The southern enterprise. [volume] (Greenville, S.C.) 1854-1870, February 10, 1869, Image 4
11 . ; . ?>
I! II . 1 I I I I Ml 'J
zrpnse rr y.u-4 ^ . 111 nn?r
Tr*gt in Qod, atd Do t\9 Eight.
Br NOBMA3 VACLHOD.
... <Courage,
brother, do not stumble.
Though the path bo dark as nigbt;
Thoro'a a star to guide tbo humble ;
" Trust in Qod, and do the right."
Lot the ??*d bo rough and dreary,
And its end Tar out of sight,
Fjot it bravely, strong or weary ;
" Trust in Qod, and do the right."
Perish policy and cunning !
Perish all that fear the light!
Whether losing, whether winning;
f* Trust in God, and do the right."
Trait no party, sect or fbction,
Trust no leaders in the Sgbt;
Tint In ATArv word nnd nation.
" Trust in God, and do the right."
Trust no lorcly forms of passion {
Fiends may look llko angola bright;
Trust no custom, school or fashion?
44 Truat in God, and do the right."
Btmplo rulo and sarcst guiding,
Inward poaoe and inward might,
Star upon our path abiding,
" Trust in God, and do the right."
Some will hate tboo, somo will loro thee,
Sumo will flatter, some will slight:
Ceaso from man, and look aboro thee
" Trust in God, and do the right."
A Night With a Ka&i&c.
Tlio maniac was a giant. lie
had broken hie heavy chains as
8arn9on broke the withes; had torn
the keeper literally in nieces; buret
the outer door; killed the watchman
with a heavy iron bar that ho
wrenched from the door, and escaped
with this formidable woapon
into tho city.
Tho town was aghast with the
news, and we students at tho hospital
and dissecting room, who
wyro connected with the asylum,
had to nerve ourselves to help
capture the escaped wild beast.
I had gono to tho dissecting
room alone, and was abont to commence
using the knife on a sub
ject. There was a storm raging,
and the wind dashed with tho gathered
forco of an ocean wave
against the dead house. Simultaneously
a hand struck the light
door and tho yell of a maniac rang
through my brain.
Above the door, through a small
ventilator, the faceot the madman
and tho murderer peered at mo.
"]Ia, ha! I hnvo caught you at
last?here?and alono. I have
been waiting for yon. You took
mo onco, didn't you ? 11a, ha!
Let me in."
The coolness of imminent peril
brought my powers to action. I
held his eve an instant; but it was
evident that ho was too wild for
that, his blood was up, and it
roved with ferocity through the
room and over tho frail walls.
With the light b'umd of a leopard
I gained tho door, and 6hut the
double holt. A gleam of rage departed
from his eye, but he laughed.
" ITa, ha! yon think that yon
will keep me out."
lie leaped to tho ground. In
an instant tho light was out.
44 Wait," I cried. 4i I have a
woapon in nvy band keen as a razor.
It is poisoned by the body I
have been working on. Burst the
door and I will plungo it into3*our
heart. You may kill roc, but 1
win Kill you as certain as there is
a God!
The swarthy giant shook the
door until its hinges creaked and
groaned beneath his hand. Then
laughing aguin low to himself he
muttered :
" Fool 1 I'll outwit yon yet."
And stolo otl in the darkness.?
I heard him, for an instant, pres
sing against tho wall of the building,
and it swayed and bent inward
with his weight. Then
silence. Tho din of my pulses
made thunder in my ears, as I
tried to hear his stealing tread,
and the sobbing wind rose anew
with weird shriek, and made my
efforts fruitjess.
A thousand times I hoard his
low, murderous, devilish laugh.
A thousand tirr.es I felt his brawny
strength against the door, and
saw his wild lace look down on
me through the gloom ; but still
he d.'d not come in.
I tried to think lie had abandoned
the design and slunk oiT discouraged
; but I knew it was not
so; a knew he was crouching in
soine corner on the watch, to
spring upon me when I passed.
Could I stand here all night?
No, certainly not. An hour more
and Harry I-.ee (my yonng wife's
brother) would come and see me;
o?mc unconscious of the danger,
until a blooet-honnd at his throat
would choko the brave young life
down there forever.
I listened in the intervals of the
now fitful storm to hoar if ho was
breathing near me. I put my
soul in the sense of hearing, but
no human shadow of s und g:oete
1 it.
