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v,. -o '' ' ':> 'V W " "' '.""" ^ ' ' ' ' *" * ' \ \ ..F . * ; . % ' * ) '3SP i.V:r* f v/*iU?fn - tnnriaii i'umuf>i>? X'y nn??ww??1T???i>n -t -????-irwii iip-wp?iii?ra>ii?mffTa?t.!f<i>?c??'<r,'i ' n?t?Mma?>??MMWMawnwBiniiM?i??ll?a*?aiimmJ?miiiilnni <?>ii ,l?i n ?? idt?CTWOMnn?fJX*? v . * ./ - . .i- ...y * gwaa ii mil i _ _L _~-~~.T ~~~.~tTT~I1C,'~~?I. J.1'1' '_ tTT- -.' . ,.L ."?I ~7T^r~I~T~T! " 1 ' "g niihiii??ni hwhiwhih i i i mi wmww imunii L_i f. % . S. <3., "WEDasrESX>A-Y, 'A.TjaXJST 3l, 186477sro7&&. ' X ? 4 ( ?MULUtBttianiw lift? gpiM mum ! ? ? IIHIB iw?BIBIEI*!?BCTO??p? * By X3>. 3d>. ?. . ? > '</ ? Terms oi' Sub^einptaoii. Daily paper per month ------- $:?.00. * " far Six Months - - - $15.00 "Weakly', $5.00 *. v--*-*?-. Ratos ibr A&vGi!atising:; . For one Square? t\vclvo lines or less t?TWO DOLLARS nml FIFTY UKNTS lor the lirs't insertion, and TWO DOLLARS for each subseqeuut. OlltTUAitV Xotiobs, exceeding onu square, charged at advertising rates. , Transient Advertisements and Jot? "Woi'ic MUST 1115 PAID FOR IX Af)VAXC(D No deduction niade, except to our regular adveftisng patrons ^ v vru* L ci? gp^rewr-yy i rjc tc'. 1 "" inb-fisToiv riJiRn.ofijwfls. lighter ami quicker*Uio young wife walks; More mid more constant tnc little one talks; Firelight and'lamplight llicif ruddiest glow, Over the wails of the home room throw, All that will please him is doing and done; To-night tho husband and father will como Home on furlough. The lovelight. beams Irom the mOthor'aapyo, Aa the weeks, and days, and hours goby; And abo thinks pf her darling ooffuii^ to rest His weary bead on bis mother's breast; : * Tho time sOenM brief since be nestled there, ' Yet now lie is coming, With manhood's care, . Home ou furlough. Sisters their soldier brother groi t; Friends mid neighbors with pleasure meet, And the maiden breathes in lier lover's ear ' The few sweet words that he loves to hear ; Thinking meanwhile of ll^jclaj s ;to come, When lie, whom she loves, will again como homo, 1 Without furlough. , I Alas, oh Alas! for the loved ami dear, | 'Of thosu who sleep on fi soldier's bier ; In vain for them are the lamps lit bright, And the slimier* nod olmir In- i'n? ?* ' 1 r J "? "?? ? , In vain do their stricken spirits mourn # . For the brave and gallant who ne'er return, Even ou furlough. j r I Father of Nations! O hasten wo pray, , Tho rosy dawn of that glorious day j "When our beautiful country, delivered slnll stand ! flip prido and delight of each nation and land? ^lieu strife and contention forever shall cease . And tho soldier return to his lire Ale in pence. Without furlough. _ i " y ! And yet wo are all ypon furlough here; ? ' And the Captain above, as the time draw nenf, And our furloughs expire, will summon us all ' j ?t# To his grand review at the t rumpet's c?U, j Aii i sad will it l>o tor all who must say, ' -| '"I have idly, and wickedly wasted away My lite furlough." j . A trotting match came oft' in .tin; neighbor- j hood ot Luicds, Englat.-l, recently, between :i ; 'noted liorsc called Jack Jiossifor. now nro..! ; nineteen years, and a mare called Matchless, I ^Urchaecd for the sole purpose of defeating the i invincible Jack. The match was* for i.'50 aside, I and the distance to bo run tvas filly miles for the horse, and forty-nine miles and one thousand two hundred and'sixty yards lor the marc. At thc'cnjl of tint forty-fifth mile the marc fell down dead. Jack Rossiter did. his fifty miles 4 in three hoars and thirty niinutcs, twenty-seven miles of the journey having been completed in ono hour and forty minutes. .The winner was in a most^ieplorable state at the firiist). IIei.kXskd on Paroi.k.?Mjy Edward A.Pollard, of Richmond, who was captured on board the steamer Greyhound while on the voyage from Wilmington to Nassau/ aud^-confined in ; 1.v..4 a AT ' . - sl-viu ?r?n v.n, near i^oston, httVb'ccrt' released on his parole, to report-to tlio provost marshal at Brooklyn, New York, until such time as. he may he exchanged for a special part}' now in prison at Richmond. I'olano.?M. Trangog, tin* head