%
IIut, Georgia, some time in 1845,
the bride's father was killed in a
difficulty with a brother of her
husbanu. This occurrence is, per*
bans, brought too readily to tho
minds of our readers, it is, to
sfivncoTknown that the bride of
bu< a for hours attempted to kill
hec bnsband with a pistol. The
wife sod husband parted. 6he
went to ah Interior village in Tex?r,
land he remained, until
jjio war, peaceably upon his
plantation?altheugh lis married
in the meantime, and to liim
was born * sod, which son entered
the army of the Confederate
'.3i i~e j j-i t
MUltgs, UNU 1UIIUWCU HIV UHUilUIB
of Dick Taylor, Magruder, and
otbQrs of the noble chieftains who
ceMoriuAaed t6e soldiers around
the Qulf. After the war the young
man wandered about through the
Gulf States, and finally located in
Texas where his father's former
wife lived. She had resumed her
maiden name, and was the proprietress
of a large and well paying
hotel, where, she had accumulated
an immense fortune. Arriving at
the village, the young man stopped
at the hotel, and was well pro\ ided
for by the enterprising matron.?
Neither knew the relation of one
to tho other, and although there is
a vast difference in their ages?he
but a stripling youth, and she a
well preserved, comely woman of
nearly forty?an intimacy sprung
up between them, which ripened
into affection, and resulted in the
proposition by the young man of
marriage, lie was accented, and
in a few daj'S the epiiet note! was
tho scene of marriage revelry.?
Thus the solemn wedding ceremo
ny united a man to the wife of his
lather?his mother, nearly?and
to tho wonld be assassin of his
father. Verily truth is stranger
than fiction 1 A man marries I) is
mother!?Athens (Ala) Past.
The Jealousy of OitlsGirle,
too, are awfully jealous c"
each other. 1 should call this to*,
girl's distinctive fault. See them
when they are introduced, or when
iL _ * _ 1 _ 11 ... . *
mey meet ai a uau or croquet
party; ace how coldly critical
they look at each other; how insolently
their eyes rove over every
portion of their rival's dress: read
in their faces the outspoken 6Corn
as the result of their scrutiny:
u You think yon have done it very
well, but you have made a fright
of yonrself, and I am much better
than you P' Watch their disdain
fbr the more admired among
tliem ; and how excessively naughty
for attracting so much attention
they think that Ada or Amy
are, about whom the young men
cluster. How bold she is??how
overdressed she is??how affected
she is V?and oh! how ugly she
is? Sometimes, if they are deep,
they will overpraise her enthusiastically
; but the ruse is generally
tocf transparent to deceive any
one, and simply counts for what
it is?a clever feint that doesn't
answer. It is quite a study to
watch tho way in which girls
shake hands together, or take
hands in dances. The limp, cool,
impertinent way in whicu they
just touch palms, and let their
arms fall as if paralyzed, tells a
volume to those ablo to read the
lettering. ;*
A VKixxrirtDB^pnpil in Cincinnati
rode J)i6 untamed steed into a
hatchway, and fell down four and
a half stories. lie was p eked up
badly injured.
Tiiekv is said to be an onk tree,
in the Holy Land, still living, that
was planted by Abraham. It is
to be set up at a Kussinn Monastery,
in Jerusalem.
A little daughter of Mr. Moses
Coward, living near Eminence,
Md., came to her death a few days
since by having a pot of boiling
soap poured down her throat by a
negro woman.
You must be a friend to youreclf
and others will be.
You bad better pass a danger
at once, than be always in fear.
Evdry man is architect of bis
own fortune. _
v i 1 l.it? i* - i
A ou itWU WUW j>?y uiO OOOK
than the doctor.
r A eere way to wealth: Spend
<mly Iralf yon make.
Et?by man know? beat where
his own shoe pinehca.
A b*d workman quarrels with
hieteck.
A wild ooosk never laid a tamo
??gA
win-re glove often covers a
dirty hand.
A mas is a lion in Lis own
< ft'.lfcC.
