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^ lay, we quote the impressive language uttered from one of our pulpits by an eloquent Divine: u The intelligence of this morning, my Christian friends, has filled thousands of hearts, and will fill thousands more, with sadness and anxiety. The Chief Magistrate of our Union is no more ! One . short month since, amidst the breathless attention of an immense multitude, with clear and solemn, voice, he called God to witness that he would faithfully discharge the duties of his high office. He has now gone to appear in the presence of that God. The praises of his friends, the denunciations of his enemies arc alike awed into silence before this dispensation of mysterious Providence. Amid the busy achemings of man the Supreme Ruler has manifested his power; and we read with trembling sadness his awful lesaon, of the uncertainly of human life, the emptiness of earthly glory." * You have seen?how recently and j sadly seen, that the summit of human j power affords no security from the shafts | of death. The illustrious man, lately al-j roost a nation's idol, now lies in the calm | deep slumber which knows no waking till t the final day. Those deeds of service to his country which were so familiar to the lips of thousands, and that fidelity to his country's good, lately so fervently expres. sed, and as we trust so sincerely felt? these and all else that graced hi3 cha-acter have followed him to the bar of the j just and *he merciful Judg". Before that bar, my friends, we also are to an. pear. We know not how soon. M { we sou9e the present time as to prepare I ourselves for that awful hour." Immediately after the decease of the President, Mr. Webster, Jr. Chief Clerk io the Department of State accompanied by Mr. Beall, an officer of the Senate, sat out for the residence of the Vice President, in Virginia, bearing to him the following letter. ; " Washington, April 4,184!. ?*To John Tuler, " Vice President of the United States, j Sir ; It has become our most painful i duty to inform you that William Henry Harrison, late President of the United States, has departed this life. "Tnis distressing event took place this day, at the Presidents Mansion in this | city, at thirty minutes before one in the j morning. ** We loose no time in despatching the Chief Clerk ir? the State Department as a special messenger to bear you these melancholy tidings. ? We have the honor to be, with the highest regard, vour obedient servants, DANIEL WEBSTER, Secretary of State. . : . . THOMS EWING, rV ** Secretary of the Treasury, \ . ' JOHN BELL, Secretary of War. JOIIN J. CRITTENDEN, Attorney General. FRANCIS GRANGER, Postmaster General. REPORT OF THE PHYSICIANS. Washington, April 4, 1841. DkarSik: In compliance with the nintiMt m*Hft to us bv vourself and the \ . ?, other gentlemen of the Cabinet, the at. | tending and consulting Physicians have drawn up the abstract of a report on the President's case, which I herewith transmit to you. Very respectfully, your oh. cdient servant, THO. MILLER, Attending Physician. To the Hon. D. Webster, 1 Secretary of State. On Saturday, March 27. 1891, President H arrison, after several days' previous : 1 indisposition, was seized with a chill and other symptoms of fever. The next day . Pneumonia, with congestion of the liver , and lerangement of the stomach and bow- ( els was ascertained to exist. The age , and debility of the patient, with the immediate prostration, forbade a resort to general blood-letting. Topical depletion, |1 blistering, and appropriate internal remc. j dies, subdued, in a great measure, the disease of the lungs and liver, but the stomach and intestines did not regain a healthy condition. Finally, on the 3 I of April, at 3 o'clock P. M., profuse diarrhoea came on, under which he sank, at thirty minutes to 1 o'clock, on the morning of the fourth. j The last words uttered by the President, as heard hv D". Worrtbi.ngtou I were these : Sir, I wish you to under- J stand the true principles of the Govern- | " v i I ment. I wish them carried out. i a>K i nothing more." THO. MILLER, M D , Attending Fnysician. FRED. MAY M. D , N. W. VVORTHINGTON, M. D., J. C. HALUM. D., ASHLON ALEXANDER, M. I)., Consulting