Newspaper Page Text
Ilumorous ?tjiartmrat. TOO HONEST. A polite man, well dressed and benevolent ofr countenance, called on the superintendent of the K. A F. railway. "I shall not detain you but a moment," said the stranger, accepting the chair which the railroad man courteously offered, "for my business, though of much importance to me, may be of small concern to so rich a corporation as the one you represent. Early this morning I got on a train at Bradway's. I had just time enough to catch the train, and consequently did not get a ticket. The train was crowded and the conductor did not get round to me; indeed, I looked for him but oould not find him, so I came in without paging my tare. As I remarked a moment ago, it may be of small concern to your rich corporation, but it is an important matter to my pefcce of mind. My conscience, sir, would not permit me to pocket money that belongs to others; and so I have called to give you one dollar and a half. Here is your money." The superintendent took the money and said: "Such honesty, sir, is extremely rare. Would you mind telling me your name?" "Surely not. I am R. B. Millirons." "Thank you. I have to step into another room a moment. Will you kindly await my return ?" "Assuredly, sir." The superintendent went into a room some distance away and, over the telephone, called up the sheriff's office. "Make out a warrant for the arrest of one R. B. Millirons, for robbery, and send an officer here at once." The superintendent returned to the room where he had left the honest and courteous visitor. "We are having some very pleasant weather for the time of year," said the superintendent. "Yes, very. Indeed, I was thinking this morning that we should all feel thankftil for the many blessings showered upou us. The sensational threat of a money panic has passed and a number of vile and grinding trusts have gone to the wall of justice. Well, I must be going. I owe a grocer for a barrel of flour and promised to pay him this morning." "Pray don't be in a hurry. It is so rare that one meets such a man that a little talk with him is refreshing." '"You greatly surprise me," said the visitor. "I have never had much to do with high railroad officials and have heard that they are as a class harsh and imperious. I must say, however, that you are one of the most agreeable men it has ever been my good fortune to meet." "Don't mention it," the superintendent answered, looking toward the door. "Please don't be in a hurry," he added as the visitor arose. "I should like to stay longer, but really I must go and pay for that flour." "Ob, the fellow can wait. Come in." A man had appeared in the doorway. "This is he," (pointing to the honest fellow). "I am a deputy sheriff," said the newcomer, addressing the honorable gentleman, "and I have a warrant for your arrest." "What? A warrant for my arrest? I don't understand you, sir." "Perhaps I can explain," said the superintendent. "Some time ago, somebody robbed an express messenger on one of our trains, and I am convinced that you are the man. I never saw you before, and of course know nothing about you, but a man that would come in to pay a railroad one dollar and a half that a conductor had failed to collect is either a fool or a robber, and as you are not a fool, you must be tne otner fellow. At any rate we will try you on the charge of robbery." The fellow was tried, was proved guilty and is now serving a term in the penitentiary. A Sad Appeal.?A middle-aged, healthylooking man, who had called at the postoffice for a letter several days running, returned yesterday with the usual inquiry, and was answered as before: "No letter for you." "Are you quite sure ?" he earnestly asked. "Oh, yes." "Alas! but I can't make it out!" sighed the man. "I should have had one Monday, and this uncertainty unnerves me." "Expecting to hear from some of your friends?" queried the clerk, touched by his despondency. "Yes?my wife." "She is away from home?" "Yes?in Buffalo," "Any one ill ?" "No, not exactly." "But you were so anxious I thought it might be a matter of life or death." "It is, almost. You Bee, she cooks in a restaurant and sends me five dollars per week to live on here, and this is the first time in six months I have missed a letter on Monday. I don't know what to think. She may be ill?she may be out of a job?she may. have gone back on me. I may even have to go to work again and earn my living ! Please be very, very sure that you have not overlooked my expected letter." Needed Water.?A North Carolinian went to a physician and requested to be treated. "What seems the matter with you?" the doctor asked. "I don't know. My tongue is parched and my throat is cracked and my lips, you see, are chapped until they bleed." The doctor examined him closely. "Yes, there is something the matter with you, undoubtedly." "Do you think that you can cure me ?" "I can and will cheerfully undertake the job." "All right, and what will you charge?" "Five dollars." "All right, the money shall be yours just as soon as a elire is effected." "Good enough. The truth is you don't need any medicine. All you have to do is to drink some water." "That's a fact," the patient exclaimed. "I knew there was something that I neeeded, but to save me I couldn't think what it was. Well, here's your money, anyway. A man ought to be willing to pay for information." She Will be Left.?Yesterday forenoon a mother and her ten-year-old son got into some sort of dispute in front of the city hall, and he wheeled about and said to her:' "I won't do it, and you bet I won't!" "Then take that!" she exclaimed, as she fetched him a box on the ear and walked off. The boy stood holding his ear when a newsboy approached and asked: "Was it your mother ?" "Yes " "Hurt much?" "Awful. "Going to give her anything for Christmas." "Not much ! I was going to, but now she can hang up her old stocking and be hanged ! I've got her a handkerchief, a paper of pins, and four yards of calico: and got them hid in the woodshed, and now I'll go home and trade off the outfit for a peck of peanuts, and eat everyone of them myself."?Detroit Free Press. I ? ? Tried in the Crucible.?An individu-j al of rather doubtful, not to say suspicious ' appearance, applied to a prominent coal dealer the other day for a position as driver. Upon being asked for references he mention-' ed one of the dealer's old hands, who was called up and questioned as to the candidate's honesty. The "reference" rubbed his chin meditatively a moment, and then answered : "Honest! Veil, boss, dis yere man's honesty have been proved befo' de cote. He's i been tried sebeu times for stealin' and escap-: ed ebery time!" This dubious recommendation didn't help , the applicant's chances, and he was told to i get out.?Washington Post. W&" The Old Fashion Woman?Do you j really feel that you are doing your duty in running around the country lecturing and leaving your husband at home to attend to the children ? The "Advanced" Woman? You don't suppose I would leave my chil- j dren under the care of that idiot, do you? They are supplied with the best governess I can afford to employ. t&T A little boy who had been punished for an exhibition of ugliness was sent to bed | with instructions to pray that he might be a better boy in the future and that his temper might be reformed. His mother stole to the ( door of the room to make sure that her com- j mands were carried out, and this is the; prayer she heard : "Oh, Lord, please take ' away my bad temper, and while you are about it you might as well take mother's." j Wagside Gatherings. I?