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WHO WILL MEET ME SIBST. Who will meet ine first in heaven, When that blissful realms 1 gain ; When the lianda have ceased froin toi'iug, ' And the heart hath censed from pain ; When tho last farewell is spoken, Severed, tho last tender tie, And I know how sweet, liow solemn, And how blest it is to die 1 As my barque glides o'er tho waters Of that cold and silent stream. I shall see the domes of tetuplcs In the distance brightly beam" Temples of that beauteous city From all gilt and sorrow free; Who, above its golden portals, First will haste to welcome me ? Who will greet me first in glory ? (Oft the earnest thought will riseMusing on the unknown wonders Of that homo beyond the skios,) Who will be my heavenly mentor? Will it be some seraph bright, Or an angel from the countless Myriads of that world of light? No, not these, for they have never > Gladdened here my {{Lcstwr vtew; But the dear ones gotae before me? They, the J^Ved, the tried the true? They whs-fvalked with me life's pathway, Frsm my soul by death were riven, They who loved mo best in this world Will be first to greet in heaven. THE YWWF WiLod'. She is modest, but not bashful ; Free and easy, but not bold ; T.Ilfo nn rtrtnlo rino nnil mollnvr ? -t I? -- ?- ? > Not too young, and not too old. Half inviting, knvo repulsive, Now advancing, and now shyThere is mischief in her dimple, There is danger in her eye. She has studied human nature. She is schooled in all her arts? She has taken her diploma As the mistress of all hearts. She can <ell the very moment When to sigh and when to smile Oh, a maid is sometimes charming, But a widow all the while. Arc you sad? How very serious Will her handsome face become! Are you angry ? She is wretched, Lonely, tricndless, tearful, dumb ! Are you mirthful? How her laughter, * Silver sounding, will ring out 1 She can lure and catch nnd play you, As the angler does tho trout. Ve old bachelors of forty, IVho have grown so bold and wise ; Young Americans of twenty, With the love-looks in your eyes, You may practice all tho lessons Taught by Cupid since the fall, llut I know a little widow Who could win and fool you all. KEEP IN HE MIDDLE OB DE ROAD. Ncbbcr mind de right, or de lcf"?don't wait? Keep in de middle ob de road ; Fix your eye on de big white gato, Keep in the middle ob de road. Dis world nm full ob grief nn' sin ; Kf you'll keep gwincon you am bound fo' to win, When you git up dar dey will pass you in If you'll keep in de uiiddlo ob de read. CHORUS. "Den, bredron, keep in de middle ob do rond, Den, bredrcn, keep in the middle ob de road: Don't look to the right?don't lean to de lcf But keep in the middle ob de road." CUTTING AND KEEPING FLOWERS. A great ileal lias been written 011 the preservation of cut flowers, but the matter is still imperfectly understood by most people. It is important to kuow not only how to take care of them after cut, but how to cut, them. On this latter point a practical hint may be of service to our readers. It might not occur to them that it could make any serious difference whether the stems were broken off or cut with kuife or scissors. A sharp kuife is the right tool lor trie purpose, as it leaves the sap-vessels ol of the stems open for the absorption of water, while s-issors crushand compress these vessels, so that their absorptive power is uiore or less destroyed. Like injury may be done in breaking oft' the stems, especially if they are tough. If the flowers arc not put into water immediately, the ends of stems should Lc cut off with a shap knife, as the sap-vessels will probably have become elogged up with coagulated matter. It should be remembered that evaporation is going on from every pore of flower or leaf, and that unless fresh fluid can be taken up by the stems to make good this