MM*
? ? ?-7 r
M i
company with a friend^whose ex '
nerieuee in the city was twenty J
hours older than that of the Schoo- (
ba man, was sauntering down
Bovnl street, reading signs and ,
looking through show windows, ,
^rTEN^'^t^;
win t'n thunder's ken-o 1"? i
H Why," said his chnm. "yen '
must be a shore-en of fool?don't '
know what ieno is. I was up thar J
last night, and seed a lot of fellers
settin Vound tables a puttin bnt- 1
tons on kvarde. and a feller settin .
by htsself on a high chcor, pullin J
marvels when lie pulled 'em out,
and bime-by one ot tie fellers at a
table said 4 kcno,' and all the balance
on 'em said 4 darn the luck/
That's keno; anybody knows what
kono io."?Mobile RegufUr.
A Valuable Boy.?44 What can
you do?" asked a traveler of a
country urchin who was in front
of a farmer's house tickling a toad
with a long straw. 1
44 Oh, I can do mor's considersble?
1 rides the turkeys to water,
milks the gccse, cards down the
old rooster, puts up the pigs tuils
in paper, to make 'em cur), hamstrings
the grasshoppers, makes
fires for flies to court by, keep tally
for daddy and matnmy when
they scold at a mark, and cuts the
buttons off daddy's coat, when be's
at prayer in the morning."
A Jap&mebk correspondent sajs
the Grecian bend has been in fashion
in Japan for four centuries.?
The spinal curve had its origin in
the custom which the Japanese
ladies have of carrying their babies
on their back, and tbe pannier
had its origin in the broad
silk girdle which is swathed several
times around the waist and
fastened in a large bunch behind.
?
A person invited an acquaintance
to dinner on the 29th of September,
saving he always had a
goose at diuuer on Michaelmas
L>ay.
An editor says that when he i
was in prison for libeling a justice I
of the pence, he wa9 requested by i
the jailer, 44 to give the prison a '
puff."
44 Daughter," said an anxions
parent to his little one, *4 didn't I ,
tell you to eat no more green ap- ,
pies?" "Yes, papa; but this i6
a yellow one." ,
The following u notice" is posted
on a fence in a London 6uburb : 1
44 Whoever is found trespassing on 1
these grounds will be shot aud 1
prosecuted."
A young lady studying French, i
aud finding that 44 belle" meant I
44 fine," told somebody in a letter I
that wc bau a great deal of belle '
weather lately.
Write your name in kindness,
love and mercy, on the hearts of
those yon come in contact with,
and you will never be forgotten.
A wicked wretch was asked
why he married a little wife.?
Why, said he, the best way among
all evils is to choose the least.
Don't let others fay that yon
are selfish, and euro only fur your- <
self. '
A handfull of common sense is '
worth a bushel of learning.
A man may say many things <
out of time, even his prayers. ?
A man may talk like a wise 1
man, and act like ft fool.
A mcrrv companion on the road i
shortens tfio journey. <
Mill Buaxan.?Thursday night la*t, Sim
kin'* Mill, in Elg-'fiflJ County, below
Beech Island, in South Carolina, was en*
i '
tirely destroyed by fire. The mill wm j ,
a-ed m a grist and saw mill, and the same I (
water power running a cotton gin. Near {
the mill is a afore, whert were congregated ,
a crowd of man, and it is thonght the fire i
originated from a match being thiown I
among some loose cotton, which common!- ;
catcd to the mill. The Ions of the mill t
aiooc is abnnt <>5.000, which h a sad cnlara- '
ily to the neighborhood. Besides the burn- '
ing of the mill, a quantity of onro and out- 1
ton was also destroyed, the amount of '
wlrieh ws did not leara.?Plttuix.
tiii rBurner utnimitn ?Tbi follow*
Ing te an extract from a letter of lion. Benjamin
F. Wade, of Ohio, in reply to an addreae
of tba National Executive Committee of colored
men : " lint, in my jadgiaent, much more 1
remain* to be dona | for I can never believe a
government perfect while it le potelble for one '
man to appropriate the avail* of the labor of 1
tboaeande, while tboeo that perform the labor 1
pine awey their lilt In poverty and destitution 1
or to monopolise en nnltmHcd extent of Ood'e 1
earth to tho exclusion of otbera. Theee evile
are yet to be corrected; and may I aot expect
that yon who bare been eo lately emane pa ted
from the hohal oppreeefen and Injustice will 1
I take the tad hi those great and nwesnry re- 1
'-.A* ?"