When the storm swelled again 1
drew tho bolt and looked into the
night; a black pall hung over the
Til.8 i
cArth and sk)\ I bad as good a
chance to paw him in vbsoiuity as
lie t6 cnt6h mo. Witn ftry krftfe
in my teeth and the massive thigh
l?one of a negro to fell him with,
if fmnst, 1 drew off my shoes ana
stepped out into the darkness. A
sudden whirl of the tempest almost
t?>ok mo off my foot, and a brick,
dislodged from one of the chimneys,
grazed my head in its passage,
and broke in half on the pavement.
With hated breath, and a step
like the tread of a pantber scent
ing his prey, I parted the thick
darkness and turned rily face to
ward tlie hospital, lie might he
either hero, at any step along the
passage, or hid in the angle of the
wall at the door throngh which 1
must enter. This seemed most
probable; but there was another
door known to the doctors.
I tin'tight I would elude him.
With infinite caution I began to
scale the high wall, dreading horribly
lest some sudden break in
the sky should reveal me to the
wild eyes that watched for mo;
hut no.
Safely passing the snmmit I
threw my leg over the descent,
and?felt my foot seised. It was
but the clinging tendril of a wild
vine, skirting the wall. Grasping
my knife in my right hand, 1 crept
along the bushes for fifty yaras,
then strnck across the lawn for the
side entrance. The darkness perplexed
me, but I thought I was
steering straight. Suddenly my
foot struck bricks. What was
t i6? I tried to recollect. There
was no pavement round that part
of tho hospital.
I pushed on uncertainly and
feeling a weight in the air, put ont
my hands to grip for some clue to
my whereabouts. I was in an
alley flanked with stone walls above
my bend. It gave a sudden turn.
In an instant I knew I wns in the
subterranean passage of the asylum.
I turned to retrace my
sfcj>s ; the opaque density of some
heavy body crouching between me
and the outer eir. I beard its
Btiflnd lirpflfhimr- ifo cfuottliv
? f, VT
approaching inc. My God ! he
had followed me from the very
door r?f the dead house herel A
strugglo for life with a madman in
these narrow gloomy vaults; to
lie in the pool of one's own heart's j
blood in this undiscovered tomb? !
and my young wife Constance?
'twaa maddening.
For an instant my brain was on
fire. Then I thought there might
be an exit; other devious windings
in which I could elude my
deadly pursuer. Going directly
backward, I turned thu angle in
the wall, and then plunged at the
utmost speed ot a young and active
man along the back passage.
Meeting another crossed path 1
struck into an opposite direction.
The maniac instantly followed me
What & race thro' tliose cavernous
depths ot the mad-house 1 What
tragic pitfalls might lurk at every
stop! what black and stagnant
pools lie waiting to cngnlph me 1
what deeper depth of icy blackness
into which to fall, and tall forever
1
The passage <rrcw narrower.?
We wore, perhaps, under the very
centre of tiie building, and farthest
from outer air. 1 had tried to
breathe noiselessly ; the effort exhausted
mo. I knew nothing of
the labyrinths; could only guess
at our position by the distance
from the entrance. I had counted
the turnings we had made; I
thought I could retrace them My
strongtli was failing. I was the
fleetest, but he was the most enduring.
Presently he would run me
down. It was a terrible venture,
but the necessity was imminent.?
I would try it. (lathering all my
force I darted like nn arrow on
into the darkness. The suddenness
ot my increased speed battled
him. I succeeded in putting fifty
yards between us, gain d and tinned
the next angle, thon drawing
tnyseii against tnc wall, with every
nerve and muscle strained into a
preternatural tension, witli the
mighty heavo ot iny chest crushed
into 6i)ence hy an iron effort of despairing
will, 1 waited for him to
jxi8S me. I heard him come rushing
on with new strength through
the blackness, reach the angle,
turn it, striking his massive b??dy
against the jutting stones. 1 heard
him spring like an animal along
the track. 1 felt Ids hot breath
like steam?the fonin of his jawi
Aung across my face?and he stop
ped. I felt that he was feeling
for me !?then he wag crouching
on the stones. I saw the rod firt
of his eyolmlls glare tip to m<
through the darkness. I felt tin
' touch of his icy Aesli on iny hand
Like lightning he raised liimselt
and throwing his vast weigh
against me, pinioned me to tin
!1 stones. All the mad rage of i
: n.an at bnj* surged upward to im
I 8 TDS8 8
'I .1 . ,i . , - - . . y
brain. I clasped my knife convulsively,
nnd seized him by the
throat, resolved to die hard- It
was hairy?it was shaggy. The
hands against my chest bad a
thick coat of fur. I clasped him
to my breast. It was Lion?my
dog Lion.
