THE SOUL'S DEFIANCE.*
I said to sorrow's awful storm
That beat against my breast,
Rage on ??thou may'st destroy this
form,
And lay it low at rest;
But still the spirit that now brookB
The tempest, raging high,
Undaunted, on its fury looks
With steadfast eye.
I said to Penury's meagre train,
Come on !?your threats I brave
And crush rne to the grave;
Yet siill the spirit that endures.
Shall mock your force the while,
And meet each coid, cold grasp of yours,
With bitter smile.
I said to cold Neglect and Scorn,
Pass on !?I heed you not;
Ye may pursue me till my form
And being are forgo: ;
Vet still the spirit, which you see
Undaunted by vour wiles
Draws from its own nobility
Its high born smiles.
\
I said to Friendship's menaced blow,
Strike deep ??my heart shall bear j
Thou canst add one bitter woe
To those already there ;
Yfer stii! the spirit, that sustains
This last severe distress.
Snail smi e upon its keenest pains,
And scorn redress
I said to Death's uplifted dart,
Aim sure !?-Oh, why de ay ?
Thou wilt not find a fearful heart?
A weak, reluctant prey;
For still the spirit, firm and free,
Triumphant in ihe last dismay,
Wrapped in its own etornttv,
Shall smiling pass away.
This Poem was written many years ago,
by a lady and written from experience and
feeling.
LAW AND LAUGHING.
" Oh, I am stabb'd with laughter.^
The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers.'
Law was made to be laughed at. LawVers
are the greatest laughers upon earth;
?nd their extensive practice in this way is
all down in the sleeve, which was the original
cause why counsellors' gowns were
furnished with room to slip the head in j
along with the arm. All men should re- j
spect the law, and keep it, also, at a re-'
apectable distance. We once heard of a j
man who lived till he was ninety without j
ever getting into the law, and he was the !
1 ' ' 11 niror lived. A !
merriest oia iciiuw mat
neighbor started a law suit against him,
and the old man died immediately. Law
was made to be laughed at; and those who
do not laugh with one side of the mouth,
will probably with the other. It is a very
subtle sort of medicine, and " kill or cure"
should always be stamped upon the label.
There are two sorts of people who can go
into law with safety, the man who has
nothing to lose and the Sir Giles Overreach,
who can fee his judges as well as
his lawyers.
MlVe must not make a scarecrow of the
law," nor do we wish to take away a
tingle feather of its dignity, but we re- i
commend to all in need of advice J
(charging no fee for the same) the ideas
of a philosopher whom we heard discours-1
ing yesterday. He stood upon the curb j
stone, embracing an awning post, and
contemplating sundry legal gentlemen !
passing in and out of a court of justice oppjaite*
>
M There's where I'm lucky," said he,j
taking an irregular step, and grasping the j
nost more firmly as he came to a stand j
again. "There'* where I'm hicky?ha, I
ha, ha !?they've never got me into law.!
and I laugh at 'em all, judges, and juries,
and lawyers and clients?hie?and plain-;
tiffi^ and, that's my philosophy. Now, if i
that gen?hie?tleman with three hooks
ainder his arm and spectacles on his nose.;
.should come ovei and request me to favor
him with a suit in chancery?ha, ha, ha, j
lw !?poor devil?hie?how I would j
laugh at him I Philosophy is a great j
thing?hie! I never was brought up to)
the bar but once, and then I performed a
popular piece of " unwritten music" upon
any nose with my ten fingers, and politely
signified to the judge that he 'could'nt
come it V Ha, ha, ha, ha! laughing has
always seemed to me a more profitable
business than fighting?hie! When a;
m?n'? in a nassion with vou, and wants to j
go to law, laugh him out of it and he's
. jour friend forever! That's mv philoso.
phy?hie Law! L-A-VV, Law! Theglorious
uncertainty of the law?hie ! ha,
ha, ha, ha ! Now there goes a poor devil
into court, looking as melancholy as a
musquitoe in January. I wonder how
much money he has spent getting poor by
law! Poor devil! ha, ha, ha?hie! I could ,
have settled his business for half the j
money, and left him twice as well off, (
too. If they'll admit ine to plead at the j
bar, I'll introduce a new practice and
check litigation?hie?materially. I'll
?hie?I'll?ha, ha?hie?teach my cli-1
ents to laugh at law?they shall always
be in such ajollv good humor that law
wont he able to touch them with a ten
' * 1 ? W?II aooml thoir nnim.
