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V nr william iikMiy numeraT. ^ Com*, beauteous Jay! . Never did lover on his bridal night . * 80 chide thine over enirer light K A# I thy long delay 1 " Bring mo my real ! Never can these sweet thorny rosea, ? Whereon my heart reposes, Be into alumb^r ,pre*se<J. A. ** "' v '' Day he my night! . Night hath no star to rivnl with her eyes; ^ Night halh no peace liUe his who lies 1 Upon her bosi-tn white. . rij'i.i , , , . . . She di.l transmute f, Thia piy poor coll iato a paradise, h Gorgeous with blossoming Hps and dewy a eyes, h And all her beonty'a fruit h Nor dull, nor gray d Seems to mine eyes this dim and wintry n morn ; c Ne'er did the roey banners of the dawn w Herald a blighter day. * Coma, beauteons day 1 'V t Jt Come! or in sunn) light or storm eclipsed 1 Bring me the immortal summer of her Hps ; ^ Then lmre thy way! Alligators oil the Ganges. The bank of tho Ganges opposite Monghyr has not tho slightest pretensions to beauty ; its low, flat, swampy shores, intersected villi reedy inlets, ^ are (he haunts of multitudes of alligntors, which in the hot seasons may he . seen sunning themselves by tho side of the huge ant hills erected upon the ? sand banks, appealing above the sot face j of the water. Some of those animals ^ attain a prodigious size ; they are ex ^ ceedingly difficult to kill, in con-equenee of the adamantine armor in which the greater part of their bodies are eased | Even when tho balls penetrate less | guarded points, thev are so tenacious of j life as to cause a great deal of trouble before they can l>e finally despatched. One which had received eight balls, and was supposed to be dead, after liaving been lied to lhe bamboo of a budgerow for a whole day, exhibited in the evening so much strength and fierceness, as to be a dangerous neighbur. Many of these monsters are fif teen feet long, and swim feailessly past the boats, lifting up their terrific heads, and raising their datk bodies from the water as they glide along. Though not so frequently as in former limes, when the ech<>es of the river were less disturbed by the report of fire arms, na tivc* are st 11 the victims of that species of the alligator, which lies in wait for men and animals, venturing too near their haunts. In many that have been killed the silver o'natuenfs that have been worn by women and children, have been found, a convincing proof of the feaiful nature of their prey. An alligator, it is said, will sometimes plunge amidst a group of bathers at a ghaut, and, singling out one of the par ty, dart into the middle of the stream, defying pursuit by the rapidity of its movements against the current, through which it will flv wiih the velocity of an arrow, and having reached deep water. u sinus wun us victim mm uic mass of tite tivcr. Spoilsmen, the younger portion especially, delight in waging war against ihefC giants of the stream, as they lie wallowing in the mud in shallow places, and presenting the de fenceless parts of their bodies to the maiksmen. In the Sunderbune, where the creeks and natural canal of the Ganges wind through the forests, whose margin almost mingles with the stream, alligators are sometimes engaged in deadly encounters with the tiger. A battle of this kind, witnessed by a missionary, is ^esciibed to have been a drawn one, for, although the tiger succeeded in drawing hi> unwieldy adversary into a jnng'.e, after an hour or two the aiiigator was seen to emerge and regain the water, not very materially injured by the cd-flict it had sustained. An Oi.n Fashioned Teachrti ? 44 Patrick, do you know your letters 44 Yls sir, I know them bv sight sur ; but I don't know their nsm<u," 44 Well, that is A.'' 44 How aro yon A ?" 14 You must not sp?*ak in that wav." 41 Tn what way should I rpeak thin, sur V 44 Say what I any." 44 Yi* Mir." 44 This is 15." 44 Sure, an' is that 13 ? I thought it an ox-yoke." 41 What was the last letter I showed you ?" 44 I can't remember, sur." 44 What bird is it that lays honey and 44 I- it a wn?r>, snr !" ' No ; it in a hee." I | " Ho it is, and looks like an ox-voke." | ( " What letter is that on the third j , P1^*' i f n't know, stir." . *' \\ hat do I do when I look at von ? ( ? | .