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1 - 1 1 - SELECTED l'OETRY. Patient and Faithful. You have taken back fl?o promise Tli.it you spoke so long ago : Taken back the heart you gave mc ; 1 must uvcl? let you go. |dieth Where Love lnth onco breathed, 1'iide I have struggled, hut in vain, First to keep tho links together, Then to piece tho broken chain. Hut it mtght not he?so freely All your friendship I restore, *' And the heart that I had taken As my own for evermore. No shade of hlairio shall cloud von, Dread no more a claim from mc ; Hut I will not have you fancy That I count myself as free. I am bound with the old promise; What can break that golden chain 1 Vi?f till, LfA./ld tli'it ti.Mi l.n.iA oi.r.l..t. ?< uv %*?v *? vmi i uitv y uti no v> nj'UMJiij Nor tho sharpness of my pain : Do you think, becauso you tail mo And draw back your hand to-day, That from out tho heart I gave you My strong lovo can fade away ! It will live. No eyes may see it. In my soul it will lio deep, Hi I from all ; hut I shall feel it Often stirring in my sleep. So remember, that the friendship Which you now think j?oor and vain. Will endure in hope and patience, Till you ask for it again. Perhaps in some lone twilight hour. Liko those we have known of old, Tast shadows gathering round you, When your present friends grow cold, , You may stretch your hands towards me, All ! you will?I know not when? I shall nurse my love and keep it For you, faithfully, till then. MI S C ELL ANEOUS. [From the Now York American.] Aivice of a Father to his Only DaughterWRITTCN IMUKlMATKt.Y AITKU IItH MARRIAGE. [A lady friend sends its the following, with the request that it be inserted in the Enterprise for the benefit of its female readers. It was published many years ago. The paper from , which our friend clipped it, was pub- i lished in 1320, its first appearance be- < Jiii^ uiniiJ Juuia I'lUVlOUS 10 Hint (late. It is said to be from the pen of one of the best and greatest men Virginia ever produced :?Ei>. En.] My Dear Daughter?You have just entered into that state which is replete with happiness or misery. The issue depends upon that prudent, amiable, i uniform conduct, wliich wisdom and virtue so strongly recommend, on the | one hand, or on that imprudence which i a want of reflection or passion may j1 prompt on the other. 1 You are allied to a man of honor, of 1 talents, and of an open, generous disposition. You have, therefore, in your : power, all the essential ingredients oi ! domestic happiness; it cannot he mar- ; red, if you now reflect upon that svs- I tern of conduct which you ought inva- < riably to pursue?if you now sec clear- < I)- the path from which yon will re- t solve never to deviate. Our conduct is often the result of whim or caprice, j often such ivs will give us many a pang, i unless we see, beforehand, what is always the most praiseworthy, and the most essential to happiness. The first maxim which you should I impress deeply upon your mind, is never to attempt to control your husband i by opposition, Oy displeasure, or any j I other mark of anger. A man ol sense, j' ot prudence, ot" warm reeling, cannot.11 mi?I will not, bear an opposition of any |' kind which is attended with an angry j1 look or expression. The current of his t affections is suddenly stopped ; his at-p tachment is weakened; lie begins to I feel a mortilication the most pungent; ' he is Ixilittlcd even in his own eyes ; ! i and bo assured, the wife who once ex-'1 cites those sentiments in the breast of a husband, will never regain the high i ground which she might and ought to I have retained. When he marries her, i; if lie bo a good man, he expects from ' her smiles, not frowns; lie expects to find her one who is not to control him? ! not to take from him the freedom of < acting as his own judgment shall di-1 root-? but one who will place such con- * fid once in him as to believe that his i prudence is his host guide. Little. I things, what in reality are mere trifles Iin themselves, often produce bicker-! s iugs, and even quarrels. Never per-1] init them to be a subject of dispute ; jj yield thorn with pleasure, with a smile 11 01 airecuon. lie assured that