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; '' ' ^ vt i . :-V * ? ?.- ' J ' w The Abbeville Press and Banner. . . .. . ?/ h - V'VS ? - ......? , " - :;<i0 BY HUGH WILSON. ABBEVILLE, S. C., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1886. VOLUME XXX. NO. 32v M THOUGHTS FOR FARMERS. HARD TIMES?THE REMEDY. The Fanlt at the Farmer's Own Door ?The Martttre Pile and How to In* crease it ?? Jndlcious Composting^ as Against Commercial Fertilizers i Oats, Clover and Grans. In our last we urged a curtailment of money crops, especially cotton, because it called | f??r too much labor. It is plainly our policy to cultivate those crops which require the least latior, not such as demand the most Under * existing circumstances the vast amount of labor involved, is the weak point, the great delect of a cotton crop. The mere picking of a bale of cotton costs at least a sixth of what l that bale will bring at present prices. The cotton crop Is one of all others least adapted *- -1 1 r rjrmlni>< nnrlpr iu iae ejneiiMvc p>omu u> the opposite or intensive pystem, where the yield becomes large as compared with the labor of production, there is some margin for profit; under the former, where labor reaches lis maximum and the yield its minimum, there is scarcely a possibility of profits. The mutter might as well be looked squarely in the face; a great many of our people are going down swiftly to financial ruin, and it is time to call a halt. There must be a change In our farm economy ; a blind man can see the ne* cessity. If a merchant has a mortgage on your farm, and refuses to give farther credit tin less you plantcotton, let him take the farm; it is only a question of time; he will get it in the end any way. Better start from theground ngain, with no burden to carry. A one-horse fhrm can be rented v?ry cheaply and an Industrious, thrifty, saving man can very soon fcnake enouuh to buy such a farm. If not so badly Involved in debt as to require a giving up of all your land, sell a part, reduce 6tock, -start out on the intensive plan and resolve to live at home and buy as little as possible. "This is no new thing we are urging. Before the war this was the prevailing practice of the country. Provisions were raised at home, and farmers grew richer every year. The South was wealthy then, but the war reduced us to poverty, and we made the mistake of trying to get rich again too fast. We became practically, speculators; risking everything : " "r AAttnn /?p/>nc nn/l on tile venture m tai^c wvw? like other speculator* while a few have made money, the great majority have lost It. The . war lert most farmers with the!"* lands unen<cu!nbered: how many are free from mortgages to-day. Mercantile centers have built up and jrrown rich ; how Is it with the farms? Guano j factories, and oil mills, and railroads have sprung up on every hand; somebody makes money in supplying farmers with what they i buy and in transporting what they consume. ( Somebody manages to gobble up about all | they make, and without equivalent, returns; \ for the gobblers have gotten rich, and the far- , iners, to say the least, have kept poor. Now . <do not let us stop with this statement, and ex- | J>end our wrath upon the gobblers. The fault i s at the farmer's own door. He has placed . himself at the mercy of the gobblers, by pur- i suing wrong methods and practicing a poor ^ furm economy. He gave the middlemen the j advantage and they took it?had he been In j their place he would probably have done the i same. What is more, they will continue to < take the advantage Just as lone as he contln- { , ues to give them the chance. The way of es- t cape is simple and easy. Contract the scale of i ' business; raise and maks at home what you f need as far as practicable; buy very little; i keep out of debt. If you have not money to . buy a thine, do without It: despise not the day of small things, and ever remember that j everything of real value grows slowly and ' 4 J .steadily?trie musnroorn springs ujjiu a ui^uv , ?the oak requires centurics. j The Manure Pile. Next to diminishing labor, ranks increasing 1 the manure pile. >us a remedy for hard times. ] .Manure enhance* the value of labor. A day's work may be worih twice as much to the em- ] ployer if expended on rich or hishly manur<ed land, (had if spent 011 that which is poor. To express it mathematically, the manure pile Is inversely proportional to the labor required to produce a given yield; the larger Ihe manure pile the smaller the amount of 'a? bor needed. It is plain therefore thai a far- { mer should use every diligence In increasing his pile. But how. By saving and husband- ! Ing every manurial substance about his prem- { ises. That is too obvious a proposition to dis- } cuss. Every good larmer does that as a matter of course. But that does not answer the , question. The more stock, the more manure. : Shall he keep stock then with a view to mak- j ing manure. In some localities that Is good J policy. In many regions of Europe and of : the North where meat, milk, butter and : cheese find ready sale in domestic markets at , remunerative prices, farmers keep as much ! dock as they can. In the warmer portions of j! Ihe South, where there are good and extensive , ranges, and where cattle require little feeding ' at any season of the year, it is well to do the * *ame thing. Every animal as it wanders dur- ' Jng the day, is gathering manure to be depos- } ited in the tarnwyard during the nlsrht. Cow- : pcuni ng land U one of the very best methods * of manuring it; both solid and fluid excre- { 1" 1 Aco If Aurn iw t f? If pn ; Jilt?li b ID nci UiCU UitU'/iiv ivo*C| 14 V?i> V IU vw.?v.. I to plow the soil enough to keep up Its nbsorp- ' live power; and all the risks of fire-fanglng and loss of amuionia is avoided. Near the 3 larger cities and towns where stock is in demand for butcher's meat, it would he profitable also to keep hs many as can be well fed and eared for. Even where the profit on the ^ sale of meat is small the manure itself might * be made to pay a very satisfactory profit. A i Judicious, managing farmer could even afford ^ to buy bran, meal and other urain, to supple- ^ ment that raised on hlsowu farm, trusting to , the manure therefrom to remunerate him for f the outlay. Speaking broadly, and wit hout ' reference to special locations anu surround- ? inns, it may be said thai it is sound policy for ? a. farmer to keep as much stock as is requisite " to consume all the forage which is raised on * his farm. It Is very rarely profitable to sell ' straw, shucks, fodder, hay or grain. How to Increase the Manure Pile. ^ E But supposing a farmer to be very diligent c In making and saving manure?that he has a c Ktall for every animal, ana keeps it well litter- r ed. how many acres can lie manure to each f animal. It is estimated that a horse that is c worked, not confined in his stall all the time, l; yields in a year about four cords of manure, c when half of sa d manure Is litter. A cord of e manure weighs from one and a half to three h tons, according to dryness and degress of u packing. Taking two tons as an average. a ? norse yicius tsay, eigru. tons a .voir, or putuug o It in a more familiar shape, eight or ten two- a horse wagon loads. Thai we regard as* a full u estimate. To manure an acre broadcast will g require at least fifteen such loads if it is to be * made rich; thirty loads is not an uncommon y application iu market gardening. If applied g In drills fout, feet apart one cord will manure ?i lightly nearly one and three-quarters acres, as i a simple calculation will show. Four feet j rows will give in an acre, in round numbers, | 62 rows 210 feet long, or 10,920 running feet, or i 131,040 Inches. A cord contains 126 cubic feet | or 221,184 cubic inches, and if these cubic t inches were strung out like bends on a string, i tlie string would be 221,184 inches long. Now r divide 221,184 by 131,<>40 and we get 168 or near- [ ly one and three-quarters. If a cord of ma- \ nure was distributed in a drill, therefore, in a t stream one inch deep and one wide, it would j t manure, as 6tated