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GUV'S LETTER. And lo, theresball oe twelve million and twelve baies of the li Nt c.tlle<i cotton made in j. that year. And beboid the men so called bears will arise and will bear upon the price thereof even unto a Gerah a pound ; and all the people with one accord will lift up their voices and-howl. Now a gerah is the one half part of a nick.-Hez. iv-xv. Let us p-sing "0, what wiM the harvest be." The prayer will be postponed until fall, when we will doubtless ask the good Lord to forgive us for acting so much like the animal that browses UDon the thistle As a special expounder 'of the book of Heze? kiah we unhesitatingly pronounce the above prophecy as referring to this present year of grace and cotton. "Yes, the die is cast." Bat we fear it's a die that wont stamp out much coin for us. A trip through the neigbboriog township and adjoining coun? ties will prove to any oae that great efforts are being made to fulfill the above prophecy. Verily, verily the cotton farmer liveth upon hope ; but we'll be doggoned if its a fatten ing diet unless well seasooed with hog aEd homioy. We don't mean to indicate that the provision crop and stock are being ne? glected as in former years, for we've noted some very promising crops of both. The acreage in tobacco is also largely menaced, but progress with that crop bas been badly handicapped by the dry weather. AppolUs has been very partial in the distribution of moisture this season and some of us have suffered much. We notice strenuous efforts being made on the Rosehill plantation to move the mill pond np into tbe tobacco field, and they had nearly succeeded in moving considerable portions of it. Water appears to be a very precious fluid under certain cir? cumstances, whether :,chemically pure" or not. Some of the tobacco planters that " we've caught on the fly are Messrs. Neill O'Donnell, near Mayesville, 10 acres ; D. W. Josey, 4 acres ; J. Bullock, 5 acres ; McKa gen & Moooeyban; 4 acres ; Geo. McCutch eo, 2 barns; R. M. Cooper, 2 barns; A. Brearlyr 1 barn ; Ryttenberg, Rosehill, 50 acres, 10 barns ; Thomas McCutchen, 15 acres ; H. H. and C. T. Evans, 12 acres ; J. D. Evans, 7 acre3 ; T. J. Baker, 5 or 10 acres ; Wiley McKaio, 5 acres ; John Kelly, 5 acres ; Clarence Durant, 20 acres ; A. A. Strauss, 2 barns. There are many others that we have not yet caught. Will try and report any interesting features as we wander around. Well, well, this world ought to be big enough for us all and the good Lord un? doubtedly intended that there should be crops enough and money enough and room enough and range enough for us all, but it really looks as if there aint and that we're getting crowded, judging by the way some people act. But it is simply too hot to dis? cuss-or to cuss-anything. We wish the proprkies would permit us to reduce our cos? tume to a hat brim and spurs, or that we could find soma "endless contiguity of shade" with a spring and ice house in it, we would retire into a state of "innoccuous disuetude," but we learn that rations are not produced in that state, and goodness gracious knows, they are scarce enough here now. We eat breakfast three times a day, leastways there's a mighty sameness, as vegetables are not fully ripe and scarce, and fruits and berries scarcer. Not even the belly-acbe plum bas specified this year ; but the political plums will ripen later on, though the crop will net near supply the de? mand, and there will b? bowling there also. Too much plum causes the small boy to how! and no plum causes the big candidate to how!. We are not racning 'or any office. We wouldn't walk after one except in the shade ; but we wish it understood that if any office is seeking the man, the man is not far and will accept readily and on very moderate terms. Coroner would have suited aa io the recent past, for there have been a number of fatalities around calling for in? quests ; but we be dad fetched if our luck aint such that we verily believe if elected coroner everybody would stop dying except legally and regularly under a doctor's cer? tificate, and we'd die of starvation, cut off in our youth and beauty and furnish the first inquest over our interesting remains. We would discuss the financial question as we've received much information Rod many origi? nal ideas from varied sources ; but the torridity of the atmosphere has produced a torpidity of the cerebrum et cerebellum and we must postpone until a change of weather -and of the Shove organs also. Suffice it to say that the "unit of value:' is a mighty good thiog by itself, but is much improved by the X ray, and some contend that there's a "C" ray that is 100 time3 better, but very difficult to obtain. 