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te*. i - ^ i *?r?j'i rn = MTAIL S'rJOT. 1 Arooftg the many fair castle homos of England thero could bo iitxio fairor or more stately than Coran Castle, Suffolk. 'I here lived Squiro Co ran , a fine specimen of the olden school?stern, rugged and unbending as one of his own oaks, yet, withal, genial and kindly.' ^fije meanest peasant on his estate walked brisker when be saw tho squire, and smiled for five minutes after henring his me-ry w Fine morning ; first-rate weather f" Nearly forty years had passed since the squire laid his fair g rl....:r~ ?i.~ t. _ n nuo in vuu >uuiv vi niu v/vrmio? nearly twenty since lie bad buried bv h?i side the one son of their snort wedlock. Yet Coran Castle was not desolate. Tlip 44 hci"," though ho bad died young, had iivod long enough to leave a widow and two orphan babes to his father's care. 'Iho orphans were rtbw grown up, and the names of Hugh and Emma resounded through the castle, shouted in the fall, cheery voice of the hearty old man. Dearly did he love theiu both i but iingh was somewhat wild and wayward, and would somotimcs thoughtlessly thwart his grand sire's imperious will. One sore subject evor lay between them. The old squire was a giant in stature and strength ; his youth had been signalized by feats of prowess and daring, of which lie never wearied to boast. Hugh Coran, on the contrary, had small tastes tor field sports, and, being small and delicate in frame, constantly took to himself bis grandfather's careless 6coffs about 44 lady men " and 44 degeneracy." Not half , a inuo from Coran Castlo was a large tract of heath aud moorland, very wild and lonely, and at that time infested with highwaymen. It was necessary to cross this district to roach the neighboring village of Wrottel.? One day, in tho winter time, Hugh Curan had occasion to go to this village, llo did not return when expected, and dinnor was served wi hont him. Just as it was over, he caiuo in, excusing his tardiness by saying that suspicious characters had been seen on the moor, aud, therefore, ho had waited for companions on bis Lome ward journey, llis mother was about to commend what to her seemed but prudence, when tho squire broke into a storm of invce tive at Hugh's " cowardice." ? "When had /? feared any mortal man?least of all, a mid night robber? The moorland ollerid no shelter for a band of highwaymen, and he took shame that one of his race dreaded encounter with any single foe. Old as ho was, he would rido over Coran M* or alone at midnight, and no hand ' should harm hiin or touch his purso. lie blushed?yc?. that was tho stinging word?for the last of the Coi ana of Coran. In vain did Hugh answer gently that lie did not think his courage would fail if put usefully to the proof, that ho owned he had but little of the reckless daring of the ancient Coi ans ; but still he thought?ho modestly 6aid be thought, for the youth was no - braggart?that be would risk his own lite to save another's. Rut the squire's lust woida were too tun eh. llis blue eyc6 Hushed, he threw down hie knife, leit his dinner unfinished, and his mother and sister in tears. ile did not bLow himself all that evening. Late at night a messenger ewne from Wrottel, bearing tidings of the sudden and dangerous illness of an old friend ot the squire's. The man who brought the letter went on with another to a more distant neighbor. " I shall go at once," said the squire to Einiua and her mother, 4'I must see him again in life." " Thon Rogers will attend you T suggested the widow, timidly. "No; Latymcr Coran was no court popinjay, who could not take care of himself; he was not afraid of the dark; cowards Mere uu known in his young days." Squire Coran went to his room to prepare for hie journey, Boast ing never strengthens one's own courage, and he took great carc that bis pistol was in good order At another time, notwithstanding the reality of the danger, lit would not have taken the pistol; but now he loaded it with dcndl) itrocision, and laid it carefully in lis great coat pocket. Knuua ran to call her brother tc say goodbye, but she found hh door locked, and could get no an gwer. . 