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* ' J?* Ml - W7 ?? ??. , * ,; H T" . ' . ^ TrrrrT-Ar -i... , ; . II.: _jjim. i; ,' . rfeggg , eeWv^ we*tri ag iTttoWa Th^re are widows and widows, oarcnstieftllv remarks the Saturday JV fteftew, There nre Sbhss who are !**wM ftnd t!?oso who are released; those who lose their sop* -i. 'port* ?n&4hes* whoss chains are ^ broken ; these who lire sunk in 35 Joadwlct^ftib-O. <|P x into freedom. Ofthe first we win *'~i not spoak. There-is * sorrow too T ^%jcrea to be publicly handled eren with sympathy; bur the second demands no Snch respectful reth eence. The widow who is no-soon(.er released from one husband than she plots fly another, and the A^idew who leaps into liberty over the grave of a gander, not a lover, are' fair game enough. : They have j always been favorite subjects for authors to exercise their wits on ; and while men are what thev are .?laughing animals apt'to see the liumor ljrmg in. incongruity, and with a spice of the devil to sharpen ^ that same laughter into satire? - * they will rejnnin favorite subjects, tragic as the state is when widowhood is deeper than more outward condition. *; ' There are many varieties of the widow, and alt are not beautiful. For one, there is the widow who is bent on ro-marrying whether men like it or not?that thing of prey who goes about the world seeking whom she may devour; that awttil creature who bears down on her victimewith a vigor in her assaults that puts to flight i?opnlar fancy about the weaker sex . and the distribution of power. No hawk poised over a brood of hedge birds, no shark cruising steadily toward a shoal of small fry, no pl< ralical craft sailing under a free flog and accountable to no law, save success, was ever more formidable to .the weaker things wr sued than is the hawk widow bent on ro marrying. She knows so mnch ; there is not a manoeuvre V?y which a victory can be stolen that she has not mastered, and she . is pot afraid of ?ven the most desTOratn mMsnrwL Wlipn elm hoe once struck, he would be a clever man and a bold one who conld es. capo her. Generally left but mca jgrelv provided for in worldly Voode?else her game wonld not pe so difficult?6he makes up for lier poverty hero by her wealth of bold resources, and by the courage with which 6ho takes her own fortunes in hand, and, with her own. those of her more eligible masculine associates. She is a woman of porposo, and lives for an end ; find that end is re-marriage. If fate lias dealt hardly by her? though, may be, compassionately by her successive spouses?and lias landed her in the widowed state twice or thrice, she is nowise daunted, and as little abashed.? She merely refits after a certain time of anchorage, and goes out into the open air again for a repetition of her chance. She lias no potion of a perpetuity of weeds, find, though she may have cleared her half century with a margin besides, thinks the suggestive or ange blossoms of the bride infinite!}' more desirable than-tbo fruit J088 Heliotrope ot the widow. If one husband is taken, she romombers the old proverb, and reflects on the many, quite as good, who are potentially left subject to bcr Choice. And soinohow site manages, Jt has been said that any woman oan uiarry any man if she ~ determines to do so, and follows on the line of hpr determination with tenacity and copimon sense. The hawk widow exemplify^ the truth of this saying. She determines npon marriage, and she usually ucoeeds; the question bein^ one of victim only, not of sacribce.? One has to fall to her share ; titers is no help for it, and the whole