The Intemperate Husband
by Charles Sprague.
It is my friend in the degradation of a
husband by intemperance, where she who
has ventured every thing, let-Is that sl.e is
lost. Who shall protect her when the
husband of her choice insul s nn>l oppresses
her/ What shall delight her when she
shrinks from the sight of Ins face and trembles
a I the soon 1 ol h s voice ?
Tlie hearth is indeed dark, that ho has
made desolate. There, through the dull
midnight hour, her griefs are whispered to j
herself; hut her bruis- d heart Ulceus ill se- |
crct. There, while the cruel author of her i
distress 13 drowned in distant revelry, she i
holds her solitary vigd, waiting, yet dread- ,
ing ins return, that is but to wring Iron;
her by uiikindiiess. tours even more scald-,
ing than those site sited over his transgressions.
To fliqg a d<*eper gloom across the
present, memory turns hack and broods
over the past. Tne joys of other days
come over her as if only to mock her
grieved and weary spirit.
She recalls the ardent lover whose graces
won her from the home of her infancy, the
enraptured father who bent with such delight
over his newborn children; and she
asks if this can he the same; this sunken
being who has now nothing for her bui
the sot's disgusting brutality; nothing for
those ubashed and trembling children; hut
the sol's disgusting example!
Can we wonder that amid these agonizing
moments, the tender chords of violated
affection should sn.?p asunder? Tnat the
scorned and d?-ser.ed wife should confess
"there is no killing like that which kills the
hear.!" That though it would h?ve been
hard to ktss for the last time the cold I ps
of a dead husband, and lay his body for
ever in th * dust, t is harder sill to behold
him so debasing in life, that even death
would be greeted in mercy.
Had Ire died in the light of his goodness,
bequeathing to his family the inheritance ot
an untarnished name, and the example of
virtues thai should blossom for his sons and
daugh ers from the tomb: though she would
have wept bitterly indeed, the tears of grief
would uot also have been the teurs of
shame.
She beholds him fallen from tho station
he once adorned, degraded from eminence
lo ignominy, at home, turning his dwelling
to darkness, -and its holy endearments o
mockery; abroad, thrust from the coiuponionshippf
the worthy, a self branded outlaw.
MKUICAL.
Froui Palm r's Prize Essay.
PHYSICAL EDUCATI N.
To phsical education belong the propor
training and stienglteuing of all the pow? rs
of the body, and tho avoid <nce of every
thing calculated to injure its s'ructure.?
Nature here is the great preceptrrss. If wo
only uttend to her warnings, wo shall seldom
go wrong; and, when we neglect them,
we are sure of punishment, more or less
severe. Our present duty, then, will he
chiefly to point out the d viatious. from
Nature's course, while the child is at
school.
The first and most striking error, in
physical education, is the unnecessary con
fiicment to which the child is subj ctcd.?
At the early age, at which ho first go<s to
chool, nothing c.iti Im niore painful, nor
more pernicious No one ilml lies ob.
erved a child, between the age of three and
six, can doubt that nature requires that he
should he almost cnnstan ly in motion,
during his waking hours. At t' is period,
he is ail activity, forever engag. d in some
employment, by whch be is enquiring
knowledge, at the same time that he is
developing and strenghening Ins physical
powers. How painful then, how unnatural,
in us: be his situaion in school! Petit up.
for nearly six hours in a day confined to
one seat, and dial generally a very uneasy
one, where, notwi.hstaiidiiig, lie is forced
to sit perfectly still and silent, without employment.
(for the pretence of study, at that
age, is truly tidieulon.s ) how irksome mutt
I>e his condition, how prejudicial to his
health; And what aggravates the evil is,
that it is wholly unnecessary. For the
extended confinement defeats the v r\
jjur(K>9? for which it is imposed. **The
body and mind," says S ernu, "are like n
jeikin and its lining. If yon rumple the
one, you rumple the other." Besides the
injury to his heaith, his mind become*
heavy and dull, and his progress, const*.
qucnilv, is not half what it would be under
a more rational course.
*****
The school-room is 'oo small, either for
convenience, comfort,or health. Tn?* s< a's
are narrow, and too high for many of the
children, so that their leet hang d tngiing,
thus adding to their uneasiness, increasing
' their restlessness, preventing proper at enition
to their books, and having, also, a
direct tendency to produce deformity in the
limbs. For, if the seat be narrow, half the
thigh, only, rests upon it; if too high, the feet
do not reach the floor. Now, most clnl.
dren go first to scltool while many of their
bones are stil in a forming sta'e, little else
hut gristle, and when any of the numerous
join s may be easily loosened ordis orted.?