IOOl pOJR. 1 liuy siirtii oana., ...~r,
nents with broad grins, and lauph judge
and jury out of?hie?countenance!" j
Our laughing philosopher here went off
into an irrepressible fit of cacthination,
and he certainly was the merriest looking j
genuie that has recently fallen under our
observation. He tickled us, and we re.
eolved to "hand him down," let his odd
philosophy he worth what it may; but it
?tike? us, if there were more of his way of
thinking in the world, there would be less
work for the lawyers.?Ficayunc.
THE FORSAKEN GIRL.
BY JOHN G. WHITTIER.
They parted?an all lover* part?
She with hor wrong and broken heat t;
But he, rejoicing h? is free,
Bounds tike the captive from his chain,
A'?d wilfully bulioving she
HaUi found her liberty again."
L. K. LANDON.
If there is any act which deserves deep
and bitter condemnation; it is that of
trifling with the inestimable gift of woman's
affection. The female may be
compared to a delicate harp?over which
the breathings of early affection wander,
until each tender chord is awakened to
tones of ineffable sweetness. It is the
music of the soul which is thus called
forth?a music sweeter than the fall of
fountains or the song of Houri in the
Moslem's Paradise. But woe for the del.
*'?CooKirknincr of that harD if a change
iuaIC laoinv.....^ ? f ? ? c
! pass over the love which first called forth
its hidden harmonies. Let neglect and
cold unkindness sweep over its delicate
strings, and they will break one after another,
slowly perhaps, but surely. Un.
visited and unrequited by the light of love,
the soul-like melody will he hushed in the
stricken besom?like the mysterious harrhony
of the Egyptian statue, before the
coming of the sunrise.
I have been wandering among the
graves?the lonely and solemn graves.
! I love at times to do so. I feel a melan.
choly not unallied to pleasure ill communing
with the resting place of those
who have gone before me?to go forth
j alone among the thronged tombstones,
rising from every grassy undulation like
the ghostly sentinels of the departed.
And when I kneel above the narrow mansion
of one whom I have known and loved
in life, I feel a strange assurance that the
spirit of the sleeper is near me a viewless
and ministering angel. It is a beautiful
philosophy, which has found its way unsought
for and mysteriously into the si- |
lence of my heart?and if it be only a
dream?the unreal imagery of fancy?I
pray God, that I may never awaken from
the beautiful delusion.
I have been this evening by the grave
of Emilv- It has a ^Jain white tombstone,
half hidden by flowers, and you
may read its mouruful epitaph in the clear
moonlight, which falls on it lik-3 the smile
j of an Angel, through an opening into the
| drooping branches. Emily was a beauti'
ful girl?the fairest of our village maidens.
I think I see her now, as she looked
when the loved one?the idol of her
affections, was near her with his smile of
conscious triumph and exulting love.
She had then seen but eighteen summers,
and her whole being seemed woven of
the dream of her first passion. The obAfkor
lnvp was a nroud and wayward
J^V/l VI aivs ?v? w " ? ? -- p. being?whose
haughty spirit never relaxed
from its habitual sternness, save
when he found himself in the presence
of the young and beautiful creature, who
had trusted her all on the " venture of her
vow," and who loved him with the confiding
earnestness of a pure and devoted
heart. Nature had deprived him of the
advantages of outward grace and beauty;
and it was the abiding consciousness of
this, which gave to his intercourse with
society a character of pride and sternness.
He felt himself in some degree removed
from his fellow men by trie partial fashioning
of Nature; and he scorned to seek
a nearer affinity. His mind was of an
exalted bearing, and prodigal of beauty.
The flowers of Poetry wore in his imagination
a perpetual blossoming; and it was
to his intellectual beauty that Emily knelt
down?bearing to the alter of her Idol the
fair flowers of her affection?even as the
dark eyed daughters of the ancient Ghrber
spread out their offerings from the gardens
of the East upon the alrar of the Sun.