above, nearly one and I g three-quarter acres, and the manure from one 11 horse (four cords) would manure about six or g . even acres at that rate. That would be very \ light manuring; it would fall very far short r of the requisitions of intensive farming, t These figures are presented to show how very inadequate the supply of home-made manure ?] necessarily Is. How to increase it is the ques- e lion. Fortunately science has revealed to us g that nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash are j the substances most needed by plants and t most difficult for them to get from natural f sources, and that by adding these to barn- i yard manure its fertilizing powers may be in- ? creased maniford. A ton of average Imrn- < yard manure contains about the following ! i small quantities of those three substances: Nitrogen 12 pounds I' Phosphoric acid ? pounds 11 Potash 13 pounds ? Now 200 pounds of cotton seed meal or ten * bushels of seed will contain as much nitrogen ;!1 fifty pounds of an acid phosphate as much J phosphoric acid, and 10(J pounds of kainit, nearly as mucn poia*h as the ton of manure.;, If the*<e three substances, in the quantities;} named, be added to a ton of barn-yard man- i ure, the mixtuie will go just as far, will be the !' lull equivalent of two tons ol'the pure barn- Is yard manure. We do not mean to say by this J that they should always be added in those proportions. Different crops and soils tall for different proportions, as we have repeatedly stated lu these columns. That Is not material to our present discussion. our object be- * ing simply to show how the pile may be made I larger. In Home eases four times as much acid < phosphate may be added to a ton of manure, I < and its fertilizing power be increased four t lold. These deductions of science have been ' amply verified by experience and vast quun- 1 titles of such mixtures (composts) are being I used in this and other States. They ought to t he used universally. 1 JndleiouM Purchase and n*e of Com* ( auereinl Fertiliser*. J As the season for composting is at hand, a i discussion of chemical fertilizers from a com- i mereial point of view may be both interest- i ing and instructive. As stated above, uitro- i \ ! gen, phosphoric acid and potash are essential ingredients of chemical or commercial fertilizers. The natural or crude substances which supply them may be varied and numerous, but theabove three are the valuable ingredients in them. Now by ascertaining the value in open market of any article containing either of the three, and which Is valuable solely because it contains It, we reach the market value of tne particular substance. Take phosphoric acid for example: Ground South Carolina phosphate rock is valuable solely for its content of phosphoric acid. It is quoted in Charleston or New York at so much a ton of 2,000 pounds. It cohtainssay 24 per cent of phosphoric acid, or -180 pounds In a ton. Now divide the market price per ton by 480 and we get the market price per pound of phosphoric acid in its natural or insoluble condition. In like manner the market value or price of nitrogen and potash can be ascertained. The Directors of the Masi&chilsetts, Connecticut and New Jersey Experiment Stations, after getting market quotations of crude or natural fertilizers, and calculating as above, adopted the following list of prices as representing tKn voln/irtf nnmmr^HoloI fertilizer Kllh J (VI L IJ I 11*3 ItftlUV vr4 vwi(?t?v. I stances on the 1st of March, J8S4. The prices | given are retail figures, being wholesale prices with about twenty per cent, added; , Cents per lb. i Nitrogen, In ammonia salts 22 Nitrogen, in nitrates 18 Nitrogen in dried and fine ground fish 20 < Organic nitrogen in guano, dried and fine ground blood and meat 20 \ Organic nitrogen in cotton seed and linseed meal 18 Organic nitrogen in fine ground bone 18 Organic nitrogen In coarse bone and fish scraps -10 , Phosphoric acid, soluble In water... 10 Phosphoric acid, soluble in ammonium, : eltrate or reverted ?? 9 Phosphoric acid, insoluble In fine bone 0 | Phosphoric acid, in fine ground phosphate i rock 2Vx i Potash as high grade sulphate 7% \ Potash as kainit 4V. , Potash as muriate \ By sampling large stocks from time to time ! during the year 18SJ, analyzing them, and also < getting retail quotations from manufacturers 1 it was lound that the average prices were a ' little below those adopted oh the lstol March. < They were as follows ( Average cost. | Nitrogen in Nitrate of soda 16.9 cents Nitrogen in sulphate of ammonia 17.1 cents Nitrogen in dried blood 18. cents Soluble phosphoric acid from S. C. rock 8.6 cents Reverted phosphoric acid from South Carolina rock 7.8 cents Potash from high grade sulphate 7.2 cents Potash from kainit 4. cents Potash from muriate 3-7 cents J With these figures, which are probably near present quotations, one can form a pretty correct idea of the value of any fertilizer at the factory. Of course, freight from factory to his locality would have to be added. Let us eximlne that of acid phosphate. Suppose the irtlcle con talus ten per cent, of soluble and Lwo per cent, of reverted. In a ton there 1 would be 200 pounds of soluble and forty > pounds of reverted phosphoric acid. 200 | founds at 8.6 cents would bu worth 817.20, and 1 SO pounds at 7.8 cents would be worth ?3.12, or 520.32 cents a ton. By calculations Just like t :hiR and Just?? simple, a farmer can find out ( ivliether he is paying too much for nny arti- s :le. Let us look into the value of a guano or c immoniated goods. Suppose it to contain c leven per cent, of soluble, one and a half re- t Perted, and five insoluble phosphoric ucid, al- s so two and a half per cent, nitrogen and two t ser ceut. of potash. These percentages would e ;ive In a ton : S Phosphoric acid, soluble 140 pounds. ? Phosphoric acid, reverted 30 pounds. Phosphoric acid, insoluble 100 pounds. Sitroiren 50 pounds. . Potash 40 pounds. , Now multiply these numbers by the values i ier pound: I [40x8.6 $12.04 J 30x7.8 2 34 ? .OOx'2'4 2 2-5 i 50x18 9.00 ? 40x1 1.60 t s Total ?27.23 a ton. f The ca?e supposed represents a erst-class t piano. Observe the diflerence in market valle between and acid phosphate and an ammo- f iliited phosphate; the latter costs about one- j' ,liird more. Now a cotton planter, by com- ^ josting stable manure and cotton seed (or cot- t on seed meal obiained by t>wapping the seed) ,vith acid phosphate, can have a manure bet- ^ r?i ,\ra r?l I n lilu t lliin t.h? hpst, BlianO ill ? lie market. In other words, ammoniated j jhosphates or guanos ought to be driven out f >f the market, not a pound should be bought v >y a eotion farmer. Composts ought to super- v >ede them universally. At this point our >, arm economy has been exceedingly defective, j rlnndreds of thousands of dollars have been r ipent annually for ammonlated goods where here was no need to spend one. Observe we ? ire not decrying commercial fertilizers; we J, io not even mean to say t hat ainmoniated ? jhosphates are not good; they ore excellent ? nariures. What we mean to say Is, that the j. sotton farmer can have them through com>osfcs at a greatly less cost; that he ought to . my only acid phospaates, and possibly some tainit, and get his supply of nitrogen from * vegetable matter In his soil, from the barn- r, ard and from his cotton seed. Every dollar v 'pent for ammonia on a cotton farm might be ? saved. The proper use of fertilizers is no less lm- i jortant than the Judicious purchase of them. t Manuring heavily pay* best, because manure .. nakes labor, and everything else used in pro- i luclng a crop, yield larger returns. But nea- ' ry manuring must be judiciously done; it is , >y no means free from danger. Poor, thin ? and, destitute of vegetable matter, will not i, -1-.