**Tney go almost as early as when ih<Chinese
turn their children's feet in'o the
shape of horse*' hoofs; or when some tribes
of Indians make their children's heads as
square as h jowr's box. And, at this period
of life, the question is, wlv ther the scats
shall he conformed lo the children, or the
children deformed to the seats. Let any
man try the experiment, and see how long
he can sit in an upright posture, on a narrow
bewh or sent, without being abie to
reach ihe floor with his feet, and, conse
quenlly, with the whole weight of his tee;
and the lower part of his limhs acting with
the power of u lever across the middle ol
the thigh hones. Yet, to this position- hnn
dreds of children are regularly confined
inon'h after mon'h; Nature inflicts her
pUtlishiuefVS of insupportable uneasiness
and distress on every joint and muscle, if
they do sit si ill, and the teacher inflicts
his punishments, if they do not. A gentle,
man, extensively known to the ci izcns of
| this State, for the benevolence ol" his char,
acter, and the candor of his statements, who,
j lor the last twenty years, has probably vis.
ited more of our common schools than any
! other person in the Stale, writes to me as
! follows: '1 have no hesitation in r< pealing
what i have so often publicly declared, that,
i from the bad construction of our school.
hous?-s, there is more physical sufleritig * n
dured by our children in them, than by prisoners
in our jails and prisons.'"1' Th ra arc
i no convenient places under the desks, for
j putting away the books and slates. The
'closet for hats and coats is small and iix-ouvetiien',
or altoge.hej wanting, so that the
children acquire disorderly and wasteful
habits with their cloth'*s, either throwing
them, carelessly, on the benches, or heap.
1 in" them on the table, which leads to a
scene of tumult and disorder at the close ol
he school. The room is badly ventilated,
so that, in cool weather when the doors
and windows are kept shut, the children ar?
forced to breathe the same air over and
over, until it has become unfit lor rcspira.
turn, thus laying a foundation for debility
and disease.
* Report of the See vtiry of the Board ol
Education of .Massachusetts, ou tl?o sui'j ci 01
school- houses.
CENSUS ANECDOTE.
Mr. Cist, iii a letter to the editor of tie
Cincinnati! Chronicle, relates the following
dialogue b< twee.i himself and a tnurrteu
lady.
"Madame, what age shall I put yot
down??(No direct answer.) How old i:
your husband?"?--ixty-one." "And youi
eldest son?"?"Twenty-seven." 44 A mi
(lie next?"?"Twenty-one." "And how
old do you call youtsell? '?"I do not know
inv age exactly; but 'l about thir;) ?"?
"Did I understand you, madam, that youi
eldest sou was 'wt n'y..seven? '?"Yes.'
Y<?u must surely, then, be more than thirty?
?"Wi ll, sir, (quitesnappishly,) I told \oij
alniut thirty; i can't lull oxuc.ly; it may be
ti'ir y ontr or two, but i uin positive iiisiiol
over that,"
Niceties of Law.?lu a late court in Eng
land a singuhr case wjs brought forward respecting
the maintenance of t pauper. In the course
of the evidence it appeared that the boundary be*
*u~ ?--I?? * " IliM rofim in vi'iiidi)
IWteiJ lilt' jiaiiouto i uii uvi?a?
the pauper slept.
In reference to this fact, one of the lawyer?
said there iiad been a decision in it somewhat
similiar case, which hud gone to determine thut
the parish in which the bed oi'the p upcr had
been pi iced was the p irish which was bound to
mamtuin the party. Another remarked, it wan
impossible that that decision coulu l>c maintain :d
in all cases where such point was in dispute between
contending parishes, for he well recolhe
ted an instanco where the bed of the pauper had
usually stood across the boundary lines sop iraling
the two parishes, and it turned out that the pau
jKsr had been accustomed to lay with his head in
the one and his feet in the other parish. In thai
case the Court li id held that tho parish in wliieli
the head of thcpiupcr had reclined was bound l<
support the body. Another beggard to remind
the Cour* that there was also another case?one
in which the paujxrr's bed had been placed in
such a position as that the dividing line of llir
two parishes had run, us it was shown, from the
head to the heels?that was, lengthways of the
bed. There it had been held that tho pirish on
h hich the left hand sido of the bed had been situated
was liable to the maintenance of the p uper.
on the ground that the poupe*'s heart which w.u
conceit d to ho the iinpoituut portion ofthe com
ten s of I ho frame ot a human being, as wc I at
the most vital part of a man, was usually on thai
I side. In the piescut mailer it was proved thai
I only fifteen inches of the bud was in St. Ciles't
p rish, and us it bee.in; a question whether a
man could eleep in a sp ice of fif oen inches wide
a special c ise was ordered lo be subuiil.ud lo tin
! Queen's Bench !