-ii' uldr.'t like to mv sur." ( ? | went von to tell me " I n?D afraid you will lick mo. *ur." "Tell roe what I do when I look at you." i M Well, aor, you eqtiinl." " Can't you say C without the squint!" " Vis sur." " Say it then." " (3 without the squint." " What is the umiiio of the nrxt letter ?" " I don't know fur ; I r.eter raw it l>? fore." " Well, it ia P for dunce, just like yourself, Ray that " " D for dunce, just like yourself." "Take your ?e$t, arid the spelling dftsa will come up and spell." TUB SI Female Affection. 1 iv omnn is not half so selfish a ore? ire as men. When man is in loae. the biect of Itis passion is himself. When omen is ens moored of man, she for ets herself, the world, and all ii con tins, and wishes to exist only for the l>j*ct of her affection. How few men. lake any violent sacrifice to sentiment, low many women does every man now, who have sacrificed fortunes and ononrs to noble, pure and dieinteree pd motives 1 A man mounts a breach ; ie braves danger, and obta:ns a victory, 'his is glorious and great. ITe has erved his country, he has acquired sine, preferment, riches. Whenever e appears, respect awaits him, admir tion attends him, crowds press to meet iro, and theatres receive him with >ursts of applabse. His glory does not ie with him. History preserves his nemory from oblivion. That thought beers his dying hour?and liis last rords. pronounced with feeble pleasure, ,re I thai I not die. A woman sends her husl and lo war ; he livisbut in that husband. Her oul goes wi'.h him. She trembles for he safety of the land. Every billow hat swells she thinks it to be his tomb; very ball that flic, she imagines is di ected against liitn. A brilliant capital ppears to her a dreary desert; her unis erse was a man. and that man her teror tells her, is in danger. Her days re days of sorrow ; her nights are sleep f?ss. She tils immovable her morning, a all the dignity and composure of ;tiof, like Agrippa in hi chair; and vhen at night she seeks repose, repo?e las fled her couch ; the silent tear Meals lewn her cheek, and wets her pillow ; t if. br chanrp, exhausted naluro finds n horn's slumber, her distempered soul ees in that bleep a bleeding lover, or lis mangled corpse. Time passes, and ier oiii-f i'lcros-ics till worn out nt englh by loo much tenderness, she fall* i victim of too exqui-i'c sensibility, and inks with sorrow to the grave ! No. add, unfeeling reader ! these are not ihe >ictuies of my own creation. They are leither changed nor embelli-hed, bill aithfully copied from nature. Indian Character.? Mr. Schoonjoveu, an old man, eighty years of age, vho not long since lived in the neighlothood of Lake Giorge, related (lie allowing remarkable instance of the rnelly > nd generosity of the Indian*, 0 Mr- II?, a friend of L)r. Si'.lirnan.? during the last French war in America, ie, with six or seven more Americans, vas taken piisoner by a detachmen* of Indian*, while on an excursion througli he wilderness between Fort William Henry and Lake George, and Sandy Hill on Hudson River, where thee is iow a Hourishing villsge. They con lucted tbeni to a spot which now fo'ms in open plac? in the village, ami made hem sit down in a row on the trunk of 1 tree. The Indians then began with lerfeci indifference, to split the sculls >f the victims successively with their omahatvks; while the survivors were rompelled to witness tho dreadful fate >f their ennpanions, and await their iwn with a terror not to bo conceived, dr. Schoonhoven was the last but one in the opposite etui of the tree where he ma-s.icre had begun, bis turn was dready come, the murderous axe *va? randished over bis bead and ready to all on him, when the chief made a sig ...I ...... I . ? fl.. ir%i u? |mu mi ?rn?i ii? iiig ikiiiuci. v^ii his lie aoroached Mr. Scoonhoven, i?n<l aid wish composure : " I >?? jou not re nember how (at r time which he inertioneil) while your young people were lancing, some poor Indian* cnm? up tnd wished to join in the dance; but! four young said, " No ; Indiana shall j <ot dance wiih us but you (for tbis nnu it seems recognized hia features i list at the critical moment) said : the Indians shall dance.' I will now how you that Indians can remember a 'tvor." This accidental reccol loci