44 Let him alone," said her grand father ; 4*let him alone ; example is better than precept," and so he yode away. There wiis only a clondy moon, but the stouthearted traveler knew hie road, nud was as little Nfe i 41 ,,v jl likely to miss bis way on the moor as is a street Arab to lose himself In London, liis thonghte j went before him to his dying ; friend, and his indignation \ with llngh slowly faded from his 1 mind, when, just as a cloud obscured the moon, ho beard the j snort of a spurred horse, a shad- i ow fell on his path, a hand and- ] donly caught his bridle, and a pistol was pointed at hiB head. 44 Your money or your life !" llio words were sunken nuieklv. in a disguised but agitated voice.!, Thero wns just light enough to seo | j the highwayman was a slight-built ji man, of no apparent physical force,' i yet the squire remembered liis]< vain boast as he felt how complete- , ly ho was in the stripling's power. There was a moment's silence.? Thesquiro's band was in his great coat pockot. Did the robber 1 think he was getting his purse ?? 1 Did the squire know ho was < searching for his pistol? 1'bc highwayman spoko again in ' the same 6trango voice, which ' 8oemcd full of smothered unssion i or grief?" I have heard you i would never v it Id to a single man." ; The squiro's blood boiled at the ( implied taunt, but yet the pistol ' was terribly near bis head, but he | felt that in such case neither 1 strength nor courage can always ' win victor^'. I "Nor would I yield to you," lie 1 said? e knew not what prompted 1 him?" not to you alone ; but to i that other fellow looking over your ' shoulder " The robber started sliudderingly and turned. Swift as lightning, the squire aimed his own pistol, and fired. Tor a moment, tho moorland ' seemed illumined; out ot the fiendish brightness camo a light, sharp, almost girlish shriek. A second more, all was dark and nuicl. and tho souiro realized lie stood alone in the dim moonlight, < with a dead man at his feet. j A stern man was Latymer Co- 1 ran ot Coran, and ho was not to ho brought to a pause on his journey, bccauso lie had chanced to slay a thief. Nor was it the awe and horror <>t bloodshed which blanched and flushed his check as he rode on. No, Ins rigid justice decided that the man deserved his death, only it was not meet, that such as ho should havo betrayed an honorable gentleman to deceit. For lie knew that he had verified his boast, and saved hiiusclt?bv a lie! That haunted him as he stood in the grim chain er of Wrottei Clock house, and saw the last of his I old friend, the county magistrate | lie di-spaicitcU no one to tno (lead 1 robber; time enough for tlial when be returned in tbc morning. Then ho took oflicors of justice with him, and they, respecting his position and the depression in which he 6eenied plunged, walked quietly side by side, a little way behind his horse. At last they reached the spot where the deadly deed ha I taken l.laco. To their astonishment a little group of perpie wero gathered about, and as they drew near they heard a sound of lamentation, and the squire saw his own livery servants, one ot thein holding the bridle of a rider less horse. They turned startled, white faces to him as lie rode up, and were silent. " What is the matter ?" he demanded, imperiously. "Oh, he ennna he dead, the' honnie laddie 1" 6obbed an old! Scotch grooin. " Some one has shot Mr. Hugh," I said two or three at once. " It must have been a duel,"! said some one, "for the young] master has his own pistol with ' him." The srinirc pushed Lis horse! i >t.n .1 ?i._ i t i I imuii^ii iuv i;ivn>u. v/u uif Ui?;uU" stained heather lay his antagonist of the night before?bis own 1 grandson?the back of bis head j completely shattered, and stains of 1 blood on bis fair, lavish face.? ! Tlic steward knelt by the corpse, disengaging the pistol from the stiff grasp ot the dead. JJe looked at it with wondering, bewilderi cd eyes, and said, " it bus nc\ er been loaded 1" i Then tbc old squire understood t it all?he understood that bis . boastful, provoking words bad ag j gravated Hugh to put bis coinage : to tbo test, in hopes of convincing ; him there is no trial of bravery ' between an honest man and a rob i bor. And the squire understood also that had that unloaded pistol > been what it had seemed, he, the i honorably Cornn of Coran, had on ly escaped by ale! "I (lid it!" he snid, gloomily, and the two deferential officers of \ justice came and stood at either i hide of Lntymer Coran, and his own servants fell back in horror , and dismay. Alas! for tbo twice bereaved woman waiting and weeping, aid as yet hoping, iu the k ) B'FMV i ? proud old castle towers ! Latymer Coran was spared the ignominy of a trial?he did not even live to hear that the coroner's jury returned a verdict ot u misadventure." lhe stout old heart was broken. Hugh's funeral was delayed but a single dav, that his grand father and he, " the last of the Corana," might be bnricd together. Their names, the murderer and the murdered, were wrifton on tlm Inlilnl ?* u-Afil was told of their ancient and honorable lineage, nor of the tragedy in which both Jives closed?only thoir names and their ages, the old man and the boy, and the text? il Fathers, provoke not jour children to anger." Dick Daley's Stump Speech. Feller Citizens.?This is the day Tor the poperlation o'Arncricus, like a bob tailed pullot on a rickettv-hen rout, to be a lookin' up up ! A crisis has ariven?an* something bust 1 Where aro we? all in a bunch. Where am 1! here I is, an1 I'd stand here an* expliate from now till the day o* synagogues if you'd whoop for Daley ! Feller Citizens?Jerusalem's to pay an^ wo haint got any pitch. Our hyperblical an' majestic boat o'crcation has onshipped her rudder, and the Captin's broke his neck, an the cook's div to the depths o' the 11 vastly deep" in search o' ditnons ! Our wigwams torn to pieces, like shirt on a brush fence, an' isty of the geography of these ero latitudes is a vanishin' in abluo ilaino ! Are such tilings to be did ? I ask you in the name ot tho American Eagle, who whipped the shaggyI ...n.l-i/l r;.^ A * - uvuuvvi jwi- -u \j VJTI t'rtt jUI illCIl ell I nt)\v sits roost in' on the magnetic telegraph, if audi doins is a poin to l-e conglomerated, I repent it to you in the name o' that glorious peacock o'liberty when he's Hewing o'er the cloud capped summits o' the Kocky Mountains, if wo's pom's to be extemporaneously hiogyogged in the fashion ? " Oh, anaw?r me ! L?l me not butt in ignorence as Shakspccl says, blmll wc be bamhoozlcfied with such unmitigated oudaciousncss. Metiiinks 1 i ear you yelp?"No' sir,?boss! Then 'leet me to Congress anithere will he a revolution. Feller Citi zens?If I was stnudin' on the ad amantinc throne of Jupiter an* the lightuin's was a clash in' around me, I'd continue to spout! I'm t'tdl of the bilin lather of Mount Etny, an' 1 won't bo quenched ? I've sprung a leak, an' 1 must how! like a hear with a sore head. Flop together!?jump into the ranks? an' hear me lhn?'! Feller Citizens? You know inc, an' rip my lungs out with a nail grab If 1 wouldn't stick to yer like brickdust to a bar o's<>np. Where is my o|MUient??no where! lie aint a cat bird in a garret to me ! 