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TSS ORANGEBURG NEWS HATlIRilAY. SEPT. 4,1869. MALCOLM I. BROWXIXO. Edit "Democracy and the Future." "Disintegration i? toiling fast hold of the Democratic party. Soon this once powerful and long dominant political or ganisation will be us dead as the <M W>> W*> ??"?? seeily clings. ? When that event shall be consummated, a new partition will bo inevitable. In a republic like ours, it is impossible1 that there should not be two parties, disagreeing as to the in terpretation of certain parts ot the Con stitution, add warring in matters of poli cy. When will the line of separation be drawn? All the issues of the war are practically extinct. Negro suffrage established fact. Reconstruction, according to Congressional forms, is un doubtedly and really an accomplishment. Indeed nothing remains actually of the questions raised by the rebellion. They are either settled or in tho course of wHy ami fteflnito settlement. But there is a wide difference of conviction regarding the tariff and finance. Wc, therefore, think thot coming party di visions will touch those questions as vital points. Wc arc to have brought under discussion the proper policy to be pursued in the management of the na tional'debt, and the relation of protec ted^ to the general industry of the Oelmtry. For one ice shall rejoice at (hit dRfti?e 'of fctnte. Wc shall be glad to from purely sectional cousidc those which havo national im port. The country will gain by the change. 'Sympathies will be national ised. Liues of latitude will no longer segregate political affinities. Political affiliation will be as strong in Texas as in Maine, in Cclifornia ss in Massachu setts. We welcome, wi^i extreme cor diality, the Coming issues. It is im pos sible that they will not prove regenerat ing influences. They will drive every past resentment into the back giound, and compel men's thoughts to a contem plation o? tho future. We have been dwelling in the past long enough. It is time to cut "loose from what is effete. By all means give the issues about the tariff and the debt. They arc the vita) considerations which should arouse the whole nation into attention." The above sensible article i.s from a lerrwii.'?7: r- ?tn >ttz . ? T late copy of the Chicago Republican, and is suggestive of new thought to us at the South. ,Now wc uiny prate here forever ubout negro suffrage, about the States regulat ing the question. of their own suffrage, about the constitutionality of reconstruc tion, about the reality of our defeat and the facto of our parts of this Union, but we arc merely protesting against settled and accomplished facts. New considerations are arising for the .nation, in which we are interested, and we are keeping aloof from them in our long lethargy of regret . .. Is the South no more to contribute her vigor, her talcut to a common coun try? Arc her sons never again to t'.iiuk and act for hor own good ? Was all the 'energy, the patriotism, the ability of the" Southern States swept away by the be som of war ? tin,* of fti Aro.fhoso who yet live not to devote themselves to hor interests? ? ; Are thoy to live ouly in the past, and shirk the duties of tho present ? Is the life of this gtmeiuiioii to be but a lament mTmM^sWr ; The bright pyramid of flowers, reared by hands of lovo, above these hallowed graves, will lirlger awhile, a sweet memo rial'of "a people's sorrow, but the heroic effort of a manly heart that turns from this fond retrospection, to tread the rocky, rugged path of duty, "shall heap no mound of flowers o'er the past," but his nsmo and his heroic life shall be graveu on yon granite pillar, which rises pa- tbo cliff, which overlooks these ?'rugged crags of duty sealed." These flowers of holy regret will have their icsibQ and shall fade, but he shall live, with those who did their duty in their The lato Democratic convention in Mdnishnastte has put forth a uow plat form in nominating John Qiiincy ADAMS for Governor of that State, -which is significant, in acknowledging fast "the issue* of negro snffiwgs arui o. reconstruction are dead and past, i n 1 