* If anything must be done, do it and be done with it. ?- If others say how good you are, ask yourself if it is true. I?" He who wishes to secure the good of others has already secured his own. ?" A woman never blames a man when she can blame a woman. IfiT The faster a man runs in debt the less he is apt to get ahead. J?"* Wyoming is the first State to muke an appropriation for the World's Fair, t?" "It is very hard," sighed the gas-meter; "I always register, but I can't vote." tST Krupp, the Prussian gunmnker, has an annual income of about $1,500,000. I?* No rich man was ever happy unless he used his money to make others so. J? There were three hundred and fifty new medicines patented in 1890. I?* There are said to be 15,000 brass bands in this country, with 150,000 perlbrmers. I? The people of the United States pay a war pension tax of $150,000,000 a year. 1?* Don't put too much trust in Providence. Providence has her arms Aill of fools already. I?" A watermelon weighing 165 pounds has been raised at Wheatland, California. The Sultan of Turkey has attached to his body guard a soldier who is 110 years old. I?" Real estate nine miles from the Centre of Chicago sells for four thousand dollars an acre. The best characters have a mixture of infirmities, and the worst have sometimes redeeming virtues. I?* Two million and a half is the number of persons who are said to work on Sunday in this country. B3T To rejoice in the happiness of others is to make it our own ; to produce it is to make it more than our own. #?" An octogenarian at Mayesville, O., has just taken his seventh wife?a woman thirty years his junior. 0?"A curse is like a stone thrown up to heaven, and most likely to return on the head of him that sent it. A cheerful temper, joinel with innocence, will make beauty attractive, knowledge delightful, and wit good natured. tST A Georgia somnambulist awoke, tbe other night, and found himself at the grindstone sharpening his knife. I?* Missouri paid over seven thousand dollars last year for tobacco supplied to the convicts in the State penitentiary. J?* Nothing is easier than fault-finding. No talent, no self-denial, no character, is required to set up the grumbling business. |??About the first thing the small boy begins to count when he has learned his numbers is the warts on his hands. I?* Farmer Drisko, of Jones-borough, Me., has a plow, it is said, that has been in constant service for fifty-three years. B?~ It is said that one-eighth of the wine produced in California last year came from a single vineyard owned by Senator Stanford. I?* Rub your lamp chimneys after washing with dry salt and you will be delighted at the new brilliancy of your lights. J?* The printing press which Voltaire set up in Fernay to demolish Christianity is now used to print Bibles in Geneva. 4 k^1"" ?'AAn lAfynllmr nn WOO A ni'u man b ucms ?cc|< iv^iun their way to the graveyard, but they hate each other on the way back. 19" He who gives pleasure meets with it; kindness is the bond of friendship and the hook of love; he who sows not, reaps not. To complete their growth, the nails of the left hand require eight or ten days more time than those of the right. 9" If the spine is weak rub it with a mixture composed of oue teacupful of water, one tablespoonful of brandy and a pinch of salt. 89" You may safely commit the child's clothes to the servant, but the rest of the little one you had better take care of yourself. 19" A tickling in the throat can be cured by placing a pinch of dry, pulverized borax on the tongue and allowing i t to slowly dissolve. 19" Chicago is overrun by idle workmen, drawn there by expectation that the World's Fair preparations would give them something to do. 19" In Germany the law makes servants give a month's notice before leaving. The mistress must give a similar notice before a discharge. 89" A grain of fine sand would cover 100 of the minute scales of the human skin, and yet each of these scales in turn covers from 300 to 500 pores. |9" In the photograph of the heavens in course of preparation in the Paris observatory if ia r-nlfiilnfpH that, fi4.000.000 of stars VI " " - -I 7 will be represented. B?" England has more women workers than any other country, in proportion to population; twelve per cent, of the industrial classes are women. I?* The placing of the lest stone in the spire of the cathedral at U! a raises it to a height of 530 feet, and ina,:es it the highest cathedral in the world. 4?" The wide awake farmer visits other farms than his own. When he finds conveniences, methods and crops better than at home it improves his farming. B?* By due process of law in New York last year 100,000 people who could not pay their rent were turned out into the street without a place to go to. J?" There is a house a Fayette, Me., ninety years old, in which, it is said, four generations of the same family have lived, and yet only one death has occurred. B?* Statistics show that one-fifth of the native married women of Massachusetts are childless. It is said that in no country save France can a similar condition of affairs be found. 8?" The American locomotives sent from this country to China a few months ago are proving so superior to the English locomotives that nothing but the American make will now be used. I?* Blue is the Chinese mourning color. When you see a Chinaman wearing a blue coat, or with blue braid plaited in his queue, you may take for granted that some relative or dear friend is dead. 0?" One of the industries of London is the selling of sea-water, which is delivered at the purchaser's house for two-pence a gallon. It is brought to town every night by the railroad companies. 8? A fanner near Atlanta, Ua., not needing a coffin he had bought for his sick child, the latter getting well, mounted it on four legs and used it as a watering trough for his cows. With the lid he repaired his fence. 8?