NORMAL SCHOOLS FN FRANCE.
"Ihore arc in France." says the Moniteui
Parisien, " 78 primary normal or model schools,
destined lo form primary teachers. The nmiibci
of pupi's educating fr teachers in these establish
in nts is about 24 0. 8l)0 pupils annually obtair
brevets ot capacity, cuner lor p unary nvintuu
ry instruction, or primary suprior instruction
2356 pi ice# of primary teuchci a become disposa
ble each year, cither by deuths, or resignation*
or new creations. The number of pupils who re
ceiva brevets anuuaily as teachers, being 860
there are 1545 places to dispose of, either foi
youths who are intended for priuiury instruction
without pausing thro igu the normal schools, oi
tor religious corporations.
RAIL ROADS IN THE UNITED STATES.
The journal ofthe Franklin Institute contain)
a detailed account ofthe rail roads in a n<mbei
of the Slates, wilh the length, costs, &c., f. on
he tables of which the National Uazotln givot
the following : In Pennsylvania, the number oi
rail roads are thirty-six, the number of miles op
erred five hundred and seventy.six and a half, tlx
total 1 ugth of road e ghl hum red and fifty milci
and a quarter, and the amount already expuudctl
?15,640,450. Iu Virginia, the Carolina*, t?'oorgir
and Florida, there are twenty-three roads
and nine hu tired and ninety four nules opened;
total length, sixteen hundred and seventy five
miles and a half..; Amount expended, ?18.442,000
In Alnbam?, Louisiana. Mississippi, Tennessee
and Kentucky, there are twenty-seven roads, oik
hundred and niucty-fnc miles in operation ; loial
length of loids, eleven humlrod and f?n ty eigiil
miles and a quarter. Already expended, ?921,
000. In Ohio. Indiana, Michigan anJ liltooit
there are twenty-nine roads, one liundred auc
III nut l'.in ilf.a in ii,,, I :i 1 li-iur li nf road*.
VV ?r , ~ 6 1
two thousand eight hundrcl and twen'y out
miles and a half. Amount expended, $5,523,040.
ABOUT A FISII?BUT NOT A FISH STORY.
A Skate fish (Genus, Raja, ray) was caughl
in a seine and dragged to shore on Wrightsville
sound, about 9 uiiles frotn here a few days
ago of these dimensions, furnished us by s
gentleman from that neighborhood.
Length, 13 feet.
Width across the shoulders, 16 feet.
Thickness of the body, 4 feet.
Extended jaws, three feet apart.
Estimated to weigh 2000 lbs.
Wilmington Chronicle.
STATISTICS OF MARRIAGE?HINTS TO LA
DIES.
Wo published some years ago a table of tht
probabilities of marriage at the d fforeoi periods ol
life, in the case of females, for which we have ?c
doubt that the Indies of Britain feel grateful. 11
was founded, however, on limited data, which
were derived entirely from records of marriages
among the working class The table published
in our leading artiele of Saturday supplies mate,
rials lor more accurate conclusions grounded on
| r turns which comprehend till classes; and we
shad con'Vr a favor on our female readers by put.
I ling the results into a more distinct form than
,j I ho table in its original shape affords.
If we lake one hundred to represent tho whole
' of u woman's chances of inarriago between the
ages of fifteen and seventy, the proportional
j chances in each period of five years will be at
' follows;
Age. Chances of Marriage,
15 and under 20 14$
20 25 52
>25 3d 18
! 30 35
I 35 40 3*
! 40 45 2|
j45 5 < ]$
50 55 }
' 55 60 j
(ill (15 ) { one.
05 7>? ? ^ tenth.
11 , 100
1 From the table it appears:
> | 1. 'I'll it one- event!) part of all the females win
I marry in glind are married between tho ag?>i
i of 15 and 20. or one-seventh part of a woman')
f chances of marriages li s between those years.
| 2. That fully one.hulf of a 1 tho women win
' j marry are married lietween 20 and 25, or one-hal
1 | of a woman's chances is comprised w.thii
' ' these five yarn.
I J 3. Thatbefw?en 15 and 25 precis lytwo-thir'i
of a woman's chances of marriage are cxhauslei
and only one.third remains for tho rest of her lif
up to 7th
.1 cr _i ?,lf n
4. 1 'I;ii ill uu no less man ^ ciiaiicus ??? the
10,J are gone. and 15, or about one-seventh
f only remain. She has a strong reason now To
f improving her time.
5. At 35, a traction, a tenth, is all that remain
to her?which is reduced to a twentieth at 40.
0. At 45, hor chances of marriage have sunl
to one.foitieth; and at 50, to one hundreth. A
00 there is still a g'imm ;ring of hope, for it ap
; pean that, among females about 1 marriage ii
j I.O'IO take* place at and beyond this age.
