Transcribed without making changes to spelling and grammar. Transcribed by Joyce Robinson The Portsmouth Times Dated: September 18, 1880 I. F. CORRIELL is at home again. T. MACKEY went to Cincinnati Thursday. Miss ANNIE BARKLOW is visiting friends in Ironton. Rev. NIEBUHR, of Powellsville, was in the city Thursday. Miss ICY MCCALL, of Twin Creek, is visiting friends in this city. S. B. JENNINGS is expected to return from Colorado next week. LEWIS MORGAN and wife have returned from their trip to Leadville. J. W. LEWIS boarded the Fleetwood, Thursday, for a business trip to Cincinnati. Mr. BENTLY LLOYD left Tuesday for the Ohio Wesleyan University, at Delaware. Mrs. CROPPER and daughter, Miss EFFIE, of Louisville, Ky., are visiting friends in the city. CHAS. MADDOCK and sister, Miss MAME, left on the Pittsburg Thursday for a visit to the Queen City. Ex-Treasurer MILES is engaged for the present as book-keeper in the wholesale house of J. L. Hibbs & Co. Miss KATE PFEFFER, of Lebanon, Ill., and her cousin SOPHIA, of Cincinnati, are visiting Miss LENA ZOTTMAN. School was resumed at the lower Carey Run building, last Monday morning, with Mr. S. S. FERGUSON as teacher. Miss HATTIE TRACY is spending a few days in Cincinnati, visiting friends and witnessing the wonders of the Exposition. Miss LOU DAVIS is visiting her old home (Portsmouth) after an absence of two years, but will remain only a few days. Prof. GRABROW, of Philadelphia, is in the city, and is attracting much attention by his performance on the Zithern (sic). Miss MAME TIMMONDS returned to the Wesleyan University, at Cincinnati, Wednesday, to resume her course of studies. Messrs. FLOYD McCORMICK and N. K. McCALL left Monday, for Delaware, to attend the Ohio Wesleyan University. Mrs. MARGARET P. LACEY, of Wilmington, was visiting in the city the past week, a guest at the residence of THOMAS HOWELL, Esq. Mrs. M. B. WELLS and children are visiting at Pomeroy, and will not return for several days, owing to the sickness of the infant child. Rev. GRENTZENBERG, appointed pastor for the German M. E. Church in this city, by the late conference, has entered his new field of labor. GEORGE HOLMAN, son of JOHN HOLMAN, and well known in this city, has removed his headquarters from Quinnemont to Longdale, Va. Miss LILLIE YOAKLEY will make her future home at Pittsburg, and her brother JOHN, who has been visiting here, has returned to Cincinnati. The Right Reverend JOHN T. WATTERSON, Bishop of the Diocese of Columbus, has been the guest of Rev. Father STEYLE, for the past few days. Miss ALLIE DUDUIT departed Monday for Delaware, where she will enter the Ohio Wesleyan University, with a view to taking a regular collegiate course. W. H. WALLACE began the fall term of school at his Red School House, Monday of last week. He has been a successful teacher, and will give satisfaction to the directors and patrons of the school. Deacon SAM TURNER, the ponderous knight of the razor in FRANK WHITE's tonsorial parlors, has bid adieu to his bachellor (sic) friends and embarked on the frail craft of matrimony. A happy voyage, Sam. HERB CLARE paid a visit to Delaware, Monday, and was present at the opening of the fall term of the University. He leaves in a few weeks to attend Eastman Business College, at Poughkeepsie-on-the-Hudson. Miss ELLA N. DAVIS, daughter of EWING DAVIS, of this city, who is now making her home with her uncle, JOSEPH DAVIS, at Columbus, is visiting her father, who is making his home at J. H. JOHNSON's on East Second street. Dr. G. W. FIELD and wife left Wednesday, for Cincinnati, and after a brief peep at the Exposition, will depart for an extensive tour through the West, taking in the cities of Indianapolis, Chicago, and St. Louis, on their route. JOHN V. SUTER, M. D., (doctor of medicine,) contemplates a trip to Cincinnati to free himself from professional cares, take a much needed rest, and to resuscitate his shattered mental energies. Overwork is playing sad havoc with "Doc." Mrs. GEO. WILSON, nee VAUGHTERS, of Sugar Grove, West Side, will leave next week, for Pensaukee, Wisconsin, to join her husband, who left for the above place early in the spring. Mr. and Mrs. WILSON intend making that place their future home. FRED. H. STORCK, with Eberhardt & Co., left yesterday for a visit to the principle cities of Kentucky, expecting to be absent several months. A charming belle of the blue grass region is the cause of the tour, and not ill-health as Fred. is trying to persuade his friends to believe. Misses STELLA FOLSOM and JESSIE MURFIN, two of Jackson's handsome belles, spent a few days in the city this week, the guests of J. O. MURFIN, east Third street. Wednesday they departed on the Bonanza, Miss FOLSOM to enter Glendale College, where she completes her course of studies this year, and Miss MURFIN to enter her junior year in the Wesleyan University.