contest is, which shall it be? which is strongest to break her bonds ? which craftiest toslipont of them ? Which most resolute not to bear tiiein from tho beginning? This the straggling covey must settle among themselves the best way they can. When the hawk * pounces down upon its quarry, \t m mum qui pent / But ail cannot bo saved. One ha* to be caught. i and the choice ie determined part* ly by.chance, and partly by relative strength. When the widow of experience and resolve bears (}<wrn upon her prev, the result is ? certain. Floundc r f n g avails nothing; struggling and splashing are iuet as futilo; one pmong the crowd Has to cotne to the slaughter, and tn Resist at his , # own immolation. The best thing * )te cab do is to make a handsome "surrender, and to let tho worjd of men and brotlicrt believe Sp rather likes his position fhnti not. I>at there are pleg^atiter typos of , tlw* re-marrying widow than this, df There ie the SrMow of the W?dr span kind, who has outlived her jffriel' and is not disinclined to, a dblpetition of tlie matrimonial ex# - 4k t m . -V ? v ; v.* WWftllllHIII III , I peri meat, if asked thereto by an Butio a pretty, tei*isrt womanly war, fcf notr quHeio timidly m a ?*?"]? Vl bofcomingty in her dfe grco, and "ith that.peculiar fusclnatfofl which nothing bat the ownbinalUm of experience end mod esty can give. The widow e# the WadmftTi kind is no creatnre of prey, neither shark; nor hawk; at the worst, she is hot a cooing dove, making .Inst tho sweetest little noise in the world, the tendorest little call, to indicate her whoreabouts, and to show that she is lonely and feels it. She aits close, waiting to be fonnd, and does nqt ramp and dash about like the hawk sisterhood, neither does she pretend that she isnnwilling to be fonnd, still less deny that a soft, warm nest, well lined and snugly sheltered, is better than a lonely branch, stretched ont com fort'ess and bare into the bleak, wide world. She, too, is almost sure to get what she wants, with the ad vantage of being: voluntarily chosen, and not unwillingly submitted to. This is tho kind of woman who is always mildly bnt tbor oughly happy in her married life, unless her hnshan.i should be a brute, which Heaven torcfend.? She lives in pence and bland contentment white the fates permit, and when he dies she bqrics him decently nnd laments him decorously ; but sbe thinks it folly to spend tier life in weeping by the side of his cold grave, when her teats can do tio good to either of them Hathcr she thinks it a proof of her love lor him, and the evidence of how true was her happiness, that she-should elect to give hith a successor. Her blessed experience, in the4|>Ast lias made iter trustful in the.futnre; and because she has found one man faithful she thinks that all are Abdiels. As a rule, this type of women does find men pleasant, and by her own natnre ensures domestic happiness. She is always tenderly, artd never passionately in hive, even with the hnsband she has loved the best; she gives In to no excesses to the right or uie icit; nor lemporaniem is 01 that serene moonlight kind which does not fatigue others lior wear out its possessor j without ambition, or the power to fling herself into any absorbing occupation, 6he lives only to please and be pleased at home; and if she is not a wife, wearing her light fetters lovingly, and proud that she is fettered, she is nothing. As some women are born mothers and others born nuns, so is the Wadman -woman a born wife, and shines in no other character or capacity. But in this she excels; and knowing this, she sticks to her