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|V. "il l II IIII I "Jll .1.1. .'llllJII I ' i Jllllll'iii.lJ| i . I "ll , M l.l J I UJi . ! 1 !! ! nini.1 ,1 III Hill ,M ' i- f T?" |M Jf ? ? VOL. 1 CIAiVT.D.TCIN', S.'O., T U ICt-Ll > A. Y, NTC> V. f>9, 1 8^^ ' ~m, ft m gT m * m g 1 ^ J Vi M ~_tLT "JL" . . Terms of Subsei'iption. Daily paper per month_ $3.0( " " for Six Months - - - $15.0( Weekly, * * $5.0( Rates for Advertising: i'or one Square ? twelve lines or less?TWC COLLARS and FIFTY CENTS lor the first inser tion, and TWO DOLLARS for each subscqeunt. nDtmrri r>? ? J'? ? ? ubiiumii iiuiiuLs, ojvt;ccuiug ano square, cliargec at advertising rates. Transient Advertisements and Job "Wonc MUST BI PAID FOR IN ADVANCE -4. No deduction made, except to our regular advertis i ng patrons. Speech of JSutlcr in JTew Yorlt? B Plmi for Peace. Butler lias gotten through with his work ii New York, and has started hack to rcsunu command of his army on tho James river. H< Was in Washington on last Tuesday, and th< Chronicle said he Would leave for the front it tho next morning's boat. Before leaving Neu York, Butler was givcti a public dinner, wher he delivered himself of n er.o?/?n a a _ _ va ?iwv XIl ^LV/I A pressing bis conviction that the result of the recent Presidential election was "a moral vie tory tor the National cause ;" that it would be so regarded in Europe; that it would "be every where received as proof that the Union i: never to be surrendered,"?he said that tin Washington "Government might now proftei the olive branch to the rebels," tendering then: terms of adjustment in case of their return t< the Union, giving them a reasonable time *a.j till the 8th of January next?to signify thcii acquiescence ; if tbey hold out, then lie would favor a most energetic and unsparring prosecu tion of the war, to tho end that the rebels should be driven to Mexico or elsewhere, am all their property divided among the Yankee CAlrlinm U ~ 1 uum?>o. ncic ia mis language Lcondonsed ^ upon this point: Wo cannot always last. The history of na tiona, the experience of the world, has showi this. Might it not be suggested that now is i good time for us once again to hold out to tin deluded men of the South the olive branch o peace, and say to them : "Come back, conn bnoli, now. This ic tho lu^t timo of nfclnncr.'1? We are in a condition now, not '.aking counse from our fears, not taking counsel trom on weakness, but taking counsel from our magna nimity and our strength, again to make an offe for the last time. There might have been reason I think, among a proud and chivalrous puopl< that they would not desert their leaders, in an swer to the amnesty of President Lincoln, bu now has come an hour when we can say : "Conn back, come back, and submit to the laws, am you shall find exactly'such laws as before, ex cept so far as they are altered bv tin* j b"v"' judgment of the Legislatures of iho land. [Applause.] Perhaps the -Sth of January, fo the association, will be'as good.as any, for al to come back. And when that time is conn to every man, who shall scout the proffered am nestyofa great and powerful nation? W< say to them, to him who scouts that proffcrec love and kindness, let us meet him with sharp quick, decisive war, that shall bring the war l( an cud, to.tlic extinguishment of such mei wherever they may be. [Applause.] Unlesj ^ they take our amnesty let us go down there and you shall have whatever you get by a far, division ; we will open new land offices where ever our armies march, distributing lands amonf the soldiers, to be theirs and their heirs forever And when the clock strikes the last knell o that parting clay, and then all hope of rcturi for those who have not made progress toward! that return shall be lost forever, no longer cat they live in tho land of America. Mexico, '.li< West India Islands, or some place that 1 can not. to nainn Iw /.? ? T 1 ......iu, u<?uaus? l kjiow 110 land liart enough to be cursed with their presence, shal be their dwelling place. * * . * A Victsburg letter says that a rebel forco o sevonty-five men surrendered to Gen. Dana* force of negro infantry, and after beinir disarm co, several thousand negroes were turnnd