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BALEIGH AND GASTON BAIL ROAD. We find in the Raleigh Register of last j week, the third annual report of the com-j pany for constructing this road, together; with the report of the Chief Engineer. The j road it is expected will be completed to | Raleigh by or before the close of the present year. The income, per month on the j part of the road now completed, and in use, j 42 miles in length, is $3,183. The engi- j neer estimates the profits of the road when j completed to Raleigh, even if it should ex- j tend no farther, at 6 per cent per annum upon the capital invested. The following is the part of his report which relates to the extension of the road to Columbia. If the Road should ever be extended to ; Columbia, South Carolina, the stock would certainly be one of the best in the? Union.? There is scarcely n man who entertains a doubt of this. The friends of the work know it, and are anxiously endeavoring to find some means of prosecuting this extension. We see every day evidences of the opinions of those whose local interests are opposed j to this project. j Id a Report recently made on an exam- / < ination for an inland communication be ween 11 Wilmington and Charleston, by Mr. VV .ite, Civil Engineer, he says : "Let us tor a moment reflect what will be the consequences of neglecting or delaying the execuiion of this project. The line ot Rail Road wluc.i is now completed to RaMgh, would be pushed on to Columbia and Augusta, and then our already languishing portion of the State would be laid prostrate." This shows Mr. White's opinion of the merits of the Metropolitan line of travel. Tiie same Report mentions a fact which would be a strong argument in favor of the Raleigh and Columbia Road, even if the inland communication between Charleston and Wil. mington were effected. He says t4iliat during the sickly season, passen 401 s must be ^ North of Wilmington before sun-down."? ^ In short, it is almost too evident to nrgue. that if Raleigh and Columbia were joined by a Rail Road, the whole Southern and South-western travel would be brought over tl^Jialeigh and Gaston Rail Road. jRt us, for a momen\ examine into the j chances of this most desirable connection j being formed. Surely each S ockholder I in the Raleigh and Gas 01. Rail Roa J has j the deepest possible interest in promoting it Every Stockholder in any cf the Roads between Rahigh and Baltimore has n deep interest in this project. But no R 11 Road Company, not even the Raleigh and Gaston, has a deeper interest in promoting this work than the Charleston, Louisville and Cincinnati Rail Road Companies. There are two Roads now constructing which threaten to take the South-western travel from them. One is the Macon and Savannah, and the other is the Rru iswick City and AppnlachicoJa Road. If either of these i Roads is finished, it will take a larg^ portion i of the travel irom the Charleston and Ham- 1 burg Road. The only thing which can se.; cure them the travel will be the connection of Columbia and Raleigh by Rail Read. Nor has the Georgia Rail Road Company less to fear than the Charleston and Hamburg Road. The completion of the Macon and Savannah Road would draw off the greater part of this travel; and the Brunswick and Florida Road would deprive i them all of the travel from New Orleans. < These views are so plain, that the Charleston and Hamburg and the Georgia Rail Road Company, cannot avoid seeing their danger, and they will csrtuinly do any ( tiling in their power to obviate it. If there is a Rail Road made from Columbia to Raleigh, the Georgia Rail Road from Decatur to Augusta, the South Carolina Road from Augusta via Urunchville to Columbia, the Raleigh and Columbia Road, th8 Raleigh and Gaston Koad, a-c. would form a line which would defy ail competition. This route would be the shortest that could be travelled. It would pass through a perfectly healthy country, and it would avoid the danger of Steam Boat navigation at open sea. The City of Charleston would be very injuriously effected by the travel going through Savannah or Brunswick, for it would then pass Charleston in a Steam Beat, without stopping, so that neither the < City of Charleston, nor the Rail Road in which that City is so deeply interested, could 1 be affected otherwise than injuriously, by i the completion of this inland route from Charleston to Wilmington, and these other Roads in Georgia. If (ho Raleigh and Columbia Road were completed, the traveller from Charleston it- , self, instead of going out to sea, would