The southern enterprise. [volume] (Greenville, S.C.) 1854-1870, September 22, 1854, Image 4
W-f- W.s* v v.-jJKAXT
I8HT ALL XK BKHfOIHO UP.
It isn't all Inr "bringing up,"
Let folk* nay what they will;
To silver scour a pewter cuj???
It wULbe pewter still.
E'en hdRfolu, wise Solomon,
Wlio said "train up a cliil<l,n
If I mistake not, had a sou
Proved rattlebrained and wild.
A man of mark, who fain would |mws
For lord of sea and land.
May have the training of a son.
And brfcg him up lull grand ;
May give hint *11 the stealth and love,
Of college and of ndbool,
Yet, after all, may make no more
Than jnst a decent fool.
Another, raised by penury
Upon her bitter bread.
Whose road to knowledge is like that
The good to tiffaven must tread,
nw pot a spark 01 nature s light,
Ile'll fan it to a flame,
Till in it* burning letters bright
The world may road his name.
If it were all in "bringing up,"
In counsel aud restraint,
Some rascals had been honest men?
I'd been myself a saint.
OI 'tisn't all lu "bringing up,"
Let folks say what they will;
Neglect may nlm a silver cup?
It will be silver still.
* Not I1.\d.?A correspondent of the Conntry
Gentleman, speaking of book farmers,
says :
"Yet oft-times I am reminded of anecdote
of Judge Vetera, or Pennsylvania, who was
somewhat noted for his agricultural papers
many year ago. A certain German farmer,
one of the best in hfs neighborhood, having
bodft much pleased with the Judge's essays,
concluded much more benefit might arise by
a visit to ins honor's residence, expecting to
lind everything in its place, and a place for
everything. But, on the contrary, the gates
had no hinges, the barn only part of its \v Gathering,
a plough in this fence corner, and a
harrow in that, the honest yeoman was quite
astonished.?Meeting the Judge, he expressed
his surprise 'at the departuro from the orthodox
practice of farming, to which the expounder
of Blttjkstone and the statutes, replied,?Why,
ifctn, ymi certainly don't exj>eet
mo to write and work too.' Just so,
lriend editors, you can't expect farmers to
work and write too. 'llowsomerer,' j?s the
chronicler of Sliokvillo says, they can and do
write, and though not alwnys according to
Murray, yet with pretty good effect; and perchance
having a two-fold result, teaching,
their fellow-workers of the soil some of their
knovj^Are, ami also prompting them to n
more scrutiny of their experiments."
Is there a father in all the whole land who
vffruld not have his children put away the j
rum glass and repudate it forever? If the
liquor traftio is sutforcd to exist in our midst
as it has for ages, it will be an inevitable consequence
that many of those chiidren, into
whose young and guiltless faces the fond parent
gazes with uniuingied deliglu, will he
drunkards?many of the little girls, whose
sunny ringlets and brilliant eyes lead us to
tiiinic ol sweet little angels let down from
liCHven, will, in a few years, be tied to the]
living corpses of drunken husbands. There ,
are parents now opposing the temperance reform,
who, when tlieir old heads are silvered
and their old hearts beating the last feeble
strokes of mortal life, will look upon their
children and cry out. "Would to Heaven
I could havo looked on their young faces
with the calm seal of Heath stamped thereon,
and seen their little hands clasped on
their pulseless breasts, and laid them in the
green vale with young flowers to bhx>m o'er
their bed, beforo I had seen them come to
..this?a thousand times worse than death !!"
?Spirit of the Age.
A Little Hcshanu and a Little Wife.
?Tho Sandusky Register is responsible for
this : Two little children?a boy and a girl,
n rvorl ??\i 1 r on/1 1?eon
ix/ui uiiu uuvvi j vai^ iuo|?uruvui| I
were missed by their families, and search
made everywhere for them, but in vain. The
day passed, and considerable alarm existed.
