University of South Carolina Libraries
* ' 1 ] 11 1*1 I H " I. ? LETTER FROM HON. It. CHOATE. vJo8T?>n, August 9, I85G. I' Gentlemen *Tpon my return lasteioni ing, after a short absence from the city, * T found your letter of the SOth ult., inviting me to take part in tho proceedings of the Whigs of Maine; assembled in mass meeting. I appreciate most highly the honor and '.ndness of this invitation, and should ;id true pleasure in accepting it. Vbigs of Maino composed nt all ' i important a division of tho groit j al party; which under that name; . 'or without official power, as a responsible administration or as only an organized opinion, has done so much for our country, our whole country,?and your responsibilities at this moment are so vast nnd peculiar, that 1 acknowledge an anxiety to soo,? not wait to hoar,?with what noble bearing you meet, the demand.* of the timo. Tf the tried legions, to wlioru it is committed to guard the frontier of the Union, falter! now, who, any where can bo trusted? Mv eneaeromcnts. LowAvor m.l m.. ' O C7 f *MW 1 necessity or expediency of abstaining from oil speech requiring much effort, will prevent my being with yon. And yet, invited to share in your counsels, nnd jatfr grateful for such distinction, I cannot wholly decline to declare my own opinions1 on onoof the duties oftho Whigs iu what you well describe ns ??the proser.t crisis i in the political affairs of the country." I cannot now, and need not. pause to elaborate or defend them. What I think, nnd what 1 have decided to do, pormit mo iu the briefest and plainest expression to tell you. The first duty, then, of Whigs, not merely as patriots and ns citizens.?loving, with a largo and equal love our whole native land,?but ns Whigs, nnd because wo are Whigs, is to unite with some organization of our oountrymen, to defeat and <hssolvc the now geographical party, calling itself Republican. This is our first duty. It would more exactly oxpresK my opinion to say, that at this moment, it is our only duty. Certainly, ut least, it comprehendu or suspends all others; and in my judgment, the question for each 1 and every one of us is, not whothcr this candidate or that candidate would be our first choice; not whether there is some good talk in the worst platform, and some bad talk is the best gjitfome nnt whether i r , . ( this man's ambition, or that man's servility, or boldness, or fanaticism, or violanee, is responsible for putting the wild waters in thi* nnrnar;?but just this.?by what vote can I do most to prevent ihe madness j of the times from working its maddest act. ?the very ecstacy of its madness,?tho permanent formation and the actual present triumph of a party which knows one half of / wcrioa only to hate and dread it, from whose unconsserated and revolutionary banner fifteen stars are erased or have failon;?in whose national anthem the old nnd tho endeared airs of the Botaw Springs ... ? ... . . nod (be Aiog'i Mouotaia, Md l urk town, I end those, later, of New Orleans and Bucoa Vista, and CbapuHepeo, breathe no more. To this duty, to this question, all others seem to me to stand for the present postponed ar.d secondary. And why? Because, aeoording to our creed, it is only the united America which car peacefully, gradually, safely, lid up h anu bless with all social and personal and civil blessings, all the raoes and all the fcto, conditions which oompoeo oar vast and y various faintly,?it ia such an America, only, whoso arm o?n guard our flag, develope our resources, extend our trade;? and fill the measure of our glory; and beeanse, according to our convietiooi, the triumph of such a party puts that Union in danger. This is ray reason. And for you, and for me, aod for all of us, in w> one regards the Union pooaaraa such a value, tuid to whose fear* it aeema menaced by such a clangor, it is reason enough. I3elieriag the nebls Ship of State to be within a half cable's length of* loe shore of rook, in a gale of wind, our (hut boainees is to put her about, and erowd her off into the deep, open