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JUST ABOUT A BOY. A Brooklyn Lad's Predicament and What j a Lie ile Told Cost IHm The boys in tlni lower p i Van Buren street, Brooklyn, just off Tompkins park, have been building bonfires. Frame houses line the street on both sides, and the resi dents have complained to the police of the danger to them from fire. One of the boys had had strict orders from his father never to share in the building of those fires, and, be ing an obedient boy, he never col lected the material for the fire or contributed the matches. His fa- tber had not forbidden him, howev er, to furnish some raw potatoes for •a feast by baking them in the em- )ors. It was this consciousness of inno- conco that made the boy stand when a policeman hove in sight around the corner the other day. All the other lads skedaddled. The police man came up with a stride. “Did you build this fire?” “No, sir,” said the lad without the least show of fear. The police man began to respect him, hut it would not do to relax his severity. “Whatchegotinyerhan?" he said sternly, and running his words all together to impress the boy. The hoy began to tee that the presence of the potato was prima facie evidence in the policeman’s eyes of guilt, but he was still con scious of innocence, and he replied frankly: “Just a p ’ate.” “Whatyrgointodowithit?” The full gravity of the situation now dawned upon the boy’s mind, and under the sternness of the po liceman he saw that something had to he done. Visions of the jail that every hoy dreads had begun to float before bis eyes, and be made an ef fort to resort to desperate means. “Oh, I’m going to eat it.” “T- -c- -nt raw potatoes?” said THE GREEDY STARFISH. SKINS OF Fo: ES AND OTTERS. .n. ’:C, 'axing a little and v ords together in a His manner gave and he replied with secretly amused the .. of which the lad I cat ’em. You see, I “On, yes, like ’em.” “Where do you live?” asked the cop, turning his head to hide a smile. Tho boy told him, and boy and cop went over to a basement- door. To the servant who answered tho ring the policeman said: “Does this boy live here?” “Yes, sir.” “Well, now, then (very st • ), I charge you on your honor, toll me truly, docs this hoy eat raw’ pota toes?" Tho policeman was nearly burst ing with laughter, and the servant stood there in blank astonishment. Tho boy was wildly desperate. He was surely booked for jail, all be cause ho had been honest enough not to run when the policeman came. The only one who could save him was that servant. He must give her a tip, and quick as a flash he spoke before tho girl could ask tho police man what ho meant: “Oh, yes, you know I eat ’em, don’t you? Why, ? on can both see for yourselves. I iiise ’em. I eat ’em. skins and all.” Then tho boy smashed his teeth into tho potato, and that Brooklyn cop was mean enough to stand there and make the boy eat half of it. Tho cop could endure it no longer, and with a laugh said: “See here, youngster, if I catch you eating any more of them things I’ll send you up sure.” And then he rolled off. The worst of tho experience to that hoy was not his fright nor the lecture his father gave him to the effect that it w add have been bettor to toll the trut h all tho way through, oven after ho became soared, nor the inconvenien ce ‘ ho raw potato caused him, hut th» fa-1 that since ikon when ho tm ns up Ins nose at some dish at the t able his parent says: "Well, I guess that any boy who likes raw potatoes can oat that dish or go without.” All of which illustrates the truth of tho fact that sometimes, especial ly for boys, it does not pay to tell a lie.—New York oun. A Wonderful! Feeder With fta Appatlto For Oy*t©n* In th« Shell. t The gray bearded captain of a dredgeboat sat sunning himself on tho quarter rail of his ernf., and he was telling a visitor s-. me l.icts about that pest of the oyster plant er’s life, the starfish. “It’s qneer, mighty queer," said he, “to see how little the average well educated man knows about the creatures one gets to know so well in my line of busi ness. Take starfish, for example. Here, this very morning, a thin faced chap, who wore spectacles and acted for all tho world like a school master, picked up one of the dead stars on the pier there and asked me if I had ‘any with the root and stalk attached.’ “I suppose I looked stupid for a minute or two, because he informed me next that those v ere the blos soms of a very beautif si sea plank I was mad at his dumb ignorance and told him my men were so har ried when they hoed and weeded them out from the oyster plants that they generally broke the stems. “Yes, sir, the star is a beautiful and a wonderfully made animal.