Persons were out in all directions, and the
bell-ringer had been sent for, when, passing
a thicket of bushes in the garden, the mother
thought she heard low voices near. Pulling
away the loaves, there wcro the truants
with their nights clothes on, locked in one
another's arms, and very comfortably stowed
away for the night. The precocious lovers
were stirred from their nest, but the l>oy expressed
the utmost indignation ; for, said he,
"the hired man had married me and sissy,
and that bush house was his'n, and they
were goin' to live thoro till it rainod." The
denoutnent was so comical that it was concluded
to let the babies be married until they
had a falling out, which occurred tho next
day, and now they live apart^a separate
man and wife.
A Promisino Si'f.cimkn,?[We may have
copied tho following !*?for<?. but for fear we
have not, we give it a start. Children are
growing more prococions every day :]
"What are you writing there, my boy V
asked a fond parent of his hopeful son and
heir, a shaver of ten years.
"My composition, thir," replied the youthful
Orotius. "But really, I shall be ipigbie
to conthentrnte my ideas, and give thdto a
logical relation if I am conthantly iuterrupted
in thith manner by irrelavent inquiries.'
A dcxntho i.ktter?Mr. C.: Sir?
To avoid all proceedings unpleasant,
I beg you will pay what is due;
If you do, you'll oblige me at present,
If you don't, then I'll oblige you.
Kxpkrimk.vts made with Indian corn
show that farmers should not select the largest
ears for i-oed, but rather those that grow
nearest the ground.
Tub editor of the Jackson (Missouri)
True Witue** says he "has not seen a drunken
man in Jackson since the Legislature adjourned."
f
iff -: -vs*
! S^r^W*gggg?l*ii*!ggl
~ irew oUw ftnr tttoree.
Th* inability to malJIkewi has been
declared sufficient ground for divorce, by tlie
Jones Countr Agricultural Society of Iowa.
Husband and wife, br decrees of Courts and
acts of Legislatures, hare boon separated for
lifo on grounds lees reasonable. But, sup|K)ee
the Courts to side that an iuabilitv to
make bread should be a good reason for
separating man and wife, what would become
of 1'Upper Tendom,"?what of the scores of
fair faces, delicate hands, and sumptuously
educated women who are trained simply for
the parlor, the ball room, and the pomp and
show of fashionable life. Our good mothers
all knew how to make and bake bread.?
There was uot one in a thousand who wcro
mothers, in America, twenty-five years ago,
who could not do this, or make a bed, sweep
1 a room, dust parlor* and chambers, oook a
good diuner, Ac. They could also preside
at table with dignity and honor, carve the
dishes set before them, and economise in the
great and honorable work of beiug the mother
and heau"of a family. They could nurse
their own children, too, and wero slow to
?1. ...1 il K-.l L!_.l
UU5V iinmo lu ITI1U1U lUt'V UJtU glVCII UITUI
to tlio management aud control ot' others.?
There were neat, tidy, healthy women then,
too. They always had changes of clothes,
and clothes adapted to the seasons. The
doctor was called less frequently, ancL,for
leas frivolous cases. Care and prevention
were tlio medicines which both ministered
. to a mind diseased and saved disoasod bodies,
and the practical maxim was that
"an ounce of prevention was worth a pound
of cure."
Many of theso things nro changed now,
and for the worse. The result is the double
misfortuno of a bad education, increased
physical ailments, and a total want of preparation
on the part of many who are married
or marriageable for the practical duties
of life.
Unsedge and Brush.
In the days of nullification, when, in outof-the-way
places, aud in uninformed quarters,
the name of General Jaskson carried
terror to tho licai ts of the people in every syllable
and letter, a certain captain in the
chivalry State was mustering about a score
of variegated bipeds, armed with dreadful
cornstalks, walking-sticks, and lucklessshooting
irons, lie was just about to go through
with some extraordinary evolution of military
tactics, which would, no doubt, have astonished
the world, when hearing the lumbering
of tho heavy cotton waggon on tho
hard road, ho supposed that Old Hickory
was right upon kuu, with all Uncle Sum's
dreadful artillery.