There is a surpassing strength in a
love like that of Emily's?It has nothing !
gross, nor low, nor earthly in its yearn,
ings?it has its source in the deeper foun.
tains of the human heart?and is such as
the redeemed and sanctified from earth
might feel for one another in the fair land
of spirits-?Alas! that such he unrequited,
or turned back in coldness and darkness
upon the crushed heart of its giver!
They parted?Emily and her lover,
but not before they had vowed eternal
constancy to each other.?The one returned
to the quiet of her home?to dream
over again the scenes of her early pas.
sion, to count with untiring eagerness
the hours of separation, and to weep
over the long interval of "hope deferred."
?The other went with a strong heart to
mingle wun me worm?girm-u wuu j>n?iu
and impelled forward by ambition. He
found the world cold, and callous, and
selfish, and his own spirit insensibly took
the hue of those around him. He shut his
eyes upon the past, it was too pure and
mildly beautiful for the sterner gaze of
his manhood. He forgot the passion of
boyhood?all beautiful and holy as it was
?he turned not back to the youug and
lovely and devoted girl, who had poured
to him in the confiding earnestness of woman's
confidence the wealth of her affec.
tion. He came not back to fulfil the vow
which he had plighted.
Slowly and painfully the knowledge of
her lover's infidelity came over the sensitive
heart of Emily. She sought for a
time to shut out the horrible suspicion
from her mind?she half doubted the evi
A
dence of her.own senses--sne coum n<u
believe that he was a traitor?for her mem.
ory had treasured up every token of his af.
tion?every impassioned word and evorv
endearing smile of his tenderness. But
the truth came at last?the doubtful spectre
which had long haunted her; and
from which she had turned away, as if it
were sin to look upon it,*now stood before j
her a dreadful and unescapahle vision of
reality. There was one burst of passion- I
ate tears?the overflow of that fountain of j
affliction which quenches the last ray of
hope in the desolate bosom?and she was,
calm?for the struggle was over, and she
gazed steadily and with the awful confi
dence of ooe whose hopes are noi or
earth, upon the dark Valley of Death
whose shadow was already around her.
It was a beautiful evening of Summer;
that I saw her for the last time. The sun
was just setting behind a long line of blue
and undulating hills, touching their tall
summits with a radiance like the halo
, w hich circles the dazzling brow of an An
gel, and all Nature had put on the rich s
garniture of greenness and blossom. As t
I approached the quiet and secluded
dwelling of the once happy Emily, I r
found the door of the little parlor thrown *
open; and a female voice of a sweetness r
which could hardly be said to belong to r
Earth, stole out upon the soft Summer v
air. It was like the breathing of an c
ASolian lute to the gentlest visitation of ^
the Zephyr. Involuntarily I paused to t
listen, and these words?I shall never for.
get them?came upon my ear like thelow t
and melancholy music which we some- 1
times hear in dreams? f
44 Oh?no?I do not fear to die
For hope and Faith are bold, *
And life is but a weariness? s
And Earth is strangely cold? <
In view of Death's pale solitude I
My spirit hath not mourned? (
'Tis kinder than forgotten love, I
Of friendship uureturned!
And I could pass the shadowed land '
In rapture all the while? '
If one who now is far away, <
Were near me with his smile. i
It seeins a dreary thing to die j
Forgotten and alone? ]
Unheeded by our dearest love?
The smiles and tears of one !
Oh ! plant my grave with pleasant flowers;
1
The fairest ot the fair?
The very flowers he loved to twine *
At twilight in my hair. <
| . Perchance lie yet may visit mere
i And shed above my bier (
( The holiest dew of funeral flowers
Affection's kindiy tear!" 1
It was the voice of Emily * * * *
She was leaning on the sofa as I entered !
the apartment?her thin white hand resting
on her Bible. She rose and welcomed
me with a melancholy smile. It
played over her features, for a moment,
flushing her cheek with a slight and sudden
glow?and then passed away, leaving J
in its stead the wanness and mournful !