I I
9BT MBBW
Sfr. *frend* tbo E??ti?h Mstortsn, b? tlAh
kpftlnted tntit of <|? UntrenHy of St. A*|*?w*?
j nd on tbo Soy of bis inoactandiea be
' Itferif it liSni'te tbo stadonts, *Wrt, In
nany of Us passages, baa ? roWiltil appltra
ion, sad especially in tbosa which relate to
:dneat ion ?s n moons of Indepon&eaee.
Ho sold Hon woro two ways of being lade
ondeot. If mi rognired rot**,' ho most
>rodnoo anaeh; otdlf ho prodooOd little, So
nst roonire Httle. Ho ?ot the oartoro life of
ho eld scholar* befbro Ms audfao*?tbo nfon
rhose itndlei added nothing Co tbo motorist
rooltb of tbo world, and wbo worn content to
ve poof. Tbo thirty tbonssnd students wbo
issombtod At Ports from All jM.rt.ef Europe to
war A belaid bad tbo am qjrtbotr own logs la
(Slag there, and woro sotWRod. Tboy did hot
pro table bosonso tboy bod no money wbere?ltb
to ri.le. Tboy respoctod alike tbo eoraponwtieas
of tbo. latolloet and of manual laborrboy
bad takon tholr stand, baring mad# tbotr
iwn ebolee, and did not look for weilth in tbo
there eklxli tbev had deliberately accented
mowing that wealth AM not grow there nor
mytrhm, out Aftlit miterhl nb4HImi. Tbla
ru the" mmt important thing for a mas to
nake up hi* mind to in tha outset of life. 0*
hen kMtp whnt he in doing, tad walk# Intel- i
igeot'y Ibmugk the world, without quarreling
with the bet*.
Bat tb* eld ayatem of education wn* all ,
rrong. A men of to-day moat he trained to .
Ira In to-day?to grapple with the anargie*,
ifliculties and ohatrwrtiona of the tlmea which
no We hla life. To cram a lad'* mind with in.
Inite namaa of thing* which ba never bandied,
daces he never aaw or will aee, and etatcaaent*
f fact* which ha conld not po**ihly nndertand,
was like londing hi* stemaeh with gap,
ilea?for bread giving him a atone. A marf '
no*t earn hia living; that waa the primal noo**Uy.
Ha mn?t maintain bimaalf in honest
ndcpcndence. No edncation wa* worth a ruth
hat did not aid a man to do this, for the miliona
mnat toil with their band* or the rare
rill noon cenae to exist. But there wonld eomc
in amelioration of labor. The beneficent light
hen It deecended would be a light whtch
voold make laber more prodnctlve by being
more scientific, wbicb wonld make the hambleat
Iradgery not unworthy a human being, by mating
it at the aim* time an exorcise to the
nind.
Indeed, from flrat to leaf. It waa a practical
kddreas. Educate to tb# Waaiaeea of life?that
vas tha harden of It. Learn the modern in
)reference to the dead language*, and learn
aany ol them. Do net forget toeatabliah your
nind la the phyaieal aclencea either. Tbey
?ill be aura to prove of inestimable value at
nme time or other of one'* life. And above
ill thing*, be honest. Aa John Knox aald,
'Know God, and atand by the good eanae, and
ite your time well." This la tha whola duty
>f man.
Tim Marshall, Texas, Republican, 'of the
)lh in-l., gives the pat tleulara of an affair
in iiusa uounijr vnai wrma a climax 01 nor
rore. Th? circumstances arc aa fol'owa:
"A young man by the name of Colonel
Green, who ia said to have been a new actiler
in the county, left Henderson, on Sat'
urday evening las*, in a elaie of iutoxha*
lion, for home. When he got about eeven
ruilee from town, on the Marehall road, he
stopped at the Widow Griffin plane, where
a body of negroee were making a crop, and
ordered hie nipper. While he waa eating
|t ha waa ?eiz?d by fire negroee, who tied
liie han<la behind him, and dragged him
about half a mil* and linng him. They
(rented him very brutally, throwing him
over the fences aa they reached them,
limiting his laee ard otherwise maltreating
him. While he waa hanging tlicy rolled
batk a log, dug a trench, threw hint in it
before life waa exlinet, and then rolled the
log heck to ile former place. Two of the
negroee were preacberr. The principal
one engaged in the murder (Julius Jones)
itoud by with a gun, direeting the others,
and telling them he would kill the first one
that flinched. The seme negro went the
next day to Henderson, preached a sermon^
and baptised fourteen negroes. Green is
represented as a refined, intelligent, aecom"
plWhed gentleman, but who occasionally*
unfortunately, got intoxicated. His friends
m wing him, it eoems, found his horse at
his plantation, and hia hat at ona of ihs
sah'.na On searching for him, they traced
file footsteps upon the route lis had been
tarried, and found a Itlltr that had bean
dropped out of bis pocket. Flva negrnft
more arretted, who confessed tha orime.
