The southern enterprise. [volume] (Greenville, S.C.) 1854-1870, June 06, 1867, Image 4
?'ytrr*- ib
. Hai of ttM HBM.
Ijjk The Charlotte (N. C.) Timet bus the
HMblk>wia?*ta?ible remark*:
ML tbew. liAtr for the leal few day* hat
Hpn vary favorable to the wheat?
MHtom all direction*, we hear the mo*t
jpyMallci lag aeooucU of the growing crop*.
plCotton m backward and the aland not
wood* bat it it. atill time to teoure that,
ace -glad ?e know that all the
SggraMBten la thia and the teetiont con tigW&SHa,
have givea more than the ueual
Uiu. iki. Tk?
Sf^^Wgreat profit oat of tbs ftsecv staple,
we &biak, hoe passed, The Immense
field opened to Its cultivation io India,
Egypt* Br mail, and other count ties, will
greatly reduoe the prioe. aod those in
tbia oouotry who place ell their hope*
on-this one article, to the exclusion of
meal and grain, will be woefully disap
pointed. We need more bread stuffs,
for, frea the aigna of the times, we can
safsly prod let a large emigration to this
country daring the fall and winter.?
Enterprises of various descriptions are
under contemplation. Mining on a
move extensive scale than aver known
in this region will be proeecuted. Alreadv
have many minee been sold to
persons who will work them, and all
the laborers will hare to be fed.?
From what we can gather from reliable
sources, we can safely prediot that
0,000 persons will be engagsd in that
one branch of business in this County
within the next twelve months. We
are now at the orisis (in a business point
of view) of our fate. We hare reached
the lowest segment in the wheel?the
next revolution will be upward. Our
proepeots are tinged with the silver lining.
In order to do justice to our
grand resources, we must have enough
to est and to spare, which can only be
done by cultivating provisions on an
enlarged scale. In less than fire years,
the population of this County will be
doubled ; and with this increase must
our thriving and enterprisisg city go up.
We have croaked enough. The limes
are hard ; money has been and is scarce ;
but with the find weather and the harvesting
of the growing crops, alt our
fecrs will be dissipated, and a relaxation
in the money market take place
that will fill our streets again with wagons
and our stores with customers.
f> ?Frou
every party, as a partv, the
people of this State should stand aloof.
With no party, as a party, can we hare
any immediate affiliation or fraterniza
lion. Our party must be a simple
conservative organization, whose only
object shall be, while obeying t tie law
as a law in fact tbough not a law in
right, to prevent the inauguration of
voilence or turbulence, and exert every
possible influence to prevent the organic
change wrought by force in our institu
lions from working our own utter ruin
and that of the couutry.
This great Conservative parly may
include men of every former political
opinion and doctrine. No man iu it
should be tabooed or proscribed, but all
who have order and peace at heart,
should combine as good and honest citixens,
in one powerful Conservative organisation,
regardless of old party divN
sions or feelings. In this organization,
every Southerner, every secesionist will
find place, and in it the mass of the
Union party will find room. Neither
must repel the other, by any attempt to
revive in malice old issues and dead distinctions.
There must be a true and candid
oblivion of old disputes and controversies.
The labor and woikof each
one is needed, and they will be given
by every man, who, whatever bis policy
or principle, had only looked to the
well being and stability of the couutry
in which be lived.
In the Conservative organization of
this State, there must be leaders, and
while these leaders should be chosen indiscriminately
from all the various par
lies which have existed, they must be,
as far as practicable, men who will com
mand the respect and confidence of nil
classes of their fellow citizens. Thoy
must be men who will work for our one
common object?to save the State from
political backs and unprincipled agita
tors, who would be willing, for profit, to
destroy the very life of Carolina, and
who would be willing, for profit, 10 pan
der to any one class that would raise
them to a temporary eminence of un
enviable notoriety. No men in the
..Conservative party should be outlawed
or ostracized. There should be one test,
and one alone?and that is that the
whole party should work sedulously to
maintain order and law in our midst,
and to avoid everything calculated to
engender a war of races, which must
end la making the country exceedingly
uncomfortable to all and destructive to
one iace.? Charleston Mercury.