Pnysicians. The funeral of the President was to take place on Wednesday. Appropriate orders were of course issued from the Heads of the Army and Navy Departments, to shew suitable re. spect to the memory of the late President. Agitation.?It.has been said that the decision of the question whether or not a j .U. S. Bank. sh^jLbe chartered by the ?ext Congress will depend upon the vote I ?? of Col. Pbeston. Although a large ma- the a jority of the States are Whig, and be- Whij lieved to be certainly favorable to a National Bank, yet some of these States are still represented by 44 Democratic" Sena- rrom tors, and a few Senators who have been sj,ew elected as Whigs will oppose the chartering 12,0( of a bank. For the purpose of intimida- provi ting Col. Preston and driving him either p'ace to resign, or oppose the chartering of a bank, if he is now favorable to it, the J Columbia Carolinian lately proposed that jg to public meetings should be held in the dif- chan, ferent districts by those who are opposed must to a bank to express their opinion on the 'on subject, and obtain from Col. Preston an 1n*? expression of his. It fu. ther proposes that, j in case Col. Preston should not promise to . vote against chartering a bank, the Gov- congt ernor should forthwith call a meeting of ofsis the Legislature, to scold him we suppose, large for the Carolinian certainly knows the the w Legislature can neither recall its Sena- ^ ^ the o tor. nor compel him to vote on any ques- . . r vis10j tion against his will. The Charleston goutj Mercury seconds the movement of the p Carolinian, and one meeting we see has deavt been held. It was at Rockville, in St. suhje Johns' Colleton on the 31st of March.? e(*? ' The Chairman of the committee appoint- here: ed was the Hon. W. B. Seabrook.? Among the resolutions adopted one was against a National Bank, one in favor of .... that the Sub-Treasury, one against the disb . anv i trih'ilion ot (he proceeds of the public " hinds, cne in fa\or of an equal duly on all *. . says imports, and another against any duty j * at a7 on silks and wines. Another of 1 ! sessic their paradoxes is that a tax on imports is a tax on exports?a tax on wines and I Ti silks would be a tax on cotton, rice and to- provi bacco. death They ordered a copy of their resolu- dutie tions to be forwarded to Col. Preston, Vice with an enquiry whelher or not he will office vole for a national bank. Incase of his Mr.' giving an affirmative answer to this en. j By It quirv, they directed the chairman to call j P^i the meeting together again at the same i there place. Mr. Seabrook made a speech in I the * favor of the resolutions before they were R^pr adopted. case A correspondent of the Charleston rtnd 1 Courier ascribes to Mr. Seabrook the au? ded f thorship of these proceedings, and ex. rpj presses the opinion that he did not move rg>cej, in the matter of his own accord, but at ^ t( * -* * ** ta ti mi trie suggestion ot mr. uamoun. ine fon? g reason aligned for this opinion is that m0re Mr. Seabrook "began to agitate against Th Mr. P." the day he left Charleston, after jor having, according to his own repeated nex| declarations, sat up late the preceeding night in company with Mr. Calhoun. The Th Columbia Chronicle also intimates that chani the movement of the Carolinian in the repca matter was prompted by a suggestion from holde the same quarter. S.ieh suspicions (for quori the are confessedly nothing more) may selvej be utterly groundless. We notice them chart only as among the on dils in the political on ^ circles. They During the discussions which prceed- Jorlty ed the late Presidentail election, the lead- Until ing, and indeed, the only prominent ques. atl(l 1 tion before the country was, Sub-Treasw thoris ry or no Sub-Treasury ??or in other a't,es words Sub Treasury or National Bank ? s* For, on all hands, a National Bank is nient considered the only alternative to the authc Sub.Treasury ;?the pet-bank system is behal given up every where. The decision Pena' was in favor of a bank by the largest ma. them jority of votes ever given in this country 8ay ^ on any contested question. Of the 26 yers 1 atnl^e irJiiph rnmnnsp tho Fodnral Union. a?t* r? ? 