go i North through Columbia, and pay a tribute | to the Charleston and Cincinnati Rail Road ? Company. I In reviewing the whole subject, we see ? that such a vast amount of capital is < dependent for its value on the completion j of the Raleinh ond Columbia Road, that wp> f cannot entertain a rational doubt of its beine ] effected at no distant period. This being the case, the Stock of the Raleigh and Gaston Rail Road Company, would be inferior to none in our country. , BAIL BOAD DEPOSITORY IN AUGUSTA. The South Carolina Canal and Rail Road | Company have presented a petition to the I City Council of A ugusta for the privilege 1 of exiending the Rail Road, by a bridge I across the Savannah River, and of estab- i lishing a depot on the Augusta side, with < such restrictions as the Council may deem : necessary. The petition was referred to the Committee of Nine, appointed by the i Chairman of the late public meeting, held < on the 22d inst., to report to tiie adjourned | public meeting, to be held on the 29th inst. j The object of the Company is not to es- i tablished a toll bridge, but merely to extend 1 the road to Augusta, in order to avoid the i inconvenience, and heivy tolls, attendant on < passing good? over the Augusta bridge.? I The town of Augusta owns ihe lands and j sn wharves bordering on the Georgia cide of; 01 the river, and their free usp for the road and j v( depository are asked by the Company. FLORI DA. We copy the following from the Tallahassee ^ Floridian of the 22d uit. 'h The extract of a letter from Mr. Poinssett to a citizen of this Territory, affords satiefac. 0 tory evidence that the Government htsresolv- R ed that under no circumstances shall the Se- f,j minoles be suffered to remain permanently in Florida. The Washington Metropolis, a pa. tQ per supposed to be in the confidence of the , Administration, edited by Judge T. J. Smith, lately of this Territory, confirms this determi- a, nation of the Executive, by information de- 0 rived from "undoubted authority." So far so ai good. We learn Governor Call has not been ti i fficially informed of the views of the Govern- s; ment since Gen. Macomb's arrangement. I, Sir?I take the liberty of requesting the pub fi lication of the enclosed extract from a letter from u the Secretary at War, which placs the arrange, ment made by Macomb in its true light. It clear- Ir ly shews that the Administration have no idea of substituting the armistice made by Gen. n Macomb for the Treaty of Payne's Landing. si "We must expect hostilities to be partially Cl continued for a short period after an armistice; ' but, I am of opinion that the arrangement made by Gen. Macomb will lead to the pacification j h Df the country and enable me to remove the In- Italians from the Territory much sooner than can |jj be done by force." ^Signed) J. R. POINSETT. Mrs. W nifred Galas, consort of Jsseph Giles Esq., and mother of one of the editors of the r< National Intelligencer, and wife of the other w editor, died at W shingfon, D. C., on the 26th ult., in the 79th year of her a^e. She was a lady tj of superior mind and great worth. Extract of a letter from Doctor Byrne, of the Armv? dated Fobt King, June 13. " i,v " Lieut. Ransom and myself, on our way p here from Pilatka, met four Indians in <1 hammock about 10 miles from the latter {e place, and were much gratified and some- f( wha relieved oi? finding thai they behaved jlike gentlemen. On our way from Payne's ^ Landing this morning we met two o hers, ^ and they also deported themselves properly, ^ shook f ands with us, &c. Toere have ? been altogether between three and four bun- ' dred of tocm in at his post, and th'-re are y at present about 260 encamped in its vicinity. Nobody here'doub s that they will comply with Gen. Macomb's arrangement. Tygertail lias not yet appeared but the Indians informs us that he will shortly come ,i in " * 11 in. h w RUNAWAY SLAVES. Tile Wheeling (Va.) Times of June 10, s says ; ?? The post master of this city has shown us two letters received from men in Ashtabula, Ohio, which give the particulars of the concealment of fifeen fugitive slaves in the cellar of a man named Hubbard of a that place. They art concealed, nwaiting h a good wind to take them across to Canada. The writer gives his name as well as those e< of several abuhtionis's of Ashtabula, and au_ tl thorizes his to be used if necessary. A por. dj lion of the slaves h"re confined, are said to b'.do g to a Mr. Jacob Joseph of this state, jo an were taken to that place by the line of b! abolitionists, which we