- When yon piok it out of the dredge and hold it up, it seems utterly help less. Yet no creature in the sea is more tenaoions of life, more cun ning or more destructive of the iife around it. Its greed is almost past human belief. "Very few fishes, so far as can be learned, prey upon them, the storms seldom tear them from their deep hiding places, and they multiply with astonishing rapidity. If some irate crab or lobster bites off one of the star’s rays, a new growth speed ily replaces the old one. Its digest ive system is so powerful that be side it the oast iron organs of them trioh seem as the stomach of a weak dyspeptic. Oyster shells, the most- fatal and indestructible mor-- • which can assail the insides of a y land animal, do not cause the star r. moment of distress. “It seems to scent foodorpr'v from a long way off. As you lo- down on a -\ oal oyster bed yon rn:. see a big sUv from a j oint 100 fi t • away change bis course and < straight to whore a fat oyster lies Their gliding movements r. > stealthy, hut swift. Once they f upon the bivalve its days—yes, iis minutes—are- numbered. 'on s. the underside of this follow—tke bright, yellow side, I moan. The back, as yon notice, is purple, c-v ored with blunt spines. Well, tie long narrow slits r» 1 .ating from center are the mouth anil s :on combined. The star sim.'V o, itself—lays bare its eter il ac my, so to speak—and, infolding the hard shelled victim, stretches itself hack, having wrapped up the food as a storekeeper wraps up a bundle in paper. “Then the star crawls away to some secluded spot and lets the whole thing digest. The shells and other irritating substances do not seem to inconvenience him in the least. When he has sucked all the nutriment from the oyster, he un folds the package and disgorges the shells, sand and gravel. He is then ready for a fresh meal. “The damage they do ns is incal culable. Wink' s, dri" s, drumflsh and poaching L.-hermr i all annoy us, hut they are nothing when com pared with these five pointed ras cals. But with all that, still I ad mire them. Their untiring care of the baby stars until big enough to shift for themselves, their knowing ways in time of danger and their quick hunting instincts all command the respect even of an enemy. If those college chaps would study the stars of the sea more—there are some 40 varieties—and the stars of the sVy less, they wouldn’t got such stiff nooks.”—New York World. •mrii. Av'J It Came to Pam. ... i street this morn- tr ii attention on ao- I hung around his k was printed: • • rtunate. This poor '-icycle." . 'y who wheeled by u. -.,, .1. a coin in his bat, as his helplessness was calculated to touch a heart of stone. Adam Oldtimer of 2375864 Jones avenue was arrested this forenoon for walking on tho strook Ho was fined *10. He is the second man this week who has thus wantonly endangered tho lives of honest citi zens moving about on their bVyolos. The mooting of tho Pn ■■ tie Fox Hunting club yostoiday was a marked success. Mr. Mercury Go lightly received a few scratches in a fall when taking a ten rail fence or bis hunting cycle, one of tho spira jumping springs breaking, but oth orwiso there were no accidents. A trial was given to tho now Canine' Delight dog wheel for the hounds, and it was pronounced satisfactory Tho intelligent animals took to r, readily and worked tho pedals fierce ly. It is reported that a man in Connecticut is soon to bring out r fox wheel, to which thri boast will n fastened with a small strap, hav ing two minutes’start of tho hounds and riders.—(Hourly Gazette For ID 15.)—New York Tribune. Only two courses wore served at tho most elaborate Homeric feasts. Mo«t YmluMble of the Fur* Found In th* Pacific Conat Region*. The most precious of all Paciflo coast furs is the sea otter. There was a time whi n this animal was very plentiful off the California coast. The Russians are largely re sponsible for their destruction at the time they founded a settlement at Fort Ross, at the mouth of the Russian river, in Sonoma county. Some sea otters are still captured off the California const, and there are a few small vessels specially engaged off the California coast sea otter hunting, but Alaskan waters are tho chief sonroo of supply of this class of fur hearing animals. Sea otters are always found afloat, and the hunter can capture them in no other way than by she. ing. The deeper and colder the watt r they are found in the better the fur and the higher the