20, or nearly four fifths, voted the ^|( Whig ticket. Several of these states are years still represented in the Senate, either en- cuif, tirely or in part by Sub-treasury mem- in W bers, whilst only one, South Carolina is . ^ represented in part by a Whig. Now ?^a| suppose it were possible by indignation ^ ^ meetings, or by an extra meeting of the ^ Legislature, to drive Col. Preston from . .. i will t Wnig ground, or from the Senate, and i ?,ty thus defeat the efforts making immediate- | days, ly to repeat the Sub-Treasury act. would j JIt it be expedient or proper to do so ? The j Ham sub-treasury s\3tcm has been condemned ! heral l?v the people. Whether thev w*ore t An(^ * ... . ' I moan right or wrong in this we do not noxv u;i- . h " . wouldertake to say. But they had a right tode- por ^ cidc, and in the exercise of this right the they have decided. They have most nn,j , nT>nii<vocallv evinced a determination hatin to abolish the system; they have the nc power to carry this determination into teen effect, and all efforts to prevent their an Q doing so must prove fruitless. Suppose, funer then, that South Carolina could for a decei time postpone their final action on the jfo subject, would it be expedient to do so ?? lutioi If the system must he abolished the soon- Rt?pr er it is done, and something permanent gross is substituted, the better for the country. Chal If South Carolina could by the legitimate totra exercise of her constitutional rights, con- and strain the other states to adhere to the system we do not deny that she would of thi be justified in doing so. But what are apart the facts? South Carolina alone, of all of du nti-Whig stales, w represented by * ad I in the Senate; whereas several mt I states are represented by anti-Whig oui tors, one of them (Tennessee) by a Cc tor who received his appointment tor the Executive, after his state had ice n herself Whig by" a majority of )0 votes. The constitution wisely des that. Senators shall hold their f s for the term of six years, and not ly during the will of their conatitu-. Now, if in the present ultra deift- a ic age, this rule of the constitution be practically abolished; if such pei ge is to b? introduced that Senators resign upon et#ry change of opin- Jj in the states which they repre- 0 is the change to be confined to one * * ' Would South Carolina, if she , effect a one sided change, in viola- ei )f both the letter and the spirit of the 80 itution, which would cause the will na : states, and these by -no means the ?* st or most populous, to prevail over ill of twenty? If a new rule is to c lopted, let it work both ways. If ther states adhere to the present prons of the constitution, why should i Carolina depart fr'dm them? ?But . ' mrposes of those who are now enDring to get up an excitement on the 0 ( ct in this state would not be answer- 101 f the change which they propose should be effected, also, in even one . e half dozen or hiore other states 8" ar!v situated. c? I fa i ice the above was in type we see "*j the Charleston Mercury disavows pcj intention of favoring the call of an mi session of the State Legislature, and it "has spoken only of meetings of pu cople having reference to the * extra Rn >n of Congress." " ^ ib Presidency.?The Constitution uh des that in case of the resignation, i or inability of the President,'the an co s of the office shall devolve upon the ^ President; and after him, upon such r as Congress shall by law designate. pU ryler, is of course, now President, tw of Congress passed in 1792, the dent of the Senate, pro tern, and if should be no President pro tem. of Senate, the Speaker of the House of ^ esentativea, is to be President, in of the death of the Vice President; a new election is, in that case, provi- J or. ?if ? '' 'oj ik Southern Magazine.?We have r^?; ved the second No. of this periodical, uy >o late to read any of the articles be- ^ joing te press. We shall notice it particularly next week. >e March No. of the Farmers' Regis, i also received. Table of contents ? week. Fi >e Directors of the Planters and Me cs Bank of Charleston, having made ted calls for a meeting of the stock. i SCI rs, without being able to procure a y. un, proceeded on the 3d inst. them. mj