-
Population op mi United States,
From returns made under the aupervis
ion of Director Delmar, it appears that
the total population of the tbirty-seven
States of lbs Union, in November and
uecemoer n??i, wm ot,jv/w,?oo, ana 01
tb? Slate* and Territories together 84.
605,889. In rooet of the Southern
State* there ha* been a decrease of pop
ulalioo, in the Eastern a small increase,
and in lb* Western a large increase ?
The results are supported in every instance
by the State census of 1865, so
Car aa taken. The comparison with the
census of 1860 is as follows: Thirtyseven
States, a few of which were then
Territories, numbered 81,218,021 in.
habitants, and the total in the States
and Territories 81,448,821. The total
increase since I860 bas, therefore, been
8,002,561, which, in view of the late
extended conflict, demonstrates tbe extraordinary
recuperative powers of the
country.
T H B %
Wmiit Orowum in th* Coast District
ot Tuas?We stated hi our artiole
of yesterday on this subject, the
principal onuses which prevented any
serious efforts to cultivate wheat as a
crop hi the coast districts of Texas, while
agricultural labor was performed chiefly
by slaves, and while cotton was the leading
crop for market. We stated also
that the occasional experiments with
wheat made here on a small scale bud
been a success. It is now proposed to
glanee at wheat growing in various
countries of the earth, ?cbiefly in reference
to the vast diversities of climates
and atmospheric conditions, in wbioh it
is cultivated successfully.
At the Great Exhibition of 1861, in
London, the class of Substanoes u*e<i for
Food held a prominent place. Fore
most among vegetable productions was
wheat. Wheats grown in various
and moat diverse regions of the earth i
were exhibited, not in samples, but in
commercial quantities. Each quantity
of wheat was accompanied with inform
ation concerning the country where it
was grown, general facts concerning its
cultivation, and the amounts produced
per acre. I; would be superfluous to
enumerate all countries there represent
ted by their wheats; a few of the more
diverse will suffice. There were side
by side'wheals from England, Scotland
and Ireland, famous for their fogs, and
with shies generally dripping with
moisture, and surrounded on every side
by salt water?from the dry regions of
Northern Africa, where rains are unfre
quent?from Egypt, where it never
rains, or at roost, but once in many
years?from the low, flat, swampy, cold
and humid regions of the Daltic?from
the warm coast districts of Western and
South Africa?from the wet, harsh climate
and vast flat distircla bordering
the Black Sea?from Van Dieman's
Land, in New Holland?fiom all the
countries of the levant?from the inte
rior regions of France, Spain, Italy and
Germany, far removed from the salt
water atmosphere of any sea?from Sicily
and other places on different coasts
swept incessantly bv salt sea brecxes?
from the equable clima'es of the old
continent?from New Yoik and Canada,
presenting the vicissitudes of ex |
treme heat and extreme cold?from al j
Iuvial and diluvial districts where there
was not a rock?from broken and
mountainous regions, where the soil i
was in proximity to the primitive rocks
whose disintegration had formed and
1 composed their soil. It would bo ea?y
to make this enumeration of countries
where wheat was sent to the London
Exhibition much more minute. It is
sufficient to say the different continents
and different hemispheres woe repro
sented ; so were climates hot and cold,
the most humid and '.ho most dry, and
countries presenting nearly every physical
condition. There was no wheat:
from any of our Southern Slates, not
even from Maryland?nono we believe
from any of the moro western States,
including Illinois?nono from California.
It is needless to add there were
on exhibition all the known vaiietiesof
wheat.
Many interesting facta were developed
in the comparison of these wheats.
In point of quality, the best wheats of
all the several countries there exhibited
were equal or so nearly equal in quality,
that it was impossible to discriminate
strongly between them. The wheat
from Australia, Tort Adelaide in New
Holland, was admitted to have a minute
shade of pnferenco over all. While
the acreable production varied greatly,
it seemed to he ascertained as neatly as
this could be dot e, that the best laud
under the best cultivation iu each conn
try produced approximately lite same
yieid per acre. The ascertained yield
per acre of all was greatest from a farm in
New York ; it being 02 bushels and a
fraction. A similar uniformity exhibited
in the weight per bushel, among the
best wheats, tea irdless of the rendnn
, - o - - D
where they were grown.