kitd were takoo to Ilenderaon and placed
n jail. Thin wai on Monday. On Tnsaday
tight, about 11 o'clock, a mob went to tha
fall, and hung every ona of tham on the
[>uhlte wjuare fronting carh aide of tha
eonrt houea, the two preachera together."
FaLaa-racRKO Conojr.?Yesterday, a lot
of nineteen balea of cotton, from Abbeville'
waa offered to Mesne. Biakaly k Gibbea. Mr.
(llbbcs sampled the cotton and after offering
>M cents per pound for it, mads a class extra
inatlnn of It, and found eighteen bales of It
k> bo falsely packed?being filled in the middle
of the balea with eotton seed and wet and
rattan eotton. On boring into the middle of
Lhe bales, bushels of seed were found. The
ronng man who had ebarge of the eotton as
erf* wry peiltlrrly that the triad was entirely
unknown to him, and that the packing wee
lone on hi* mother'* plantation by the freedmen,
who had an intoraat in the er?p of onehalf.
The mcrcbaat* and committee of the
Board of Trade hare, w* learn, determined not
lo prosecute tb* party In this case before glr'eg
hfm a chance to elear himself, and the
cotton will be left in the depot, at the Orcenrille
road, for the present. Theee who would
like to see a well-arranged pteea of rascality,
gotten ap to defrand oar merchant* weald da
oil te go and look at thla lot. Plantara and
otbera oan rest area red that In fWtnrn attempt*
?f this kind to defrand will he punished to lha
extent of the law, and our merchants, from
hitter experience, bar# learned te examine
Ihcir purchase with great sera tiny.?Colombia
/'bora's.
Tnn Barnwell Journal rrgea the proprl
rty of holding en Editorial Generation nf
the Editors nf thw State h?Charleston at an
?mly 4*y,
" "Tl^lflB Mi'l*" I 11 11 lllTI M
? _ i,.,, ,. ,
?Uh tftd mmHc lo Uila dole ^
Three per cent State etoek?principal,
fS8,886.60? Interest, 1^**7 SU per
cent, Are loin?principal |8 J 4,468.89; in*
tr rent. 123,004 M, { Fire Mr ee?t/ bond* ,
fire \otfHr principal, $484.444.61; latere*.
tf6.922.lO. Six per teaL bond* rot stocks
funded?ptlmijval, $1,281,971.27 ; Interest.
?08.281 Six par oegt. ??w State Hoaae
bonde?priaeipal, $1,286,800; later* at,
$17l>96. Si* Woe Ridge BaP.
rro? broh^rrlwlpat, $1,000,000; >tare*f
$75,000. 8i* percent. redeeming notes o.
the Bank of the Slate?principal, 1,021,900
Total principal, #8<441,t0S.t7; total intereat,
$4X4,791.62. Provision baa baen
toad* to. aaaat the Internet op to Joly 1.
1868.
Aaaeta or tha Stata oo Slat Oetwber, 1888:
Sharea In Northeastern* Railroad Company,
$120,000; ahnrea in Spartanburg and Union
Railroad Company, $250,000; aharea in
PondUton Railroad Company, $42,600;
aharea in Greenvillennd Columbia Railroad
Company, $488,896; aharea in Bine Ridge
Railroad Company, $1,810,000: aharea in
Colombia and Augusta Railroad Company,
$42.200: aharea In Che raw and Coalfields
Railroad Company, $200,000; aharce in
La arena Railroad Company, $60,000;
aharea in 8oalh Carolina Railroad Com
r anv, $24,000; aharea in Ooarlaeton and
Savannah Railroad Company, $270,000 >
aharea la Southwestern Railroad Bank.
|8,000; aharea In Keowaa and Toakaaeegea
Turnpike Company, $6,000. Total, $2,764,880.
mP-rororowmmtotowmmmmmwmmm^m
NOTICB8 OP JUDQB OF PROBATE.