The numlrer of women married between II
and 20 i? six times greater than the number u
1 ntcu.
t The nnnih -r or men and women mnrried he
1 wee 11 20 and 25 is very nearly equal, but tin
| number of tin ii married at all higher ages is groa
ter than iho number of women.?Edinburgi
Scotsman.
i
A? IRISH TEMPERANCE ANECDOTE.
' A Tavern keeper meets an old customer
? when the following dialogue takes place:?
! Tav. How arc you Mike? Why, I have no
seen you at my house lately. What has beet
the matter .v ith yo ??
Mike. O, then h ive you heard that I hav<
joined the leiiifmrauce Society?
Tav. No i have not; but you look vcr;
sickly, how yellow your face looks!
Mike. O, faith, my honey, if my face look;
! yellow so is my pocket yellow, too, (pulltnj
'' out several sovereigns.) Look here what I
1 am going to put into the Savings' Bank, that ]
have by not visiting your house.
1 It is needless to say that the tavern keepei
had no more questions to ask Mike.
i
? From l/.e Cultivator.
! VALUE OF ASHES
Professor J.ickson, in one of l?is lecturei
| in Boston, in il us ruting (lie manner ii
p which soils might he rendered fertile, suit
| thut?'*a Inrirt witldn lus knowledge, whirl
i whs a blowing snnd, a pine barren, and al
inosi boneless. on which ten bushels ofcori
' to the acre could sc m ely be grown, bj
I the judicious applicu'imi of ashes, had bee:
, made to produce tbiiy or filly bushels t<
i the acre." YVe do no; question the cor
! rectwss of Dr. Jackson's statements.?
: Our observation h is convinced tis that ot
, sandy soils, with the exception of clay marl
> there is nothing more beneficial in the ap
> plication 'o such sods, than ushes; and ver
1 ioiluuately, unless uncommon quanli ies o
' acid exists- in such so Is, leached ashes ar
t nearly as beneficial as uuleached ones.?
L Ashes do u ha lime cannot; they rende
' the soil more tenacious of moisture, nix
1 although iheir action is not as prompt o
I efficient on cold sour soiis, they are lor tlx
reason assigned, considered as valuable 01
iight sandy ones. Of this fact the farmer
on the light sods of Lung Island and New
J rsey, are well aware, and in the gather
nig and application of ashes, find a curtail
source of piofit.
Froin the Southern Cultivator.
Cabbage YVorms.
Cabbage worms cannot stand the smt\
of Penny royal. The wrier of this has i
p square of very fin*.* cabbages in his garden
i and shortly af er the wi t-sp< II of wenkhe
' ?
r the Inst month commenced, the worms oe
gun to piny havoc amongst them. Penny
royal was gathered and scatt< red plentifully
over lie cabb-gc heads, and the work o
I d struct ion ccns d. | do no; know whethe
, this is a new remedy or n"t; it is a very
j simple and effectual one?at least, it lin
r proved efT'Ctunl with me, and I wouli
II recommend others to try i'. J).
I TACTS TO BE EXPLAINED.
The statements copied below, were mad<
at the last monthly meeting of the Philadelphia
1 Society for the promotion of Agriculture.
'Col. Smith stated a circumstance whicl
showed the great importance ot a thorougl
cultivation of'he soil?which was this; tha
I he had a field belonging to his farm, whicl
l 1 had not lipen manured for nine years, and ye
. J it yielded the present season more than tw<
i ! tons of superior hay to the acre. The firs
I j six years of the nine, it was in grass ; thet
, J corn, then oats, and then grass again. Ht
> attributed this unusual success, on a soil only
ordinarily good, to the high degree of tillage
wh eh it received, and the entire annihilatioi
of blue grass and weeds. The application o
manure was also strongly recommended whet
. the earth is warm and dry, especially on clay/
, ey soils.
! \Tr Pharlna RnLfPtS also Stated tllP fillloW
ing curious fact:?A friend of Ins in Delaware
county, made this experiment:?Last yeai
he ploughed a4fifteen acre field?one-third o
which lie put in oats; one third in huck-whea
and the other third was left in fallow. Whet
the oats and buckwheat were done growing
they wore turned down, and at the proper tim<
the whole field, including the fallow, wag pu
in with wheat. A few weeks ago, the crof
was harvested, and each part kept separately
thrashed, and the grain measured. The resul
5 was that the fallow produced double the quanf
tity of the buckwheat portion ; and the oats
* four limes that of the fallow! The whole
" field was precisely alike, and each portion re.
1 ceived precisely the game treatment. Thii
| being the case, we should like to gee the
cause of this marked d fibrcnce satisfactorily
I explained/'
] Shoes.