The general facl or I rut h which
seeir.ed to stand forth was that every
country fitted for the permanent habitation
of white men will produce wheat,
I the great breadstuff of the human fatn>
ily. liut it would be a grave error to
conclude thence that all of the several
varieties of this cereal are equally adapt
ed to and would succeed equally well in
different climates and under other different
physical conditions. To discover
which kind of wheal is suited to any
given district, as to our own for exam
pie, is the work of trial and experience.
[flout ton (Texas) Telegraph.
? - ?
Th* Queen of Spain, on Good Friday
after having attended divine service in
the royal chapel, war-hed and kissed the
feet of twelvo poor old men, and the
King did the satne for as many more.
All of tbem were supplied with new
clothes, and afterwards conducted to
tables on which a plentiful repast was
SDread out for their use. after which
they were, it is presumed, told to make
themselves scarce. This farce has been
gone through with annually for ccntui
i >? . i
Np.OROKS OpPOSB FlCMALK ^eviritAOK
in Kansas.?The Republican State
, Central Committee met at Topeka for
the purpose of arranging for the canva*a
of the State on the question of impartial
suffrage. Several negroes par*
licipated, and distinguished themselves
by bitterly opposing female suffrage.
Bcllt Wombn.?Lizz'e Cady Stan*
ton and Sue Anthony, telegraph to
Kansas State Convention : *' Rise above
mere party; strike white male from
your constitution ; make Kansas a gen
uine republic. Lead the nation end
the world.'*
^ . 1
tMClH
Kelly In CharlotteI
Judge Kelly spoke in Charlotte on
Friday evening. The Times, In noticing
hi* speech, saye i
He was kind and conciliatory In hie
intercourse with the people, and his
speech was wnescepxionable. We ao
count Tor this M tooiof of the dove "
from the fact tb?U the Mobile riot had
Riled the eoatraet with his Northern
friends and hie best policy here was to
show the beauties of Republicanism in
another phase. A certain old fellow is
_l ft .J -
iryrmculcu id owdhi ? hi W IMIimiag
the appearance of an angel, when U wan
necessary lo do to, to carry an otycet.
Had the" plain Devil " appeared lo Eve
without a di?got*e, oouhi be have deceived
the mother of mankind t Time
we lake it to Uh with Kelly & Co. lie
is violent and denunciatory, or oily,
when it suit* the ptirpoaea of hia party
to be eo. This particular rpeech in iteelf
was very good?of course it was.
The " painful " waa never uttered. Hia
contrast between the different systems
of labor and the result was good enough
from a Northern stand-point, and if to
make money, as some people think, is
the sole duty of roan, very practical and
sound. We are glad that the concourse
who heard hiin conducted themselves in
a quiet and orderly manner, and for in
telligence and good behavior, must have
impressed the speaker very favorably.
For the good of the country, for the sake
of the starving families, for the interest
of the farmer, for the hope of the merchant,
and for thw safety of all, we trust
this is (he last itinerant who will ad
dress the citizens between this and the
harvesting of the crops.
An Unfortunatr Affair.? We regret
to state that a very melancholy
and unfortunate nffair occurred in the
neighborhood of Clinton, at the resi
dence of the deceased, on last Saturday
evening, which resulted in the death of
Elias Compton. It seems that some
family difficulty had occurred, creating
a rencounter between the deceased and
his wife's brother, John M.Thompson,
a youth, who was livincr with them, in
which the deceased w?i stabbed several ]
limes with a pocket knife by liis brother
in-law, from the*effects of which he
died on Sunday evening. The affair is
deeplv regretted on all sides. Young
Thompson gave himself up to the Slier
iff". A motion was made before Judge
Davis, on Tuesday last, for bail, and
was granted, on a bond of $10 000.?
Tho deceased leaves a widow and sev*
eia! small children.
[ZsaHrcntvillc Herald.