The State of South Carolina*
GREENVILLE COUNTY.
In tha Oanrt of Probata.
THOMA* 0. COWER and W. B. MILL
WEE, Adminta'ratora of W. A. WilHeme,
deeearvd. *? S. R. WILLIAMS
el at. Citation for Fined Settlement and
Deer**
TT appearing to my eatlefaetlon that BamI
...I D u*:tu.^ f a? t I i:
A mci iv. fi iiiiriiW| ?rmiira a*. n iiiisma^
W. A. B. D*r?nort nnd Mary K. D??tn?
pert, hrl'? at law and Mrtribalett of the
Batata of W. A. Williams, deceased, da
fendatli in this caee, raaida Icjoml lh?
limit* of this Stats. On motion of J. P. J
Moor*. So'lsitor pro pet.. It la ordered:
That they do appear In pereon or by attorney,
at a Conrt of Probate, to be holdm at |
Orsenrile Comt Moose on fha first day of
July next, to show cause, If any they hate,
why a final settlement of tha Estate of
WEST ALL: N WILLIAMS, deceased,
should not ha had, and a dearaa given
thai eon; and their eonsenta, on failing to
attend, all) be eatercd <>f record.
Qlvan under my hand and seal at Green ,
ville Court Llouaaon this 31-t day of March,
A. D. 1809. 8 J. DOlfTIIIT.
P. J. Q. 0.
Ap 1 40 31m"
stats' op fovm 44b0us4
ORKKNYILLK COCNTT.
In tha Conrt of Probate.
8. A. KLFORD, Kaecntrla, a*. LEMUEL
WADDELL et nl.? Citation for a Final
StUlrmmt and Drrrrt.
IT appearing to my satisfaction that Sarah
Evans, I/anry tvelhorn, Alexander Waddoll,
J .me. Waddell, Nancy Waddall, Jpesc
Wadded. I.ucinda Waddall, William Waddell,
Elisabeth McQueen and Ifugh Mi Queen bar
bnshand, Martha Pcrtigg. and John Pernggt
her husband, Mary R. Niehofsnn, Claihorn
Waddell, Alfred Wadded and Kmllr Gregory,
Defendants in this case, reside without the
limits of tbie Plata : It la therefore ordered
that tner do appear in person or be attornov.
at a Court ol Probata to b* hnlden at Greenville
Court House, at 10 o'clock, A. M., on
tba 13tk of Ma; neat, to slikw eause, ir an;
thav ran, why a Ana) settlement of the Estate
of EDMUND WADDELL, dnenascd, should
not be had and a decree given lhereon, or
their consent* in failing to attend will be entered
of reoord.
Giren under njr hand at QreaQTille Conrt
House, this 13th da; of Fehronry, A. D., 1909.
S. J. DOUT111T, P. J. Q. C.
fm> 17 st su
STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
GREENVILLE COUNTY.
Ia tki Court of Probata.
NELLY TURNER, JOSEPH K. TURNER
and JEFFERSON BARTON el at. ea. BE
BECCA KELLY, MAi'K KELLY. T, P.
ASM WOKE, and Children of MARY
A$H MORE, di seased.?PotUion fm &o*
er, Partition and Salt of Rood h tlale, dr.
IT appearing to tha satisfaction of lha
Court that the Defendants, Rebecca
Kelly, Mark Kelly. T. P. AtAnmre, and tha
Children of Mar; Ash more, deceased, rwsids
nut of the State; It is therefore or iered, an
n??t ion of I'err; A Parry, Solicitors far Petitioners.
that tha said Defendants do an
swer, plead or demon to tha Petition within
forty days, or tha saws will La takao pro
confesso.
SAMUEL J. DOimilT.
Ju lga of Probata for Greeaailla Cnnnty.
Greenville 0. II., a C.. April 14th, 1809.
A pi 14 47 6
9tmr ?i nunin t nroiina,
GREENVILLE COUNTY.
in tha Coart of Probata.