"Attention, company !" said he, "Prepare
to sedge. Sedge!
No soouor said than done. In (lie twinkling
of a bedpost, the whole of his men were )
safely ensconced in the sedge-grass which
grew there in great abundance, and which
entirely hid them from view. In a few moments
a traveller enrao riding along, and
the terrified captain hnpnrod anxiously if he
had seen anything of General Jackson down
the road.
"Why, certainly," replied the man, "I
have just passed him?he is not more than
three-quarters of a mile ofi", and will be here
immediately, if not sooner."
"Attention, company," cried the captain,
turning to his men. "Unsedgc and brush,"
and away they scampered in all directions,
seeking the cover and undergrowth in the
woods.?Exchange jxtjtcr.
Keep Your Premises Clean.
I.v our hot climate and long summers, we
can luivft no Wtur mioi??on?<u> 1
_ ..v ^ui?iir?iivvv iwi urni u l,
than that secured by cleanliness in our j?ersons,
houses, and premises. Good pure cold
water is a groat blessing, and it has performed
but a moiety of its benefits, when it
has ministered to the comforts of the inner
man; there can be no question of the
healthful influences which may he derived
from frequent bathing or washing, in bracing
the system, and cleansing the skin from
all impurities and obstructions. This we
doubt might be introduced to advantage, as
a part of the prudential regulations of the
farm, among our negroes. "We shall not
undertako to say how often this should l>e
done, or even say that it shall ho dono at
all, hut venture to make the suggestion as
one which, if judiciously managed, would
he found to work well. The houses of our
negroes need to be kept clean. It is a good
plan crery summer to have a thorough
cleansing and white washing of the walls.?
A few bushels of lime, and a few days work
ofsomo one of the hands, are all that it will
cost, and when washed inside and out, presents
an air of neatness fully compensating
for tho trouble and expense, if there should
be no other trood. But there will be nth^r
benefits, ami we think very large once, in
the better health of the negroes. There
should also be thorough examinations and
I cleansings of the yards, under the houses,
about the slop holes, and all other deposi- 1
tories of filth. Let all theao matters be attended
to faithfully and at once, and you
will find your reward, in the improved health
of the family. Very small causes are sufficient
to produeo fever, and the atmosphere i
which we breathe is often poisoned with
miasma which may originate from tho slops
which accumulate under a kitchen window, 1
a damp cellar, or decayed vegetablo inAtter
under or around the house. Families are 1
often sick through tho whole season with '
fever, paying large bills for medical aid* ,
when an hour's search, and a day's work (
might have found out and removed the ,
whole cause. "An ounce of prevention is- .
better than a pound of cure!?Soil of the
South.
..? ?
To-mohrow.?The day on which idle
men work, and fools give up their folly, and ]
ameers repent and believe, and reform their 1
characters and life!
#
IIabit in a chikl is at first like a spider's (
web; if neglected, it becomes a thread or a t
twine; next a' cord or rope ; finally ajcable; /
then who can break it 1 " I?
* 4
? f
J- u? iL-i-.j) i -jj.??.?u?mMi^1
Look Before you %*. A
mhiiater in owe of our othgdox churohqb,
while on hie -way to preach mNM' ?1 *er>
mon in the country, called To see Che of bio
members, an old widow lady, who lived near
the road lie was travelling. The old lady
bod just been making sausages, and-she felt
proud of them, they were so plump, round
and sweet Of oourse she insisted on her
minister taking some of the liuke homo to his
family. ITo objected, 011 account of his not
having his portmanteau along. This objection
was soon overruled, hv the nil IbJw ?t
ter wrapping them up in a rag, carefully
placed a bundle in each pocket of the preacher's
capacious coat. 11ms equipped, he started
fur the funeral.