beauty of the dying. It has been said *
that Death is always terrible to look upon. <
But to the stricken bmily the presence j
of the Destroyer was like the ministration ,
of a 11 Angel of light and holiness. She
was passing off to the land of spirits like <
the melting of a sunset cloud into the blue
of Heaven?stealing from existence like
the strain of ocean music when it dies
away slowly and sweetly upon the moon- j
light waters. (
A few days after, I stood by the grave ,
of Emily. The villagers had gathered
together one and all, to pay the last tribute
of respect and affection to the lovely sleep. '
er. They mournod her loss with a deep
and sincere lamentation?they marvelled
that one so young and so beloved should
yield herself up to melancholy, and perish
in the spring time of her existence. But ,
they knew not the hidden arrow which j
had rankled in her bosom?the slow and
secret withering of her heart. She had
borne the calamity in silence?in the un- i
complaining quietude of one, who felt that
there are woes which may not ask for
sympathy?afflictions, which like the can- *
ker, concealed in the heart of some fair
blossoms, are discovered, only by the un-,
timely decay of their victim.
From the Philadnlphia North American.
woxan's devotion.
Marrying for lore, and refusing to mar 1
ryfor money?a parent's harsh conduct
?the consequences?retribution.
In an Indian camp, in Florida from
which the savages were driven by Cap.
lain Barnman, there were found an un.
dicss uniform coat, belonging to Lt.
Sherwood, and a lace collor which was the
property of the unfortunate Mrs.
Montgomery, A duantity of clothing t
taken from the bodies of slain soldiers
was also discovered, and much plunder.
?Saranah republican.
Tli above simple announcment brings
up some recollection of a sad and painfull
nature. Mrs. Montgomery was a resi.
dent of Pensacola. Gay in her dlsposition,
kind and courteous in her inter- '
course with society, she was justly a fa.
vorite with all and especially Mr. Mont- j
gomery, an army officer. They became }
much attached and were equally merita
rious and deserving of each other. But 1
their intimacy was frowned upon oy ner
father, who was opulent, while Montgomery
had only his army pay and divided
between a dependent mother and
sister. The opposition of the parent on- ,
ly gave intensity to their feelings, and <
led them to the resoulution to be married <
immediately. The father continued firm I
in his opposition, and after they were <*
married she was forbidden to enter the <
peternal mansion. Before leaving the 1
city with her husband, she waited some
hours, hoping to have an interview with
her father. If he did not relent, he might
bid his daughter an eternal farewell?
But even this poor consolation was denied (
her, and she left with her husband, the j
only one on earth to whom, in her disconsolation,
she could cling. After 1
residing for some time at one of the 1
posts in the interior of Florida, she was
sent under an escort of soldier* to another
? . i ;
station, where her liusnana expected in a
few days to join her. On their way they
were attacked by the Indians and slaughtered,
she fell covered with wounds, and
when they were found, only a faithful dying
soldier remained to tell the sad story.
They all might have escaped, but they
pretered to remain and defend her, and
in doing so, they were all shot down and
left for dead! The anguish of the husbandmay
be well imagined. But the heartrending
grief of the parent finds no so.
lace even in his hoarded treasures. His
unkindness to his, daughter, and the agonizing
circumstances of her death, have
destroyed his peace of mind, and left him
perfectly inconsolable. God in his providence
often rebukes the cold hearted selfishness
of the world in this way, yet how
oon is the startling admonition fotgot- J
en. t
And this and secbas this, are the sac- ^
afices made to Mammon by his devoted j
worshippers?a murdered daughter, a beeaved
husband and a broken hearted paent.
What now avails the father's
wealth; when weighed against the loss
f one most dearly loved and cherished in j
ler early days?and the deep affliction t
he bereavment has carried to his heart. ;
The fiend of avarice and moneyed respec- 1
ability, but mocks him when it points to '<
lis hoarded treasures, and bids him look
or comfort there. And yet how many
nake the sacred marriage tie a mere-mater
of traffic and speculation, regardless
md reckless of the result that must soon |
>r late sting their hearts with many sor- 1
ows, and make the fountains and streams .
)f human happiness and life, as bitter as
he waters in Marah in the wilderness
>fSin. God never made the deep
ind pure affections of the heart thus to
)e bough and sold?and to those who so
iegrade and dishonor them, sad are the
nevetable consequences. Oft times un
evealed to the eye of the world, they yet
live to blast the comforts and destroy me
jeace of thousands who in rustling silks
md splended equipage, are to frequently
the envy of the unthinking and the emulous.