rol#< how frequently soever the interlocutor may be changed. There are widow*, however, who have no thought or desire for remaining anything hut widows? who have gained the worth of the world in their condition. M Jei,vr, ric/ici ft vemm?quel bonheur / ' savt the Fiench wife, eyeing 4%?io? mart" askance, (tan tho most exacting woman ask for more?? And trulv ench a one is in the most enviable position possibly to a worqan, supposing always iiat she liaa not Ioat in her husband the man she loved. It she hae lost only the man who Sat by fight at the same hearth with herself? perhnp3 the man who quarrelled with her across the ashee?she has lost her burden, and has gained her release. The cross ot matri mony lies heavy on many a wo mRn who never takes the world into her confidence, and who bears in absolute silence what she has not the power to ca9t from hor.,? Perhaps her linshand has been a man of note, a man of learning, el elevated station, a political or philanthropic power. Sne alone knew the frnitfulnem at home ol the man of large repute whom his generation conspired to honor, and whose public life was a mark for the future to date by. When he 4?bd the prea9 wrote Ms eulogy and his elogy} but his widow, wherf she put on her Weeds, sang softly tn her own heart a j ??an tc the great King of Freedom, and whispered to herfceit Laudamus with a sigh of unutterable relief 1q such a.woman widowhood hw ?o.l ? il OL_ t_ IIW ??I" > mot rmi ir^iutn. outs I MM eutno into possession ft! the good for which perhaps the sold her stir; /ihe to young enough yet U enjoy, to pnijeet e future ; she b? the tree oh, nee of ? maid and tin free action of ft matron, as 110 othei woman has. 8he may be courted and sho need not be chaperoned nor yet forced lo accept. Kxperi enqe has mellowed and wichet her ; for though the asperities o her former euudnioo were ebar] while they lasted, they bad no tune permanently to roughen o eiubitwr Ur. Th?J ?l.f WH&P e fr * * vv jkj ii- ^ f '1 " im re x?t?? leliirf glad?i<Mi?, w hile the senae >f j clvi'de the streetcar sympathy with pleasure in which the may not ' joia?with happiness which ia, asks so mutely, so bewitch ingly, for onueoUtioo. Xwp a bard man j '.I# roofed at the sfgi't of H prtftty ; widow in the funeral black of her j first grief, sitting apart *itt? a pa-1 tient smile, and eyes cast meekly : down, as one _not of the world j though in it. IJer Jom is. too recent to admit ot any thonght of reparation; and ys* .what man j does ?ot tnink of that time of re* i pnration 9 and it she is more than | nsnaUy charming in person, and I well dowered in purse, what man does'not think ot himself as the beet repairer she could take 9? ! Then, as time gpes on and she glides gracefully into the jbra of mitigated grief," how bean ifnl is her whole manner, how tasteful her attire I The most exquisite colors of the rampant kind look garish beside her aainty tints, and the nntcmpered mirth of happy girls is coarse beside her faint snbdncd admission of moral sunshine. Greys as tender as a dove's breast; reeal purples which have a glow behind, their gloom: sratelf silks of sombre black, sof.ly veiled by clonds of gauzy white -all speak of passing time, and the gradual blooming of the Spring after the sadness of the Winter; all symbolize the flowers which are growing ever on the sod that oovere the dear departed ; all Mat at the melting ot the funeral g'ooin into a poss ble br-dal. She begins, too, to tdke pleasure in the old familiar things of life. She steals into a quiet back seat at the opera ; she jnst walks through a quadrille; she sees no harm tn a fete or flower show, if properly companioned. [ Winter docs not last forever, and a life-long mourning is a wearisome prospect, so she goes through her degrees in accurate order, and ctmieu oiu ai i ena raainnt. J? or when the faint shadows cant hv the era of mitigated grief fade away, she w the widow par excellence?