loss, the blooms will soon wither and die.? Wc can readily see why the flowers of plants with hard close stems, fade sooner than thoso with soft, large-tubed stems. The latter, owing to the ease with which they suck up moisture, will expand in water almost as well as if left ou the parent plant. Cut flowers often atttter from too dry an atmosphere. It is duflicult to avoid this in our artificially heated rooms, but we may at least put the blossoms in the coolest part of the room. Near a window, and especially in a bay-window, the temperature is generally sevtral degrees lower than iu other parts of the room, as you can see if you will test it with a thermometer. The best authorities say, moreover, that the flowers should have the benefit of light, and even of sunshiuc in most cases, though there is a popular prejudice against exposing them to the latter. On the other hand, they suffer, as plauts do, from draughts and from sudden alternations of temperature. .Botany also furnishes us a useful hint for i ! ii.. \:r~ - ? n prolonging i.uu inu ui many single liowcrs. This may done by removing the anthers, for when the pollen on thoso becomes ripe the stigma gets impregnated, and the flower, having fulfilled its natural destiny, drops its petals and withers. In the caso of blossoms that fall to pieces very easily, it is a good idea to lot fall a drop of guin or mucilage into the centre, which will glue the petals together at tho base. To prevent tliin from running out before it hardens, the flowers should be kept upright by putting their stems through the bottom of a sieve or s|ieking them iu sand. With the aid of n eiincl'fl hair brush or a pointed stick, a largo number of flowers maybe guuimed iu a short tiuic. _ of When flowers have been -carried a long hi distauce in closo boxes or cases, they often tl appear withered and worthless, but with rt proper treatment they may bfe revived aud tc restored to their original beauty. Instead c( of being at once put into vases and exposed n to the hot and dry air of the parlor, they, should cither be carefully spread out on flcij N flannel or moss and covered with a dishcov- ei cr or an iuvcrted box, or else put in pans is containing moss and water or wet sand, in ai which thoy can bo set upright, and then di shut up in the dark for a few hours. If di they do not regain their freshness under ui this nursiug, there is no hope for them, but ,t\ in all ordinary cases their recovery is certaiu. st ?Boston, Journal of Chemistry. ni tl Shall we Meet Again.?The following is said to bo ouo of the most brilliant ^ articles written by the lamented Gcor^i P. C( 'Prentice: n 11TL. . vi. ml ~~ ji iiu uiu ui nature is incxoraoic. a. sere ^ is no appeal for relief lrom the great law w tlint dooms us to dust. We flourish tnd C| fade as the leaves of the forest, and the j flowers that bloom nud wither iu a day liavo jt no frailer hold on life than the mightiest c monarch that ever shook the earth with his u ^ stcpW Gcuerflrttons'of mcft will and disappear as the grass, and tho uiulti- g tudes that throng the world to-day will disappear as the footsteps on the shore. Men v seldom think of the great event of death t until the shadow falls across their own path- a way, hiding from their eyes the faces of 0 loved ones whose liviug suiile was the sun- t light of their cxisteucc. Death is the an- j( tagonist of life, and the cold thought of the j tomb is the skeleton of all feasts. c "We do not want to go through the dark n valley although its dark passage may lead to a paradise; we do not want to lay down iu t the grave, even with princes for bed-fellows. s Iu the beautiful drauia of Ion, the hope of immortality, so eloquently uttered by the death-dcvotcd (ircck, fiuds deep response in s every thoughtful 60ul. When about to t yield his young existence as a