1 was brought up among you, feller citizens, an' lie was pupped in a school; but lie can't git me with his highfalootin words. Hi dim, stictum, albroanta. catnip, lirazil Taghtoney, on JiaJIins J>ay ! ! \\ hat -do \on think o' tliat f Go It, Porky, root h"g, or d-i-i- !"' ha Slmkspeel sai?l when Cesar stab' t'.d him in the llou&e o" Representatives. Feller Citizens?Eleet me to Congress, an' I'll abolish mad dogs, muskeoters, an' had cents I'll go iii tor the teetotal annihilation of nigger camjMncetins an Jails. I'll repudiate crows, an' tiustify hen hawks I'll have barn ruiacn's every day? (Sunday excepted)? an' liker enough to swim a skunk. Yes, feller citizens, elect me to Congress, an' 1 shall bo led to oxclaim iu the sublime?the terrific language ot Bony parte, when a preaehin' in the wilderness? " Richard'* hiniaclf again J* On, then, onward to the polls? " gallon apace, my fiery footed steeds," an' make the welkin tremble with anti spasmodic yells tor Dnlcy 1 Cock yor muskits?I'm com'in? " llrnce y? Rrulu*, broad-ax an glory." Let's liker! [A mcricue (Ga.) Iitjniblican. A young lady, the othor day, in the course ut a lecture, hftii]: il Get married young man, and he quick about it, too. Don't wait for the milleniuin, boring that the girls would turn angels before you trust to one of them. A pretty thing you would be alongside of an angel, wouldn't yon, you brute." - When yon pass a door after nino o'clock at night and yon see a young man and woman, and hear a smack, you may know that the young man don't live there. A mktucal student says he boa never been able to discover the bone of contention, and desires to know whether it is not situatej near the jaw bouc. " B H T i ft ft "And I< Passed ta to fhanem"! The words of my text, my hear-1 ?re, yon will find in II Kings, chapter IV, verse 8, 44 And he passed to Sliunein." Take to heart the lesson our text teaches, and when tempt a unions try yon, and evils lio in wait to ensnare you, "pass on to Shun'era." When you 6ee men of wrath fighting and breaking heads and sticks, and hear them cursing and swearing?mind ihe words of the text ana 44 pass on to ShnnVm." And oh t my hearers?if you should come into ono of fctir little towns and behold a row of nice little offices with tin eigne on the doors of each, and hear men talking of attachments without affec tions, and sequestrations without quiet-ali, and seize?yours and never theirs-ah, and about eternally going to law-all, it will be to your profit to mind the words of the prophet, and 44 pa?8 on to Shun'eui. And if you go round where the merchants are ah, and they rush out to shake hands with you, and are especially anxious to learn the condition of vour wife's health and the children's and the worms and the crops, and offer to soli you a a little bill of goods a good dealer lower than their coat, on account of their love for you, and for cashall, 44 pass on to Shutr'em." Yankee all Over.?A Yankee can beat all the balance of creation in inventing plans for swindling people generally, but negroes in particular. When he hires one by the month he stipulates that he is to deduct fifty cents an hour the poor darkey loses, and at the end of the month the darkcv invariably comes out in debt. Ifut here is the latest dodge we have seen. An exchange says : A carpet bag school j?acbcr, in TllllndofttL. aonlonrod H nt?rrri? rrirl ?--? -----?? -? ? e>- ? t?" -j one of liis pupils, to ton days cooking at his private residence for a violation of the rules of his school. 11 id pupils are rather refraotorv, and he manages to get all his housework done by them. We would call that pretty sharp tinanciering. Of course he can always tinds some excuse for punishing his scholars. A pair of ktdics, who carried on a large business in the way ut procuring subscriptions lor new ) works, called a short time since at the ollice of a young lawyer for | the purpose of getting him to sub! serine for a book "just out." "Indeed, ladies," said he, "the [partnership of which I am an I untile member has lately been so imprudent as to issue a new work of their own, which, in consequence ol the enormous expense attending its illustration, embellishments, etc., has completely crippled us." "Then, perhaps," replied the canvassers, " we could procure you some subbcrihers. What do you call your work ?" " Well, we have not fully determined us yet ; but I guess I'll let tny wife have Iter own way, and call it after me, Charles Llcnry." 