The Camden journal. [volume] (Camden, S.C.) 1866-1891, January 25, 1867, Image 1

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-VOLUME XXV^. Ill jjj| J CAMDEN, S. C., FRIDAY; MORNING, JANUARY 25, lBfiT. PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY ' , THOMAS W. PEGUES. , ; jr ^ . / r. - ' - V TERMS-OP SUBSCRIPTION. . j Three Dollars a year Casii?Four Dollars - if paymout is delayed three months,, Bate?, of advertising, peb-sqcare. For tlie first insertion, $1.50;forthcsccond, $1.00; for the third, 75 cents; for each subsequent insertion,-50 eonts. Semi-monthiv, Monthly and Quarterly advertisements, $1.50 each insertion. The space occupied by ten lines (solid, of this size type) constitutes a square. Payment is required'in advance from transient advertisers, and as soon as the work is done, from regular customers ^MIBCELL ANEOUa"1 ACTS OF TEE LEGISLATURE. ' An Act amend an Act entitled "An " Act to amend 1 an Act to , establish District Courts.'" . y 1. Be it enacted, by the Senate and House -of Rcprcstativcs, now mat and sitting in General Assembly, and by the authority of the same, That so nf nri Aft fvnt.it.lorl ''An Arf-tn . amend an Act entitled "An Act to . establish District Courts"'ratified the twenty first day of September, one thousand eight hundred and sixty six, as requires the drawing and cmpanai el in g of Grand Juries for the Dis. trict Courts, bej and the same is here by repealed, and all persons already drawn and summoned to attend said District Court as Grand Jurors, are , Q hereby relieved of the duty of so at- . >. tending. . .. II. That no presentment. of a Grand Jury shall be necessary in any J case in the said District .Courts, but * it<shall be the duty of the Attorney \ . General and Solicitors, after inquire ing into the facts of each ease, to prepare Bills of Indictment, and present the same with the papers pertaining thereto to the District Judge for his examination, who shall order the same to be docked for trial, if in his judgment, the prosecution thereof,;be .advisable. . V III. That the Juries in the District Court, shall consist of <rc Jury of eight Jurors at each Quarterly Session, and the venire therefor shall - . consist of a panel of sixteen; and it t nil a II I^a tVio rlntv-nf !??< > District .Tiuloe I at each Quarterly Session, to order tlic drawing in open court of the Jurors to constitute the panel of the venire for the succeeding term. IV. That there shall be bent a separate Jury Dox for the District Courts, which shall ho filled from time to time, and the drawing therefrom he conducted in the same manner as by law required for the Superior Courts; and in reference to the said Juries of the District Courts, the manner of summoning them, the duties and liabilities of the officers of the Court and the penalties for not: attendance, and in all other respects, the jury law of the State shall apply. V. That in drawing Jurors to constitute the pane! of the Venire, it shall be competent for the District Judge to direct the rejection at the time of drawing of the names of per sons who arc known or believed to he dead, not resident in the District, over seventy years of age. or in any manner disabled from discharging the duties of a Juror; and names shall be rejected for the occasion and returned to the 33ox of persons who are known to be in the panel for the term of the Superior Court next ensuing the drawing, or who have served ! lis Jurors either in the Superior or ' District Courts within twelve mouths ' preceeding the drawing. YI. That to constitute ihe_ Juries in the District Courts for the Term next succeeding the passing of this Act, and lor which the Venire has already been issued, the District Judge shall order the drawing of sixteen from the number of those summoned and" in attendance, which number, so drawn shall constitute the panel*for that term, and from them shall be 1 drawn those who shall serve as the Jury of that 'Perm; and, it" in any District such Venire shall not have ^ been already issued, the District Jedge shall order a special court lor the drawing and shall order the Venire in accordance with the provisions of this Act. VII. That in the District Court, | each party in a civil action, and the accused and the prosecuting ollicer in a criminal matter, shall be entitled to challenge each, two jurors; and the places of those challenged, shall he (supplied from the supernumeraries.? An insufficient number of jurors in j any instance, shall be supplied in like manner as in the Superior Court. 