ion nved the life of Schoonliovcu and his mrviving companion. U.uuc.u.s Schisms.?Tboro Is a very tin . virtual article in the Chronicle of this morning, which is utmost siifn<ient to I prove ? most extensivo and buna Jlrlr iptit off from the l'.udicat party of men ally able to crush it to atoms. Tho rcsponlihlo editor, whoso expressions arc always duuito-leadcd, formally reads out of the party Senators Fcsaondcn, Trumbull, Oriincs, llonlerson, Ross, Fowler and Van lVink?o as emdiatically as Greeley kicks out Thad. Stevens. I Forney charges tho failuro of tho rcconstmeion scheme directly to these men, and than >rocccd?: 44 That Andrew Johnson held out lopes to thnso soven mou that he wonhl node* lira Mir vjvrui oii IS lllV|miTCU UJ KIO IftCl lllUb I learly all of thorn havo beerv known as recoivng favors nt his ban<l.s since they voted V? tecp him in office, as Indeed most of thorn had previously put themselves in his po^er. His hostility to the laws an 1 his encouragement of { the traitors in the South hare been more fropicnt than before, thus e-tablishlng the fact Ibat they know that his scheme to overthrow j I be government would not be abandoned, even |n tlic taco of their deplorable concessions to the arguments of bis generously rewarded counsel. Facts about Colons.?There are many little arts which may he user! about colored clothes when wavhing them, which tend to n look of newness as long a* they are wotn. 'I hose are some of them : A spoonful of o* gall to a gallon of water will set the colors of almost any goods soaked in it pie viotis to washing A tea cup of lye in a pail of water will improve the color of Mack good*. Nankin should lie in lye before being washed ; it set* the color. A strong clean tea of common hay will preset *e the color of French linens. Vinegar in the rinaing water, f.>r pink or green calicoes, will brighten them. Soda answers the same end for both purple and blues 9 0 T 8 8 B H Hie Chamois. This animal, which belongs to the fin'elope tribe, chiefly inhabits the Alps and 1 Kyrenees. and are found in flocks of ' from four to eighty, end ev?n a hundred. It is about the site of the domestic goal, of n du?ky, yellow brown color, with the cheeks, chin, throat and belly, of n yellowiah while. The horns sre black, slender, uptight, hooked backward at their tips, and nbout eight inches in height, and at the bsseof each there is a tolerable large orifice in the the skin, of which the use is unknown. Like all.the antelope rnbe, the Chamois Iias sparkling and animated ejes. It feeds only on the finest herbage, and its flesh is of a delicate Uavor. When alarmed, the Chamois hisses with sach force that the rocks and forests re eobo, the note being very sharp at first, and becoming deeper towards 1 the close. Having paused a moment, the animal looks around, and perceiving his apprehensions to l>e well founded,' he agrin hisses with increased viohnce.; at the same time striking the ground with his fore feet, bounding from r<>< k to rock, and evincing the utmo?t agitation, till the alarm is spread to a vory considerable distance, and the whole flock provide for their safety by a precipitate flight. The hissing of the tuale is much louder than that of the female ; it is pet formed through the nose; end is, strictly speaking, no other than a very strong breath dtiven violently through a small aperture. Ileal is so extremely disagreeable to these animals that they are never seen during summer, except in the excavations of the rocks, amidst fragments of unmcltcd ice, or under the shade of hanging precipice*, which face tbe north, and effectually keep off the rays of the sun. They drink but sparingly, and ch;w thn cud in the intervals of feeding. Their agility is wonderful, as they will throw themselves down, across a rook, which is nearly pet pen dicular. and twentv or thirty feet in height, without a single prop to supper* their foot. Their motion has, indeed, rather the appearance of flying than ul leaping. The Chamois hunters of ihe Alps are so fond of the occupation that it has almost become a mania, ntrd they will brave every danger in pursuit of this animal. Marriage. It is of en proclaimed by the advocate* fni celibacy, that there are but few instances of liannv