The Camden confederate. (Camden, S.C.) 1861-1865, January 24, 1862, Image 1
\
21) c Camden 2onfelevate.
VOLUME I. CAMDEN, SO. CA., FRIDAY, JANUARY 24,1802, NUMBER 13.
|)f Cflinbcn Confcbcrfitf
18 PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY
J. T. HERSHMAN,
AT TWO DOLLARS A YEAR,
PAYABLE INVARIABLY HALF-YEARLY IN ADVANCE.
Terms ioi* Advertising:
For 0110 Square?fourteen lines or less?OXK DOLLAR
for the lirst, aud FIFTY CKNTS for eaeli subsequent
insertion.
Obituary Notices, exceeding one Square, charged
tor at advertising rates.
T..K 1\r HTKvn
J-iauoiVJIII; i\U> VIII.X IIKMI^ illiu UUU U UI iV lUL Ol ljVi *
rAII> FOR IN ADVANCE.
No deduction made, except to our regular advertising
patrons.
ADVERTISING TERMS TER ANNUM.
One Square, 3 months, $">
" 44 G ' 8
?' "12 " . - . 12
Two Squares, 3 months, 8
" " G " 13
" " 12 " 18
Threo Squares 3 mos., 12
" " 6 " 18
it " 12 " - - - ?> r.
Four Squares 3 iuos., ] <1
44 44 G 44 21
44 44 1 2 44 30
C3T* Eight dollars per annum lor every additional
square.
Business, and Professional Cards Eight Dollars
a-year. All advertisements Tor less than three months
Cash. If the number of insertions is not sj?ociliod in
writing advertisements, will be continued till ordered out,
and charged accordingly.
Announcing Candidates, three months, Five Dollars
over that time, the usual rates will be charged.
No advertisement, however small, will he considered
less than a square; and transient rates charged on all
for a less time than three months
TO TRAVELLERS.
:o:
OF THE
SOUTH CAROLINA RAIL ROAD.
?
NORTHERN ROUTE.
STATIONS. I DAX ~N,QHT
TRAINS. TRAINS.
Leave Charleston I 7.00 a m 3.15 p m
Arrive at Kingsville, thoi
Junction ofthe Wilmington
A Manchester It. It. J 2.45 pm ."1,15 a m
Arrive at Columbia I 4 00 pm 16.00 a ni
Arrive at Camdeu | 4.40 p m j
O
Leavo Camden 5.20 am
Leave Columbia G. 15 a m 5.20 p m
Leave Kingsville, the Junction
of the Wilmington
A Manchester Railroad.. 6.45 a m 3.25 p. ni
Arrive at Charleston 8.00 p ni 2.30 a. ni.
WESTERN ROUTE.
I DAY KIOIIT
STATIO. S. j TRAlN}i T11AIN8
Leavo Charleston I 7.00 n in G.30 p in
Arrive at Augusta ! 2.45 p m |4.30 pm
o
Lenvo Augusta ; S.OO am | 7.30 p m
Arrive at Charleston 3.30 pm i 4.30 a in
THROUGH TRAVEL RKTWEEN AUGUSTA AM) K1NSGVII.I.K
.. ? DAY XIG1IT
STATIONS. TRAINS^ TRAI NS.
Leave Augusta 8.00 am ,7.30 pin
Arrive at Kingsvillc 2,45 p in :3.15 a in
o
Leave Kingsvillc I G.45 am i 8.25 pin
Arrive at Augsta I 1.15 p mj 11.15 pm
MID-DAY TRAIN BETWKKN CAMDEN AND
KINGSVILLE,
Monday, "Wednesday, and Saturday,
down. i up.
Leave Camden, 11.40a. m. | Leave Kingsvillc, 8.5 a.m.