16 to 1 is also good, pro? vided we get the 16 and tother ellow the 1 We are much like Long. Long says, "I've pondered and considered and calculated and reckoned and opined and thinked all over from head to foot and after mature delibera? tion have reached the decided conclusion damphino " We doo't know how this word spells itself or where Long got it ; but it is popular with him and emphatically expres? sive. Gcv. "To Slightly Correct." MT. Editor :-Allow me to slightly correct you in reference to the vote on the Irby reso? lution io the State Convention by the Sumter delegation. Two of the delegates, Messrs. McLeod and Purdy, were not at the night ses? sion, consequently did not vote. The resolu? tion was uncalled for. Delegates had never been bound to the National Convention. Why bind them now? A man that can't put the good of his country ahead of bis party, is not tit to hold office, either by trust or pro .jfi If enough delegates to the National Convention will be bought as now claimed, to control it in the interests of gold and against the verdict of the people, such Con? vention wiii not be a Democratic one, and it will be right fer one delegation to bid them "good evening," and if this is done, by them, you will find the State Convention if re-convened Sept. 1st will sustain them in their action. This is the object of the recess. The time is here when principles and no_t men will control the day. This stifling cf the voice of the people by the corrupt use of money in our politics must Jcease, or scenes worse than the history cf the world has pro? ducid will take place here. Pisgah, Maj.30th. JAS. E. D?PRE. THE ANNUAL RF.PORT. County Treasurer Scarborough Files His First Annual Report With the Ul erk of Court in Accordance With Law. County Treasurer Scarborough has com- ? pleted his Aooual Report of the disburse- | ments of the mods of the county and hae'filed j ? copy ia -No office of the Clerk of Court HS require* >y law. j 1 The report is carefully and neatly made up and may be readily understood by one who cares to inspect it. The annexed recapitulation of the report j will give some idea of the manner in which j the nioner of the county has been expendrd. ? Roads and bridges, S 4,804 16 Other county expenses, 16,746 46 ! Total, $21,550 62 j Court expenses-October term, S 952 00 j March term, 1,549 20 Total, $2,501 20 Dispensary profits paid City of Sumter, $1,735 48 | Public Schools-District No 1, S 1,718 70 DistrictNo 2, 1,195 47 District No 3, 1,035 SS ? District Xo 4, 185 60 District No 5, 734 00 DistrictNo 6, 1,17919 DistrictNo 7, 867 65 District No 8, T93 00 DistrictNo 9, 1,087 31 DistrictNo 10, . 496 94 DistrictNo ll, 397 80 DistrictNo 12, 1.574 87 DistrictNo 13, 1,104 30 DistrictNo 14, 991 00 DistrictNo 15, 675 50 DistrictNo 16, 790 10 DistrictNo 17, 1,690 90 DistrictNo 18, 732 00 DistrictNo 19, 376 00 DistrictNo 20, 1.257 75 Miscellaneous expenses-Salaries School Commissioner, County Board Education, Advertis? ing, etc., 1,314 75 Toial. $20,248 7S Grand Total. S46.C36 04 ! Sumter City Mission Picnic About two weeks ago Mr. W. P. Smith, Superintendent of our Sunday school ap? pointed a committee on Sunday School picnic consisting of Mr. John S Kennedy, Mrs. G. W. Broach, Misses Annie Childers, Mamie Brinkley and Lorie Barwick. This commit- j tee went immediately to work and as a re snit our school spent yesterday, May 28tb, a j most delightful day in the grove uear Mr. J Newton Berwick's. There were in all about one hundred pres- , ent, as near as one count, for some of the j children were like the Irishman's pig -ran ' around so you could not count him Some of the members of the other Metho? dist school, accepting the invitation of our Superintendent came down and enjoyed the day with us. We wish here to thank all who, though not immediately connected with our school, aid? ed in making the day pleasant for the younn people and children. Especially would we thank Mr. James Foreman for his kind thoughtfulness in bringing along ropes for two splendid swings. We wish likewise to return thanks to those who made additions to our-table sto:?, though they themselves could not be with us. Truly one o'clock yes? terday witnessed a feast of good things. The table seemed a3 it were to groan uader the weight of luxury and even after one hun-j I dred appetites had been satisfied there was | j plenty left. Mr. Newton Barwick along with j his many other kindnesses furnished our I table with rather an unusual dish-Brer Coon was caught early ia the morning and was nicely cooked for the occasion. The general understanding seemed to be ! ? that each one was to make somebody else I have a pleasant day and of course the result ; j was unanimous verdict that the day was a j I grand success. T. G. H. Confederate Relics. Miss Mary Singleton Hampton, regent for ! the South Carolina room of the Confederate j Museum, Richmond, Va., has appointed Miss j Carrie Moses as chati \n for this county, to ; collect relics for exhibition and preservation j in the above mentioned room. There