? *
44 Great Heaven, Winter Keene t
What kept von the whole night in
that enrsed dead house? It is
near by ; the door has been open
this two hours, and Derby and
Ring have been asleep. I was
getting on my boots to look for
yon."
44 Why in tbo name of common
sense did yon let this dog out after
mo? Will yon tell me that?"
44 Why, he howled like a maniac,
and clawed the door till if I
had been suspicious I should have
thought yon in some danger and
could not keep him in."
" Tlaiinror I Wall trn omH tall.
^ ?* v My n v van t iniA
now. Konse youreelf', I have
had an interview with your maniac,
and he is prowling round the
grounds after me now. Call up
the men. I must go after Phillips
immediately."
44 My God ! yon don't say so ?"
44 Yes; don't waste a moment."
In five minutes the whole force
of the hospital was ont on the
grounds. We took him in the angle
of the great door, crouched
behind the jutting wall waiting for
me. He diew his lips back over
his teeth, in the dumb ferocity of
a mad brute, as his eyes settled
into a dull, lurid gaze, impossible
to describe, as he hissed out:
4411a! this is twice, twice you
triumph ; wait till the third time."
Around the blazing grate in the
closing hour of the tempest tossed
night we shook hands over the
gladness ot our reunion, and alter
the story was over, and the horror
first, and tho laughter after, (at
tho close ot my adventure,) and
Derby " and King had left, and
Harry 1/eigh and I stood at the
window watching the young winter
day rise over the hills, there
was something very bke tears
over the bold, bright blue of his
eye as he pointed to the granite
walls of the mad house, and said :
4> Constance would have gone
'here, Winter, or died, and tuine
would have been a heavy life after."
i&ixrmoiEn&tf'a ?in?.
Old Dugood's Dog.
Old Dugood came into the l>ar
room the other day and took a
seat among the idlers there assem
bled. The dog question was under
discussion, and iter listening
to a few wonderful stories. Dugood
chipped in as follows :
* Now, boys, you may talk as
you please alauit the smart things
dogs hev done, hut I can just tell
you something that will lay over
all your stories.
" I don't spect you'll believe a
man when he's a tell in' ye's the
troth, but this is as true as the
go-q?el.
44 Youb all know that big yaller
dog of mine? Well, that dog is
the smartest dog in this drive.?
He's an intellectual dog, he is.?
Now, I know you won't believe
me, but that ar' dog's been larnin'
to sing."
44 Learning to sing ? Get out 1"
interrupted one of the listeners.
44 Yes. sir; that's so, every
word of it; and I'll icst tell von
how it was. T'other night wo had
some singing at our house. Yon
know our Sal's been goin' to the
singiif school, lately, and she and
thu other gals, ami the young leilers
what go, hev got so tliey can
squawk like the very blazes.?
And so most every night they
moot at somebody's house and
practice.
M Well, the other night, there
was a whole crew on 'om at our
house, and they had a big time.?
Such a scrccchin' and squaHiu'
and a bellerin' yon nover hoard in
all your lives. You'd a thought
that a whole gang of torn cats hud
broke loose and tackled Squire
Jones' big bull, and wor pest having
it hot and heavy. \V ell, that
ai' dog was "in the room while
they wor singin', and he was the
most ilifp.rftsind fpoahini I
saw. He watched 'ein heat in'
tiino and going through their manoovcrs,
antl 'neared to underi
stand 'em as well as they did. At
; first they sung lively times, joii
i know ; and purty soon, when thov
i got tired of these, they com
inoticed on psalms and hymns,
r and other serious things. The
; dog, he *)icared to like these bets
tor tlian he did the lively tnncs,
j and so! down as close up to 'em a*
) he could while they sung.
4i At last, the gals coaxed .Tim
, Blow hard to sing Old Ilnndrcd.?
t1 You know what an old tearing
a: base voice Jim has. When In
\ commenced, the dog l>egan to goi
f! dreadfully interested, lie pintct
?a * ? ?J- ? . ? ' ??eees?