* The longest recorded range of any foreign gun is just over twelve miles, which was achieved with an English gun. The longest recorded range of an American gun is about six and one-third miles. PaF There are about 105 women to every 100 men; one-quarter of the population of the world die before the age 17 years ; only 1 in a 1,000 lives to be 100 years old, and only 6 in a 1,000 reach 75. A West Virginian claims to have discovered a cave filled with boxes of gold, diamonds and rubies?enough to load two freight cars?but he won't give it away for less than $5,000 cash down. He doesn't want to be mean; but he just won't do it, that's all. P&~ Not long ago, in a public school examination, an eccentric examiner demanded : "What views would King Alfred take of; universal suffrage, the conscription, und i printed books if he were living now?" The i ingenious pupil wrote in answer: "If King! Alfred were still alive he would be too old to j take any interest in any tiling." All music in the house of (lod should i be based upon and governed by the great! idea that music as a part of the service in a j religious congregation is an act of worship' rendered to God. It should hence be chiefly j vocal and of such a character that the congregation can join in it. The abandonment j of this idea is a perversion of the fundament- ! al idea of church music. BA finger nail led to the discovery of u j thief who robbed a factory in France. He I entered through a window, und the nail was! in some way torn oil' and left on the sill, j The next day an employee appeared with an injured finger, and suspicion, of course,! pointed to him, but he fled before he could i be arrested. He win traced to Paris, and, j on the police finding him in apartments, ho! jumped out of the window and was dashed , to death on the bricks below. ^HisteUattfOMS fUaditig. | FOR LOVE'S SAKE. Sometimes I am tempted to murmur, That life is flitting away, With only a round of trifles Filling each busy dayDusting nooks ana corners, Making the house look fair, And patiently taking on me The burdens of woman's care. Comforting childish sorrows, And charming the childish heart With the simple song and story Told with a mother's art; Setting the dear home table, Ana clearing the meal away, And going on little errands In the twilight of the day. One day is just like another! Sewing und pieceing well Little jackets and trousers, So neatly that none can tell Where are the seams and joinings? . Ah! the seamy side of life Is kept out of sight by the magic Of many a mother and wife! And oft, when I'm ready to murmur That time is flitting away With the self-same round of duties Filling each busy day,? T# immou to mv uttiril AWMtlv. With the grace of a thought divine; You are living, toiling for life's sake, And the loving should never repine. You are guiding the little footsteps In the way they ought to walk, You are dropping a word for Jesus In the midst of your household talk ; Living your life for love's sake, Till the homely cares grow sweet? And sacred the self-denial That is laid at the Master's feet. Disappointed with the Lymph.?After experimenting for over two months with the Koch lymph in New York city, on about three hundred and fifty persons, members of the medical profession of that city consider Koch's lymph a disappointment, and aver that the discoverer's claims for it are shown by their experiments, to be unfounded. The New York Herald gives the opinions of several very emiueiit practitioners to show that it is valueless as a diagnostic, that it does not cure consumption, and that it is not the specific it was thought to be. No one has proved it to have an elective affinity, as claimed for tubercular tissue. Conservative men declare that the cure for consumption is quite as far beyond the reach of the profession as it was before the lymph was known. Dr. George F. Slirady, at St. Frances's hospital and the New York Cancer hospital, says: "We are awaiting proofs that the new method of cure is quicker and surer than the old one." Dr. J. Newton Heineman, visiting surgeon of Mount Sinai hospital, where the most numerous experiments have taken place, and of the Polyclinic hospital, where most interesting experiments have been made, said he had abandoned treatment in all cases which did not show a marked amelioration under the lymph influence, and continued: "I am convinced that by itself the lymph is not a specific for phthisis. It is only a means among many others of improving the condition of consumptive patients, but it is very far from being a remedy of such potency that it may av/.U?o?/\? nf flin Tf iu UC U9CU IU UlC I'AUUOIUIl VI hiv viiivivi of very little virtue as a diagnostic." Dr. H. P. Loomis of Bellevue hospital thinks sufficient time has not yet elapsed to justify a statement as to the benefit, if any, to be expected from injections of Koch's lymph in consumption. Cold Waves.?Cold waves are those sudden changes from high to very low temperature which constitute the most noteworthy feature of winter weather in the United States. They are produced by the flow of masses of cold, dry air from the regions east of the Rocky Mountains in British America, towards the south or southwest. During the long winter nights of the Arctic regions, dry, clear air accumulates in deep layers which is cooled by radiation to a temperature many degrees below zero; and then begins to flow towards any place where warm air is ascending, as it does in the low pressure areas or storms which .constantly pass from west to east across the United States. A "low area" is produced by the air somewhere becoming heated from unknown causes above the surrounding atmosphere. This excessively heated air ascends and the air is drawn in below from all sides to replace it. That drawn in on the south to east side is warm and moist; that drawn from the north to west side is dry and cold. The cold wave follows after the low area as it moves eastward. The severer and prolonged cold waves are associated with extensive areas of high pressure. Their rate of progress average eight hundred miles in twenty-four hours. It is of great advantage to many business and agricultural interests to know in advauce when the temperature will full quickly and decidedly, besides affecting the comfort and health of thousands of people.?C. F. von Hermann. The Origin ok "Sub Rosa."