REBECCA ROBERTS ef /.. * PLEASANT
JENKINS SARAll JENKINS ft al
Petition for Partition mnd 8ml* / Iieal
Kilate, and to forth.
IT appearing to mx eatiffaetion that WltI
Mem Chandler. Benjimln Chandler. nod
tho heire ot lew of Weea Chandler, N?ney
Hooker, Intermarried with Jyrhn B. Hawkine,
El'zaheth Chandler, murilrdlo Manoah
Stephena. Kelly Chandler, wila of William
Ri?e, and l'olly Chandler, married to
Jamea Gilrealh, all realdn boynad I Ha iffn.
iia of tha Stale: Jt it ordeted, That they file
their plea, anewer or demur, la aaid P?ti
lion,-in thir OfR?*( within forly daya from
tha pnLllaaiion of thia noiioa, aa oa failure
to do eo. tha IVtilloD will l?e taken pro eon
fttto agaiaat then. S. J. DOUT1IIT,
p. j. o a
April fih, 18119. 48-8
L .1 fj|ll||j?
Notico. |"
Jff eoaformllT witli rennircaaaate of Internal
r Revenue L'toe, I hereby gira notice to
perron* who may claim a Ttro-horaa
rg?n, a Mara aod Coll, and three large
and one email herrola of Whiaky, which
were eeieed In a nine thieket on the night of
the Nth of April, evidently tha property of
A. J. Ward, heeetaae of a violation of tha Interrial
Berenae La wo? to make aneh etaima hofore
mo witkia X? daya from the A d ;>uhliaattOa
of thianaSoa. ' * A. T?. COBB,
Dapaty Coileetor.
I A pi 21 48 * 5
nrr r imjmt in?
g? rsi.
Jongo o "ronH'Vrbon nitlt ABJT 0?Wp?M la
th? world. The lergrei proportion of it*
PvlWioo are M the Hera of eilitmi of that
State, there lie standing and akmraatar i*
hret known. It ha* eevoatoon kiade of
Ailiele%aU wo*- furjrMag, and !ta rate* ard
Saee thaw North era eoamanU*. for the roaeoo
that Northern ooenponlea prafm to bolteVo
J?et Southern peopta do out Qre ae Jong a*
northern, dun 'A* Wry rwrrw b fie mm
Call ni onto, and weurei Policy. Were
fer to Rot. IX M. Turner, Ooa. S. MeOow?,
Hot. J p. PrMoly, R?v. Ik a drier,
Rot. J. JL Bo A nor, Dr. O, W. l'reealoy, Dr
I. W. II re ret. Rev S *. 8loon, Dr. t. J.
Wardtnw. and at laact one hundred ot*m
In Ahh??Ulr: who Inn heunA T.? n W
JnHivnn, Hon. W. D 8itnpron, Judge Man
ro, Hon. J. P Re?d, Col. D. L Donald. O,
W. A ndrraoe, Dr. opting, Df. foirlMilt,
snd great many other* who have oUo
inaorad In tbta Com pony. Geo, N.G. Kvana
m istored in Ibia Company for #0.000.
?nd I hit oomnnt ?? promptly paid immedi
tltly afltr kit death. The Company hat
?#uVd over *0,000 Policies in aeveoUan
rnoniha, baa received an inoreaea of nearly
1400,000 in that time, and bare only km
foe by death, for which It haa paid $17,000,
leaving a clear iaenme of abont $388,000,
tighly-oeVen and a half per a*nt of which
mil tx divided among the Pulley lioldere
We challenge tha world to beat thia. Dr.
Branch, the State Agent, haa leaned ear
timdrW Policlea m Abbeville. We repeat,
sail at onee and gat n Pulley, or wo will
won call on yon at your hootet; and beg
you to wait until we aall before ineuring
11 bow bam.
JOHN FERGUSON, Agent
For Greenville, 8 0.
Dr. J. IT. Data, Medical Examiner. *
Greenville C. H., March 8, 1888. J .
Mar 10 48 If
B. WN8RLB,
DEALER IN
Clocks,
WATCHES,
.1 AND
Spectacles,
<bC.
IdST" Particular attention will be
paid to all Work ontrusted to him.