are no doubt many persons in the county who pos- j 3ess interesting relics of '.be lost cause, and j they can be deposited in no safer or more ap- | propriate place tb" i in the Confederate ? Museuro. . If, however, the owner of such j articles have some tender associations con- ; nected with them, and feel unwilling to give j them away, then they may be loaned to the Museum and returned at the owner's pleasure It is especially desired to have a creditable exhibition in the South Carolina Room by the thirtieth of June, when the United Con? federate Veterans hold their re-union in Rich? mond. Miss Moses most earnestly begs the old soldiers of Sumter County to help her i in this work. Each article sent should be I j plainly labelled with its history and the ? i sender's name and address. Miss Moses will ! j goto Richmond herself and the articles will j j receive her personal care All packages or j j communications should be addressed to Miss j Caroline Moses, Sumter, S. C , or if more convenient, packages may oe left with Mr. Horace Harby. - iiMIH--Ullin Perfection in Cake-Making. _ ? Housekeepers frequently wonder why it is that they cannot make biscuit and cake that are light and palatable and that taste as deli? cious as the buscuit and cake made by their mothers and grandmothers, the delightful memory of which even to mis day creates a sensation of pleasure to the palate. The trouble arises from the highly adulterated state of the materials they have to work with, particularly the cream-of-tarter and soda used to raise or leaven the food. Cream-of-tartar and soda that are now procurable for domes? tic purposes contain large quantities of lime, earth, alum, and other adulterants frequently from five to twenty-five per cent., and conse? quently vary so much in strength that no person can tell the exact quantity to use, or properly combine them, to insure perfect results. From using too much or too little, or because of the adult?rants in them, bitter, salt, yellow or heavy biscuits or cake are frequently made. These adulterants are also injurious to health . All this trouble may be avoided by the use of the popular Royal Baking Powder. Where this preparation is employed in the place of cream-of-tartar and soda, its perfect leaven? ing power always insures light, flaky, digest? ible biscuit, cakes, and pastry, that are per? fectly wholesome and free from the impurities invariably present when the old raising prep? arations are employed. The Royal Baking Powder, weare informed by the most reliable scientists, is perfectly pure being made from highly refined ingredi? ents, carefully teated, an ! so exactly j-rn por? tioned and combined that it never fails to produce the best and uniform results. An additional advantage in its employment comes from the fact that bread or other food made wit!) it may be eaten while hot without fear of indigestion or any unpiea-ant results, while t'C-ing equally sweet, moi?t, .md grate? ful to the palate when cold. Base balls, bats, mas!s3 and mitts for sale by H. G. Osteen & Co. Th* Graded School Commence? ment. The au'hermes of tbe Gr-tded Schoo! res? izing how inadequate the assembly hall of tbe Gradad School building is tor the accom? modation of the visitors who attend the com? mencement exercises, and feeling assured that there are many parents and others thoroughly interested who will be anxious to witness the dosing ex?rcises. have decided to rent the Opera House for that occasion. The rent of the Opera House for o ie night will be twenty five (S25) dollars, in order to raise this amount so as not to impose.upon any one, the commi;sio*ners and superintendent have thought it nest to charge an admission fee of ten cents. This entitles one to a seat anywhere in the building, except on the first rews of chairs in the balcony, which have been reserved for the pupils of the school, and in the boxes, which are intended for the members of the Board of Commissioners, the City Council and for those gentlemen who have consented to decide on the merits of the contestants for the declaimers' medal No complimentary tickets will be given ; but the authorities will see that no patron of the school shall be deprived of the privilege of attending these exercises on account of in? ability to pay. If a greater sum than S25 is received, the remainder will be given to the library fund of the Graded School. The commencement exercises will beheld in the Opera House on Thursday, Juneilth at 8.15 p. m. The Deelaimer's Medal. The declaimers' medal that will be con? tested for at the approaching commencement of the Sumter Graded School was purchased by the contestants themselves. When the four boys, who were elected by the members of. their classes to represent them at commencement began to practice for the occasion it was suggested to them that it would be well to have a medal as an incen? tive; the