?The Latin phrase "sub rosa" is used in elegant speech to indicate secrecy, and means "under the rose" or "not to be told." The origin of the saying is as follows : The first rose that was ever seen was given to Harpocrates, the god of silence, by Cupid, to induce the former not to betray Venus in her questionable go-1 ings on ; and from this myth the ancients I made it a symbol of silence, and it was a custom to place a rose above their heads in their banqueting rooms, in order to indicate that nothing said or done was to he told outside. A company of wise men once handed themselves together into a club?though they did not call it by that name?whose sole object was mutual improvement. For the furtherance of this object, they swore each j other to silence during their meetings, the conversation being carried on by means of symbols and pantomime. At length came a man wiser than all the rest asking for admission. They would gladly have received him, but their prescribed number was already filled, to indicate which fact they sorrowfully filled a wine-glass to the brim with wine, so that a drop more would make it overflow. He understood, and quick as thought dropped a rose leaf upon the brimmin liquid, where it floated without making it i un over. The | wise men were so delighted at this that they j stretched their rules and received him with | great joy. And so has come down to us "the | rose leaf 011 the brimming wine cup." Don't bk Too Strict.?"We can pin j boys down 011 benches, we can restrain tlieni, from restlessness, we can coerce them to! walk sedately, we can withhold their hands from exploration and mischief, and their whole bodies from rollicking activity; and in doing so we are modifying the development of their brains." This is the opinion of a great medical authority, and should, together with the weight of evidence from other sources, accomplish some reform in the present treatment of boys in school, and girls as well. Courses of j study are too little diversified and appeal to j the intellect for too long a time at once, j The eye and the ear have too prominent a place in education, and all spontaniety of action is wrongfully repressed. Physical exercise at proper periods and changes from mental to manual work and vice versa, as occasion may require, are elements of growth that are sadly neglected by teachers. To Look Well is a Duty.?It is right for people to look as well as they can. He who made all things, says one, is a lover of the beautiful. He could have made the world without its tinted skies and golden sunsets. He could have made it without its majestic clouds painted in gorgeous colors. He could have made the flowers without their exquisite lieauty, but Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. The Creator's works on every hand declare Him to be a lover of the beautiful. It is right, therefore, to lav tribute 011 all things at our command calculated to improve personal appearance. What Hoksks Dik Of.?A New York horse life insurance company, insuring only sound and generally young animals, worth between $100 and $400 each, reports that, of 704 horses dying within the past live years, 18:* died of eolie, 77 of inflammation of the bowels, 74 of kidney trouble, 51 of pneumonia, 52 of sunstroke, 50 of pinkeye, 57 of lockjaw, 25 of broken legs, 12 of epizootic, 10 of heart disease, 4 of blind staggers, 0 killed by runaways, 4 were drowned, 2 were killed by lightning, 12S died of unknown diseases, and only S were burned. ft^tiod knows where we can do the most good better than we do. Hence it is well for us to realize that we are just where we ought to be when we are in the place where (Sod has sent us. "If each drop of" rain chose where it should fall," says Charles Kingsley, "(iod's showers would not fall, as they do now, on the evil and the good alike." So it is that the world is benefitted by (lod's choosing the place for his individual workers in the world. ?&e Jam and INTENSIVE FARMINII. Mr. George W. Truitt is a successful farmer on the intensive plan, as everybody knowB who has been to the Piedmont Exposition for the last year or so. Last fall he and Mrs. Truitt carried off several thousand dollars in prizes for their displays?Mr. Truilt in the products of the farm, and Mrs. Truitt in a multitude of exhibits of the housewife's skill. The picturesque plantation cabin, surrounded by a real cotton patch, which attracted so much attention at the previous exposition, was Mr. Truitt's conceit. The point of this article is the renaissance of intensive farming. A dozen years ago it was much talked of, and the Hon. Farris Furman, its apostle, stirred up a great deal of enthusiasm for the new culture. Since then the idea has been quietly but steadily growing. Each year has raised up some new advocate of the system, and in some counties it has been extensively adopted. The scarcity of labor has now made intensive farming a pressing question. It has almost come to be a necessity. The migration of the negroes within the last two years has in many instances, left the planters with a large crop in the field and nobody to harvest it. This has caused loss and has forced the owners of land to consider means of culture with fewer hands. Happily it has been found to be much more profitable than the old way. Mr. Truitt says it will be the salvation of the country, and he has come to the conclusion through experience. At the request of The Constitution Mr. Truitt gives a description of the method which, in his pointed words, "brings contentment and happiness." Here is what he says: "There is uo question in the minds of^lT serving people that we are drifting to the small farm. In fact, our labor Is so disorganized and unreliable that the day of profit on the plantation is gone except in rare instances where the owner is a man of exceptional executive ability, and has reduced all his operations down to the most economic business system. By hard work and constant, unremitting attention to details, I have succeeded in bringing average poor land up to where it averages a bale 1o the acre. Of course some land produces more than other. On eighty acres of my individual crop last year I made 104 bales, averaging 470 pounds per bale. On seventy acres my tenants made forty-six bales, or on 150 acres of land 150 bales of cotton. Tins is a plai n statement of a simple fact. As to how I ilc this: "First, I break about one-half of my land with a two-horse plow, alternating each year, ploughing very deep. The other half I bed with square pointed scooters. "I lay off my rows four feet wide, running a sr-onter in front and a Johnson wing the opposite direction in the same furrow. In I that furrow I place the cotton seed for fertilizer as early after Christmas as possible, | forty bushels to the acre. About the 10th j or 15th of March I put on top of these seed 400 pounds, of acid per acre. I find the j heavy rains wash the sand irto the furrows! and mix it thoroughly with the seed, which j is very beneficial. Then bed fiat, with square-; pointed scooters. When the cotton seed can- * not be had, I use 500 pounds of gossypium I per acre just before planting. O n my thirsty ; land I run a subsoil plow over the fertilizer, in order to mix it thoroughly vrith the soil. "On my bottom land I put 1,000 pounds of fertilizer per acre in the drill and two list furrows, and mix it well with the soil. With the planting seed I put 250 pounds additional. From the 11th of May to the 20th of; June I broadcast 750 pounds pur acre ahead I of the ploughs. On bottom lands I use a mould board, making the beds a little high-1 er than on the upland. "Before planting I run a Thomas harrow \ across the beds ahead of the planter, which i destroys the early grass and makes the land fresh and level. With a Brooks's planter I put in two bushels of seed per acre to insure a good stand, using 100 pounds of fertilizer with seed on the upland. "As soon as cotton on upland begins to break the crust in coming up, I start my harrows, running them obliquely across the first time, and afterwards directly across the harrow rows. Then follow with an eighteen-inch scrape and short scooter, runningshallow. Then start the hoes, every hand carrying a three-foot stick to measure the lu>hi.Mn liillu nt> nil imlnnrls. I uiniauvu uvvnvtu v.