While attending to the nolenin ceremonies
of the grave, some hungry dogs scented the
sausage*, and were nut long iu tracking them
to the gooekman's overcoat. Of course this
was a great annoyance, and he was several
times under the necessity of kicking these
whelps away. The obsequies at the grave
completed, the congregation repaired to the
church, whore the funeral discourse was to
be preached.
After the sermon was finished, the minister
halted to make somo remarks to the congregation,
when a brother, who wished to
have an appointment givcu out, ascended the
steps of the pulpit, and gavo tho minister's
coat a hitch, to get his attention. The divine
thiuking it a dog having a design upon
his pocket, raise* 1 his foot, gave a sudden
kick, and sent tho good brother sprawling to
the steps.
"You will excuse me, brethren and sisters!"
said tho minister, confused, nnd without looking
at the work he had just done, "for I
could not avoid it. I have sausages in my
jKX'kct, nnd that dog has been trying to grab
them ever since I came upon the premises."
Our readers may judge of the ctfect such
an announcement would have upon a funeral.?
O'er matt town (Pa.) Empori tt m
An Amiable Girl.?This is n young lady
of pale and pensive countenance, not pretty,
but interesting. She dresses in white, and
wears a bouquet. She sits close to her mamma
and the wall. A gentleman is introduced
for tho next quadrille. She bows her
head and moves gracefully to the place, inhaling
by the way the fragrance of her inseparable
bouqeut. A most interesting and edifying
conversation then takes place, which
consists of a sort of drawing-room soliloquy
by the gentleman, with echoes of some of Ins
words at appropriate intervals by the lady.
To all direct questions she returns the shortest
possible answers. She has few opinions
of her own ; and her silence proceeds in somo
degree from viauvais0f^ont ; hut in a greater
degree from having nothing to sny.?Yet,
thoucrh she is thus icv to von. she th?w? won.
dorfully, you liear, among lio intimates.?
Then she is highly accomplished. She draws
beautifully, and sings divinely, it is said ; but
cannot utter a note if any one be present, she
is so nervous. She is addicted to^novels, but
only those of a sentimental order. She marries
Mr. liawson, a little attorney in a large
way of business?and tho "amiable girl" boconies
a matter of fact woman.
.
Don't Kim, the 13ihds.?Tlielittle painted
songsters follow man and attend upon him.
It is its mission to clear his ground and trees
of insects, which would otherwise destroy his
fruit and his grain. What would the country
l>e without its birds ? The innocent notes
gladden the ear, and their beautiful forms
and plumage delight the eye. A pair of robins
have becu known to consume 2,000 cntterpillers
in one week?and what an amount
of service to that farm was that one week's
work! The farmer who shoots the small
birds that confidingly surrounds his dwelling,
errs both in economy and benevolence. We
speak not of the hawlt, which devours tho
chickens, or of the kingfishod, which swallows
tho bees?let him use of his shot on
them if lie will. What if the songsters take
tithe of the ripened produce of field and
garden, it is nothing but their due. They
present their bills some months after the lal)or
was performed, and are fully entitled to
their living. Honesty in this, as we'd as other
matters, is always the best jx.?licy ; and it has
invariably been found that the farmer who
encourages, instead of repelling the visits of
these tiny workmen, is more than repaid for
his forbearance.?Plow, Jjoom ami Anvil.
?
A Nkw York paj>er says :?"Every
American is a Methuselah?take
breath, dear reader, and try again to
believo it. What American of fifty
yearn of age has not lived twice as
much as Methuselah, though he has
not lived a twentieth part as long??
The miller, without enlarging his mill,
may so accelerate his wheels as to grind
more. We grind a century in twenty
years?to speak moderately?as to national
progress. And the life that
each individual lives, seems to be proportionately
accelerated. What used
to bo lifetime work is now dono in a
year or two, 'by any sort of a smart
man'?and then he 'iroes at something
else.'"
TriE difference of character are never
more distinctly seen than in times
when men are surrounded by difficulties
and misfortunes. There are some
who, when disappointed by the failure
of an undertaking from which they had
expected great things, grow desponding
and hopeless; but others will
rouse themselves, and say, uTlio more
difficult it is to attain my ends the
moro honorable it will be.
