University of South Carolina Libraries
NE WBERRY, S. C. Wednesday Morning, October 10, 1866. We invite attention to the card of Messrs. Booser and Peoples, offering fair compromise to debtcrs. All should avail themselves of these inducements, and get rid of the night-mare debt. Da- R. S. WHALEY respectfully announces to his friends and the public that he is perma nently located in Newberry, and will be pleased to wait upon then, professionally, either at his office, or their residence, when desirable. NEWBERRY COLLEGE.--We are gratified to announce to the friends of this institution that it is again open. For the present the faculty is limited, but professors will be secured as the school increases. It is pre sided over by that good, pious and learned man, Rev. Prof. J. P. Smeltzer. The Newberry District Bible .Society will meet in the Lutheran- Church Saturday the 13th inst., at 11. a. tn. The friends of the Bible cause are invited to attend. An address will be delivered by Rev. Mr. Smeltzer. The object of the meting will be to secure members. No cetse is more worthy of a large membership. Health and 1r1fperity of Charleston. It affords us much pleasure to learn that the city of Charleston is in such an excellent sani tary condition. The broke-bone fever, not at all dangerous, is rapidly passing away. It enjoys perfect immunity or exemption from the pesti lences of the day, so afflictive to other commu nities. No better proof is ne ded than the daily arrival from, and departure to Charleston, of our merchants. Commercially, the old city is also do:ng well. The community sy&pathizes with our afflicted townsman, N. B. Knox,,who, within the brief space of a month, has consigned to the .silent chambers of the grave, three members of his household; an endeared female relative, a lovely little daaghter, and "bAfbeloved, devoted wife. The'tendrils that enftined about his,heart have I been broken one by one, and he is bowed beneath a burden+of grief too deep for utterance-and eloquent enough to challenge .the sympathy of -angels The vew store of Mr. Singleton (No. 2. Mollohon.Row) is a feature in that old and favorite business block of stores. We are tpleased tootice the varied and choice stock of family groceries in this establishment, * besides therprincipal and leading articles of * ~ dry goods, as .well as shoes, &c. It is the * aim of Mr Singleton to make No. 2. a place much to be desired to trade at, and as near A No. 1. as citt,umstances will allow, both in regard to excelDence in goods and in prices. HIs motto is qnick sales and short profits. H is polite and -gentlemanly clerks are in ikeeping with the general excellence. Sum mary. Disasterk byflood,-have befallen many of the farming interests'of the North-west; much corn, etc., destroyed. IGloomy tidings reach us from EnglanAd -and Western Europe, concerning the harvests. In Russia, the crops were abundant. Agricuutn1-societies are being organized in Georgia; we neba agricultural clubs and socie ties here in Carolina-we need them inNewberry. "We can neverdaover our lost wealth or posi tion exeepts through a prosperous agriculture. * We need especially exhibitions of agricultural * mplements and: labor-saving machines, more 'than at any peiod of our history." The intelli * gencevocmeeup.from may sections of the State, that revivals of religion are progressing. We trust that the day is not far distant, (dark as Is the prospect}when wars and persecutions shall Cease. The Preibytery of South Carolina con ~vned in -Anderson, last Wednuesday. The 'Charleston papers announce the death of Mr. H. L.1BiteidemI~, the late genial and kind-hearted host of the 1'avilion Hotel, Charleston. They also record the death of Mr. Andrew McDowall, an esteemed citizen of that city. Another fiend ish attempt was made last 'week to throw the cars from t$ze track of the Blue Ridge Railroad, below Pentdleton. It is proposed by one AhYuc, we believe, to flood the South with laborers from 'the "fiewety kingdom." It will never do to s plaint the Mangolian here. The cholera has bro - ;ken .gt'with much virulence, in Philadelphia. The rinderpest, or great cattle plague prevails -in.Kentuicky. A mountain of pure rock-salt, several thousand feet high, has been discovered nj Nevada. It Is said that Mr. A. T. Stewart sof;New York, will donate one million dollars to .build tenen:enut houses for the deserving indigent .peor,.provided ground was furnished. A boat's .crew :from his imperial French Majesty's war --stamer Fulton, were captured, killed and eaten .by'the savages of New Caledonia, in the Pacific, Aast June. The ship's crew visitecy summary vengeance upon the canibale, by shooting and bayoneting them and burning their villages. War ha broken out In Candia between the Chbristians and Inxidels. The allied Turks and Egyptians sufibred a kess of 3000 killed, in an engagement. Agitation speads. The complica tions in the East are so great that Western Eu, rope is apprehensive of trouble. OIGWLE GUTB.