One kind word?one faithful
whisper from a heart that truly and cincerely
loves, is worth a lifetime of such
Dutward show, when secret care, carking
trouble pin their possessors down, like flattering
insacts, to the poor and barren place
in which they pine in hoplessness and die.
?W. W.
SOUTH CAROLINA. (In the Common
Chesterfield District. $ Pleas.
Ranald McDonald : Declaration
vs. > in debt in Atlohn
McKay. ) tachmont,
WHEREAS the Plaintiff in the above
stated case, this day filed his Dcclara.
ion against the Defendant who is absent from
ind without the limits of this State (as it is said)
nid having neither wife or attorney known
within the same. It is ordered that the Defenlant
do appear and plead to the Decralation
lforesaid within a year and a day. from the date
tereof, otherwise final and absolute judgment 1
will bo awarded against him by default.
TURNER BRYAN, C C. C. P
Office of Common Pleas, >
March 20, 1840. (
27 er m 31 v
Sept. 16 1840 No. 44t f
DTKLAP & MARSHALL,
HAVE just received among other desirable
fancy goods, the following articles, viz;?
SHAWLS.
Super Black Hernani, 3-4 and 4 4,
Handsome printed Mouselin De Laine from
r-8 ro6-4,
Supr. Scarlet Merino 4-4 and 5 4.
Do. Mode (Plain) colored Thy bet,
Belvedere & Cabyle do. 6-4 and 8 4
gloves.
A good assortment Ladies and Gentlemen's
super colored and black II. 8. Beaver and
Buckskin.
iiose,
Ladies super white and black Merino, Cash
nere and Ingrain Cotton.
mouselin de laines.
Rich Printed, Fancy black ground and Mode
Dolors.
also,
Super Blue and wool dyed black cloths,
44 4 4 44 44 44 Cashmeres
md Sa?inett8
BOOOlNDlNS
rHE subscribers ha ve established themselves
in the above line of business in Cheraw
ind offer theirscrvices to its citizens.
u. BAZENCOURT, ACQ.
FOR SALE.
IThreo Horse Waggon,
2 Extension top Barouches,
2 Second Hand Gigs.
MALCOM BUCHANAN.
March 10. 1841. 17 2in
INSB.
BLACK, Dark Blue. Light Flue, Red and
Copying Inks, in small Bellies, For
tuie by John Wrightat the Cheraw Bookstore.
October 30. 1840.
51 if
Hals and Shoes.
A LARGE and well selected stock for cal
by A. P. LACOSTE.
October 21, 1?40.
NEW GOODS.
THE Subscriber has received by Steamer*
Swan and Oscola a fresh and general assortment
of Spring and Summer goods which
ogetlier with his stock of groceries makes his
Lssortment quite desirable. He will sell on the
test terms for cash or to punctual customers on
ho usual credit. His friends and customers
ire invited to call and examine his stock.
D. S. HARLLEE.
April 8,1841.
22 4t
CASH SYSTEM CONTINUED.
THE TIMES are such as to compel the
La. aI?M Pack Viref orrt
?UUBCUUCr IU tUIVlllUC IliC vaoii UJBM.IJI ,
Groceries and all articles in that line will
t>e sold for Cash only. Persons whose accts.
and notes still remain unpaid, will please understand
that no new credits will be given
until all old arreareges are settled in full.
D. MALLOW.
Cheraw January 4th 1841.
8 tf.
exvv notice:
JAMES W. Blakeney, and Alexander
Gregg, having formed a Copartnership
in the practice of the Law, under the name of
Blakeney and Gregg, will attend the courts of
Chesterfield, Darlington, Marion, Marlborough
and Lancaster. Office, Market Street, Cheraw,
December 28th 1840. tf
* A"CARD.
JOHN A. TNG LIS, ArroHNfeY AT LAW
Will practice in th>.* Courts of Law tor the
Districts of Chesterfield, Marion, Darlington,
and Marlborough. His office is in the building
next below the Store of Messrs. Taylor &
Punch.