sacrifico to h fate, his Clcmautha asks if they should meet J again, to which he replies : * t "I have asked that dreadful question of t the hills that looked eternal?of the stars a among whose fields of azure my raised a spirit has walked in glory. All were dumb; J but as I gaze upon thy loving faco I feel t that there is something iu the love that c mantles through its beauty that cannot h wholly perish. We shall meet again, Clc- a mantha." t Present Happiness.?The great secret of gaining happiness in lifo is to enjoy the present. To be doing one thing and thiuk- j ing of another, is a very unsatisfactory mode j of spending life. Souie people aro always ^ wishing themselves somewhere but where j. they arc, or thinking of something else than j what they are doing, or of somebody else than to whom thoy aro apnnkinp. Thi* i? j the way to enjoy nothing, to do nothing ,,,.>11 -I..-...- ??. .1.. L - I ni.ll, ?i1iu IU pivuau HUUUUJf. 11 IS DOllur lO be interested iu inferior persons :in?l things j than to be indifferent with the best. A } principal cause of this indifference is the ) adoption of other people's tastes instead of v our own?the pursuit after that for which c we arc not fitted, and to which, consequent- s 1)*, wc are not in reality inclined. This j, folly prevades, more or less, all classes, and s arises from errors of building our enjoy- f nieut on the false foundation of tlie world's ,, opinion, instead of being, with due regard ,j to others, each our own world. ? o Washing l't.ANNK.l.s.?A lady corrcs- ^ pondent says: "I will give a little of my " experience in washing flannels. L was 1 taught to wash flannel in hot water, but it a is a great mistake. In Italy my flannels J were a wonder to mo; they always came home from the wash so soft and white. 1 learned that the Italian women washed them in cold water. Many a time I have watched them kneeling in a box, which had one end taken out, to keep theui out of the mud, by the bank of a stream, washing in j the running water and drying on the bank i _ ;.i ? l ;i! it . ? fl hi ^iuvui, wiuimii uuiniig ; auu i never nad washing done better, and flannels never half ( so well. I have tried it since, and find the secret of nice soft, flannels to bo the washiug of them in cold or lukc-wartn water, ^ and plenty of stretching before hanging out. Many receipts say, Don't rub soap on flan- t ncls; but you can rub soap on to the advantage of the flannels, if you will rinse it out 1 afterward and use no hot water about them, not forgetting to stretch the threads in both 1 directions before drying. Flannels so cared J for will never become stiff, .shrunken, or yellow."?Boston Journal of Chemistry. A Great Curiosity.?Silver Spring, Florida, is one of the greatest curiosities in the South. It hursts forth in the midst of the most fertile county in the State. It bubbles up in a basin near 100 feet deep, and about an acre in extent, and seuding ? from it a deep stream 60 to 100 feet wide, and extending six to eight miles to the Ooolawaha llivcr. In the spring itself sixty j boats may lie at anchor?quite a fleet. The f spring thus forms a natural inland port, to | which thrco steamers now run regularly from the St. John's mnking closo connections with the ocean steamers at l'alatka. The clearness of the water is truly wonder- , ful. It seems even more transparent than , air ; you see the bottom of your boat, tin . exact form of the smallest pebble, tho out- t line and color of the leaf that has sank, nnd , all the prismatic colors of the rainbow are : reflected, barge fish swim in it, every scale , visible, and every movement distinctly seen. If you go over the spring in a boat you will seo tho fissures in the rocks, from which the \ river gushes upward like an inverted calar- ( act. I ? | A young lady amateur remarks that while she doesn't object to the "Loan of a Lover," she doc9 disapprove of his keeping Lent. I Tiie Homestead.?Tho recent decision tho Supremo Court in regard to tho < ouicstead will bo likely to create not a litc litigation in the couits. Wo have al- i )ady published the decision, but in order < t uiako it perfectly clenr we give below a i Slfciso synopsis, which will probably be ;ad with' iutcrcst by our readers : "Every man is entitled to a homestead of t^vaWc of $1,000, nnd tho personal proprty exemption!