University of South Carolina Libraries
. A ; . i * ' * . ' ' * ' . , - * ' ? "... WMwywij? ???' ? ! ">'fi iwwwii?n i m 11 i i unii^ i<??*?? ? . ?? i.mun^iiiiinnwiih^i nil' aj<!l?^Bi>yMpr?i?wwiqaM;ii>fc?qa>auiui.MjnnMMBPaiMwn^?|oBCT'*a?i? uuui?Kcq?cnc' umA airai^iM^?Mi?5w?Bnii>?mu?j??p.iiuii??i?MmM?wa??wanaiiin i inn 11 HIII mtmmy i ? HI 11 m jp MI I ? mi IIMIW? ? j " i VOL.1 CAMDEN, S. C., FRIDAY, A_TJGr-TJST 19, ?864. 43. ?p? ??wpn??ywpp?loaraK? li?UM?Iftlf nmwin. Wttpn l . -* ?" ?? ? By D. ID. HOCOTT. Terms of Subscription. Daily paper per month i * $.1.00 " " for Six Months - - - $15.00 # "Weekly, - ,.$0-00 Rates for .Advertising: For one Square ? twelve lines or less ?T\VO DOLLARS and FIFTY CENTS lor tf!c first insertion, and TWO DOLLARS for each subseqeunt. Obituary Notice's^ exceeding oue square, charged $t advertising rates.' Transient Advertisements and Job WorK MUST BIO PAID FOR IN ADVANCE; No deduction made, except to our regular advertisng patrons. * "Pretty Hard oai ILiucolu. l lie 'limes is severe in its strictures upon its own candidate for President. It does liot exactly pronounce him a fool, but it does the nciirest .thing to -it, in referring to him as a man of open nature who, in connection with Mr. Greeley, a good natured man, has lately had dealings with "vagabonds and thieves" at Niagara, and/that thus the "national dignity" has been compromised. The Times goes farther, and declares that "no private man of any self-respect, would recognize" the men with whom the President and atjli.,\jrocit;y.i/reaLea at in lag&ra, "''even if tliey were not traitors," but' only vagabonds and thieves. It is a significant fact, in connection with this subject, that the posi, tion of4he President iu this negotiation with the Southern agents is no-j where sustained. The JDemoc'rats I denounce him for" his assumption in j 3 determining'that the war shall not! cease except upon condition of the abandonment' of slavery. ' His own partisans condemn his "open nature," which is pretty near aquivalent to .calling him a fool. Nobody believes him fit for the grave and responsible position which- lie occupies. It would be difficult to determine which are more rlnmnmn?4^ uu i JJC j ?i inspects of Mr. Lincoln in his Candida-1 cy for a re lection?-the heavy blows in front which his manly opponentsI are dealing, or the stabs in the back j inflicted by his professed friends.?JY. Y. World. " Tlie Example of 1775. "We will eat no lamb;" promised the multitude seeking to retaliate "\ye will wear no mourning at funerals ; we will, none of us, import British goods,'*said the traders in the towns. . The inhabitants of North Carolina set up looms for weaving their own clothes, and South CarolinaY\yas ready to follow the example. * "Th6 people," wrote Lieutenant Governor Sharpe, of Maryland* "will go upon manufacture." "We will have homespun markets of linen and wool ens," passed from mouth to mouth, till it found its way across the Atlantic, and alarmed the Icings in wimmi. -Q" ? sv/UIJV-JI , ladies of the first fortune shall set the example of wearing homespun; it will be accounted^ virtue in them to wear a garment of their own spining." ' "A little attention to these manufactuces will make us ample amende for the-distresses oi^the present dav, and render us a great, rich, and happy people."?Bancroft. Transposed for lifts?the man that marries v happily. f CAMDEN DAILY JOURNAiT FRIDAY lUCfiNiNCK, AiG. 10. The Ladies of the Aid Sooioty acknowledge the receipt of threo barrels and one tierce of vegetable* from the ladies of Camden, which wero-sent by.the cars on Friday last, to the defenders ot'Fort Sumter. The Ladies Aid Society propose sending vegetables to Fort Sumter again on Thnrsdiy 25th. Ladies will please send their contributions to Mr. Kkxxkdt s store, by half p;;st nine o'clock on that morning. Oak Ashes.?Person having oak asfies, and nro. willing to part with them, would confer a lhvor by sending them to this office, for which a Inir