one dif- m fercnco outweighs them nil a thousand i of ten thousand times. A difference i with your husband ought to ho conflict- i ered as the greatest calamity?as one 1 that is to ho most studiously guarded s against; it is a demon which must no t ver he permitted to enter a habitation ,i where all should he peace, unimpaired j confidence, and heartfelt affection.? | lies ides, what can a woman gain by | her opposition or her differences! Nothing. lint sho loses everything; she loses her husband's respect for her virtues; she loses his love, and with that, i all prosjKjet of future happiness. Hhe j creates her own misory, and then ut- j tors idle and silly Complaints, fait ut-1 tors them ill vain. TJio love ot a husband can bo retained only by the high opinion which ho entertains of his wife's goodness of heart, of her amiable disposition, ot the sweetness of hor temper, of her prudence, of her devotion to him. Let nothing, upon any occasion, ever lessen thut'opinion. On the contrary, it should augment every day ; he should have much more reason tc admire her for those excellent qualities, which will cast a lustre over a virtu ous woman when her personal attrac tions arc no more. Has your husband staid out longer than you expectedi When he returns, receive him as the partner of your heart, lias lie disappointed you in something you expected, whether of ornament, or furniture, or of any conveniency ? Never evince discontent; receive his apoltwrv wil I) rhcuu-tnlnojia llnocho u-luui DJ " " -^V ..V) yim arc housekeeper, invito company without informing you of it, or brill" homo with him a friend Whatever may be your repast, however scanty it may be, however impossible it may he to add to it, receive them with a pleasing countenance, adorn your table with cheerfulness?give to your husband and to your company a hearty welcome; it will more than compensate for evevy other deficiency; it will evince love for your husband, good sense in yourself, and that politeness ot manners, which acts as the most powerful charm ! It will give to the plainest faro a zest superior to all that luxury can boast. Never be discontented on any occasion of this nature. In the next place, as your husband's success in his profession will depend upon his popularity, and as the manners of a wife have no little influence in extending or lessening the respect iind esteem of others tor her husband, you should take care to be affable and polite to the poorest as well as to the richest. A reserved haughtiness is a sure indication of a weak mind and an unfeeling heart. With respect to your servants, teach them to respect and love yon, while von expect from them a reasonable dis2barge of their respective duties. JNurer tease yourself, or them, by scolding ; it has no other effect than to renter them discontented and impertinent. Admonish them with a calm firmness. Onltivsite vonr mind lu- tl>r> of those books which instruct while they amuse. Do not devote much of your time to novels; there area few which may be useful and improving, and in giving a higher tone to our moral sensibility; but they tend to vitiate the taste, and to produce a disrelish tor substantial intellectual food. Most plays are of the same cast; they are not friendly to the delicacy which' is one of the ornaments of the female character. History, geography, poetry, moral essays, biography, travels, sermons, and other well written religious productions, will not fail to enlarge your understanding, to render you a more agreeable companion and o exalt your virtue. A woman devoid A rational ideas of religion, has nosenirity for her virtue; it is sacriliced o her passions, whose voice, not that >f God, is her only governing principle. Besides, in those hours of calamity to which families must, be exposed, where will she iind support if it he not iu her just reflections upon that all ruling Providence which governs the universe, whether animate or inanimate Mutual politeness between the most intimate friends, is essential to that harmony which should never he once broken or interrupted. How inipor( liit tlioti 1a it ....... 1 ?...? voviif in i u vv/vn V/V/ii 11 liii i <171(1 wife! Tho more warm the attachuent, the loss will cither party bear u he .