sea. That done, we can | regelate the storage of her lower Her of powder, and sel*ot Iter cruising ground, and bring her creels to court martial at oar leisure. If there ere toy in Maine -mod among ?.. - - _ ? A tfte Wbigi of Maiae I hope there i? not one?but if there are any, la whose hearts etroog passions, vaulting ambition, jealousy of men or ?ction% sod impatient philanthropy, or whatever ebe ha r* turned to hate or eoWaeaa the hettrnal blond and qa sashed the spirit of 4 national Mb at its MMtea with vho*the union of aUra States aaa free St??e under the actaj^ffco?tilatioa li ram, a bin. dranoe, a raproaeh, with thoae of eeum our ?iow of tur duty and tf?a reason of it, 31 - a II | Mi, are a stumbling blook snd fooliahoeed. To suoh you can hare nothing to say, and from such you can haye nothing to hope. Hut if there are those again who lore the Union as wo love it, and prise It as we priso it; who regard it aa we do, not merely as a vaat instrumentality for the protection of our com merer and navigation; and for achieving power, ominonco and name among the sovereigns of tho earth, but sa a moaus of improving tho material lot, and elevating tho ""oral and nicutal nature and insuring the personal happiness of tho millions of ninny distant generations; if thcro arc those who think thus justly of it, ?and yet hug the fatal delusion that, bccnusc it is good, it is necessarily iiomortal; that it will thrive without carc; that because the reason and virtue of out ago of reason and virtuo could build it, the passions and stimulations of a day offremy cannot pull it down;?if such there nrc among you, to them address yourselves with all the earnestness and all the eloquence of aion who feel that some greater interest is at stake and some mightier cause in hearing, than ever yet tongue has pleaded or trumpet proclaimed. If ruch minds and hearts are reached, nil is safe. Hut how specious and how manifold arc the sophisms by which they are courted! They hear find they road much ridicule of those who fear tlint a geographical party does endangor tho Union. Hut can they forget that our greatest, wisest, and most hopeful statesmen have always felt, and have all, in one form or another, left on record their own fear of such a party? The judgments of Wellington, Madison, Clay, Webster, on the dangers of the American Union,?-are they worth nothing to a conscientious lover of it? What they dreaded as a remote and improbable contingency?that against which they cautioned, as they thought, distant generations ?that which they were so happy as to die without seeing?;.s upon us. And yet some men would have us go on laughing and singing, like the traveller in the satire, with his pockets empty, at a present peril, tho mere apprehension of which, at a distance and bare possibility, could sadden the hnrt of tho Father of is Country, and dictate the grave and grand warning of the Farewell AddreM. They hear men aaj that suoh a party ought not to endanger the Union; that, although it happened to be formed within one geographioal section, and confined exclusively to it; although its end and aim is to rally thai section against the other on a question of morals, policy and feeling, os which the two differ externally and unappcasably; although, from tho nature of its origin and objects, no man in the section ov.tside can possibly join it, or socept office under it without infsray at home; although, therefore, it is a atnpendous organisation, practically to take power and honor, and a fall ahare of tho government, fVom our whole family of States, and bestow them, substantially, all upon tha antagonistic family; although the doctrines of human rights, whioh it gather* out of the Declaration of Independenoe?that passionate and eloquent manifesto of a revolutionary war?and adopts ss its f uudamental ideas, announce to any Southern apprehension a crusade of government against slavery, far without and boyond Kansas; although the spirit and tendency of it* electioneering appeals, as s whole, in prose and