Tiik Goiikilla.? As "many persons
have expressed doubts as to the exi?t>.
cnce of this strange animal, as de?ciil>ed
liV M. Uhailht, it may be of interest to
state that there now lives or. the plantation
of the II<>n. Charles Macbeth, in
St. John's Berkley, a venerable man, a
native of Aliica, who was an adult ajd
the joyous husband of three wives previous
to hi* removal so this country.?
Ilis recollections of his native land me
very distinct, and among other thing*
he describes the Gorilla very correctly,
and in perfect acco-d with M. Cliaillu's
account??o that if the latter gentleman
should lose bis specimens of the genus,
and still encounter non-believers in bis
reports of the name, he need not despair,
for he can find a competent and credi*
ble witness in this part of the Second
Military District.? Charleston Courier.
Washinoton, May 24.
The Pre-ident and Messrs. Stanton
and Stansberry bad a pioloncred inter
view litis morning.
Tito Custom receipts from tlio 12ih
to the 18th are nearly 3000,000. The
Internal Kevenue receipts to dnv nre
522,000.
The appointment of an Assistant
Treasurer at New Oileans still hangs
fire. The wishes of high officials clash
regarding it
It is supposed that the Judiciary
Committee will adjourn on the 1st proximo.
The impeachment proceedings
are regarded as growing day by day
more feeble. A July session is consid
ered utteily improbable.
Quartermaster-General Meigs has six
months leave of absence on account of
ill health.
The official report of the Agricultural
Bureau for April says that the pros
pects for an unusually heavy crop of
wheat continues favorable.
The President leaves on the 1st, to
he in Haleigh on the 4th June.
Judge Chase has granted a'writ of
Error in the United States vs. Joseph
Bruin, whoso property was confiscated
by Judge Undorwood, and sold during
the war. The writ was grounded first
because the District Court condemned
and sold the absolute estate of the petitioner
in and to the property, which
judgment was beyond the power of the
Uuurl to pronounce. Second. The con
demualion of (he properly we* for treaeon,
of which the party could not he adjudged
guilty, except upon the finding of
a jury. Third. The proceedings were in
Admiralty when they ah'ouhl have been
upon the Common Law *ide of the
Court by information, and not by Libel.
Oen. Fullerton was before ihn Judiciary
Commtttoa to-day regarding the
restoration of lands in Loumna*.
Mr. Geo. Bright Washington, agent
of the Associated Press, was before the
committee, and qnestioned regarding
the doing* and sayings of the President
during bis Western tcur last summer.
Tiiasb Soothernera who jump to the eoa
elusion thai "Northern pnblie sentiment is
overwhelmingly in favor of Negro Suffrage,'*
are wofnlly mistaken. A majority of the
Northern States ean be earrte?f against that
issue. Mark if!
FORHnmi
Mgwf
D??len is Or oeeries alHVIHH
rSXIVLilUA WTKKKT,
aS&B THl DIVOT. a
Mtf 14 4? if
1!* loiiS!
CHEAP FOR CASH!
AT T. B. ROBERTS' BRICK STORK
III AVE on Hand, and shall l>? race! ving
???ry w?'k additions to my st-ck, the
following GOODS, to wit.:
Ladiaa*. Gentlemen's. Aliases', Boys' and
Children's SHOES
Shoe LAOETS, linen and cotton
Note and Letter PAPER, fine
Fine White ENVELOPES
COFPKK, SUGAR, TEA, SODA
PEPPER, 8PICE, GINGER
COPPERAS, ErSAM SALTS
TOBACCO, CORN. BACON
Venison HAMS, Ees. Coffee
Fine CIGARS,
BUTTONS, HOOKS and EYES. Hair PINS
Seed Irish POTATOES, APPLES
COTTON YARN.
In a few days I shall be receiving addi
tlona to my prrsent Stock. Persona wishing
any of the above articles, will do well
to eall and exnmlns before buying, for bnr>
gain* cnn be bought at this place.
or I will barter for Corn, Beeon, Butter,
Eggs, Lard, Chickens, Ac.
R. L. BURN.
March "7th, 1861." 41-tf
HotioeIS
hereby given that in future no persons,
I black or white, will be permitted to be
interred in the grave yard near Greenville
Village, known as the negro burying
ground, now owned by myself, and others,
by whom I am authorised to set.