TOR Subscriber has now on hand a vory
extensive assortment of Shoes, suitable
| for all seasons, which he will sell very cheap.
! D. MALLOY.
I i April 13, 1840.
;' 23 _tf_
Umbrellas
JUST received a good assortment of Silk
and Ginghaims Umbrellas.
! DUNLAP &MARSHALL.
American Phrenological
Journal.
In the present state of the pub ic mind,
probably no other instrument or means what- ]
ever, can te rendered efficacious in promul-1
gating, defending, and establishing the prm. i
ciples of Phrenology, as a well conducted
Journal. It is unnecessary to state the particu'ar
advantages which a regular periodical
possesses over all other agencies; or to urge
5 ; the importance of having, in this country, such
8 j a medium as it affiirdsto make known to the
8 public the facts and principles cf the science.
} The objects of this Journal are to preserve
f from oblivion the most interesting of the very
, numerous facts confirmatory and illustrative
the truth of phrenology; to record the history
p and progress of the science; to show its true
i bearings on the education (physicial, intellec"
j 1 tual, and moral); on the naiure and treatrnen1
of insanity; on jurisprudence and criminal log..
f : islation; on mental and moial philosophy; and
J to point out various applications to the imr
j proveinent of the institutions, manners, and
svstnms ofsnripfv
i -J ? J '
Original essays on phrenological subjects
will form part of the Journal, and also reviews
t of phrenological and anti-phrenological works;
. and, a6 often as practicable, we shall transfer
3 ! to its pages, the best articles in the Edii.burg
I Phrenological Journal. There are already en5
j listed as contribuiors to the work, many of
f the ablest writers and b st penologists in the
country, as well as several foreign correspou
dents. We hope, as it progresses, to embody
D in its pagps nearly all the matter published on
the science which is of particular interest to
* the puidie, or can be of permanent value for future
refeience. Vv e shall frequently accoin
pany our facts and delineations of character
with illustrative cuts.
It ,s not with the desire or expectation of
' gain that it is offered to the community, but
" ; from far higher considerations?from a desire
to know and to promulate truth. It will be
n obvious to all, that a woik of this character
must depend chiefly for support on the voluntary
\ patronage and co.operations of those who are
interested in the subjects it discusses, and it is
^ hoped that the friends of the science w ill nut
only encourage it by their own subscriptions,
f but that tiiey will make efforts to extend its
^ circulation in the various parts of the country
. where they may reside. No pains or expense
will be spared on the part of the proprietors to
r render the work worthy of a liberal support.
TERMS.
The American Phrenological Journal and
Miscellany is published on the first of every
month?the volume commencing in October.
2, Each number contains 48 octavo pages,
8 making a volume of nearly GOO pages, got up in
i superior style in regard to both paper and cxi
ecuiion.
i 3. The work will be furnished at ?2 per vo.
lump for one copy, or $8 for three copies, or
$5 for volumes I. II. and III.; in all cases in
advance, and postage paid. This work is pub^
lisncd on the cash system, and it is in consid1
j eration cf payment being required in advance
D | ihat its terms are put so low.
- j 0*AH letters, of business or communications
- 1 or the work, should be addressed to the Edi**
t ' of the Atner. Phren. Jour, Philadelphia.
.Elementary Books.
For Sunday and Common Schools.
\ ATTN ION Primers, Union Spelling Book.
' *J u mon Hymns, Union (^uculions, Browns
^ Catechism, Cheap Testaments, Shorter Cate
cliisin, Lovcll's Young pupils First Book, Worr
cstor's Primer, GallaiiHel's Picture Definer.
j j Young Header, New York Reader, Child's
i Reader, Worcester's second Book, Webster's
r ; American and Elementary Spelling Books,
0 Dilworth's and Town's Do. together wi'.h a full
n assortment of the more advanced English and
s Classical Scho ! Books received during this full
; at the Bookstore. A liberal discount made to
* j Teachers who purchase in quantities to supply
" ! their Schools.
u j December 27,1839.
7 if
For sale at the Bookstore.
4SERON by the Rev. J. C. Coit, dcliv
livered in the Presbyterian Church in Che.
|| raw. "upon the occasion of the Sc.ni.centenary
i cclobration; prepared for the pres.*, and published
a j by the author, as a tcstimo iy against the estab.
>t j lishod religion in the Uuitcd States " Price 525
r ; cents.
. j August4th, 18-10. 28?tf
' | Stale of South Carolna.
' DARLINGTON DISTRICT.