Gret hairs, like honest friends, are
[ducked out, and cast aside, for telling
unpleasant truths.
Tub gentleman who embraced an
>pportunity, is of the decided opinion
hat it docs not come up to some of his
female fVicnds. What a rogue.
i
' - II - '
fflTOBW^aaHrg SMC. .
A bbiok.?The Poughkoepsie Press
says: As a dusty looking, 'colored
child,' about 40 yean of age and from
the country was passing under the scaffolding
of the building now being ereeted
on the corner of Main and Catha rine
streets the other day, a brick caznc
down, struck upon his head, and broke
in two. He wektunned for a moment
but soon recovered sufficiently to get
off the following, and leave those \vho
had gathered around him in a roar of
laughter : 'I say, you white man dar,
if you don't waut yer bricks broke, jea
keep 'em off my head P
At one of our western courts lately,
the ix>rtentous duty of swearing in a
clerk, fell upon Squire Ik, a nowly initiated
iustice of the peace. Tkb Sa uire
stood up with a good deal of dignity,
the meeting was nushod and the clerk
was ordered to hold up his right hand.
Then came the administration of the
solemn oath?" You hereby solemnly
swear to tell the truth, the whole truth,
and nothing but the truth, for one year,
so help you God." "No, I'll be d?d
if I will 1" came from the clerk ; and
the listeners shouted.
Mrs Swiss helm, of the Saturday Visitor
says: "If our bigger half would get
drunk and tavern keepers would sell
him the materials, insurance on that
species of property would rise in> this
neighborhood. Stiil, she says she
does not advise others to burn rumsel
lor's houses. She was only distinctly
intimating what sho would do in such
circumstances.
An Irish lawyer, famed for cross-examining,
was, on one, ticcasion, completely
silenced by a horse-dealer.?
"Pray, Mr. , do you belong to a
very honest profession#" UI can't say
so, replied the witness, "for, saving you
lawyers, I think it is the most dishonest
going."
i
Tin? Captain of a merchant vessel
unloading at Constinople feared to
leave pnrt of his cargo exposed dnring
the night. "It will not rain," said a
mussleman. "But some one may steal
them!" "Oh, never fear," replied the
Turk, "there is not a Christian within
seven miles."
There is a good stotyofan cnccntric
lady of unfortunately acquisitive hal>its,
to the effect that she was on one
occasion so affected by a charity sermon
as to borrow a sovereign from her
neighbor, and?put it in her own pocket!
Qcrric Reason Sufficient.?The land
lord of an inn, on being angrily asked
why he did'nt employ a proper and
sufficient number of attendants, answered
by declaring he considered himself
a perfect host.
Ladies who have a disposition to
punish their husbands, should l?ear in
mind that a little warm sunshine will
melt an icicle much sooner than regular
north caster.
OrraiDE show is carried on at a great
extent at the races, where ladies wear
their fine clothes on the course.
A Genuine Aktict.e.?When a flow-'
er blows, thcro is not the' least puflf
with it.
A Poor Man's Wisn.?I asked a
student what three things ho most wished.
He said, "Give me books, health,
and quiet, and I care for nothing more."
I asked a iniscr, and he cried, "Money?money?money
1 I asked a pauper,
and he faintly said, "Bread?
bread?bread! I asked a drunkard,
and ho loudly called for strong drink.
I asked the multitude around ine, and
they lifted up a confused cry, in which
I heard the words "wealth, fame, and
pleasure." I asked a poor man who
bad long borne the character of an experienced
Christian; ho replied that
all he wished for was health, wisdom,
and to have a constant love for his Maker
and Redeemer.
Every-day Life.?From morning
till night is the human miud restless
as the troubled sea! No sooner do
men enter the world, than they at once
lose their taste for natural and simple1
pleasures, so remarkable in early life.