* M.. ?4 _ ])longh this once every twelve days, using after the first time a tweuty-four-inch scrape, ploughing up to the 1st of August. "On my bottom land I make the rows five feet apart, and bring the stand down to four feet between hills by taking a twentyfour-inch scrape and running two furrows across the rows, leaving a belt of three inches to form the stand. This enables me to plow both ways, leaving but little work to the hoes. This is better than dropping in the check and ensures a better stand. "I find that from the 20th of March to the 10th of April is the best time to plant cotton. I have improved my seed from year to year from the best stalks, until now my cotton is at least 100 per cent, better than it was eight years ago, when I began improving it. T ..,.,.,1 <nt, utnl.lu maimra lw ifqclf tf? llVOill J. USUU 1UJ Diauiv IIIUIIui V WJ .VWV..J ? ? ? hauling heavy compost loads. "I do not know that I could improve on that plan, even reducing my operation to one-fourth the land I now cultivate. I do know that a man can make twenty acres pay big money hy building it up for all it is worth by fertilizing with peas iu the spring and rye iu the fall?turned under and not cut at all. I follow the next year with cotton. As an example of this, three years ago I had a tenant who made twelve bales on twenty acres of land. The following year that land was sowed in peas in the spring and rye in the fall, and last year it made twenty bales of cotton. "To get the best results from twTnty acres in cotton, starting with ordinary, wornout farm land, the lirst thing to be done is to thoroughly terrace the land, in order that that there will be 110 waste from washing. I The terraces must Ik; made strong and 011 a level. When so made they will not be any trouble after the second year ; then prepare and fertilize as above. Deep ploughing iu the preparation of land is essential. Alter the plant is up of course the shallower the cultivation the better. About the 20th of July the cotton should all be topped, as that makes it mature earlier and often saves much damage from the caterpillar. Most people wait to late to top their cotton and consequently fail to get the real benefit from the operation. "The salvation of this country rests on the intensive system of farming, small acreage, high fertilization and thorough and rapid working of the crop means profit U?> the farmer, whereas the old system means j a continued struggle and a miserable hand ! ! to mouth existence. The one system brings! contentment and happiness, the other only I I trial, hardship and discontent."?Atlanta I Constitution. ... PLANTING CORN. It is well to plant early. If frost cuts 1 down the young plants no harm will come of | it. If it kills them, it is not very great labor; i to plant over again. A bushel of seed plants ' [ about eight acres, so seed is not a matter of! : great consideration. But why plant early VI i Because, as a rule, early planted corn ears j best. It does not make so much stalk, bull j expends its energy in making larger ears ; Again, an early crop is apt to mature before the great heat and drought of summer comes.! j Much corn is planted just in time to sull'er | from these. Early planted corn does not inj terfere with the cultivation of si cotton crop jus much as one planted a few weeks later. : Alt early planted crop is more apt to escape I the hud-worm. This does not begin its depI reflations until the weather gets pretty warm, j and by that time early planted corn will be too advanced to be much injured. Again if early planting fails to secure a stand, one can plow up and plant over again before the season is very far advanced. In planting early one must cover the seed very shallow. The reason for this is ! two fold. First*, the ground is very liable j to pack, hake and crust in early spring, and . when this happens the young corn often fails j to get through and reach the surface, if it has much thickness of soil to come through ; 'second, the grain requires a certain amount I of heat to germinate (will not sprout when j average temperature is below forty) and this ; it will get near the surface more quickly 1 than when it is deep down ?for the ground t is cold in the spring-ami the warming up ' begins at the surfacti and travels downward, j Later tin; ground may get too dry near the) j surface, to bring seed up, hut there is little i j danger of this in the very early spring, j Cover shallow, hut cover with a little ridge over the grain to prevent water settling (over it, and making the soil hard. If the) seed ha* been very carefully selected and is sound, one grain at a place is apt to come up and secure a stand as a number of grains; but out of abundant caution, it is well to drop two in a place. It is thought that a weak solution of saltpetre is a protection against bud wo:."ms, and makes the young corn grow off'better. The question is often asked, shall we plant home raised seed or that from a distance. There is nothing gained by procuring seed from a distance. Corn does not deteriorate from being planted long in the same locality. Get the variety that has given best results in your neighborhood. If weavils are bad, perhaps it is better to plant the hard, flint varieties, where they are not, thegourdseed, or what the Northern fanners "call dent" varieties are very good. There is an exception about getting seed from n distance. It is in case of early varieties. Always get seed of these from the North. They lose their earliness after two years cropping at the South.?W. L. J., in Atlanta Constitution. Care Pays.?It has been demonstrated that a good common cow, treated as the choice Jerseys are, will give better return than a finely bred hut neglected Jersey. This discovery has had the effect of bringing down the price of Jerseys to a point which Oi.im liriOiin *oiinli t\f nrrlinnrv dflirv. piatto vuvui nivmii v??vu. vi vi\i<**mi^ j . men. The editor of a Vermont journal is credited with being the owner of a "stubtailed, one-horned, 'yaller' cow, with no pedigree," which last year, besides furnishing the milk for a family of ten persons, supplied more than $100 worth, sold to the editor's neighbors who had the misfortune to own cows with long pedigrees. Whatever exaggeration there may be in the tale as told, it is certainly true that good feeding and care will do wonders in developing latent bovine poweis. By crossing the "scrubs" with better blood and treating th% offspring as if they were thousand dollar stock, a vast improvement should be effected in the character of the ordinary dairy stock and in the profits of the dairymen. But