411 have the most effective eyewater here that yon eveV ba? i said a peddler to an old farmer. 144 No, you hain't," responded tho I farmer ; 44 tain't half so effective ! as a woman's tears, and I've seen [ lots of them. They beat all the eye water you've got in your pnck.'> An Indian being asked what he did tor a living, replied : '* Oh, me preach." 44 Preach 1" paid a bystander. 44 What "do yougetpaiJ for preaching!" "Sometimes mo get a shilliu', sometimes two shillin'." 44 And isn't that mighty poor pay ?" 4-Oh, ves, but it's mighty poor preach." 44 What is your consolation in life ami in death ?" asked a clergy, man of a young miss, in a Bible class that he was catechising. The young lady blushed and hesitated. 41 Will you not tell me?" urged the clergyman. 441 don't want to tell his name," said the ingenuous girl, 44 but I've no objection to telling yon where be lives." fiorrvNiNo the Expression.? 44 That's a thundering big lie 1" said Tom. 44 No," replied Dick, it's only a fulminating eulargmcnt of rtliinrrutorl i'nra/>!t*** ??? ?? *?/.!. j ? VIMVIIf *4tMI J IWVn off his hut, elevated his eves, and held his tongue. Tiikre is a man in Chicago who possesses so reinuikablo memory that he is employed by the various !>ehevoleiit societies to " remember the poor." 44 Cleanliness is next to godliness and this is Ihe reason, my little deArs, why yon are nut in the tub on Saturday night, before being taken to church on Sunday i rooming. 4L11UIUIJJ Rise. Senator Cain and the Radical Poll* tioiana. "Celn," the colored senator from Cbarleston_ tolls the colored people, hi the lest number of the Missionary Record, that they meet ohang0 their polloy and elect honest men to offloe. He says > " Colored men mnst place their eyes on eve* ry oBce now filled hy men who hare leaped Into tbem hy the means of frnnd and corruption. Remember that none of them hare ben. efitted your race one som market, end yet yon have foisted them into office, and ate now W?lk, injr about the streets, penniless, homeless, and without ? prospect of ever attaining anythingEach ujnn you haro elovated to office receives hia thousands of dollars yearly, yet not one dollar of that means la placed within your reach. What enterprise bare they engaged in which will give one colored man a dollar ? NuT j one of these men has done anything with his I means to augment the wealth of the State or enconrage any enterprise which would glre ' employment to a man In thia State. Colored ' men must change their policy and encourage such men in public affairs as will giro the State something In return for the honor conI ferred upon them. Change your policy, and make honor contingent with the State's prosperity. llo whom the State honors, should honor the State and his constituents by a return to her and thetn of suob measures ss will guarantee material prosperity. We would favor sending to the legislature honest mechanics and farmers, whoso minds are not biased by political chioancry ; at any rate, let us have honest men who are identified with the country's prosperity and the people's ln? tcrest." W. K. KA8LET. 0. O. WELLS. EASLEY & WELLg, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law ANI) IN EQUITY, OnSKKVTLtdC, 8. C., PH\CTICK in tho Courts of tho Plate and of the United States, and give especial attention to cases in Bankruptcy. June 13 3 WM. P. PRICE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, DAHLONEGA, GA? WILT, practice id tho Counties of Bumpkin, Dawson, Oiliner, Fannin, Uuku, Town*. Whtte and Hall. Jan 10 33 tf Law Notice?Change of Office. GF. TOW ICES has removed his Law , Office to tho building north-east corner of the Public Square, in part occupied by Juli'i* C. Smith, Auctioneer, and the Enterprise I'riuting Office, up stairs. Jan 8 33 It LAW NOTICE, A. BACON, ATTORNEY AT L AW AID nrAOHTRATE, OFFICE OVER Sl'LLlVAXST STORE, S. ?. *?b 10 38 tf W. H CAMMER, PRACTICAL GUNSMITH AND MACHINIST. (10RN 8IIELI.FT18, Cotton Oint, Lock#. J Kerosene Oil Lamr>?, Hewing Me chine. and Paraaola, REPAIRED with promptnc.