suggestion was accepted and the medal was purchased by a joint contribution. A committee or seven gentlemen has been requested to act as judges end they have kindly consented to do so. The following gentlemen compose the committee: Maj. H. F. Wi bon, chairman, Dr. J. S. Hughson, Col. R. D. Lee, Messrs. T. G. McLeod, H. G. Osteeo. W. F Rhame and E. P. Ricker. A Vote of Thanks. The following paragraph is taken from The News and Courier's report of the regular meeting of the Charleston City Council: A letter from Mr. Tomas E. Richardson, of Sumter, was received, donating a valuable historical paper relating to the laying out of East Bay. The paper was read by the clerk with great, difficulty. Mr. Gadsden moved that the thanks of Council be returned to Mr. Richardson. TIMMONSVILLE TIDINGS. News Ttems of Interest and Gen? eral Notes. TlMMONSTILLB, S. C , May 28, 1896.-Mr. John McSween-leaves to-night for Scotland to visit relatives and take recreation. He expects to return about the 15tb of August. Prof. C. A. Smith attended the commence? ment exercises at Wake Forest College, N. C. this week. The school here closes to-morrow. Prof. J. L. Mann, Superintendent of Lan? caster Graded School is spending a few days with his father, Rev. C. D. Mann. Miss Hodges, of Cokesbury, is visiting Dr Wright's familv. Work is being pushed forward on the Presbyterian Church. They hope to have it coroDleted soon. Mr. R. C. Severance hos moved into his new residence about one and a hair miles from town. E. 3. T. Alabaster Boxes of Human Sym? pathy. Do not keep the alabaster boxe3 cf your loyc and tenderness sealed up until your friends are dead. Fill their lives with sweet cess. Speak approving, cheering words while their ears can hear them, and while their hearts can, be thrilled and made happier by them ; the kind thing3 you may say when they are gone, say before they go. The flowers you mean to send for their ce?ios, send to brighten and sweeten their homes before they leave them. If my friends have alabaster boxes laid away full of fragrant perfumes of sympathy and affection which they intend to break over my dead body, I would rather they would bring them out in ray weary and troubled hours and open them, that I may be refreshed and cheered by them while I need them. I would rather have a plain coffin without a flower, a funeral with? out an eulogy, than a life without the sweet? ness of love aRd sympathy. Let us learn to anoint our friends beforehand for the burial. Post mortem kindness does not cheer the bur? dened spirit. Flowtrs on the coffin cast no fragrance backward over the weary way. [We publish the above at the request of a reader of The I'.etn, who is anxious to learn the name of the author. If any of our read? ers can give the author's name we shall deem it a favor if they will do so.-ED.] - ? amy ^^mtmw Mr. Shirley C. Hughson NEW YORK, May 27.-One of the gradu? ating class of thirty-three who received diplomas at the General Theological Semi? nary in Chelsea square this city, this morning was Shirley C. Hughson, once a well known member of the News and Courier's staff, whose historical work gave promise of d is tinction until three years ago, when be began the study of divinity. Mr. Hughson will b? ordained deacon in Sumter next month and will afterwards begin work in one of the densely populated parishes of Philadelphia. -News and Courier. Converse's Annual Orator. The Spartanburg correspondence of the News and Courier has the following state? ment in reference to the annual oration at the Conveise College : "By tbe death of Dr. Pritchard, of Char? lotte, Converse College was left without a commencement orator. This was greatly re? gretted, because our people were anxious to hear him. But Dr. C. C. Brown, of Sumter, has kindly consented to deliver the address before tbe literary societies, Tuesday. June 9, at ll a. ra. Those v.ho know the speaker expect to be k?pt wide awake. Dr. Brown always says something when he talks. Ifit required an annual outlay of $100.00 to insure a family against any serious conse? quences from an attack of bowel complaint during the year there are many who would feel it their duty to pay it; :hai they could not afford to risk their lives, and those of their family for such an amount. Any one Ctn get this insurance for 25 cents, that be? ing the price of a bottle of Chamberlain's Co!;c, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, in almost every neighborhood some one bas died from an attak of bowel complaint before raejicitif could be procured or a physician summoned. Une or two doses of this reme? dy will cuni n;iy ordinary ca-". Ir never fails Can you afford to take the risk for so small an amount? For sale by Dr. A. J. China. Council Meeting. The regular weekly sunning of City Coun? cil was held lust evening nt the usual hour. Regular routine o:jsiriess was transacted and