Yob 18 m tf
Charlotte A South Carolina Railroad,
and Columbia A Augusta
Railroad Co'a.
J688KSfi&SBJB3Ijfi351
8TPKIUN TEN DENT'S OFFICE. I
Colombia, Feb. 2, I860, j
icfltdvli boimu jk-htb.
Leave araciteviiie at 7 20, a. m., connecting
with train leave* Auguita At
It 00, A. M.
Leave Columbia 12 30 P M
? Charlotte 7 45 P M
' Grvcnaboro, N C 1 00 A M
" Richmond, Va 11 00 A M
Making eloae connection* with train* for
Waahington, D. C.
coMiita aooTW.
Wr? New York 40 P M
Arrive at Richmond OOP M
Laavu Richmond 2 00 P M
' 'Iroeaahorn, M C _1 00 A M
? Charlotte, N C - ^.-0 00 A' M
Arrive at Columbia .. 12 15 P M
" at Uraniteville -0 00 P M
Ticket* aotd at Columbia and baggage
chocked to all point* North.
C. DOUKNIGHT, Superintendent.
Fpb 10 88 U
South Carolina Railroad Company,
Obmboal 8uramatbnnr.rr'a 0*rtca,
April 0, 1809.
ON AND AFTER SUNDAY, 11th laataat,
the follow lug Schedule for PASSENGER
TRAINS, will be obeerved i
?at ea8v.*geh trai!t.
Leaving Colnmbiaat 7.45 a. m.
Arriving at Colnmhia at .410 p. m.
miomt axraaaa tbaim.
leaving Columbia at.... .. 5.50 p. m.
Arriving at Columbia at .....441 a. m.
cam oca r*aim.
Will run on Mondaja, Wedneadaja, and Saturdaja.
Arriving in ColnmbiaatM....MM.....11.00 a. pa.
Leaving Columbia at ...........2.20 p. m.
Tba Train aow running between Columbia
ml niDiTiiw, ID oonnkoiinn wltu the Through
Mail Train, will be taken off on Sunday, April
11. II. T. PEAKS,
Genoral SapcrlntcndanL
April U 47 tf
W. H CAMMER,
PRACTICAL GUNSMITH
AND MACHINIST.
CORN SIIEI.LF.U8, Col ton Gina, Locka.
K?-rna~na Oil Lampa, Rowing Ma
eliine. and Persia. RKPAIKKD with
prompt n can. Charge* rea.on.lila,
St.nil?At Waalfield'a old Shop.
Fob 10 88 If
Law Notice?Change of Office.
GF. TOWNE8 baa ramored hi. Law
, Odtee to the hnildlag north-Mat ear*
ner of the Pabllo Square, In part occupied bp
Juliae 0. Smith, Auctioneer, and the Eaterpriae
Printing Office, up ataira.
Jan 8 U tt
LAW NOTICE, >
A _ BAr!OT\T
ATTORNEY AT LAW
ARID IIACIIITBATB,
orFICS OVER SULLIVAN? STOis,
mgnsnnrsaa^ 0. <0.
I-. b 10 M tf
SAMUEL BLACK. BARBER.
\XTOULD r??pwtfully inform tba pithlM
T that I11 baa Rimnitd (? * room in
lb a OLD COURT HOU8R, wbrra l.a will
It* prrfarol lo r?ki?i m (mMofor*.
B.log ft Proftttio**l HarUr, h?
hopHi, by aUanilnn lo boainaaaa, logatbar
with potuanaaa to all. la turrit ft portion of
pnbiia paironaga, in OUTT1MO, SilAYlNO
ASDHHaMPOOIXO. t '
Jan -20 SI t(
^ P ^
iggigMgmsmimm
, |? '
3O0 Sack* Bxtra r*?>llj N. 0. FLOUR
too BmIi Standard UnrfMl SALT
90 KV MAILS* WmM abas
SO Bab* BATSSVILLI SniBTCTO
to Bates SHIRTUfe ?"* ?
SO Brtwdwmn lutM. v
?0 Boga Prima and Pair BIO C0FFB0
20 BamUa StfOA* Wrg^ySffTS
t0 BAGS Dvtbin Smoking TOBACCO
2 BAGS SpanUh Smoking TOBACCO.
ALSO, A WELL BKLBCTB? STOCK
m
shoes. Rata.