Doc 14 1840.
For Sale.
A TRACT on the Doctrines of Election and
Reprobation, by Rev. Jaincs H. Thorn roll*
Also, a Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine
concerning Justification.
May 1st, 1841). 25 tf
The Subscriber has just received, and wil
keep constantly on hand,Cotton Yarn and Twine
at wholesale, from the Manufactory of Rockingham.
GEO. GOODRICH.
Cberaw, Jan. 1840. 10 if
JY THE LIGHTERS of Steamer Oseola the
Subscriber has received and is now opening
lis stook of Fall & Winter goods which his ?
Customers may expect to buy at very reduced Jrice?
d
D B McARN ;
Nov. 16th 1840. '<
2 ti
Ut bi
Dunlap & Marshall *
EARNESTLY request all persons indebted
othem to make an early settlement of their
iccounts. They will invariably add the in;ere8t
however trifling the amount on ill
iccounts not paid within ten days.
January 1st 1840. 8tf
Trevtrichard frnitiavm 1
sermon, i
DELIVERED in the Baptist Church in this #
place in vindication of the doctrine and ^
practice of the Baptist denomination, for sale at t
the stors of I;
A. P. LACOSTE._ ;
just receiver s
Methodist hymns i2mo. ^ ?
do do 24mo. sheep, calf, y
dVid Morocco. s
Methodist Discipline late edition, t
Watsons Dictionary, ?
Life of Wesley,
Life of Dr. Clark,
Family Bible, sheep and calf,
Al' of which will be sold at the New York
prices,
JOHN WRIGHT.
April 10, 1841.
- ? I
22 tt |'
COTTON BAGGIfiSr&t; .
5000 ps. Cotton Bagging mostly of ,
recent importation,
200 ps. Osnuburg9, (
200 ps. Burlaps,
20 Bales Twine,
For sale on the usual terms by
JOHN FRASF.R & Co.
Charleston April 30, 1841. 25?4t
Dunlap 4* Marshall
HEREBY give notice thatthejr will continue .
to sell their Dry Goods on!}, on the usual
credit to punctual customers.
They will sell their Groceries at the lowest
prices for cash only.
The very short credit at which groceries can
now be bought, amounting with the exchange
almost to Cash, with their limited capital compels
hern to the adoption of this c.
Umbrellas
JUST received a good assortment of Silk
and Ginghams Umbrellas.
DUNLAP &c MARSHALL
SPERM AND TALLOW CANDLES
FOR salo by
A. P. LACOSTF,
October 21, 1840.
49 tf
Lard.
2QQQ LBS.^LEAF LARD, for said
** hT A. P. LACOSTE.
September 30, 1840.
" NOTICE.
ON Monday the 14th day of June next I will
offer for Sale, for Cash, at the Court House
door in Wadcsboro, the following negro slaves,
viz. Ephraim, Cicero, Dave, Ben. Dicy, Lucy
little Fr.mk. Mary, Row, Eli, big Frank, Abram
Terry, La urn and Harry; levied on as Ihe properly
of Vincent Pardons, James Curl is and
Dudley D Dnniel, to satisfy a venditioni Exponas
nod special Fi. Fa. in my hands in favor of Joseph
Medley Adminstrstor He bonis non of
Hugh McKenzie deceased; agninsf said Vincent
Parens, James Curtis and Dudley D. Dnniel,
J. WHITE.
Sheriff of Anson Count;,
May 4, 1841. 26 4
SPORTSMAN POWDER.
ONE Case English Canister Rifle Powder
manufactured by "Pigous & Wilks,w Lon
don, lor sale by the Canieter.
D. MALLOY.
May 28, 1641. 29 tf
CHINA CROCKERYAXDGLASS
|? WARE.
THE Subscriber has on hand a good as<ort.
ment of the above, comprising a variety of
patterns. For sale cheap
D. MALLOY.
May 31, 1841.
29 tf
RECEIVING AND FORWARD^
ING BUSINESS.
THE Subscriber continues the Receiving
and Forwarding of Goods and Produce, his
Wharf and Stoie are in good order, and the
room, ample. His charges are no more than
those of ether Houses in the the same linn.