loos< upon them with their bayonets, and not a lift was spared. Tho letter asks how this cold blooded atrocity will look on tho pages of his tory. A few officers expressed indignation but as a general thing debato on the subjec T*as suppressed. -4 ft. 1 Herb can be no Retreat or Disaster.? For pindent reasons alone the disposition of our forces is not. made public, as such information might frustrate the plans of Gen. Slier) man, who has thoroughly jnaturejJ and wisely I ) resolved upon a course of action which will > ) prove him to be the nation's greatest General j ' lie is now constructing one of the greatest enterprises that was ever originated by the fertile ) brain of military genius, and wo are convinced . that the leading objects of the undertaking will be accomplished, and ^tliut the effort will prove i 1 a perfect sifgpess. . r A more' important military movement has j not been undertaken since the commencement' i of the rebellion, and the Confederacy will soon receive a shock which will shake it fioni the ; centre to the circumference, j As a matter of interest, we compile the fol- ! lowirg table of distances from Atlanta to the I several points which have been mentioned as likely to be visited by Sherman : ^ MIl.KS. "s Atlanta to Macon Iu3 \ Macon to Savannahs ....... ...100 s r Atlanta to Augusta 171 Augusta to Savannah 182 1 Auuusta to (MiHi-lojt.Mi q.% z"1 ^ vaiuilliti,... lO / , Atlanta to "Lynchburg, Virginia 380 i Louisville Journal. Tiie Financial Crisis at the North.'? ' "Whatever the result of the contest may he, the present financial policy of the country tnu*t he changed if the ultimate disaster* which it is j inviting are to be averted. The fir t duty of "o tigress is to take into serious consideration 7 this important subject. ThVp'ihhe debt is tttidergoing angmentation at u rate so enormous I that further paper money expansion will aggravate the existing evil in a rapidly increasing ratio. Yet the policy of paper inohcy inflation I is being steadily persevered in. and tUj^iucuhus is daily becoming greater. Our national debt \ I is nearlv two tli.?ie--.....i ?1 * * v. uiwa^aiivi flllCl OI LUIS 1 $087,006,873 was in the form of currency is- ' sues at the end of September, exclusive of more , than fifty three millions of national bank paper^L The Worst blunders of Mr. Chase have bee 11T \ repeated by his no less incompetent successor, "j. and arc likely to be continued until legislation steps in and provides a remedy. Whichever, ' therefore, may be the dominant party the fit- ; j" ture oft.be tlnanees of the country may be easi- 1 ly foreseen, unless" measures are adopted to r counteract the currency evil and so improve | the value of the paper dollar. i p .V. V. // .,/,/. ; t - ;? ?*/ L* From Macon.? A gentleman win-nit \e?i in this city yesterday, from M.noti, m S.?ut iw-'-t fleoriia and Savannah, informs us ih..ton KnuI day last the Federals aitaeked Fast Macon.ntt' * * * . I i ncv succeeded in capturing one of our balta- : I ries,.but it was immediately retaken by our j brave soldiers, and the enemy signally repnhed. j .. A renewal of the attack was anticipated on | \ Monday, but tlie Federals did not make their n appearance. It, was supposed that the force making the attack on Sunday was not very > large and that the movement was a feint. The loss on both sides was small. Gov. Brown had removed all the valuables ^ from Milledgevillc to Macon and was in that i cilyi The military authorities of that place wci*e as much mystrfied about the movements of p Sherman's army, as those in this section. The general opinion was that Augusta was Shcrr man's objective point. ' There was a sufficient force in Macon, nnd?r i> the. lead ol a cm 11 ant. n ?.v.., iu ih'iu tnu enemy ' at bay.? Chronicle tk Sentinel of Sunday. S ??? * 1 Very Warlike.?The neighboring town of 5 Hamburg South Carolina, presents at tliu pres* ent tirno a very warlike appearance, there be' ing a large number of troops quartered in the '* town. Nearly every available building has been pressed for the use of these troops, whic iia.f caused much inconvenience to the merchant" i s and citizens of the place. Wo heard ofone in I - stance where a merchant whose store was