i . ;^' • ilSpr -iU-.- MM .‘rw Special Bfq«eat». 1. In irrtung tft^ihU office on btndtieu «1- *>*y* 8'** youf wome nail Poet OffieoaddyeBii 2. IJiiBiness lettem and coTn»miotc«tion« to fte put>H«hel ha mis. aytoelimes I flpd it difficult to-L^m, »oftg Houth Carolina Railroad» which iq my own and f b^L author’s work. In many I foryetln the morning, ■lyn l leave a city, W^ktf have read Ag night be- fore.^ ^meu my, I repeat it to myself, as I am traveling along, _ .and I remember it from time to time, us if it weis^an event wAJcb Iliad ex perienced <5f invented mySelf. *Tbefol heart belopgs, wittAjSjfcew JudidlTJ. tain. ki» sot yet ogfable o; but 1ft lasgs ta be iewsdU to mired; It and judgment | continually.” icb Is th a. m. 8 15p. tn. Arrive at ColUttl1)i)i,l£'15 p. ui. 1 15 t. m, volt AfnBsTA, (Sunday irtOfnlriy diCepted)) Leave Cuarlesion . . St 00 a. m. 7 Hip, ta. Arrive^tugiur* . . 8^ 00 p. hr. 8 0>»a. in. kor ni aIu.kston, -*■ (Funday ranmlng carvpted). Lbavfe Cbluitaliia . . 3 l^p Ih. J 00p. ta* Arrive nt ChatU-gt juIO 00 p. m fi 40 a m- Leave Angtista . . 8 30 a. m. 8 15 p’ in. Arrive tdiarleeton r . 4. 20 p. iu. 7 20 a. vn- The Caniden train will leaV* Otmdctl at t SO a, .tn. oh Molidaye, Wr. Connects dally With tHitha-from aod -tn LliarhwtuR. - 8j-S SOI.OUONH, Superintendent. GREENVILLE AND COLUMBIA HAiLROAft ^ rnAMiF. op schkdulR ——fcaasuumer Tmina Vun dally, SundaVs Cl- Fetatftd, e-nneertngW|fS the Fast Hay TrBniis un Suuih t'arulina KailrHnl up and'lown. On and after Monday, July 11, the following will be the schedule t Leave Oolhtahia at i Lcavs Alcten - " - '-‘T ^ - Leave Newberry •*'-»- Leave Hodges* ' - » * - I^ave Utaittin *_ • 1 - *' - Arrive et Greenville - - - DOWN. Lchverortvnville at - •' Leave Heltou •, - r Lea'VHodgee - * - •'* I/rave Alston.‘ • Arrive at CulUthbia * 12 4&p. ta. 2 36 p. m. 3 43 p. 1 - C 50 p. m, 8 80 p. m. 10 00 p. m. pT7iK^:UV^7VI IUVT7UV^U ujjorii. X UCJ (in Win tVF lowiDg tato to t^ ^Tma dass^^-Wfrl^ happiness. Weeks, months, not remember where I have read it for the first Umfc, nor do I know whether ths Story, a»,I am going to relate it to ycftO) is the same as 1 read It., But the idea is not my ownr I think I found (t to a French ra.iguHine. But that must have been many years ago ; for Some rariatau friends of mine, who read everything In the shape of peri odical' literature, do not remember ever having c"een It, Should the au thor at any time claim it as his own, I will with thanks return it i here, how ever. Is the. story as it has gradually taken shape iu my head i •e . A’ S .(*'*-• 'The numerous guests of the Coun- tees de B——bad begun to retire at about eleveh o’clock, and toward mid night only a few bT the most Intimate friends of the family were assembled in the drawli4f room. The handsome Palatncde hail given his final opinion on tbe most noteworthy toilets of the evening; Reu*».»» had left me I 6 40 a. m.' 7 20 fc. m. 8-67 a. m. 1 O', pv m. 2 fc) p. ui. Awm. The count&e turned to her neighbor Gk-ton. ‘'You are to-day more noisy than usual,” she said ; “for the; last half hour you B&ve been asleep with open eyeaj* - V The gentleman whom she addressed was attUng on a low chair, and had been deeply interested in a Conversa tion with tbe fire 4n the efciaaney- He turned slowly round, and said.; . BWy _ “I have bean thinking" love.”*'' first lA ur. I^**ve Bel ion • Lmv« Aadvmon , Lcava Fciuiktoa Leavel^erryvilla Atallvc si ^ iiliudla •. r '. ~ a 8 fto p. ta. • * 8 ao p, m> • io to p. at, • 10 40 p, ta, . XX. 16 p. ta. DOWH. fr i Leave WalbAlU * . • Leave Pevrjvtlle - jr Leave PeiiAleiah * Leatar s Branch Trail# leave C Heave fawbaary 8 ffi, Va And geeifts bees be- rioweiftif Bcfortf th? bench r %r dfrohar^e its functions with credit and honor, A truly judicial mind is a rare poswasion, and is the result both at toupetament and training. > « _ Judge John J. Maher (s h Candidate for the circuit heucWr— We know, of no one in the State better fitted to fill the position. To a mind amply stored with legal knnwle lj^, he adds a dignity of demesbor and an elevation of mortf char acter i>re-einiacotly diatbiguiriiing him above hU notemporaries. His sense of justice is so keen as to have become * predominant feature In his mental organ isation,. Hie quickness of apprehension enables him to seiie at once’ the salient point in any i>sue,aod on if, ne .a focus, bring to bew-the whole of hty'WfigT'rC tha Bftte'wn * bldfrtha.Wight o4 a spOri ftw ftf .tkBiBetw was more beyond honor * 5 MtaotabtaWked by any com- n of w?