-One night last -week three negroes effected an entrance to .the dwelling house.of Mr. Daniel Hammond, living near Smithfield, Jefferson county, * Ohio, while all members of the family were .absent, excepting two daughters of Mr. Ham mnond, and gratified their brutal passions by .outraging the bodies of the two.young ladies. They effected entrance .about nine o'clock in -the evening and did not leave till near four .o'clock in the morng. -One of the young ladies is not expeeted to liwe. In the famiine districts in eidia, the natives :are redneed to feed on xoots sad mango stones, which they gri.ad into a kind of flour. This miserable sastenauee is wholly insuffi cient tokeepaage numDber Of them from starving, and the fearful spectacle is presented of namerons cosrpses lying on the highways. They remain uznburied, and, probably as a ~Consequence, ieholera has broken out, and is earrying off large numbers of persons. [n their utter distress mothers are offering their 4hildren for sale in order to bny bread. The French navy has the biggest gun yet cast-a 40,000 pounder. Our Exchanges. We have received the American Agricul turist, for October. This popular monthly, published at 41 Park Row, N. Y., by Orange Judd & Co., for only $1,50 per annum, in advance, is brimful of agricultural, hortienl" tural and scientific intelligence. It is devoted to-the farm, the garden and the household. Also, the American Farmer, for October, a handsome monthly magazine, of agriculture and horticulture, the oldest in the United States,is published by Worthington & Lewis, 52 South Gay St., Baltimore, Md., Price $2 per annum. And "The Southern Cultivator," published at Athens, Georgia, by Win. N. White, $2 per year. The Cultivator for October, is replete with delightful, edifying and in structive reading for the farmer. "Agricul ture is the most healthful, most useful, and most noble employment of man," and we would be rejoiced if, at this juncture, in our farming history, every planter in the South would subscribe for the above works. They are publications that will bear the test of criticism every way, and yield a handsome return for a careful perusal. The Abbeville Banner.-Mr. James S. Cothran retires from the editorial chair. He says, in his valedictory, "that the retrospect is so fNll of blasted hopes, perfidious promises, delusions, pain, anxiety, trouble, that he shrinks from bolding it to view." Messrs. X. M. and W. W. Farrow succeed in the management. Sumter News.-Friend Darr, has associated with him in the management of his handsome paper, Mr. N. G. Osteen, a practical printer and courteous gentleman. Mr. F. J. Moses, adorns the editorial column. The Weekly Record, offers to any clergyman sending the names of two annual subscribers with the cash, a third copy of the Record free for one year. The Charleston Record is a com pendium of useful intelligence. * The Columbia Carolinian.-Mr. De Fontaine will, in addition to his popular daily, soon issue "the tri-weekly", and Weekly Carolinian. Send in your names at once. Tri weekly $2.50 for six months; weekly, $1.75, do. Southern Enterprise.-Mr. W. P. Price, the senior partner of the Press has sold his interest to Mr. John C. Bailey. Col. G. F. Townes takes control of the editorial department; It will suf fer no detriment at his hands. Success to the Enterprise, brother Bailey and the Col. Savannah Advertiser.-E. O. Withington, pub lishes, in Savannah, one of the neatest, live liest and quickest little dailies in the South. We recommend the Advertiser to every one wishing a Savannah paper. Subscription only $4 per year. The~ Augusta "'Press."-Mr. E. H. Pughe has enlarged and improved his paper. It is alive, and robust with 'healthy' matter. We commend the "Daily Press" to those wanting a paper from Augusta. Tire SIGYs.