have had ocelot) heretofore to mention They were placed ** first in a barn belonging to one of the socio- Jjjj y, afterwards transferred to Deacon Hubbard's cellar, where they were fed by a wo. ^ man w io could not keep a secret, and com- C( municated the number and names of several oft hum: m E GOLD IN ST. LOUIS. The St. Louis Republican states that gold ^ has been found on a furni about thirty miles if. from that city, on the waters of the Merri- jg mac. A lump of gold shown the editor, was about the s;zeofa hen's egg, and was turn- pj ed up by the plough. Oih*r specimens r have also been found. The gold was about p; 17 carrots fino. Too Republican says: fa --*** a ?1J ?? /vflnivinr nf ihn "We are ioic mui a ijiiuiuci ui ium^s same kind have, at different times, been a< picked up in that neighborhood, but no one *? knowing what metal it was, it lias hereto- ai fore elicited very little attention. We are m not informed whether the indications are ^ such us to justify the expectation that it ex- r. ists in lurge quantities. f0 IMPORTANT DECISION TO TRAVELLERS. H 44 The Quincy (Mass.) Patriot gives notice S? Df a novel decision in an action of Noah p, Fifield, vs, the Braintree and Weymou h S Turnpike Corporation, determined at the re last term of the Court of Common Pleas for the County of Norfolk, Mass. It was 8 settled that a person travelling over 6aid ra Turnpike upon the common and ordinary pi business of family concerns-?going to a w scrist mill, etc.?is exempted from the pay. I11 ment of toll. These exceptions extend to in procuring fuel for the fire und other necessaries for the use of a family, and such oiher cc business as necessarily appertains to the Jl' support thereof. It was adjuged in this gr' :ase that the plaintiff recover back the ;e( amount of money paid the defendants for toll while passing their toll gate for tho pur. th poses aloresRid. ti new gun. of We were shewn, a few days since, a |?j newly invented Gun, which, as far as we jy were able to judge of the merits of such death-dealing implements, is the most ingenious and effective we have ever 6eeri or cr heard of. It hus received the name of the Torpedo, and was invented by Mr. B. F. fo Smith, of South Hadley, Mass. and made w in that town. It is so constructed that the w cartridge, which contains the powder, brill,or shot, and wadding in their proper order, is w inserted in a chamber at once, and in a mo 80 mentoftime; and the discharge is produced by percussion, the result of a rod or 1 piston driven forcibly throuuh a cap to the powder in the chamber. With such facility is the process carried on, that the piece can I(l be charged and discharged ten timf-s in a rj, minute, or once in six seconds. The machinery connected with the gun is entirely m bidden from sight. It is said to be perfectly g< ife, and is considered a great improvement /er every other fire arm that has been in* * ;nted. Providence Courier. c ME. CLAY AT ASHLAND. The Rev. Dr. Humphreys, President of c mherst College, Mass., who is travelling ^ rough the Western States, gives the t Ho wing interesting picture of the great ^ rator of the West, as he appears in the t epublican simplicity of his delightful ii rm: c Happening to meet, and to be introduced s i Mr. Clay in the morning; he very polite- ; I invited us to call at his seat, a mile and half out of town, which we did at four 'clock. He received us with all the ease j nd urbanity for which he is so much dis- c nguished, and entered freely into convcrnion upon a variety of topics as tiicy r appencd to come up. It is delightful to I nd n great man so perfectly affable and \ naff'Cted ; and indeed this .sone mark of 1 ue greatness. Ashland is an enchanting spot. The lansion is simple, spacious and venerable; andiugjust on the border of a park of 'ghhj acres, which for the majesty and eauty of its thousand forest trees, is the nest I ever saw. Mr. Clay has two other oodland pastures, and in ail* something j o- 800 acres in his farm. He has lately y irned his attention very much to raising l ock, and it is said that no man in Ken. icky, even, can show you finer oxen and , aws ihan he can. He spent an hour in j alking with us over his grounds, and de- < tined us, almost unperceptibly to ourselves, 1 II nearly sundown. , < HORRIBLE. Y?