(he blooming widow, young, rich, gay and free ; with the world on her side, her fortune in her hand, and the ball at her feet? 8he ia the freest woman alivo; freer even than any old maid to lie found. Freedom, indeed, comes to the old maid when too late to enjoy it; at lejt?t in certain directions ; for while she is voting she is necessarily in bondage, and when parents* and guardians leave her at liberty, the world and Mrs. Grundy take up the reins^ anil hold them pretty fig? t. But the widow is as thoroughly emancipated from thf conventional londs which confine the free action of a matd e? she ig from those which fetter the wife; And only she herself knows what she has h*t and gained. She bore her yoke well whde it pressed on her.? it galled her, tint she did not wince; only when it wag removed did who tiecome fully conscious how great had linen the burden, from her seine of infinite relief. The world never knew that she find named under the liarrow; probably it wonders at hor cheerfulnem, with the dear depleted scarco two years dead: and acme say how sweetly resigned .site is, and others how unfejling. She ia neither. She is simply free after having lived In bondage, and she ia glad in consequence. But site is dangerous. In tact, site is the most dangeums of all women f to men's peace of mind. She does I not want to marry again?does not, , I mean to marry again for many f years to come, if ever, granted ; | bnt that does not say that she is , indifferent to admiration or oare. less of man*a society. And beihg , withont serions intentions herself, she does not reflect that site may possibly mislead and deceive oth' ere who have no such canso as she ! has for hewarln^ of th? ni?na4iit JIB O '* *"*w j folly. In the exercise of her prerogative as a free woman, aUo to ; .cultivate the dearest friendships i with men and fearlessly naing her. , power, site entangles many a poor , fellow ft' heart which she never . wished to engage more than pla, tonically, and crushes hope* which i she had not the alighfeet intention f to raise. Whtf. cannot nven be r her friends f she asks* with a pretty. pleading look?a lender kind ' of despair at the wronghfcadedneas ' of the stronger sex. lint, tender \ o? she U, she does not easily yield f even wtren fthe loves. The freej | dom fthe hfts gone thsongli so much f to gain she does not rashly" throw r nway ; and if ever the day eomes f | w Im-u |he gives it np into (he keep'5 jjWB j Ulide"rath a Z^iflce HTiter mar* 1 rinspe ae did this widow of mearn, 2 and good look*, when she laid, her ^ freedom, hef jojoo# present and a 5 potential fntwre in hie hand. He I ?ta?i . a-W^ It e>a? a- * ? ^ ^ -* ? b_J! win t?e incay n ne manage* to j well that be ? never reproached . for that wtcriflce?if hi* wife hpvor looks beck regret folly to the time when the wee * widow, end if there wee no* longing glances 1 forward to the pnaeibiiittes ahead, mingled with sighs at the difficulty of retracing a step when feirly . made. On .the whole, if a woihan h can liva without love, or w?in h nothing stronger than a tender sentimental friendship, widowhood is the mnet blissful state she can ~ attain. But ?f she is of a loving iiuture, and fond of home, finding I her own happiness in the happiness of others, and indifferent to freedom?thinking, indeed, feminine freedom only another word 1 for desolation?she will be miserfc- J ble until she has donblsd her ex 0 perience, and carried on the old ' into the new. . . Ike'* Isat trick waa to throw lire. a Partington'* old gaiter in Ik* alley, and ) call the old lady dona from the third floor to ree alligator. Man H fearfully and wonderfully i made. {leader, if you weigh 140 < pound*. 