<s Charge. rea.onaMe. Si.ml?At WealfieldV old Shop. Feb 10 88 tf SAMUEL BLACK BARBER. WOUI.D r?.peatfhlly inform the public that he Im? Hrmnvtil to room in the OLD COURT HOUSE, where he will be prepared to reed re cmtMnm a* heretofore. Being a J'ro/eaniotial Barber, he hoper, by attention to hu.ineaea, together with polueneaa to all, to merit a portion of public |>atronaire, in t'U i 11NU, MJAV1MJ AND SHAMPOOING. Jan *0 83 tf ROSADALIS Purifies the Blood. For Bale by DmggiiU Everywhere Insure Your Lift at Once! r|"MlE tul>Krib?r is Ag.nt for ore of the L brat and moat, reliable Companies In the world, a pnrrly Southern company. and la managed by s<?nie of the brat men in Virginia. In regard to ita anceeaa, wa challenge a comparison wltli any company in the world. The largcat proportion of Ita Policies are on th? Uvea of citizens of that State, where Its standing and character la beat known. It baa seventeen hinds of Policies, all tian /trr/tiling, and Ita rates are less than Northern companies, for the reason tiiat Northern companies profess to believe i hat Southern people do not five as long as Northern, tehen the very refers* is the case Pall at once, and secure a Policy. We refer to ittr. D M Turner. Gen. 8. SleOnw an, Itcv. J. P. I'reesly. Hev. H. C. Grier, lie v. J. I. Homier, Dr. O W. Preaetey, Dr J, W. Hearst, lUv 11. T Sloan. I>r. J J. Wardlaw. and at least one hundred others ill Abbeville, who have insured. To O. W. Sullivin, Ib-n W. 1). Simp*on, Judge Mun ro, Hon. J, P. Heed. Col. I). L. Donald, O, W Anderaon lir Pi.lino lis lU,lr,J-l and a greM mnny other* who have alwi iu*nred In Urn Company. Gen. N. O Kvana ?m in?ured in '.In* Company for Ift.oOO ' and I Ida amount wa* promptly paid iwtnrdi i atrly aftrr hit death. '1 ha Company haa I incited over 20,000 i'olicie* in eaveatcen month*, haa received an inereaee of nearly 400,000 in thai lima, and have only hxt five hy death, for which it haa paid $17.<*>0, leaving a clear income of ahoul $388,000, eighty acven and a half per cent, of which will be divided among the Policy holder*. We challenge the world to heat thin In*, ltianeh, the State Agent, line betied aw* hundred I'olicie* n Ahlmville. We rrpeat, call at once and get a Policy, or we will Man call on you at your bona**; and hrg yon to wait uutil wa oall before imuring e'aewhrre. ) JOHN FERGUSON, Agent For Greenville, H. 0? T>r. J. T1. 1)ka*. Modieal Kx* miner. ! Greenville C. 11., March 3, I860. Mar it 42 It i . 3 ,77:ilm * n* JXTUUi C. SMITH. AUCTION ANO COMMISSION MERCHANT, COURT HOUSE SQUARE. Greenville. S. CPKRPONAT, attention given In nil mIm of I Real ind Pereonal Property, Ranting of Honsee and Collecting ot Rant, end At. eonnte, and to all buaineee intrusted to Ma. Raving been appointed agent for the following Fertilisers, they eta be fbnnd at aijr office and .old at Charleston prices, freight and drayege added: MAPES' NITROGEN I ZED Sirsa-PROSPUATB. WANDO AND BAUGH9 RAW BONK. PERUVIAN ^ GUANO. the geanlne article, kept for eale and ordered in any qnantlty. fter hO (owe of Phosphate and Pornvien Gn.no mid ' by me lor Iba wheal tewing in Greenville this fall. Agency for the Celebrated WAJT PLOUGH?lorn, rubcoU, mid cultivator all in one. Five thousand of three Plough* art In the hands of the tanner* of Virgin* la. North and South Carolina, and Teunet?it Orrr 00 of