-st rd.ty morning a whole crowd of i eople were collected in front of a house in i roii? street below Ma?ket, their counten- | ices indicating the most painful and in- I uise anxiety. We looked up, and on the )of of a house beheld a small boy creeping 1 om t.ie dormant window, down towards ie spout, in ord. -r to culch a little pet bird J iat, reloaseJ from its fetters, had taken re- j ige in that apparently inaccessible spot, le had gotten about half way when fear vercame him. He advanced a Imle more, i Ve held ojr breaths and closed our teeth < 'ith excessive sympathy. Another step, nd a convulsive shudder ran through the < rowd. Tne bird moved a little further. ^Iie boy made one unsuccessful grasp?and 1 ie boy, horrible to relate, fell?into the 1 ands of his father, who pulled him in the on ow by the breeches, and severely whiped him for his temerity.?N. Y. Era. 1 I gg?g=9 , S U HI .11 A K Y i The steamer McFarland came in contact 1 nth another steamer, on the Arkansas, lately, 1 nd was sunk. Fifteen persons aro said to i ave perished. A person in Boston lately sued and recover1 damages from another who had taken from ie Post Office, opened and read a letter ad- 1 ressed to the plaintiff. The Tallahassee Star states that the marity against the atJopnoir of he constitution ! p the people of Florida is eleven only. The Philadelphia North American says it is scertaified that the Canton trade this spring ! j om the United States wlil engage about ten i lousand tons <>f shipping. The Madisonian 5ays that John Campbell, s?q., Treasurer of the CJ. 8., has been remov- 1 1 from office by rhe administration 1 Robert Da e Owen is announced a* tW*d- r imstration candidate for Congress in the . vansville District, Indiana Dr. Franklin has said, "Where I see a house ell furnished with books and newspapers, there ( see intelligent and well-informed childreu ; but y there are no books or papers, the childrea art norant, if not profligate." ! !\ ?: ?? ? in a nrvaf r\( tlia blulo/lnl V/WiUg IU <X VICIOWW IU u D^A/k VI kllV A liliavivi* | lia and Trenton railroad, an accident occur- < id upon it lately, which injured a respectable < issengcr very severely, and it is apprehended tally. # ; McKenzie, the "patriot" refugee from Cania has been tried in Monroe Countv, N. Y. t r violating the laws of the United States, i id convicted He is sentenced to twelve ! onthe imprisonment. j At the recent session of the U. S. Circuit 1 ourt at Jackson, (Miss.) there were 2700 ises on the docket and the fees of the clerk , r the session were upwards of 40,000 dollars. The following announcement is from the j iouston (Texas) Intelligencer of the 90th ult. : VI r?. Pamelta Mann, convicted of forgery, and intenced by Judge Franklin to be hung, at the esent terra of tne District Court, was on aturday last pardoned by the Executive, and ileased from confinement. Mr. Phinrey, of Lexington, in Massachuitts, makes $3,000 or $4,000 annually by | lising pork, and he uses sweet apples as the I incipal article of food. He calculates that J haiaver he gets for his pork is clear profit, as 1 } makes the hogs pay the cost of their keep- < g by the manure he gets from his piggery. 1 A convention of delegates from several of the ] unties in Texas interested in the construe- j 3n of a railroad between Houston and the j rassos was to assemble at Richmond on the l st A on day in July, to deliberate on the subct of locating the road. f The Salem Gazette contains a statement j at the number of vessels engaged in the Cod j iahory, owned in Marblebead, is 85. I A man named Win. McPherson took a load l wheat to Rocnester a day or two ago, 6old it, 1 >t drunk, and fell from his wagon ; the wheel 1 ,n over his head, and killed him almost instant* ? c Two steamboats came in contact near St. ^ ouis, on the 22d June, one of which was ^ ushed. Only one person killed. A man walking along the road near NorIk on the night of the 23d June, (Sunday) I ith gun in hand, s umbled against a fence, hich made the gun go off and cause his death. 1 A free negro in Cincinnati being threatened s ith the horsewhip by his employer, became excited by rage as to drop dead. t A few cases of yellow fever have occurred in 5 ew Orleans. From 1832 to 1837 the number of yokes of * ;en in Vermont had diminished 13,000, the imber of two year old cattle, 15,000. The ? unber ot sheep has increased 1,000,000 du- r tig the same five years. A man named Mack, at Woodstock, Ver- i ont, lately killed 32 crows at one shot, and t * iT'ckc* over in the bargain. The Philadelphia papers state that the ship taly, thence for Trieste, has on board two loomotive steam engines with all their appliance. Two gentleman returned from a piscatory ixcursion among the trout lakes in Hamilton ounty in four days, with rod and flies, tioc lundred and thirty-one pounds of