verae, tho leading articles of its papers, and the speeches of IH> viaM/iH) BIO W OAV.IW Wfffgipt RUU U*VOy or fear of oar ontiro geographical section, and' hato or droad or oontampt ij the natural improaaion it all loarc* on the Northern mind or heart, yet, that nobody anywhere ought to be angry, or ought to be frightened; that the raajoritv must govern, and that the North u a majority; that it ia ten to one nothing will happen; that, if wont comes to wont, the 'South knows it La wholly to blame, and needs the Union more than we do, and will be quiot accordingly. Bat do they who hold thii language forgot that the question if not what ought to endanger th? Union, hat what will do it? la it ntf m ho ought io bo, or man aa he is that wo moat live with orKve afooe? In appreciating the inflaenoea wbioh may din. tarb n politioa) system, and eepeoislly one like oars, do yon make no uMowanoc for pood oaf, for pride, for infirmity, fcr the burning Sauna of oroa imaginary wroagf Do joa assume that ai1 men, or oKmaeeeeof men in all seetiosa,uniforraly wisely roe and calmly seek thrif ty** inleieomP Whore on earth Is auoh a fool's Paradise as thai to ho found? Conceding to the people of the fifteen States theerdinary and average human nature, its good and evil, its ?utk< noes and its stengtb, I, for one, dare not say that the triamph of sneh n party ought not to be expected naturally aed proUb^ , .inriii* iiiiiiiiiuwih.m. . ^ to tfiamiito the States. With my undoub itfg conviction. I know that it would 1 fuHy mud iottaortality mi men to wish i Certainly there nre in all sections and in : States those who lo'vo tho Union, und the actual Constitution, Washington di as Jay, Hamiltou, and Madison did; i Jackson, as Clay, as Webatcr loved i Such even is the hereditary and the he itual sentiment of the general Anuria heart. But he has read lifo and books tittle purpose who has not learned tb 'boeoru friendships' uiay bo "to rcscutmc | soured," and that no hatred is so kee deep and precious as that. "And to be wroth with one wc love. Will work like madncis in the bruin," | lis has read the book of our history to sti ' less purpose, who has not learned flint tl | friendships ot tho States sisters,but rival ^ sovereigns caoli,. with public life, ai i a body of iotcrcat, and sources of lion and shame of its own and within itac distributed into two great opposing grouj are of all human ties uioot ox posed to sat rupturo and such transtojiaation. I have not time in. theso hasty lines,nr there is no need, to speculate on tho d i tails ot" tho modes in which the triumj of this party would do its work of evil. 1 I mere struggle to obtain the govern men , as that is conducted, is mischiovous to a : extent incalculable. That thousands the good men who have joined it dcplo this, is certain, but that does not mend tl matter. I appeal to the conscience ac honor of my country that if it were tl aim of a great party, by every species success to the popular mind,?by elorp | ence, by argumoot, by taunt, by sarcaar i by roorimation, by appeals !o pride.Vham i and natural right?to prepare tho nati( for i struggle with Spain and England, i Austria, it oould not do its business moi thoroughly. Many persons, many speaker ?many, very many, seta higher and wis I example, bat the work is doing. If it ftooomplishea its object and giv< the government to the North, I turn tr j eyes from the oonsequences. To the fi I teen States of the South that governmei will appear an alien government. It wi . appear worse. It will appear a hosti I government. It will represent to tht I eyo a vast region of States organised upc { anti-slavery, flushed by triumph, cheerc | onward by tho voioes of the pulpit, tribun and proas, its mission to inaugurate fVeedo and put down the oligarchy; its oonatitatic j the glittering and sounding generalities natural right which make up the Declar I tion oi Independence. And then and thi 1 is the beginning of the end. If a ncocessitv oould bo madn rmf f, ! such a party we might submit to it as other unavoidable