-lighted, or treated with the mallest degree of rudeness, or inat en:ioa. This politeness, then, if it be u>t in itself a virtue, is at least the means of giving to real goodness a lew lustre; it is the means of preventng discontent, and even quarrels ; it s tho oil of intercourse, it removes aslurities and gives to everything a miooth, an even, and a pleasing nioveinent. I will only add that matrimonial lappiness does not depend upon wealth; no, it is not to be found in .vealtli: but in minds properly temper >d, and united to our respective uituaions. Competency is necessary; all devoid that point is ideal. J)o not aippose, however, that 1 would not id vise your husband to augment bis l>roperty by all honest and commenda.i r 1.1 ?J * * ..MU Miu<inn. A would WISH to HOC Jlllll actively engaged in such a pursuit, because engagement, a sedulous employment, in obtaining some laudable end, is essential to happiness. In the atainmont of a fortune, by honorable neans, and particularly by professiond exertion, a man derives particular intisfnetion in self applause, as well is from the increasing estimation in which lie is held by those around him. In the management of your domestic concerns, let prndence and wise economy prevail. Let neatness, order and judgment be seen in all your different departments. Unite liberality with a just frugality ; always reserve ftometliino for the hand of charity ; and never lot your door bo closed the vofco of i?uirering humanity. Your servants, in particular, will have the strongest claim upon your charity ; \ let them bo well fed, well clothed, nursed in sickness, and nover let them be unjustly treated. An Indian Legendi We paused 011 the margin of a lake ( in the valley of the Mississippi. It ? was near the hour of sunset, and a , bright golden tinge fell upon the waters, gilding the glossy surface bcauti fully. Look across in that direction," said my companion. I a see n precipice 01 imposing height," I replied. [ k* There is a singular legend connect 'ed with the history ot' yon )>ile of jagged rocks ; every foot of this soil was .once trodden hy red men; the original i and just owners of this wide and for-1 tile valley," returned my friend.? ( u Yonder was an Indian village, hut. ' no mementoes remain to tell us that ; this romantic place was formerly the i home of a powerful tribo. The chil. dren of Wapesha sported on tliese ver-j dant banks, and the maidens bathed j ! in these waters, and listened to lovetalcs beneath these sylvan shades. | " It chanced that a young hunter he-1 came enamored of one of the fairest of j the daughters of his tribe, lie was brave and handsome. There was none swifter in the chase or more cunning on the war-path, lie was successful ! with the maiden, but not with her parents, for lie was without, rank; while i a notable chief was his rival. Unfortunately, the red men, like the pale faces. J have regard to earthly distinctions, and titles have charms for their cars, j I The untitled suitor was bidden to goi his way, and treated with marked I I harshness and contempt by the relations of the Indian damsel. She was closely watched to prevent stolen in' terviews, and every artifice was used to keep the lovers apart. I " One day the hunter had the good luck to meet her in the forest, when he : again repented the oft-told tale of de-l I votion, and she renewed her promise I to wed him, or never become the wife j of warrior or chief. The sharp eyes ' of the hunter (lete.et.eil !i form irliilinir - ? - ? ?