press- i j ed, being compelled to remove Ins goods t.o the ! ' parlor of his residence. This is very tough, j " Kilt *' ' w..i, is me mother of inventi- 11 and knows no law, and all we can do in these war I times is to grin aod bear it.? Chronicle & Sentinel, of Sunday. CAMDEN DAiLY MJKNAL | 1 TUESDAY UIO St* I KG NOV: 29. We are again without any latp nowa f:ora the seats ! K of war, and our readers will have to be satisfied wiih what we have been onabled to extract from the Chronicle <fc iSentinel as to tlio condition of Georgia _ Good News from Brrckixkidk?a courier iias just arrived ut Asheville with infurmaiidn that in a recent fight Gen. Breckinridge had defeated ihc Yankees and ^c captured seven rnnd.vd prisoners and one litihdif'd i 2' wagons. .So mem ion is made of the point at which 1 C( the engagement occurred, but we | resume it to have p taken place at Strawberry Plains J Distinguished AuiuvaIj.?Wo learn that General | * ? Braxton Bragg arrived in Augusta on 'I hursday ti c eiling, and stbe must of Mis,II inn a* tlio Mtfyoi*? I There is at. present jnito a number of celebrated genet* i als i i .hat ei y. brought the o bv tin* ?nii..i>vii...i -f! u raid ot Siii.rman s Army upon .Augusta. We learn | that Gen. Bcauukuaud. willuiso be theie. This leeks j ^ like worA ahead. * Bay.?Rumor has it, and wo suppose upon . her usually bad authority, that the enemy ae binding iiouv Charleston, at Bull's Bay, with a view both 10 create a diversion in favor of Sherman, and to take our tl balterieson Sullivan's Maud in <iveise. There may ' U be n grain of consolation to people of a cernleon turn I w ol mind, just now. in the icnmrk said to have been 'made by Gen. Bit ago. a few days ;.go, th.t "the advanco of Sherman was fully anticipated, and we tmw had him preeiselj* where ho was most wanted." V o a think we have heard such observations befoie; but. as i'Gen. Biiago says so," ihere ;s in the present in-ianeo e< some teas 11 to boiieve that it may he. as we hope? 0 true, says the "South Carolinian." ^ l.'tll ' ?v.x i AM) JUOSS OF i.IFK. -TIlC <)ieeU- \\ ville iriiin, >aturdav evening. when about Iwcutv miles s distant iVoin <'oluinbia. al a pnnit known as Wallace's II 'Fa-m. eneouu.eled onu of?lie- evorest and cosihest uc- 43 ei dents that lias occurred in the history of Hie road.? The rear truck of the third car from the enghie jumped c the track, and all which followed?some five or six. . s is we are informed?met with the same fate. Three passenger ca.s were mashed. Anion;* the passengers was the company oT Uupt. %|'owxhbxd, fr<?*.U iiion.? Of these, a 3*011 iu>' man named Cra WFOt:n was killed q outright, and onoiher mimed MiTCHK.i. sustained a com- q pound c mininuted fuetnre of the right lug and right arm n is thought that lie will not survive.- Two or th.ee Others were injured, ljin not .-o. ously. - r: 23 I.00K Oct kou -l'iKS ANt) 1 1: aitocs?The Savannah ^ "A'ew.v" says: " V fact that should not be overlooked ov oti. mill ry nthor 1 icsi- the presence of spies in ^ our midst through wiiuni mikcmax is no doubt kept, constanthr advised of ovoiylhiiig important for him to tl know. A gentleman who, a few weeks since, was ]j within StiEUM yn's lines, and had a long inle- vicw with c< him, iiiforiiu-il us lli;it Sherman was not only well posted in regard to the condition ol our military affairs, but thai he kin-w .-veil the status of individual citizens of Savannah bettor i hail we did. .With such advantages a h ss skillful genual would be able to make a display of astonishing strategy. We need expect nothin1' from the ignorance of our enemy unless we can 1)1 adopt means to interrupt lii.s sourc es of information. Ti becomes us to be \va chlul foi spie> and traitors. From the Ce;>tuai, Road.?Gen. Hardee h) has ordered the train on the Central ltoail to "l go no farther than No. Ten, and Gen. Wayne ^ to evacuate Stations thirteen and fourteen. s' Gen. Wayne's cavi.lry and artillery arrived Fl at No. Ten last night on the. Oovi...l./.? * '' A fiejht occurred about six miles from Ten- I nille, about ten miles from the Oconee river. ',( The Yankee loss is estimated at ten killed and A fifteen wounded. Our loss two killed.? Chrun- Pr icle <& Sentinel of Sunday. Sl The Press Association.?The folio -vine? 1 dispatch has been forwarded by the President of the Piess Association, which explains itself: ^ Mobile, Nov. 12, 176* ni To the. Mouthers of the Press Association : wl 1 have the satisfaction of announcing that a W1 i......... i.i ? ' rivoi-nit-;iri;<i!