TlYllf
hie hose ri^it; np at the celih1, and )
every time Jim carue to tho.lpw
uotce, he'd sorter howl." '
44 Who, Jim?" i
44 No, blast yon, the dog.?
BloWhard he sung airay for a '
while, and iuet then he turned J
round and kinder bit his hind ,
,
"Gosh Almighty I Blow hard I" \
"No, you all-fired fool you ; the 4
dog, of oourte. Then, sea I to the ]
l ol<T woman, 4 Naney Jane,' sea I, *
* you iust bet yonr boots that dog's /
something in his head.' And i
Nancr Jane sea she, 4 you gft out ]
?I shan't do it.' Just then the J
dog picked aomethin* np in his
mouth, and bolted out of the room I
qnicker'n a streak. I didn't pay I
much attention to it, and nobody
else noticed it. . 1
t4 When Blowhard finished, all
the gals crowded aronnd him, and i
commenced flatterin1 on bim, ?
when suddenly we all heard a J
noise. It was the orfullest. mixad
up noise ever anybody heard.?
Everybody was scart nearly to
death. Six of the gals fainted
away into Blowbard's arms all at '
once. They wor hanging on to
liira from all sides, like beans on
a pole. Blowhard sot still for a
uiinit or two; it was more bnggin' ]
than he oonld stand, and lie wilted ,
right off his seat on to the floor,
and tried to crawl under the sofa. '
Before he got more'n his head and ,
shoulders under, the gals all cainc
to and cnught him by the feet, and
tried to pull him out. ,
w Blowhard he hung onto the {
sofa legs and bellowed murder, '
and the gals screeched, and some ,
on nm run round the room nineteen
times in a minute before they 1
could find anything else to iaint '
onto.
* ' I picked up a candle and
rushed into the back yard, with
two or three of the spunkiest
men ; and what do you think that
ar' intel lectual dog was doinT f?- ?
He'd got a music book spiead out
liefore him, and he was beating
time with his tail on a tin pan,
and a liowling 'Old Hundred'
like all possessed."
[G<>ld ti JErd.
STBBN'8 STOHB.
IHAVF, j'nt ri-turnrd from lh? market
will) ii rtwk of Very Cheap lio?d?, |
which I am determined to mil as ccrlp as
nny store in the town.
TIIOMAS STEivN ^
CALL and examine my stork of Calicoes,
Dress Good*, Hs I mora Is. Heavy
Shawls, Hoods, Cloak*and Breakfast shawls,
all remarkably cheep. for sale at
8rtEN'H STORK.
IF von wish cheap Bonis ami Shoes, I Wars
got them, consisting of Gentlemen's
Kmc P:p><ch Calf Skin Sewed Boots and
Shoe*: also, Fine Fiench Balmorals, l.a.
di*s Fine (5love-finished Kid Polish Bnlmoral*,
Children* French (ilur* fitlifh J?re
Ties, and a very large assortment of Men's.
Women's and B"y? Hoots and Short of a
superior quality, for tutlr nt
HTEKN"S STORE.
HROAT) Cloths, Cas?imere<, Twerdt,
Jans, mid a eery large assort incut ol
other cloths, vi liirh would take too much
space to enumerate, for sale at
HTLEN'S STORF,
ALSO, a splendid Stork of Groceries,
Hardwaie, Crockery and Glassware.
To satisfy yourselves about prices, call and
examine this depaitmcnt at
8TKEICS STORE.
I IIAVE selected a very fine lot of Teas
and Cuffm s, consisting of Rio, Java,
Marncabo, Lnynyra. List of Tens?Extra
Fine Moyune, Gunpowder. Extra Moyune,
Young Hyson, Fine Young Imperial. Black
l eas. Super Oolong, Oolong. Sonrhong and
English Breakfast, nil of which 1 can reeom
inerd, for sale at
STEEN'B STORE.
Nov 18 26 ,,tf
'risi" Ai.n
CAROLINA BITTERS,
MANUFACTURED BY
KOQ&RICH.VIIIM&H&CD..
CHARLESTON, S. C.
SOLD 1IKRE BY
MORr.AN ,<? WESTMORELAND,
HARRISON <fe MARSHALL
AND
f. a. Walter,
PCM TMX MOHDSE,
Goodrich,
Wlnetnan &, C o.
Rppt 9 It tin
B. WHERLE,
VfflBUm m JEWELER.