s to consider the amendments to their ^ er proposed by the Legislature, and Pr thalf of the directors, adopted them, th may have ascertained that a ma. an of the directors will approve this act. thevdo so, the act is in law noil , 1 (w 'oid, as not having been legally au> sed. The bank is liable to the pen, to of the act of the last session, until rei ockholdcrs either adopt the amend* th< s to their charter proposed by it, or I?1 >rize it to be done by others on their ^ - - - 811 f. We say they are liable to the * tics. We mean, if the penalties selves can be enforced ; which, to de ie least is doubtful. The best law- of in the state are of opinion they can co *3 hi Pa exander Troy Esq. for nearly thirty wl , Solicitor of the Fayetteville cir- hi in North Carolina, died suddenly th adesborough on the 20th ult. ca 7 !? , . r'cr a public meeting had in the city o1 leston, on the 8th the < following; ied utions were unanimously adopted : solved, That we highly approve and v cordially adopt the suggestion of our ^ Council to wear crape for thirty a^ r - C< solved, That the family of Genl. isou have claims not only on the liity but the justice of the country, hat the appropriation of the full ait ofone year's salary, to their relief, " I be but an inadequate compensation ie pecuniary sacrifice, incidental to J recent changes in their condition vould meet with the hearty appron of a generous people. ' solved, That a Committea of thirbe appointed, by the Chair, to select ,al rator and make arrangements, for a ou al oration, in honor of the illustrious h0 iSCd. zsofocdt That a copy of those Resois he entrusted to our immediate e esentativo, and our Senators, in Conto lay before that body, and that the rman of this meeting be requested nsrnita copy of them to the widow,. . family of the deceased. r . Zrjoived, That the Revererid Clergy s C.ty and Neck be requested to set jje a Funeral Sabbath, for the delivery an fcourses, in their respective churches so J. W . t)L.iiVLi;>l^ l, jfiiruuiim. Kv Brown Bryan, *j ^ , George Goodrich, =; n?' Duncan McNair, /' John A. Incus, ? ' 'lix Long, Town Clerk. Up H( PUBLIC MEETING. M PURSUANT lo 4 r?*o!tJiion of tha Town ca Council, the Citizen** of Clieraw and it" . :inity are requited to convene in tlin Town *!' >11 on Thurs-hiy next, 15th inst. at 5 oV.lock *' M. for the purpose of adopting suitable mens- wt 5s, as a tribute of respect to the memory of au bnkral William Henry Harrison, jn coresident of the United States. o J. W. BLAKENEY, Jntcndant. April 10, 1841. ee 22 .It gUl ' At om the National Intelligencer Wedncs- thi day April 7th. sti the new president. re' toi By the extraordinary despatch used in m< tiding the Official Intelligence to the ce President, at Williamsburg, and siliar despatch by him in repairing to the ^ it of Government, John Tyler, now esident of the United States, arrived in jn is city yesterday morning, at 5 o'clock, en id took lodgings at Brown's Hotel. r0| At 12 o'clock, all the Heads of Depart- be jnts, except the Secretary of the Navy, th< 'ho has not yet returned to the city from of 3 visit to his family,) waited upon him, of pay him their official and personal a" spects. They were received with all S*1 e politeness and kindness which charac. ^ rize the new President. He signified . 1 s deep feeling of the public calamity ,n stained by the death of President Harion, and expressed his profound sensi- ne lity to the heavy responsibilities sosud- j)( nly devolved upon himself. He spoke fa, the present state of things with great j f0, ncern and seriousness, and made known to a wishes that the several Heads of Do- Tl rtments would continue to fill the places sit tiich they now respectively occupy, and ha s confidence that they would afford all e aid in their power to enable him to CI irry on the administration of the Gov- *c nment successfully. The President then took and subscrib- . I the following oath of office: " an 1 do solemnly swear that I will faithful- g, execnte the office of President of the lh nited States, and will, to the best of my t\r ulitv, preserve, protect, and defend the CI [institution cf the United States. so April, 0, 1841. JOHN TYLER. efl n " * i xx. nr ISiSTKlU-r Ur VUlil/iUDinf _ ? . , ity and County of Via -hington, \ I, William Chanch, Caief Judge of nc e Circuit Court of the District of Coln!)io, certify that the above named John pier personally appeared oefere me is day and, although he deems himself alified to perform the duties and excr ^ se the powers and office of President cj~ i the death of William Henry Hajrlson, CQ le President of the United Slates, with- cu it any other oath thon that which he g, ,s taken as Vice President vet, as doubt-, rni ly aristy and for greater caution, took in id subscribed the . foregoing oath fore me. Apbil6, 1841. .. W.CRANCH. lvl yc From the National Intelligencer. FROM ENGLAND. Editor si Correspondence.- * * : ' New Yobk. Apbil. 4. The British Queen has arrived, sailing M r regular day, on the 10th of March, | 8a d making a passage of 24 days and I Mi me hours* The detention was in conse-1 R< apted to the solemn occasion and the qu< daneholy event, which have clothed eve r nation in morning; and that the ha; mmittee, for the selection of the Ora- cor fix the day for these religious serv;s." 8al' ?the At a meeting of the Town'Council held ant the Town Hall on Saturday the 10th 301 it. the following preamble and resolu- arr ns were, on motion, unanimously opted. Whereas, it has pleased Almighty God, ^ ry recently to remove by death, the ssident of the United States; while in i discharge of the duties of his high p6}, ice ; and whereas, in the judgment of we i Council it is becoming, that some fh tice of an event so entirely unprece- the nted in thehisory of our country, and tba afflicting to the people of this whole oni tion, should be entered upon the records tha the Town. mo Be it therefore resolved?That the SP >wn Council of the Town of Cheraw, ?V( irn with unaffected sorrow that Wilur.Henry Harrison. President of the ne lited States, departed this life at the tecutive Mansion in the city of Washgton, at thirty minutes before one ma dock on the morning of Sunday the C0] jrth of April inst. nil Resolved, That the Council desire in p8| eir corporate capacity to express their fai icere respect for the memory of the de- wii ased, and sympathy with the weeping ass rnily visited with so sudden and so awful R bereavement, and to unite with their iow.citizens in mourning this sad and an t hi y-steriou* dispensation of Providence. Resolved, That the Intendant call a _.r.i?IT^.un vei t)lic meeting 01 me citizens <n mti > d neighborhood at the Town Hall on t mrsdav next the 15th instant for the rpose of making such expression of pop- so| ir feeling as may suit the occasion. ra] Resolved, Taat the foregoing preamble un d resolutions be entered upon the re- be rds of the Council, and that a copy wo ereof signed by the Inlendant and War. Tf ns and countersigned by the Clerk be fir; blished in the Farmers' (razette. mt , frnwrv r?. ? | Mi II) 3*1 Y 3 IIIU JL IIIIV.V) wa - ? ?? en ordered on the coast or America fo e purpose of enforcing the remonstrant the British Minister against the murde McLeod !" I see nothing alarming ii this, if true, and do not believe th< itemcnt made. It, however, has ha< e effect to create some feeling here on< uch abroad. I leave American affair England for those of China. An express to England from Marseille d anticipated the overland mail. Th< ws from Macao is down to the 18th o scemhor, but the news is very unsatis ctory. Admiral Elliot had left Cantoi r England, and given np his commani Commodore Sir J. J. Gordon Bremer ,ie cause of this was the serious indispo ion of Elliot. Stanton, the missionary d been released, but the other prisoner ?rc detained by the Chinese. Fron husan there are dates to the 24th of No unber, but nothing more satisfactor >111 this quarter than from any other.? he negotiations at Canton are conduct I by Khesan on the part of the Chinese id by Capt. Elliot on the part of th nglish. The Chinese were doing ever; ing in their power to protract negotia ins, and had succeeded so far. Th fiina news in England had caused grea rrow and disappointment, and had th< feet of creating new demand and highe ices for teas. The news from France and Spain can it lie considered as important. The English markets were in an unset ;d state, for the reasons I have named ime of the English papers were calling ion the United States Bank to go int |uidation. Money avss easy at 4 pe A1? 