All persons are notified that in future
they will not be allowed, under the penalty
of thelaw, to enter upon, and go through,
my premises, lying on Reedy River and
Richland Creek, n?ar Greenxille Village,
f _ At I t -
tor tuning, minting, or any other purpose.
I have understood that person# here
been purchasing fire wood from certain negroes
and hauling It from lands under my
charge. This is to notify them and all other#,
that I have no negro agents for felling
wood, and that in future if any persons
shall puichase and haul wood from said |
land, 1 will hold them responsible as trespass*
rs, unless they purchase the same from
me.
For any violation of the foregoing notiee,
I shall enforce the luw.
WM. C1I0ICR.
Feb. 14 88 tf
I)R. ANDERSON
RESPECTFULLY informs
the citiaens of OreenvitU **J
^-mXLLT vicinity, thnt aineo tho tiro he
has opened his OFFICE next door to his residence.
just in the rear of Messrs. David A
Stradley, whero he ia prepared to practice
DENTAL SURGERY
Iin both its branches, operative and mechanical.
for the CASJf ouly. I
Fob 14 38 tf
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA.
ORKBKVtt.bK DISTRICT.
nssr sscQwsiP'sr.
Bill for Sal* of T.oml to pay D'bd'C ?
Jamk* P Mooar., Administrator vs Aramixta
T. Wkstfield, el al.
riiHE following paragraph from the Dacretal
Order ol Chancellor Johnson i?
tho above case is published for the informs
lion of those interested.
It ia fnrther ordered that the Commissioner
ot ill's Conn, do forth with publish a
rule, requiring all the creditors of the said
DAVID O. WE3TFIELD deceased, to come
In within nine months from the publication
of said rule and establish by proper proof,
rn? nature and amonnt of their claims
{ against said deceased.
J. !\ MOORE, C. ft 0. D.
Commissioners Olfice, Sept. 24. 1886.
Sep 27 17 ' 9m
Notes and Accounts of Brooks.
Bcrnggm & Gibson, Assigned to Jam.
8- Brooks
TIIaVE inst received for Collection
these NOTES end ACCOUNTS, end req'lert
ell persons indebted to the Firm, to
call, without d(fl?y, to mske settlements
and payment*. O. P. TOWNK8.
Attorney at Low.
March dh, 1867. 41-tf
Guardians. Trustees and Receivers,
ARE REQUIRED to make their Returns
to this Office by the firU day of Juno
next. All failing to make their return by
that time, will be reported to the Court,
JA8. P. MOORE, C. EL O. D.
Commissioner's Office, January 28, 1867.
Jan 24 85 tf
Dissolution.
The riRM of barksdale, perry
A Co.. is dissolved. Partiea to whom
the same is Indebted, will present their
Claims at tha Factory, or to me at Greenville,
S.0 W- M. THOMAS.
January 7, 1867.
Jan 24 85 tf
WM. P. PRICE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
DAHL0NE8A, GA.,
WILT. pr?etl?* in tbe Countlea of Lamp
kin. Dawaon, Gilmer, Fannin, Union,
Towns, TV hi to and Hall.
Jan 10 33 tf
Sullivan, Stokes A Stokes.
GREENVILLE, S. O.
WILT, pi act ice in the Court* of law
and Equity. Office on the Public
Square.
All bnstneee Intmeted to their cere will
receive prompt attention.
Cdarlro P. fcuu.iv a*. John W. Stoke*
Edward P. Stoke*.
July 10 17 If
Notice.
WE reepectfully invite all pereoae owing
u*, to come forward end pay up. A
word to the wlee le euffioient to eavo eoste
We ean be foand at the eld Leilmer Hotel.
Come and eettle boob, or job will hava coat*
t0P*y" A. J. VAWPEROETPT A CO.
i Jan 3 32 tf '
whieh!wJ9HH^HHH
the Uu? by
And being mindful orWnHHHjfl
m the mdb? article*
Charleston.
8CHOOPI
I respectfully Invito Ui? attention of Td
m??t of SCHOOL BOOKS, by the beat and 1
will be found all of the TEXT BOOKS, Kill
OAL wanted in any School or College.
