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absccnco. They were shocked at oar wild sod frightful appearance; and my ?l me that at lie so many frr?rr, d fully from ected his buriends, anon the dreadful night. He fell to drinking soon after, and died a miserable drunkard, before age had whitened a hair of his head. Pah mv rtnrt I ennfeaa I linvo n#?r?p ?? A V? / f"*"- *P * * V MVf Vl VM" tirely overcome tho terrors of the melancholy circumstances, which I have endeavored to describe. The thought of it has haunted me like my own shadow; and even now, the whole scene comes at times freshly before me in my dreams, and I start up with something of the same feeling of terror which I experienced, when, ? more than half a century ago, I passed a night among the wolves. CAMDEN COURIER. CAMDEN, SATURDAY, APRIL 28, 1838. 'IV, . .1 ft v & _ 1 it o iugrut uim mo com* niunication of "R." in dcfenco of O'Connel and his countrymen, and in reply to our remarks of last week on this goat loin an catno too late for tlio present number. It shall appear next week. * Te.VAS AND THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT.?A slip from the New Orleans Bulletin of April 19, brings advicos that a letter has been received from London, with intelligence of the most friendly manifestations on tho part of England, towards our sister Republic of the South-west. It is stated that the dolay in recognising Iwr independence, has arisen mainly from the Canada rebellion, uud the expectation that Mexico would liavo mado another invasion during tho last winter. But now, the Canadian difficulties arc nearly settled; there is moro probability of tho Tex. ans invading Moxico, than of tho Mexicans invading Texas; and henco tho advices from New Orleans leave us awaiting anxiously the further deliberations of tho British Government. Whatovor bo the result, it will be full of interest, not only to Texas, but to ourselves. Whether her independence be recognised or not ' her cotnin<?rcial intercourse with England will bo established 0:1 a most advantageous footing. Texas be. iaga low, planting country, England will monopolize lier cotton trade, and exchange in return her manufactures without paying duty upon them; bccauso it will be the policy of Texas to establish a free trade, or, at baast, a very low tarill*. Texas in turn, will perceive the advantage of receiving goods directly lrom England, rather than from this eountiy, after - they have paid an average duty of dd percent.? Theso advantages she will lose by a connection with us, and hence slio must infer that it will bo her policy to remain independent, llor proposition to annex herself with us will be withdrawn, and all the benetits to which we have loeked forward from her annexation will be lost to us. This the Bulletin takes ? in high dudgeon, and roils bitterly against the mistaken policy of those whose opposition to her union Willi us, lias deprived us of mu:!i a profitable speculation. For our bumble selves, we beg leave to diiFcr. If it is to the advantage of Texas to remain single* and independent, we hope sh<- may ever do so. We have never anticipated, and are too disinterested to desire, any advant. ?:ro f : ' v. L..1 not bo mutual. If it is to h'.r ;v. t ; iUm a :ys. tct.i of free-trade, \vc would be the last to desire her to ho severed from such a system. If English mo nopoly is to deprive, us of her "immense and valuable trade," and if such an arrangement be to her advantage, we say, lot. it go. In line, if by a connection with us, Texas is to exclude herself from any source of profit; if she isrin any way, to retard her own prosperity, wo, ibr our part, would, not only willingly but cheerfully, resign every selfish consideration, and leave her to stand upright and alone. lint k!|C will ll"t oSllwl VI ' 1 - ? ..... ...v.