Steond Poor abort tht Pott Offict,
(0JJUa raftN (*).
___ I WOULD Inform my frlcnAs ami
JrTtL patron# of Ore?nvill., thai I have
' f&^Sl Jn,t " FIN'R VARIETY o
CLOCKS,
: SBBtwaicnos and Jowolry,
Together with * J.ARUK ASSORTMENT of
SPECTACLES,
1 Which l will .liapoae of at LOW RATES.
?ir K K r AIKIN t J in all of ita branjh'e
will be faithfully attended to.
' Sep (? 16 if
I
, DR. J. M. M'CLANAHAN
^ nn^ WfiVT.T> respectfully offer hie
, PROFESSIONAL SERVICES to
. WTW the ciliaona of thia community.?
5 Office at the residence of H. fj. Mc?
| QbT? fi.?.AiiA?, E?q., three tuilea wc?t
. of tlrcenvillo Court flonao,
I IK.C 3t? 32 3m
11 tl.
lit Sao
14 000 lbaco?hoicb C0UMTRr
K>0 8acka Extra Family IT. C. FLOUR
IOO Sack* Standard Liverpool SALT
95 NAILS, aaaort?d aisaa
90 Balaa BATESVlLLK SHIRTING
IO Balaa MoDBH 8IIIKTING
20 Ualoa COTTON YARN
20 Baga Prima and Fair RIO COPPER
20 Darrella SUGAR
10 BAGS Darbnm Smoking TOBACCO
2 BAOS Spanish Smoking TOBACCO.
ALSO, A WELL SELECTED STOCK
or
Shoes, Hats*
DRY GOODS, DRUGS &C.
Oar Stock of IIATS SJIOES is Tory
urge and complete, on<l wo will guarantee our
mtlro Stock will compare with any in Town,
loth as to quality and prieo. A call wilt set?fy
ybn.
DAVID A STRADLEY.
May 13 51 tf
Ghreeimlle and Columbia Railroad,
PRESIDENTS OFFICE,
Columbia, 8. C., December 28, 1888.
NOTICE ia haretiy given that at a recent
meeting of the Board of Director* of
ihia Company. It was determined to pay the
dx months' interest npnn onr mortgage and
guaranteed debt, falling dn* on the 1st day
jf JANUARY n?xt ; Proritfrd, the holders
r?f the said mortgage and guaranteed bonds,
tnd certificates of indebtedness, will fund
ill interest accruing upon them up to July
I, 1868.
We are, however, compelled to suspend
ilie payment until the Legislature validates
ihe Acts of 1861 and 1866, authorising the
guarantee of the State upon our bonds, besauss
until that is done, we cannot fund the
Irack interest in the same security which it
now has.
When such action is taken hv the Legislature,
notice will be immediately given
ind payments and settlements made, in accordance
with the above terms.
11. P. 11 AMME1T, PresidentJan
6 88 ti
" COSTAR'S"
PREPAB ATIONS.
EV EliYBODY? Tries Them !
EVERYBODY? Uses Them !
EVERYBODY?Believes in Them !
EVERYBODY?Recommends Them I
Cottar's Exterminators.
Fur Rats, Rutohci, Ants, Ac.
Cottar's Bed Bag Exter.
A Liquid?Kills?" Ban) thing.
Cottar's Insect PowderFor
Fleas, Moths, Insects, Ac.
Cottar's Corn SolventFor
Corns, Bunions, Ac.
Costar's Buckthorn Salve.
Fur Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Ac.
Cottar's Bishop-fills.
(Sugar Coated) Dinner Pill.
Costar's Cough Remedy.
For Coughs, Colds, As.
Cottar's Bitter-Sweet and
Orange Blossoms.
Beautifies the Cwnplcalon.
Makes the Skin fresh and fair.
Beware !! sf all Worthies* Imitations.
^Vflont genome without CuiUr'i aignnture
end 64c. siiri kept by all Druggiata
^xr?l tiae* aeat by mall on receipt of price
jbW?$2 paya f>?r any three $1 alias by Express
f.\T$j pay* for eight $1 lites by Express.
Addroas
HENRY R. COSTAR
612 Broadway, H. T.
For aalo by W OHO AN A WEST
MOKKLAND. Oreenville, 8. C.
?fr- And at Wholesale in all the cltlca en<
large u?wna In the United Statce. ' Id-Am
taw Notice?Change of Office.