70 of theta are watar, and tf 0 you aqnerea yourtelf in a hvdreolic [ p?se* about Ax bucket* full will run out ? I General Orders. 'm The blloeinf or<t?r h*? been i?rt?d ? h UfttDgi>?mM oe nra Aawr. 1 " AwrT(*T (lM?rt> Oewtou, V " W*?ninotn?( March 6, 1SSS ) Grnrnil OrtUrt At> IS. Tli- Pr alU-nt of the United Slat-* dtrcete " Iliftt tK? following erdere be eerried into e*e?tj?Un eoon a? peaetie?W? : 1. Tkc D'piHmtut of ihe 8*?w?H will he commanded hv B^??(lbr and Brevet kit jof Genera' A. H Terry. t Major-Oe'n-ml O O Meede It e?r*jrted I" wmmtri't of the Mlllrtr* W*l#l?? of the Ailtmi' and efll H-tntfrr bit heOdttadrteap to Philadelphia, Penneylvanle. lie will Inrn mi* We premnt oommend temporarily J to Brevet Major General T. H Rtpker. I Colonel Thirty-third Infantry, who le ee- " Irned ?o doty eeeordin* t? hl? Iweeet ?f MaJor-Orni-rel while la the eaereier of Ihte mmmtni , I. Major General P. fl. SknMtt le an iyned to command of the Department ?f L?nietana. and wilt Inrn ovfcr the commtod of the Itepartment ?f 'he M'eeouri tempo- i Verily to to the .ie*| ?n'er officer. . .,4. M^jor-G-nerel W. fl. llnecoeV la ae- I i eitfned to command of the Department of I Decoiah. A. Brigadier end Bwtd M?J<mflener?l | E. R. 8. Cenhy U neelf nrd to command the I Fire! Military DM* riot, end will proceed to I I.U poet ee eoon en relieved by Brevet Ma jor Ova*rel Reynnlde (I. Ilrevet Major General A. G. Oitlem. I ri..i i -?.i- t-i?.? -*? 1 vivnri wmj 'wirm ?n*-ry, Win turn over the of tha Fourth Military ' District to the not Minor offiaer end join 1 hi# r?cim?Bt t. Brevet Major General J. J Reynold*. J Colonel Twent? AMi lafbntey. l? **?i,rn?nl | to (fmmiiul of the F'fh W"'1>*<?ry Dietriflt, ^ aeeorllng to h(? horrt ?f MMor-non-ml. ( h Iirev?t lihjiif rt?#?nl w R. Em<<rv, , Oolnsnl Fifth VavaPy. i? ar?lifne.| to ooeo ] ivnnd the JVpartinent of Warlnngtoii, te. \ cording to hie hrevel of Major General. i Bv command of Ge?er?l of ih* Armr. * i E. ft. TOWNHEND. A. A O. i WRt( Flow. j I AM rt?H Inriiithinc th* above tnperior j Turn, Buh?>U. end CnltirailuK t'ingah. I Having eold nnn kwuM of the* in ami I ?rmiD<i oar loan and n? ran ?? quit*a nwoiher of MrlifmlN to t l??lr eel priior quality 1 am a?w prvparod to nan* ply the 8t**l ftrmprt ward on fh? Wall Wow lor aer*f>lit|t e?t?on. A mnngat the 10 eat oumhev of perahea Ming litem. I am permitted to refer to lit* following a a see j T. P. Smith. E*q , Oreanrlllg. 8. (J. Jna Blr.iln, Krq , Or-rnrillo, 8 O. Re* J. P. Boyea, Oernvtllf, 8; O. . T. J. ' ureton, Urtrgrilk 8 0. . T. GoMarnith, Groeavilie, 8. C. . J. 11, CloaelgiKi, Greenville, 8. C. .. ft. E Hi one. Greenville, 8 C. 8 MoCUnahan, Greenville, 8. C, 1 J. A rtafud. Ore*irviUa, 8. G I Rev, JUC. Pwnaan, Gr*env|l|e, 8 G W. J. Roe, Grreaville. 8 a f?. M. Peden, Greenville, H C. t R. II. Ahderton, Greenville, 8 <3, W E Rarle. Eaq, Gre?-o*lH?, 8 G JOG Turaer, Greenville, 8 G J. W. Gnldamith, Greenville, 8 G Dr. A"*<V*. Greenville. 8 G j T, Q. T>??el4eoo, Orre.tvillf, 8. G Dr. A. D >loV?, Orrrnrillr, H. O. R. M 6rM??illr, H. 0. T. H. M?<'?nn, B#q., An4#feon, S 0. * Cf?y*n, AoM.'^n, rt C. ? , & F, Whlinrr, Aodrn?orit ?. O. , Dr. /. H. A'"'*1 *??. | a R Wlg,;i*gton, H. <L ^Dr, F A. Hlch^n*. 