evils, and other oertai i danger. But where do they find tba , Where do they pretend to find that 7 is to keep slavery out of the territories ] There is not one br.t Kansas i which slavery is possible. No man feat no man hopes for slavery in Utah, No Mesioo, Washington or Minnesota. | national party to givo them to freedom | about as needful and about as feasable as national party to keep Maine for flreedor And Kaoeaa! Let that abused and pT ' faned soil have calm within ita border deliver it over to the natural law of tt I peaceful and spontaneous; take off the re j fian hands; strike down the rifle and tl 1 bowic knife; guard its strenuous in fan* and youth till it comes of age to ohoo for itself?and it will havo forever what chooses. When this policy, so easy, simple ai just, is tried and fails, it will be time cnouj to resort to revolution. It is in part b cause the duty of protection to the local at tier was not performed that the Democrat party has already by the action of its gre representative Convention reeolved v> p out of office its own administratidb. Th leason will not and most not be lost on in body. The country demands, that Co great, before it adjourns, give that territo peace. If it do, time will inevitably gi it freedom. I have hastily and imperfectly expo* my opinion through the unsatiafacto forma of fk letter, m to the immediate du of Whigs. We are to do what we oan defeat and disband the geogmpbioai pa tj. Bat by what specific actio* we ei most effectually ooctribute to such a ran is a question of more difficulty. U sees [ now to be settled that we present no cant ' date of our owe. If we Tele at all, the ws sots for the aeooincse of the Ameriei ? ??? ii ii/mw? in mo ^vnuvniio pfn > Kb bdivMn Um 1 ibll not wttwi ' Bwmwl thmAVhSpt oflfiiM, bat I daaot I dMloftwkoM Mid kooor to BBJ, tk wbtla I antarUia a High sppiAfUliftt oft \ ihwwWr and ability of Mr. Fill mora, I i aoi ayapathiaa la any i?grw with ilia < joeta and aooad of iha particular pai i ^ / ? . I II 111 i- that nominated him, and do not approve be of their organisation and their tactics, it. Practically too,the contest in my judgment ill is between Mr Ihichaoan and Col. Fremont, er In these circumstances I voto for Mr. Uuohd, anan. lie has largo cxporicncc in public as afloirs; his commanding capacity is univcrit. sally acknowledged; his life is without n b- stain. I ain constrained to add thnt ho &q secuis at this moment, by tho concurrence to of circumstances, more completely than any at other, to represent that sentiment of nant tiomlity,?tolerant, warm and comprehetin, sivc,?without which, without increase of which, America is no longer America; nnd to possess the power and I trust the dispo. sition, to restore nnd keep that peace, ill within our borders, and without, for which lie our hearts all yearn, which allout interests s, demand, through which and by which al. id one we may hopo to grow to the truo greator ! ncss of nations. If, Very respectfully, >*, Your fellow titixon, sh HUFTJ8 ClIOATB. To K. \V. Farley and other gentlemen , of tho Maine Whiir )(J - D tec, >h From the Now York Day Book, ts A CIVIL WAR?TIIE BEGINNING t, OF THE END. n Tho abolitionists have at last accomplish > cd their designs. They have brought rc about u oivil war in this country, and by the next steamer across the Atlantic, can 'd send word to their allies and friends in 19 England that the long sought end is accornpliahcd ! What the old torics of Britu | ain by sword and bayonet, could not do n> their descendants and tools in New Eng?> land, by newspapers and songs, luivo dono ,n to wit:?divided this Union ! No one, ?r looking back to tho past history of the f? abolition and seward faction of this country, can fail to see that their whole aim has or been, as Mr. Greoly once expressed it, to rear and educate a generation to "hate the ss .South," In recording tho news of the iy battles in Kansas, the Tribune calls one f- party the "northern" and the other the at " southern," and talks of " the enemy." 