price the banter secures for the pelk A first class sea otter skin in the raw is worth $500 to the hunter. The best sea otter pelts taken off the California coast will yield $250 each to the hunter. There may be elements, however, in the pelt which may reduce the value of the Alas kan pelt to $20, and that of the Cali fornia coast to $5. The 'coast of Japan has been a good hunting ground for sea otter, and during the past 25 years several small craft have sailed from San Francisco and San Diego to Japan, outfitted for ot ter bunting. Almost all sea otter skins are marketed in Russia, where the fur is in demand. Next in value to the sea otter is the fox among the fur bearing ani mals of the Paciflo coast. Six kinds are hunted for their pelts, which range from 20 cents to $00 each in the raw. These are the silver, cross, red, blue, gray and white. Something very rare among foxes i« a black coated animal, and tho fur of such a fox commands a fancy price, often running as high as *150. To supply the demand for black fox furs fur riers prepare an imitation by dyeing the fur of the roil fox, which is the chonpi v pelt of t. o fo:; famil; . ;e best "red” not being worth to vno trappers more than $2.25 per sk; i If we except the natural black fox, tho highest priced fox pelts are tho "silver” and the “blue.” Atrnpiior gets for a perfect silver fox pelt us be strips it from the carcass about $90 and for the best blue fox p 't about $22. An effort is being made on t • Aleutian islands to farm the ’ fox. Some of the small is’,..!:, the group suitable for the pu: of farming have been leased by some of the old trappers of t he Hu ’- son Bay and Alaska Commerc-.i.l companies for a nominal rent, and these have been stocked with foxes. Tlie animals are stockaded and re u- larly fed by tho farmer, who is t. ually a “squaw" man—that is, one living with a native woman, who is settled with his family on the is land. In -time tho animals become domesticated and are then easily managed. Furriers are watching the experiment with considerable interest.—ban Francisco Chronicle. A Home That II j Too Man. A Washington p. ofcssiop ; has an intelligent hoi j. The tleman named is in the habit ni ing on occasional sprees, and w he does the horse knows at or that bis driver does not want to home and takes him to a cocntr. house about seven miles from the city. The professional man, when about to spend qn evening among the boys, sends word to bis wife that he has been called out of town, and in this way has been able to keep the fact that he drinks a secret from e~- ery one except the oompanions with whom be goes on sprees. A few evenings ago the wife and a lady visitor started for a drive. The horse noticed that something was wrong with the way the lin were grasped and started for tb< country pkee, supposing that the owner was intoxicated again. No amount of pulling or whipping oouhl he made to change his course, am', about dark be baited in front of tbr resort. “Here, Tom,” called the proprietor, “ ’s drunk apa.r ' Come, help me carry him in. Am.' j Dan, put up the horse.” LONDON FIREMEN. MiMtlr Recruited From the See—Muet Re Mao of Nataa. A member of the Metropolitan fire brigade, seated in his street shell r and scowling at the curious public who peep in at him or hurrying from one station to another, with his ax and helmet slung over his shoulder, is not seen to advantage. He looks surly, and that Is precisely the feeling that is most seldom dis played by firemen. They are an in- teresting body of men. Most of them have been sailors, and. as a rule, they retain the free and easy Jollity for which seamen have al ways been celebrated. The brigade of which they are members has been in existence for only 30 years, hnt the origin of the fire brigade move ment takes us hack to very ancient history indeed. There wore bri gades before the great fire of 1666, when each parish employed a few men whose duty it was to attend outbreaks of fire and do whatever they could to prevent the conflagra tion spreading. Their only equip ment consisted of a few ladders and hand squirts about equal to those nsed by our gardeners, and they could not venture too near the fire lest they should spoil the gold laoe on their uniforms. In spite of the. terrible fires that from time to time arose in London, no serious effort seems to have been made to render the tire brigade more efficient until the end of last century, when a brigade was formed by the insur ance companies. Thirty years later the question was again brought for ward, and the result was the forma tion of