even without the crossing, good feeding and care will greatly increase the supply and improve the quality of the milk of most cows of the ordinary breed.?San Francisco Examiner. Comfort in Show..?A "retired shoe dealer, whom mercenary considerations no louger deter from giving advice as to the proper care of shoes," says: "A pair of shoes made of good leather will last much longer if properly oared for than when neglected. When shoes are only blacked the shoes soon become hard and dry, the l>est fitting pair will be uncomfortable, and here and there little cracks will appear, which will soon become chasms. Every week or two the blacking should be wiped off with a 1 .1 .1 .1 .1 1.J | 11?..?wl + T. UUQ1}) CIOIU, till! HI1UU .Miuum uc uuuncu iu dry, ftud then be rubbed with the best burness oil. Every part, including the sole and the seams should be oiled, and the oil given a chance to soak in. The toughest leather can be made soft in this way, and good leather, after this treatment, will feel like kid. The shoe will wear three times as long and be much more comfortable.?N. Y. Commercial Advertiser. ~?C" POWDER Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of all In leavening utrcngtli.?l". H. Govenrinent Report. Aug. 17, lfWt. FebrvaryiK 3 ly 44,oils 1*1 toed in Southern Homes sanee 1^(J?Twenty ?enr? IQOOMllful bUliQd>U--ulMOVOI Hi* ill lllloii DolliiM mainsss. ite^5stssMi TO SELL-NOT TO USE and the pnblio ti?? found out that WE DON'T SELL THAT KIND Our Instrument* lead the world Oar Prices I.FSS than factories Terms. EiwUwt. Melhnis. lairrst. Inducements. greatest. *nd svi? nnv li<iulit. Write for Free Catalogues nnd Circular* n pinning fully?all In plain print Eu-y to liny fri r IUDDEN&BATEQ I Southern Music House, |$ "" SAVANNAH. CA. "I I _ I I I I I ! Children Cry ; for PITCHKS'S | Castoria " Castoria is bo well adapted to children that j I recommend it as superior to auy prescription known to me." H. A. Ahciikk, M. I).. Ill South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y "I use Castoria in my practice, and And it specially adapted to affections of children." Autx. Robertson, SI. D., 1057 ad Avo., New York. 'From personal knowledge I can Bay that i Castoria is a must excellent medicine fur children." Da- 0- U. Osouun, Lowell, Mass. Cnatorrn promotes Digestion, ami | rvereoinos Klutuloney, Constipation, Sour Stomurh, Diarrlui-n, ami Fovorisliiiess. I Thus tlio child is rcndoreil Ileal thy ami its { 1 sleep natural. Castoria contains uo j Alorphino or other narcotic property. j ouinmnBMm DtH'cinlicr i'l r?I ly to l>ec. iS?, *!?1 | H.AI1 III T !H IOTA I.. 17V ?K SA I jK several hundred pounds ol' It A 15HIT M MTA I. at ten eeiits per pound. Ap| ply at the KNtJl'l KKK OFFICIO. THE Y0RKV1L1 IS PRINT! CRANSTON INII PURCHA DODSON'S PRINTEF ATLAN' All Kinds Printing: Material am Lowest February 25 The Best Bargain Ever Off A $45?-? SEWING I INCLUDING ONE YEAR'S SUBS WE have made audi arrangement* aa enable offer the CHICAGO SINGER SEWING CHINES ut lower rates than ever before for a Gi MACHINE, and we offer our readers the advar of the unprecedented bargains. This Machine is made alter the latest models o Singer Machines, and is a perfect facsimile in shap< numentation and appearance. All the parts are i to gauge exactly the same as the Singer, and are structed of precisely the same materials. The utmost care is exercised in the selection o materials used, and only the very best quality is chased. Euch Machine is thoroughly well mude a titted with the utmost nicety and exactness, and no chine is permitted by the inspector to go out o shops until it has been fully tested and proved I perfect work, and nin light and without noise. THE CHICAGO SINGER MACHINE has a important improvement in a Loose Balance Whet constructed as to permit winding bobbins withou moving the work from the Machine. The Loose Balance Wheel is actuated by a : bolt passing through a collar securely pinned t( shaft outside of the oalance wheel, which bolt is iii held to position by a strong spiral soring. When i\ enough to reiease the balance wheel, and turned sli pin until the liohbin is tilled. Wiiere the Machine can be left out of the wheel when not in use, so tin The thread eyelet and the needle clamp are ma< convenience. Each Machine Is Furnished Wi 1 Foot Heminer, d Hemmers, all different 1 < tangc, 1 Tucker, 1 Package of Needles, 1 Thread Cutter, 1 Throat Plate, 1 Oil Can filled with Oil, The driving wheel of this Machine is admitted venient of uny. The Machine is self-threading, 1 made of the best material, with the wearing parts has veneered cover, drop-leaf table, 4 end drawers warrant every Machine for live years. This valuable Sewing Machine is GIVEN" AS to THE YORKVILLE ENQUIRER at $1.75 em each, and $ti.00 additional. Price, including one year's subscription to Till Our price?$16.00?is for the Machine well crate< all attachments and accessories. The Machine maker, as the case may be, and the freight will b< The manufacturers write us that the freight to ar (live name of freight stution if different from pos THE CORI Is the Best Farming In NO OTHER IMPLEMENT WILL DO Right Now Is TI THERE is no doubt of the fact that no farming implement lias ever been oll'ered to the farming world that has given such universal satisfacT^TUL' IF.VWHnW Tt 1U lion H8 mo LvjADiii , .. . imcd in every State and Territory and is heartily and enthusiastically endorsed by every fanner; who has over used it, and they are numbered by j thousands. Practical farmers everywhere agree that it is, WITHOUT EXCEPTION, the most pmlituhle implement for cultivating the soil and putting in grain yet invented. It increases the crops, saves time and saves lalnir. The Harrow is made of tirst-chiss material throughout, and with proper earo will do good work for fifteen or twenty years, and will pay for itselfa dozen times over. The wheels or disks are made of the very best of steel, and will neither break, bend or crumble. The disks are not affected to any appreciable extent by rocks, and the Harrow will do good work on all kinds of land. The following are some of the points of superiority possessed by the Corbin Harrow : I. It is the only Disk Harrow that is perfectly flexible (i. e. one that will adapt itself to uneven surfaces). '1. It is the only Harrow in which the gangs are j independent of each other?either can lit or fol-1 low an inequality without disturbing the other, j It is the only Harrow having chilled boxes and anti-friction balls. 