Leavo Boykiu's, 12.12p.m LeaveClarkson's 8.20 "
Leave Clnremont 1.248 * Leave Manchester JuncLpavo
Middleton 1,10 " tion 8T38 a. m. *
IjjCavo Manchester June- Leave Middleton 8.43
tion 1.18, p.m. Leave Claremont 0.08 "
IJiCave Clarkson's 1.38 u Leave Boykin's 0.48 "
a l r.n \ ?:? ... ry , . ~ ~~
t^uivu at ivuigoiiuu 1.U", \ mnvu ill lyltinUCIl, lU.'JO
Nov. 8?tf H. T. PEAKB, (Jen'l Sup't.
Oats and Cow Peas
For sale for cash, at tiie old corner.'
November 1 E. W. BONNEY.
Notice.
I HAVE THIS DAY, OCTOBER 21, SOLD OUT
iny entire stock of Goods, "YVaros and Merchandise,
in the town of Camden, to J. M. Springer, Esq., who
will continue the business at the same stand 1 have
Occupied heretofore in tho said town. All persons
who aro in anywise indebted to me, will please make
payment of tho same to said J. M. Springer, at an
early day; and all who have claims against mo will
present them to him for settlement.
1 'I T> CDDTXTn l<n ?
/vvviiivvi XX. UDU,
/
I
STATE OF SOS Til CAROLINA.
COUNCIL CIIAMBKR, Jan. 10, 1802.
AT A MELTING <>F THE GOVERNOR
ami Council, held this dav, the following
rules were adopted and ordered to be published:
Rules made and established by the Governor ami
Council for the munayement of the Department
of the Mditary of the /State.
Rule 1. It shall be the duty of the Chief
of the Military Department to examine into
the military condition of South Carolina, which
includes the returns and pieseut condition of
tlin 1 In lii.n i.>n otnl tlin ..~4- ...
v??v i?W|?o IJVI ? *W, illivi Uiv J I I I I I III nut III
service, together with the number, amount and
condition ofarms. ordnance, aiumunition,c lotliiug
and supplies, and to report the same to
the Governor and Council.
Rule 2. ltshali l?e the duty of the Chief of
said Department to keep in propper form and
report regular and exact returns of the military
force of the State in Confederate service and
in tlie militia of the State, and of all military
stores arms, equipments and supplies in the
magazines and other places in the State, ami
to order, receive and take them, and all arms,
ammunition and equipments from officers and
other persons in whose possession tliey mav be,
which belong to the State and are not used in
actual service, and to direct them to such
places as he may deem proper.
Rule JJ. The Chief of said Department
shall form estimates for all such stores, arms,
ammunition, equipments, clothes and supplies
as may be requisite for the military service of
this State and the contingencies of the Confederate
demand, and providing adequate magazines
for the same, where such do not exist,
and report the same to the Governor and Council
that due provision may he made therefor.
Rule 4. The Chief of said Department
shall give directions necessary to carry into
operation all resolutions and directions of the
Governor and Council by orders through the
Adjutant and Inspector General's Department,
for raising, arming, and equipping troops for
the service of the State, and oftho Confederate
States, under the authority of the State, and
for the organizing, providing and inspecting
4 1 1 4 _ .1 I 4 4-1. _ . 1!
me iit1; , iiii<i iu uncfi uie arangciueni, 11 istribution,
transportation ami operation of such
troops (till mustered into confederate service),
as may he brought into the service of the State
under and subject to the orders of the Governor
and Counril to provide for the transportation,
safe-keeping and distribution of supplies
necessary for the troops called into the service
of the State, or which the contingency of the
Confederate service may appear to require.
liule 5. The Chief of the said department
is vested with all such powers as arc necessary
for the full perfoimance of the duties above
specified, or which may hereafter be imposed,
and to this end he may supervise, direct and
give all proper orders to the Commissary, Ordnance,
Quartermaster and Medical Departments
ol the military organization of the State, and
to command all oflieers and employees in the
military service of the State, and to depute to
them such matter at such times as lie may see
proper. Ho is vested with further power to
remove all persons employed m any of the
Departments aforesaid and to appoint others
in their stead, and shall be responsible for their
conduct in oflice ; but all such orders?removals
and appointments?shall be done bv orders
through the Adjutant and Inspector-General's
Department, and shall be reported to the
Governor and Council at their next meeting
thereafter, and be subject to the control of the
same. All the vacancies in the militjirv sor
vice of the State heretofore vested by law in the
Governor, sliall be vested in the Ciiief of the
Military Department, subject to the previous
decision of the Governor and Council.