8. O. * H. W l'lrk^o*, 8. 0. K. K Ruwrs. 0. I ROW#*. Ptpkmt, 8 ft i?##trr A Hn?n? VkU, Jft?, Monltfomlry. HkWviUr. Dr. W A Harrtoon, F?lr?U*r. Rw C. B. Fdlf?i*w. J. R. Rridriil* J*_ ^ OcA. T U C. K*njr of lb* <>*? Mn?M Ho# fr#w t <o * In o?# T,H. M?0?n? HnM t?d ft. m>4 on# M *n?t H. W?U J'U?w, ?ud mya U to th? Picjr hp rx?* ?* ? t, l.tlIT<| M.rlO ^,4$ *1 ?#?. n' 1 Job W#rk T \ONF. nt thtoOAor, wfli? 0?*U>?M and U 1 tOO 8*ki JESS M a 1,5001 Ml ^8EM^OEO * * to Stiii 'ato9*&;' ! f * o ?^as i>vh*? *?* *!?* tobacco | BAGS Split 9*aHte? TOBACCO. ALSO, A WKIL SELECTED STOCK Shoes, Hats* )RY GOODS, P& *C. | <Nr Stock of HATS nd AH0X8 U Tory wfo modi owmploto, ??i wo will f?onuri?? our ?Uf% 8tn?k will fnoptn wtth mty to Town, alb m to quality ud prtoo. A nfl wtU o?U rfy y?u. v\ A vt'n O- own a ?*? nw A/A r ?A/ n S5 m RAVAifllZ M|| IS, 18M. 5t tf . " JXTUXTS C. SMITH. iUCTIOM AND COMMISSION MERCHANTt CO^E? HOUSE SOUSE* B x OmaVilie. I. 0 .5? ' PERSONAL HUhtlm |?t?n U> *11 m)m af lUal and Peranaal Pm;?rrty. Renting if Hoaans and Collecting ?t Renta and Ac onnta. and to aP *?"ain?aa intntated toliim Having Keen appointed agent (or pin lot* awing PortlMatm. thny agn ba found ?\ ?"J Ac* and aoid at OhtrlrdM prion., freight ,nd dmvapnadded 3 1 apbs' KiraoesMiERD Sc**Arno*. PUATK. WANIX) AND BAU0H"8 11AW BONR. PERUVIAN % GUANO. h? gen ulna article, kept for aala and rdered in aay quantity. Oeer SO toa< if Phoephvte and Peruvian d?*M aetld iy me tor Ihn wheat vowing la OraoaviHo hi. fall. Affeney fo> the Celnhratad WATT M^UOH-lara, enbaoil, and enllivator all a ono. Piva ihnuaand of the*# Plough, re in the hand* ot tbn tarm.re hf Virgin1, North and Sooth Onroltga, aad TenaeaOver |0 of the i?oa horao Plough, aid in Green villa In ant month. Oct IS. tea from the beat of oor Plan tern oan he tana, ?M?? hava onod tha Ploagh in toak|g their crop of (SOS. Agency for Card well's Superior CORN ANDCOTTON PLANTER, STRAW PUTTERS. CORN SHELLERf*. An. Ufiaro, v iAjvrK, ?bo oliinr need* lOjs )M ?t abort noli???. POKING STOVES, STOVE WARE. _ faikoi AND OFFICE STOVES Tor aaU m obenp m c?n b# bought. ' i JULIUS L\ SMITH. Qreanr ille fi. H , 8. 0. Jan n M It Fairvi w Sugar Company. 'pnia C<?mpmy baring bongbt the Right 1 In tba great discovery of making *ng*r mJ raining >7rap made from Sorgo Can*, in hat portion of tirrenrille Dictriet ephraoing he Third Reginiaat, ?n pr?iu>M Id erect a 3UOAK HOUSE and BEKINEH near FAIR. HF.W aa ?e?* a* practicable. Ta theae who ira too far ?M?n oar wo/he, te baa! thetr canea, >a propvA to aoli Farm Right*. We haliera ;hU tn be one ot tba greater! dirceearie* far be South that could have been made, and Java no dnttut that it will be. in a Are ream. 1 he great Mafia ?f the South.. Ill operation* ire *nnple and coet comparatively nothing to tnrt n farm verba. And will pay Are tint* bat* :er than ahy crop aioept cotton, anil ve bnieve vtil doable tbnt great king of tba 8onth. rhoaa viahing Rigbta *h<?.ild call at ouca 00 [>r. W. A* Barrjfon, at Palrvir*. of jpp. W. , . ? mm ? "ivrtiTlllfl, mil Will Mil groat >1 mm it re iBuitviag Aill partioalari We will ureith ??w free o( omt, uwyt freight, to hoee wishing Vo plant. W. A. HARRTBOH, } W. P. PAHSMORB. Agent* far Caaepaay. T. L. BO*EKA!*, Ircrideat. Hem 2 U |T | TO THE rUXJLfC. THE PAVILION IIOTEL, CHARLESTON, S. a t WONO end n^ly con dialed by tl>r lata H. L jjgffl Bl lTKHklKH) will etill QU9QSn&? ** kcjit open for tfi? ?ccon? mutation ?7| ihe traveling pnbll? And lie former 'frleiMa and patmna will find the usual accommodations and attention* he ( wad on them a*formerly, and (he public fever*, air tody ao Well established as TIIE HuTEL of t he TR A VELI HO MERCHANTS of the South, will, Ity ear neat efloru, be fatlbfully pree-rvad* Marat.4. IMA) 41 , If TUE80UTHEHN. HOTEL, ' x m~ ' *** ' Tj.e*r v THE BVZU>?0 X10WH A? \" U tiwweistrr'oo ? nuniiinun A/<8^L-"V. Has flMiJIy Urn fkird M**9P<*| "P "<* ? ?