the on* liorae Ploughs told io Grrrnville In one month. Crrllfl. ealH from the beat of our Planter* can bo given, who have need the Plough in mak* ing their <r?p ol 1868. Agency for Cardwell'a Hnpcrlor CORN AND COTTON"PLANTER, STRAW CUTTERS, CORN SMELLERS, Ac. GRASS, CLOVER, and other Seed* *upplied at *horl notice. COOKING STOVES. STOVE WARE. ffAl&OSt AND OFFICE STOVES, For eale ae cheap ss can he bought. JULIUS C. SltllTII. Greenville C. H , S. C. Jan 87 38 i if Fairviow Sugar Company. ^ fpniS Company having bought the Right 1 JL In the great discovery of making sugar and refining syrnp tnailo from Rorgu Cane, in that portion of Greenville District embracing the Third. Regiment, we propose to erect a SUGAR IIOl'SK and REFINER near FAIR. VIEW as soon as practicable. To those who live too far from our works, to haul their canss, we propose to sell Farm Rights. We believe this to bo one of the greatest discoveries for the South that couhl bare been made, and have no doubt tbat it will be, in a few years, the great staple of the South. Its operalisns arc simple and cost compnratively nothing to start a farm works, and will dot fire time hot. ler tbnn nny crop except cotton, and we believe will double tlml great king of the South. Those wiebing Right* should call at once on Dr. tl'. A. Harrison, el Fsirview. or Dr. W. P. Passuiore, at Greenville, who will take great pleasure in giving full particulars. Wt will furnish seed free of cost, except freight, to those wishing to plant. W. A. HARRISON, W. P. PASSMOHK, Agents for Company. T. L. BOZEMAIT, President. Sept 3 1* tf Greenville & Columbia R. R. * PASSENGER TRAINS run daily, Sundays excepted, connecting with Night Train on Charleston Railroad, as follows: Leave Columbia at. 7.00 a. m " Alston at .. 8.55 " Newberry at.... 10.35 " Art ire at Abbeville at.... 3.30 p. m. " at Anderson at ...5.15 " " Greenville at 0.00 '* Leave Greenville at 0.00 a. as. " Anderson at......................0,45 " - Abbeville at .......... 8.45 " " Newberry at 1.25 p. wt. " Alston at......~ .....'*."0 M Arrive at Columbia at .5.00 " Trains on the Blue Ridge Railroad will also run ns follows I Leave Anderson at..... .5.30 p. m. " Pendleton at..... 0.20 A rri va at Walh.ll. -? a na ? Leave Walhatla ?L _4.00 a. n. " Pmllelon at........ 5.40 " Arrlrt at Anderion at *.40 " The train will return from Helton to Andcr on en Monday and Friday mnrninpe. JAM KS 0. MEREDITH. '.neral Superintendent. Feb 2v 40 Charlotte ft South Carolina Railroad, and Columbia ft Augusta Railroad Co's. mmImb j BTPKRINTRVDENT'8 OFFICE. > 1 ciii.umbia, Feb. 2, loe*, j arnnncLK ooiso itonrtt. IEAVR tjrur itevilio at 7 20, A. M., eon- 1 J nicling with train leavea Augurla at rt un, A. M. Lenve Columbia .........12 20 P M | " Charluti# .7 45 P M 1 * (Ireeiiflmro, If C..m..m.....l 00 A M v " Richmond, V* 11 00 A M Making eloae ronnectiona with traiua for Waablngton, P. C. comas ?orrii. Leave Ifew York40 P M Arrive at Richmond 1 SO P M Leave Richmond 2 00 V M " drttuikorn, N C.......... ..1 00 A M ? Charlotte, N C .-? 00 A M Arrive at Columbia.. 12 15 P M I liranitevlllc 0 00 P M Tirkota Mild at Columbia and baggaga checked to all point* North. C. BOUKKIUIIT, Superlatendcat. Fab 10 M M South Carolina Railroad Company, Uuiiti SvriiiimiiiiiT't 0?rir?, April 0, 1000. ON AND AFTER StKDAY, 11th inatant, th? following Schedule for PASSKN'JKll 1 HA IN 8, will ka obacrrad : ?ar Leaving Columbia at...... T.4? a. m. Arriving at Colombia at,...M .0.10 p. m. manr ttniH mam. leaving Colombia at S M p. m. Arriving at Colombia at a. m. caiman thai*. Will ma am Monday*, Wndnasday?, and Saturdays. Arriving I* Colamblaat 11.00 a. m. Lanving Columbia tt... l.W p. n. The Train ?? runalng between Columbia and Klafvllb, in aoaaoatlpa with tba Through Mail Traiii, will ha ukan of on Sunday, April II. H.T. PEAKE, J Outfil Poparlntandant. IptU Id d7 * ? J