no matter of any special importance was , transacted. ? A petition, that was very genera!:;/ signed ; by the taxpayers of the city, WHS presented, requesting council to restore the scale of : salaries paid the members of the police force j and other city officials prior to the reduction ; made two weeks ago. The peti'ion was re- 1 I ferred to the Ways aDd Means Committee. I The Bink of Sumter petitioned for an ? abatement of the license tax imposed on the I bank by the license ordinance. The license | i I had been paid by the bank, but the First Na- ! i tional Bank had not paid the license, as un- | j der the national batiking law it is exempt from such charges and the city could not J collect the iicense. The committee on streets reported that j the work of preparing the gruuods for the j Citadel encampment had bee-: commencedjjby ! Street Commissioner Tribble. The Winthrop Scholarships. The attention of parents who have daugh j lers whom they wish to send to Winthrop ; Coliege is directed to the notice of examina I tion given in this issue by President D. B. Johnson. Winthrop is one of the most modern and best equipped educational in? stitutions in the South, and a girl who j completes the course of study in this instiru tion will have a practical and thorough edu j cation that wii! fit her for life's duties. Good Soda. J. S. Hu^hson ? Co , have a new adver ? tiseme t in this paper that no one can fai 1 to j ! see. It is artistically and attractively illus j trated and tells about the soda and ices served j j at their fountain. Only the best methods are j j used aod nothing is more refreshing these hot days. Where to get Your Money Back. Ten cents rebate on every dollar you spend ! ! ; This is not usual when goods are bought at j j the regular price, and when goods are selliog j ! at the very bottom prices as at the annual ! clearance sale of the Palace Dry Good3 Em- ] I porium, it is a most surprising proposition. ; j Thi3 is what Schwartz Bros. advertise to do, i j and they wi'I do exactly what they advertise. ? j Fer particulars see their new advertisement. ' ? Mill? ? ? - I A Puddin' Swamp Enterprise. j A charter was issued last week to the Pud j din: Swamp Tobacco Ware House Company, '? I of Mayesville. The directors of the comoanv I i are: W. D. Gamble, A. T. Buddin, ?. A*, j Strauss, J. E. Tomlinson, J. E. Barnett, R. j M. Cooper and D. E. Keels. The officers are : ! President, W. D. Gamble; vice president, ! A. T. Buddin ; secretary and treasurer, A. j A. Strauss. McLaurin's Opponent. Congressman McLaurin is to have opposition in his district this year, j Mr. W. D. Evans, the chairman of j State railroad commission, has finally j decided to enter the race against Mr. j McLaurin. The fight will doubtless : be a very interesting one, as Mr. j Evans is considered a pretty strong j man in his district. Mr McLaurin, j however, has a strong following, and ; the contest will be a lively one.-The ! State. THE STATE*BANK EXAM? INER. The announcement was made yes- ; ; ierday that the special banking board ! I created by the act of the general as- j ' serably is to meet on Tuesday next I I for the specific purpose of electing! I the State bauk examiner, as provided I i for in the act. A great many ap ; j plications have been received by the \ 1 board from all over the State for the j i position. Governor Evans says I I that in view, of the fact that! I no machinery was provided in ! ! the act for the collection of the tax, ? ! the board considers that the legisla- j ture intended that the special tax to be collected through the channels I provided for the collection of any : other tax.-The State, May 31. The Moscow Tragedy. Moscow, June: 1.-Every offert is j being made to cl?ar the liodynsky 1 plain of the dead upon it who lost: their lives in the frightful disaster of Saturday. To-day a number of. bodies were found on the edges of j the plain and in the villages around j These dead were injured and crawled until death overtook them. The functions in connection with the coronation festivities are being given a3 though nothing had hap- \ pened. The pleasure resorts are open ; as usuai. Several wealthy residents j gave garden parties to-day and things j generally are geing on as though nothing out of the ordinary had oe ; curred The police ecalre that tkey j had no official power on the plain and ! ctuld not interfere until it was too late. Many of the Modjiks danced j about the beer casks while the dead I were lying around. It is stated that large numbers of j the injured refused to go to the hoe pit?is The mob subsequent to the j disaster callously stood by the corpses j and received the doles. All the bodies of the victims were j interred to-day. About half of *^e ! dead were identified The unclaiin^ '. dead filled ll trenches which were! 50 yards long. The priests officiated afall the interments. Many pathetic