remunerative price will he paid. Gen. Tage, the man who told Anderson tq "hold j on" to his fort, but took no active moasures to prc1 vent its surrender, is, as we Jearn from a naval officer, iiu oiu soiuior, ponneriy ol the I. Stales Navy.) Yankee Hushwhackekp.?The following appeal from 'General Couch, an army officer, to the people, to "bushwhack" the Confederates, sounds rathei strangely from a people that, have denounced bushwhacking in the Confederacy, and murdered so many unoffending citizens ' merely upon the suspicion of being engaged in it. We copy the official order for. the benefit of the Government: Headquarters, ) Department of the Susquehanna, > Pittsburg, Pa., August 4, 18G4. ) To the People of the Southern Tier counties of Pennsylvania : Your situation is such that a raid by the enemy is not* impossible at any time dating the summer ?ud coming fall. I T .In - A metfiui u c?m on yon 10 put your ritltSs and shotguns in good order, also supplying yourselves with plenty or'ammunition. Your corn-fields mountains, forests, thickets, buildings, <fce., furnish favorable places for covqr/and at the same lime enable you to kill the marauders. ? Recollect, if they come it is to plunder, destroy and burn Tour property. .. P. X. Coven," Major-General Commanding Department. Foreign (lio^ip. A Paris correspondent writes as follows con- i cerning Louis Napoleon" ami his family : The Emperor seems to grow fatter ami older in the most.complete tranquility ofmiml and body. I saw him the other day at the private i view of the annual 'exhibition *of miiniimr* J -* ' I walking with his littlo hoy, and shoeing him tlic paintings. lie has become so corpulent ! that bis figure is now quite short and rotund, | giving him, with his long nose,' a strong, nisein- j Hnncc to l'unch. lie looked, as lie generally! does,- very good-humored, with hoth his hands, | as well as his cane, stock into tlie pockets of his overcoat. T saw him take his son up to a j painting of Napoleon T, on his return from HI ha, j and point out and explain to him all the inei| 'dents, but the'boy did not display much animation. lie is very like his mother, seems j soft and gentle, and has not* much life and vigor in him. Presently the Empress also came into the saloon to complete the family party, wearing her petficoats exceedingly short, an order to display the pretty bo<>u.and tassels, reaching half way up the leg, which Paiisian ladies now delight in. To.see them all three standing together, ^made one think of the strange fortunes, past and present, of the parents, and wonder what would be the future destinies of the child. Titled.?Tho origin of the titles D. D. mul LL. D. dates back to the. twelfth century, at the first settlement of the Universities, and were then held in high esteem. The first person on whom tlio title, of Doctor was conferred, was Lamcus, a learned Professor at Law at. lliu University of 13ologna. lie induced the Emperor Loth aire II, whose Chancellor lie was, to create the* title, and he himself was the first recipient of it. lie was made Doctor of Laws by that University. Subsequently the title was borrowed by the faculty of theology, ami first conferred hy the University of Par-is* 0:1 Peter Lombard, the celebrated scholastic theologian. \Ym. CJordieno was. the first person upon whom the j title of Doctor of Medicine wa^ bestowed, who received it from ihe College of Asti, 1320. AVhat road is it that extortioners never travel I The road to Hc^yen. - ' LATEST BY TELEGRAPH RE POETS OP Til K PRESS ASSOCIATION. Entered according to the Act of Ootipross in tlic year 1803, by J. r>. Thuasuek. in the Clerk's ollieo'd tinj District Courf of tho Confederate States lor tin Northern District of Georgia. FliOM MOBILE. j I Mobile, Aug. 17.? Major Gen. Frank Gard- ; l nor assumed command of tlic Itistriet of 11io j I gulf to-ilay. The people are much pleased j j with the appointment. Yesterday evening the" , enemy embarked-in fifty launches at Montrose, j