-> l from tree to tree, and presently he; heard the click <?t a lock, admonishing hint of his peril. A timely change of position saved his lile; a hall cut the ,j air close to his head, striking an oak I beyond. " You do well!" cried the hunter, j calling the young man by name, "to I come forth to shoot a neighbor as you would kill a pale-face. What is my' crime, that I deserve to be hunted j like a buck if" "You have boon told that my sister is promised to a powerful chief, ar.d ] that you must have no more love-talk with her. Von deserve to die for ! your audacity !" replied the girl's broth-; Icr* , i "The hunter had his gun in his i hand, and his knito and tomahawk at; j his belt. I " You are in my power !" he proudly replied. "lean kill you in a moment, but I scorn such wickedness. Besides, your death would distress the maiden I love; depart in safety, unpunished for your treachery, and remember I have given you your life." "I will <ro, but inv sister shall crol c % O with 1110, and you can go to your lodge and weep like a s?piaw," retorted the young man. " Come, foolish one, your future i husband awaits you at the lodge,1' added her brother. My future husband is before you, if I am destined to have one on the I earth!" she exclaimed. uI despise , the man you name?" "Jler brother laughed conteinpj tuously, and taking her by the arm, ) led her toward his father's lodge.? When she was taken beloro her rola; lives, they covered her with rcproachj es, accusing her of unmaideniy conduct.. All her spirit was aroused by i their taunts. " 1 see plainly," she said, (> that you are not my parents. My father and j mother and brothers must have died] when I was an infant, leaving mo to1 . the care and atfection of strangers ! I j ! will go to seek mv relatives in the! i land (if shadows. They* will be glad j ! to see ine, and console me for the mis-: ! cry 1 have suffered." " She hastened from the lodge, stcp)>od into a canoe, and paddled swiftly for yonder c1 iff. Her friends watched her movements with silent terror, until they saw her touch the shore and climh the jagged height; then they cried out in remorse, and ran to arrest her purpose. J>ut they were too late to reach the spot. They saw her upon the summit, and the words of her death song were borne mournfully to their ears. They shouted their sorrow? they promised in vain; if sho heard their wild adjurations, sho heeded thein not, hut scorned their late repentance. She chanted her wrongs, called on the Great Spirit, tossod her anns in the air, and leaped from the dizay height. The waters of the lake closed over her, and her conscionco-strickcu relatives saw her no more:" Flatterers?When flatterers meet 'Satan goes to4tfuncr. G entlkh ANI.Y Conduct.?Sel f-r cspect is the safest prevention against quarrelling. The man who is sure of his own position, is tho slowest to suspect another of any design to question it; and hence the art of avoiding altercations has generally hocu deemed one of the peculiar characteristics of a gen-1 tleman. Never to seem afraid of bo- j ing put upon, us the phrase goes? I neve: t-o argue a question merely, j lest people should think you cannot argue it?never to fight simply for j fear the lookers on might think you a i coward?these are some of the maxims ! or. which all men of superior minds : act, habitually and unconsciously ;ntul it is tliis habit which gives to such men that air of repose and self-possession before which fools stand abashed and dandies are wild with envy. Few men can have mingled, even in 4 1*/-v el I/rlitncf /loi*rnn in ? ti?itlw??it I?I1V5 Pll^lll VOW Viv^l V/V^ III OW1VW' ^ ItilUlIL noticing that 0110 prominent feature in the character of a parvenvc, is his pronenosB to tako offence. His ancles arc sharper, his corns " more tendor,'' than those of other people. There is really no knowing where to he safe with him. The moment you put your linger on him, his bristles stand out like a hedgehog's. The best plan, of course, is to leave such a character alono. We should do our best to avoid infringing on their ramitied irritability. It is senseless to provoke a man, w boevcr he may l>e, who has the power to he mischievous. The man who wants to light von in the streets because you push against him, may he a low fellow, but that will be no consolation if you go home with a black eye. Neither will it much mend the matter if you give him two in the return. On the whole, you will consider it a very disagreeable business, and wish devoutly you had never got into it. Knrc.vriov of toe Agriculturist.? No man is so high as to be independent of the success of this great interest ; no man is so low as not to be affected by its prosperity or decline. Agriculture feeds us; to a great degree it clothes us; without it we could not have manufactures, and