-The Louisville Journal ob serves: The signs are direful. Our nation ality seems more fearfully threatened than it was at any time during the late war, the world's greatest war. The portents glow and redden like balefires upon all the hills. The country is covered with combustible materials scattered around by: fierce hands, and the hurling abroad of a single firebrand from Washington, or the bursting of one flash of lightning from the lurid clouds that hang low over the capitol may wrap the land in a conflagration of civil war. And let the Northern people remember that if civil war comes, it will rage and madden and work its desolations first in the North, and if the South choose, be confined to the North. The people of the North, with the exception of the soldiers, know little of war save from reading about .it. The flames of bnrning cities glared, and the thunder of hostile can non roared and died away a thousand miles off from them, but let a civil war, such as large portions of them seem now to be invo, king, burst forth among themselves, and they will be the witnesses and the victims of horrors wholly unparalleled by the late dreadful experience of the South. It will be a wEir, less of armies than of neighbors, and neighborhoods The midnight torch will be one of the chief weapons of the fight. The air will be red with flame and black with sulphurous smoke. Every man who does not convulsively shut his eyes, can foresee the consequences, but we can scarcely hope that any consider ation, however appalliug, will cause fanatics andi madmen to pause in the execution of their wild and ferocious policy. "lis little to a man to die, but that our once all'glori os country should perish from off the face o~ the earth-the thought is terrible. It might well sadden the whole civilized world. IloNORABLE .-Several of our lawyers have infornied us that even had not the Legislature postponed the Fall Session of the Courts of Common Pleas, the docket would have presented a beggarly array of suits. We are proud to record this evidence of the goodfeeling prevailing among the citizens of this District. An instanse has very re, cently been brought to our attention, where a gentleman declined to accept specie in pay ment of a debt contracted before the war, declaring he would only receive currency. We have heard several merchants express their willingness to compromise with their debtors upon the most liberal terms. Such Iindications of humanity and sympathy, amid the demoralizing tendencies of the times, are most creditable and praise-worthy, and de-' serve the highest commendation. [Chester Standard. Thn SOUT.-The destiny of the South is the fate of Fairfield District. WVhile we have no desire to screen the worst aspects of the current of events as it flows by, it is ad visable that a dignified composure character *ize us under the really ominous cioud now growing darker and darker above our politi, cal horizon. Let us push on as though the utmost prosperity awaited us- It is worse than childish to fold our arms and growl over the rudeness with which we have been treated, or put on a long face of melancholy at what seems to be in store for us. Let us rather go on just as if there was not a Radical outside of the Chinese wall. -Six years of hard times must not be lost as a school of Iexpeience.-Winnsboro'_News. An unsual amount of sickness is prevailing in the country, mostly chills and fever. At West Point, Columbus, Georgia and other adjoining places, chills, bilious and broken bone fever are the prevailing disease. The poorest man in the world is a Kentucky editor,who declares that if salt was selling at two cents per barrel, he could not buy - enug to pikl a jnv bird. ACQUITTAL Or MESSRS. STARLING AND POPE.-The trial of these two gentiemen, J who it will be remembered were instrumen- c tal in the killing of John Counts alias John e Dawkins, the negro murderer of Mr. Lemnel i Lane at Newberry, and in the recovey fron i him of several thousand dollars, took place t yesterday, before His Honor Jadge Aldrich. 1 Indicted for murder, every particle of evi- 1 dence that could be gathered, was adduced a pro and con ; and after the arguments of s Messrs. Baskin and S. Melton, on the part I of the defence, Mr. Ficklin for the State, and < the charge of his Honor, the case was given s to the jury, who, after an absence of three - quarters of an hour reurned the verdict "not guilty." The case is one which has excited much attention. Had the -victim been a white man, and like John Counts the freedman, a known murderer, no trial would have taken place ; but the fact that the victim was a negro, induced the authorities to make a most searching investigation, and subject the case to the severest tests. We shall publish a full report of the proceedings here. after. BANISHED POE 5 YEARS.