- I.I...11.. . ...Ill o I( &k<; neavy miiuuriui; kiiiuij , uvuuvi < * ? .. oil that is not or cannot be kept in pood tilth i: i flt recipient for heavy doses of manure. As J ; rule the best lands ona farm are those on f ehich heavy manuring pays best. Of course J here is a limit* neavy manuring is not to be L dvlsed on land that will make seventy-five , mshels of corn, or forty bushels of wheat, or f ?ne bale of cotton per acre, but such land is : iot common ; we mean the best Ian J on ordi-i" lary farms. If a farmer, who is in the habit | J: if cultivating fifty acres In cotton and corn,;, nanuring moderately, would select twenty- J Ive of his best acres and double the manure }j in them, he would cl^ar more money. His { and, too, would steadily improve and become apable of receiving heavier dosesof manure t very vear. the saving: half the labor, talf the number of plow unimals, half the lumber of plows and other tools, half the mith bill, keep land filled with humus, break g leep and cultivate well, and you will never be s ,hie to gather up two much compost to put / ipon it. Apply heavy dosan of amnion la ted uanas on poor thin land, destitute of humus, p hallow broken and poorly cultivated, and ou may exhaust your vocabulary in abuse of y ;uano, but it should legitimately have fallen j ipon your own folly and lack of Judgment; . ?o sum up what has been said : condubt busl- / less on a smaller scale, avoid crops requiring nucli labor, especially cotton, never raise a j noney crop to buy provisions, or mules, a lorses or any other needed thing which can >e raised at home at reasonable cost. If bad- <s y encumbered with debt, sell outorsurrenuer | .1 iroperty mid muke a new stiirt; rent a one- | * lorse farm, by diligence and economy you f ittl soon be able to buy it. Make and save all t he manure ycu can and buy acid phosphate j 0 compost with it. Never buy ammoniated / ;oods; plant the best spots of land, manure hose heavily and cultivate well: sow down ji urplusland in oats or grass, or if too badly j worn, give it rest. Get out of the treudmill of aisiug cotton to buy corn, to raise more cot- c on to buy more corn. / Our old methods were good under the conlitions prevailing before the war, but they are -j ixeeedlngly defective under existing circum- \ tances. Let us break loose from tiie force of \ uibit and remodel our methods. An agricul- \ tire based on slave labor uud one baved on ree labor must necessarily differ, t>ut we nave lot practically recognized the difference. We till pursue largely the extensive system of mr forefathers, and use the simple Implements adapted to freshly clearad lands . (.bounding in stnmpfi and roots; we employ abor lavishly, though unsteady, costly and J! lard to control; we cultivate crops which call 1 or the largest amounts of labor instead of ?. hose demanding the least, and our methods } lecessitiite a vast horde of middlemen to be " upported at our expense. It Is wonderful j a hat we could have kept up the unequal strug- j ;le so long. A people less intelligent, lessi^ lopeful and eueruetic would have succumbed ! ? ong ago. Let us take courage and start afresh 5 ? >n a bet tcr way. We have a goodly land and i \ 1 kindly climate ; all we need Is a better farm ] , sconomy, a better adaptation to present sur. v ouudlngs. 1 . 1 Compost!*. s Whilst composts, put up five or six weeks ;r > It A?? ft Ha 1 f h Al? O l'A K/kt I iwr,* aic uw " *??vj ?iu uvm.i f prepared several months In advance and] lit down and mixed over after standing five i >r six weeks. The present is an excellent | ,lme to attend to tills matter. Barn-yard ma-' c lure, cotton seed, acid phosphate and kalrilt , ire the recognized components of u good com-1 jost. The first three are Indispensable, or ra-i ; ,her, manure, or cotton seed and phosphate j ire indispensable. Manure and phosphate, or c :otton seed and phosphate, make an excellent! j irtlcie, but where one has both seed and man- j e ire it is best to use both. The villus of kainitis n the compost has not been so clearly deter- f nlned, hut the probabilities are that it con- s tributes to the value of the compost, as a sol- o /ent of other materials, as a fixer of ammo- c lia, and, to some cxteut, as plant food. The I y ? mixture, made according to Furman's formula, 1r a pood, average compost, adapted to most crops and most soils. Itcoqslstsof manure, thirty bushels of cotton seed, 400 pounds of acid phosphate and 200 pounds of kainit. These may be put up In thin alternate layers, or thorouehly mixed. In all eases care must be had that the whole mass Is well moistened and well tramped: cover the top with several inches of rich earth. If not built under shelter, put in pens and make four feet high ; this thickness will absorb rain without leaching. On land that is in good heart, well broken nnd well cultivated, 3,400 pounds; the aggregate weight of the substances above may safely be applied to one acre. Half that quantity would make a fair ordinary manurlns, equal to some 300 pounds or more of a good gunno. A cheap, efficient and rapid distributor of such compost adapted to our modes of culture, is a great desideratum. We need drill rather than broadcast distributors. OatH. It is advisable tosow some oats this month; it will give another chance at this valuable crop, though February oats are quite liable to be cut off by drouth. But It is a good and safe rule for a farmer to take all the chances he can. As spring oats tiller very little, they should be seeded very thickly, and as they have to make in a very short time, tuey ought to be manured well. All quick growing crops r.,11 f?i. inn,i oooiiv ott,i ,,,,i,.k|v obtainable: they cad't wait. The Burt is considered a arood spring oat; it matures very early, but is not so heavy as the rust-proof, and, Upon the whole, we would rattier trust a good strain of tiie latter. Clover and Grass. These may be sown towards the last of the month, and preparations for them Is in order. A.a these crops oocupy the land for some years, It ought to be thoroughly brpken and brought to the finest tilth. Clover calls for lime and potash; grass needs these with the addition of nitrogen. Barnyard munure is good for both, is it contains all the elements needed by plants. Seed heavily and brush in lightly. Stiir soils are best suited to both of these jrops. but the tall meadow oat will do well on pretty light soils. Whenever grass can be successfully grown it is an unusually valuajrop, under existing circumstances, because it jails for so little labor. A well established ield of orchard or Blue grass will last twenty years or more and stock will do all the harvesting; an occasional topdresslng the only mtlay required. JAMES COLEMAN STUART. 1 Pft?t<rr'8 Worthy Tribute to the Memory of a Koblc Young: Man, Whose Life was Beautiful and Whose Death was Assuring: of a Blessed Immortality. Jaines Coleman Stuart, fourth son of the ate Dr. John A. Stuart of Ninety-Six, S. C., vas born on the 7th, September, 1866; tie detaeto.i tiiic iifonn tIia Wnl riuv nf Snntember. 885, being: 19 years and 10 days old. At the time of his death he was a student in he University of South Carolina. He was celing badly when he came home in June to ,pend his Summer vacation Having been :onflned very closely In the college and In the :ity of Columbia for several months, it was laturai when he got out into the country to eek recreation and pleasure in roaming over he farm with his friends. In doing tnis he ixposed himself to the scorching rays of the Summer's neat. Not being accustomed to his, it was too much for him. Itbroughton i severe attack of typho-malarial fever which esulted in his death. James Stuart was a noble young man ! He eaves a host of friends to mourn his death. Vt college he was very popular among his felow-students. He was kind iu disposition, >olite in manners, and chaste in conversation, iis eldest brother, who had been intimately issociated wllh him told the writer on the lay of his death that, he hud never heard him itter a word whicft he could not with proprley use in the presence of ladies. Possessing inch traits of character as these, it is cot surmising that he drew around him such a host if friends and admirers both at home and at ollege. i In 1881 he made a public profession of his I alth in the Lord Jesus Christ and connected j limsclf with the Presbyterian church. At; hat time he seemed to be determined in his ' >urpose to live, by the grace of God, for Him i rho had bought him with His own precious 4ood. And, as far as we know, he led a conistent christian life till the day of his death.J: ie died In the triumphs of the curisuans alth. He was conscious to the last. "While lis body was riipldly falling under the attackB vhich the dreadful disease was making upon 1 itin, his mind appeared to be as clear us ever, ie spoke with a great deal of calmness and < easonjust before his spirittook inflight. On i he day before his death his pastor had a very ! ileasant and satisfactory interview with him >11 his spiritual condition and prospects. He i ave unequivocal evidence of his acceptance I fitli God. He said that tlio blessed Savior 1 lad sustained him by His grace and that He I fas very near and dear to him. He seemed 1 o be getting ripe for heaven rapidly. While 1 redid not think the end was so near; yet, I hp blessed Savior knew, and no doubt He ras preparing him for the great change which k'as soon to coine over him. And wo have he strongest evidence that.Iesus was right by Is Mde when he was brought face to face with i he last great enemy; iOr, he met death with lie greatest christian bravery and fortitude. < 0 death, where Is thy sting ? 