of the l'ol?, ish National Government, together with four chiefs of the department, were liung on the! 5th inst, on the glacis of the citadel. The son- I tcnces ol c! e a 11 > ol eleven other officials of the National Government had been'commuted. A petition is circulating in Ohio hnd other States, requesting Lincoln to defer the draft for half a million more men* until an attempt has been made by negotiation to secure peace, based on the Constitution and Union. "Perhaps you did not know that T had corns," said a good matured man, as a stranger set his bag down on bis toes, in a crowded car. "No, stranger," said the carpet-bag man, "but j I think you cultivate too much ground." CAMPS' DAM;,JUURNAL \Vr3Ti>^ B'VB>AV MO|l A?J GT31. The Yankton Indians ImTO disastrously 'dofe'ated the federal fofees under Gob. Scully. Professor Snki.l of Audiorst College, who has kept a lri'ctcdrological register lbr twenty eight year?, says that Monday,, the 1st of August, was llio hottest day during twfcnty-tfight yaars. _ Tin: Tai,i,aua.ssek.?l.atu Northern papers aupouuec that tho \knifcdcrntU' cruiser Tiillahassoo htm paloly gotten out of tho harbor of Halifax, and is again at large upon the high seas. As a matter pf course, all Yanketdotn is again 1n commotion. ,? Tlw-Rudlc at Pctcrxlnirg-. A fioirosjKindent of the Ivielimotid Dispatch writes to thai paper an account of the battle pf Friday, from which we c.xtraet^the following referring; to the action of Ilagood's brigade t Ha good's (S. C) brigade, nothing daunted, actually pressed on amid that heavy fire of shot and shell, and reached the enemy's works.? Mr hen General II, reached the works, he foundthat one of his colonels had surrendered his regiment, of his brigade, without consulting him. At once repudiating the aet"of his subordinate, he ordered the men to fire and then to save thfrmselyos, his supports on the right and left having long since fallen hack. General JL. himself*escaped, though two horses were killed under him whilst .retreating. The engagement lasted about two hours,' .ending about 11 o'clock, and has not been renewed since that hour. It was as^eitaincd, beyond all doubt, by the attack t hat the whole of the 5th and Ptli corps were, massed on tlu> r.-ii.'i?%?/! ??? ' -i: *> w c* nit ilinw t H U Ul" visions of the 2d. Prisoners any that Urant and Meade wero both present at the-fight.? The enemy wen' doubtless expediting fin attach, and were- advantageously posted on both sides ot the rail road, with their ares fronting us; hence Mahone found no Hank to strike. Some caviling critics wiil doubtless take occasion to animadvert upon fnis failure. In order that, the failure may be perfectly understood, I will give the reason which, in my judgment-, I'd to it. In the first. Mace,, the enemy were present in overwhelmingly strong force when compared with our numbers; In the second plae?\ they,were admirably posted and very strongly fortified artificially. Ju the third place, to the eternal discredit of 'one of our brigades, be. it said that tljev' broke nnd .ran, ard refused to be rallied by their gallant, commander, though he did all thai, a man could do. And finally, if the enemy 'were not apprised o*' our at-taylc, it .was not because thx; plan and linn* were not liinvn ..v.... <i... , - . ? .. W I i I Ki vorv urchins of J.\:tcr.-f Vwioso li^slt it was that, those inxttiT> leaivcd <*d, I do not know ; but 1 know that eighteen hours boS'ore, the time, place ami character of \he liirht wcri! on lips of nil, soldiers and citizens. Our loss will, 1 think, font lip about" 1,000, the greater part of which was borne",by Harris' Mississippi and Hagood's South Carolina brigades, both of frhioh acted with conspicuous gallantry. Gkotjoe N. Saitndeks' Courtship. ?A lady furnishes' the following concerning George N. Saunders,' who fignreft so prominently /in the late Clay, Ilolcombe ntid Greeley Peace Conference: lie started 111 life as an editor of'a newspaper in Kentucky; I think it. was called .the Mayflower, and had many lady patrpns and contributors, among whom wasMiss Itcid, "adaughter of Capt. Reid, of