a much more effective bri gade nnder James Braidwood. a di v er and fearless Scotsman. I DOIT HERffHIKfi- 3Ptje ©pentng of which are to be pub lished ia these columns HEIT WEEK. Tour attention will be chained from the very start. But . m pretty well peeled oa t,iiic-pifcce» That's my particu lar line, and I can doctor any Clock or Watch • ■ iiiAi That waa ever broken. If you have any silver goods or jewelry that need repairing, I can do it for you cheap. EVERYTHIN, usually kept In a first-class jew elry etore.snd at the lowest New York prices FOR CASH HIGHEST CASH PRICES^- paid for old gold. S.WOLFRAM 4-4 I bUr+t 11 < STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. County of Darlington. By W B. Hoole, Esq., Probate Judge. "VHERE 8, P. E. Oriffln made suit to me to grant unto him Letters of A dii inist ration ot the Estate of au 1 effects of E M Griffin, deceased: These are therefore to cite and ad monish all a d simrnlar the kindred op Feb 26th next, after publication hereof a' 11 o’clock n the foreiioou to show cause if any 'be> have, why the ssid AdtuiiiMr, tj»i« sh"n d not be irraute.i Given o der my Hand, this 12 day of Febrnniv. Anno Domini I6!I6. W B »li> I K •lud.'- of I’rob te. Feb a—2t YOU NEED N T GO TO CHICAGO T>> jiliice your o>d< r with OIE ROYAL MM ii f The men whooomposethe brigade ; and creditors of the said E. M. Grif- are mostly, if not wholly, recruited I J^ased, that they be *od ap " ” , i ’ . . | pear before me in the onrt of Hro- from the sea. It has been fn'i' d j jjato. to be held at I'arli gton, 8. <.. that men who have spent a number of years at sea ai d become own - tomed to danger, who can climb it : zy, swayinu rope ladders in a’si • and at an emergency can even k- o their way to tho yards without i t< assistance of a ladder, make Ir-* the best firemen. They possi... i rule, the soundest of constii b •d the si ron est of nerves. ae«.ig absolutely necessary for brigade service. Before bnua lowed to assist at an out ik fire the recruit has to pass thrpff a regular course of instruct on re drill and is taught how to overcome or avoid the difficulties and dangerk that present themselves at ever- rrous fire. Fireman have a i. i- tude of do ties, n.’.d hi ril the;-. reorui* i • • : illy i • .v” >'- being i r. d mi tee st.»,f 07 - tion. Tile daily drill is very try: and soon tells tab s on any recri-it who dies Mt start with a first r " constitution. The rescue di ;II is tne most interesting and probubly the most exacting and taxes the nerves and the muscles of the men to the utmost. A building is supposed to ho on fire, a fire escape is run out, and two firemen climb up like mon keys and jump into a room on tho second story. One simulates a half suffocated person, while the other takes the role of rescuer. The for mer of course remains quite still, while the latter raises him and car ries him down the ladder to the i opening of the shoot. Here the res cuer places the supposed victim bead downward in the net, and, throwing himself into the same position, pro ceeds to work his way to the ground, taking care that the aesoent is not too rapid. There are of course oth er methods of resoue, and if the per sons to be rescued retain their con sciousness and calmness the danger is not nearly so great. An item of drill that tries the nerve of the men is that of jumping from a window over 20 feet from the ground into a sheet held out by their comrades be low. —London Sketch. Hot TiAmm for Miiij. THE°E IS MONEY IN Tobacco Growing. Good Planter* Make From S76 to •300 Per Acre It You Want To try Thi* Crop We On Help You. ^end us one dollar and we willf "wnd you thr > •..SuiD'lern Tobacco Journal..' »r\ werk for six month*; also a 4. he'obacco Planters’ Guide V>. It.tit W! i.-t. tells all shout lo-t 400.1-00 ,;rowiii:r The two make -jtcoini'lt't nit tit. worth hundreo^; toi i>oll..i> to every beginner, at Jthey give the -xjierie ce of sue ■> essful ; 1 nt -rs Ali'lress | Southern Tobacco Journal, | | WINSTON, N. C. + t «. • - r - -» V- V .*.«-*-• *._*.-* . , ** WWW W . TT*r~"v'r WW WVF g»v Clerk’s Sales. A Field For lavontors. The offer baa been made by distill era and brewers of a reward for thi discovery or invention of a bottle that could not be refilled after it- contents had been once removed Brewers and distillers complain tbn; they suffer serious losses beoaus unauthorized persons buy up empr bottles, refill them, closely imitati- the labels and style of putting np and pnt these unwarranted produc tions upon the market as genuine goods. A nonfillable bottle is there fore among the needed inventions. Just how it is to be made no one is , _ Now the lady is visiting 1. -v •5* v- •5*+*5**5’ *1- Importers of Fine Woolen Goods, and Pi oprietors of the lir<rest Tailoring Establish ment on Ear h; — 4'|.44.