B. KING,
rrof/1UTn f2 C Mnv 24. 1841.
VIVWI?V?V? ? . ? 29
tf
CHEESE. '
For sale by ,
A. P. LACOSTE.
October 21, 1840.
GEN. JAMES W. CANTEY, (the present
incumbent) is respectfully nominated to
the next Legislature as a competnt and suitable
candidate fur tho offices of Adjutant arid Inspector
General. MANY OFFICERS.
Cheraw, June 2,1841. if
NOTICE.
LETTERS o'f administration on the estate
and effects which were of Hugh Mclntyre,
deceased, having on the 8th instant been granted
to the Subscriber by Turner Bryau Esq. Ordinary
of Chesterfield District. All persons having
claims against the saidestato are notified to render
an account of their demands duly proven,
and all persons indebted arc requested to make
immediate payment. MARK HAILED.
May 11, 1841. 26 tf
LADIES SHOES.
DUNLAP & MARSHALL have just receiv.
ed direct from the Manufactory (Phila.) 450
pair Ladies and Misses Kid and Seal Slipperi
and shoes.
CORN AND SEED PEAS FOR
^ALE<
?JEVERAL hundred bushels of corn and
fifty bushels of cow peas for sale, for cash
by the subscriber.
R. L. BURN.
May 15, 1841. 27?3t
SOTICE.
rWllIE Subscriber having purchased Mr
| JL Gregorie's interest in the Iste firm of
ROSSER <$ GREGORIE,
Will continue the business at the same stand
on his own account. He iutends keeping an
extensive assortment of Dry Goods, Hardware
and Groceries, which will be sold at the lowest
prices for cash only, by the whole sale or retail.
lie solicits a continuance of tlrat patronage
which has been heretofore so generally extended
to the concern.
ISAAC H. ROSSER.
April 24, 1841.
24 eowtroa4
DISSOLUTION OF COPAIT^
NERSHIP. g
rHE Copamerahip ^heretofore existing uaJP
der the firm of Rower & Gregoris, WBf
issohred on the 10th mat. by mutual oonsent,?
ertom indebted to the eaid firm, axe requested
> call and settle their accoonts fcc. with laaae
[enderson, Roiwr, at it necessary that the
usihess of the concern should be brought to a
lose as soon as possible?
Isaac Henderson robsbr.
ferdinand gregorie.
April 24, 1841.
24 eowi n*4
- -ii n?
SUMNER RESIDENCE.
[intend to remove for the summer men the #
my plantation iu consequence of which I Will
ell my summer retreat at Gopher Hill. . ThetW
i a large and comfortable dwelling House nitlt
he necessary out buildings and fifteeo actee of
and attached thereto, TO any person wishing
i healthy retreat for summer this place ederr
uperior inducements. It is watered' both bf
prings convenient and a first rate well in the '
'ard and 1 believe aa healthy as any place thie
ide of the mountains. If applied for soon it witt '
? sold greatly below its cost and a first rate bar*
rain will be given.
d. s. harllee.
May 31st, 1841.
29 it
SWEEDISH IBOff. .
TO ARRIVE.
rHE Subscribers offer for sale the eiifo
the Schooner Marie, Sandberg mailer, ex^
peeled to arrive from Swceden in'June next con*
dating of one hundred and thirty five tons offlat
ind square Iron, in bars and bundles of various
dimensions, selected for this market. ,
HERKENRATH & LOWNDES.
Charleston May, 12, 1841.
29 at
CANDLES
A few Boxes Ta loir and Sperm Candies for
sale by
D. MALLOT.
May 31,1841.
29 tf_ M
DRUGS, iHEDICINES,
Chemicals, Patent Medicines,
Perfumery, Paints, Oils, Dye
Stuffs, &c. &c., for sqId
wholesale and retail by
A. HOPTON, CETERA W, S. C.
At his Drug Store, next door to Brown
Bryan df Brother.
Where may be had at all times a general so
sort mo t of articles in the L>rug line? reeoin
mended to be of superior quality which will bo
disposed of on very moderate terms?Physicians
and others wishing pure medicines, may rely
on being supplied with them.