11 as if the southern pcoplo were citizens of !ev another country, and our natural enemies, ir War bow actually, exists in this country; >n the North is arrayed against the South, id and men are fighting, shooting and killing e, each other in the territory of the United m States, with the same ferocity that char. >n aoteriaed Frank and Hun last ja*r in the of Crimea There is no denying this?no geta ting over it with the slur that it is only a as, "party" or"strife"?it is actual war, and nothing ?iw5, and a war that in growing jr more furious and sanguinary every day. a - j *1-- ? * .... to auu uuw ioe question arises, what is it Q for? What ball thia strife and bloodshed t? about? Why, simply tokoop our southern la brethren out of tho common territories i7 of this Union! Sift tho whole question ;n I down to its real merits, brush off all the n, ! dust and garbage that have gathered o;< w I it free it from all the abolition clap-trap A and nonsense about "freedom and Freis niont," strip it of all the kitos straws and a election nonsenro, and we find it a plain, n. simple assumption of power and authority o- of the North to govern tho South, isj The men and families of tho South have to gone into the Territory of Kansas with if. their property under no disguise, but sim. lie ply to inhabit it atf oitiieos and common 3j owners of our common country. They M have not sought to drive nor to keep any it one out of tho territory. They hsve not passed any laws to prevent another cititen'a id oomi 11 into md living pesoeably in it, gh aud what hsve they met there? How *. have their northern brethren met thorn ? :t- Why, with fire and sword, with cannon ..j W.tl 4 i i ? * tic ? imn,avui mj cnuronei ina clergy irom at New England tad How York. The north t ern settlers have denied the right of south, at erners to oorne there, they here met togoy ther to peae laws against their coming, and n- when all has failed to prevont them, thoy ry have called for men and arms to oomc and re help drire them out. To tho eternal shame of the North be it said, they havo responded cd to this call, and from the purlieus 6f ty their ciiier. and the low dens of their riltj leges has gone forth an army of the lowest to vagabonds and hireling traitors that ever inj.. feeted any country. The Oreeleys and Oidin dings and Beeohers have joined hands i)t with Debauchees like Lane sad Cole, and aa vent forth a bandit of plunderer* to ravish it. the Atirof land Kansas. Ttaorei* no deny?, ?o gettingovsr it. an The whole operation, the whole desiga Vf. is lo drive tha South ?ul of Kansas. They ?<> As, * ikr- -? I. ?> ? A wm w ,,vn W L? W it Booth triMornnta to '>,| thou oat, or ?l tlut it mkm aaythioc Hot Hot iu pooplo ho shot! b# pypiltod to Mtt*o poooeobly tad do qaiotiy it flit torfltcrjr (ho uno u tbo *. pjtyloof tho Ncrth, hot ibis (ho BoOcbtr, 1y tod fiwloyo, |tt! OhWio^o doctor thoy - "w 111 -ill?IM?W?i j shall not do. They arc determined there shall bo no South, but that tho North shall be the government, and have ail tho territory and all that bolongs to tho Union. And now, siuoo it has come to this? since war against the South is openly declared by the formation of a "northern ! party," and has been actually oommoncod I for the subjugation of the South, lot every I citizeu tako but ttfvml add his position, i For ourselves, wo do not hesitate to enroll ' our uatnes against the men and party that have declared this war, wo do not hesitate to join the ranks ot those who are fighting i for their right? qa citizens of ono common ,i country; and if it becomes necessary, we j j will cheerfully give not only our money I but our services in tho field to sustain them. That there are thousand? and tens of thousands of other? in this city who will do the same, we have no doubt, ml wo I trust that immediate measures will l>e taken by our conservative and Union-loving citizens to sustain, cy common effort, : thc?c pincers in Kausas who are fighting for thoir rights as citizens against the northern horJcs who have boon sent there to