unions; and we must. however unwilling we in>ty he, acknowledge the truth of lit is assertion. Hut it i- undeniable, thai when the marriage stale is entered into with congenial dis? positions and proper motives, wi'hoiil any sordid views or *elfi?h ends, it is productive of more perfect happiness, than any other situation in which human beings may he placed. If, on the other hand, people will attach themselves together for life, without due consideration, led on only by the humor of the moment, and pass their days n gardless of each o'heis desires, and only seeking for the gratification of their own peculiar whims and caprices-? nttt lually unbending and un\ hiding to the other?it would be the very height of madness, to suppose that such a connexion should be productive of aught el?e but continual dispute, war, and misery. Reciprocal, conjugal love, is the souiee of the purest happiness that earth affoid-?. It is a perpetual foun tain, from whence flow continual streams of joy to gladden the heart of the recipient?to give to hitn comfort in all hours of > ffiigtion?to revive his drooping spirits, anil inspire him with now life, as (all the penile dew# of heaven upon the faded (loweta. and re \ives them to their pristine fragrance and beauty. It i? the consummation of affection ? the h*ppy minglement of two fond heart a in one. Their mutual wishes tend towards the happiness of the other, and they drink from the same cup, v bother its contents are the sweet waters ?>f gladness or the gall of bitterness. The sorrows that rend one heart reach the other, and the throh of i ?y 'hat vibrates in one breast thrills in , the othpr. With them there is no re| serve. All their actions are guided bv | mutual sinceiitv, and they therefore have never to complain of rWeit. Such a connexion is, and ever will he, proj ductive of the purest emotions of pleasure, that the human heart is susceptible of. and will raise the virtuous and con tented to a height of happiness, that those who plod on in the dreary, solitary path of celibacy, can never reach. M* j* CAnrr.T-BACGKRS.?The only man of the j " reconstructed representatives" In either llonse who upon arriving st the metropolis had, as it wore, a second rhirt, is a Mr. Whit ' icinoni, who nana irom Mossachuaeue, via South Carolina, and who, says the Boston Courier, raised the wind upon arriving In Charleston a year ago in the following very Ingenious manner: " lleeonvinoed the negro** (hat thcfr marriage* under the old ayatem were invalid, and that they mint he aplieed anew hy biinrelf. In some c.iscs couples of darkies caino to be re-uarriod who had grand, children with them. Wbittenmre, of course, charged a remunerative fee for his services, aa<l hence was enabled to tako bis a*at in respectable apparel as soon as he arrived at the seat of government." Another of these gentry, who assumes to represent some district in i North Carolina, was cooped up so long in a hotel garrot hero on this account that his family advertised him far and near, and even hinted that be bad been spirited away by the " Ku Kiug-Klen." You have already heard of the disgraceful conduct of Abott in the Senate In respeet to bis salary. The Radicals themselves literally compelled him to with draw hie vote to swell hit own aeconnt. To such a depth of degradation bars the Radicals reduced the legislative branch of the grove rnI tor at.? Our, fluff. f?<?t#f#?, 2TfA tiff. E B T i B I A Confession of WookBMS. ?' I Hi* triumph ye-terday announced M that the Southern rnernoere of Congre?a hare dreid*d, In conference, (hut it would bo beat for I ho Presidential o]?otnra to be ohoeen by the reopeotiee State licgielaturee, in the aame manner that South Carolina ha* a'way* chooen her'e." Tliia Idea ta evidently the auggeatlon of the Radical party In Congreea. It la the moot conelnsive evidence we hnra yet aeon ut the weaknese of the Republican cou?e at the South. It ia a confection that their ctiifc in |{one, ii funminvi i<? ? tair iow pi '.lie penile. And thin, notwithstanding *11 tht'r Inwr of dbfrsscliiMnitnt sod exclusion. The colored people have found them out. Tliey her* discovered thet tbe "car. pet hsgger " is not their real friend. He I* after the offices, and therefore wnnls their