I Our cavalry fired upon them, .killing "two an.d i I wounding several. Last night Maj. Carroll, j I agent of exchange of prisoners at this point,' > ii-iiiiiu'M uom uk' c11Cit11v e> licet, alter, send ire I - . " . '7 | ! packages ami letters for the Dauphin Island i prisoners. !No hopes are entertained of an cx- J | change of prisoners at present. Yesterday a1 1 force of the enemy from I'ensaeola, i200u strong, J I crossed Pordido river towards Mobile. All j i quiet in the nay to-dav. -1 f*" * I FROM ATLANTA. Atlanta. August 18.?Heavy skirmishing | again at midnight last night, on the centre, and ! continued until two o'clock without any results, j This morning Stuart's corps opeued with artille ! ry on the enemy?their batteries replying. The firing was very heavy, producing consternation among the enemy. Prisoners report that our cavalry captured a large number of beeves at Kingston, a few days ago. Reports arc numerous concerning operation*, hut beyond the fact that the enetnv have Cut the road at Aekworthvaud destroyed the ; Track between Etowah and Ostannula river, ! had thus far been entirely successful. Noth- j ing official has been received. '.I lie uneillV seem to If iirnm-mf Al' (I,.. ... ----- .... U - ! Ull '" ' A j nitudc of operations in their rear. They are J preparing another raiding expedition under ! I 1 o O l Kiipaftiek, w hofce. rende/.voux is at Svveet YYn- j ter. It is l?oli?.-vo.l tiie party \v?~*ro recalled j yesterday?fearing pursuit l-v oar cavalry. The Lord High Chancellor of England recently, in a decision relating to some ucciesiae- . tieal matter, gave expression to t.lio. following: "There is not found iii the meed of the church, such a 'distinct declaration upon t*e mysterious question of the eternity of final pun - ! i-lllMH'lil :i< 111 IT.II. - '* ' . ..... ?.>. ..VII1H lllll lilC f.\|?I'l."SMt)ll Ol lljPpO ' I l>v a elorgvinan, the wicked will event-I uallv he-saved. I therefore dismiss the ease, 1 j and order the appellants to be taxed with costs/' j i Whereupon sonic wags c?f the bar got oil' the | 'following perspective epitaph for the 1.4?rd(|, Iligh Chancellor: "Richard Citron .-Wostburg', j Lord High Chancellor of England. He was an eminent christian, ah energetic statesman, and a still more eminent and successful judge. During the three years tenure of his oflice, he abolished the time honored institution of the Insolvent's Court, the ancient mode of conveying land, and the eternity of punishment-. To wards the close of his earthly career, in the Judicial'Committee of the Privy Council, lie dismissed hell with costs, and took away from ! the orthodox members of the Church of England their last hope of eternal damnation." ? But on:; Way.*?The Boston Covrier is pub- J' lishing a series of tatters, under the head of j ' "A? llido to the Iloosiac Mountains." The i 1 writer says, among other good tilings : f As we sat in the bar room after dinner, j 1 heat;d from.an old farmer a suggestion worthy | 1 of note: "There ain't but one way," said he, j f "to get a hole through this hero mountain, and [ j that is, to bury a nigger in it somewhere, and 1 then Gov. Andrew will set all Massachusetts to ? clig. him out. The New York World frankly ,admits Slier- j man's defeat at Atlanta, and argues "all, or i nearly all, the disaster of this war are due oith- | or to,Mr. Lincoln's direct intermeddling with 1 army movements, or to the appointment of J * , V ' v him wh<f aro notoriously u^fit and ^ ij.couip lent." ? In what ship have the greatest, number of j people been wrecked I Courtship. Southerners in ;niadii. The Toronto correspondent of the j^ew York1Herald, under date of July 29, writes : . There has been a grand pow-wow in Toron-" to this week. Southerners, Copperheads and Kout.'uekiaiis have been hob-nobbing together.The latter have been <juilenumerous this week.' 1 think some order must, have been issued in Kentucky which has wounded4 their feelings. The K'MMiiekians are a very, mixed race. All the lighting portion of the Kentucky rebels Went South with llreekinringe and IJuckner; They, at all events, were not wanting in pluck; but the great majority of Kentuekians are still on the fence. 