scens were witness? ed as tlie bodies were consigned to the earth. Thousands of persons were in the cemetery weeping and praying. Upon the hearts of all the dead were placed icons or sacred pictures. To? night the city has resumed its normal aspect and a stranger, unless told, would not for a moment imagine th.it two days ago one of the most fright? ful clamities that ever occurred in Ruissiahad taken place just ^outside the city. WHIPPING HIS WEIGHT. Th? Champion Lodger Overestimated His Fi*?c AWlity. Iii the logging ea a-ps of Michigan ! might makes right and the man who ! has chipped all comers iii fair fights is j king of his camp. j Ono of these, said a logger to ap? porter, was very boastful of his exploits. ! He had been the viet or in a dozen fights | and no one cared to enter the lists with j him, but every man in the eamp hated the champion. Going into a saloon one I day he announced: "I'm tired of these babies in camp. I ain't had a good light j in Michigan. I can whip my weight in i dogs, wildcats cr anything that breathes i for ?100." A meek looking man took tho bet and j arrangements for the fight were made. It was to take place in a closed room one week from the time the bet was made. * The day came and the champion called, "Bring on your animile. " The man who had bet against the king of the camp brought his antagonist in a j large sack, which had been deposited j behind the stove in the saloon where the match had been entered into, the weather just beginning to get cold. The gladiator entered the room, the sack was emptied and the people crowded at the window to see the contest. Out of the sack came three large hornet nests, j the occupants of which had been revived by the heat. They issued from the nests in swarms ! and lit all over the man. Ko fought I them for a minute or two, then with a j yell jumped through the window, carry- j ing sash and glass with him, never stop- I ping until he reached the river, into ? which he jumped. "Said he could whip his weight in ? anything that breathed/' remarked the i meek little mau as he pocketed the i stakes, "but about five pounds of hor- : nets knocked him out in the first j round.';-Washington Star. A BEETLE THAT GNAWS SHELLS. _ And It Does Other Things Calculated to Slake Its Prey Tremble. Of all tho insects the beetles aro the most interesting. There is one that car- j ries a cannon, which a naval man ! would call a stern chaser, and is loaded i with a fluid. When pursued, the beetle j fires it, and the other insect, usually a ? carnivorous beetle, is blinded by the dis- j charge of fine acid spray. Hence its name of bombardier. The latest thing that has been learned about beetles is that Dytiscus marginales cuts its way through the shells of snails and mollusks and eats the inhabitants. W. B. Tegetmeier writes to the Lon? don Field and tells about the curiosity of naturalists at finding shells manifest? ly gnawed by some insect or other and the final discovery of Dytiscus margin? ales at work on the shell. Then he tells some things about the Dytiscus family. Says he : "I know of no moie interesting ani? mal in au aquarium than a Dytiscus, | who scon acquires the habit of follow- I ing the fingers for food and amuses : himself ar night, if the aquarium is. . open, by flying round and round the : room, and occasionally misses the way. and, hoing unable to return, is found ; on the floor in rho morning. There is one drawback to the habits of this crea- : turo.. He is a bloodthirsty tyrant of the aquarium, requiring the whole place to j himself, fer if kept with tadpoles, frogs, ; fish or any other animals, he* quickly I destroys them, evi n if many score times his own slz-\ ?; What hawks are to the other birds I cats are to other mammals, sharks arc to other fish, thc Dytiscus is toother in? sects. ! THE HORSELESS CARRIAGE. The Perfect Vehicle Will Come luto Uso Slowly hut Surely. A little reflection will convince any one that the ase of morocycies, or, in ; other words, horseless carriages, will j improve the roads. Gc ii; ral Morin of j France is authority for the statement j that the deterioration of common roads, except that which is caused by the ? weather, is two-thirds due to the wear | of horses' feet and one-third due to the wheels of vehicles. This being the case, if the same amount as usual c< mtinue | to be laid out upon the roads, and the ! continual damage decrease two-thirds, [ then the amount spent will go to in creased and permanent improvement, and thc roads will be "as smooth asa barn floor. '? There aro many questions to be j solved, many difficulties to be sur- j mounted, before the unexceptionable vehicle appears. It was a long-time be- ; fore the difficulties of making sewing | machines, revolvers, repeating ri?es typewriters and typesetters were over- ! come. Yet. examine them! It is all : plain and simple, and not ar all