we should not have commerce. These ail stand to gcthcr, hut they stand together, like pillars in a cluster, the largest in the middle?and that hugest is agriculture. We live in a country of small farms, and freehold tenements; a country in which men elutivato with their own hands their own foe simple acres, drawing not only their subsistence, but also their spirit of independence and inanlv freedom, from the ground they plough. They are ac once its owners, its cultivators, and its defenders. The cultivation ot the earth is the most important labor of man.? Man may be civilized, in some degree, without great progress in manufactures, and with little commerce with his distant neighbors; but withouteul- j tivatiou of the earth, lie is, in all j countries, a savage. Until he gives j up the chase and tixes himself to sonic place and seeks a living irom the earth, he is a roaming barbarian.? When tillage begins, other arts follow. The farmers, therefore, arc the founders of human civilization. [Dan id 11 \bstcr. Tiik Ukooukss of Likk.?Men rejoice when the sun has risen; they rejoice also when it goes down ; while they are unconscious of the decay of their own lives. Men rejoice on seeing the face of a new season, as at the arrival of one greatly de9ired. Nevertheless the revolution of one season is the decay of man. Fragments of driftwood meeting in the wide ocean continue together a little space; thus parents, u'ives r-liililren iViotwlj mid i>i/>l?r?a ? ?-? - t J ~ J <" ??) > v main with as a short time, then separate?the separation is inevitable. No mortal can cscapothe common lot; he who mourns tor departed relatives, has no power to cause them to return.? | One standing on the road would readily say to a number ot persons passing j by, I will follow you ?why, then, should a person grieve when journeying the same road which has been assuredly travelled by all our forofath-; ersf Life resembles a cataract rush-1 ing down with irresistible impetuosity. Knowing that the end of lite is death, every right-minded man ought to pursue that which is connected with happiness and ultimate bliss. [Dublin University Magazine. A statement was made in a law suit in Paris recently, which is very nn/l olnrrnlnu A ImoKott/l 1 !??!?*/ Ml 1 C??IU O?ll0UH?l, J.X. lllioi/auu 11*111^ separated from Ins wife, met her one day in company with a man who was leaning very affectionately on her ann. lie gave his wife's companion a terrible drubbing. His wife was anxious to have the latter as one of her witnesses, but he declined to appear. It aj?peared that the wife was really the sick nurso of a highly respectable gentloman, who was atHicted with a nervous disease, and his life wjis despaired of by the physicians. The shock occasioned by the nnexpooted and severe threshing acted happily on his frame, and he is now in excellent health, and bids fair to attain the age of Sam. I Purr I lie objects most Btrenonsly to I appear as a hostile witness to his "saviour." The Planet Jui*iteu.?Jnpitcr is now the evening star, ami will Continue so uutil April 11, 1857. Jupiter is the largest of all the planets, and j next to Venus, the most brilliant. It is one thousand three hundred times! larger than the earth, is aUmt four hundred and ninety-live million eight hundred thousand miles distant from the sun, and is acompaniod by four moons, which help it to give its light. It is twelve years in revolving around the sun, and turns about on its axis once in ten hours, which gives it a veloeicty at its equator of four thousand six hundred and fifty-eight miles in a minute, or a speed two thousand times greater than that ot a cannon ball. Its axis being nearly perpendicular to tlio ]>lnnc ot its oribif, tbo sun is almost always in tbo plane of its equator. A London paper gives a very gratifying account of the progress Christianity has made in New Zealand. A chief of that cannibal country was! questioned by one of the missionaries! as to how far the study of the Scriptures had broken, him of his unnatural passion for human tlesh. The Chief, answered proudly, ''Yon missionary men have done me much good. I never eat my enemies on Sunday now," On week days, however, he dined