delicious rout. Valuable Emigrants.?The St. Louis'Bullein 6 tated: hat a company of Germans amountng to 700, have recently settled in Perry :ounty, Mo. Thoy are of the Lutheran per. ruasion in religion, have a library of 20,00C rolumes, and intend to establish a College. , The Miner's Journal announces the discove y of a mine of Quick silver on the north side if the Blue mountain, by 6ome gentlemen ol 3otts?ville. It is pronounced by judges to be if an excellent quality. A stupendous project of internal improvenent is broached in the St. Louis papers leing no less than the connexion of Bostor vith St. Louis by a line of Rail Roads. A neeting to consider the subject was to have jeen held at St. Louis on the 20th instant. General John Armstrong, formerly Secreta. y at War, upwards of 80 years of age, if low rosiding with his son, near Govanstown n Baltimore county, within a few miles ofthf iity of Baltimore.?Patriot, Eliding down Bannisters.?A German la< n the Aine ican House, Cincinnati, fell an< ^liip, his arm, and his jaw, while at :emfft!ng Vd slide down the banisters of tha aouse. There was no hope of his surviving. Mademotselle Rachel, the celebrated Ffencl ictres-, who has come up from a street balla< jirl, is 10 be wedded to the Duke D'Ossuna and becomes a Castilian Dutchess, with a for tune of many millions. The Grand Jury of Otsego County, on thi complaint of Mr. J. Fonimore Coop T, hav< indicted James Watson Webb, of the Courie and Enquirer, of N. York, Thurlow Weed o the Albany Evening Journal, and E. F. Pellc of the Chenango Telegraph, for libehous lan guage published in their respective newspa pers. About two hundred physicians, druggists pill venders, and dealers generally in the cur ative arr, have been arrested at New Orlean and held to bail for practising medicine, an selling physic, without the authority of i license. A census of East Boston has just bee and the number of inhabitants amount to seventeen hundred. Five years ago, thcr was but a single house on the Island. Th express mail is to be lionet forth die continued, from Augusta 4- Nashville, South The London Journals say that Ellen Tre lias realised a profit of ?50,000 during lierprt sent theatrical tour in this country. In the year 1769 the imports of South Care lina wore nearly three times as large as thos of New York. In 1832, those of New Yor, were nearly forty^seven times as large as thos DfS. C. Gum Elastic for Horseshoes. A late English paper called the London Vc lerinarian, recommends witb excellent reasoni the use of caoutchouc, or gum clastic, as substitute for iron 6hoes for horses. In the general appropriation bill, wkich hi passed the Senate of Pennsylvania, thorc, is a item of$3fJ0,000, for the extension of the Bait mofe and Ohio Rail Road towards Pittsburg. The Indiana Argus oftbe 14th instant sta'e ihrftUen. Stapp, as fund Commissioner, has n< goticiatod for Indiana a loan of ?4,000,000 to t appropriated to the prosecution of Internal la provemenla. We understand that seventy .five men and girl arrived in this town last week from Livcrpoo to employed in the factories and Cliicopee. Springfield (Mass.) Republican. The Merrimack Company, at Lowell, Mass cleared 11 per cent, the last six months, of whic Ihey divided 7 per cent, carrying 4 per cent c ff8|LQff0 to surplus fund. Tlllllffn. Uttcliff Boon, of Indiana, is said t cave succeeded Gov. Lucas, as Governor of I< ?va. Strawberries.?The New-York Journal < Commerce states that 78 one and two hors vag'-ns, loaded w lh strawberries, came dow he Wechawken Hill to the Hoboken Ferrj in one night, from the country round Hacker jack and the English Neighborhood. 60m Df the wagons had more than 700 baskets an :ame a distance of 23 miles.. Three times week they leave home in the evening, and ar at the Ferry by sunrise. The Philadelnhia Gazette, save: " we rettre to learn, that the health of our esteemed frien and fellow-citizen, Condy Raguet, Esq. ha been more than precarious for several days,From, as we understand, the rupture of a mino alood vessel. The oldest town in the United States is Si Augustine, Florida, by more than 40 years. The Newport (R. I.) Mercury, has complete its 01st year. CHER AW PRICE CURRENT* Friday, July 5. Reofir. market, lb 0 Bacon from wagons, lb 11 12 by retail, lb 12} 15 Butter lb 15 2 Beeswax lb 22 2 Bagging yard 18 2 Baleropo lb 10 12 Coffee lb 12i I SOTTO.V, 12 1 Uorn bushel 87? 10 Flour Country, brl 5 00 6 4 Feathers from wagons lb 40 5 Fodder. 