in meeting other issues before the country. The platfi.rm sajs : "Wv. DEEM IT A ?U?H<lnlt IkllllU w/\ wintii?uL< ? ?. SETTLED RESULTS A N t>. PO ST PON E FRUIT LESS OPPOSITION TO THE ACCOMPLISH ED factis YKHT?kbAY, I? onffint^t) SKCfUK EFFECT IV K ACTION UPON THE PRESSING PHOUI.KM8 OF THE DAY." This language is momentous ! The great principles of the Republican party are acknowledged and accepted. The Democratic party is to be reorganised upou facts! Perhaps somo of our old regime in South Carolina will exclaim, "Well, then we are no longer Democrats." Alas! for them, these things are ac complished results, facts, history I Surely wc will submit now! But even now, with these momentous changes in their platform, with this acceptance of the situation, will victory perch upon Democratic standards ? We trow not! Gradually making changes to suit the onward march of progress, this standard has been a snare to the .South. It has disappointed us too often ! Napoleon's advice was, to havo "noth ing to do with unfortunate men and measures." The prestige of this party is failure. But now, as it bows before tho fiat which has settled the cheat questions upon which the South donts and dreams, mo thinks ! wc hear the ex clamation : "Why wc might as well be Republicans !" Yes ! the difference be tween this new sort of Democracy and Conservative Republicanism, is the name! One is fate, the other fated ! One is the mountain, the other Mahom et ! As to tho new issues before the country, is it not probable that these questions ol "tariff, taxation, the pro tection of labor, universal amnesty," etc., will be settled as these great issues have been ? The Courirr quotes from Mr. Adams' speech itself, where he asks his party to heed the advice of Dr. Holmes,- in the lines, which contain counsel we may well take to heart: ??Yet in opinions look not nlwsynbnck The past ir nothing, mi ml your coming back." [roR Tin: OBANOI'BI'RO M:\vs.] Oranoeruru, S. C, Sept. 2, 1869. Air. Editor: Supposing that you uro liberal iu your principles a* well as Con servative, 1 take the liberty of address ing one of your correspondents a few lines through the columns' of your pa per. In your last issuo "Loo in the Fork," as he signs himself, hus taken upon himself the arduous duty of informing your readers that Orangcburg County is represented iu Congress by a man who is a stranger?a man that no one iu the County is acquainted with, Ac, &c., and proves convincingly that he is also unacquainted with htm. This abuse of the Hon. S. L. H?ge, coming from a person, who is undoubted ly a stranger and a prejudiced one, as every line he has written goes to prove, is, in every sense, unfair. Mr. Hogc is a public man, and there by liable, perhaps, to attack in that ca pacity, but let the attack come in an honorable manner, and not filled with bercsay assertions which cannot be sub stantiated. I would tike to inform "Leo iu tho Fork," that Mr. H?ge is from as fine a family as lives in this County. He has been well educated, and well raised, and would not deign to answer aspersions that emiiiate from such a source. Ho has, and iloe*, oteu property in Ohio. He is a citizen of South Carolina, and expects soon to own real estate in it, if he does not already. He occupied a prominent and responsible position iu tho army, has adoptod South Carolina as his home, has been elected to an honorable posi tion, which he has filled so far, with dignity and honor, and which ho will continue to fill, I hope, for years to come. I can see tho wolfc sticking from un der the sheep skin, Mr. Leo, and there arc very few of your readers but what can sco him too. You wou'tget^any Lambs, however. It won't do, now, sir, to undertake to teach South Carolinians a policy which they havo been living under all their lives, that native aristocrats must fill all the officers of trust. That because a mau is poor, or happens to be born in some other clime, that he is a grand rascal, and cannot become a respectable citizen of South Carolina. That is the Unit which has been brok en in the Democratic ranks. Tho Bo publican party broko it. Mond it, you can't. Tho poor man, the froo and inde pendent American citizen, stands in your way, unshackled and unfettered he asks you no odds in tho right. I kuow (and ./ho don't?) if Mr. H?ge had belon^cviA-.