the Armstrong* who also designed the present United States flag. Saunders' courtship was as singular as his movements generally are. He was pleased with Miss Iteid's style of writing and opened a correspondence with her.? She then sent him her slipper, also a sash, marked the size of her waist, both of which he appeared to admire, as lu; visited her once and married her. i ftlurvfiiff ?til lite Soiitli,"?What Stijlite Statit{<!8. A correspondent of the Baltimore Sun calls attention to some striking and interesting facts, to show that the bugbear of "starving out the South," and "cutting off supplies," ?fcu, may be said with ease, but doing it is another thing.? lie says: I will select first, Sontlj Carolina, to run the parallel with, for several reasons, the chief of ' which are that she has been supposed to pro- ] duco nothing but o'otfon and rice, and she is the . ' most derided ?hd ccmthmnetl of all the slave- 1 holding States. Not many persons are a ware ' that this State'aldne produces five sixths nearly : of all the rice grown, but the census of 1850 I I sho\vs that to he the fact v besides nearly all the ( I riee, she produces wheat to within. 3000 bushels of all produce*! by tlto six New England States together. Slue produces almost as much Corn j as t he State of New Yolk, and six millions of 1 bushels of tlwit grain more than uH the New , England States together, for she produced lipwards of 1G,000,01)0 of bushels. She produced more oats than Maine \ more byl, 0f)0,000 bilshels than Massachusetts ; more , tllhn 1,000,000 bushels of potatoes over and 1 above what Maine produced ; more heans and peas by 130(000 bushels than all the Northern ^ States together, except New York ; more beef 1 cattle than Pennsylvania by 3,740 and, almost, as' many as all the New England States togclh- f or ; more slieCp than Iow? and .*!%'iseonsin by 10,G99 ; more hogs than New York by 47,251; ' more than Pennsylvania by 251,137, and 80,- I 000 more-than all the New England States, with New Jersey, Michigan, Wisconsin ami j California in the* bargain ; more horses and * ifiulcs by 10,000 than Maine, New liampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode Island together ; he- ' sides all which she produces' largely of oxen, ! cows, and a variety of products .of smaller I.:., i KIWIS. 'i Virginia and North-Carolina produced jointly 13,363,000 bushels of wheat-, or 241,000 bushels more than the meat wheat '"{Slate of . New York,'or a quantity equal to the \vhoic product of the six New England States, with New .Jersey, Michigan, Iowa and Wisconsin, all put together. Virginia, North C?:olina and Tennessee produced 115,471,503 ^ushols ' of eor.n. a quantity exceeding by 800t00t> hushels the joint product of New York, IVulisylva.,nia-, Ohio, New .Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine". 1 Tennessee alone produced 1G,50G more hogs i than all the six New England Slates, with New York, Pennsylvania, Ne-v Jersey, Iowa and Michigan; for that State produced 3,104,SOO hogs, while the eleven Northern States named produced but. 3,OSS,304. Most of pcnpic have " thought that the North was really the hog pro- ( ducing section, hut such is hv no mqaus the | laet. Tiie whole nuinlier of hogs- produced in 1650 was 30,81 6,008, of which the slavcholding States furnished 20,770.730. or T lnrn 1I 1 two-thirds of tlio whole swine production. i It will doubtless surprise many persons to l>e t told that tlic seven gulf or cotton Stato3 of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas produced 45,137 moie beef cattle than the six New England States, 1 New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, New Jersey, j Indiana, Michigan, and "Wisconsin, altogether, i but such is the fact, tor the census of 1850 tells " us that these seven cotton plates produced 3,354,480 beef cattle, while the thirteen Northern States named produced but 3,312,327. A single glance at the live stock columns of ( the seventh census will prove to the inquirer ] that the slaveholding States produced nioro i beef cattle than the non-slavelmlding by 1.782,587. That while