4. It is the only Harrow that has a successful Seeder Attachment. f>. It is the only combined Harrow uml Seeder that covers every kernel of grain in rows like a drill. <>. The Corbin is uncqunlcd for lightness of (lrult and power as a pulverizer. GARRY IRON RO 4 Manufactures all kinds of IKON KOOFINC, AjHj CKIMI'KII AND COKKl'OATKD SIIXNO, ^| Iron or Shingle, KIKK I'HOOK POORS, SlllTTKIlS, .w, THK LARGEST MANUFACTURERS < .Sir* Orders reeeivetl by L, M. (?KIST. LIVERY AND FEED STABLES. I WOl'LI) respectfully announce to my old friends and tfie traveling public* that I have returned to York villu, and ill the future will give my jiersoiial attention to the LIVKKY AND KKM) STABLKS so long conducted by me. Determined to merit public patronage, I hope to receive a share of the same. MY OMNIBUS Is still on the street, ready to convey passengers to all departing trains, or from the trains to any pail of town. FOR FUNERALS. I have an elegant IIEARSK and also a CLAKKNl'K t'OACM which will be sent to any part of the county at short notice. Prices reasonable. Buggies and other Vehicles On hand for sale. Bargains in either new or secoud-hund vehicles. HAVE YOUR HORSES FED At the Yorkville Livery and Feed Stables where they will receive the best attention. F. K. SMITH. PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY. TIIoltol'OIILY littisl up with new backgrounds, accessories, Ac., and with a line sky-light, I am prepared to take a picture in any style of the art, as well executed as can be done elsewhere. CHILDREN' S PICTURES A SPECIALTY. By the drv plate process I can take them instantly ; makes no dillcrciicc about fair or cloudy weather. 1 do all my own printing and finishing, and there is very little delay in delivery. ENLARGED WORK. Pictures copied and enlarged and finished in the highest style to be had, and prices reasonable. (live me a call and see specimens of work, at inv Oallery on West Liberty street, near the jail. J. B. St'llOKB. im)i:htakino. IAM handling a lirst class line of COFFINS AND ('ASKFTS which I will sell at the very lowest prices. Personal attention at all hours. I am prepared to repair all kinds of Furniture at reasonable prices. J. F.D. JKFFFBYS. PROTECT If From injury by the "Fly" by top-dressing Willi CKRKALITK. I iiii1 Imy per iicn- will largely ineri'ast' tin* virlil ??1" grain aim straw. HOY KIN', ('A KM Hit * CO., Kaltimnre. Mil. XdVI'llllnT l'J -lli I'll u _E ENQUIRER ? Ai BD OX A A 'ROVED ?f? | lSED OF ? I.S' SUPPLY DEPOT. I "'W 'W ' ~ 7 A PAl, GA. | A :l Machinery at Manufacturers' * Prices. g 3 tr ? w fered in Sewing Machines. ACHINE FOR $16* j CRIPTION TO THE ENCIUIRER. i lx>l>bin is to be wound, the bolt is pulled out far ghtly to the right or left, where it is field by a atop! is liable to be meddled with by children, the lailt L it the Machine cannot be operated by the treadle, j, le SKLF-THRKADING, which ia a very great L L til the Following Attachments: [; L widths, 1 Screw Driver, 1 Foot Ruffler, l 1 Wrench, 1 Gauge Screw, L 1 ('heck Spring, 1 Hinder, L 1 Inatructlon Hook, 5 Hobbina. y to be the simplest, easiest miming and moat con- ^ ins the very nest tension and thread liberator, ia L' hardened, and ia finished in a superior style. It a < and a center swing drawer. The manufacturers a DiiuMTiTvr vnit STYTY vearlv Hulisoribers [?h; or for THIRTY yearly subscribers at $1.75 (' : YORKVILLE ENQUIRER, $10.00. 1, and delivered on board the cars in Chicago, with ill be shipped direct to the subscriber or club; paid by tne person who receives the Machine, ly point in this section will averago about $1.50. t ollice address. L. M. GRIST, Yorkville, S. C. DISK t BlIM HARROW lplement in the World. !' AS GREAT A VARIETY ?P WORK. * ie Time To Buy. The Harrow With Seeder Attachment. ; Every Uorbin Harrow, whatever the size, isar- 1 ranged so that a Seeder can bo attached to it. s The See<l Box and its machinery are of the most T simple and compact character. All its metul parts are of malleable or retined wrought iron. Its weight is (of the size to tit the No. 7, 12-disk Harrow) about eighty pounds. The Seeder Attachment is removable at pleasure. It locks itself tinnly to the Harrow frame by simply putting it into position. Neither bar, 1 m>1 t, wedge, key, screw or pin, is used to fasten it. Therefore, no hammer, wrench or other tool | is required to attach or detach it. Haifa minute I of time will remove and one minute replace it. The Harrow and Seeder combined cost aland half as much as a Drill, and is a better tool. It will sow grain as evenly as any drill, cover it better, and place it ut any depth in the ground. It is two complete implements in one.. It prepares the tield in the best possible manner for seeding i 1 ? ..... ti... ft v/.uu RKD KIT8T til 111 liit'll mntn iuu ? iw.? PROOF OATS capitally. The St. Lawrence MM 'g Co., who are t lie manufacturers of the Corbin Harrow, recommend the No. 7 Harrow as being best adapted to general farm \vork. It is made in two sizes, viz.: 12 disks, 111 inches in diameter, and (1-foot cut, and the other size has 10 Ill-inch disks and 5-foot cut. I keen a few No. 7 12-disk Harrows on hand and 1 can till orders promptly. I am sole agent for the St. Lawrence M'f g Co. for York, Chester, Fairtield and Lancaster counties, S. and Mecklenburg county, N. C. 1 am prepared to quote unusuallv low prices and liberal terms. Call on or write to me at once. SAM M. GRIST, Yorkville, S. C. OFINGr COMPANY, IKON OKE PAINT | And Cement. Cleveland, O. Send for Circular ' *=,=cto23i -- -* and Price List No. 75. )F IRON ROOFING IN THE WORLD. ! I THE WEEKLY CHRONICLE. S'J.OOO IN GOLD. AVKRY intelligent lady writes of The Chron-1 icle: i " You have undoubtedly the best m eekly paper; in the State." I Our correspondent is very appreciative. Cer-i j tainly, we can claim truthfully that Tim Wkkk- i I i.v ('ii icon ici.K is one of the best in the South. | *< We want 5,INN) iicm' subscribers for it this year.! As an inducement, we oiler in premiums?not I j ; in books, sewing inachincs, furniture, meliHle- N i ons, crockery, joMsharps or plated ware? ! j $2,000 IN GOLD. l! For 1000 subscriliers $400 00 j noo " 2oo oo too " 100 00 , :ioo " 120 in) . " 2INI " .so IN) 1 UN) " 40 IN) 1 50 " 20 IN) ' " 2.7 " 10 IN) " la " a IN) 1 " 111 " :{ IN) a " 1 IN) The amount of $2,(N)0 in gold will be paid out .j on the above plan, and in like proportion for any j number of new subscribers sent in. j j The Cash Must Accompany All Names. Thi' subscription is onlv -SI per annum. All subscriptions must be paid for one year. t Coninioncintf next week Tit k Wkkki.y <'ii noxit'i.K will be sixteen pages. It is one of tlie best j and cheapest papers in the South. Sample copies on application will be sent tree to auv address. I No Names Entered Without the Money. r Remittances may be made by check, postal money order or by express. j Those who purpose to enter the contest for the 1 Hold premiums are requested to send in tho < 1 names and money as soon as collected. Their j* names and amounts will be entered on our lmnks i and a correct account will lie kept with each 1 person who is a competitor for the premiums. I These premiums will remain open until July! i, ism. Address: ' TIIK WKKKI.Y CIIUONICLK, ! | ArursT.v,?; j February 4 ">- tf I I You should road Creole and 1*11- , . lit a 11. It will ohuriti you. < !j . II. k. KIM.ky. J. s. it It 14 *k. . FIN I. MY IIKN'M. ATTOItMlYH AT I.AW. Yorkville. S. C. ' Al.l. business entrusted to us will be yiven ' prompt attention. inlTICK OI'I'OXITK TI1K roi'KT Hol'SK.