1 AlI- ? ?.J J fiua m nr. on ine iuui, uuu uou uwu n?v ... loice securities for some time prior. 0 urse but little was done in American se irities. Politically and financially, Johi ill looked to Brother Jonathan ver uch as a child looks to a bod of live coal winch he has burned his fingers. 'My dear,' said a gentleman to a ladj iiom he ihovglU to have married, 'd< >u wish to make a fool of me?' 'No, plied the lady, 'Nature has saved me th< >uhlo.* . .. # ?'* -t . MARRIED. At Chesterfield C. H. on the 31st o arch, by the Rev. Mr. McPherson, Mr muel Wilson, of Darlington, to Mis ary Robeson, daughter of Peter L ibesoo Esq. ?fice of the most boisterous weather >r experienced by the Queen, or per>9 any of the steamers, and the storm itinued for ten days in the teeth of the pen, and crippled her in the use of her Is and paddies. Twenty days out re was discovered to be a lack of fuel, ] the captain put into Halifax on the :h, and left there on the 1st of April, iving at Quarantine at two o'clock this rning. The news from England is deemed imtant, and in reference to American iirs had created a great panic there, e imprisonment of McLeod, the susision of specie payments, and the ap. irance of Mr. Pickens' warlike report, nt to England in quick succession, e alarm created by the appearance of i latter document caused more feeling in either of the others, and the imprisnent of McLeod, in the anticipation t he would be tried and hanged, much re, of course, than tho suspension of cie payments. The second of the ;ntsl have named reached London on nday, the 7th of March, and we have ivs to 12 o'clock on the 10th. The pa s of the 8th were full of fight, and alst every remark in the press touching oerican affairs seemed to have been ide under great excitement. The nments in the papers of the 9th were Ider and in better temper, and the news pers of the 10th, leaving American afrs altogether, are taken up pretty much th China news. Mr. Pickens and his lociates upon the committee of Foreign Nations who agreed with him are spoken in a maoneralmost too rudely to repeat, d in all their representations touching i capture of the Caroline and the charter of that mischievous and ill-fated ssel as deliberately falsifying the truth. The effect of the news had been disa9? >us upon American securities at first, le fall had been getieral. U. S. Banb d for ?112. They were, however, lying a little when the Queen left, and der the impression that all difficulties tween the United States and England tuld finally be settled by negotiation, le excitement consequent upon the it news had subsided, and with thinking m the remarks of ex-President Adams r. Granger, Mr. Fillmore, and Mr, 11 1 1 'I? - O*allavinn tHp mreu, imu me cuai ui .... liferent feeling naturally excited bj i appearance of the paper drawn up bj i Chairman of the Foreign Committee In regard to this noisy report I find on reference to the proceedings of th< tuse of Lords on the night of the 8th oi arch, an inquiry made by Earl Mount shell to Lord Melbourne in reference t< s authenticity of the document of Mr, ckeiis. The reply of Lord Melbourm is simply that he had no doubt of it: thenticity, but that he had no officia lormation of the fact. The charactei the document gave rise to the doubts it c mind of the Earl. He could not con ive, he said, of a pacific nation holding ch menacing language to a friend.? nerican affairs were also alluded toil b House of Commons an the 5th in int, and a proposition was submitted ti iiovc the troops from the disputed terri y. Nothing was done. The onlj jmbers, however, who spolce, anc long them were Hume, O'Brien, an< nart, were anxious for peace. Per con i to this, however, I see in the London mcs what the editor interprets as ar Jer for sending more troops to Canada addition to the squadron which had beer gaged on the Syrian coast. *?A squad - ? Timno * nf t#?n sail hai CHER AW PRICES CURRENT. Anux lt? ARTICLES. M* | $ C. | $ Bjefin market, lb 0 5 a 0 7 Bacon from wa?ons, lb 1 a f ???by retail, lb 8 a 10 Butter lb 15 a 80 Beeswax lb 21 a IS Bagging yard 88 a 18 Bale Rope lb 10 a 11| Coffee lb 18| a IS Cotroif, lb 7| a 10J Corn, scarce bush 40 a SO Floor, Country, brl 5 a S 85 Feathers fm war., none lb 40 a 45 Fodder, lOOlbe 75 a 101 Glass, window 8x10, 50ft 3 85 a 3 374 , .. 