9 YIH. A traverse of an indictment shall not, in the District Courts, of itself, operate to continue the case. IX. That the concluding paragraph of the eleventh section, in the words, "and in the District' of. Beaufort, where the Court shall he held, alternately at the Court House in the town of Beaufort,' and at Lawtonville, be repealed. ; ' X. In civil causes the defendant shall be entitled to an imparlance to the succeeding quarterly Term of the Court. XI. The Superior Court of Equity and the District Court shall have concurrent jurisdiction in all of Equity; "and the Superior fHwts of Law and the District Court shall have concurrent jurisdiction of all cases in Law, civil and criminal, of which, by the constitution, the said District Courts hpvc jurisdiction. XII. That in all cases now commenced in the District Courts for7 services where the amount due is - j~n.? over quo iiuuuieu uuiiin?, - tue euoc shall be transferred to the Court of Common Plisas; XIII. Matters of Equity pending in the District Court, shall be heard by the District Judge, at a Quarterly Session, or at such other time as with his concurrence, the parties may fix, with an appeal, as from a Chancellor on" Circuit. . JFith respect to these matters the Commissioner in Equity for the District shall regard the Judge of the District Court as he does a Chancellor with respect.'to matters in the Superior Court of Equity; and in both of these Courts, the law,'practice, fees, modes of proceeding and effect of order and process.sliaiibe'as nearly as possible the same. .? i A GENERAL BANKRUPT1 LAW. Tito New York Herald, of the 7th, has the following article on a United States general bankrupt law: The Constitution of the United States empowers Congress tc pass uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies. This power has only been-twice exercised?once in 1800, when a bankrupt law limited to five years was passed, which was repealed before the expiration of the tcrm: term, at the close of the year 1803, and again in 'August 1841, when a in sol iron r. law was enacted. which was so loose in its provisions ami so available for the fraudulent debtor as to excite a storm of popular di. favor. The latter law was pushed through Congress by questionable means, ami among the first who availed themselves of itmprovisions was the. Chevalier J.r.nes Watson Webb, who after making a great fuss over the passage of the law, coolly wiped out s one halfa m ilieu dollars of debts by i'y aid. lie derived no permanent benefit from the whitewashing proeivo, however, since he could have resorted t:> it again a few years afterwards. on a smaller scale, to his own advantage. The law of 18-11 -bad less-. iv.'n year s ex arence, a nil hjv its repeal having received the "resident's tu'.'vi on March >, ltii-). During the period it remained in operation, it was cairn!;:ted that sonic dOjOUd persons availed themselves of its provisions, whose aggregate debts must have hcen i:; the neighborhood of i^MMWUhJO. Notwithstanding the failure of former experiments, it has long been the .opinion of the ablest financiers and the most honorable business men j in the Ui.iled States, that a general j bankrupt law, fair and liberal in its I provisions, and containing strict sufe| guards against fraud, would be at once a protection to the honest debti or, and an advantage to the business : community. Congress alone has pow: er to pass such a law, which would be untiling upon ai! creitnorsiu tlie Liu1 ted Utatus, and ail ?le<criptions oi' ! debts. The insolvent laws of a. Statu i can only reach its own citizens, unless creditors from other States, by : voiuntjirily recognizing tffc? insolven| cy-and accepting dividends from the estate,'put themselves within the pale ! of their operation. The close and intimate commercial relations between 'the State-? render it very desirable , that a uniform system of laws relating I to bankruptcy, which all understand, j and by which all alike are bound, should exist; and it was a wise provision of the Constitution which vested the power to make laws in the Congress of the United States. In Europe, bankruptcy laws are of a quasi criminal character. Thepro| ccedings are regarded as hostile to the bankrupt. Under the Trench law, he is arrested and confined in prison, or put under surreilancO) and after an examination into his affairs by the Tribunal of Commerce, he can be released on bail br unconditionally. After the investigation is completed, he can be condemned to imprisonment, with or without labor, if fraud be proved against him. The English has some peculiar features. A bankrupt who obtains his certificate of discharge, is allowed a per centagc to a limited sum out of the proceedings of his estate, when the dividends reach a certain amount. When fifteen shillings in the pound is realized by his creditors, he receives ten per cent, on the'whole assets to a sum not exceeding 600 pounds,- and so. inpropc-rtion for a smaller dividend. This affords a bankrupt & small capital with which to commence life anew. One .1? ii.. in i JL..1J provision 01 me, jcuigusu ibh tyuuiu hardly suit the United States. , A bankrupt is not entitled to his discharge if he has lost a certain amount within the past year immediately preceding his bankruptcy, either at gambling or stock-jobbing. It is objected* by some that bankruptcy laws are $ protection to fraudulent and dishonest debtors.