votes. This Is all the nse he has for them. They neither earn their livelihood from him, nor can they depend upon him, except ao far as they become his political slaves. The mighty reaction of an outraged public sentiment has begun. Justice and Rlgl I are at last beginning to assert their prop?r sway. The Republican party arraigned at the bar of public opinion trembles, and lit a Belshnzzar, smiles lis knees in very fear at ita coming doom. This it seems to avert, by demanding tbnt the election of PreeidenVial electors be taken from the people. The Kepuhlieana heretofore have contended that the Government of Bouth Carolina was not Republican, because her Presidential electors were elected by the Legislnture. This suited their purposes th*-n. But the Coastilulion of South Carolina has been changed. The elections under it have been taken from I lis Legislature and conferred upon the peop'e. But the people have not proved as facile as desired And now they change their cry and would commit these back to their Radical Legi* < latere. This suits tlieif purposes now. But this Is futilo. It cannot prevail ? The Constitution of the Stata, aa ratified hy Congress, givoa the election to tha people. And this ends tbe matter. The Radiealahave sown the wind. They are about to reap the whirlwind. [Charletton Courier. July SOIk. BAJixarcT Act.?Mr. Frolinghuysen called up House bill amending the act to establish a uniform system of bankruptcy throughout the Uni'ed States, approved March 2, 1867: Tie it enacted <fco., That the provisions of tho second cause of the thirty-third section of said act shall not apply to the cases of prorrcdiugsjin bankruptcy commenced prior to the first day of January, 1869, and the time during which the operation of tho provisions of said clause is postponed shall he extended until said first day of January, 1869. And said clause is hereby so amended as to read as follows: lu all proceedings in bankruptcy riiinmnnAM ttfifr thn firnt ilnv of .Turiiinrv. no discharge shall bo (fronted too debtor whoso unIi shall not lie equal to llfly per centum of the claim* proved against bis ?etste upon which be shall bo liable as the principal debtor, unless the assent in writing of a majority in number and vuluo of his creditors to whom be shall hnvo become liable as principal debtor, sud who shall have proved their claim, be filed in the case at or before the time of tba bearing of the application for discharge. Sec. 3. Anil In it furl fur rnnetatl, That Said aet be further amended as follows : The phrase presented or defended" in the fourteenth section of said act, shall read " prosecuted or defendedthe phrase " non resident debtors,'' iu line five, section twenty-two, of the aet as printed in tho Statutes at Large, shall read " nen-reeident creditors t" that tho word "or," in the nest to the last line of tho thirty-ninth section of tbe act, shall road " and that tho phraso "section thirteen," in the forly-second portion of said aet shall read " section eleven and tbe phrase "or spends any part tber??>f its gaming," in the forty-fourth section of said not, shall read "or shall spend any part thereof in gaming and that the words " with the senior register, or " and tho phrase " to be delivered to tbe register," in I be forty-seventh section of said act, he stricken out. 8rc. 3. A ml ha it further t nor led, That registers in bankruptcy shall bure power to administer natns in alt eases, und in relation to all matters in which oaths may ho administered by commissioners of the circuit courts of tho United States, and snoh commissioners may take proof of debts in bankruptcy in all cases, subject to the revision of such proofs by the register and by tbe roart, according to the | provisions of said act. The bill goes to tbo President. [Ss??