* to tho valuo of $500 ; bo always entitled to the maximum of these mounts. If the homestead should, by a eclino in value, or by fire or other cause, ccrcasc in value to an amount below the laxiuium of $1000, the homesteader is cutlcd to liavo a rcallotnicnt of his home.cad and the deficiency made up out of ay subsequently nequircd property. On io other hand, if tho homestead by imrovement, or otherwise, should becomo to c worth say $20,000, the creditors masonic in and have it re-allotted, taking $19,00 of it for themselves. And so it is with ic personal property exemptions. If $500 orth of stock is allotted, the creditors nro milled to all the increase from such stock, f the homesteader have $1,000 worth of ind and $500 worth of personal property, very pound of cotton or blade of fodder he ...i ,u. i i i li-vt- ,.i uii viiu uuuioawau i? iiuuiv iu uu ounafor his debts. In other words, the houictcnder.is entitled to "81,500, and no more. The homestead clause iu tho constitution ras placed there for political purposes by lie frauicrs of the constitution of 1868, ,ud while it was ostensibly in the interest f the poor man, good reason taught us hen, aud experience teaches us now, that t is anything but the poor man's friend.? jaws which protect honest men from the xacting demands of the modern Shylock re all right, but nny regulation which takes way the credit of tho honest man, as does he homestead provision, is nothiug but a nare aud a delusion.? Charlotte Observer. Queer Superstition.?The military upcrstition that it is dangerous to change he color of a horse during a campaign has ?cen illustrated by Gen. Shobcluff. He iocs not like a gray horse, but he happened o ride one in the first battle, and soon came i) believe that he could never be killed on horse of that color. A correspondent of Scdalia paper, who served under Shelby luring the American civil war, states that hat officer had a similar superstition, llis olor was sorrel, and lie firmly believed that 10 would never be killed while mounted on horsj of that hue. IIo was wounded hrec times, but never while riding a sorrel torse. He had twenty-four horses killed inder him in the various engagements, iu rhich lie was not wounded, and in every nstance the horse that went down under lirn was a sorrel. Once a ball struck the irirn of his large felt hat, and scratched his brehcad, and he fell heavily from the sadII,. . I,,, .... r?,.? : ?? Iiv ? L/uv n<io VIJ hid it't'v 111 ?ill imiillll, houting to his men, (,I cannot bo killed to[jiy Tor I am on a sorrel horse." iiow THEY do in NoitTII carolina.? Ic lives in the "Western District."? fcstcrday he called at the House tosccGcn. ,ranec. He modestly communicated his rishes to the door-keeper. "Have you a ard, sir," he gruffly growled. rtCards," he aid thoughtfully, mechanically running his iand in the rear pocket of his co?t. "No, ir, I don't carry 'em." Where arc you roui ?" inquired the d. k. North Caroliia," was the prompt answer. 