0 grave, where s thy victory? The sting of death Is sin; 1 nd the strength of sin is the law. But ' hanks be to God, which glveth us the victory i hrough our Lord Jesus Christ." He was per- < BCtly willing to die; for, he knew what was ti store for him. Such adeath as this Is worth i tifinitely more than all the honors and emo- ! uments of this world. No diubt our young I riend and brother has heaped upon hitn now I ufinltely greater honors than he could ever < inve achieved In this world. "For our 1 iht flllction, which Is but for a moment, worketh ' jr us a Jar more exceeding and eternal weight ' f glory." We have the assurance that nis i ondltlon now Is transcendently better and I nore desirable than'it ever could have been < ii this life. "For we know that if ourearthly j iouse of this tabernacle were dissolved, we ave n uhuhid^ 01 uou, a nousc nuimuue wnu mnds, ftternal In the heavens." After his death his mother found these beau- 1 Iful lines in his trunk: 1 Our God is faithful! Time moves on, to And i UK I till Rineins of the mercies left behind us. < till taking, as we sing, of some Iresh store; i ind looking trustfully for those before. I low can we doubt, with memories to cheer . us ? i low can we sorrow, with his lovo so near us? i low can we faint, while he his strength to , give, ind we, by faith, his proffered grace receive? ] -ike ns a father, pitying, he leadR us, Lnd, daily, with some heavenly morsel feeds ( us: ees to our ailings, hushes our alarms, i ind bears us, weary, in his loving arms. I le who has led thus far, will never leave us, Jotll he at hi* heavenly home receive us; i 'here we shall see his face, and then adore. LIU IUIIU Ulll IIUIIjO I.U jjminc ijiiij e<si uiviv. l few more stages, on our Journey golnc, i ind we shall reach where Jordan's stream Is: (lowing; >ur faithful God will cleave Its swelling tide, i? Liid land us safely on the other side. 'here Ebenezer* shall he lost in Joy for ever, ! < Vhere sorrow, s'n, and want can enter never, I V'hlle, In a day that knows no coming nighl,! Ve'll bless the faithfulness that kepi us right." i W. G. N. ( "Economic." The opposition to the census seems to have een Imsed on purely economic, grounds. It. < conceived by the opponents of the measure ! hat the expenses would he too much for the 1 ood to be accomplished. That, is our view. Vo think the state can well siftord to wait a 1 bw years longer.-- Wiiinsbovo News and HerId. < "Economic grounds" had very little io do ' rlth defeating the census. The census was efc tied by Charleston and the low-country, ,nd It is wrong to try to dlsmtise it or excuse ' t. The Journals of 1X81 and is<<5 will prove it. Hid the purpose was to retain an unjust adMitnge. But suppose It hnd been "economic grounds." i s the Suite Constitution to be violated for the ake of economy ? Is that our contempora! '? Uvlaw" nliin*?\'tntiht*rrtt Ohsutrn/tr. Kindly Mention. The Columbia Rcguter In noticing our ao ountlast week of the Court proceedings in he Ferguson cnsc, makes the following kinder mention of our paper: The Abbeville Press n?d Banner with a most ommemliible enterprise, in view of the treat ntercst to the public of the questions discuss- j d. ns well as the absorbing concern in the realtor the motion, secured and published a i nil report of the proceedings, inelndlngevery peech made, and they appeared In the issue if thut paper yesterday, occupying eight full 1 olumna of nonpareil, equal to at least three lages of the Rcgidcr." BIG FIRE IN GREENVILLE. THE CLEVELAND BLOCK DESTROYED BY FIRE LAST THURSDAY NIGHT. The Origin of the Fire nnd its Progress?The Firemen and their Noble Work Against Odds?The Losses nnd the Insarance?Xaines of the Sufferers, and What they Intend to do. Greenville New*. A brief and hastily constructed account of the disastrous fire of Thursday night was priuted in the edition of the News issued yesterday afternoon. Fuller particulars have since been obtained and are given below: The "Cleveland block" was built about eleven years ajro and consisted of a two-story building with front and rear walls of brick and divided on the ground floor into four large store rooms by latli and plaster partitions. In the second story there were a number of hall ways, offlceR and rooms. Flights or steps ran frnm iho fmnt. nn Main street,, hetween the partitions dividing the stores, to landings on the second floor nnd thence down to the rear. The block adjoined a large square two story brick building at thecornerof McBee avenue and Main street also belonging to Mrs. Mary Cleveland, the owner of the Cleveland block, divided on the street into two stores. At the other end, toward the Court House, the three story brick building occupied by J. C. C. Turner joined the block, rising considerably above it. In the rear the Cleveland block had but one story lighted by sky-lights, forming the rearof the stores. The store nearest T. B. Ferguson's was occupied by L. Rothschild, clothing and furnishing goods dealer; K.G.McPherson's book and stationery store was next door and M. J. Mullane, dry goods, and A. Rosenthal, clothing, came next. Tho fire was first discovered in Mr. McPherson's store by a large tiger cat known as "Caesar. ' and kept by Mr. McPherson as a pet. A stove 6tood about the centre of the store and a pipe ran from it straight up through the second floor and into the office of w. L. Bell, book agent, where the pipe of another stove Joined it through a drum. A space of two feet clear surrounded the pipe leading from below, and the floor was further guarded by zinc pintlng. The action of the cat in persistently leaping 011 the counters and shelving and crying attracted Mr. McPherson's attention to the celling several times, until at last he saw a spotof Are about the size of a penny near the pipe. He immediately sent to the engine house of the Lee company,a blodt away, to give notice. Messrs. Thomas Sloan, Jas. O. Lewis and others had heard the cry of fire and rushed upstars to Mr. Bell's office. There they found the floor burning around the stove and immediately threw all the water they could find on it. It is thought that eight or ten buckets of water applied quickly at tills time would have extinguished the flumes, but that quantity could not be obtained soon enough. The smoke had by this time become stifling. It was 9.30. The Lee steamer was promptly put Into position at the nearest cistern and a line of hose was quickly run up stairs. The block has long been regarded by firemen ae a death trap bocause ol the thin brick walls, absence of dividing wailsand complicated structures of frame partitions and stairways on the second story, but the men rushed in readily and pointed their nozzle at the burning place. They waited and waited, but no water came In response to their cries. The engine was out of order. Opinion was divided as to whether the valves had been cutout by the sand in taking water from Richland creek ai