-* A goo^ law must always be the reverse; Our present system, without any general law at all, is oppressive only -to the unfortunate and honest'debtor, and arilords the rogue*-every facility he can desire to cheat his creditors. It is also am incentive or-temptation-to men of weak and unstable principles 1 to become dishonest/ Wkftn a person who 13 doing business with an intention and wish to establish a ( good reputation fincls' misfortune^ coming upon him he has- now no opportunity to redeem himself, aiid will in a large majority , of instances, set to work to put his property out of the reach of his creditors. If he goes down, he argues, he can never get up/ again, and self preservation, is the 'first-''law of nature. . A fair^ank^jjtr law would enable him to stop- at^onco, to put all his property in the hands of Jus creditors to pay as mucn as no could, and to commence again "without an incubus of debt "weighing him down. From dishonesty and fraud no law devised by human, wis lorn can entirely protect the creditor. *Cut a good bankrupt law would afford liiiri more protection than he at present enjoys, since it would enable him to take immediate measures for his protection whenever evidence of intended fraud should make itself apparent. The lack of a uniform "bankruptcy law deprives the community of some of its best commercial ^ability and /vnfAfnuiOA T .n moil uuoiuwro Ulltui J- \S ?VV|/ W Ultvu constantly out of business because be has once been unfortunate, or to compel him to resort to all manner of tricks and'subterfuges to conceal his property and cover up his interests, cannot conduce either to the good of the creditor qr of the State. The honest debtor, if he should become a bankrupt, would never fail to pay up his old obligation in fulLshould he subsequently secure the means to do so. The dishonest man would never pay a debt at all if he could avoid it. We have examined with some care the law which passed the present House at its first session," and is now before the Swiate. Its main provisions appear to be fair and just both towards the creditor and debtor, and it contains apparently stringent safeguards against fraud and dishonesty on the part of a bankrupt. At this period of our life as a natiotrit is eminently desirable that some uniform law should be given to the count try, and the subject should claim the I early and the serious attention of the Senate. It is one of the most important matters that remains before ! that body, and should be passed dur . ingthe existing session, so that it any ! amendments to the bill are found ! desirable they maypiie acted upon ! by the present House, which lias alI ready muturely considered and thoroughly debated the subject. i Soi'tii i:ux M.ixupactukks.?In July last, a factory of jeans linsey, cct., was commenced to lie erected at De j Soto, Mississippi. They began the 1 enterprise in the woods. On the 1 Tth of December, looms commenced running, and now the factory, is in full operation. The cloth made is eijual to any other of same grade, . and the demand is equal to the supply. This is the shortest road to inI dependence and prosperity, and the example of the ".Magazine Mills" should be imitated hue very Southern , State. Fl'om the Columbia Phoenix. - COTTON OUIiTtTRB. There is a new paper published in Manchester, England, devoted to the culture of cotton, its manufactures, &c., which proposes to lay before its readers' the last and most reliable data and information that can Tie obtained in regard to the present culture and future probable value of the great staple. . . Some of the statements the writer makes will be interesting to planters. He assumes that the production of cotton in India was profitable; when its value, in the Liverpool market, was only four pence per pound, and the difficulty and cost of transportation were greater than they are now, and that the price which it now commands (more than double the former) will insure its -cultivation in that wiii AVI Avf nnf flion UUUULl jr ' tU <Xi JLUUV/U liti gci caicuu i/uau heretofore. He recognizes in India a formidable competitor to the Southern States in the growth of cotton, and after enumerating some of- the advantages the former possesses," brings them iti contrast with impediments which, since the war, have superinvened in the latter. There are some truths in the argumentshe uses to stimulate an increased production in India. He says that the present condition of the South, its incapacity for producing .the former large crops, and the tax of three cents .per pound, which has necessitated a method of collection that seriously impedes the movement of the crop and embarrasses.the planters in their operations, may be regarded with certainty as guaranteeing ' the cotton growers of India and elsewhere on the Eastern continent ample ' remuneration as the result of the curtailment of the crop here. He adds other "reasons for expecting a diminished production of potton in the Southern States, as compared with the quafltTbeforp tTnTwan and'Kmo'ng ihenr is-the re-organization of society and of the relations of labor; that the number of horses, mules and cattle in the Southern ^States is now about forty per cent, less than in 18G0; that the transport system, both on land and water,- is still very far from being restored to its former efficiency; and that the priccp of labor, and all im \1 nm rn-v fa on i-l TMYkfhifita. and animals. UIl\t ji/? vv%?vw7 ? ^ are now double what tKcy were previous to the war, and involves at least double cost in the growing of cotton, whilst credit, so essential to production, shows a very tardy recuperation/ lie then places in contrast the advantages that India at present possesses. v He says the prostration of energy