}, U>% Dx'.mocraiis ranks, | and elected to the pusitiou he now ocou.1 pics, that his name and virtues would have been lauded to tho, skies, and this even by Loo. I don't say, Mr. Editor, there Is not now and then a muu to b* found in the' Republican party in ?South Carolina whose acts, pcrhups, ore without blemish', but, sir, show me the flock of sheep that have not some black onua in it. Is tho record of Democratic ^office holders so pure thnt one can suy, look ! virtue un adorned ? Leo has mistaken his man ! Judge Uoge don't fill the office of As sociate Judge of t'io Supremo Court. If he does his services arc gratuitous to tho State. For any man who reads, know well enough that ho cannot receive pay as representative oud puy also as a State Judge. Leo had better read the Constitution of his State, and of the United States, before he sets himself up us a critique of honorable public charac ters, who-ure doubtless his superiors in every respect. A REPUBLICAN. Do You Want Hkai.tii! And Who Dok8 Not??If so, be advised, Use Dr Tvtt's Sartaparilla aha Queen'? Del?/ht, tho grcut alterative und blood purifier. There is 110 mystery about the universal success that attends its use. Ii is the finest selection of tonic, anti-bilious, anti scorbutic, aperient and purifying Herbs, Root* and Barles thnt ever entered into any medicinal compound. "The Third (Conservative) Party. The existence of a third party in the Southern States claiming attention and respect by achicviug two of the most victories iu Virginia and Tcnuc-soc in the very start of its career, fills the radicals with atnsscmcnt uud chagrin, and seems to puzzle the unprincipled and inconstant partisan now at the head of the Government so completely, that his indecision and perplexity would be a mofct ridiculous farce, but for the fact that his petty malice and perfidious false hood nud meanness may lead him to inflict upon tho unfortunate but irre pressible Southern people additional out rage uud wrong. Let Grant exact the iron-dad oath, if he please, ami if he dare, of the Vitgiuiu Legislature. It will not destroy this party. lie could see the folly of attempting it, by simply glancing across the line, and pondering the reaction in Tcnnewce that has sprung of the same short sighted course. This third party is destined to grow. It will gradually ubsorb the Democratic party within it, and infuse the vigor ot its new lifo and progressive spirit into that effete, organisation. For if the Democratic party will heed the counsel of John Quincy Adams, accept negro suffrage as something already forced upon the coun try, and act upon the issues of tho pre sent and the future, it will have come up to the position now held by the third party called at present the Conservative or Conservative Republican party; and unless the ballot-box be stuffed in 1872, and the votes be counted by the bayonet ?a result thnt would not surprise us at all, for there are no constitutional rights now?it will elect its candidate for the next Presidency by a tremendous ma jority. "The formation of a third party in South Carolina would be the destruction of tho Republican party.' These are not our words, but a quotation from thu late contributions of the Mac-keys to thu Charleston papers, and it in the burden of their charge thut Senator Sawyer favors such a party, and is using influ ence and patronngc to create it. Bout well and Cresswell and Butler take the same view of the matter as affecting the nation, that the Maukcyg do as affecting this State. They see that it is a party of liberal principles and progressive ideas. But their fear and their hatred cauuot prevent its growth nor long postpone its triumph, for it is the party of domestic pence and national progress, which it is the interest of all, whether whito or black, earnestly to support, since pcuce and progress will bring contentment, prosperity und liberty to all. This is the party for which