|..|.44,|.H..t. .1,44444 | THEIR LOCAL AGENT. * CLAUDE UIlLING, will take the order for you after you have se lected what yon want from the large and va- 4 ried assortment of sam r pies which he carries. 44444444444444444444 This celebrated house believes in standing up to its motto of “Thi Mtr tli Ms, Iks Biltei Uu Ms.” able to give the slightest idea. One of the largest distilleries in the country olfl -’.’S to have been looking for years i; r .nst this sort of thing, hut without avail. It is hardly pos sible to make a bottle that might not be emptied and refilled by in genious persona Even though it could be so arranged that it could not he filled at the neck i piece could readily he cut out, then ce mented in again in such a way as practically to escape detection.— New York Ledger. A River of Heath. mother in Virginia, and it will ti a strong pledge upon the huslw part to induce her to return.—V\ ington Star. Common Carp. The Scotchman’s disposition to A Cat'* Love of Hume. The difficulty of taking cats about makes this exclnsive attachment often a source of mutual pain. A pet dog, being generally taken on the journeys of the family, is de lighted at the sight of trunks and signs of departure, hut the oat, who learns to know that she is to be left behind, grows melancholy and rest- less when she sees them. Mine give me so much frouble by their impor- tunity when I am abont to leave home that I have the packing done ' in an unoccupied room and keep the j door shut. In this way I once kept I Princess from knowing my plans | until the carriage was at the door ! and the luggage was being put on, • ilia was up a tree before the house i v ?n this happened, and, taking in on ns she saw me THE BANK OF DARLINGTON. DARLINGTON, S. C. C PITAL, - - - SURPLUS, — - - $100,000 $50,' W, Sayings L apartment, interest * flowed at rate of 5 per cent per annum from date of dejioeii —payable quarterly oit tne first day ol January, April. July and October. transacts a Genera* Banking Busines* STATE OFSOU1H CAROLINA County of Darlington. IF COMMON PLEAS. At' .- ii Weinb. rg vs, ’.nnie Dampier et a) i ■■ '< r of Sule and Partition. Pursuant to .tn Order of air and Partition made in the above -rated case, 1 will offer for sale in front c<f the Court House ot Darlington 1 tiunty on the first Monday in March ne t. the following described real estate, at the risk of the former purchaser, to wit: A certain tract or parcel of land sit uate, lying and being in Darlington County, i.i said State, containing one hundred acres, iii'tre or less, and Itounded north by estate lands <>t Henry Mclnto h; east by Black Creek south by Black Creek, and west by esta e lands of James Sumner. Terms of sale, one-third cash, balance in one and two years, secured by bond of purchaser and mortgage of the premises sold, with privilege to pur chaser to pay 11 cash. Purchaser to (•ay for all necessary papers W. ALBERT PARROTT, Feb. 8, 1896. Clerk Sheriffs Sale. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Darlington. George G. Watson vs. A. W. Parrott. Execution against Property. By virtue of the above stated Execu tion to me directed, I will sell in front of the court house of Darling ton county. State aforesaid, on the first Monday in Mar. next, daring the legal hours of sale, all of the right, title and interest of the De fendant in and to the following de scribed real estate; All that cerioin p.iicel, tract, or plantation of laud in the county of Darlington, State of South Carolina, containing one Hundred acres, more or less, and bounded as follows:on the north by J W Parrott's land; on the east by J W Parrott's laud and W- A Ifowlmg’i* laud, on the sooth by Jef fries Creek, and »n the west 1 mis for icer’y »>'’ n ;s Julia Parrott;—to satis fy thi* and other executions now ii my office. G. P. SCARBOROUGH, Feb. 8, 1896. ». D. C. W. I. Coker, J Ward. R. W. Boyd. H Melver. A. Naehni. n, wl.it was going regard his own judgment aa the best oomo out in my bonnet, she rushed that can he found is well illustrated down to the ground with a uowl of in a story once told of the modera- i anguish like a cry of physical dis- DlKEiTORS uker I J Mr" Hricl ’ WIVhUH- f. HKI'tH I WU.MAMNO Pre-i. '...i-hier, • The most absorbing ly interesting serial story ever published in these columns, if we except Dr. Doyle’s “Sipof the Four,” will be begun in our issue of Neit Week Look out for the opening chapters! They are the only ones we fill urp you to read. You will read all the others without any urging. : THE NEW-YOBK TUBS tor of a Scotch presbytery. This man’s opinion differed wide ly on a certain question relating fo church disciplirfe from that of tho associates with whom ho was osten sibly consulting. At last he said that he would lay the matter before Before the English oceupovion of { India it was estimated ’hi t the the Lord in prayer and tlier. wait Ganges carried to the sea o\ ery year for his guidance. 