1 vvile 0. The Chief of the Military Department
shall keep a book or books, to which all
orders or directions made or given by him
shall be transcribed, and the same shall be
submitted to the Governor and Council at each
successive meeting, and to enable liim to discharge
such duties as are imposed, lie is authorized
to employ one or more clerks upon such
compensation as may be fixed by the Governor
and Council.
By order of the Governor and Council.
r. j. moses, Jr. ,scc'ty.
January 24 2
From the Newborn, (X. C.) Progress..
TIIE E\T0KT10i\EK.
Of all the various beasts of prey
That thirst for bloody gore,
That seek and prowl, relentless slav,
"Whoso constant cry is more,
There's none like him whose craving maw,
"Would till his coffers by this war.
No heart of which wo ever read,
Would prey upon his like ;
"Whoso craven heart, to feeling dead,
"Would 'gainst his species strike,
'Tis left to man, man's high estate,
To do the deed he'd execrate.
Aye, can it he?alas! 'tis so?
All "Shvloeks" are not dead?
There's those who wring the heart with woe,
That take the orphan's hrcad,
"Whoso moneyed might the poor oppress,
"Who should relieve, but make distress.
Now is the time we all should strivo
To do all good we can ;
Not by our neighbors' sulVcrings thrive,
But help our fellow man ;
And in a measure thus requite,
Our being absent from the ' light."
But rest assured, the heartless man,
The meaner than the beast,
"Who speculates 011 what he can,
"While others starve, to feast?
Mark what 1 sav. believe it well?
Ho'll surely die and to li?11.
Goon for tiie Thirsty Soldier. ?Extreme
thirst is one of the most severe trials the active
sohlier has to encounter. During a long
march and on the lield of a long and hotly
contested battle, he is often almost overcome
with fatigue and thirst. An old frontiersman,
who had much experience on the W estern borders
and on the plains, suggests to us the following,
as the best remedy and preventative of
thirst that has ever been discovered:?After a
meal, take the coll'ee grounds, boil them over
again, and pour it oil" into your canteen, and
let it cool for your next march. It is not only
nutrativc and stimulative, but it will quench
tlie thirst more effectually than water. It will
go two or three \iines as far as water. Also
take the coffee grounds, after being thus used,
dry them, and put them in your pocket, and
chew them at intervals 011 the inarch, or during
any arduous service, and they will repress thirst
and satiate greatly the cravings of hunger.?
This course has been tried with the most gratifying
results, and is worthy of a trial by every
soldier in the service.
jfct?" A lady of 1 h'lllas, Texas, has received a
letter from her brother, who was taken prisoner
by the Yankees at Manassas, and who after
wards made Ins escape, from which we make
the following extract:
They came very near killing me on the spoti
but they carried me to the rear about one
mile, and there the rout commenced. They
took me on to Arlington Heights, a distance of
about dO or 40 miles, made me go at a trot all
the way. 1 arrived at Arlington about 10
o'clock Monday, and there was placed in an
old stable, and tied hands and feet ; kept me
there two days, and only gave me one piece of
bread and some water.
From there we went over to Washington,
O '
where we were mobbed by the drunken sol.
dicrs and little boys. Brickbats came as thick
around inc as the halls at Jiull Kun. Several
of those who were with 111c were hurt very
badly. We lived 011 bread, water and salt
pork for three weeks after wc arrived in Washington.
After that wc lived first rate; the so*
cession ladies and gentlemen of Washington
and Baltimore made up a purse of $1,900 for
our comfort, which they put into a gentleman's
hands in Washington, who provided us with
sugar and coffee, beef and clothing, cots, mattresses,
blankets, and also hired a negro to
help us cook.