'Well, how lo they do in North Carolina when people ;o a visbing?" "Why they ride up to a ejllpw's fence and holler to him to tic his I log, and they gets down and goes in," was he laconic reply. The doorkeeper immcdiitely dispatched a page for Mr. Vance. lie bund that hissupposed verdant constituent lad got the best of a House doorkeeper.? Wash. Cor. Iialevjh Observer. Plant Grape Vines.?"Not only furncrs, and thoso upon large lots, but even esidents upon contracted city lots, should dant grape-vines, for from no species of ruit can so much be produced upon a given irea of OTOlind snneo l'l.nnlml olniiir nn -- o -r; t " ",v"n v" he.soutli or cast side of the fence bounding he' inclosurc, thoy can be trained up on rcllisscs to quite a height, if desirable, and he amount of most delicious fruit that cau ?o grown upon a well managed grape-vine, if the right variety, is perfectly astonishing 0 those who Iiutc had no experience."? Kx. .? The sequel to a beautiful song l>y Eugene "icld, "Grease the Griddle, llirdie, Darling," is ust out. We have only room for one stanza : Scratch uiy back, oh brown-eyed Mabel, Throw the buckwheat flour away ; Scratch as long as you are able, Harder; stronger; that's the way. Somewhat higher ; a little lower; closer to the shoulder blade ; Dig! ! ! Good Heavens! go it slower ! Murder! Thunder ! Come, that's played ? - ?# Unselfish people arc always polite, bcsnusc good manners arc only the absence of elfishness. They are doing unto others as ve would wish to be done unto. A thoughtillness for tho comfort of those about us, 1 pleasant smile, a kind word?these arc he ingredients of which good manners arc :hiefly composed. A quaint writer says : 'I have seen woncn so delicate that thoy wcro afraid to ido, for fear of tho horso running away ; ifruid to sail, for fear the boat might upset; itiiydp to walk, for they might fall, but I never saw one afraid to be married, which s far more riskful than all tho others put ogether.' The man who is anxious to seo how the rorld could get along without hiin, can find >ut by sticking a cambric needle in a millK>nd, and then withdrawing it and looking it the hole. Can a man who has been ridden on a rail >o properly called a railrodc man ? An old darkey, who was asked if in his experience prayer was ever answered, re- , plied : 41 Well, sail, souio pra'rs is ansur'd, , an* sonic isn't?'ponds on wu't you axes fo\ Just artcr dc wall, w'en it was mighty hard sc tchin fo' do culled brcdcrin,' I 'bsarved dat w'enebber I pway do Lo'd to sen* one o'Mnrse Peyton's fut turkeys fo' deole man, dcro was notice took of the partition ; but w'en I pway dat he would seu' do ole man fo' do' turkey, de matter wus' tended to befo' sun up nex' uiornin,' dead sartin.' i A pious resident on Plain street, who has been much interested in the cremation system, yesterday said to his wife : "My dear, I wish you to remember that when the Lord calls uie to uiy reward, I desire to be cremated, if a suitable furnace is accessible." "Yes, love," replied his spouse, "but when the Jjord calls you, I think lie will provide for your burning."?Ex. If you have the fccliti'j: of hate or revenge. subject it to a severe pioccssof mental chemistry; examine into its nature, its uses, its philosophy, and before you have finished the scrutiny, it will probably vanish like a volatile essence into the air. A darkey who resides not far from Ninety-Six, puts it thus: "Vote fur do Guv'nor! Why, ob course I is ! Since Mr. Hampton been 'looted, bacon am come down seven or eight ccuts cheaper. Ain't dat 'nough to make we niggers stan' to hiui ?" "We find," said a coroner's jury out West, "that Hill Thompson, came to his death by holdiug five aces, wheu Jack Smith held four. And we find that nine aces is five too many in a pack." ? ? Seek not so much to know thine entities as ihy friends; for where one man has fallen by foes, a hundred have been ruined by acquaintances. VEGETINE Purifies the Blood, Renovates "and Invigorates the Whole System. ITS MEDICAL PROPERTIES ARB Alterative, Tonic, Solvent, and Diuretic. VKOrrnra U maa? delusively from th. Juices of carefully-selected buki, root, and berba, and ao tronaljr concantratod that