-John Tollison and his two sons, young men who had been found guilty of cow stealing, after an affects ing address by his Honor Judge Aldrich, were banished from the State for five years. Samuel Byers for an assault and battery was fined fifty dollars. Charles Parker, found guilty of horse stealing was sentenced to be hung on the first Friday in February next. The jury-had recommended the prisoner to executive clemency. Phillips threattens the block and the axe ; Brownlow the torch and turpentine ; Forney, impeachment ; Sherwood, murder; Stephens, the penitentiary of hell. This specimen statesmanship of the radicals, says the Argus, ought to make holders of United States securities rush to the polls next No vember to keep those statesmen in power. ALBANY, N. Y., October 5.-In this vicinity to-day Judson Palmer eloped with he daughter of Archibald Stevens. The latter went in pursuit and the two men finally confronted each other in the house of a friend and commenced firing. Stevens was killed and Palmer slightly wounded. The latter, however, carried off the woman. News from Japan says "rice has fallen two boos per picul"-whatever that means. New Advertisements. We invite attention to Circular and Gen. Orders in to-day's paper issued from, the headquarters of Gen. Scott, Ass't Com. Freedmen's Bureau. I. M. Suber & Co., Boot and Shoe dealers have.a most complete and elegant stock of goods, all warranted of best material and good make. Prices cheap, Capt. J. Y. McFall with Mathias Barre and Son, dealers in foreign and domestic, staple and fancy dry goods. Gregg & Co., corner Richardson and Tay lor Sts., Columbia, S, C.. importers and deal, ers in Crockery, Glassware, etc. Notice application for charter-W. G. Mayes. Notice-E. A. Bradley, Ex'or. Special Notice-P. Rodelspetger & Co. Ordinaries Notices-J, T. Peterson. Selling off below cost-Win. Boag, RT.TGIdUS NOTICE.-Having* seen, in the Herald, the generous offer of the use of Fairview Baptist Church for our contemplated Union Meeting, we hereby gratefully accept the offer an d respectfully invite the clergy of all christian denominations, and the community generally to attend. Services will commence on Saturday before the 2d Sabbath in November anji will be continued as long as there is a prospect of doing good and saving souls. The Pastor Rev. W. D. Mayfield will be present. J. HAWKINS. OBITUARY. DIED, in HeleDa, on the 25th of September, of congestion of the brain, CORA HALLO WAY BREAZEALE, aged 9 years and three months, youngest daughter of Halloway and Caroline Breazeale. Cora was much beloved by all and peculiar ly so by those who were daily associated with her. She was a favorite with her teachers as well as her schoolmates, fi4om the eldest even to the little ones who could barely lisp her name. Cora was too pure for earth and as a ten der plant has been transplanted to a more congenial clime. She is now with Him whio hath said "Suffer little children to come unto me and forbid them not, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven." We deeply sympathize with her bereaved parents and sister. May we when called to go up higher, join our dear little friend Cora in singing "Around the Throne of God mn Heaven" which was the last hymn she learned on earth. M. S. B. COMECIAL. Markets corrected weekly by Mayes and Mar tin-currency prices. Baggng, Gunny, per yard,.................48c. Dundee, ".............------------..4Lc. Bale R ope,.Manilla, per lb............ 30 to 85c. S "Hemp,..................... 25 to 30c. P]ough Steel, per lb,.................- 18c. H. S. Iron,........... ..... ...-----. 2 to 14. Sweede Iron,................----------- .- 14 Nails,--- . ........-----. ------ -- -. ---. -'--- 12 Blue Stone....................--...-----2 Coffee, Rio,........--------- .------------. 85 " Java,......................------------5 Sugar Brown,................---~.--.-..-----~~ " Refined,........................ 20 to 25 Rice..........----- ..---- .------- .--.------ 18. Salt, Liverpool,.................... 4.75 to 6.00 Cheese,....... .---------------- .---- .-.----. Mackerel, kits,................ ........ 4.00. Candles, Adamantine,................... 40c. " Sperm,................................5c. Molasses, Sorghum,.............................00 " Cuba,.........................1.0 Corn,......----------..... ................. 0 Meal,......... .............................. 2.00 Gold, . ........ -.--.-.--------- ..----------- 0 Produce Market-Wagon Price. Butter, per pound,..........................25. Beef, '........................10 to 2 Bacon, ". '--.--. ---------.----- ----.-. .-.-.-25 to 27 Eggs, per doz................................. 20c. Flour, per b.......................... 16.00 Lard, per pound,.......................... 