11 ad. the rebellion proved successful, tliev would have been South. AVhen the rebellion is put down, you will hot tind a KciiLuctcian outside of those it' the rebel rank3 who will not swyar that his-iiedrt has always been loyal to the Stars and Stripes. They have two reasons for coming to Canada. There have been rumors of Morgan making another visit, to fetch conscripts for .left*. Davis?that is one rcjtsotj. Then they might be wanted for the Union army?that is reason two. Well,those Kentuokiaus have had an interview with * Clement C. Clay, and have tried to induce him" to persuade JetV. Davis to make a peace on the basis of union, with guarantees for slavery, before Kentucky loses all her slaves. Clay goj furious with 'them, and told them in plain terms that if they laid any real sympathy with the South, their nlsiro u-nc of Pntm.r.1.... , f VlV.SliUI^ U1 Atlanta; at.which SntTdcrs cut up rough and spoke up for Kentucky. To tell the truth, I do not think Senders would refusp tho eolleetorship of the port of New York, lie has had more kicks lately .from J etf. Davis than he relishes, and if report is true, lie deserved them. It seems George was employed in London to make an arrangement with \Y. S. Lindsay <fc Co., for the building of some steamers. > which were i<> run the. blockade with munitions of war for the rebel .Government, and lie told Uicm so many.different stories that they refused to'treat with him, and when they applied to hciickpuuLers at Kiehinond, the rebel authorities repudiated all he had done. Therefore, although I heard him say the other day tKit he wished to see Lincoln re-clcctcd,' he caifso jt would insure the success'of the rebellion, yet, il'n national ina.i like McClelllU) wore elected President, Sanders would be onc'of the liivt t?> eoine in ami lake the oath, because ho is wily enough to know that-the death kuell of the rebellion would have loon rung. After all,, "this meeting between the rebel agents and the Kentucky skedadiers may have n good effect upon the Kmtuekinns who remain at hoino. The rebel agents say that Kentucky is a disgrace'to the South, anil that ihev don't, want nor iji the Confederacy. .They were told here that 1">rockimidge, lJur.ktuT. and Jluniett hml all declared liqflto. they were ashamed ot' their Stale, anil would never live iit it ngaint or nd11.it tlisit tliev came from it. Those were hard nuts for the Kentuekisns to crack, and will, per imps, show them that the double game they have been playing luis not succeeded with either party. The rebel chit-fa are continually passing backwards and forwards frfcin St. Catherines to the faWn as any Copperheads or Abolitionist arrive. Their objects is evidently to use any material which is pliable ; but tbo supporters of any great national movement which will give us peace on the basis of the Constitution tin (I the Union tint! no favor with them. Corn we saw yesterday a drug at four dollars per buslnd, which will he news most gratifying to the poor who have been ^'oinpellod to |>ay as high as six dollars lor the staff of life. Llorn"is doubtless already feeling the first pufi >f the breeze which will soon be a eonsiflerat.l.v !.!, ?. . 1 1-- i . o.. i? - - 'iu imu, tiiciiik> u? mo unc crops hrnI the dnnnmncv oI'IFjc money market. A little, more patience atuf we j-liall yet sen it clown to a Iivtin* Jifure.?Afotihionicri/ A lfcrtmcv O Garden Seeds. 4 SMALL 6UPPLY OF THK FOLLOWING l\ 'Garden Seeds ?ro for sale at the Post' Ollioo : Farly York, Drumhead, Savoy nnd Fnlleld Cabbage; fellow Patch, While'Stftno and Red Norfolk Turnips; icets. parrot and Parsnip. Those Seed wero imported by the Confederate Gov rninunt, and are believed to be fresh and genuine. . ?A I.HO? -V luta Baga, White Norfolk and country Turnip. July 2t? 3