Every hour do they nek themselves,
what progress they Lave made in the
pursuit of wealth and honour 3 Ami
on they go, as their fathers went before
them; till, weary and sick at heart,
they look back with a sigh of regret to
the time of their childhood.
It is a common saying that wives
and husbands' mothers never agree in
the same house* Nature seems to have
set them against each other, perhaps
for a wise purpose. But one reason is
that a woman who has been chief in a
house, never bears well the humilitation
of being made subject.
Pridk.?Of all human actions, jirido
seldomest obtain its end for, aiming
at liouour and reputation, it reaps contempt
and derision.
Mistrust the mind which suspects
others. Suspicion is involnntary self
betrayal?the rattlo appended to the
snake, warning us of its venom.
0
fi? asfssffpsi" "T
Book and Job ranting '
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HAVING A FINE SELECTION OF ]
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m ?ra&a.
CIRCULARS, CATAL06UES, HAND-BILLS, WAYBILLS,
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Dpoi) fbe $Jo?f fqbohibie JeNw.
?irera \cts & ]
Town and District OovernmnteJntrndont.?I>T.
A. B. CuooK.
Warden*.?D. Q. WwrnriKui, J. W. Stores,Esq.,
IL K. William^ JOHN MUPhersox.
Cirrit of the CohhciL?Joiijc W. Stores, Etq. \
Sheriff.?W. A. MhDaxiki, Esq.
Clerk of the Court.?Daviu Hoke, Esq.
Court of Ordinary.?L. M. McBr, Em.
Commiesioner in Equity.?Maj. 8. A. Tow km
Officcri and Directors I
Of the Greenville Jt Columbia Rail-Road. (
Thomas C. Perrin, President; W. H. Griffin; |
Engineer; H. T. Peako, Superintendent Trans- I
portation ; J. P. Southern, Auditor and Treasurer,
T. I). Daviu, Agent Directors?D. Nance, Wm. i
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J. P. Reul, J. N. iVliitner, J. Kilgore, V. McBee. i
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gm rpnK FIFTIETH EDITION, with On?
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eases and Malformations of the llumnn
III System in every shape and form. To (
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of Females, being of the highest importance
to married people, or those contemplating 1
marriage. By Wu.liam Youno, M. D.
Ix t no father be ashamed to present a copy of
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4:??.i ,.A? ?! , 4k?i. 1? At.?
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152 Spruco-atrect, Philadelphia.
June IK, 1854. b ty h
Mechanics, Mannfactnrers, and \
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1. The T ondon Qnarterly Review,Conservative *
'2. Tlie Edinburgh Review, Whig,
8. The North British Review, Free Church. 1
4. The Westminster Review, Liberal. i
6. Blackwood's Kdiubnrgh Magosino, Tory. i
ALTHOUGH these works are distinguished by
the political shades abovs indicated, vet i
but s small portion of their contents la devoted i
to political subjects. It is their literary oharac- 1
ter which gives them their chief value, and in 1
that they stand confessedly far above all other
journals of their clasa i
TERMS: ,
Any one of the Four Reviews, $8 00 <
Any two of the Four Reviews, 6 00 i
Any three of the Four Reviews, 7 00
All Four of the Reviews, 8 00 i
Blackwood's Magaxine, S 00 I
Blackwood and three Reviews, 9 00 I
Blackwood and the four Review*, 10 00
Payment* to Ikj made in all cases in advance.
Money current in the Htate where issned will be
received at par.
LUBBINO.
A discount of twenty-five per cent from the i
above price* will be allowed to Club* ordering
four or more copies of any one or more ai the
almve work*. Thus, Four co|4m of Blackwood,
or of one Review, will be sent to one address
for $9 ; four eopiee of the Four Review* and |
Blackwood for ?0, and ao on.
gy Remittance* and communieaUona should 1
be always addressed, post-paid to the I^ublishers, '
LEONARD 8 CTT * 0., ?