10x18, 50ft 3 60 a 3 7 Hides, croon lb 5 a dry lb >0 a Iron lOOlbe 5 50 a 6 SO Indigo lb J* 51 Liiue cask 4 a 4 50 Lard scarce lb 11 a Leather, sole lb 88 85 Lead, bar ib 10 a Logwood lb 10 a 15 . Molasses N. O. gal 40 a 50 . ; gal 35 a 40 Nails, cut, assorted lb 7| a 4 1 , wrought lb 16 ft IS Oats bush 33 ft 40 Oil. curriers est 75 ft 1 ?, lamp gal i 25 a , linseed gal I 10 a 1 2* ; Paint*, while lead , keg 3 25 a 4 5# i , Span, brown lb 8 a 19 , Pork 1001b* 5 50 a < , The River is in good boating order, aod rising. A gentle rain fell from Saturday night till noon on Monday, which may , possibly cause a freshet, tho' not very i high. ATTENTION! J CHER AW LIGHT INFANTRY. - "MTou * are hereby ordered I 9 JL to parade at the MarP ket Square on Saturday the H* 18th inst. at half past 10 fflM o'clock, armed and equipped as the by laws direct, in full WTj summer uniform. I Inn / By order of Capt. Benton, i WW D. W. MOORE, 1 M 0.9. ' ' April 1*, 1841. ' 22 It JUST RECEIVED , METHODIST Hymn. 12.no. , ITJL do do 9imo. sheep, calf, , and Moro. c<?, M thodist Discipline Isle eJiti? i, ' Watsons Diction ry, . Life of Wesley, , L'fe of Dr. Clark, . Family Bible, fboep and cilf, . AT of which wik be sold at the Near York pri-ee. JOHN WRIGHT. > April 10, 1841. 22 tf j ?? 3 NEW BOOKS* 1 llff ITCH ELL'S Primary Geography, ITA Women of England, Webstors Svo Dictionary, 1 Sketches of Con>picum< living ehanctera of France with a portrait of i hi.ua, r Walker on Beauty, . do Intormarri gs, - ww _ ?i m MM. nuroni rucnii, Smith'* Memoirs and Comic Misoetlaaie*, Young Lady's Fuend, > Heroin* of Sacr-d (iwtory, . Mi*a L slijf Complete Co kerjr, , Just received at the , BOOK STORE. i April 15, 1941. 22 tf ]?EWOOOM. THB Subscriber h s received by St tamer* Swan and Oseoli a feah and ge icral ae> ' sortment of Spring and Summer go-xla which 1 together w itb hit stock of gr ccriea make# hie oBHOrtinent quite doairable. He will aell on the 9 beat ttrina for caah or to punctual euatomera ou r tho usual credit. Hia frienda and castora-ie are iuviled to call and ?*xa nine bis atock. 9 D. S. HARLLEE. r April 8,1841. I 22 4t 1 A LIST OF LETTERS j ? EMA1N1NG in the Poat Office at Cher aw d J[% S. C. if they an out called fo- before the fi at of July nozt will be aent to the General Peat Office as doad letters. 8 BROWN BRYAN, P. M. 3 B?Misa Martha Br ?wn Andrew Buchanan, f C?F H Collur A D Campbell- N?- i-lKw.p6.il . Courtney WC2, Crocket R H Canipin Cliaa Mra. Curry Chariea A D?Rrak" Liura Mia* Dinwid<!ie Jaa M 9 -1 Dickey Elizabeth Mm 2 Dickson W i> Davis . William. i. K?Ellerb |E izxbrth Mm. E laa Eliza Mra. F? Farlow Wil i.m A Furman Ri-ffiard See. G?Goodrich George s H?Husbands Lewis I) Husbands Hamilton - v n a ww _ r _ f /e Q Harrison J n z nunu mi v J?Jordan Richard Irby Rebecca MIm ,r L?Leowentrill G M 2 Latta Andrew W Lazarus James M?McRae John C McCall H K McDonald " Daniel McCalt Dani 1 McMillan James McNsbb 0 Duncan McMillan Clarisa G. McCollough e JD. y P?Powell Martha Miss, Pervis Cbarlea G Perkin's Martha. e Q?Quick Thomas. -" * 1 R?Rakestraw Ann. 9 S?Smith Mary M Mrs. Smith Martha r Miss, Smith Margaret J. % Smith Charles M. Suries Margaret, Smith John M. i- T?Turrentine Wm. Thomas Samuel TranthamJ. W?Williston Hiram Wet more Geo. I. B. VVest Mr. White C. M. Wise David. E April 1, 1841. 0 21 3t 1 EMANUEL 4- SOLOMONS f ^1"AVE received per Steamer Svran and are now opening a general iprnew ?* * articles in their line amongst vrMefc be n had ' y Wines, Philadelphia fortif AK , Liquors, Pale Scotch "' i ** Cordials, London k> Preserves. Leroioii and ?dherSprDpe, Jeliy, Green and Drk? Pr^fes^ f Nuts, Spioea. r> SarJines, Bologna Sausage^ ? Herrings, Pifceepjle Cheese, Col Fi?h, Goih^ Cheese, ' *'4t1 To nato Catsup, i Gflfhotr!lButte% / Pepper Sauce, Bndersiood'a Pioklcs, * Mustard, OWwe Oil, Sperm and Charlaston C-xWwhw,, f Together with an assortment of tUnjNionftrx . and Fancy articles which Vhey wH\ eefl low and . hope to reoeive a continuation of mIUc ftror, April 7,1841. 21 St