-WHU UlUIKl * lUllll-U, iW (illU IS, Oil tlio borders of barbarism, political and social, she will nourish the flame upon the altar of Liberty, for the nations who sit in darkness around her. She will illumine thoin all with its radiations, and be their alma mater, in tlio arts of civilization and humanity. Wo have long been grieved to observe how narrow a slip of the mantle of charity, is axtcndod over her by her neighbors of this country. She has lior vices it is true, andhor condition is extromcly unsettled; but are her vices more numerous, or is her condition more unsettled, than our own, at tlio termination of the revolution ? Arc her morals oven now worse than those of that, section of the United States, on which she borders > Instead of being worse, they arc better; and we would remind those who chuckle over every murder within hor limits, as if it betokened our own superiority, that tho time may not be far distant when our constellation will be blotted from the political horizon, and the one star of Texas, despised, anhonorod Texas, be the only boacon to guide tho way-faring patriot to the Temp!a of Liberty. Dr. Cooper.?Wo have recently heard an anecdoto of this gontleman, which we do not remember to have seen in print. Shortly after tho passage, by tho Faculty, of a resolution that the students should all bo in their rooms by nine o'clock, tho students, to express thoir contempt of the measure, determined to put their heads out the windows, at the timo, and just as tho bell stoppod ringing, to raise a tremendous, universal horse-laugh?or what is better known by tho hame of "a college smile." They carried their determination into effect, and nightly, at nino o'clock, the ears of tho Faculty wore stunned by the reverborations of thoir "smiles" Mooting after mooting was held by those functionaries, and at length, in solemn conclave, it was decided that laughter was not wrong in the abstract, and tho case was referred to Dr. Cooper, for final decision. "Ah! well!" said the Dtf- ??wn >>*? ?! w ???? and let thom laugh on. When they are laughing, they are only playing the fool, and bo long an they playing the fool, wo can make ourselveB easy that thoyaro not playing the devil. Boys will be doing one or tho other." A brother quill recently unnouncee vory gravoly the accession of Queon Victoria! The same wise, acre, undo* tho head of " A lino chance for the , t * t | girls,"-remarks that the highest price of the next \ Virginia Lottery, ie to be thirty thousand tfeife, I .. I Lorrsaics?Oar brethren of the press are eery I ibusily' congratulating some "honest, worthy indi- < vidual" in the North who has lately drawn a prize of I ten thousand dollars. We know nothing, personal. 1I ly, of the' individual referred to, but whoever he is, J < instead of greeting him with the voice of congro. < tulation, we would go some distance out of our way, < to offer him our sympathies. We put no faith in < (these sudden accessions of wealth. All such as are ' not arrived at through the slow and sure channels 1 of persevering industry, do, in general, far more hurt 1 | than good, not only to the individual himself, but 1 I to the community at large. The reason of this is 1 obvious. The main value of money does not lie in the mere fact of its possession, or of its ability to 1 procure the conveniences of life. The chief benefits 1 arising from it, .are the habits of prudent forethought that have been excited during its acquisition, and j on which its acquisition deponded; the virtues of self-denial that have boen called up and strengthened during its attainmeijj. The man who by a stroke of fortune coines to the sudden and unexpected possession of wealth, loses all these advantages. He is without habits of forethought to guide him1 through the plans of an use ill and honorablo economy; he has no fixed principles of self-denial, for that virtue has dwelt in him as the offspring of necessity, and as soon as the nocossity is removed the; virtue is removed also. His newly acquired proper.! ty places him in a station that demands an increase | of expenditure; ho feels that he owes his importance i solely to his wealth, and this makes him go beyond, his means to support his consequence; the result is that his riches speedily take thomsclves wings ac-, cording to the proverb, bearing with them peace of mind and evory concomitant joy. This is an every day picture, and nothing litis contributed so much to 1 heighten its gloom and increase its frequency, as tho Lottery system of the present day. This system: involves a combination of evils unsurnnssed bv nnv ^ I \ corruption