79 Fulton street (entrance 64 Gold-at, N-York. j
The Spartanburg Express 1
BY EDWARD 1L BRITTON, J
(Formerly of the Fairfield Register and Herald, (
and lately one of the Editor* and Proprietor* i
of the Charleston Standard,)
lias l?con established at Spartanburg C. IL, & C.
TERMS.
Tri-Weekly Express, per annum, $8 00
Weekly * 1 00 J
Greenville and Laurens.
A. 8UDDUTH will carry persona froir. ~
\ Jf a Greenville to Laurens C. H. Leaving
Green villa every Tuesday and Friday, returning j
Wcdnesilav* en<l Saturday*. Application to be
made the aay bofore leaving. Jnog t f
X
"J" GLENN SPRING'S.
FlMAfclliBtttWR.
Rt. Rer. T. 9i Datw> IX IX, cx-ofBeio Visitor.
Rw. T. R Aavmm, ) p. rri.t l.
" J. a MoOouoro* f lfoprtetors.
-" Obomc Bestow, Rector, tnd Inatractor is
IfenUjjs^pfcristisn Science, Modern Language*
Mm. BmoH, Matron.
> Instructor in Mathematics, Matin!
Soicaces, and Ancient Literature. '
ProC G. F. IWnrr, (late of Linnet one Ratings, >
Instructor in the theory and practice at Marie.
Miss C. M. Knn, Instructress in English.
" Soswwntt, Instructress in Drawing,
Painting, and Aaeiatant in Fneth.
Mim Boniia W ablet, Instructress In English
Branches, and Assistant in Mathematics.
Miss Eliza I'a att, Assistant in Music and English.
N. B. Tha corps is not yet complete.
THE nbore Institution located at Glean
Hprings, in H(>artanburgh District, S. C, wan.
opened for the reception of pupils on the first of
tebruarv lost. In converting this establishment
into a school for young ladies, the buildings hare
been thoroughly repaired and fitted op; and in
furnishing them anew no pains hare been spared
to make it in every respect, such as hom^ parents
would desire for tneir daughters. Particular attention
has been bestowed Upon the musical initrumcnts,
and with a Inrge and efficient corps ?f
teachers, and a thorough coon* of study, it afrordri
every advantage to be enjoyed in any similar Institution.
Applicants are admitted of any age, over seven
jreara, and placed in such class as they may be
prepared to join.
Tne scholastic year will consist of one session.
divided into two' terms of five months each, befining
on the first of February and July. Vacation
December and January.
Rats.?For Tuition and Board, including washing,
fuel, lights, A& Ac., $126 per terra, and there
wul be no oHra ckarrrt, except for Music, $60 |>erterm,
and for Books, sheet Music, Drawing Materials
Ac., actually used.
For further information see "Prospectus,"'
which may be had by applying to the Rector, or
either of the Proprietors,
may 1, 1866. 1 dThe
Southern Enterprise.
OUR MOTTO?"EQUAL RIGHTO TO ALL."
rpiIE Subscrilier will publish on the 10th of
JL May, the tirst nural>er of a "New Paper,"
with the* nl?ove name, issued weekly, to contain
rwxNTT-rora oonwxs, printed on new and beautiful
Trrr, and neat wliite paper, Manufactured I
expreeely for it. j
it is the design and intention of its manager icmake
it an acceptable "FAMILY NEVTSFAPR," f
free from everything having a vicious or immoral ||
ippesranoe?excluding from its column* the
xliblo trash which too often find* medium in
many newspaper# of the present day. Whilst hewfll"
endeavor to prove it a welcome visitor to
the domestic^ circle?making its members more
tiappv and contented, the various classes of
WORKING MEN ANI) MECHANICS will find
in it something to instruct, refine and elevato
them in their different vocations. The latest improvement
in Agriculture, Patents of recent Imrention
and Discovery, as well as everything I
senccrning or affecting the great Iu i*wtral Pur- I
mits and Interests of our State and country will
(Kijtivon.