on j cold boiled missionary, 011 baked young1 women, or civilian cutlet, as usual. I This is not more absurd than the men of the world who cheat on every day of the week, and go to church on Sunday. JOHN KRAUSE, F U R N I T U It E AM) CABINET MAKER, <n n?lVr'iTW)!l%- ^ hULD respectfully inform V, bi" riti?mi- t-f Greenvi.lc rnd vir^., . ? ttsoinity tlmt he has on hand a lot of FIJltNITUUE, which lie will dispone of upon reasonable terms. He luis Chairs, Tables, Sofas, Wnslistauds, Ac. Fine ninl l'lniu Furniture made to order. His shop may be found on Avenue Street, between lioatlioV Store and the Confectionery, and ncurly opposite tlie Court IIuosu Greenville, H. C'., Aug. 14-14-ly "PT GPEdlAL~'P.ECUSQ'tV' Painting ! Painting ! r I'M IF subscriber lias located himself in the X. town of Grceuville, and wish it to he understood that he is now prepared to reeeivc orders for House, Sign, Ornamental and FANCY PANTING, Graining, Marbling and I'Al'KIl HANGING. All of \\ hieli will be executed with neatness on.l despatch. Having worked in the principal cities of both Kuropc and America, lie feels sntisti< <1 ilint he vim give satisfaction to nil who may favor him with their patronage, He deems it minecessary to give a list of references ; all lie asks is an examination of his work, lie wants no hotter recoinnieiulation than his work can give. lie has the right for a celebrated Metallic Fire IVoi.f Hoof, equal to copper in <li.nihility, ami in addition to the ahovc lie is also prepared to execute either Professional of Ilusiuess Cards on Glass in a style second to none. Orders for Graining or Marblcing will he attended to, and the work done in a style to suit tho tastes of the most fastidious. All orders addressed to mo at Greenville C. II., or left at the Carolina House, will meet with prompt attention. MAI'S SAMl'KLSOX. July 3. 8 Gin IMt'W 4*iiift JBaiinlhctory. ENGRAVING AND CARVING OF THE FINE ARTS, r | MIK subscriber, recently from London, Paris 1 and the principal cities of Knropo and America, where specimens of his art have given lie utmost satisfaction, respcetly informs the eit izvim of the I'pper Country, that he has just nr rived, and located himself at Greenville, where he is prepared to donll work appertaining to his business, in the host manner and at tho shortest notice, as Double and Single Cost-Steel Hides and Shot Guns, Duelling I'istols, Ac. lie will also keep constantly on hand an assortment of Sporting Materials, which ho offers I for sale at very reasonable terms; linely carved Alligator's Teeth, Steel Tumps, and Kngraving oil Gold, Silver, Ac. All Work nnd Repairing done in the very best j manner,- ami warranted equally as good as can j be done in the United States. will be found two doors below i Dr. Knrle'a Drug Store. July 3 8?tf. F. BRFDA. | now?#? Anti-Rheumatic Powders. A Safe, Speedy and Radical Cure | for Jihcuma&ism, Ji fie urn otic Gout and Sciatica. WE, the undersigned citizens of Pufnnm ' County, Georgia, cheerfully hear tcsti-1 iiiony to tlio efficacy of J.iiich'a Anti-Rheumatic Powder* in the treatment of ucute or chronic Rheumatism, many cases having hcen sueeessfully treated by Dr. A. O. OII1S0N, within our personal knowledge in which these Powders were principally used. Joel lirnnham. if. D. lFin. B. Carter, Stephen 11. Marshall, D. K. Adams, T. It. Harwell, Thomas llespess, 0. II. Thomas, J. Nichleson A others. tw Any rensonahle number of individual cortilieates can be given iit attestation of their efficacy. Prepared and sold l>v J. O. GIBSON, M. IX, Eatonton Go., at $6 per box. All orders directed to him, with tha Above sum enclosed, nn<I a description of the ease shall receive with the Medicine such advice an may suit any peculiarity thereof. For ?iil? l?y M. II. KAItT.B, M. D., Apotheoury and Wruggist, Greenville, K O. May 1. ftl ly Shaving and Hair-Dros&ing. BVRRIDOE (AONTINUKH the Tentorial hnaincM at 14a J old stand, in Beattie's Brink Building.? i flentleinen can have their hnir cut, or shampoo ed, or face* slinved, at nay time during the day rn owning. April Jt, 18 tf. h SPECIAL 1 WE wouldinform the citizen# of Greenviilo and of the euiTonndlng Itfstrict#, tlint our constantly iiicrcusiiiR l>ti#inc#s lin# compelled our removal from "4 Uiumh-Stiikkt." tc tlio nuupihie.