of the day, exhibiting an array of con-, traricties tho most direct, and of consequences tho | most appalling. In it, success is ruin; it is pre. sided ovor by a Goddess whose favorites aro licr principal victims; and they alone, of her devotees, ; are truly fortunato who arc frightened by her frowns, j into a desertion of hor shrine. Yet even these demand our sympathies Thrv are generally comprised among the poorer classes of society, and J save little by littlo from their hard earnings wlicrcj with to tempt the uncertain Goddess. They arc blessed with her frowns, it is true; but, then, tho i oblations which tlioy have brought her, arc just so many loaves of bread snatched from their famishing 11 I.-U - - ... uuubuhuiuk; ho in:iny pairs ot shoes from their perishing children; so innny blankets, that might have preserved them from the rigors of winter; and more than all, in seeking the favors of this polluted Deity, they have shaken oft* depcnduncc on Him who hears tho young ravens whon they cry, and, in righteous judgment, aro loft to the blindness of thoir ' own minds. Their habits of industry havo been destroyed by calculations upon the liino when industry would bo unnecessary; thoir sobor souses havo boon dazzled by golden antioipations; and when they awake from thoir dream of folly, they ore ; either cursed with reason to plunge them in drspair; or blessed with madness, to shut out from j them a true senso of their condition. The on:y i | rospcct in which they aro moro highly favored i than lie whom tho world calls more fortunate, ip, ! that in addition to being, brought to tho same j 'condition at last, he bears within him a mil d poi; soned by his temporary elevation and doubly embittered by the contrast of his present situation. Not only has he been a curse to himself but to others. So soon as his success was announced, he was fastened upon by a set of harpies, who beset a lottery-drawing as vultures hang over an army. They lauded him as the favorite of Fortune, and cheated him in. to risking more upon her favors, until he had no moro ' r~ ?:-t? " iino was mo signal lor tiioir departure,' for these "horse-leeches" never luck a keen perception into the ability of their victim to answer their cry of "give! give!" Yet so inverted aro his notions, that I lie looks upon their absence as a misfortune. He considers himself a deserted man, and is loud in his railings against the ingratitudo of the world. In the mean time his conduct towards the world has cnti. tlod him to any thing else than its gratitude. By his poisonous example he has led others to leave their honest callings and embark on the perilous sea of chance, and thousands have been ship-wrecked in his wake. His own turn comes at last, and his fate is tho worst. But if by any means, (as is sometimes the case,) he devotes his ill-gotten gain to honorablc and useful purposes, it only makos his cxamplo I toil-fold more pernicious, by giving the enemies of virtue double cause of gratulation, and enabling them, with the most dangerous of all sophistry, to exputi. ate on the apparently beneficial results of a most corrupt system. The man who, by a turn of the wheel of Fortune, arrives at opulence from indi-j genco, stands out before the world as an acknowledged pauper, who has attained wealth by contribu. tions levied on the pockets of his fellows; and the only difference between himself and the tenant of a poor-house, is that the "poor-tax* has been hoavier in his bohalf, than in behalf of (ho other. Our exchange papers have been so dull this week, I that our editorial scissors have got quite rusty. ? Ajwiy tiuug is niieu up wiui lirandrcth's fills and tho Matchloss Sanative. Appropog, of the Match, less Sanative. A Georgia negro lately ran away and hid in a swamp. Ilis master searched inertec* tualy after him for several days. At last, being utter., ly unable to find out in what part of it he lay hid, he j bethought hiin to pour in three drops of this 'divine' medicine, when, behold! the swamp vomited the negro up fifty feet high into the air, and his master was enabled to mark the spot whero he fell, and get him without further difficulty. ? | Tiie Abddtion.?The Erie Observer of i the ?th