*14tra ol pMrriotpaats, for thy eviden^.kl^ot wanting toyeach the iwnnm Tif me iwuusirugttwi’ rdad igiater ft.ljfro farm, and drdwn by ydlrita W Mrfe fkt •eoduaft ttajaa, badaekeM vHth kfranfosi iJdDwa twtoiimeMw n—Hkm mt ;Ka OJaiL iMRri sources of accumnlated legal knowledge derived from long jwnra of an remitted study and application, . His powers of analysis are remarkable, so touch so as to enable him ore rotutuU to deliver his opinions on the most intricate questions of law without tbe nSWiaty of ftonsctTta- tion or delay. His frfitili&ri|y with decisions of. our caurts fro and Black to the oba£U$ fr frfiidt^itrip ped of his pka^b^ Vithsalary in arrear, l having lost all by his »elf-aacrificing de votion hut honor, and the consolation arising from a sense of havin^f4p4sftic^ tiously discharged his duty. Whit then"? Shall the people of Sotith Carolina, so generous sad so true, shall their representatives, in the exercise .of their delegated elective privileges, so far forget the past services of this eminent jurist as to ignore them in the day pf re* h&bilitation, and consign to ike privacy of kis study one Who has sacrificed so much for the State, and kept the lamp of justice horning brightly amidst the darkness and gloom of political thral dora? We trust not. For so calami tons a ooniretempi would be far less pnF duetfva of injury to the fortunes and feelings of the individayti than lo the honor and credit of the State. South Carolina is now represented by gentlemen alive to the dictates Of honor ahJgratitude/ fltTd holyaa utthe recent « aa- *- -»"■ Shtop.fr Leetle! ,» ^ ^ . X A •.*7 Of you wm a driakio* mans, (ynst a leetle soincdiraes), fen ytm oooms aiit dot Barnwell U)Wta, %8ttor you shtop a lectio in ft J6t Nio. Villiams’ Saloon, m und got a leetle Schnapps. He keeps dot hlaces in der Patterson House under, und he vas von nice fetters mit dot Saloon. He sells you somediogs to drink vot vill make you right r quqpek feel so potter ash goot. He vas got some of duse tioot Olt Gabinet Yhiskey vas more ash dwendy years mit age. 1’t it, ch ? Yust you coom und dry q ftectle. Id vas von goot idea to pring some ftf dose frents mit you veu you vent dere, necdcr. Yen you not^ likes to take a , leetle Schnapps, better akh you Ukca couple tozen gkases QrO&l LAOKft PESR, us.t to gif you a achoiall appodit^, Nic. de mans dot govps dose dings. ''Had duatycujyrgotid. ^wctll*diuo you ao thoughtful even to-day Gaston rubbed blu loug, tbla baadu, and began as follows t "When I apeak of my firftt leva I do not mean the vary first, aKbougk fft the time I a offered delightful pain and SCUO) arvn km aeklous Joyik But when t think of U now it seenii tu be somebody else’s, and not my twelve years Irianfr ■y hair. Butthis farce dkl eompleta na . tgrew Myedfcftila^- ^luftodhy poerley, and cared * tbe world aald or thaUn£lHfr>*ufl nothing ean bring her back ; and ev rvbodk mav Iftvnir tfra Laaa farad Itatl mill Mwftsft me. I ffifta nothing, notWog eauiklra and I would willingly giiaxU. X poa organixatiod to the present tlie uriiLciiiltiS mm- rui Letler Fiom AliendtJe. the interest and efourexhe euooans of , , V)ur Fair *• they did io New Hemp- * J HblreT Wtrft Orange will take the lui- Jasilses awd Csnstables. AtuOrbAuc, October 11th, 187T. 1 RAtiort rtf The People i Bela five to the trial Justice system •kd tbe aoft regulating the appoint, ment mid nularlea of trial Juatlcts and dxwtables to Barnwell county, a good deal boa been eald, and considering the evil, though natural consequences of that insane project of making tbe labo rious office of a constable one of hon or entirely, there la room to eay a good deaT rftora -«* •* i%e amoont p? liural Falf { eannot tne 1 tbsBtata dta as much to IIMi Grange . Siafrivs 8 (Speak out, Ortuffibia, Acton, KUiian’s-aM-other