1,000,000 dead bodies It was then considered by the Hindoos that the happiest death was one found in its waves, and all pious Hindoos who could do so were carried to its banks and placed in its waters to die. The decaying carcasses along its banks were probably responsible in no small degree for the pestilences which formerly desolated the penin sula. Germany is now the best educated nation of the continent, yet only 100 years ago German teachers in many parts of the country wore so poorly paid that tuoy used to sing in front of houses in order to t dd to their income by odd pence. tress. In my absence she bestowed her society on her master much more than at other times, hut when we were both away she remained alone, as she never associated wuh the servants. She had her prefer ences Mtiong tbi m and would at long intervals jay a short visit to one whom she l.kcd in the servants hall and the sewing room, hut nev vently and with perfect sincerity of er B t a j(j niore than a fow minutes, "O Lord,” said the moderator for- Docs This' Hit Yon? —^—4. ~.e Society in the Department of ! ‘ Carolmas, wishes to se- c .rc t few Special Resident f«.*, this work will find this ■ CoM fforK ol aH n A Rn Opportunity mm ) AXD For the city reader or the ooeeiry THE NEW-YOBK TIMES Han unmwnnly intereetlo* newspaper. Its alxteeo I brimful of new*. It It bandeom accurate, dean, freak, and vlfovoue. Intelligent reader will prim im special depart ments, comprising literature and book aews, social program, religion, art, science, fashion, the woman's pare, and amateur sports. The unequaled Baaodal page of THE N1W- VORK TIMES ia a capital manual for luvuet- ors. for bankers, and the officers of Savings Banks, Trust sad Insursnoe Companies. Est) way Earnings, Stock and Bond Quotetions- InteresLand Uivideud Notices, the Organ!m- tion of New Companies, end ALL News reports are accurately uud promptly printed. Its commercial reports, including wool, cotton, breadstutfs, butter, agw sad farm produce, recently much enlarged, ere of unequaled fullness sod value. The TIMES will do Its fuU share of earnest work for sound Snsndal legislation, to repel the assault of private greed upon the lavmek ug power, to establish Dome watte principles fo equality in taxation and ecouomy te ex penditure, and to retrieve the defeat twoaght upoji the Democratic party by errois and be trayals. THE REW-TOBK WEEKLT TIKES. The subscription price of the NBW-YQRK WEEKLY TIMES tt ONE DOLLAR a The WEEKLY TIMES Is a oapttslnewspaper It contains qU the current news non lie used from -lie dispatches and reports of t" full and accurate market reports«■ | farm produce, live stock, Ac-, apd a < prepared £1 purjx se, “O Lord, grant that wo may be right in this matter, for thou knowest that we are very de cided.”—Youth’s Companion. The English View. The lady with the high brow ad vanced with an air of timid oonfi- denoe. “I’ki soliciting fnuds,” said 1 she, “for the aid of the Patagonian missionaries.” “Now, what do you want to be sending missionaries to Patagonia for?” asked the praotioal gentleman querulously. "“Iho whole country isn’t worth 2 cents an aore.”—Indi anapolis Journal. and this has been more or less the case with ‘hem all.—Temple Bar. The AwkwiAa mss. Minnie—Have yon ever danced with Mr. 1 lummes? | Mamie—Yee. He isn’t very light on his feet, I must say. Minnie—He certainly waa not very light on mine.—Indianapolis Journal Hot Much. She—I snjijjose if we women had clubs that kept ns ontbalf the night you men would rebel violently. ! He—Not a hit of it We’d join 1 them.—S*. Loots Poet-Disoatoh- nndertaken, and satisfaction guaranteed JHHH SIMS SHOPS corns, ,Zj nd Undertakers’ band at low once*. T. C. Jeffords, Jr. supplies always on It isttvril, however, aud thoae -who succeed best in itpowead character, mature judgment, tact, perseverance, and the respect of their community. Think this matter over fully. There’* a opening for somebpdy. If K Sts you, itwfllpnyytm. luT information on W. J. Roddey, 'tedk'tm.S.C.