25c. Peas, per bushel,.......................... 5 Chickens..............................20to 80 NEwBERRY, Oct. 9.-A good demand for Cotton at from 28 to 33c., tax included. COLuBIA, Oct. 9.-Cotton 27 to 30, corn $1,50, flour 12 to 18. NEW YORK, Oct. 8.-Gold 49k. Cotton heavy, with sales of 1,500 bales. at 37 a 39.1 Flour lower-Southern $12 a 16.50. MOBILE, October 8 -Cotton sales to day 600 bales; middling 35. Market quiet, with a moderate demand. NEW ORLEANS, October 8.-Cotton un changed-low middling 35 a 36. Gold 146k. LIvEPOOL, October 6.-The cotton mars ket has declined jd., with sales to-day of 1,000 bales-middling uplands 14jd. Con sol. 89kTTnited States five.twentis '70k. LAURENSYULE FEXALE CQLLEGE.-The Lnual Fall Session of this Institution began n Monday last with a full corps of able-and xperienced Professors all at their posts. Tbe odications are, we learn with pleasure, that ae classes will all be well filled. Pare*ts binking of sending their daughters had >est do to at once, as it is always so much >etter in every respect for the pupils to get in equal start with their classes. The learned,. Lecomplished and devout President, Mr. rice, enters with great zeal upon the dis harge of his duties as the head of the In. titution, and is earnestly seconded by the ible corps of Professors associated with him. [Laurensville Herald. "Have ydu no mercy for the South?" tsked a Georgian of one of the delegates to be flesh*Pot Convention. "Nary a mercy," vas the reply. "Come away from him," ,aid a friend, "he's one of those Radical nercy narys. He'd go through you in a ninute." The Logansport Journal says: "A young ady from the country yesterday promenaded ,he streets under a new flat and tilting skirt, efore a great waaerfa;ll, and behind a cob ipe and a bran new baby. She looked the icme of bliss. The Chamber of Commerce has unani nously adopted a resolution appointing a :ommittee to consider the expediency of pe.titioning Congress for a total abolition of sxport duty on cotton. ST. Louis,. October 4.-The steamer Jim-. my Brown and Duella have arrived at St. oseph, Missouri, from Montana, bringing $1,000,000 each in gold dust as freight and in. the possession of passengers. Wholesale and Relail BOOT & SHOE HOUSE. We are now receiving our FALL & WINTER STOCK OF Boots, Shoes AND BROGANS4 WHICH WE WILL SELL AT SMALL P1R0FITS, And WARRANT every article sold. Oar goods have all been made expressly to order, and by the very best of' workmecn. 1. M. SUBER & CO. oct 10 41tf An Offer is made to all parties indebted to me by note or account, made previous to the war,. to settle the same at a liberal compromise mn proportion to the ability of the .parties to pay, if' paid by the 1st of January 1867. After which time they very likely wtll fnd them in the hands of another person for cot'. lection, that will not settle on as liber'at terms. This offer Is made in conisequence of the result of the late war and of being under obligations to make payments on old debts myself by the time above mentioned. E. S. COPPOOK. Newberry, S. C. Oct 10 41 4t NOTICE. All persons having demands against the estate of R. L, Bradley, dee'd., are requested. to hand ther' in to the Ordinary, properly attested, immediately; and all persons int debted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment. E. 4. BRADLY, Executrix. Oct. 10 318St. SE LLING OFF BELOW COST.! !! My Stock of Goods, Consisting of FELT HATS, Dress Goods, White Goods. Shoes, Boots. I obacco, -Confectionery, Gloves, Teas, Candies, to. At Capt. Parker's Old Stand, Law Range. October 1038 Wx. BOAG. MEssRs EDITORS-Please announce Mr. JACOB KIBLER as a candidate for the of" ice of Tax Collector, for the ensuing term. as in every respect qualified and worthy of, the office, and oblige OLD 'TIMES. MEsSRS. EDrrous.-You will please an' nounce THROMAS H. CROMER as a candi.. date for Tax Collector Newberry District, at the next election. MOLLO HO N, ept 12 __ _ _ _ _ MESSRs. EDITons: -Please announce Da-. CHARLTON H. 60NDLEY, as candidate for Tax Collector, of Newberry District, at the next election, and oblige MANY FRIENDS. MESSRS. EDITrs:-You will please an none N. F. JOHNSON, as a candidate for Sheriff of Newberry District, and oblige April 4, 14. MANY FRIENDS. The friends of Capt. THOS. M. PAYSIN CER respectfully nominate him as asuitable candidate for Sheriff of Newberry District. VOTERS. Messrs. Editors-By nominating Mr. Daniel B. Wheeler as a candidate for Tax Collector of Newberry District, you will oblige his many WAMF ENS July 4WAMFIN . MESSRs EDITORs : You will please an nounce J. D. SMITH, as candidate for the office