G1 y. TOWNUB baa removed Ma Lai
r. Office to the building nnrth-OBct cor
ner of the Public Square, in part occupied l>;
Julius C. Smith, Auctioneer, and the Enter
prtao Printing Office, nj> ataita.
Jan 8 IS U
WM. P. PRICE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
| DAHLONEGA, GA.,
WILL practice in the Countica of Lump
kin. l)awann, Oiltner, Fannin, Unii,t
Towns, White and IIall.
Jan 10 SS if
! 1
ROSADALIS
Purifies the Blood.
For Sale by Drnggigta Evetywher
w? ruibiihii o# a. well
EASLEY & WELLS,
Attorney* and Conntellors at La^
ANI) IN KQIJJTY,
OilKKNYILLE, S. 0.,
PRACTICE to tlio Courts of the Statu u
of the UnitoA Statu*, and giro ospeel
addition to c??o? to Bankruptcy.
Juno 1* 3 tf
iBATE8Y1LLE
imMtllllt COMPANY.
HA VINO bftin ippnlnUd A^nli f
I his Company, wo ?rn prepared I
sell *I1IKTIN()? AND YARN al Faotoi
prieoa.
Dnvid 4k Rtradlfy,
Orocera an.I Commission Merchant*.
f?riTti\illo, 8. O.
Not * 24 If
1 I ?. N
' --l? -I ' 1
V i \ f - ' . ..
.^?T...J. - :. .' 'ii 11
TO THE I'UBL^O.
THE PAVILION 'HOTEL, ,
charisstok a. r? . I
a ?----- BO LONG and ably oon
dunled by the late IL L<
fliMLS PUTTEHFIELD. will Milt
LiTIv ''!w^?_be kept open for the accommodation
of the traveling pubfle. And its
former friends and pntrons will And the
usual accommodations and attentions bestowed
on them as formerly, and the public
r ? -I- ..J.. ... li ut.kll.t.u) uTItf
11<7TEI?of thVTflA V ELI NO MERCHANTS
of the South, will, by earnest eflorU, be
faithfully preserved.
March 4. 1868. 41 tf
Changeof Schedule on G. & C. B E
ON and after WEDNESDAY, the 12th Inslant,
PasseVigcr Trains will run dailf,
Sundays excepted, connecting with Night
Train on Soatk Carolina and Charlotte sad 4
South Carolina Railroads, as follows i
Leave Columbia at 7.00 n. 01
" Alstoo at 8.40
" Newberry at. 10.10 44
Arrive at Abbeville 3.00 p. n
" at Anderson at 4.20 "
" Oreenville at 5.00 "
Lonvo Oreenville 5.45 a. trt
" Anderson at 6.25 "
" Abbeville at...... - 8.00 "
" Newborry at Y3.16 p. n>
" Alston at........ 2.15 "
Arrive at Columbia at 8.45 "
Trains on the lllne Ridge Railroad will alter
run daily, Sundays excepted.
Leave Anderson at 4.30 p, to
" Pendleton at. 5.30 "
Arrive at Walhalla at 7.30 ?
Leave Walhalla at....... 3.30 a. A
44 Pendleton at 5.30 "
Arrive at Anderson at 4-20 "
The train will return from Bolton to Ander'
son on Monday and Friday mornings.
JAMES O. MEREDITH,
tioneral Superintendent.
Aug 10 13
Charlotte & South Carolina E. E. Co
IBSIRSl G?5v5b* ocjt.
sS^stS^SSSSi9^
SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE.
Coli'Ubia, S. C., August 8, 18(18.
ON and after WEDNESDAY, the 12tl?
instant, the Trains over the Road
will run as follows, viz:
Leave Colombia at 4.15 p. m.
Arrive at Charlotte at \ 11.00 p. ftf.
|j?n*r oiiHi iuvve ??t ??** |?. u?,
Arrive nt Columbia G 00 a. nv.
Close connections, both wave, Willi
Trains of Greenville and Columbia and
South Carolina Honda.
Passengers lor the North, taking
thia route, have the choice oI FOUR J)JF?
FLUENT ROUTES, via: From Greens'-oro,
either via I>anville or Raleigh. From Wal
don, either vih Petersburg or Portsmouth ;
and from Portsmouth, either via Old Bay
bine and Baltimore or Atmamesaie Line aud
Wilmington, Delaware
X&T TIME AS QUICK and FARE AS
LOW as bv any other route.