we are willing to work." ? Wimisboro News. Anui.o-Amehican Boat Race.?For several weeks past, the sporting circles of England and America have been nroii8cd on the subject of trial of skill iu rowing between crows from tho rival U ni versifies ef the t Wo countries?Oxford and Harvard. The Hurvard crew went over to challenge their English competi tors some time io July last. They had already beaten in a race with a crew from Yale College, and thoir competitor, were likewise the victors in a recent con test at home, with Cambridge; so that tho two parties, champions on thoir own wators, wero anxious to test the relative merits of English and American systems of rowing, in an international contest. After much training and practicing, tho raoo came off on the river Thames, on Friday, 27th ult., nud resulted in a victor} fov the Oxford crow bj second* iu a four mile row. My Wiks.-?Obsorvo with what lovo f.ud respect (he good man and worthy husband speaks of that dear creaturo whom (Jod hu idven bim for a companion throughMifo.j^Bbc hin actions and ob servo bis bc^HfhaH', and you will see that her imHKBs reflected in hiin. I care not bo\3H|eat a man lie may be; I care not iiorSustcre and strong minded he may bo; flthat he loves her. Her influence is j^Bpvcry day, and feminine dependence aapa power within him which "thcijHK might have slumbered unknown nr.^Kgnttcti. Ill the language of JJulwer;jBPr image glossed in his soul, lures IibBi to those inspiring toils by which SB masters men." Our greatest ber^Hll attribute their success in life to cBBsotent influence of either a wife or a mother's love. Man must have something to love, something to stimulate him and raise him from that state of thraldom in which the cares and anxieties of an every day life usually plunge him. What friend can tako a wife's place; who but she Can administer consolation which is ever free from the suspicious, the hope of |ntcrestcdness, other than that of a holy desire and deep anxiety to make you happy? Let all the world forsake and abandon you; let trials come upon you and calamities befall you, yet iu her presence and loving affection you may always find a harbinger of love, truth and devotion. Men havo a yearning for disinterested love. Once convince a man that he is beloved for himself alone, independent of his wealth, his riches und'his station, or any of tho many advantages of which he muy be possessed?let him see I say, that ho is loved for himself, and you make him your slave for life. Such a man blessed with a noble woman for his wife, is capable of performing things, that would discourage him had he not had some one to offer him those little words of consolation which lighten the burdens of life. Smothered for Crying.?A murder was perpetrated in this city last night, which illustrates in a terrible manner the Chinese practice of putting female children to death when the parents bo ceme tired of providing for them, or are exasperated at them for misconduct: About 4 o'clock this morning police officer Kelly was standing on Dupont street, near Sacramento, when he observed a Chinaman hurrying along the street with a sack on his shoulders. Thinking he had committed some theft, the officer stopped him and asked him what the sack contain I'd The lliau replied that it was filleTTwith clothes. Officer Kelly felt of it, and said, "This is not a sack of clothes. Put it down." Upon this the fellow dropped the sack on the sidewalk and started to run. but the officer drew his pistol and ordered him to stop or he would shoot. The mau then stopped, and Kelly, on opening the sack, tound tho dead body of a female child in it apparently about n year old. On ques tioning tho Chinaman, he was told that the parents of the dead child lived on Sacramento street, and that having killed her a little while before, they gave him the body to conceal. Kelly took him to the house and found the parents. When aski d abou' the child and the reason fur killing her. they said she cried too much, they couldn't sleep, and had purposely smothered her with the bedclothes. Kelly thereupon took them also into custody, and