Misom
I have a well-selected Stock af MISCBI
be found n variety of Saered MUSIC, for th<
ELS, Standard WORKS, HISTORIES, ChlU
? T ATT K
t t... naava ?-? a -
Letter; from Billet Doux to broad Eqn
Ink*, Blotter*, Ruler*. Playing Card*, and e
the*# article* In largo quantities for eaab, an
the low#*I price*.
BLANK BOOKS OF ALL KIND
wA N <0 'JT As
I h?T, boullful lnt of fanct art:
Ho*, Work Box#*, Draft-board*, and Chjaa-iu
and Photograph Album*.
PERIOD
I am rolling the bc*t Weekly and Monti
advance of the mail*.
i*m. u m
I have just opened a lot of New 80N(
be *old at pmblithtru prices.
O R D E
I will ORDER any BOOKS or Piece
very small advance on original coat.
CIRCUIATIN
After Court week, I will arrange to let
email cnet, and take them back uninjured,
at email expense, to read all the late Novel
them would coat quite a turn.
Come to the BOOK STORE and look, at
Greenville, 8. 0., March 81,1M7.
MERSfli HOTEL
PASSENGERS H
ARRIVING IN COLUMBIA ON THE
DIFFERENT RAILROADS
j WILL FIND
Omnibuses, Carriages
AXD
Damage Wagom.
Iu Rcndlucti to Carry them to
and from hi*
FREE OF CHARGE.
Responsible persons in attendant* to recti
ve Checks and Baggage.
T. 8. NICKERftON,
PlOmiBTOB.
Ang 23 12 tf
MILLS HOUSE.
Corner of Meeting and Queen Street*.
CHARLESTON, 8. C.
THIS well known FIR8T
|i?K!3L CLASS 110TEL has Jul
Sk3SXt been thoroughly repaired, refitted
and re-famished, and la now ready for
the accommodation of the travelling public,
whose patronage la reaped fully solicited.
Merchants vlaiting the city, are reapoctfully
invited. Every accommodation will be offered
thena.
Coaches always in readiness to convey passengers
to and from the Hotel.
The Proprietor promises to do all in his power
tor the eoinfort of his guests.
JOSEPH PURCELL, Proprietor.
Feh 11 S9
TO THE pum.in
The Pavilion Hotel,
CHARLESTON, S. 0.,
. 80 LONG and tbW conducted
by the late H. L.
MfSW^ BUTTRRFIELP, will still
HtxSSiHBE be kept open for the aeeommodation
ol the traveling public. And Ite
former frleada and patrons will find the
neual accommodations and attentions be
stowed on them as formerly, and the pnblie
favors, already so well established as THE
HOTEL of the TRAVELING MERCHANTS
of the 8onth, will, by earnest efforts, be
faitfifally preserved.
Oct US 81 tf
frwrDAvis;
wmu iiiircD
If fit Wll mftRKn,
Ctt WOULD Respectfully inform
r h? people of Or?MtUI?
(MMjiid the surrounding country,
ML KDMHCBWnSWB
From hit OI.D STAND In the Good.
Utt Hmim, to I more CONVENIENT
one, three doors North of the Man
ion Ilonee, next door to Plekle A Poor, on i
Main Street, where he ie prepared to do
II work In hit line of bneieeM, at abort nolice,
in a workman like manner, and on
reasonable term a.
Aug *0 It tf
dbQA A MONTH!?AGENTS wanted lot
mJ" atx entirely new articles, jnet ant
Addreee O. T. GARY,
City Building, Biddoford, Mr. <
May 13 tt ly
'NCR T?^*
irletT, from mbiibm FdcIwW tCTsW^^MBB
ity Bill. Alao, Boy el opes, Pont,
legant new stylo Visiting Card a. I boy
d are prepared to supply all. demands at
' ? ? , .,.; .-.. ;*'.
8. STYLES AED UUALITXIS.
A ??? *9 /* 99 ^
ICLR3 in my line, Writing Desks, Portfo.
on. Aliw, some bwiwt Pleture Praams
I C A L 3 .
ily Pat iodleals, and always k?n them ta
at mzzm
33, and Instrumental PIECES, which will .