and enterprise whLu resulted from the.tyrannical sway of the East India Company is giving away under the new system rule; that the people of the country are recovering confi | dencc in Europeans, and having Detter chance3 of securing to themselves the rewards of their'industry, they are more disposed to cultivate the land and to engage ip productive and trading pursuits generally. The writer ..adds that the same causes and influences arc producing lite effects in other parts of the East and in South America, which have valuable opportunities open and available, and oj which - advantage will be taken to the utmost, in order to establish a permanent and Remunerative cotton trade with the manufacturing community. We lay these views before our readers, and commend them especially to the farmers and planters of our State. Some of the positions of the writer cannot be gainsayed ; and when we take into consideration, superadded to the onorous tax imposed by Congress, they must show the planter, that it is his interest to'plant less cotton, and turn his attention more ta other agricultural production. It shows more?that it is the interest of both the planters and capitalists of the Southern Statcu to engage largely in the manufacture of the staple,.?c that if cotton-spinning Manchester i.] determined to make herself independj cut of Southern production, the South ! can make herself independent of hei ' swindles and looms, This course, be _ ?in ?1: i Slurs, AV11I 1 UIK l t mv; ... i cents per pound, wliicli, in the shapi : of protection to New England manuj facturers, redounds to their advantage ! and will largely increase their already I ill-gotten gains; ! I The South has now a splendid op I pnrtunity of entering upon a carce i j of prosperity, if she will only avui ' herself of it. Let the plantcrs'giv up the old .system of large cotton plantations, vary their products so as to furnish -abundant provisions for man and beast, and the future will be more prosperous than ever- it was in the past, r- .. . V Letter from Gen. Beaeregard. ?The following letter from General Bqauregard is published in the New Orleans papers of the 11th instant.-:? It will explain itself. s. New Oit^eansj Jan-. lO, 1867. William H. C. King. Editor of the: New .Orleans "Times." In your, letter of this morning you publish an' article from 'the New York Herald, containing some remarks relative to the speech I am reported ta have made at Canton; Mississippi, to . the Congressional excursionists lately in. that city. The Herald is in error. I made nct'speech at Canton or else-, where to the- excursionists'; but con-, versed with them freely,- and .openly told them" tire ;South had fought the North so desperately, because it was defending what it .conceived to. be its 'constitutional' rights; that having appealed however, to arbitration of armis, it yielded to decision?-which was given; against it; that I believed the people of the" South were noW willirtg to accept the Constitution as made by the war and understood by the Supreme Court of the United States. I said, also, invmy opinion, questions of secession and slavery were forever settled; and so far- as I was concerned under no circumstances would I countenance any effort t6 revive them t that we must now direct our energiesr and our vitality to repairing the damages of . war, and restoring to Our homes soiiie. of those comforts-and that prosperity which they formerly' enjoyed. In answer to the questions of some excurtipni'sts,. if I thought the' South would accept the constitutional Amendments, rreplie&that. eschewing ; politic^ ioprr;-rsfe^ru'sincss and the * duties "of my position, I had little opportunity, ex cept tlirougli newspapers, to ascertain the: public sentiment on the subject; but if thej desired to know my individual opinion, I would say that theSouth would not and should-not accept those amendments, even if presented as a finality, for its interest and manhood forbade it; that-we well know we are now at the mercy of the North, but that the South would never do anything which, its honor could not approve, to protect its interest, and I believe would-remain passive spectators.of. the struggle of power going on at the .North, relying on the sober second thought andsdnse of jus, tice of both parties to protect us. I added, thou eh, at the fall of the Con fcderacy, instead of going to a foreign country to swear allegiance to its government, I preferred remaining 1 in my own and swearing allegiance to what I conceive to be its new government. . : 1 In conversation witli the excursionists, I used the^ words of consolidated i I government when speaking of the -/United States Government. I meant, of course, the common Federal National Government operating under the Constitution as interpreted by 1 the Supreme Court of the United i States. I remain, " .. Yours very respectfully, ' (Signed) G. T. Beuregard. A Continent Covered wititSLce. ?Prof. Agassiz comes to the oonclirsion that the continent of North America was once covered with ice a mile in 'thickness, thereby agreeing with Professor Hitchcock and other geological writers concerning thegla1 cial period.' In proof of this conclusion, he says that the slopes of the. Alleghany