the last tire or whether there was an accumulation of Ice. However it was, the machinery positively refused to work and many precious minutes were lost. The Palmelto hand engine, managed by colored firemen, responded to the call of the bell, which was not sounded until some time had been lost with the Lee engine. To the dismay of the firemen and thecrowd It was found that the Palmetto's pumps were irozen tight as iron and refused to draw water. By this time the fire had eaten Its way along the flooring and partitions toward the rear and began to glimmer through the windows over-looking the low roof and climb on the sashes and cornices. The Pioneer truck was on the ground and had its ladders run up at the rear, while axemen and members with hooks did what they cou'd In preparing lor the hose. Very lew minus were removeu irum m? stores, partly because it was thought the tire could be managed, niul partly because the building might tumble in at any time. A large eap piece crowning the front wall was especially feared, and Chief of the Fire Department Reilly and the police kept Alain street I as clear as possible, while the firemen were instructed to enter trie building and throw their streams only from the rear. The Neptune hand engine company arrived and immediately put on a stream from the roof of the one story in the rear. They were quickly followed by the Lee steamer, which ?ot two streams at last. But the firemen worked under great difficulties. The ladders became masses of Ice as did the tin roofs and the ground wherever the water fell. The cold was intense and sevpral men had their hands frozen to the nozzles while thoseon the brakes were compelled to stop work at short intervals to get life and feeling into their numbed fingers. No definite idea could be obtained of the location of the lire. It burned apparently slowly, but In the middle of the house, spreading both sides, eating through partitions, floors [ind stairways, showing now at one window and then at another while the dense smoke obstructed views and men could not enter anywhere because they did not know but that any floor they stood on was afire underneath and j ready to drop through. A naming, tneneciuai fight was kept up for four hours. Sometimes the tire seemed to subside; then it would suddenly burst, out in a new place, revealing a muss of fiaineand blazing coals. All the time the darkness, the cold and ice, the occasional stopping of the engines or bursting of hose tind the ever present feeling of imminentdanECer combined to dishearten, discourage and demoralize the firemen, who, nevertheless, <tuck to their work as bravely and stubbornly as men ever did. At one o'clock the roof went down and the flames, freed front all restraint, leaped high in Lhe air, lighting the sky. while smoke rolled nut in thickening volumes. By this time the sidewalks along Main street opposite the burning block were packed with a dense crowd of people attracted by the continuous ringing ol the fire bell, and many of them were pressed into service on the brakes of the hand engines. After the roof went in the firemen were ordered back from the lower roof to the ground and from that time threw their streams from there or from ladders against the side walls ol the stout old building at the uorner. The tire now burned very rapidly and fiercely and the entire block was soon a mass of j flames shining from the top and gleamingi through the empty spuces where windows and doors hud been. * ' " '* tn/VHA AAMAAn. i AIIA1CI) UIIU UtlCUI'lUJl WUIU UlCII WHWVIItrated on tlie tall and strong fire wall of the building next south of the burning block, owned and built by L. B. Ollneand occupied by J. C. ('. Turner. Thin wall guarded the stores of J. C. C. Turner, furniture and coffins; t\ P. Mlmnaugh, dry goods; Gilreath & Pation, household goods, crockery and tinware; Henry Kneble, liquors and tobacco, and Julius U. smith, auctioneer and agricultural implements, in whose building the A'euvr office and two lawyers offices are located. All of the stores mentioned contained Ifir^eand valuable stocks. If the Turner wall had gone nothing could have saved them, and probably $75,XX) of property would have burned. The flames leaped and roared against this wall, lapped over it.and threw driving showers : of sparks and hlazin;: fragments of wood upon ihe tin roofs. Half a dozen times the I ularm was given that the fire had got over the I barrier and that, the Turner building had! saught and men began to remove articles of furniture from the ground floor nnd stock I Ihem against the Mansion House across the street while the occupants of some of the second story offices further down also moved out. i A stream was now played from the front against the wall and into the fire near it to J mitlsinto the heat and keep down the flames j us much as possible. The wall held. The fire: went Its fury and becran to burn lower and it I was seen that the danger was over. Meantime a hard tight was being made at the other end of the block to save l he corner building, the cornices and roof of which took fire at half past two o'clock. Here the firemen fought insldeand out. The tiff got In the dangerous place between ceiling and roof and the Pioneers went in, tore holes in the ceiling and ran short ladders from the lloor to It. Tho nozsiemeu put their heads and nozzles through these holes and played on t ho tire until suil'o-1 cation compelled them to drop back and give | place to others waiting to relieve them. Out-1 side the men clung to ice coated ladders with : their elbows and used the nozzles with their ' hands. All the goods were removed from the: Ferguson and Heaves stores and at lust, at. | four o'clock, after a tight of six hours, the building was safe. From that time the work was done by the! Palmetto firemen who remained on the j ground giving water at intervals from a cis-l tern in McHee avenue, filled from tho big cis-! tern in Coffee street by the steamer; a stream' being thrown wherever dangerous Haines np-i pea red either in the Cleveland block or in the I corner building. The firemen were completely exhausted by their long fight. Many of thciu weut home 1 with clothing frozen stiff, and they gathered up their apparatus when the struggle was over wearily enough?sore, tired and cold. Chief Reilly became completely exhausted nt about 2 o'clock and was curried home by his friends. He was unable to leave his bed yesterday. Six Are cisterns, containing nearly 200,000 gallons of water, were emptied on the lire through the hose of the different companies. The front wall of the burnt block fell In at9 o'clock yesterday morning with a great crash. There was much pillage of property being removed. J. L. Reaves lost very heavily lrom this cause, and it Is likely that much of Mr. McPherson's stock would have been saved if It bad not been that as soon as his doors were opened parties rushed in and began stealing right and left. By the time this crowd was ejected and a force of trustworthy men had been collected it was too late to save more than the account books, a show case and a few miscellaneous books. L. Rothschild got out clothing to the valtle of probably 8500 or 81,000. Iiis books and some other valuables were in his safe and were gotout yesterday uninjured. Messrs. Rosenthal and Mullane saved nothing but their books and a safe belonging to Mr. Rosenthal. The stock of the late T. B. Ferguson was brought out, but wub considerably damaged by handling. As well as can he estimated roughly, the total loss is between $50,000 and 800,000; Insurance about 843,000. All the parties damaged have some insurance. The following are the losses and insurance : Mrs. Mary Cleveland's losson block and corner buildings, S20/XK); insurance, 815,300. J. L. Reaves, grocer) insured for 51,000, which will cover his loss. Estate of T. B. Ferguson Insured for 82,000, 1 which will cover the loss. L. Rothschild, clothing, insurance 810,000; loss, estimated,814.000. R. G. McPherson, books, Insurance, $2,000; loss, 84,000. M. J. Mullane, dry goods, insurance, $10,000; loss, 813,500. A. Rosenthal, clothing, insurance, 82,000, which