It will effectually eradicate from t be .jrstcm every taint of Hrrofnl.t Mrrofuloua Humor, Tumors, Cancer, Cancerous Humor, Erysipelas, Knit Rheum, 8yphl? litIc Diseases, Canker, Falntness at the Nlomnrh, and all diseases that arUa from impure blood. !htclatlcn, Inflammatory and Chronlo Khcumallam, Neuralgia, (lout, and Hplnal Complaints, can only be effectually cured through the blood. For l.'lcers and Eruptive Diseases of the Skin, Pustules, l'implcs, IMotelies, Bolls, Tetter,8caldkca?LandUinft4MMl|Mi|H ri a~? ??. ?oua w .ass For Pains In the Hack, Kidney Com. plaints, Dropsy, Female Weakness, Leu. corrhortt, arising from internal ulceration, and uterino diseases and Cenernl Debility, VgOEtime acta directly upon the causes of these com. . plaints. It invigorates and strengthens the wbolo* ayateni, acta upon the accretive organ,, allay, inflammation, curea ulceration and regulate, the boweta. For Cutnrrh, Dyspepsia, Habitual Cos. tlvenese. Palpitation of the Heart, Head, ache. Plies, Nervousness, and Ceneral Prostration of the Nervous Hyslem, no medicine has ever given auch perfect aatiafactioo as the Veoetin g. It purifies the blood, cleanaeaali of the organs, ana poeesses a controlling power over the nervous system. The remarkable curee effected by VEOETINK have induced many physicians and apothecaries whom we know, to prescribe and use it in their own families. In fact, Veoetine is the best remedy ye* discovered for the above diseases, and ia the only reliable IH,OOD PL'RIFIEByet placed before the pubtio UNQUALIFIED APPRECIATION. _ _ _ _ Boston. Nov. IB. It'h B. R Stevens, Esq. Dtar Sir,?during tbe past five years I have had ample opportuuitv to iudao of th. m.m of Van.. TINS. Mi wife bee used it for complaints attending e led; of delicate health, with more txnsflcial results then southing else which she erer tried. I here given it to my children under elmoet every circumetence attending e Isrge faintly. end always with meritrd benefit. 1 here teken it myself with such greet benefit thet I cennot find words to express my nnauelified appreciation of its goodness. While performing my duties es e Police Officer in this city, it lies been mi lot to fell in with e greet deel of sickness. I unhesitatingly recommend Vxobtink, end I never knew of esse where it did not prove ell thet wee cleimed for it. Particularly in ceeee of e debiliteted or iraporerished stete of the blood its effects ere really wonderful; end for ell complaints erising from sn impure stete of the blood It eppesrs to work like e charm, sod 1 do not believe there ere any circumstencee under which VKOBTINB csn be used with injurious/esulU, end it will always sflord me pleeeure to gire gay further informatiog e. to whet 1 kaow about V*OBT?igfa h Folic# StelioaA CANNOT BE EXCELLED. CuanLZSTOWx, Mut II. R. 8TT.VrN8t I)ssr Sir,-Thin U to certify that I hare used your '^llood Preparation " in my family for aererel years, and think thet for Scrofula or Cankerous Humors or Rheumatic afioctioioi it cannot Ix excelled . and as e blood purifier sod spring medicine itisthe healthily 1 hare erer need, end 1 here used almost everything 1 can cheerfully recommend it to any one in need * ' such e medicine. Yours respectfully, Mrs. A. A. DINSMOUK, I* Russell Street. VECETINE Prepared by II. R. STEVENS, Boston,Mass. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. CAUPENTEli WOllM. JOHN T. II A It I' WOULD respectfully inform the citizen*, in town and Country, of Union County, t lint he is prepared to do all kinds of Carpenter work, in the most WORKMANLIKE MANNER, and solicits the patronage of the people. Work in llieenunlrw nrninnlle ullaixla.l i. h/VJ-J MR A TRIAL. J. T. HART. Feb 22 8 If /J /> a week in your own town. $5 OutIt free. No risk. Reader, if you want, n business at which persons ol either sex can make great pay all the lime they work, write for particulars to II. IIai.i.ktt fc Co., Portland, Maine. March 15 11 If. TIMOTHY HAY. 10,00011)8 CHOICE Timothy Hay For Rnle by B. F. RAWLf*. March 15 11 tf ~ TV E W FURNITURE STORE ?BY? J. B. PORTER UNION C. H., RIC111T UPON (lie RAILROAD. HAVING opened a Furniture Store in the town of Union, I propose to keep on hand iv good supply of all kinds of Furniture of tha VERY BEST MAKE* and will sell at t lie lowest prices, possible, FOR CASH. I will also order any kind of Furnituro not found in my stock. MATTRESSES MADE at tlie shortest Notice, at the lowest prico and of the best materials. FURNITURE REPAIRED. f will repair, varnish, and otherwise improve all kinds of Furnituro entrusted to me, at the low est living prices. Cain-seated chairs reseated as good as new. ALL I ASK IS A FAIR TRIAL. J. B. PORTER, Feb 15 7 iim Seed Potatoes. C A TUT TT 17* T O O m r\ T7* m n U ?k 1U U HI U O . PJ i U CL CJ o , Attorney ut Law AND TRIAL JUSTICE, Union (!. II., S. ( ., WILL practice in (ho Circuit and Trobale Courts. All business in (ho jurisdiction of a Trial Jus- _ ticc attended to with promptness. Special uttcntion given to collections, &e. Otlico over Steadman & Hnwls Law oflico. March '2 8 tf ]tlETALLIC COFFIXN. THE subscribers h*vo on hand a lot of Metallic Coftins of all sices, and nrc prepared to make other Coffins at the shortest notice. We also keep a supply of Cincinnati made Wooden Coffins. Theao coffins aro finely finished, presenting the nppearanco of Metallic coffins. - m > , l ALLEN & ROBINSON. Jnn 18 8 tf Cheapest and Best Flour. I IIAVE received a large consignment ol very superior Flour?the best in this market? which 1 ain authorized to sell. VERY CHEAP, FOR CASH.* B. F. BAWLS, No. 1, East Union. Feb 80 tf TIME TABLE OF THE Spartanburg & Asheville R. R. AND H . U. A C. RAILROAD. ToUo Into Effect, Monday, Oct. 22, 1877 STATIONS.^ Dccvc. | Leave. Arrive TryoH City*. k.~ 4 80p m $ 8 18am f* * Lnndrums. 4 4 4<i '8 02 t'ampobclln. 6 6 06 7 42 4/ I ii in><ti ft 6 20 7 22 ; Air-Line .lun'u 10 GOO ,0 60 SpnrlanburgJ 2 0 OOn m ,0 16 a ni 816p m{ I'acoleile. 11 7 Oil 7 28 7 18 Ionesvillc. 0 7 40 G 64 0 44 Union. 10 0 01 G ^4 6 24 Saul in;. 0 0 40 4 48 4 48 Fish l'api. I 0 10 18 4 10 ? Shellon. 0j 10 47 3 66 3 60 Lyh .'foril. 8|11 04 3 38 Strut hers. 6! 11 32 3 18 Alston f. 12| | 2 30 pm {Supper. fDinner *l$reakfusi. JAB. ANDERSON, Superintendent. ?. 't Nov 2 43 tf ' Greenville and Columbia It. It. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. Passenger Trains run daily, Sundays excepted, connecting with Night Trains on Seulli Carolina Itailroad up ami down. On and after MONDAY, May 20th, the following will be the schedule: UP. Leave Columbia nt 7.45 a m Leave Alston 0.80 a m Leave Newberry 10.50 n m Leave Cokesbury 2.17 p m I.cave Helton 4.00 p n? Arrive nt Greenville 5.35 p m nows. Leave Greenville at 8.05 n m Leave Helton 0.55 n m Leave Cokesbtiry 11.33 n in a. Leave Newberry 2.40 p m Leave Alston 4.20 p m Arrive nt Columbia 5.55 p pa ANDERSON BRANCH AND BLUE RIt)GK * DIVISION. i?own. up. Leave WnUialln....6.15 a m Arrive 7.15 p m Leave Pcrryville...7.00 a in Arrive 0.40 p m Leave l'endleton...7.50 n m Arrive 0.00 p m Leave Anderson...8.50 a ni Arrive 5.00 p m Arrive at Helton.10 a in Leave 4.00 p m THOMAS DODAMKAD, General Superintendent.. J a nr. 7. Norton, Jr., General Ticket AgentJuno 0, 1870. 23 tf Pioneer I'm per Manufacturing' Com pan jrv MANUFACTURERS of Hook, News and wrapping PAPER. John W NipllolMon, Agent, Athens, On. For sample of News, see this sheet. Nov 22 45 tf Cod Liver Oil AND Lime, for sale At. . H. F. RAWL8 & CO'H, ( No. 1. Fast link it. July 20 2B tf , Paints and Oils, PAINT Drutbn, for sole nt B. F. RAW 1.8 & CO'S. No. 1, East Union. July 20 28 If 1>. A,. TOWNHEND, Attorney at Law, UNION C. H.t N. C. * Murcli 2 8 If