' In Onpinaryb Office, Septemlier 21st, 1840.
r J Joshua Pollard, Applicant, vs. John Goodson,
v\ El ins Goodson, William Goodson, Josiali
K | Goodson, John Kirven and Nancy his wife,
j Benjamin Lucas and Margaret his wife,
K lodsooodson. James Goodson, Hamilton
Goodson, Arrena Goodson,^ Charlotte
Gcxlgon, Abigail Goodson, VV illiam Pollard,
Wright Pollard. Calvin Rhodes and
Sarah his wiP1, Frederick Woodlmm and
Mary Ann liis wife, Wm. H Ward and
: Martha his wife, and Allen Fort and .YJary
liis wife?Defendants.
IT appearing to my satisfaction that John Goodson,
Eli ? Good son, William Goodson, Josiah
, Goodson, Elias Goodson, James Goodson, 11amj
ilton Goodson, Arrctm Goodson, Charlotte Goodson,
Abigail Goodson, William Pollard, Wright
Pollard, Frederick Woodham and Mary Ann his
wife, William F. Ward and Martha his wif , and
i Allen Fort and sn li s wife Defendants in the
above stated ease, reside without the limits of this
I Suite. It is therefore ordered that they do apjiear
I and object to the Division or sale of the Real
' Estate ofThomas Goodson deceased on or befote
the first of January next or their consent to the
same will be entered of record.
ERVlN 13. RRUNSON.
0. D. D.
September 30,1840.
40 12t
Georgetoxcn Ste in Saxv
f l\Jill /*V?v Ss/iTp
I " ""-I - ?
1 1TAM disposed to sell this small hut valuable
1 Jl Mill. When in perfect order, she will cut
? j from two to 3.000 feet per dry, and grind 40 to
* i 70 bushels of Corn. The situation is one of the
t i l**st in the state. The Jxit on which the Mill
) | stands, and those attached, extend quite across the
f 1 Peninsula and afford room enough tor the erectl
j tiing a large mill and the necessary out-buildings j
for the hands The home demand for lumber is
equal to all the mill can cut. With the Mill, I
will also sell Logs enough to employ her for 6
' months. To prevent needless applications the price
" is fixed at $3,000 cash?or $3,500 payable in 1,
} 2, and 3 years, with interest from date, and np
* proved security, with a mortgage of the property"
r E. WATERMAN.
Georgetown, August it2. 1840, 4*2 2ui
11 a ts,
JUST Received a large assortment of Mens,
ojs, and Children* Straw and Leghorn
Hats.
ALSO,
Gents and Youth's Fur Hats, for summer wear,
al! of which will bo sold cheap by
D. MALLOY.
April 13, 1840.
23 tf
SOU TH CAROLINA. > (u the. Common 1
Chesterfield District. \ Pleas.
Ranald McDonald i Declaration
vs. [ in debt in At.
John McKay. ) tichincnl.
WHEREAS the Plaintiff in the above
stated ease, this day filed his Declara.
! tion against the Defendant who is absent from
j and without the limits of this Slate (as it is said)
i and having neither wife or attorney known j
j within the same. It is ordered tint the Defcndaut
do appear and plead to the Dccralaiion
aforesaid within a year and a day. from the date
hereof, otherwise final ami absolute judgment
i will bo awarded against him by defaultTURNER
BRYAN, C C. C. P
! Office of Common Picas, J
March 20, 1840. )
27 cv m 31 v
! Sept. 16 1840 No 44 if
i iroTios"
THE Ilopewell Baptist Church of Chesterfield,
will Petition the Legislature at its
' next session for an Act of Incorporation.
WW. A. AI J 01 t'h. Clerk.
Septembers, 1840.
44 1 m f 3 in
! For S.ule.
A TRACT on the Deciriue* of Election and
Reprobation, by Rev. James II. Thouiwcil.
Also, a Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine
, concerning Justification.
| May 1st, 1640. 25 if
Carpenter's Tools.
Til E subscriber has just received a very expensive
assortment of Carpenter's 'Tools,
i among which are, Double and Single, Cast Steel
I Iron, Jack, Smoothing, Fore, and Jointer
| Planes, Astragals, Beads, Dado's, Hollows and
Rounds, Nosings, Grecian Ovaio's, Qu'rk <). G.
Reeding, Rahbii, Side Rabbit, Raising, arid Sasli
I Planes, Sash Cord, Coves for steps, Table
Planes, Torus Beads and Cornice Planes, Ro
' inati (), G. and Fillets, Fillcttsler*. Snipes Bills,
rViliiur Flnnrinir. imd Plow Planes.
: "v%,,,wi o* -? - , ?
; Plane Irons, Oil Stone*, Key Hole Tenant,
and Panel, (land, Cross Cut and Frame Saws.