BAGGAGE CHECKED THROUGH.
For THROUGH TICKETS to Richmond.
Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and
New York, apply at Ticket Office, foot
Blanding street.
An Accommodation Train will be run as
follow a:
Leave Culnmli-/ on Mondays, Wednesdays
and Fridays at 7 A. M., arriving at Charlotte
at 6 35 P. M.
Returning?leave Charlotia on Tuesdaya,
Thursdays and Saturdays at 6 A. M., arriving
at Columbia at 6 05 1*. M.
Passengers taking the 8 A. M. Train from
Charlotte can oonnect with Night Train of
South Carolina Road for Charleston. Passengers
from Charleston can?by leaving
the South Carolina Train nt Junction?connect
with the 7 A. M. Train from Colniubia.
CALEB BOUKNIGHT,
Superintendent.
Aug 28 14 ?
Greenville and Colombia Bail Boad
Companv.
TillS Company hna now for sale, in lira
of ' Season Tickets," a Ticket which
entitles a person to travel ovor the road
1,000 in ilea for $40,
Within one year from date of purchase.-*Tht
Tickets can be purchased from the
Agents at Columbia, Newberry, Abbeville
Anderson and Greenville*
tt. ai>3iu>i uinuce.
General Ticket Agent O. nod C. R. R.
* August 12. 1868. 12-tf
' South Carolina Railroad. >
GENERAL 8UP T8 OFFICE, *
CiARitiToj, 8. C., March 28, 18(18. )
ON and after Sunday, Mareh 29, tkc Passenger
Train a on (be South Carolina
Railroad will ran ? follow*, vlt:
1 Leave Cliarle.ton for Columbia...... 6.SO a. tn.
Arrive at KingsviMe.,,., 1.S0 p. m
Leave Kingsville 2.00 p. m
Arrlre at Colombia lit p. m
Leave Colombia. 0.M a. in
Arrive at Klogavllle ?.W a. tu
* trf?r? Kinrnvitle 0.00 p. la
Arrive at Charleston 3.10 p. m
y The Passenger Train on the Camden Branch
will connect with up and down Colombia
Train* and Wilmington and Manchester Rail,
road Train, on .MONDAYS, WEDNESDAY*!
- and SATURDAYS.
Night Expro*. Prclght and Paeicngcr Accommodation
Train will run us follows:
, Leave Charleston for Columbia- 5.10 p. aa
Arrive at Columbia 0.05 a. nt
I.cure Columbia 5.30 p. iu
Arrive at Charleston... 5.40 a. m
'? 11. T. PKAKK, Uen'l Sep'L
April 15 47 , tr
?-?
- Fairviuw Snga* Company^
" ^iSnrs Company having bought the ftlgft
1 A **? great dlerwery of tnJ&fcg sugar
a and refining syrup niado from jSorgoCanc, in
* that portion of (Jrvwnvjlle District embracing
the Third Jfefftmout, we pvupnso to croct a
SUOlHt ITOUSE and ILK FINER near FAIRVIEw
as aoon as (frwctlcabl.. ToThose who
live too far from our workt, to haul tli.tr eaunx,
6 we propuaa to soli Farm UighU. We bolioee
m this te be one of the greatest discoveries for
the South that could have been aide, au<l
" bare no doubt that it will he, in a -few vent1*.
a. tWo great staple of the South, Its operatiipi*
aro simple ami cost comparative!/ nothing t<*
start a farm works, and will pay nve time net'
V ter than any crop except cotton, and We believe
will double that great king of the Mouth.
Those wishing Right* should cell at Wife or*
f)r. W. A. Harrison, at Fairview, or Bh W.
id P. Pnssmoro, at Greenville, who will take greet
?l pleasure in giv full particular*. We will
furnish seed free nf cost, except freight, to
those wishing to plant.
W. A. HARRISON, 5
W. P. PAHHMORr. /
Agents for Company.
T. I,. BOBRMAN, i resident.
Rept ? l? tf
DURHAM > ??
lo SMOKING TOBACCO.
ry TTAVISO reeelrnd Ihn agency of the
11 nboye Justly celebrated RrnnVf of
TOBACCO, w will malt# it to your InterIest
to h?y from on. For sale hy wholesale
Zr retail. DAVIO A STRADLEY.
Oct 80 i* if
V