inst. gives the following account j of what took place in this affair, snbse- i qucnt to the conveyance ol the young < lady on board the steam boat. i The companion ot the young lady im- i mediately gave the alarm, and as soon as i the course of the carriage could he asce?? I lained pursuit was made toward the dock: i but by the time the pursuers arrived there, i the boat was some yards out. Providen- i ? * "J fjk * 4 ^ * * . VJ % ^ tlally Thomas Jefferson was lying at tlio same pier, though without fire* and measures were in.m< dint* ly taken to get Iter under way in eliase. A number of citizens volunteered their services onbourd ihe latter, which was got out in about three hours alter the departure ol the Malison. The night and morning being ex* Lremel) fuggy, no truce of the Madison could be obtained until they approached Ashtabula creek, where she was discovered moored at the dock, but left before ihe arrival of the Jefferson and headed for Cleveland. The latter, however, did not continue the pursuit directly (as was eviil? ntly exported) but went into the harbor, where the individuals who had volunteered their services immediately went ashore; and ifter considerable search and inquiry discovered the young lady through the window of the public house from which she made a signal to them, when they immediately rushed for the room, the door of which they vvcr? obliged to break open in order to train p i ney inert* l<>und ihc object of their search in company with Capt. B. who by promises, persuasions and high handed threats, was endeavoring to prevail upon her to tnarr> him* lie had indeed, so far succeeded as to obtain h?r consent on condition that he wouhl immediately return with her to Erie,?she in the excitement ami agitation of mind naturally attending such an oc? currance. and operating upon a nervous system, supposing this the most effectual, and, in fact, only means hy which she could return to. and obtain the protection of her friends?hating also been assured by hint, that resistance was tisehss, and he was prepared to carry out hy force hit full determination of making her his wife As soon, however, as she could bt brought to realized that she was witli friends who would and could protect her she avowed her desire to return, aue threw herself upon their protection. 11< r? n severe struggle ensued. Cant. It eni*;**., _f .. ? her by the arm, w hich lu* held with a death like grasp, which lequired the united strength ot a nuitiher to release. Sht was, however, released and taken to ilu boat, which irnincdiat* ly returned will lici ?o Erie, where she arrived, alter an absence of about twelve liouis and trav? r sing <v0 miles of the lake navigation, to th< no small joy of her parents and l igh gra liheation of all our citizens. To heighten the flag-ancy of the out rage; its author had seized upon a time when the fat'?cr of the victim was confined to a bed of sickness, and wholly unable to render any pron riioti. We understand diligent measures are in progress to arrest and bring to justice tin pritici; al in this murage. A lew individuals have been arrested and held to hai on charge of being accomplices in th? transaction, and warrants, we. believe an out for others. The Buffalo Cot:?r* ? iria] Alter ise Completes the hi?to? , .. < iollows: A gcnJeman uirect i.'mn Erie inform: us thai the above is substantially correct Miss llamot wa? married on Sutuhit eve ninjr I" M(. W.'lcer, ? tm reliant of Erie and thus ? mis t romance. An Example \m>ktiiv m Imitation.? We observe in one of a file ol Matagorda (Texas) papers, received yesterd.it, a correspondence between Mi atn an B Lamar, and Thomas J* Rusi, upon il ? subject of the candidacy for the presidency of the Repul lie. Both gentlemen Inn ber n sj oken^if for the office, and u In n Mr. Lamar Was applied to for pennies on to announce his name, he writes in tin following strain to Mr. Rusk. Gen. Rusk:?Dear Sir ? ] have ji-i rec?ived a letter from several dist ngur1 ed gentlemen, our mutual friends, in\iiiug tve to become a candidate f..r it... KM IM A I Presidency. As you have been spoken ??i very extensively for the same high office, I am anxious to see you before I give a final answer. It is important