Foreign and Domestic news, will be publishedl
jp to the hour of going to press. The great end!
ind aim of its Proprietor will be to make it just
what its name implies?advocating whatevsr
nav be right respecting our common country
ina her institutions. We shall be National upon
lulijccts affecting the whole country, but South
>m in feeling and sentiment when they involve
the rights and interests of the section to which
wo are, by birth, attached. _
Rojiorts of the Cotton and Provision Markets, u
Arrivals at Hotels, Consignees at the Rail-road,
ire. A., will be reported.
Terms.
Single Suliecribers, tl,50, per annum, in ad- I
ranee. Clulnof t?n atfl,00 cadi. $2 will in all
iuh'8 Ik- charged, unless the money accompany
the order.
Subscriptions, Advertisements and Communications
will meet attention by being addressed
WILLIAM P. PRICE,
Box No. 60, Greenville, 3. C.
Greenville, May 10, 1864. .
SOUTH CAROLINA TEMPERANCE STANDARD*
TIIE UNDERSIGNED would respectfully announce
to the friends of Temperance generoly
that they intend to commence the publication
>f a Temperance Paper, about the lfitli of Jane
text, provided a sufficient number of Subscriber*
?an be obtained to warrant the undertaking.
It will be printod upon substantial paper of
imperial size, and will contain 24 column# of
matter. It will be denominated the 'Booth Car
ilitia Temperance Standard," and will be published
every two weeks, at the pries of One Dollar
iH-r annum. Aa soon as fifteen hundred subtcriDers
are obtained, we will publish it weekly
nt the same price.
Our sole omect is to advocate the cause of Temperance
; and particnlarly the Legislative Pro- .
nibition of the Traffic in Intoxicating Drinks; I
and to prepare the masses of the people of onr I
Mate, for the enactment of such a Law, by eon- I
rincing them of ite expediency and necessity.
We will endeavor to make it a welcome visi- I
tor in every family. Nothing will be admitted I
into ite columns of a worthless and immoral ten- I
denoy. *
A strict neutrality will be maintained on all
lubjeeta of a political and religions sectarian character.
No subscription will be received for less
than on year, and in every eaae the order moot
be accompanied by the money.
We hope all persona feeling an interact in the
access of this enterprise, will exert themselves in
getting subscriptions, and aa soon thereafter as
Buapranient send as their lieto, Pout masters are
requested to act as Agents.
All communications intended for the paper
must be poet paid, and addressed to the 'Booth
Carolina Temperance Standard," Lexington C, II.,
i G.
8. E. CAUGHMAN, ) m
i. R. BR E ARK, > Euitoba A raorjurToa*.
a OORLEY, )
PROSPECTUS OF THE ~
State Bights Register and Wo
M a ew T . , TT" i
tionai jboonoxmit. i' j
A rOUTICAL ;OCMAL AXD GBtCKAL MrWATArn. 1
CO. BAYLOR. Editor.?Term# 88 a jeer J
leaned weekly. Tn Statr Rieim R|o? I
ru will be conducted upon the princlplee of I
Hate right* u laid down by JeBemon. The iUfj- I
iter will Adhere to the original sompaet, u rati
led by tl?o several States, and will oppose si list- 8
tudiunrinniam in legislatipi, and all encroach I
nents, secret or open, npon the rights and sorsr- B
ignty of the States. tie Begieter will take as I
t# text in the dfceuasioa of all publie questions the I
Constitution, strictly construed and unmeoprom f
l^de
WAMtnsoroN Orrr, July, 1884.
The Wool Cards.
A T M? BEE*8 MILLS, below OreestTOle 0. TT. I ?
rV hare jw* been fitted *p in the Aeatf manner, I .
er making HOLLA.
Bring ^yoor Wool In nice ft*, and you .wil^firi
. * a . . Bui?i?
UT We are authorised he. aanouno' Cnpt |
VaswiM TTayl#r, aa a eeadMH far Tex da
Collector atffci owning election, Jt t|
*
I , I