will nearly cover loss. J. C. C.Turner, loss all by removal, fully covered. Dr. J.W. Norwood, dentist, insured for 8341; loss, Sl.lKK) or more. A. C. Welborn, Insured for 8400. Loss cover ed. All this block is located in Sanborn's map, sheet 3, block 13, Nos. 635, 630,637 and 638. totally destroyed. Same block, 630 and 640, slightly damaged. Main street looks desolate and forlorn with a smoking pit full of bricks, charred ttmbers and twisted iron where there was a row of imposing and fully stocked business houses Thursday. The fronts of the buildings left standing are amass of ice. R. G. AlePherson will go north immediately and lay in a new stock. He will open within t wo weeks in the store recently occupied by J. jl. jDriunieii* 111 ine iviauiuui omcj*, ivium bucci near Washington. M.J. Mullnno will probably re-open an soon as possible iu the store recently occupied by Roberts & David, Main street between Washington and McBee avenue. Messrs. Rothschild and Rosenthal have not yet announced their plans, if they have formed any. The Cleveland block will be rebuilt as rapidly as possibly and on an improved plan. The idea of tearing down the building at the corner and building a uniform and handsome block of six two or three story buildings is being considered. It is proper to say in concluding this account that the proprietor of the News appreciates the annoyance caused readers of a daily newspaper by the skipping of an issue and has always heretofore obeyed the newspaper maxim, "get out your paper in any circumstances and atall hazards." Rut he feltdurlngThursday night that he could not use his force more to the public interest and his own than having it aid the flsht against the fire that threatened so many thousands of dollars of property and the JVeius office itself. When the danger was over yesterday morning. work in the office was an impossibility and the New.t of yesterday did not appear until six o'clock yesterday afternoon. The lire is the most destructive had here since 1877 when the old opera house and the block attached in Coffee slreet were burned. The loss exceeds that of the academy of music fire in 1879, and makes the event rank as the second greatest conflagration this city has known in its history. IT PAYS. What a Believer;in Prlntcr'8 Ink has to Say About Advertising. A gentleman who has found that advertising pays has the following say, which may be of some benefit those business men who "hide their light under a bushel: "I am a firm believer in advertising, and think that great pennninrv tmnafltK miiv he derived I'rom it when carried on in a judicious manner. I have done some of it myself with good results and have nhvays contended that newspaper advertising Is the best. The keenest and most successful business men employ the columns of the newspapers as thetr medium of reaching the people. Men have otten lold me that they have watched the effect of advertising certain articles, and, old business men and advertisers though they were, have been surprised at the excellent results attained. It is not the one who advertises by spurts?fits and starts, as it were?who sees and receives the greatest benefits. It is he who keeps his name and business before the people corstnntly, week nfterwrek, that reaps the reward. I would not keep an advertisement the same the year round, unless I sought simply to couple my mime with my business, but would change it frequently, even if it cost more. In old times, If you changed the reading of your yearly advertisement ofteuer thr.n once in three months you were compelled to pay extra for setting it up. Now you can have It changed any reasonable number of times in a year without extra cost Tho person who keeps his name and an attractive advertisement before the people all the time is sure to realize from it. If yon want to buy shoes the person whose nnine you see in the newspapers every H.H. In nnnno/>!lnn wlf.h this hrnnfll (if tnidp. comes to your mind unscrupulously. You feel acquainted with him before you have seen him. This Is common sense, and all judicious advertisers know it." "Figures that Mislead.*' Georgetown Enquirer. The News and Courier recently publiseed a review of the industrial progress of South Carolina, in which it was claimed tli.it during the last five years the increase in the wealth of the .State amounted to $P>x,000,ikX). This would be a very cheerful nnd gratifying exhibit if the theory of our able contemporary, that every new enterprise represents an increase of wealth to the extent of the amount of capital invested, could be accepted as correct. Til a Abbeville Pres.* and Banner, com menting on these flirures, exposes the fallacy of the assumption that they prove what is claimed. It is manifestly a begging of the question to hold that the Investment of a given amount of capital in a manufacturing industry constitutes a proportionate addition to the aggregate wealth of the State, for the simple reason that the enter prise established is only pre-existing capital converted Inloanotner form. In order that the assumption should be true, it must be shown that the new enterprise represents capital brought into the State for investment. The Pre/si and Banner Is right, therefore, when it compares this sort of logic to that which counts a merchant's gross sales us net profits. IL might with equal rMiivnii |,f> Asserted thnt, smods. purchased l>v otir merchants in New York and paid for by sending money out of the State, represented an Increase in wealth. And yet to state such a proposition Is at once to reveal its fallacy. It Is not denied that there has been a considerable increment in the wealth of South Carolina during the period covered by the und Courier'.* statistics, but wo are satlstlad Unit Its magnitude mis neen exaggerated. it is pleasant to contemplate evidences of procress, especially where the proof is incontrovertible, but no siood result citn be obtained by over-estimatlnit our growth. It is better for States, us it is for individuals, not. to sail under tales colors. When the real facts become known, the ronction is likely to be dangerous. The AV?/? and Courier doubtless has the good of the State at heart. It should take care not to frustrate its own purposes by publishing figures, which though honestly complied, are yet calculated to mislead. DR. ARMSTRONG CONVICTED. Tlic Clinrge of "Immoral Revelry" only Partially Sustained. News and Courier. Atlanta, Ga., February o.?Bishop Beck with announced the doclsion of the Ecclesiastical Court in the Armstrong case this morninir. The Court found Armstrong guilty of violating his ordination vows, In that he confessed drinking beer in a hotel and visiting houses of ill-fame. Although on a lauda- j hie mission it was not setting a good example to his flock. The penalty is not more than ten years' suspension, but the Bishop has not yet pronounced sentence. Tjif. second session of the Greenwood Female College begins this week. Several new! btudcuts have arrived. I f THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. THE PAY OF TEACHERS?THE AVERAGE ATTENDANCE OF SCHOLARS?THE SCHOOL AGE. The School Commissioner Sf Abbeville County Makes Many Suggestions of Vital Importance to the People. Office of School Commissioner Abbeville County, 1 Abbeville, S. C., Jan. 14, 18#6. The County Hoard of Examiners have agreed that the monthly pay of teachers shall be according to grade of certificate, or grade of school, as follows : First Grade, Twenty-Five Dollnrs. Second Grade, Eighteen Dollars. Third Grade* Ten Dollars. mw a * tntnlmum ntrAMna nnmKni* ftf r?11. mat uic iiiiuiiuuiu urvingg uuiuuvi vi pils per month that shall entitle a teacher to full pay in country schools shall be 15; in incorporated villages and towns tf). In casus where the average number between the ages of 6 and 16 falls below the minimum the trustees shall pay a per capita share of the monthly pay. The following changes of general Importance to trustees and teachers have been recently made in the School Law : 1. Certificates granted by County .Boards are valid for 2 years, and are renewable with or without examination, at the discretion of the said Boards. ? 