DRY GOODS, DRUGS fcC.
Oer Stock of HATS and SHOES If rwrf
Urn and complete, and we will guarantee eu#
enUro Stock will compare wltk any la Town,
both m to quality aud price. A call will eetWyy?^
, . >'-j itt/P * \ .A CTSft
DAVID & STRABLETrf
Hay IS, 186*. 51 .
^ JULIUS C. SMITH*
AUCTION AND C0MMI88I8N MERCHANT,
COUET HOUSE SQUARE.
Greenville. 8. CPERSONA
L attention given to all eelee of
Real and Prreoaell'rnpertj, Renting
of Iloaoca and Collecting of Ren<e and Accounts,
and to all bnataeaa intraeted ta Mac.
Having been appointed agent fur tka fallowing
Fertilisers, they can be found at ay
ofTioe and told at Charleston prleee, freight
and dray age added:
M APES' NITROGEN I ZED Svnft-PHOSPBATR,
WANDO AND BAUGHH
RAW BOHR, PERUVIAN
GUANO,
the gennlne article, kept fee eale aad
ordered la any quantity. Owr 90 Uwe
f Phosphate and Peruvlaa tJoane aald
hy me lor the wheat aowing in OraeaviUe
ll.i. fall
Air?ner for tha C?Wr?M WATT
PLOUGH?tarn, rabroil, and ?lll?it?r alt
in ona. Pi*? t hem rand of ihfM Ploughs
ara in the bands of tha larm?r.? of Vlrgta*
ia, North and South Carolina. and Tounoawa.
0*?r AO of lha ona horoo Ploughs
.aid in Greanrllta In on# month. Cor 11 flea
tee from tha boat of onr Planters can bo
gtvan, who have oaed tha Plough ia malt*
ing thair crop of 1 AOS.
Agency for
| Cardwell's Snpcrlor
CORN AND COTTON PLANTER,
8TRAW CUTTERS, CORN
8HELLERS, Ac.
GRASS, CLOVER, and other Saeda aopplted
at short notice.
CQQKIKQ STOVES.
STOVE WARE.
iPAR&OSt
AND
OFFICE STOVES,
For sola as cheap m can ha bought.
JILIU8C.81H1TH,
Oreenellle f. H , 5. C.
Jan t7 M tf
TOE SOUTHERN HOTEL,
thi itriLsnio tiovi is
?? U wvrwma unnne m
HAS r*MiUf been fitted
MVflvahd. op and not In eoenpteta order,
with new Fornttore and
other ooDveaieneea. and ie now opea to the
Travoltas public, where the* ean find gpod
accommodation and fare at the low eel. rate#.
A few permenent Boardere will bo reeefred.
M. L. fiOVTHEBll,
Proprietor.
Oreenrlile, 8. O , Feb. If, 1869. SO-tf
W. K. BABLOV. ?. W. VIUI.
EASLEY * WELLS, . *?
Attorney! and Counsellors at Law
, AND IN EQUITYo
OREENVILLK, ?. 0.,
PR4CTICI la the Coorte of the StaU and
of the United States, aad giro oepsetsl
atleatioo to oaaee in BaakrWwter.
June IS S
ROSADALIS
Purifies the Blood.
For Sale by DmgfleU Imyvhwe
i \wmmmrnmm
BATGSV1LLV
mmm mm.
Having been appointed Agente for
thla Company, wa are prepared to
toll SHIRTINGS AND TABU at Fnatoty
prleea.
David ft Mrtdlef,
vroewrs ana CwnnWon N?r?liMt^
Nor ?, 1 SOT. U %t
DURHAM
9MOKINQ TOBACCO*
Haying r**ci*od ib? *g?ocv ?r ik?
?bor? ju?ilj oolubroUd 0r?I of
Tobacco. w? win w?k? u u> jW uurMt
to buy from no. For nil by okltinti
or rotoH. DAVID A STMADLKY. I
Oct SO, 1867. 88 ? * U
WM.1T PBim, "7prr
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
OAHltNtSA. M, fl
*? *?.?"".?*
It, w^BCf
Town*, Wbit* m4 11*11. / , ,
J12 " -4DONS
M ikwos?, ?Uk MitMwui
4<frp?tob