/e I'rnceediiiy, Saturday. Mybtmiocs Dta.irraanaxck ?About two weeks ago, n notorious negro girl named Mnry disappeared from this community. Several days elapsed before the fact became known to tbo wbito people generally, and then there were tbe wildest rumors afloat regarding her fate, such as licr last appeals for mercy being I heard by other negroes In tho direction of | Kocky River, Ac. Tbe greater part of last woek was spent by parties dragging the river I lor ner nony ; cart-oil dottier wore identified, I mid any amount.of the veriest nonsense relied upon by many of tbo negroes. In the mesn[ titno, the missing girl hud been (Uncovered at j U'hIIihIU, and although reliable persona have asserted positively that they knew and recognised her at that place, tnany negroes doubted the testimony, and on Saturday night last, one of their number was sent there to ascertain the correctness of the report, if possible. He came back on Monday morning, and reported that bo had actually teen and converted with her; that she refused to come back here, and that there was no doubt about her actual existence on ferns ftrmn. Notwithstanding tills positive statement from their chosen representative, his story was disbelieved, and we have heard it asserted by nogroes that he wss bribed to make such a report.? This incredulity on their part is unaccountable, and aven beyond comprehension. The affair ha* ere a ted much excitement hi this community, and there are reasons to halievo that designing persons, either white or black, have kept alivs the flame of discord and dls /infraction among the negroes, to rait tbelr own mischievous purposes. IAndtrtan lulclliqtnccr* 29th ulk ? ? Rr.-Onn axttattn* or Miutart Disrnicrs iv the Boer ft.?Secretary Sehofield, liy direotion of the Prefidont, will shortly treue an orrtcr re-orgauising rtio ftve Military Districts in the Southern States; relieving a number oi I officers now on duty in those Districts. Ciril government* bare been re-established in allnf those State* except Virginia, Mississippi and Texas, and tbo affairs turned orer to the ciril , authorities by the military commanders ; h?ne? the military will he withdrawn from all except the throe States ahore named, tleneral Reynolds is in commiind of Texas, tleneral Gillain, of Mississippi, and General Stoneroao, o! Virginia, Oeneral Buchanan, in the Fifth District, General Canby, of the Second, and General Meado, of the Third, will be relieved ami ordered to duty elsewbore. Home changci will also be made in the Freed man's Bureau officers in those States. A moMiXBKT New York lawyer, ir conversation with a fric ni the othei d?y. remarked that thme was actually danger of bis literally starving todealh - Why, ia not voor credit good at the butcher's I" asked his friend. Ii'a nnl that," was the reply; "the fact io, I have no appetite for breakfast, I nevei have time to go to dinner, and when 1 get home to tea, I am generally toe i.ruek to eat." t? . A.-,., j/a*. I" 'ISSIo A Cl E N TS FOR WEED'S SEWING MACHINE 1 4 | A THE host and most simple Machine now in nir, and it un? lorlled hy an* e*er 1 printed to the public, having all the I lateet improvernsdt* ; usee the straight Neo- ! die, make* ihr Tight Lock Stitch, which is | the only reliable one, ant tliowe the same ' on both sides. It la simple, eatily worked and kept in order; it wlil Stitch, Hem, ? Fell, Bit-d, Cord, Braid, Ruffle, Tuck, Quilt, | Hem-StHeb, Gather and Sew, at the tame i time, performing a greater variety of Wotk than any other Maohine, oo the lightest to the heaviest fabric*. It received a medal at the recent Paris Exposition. W? warrant them to giro satisfaction } if not, return them. Please eall and examine them. We also keep constantly on band, a superior assortment of (fentfenteo'e FURNISHING GOODS and TRIMMINGS, from the cheapest to the best qualities, and low for each.? We will CUT and MAKE rn tba best and latest improved styles, all Garments for Gentlemen and Gents' Wear, Ladies' Cloaks and Sacks, Ac. All Work warranted. PICKLE & POORE. Greenville, 8. 0. Jan. 15, J JOS. Jan 1ft 84 tf JEM II limits (WMIY, OF HARTFORD, CONST. ORGANIZED 180O. E. A. DULKLET. Pret'l.. T. O. EIDERS, Sec'y. DIVIDENDS for tho last five yenrs, 50 per cent, j Receipt* now over $500,000 per month. No. of Policies imed in 1867 Amount in*ur?