Screw Slide ortiCe, urvd A a? I it g Guagi s
I Augurs, assorted qualities, Mortice, Socket, and
Firmer, Chisels and Gouges, Plate and Iron
I Squares, Side Devils, Spoko Shaves, Locks,
Hinges, Sprigs, Nails, Brads. Ac.
A LSO
Collins'Club, Hand and Broad Axes, Ohio
and Pennsylvania Patterns, Haminers, Shingling
and Lathing Hatchets, Ac.
Tho above were purchased low and for cash
( of the best manufacturers, and will be sold cheap
by
D. M ALLOY,
number 22<I, 1?39. 2>l
The Preacher,
OR Three Hundred and Forty sketches of
Original Sermons selected from thewan!
userripts of two eminent Divines of the Inst
century with an essay on the Composition of a
Sermon.
For sale it the Bookstoro
Deembnr 27,1839. 7
; ^PRODUCE
J Commission Business
npilE Subscriber offers bis servic s in the
JL Commission business, for the sale and shiji.
mmt of Country Produce.
Ho will receive in wtoie anil sell any article
of produce free of storage lor commission of
2? per cent where the articles are icithoui
limits; when limited a reasonable storage will
bo chuiged.
Ho will ship cotton or other Produce to Nfw
York or Chari eston, making liberal cash
advances for a Co omission of per cent, on
mo cjibii advanced,
lie ko"ps constantly on hancl d-vcry large
stock of Grockrries with a mixed Block of otli- \
or Goods, all of which ho will sell at the lowest ,
prices wholesale or retail for cash or produce.
The Subscriber flatters himself that hisoxton. ;
five acquaintance in the upp'-r and adjoining I
Counties of North Caroli a will enaiublc hint to
receive a liberal patronage. * )
D. MALLOY. 1
Cheraw So. Ca. Sept. 5, 1810.
The "Western Carolinian" Salisbury, and
"Charlotte Journal" will insert the uhovo twico
a mor th for three months and forward their accounts
for payment D. / LLOY.
State of South Carolina.
DAliLlNGTON DISTRICT.
In the Court or Common Plea*.
M. W. Hunter Sur*v. "J Dee. on sealed
of Hunter & DuBose I Note, in Foreign
vs. j Attachment.
B E. DuBose. J
THE Plaintiff in the above stated ease having !
filed his Declaration in iny office this dny ,
( and the Defendant having neither wife nor Attor- t
ney within the limits of the said State upon whom
a copy of this attachment could he served.
On motion ofG. W. & J. A. Dargan Plantifl's
Attorneys. It is ordered that B E. DuBose do
plead or demur to the same, within a year and a
day from the date hereof or final ami absolute
judgment shall be awarded and given him.
If is also ordered that a copy ofrhis order l>e ;
published in the Farmers* Gazette once every three i
months for the siwce of a year and a day- (
S. WILDS DUBOSE. C.C. P. \
ot l?jll
Il/IITKS UllItT, >'V|ii 4-?i
46 1 cv 3 in 1 y
Lard.
**000 LBS LEAF LARD'forsaie
** by A. P. LACOSTE.
SoptomlxT 30, 1840.
1 or Cash only.
THE Subscriber takes this method of saying
to his Customers, that after this day he will
sell no article in the Grocery Line on a credit;
and Dry goods and Hardware only to such
persons as arc prompt and nunctua] in their
payments.
D.M ALLOY
Jnnnnrv 1, 1840. 8 tf
| Nails.
! M KEGS Nails, and Brads, all sizes, for
sale hy D. MALLOY.
April 13, 1840.
23 if
Sugar. Coffee, Salt, and
MOLASSES.
A LARGE Stock of the above now in store
and for sale very cheap for Cash,
I D. MALLOf.
April 13, ItHO. 23J ,
I II I
State of South Carolina. ^ *
C'hf.iiaw District in Equitv S
Ci'Iiu Goodsoh At. Al. i
Adinx. A Adiiua. of > Bill
Ja . cs Goodsun j for
v*. , account
William Beck & S
Ann Beck At. Al. j[ Partiiioo
Heirs of Jas. Gooddon (,'
It appearing to niy satisfaction that Arlatid
Smith and Elizabeth Smith his wife and Luciiida
McPhcrson defendants in tliis case, ilts ?1?sent
frt.m and reside without the limits of this
Stale. It is, on motion of Sims & Ervin Cum*
plainants Solicitors, ordered that tlic said At*
land Smith and Elizabeth Smith and Locinda
McPhcrson do appear and plead answer or demur
to the Complainants Bill on or before the
first day of January next, and that in default
thereof the said Bill us >o then will bo pro coufesso.
It is a'so Ordered that noti' r thereof be published
in the Farmers, Gazette .wice a mouth for
the space of three months.
GEO. W.DARGAN,
September 71 h J840. C. E. C. D.