with th tin four women and four men, inmates of the house where the murder was committed ?A7. V. Sun. A TitUTilFUL Sketch.?Let a man fail in business, what a Wonderful effect it has on his former creditors! Men who have taken him by the arms, laughed and cliattcd with him by the hour, shrug up their shoulders and pass on with u cold. "How do you do? Every trifle of a bill is hunted up and presented that Would not have seen light for mouths to conic but for tho misfortune of the debt or. If it is paid, well and good; if not, tho scowl of the sheriff, perhaps, meets him at the corner. A man that has never failed knows but little of human nature. In prosperity ho sails along gently, wafted by favoring smiles and kind words from everybody. Ho prides himself on his name and spotless charac ter, and makes his boast that he has not an enemy in tho world. Alas? tho change. He looks to tho world in a different light when the reverses come upon him. He reads suspicion on every brow. Ho hardly knows how to move; or to do this thing or the other, for there aro spies about him, aud a writ is ready for his back. To understand what kind of stuff the world is made of, a person must bo unfortunate and stop payment once in his lifo time. If he has kind friends, thou they, are made manifest. A faiiuro is a moral sieve: it brings out the wheat and shows the chaff. A man thus learns that words and pro!ended good will does nut c institute real friend, ship. Colonel H.J. Moses, of Columbus, Gu , has received a small number of coolies, who may be S?cn working on his farm near that city. Fruit Conduci vb to II kaltii .?Tho New York Expreu ia gratified that peaches arc so abundant as to be cheap ia spite of the fruit monopolists, but contends that they uro not yet cheap enough, and adds: "If the board ol health could have power to rcgulute the pricos of fruits at certain seasons of the year, without estab lishing u bad principle or precedent, benefit would follow; nnd it would be n grand thing to plucc in their hands n Iruit fund for the purchase of fruits to bo plentifully distributed among the very poor. The best of fruit in this sensou keeps tho blood cool nnd prevents feverishness. The juice.* of fruits dilu'e the blood und kocp it in a proper condi tion of fluidity, quito as well, if not better than water. Thoy also keep the kidneys in a high degree of health, a recommendation that cannot be given to any sort of artificial drink, uot even to water, except it be pure and soft. It is well enough to disinfect streets and other place? with carbolic neid, chloride of lime, &.o.j but it would be better to stave off epidemics by making people too healthy to be assailed by theui. And this plenty of good fruit will help greatly to do." Tub Late Ecmpsk.?A correspon dent of a Philadelphia paper thus writes of a prolonged "totality" : Few people trouble themselves to think what the effect would be if the eclipse of Saturday were to last any length of time, atot the sun were blotted from the heavens. Philosophy declares that not only would a horror of dark ness cover the earth, but tho moisture of the air Would be prccipated in vast show ers to the earth, and the temperature fall to a fearful point of cold, nothing less than lilJO degrees below zero, Fah renheit. The earth would be the scat of darkness nnd more than Arctic desola tion. Nothing could survive such freez ing cold u moment, more than one could breathe iu scalding water. Iu three days after the cooling process began, nothing created would be alive but the monsters that Wallow iu deep ocean, and the eyeless reptiles that make their haunts in cives which penetrate far un der-ground. Comiiu-doro Vnndcrbilt, aged 70, and worth one hundred million ol dollars, has be it caught in matrimony by a very young lady from Mobile. Judge tireeii decided lately at Man ning, "that no exemption of homestead could be claimed where the execution had been h dged befuro the passage ol the new Constitution." Trains on tho Pac fic lload were stop ped three days last week by the burning of the sheds erected over thu truck to keep the snow off. They wure set