* i" ?K*??pU?* or*"u - * **? ?Ui-r r<iiiri)i>-nMi,M4it * op?? l? IU Tmvettuif WW'W ih.j ran find #0"d ?oA fir? M Ml* |?W?M r*U A f?a p*ren?**ni BoaHtrs ??l) Wo .?. i.. w??g?JV Or?.?llK K O, Nt> It. xtuTUSi t-i :|,t i w. K. ?4*LKT. a. Watt* r** ? RAALEY A WKLLfl, ?T Attorawy* and CmbmUjn at U? I *iAND IN ?**U*<rY<# I *. C., T)R ATTH K la th? Ooan? of MM Am* m< A M" IW* UetleA At.fea, Wd gfv*>iay*Mii ((ration to ohm ia Bonk i*?*qjiMMfe i ,Wlt/l W f % * * f ? - ? r - - -r .LEI-I ^^15 * 's titDitu ^MiijiMiH|HHH^pji* lln? Mnnd wfil ngj u follow* t tVooecffoc wHfc *^f**Sftm 'TgiS^?! L?oto ** * '" * ; rn-feV- \mR> Arrtrs ! Ohiin)>U Connoctiog wltlt WteW** mmFmoOr&wft** K?Uro*d, Chorloil* *ori fliwnfc A?toaoXwlioowi, ?4 0?I4oo *<**?. % ......... ............,,t 00 p ?W iStoiAiuL.. j Sis Con or? tt or with TroiM fur JloWiwhU. Madi. ville and tfew Orleana, m'a Qrsad Sanction, 1mm 14 pm c?, ? Arrive at Colombia....?...^*...4 Wn Connecting, Bnedays excepted, with fliin vflto**d Columbia B??m?| ^ \ ?. a XA00V0 Colurobift.aiaMtaMfMV'^V^.MM*'*'^ V ^ Arrive M Charleston MTU ? PNHIlVtLLI *1*1*. I Laava Ct?fn:rt0a,n pat ArHva at Satomervtlle %- M?a??aa *? Leave 8ummervflle...... Arrive at Cbar1eefera.^.^v.,v.. Hill 3* * * ?a?drw ?ra?ob. , On Jloednyv, Ifedoeedayn and Saterdngr*. Leave Kin* vllle e??ae??*e?e4(-4 W Arrive atCamdaa........... T Hy? Leave Camden 8 *4 a a* Arrive at Kiagvtlle ..t * a aa ?"^.^wJ'i5SSSSUfab H gg ? Charlotte ft South Carolina BailL vaad, and Cotnmbxa ft Aaguat* | Battroaa Co'a. ?"ln twTKr^nCJBMi 8TPEKIN TKXDKNTB OFFICK. 1 ???-<> Cetoaaui Vela X IM?, j seabrb mi eoiee aeava. T EAVB Oreoiteviile at T JO, A. M, eea: jLi met lag with train leaves Angvata all r&. A. m. Leave Colombia........W I. V - Charlotte .... f 4?fM ? Orvensbore, W C ?...I MAM ? Klflhrennd, Va II NAM Makiag eleaa >?aasttuas wlf* trains fcf /NftAhtagtia,i|ta..),y>& TjZ. * i# *? comma terra. Leave New York, 40 P M Arrive at Rie>awAw..iH.,w.,t.......1 U F l| ?IQ0IDUna W ^ II 44 4lreenibor?i, N 0 m.I MAX , Charlotte, * C MAX Arrln at Columbia......... y....JI 15 P X I ? at llranitarllle..... 5 M F X r. TltVeta sold at Columbia m4 Ug|i|i ekeekeJ to alt point* North. rvt 0. B0UKNIG11T, SupOtintoadoat. < Fob 15 ??. tf Greenville A Columbia R. & T>ARMCNOEa TRAINS ran dollo. Sunday* excepted, oonuooting with Night Train ou Charleston Railroad, aa follows t Laaro ColonsMa at-.M ..t.tt a - Alatnn at -.-A 55 - Newberry at I8A4 44 Arttre at Abborilla at....- ?A80 p. m. 44 at Anderson at ......5.15 " ? Qraenritle at -..* ?AM Laaro Greenrille at : ?6.50.a. at. 44 Aadaraoa at ?4.4A " 44 Abhor ill# st. 8.45 44 44 Newberry at..*?.... .......... 1.15 p. at. 44 AImod at..?* ......,.,......_t.M 4i Arrive at Columbia at.... -.....-AM 44 Trains <>n the Blae Ridge Railroad will aba ran at follows i v vt B t *. Leare Anderson at. ??AM p. a. 1' I 44 Pendleton at .....?...Aid 44 Artlre at Walhalla at -AM ? Leare Walhalla at- -.-.-....-AM a. m. 44 Pendleton a??.?? ..Mt /* Arriro at Anderson at - 6.48 The train will return from Be I ton to A&4or? Yob 24 4* 7>-*p - I ?p. peis:attobney At. law, OAHLONEGA, ty, ,W'!-?ST?"*KJ .in ! M it " '" KOSADAL1S Purifies the Blgofi. 1 For Sale by ? " " " ' "'** * " ' ' ' ' ' " ? Miami'mil. fflSSSSSS - J Grocer* ? On o. a to* ^ DURHAM ?? SMOKING TOBACCO*