marvel- , ous now, and we can hardly imagine j how any mechanic could spend years of ? time studying over such easy problems. : So it will be with the motocycles. The mountains of difficulty will sink into molehills, and the ingenuity displayed will be found to take the form of judi? cious application of ordinary mechanic? al appliances, approved by the final j umpire, the common sense of mankind, i Those who build automobiles must j not permit themselves to think that they j were born with all the carriage makers' lore inherent in them. A man may be j a first class theoretical and practical ; mechanic and not be able to make a ! good vehicle to run on wheels. The per- ? feet carriage, as we know it today, is . the aggregate of the years of exhaustive j trial and experiment and the improve- : meuts on that experience made by 1,000 1 men of genius. If the carriage builders bestow up< n the new carriage all the art acquired in '? building the old, and the motocycie j men Irani the reasons of the convention? alities of thc trade and adapt their im? provements to them with reference to the opinions of those who are net preju? diced against innovation, they will both work together in harmony and with one purpose, and, so unitedfthey ; will make rapid progress m thedevel- . opment of tho inevitable vehicle of the 1 future. -Cassier's Magazine. Pay of .Former Contributors. Coleridge took at tim? s an exaggerat? ed view of his services to The Morning Chronicle. His surprisitig statement that. Stuart in 1S00 offered him. ?2, OOO a year if he would devote himself to journalism, that he declined on the ground that lie would nor give up "the reading of old folios" for twenty times ?2, OOO, and that ho considered any pay beyond s.'i?O as a real evil, is obviously impossible. Stuart probably tried te spur Iiis indolent contributor by savin? that his services would be worth some such sum if tiiey could he made regular. But the statement is only worth notice here in illustration of the stat" of the literary market at the time. S. aitiiey ac? knowledges his gratitude for the guinea a week which he received as Stuart's "laureate." Poetry, by the way, appears to have been more in demand then than at the present day. Both Perry and Stuart's elder brother offered to employ Bums, and Coleridge, Southey, Campbell and Moore all published poems in the news? papers. ^Lamb tried his hand at "jokes. ' ' "Sixpence a joke," he says-"audit was thought pretty high, too-was Dan Stuart's settled remuneration in these cases. The high water mark of a journalist's earnings at the end of the last century is probably marked by the achievement of Mackintosh, who earned 10 guineas in a week. "No paper could stand it!" exclaimed the proprietor, and rhe bar? gain had to be revised. A few years later, however, we are told that Ster? ling, the father of Carlyle's friend, was receiving tito sum which Coleridge sup? posed himself to have refused, namely, ?2,000 a year fer writing leading arti? cles in Tlie Times.-National Review. Heart Disease Cured By Dr. Miles' Heart Cure. Fainting, Weak or Hungry Spells, Irregu? lar or Intermittent Pulse. Fluttering or Pal? pitation, Choking Sensation. Shortness of Breath, Swelling of Feet and Ankles, are symptoms of a diseased or Weak Heart. MRS. N. C. .ViJLLER. Of Fort Wayne, Ino., writes cs Nov. 23,1S04: "I was afflicted for forty years with heart trouble and su'.TercJ untied agony. Ibid weak, hungry speils, and heart would palpitate so hard, the pair: would be so acute and torturing, that I became so weak and. nervous I cou id not sleep. I was treated by several physicians without relie! and gave up ever being well again. About two years agc I commenced using Dr. Jliies' Remedies. One bottle of the Hear: Cure stopped al! heart troubles and the- Restorative Nervine did thc rest,and now I sleep soundly and at? tend to my household and social duties with? out any trouble. Sold :<y arabists. Book sent free. Address Dr. Mi?l?S Medical Co., Elkhart, ind. BL Mes' Remedies Restore Health. Are You Planting Tobacco? If you are, you need informa? tion connected with growing, curing, grading and selling your crop. If you are not experienced in handling to? bacco, you stand in particular need of advice and instruc? tion. This you can obtain by reading The South. Carolina Tobacconist. It is a weekly journal devoted exclusively to tobacco culture in South Carolina, and gives the exact information requ;~ed by beginners, as well as ti.ose who have some experience. Do You Expect toPIant Tobacco Next Year ? Then prepare yourself to make a success of it by studying the best methods. To do this read The South Carolina To? bacconist, subscription $2.00 per annum. The. South Car-lina Tobacco? nist and T'ne Watchman aud Southron, sent .me year to any ad dress/or ?3. Cash must in variably accowj)0.ny order. Address X. C. OSTEEX, Sumter, S. C