that harmony at all times should he pr? served in our country; and, at the present period any violent contest for the Chief Majistracy, could not fail to be extremely prejudicial to the peace ami prosperity of the country, but might really prove fatal to its best hopes, 1 know that you, as well as myself, must deprecate these consequences; and with the view to avoid them, I think it all important that we should have a free and unreserved conversation, and by comparing our views, conic to some conclusion, whilst it may be satisfactor) to ourselves, will be most conductive to the public interest. I shall he at my room about 2 o'clock, when I hope it will be convenient for you to call upon me. Your friend and obedient servant, M. B. LAMAR. Mr. Rusk Repi.IV-* Dear General?Your note of this* morning has been received, informing me of a request having been made by several distinguished gentlemen to you, to become a ran idate for the Presidency of the Hepublic at the next election, and desiring a free and unrestrained confidence between us on that subject before you answer to ilieir communication. I fully subscribe to the propriety of the course vou < ? *nd am proud to say, that it gives me another proof, in addition to the many I have already had, of your patriotism, and detiro to promote the harmony and good if the country. From a press of liusiaess, it will not be in my power to call sit four room at two o'clock this evening; mt I hope you will not on my account, iave hesitancy in giving your consent to he request alluded to, as there is 110 d? sign or desire on my part to have my name before the people for any office what? i ever. As tfie representative of my comi-t try, I feel bound to discharge to (he bust ? of my abilities, the duli< s of the stat; t.; i but beyond this, my private a flair*, ami t .domestic obligations so long m gb el- d, * (imperiously demund my attention, and t I will not permit me to think of public life beyond the discharge of those military : obligations in the hour of danger, which i t I hold m?rum?>tim to all other considers- t lions. Bui 1 shall he pleated dear sir, to f see your name before the people for the r office of C.iief Magistrate, and shall he v happy to sustain you in your labors for . I the welfare of our country, to which wc ? are both under many obligations for con- t fide nee reposed and honors eon to red. i I am sir, truly*Votirs* i THOM AS J RUSK. We recommend this patriotic indifference to office, ami disinterested zeal for the good of the country, and even their party, to the great rival candidates for th? Presidency of the United States. Texas.?By the >iea . packet Columbia, from (ialveston, wc have received files of 1 ' the Houston Telegraph to the date of ! Match 31st. The District Court was in < session at Houston. Of its proceedings the Telegraph remarks, the decorum ih?i has uniformly been observed, the cordiality and even ofljeiousness, which hav? been every whereslnvvn in sustaining the 1 ! officers of justice: in the discharge ol their duties, the intelligence and respcc, lability of it.e jurors, the dec? rous ano ( | gentlemanly depot intent of the several at- 1 I | torreys engaged, ai.d the ability, integriI { tv and decision of the presiding Judge, . have comhined to render this Court one . i!t? most august nul interesting spectacles, which out city has ever afforded* On the 28lh, at Houston, W C. Quick and D;.\id Jones were executed for inur- ! d? r The confession ami dying speech of the former was forwarded to us, hut there is no space foi its publication. On the frontiers there was no disturbance except an occasional skirmish bet ween wan- , dering bands of savages. A party of surveyors, front the ?head waters of the Guadaloupe, report an engagement, in w nich a troo > of Shawue.s fought tin t'anianrhes and put them to flight with , the 'oss of iglit men killed. ( By way of improving the currency, some ingenious persons have suggested that the government of Texas instead ol , issuing | romissory notes, should issue hills, each of which, may he an inlinep di?te title to iund, representing some specified portion, desig ated in advance, ( an>l numbered oil * map prepared for tl e purpose. The scheme does not seem to t;?U? , and will s'-areely be attempted. 