May 26, 1841. 28 *
STEAMBOAT EXPLOSION!
Steamboat Swifstore, Albany, Oct. 87 1840
Mr. Dail:-y?We, the undersigned sufferers,
mmgled by the explosion of the boiler of the
steamboat Swifsture, certify that alter twenty
hours of pain, from dreadfully burnt, scalded and
bruised parts, were anointed with year Magical ?
Pain Extractor, which gave ua immediate esse
and relief from torture, drew out the inflamatiow
at once and allayed the swellings. We ceweid?
er it the best article in the known world fiw suck
afflictions, and all may be assured that tbey will
he e isy at once en application, without toy.
additional pain being produced, and healed
promptly without scar. ^
Thomas Havens, Nicholas Davis,
Hem? Yut s, John Kearney.
Testimony of the Captain, Crew, <jr.
It is with pleasure jwe recommend the efficacy
of Mr. Dallcy's Mag ca) Pain Extracting Oini.
m ini, from having witnessed the application and
its inost happy effects on tl?e four sbove men*
tinned persons who were scalded on board the
steamboat Swiftsure, on the explosion of the ,
boiler. Its talufary sooming cuuu <mr^
us s<K>n as adminiMered, and healed rapidly.?
From what we have seen we roj aider it our of
lhe best pieparations in the roiid, mid confident,
y recommend it to all who may be nffiicted.
James L. Hodge, pastor of First Baptist -
Church, Albany.
H. L. Murray, captain of steamboat SwifU
sure.
A. Hitchcock, captain of steamboat United
State*
Edward Musoly, steward of steamboat SwifU.
sure.
Benjamin Wakemcn, pilot.
O aries Carpenter, do.
Hannah Smith, stewardess.
David Steward, cook.
Samuel Havens, K. Hulton, 1
George llalsey, Moore G. Corn, ? hands.
Win. H. Snow, George Steward, j
C. Bumau, James Mnddix, i
Fanny Lrw Saiuucl Chandler, > nurses.
Elizabeth Ketchum, V
Samuel Pincott, undertaker,
John Richardson, sexton.
That the public may no long r doubt of tho
importance of this Sanative, the above gentle*
men have affixed their signatures. All kind of
injuries are also as speedily cured as burns, and '
no house in the Union should be uhsdpplied.?
If they keep it. many will, as do the insn above
acknowledge, to it they owe their livea.?Coty
can nev r touch a wound < rfftsed with it thert.
fore il iitpeculiarly unetui to an at iua? seaavn,tho
faculty acknowledge it to surpassevory other
tiling.
Prepared by Henry Dalley and, sold by Cumstock
Si Co., sold wholesaler*, and br.
A. HOPTOIV OVIERAW.
COPIES OF CERTIFICATES,
Mr. Dallkv.?In this laige establishment w#
have 100 individuals. I have forthree months
invariable in all cases used your Magiesl Pais
Extractor, and assure you it has not an equal,
for the cure of burns, scald*, inflainmat on, swelling
sore eyes, mump*, or for general case si i tie#.
I commend it with Every confidence to miy
parent, to save pain, money, and distress, ana
one important merit above all things else, always
heal* leaving no scar. Wo have ever been as.
tonished to see its soothing speedy, and extrnatai
[>ower on whatever it has been applied.
Oiyhan Asylum, Albany, ) E. CLARK,
April, 3, 1840. \ Superintendent.
#
TO WHEAT GROWERS.
I AM prepared to Thrash and Clean Wheat.
Persona having to send off their Wheat to *
be cleaned will find it a saving to send it stance ^
to the Mill where they can have it cleaned,
ground and bolted at one operation.
JAMES W. BUBN. '
June 7 30 4t
WHITE WItfE VINEGAR
Cider do
For sule by
AUG. P. LaCOSTE
| June 71641 , 30
! For sale at the Bookstore.
ASERON bv the Rev. J. C. Coit, delfv.
livercd in the Presbyterian Church in Che.
raw. '/upon the occasion of the Semi.centenary
celejrfation; prepared for the press, and published
by*6ie author, as s testimony against the eqtab.
lished religion in the United States.** Price 25
cerfta.
August 4th, 840. ' 28?tf
I ?
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