of Tax Collector, Newberry district and oblige --MANY FRIENDS. May 2, 1866. MESSs. EDITORS :-Yon wUi oblige the friends of MR. W. J. LAKE, by nominat ing him as a candidate for Sheriff of New berry District. Apr 11 14. NEWBERRY. ebdg t'en ssslatafn am sl ner, BuEAU REFUGEES, YaEnD1 EN AND AiAx ONED LANDS, Sowra CaaoLINA. ChARLESTON, S C.,, Angust 17, 1866 (CIRCULAR.) jn all cases where Freedpeople are- work Iitg Plantations for a share of the erop, the v er of the land will furnish the. necessary i ldings in which to store the Cbttom. making a separate apartment for each per,, son ermployed, where his or her .eotten, ea be securely stored until the crop is;atheed, when it will be divided, either befo: er-af, ter it is ginned, as the parties may a .. Theouter door'otthliilding wilt be *st. ened"by #-ih Ae eb . ge of someedr$ * i;w e aws confidence. The ottr can' gh as; it is stored, that Mlay -know the *mount of cotton picked eayh No person will sell, or I ny way dispose of, any part of crops, where iho owner of land has a share; until aft i oa is fairly Made. A strict obedienceto -these Instructions will be required and thereb7. s,vea the anxiety, and- the ehance of theoft ,.G Uch ' dreaded by those hhave hote k ed i to make a crop. . a 1 All honest mep. Will at once se.thee sity of some rule by whic .all wilITe equaly protected4 Any person- disoTiig the or ders of the officer in charge, will- be arrested and punished. The land,owners in many- cases iare ad. vanced rations tO enable the freednnen, to make their crop, and justiee ; -demnds that they should be pr6tt ,.,d:jjn. esty. By this eourse, alacse in- their just rights, and tber eotton willl not.:be. ex posed to the chance of up.fron smote if taken into the houses of the Ilegple, or rain if put into small pens. BY ORDEE of B T. MAJ. Ga R. .SCOFj Assistant C9znmissner.. , . W, ,. Bvt. Lt. CoL'aid Ass't e raL (OrICIAL.) - G. H.,.ZI 2d Lt.V.R. C.,8cfbs t tu. Newg r istd. C, hleadquarters Assistan C.adsirinoner, BunEu RAEUGEES, E, an A aax3 De)ND SOUTH CAdzi A. Ca ninsT , s: .,sptenbera 1866. GENERAL ODERS, No.21. - To regulate the ivisAdn o-trops aI i the Freedpeople are Working for:a kan thereof, and to protect both the Empoy4x-4 the Employees from the InjurIaus rsuls arising from the practice of some _ . '',bning the crops in small quantities the freed' men, paying therefor a ere pita oef tbeir market value, whereby atyof h 'feed ple ar left _ijoi sdered I. That all crops, whe'rhrweted,skali be stored in a secure place, pepared fd,wgrket, and divided tietween the e orand the employees, in accordac metract, *here contracts havebeen approedW this, Bureau..; 1H. When the cotton hLv ee r pardd for market, aDd so bfleror -ageht of this Bureau can he present, the ansntr.eting parties -ma agree uponOomeperscals1 whom they have confidence, of chooee.teharees to dvde the crop; and I they cannotagree, the officer in charge will act. In all cases, ofheers gd# ~ts ofd this Bureau will render1rreis te iuN their power to -preventiunfaines or .ihnu IH. Offieers and4 agents of this -w~R1ill see-that accounts letwreeu the empIyeand employees for labor or advances. ofro s or money be justly asigg efore ~either party dispose-of their crmp IV. A station or landIng, on ah of the islands wiln be establiebe4 whe aW otton for marketa be takeni andi an.ae w be appointed to'weigh tbe nQtt4i n h4 that the freedmeni -are ,neither weight ner price, audithat "thyr amount of meoney dueabtem Aomt their crops. V. AU. persons terby cotton in violation oftia )~ rested and punished B1wr. Mu*. 8CQ T 1st Lt.V, 1.C., Bt. Ms ..A.AG - ~ Newberr~y Distdct,S. C, HeadquartErnissistaMRt k issiner, BUmEAi REJUdES, YR EE D-AsNM DONED LANDS, SU'rm Ciz01.IA. CHARLEstoN, 8. C.,~ Septembier 28, 1866. (CIROULAR.) Paragraph X. of tlw Ch1enlar isue these Headquaiters,dat August 17,- 1 wherein the Copaqa is requiled to be. until all the crop Is g athr shaU b construed as to pgrzrti 'e parties^to at any time $hey masy tmutualiy agHe u BY oRDB~ o 1iVT. MAJL GEN~ .:E S00) Bvt. Lt.'Col. and Ass' GeA (OFFICpi) ) 2dLtA.V.RB.C., S&8. CR OCKER I AT 10WV PROE4' WHIT1E FRECW.CHINA, W G, C C, BERand DIPPED WARE, GLSs-WARgE KEROSINE LAM1PS, OIL, JIOUSE-FURNISHING GOOD Of all descriptons. Agents for John4son's W4Sf R an WRINGER, For sale by ' At the old stand ofteOpn8 oci 10 im COLUIES A 8 8PE1CALNOTICE. All those -indebtedto .. Co., -are repcf1reiuestOd ward and settle th .aceduti as possible, as the -firm is cent that Is due, If the. plied with parties may Oct. 10 31 3t. NOT In ewareb ietinofte tof neterry. f~b nea etenio1f0b of Newberry. Oct Lu