Oranges of Ifleb- land county. Our Yankee friends had i kinds of amusements at ths New Hampshire second best. Two men ■ or halt a mho. One “cas t a shoe,” be cause lame, and lost the laps. Two others MAlked A rails agatoet time. ,ys of the Fair con past; by sordid, venal and corrupt a(J> vciit^ifmfwftgky|lrw>fr ^ativlbutgai no country fyitoXeifVno principe but the exigencies of party, and no sense of grat itude but for favors to come. „ Axil Barnwell, October 23, 1877. The Truth Must be Told. jt » a people of South Carol! to persecute the smaller dered ing ^lafrMfrklaMBy of am insnt. judges tioi^kls by, brought honor sad Mown to olios, at 4lM£ credit due to the Intotligent tramora of for that bill We do not propose, how ever, to go into a lengthy discussion of the matter, but to simply state that our Honorable Senator thinks a fur ther reduction necessary, and that one of the first acts of the General Assem bly should be to reduce very much er«n the pittance now allowed to trial justices and constables In this scanty. Tbe act as It stands, affecting the pay of constables, has already deprived nearly every trial Justice lo the county of his constable, and the further re duction dontemplated-wUL.be lo vir tually abolish tbe office. H is pro- ®d,\Wd are toformfd, to can^der the substitution of a county court for the trial jueiice system. This may be | wfil enough, but one or the othet to * yfrhesary, as will be admitted, and it 1s not a part of wisdom to Jo away with one before the other goee Into of- : k ? WBr * t ? I f B the to **A®< frMkMe-iB toieV^>|mintmeot of Mr . H. Bellinger to the office of tria Despitj). tbo opinion tq the we notdo as meek ■BRH . our people too staid. Sober, dignified or inert to enter into and be entertained by such amuse ments ? We hope not There to no •nd to tb« variety of attraotlnos that r Iven to a Falrlf theautborl- dee wonltf give them the thought ve no desire of radicalism, justice. race, eev- a man Fair. They bad one speed oral trots, and one race bet' and a bull bitched to a.'‘spring Jftoard. 1 ThlB loftt one was a fair one for a quar ter stretch, and the Jersey came out had a foot faro And during the four tta; tbe and enter- dee wot M give them the thought re- qutred to make them sacceamri^- Newa and uourler. . »r*. Drought# Bad fteaghlsg. Farmers should experiment con stantly, and always note carefully . the results of their experiments, and as frequently publish these results. But by not so doing we are of little aid to each other, andetery ppe is dependent upun his own experience, which, is of little benefit, because he hier^r can ahticipatc with certainty-. what will bo tbe jes^lt of his expe- r^For ricncc. For instance, at certain ‘ etages of the growing crops,if a se vere droaght should occpr* it is al ways a question whether csltjvetiou shou' ould continue or eeaasu During tbs past seasm we had a few acres of lateooru ub^Twassboat shoulder high on tbe IWth of July, too! 1 that may be to store for me, tf I oould call her onos more mine—if t oould iftoae schoel, wbnrei her. moth sr I or. It 1 was covered with anew, battto was raging between thi ties that hagFm#», selfish tim« Boarbonism , Bklls.—The Invention ef hells to at tributed to Foloflufr Bishop of Kola, Qampaato, aboat tbe year 400. Tto on the Cther, adefeoes agslMnl tiender and ntog^ they were first put land Abbey, Ltocolflsbtre, W 845. the eleventh century, and later, It was the custom tb babtfse them In the churobef before they were used. The ■I ‘ l ifJfW. curfew beg was established It was rung at eight In the evening, when people wbte obliged to put out their fires and candles. Tbe eustom waa abolished In 1100. Bellmen were appointed In London (n 1556, to ring the bells at night, aod cry out, "Take care of your fire and candle.; be chart- table to the poor, lutd pray for the dead/ ut- When a man detects a thissli ton after getting on a dean sl.