The London Daily News says that the
reports that the Emperor Napoleon contem- <
plates a recognition ot the Southern Cont'ed- i
eracy are from trustworthy sources, the want ;
of cotton being severely folk i
Lincol's Cabinet and the Slavery- Quesnon.?The
Continental Monthly, a new Abolition
magazine just started in the Nortli^
makes lie following assertion :
Five of the present Cabinet, with Secretary
Cameron at their head have expressed themselves
fairly and fully in favor of emancipation
?foreseeing its inevitable realization, and, we
presume, the necessity of "managing" it betimes.
Only Messrs. Seward and Bates hang
timidly behind, waiting for stronger manifestations,
ere they hang out their tings. Mean
winU\ from the rural districts of the East and
West conic thousand-fold indications that the
great "working majority" of Northern freemen
?the same who elected Lincoln and urged on
the war in thunder tones and lightning acts?
o o
are stirnh determined to press the great mca^
sure, and purify this country for once and forever
of its great bitterness. It is a foregone
conclusion.
Burying a Man Alive.?Singular Circumstance.?'Jdie
Baltimore Clipper of the Oth tells
the following:
On Thursday last an unusual occurrence
transpired at the camp of the Wisconsin Fourth
regiment, now encamped at Patterson Park.
Peter Moore, one of the privates,, had been ill
for several weeks, lie to all appearances, died.
A certificate of his death was handed to Maj..
Bclger, who ordered a collin for the defunct.
On Thursday morning Moore was placed in
the colli in, and, just as the lid was being nailed
down, lie greatly frightened the bystanders by
sitting up in bis collin and exclaimed that it
was a shame to bury a man before ho was
dead. Of course lie was removed from the
box and once more placed under the care of
.1 1 . \! 1 i 1 1 1
iiie uocior. .uooienau miu one aav ana a
night as if dead, and came very near being
buiricd before his time. Ilis companions declare
that, as he refused to be buried whenhfs
funeral was ordered by the Col., he has
disobeyed orders, and that when he recovers
he shall be court martialed.
Second Outrage Against the British
Flag.?The following is the Northern account
of an affair very similar to the San JacintoTrcnt
outrage, and to which allusion has already
been made in our dispatches from New
Orleans :
The U. S. steamer Santiago de Cuba, on theOth
inst., boarded a schooner in the Gulf, bound!
from Havana to Brazos, and took seven passengers,
among whom was Jas. W. Zacharic,.a
wealthy anil prominent citizen of New Orleans,,
who has been of late materially assisting Jeff.
Davis in prosecuting the war of the Confederacy.
Mr. Zacharie was placed, on the arrival
of the Santiago dc Cuba, in the hands of Maj.
Hill, commander of Fort Taylor, who has carefullyvguardod
him. until he transfercd him to
the steamship Baltic for transportation to New
York.
Ci rk for Love.?Take twelve ouncos of
dislike, one pound of resolution, two ounces
of the powder of experience,, a long sprig of
time, fourteen drachms of the quiet of dishonor,
and one quart of the cooling waters of consideration.
Set them over a gentle fire of
love, sweaten it with the sugar of forgetfulness,,
skim it with the spoon of melancholy, and
put it into the bottom of your heart. Then
ifitli n D/Mittil /t.Mif>AiAi\AA lot it r/.in ni n
cui K, It ? mi ib nvuuu tumv iv;u it iviuaiii^.
and you will truly find caso and be restored to
your right senses again. These things arc to
l>e had ot' Mr. I,ov^one-only, at the house of
Understanding, next door to Reason, Prudent
street, in the parish of Contentment.
McClKLLAN and THE lincoln CoNORE&S. It
is currently reported that a movement is on
loot in the Washington Congress to supercede
lien. McCJellan by the Massachusetts lawyer,
Nathaniel P. Banks. They Complain that
McClellan is too slow, and they want a Commander
who will respond to the popular clamor
for an onward movement. The Yankees
? I ^1 _ _ 1 !. il 1_
have been cigni mourns engaged in me wont
of subjugating the South, but are still as far
from accomplishing their purpese as they were
lit tlie outset. "We do not wonder, therefore,
U their impatience.?Richmond Dispatch.