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without stain or dust, and dry it well, before storing it away for future demand. The present crop, though small, will exceed in quality the picking of last year. Owing to the scarcity of bagging and rope the crop after picking and drying, will be stored under shelter unpinned. The late foreign news has had a dispiriting effect on the markets for cotton in the South. Cotton is drooping and planters less exacting in their demands. The people of the South, in their simplicity, take Palmerston and Queen Victoria at their word. It is their own strong arms and sturdy hearts that must achieve their country's independence. So be it — Those who help themselves never lack friends. We should be ashamed of ourselves for having so long sought an acknowledgment of our independence. C. M. W. Jackson, Miss., Sept. 2, 1862. We have just received, by telegraph, Gen. Lee's dispatch to President Davis, announcing a signal victory over the combined forces of McClellan and P