drive them out. A FnKMONTK.il waki.no i p the wiiono ' Customer.?The following incident oc: curred on ono of the Kentucky railroads a few days since : Enter, n dapper-looking gentleman, with penoil and paper in his hand, and an iiui pudent smilo on his face; addresses himself to sedate old gentleman, ding the N. Y. Observer : " I nm ascertaining the political sentiments of the passengers on the Plcsidcncy?" Old gent?"Never mind me, air; I am too- old to get excited on political topic." "But you havo a preference, 819/'. Very likely?but it is of I no consequence to anybody but myself." j "Well, sir, 1 shall put you down for FrcJ mont." "Put mo down for Fremont! not . by a thundering sight" roared the old gentleman, rising and lifting his eanc over "Woolly's head; "don't you do that, or I'll break every bono in your body!" A coat tail was seen going rapidly out of the car door, amid tho shoots of tho passengers That ballot baa not been published. 1 . JSA'U JLL .L.l.Jtl JLL L.U.LJLW uTeUgrapljic. IMPORTANT FROM KANSASSt. Louis, Aug. 27-?Kansas advices state that 2600 men from Missouri would euter Kansas on the 22d. Four hundred of Lane'sjn?en were posted on the Kansas river to intercept all relief to I<ecompton. Gen. Richardson at the hoad n large body of Territorial mili'ia had gone to the Nos-th Western part ofKj Jsos to intercept Lane's re* treatAt Lexington, Mo., 600 men were under arms, and Gen. Price expected orders from the Presidont to take the field. Gen. Smith declines interfering with tho ^lissoarians while they confine operations to Lane's forces. I FROM KANSAS, i Chicago, Aug. 28.?Advices from Kansas ' state that 18 Missouri*!!* attacked Tanker's 1 Mission and demanded persons there to deliver un their horaea and lo??o .-? I The demand being refuse*], the assailants went to work to execute their threats. ' Tho Missiourians were concentrating at Leavenworth, Westport and Kansas Gity* Quaker City had been sacked by the Georgiuns'on Friday, but tho inhabitants escaped. EXCITEMENT AT 8PRINGFIELD. Washington, Ang. 28.?Advices from I Springfield Illinois, state that two hundred men nave been discharged from the army, 1 there in pursuance of orders from Washington, and that the greatest excitement prevails. CONGRESSIONAL. i A OQ T_ .L. U ? nguixvv'H, ailfj. WH J II lilt] "ItHtlfl JIT. ! Critcndnn offered bin bill to eire the Iiegfala[ tive power in Kanaas to the Governor and ^ ; Judiciary under the aupcrviaory control of i Con groan. Debate onimed, but no action w*e taken. I The IIouho rcfured by 4 majority to recede from it* amendment* to the army bill, and ' tabled a motion to reconrider. Advertisements. t O.HIiH IftftlO X AND FORWARDING BUSINESS. THE aubecrlbcru have thia day formed a Co-partnerfthip, in the above line of buaiI nea.t, under the name and firm of MOROAN A T0MUN80N. at the old atand of K. T. Morgan. All buaineM . I entnuted to our earn will be promptly attend-1 i od to. K. f. MOROAN T. H. T0MUN80N. i I Cheraw.&C.. Bent. 1.1856. IS?St. J " ? ON CONSIGNMENT. 1 5,000 POUNDS Western Bacon, 800 Hw. Prime I.ard, Four hhds. Brown Sugar, 5,000 Fins 8egar?, AO Back4 Bait, Flour, Ptu, Ac., Ac., and for sale cheap for caah. MORGAN A TOMLIN8CN. Gheraw, 8.0, Sept. 1, MM. WJ& r Eare Agents for the Sale of Gritwold'a Georgia Cotton Gifts and Seott's Little Giant Comaud Cob Mills. MORGAN A TOMLINftON. Ghent?r, 8. C-, HepC ), IM4. 1)?4t. wo'tiob. t ALL persons indebted to me, on last year's see tit are respectfully relocated to come forward and make immediate payment, as it is imjpoestbta for me to indulge them lower, ami acutain mr owe basin*** mad credit. I am la hopes this advertieemaat mill come under the observation of each of mr delinquent customers, and they will rdepond promptly by pajiag up, thee saving ta* the unpleasant esecasity <g eoliectiug by Jaw. ' 1amwr Kelly. J Cheraw, 8. C^duae 10, IS?. I?tf, t &*$ - The friends of Cel. C W- DTO LET beg leave respectfully to announce him A * . CANDIDATE FOR CONGRESS, in the First Conprtssional District, at the ensuing