} FOIt SAI.M Olt KM NT. rpilK IIWKI.I.INI! IlorsK AND l.oTsitu- I 1. ated near the Three t"s Depot, recently ?> ciipieil by .1. Thomas l.owrv, is Fn|{ SA1.K oil' i KKNT. The building contains six large rooms I and a basement. Apply to I.. M. till 1ST. i .lanuary :M * /in if I j ICHMOND AND DANVILLE K. R. CO. 10NDENHED Passenger Schedule of the South Oar> ollna Division In effect February 1st, 1891. All alns In the following table are run DAILY, by 76th erldlan time: qoYxq bopth. | No.;18 f No. 9 | No. 11 Ave New York 12 15ngt 4 30 pm Ave Philadelphia 3 50 am 6 57 pm aive Baltimore _ . 6 45 am B 25 pm Ave Washington - 8 30am 11 20pm Ave Richmond 1 00pm 3 16am Ave Greensboro . 8 30 pm 10 83 am Ave Salisbury 10 46pm 12 08pm invest Charlotte '12 20am 180 pm Ave Charlotte 12 40am 1 46pm Ave Rock Hill 1 30am: 2 42pm Ave Chester 2 07 am 3 23 pm Ave Wlnnsboro 3 08am 4 22pm rrlve Columbia 4 40am: 6 60pm Ave Columbia..'.....- 8.55 am 4 50am 8 10pm Ave Johnston' .s 8.51 am 8 48am 8 10pm Ave Trenton 9.06 am 7 05 am 8 25 pm Ave Granltevllle 9.38 am 7 38 am 8 62 pm rrlve Augusta 10.15 am 8 15 am: 9 30pm rrlve Macon 12 10pm ...... rrlve Charleston 11 06am' 9 45pm rrlve Savannah j |_6 55 pm 8 30 am _ 001X0 ^OBTU. I No. 12 I No. 10j I No. 14" jjiveHavannuh 8 40am' ? Ave Charleston, : 7 00am 6 00 pm Ave Moiwn- ? 8 30pm Ave Augusta. - 10 45 am 9 30 pm 6JO pm rrlve Granltevllle? 11 Dam 10 00pm 7.05pm rrlve Trenton 11 46am 10 26pm 7.64 pm rrlve Johnston's 11 69 am lO 88 pm; 8.10 pm rrlve Colombia ! 1 45 pm 12 15 am'10JO pm Ave Columbia 2 00pm 12 20am: ?'? !<tWnm I AS n m mVC IT u ma f?**, ~ rrive Chester. 4 32pm! 2 58 am rrive Rock Hill 6 13pm: 3 88am rrive Charlotte 0 10 pm 4 30 am save Charlotte 645 pm 4 30am' rrive Salisbury 8 00pm 6 20am! rrive Greensboro. 10 27pm: 8 Ham rrive Richmond [ 6 00am' -3 30 pm rrive Washington.,. ..... 10 25am; 7 50pm rrive Baltimore..... 12 Oftpm'll 85pm rrive Philadelphia. 2 20 pm! 8 00 am rriveN-iW Yorlt 4 50pm: 6 20am. Through Cab Service.?Pullman Buffet Sleeping irs on trains 11 and 12, between Augusta and Washgton. Pullman Cars between Greensboro. N. C., and aeon, Ga., via Augusta on trains 9 and 10. Train 12 innects at Charlotte with Washington and Southestern Vestlbulcd limited train No.88 and Vestibul1 train No. 37, South-bound, connects at Charlotte Ith S. C. Division No. 9, for Augusta. Tab. L. Taylor, Gen. Pass. Agt, Washington, D.C. Sol. Hams, Traffic Manager, Richmond. Vs. D. Caldwell, Div. Pass. Agt., Columbia, 8. C. JCHEDULE In effect March 31, 1890. Nos. fid and 53 > run DAILY; Nos. 38 and 39 dally, EXCEPT jnday: _ ^ - .. ooi no "south |"NaSa| No.38 cave iiutherfordton'. 9 55am cave Shelby 11 45am cave llluckshurg ; 12 45 pm 8 50 am eave Hickory Grove...? 1 15 pm 40am cave Sharon ! 1 30 pm 10 10am eave Yorkvllle 145pm 10 65am cave Tlrzah 1 1 56 pm 11 15 am cave Newport ' 2 02pm 11 30am eave Old Point 2 08pm 11 60am eave Rock Hill 2 20pm 12 40pm eave Leslie 1 2 28pm! 1 00pm eaveRoddey's j 2 32pm 1 16pm eave Catawba Junction 2 36pm 2 50pm eave Lancaster 1 3 12pm 4 30pm eave Camdem ; 4 34 pm 7 30 pm eave Ktngville _ ' 6 20pm rrive Columbia.... 7 06 pm GOINGNORTH. | No. 53 | No. 39 eave Columbia 9 00am cave Klngvllle 1 9 50am eave Camden II 40am 9 00am eave Lancaster........ 1 09 pm 1 15 pm eave Catawba Junction 1 48 pm 2 60 pm eave Roddey's. 1 52 pm 3 00 pm eave Leslie 1 56 pm 8 10 pm eave Rock Hill. ' 2 20 pm 3 60 pm cave Old Point- ! 2 25pm 4 00pm cave Newport. - ...i 2 33pm 4 18pm eave Tlrzah 2 39pm 4 30pm cave Yorkvllle ! 2 50pm 5 10pm eave Sharon 3 06pm 5 40pm eave Hickory Grove.... 3 18 pm 6 10 pm eave Blacksburg 3 45 pm 6 55 pm eave Shelby ... 4 w pm. .rrive Rutherfordton fl 45pm Joux P. Joxi?, General Manager, Blackdburg, 8. C. . & L. NARROW GAUGE RAILROAD. SCHEDULE of Mall and Passenger train* from Le~ nolr, N. C., to Cheater, B. C., and from Cheater to ancoster, dally except Sunday, taking efffect Februay 1,1891* i 40am * Leave LENOIR"An1ve.T^ 10 40pm J 47 am ^ HICKORY- <d 9 84 pm 3 25 am C NEWTON D ? 00pm 1 15am ? LINCOLNTON 8 11pm 1 50am 3 DALLAS ill 7 24pm 2 14 pm* ! GASTONIA. 3, 7 12pm 2 44 pm J CLOVER 7 6 10 pm 1 00 pm c YORKVILLE- A 6 45 pm 1 20 pm 5 GUTHRIESVILLE 'E1 6 25pm 1 55 pm | L0WRY8VILLE. ? 5 04 pm 2 15pm S Arrive CHESTER Leave.....*! 4 40pm ? Clieraw & Cheater,??^? I 40pm a Leave CHESTER Arrive -s 11 02am > 12 pin m KNOX'S 10 30am 1 29 pm J RICHBURG. 'I 10 10am 1 05pm * FORT LAWN 9 32am J 50pm ? Arrive LANCASTER Leave; 9 00am OL HASH, J. L. TAYLOR, D.'CARDWELL; raffle M'ng'r. Gen. Fuss. Agt. D. P. A. Columbia, H. C. CAEOUNA BUGGY COMPANY, Mauufacturera of Pine Vehlclea, YORKVILLE, 8. C. 1UY THE "CAROLINA BUGGY!" TWENTY CENTS FOR COTTON. ITTK are wiling WAGONS eheajier than over TT offered before. It does not take a pound uore cotton to buy a Wagon now than when rou received 20 cents nor pound for your cotton. 'nine and see us. ^ ou cannot leave without niylng If price is any inducement. We have Just ecolved a CAR LOAD OF THE CELKIJRAPKD TENNESSEE AND OLD HICKORY A'AOONS. FIVE HCNDRED THOUSAND FEET OF tVHITE OAK, HICKORY AND ASH LCMll.'U W <"1111 hiiiI ir?it ami HI nensions. I f you owe us either on note or ae'ouut, pay up. CAROLINA RUOOY COMPANY. KXCHAXCIC HANK. Yerkville H. C. I'. S. JKFFKRYS - President. IDS. ! '. AVALLACK Vice-President. 'RANK A. OILHKRT, Cashier. Oi'Kunl/.ed Heptembor 1, 1HN7. rllK HANK will receive Deposits, buy and sell Kxclmn^e, make laians and do a gene al Hanking business. The otllcers tender tlieir courteous sendees to ts patrons and the public generally. Hanking hours from 9 A. M. to 5. P. M. January 7, 1KP0. 4H tf SOLI-: ACJKNT. rliis will certify that SAM M. (JHIST, of Yorkvillo, S. hus been appointed as SOLK Agent for the sale of CORHlS' DISK HARtows, roltlUX ROAD CARTS, Ac., In and or the counties of YORK, CHliNTKR, LAN,'ASTKH and FAIRFIKLD, in the State of iouth Carolina, and MKCKLKNHl'RU county, ti the State of North Carolina. ST. LAWRKNCK M'F'U CO, January? 1 tf Xhc ^ovlnillc inquirer. PUBLISHED WEEKLY. TKHMH OF KUHWCJRIPTIONj Single copy tor one year $ *2 >ne copy tor two years 3 5U For six months loo For three months SO I'wo copies for one year, 3 SO Pen copies one year, 17 AO And an extra copy for a club of ten. A DVKHTIHKMENTH Inserted at One Dollar per square for the tirst insertion, and Filly Cents per square for each uibscquent insertion. A square consists of the pace occupied by eight lines of this sire type. Hif Contracts for advertising space for tliree, ox, or twelve mouths will be made on reasonlile terms. Sf** Tributes of Respect and Obituaries will lie charged for at the rate of ten cents per line, before they will be published, satisfactory arrangements must be made for the payment of ihe charges. Notices of deaths will be* inserted gratuitously, and such information is solicted, provided the death is ofarocent occurrence.