100 12 dides groen lb dry lb 1 iron lOOlbs 5 50 65 indigo lb 75 25 L,ime cask 400 4 5 [>ard lb 12J 1 leather sole lb 22 2 ^ead bar ib 1 bogwood lb 10 1 Lfnlnssns fral 45 5 few Orleans gal 50 62 fails cut assorted lb 7} wrought lb 16 II )ats bushel 5 )il curriers gal 75 10 lamp 125 linseed I 110 12 hiints white load keg 325 45 Spanish brown lb 8 12 >ork IGOlbs 800 100 lice iUOJbs 550 62 Shot, Bag 25 ? lb 225 Sugar lb 10 12 Salt sack 2 75 30 salt bush 10 Steel American lb 10 12 English lb 14 Gorman lb 12 1 Mow lb 10 1 rea imperial lb 100 137 hyson lb 100 robacco manufactured lb 10 1 5 tVindow glass 8 x 10 59ft 3$ 3 10 x 33 3 * A NBW WAY TO WAKE STOKMS. Professor Epsy is altogether out-dona by a writer in the Star, who proposes to expand j the upper regions of the air bv exploding up there some 500 pounds of gunpowder in a i balloon. This done off the Ba'tery on a hot ( evening, he thinks would make a capital j shower for the city.?N. Y. Express. t I 1 Merchants' Bank of South Carolina, ) < CnERAW, June 27, 1839. J < Tho Directors of this Bank, have this day dc- ! clared a dividend of six dollars per share, for the last six months, on the capital stock thereof? ' the same will be paid on and after the 1st of July ' ' next. W. GODFREY, Cashier. ' June 28 33 2t. t A List of Letters j Remaining in this Office, 1 July 1839, which i if not taken out before the 1st of October next will be sent to the Gen'l. P. O. as 1 "Dead Letters." 1 A?Seldon Arnold. ( B?Danl. G. Beverly, Barnard & Co., j Jacq's. Bishop, Andrew Buchanan, A. H. ! Buchanan. C?Murdock Campbell, A. Church, J. W. i . S. Crowson, Robt. S. Campbell, Danl. Chap* man, Mrs. Catharine Campbell, Mrs. R. C ' Collins, Jno. C. Chapman. I)?Micaga Dinkine, Ransom Dodd, Leon* ' ard Davis, John Dunn, Mrs. Eliza Dicky. G?Danl. A. Graham, Malachi Gullege, ? Jno. M. Gilchrist, Theophalis Guye, GaI zette. ? H?Joel Hall, Mrs. Sarah Hudson, James ' Husbands, Isaac Hotchkiss, Stephen Hays. J?E. L. Jordon 3, Elisha Johnson, Edro'd. ? Jennings J. B. Johnson. ) L?Saml. Lilly. r M?M. McLean 2, D. McNair, D. Malloy, f Attn M. McQueen, Farkier McCary, Malcom t Mclnnis, James McKay, Jno. McNair, D. L. . McKay, Jno. McMillan, Peter Morrison, Ke' - ? j rs ~ . nan Morgan, mureneau a, ^u. 4 N?J. W. Nixon. r?Stephen Pcttus, Wm. PegueF, Mi~e! ! Mary Privitt, Jno. P. Perry, Rodger D. Park, s Tho'g. Parr. " ] j R?Wm. A. J. Read, Equilla Rusco. ^ S?B.C. Smith 4, Joseph S. Seavy, Thos. . Shiver 2, Jesae Sweet, McDonald Scolt, Silas Scipper Jr. Miss Amanda Smith, Lewi6 1 Scott & Co. Peter Stewart. 8 T?Asie Talbert, Jas. L. Terry & Co. 3 MilfordG. Tarrh. W?Mrs. Ann Wallace, Miss Margaret - Whitaker, Jackson Wallace. Persons calling for these letters will say e thev are advertised. B. BRYAN. P. M. Clieraw July 5,1839. 34 tf * INSURANCE. { 2 fin HE Subscriber is agent for the Columbia JL Insurance Company, and continues to Incure at a reasonable premium, Houses, Goods, . Wares and Merchandise, both i.T this pi2r-o and , the surrounding Country of South and North J Carolina. He will clso Insure Produce and Goods on their transportation on tho River from Chnraw to Georgetown and Charleston. Persons desiring 9 to do a safe business by protecting their property n by Insurance will do well to call on the Agent '* at Cheraw, at his store on Front Street, wh^re he may usuallj be found. Communications in Wt'u s ting will receive prompt attention. D. S. HARLLEE. c July 1st 34 3m. i u I . THE SILK GROWER, AND Farmer's Manual. f . (l Edited by Ward Cheney and Brothers. r 0 4k VQ&w&kma ? With additional Attractions! ^ riiHE present number closes tho first volume ? JL of the Silk Grower, and we now take the A opportunity to return our thanks to those kind # friends who have so liberally patronized us. The . success of the work has excecdod our most san. , 3 guino expectations, and will causo us to sparo 1 no la or or expense whatever to make the SR. I C'^ND VOLUME interesting to the SILK ; GROWER and the FARMER. The work now circulates over ten thousand copies ovcry month to subscribers in all parts of J the Union?and from the continued demand for 1 it, no doubt is entertained that the patronsge will 3 be increased in a few months at least four fold. We have nlaced in the hands of an eminent r French translator, more I ban 1000 pages of N e w Treatises upon The Silk Worm and the Sugar Beet, ^ which wero sent us from Europe, and in our next shall commenco the publication of them, ? knowing that th information there given will bo useful und satisfactory. We have also been promised the correspondence of several celebrated French Silk Cul'urists, which will also be pro. mulgatcd through our pages. In fact all that we I can do to disseminate practical knowledge as to 1 the silk business shall be done. 1 In beginning a New Volume, wc arc solicit. 