range of mountains are glacier-worn to the very top, except a few pdints which. were above the ! level of the icy mass. Mount Washington, for inS.tanco, is over six -thousand feet high, and rough, unpolished surface of its summit, covered with loose fragments, just above 1 the level' of which glacier marks come ' I to an end, tells that it lilted its neaa ' alone, above the desolate. waste of ice ' and snow*. In this region, then, the thickness ' of tlio ice cannot have been much less than six thousand feet, and this is in keeping with the same.kinds of evidence in other parts of the country, ' for when the mountains arc much less than six thousand feet, the ice seems to have passed directly over them, - while the few peaks rising to that i' height are left untouched. The gla1 cicr, lie argues, was God's great plough c and when the ice uu.ished from the ??MM face of the land it leftit .prepared for Hihe The hard surface ofther oc^were ' ground to powder, the elements ofthe V soil were mingled in fair proportions, granite was. carried into the'lime, 're-^%^ ' gions, lime was'nripgled with the; faorp%$S;; "arid and -unprotected districts, and* soil was prepared for the agricultuxaf I uses of man.. There are evidences ' ; all over, the polar region&to show that: J >t one period, the ieat of'thc.ifopics^;:^^ extended all over the ^ globe. : ice period is supposed to be long snh'sequent to this, and next to the last before the advent of man. '/: :/".y. 'THE.NEQE0E9^AND.TflElh';.ALLIES - '-fj# un uujnuKisss.:?it is stated tnat ;everyr-jjj&B rybody whilst the Congressional in^;.-;^|^ chine is being run atJi TV'asbington^ : :;^^p scored of dilapidated negroes : are^i^ri-0% wandering up and down, and in and"\'-;V^|? around the public places and leadm^gv^^ avenues ofjtKe Capitol. . They, enter-'^0 the halls of Congress, cheek by jowl . with'-.the' brbad-clothed^pinipi thieves, and take their .seats.with as. _*|8l miuchaan# froid as if to the "manor |||?S born.'' These idle.and vicious white associates' of the space assigned to spectators,;|?|| and we are informed the galleries; are, as a natural: se- quetice, dirty, greasy, and lousy, and : .^^^ utterly unfit for .-..thie; 'occupatfon- ;of decent spectators. But. decent spectators rarely get thei^ now, and after -||| thjCbawdy aiid obscene jokes wMbh so recently fell from the lips of Steverisy ? ^ and Spauidingj - deceiit' people wfrilV;^-;^ Scarcely venture therein againj at' . ^ least until the fianatical wfetches .who' : if. misrepresent the >:people are driven from the halls of legislation to their M lairs in private life. v ; But the thing after;all iS appropri- ' ate. '. There ar^igots and peijurers.' , and. ragcals^pf-high and low degree' upon the floor of Cpn|prea&?h^^^ oyer a dissevere'd Union,, arid there are filthy barbarians and painted'and , loathsome prostitutes looking on and smiling approval. But within the hearts of the people there is an.un- > nilAnfthflhlfllfwe nf UV\o?.fTT n r... . <'.r -v/1 ^ \j?x vj auu.a yuiii- '^-"i ing desire for recovered rights; and ' ' Vregained freedom. Every step the / ..v* Radicals in Congress are taking-in ? the work of subverting the. government and degrading the. people, is hastening on the day of vengeancev ,'r . v and retribution, which will yet sweep y :yi like an, avenging fury upon the foes of Constitutional government and $*civil liberty.?Hackemaclt {N. J.)r ,\.'Q Democrat. . I ~ /* r"' , '* . f A JNATIONAL CONVENTION.?The" ' > Democratic State Convention of Con-, necticut adopted the following reso- "fX lution on Tuesday: "Resolved, That, after solemn de^ liberation, it is .the opinion of this^-^*^ Convention?at the suggestion"of our ; r conservative brethren of Kentucky? ' ;,k that a convention of the Democracy " '; } and all constitutional Union men of the thirty-six States should be called without delay by the National Demo-' eratic Committee; and we respectfully suggest that said convention meet in the city of New York, on the 4th day of March next, to advise and i counsel upon the great questions that now agitate the public mind; to pro-"* test against the revolutionary and. ' unconstitutional acts of the present- . majority of Congress; to announce ..the determination of.the conservative" men of the Union to resist and opx ' pose, by every constitutional exercise of power, the disorganization of Sfo toa on WV...W c-w. Ii^v uwu UV-UVU vi tJllug authority." Good Farming.?Some years ago Dr. Cloud, editor of tlie American Cotton Planter, "by manuring and care- - ful culture, raised 5,898 pounds of cotton to the acre on pine land in Macon county, Alabama. By the same system of culture, General Dunlap, of-Mississippi, picked five pounds of seed cotton by weight from a single stalk. It does not pay to farm well,,. ' anywhere, in a new or old country Profitable.?The People's National Bank, of Charleston, declared a dividend on the 7th instant. This dividend is at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, being the third one for the last year, making, in all twenty-four per cent. One factory in Augusta, Gra., has: turned out during kj&t year 6,410,000yards of cloth} and paid a' dividend, or clear .profit, of $611,000 to thie ! stockholders .