2. It shall not be lawful for any person who is less than six or more than eighteen years of age, to attend any of the free public schools. The law requires the trustees to mept as early as practicable in the year, in order to locate the schools aud elect teachcis. This ought to be done before the 1st of February of each year, so that by that time all the schools of the district shall have been established and all the teachers employed. No school ought to be opened after the first week in February unless under peculiar circumstances. The apportionment of the school fund to the several school districts is made on the 1st of February, or as soon thereafter as practicable. Unless the.trustees fix some limit to the time during which they will coutract with teachers of public schools, they cannot know the number of teachers nor their grade in time to ascertain, with the accuracy that the subject demands the length of the school term for their districtThe trustees, therefore, are urged to ascertain as soon as the apfortionment is maae me length of the school term for their district and report the same to all the teachers and to the School Commissioner. Theschool term of each school of the Fame district, for the time It is operated as a public free senool, should be the same. There has been a gt ear defect iu the administration of the school law in respect to the location of schools. In some places the schools are located too neareach other. This distribution of the forces and efforts of a community, as well as the distribution of the public fund has had the effect of shortening the school term, and depriving such unfortunate communities of the Influence and advantages of one good, well-paid, well-equipped and well sustained school. I recommend to the trustees the sentiment of a distinguished commander, who, when asked the secret of his success, promptly replied, "J concentrate my forces In some places, on the other hand, the school* are too far apart. The effect has been, probably, more disastrous than in cases where the schools are too near each other. It has lessened, alarmingly, the attendance In the county schools, arid, doubtless, smothered the spark of genius in many a worthy youth. This part of the school law is as difficult of administration as it is Important. While the law requires the trustees to pay due regard to any school house already built, or sites procured, it also requires them to have regard to "other circumstances proper to be considered so as best to promote the educational interest of the district." I am disposed to believe that there are schools In the county that ought to be removed from their present location, and established in places accessible to a lareer number of children who are not now within a convenient distance of any school. No two public free schools for the same race ought to he within less than Ave miles of each other. Two and a half miles is not too great a distance from a good school, -r-f very few only will be required to go even tins distance, ana iney ran, surely, well afford to do so, if, by having fewer schools, we increase the length of the term and. the efficiency of those that we have. It is a lamentable fact, known even to the casual observer, that in some sections of the county there is an increasing disposition, on the part of parents, to shift the responsibility of their children's education from themselves, where it properly belongs, to the public, where it belones only incases of extreme poverty and misfortune, or wilful neglect. They demand that the public, which cxactsfrom them a few dimes for school tax,shall in return educate their children, build and repair their school houses, and even pay the incidental expenses ol the school. This disposition ought to be checked at every point, and especially in the matter of building and repairing school houses. It is a manifest injustice to the teachers to take any part of their already too 6mall salary and appropriate it to building and repairing school houses. The school house Is a local matter, and the community ought to build it at tueir own expense. The circumstances ought to be very exceptional Indeed, which would induce the trustees to appropriate any part of the public fund to building and repairing school houses. I feel sure that my views on this subjest will not be well received, but I believe them to be fight, and that is a sufficient reason for me to recommend them to the earnest consideration of the trustees. win nloncp kpp tr? It. that, the 111V bi uouvwa "*|? teacher's monthly reports are properly filled out, as the School Commissioner's annual report is based upon these monthly reports. Any letter conveying suegestlons and recommendations to trustees is essentially defective, that does not ask their hearty support In the proper administration of the school Jaw, in raising the standard of teacher's certificates, in increasing the efficiency of the schools, in arousing an interest in the all-important subject of properly rearing and educating our children, and in making during the short period of our office, unmistakable advances all along our own nnes in the grand march of education. Respectfully, GEO. C. HODGES, .School Commissioner A. C. The I>isal?lcd Confederate Soldier and Xegro Education. Greenwood Light. The Con federate soldier is n thing of the past, and negro education is the white man's crnz^of the present. The conk-derate soldier was a true and brave Southron, who defended with every impulse of his mind and body hi* country's cause, his Individual honor and property, and his wife's and children's virtue ana lireside. Negro education is the confederate soldier's I wages, and the want of bread and clothing I the disabled soldier's inevitable condition, as [ long as negro education elevates the negro up the ladder of fame by the tax-payer's money. The confederate soldier is a white man, and in many Instances a poor disabled soldier, whose wife and children can scarcely get a single meal per day, and who no doubt [ would thank God 11 white people would asisisttliem. 'Die negro Is a black man, and asks no favors and gives r.one, whose children are hugged up and educated by that noble class of South Carolinians who has forgotten lhe poor soldier and his children for the negro. wiion ti?o snlfllor tonic farewell of his weeping wife and crying children for the tented field, lie went trusting that II' lie fell iiis own dear South Carolina would be "a husband of his wire nnd a lather to Ills children." O, soldier of tho South and dead comrades ! What a pity we sacrificed so much for the negro, und did so liulo for ourselves and families. The idea of highly educating the negro in the arts and sciences to make him u better citizen is the rotten philosophy of the heart- j gushing demagogue and self-aggrandizing politician anil nothing c/sp. The lost leg, the missing arm and mangled body need the assistance as well a* sympathy of bolt til Carolina. ORPHAN. If vou want, a good breech loading shot gun at New York cost, call on 1'. Rosenberg A Co. A small amount invested in window glass and prepared putty will make your houses much more comfortable for the winter. Class cut to fit any sosli by Speed & Xe utter. }2-!?. Always on h ind, a large lot of white lead, prepared paints, linseed oil, p;iint brushes, which you ran buy in any quantity from Speed *\r NeuJIer. 12-9. Hu.v the Golden Machinery Oil for engines, gins, Ac., sold by Speed Nuulfer, 1:M). .Jewelry! Jewelry ! ! For holiday presents. Just received a most beautiful assortment of ladies scarf pins, bangle pins, bracelets, necklaces. ear drops, lace pins, oxydized pins, Makado's Infant bib pins, infants pet name pins. These are the handsomest and best, goods we have ever shown. K. M. HADDON A CO. 12-2 Thomas McGkttioan. of the old reliable ralmetlo Saloon, has gruntly reduced the prices of his tine old pure goods. (Jive him a I call and see for yourselves before buying adul-, terated liquors,?Adv. ' \ p NINETY-SIX BOOMS. -? ?,:r' ' Her Splendid Rnllroad Prtspecte*Her Poor Crops of Small Grain?