__ one to the house Is aware of tbe fact He taken ntT the shirt and puts on an other, quietly smttiug all the while. He never, never speaks oT it to a soul. geosrol good. A eertain etoas of wor thies, we are iafbmed, stubbornly defy isvestigatkiB Into their official with the vain bepe of authorities into a passive went of theit innocence, delusive game, iu wiH be thorn who attain a frail defense. It Is there are several hand ■tattered about the State, who were ac tually bribed while enjoying legislative drWnbsftfcilM'pto. resammsmtotlott to ofllea We of toadnto me tpader mm! pMgntloos for appdotaeat M a very oo m patent man to tbat offiee,^ the peeeoo ^f J. wbep ift^eeiyed %.tWrougblj soak ing rain. AbMt to firftl «f -Aaguuft it was well ploughed wmI hoed, tfo nil rain has fallen oa U from ISth of Al- iiily ttU Bcytembi^itoir v fk Hixson, Esq., but ean these gentle- time to the.de- of that offloe (tha tow req , ^.... o rn Tji right and jastice, which » aside or defeat in )mplisbment while hts mofol ftsringe to such •shhev danger ean appal it, nor htsori ishments sednee ft from the path of duly. Aftjudge of the second circuit, during four long yeara of unexampled difficulty and embamufiment, while hie .native county was tom withtotcroal distatosions, he held the Mates of gentle and yet ag firm ■* hand BticaJ malice and factional asperity; though impatient and refractory, were truth mist he told vkhotoU reserve, and rcJS^muTu maTwIIIBH ta wi rr tar anmn rt IIWavTvl jMlav* provided there rsdnotlon in their ust certainly resign. Of a prominent this county, "the by old fanners, who have nothing else to do, for one hun dred dollars per annum." Old farm ers* W» admit, may >hald snob efflfrss foncdJJjat old faipsers.,»»miFfte(|t to hold such i posfetions, like ether people, de heft propose to work tor nothing. 1 Jedgelteed seems to have a higher uo- Uoa pi the knprrianseaf theqoaUfiea- tlooe of a trial justice, since he has re manded to them s great many 1 shall be promised or allowed, aud it is ;erous ground to tread upon, if there is tbe slightest disposition to make dia- t.uctim* among white or-blaek, demo- ,becode of pfodedurb and noeeesarily with so crats or republicans. -The investigation has been conducted in such a manner ss to elicit the approval of iiin#;tetath* of our population, and we do not believe fr Misthought of shiekfing tie th® leniency and forbear hushed into ailenoe for very shams sake} am* already exerywod towards and friends foes, victotas and van re uuited in one common for His vcrdicCtto^ho^turned nol judgment to wormwood,” but, as the just inau, should hoi be mil that tl dictotes surika^nurse is not compatible with unseemly diicriaioations, S' 1 better are siflgularly ignorant of the important duties of a trial justice. He should certainly understand the value of evidence. He should understand the special proceedings therein con tained of arrest and ball, ejectment, claim and delivery, and in fact all the remedies to our courts of justice. If U to supposed that a man wh* will give his entire time to tbe office as re<^ and thos, by stirtui qulred by law fpr one hundred dollars per annum, would bo sufficiently Intel ^^t^-^wiand educated toefttoiiQt a regu- ding and decide upon a quee- tlon of law or aa to the odi of evidence,!^ to a grave mistake, and ftfrouU ifi Kvet# dmghftT ail but a half t«ro of It ire experimetaUd by giving it throe, someWPesXoi^wuk .fiva.%. the.ques^ea with m was, 4 b« pb«shed during ths darnwhlT With all but a h lope about the ‘ the morning before toehtlN to. Whelliw tbri ftorift 1HI1 tfirih out heath* than tttt gtovto oti the un to if ched biff a<*c wo eftnnot now riA are satiified thrfrfftfng of tboefop was toss for the next sue- nfc ten days, and the tod! r ^ a patch than if did on tjie balf atre that waaldfYptoan bat unpToughed. Apropos to this question, Ui% Commissioner x of, ^gmnltftr# ,ft| WMjungtopj i^ a pirate 4^. fts, aays : r * jft ^. ■^Iroughts, partial but severe -r' nceota, and (town qr along tbe wca- Urn border,is accompahied by wet weather in the Eastern Stafee. The remedy for drought, to practical E culture, to to plough, and keep ighrng; nothing lika ift, 1' . t my men ploughing when i duut followed so as Jto constantly, raised a corn when others all at foiled, bccatfse they would not' the grutind that bad no weeds f and did not need ploughiug.- aiidCourirr.