1 The * exiear fl et ha?T isappi a*ed from 1 the T? \i?n coast, w lu ll ? ? -l-iven oil b\ I the 11 i _ 1. i the\ r? c?i ? t tin- -ieato 1 ei giue nl the t r<< ,!r? ad < i ( o'i eiiemii j- e?]U '!: ' idibh, has III l In i*ii revealed ffer . ; annals from 5 ' Tampi?*o, stale thai the blockading sqtiaI -J ? . | (iron na<i returned to that port and sailed - thence I? i* Vera Cruz. Fr ?ni this it would , seem that all the parade of this blockade ?js got up it.or* tor i>;avad>>, than from serious intention ot shutting tip an enemy's ports. Perhaps the prime niotive to this excursion, was the hope of booty, of winch a i-i h harvest mi? hi have been fathered troin unarmed passengers, bv.t 01 ti:e rencontre with the 1 ulumhia. In annexed eloquent extract is taken roin the addtessot the Rducaiion l"o: i \eniion ot New Jersey It is when such ' truly American spirit is infused in tin j" fforl- of the friends of general eciuca- I ion, that we may hope for the best Iruits 1 roin their labors. Bishop Doane is the i i' thor of the address, and we honor i mi , for the expression of sentiments so nor by of a son of this land of freemen.? ( Bait. Republican. We utterly repudiate, as unworthy, not of freemen only, but of men, the | < Iliirl'iilV tli " - 1 - -....ww.., ...... in n :? u* or an niuc ition for the poor, as such. Has God < provided for the poor a coarse eauli a J thinner air, a paler . ky ? Hoes not the t glorious sun pour do >m? his g. Iden flood t as cheeril) upn the poor man's hovel as ' upon the rich man's palace? Have s?<?t I the potter's children as keen a sense of all j freshness, verdure, fragtu ice. melody and i beauty of luxurious natuie, as the pale sons of kings? Or is it in the mind, th.it God has stamped the imprint of a baser birth, so that the poor man's child knows, that it is an indorn certainty, that his lot is to crawl, not climb? It is not so. G o 5 has not done it. Man cannotdo it. Mind ( is immortal. Mind is imperii!. I* b. anno mark of high or l**w?of rich ot poor. . It li?eds no bound of time or place, or , rank of circumstance. It asks hut free* 1 ilom. It requires but light. It is heaven* 11 born, and it aspires to heaven. Weakness does not enfeeble it. Poverty cannot | press it. Difficulties no not stimulate its , vigor. Ai.fl the poor tallow-chandler's i son, that sits up all the night to .read the ' book which an apprentice lends hiin, losi ( th?' master's eye should miss it in the m??r-I? I ning, shall stand and treat with kings, shall bind the lightning with a hemp cord. | and bring it harmless from the skies. The Common School is common, not as infe- ! rior, not as the school for poor mens chit- \ dren, but as the light air are common. It ought to he the best school: and in all . good works the * beginning is ? ne hah' Who docs not know the value to a comin unity of a splendid supply .of the pure j element? And infinitely more than thi*, , is the Common Schol? for it i< ihe fouu- < lain at which the mind drinks, and tt iA refreshed and strengthened for its career ( of usefulness sod glory. i ? f n Mr. WslliVu Ofiniow 6t rtit tiktitiif ?* Thai young person," said Mr. Pick' *ick, ''is Btlaclicii to your soil."?"Ttf S.? .live! Vellt't!" exclaimed the parenI.; * Ye?,M said Mr. Pickwick. ''It's nut'ral," mid Mr* Wellt-r,- after some consideration ?''nut'ral, but raytlicr ularminV Ham^ ny must be careful." "How do you neun?" inquired Mr. Pickwick. Wety ireful ilial lie aint led amy in a innocent noineut to eay anythiu' as may lead to a ><i(iUlSi.ii<ii* fi>? li.nnrtli Va* -- UMff ii ivi irp VUVH VM I c iir 1 cr BUIO ith'em, Mr. Pickwick; ven they fonce; tas designs on you, there's no knotvfry' rerc to have 'cm; and vile yor'rc constlering of i'.? they lii*e you. I was mar ied lust that fay myself, sir, and Sammy was the consekens o* the inanoover.'* A New Propelling Power.