5 ous that every person who wishes to obtain a 1 knowledge of the Silk Culture, and the growing 5 of the Legitimate Morus Multicaulis treo, will be \ persuaded to send u< their subscriptions at once, 5 that they may secure the work from tho coml mcnccracnt of the number just about to be pub. ) lished. The year's subscriptions to the rirst 5 volurao will coaso with the number now sent, D and we look with confidence for a renewal of the 5 samo immediately, as there is a progressive in5 tercst in the business which makes it requisite that our readers should become acquainted with 3 the important results of practice and experience 3 which wo havo to lay before them. The present 3 patrons of the work who wish their subscriptions S I to continue, will please forwaid their orders 5 (and the Cash) immediately 3 A few copies of the First Volume aro yet on 5 hand, and havo been stichcd up expressly for 3 tiansmission by mail. J The terms of the SILK GROWER and 3 FARMER'S MANUAL, is one dollar por ann. 1 Twenty subscriptions are furnished for ten dolls. 3 The work is published monthly?ever} num. 3 ber comprising twenty.four octavo pages, em. bollishod with numerous appropriate Engravings, 5 and the addition of a cover for advertisements, 3 &c. 1 IT Any Agent forwarding twenty names -nd 3 ten dollars (postage paid) shall be entitled to a ' 5 copy of the Volunio just completed, done up in 3 i a neat cover, which will be trau6mitlcd icomcdi. ately on the receipt of his order. ? j All orders for the work, postage paid, will be 3 I promptly a tended, if addressed to the Publisher, 31 C. ALEXANDER, Athenian Buildings, J j Franklin Place, Philadelphia. IT Our countiy brethren by publishing the 4 above a few times will entitle themselves to an 2 exchango for the New Volume about to bo coin? 1 menced, and also a full copy of the First Volume ! neatly stiched, whieh will bo sent to them as 0 , soon as their Dapcfs arc received containing the ) , Advertisement. }J July 5 3i 1 Ta^ss^smsBss^ss^ss^ssmess^ Rockingham Female Institute. HTIHE infcreased share of public attention JL which the subject of Female Education has ecently received, and the lively interest which is cgioning to be felt in its behalf are encouraging ligns of future improvement. The System wl licit ias long obtained in our country, it is to be fejfiet* ed, is radically defective in that almost exclusive ittention is paid to the ornamental to' the neglect . ?f that which is of primary importance. This desideratum, it has been the effort of Mrs. Greet, the principal of the Rockingham Fentaie Institute :o su pply ; and the result of the recent examination which we had the pleasure of attending,' proves that it was not without success# In th^s Institution the culture of tne mind is the cardinal Dbject of attention / and greater importance is formation of habits of clbee eiuowiicu iu %uv thought and protracted mental effort by which the mind is endued with strength, vigour and jlasticity, than to any given amount of cuAu:; information garnered up in the ''store house #f memory." The committee having attended the recent ex. animation, take pleasure in expressing the satis, faction they felt in witnessing the interesting exercises. We feel no hesitancy in pronouncing it equal, if not superior, to any examination of the kind we ever before witnessed; and the^ readiness and accuracy with which answers were given to the questions propounded, and the promptness and facility with which aeetitms end chapters of difficult fxUbooks were analized, did honour to the pupils and reflected credit on their worthy instructress. On the Evening of the same day we weirs highly entertained with the performanee| oflbe young ladies on the Piano Forte and Guitar; and though we are not professed connoisseurs, the exhibitisn, we think, indicated that the perforin. era correctly understood the true principles of Musick. The exercises closed and we retired to osr respective places of abode, after havrog passed a highly interesting day. The health and society of our village ronderit a very desirable location for a female Institution y and when we add to this, the competencyfof the principal and assistant, the coramitt e take the pleasure in recommending the Rockingham Pe.?