the North produced" 3,541,12J cows, the South pnWuced 2,829,810. That ? the Northern States produced 800,397 work oxen, against 820,340 produced by tho SouthI ern States. That while the Nortl v.. |/l V/MUVUU 2,310,902 horses and' innIcs, the South produced 259,358 more, for the Southern produc- ' tion was 2,570,t920. - I In conclusion", as people have boon so Inuch 4 in the habit of conceding superiority to the North, in those and other points of view, may be .the above statements may be doubted; if so, I refer the skeptical to the seventh census of 1S50, the last date we have. . ' lloxv xlpes a pitcher of water differ from a f man throwing his wife oft* a bridge \ One is [ water in the pitcher; the other is pitch licr m ? the water. * , LATEST BY TELEGilAPHt . REPORTS OB'T1 IK PRESS ASSOCIATION. Entered according tj^tlto Act of Conirres^ iu Rio yonr l>y J. S. Thrash Kit, in the Clork's office ofthe District (Jdurt of the Confederate States fir the Northern District of Georgia. v * Fit OM PETEIISB Uil G. ' Petersburg, Aug. 29.?Since the figlit on rhurkdny, near Reams' Station, nuengagement Itas taken place.* Loth nrniies seem to be resting. No efVort- 1ms been made by the enemy lo retake the" position near Reams' Station, from' which they we ye dislodged on Thursday. FulV twelve miliia nf 11?#? -? ' ' - ' u w. ociuuii luuu nave neon destroyed by,the enemy?mils and sills being burnt.. Among the prisoners captured on ] liursdny was the Adjutant General of Hancock, who escaped last night, but was recaptured today. , , ' FROM RICHMOND. Richmond, August 30.?Hie LynchburgRfmiblican of Sunday states that tho Yankee cavalry which had advanced on Rog6r8vil|dh a few days ago, suddenly retreated the Ramqavey * tliey came. f? 5 v y | It is reported on what appears' to be good authority tbat Wheeler, with a large force < of cavahy, is,l>etwoen Knoxville nnd Bristol, pVc-" paring to inarch into Kentucky. Richmond, August 30.?The situation itv,-. front of this place and Bermuda Hundreds is unchanged. Considerable shelling was going on at one time yesterday, doing but little dam-' age. To-day all'is comparatively quiet. - 1 FROM MOBILE. Mouii.k. August 30.? A ilag of tiuco boat" ,iaa , u-T?i r ...o muH-M. inuiguig itMiers viHHii papers from New Orleans, ami prisoner* thnt were capture*! iti Mobile I?av. A Confederate surgeon will bo sent, vver r?y *ir-?t boat to J'asuagoiiln. Tins Federal .'Went of Exchange think an exchange ^ ^ .. O of prisoners will soon take place. FLOM 'ATLANTA. . Atlanta, August du.?The enemy occupy the West Point Koad. They are fortifying, md removing the trunk. Scouts report ^ the Federal cavalry advancing in diiection of West Point. /'t.a m ir /*1 iv ? ' - 1 v^ui. i>.. u. v.ouer, or riio Uth Kentucky Regiment, has been appointed Protest Marshal jencral oi this army, and assumed tlio position :his moriuing. Atlanta, August HO.?The situation, in front inchanged to-day. The enemy's left is resting on the Chattahooehie?his right extending 'O near the West Point Railroad, between^ West Point and Fay burn. The following is a copy of a Jcttcr tcceived ov a village schoolmaster : "Sur, as you are a mau of noledgc, I intend to inter my son in your skull." ^ vSTtuation Wanted-"'^ WANTK^BYA It KSPMCTA BI/K WIDOW LADY, who 8ph?U?Jf,,roncU.anil German, a Bltua tun us uoverni'HS or iiona^KOeper, in a privnto famiy: Shu lias had expiTfencopapd can give the best of reference*. Address'STrs. R. A. S., Camden post^offlco, S. C. August 31 ,3 ' Branch Bank State pf South. Carolina-.^ ! ^ .CJAMDIjSW; August 31st, 1864. CITIZEN'S OF KKR^WftW DISTRICT CAN EXCHANGE Treprtury notes .of tiro old issue for hose of the novy>is.suo at this Batik-?at the dopreciaton, free ofjiily other expense. ' ..,t WM. M. SHANNON,-.. A^ugt'ist 312 -.President. ^ School Notice- THE PAltTtt^TS OF THOSE CHILDREN WnO havo applicdNxr who desire" io- apph' for ndmis-ion into the PRIVAYliv SCHOOL of Mrs. McCanUoss, aro requested t<>?etfwh4icir children and npplica* ions to the SchooPTtooin on Tlfnmlny September 1st, it 10 o'clock a:'to , to make further arCaogoments. August 30 . --AC. ^