No. 44 2 n m I 2m.
Bacon, Flour, and Meal,
CONSTANTLY ON HAND, and fur aale
J at the LOWEST market price by
D. MALLOY.
. - -? ? < . ?i f
Now Music.
RECENTI.Y received at the Rook Store a
supply embracing a considerable variety
of Songs Sacn d, Seutimmul and Ilumoroua
also Marches, Waltzes, Ac. and jVluaic paper.
DpopuiIMT 4th, Ir39
i he Path Finder.
OR the Inland Sea by the Author of tho
' Pioneers," "Last of the Mohic.ins."
"Prjir<v" Ac. Ac.?Also ''Homeward Bound"
and "Home as found'* by the same Author?for
sale at the Book Store.
April 3D Ic40.
JJ5 lf_
The Subscriber has just received, and w
keep constantly on hand.Cotton Yarn and Tw ine
at wholesale, from the Manufactory of Rocking- jn^
ham.
GEO. GOODRICH.
Chnraw, Jan. 1840. 10 if
Roberts's <Silk Manual.
A New supply of this work jual received at
the Book Store, prico 37$.
April iJU io<*u.
25 tf
ISotice.
1 A in now receiving part-of my stock o.
Spring anu Summer Good?, comprising t
general assortment of seasonable Goods, winch
I will sell low for cash. Purchasers will please
call and examine for themselves.
AIJSO,
Will be kept constantly on hand a simply el
German Bolting Cloths, equal to any used in
this country.
MALCOM BUCHANAN.
March 13th. 1840. 18 tf
Hoods and Palm leaf fiats.
7D0Z. White and Colored Hoods, and 8
duz. assorted Palm Leaf flats, just received
by DUN LAP & AKSHALL.
July 27, If40. 37?tf
PHILADELPHIA SHOES.
AT Pair Ladies Kid Slippers and 45 P.iir
Ladies Kid Walking Shoes, just receiv
ed by DUNlJVP &, Al ? I /II.
July 27 1840. 37?tf
BOOK BINDING^
THE subscribers have established thomsehos
in the above line of business in Cher w
and offer theirsorviccs to its citizens.
u. BAZENCOURT, A CO
Cherww. S. C.. Jan. 2f>.
D. Malloy
nAS Now on hand a supply of all kinds of
Goods suitable for the trade, which h:
will hell ah cheap us can be had in this uia^>
k-'t.
Persons wishing gnod bargains will please call
on liiin before they purchase. *
April 13 1840.
Uunlap Cf Marshall
HEKEBY give notice that they will continue
to sell their Dry Goods on It, on the usual
credit to punctual customers.
'J le y will sell their Groceries at the lowest
prices for cash only.
The very short credit at which groceries can
now bo bought, amounting with the exchange
almost to Cash, with their limited capital compels
hem to the adoption of this course.
AT ATE OFSOUTII CAROLINA.
In Equity Marion District.
H. E. Cannon 1
vs I Supplemental
William Whitfield^.*- > Bill
llcnry A. Veiey and j for ucpt.
Emily Vestry J
IT Apjiertring that William Whitfield, Henry
A. Vesey, aiul Emily Vescy, Defendants in
this case, are absent from and reside without the
limits of this State. On motion of Dargun Corn*
plainnnt's Solicitor, it is ordered, tliat the said
William Whitfield, Henry A. Vesey, and Emily
Vesey. do apjiear and j dead answer or demur to
the Complainant, supplemental, on or before the
first day of Dccemls;r next, and that in default
tliprt'of, 1 lie said Bill be taken pro coniewo.
It ? aL?o ordered that notice of this order be
pnblUlied in the Fanners' Gazette trice a month
lor the *lrace of three months
ED. B. WIIEELER. r
August 6, 1840.
43 2 m f 3 m
Dun lap & Marshall
EARNESTLY "equest all persons indebtea
to them to nuke an early settlement of thei:
accounts. They will invariably add the in*
terest however trifling- the amount on ill
accounts not paid within ten days.
January 1st 1840. 8tf
New Goods.
JOHN C. WADSWORTH
JJAS Now in Store a supply of
GROCERIES,
DRY GOODS,
HARDWARE, ^
SIIOES, *
HATS,
BONNETS,
SADDLERY,
CROCKERIES,
GLASSWARE, cfr.
ALL of which will be sold at the lowest market
price. Persona wishing1 to purchase in Uric
market will do well to call.
April 30.h 1840.
Garden Seeds.
1 INTEND having for sale at the Bookstore
tltiH Fall and Winter, a freah and full supply
of G;?rdi-u Seeds. * ^
JOHN WRlO0f.
Cheraw, August 4th, 184J. 38?If