election. W? trust he will allow this use to be made of his name, as his friends are prepare1 to " make h long pnll, a strong poll, and a pun altogether," at the polls iu October next. MANY FRIENDS. September 2nd, 183G. 13?4t. COMMERCIAL.CHERAW MARKET. CORRECTED WEEKLY BY .1. HI. TH KE AVGILIi. COTTON?Sale for the past week, 1 bale of new at 10.50. BACON?.Soiling from wagons at $13 to 13 50. tH FLOUR?Has been coming in freely for the past week an?l hat been selling from wagons i at $f?.f>0 to $7.00. ! LARD--None coming to market, retails at j 16 2-3 centsSALT?Retails at 1.75 per S*"k,- market | well suppiietl. SUGAR?Retails from 12 to 14 ccnte. COFFEE?Retails at 12 to 14c. CORN?None offering?wc quote at 75c* per bushel. FODDER?Sells at from 85c- to POULTRY AND EQOS-Scarce and in demand. WHISKEY-*-From 45c.to $1.50 per gallon [ BAGGING-GUNNY?Retail* at 22 to 23 cents. HOPE?Froni 12} to 14 cents, .mall supply. THE Bt\ Ell has risen 3ft feet and is still? rising. WiuiixoToir, N. C., August 26, 1856. Mtstra. Eduora:?We hand yon, helow, a review of our market: Spirits Turpentine, 3Rc^ Turpentine, 2.8ft ^ Common Rosin, 1.17 ; Flour?family $9, superfine 7f, 'ine 7 a 7 1-4 ; Salt 1.15 a 1.25; Molasses 40c.; Pork $22 ; Bi .on. N. C., 134 a 14c. hog round ; Western Sides 12}, Shoulders 114; Mullets, new, $7; No. 3 Mackerel 6 a 6}; Wneat, white, 1.47}, red 1-37}. Corn 61 a 65 ; Rio Coffee 12 1-2. Yotns respectfully, CliMMING A STYRON. Congignceg. The following is a list of the consignees by the Cheraw and Darlington Railroad, for tho week ending 23d August, 1866: 1) Malloy, M Siimentz, W J Vtreen, k Cor W T Moore, J 1 Kelly, A G Johnson, W A Mulloy, S Kecler, H Lee, J O Wadswortb, Wells k Rro., K McKensic, Richmond Manufacturing Co., W J Pegues, J P Harrall, F Lynch, Steamer Chesterfield, S Graft, L Shell. W I, J Reid, F 11 Walsh, J G Dudley,. J J Westervclt. From Georgetown to CHERAW. ff^^E Steamer, *AJ- WlL BARNETT, i Capt. C. G::.=r=r, ?ill ccssesee her regular t. .pa for the season, as above, touching at all the intermediate landings, on or about THE 12TH SEPTEMBER. She is (he lighted draught Boat on the River, and Goods shipped by her will maat with I dispatch. * L. DOZIER, Agent at Gaorgtown, S. C. MORGAN A TGMLJNSON-, Agents at ttterkvr, 8- C. Sept. 2, lfc>6. tf. DA G UERREOTY PESg. .hijrown, OF BALTIMORE, i [1 ESPECTFULLY informs the citizen* of AtlHSRAW aud it* vicinity, that ha ha* taken rooms above R. T. POWELL'S store, where ho will remain a abort time in the practice of hi* profession, of the real French and German Processes, which, together with his experience as an Opecator in some of our principal cities, is, he trusts, a sufficient guarantee that his wore will be well executed. He hopes that those who ha* not procarad a good Picture, will not neglect t^i* opportuaity. A Beautiful Selection of fancy Cmm. Suitablr for PnmnU. Particular care will be taken in copying Daguerreotypes oi Painting. Pictures inserted in rackets, Breastpins, Rings, 4?. Likenesses taken without regard to weatherN. B :?My stay in this plaee will be short, as I have other engagements. July 29, 1866. ft-tf JON. T. WALSH, s w v ra n aif* \# s * ?? n i i vnratT ni LAW AND 80LICIT0R IN EQUITT, I LL jxraotioe in Homur and th? adjoin Office'at CON WAY BO BO', 8. C. 11?If. nTaPPLICATION will be made atihe n?xt He?ion of the legislature of South Carolina to incorporate th? BenneUrriUe Preabrtarian Chnrcb. August l)th, 1866. 10?tf. C^ptrlMriUp Notice. TiE undersigned have this day formed a copartnership for the transaction Of a i Uentrat Mercantile Btmnem | in ike town of Ckmw. voder the name or firm of R. II. Clerk A Co. R. H. CLARK, A. A. COX, I. V. KKIOHT Chorew, 8.0, Aog. 18,18M. It?if50 IAI.S8 heavy tougkj Raffing, for **** hj A. B. McDf?fIE, North Water Street, Wiled****, N C. AegnM 11, I8H. . ll^4i All Persons * INDRBTKO to J. 0, F. * 6LL9**d Well* * k Brother ere reaeetted to ?MW end eettle their or count*, o? tkejr wiH he yfcttd 1% the oReer'e heed* for eoMtltl. WI?U /wmifctpt w Cherew,R.C., JelyAlMd. ,/P4 V