-ut itnd #pneft>us 'Drown Rone Huiluinp,' 9^ BROA^^EEET. The accommodations awl nrrangcnent. of this "NKW DEPOT," arc tinsurj assed by nny similar establishment. in llio United States ; and Avliilst.it, will a flu ril facilitiis for keeping our ustml large stock of MISCELLANEOUS BOOK^ C11KAP PUBLICATIONS, MAGAZINES, & C . , We also propose adding largely to our Stock of Stationery, And those in want of LEIXiKllH, JOUKNAJ-S, CAS1I BOOKS, LETTKI1, NOTE. and CAP PAPEU, AC., AC., will find it to their advantage to visit us. S3. G. OOITP.TSITAT & CO., DOOKSKLLttllS AND STATIONERS. At the Siyib of the "NEWSBOY." Charleston, Nov. 20. 28-?f OTIS7 IMPROVED PATENT Liorht/niTKr flnnHnrtrira -D j-j 'TMIE subscriber bus pnrciwtoiltkc Kight ?f J_ putting up the above description of Lightning Ilods in Grccnvilie District, and is prrfmnsl to execute orders for the same to any extent an?l with promptness and despatch. These Units are. conducted upon Scientific principles, and afford the only method vet discovered of absolute protection against lightning. Any one acquainted with the laws of electricity, will he immediately I convinced of their utility, upon examining thtsin Their value has been tested by experience and science, and has been vouched hv hundreds uf certificates from all nnrts of the V'rilon. From amongst these the following only are submitted. "I have carefully examined Otis' insulated Lightning Conductor, and have it attached to the building iu which 1 reside. It is better constructed, and more securely insulated, thau any form of Lightning Hods 1 have seen. It is neat and cheap, and if properly attached to the building, cannot, fail lo atford security against the loss of life and property hv electricity 1 therefore recommend it as worthy of tho confidence of the community, U. F. Lhumhy. I'rof. of Chemistry, Ac., in 8. C. College." Mr. 1>. G. Wcstfield has recently supplied my house with Otis' improved Conductor. I have examined them with great care, and am convinced thattlicy are the best Lightning Hods ever constructed. The methods of attraction and insulation are new, and seem to me to l?e perfect, i can confidently recommend them to nil persons wishing to secure their houses against lightning. C. J. Elford. Any further information may he obtained on application to J>. G. WK8TFIELD, May 8-5'2-tf. Greenville, S. C. "FXwotr WOISKT 1 AT nt) 7? T? VT X7TT T T-i /~l *T n /, * wujuim ?XiiijJj. li. 11) D. U ^1^11E subscriber would inform the citizens JL of the Village of Greenville nnd surrounding country, that ho does nil kinds of ENGRAVING, of Gold or Silver and Plate, generally. Makes and mounts in Gold or Silver, all the varieties of Urnidcd Fancy Hair Work; repairs all articles of Jewelry ; Mounts in Gold or Silver Walking Canes; cuts and tits to order, Spectacle Glasses to suit any age almost. Among the articles generally needed, and made l?y him, are Gold and Silver Sleeve lhiitons, Studs for Collar and bosom. The Mounting nnd getting up of his hair linger lings (hair braided by tho Swedish Lady, Mrs. Olson,) and-Fob, Veet, j or Guard Chains, bo Antlers himself, would not bo"t.-oiled at in the large* f^liioQnvla cities. Orders for woi.k, thankfully received, at the Corner, sixty yards cast of the Old Court House, nnd but a few paces from tlio Enterprise Ollicc. , ? J II. RANDOLPH. ea-M/,.1 ' ! * A7/ kv wuiiigg iwr engraving any worit Hindu by liiin. Jo 26 7 ly a. a. asasaas. NEAR nil.IlEI'. r. O., OllHKNVlf.LE DlHT. OFFEItttbis services to tba public, and sofiehs vl>nlr?iinuf. All work entrusted to him will he done with neatness And disnatch. Ayy person wishing to know how to soMer (hnrd at M>fh) will be furnished, on the reeeptloc of one dollar, with a rcoelnt containing full iastrnetions, enabling him to solder any metal. Thii receipt: Inn never been offered to the puhlie bef ?rt. Hatisfnetion given or the money refunded., Jjwkuut MRN-PKO WITH CAR*. A 10 4ft~lf Town Officers. Intcndant.? }!. LEfe THRUSTON. (% Warden*.?H. C. MAtttti.CT.0. B. Dtku, l>?. u. D. laxo, r. McKay. Town cwjur~w. p. Prick. Marthalt.?Z. Marti w and 0. OjUKirtnr.