on fire. The drought iu Maryland is almost as bad as in Virginia, and is moreover general It is feared that not half a crop of corn or potatoes will be raised ii it continues. The Levant Herald reports that two Armenian prelutcs who had bucu detained three years iu Abyssinia, have been re leased through the intercession of the British government. A walnut-tree pretrificd into s ?ap .stoue, wns lately found in an Illinois coal mine, one hundred nud seventy five feet below the surface of the earth. The tree was eight feet in diameter. At tho Women's Suffrage Association in Now York, Mrs. Fosbcrg stated she had with considerable difficulty obtained seventy five signatures to thu petition for a sixteenth amendment, giving women the vote. Not more than twenty of them were obtained from women WM.~ C7 BEE ~& CO., Factors and COMMISSION MKIt CHANTS, 22 A DG KR'S WHARF, CHARLESTON, 8. C. Wm. O. llr.e. Thiooobe l>. Jebvey LIBERAL ADVANCF8 made upon Con signments to the above (louse, for the Char h--ion, New York nnd Liverpool Markets. Apply to JAMES BROWNE, sept 4?tf At 1>. Louis' Store. COTTON GINS AND Cotton Screws. HIE UNDERSIGN HAVING P.EEN Ap pointed AGENT for the sale of the "GEORGIA COTTON GINS," Manufactured by the "ALBERT80N A DOUGLAS" Machine Company, offer them at th? Manufacturers Prices upon favorable terms. These Gin? will be found equal in Quality of Material and Workmanship to any Manufactured, nnd wsrrantod to Work equal to any now in use. Also Agent for the sale of "Graya Putcnt Anti-Friction, Labor Having 8 CM A' W PRE S S." This is the most perfect, simple and eco nomical Screw manufactured. Parties re quiring either of the above will find it to their advantage to apply to JAM Ed BROWNE, sept 4?tf At D. Louis' Stote. MAG ISTHA T IS 111. AMIS For Sale at mar 27 THIS OFFICE X|f ANTEI>.-A GOOD MILCH cow, if with yennc Calf, ;\&?ly ?< this CO* uffl DO NOT SEND NORTH FOB LIFE INSURANCE. INSURE AT ROME, AMD - RETAIN THE MONEY TN YOUR OWN STATE. AJULJCJ JTJLJCiJLriULVJLl X LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OP VIRGINIA. HAS ESTABLISHED A BRANCH OFFICE IN COLUMBIA, with ?Board of Directors, composed of well known South Carolinians, who in v<;et all funds received for Premfont* us thin State. The following are prominent members of th? Board: Col. J. P. THOMAS, Oen. M. C. BUTLER, Ex-Got. M. L. BON HA If. JNO. 8. PRESTON, R. W. GIBBES, T. C. 1'ERRIM. It claims your pstronag? on the following ground*; Int. Its terms are as low, aa is consistent with safely. 2d. Its ibrestments are based on REAL ESTATE. 3d. Your money is KEPT AT HOME. 4th. It numbers araoug its Policy Holders mauy ut the beat merchants nnd citixens of Ornngcburg. , j ft I ^ \ f } / For further information, tables of rates, &c. apply cither in person or by letter to, JAMES II. FOWL?S, Ammo, Dr. a. S. SiLLEY, Law Office of Mi? S~jt5? kt%fvmsu 1rrr ~? ??_ Medical Examiner. Sept 4 15 if FALL_ PRINTS, OTHER GOODS SUITED TO THE SEASON JUST RECEIVED D. LOUIS" AGENT, at the corner, sept 4 mar IS c ly BAGGING AND TIES. DUNDEE BAGQINU, also NEW YORK RAGGING, ?lose and aniooth, 44 inch wide and 2<| lbs to the yard. COTTON SHIPPED FREE of CHARGES, ami advancements mnde on aame. COTTON G'/.V.S*. Two of tho Celebrated TAYLOR 01N8, demon*, Drown & Co.. Makers, on hand, one 4<> and one 45 saw, nt FACTORY TRICES. LEATHKR k RUBBER UELTING Furnished at Agents Rates. Also the usual supply of LOW PRICED TOBACCO by the Box. For sale nt the Court House Store. JOHN A. HAMILTON, sept 4 nov 7 e ly Improved Farm, NBA H BRANCHVILLE. 900 A0RE8 one mile from the Town of Brunchville. This place is splendidly im proved anil improvements all new. Sixty aerea cleared ami under cultivation, gmnl fence, balance heavily timbered, and place perfectly healthy. ALSO 300 ACRES good Corn Cotton and Rie* land, lying in tho County of Colleton twelve miles from Georges Station, with good im provement*. Dwelling IIous? not quite finish ed, nil the oui-tmlldiugs in good condition. This place will be sold cheap if culled tor soon. A LSO, 2000 ACHES Corn Cotton and P.ice laud in Collet oil County, iimtut Jwolve miles from Georges Station, with improvement in good condition, and place perfectly hvalthly, Gicie is 000 ncres Sw.uup land on this pluc?. SOU I of it cleared and under cultivation, will pio- 1 rinee finely without guano. There i? ? Mill 1 Siut on ibis place, with sufficient water power for any machinery. A LSO ' 800 ACRES wool land nctr the Town of Hrunutn illc, place healthy, aud u deairabie place forn settlement. ALSO SMALL IMPROVED FARM H Allies from Ornngeburg. 