<rcincMii has Iwcrt otYeoUd with Vl ihc Southern Telegraph <'oiupanv, on the basis Pc of the coiniminicapoii sy-tem. I wil. issue a }'? circular to the members of the Association, Gi giving tlie particulars of the arrangement, so soon as the proper papers arrive from Rich- ,tR mond. W. G. Clark, u0 President Press Association. ^ai LATEST BY TELEGRAPH ? u? .*um . , j Ur REPORTS .OF TIIK PRESS ASSOCIATION. ntered according: to the Act of Congress in tha year 18U:?, by J. S. ThraShbr. in tlio i lerk's ofllee ofthrf District Couit of tlio Confederate States for tlia Northern District of Georgia. NOUTUEEN NEWS: lliciiMOND, November 28.?A Washington dcgratn in tlio Philadelphia "Enquirer" of the 4th says: "Several. European Powers have miuiuuicsted to our government their disnprolaiion of the seizure of the Florida, end hvc been polileiy informed that they need not onble themselves about it, as the administraon never attempted to justify it." Northern papers of the 20th 1ms been ra 1'ivouJLhoy contain nothing from Sherman xeept hccoiii.ts from Georgia papers. Tho rotiisviile "Journal'' reiterates the statement rat Hood's at my occupies Waynesboro, Tcnn. hoinas' army isatl'ulaski. Attorney-General >ates has reigned.A preconcerted attempt was made on Friay night to burn all the hotels in New York, arnuin's museum was also fired, but the fires ere suoii suppressed. A destructive fire occurred in Newborn, N. on the 19th. Gold closed in New Yoik L '229. European news to the 13th had bccu recciv:l. The journals reiterate their disapprobation f the seizure of I lie Florida. The La France us Brazil lias broken ofi'diplomatic relations ith the United States in consequence of the ;izuro of the Florida, and has called on tht>' I'eat l'owers tn nmiiKt imllm.ti outi? o,..,<i J,. WWX/..W WVIIVVV4I tlj a^oniaw L1IV5 iizuro. The British government* ban sent mbassadors to Mexico. The King of Belgium? on a visit to Napoleon. ? ? CONGJiESSIOKA L. Richmond, November 28.?The Senate adptcd the Ilonse joint resolution of thanks to on. Forrest and his command for recent vic>ries. Various bills were introduced in cxcCUve session. In the Iloiiso the Impressment ill was referred to a special committee, one oin each State. Footc offered a resolution iat the government and people of tlie Cocfcd:atc States have an interest in maintaining ? ic Monroe doctrine, hut if recognition by the nited States be longer withheld, it might bonne our true policy to consent. It was areat principle involved in the Monroe docinc. Improved in Spirit.?Our Ulysses, we rcrcttcd to learn, tor many days before the YanL*e Presidential election, was silent, uucoimnuicative, and sometimes even morose. His iraicdiatc attendants hinted that he had bccomo convert to asceticism, and would soon enroll imself among the membership of the Order of he Doleful, Disappointed and Disconsolate." nt no sooner did the Presidential returns,, lowing conclusively the re-election of his iesleial patron, Abraham Lincoln, roach bim, inn he resumed his wonted good humor, and icame even more facetious and hilarious than i had been before his attack of low spirits'. A single incident will suffice to illustrate- bis esent high strung pleasantry- A distim nshed civilian?a visitor to the army of tlio otomac and the Jaim?s~ remarked m, when it was definitely ascertain! ..4 *1.. UlT ? " * uu uiu "xor.ng napoleon" had'found bis VV rloo?"General, row that BntlbrKas gone ew York, where will von find a right ha an?" Pointing to a hottle, labelled Dcx, liiskcv, Cincinnati, 1859?"You see I am r ithont a faithful substitute." The Yankee linn, not to be outdone, remarked : "I n< * ireeive the spirit which animates you in d >ur Destcroux movements against Gen. Lc " lr U'ysses came back in passable style: ? 'erhaps, then, Mr. , you can test its n> twithout making a face." Wo nt eij. >t add that both imbibed, and that a >i$ igh followed.