<l on tame, $14,804,873.00 Aitota Jan. 1, 1807 - 4,401.833.80 Receipts (or year ending Jan. '60, 5,129,447.34 $0,531,381.20 Paul claim* hy death, $513,881.50 All other expentes, 1,476,787.35$1,992,608.85 $7,538,612.35 POLICIES issued on erery plan used by all the old and responsible Companies. J&T- ilranrh Office, 202 Broad Street, AUUU8TA. OA. CHA9. W. HARBIS. Manager. OOWEfl A WORTH INOTON, Agent*, Orvenvitle District, South Carolina. May 13 51 6ra MAHBU WORK! IflAKDLK WORK ! ! Tsy ? & ss? n! i rT,IIE ?ub?eriber ha* on hand, and will JL continue to receive, a good assortment of TOMB STONES, of all eixe* and qualities. Those in need of any thing in that line, will do well to eall at the Poet Office before |>iirrttMiii| elaewhcre. fly Country produce taken in exchange for work. JAMES M. ALLEN. Greenville C. II., Nov 6. 1867. 24-tf w. k. iailkt. 0. o. willi. EA8LEY & WELLS, Attorney* and Counsellors at Law AND IN EQUITY, GREENVILLE, 8. 0., PR ACTICB in the Court! of tb? State and of tbe United States, and give especial attention to cases in Bankruptcy. June IS S tf LAWCAHD. GOODLETT & THOMAS Attorneys at Law, axe SOLICITORS IN EQUITY, HAVE this Hay formed a Copartner ship in the practice of LAW and EQUITY on the Wentern Circuit. Office in the old Conrt lIou*e Building, s. p. Oonat-rrr, ws. u thomas. Dec 20 SO tf Law lffotioe?Change of Office. GP. TOWNKS has removed his Law ? Offico to t*"? building north-east corner of the Public Square, in part occupied by Juliws C. 8raitb, Auctioneer, and the Bntor pnae mount umco, up atalra. Jan ft U tf WM. PTPRIOE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. DAHLQNEGA, GA? WILL prwMtt m >Kr C?MtlN of Lamp, kin Dew.on, (lilracr, Fannin, Union. 1 Town., Whit* nod JlalL Jan 10 S3 tf BATES VILLE ; IUVUIIIHK C9MPA1Y HAVlN(Vh#an appointed Agente for thi* Company, w? ere prepared Lo ell 8UIKT1KO* AND TARN ni Factory 1 price*. Dnvhl A llradlcy, 1 Grocer, nod ComiuUaion MercWanfa, Greenville, 8, O. Nov I M If ' Tailoring. THE Suhaerlbar reepeetfnRy Inform* hi* friend*, and the public in general, that hie health 'ting In a mcaanre reatored, will ' reauma baalneaa again. Ife wlU CUT, ' MARK, and REPAIR all Garment* for gentlemen, on reaaonahlo lerma, for mmA or r country priduec. W|i| he found at'ale realI dence, corner Main Street, oppnalte the 1 Oo*eh Factory. GEO. B. DTKR. ' -* Greenville, S. C., April tttb, 1868. Aoril? 94 lot PHILADELPHIA UNIVERSITY OP MEDICINE AND SURGERY". I Medical Department Organi**d 1M8. CW> tered by Special Act of tkc Legislator*, February 26th, 1808. /? orrtcaac: President ?J. 8. FUber, 001 OoHMFM St. Vie*-President.?IUt. W. J. P. iBctthMli i , M>7 Franklin St. Treasurer.?IT. Pain*, M. D., UalUnitf Buildings Corresponding Secretary.?E. Matxgar, Ktq^ 1801 WaJJaaa 81. Secretary.? W. Pain*, M. D., Unireraity Building Solicitor?John O'B/rne, Esq., 814 Walnut Ilmt FOUR SESSIONS OTLBOTURES ANNUALLY. a Tb* flrat Seeaton, commencing October lit,, 3 and eontinning until D*e*mb*r 27th., em bra- ^ co? Auaioroy, PhjraiologT, Materia Medic*, M6 PruliM. nK.i.i.i.. !>,?tU'-l ..J 1\ - itratlvo Aniloi*;, Military and PImIIo Bar* very, P?tbv)*)i;, Dimni of Womoo and Chil- 1 Ireti, DIicmm of the Eye and Eur, Chnioal 'a Modicfoo and Surgery, Medical Technology, Medical Jurisprudence, Writing; Drawing, Uouk-kcuping and Chemistry. 1 The second Session commeuee* on the flrefi Tuesday in January, and eontinuoa until tbw > Srst of Mwrcb. embracing tba aame branches as the first Session. The thin! Sdasion commence* the first Wad-* . ^ nesday in March, and (ottitstr no til tba firs! of July. The fourth Session commences the first of Septenihar, and continues until tbo first of October; there being a vacation during the months of July and August. Tbo third and fourth Sessions, constituting tbo Spring and Fall Suasions, embrace tba ?V<| following Slndtes; Surgical, Microscopic, Pa boiogical, Descriptive, a ad Demonstrative Anatomy; Plastio, Military, and. Operative Surgery; Analytic and Organfo Cbomictry; Pharmacy; Materia Medics, including Practical Botany; Obstetrics, and Diseases of Women and Children; Comparative and Human Physiology; Auscultation and Percussion f V Practical Instructions in fhe VW of the iMievosvapo, Laryngoscope, Stethoscope, Opthalmoaenpe, Awroecope, and Rbinoscope; also Practical Instructions in the Use af tbo Speculum, Catheter, Bougies, etc., Principles anil Practice of Modieine aud Patbetegy } Clinical Modioiae and Surgery f Oonewtl and Special Technology ; Book-RcepiUg; Writing; Draw- H j and Cliuical Instruction in the Uaa of Atomisers, Kubulisers, Hypodermic Injoctions, Inhalation, oto., etc. ^ REGULATIONS OF THE MEDfOTL DEPARTMENT. ^ Peee for our /mil course of Lecture?, $140, or for one Seeriom $70. Jtntrieulatinjf Ticket, $5.00. Drmonttrnhir't Ticket $10.00. Qualifications.?The requisites for flrednation are two full course* of Lectures, and tbreo years study. SnwixiiRin.?For tbo purpose of aiding worthy young men to obtain an honorable profession, the Trustees issued Scholarships, which entitle the hnMkr lb perpetual privilege# of the School for $75 for the first counts Students, and $50 to second coarse Students.?The advantages of Scholarships arc : hat. The student holding a Scholarship caiv enter the Cellego at any time dttring tba Lectures-, attend' as long aa be ehooaes and reenter the Institution as frequently as desired. 2d. It requires no previous reading or study to entor the University on Scholarship; hencw ull private tuition fees aro saved. 3d. Student*, by holding Scholarships, cart prosecute other bnsiuess part of tho tiifie. 4th. The candidate for graduation can present himself at the etoso of either tho second or fourth tcrsioo of lectures, end' will tvetiru If ie degree as soon as qualified. 5th. In case a Student should bold a Scholarship; old not be able to attend Lectures, it) ran be transferred to another, thus preventiag any loss. MU8KUM. Tho Museum is one of tbe largest in tho cuy, cmoractng ? fine collection of Anilomlcul, Physiological, Pathological, and Zoological preparations, which arc highly advantageous to tho stadont of Medicine. BOARDING. Students can board from $1 to f 0 per week ; or can rent furnished rooms and board thernaelves from ?2 to f.1 per week. CLINICAL INSTRUCTIONS. Clinical Instructions in the University twice a week, also in the Philadelphia Hospital, Pennsylvania Hospital, Wills Hospital for the Rye, Philadelphia Lying.in Hospital, German ; Hospital, and St. Francis Hospital. , s PRACTICAL ANATOMY AND SURGERY Rach of these rooms, with ample means of Illustratiew, is open tan months in ilmyear, fj and nrxlor the supervision of the special Professors, rendering the Department perfect. TEXTBOOKS AND WORKS OF REFERENCE. Prttclit* / Medietas i? Paine's Practice of I Medicine ; Pereira's Thernpcwtiee ; Walshe oa the Diseases of lbs Heart end Langs, including Physical Diagnosis; Aitkin's Practice and Scienee of Medicine. AnatoMf :?Morton's Elementary Treetiso on Human Anatomy; Wilson's Anatomy, with KolHker's Microscopical Anatomy; or Sharpey and Qnain's Anatomy ; Grey's Anatomv. ttatorin XI t dim:?Piin'l 8ynop?i?, Therapeutic*, and Dispensatory; Abridgement of Pereira'a Materia Medic*. m Chemi'trg Fowne's Chemistry; Johnston'* Chemiatry; Turner* Chemistry ; Regnault'n Chemistry; Lehman'* Pbyeiolegteal Chemistry ; Taylor's Toxicology. Snryery f?Bym* Principles and Practice of Surgery ; Paget'* 8nagleal Ihtlobiy f Imleod'a Surgical Diagnosis. Inoiituloo of X(odioino !?Kirk*'* Martial, Virchow'* Cellular Pathology ; Paine'* Inati' tute* of Medicine. Ohottiieo .-?Longshore'* Obstetric* ; Weat on Diseases of Women; Weat on Di*ea*e? of Children. PACULTT OPMBDICINB, There are *ixteen Profoceora connected with the Medical Department, nil men of ability and experience | the* rendering the PhiUidrtphim Urniotrnly nut only the eltatxaf, bat on? of the boot and moot thorough Medical Institution* for obtaining n complete knowledge of the entire practice of Medicine and 8urg*ry. SCHOLARSHIPS. Thoae writhing Scholarships ahonld order them at once, aa there are only n few remaining. Moaev ean be east h? ??" * '? " OAo* Ordera, or Chtcka, directed to W. #iim( M. D., Den of Ik* Faculty of the Philadel- _ pbla Unlrenil/ of Medicine and Sor|?rjr, * Ninth and Loeual fltreetc, Philadelphia, Pa. PAINR*S PRACTICE OP MRDTCINK. A Manniflooot Royal Ottaro of INI page*. Price, 9T.?, Postage, tintj coots. NBW BCnOOL RBMBDTB9. Price, ?6.00, Both Booka cent npon receipt of lll.N. poeta|(o frco. l/nivertiig Journal, publichcd OTOry two week* at |LII per annum. Addreae, W. PAfNB, * ?*.. Dona of Paeulty, Philadelphia Unirerclty, 9th A Loco at. Juno 10 I 10 FOR 8ALE, CHfAP, . n a* ONR LI011T TWO faSEBBlflPw^*'OR8X CAR' hi auk , ONK liANDSOMB ONK 110RSB CAR* RIAOK. Both in olcftant order. F.aqnlre of JULIU* 0, SMITH. or 1 DAVID A OTRADLEY. April U 41 t