123 ACRES of good Com and Cotton laud eight miles from the Town of Orange burg, in the Fork. One hundred acres clear ed uml under fence, 2"> acres good wood laud with goo'l improvements, all new, place very healthy. For further particulars apply to ANDREWS A CO., seid I?tf Land Agents. The State of South Carolina. Obanokim uu } In Equity. Henry D. Bonn et t, Ad 1 minist ralor of Estate of ( Rill for Injunction, George J. Roulicit, i Partition ?a. land Relief. Jno. F. lionnett. et. al. j It appenrifi;/ to my sat is."a et ion that Josinh W. Bonnett. Kole distributee of .lo?inh W. Bonne! 1, deceased, one of the detci: ?ants in the above stated case, in absent from and re sides beyon i the lin.its of the State. It is ordered, -in nioiion of Msssr?4. Iluicons k. Legare, Complainants Solicitors, that the said .I'xinh >V. Boiinetl do, within forf\ days fr? m the dnte of this order, appear and ;!...."?, answer or demur to the said hill, or else the jane will he takeu again.*! him pro rnnfi'tn. Clvik's Office. ) GEORGE P.OLIVER, Ornngeburg, 8. C. \ C. C. P. Sept. o. 180'.?. J sept 4 cow 40d SPECIAL NUTISJeT" To parties in want of DOORS, SASHES and BLINDS, we refer to the advertisement of P. P. Toale. the large manufacturer of those goods in Charleston. Price list furn ished on application. jury 17 Hm 1> LAX term--Cull on Messrs. bvehes & Funderbnrk and have vour Ul'XS SHARPENED by J. II. Burdine'? PATENT FILES, thereby IMPROVING the LINT and getting a LA BUER yield. Address DVCHES k PUNDERB?RK, Orangeburg t. H. Bug IS?:U 11. D. STEWART. IHlvt rslty of South Carolina. rnilB NEXT SESSION WILL BEGIN ON X thefir8t MONDAY in October, and con tinue uiihotit intermission, to the ensuing July. Advantages nre offered at this Institution to Students in Law, nhc graduates being en titled tu pr?mier in the Courts of this Stale.) iu Medicine, (the course of Instruction being Extensive and Thorough, with ta*o written examinations during the Session;) in En !;incering. Mathematics, Mental, Moral and 'olilionl Philosophy, History, Rhetorto, English Literature, Ancient aud Modern Languages, and in the; various Scientific i jhool*. Expenses for Session of nine months : Annual fco, $0.0U; Library fee, $10.00; Room Hent foe, $15.00; Tuition foe,-; .for saeh of three schools, $lft.OO; Tuition in Law or Medioine, $60.00. Board can be had at $lt> to $20 per month. By messing, it will bt less. For further information, scad for Cata logues to the Secretary of the Faculty, Rev. C. Bruoe Walker. R. W. BARN WELL, Chairman, of Faculty. Cmm <*. ('., Augu/ti. i: ..'3. uug 14 lit Sheriff's Sales* by virtue of sundry wrtta of II. fa., to tsr directed 1 will neU I? the highest bidder, s>t Orangcburg Court Hcusu, an ths first Monday in September neat, for cash the following property, vis : One tract or land containing 188 acres' more or less, bounded on the south by I9*v Lswia Dantzlc-r. west by Fred. Hull, north by II. Shulcr and s?st by Isaac Jones. Lielajj on as the properly of IJiaucy Glaxe, Adas'r,. at the suit of Kohuid A. Evans. ALSO One tract of land containing 061 acres' more or lew*, lying between the Ola Stage Road and Itnilroad, bounded on the north by T. O. Uawson, north and east by t. b. Whaley, vast by Charles Campbell aad 8. C. R. H., southeast by T. B. Whaley, southwest by old Stage Koad. Levied on as the prop, crty of K. W. Andrew? and others at the suit of A. C. Aadrews ALSO One tract containing 240 acres more ?r less, bounded by Mrs. Mary A. Pale, 4. D. Inabiuet and E. A. Nix. Levied oa as ths propecty or J. 1>. lnabinct at the sale of V. V. L. Inabiuet. ALSO One tract lying in the Fork of Ediate, about six miles from the village, containing ?8Q acres more or less, bounded nwiUa fcp J? Sandern, east by Kdisto Hirer, south by B. H. Barton and west by C. 1'ooier. Levied on as the property of J. J. 11 one k at the suit of D. Louis. ALSO One tract of land known as the homestead, '-??ui?innig H'ai acres more or leu*, bounded north by J. ('. Pik?. Trustee, east by W. T. McK>v?n. south by 1>. It. Barton and west by Kdisto Itiver, t?iie iract containing nbaa?s 111 acres more or lees, bounded by If. T. Me* Kenn and oturrs. al*o .ill ihe iutcrtet uf ('. Arant in 11"? acre* muri* or lesev hounded imri u by ft. K. Burton, eaal by Cbnnpy, south by II. Pnuderburg. iti.il west by A. D. Fred? riek. L-vied on nn ib.- propeity ot O. Aram, deceaecd, ?I tile SU.t o. K. .). Felder, i.X vK of J. H. Felder. ALSO On Tun?.lay after eat end ?t, at th? lmnu atcad. 2 Males. A Cow* nnd Cetera. I Wages, lit head ot ling*. 1 Grmdst'-tif-. Plan is* loa Tools. Ill buslnds Corn, more or less, House hold mid Kitchen Furniture. Levied ?n as the property ot OT Arant, deceased, at the Hull of K. .1. Fe.der, Kx'or ef J. H. Felder. ALSO On Tuesday after sale* lay. tat th? resi dence <>r .1. J. Iluuck, 1 Horse, 7 head Cat* tie. lot Hoven and She. p. 1 old Buggy, t Wagon. "Jo buanel Cum more or leas, ? Fod dei Household and Kitchen Furniture. Levied mi im the properly of J. J. Huuck at the suit of 1). Louis & Co. ALoO On Tuesday after salraday, at the res!? deuce ot J. D. Im.binei. 2 Bedsieads and 12 Hog*. Levied on ax the property of J. k>. lnabinct at tbe suit vf Y. V. L. lnabinct. ALSO Oa Tuesday after salesday. at the reel- ? dettee of Vim. Summer*, 14 bead Cattle saera or lea*. 2d hea l Hogs more or less, 1 Mute? i Wagon, BlnckstuiiIi Tool-, 3 Uee C.una, and Plantation Tools. L vied on as the property of Wm. Summers at the suit of J. I>. Cleck ley, Ex'or. ALSO i. On Monday, at the residence of J. II. P. T?te, 2 Guns, 1 Pistol, 1 Horse, 3 Sheep. 3 Cows, Plantation Tools, Household sent Kitchen Furniture, Levied oa as the prop erty of J. 11. P. T?te at the suit of Darid Shuler. ALSO South Carolina ^ . , ? Orangeburg County. \ Probate Court. Et parle Irvin A. Till et. ux. et. al. Distribu tor Estate of Christian Keitt. Sale in Partition. By virtue of a Decretal Order to me di rected, from the Honorable the Probate Court of said County. I will sell at public outcry, at Omngehurg, on salesday in Sap ? ember next, (being the Bth September.) All that tract cf Lund containing400 acres more or less, situated and bounded by lands of Dr. Wolfe, Win. Gaffney, Zeigler er Iambi net and K. It. Graves, and known a a the Estate Land-* of Christian Kelt!, deceaasd. Terms?Enough cash to pay for these fata ceedings. balance payable in two annual in stallments. Purchasers jiving bond with two approved securities, with mortgage of land to the Judge of Probate, and to pay far stamps and papers. ALSO 0RANGKUUB??In Equity-.. Joshua Ulmer, et. al. > vs. 'rln the Circuit Courts Lewis W. Dash et. al. j By virtue of an order of sale made in this I case by the said Court, I will sell at Orange burg. S. C, en Monday, the 0th day of Sep tember next, during the usual hoars of aale ? All that Plantation or Tract of Land. I known as the Bull Swamp Plas'aAssa of tfea said L. W. Dash, situate in the County and! State aforesaid, containing 1200 seres more or less, bounded by lands of 0 i>. Hebt aadk William Knottp. This Land will be sold la several tracts., and a pint will be shown on day of sale. Terms?One-fourth cash, Um rstnslajng three fourths on s credit of one, two aodi three years. Purehaser to gtss bead for ssid credit portion bearing internal from day of sale, payable annually, and scoured by a. mortgage of the premise*, with a covenant for resale on n breach of the condition- of the bond; and also to pay for papers aad. stamps. Bherir? Office. 1 H. RIG09. s.o. a. Sherir? Office, ) OrangebnrgC. II.. S. C, > Aug.. 10, I8S& j sng 14 NOTICE?In H?r*fcjr to sll persons not to trails with. or. give oredit <Jo any peisest. whatever, net say. account. W. A. J- BUMMS*, August 12, 18*i?.L?14~:tti WIIBSHIY a.alll.lhS For Hale at T???S OFFH At 50 cts. per kiuvlrcd. mar Si