_ Her Enterprising Merchants?Several Riddles and Many Personal Matters. / ' Nixety-Six. S. C., Feb. 8,188fl. Miss Jolinnie Abney, who has been away-' ; from home for some time, has returned. The blhszard last week has about finished the oats, and we understand the wheat crop Is " also badly injured. 1 , " The "Regulators" who are looking after certain parties whpfcave not lived as thev should \ , , Hve*nave been* making some inquiries in our section. Mr. E: 9. Addison has purebaied a pair of Normaii hnrsfrftnlN THipit ?? cmnA <-> -> have fallen Into good vbands. Sir. Addison Ik a tine judge ana handler of horses or stock ot any kind. Mr. Joseph Wilson is a great admirer of the human family; but especially lotes the man who pays him the cash. Mr. A. B. Still continues his visits to the second township. We ?|on't know Whether he is electioneering or what' he is a^nt, but Ire le ' nevertheless very much In earnest. This 18J right, my young frlemj,- "Faint hqart never' won fair lady." * ; Mr. Marshall Smith has rented the Jfriek store of McGowan & Moore, and trill Often ?/ large stock of general merchandise. He is a young man of energy and buBirfeM tact, and", we hope he will succeed. './* Dr. T. W. Chiles, one of the dlrefctOTfe of the Atlantic, Greenville and Western Railway ' Company, called in to see us a few days ago. He is greatly encouraged, and says thmtearo' *. moving along all right on the lower section.-' : Ninety-Six is blessed with two butchers^ "Competition is the lifeof trade,"and we bopsC" now to be able to get some flrsuclass meat. ' ' Seed oats are boomlngand are readily bringing seventy-live cents, and are hard to get at that price. President Hammett has Issued a circular letter to the people along the line of the narrow guuge railroad, which we hope will have a tendency to remove all opposition to the en- v ?, terprlse. A pound party at Mr. Robert C. Calhoun's . s~ W one nieht last week was an enjoyable occ#? sion. The young folks were dellghtee. Mall route Inspector E. B. Treutlen has paid hlfi PPBnPPtc 1 o "NJ InoHr.m v ?1" I >iu<.>;-uiai uu ID UUIlUIIliy tt very efficient officer, and bis friends here are '4 proud of the estimate in which be Is beld by the Post Office Department. Tbe election in Oaklawn and Dunklin townships on tbe question of subscription or no subscription to the Narrow Guage Railway Company, have taken place with tbe following result: Oaklawn 5 to 1 in favor, and Dunklin 221 to 9 in favor of subscription. This is ft -j grand victory. We feel assured now that road will be built and that speedily. Mr. W. S. Richardson has recently received >' per express a trio of handsome light Brahmin chickens from Virginia. They are beauties. He bas also an eighteen month old steer calf / that willl net one hundred pounds to the quarter. It will be killed this week for thef Ninety-Six market. * Trial Justice Moore seDt Alfred Berry, colored, to Jail recently for failing and refusing to , f pay his poll tax. Mr. Ben Chiles, a popular salesman repre* . senting a popular house in Augusta, Georgia, calls occasionally. "I would respectfully request you to tako my name off of the petition that yon havfl* ; . against the Narrow Gun>te Railroad," writes a prominent citizen of Ninety-Six township to -.2 John R. Moore. Mr. Dan Chaney, who has been wintering It . ; In TTlnrhla ? "i?u_ Muoivnuiuru. uvk u oajro nunuu in a good place If a man has money. On his return home Dan fell into the hands ol some sharpers at Savitnnah and was fleeced. They did not fet much wool, but suffice to say forced Dan ro hough it home. We hope Dtfitf ha" learned a good lesson. "The hand writing upon the wall." The next eighteen months will determine what wall is referred to. and then we shall see ' i whose "knees will shake." The largest audience we have seen out for some time were outto henr Mr. Carter on last Sunday. The town and country were out 2*?n - J musse." 'Trtift Mr. James D. Fooshe was in town this week with potatoes, turnips, <tc. Mr, Fooshe is one \ of the best farmers in the county. EAST END. . - McCORMICK MATTERS. ' 1 1 Tbe Savannah Valley Railroad?Open- ' Ingr of the Academy?The Dlvlnl- ^ ties-The Assessment of PropertyDoctors and a Sad Accident. McCormick, Feb. 2, 1886. Quite a number of our citizens took their first trip on the Savannah Valley Railroad .j last Friday. The road is about completed to Mt. Carmel. We went about three miles beyond the river, stopping at or near Mr. Gillebenu. While the conductor was having some work done the passengers were strolling up and down the road and through the woiods, an seemea to oe enjoying ine irip very muen. It was not long however before all were Invited to dinner, prepared by the ladies, some In the car, some out on the waving grass. and genial sun shine, using pine logs for tables all ate heartily, except one or two, who was ? little?nclined to stroll all the-time, but I suppose they wanted to see the eountry. Capt. Rich soon Invited us In the car. and we were off for McCormick. one hour later and we were all home again. Our merchants are still In good cheer. Uncle Billle says he will never break as long as he can stand up. Dr. M. B. Johnson left for his home in Edgpfleld last week to spend a while. Doctoralways goes through by Augusta. . Miss Carrie Barnett and Miss Sal lie Day of v Augusta are spending awhile at Mr. Wm. Harmon's. Guess Mr. Jim can display his wonderful musical talent, which has been latent so long. -? Miss Howell Mcintosh.left here Monday for Wllliamston Female College. Dr. Self of Edgefield county, while skating on ice during the severe cold weather, fell and broke his skull, he died on 28 January. Pnnt. Pnrks wjis in town Mnndnv tflkircr ill or assessing property. Drummers throng our streets dally with. their samples, thus enabling our merchants to keep their stock replenished. Cnpt. Robinson opened his school in tho academy Monday. The tap of the bell doubtless mnde glad many hearts as they proceeded one by one to the school grounds. Some may have their name enrolled on ihepnges pf history, as Patrick Henry or Thomas Jefferson, and thus fulfill the prophecy of James L. Petlgrue, "There are as great people iu the Ilange as the sun ever shined upon." 1 ?; . i > TEE MEDICAL MEN. ' ' They Pans an Important Rmlnffon as to Drng Stores DesKni; Jn Wliiskey ? Change of Tfmc and Place of Meeting^. Society met 1st February. Meeting called to order by the President. A Pr. Miller made a motion to change the time of meeting to 3rd Tuesday after Saleduy. Motion withdrawn. I)r. Wldeman made a motion to fine each member 10 to 25 cents lor non-attendance. Withdrawn. Dr. Waddell made a motion for some member of Society to write an essay on some medical subject to be read before the Society. Carried. Essny to be read hy Dr. Waddell at next meeting. Subject? Dyspepsia. Motion carried to meet in Dr. Mabiy's offlcc in future. WitEKF.AS, We believe that there are oertain drug stores in the eonnty of Abbeville that art* selling whknltey, theref ?re be it Jiesolvetl. That as a Medical Society we disapprove of this action of such druggists, and that we wilt not patronize such drug stores. Meeting adjourned to meeting Saledny irr Mar?'h. B. A. MATTISOX, Secretary. Mary K. Williams, now in Jail at Yorkrille, under sentence of death for poisoning her husband and three step children last Summer, was to have been nanged next Friday, but owing to her delicate condition, the Governor has ordered that the execution shall be postponed until the 19th of November next. Another large lot children's and Missrf IIOSC ill' 1U CUniN| lV Urill UUUl W Wtuw iwiv wmo at R. M. Haddon & Co's. Xow Is your time to got a pood breech loading shot gun at New York cost. P. Rosenberg <t Co. TnK Press and Banner prints letter hends bill heads, hand bills, etc., as well as they can lie printed elsewhere, and as cheap as the cneapest. Cull and examine our stock of overcosits before they are ull gone. P. Rosenberg a Co. Velveteens, Velveteens, Velveteens, black, brocaded and colored, in a great variety of colors,see them at Hell <k Galpliin's. Skni> to the Press mul Banner for lien and mortgage blanks of the best loruj. /