RB.
a of MUSIC wanted, and will eharge *
G LIBRARY.
my customer* have Books to read,-for *
By thia means persons will be enabled,
a, and other pablieatiooe, whilst to bay
id examine my 8to*k and prieea
A. BACON. Agcat.
4Ma
General Superintendent's Oftee,
jteaaapBOTClZl
CHARLOTTK A S. C. RAILROAD, 1
Columbia, s. C., March IS, 1807. t
THE SCHEDULE ol the PASSENGER
TRAINS over thia Road U aa follow*
:
Leave Columbia at Lit a. m.
Arrive at Charletta at 9.SO a. m.
Leave Charlotte at ft. 10 A m.
Arrive at Columbia at ll.M a. hi.
Close connections era made at Columbia
and Charlotte with the Mail Train* on the
North Carolina and South Carolina Railroads.
THROUGH TICKETS are sold at Colombia
In Richmond, Va? Waenington, D. C.,
Baltimore, Md., Philadelphia, Pa,, and New
York City?giving ehoiee of routes via
orvrmouui or Richmond?and banigt
ehrtkfd. Ticket* are alao told at Cnarlolte
for Oharleaton and AngueU.
An Accommodation Train, for freight
and local pnagt. leave* Columbia Mia
m, on Tueadaya, Thursday* and Saturday*
of eaeh week, and Charlotte oa the aam*
<aj* and hour; arriving at Columbia and
Charlotte at 6 p. m..
a BOUKXIGUT, Sup*rintondent.
Mar 21 43 , it
Schedule over South Carolina B. B
naafci objlbi oumbQZX
GENERAL 8UPT8 OFFICE, ?
Coaaunroa,& C., March 11,1667. J
ON and after the 18th Inst, th* Ikiweli
M A1LTRA1N will ran a* follow*, *?.:
Leave Columbia at 11.40 a. m.( CbVa Una
Arrive Klngsvilie ?t 1.20 p. na, "
Leave Klngsvtlle at 1.86 p. na, " "
Arrive at Augnata at 6.00 p. m., ** **
nanon tIan.
Leave Charleeton, v8.00 a. m.
Arrive at Colnmbia .6.20 pi m.
Leave Columbia, 6.60 a. m.
Arrrive at Charleaton 1 p. a.
H. T. PEAKS, Qeal Sup7!.
Mar 21 48 tf
QEEEHV1LLE ft COLUMBIA B. B.
OKN'L SUPERINTENDTS OFFICE, >
Columbia, Sept. 12, 1666. (
ON And after MONDAY next, 17th teal.,
the Paarenger Train* will ran daily.
^Sundays excepted,) until further netiae,aa
Leave Colombia at 7-16 A m.
Leave Alston at ,0.0ft a. to.
Leave Nawberry at....... .10.66 a. m.
Arrive et Abbeville at 6.1 B p. m.
Arrive et Andereon It AM p. m.
Arrive at Greenville a* MO p tn.
Leave Greenville at 6.00 a. m.
Leave Andereen at 6.60 a. b.
Leave Abbeville at. IM a. K
Leave Newberry aft 1.60 p. m.
Arrive at AWten at. 146 p a.
Arrive at Colombia aft .4 40 p. at.
Sept. 61. 1661 46 ftf
sHAvma ~
an >
HAH1 HUaifiSSKHTG.'
eKNBY OANT the Barber, eoaMaaajHe
BHAV1 the fcee aad B1X8R HA 11 ae
iHy, at bie Otd Sftaad, aeaf Meeere.
Picklr A Pooa'a Shea, wbern be wltl be
pleaeed to aee hie friend* and eaeieeaaaa. Be
nope*, by attention w buetaiee aaO paHftMMae
to all, to reeetve the aatreaagaed the plaee.
March tl 46 ttf
LAW OABD.
GOODLBTT * THOMAS,
Attorneys st Law,
abb
SOLICITORS IN 1QUITY*
HAYS thU day formed a Coportaor^yw
hip la Ui? praot:m of LAW ood
RQUITiob (ho WrB^ra Circuit ~ '
Office in tho old Ooari S??m Build!Of.
h a Ooootvrr, w*. xV^KM,
Dec AO .10 ?