-? Doctor Brundfrth is now in New Orleans. The Picaune says the object of his visit to that city* is to charter a new fashioned steamboat, which is to be freighted entirely will* pills for (he Mississippi Valley; the cngincs* o he ivnrked by pills of 150 horse power. MARRIED?In Lynchburg, Va. on Tuesd^yuveoing, me 10th instant, at the residence of Col.Aug. Leftwich, hy the Itev. Win. S. Reid, Alf.xi)i n Uu i ucni ono, Esq., of Richmond, to Miss (Ceziaii K., daughter jf the late James Clark, Esq. of this place. i'aiudou i*rice Currcnf. S.1TURDAY, April 28, 193d. Cotton, * - 6 a 10 Corn, per bushel, - 61 100 Flour, country, per barrel, - - 7 f.0 a P 44 Northern, do 00 til) Rice, * - 3 a 4 CO Sugar, per lb. - 10 a 14 Coffe, 44 ... 12 a 16 Baron, " . 12 a 14 Beef, 7 a 9 Mackerel, - 0 a 14 Salt, per sack. I - - ?-r? Fodder, per cwt. - - - $1 a 1 43 Wdinkey, 45a 50 Molassfs, N. O. - - 50 a 02 44 Havana and Sweet, - 46 a 50 Porter. London, per doz. 5 a 5 (JO Raisins, Malaga lh>nch, - 3 50 a 4 Tobacco, - - - 12 a 75 Bagging, Hemp - - 22 a 26 " Tow, - - 19 a 22 Rale "iope - * 12 a 15 Twine, - - 31 a 37 Spermaceti Candles. ? ? 40 a 45 Tallow 44 . - . 12 a 16 a'W' ' are authorized to announco Benjamin * G ass as a candidate for SHERIFF, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation oi Wiu? Rosser. April 11 50 WE arc authorized to announce James L. Jone* as a candidate for SHERIFF, to fill the varan *v occasioned by the resignation ofWm. Rosser. A ,>ril 14, 50 H AJ1ES 8. STEWART is a candidate mTf in. ? horiffnfK?rJ,?... A 1 oi r.i o. _ .... .... w xi|n?i <ei KMX Ufc Sulkey for Sale. ^ x E \ f Sulkey and Harness for sale chcap v ?>v H, LEVY. A j? ?l 2^ 52 3t OJTICC. The notes anil accounts of W. ** It. Daniels, have been placed in my hands for colli i tion. some length of time. I am disposed to keep them no lonjjer; jiersons indebted, arc requested ??v come forwi rd immediately and settle, otherwise they s?;:ai.i. be put to Cost. ri: 28 52 tf W. R. YOUNG. k 1YISION ORDERS HEAD QUARTERS, > Winnsborough, April 20, 1838. f f'llv SMART, Esq having been duly appoints! Ai?1-de-<'amp to Muj. Gen. John Bnchan na . with tin rank of Major, he will be olieyed and r? h|kvIi d accordingly. By order of Mnj. Gen. Euctiannan. SAML. H. YONGUE, Aid-de-Camp. A pril 98 r?2 3t jc ' r. .loliift Sitppiugtoii'M Anti-Fever s k K'LJs?A certain andetfectualjcure for Ague ind Fever Bilious and other Fevers. To be had at ? W WARREN'S Drug Store, One dnre above Shannon, M'Gee &. Co. April 28 .V2 tf N i ? Ce-tific.tcs of their eflicacy may be seen t>V applying as above. Floritla Claims. ? ? ftflD nr. v^oiiKiimee appointed ;or the adjustment J of Claims lot losses in Florida have passed up? n -II th< se uh rh are sufficiently complete to atf*- * nil 01' n tin a d< cision '1 he amount of those slowed may be received on application, previous to he first of May. at the Branch Bank in Columbia, >nly by the pei^nns authorised to do so, viz: for <pt. Smith s Company, W. A, M'Creight. " 44 H.artrrove's 44 Dr. J. H. King. ' " Jo.ies' " A. C. Jones. ' * Child's " J. R. Wilson. 44 44 1'ickens' " J W Norris. 44 <r Gibson's ' George Witherspoon 44 44 Chesnut's 44 L. S. Patterson. ,4 41 Dul- sc's 44 S. Lacoste andA. Garden. ? u Wlji'mire's 44 Joshua Whitmore. Infor. atiou concerning claims'rejected, or thoso ruspended l?.r insufficiency of evidence or other ause, mt.y also be had ty application to Col. R. LI. G odwin, at the Bank. April '28 52T 1 P. M. BUTTLER. SUING! ES WANTED?Wanted, 100,000first r .'e heart 'ine Shi. g es, to be delivered at the f 'amden Br;dge, on rr before the first day of luly next, for which cash will be paid on delivery CH ARLES VANDERFORD April 7 49 it rg| V. I'.' ot-artnership heretofore existing under Si the :.rm ot Bishop Ami Gilchrist was at an etui >n i he l-? -lay < f February, 1838. april u 50 ti j. m. gilchrist; ( lock and Watch Maker raid, subaorner respectfully mforhiathe citizen* of Camden, an.l its m ighht rhood, that he ha* or fifed himself in this place, 3 doora ahovi the Cam* ten Rank, witere he wi.i attend t > all businesR in ii? line. J. B, KL1NGLE. April 7 49 tf HK Rank of Cam don Sout h Carolna. The nnruai meeting of the r?t?cMinl era of this Bank will coi:ve: r at the Banking 1on-*? in ?lcn, ou the first Monday in May ?ex\ v.; hi an election of seven Ihrerrors to ser** o* the ustunp "v .r ? 11 Vc heM ky order ot t.ts > ard W J. GRANT, Cath'r. The Southern Tina s, Columhia, Cheraw Gazette, Uhcraw, will insert the above until the 1st Monday n May. April M SO St