-/ male Institute to the liberal patronage ofap in. telligent public. . .?? C. Robinson, .1. W. Covington, ^ . C. C. Covington, ? James F Leak, ?, John W. Leak, I W. F. Leak, ^ Wm. B. Cole, Mr. Robinson is one of the committee lut was absent at the examination. July 5th 34 , 3f;, ' PROSPECTUS OF THE NATIONAL MAOAZINS AN 0 Republican Review; Jqiin L. Smith, Publisher and Proprietor. ? Throughout the civilized world the miuda 61 men are, to an unusual degree, employed in what comes home to the business and bosoms of ?c alt, the mode in which their Governments are administered, the principles upon which they act, and the measures which they pursue. Theso are the topics of newspaper discussion, and of debate In our various legislative assemblies. It is, however, somewhat remarkable thai in this country so few efforts have been made to sustain any periodical publication upon this principle, while in Europe, and particularly in CScaat Brit, ain, politics form the staple or many of tbsir moat valuab'e works of this description. The peculiar position of our country renders i.? xmunt nn nnsoicious moment fof undertA. king a peri >dical of this character- The coadttt is arrayed into two great divisions, one of which may be denominated the Administration, the oth? et the Opposition party. The conduct of the former is encountered by', it is believed, a larger proportion of numbers, a greater portion of intelligence, and a higher grade of prineipln^The Motives which guide the Administration party we conceive to be narrow and erroneous ?the doctrines they promulgate dangerous and! pernicious?the objects they have in view, andf the tendencies of their measures selfish and do. struetive. It is time that they be met with vigor and with systom. The gradual but obvious aggrandisement ofthe '' (idwerofthe Executive, at the expense ofthe egislatire and judicial branches of the General I Government, shbujd be exhibited to the public | mind. The plausible pretenses under which this design is furthered should be exposed. The systematic plans by which corruption is spreading itself troughout the land, the discipline which has been introduced into the party ranks, the undisguised and open interference of the officers of the Federal Government in the eleu. tions even of local officers, the regular levying of contributions for the purpose of carrying on the party warfare, the devotional loyalty to the heads of a faction which is now exacted, and the' proscription of those who refuse to yield it, are " all subjects which demand and ought to receive a more full and prepared exhibition than they have yet received. These topics will form, in connexion with general views of the foreign and domestic policy of the Government, a principal subject of oar attention. Though politics will constitute tlte principle fiortion of this Magazine, the interests of general iteraturO will not be disregarded. Essays on Philosophical and Moral subjects; Reviews and Critical Notices; Historical and Biographical Sketches, and especially essays connected with the vital subj -ct of Popular Education, will .be occasionally inserted. . t The publisher win cmorace suiutuiu lenities of improving or extending the plsn, which may be presented by increased patronage. Engravings of Distinguished PublfC' Men will embellish the Magazine, as circumstances may allow the additional expense to be incurred. iaaiefe The National Magazine and Republican Re. view is published in monthly numbers of at least uinely-six octavo pages each, on finepapor, with new and handsome type, and in the most spjuayed mechanical and typographical appearance ' at the moderate price of Five Dollars a tear, payable in all cases in advance, or on the delivery of the third number, without respect of persons. t ; <-A Any person forwarding ten or more subsoribers, and beco . ing responsible for the amount of their subscriptions for .he first year, shall receive a copy gratis as long as they may contiuue subscribers, The publisher will be responsible for all moneys forwarded by mail, in case of miscon riage, provided the certificate of the Postmaster shall be secured, and copies forwarded according. lj% , * V A subscriber not ordering his subscription to be discontinued at the expiration of ?ho year, shall be considered as wishing the Review continued, which shall be forwarded, and the sub. scrlptib'h money expected on the receipt of the third number, as iii the first instance. No subscription taken for a less term than ona year. . ; All communications, post paid, addressed . the publisher, at his residence, Georgetown, ?).' C., will roceive prompt attention. JOHN L SMITH. Wi8hinoto.h D c., March 27, 1839. 7&&WW5 FOB sale at THIS OFFICE.