Horry news. (Conwayboro, S.C.) 1869-1877, April 14, 1874, Image 1
I TIIE HOBBY NEWS, I
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'I IIK.MM :
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1
VOL. C?. CON>
A I'll A YKH,
tJivo mo an oyo to others' tYdin^s blind ?
(Miss Souths ne\N bonnet is quite a fi i hi bo- (
liuiu:; 1
c
Woke in mo charily for the suffering jmor? j
(There comes that contribution plate once
more!) ^
(
T ike from my soul all feelings covetous? j
(I II have a slmwl like that or make a loss!)
Let love for all my kind my spiiit stir?
(Save Mrs. Jones?I'll never sjvak to her!) ,
Let me in Truth's fair pages lake delight? '
(i 11 read lhat oilier novel through lo-night!) i
Mak me contented with my earthly state-(1
wish 1 d iii.ii l ied i ich! Hut It's Um late!) ^
(Jive mc a heart of faith in all my kind? ]
(Miss I trow n"-i as hig a h\ jmcrile as you'll find!)
Help me to see myself as others see? ?
(Tliis dress is quite (incoming unto me!) I
I-ot nut act out no falsehood, I apfH'al ?
(1 wonder if the) think these enris are real?) !
Make my heart of humility the fount?
(How glad 1 am our pew's solar in front!)
Fill inn with patience and strength to wait? ;
(I know he'll preach until our dinner's late!) j
Take from inv heart each grain ofself conciet?
(I'm sure thegcntleuicn must think me sweet!) I
Let saintly wisdom he toy daih food ?
(1 wonder what they'll have for dinner good'.') ^
let not my feet, ache on the road to light ?
(Nohoiiv knows how* these shoes do pinch
and bile.')
I
Li this world teach me to deserve the next?
(Church out! (diaries do you recollect the
text?) " I
The !DIot for a White WorkingmanThis
great bugbear, and scarecrow
of the iinhcallhiucss ot laboring
whites, needs some oxatninnt ion. It is
much more frightful in prospective,
than when approached. It may he
doubtful whether the whiteman can live
and work in a highly malarious region,
as can the negro; but he must live as
a white man ought, and work onl\ as
a white man can?that is, take all the
advantages which his superior intelligence
a'lords him.* Corn bread and
bacon, and the latter fried crisp, often j
till the gravy becomes almost corrosive,
is regarded as a laborer's diet, or
the basis of it. My observation as a
practitioner lias taught me that r.o
i
man, while or black, can labor long
in cur climate on such fare, and be
i (
healthy, Chronic, or sub-acute inflammation
of the mucous coat of the
stomach is no more common with the
laboring whites, than blacks, the latter
suffer greatly and almost universally
with it, wlum confined to bread j
and bacon diet. I have thought that
if any man ought to live on corn bread
(
and Dacon, it ought to la; he who docs
? , i
nothing, or does light .vork in the
shade, and if any one really dogs require
beef, mutton, fowls, eggs, milk,
butter, and the most nutritious pastry,
Lo sustain and strengthen him, this ^
me is the man who labors in the field.
Such diet, with the observance of the
Joinmon laws of health, will rob mania!
labor of much of its terrors as reelects
disease.?J. W. ().. In Jlural
t;
Carolinian, April No.
1<
'Money in tho Garden"?and Health "
. Also. >'
ri
The vegetable garden is generally p
tonsiderod too small a matter for the o>
iotton planter to give any attention
?r thought to it. It is Mrs. Planter's
loinain. Very well; the arrangement
s not a bad one, provided ma.lam has
i taste for gardening, and provided, is
urthcr, that a good hand U placed at ir
ler disposal whenever garden work y
equircs it. rI\>o often no help can be ,fi.
pared from the cotton and the corn, l(.
t hen needed, and the grass overcomes in
vorything. The garden might as w
veil have never been planted. <4Iiut
otton pays," (sometimes,) you say;
snap beans, sugar corn, squashes and I;,
kra don't." Cotton would not pay if at
rcatcd as you treat your garden
rops. But a good garden,judiciously
lantcd and well cultivated, does pay. (j(
fo acre on your whole plantation, we i><
entnro to say, pays half so well. It be
ays first and her.ily in money it nf
l Vtw mill if tioira nrtn.ii '? h.inl. ~ * ^
? 1 ? J" ?&??' " U v:il i I 11 <11 H 1 ^
>e enjoyment which ii? products 8j,
ivo, in wholesome and needed articles tii
f diet, saving money, again, in the wl
voidauce of heavy doctors1 bills, ^
ray donet neglect the garden, and
on't confine its crops to snap beans ,.jf
nd collards. Ilave a plenty of toma- of
>es, egg plants, (Guinea squash,) St
<ra Sieya beans, squashes, beets, car- zei
its and t/i? other good things so of- ~
11 enumerated in the IIubai. Cauoli- jj.
[an.?Rural Carolinian April Ro. 1 ev
X "X" ^ \
iK x
-A. ti 1 nclopen
Y AY BOKO, S. C., TUl
What Shall Wo Do?
Then what must plarter?, larmors,
ind white men generally do ? >ve
uiRNver, go to work. What, in the
ield ? Ves, in the field. l>ut the
amilu i aire villi v imru in mil uut
limate. I>:i)i?I admit the nego ea
:>eat the white man working as well as
deeping, in a mid-day .Inno nan, hut
1 am not disposed to admit that the]
negro will do the most work in any [
erm of say thirty days. The intelligent
white man will he systematic, ho |
will begin labor at sunrise, with a
well cooked and nutritious breakfast in |
he slomaeh; he can stop at ton o'clock, 1
l>athe, take a ntp, eat a dinner corresponding
in mitrivcucss to the
breakfast, ami read hooks or newspapers
t ill lour, i hen he can labor
[ill seven, having labored say at least
ox, perhaps seven hours in tl e field.
Mind, will and muscle combined,!
with its usual attendants of forecast
md constancy, will work out in five
years, working only six, hours per day, I
incomparably grander results than can .
he gotten from the negro for love or j
money though he may pretend to,
ar actually dose fitfully labor from ten
lo twelve hourt per day. The negro i
has almost an instinctive conviction
possessing him that the white man can
heat him at anything ho goes at, and
t hinks it is tho white man's educat ion :
but the history of his race docs not give
us any instances of educated labor
vvorlhy of nolo. Kxcoplional cases ol ,
pretty well to do black Inriin-rs, I am
told, occasionally occur in theWest[th
States, stimulated l>y the ex nnple
nt* tiio white's, and arc hut exceptions
to the rule, lel't i<> himself, t:> make and
sustain a public opinion. Among Ids
own race, education does not incline
Itirn to agriculture, ho seeks the johD
7 *' |
hinjr t rades, porlerships, ( lei kslop, ami,
nolahly iu the reconstruction Statesex
cry ollice he can get.
.1, \V. ()., In Rural Carolinian,
April So.
^? -
Steeping Seed Before rianting.
The agricultural world has long desired,
and especially at the South, a
successful steep tor seed before plautin!*,
thai ouhl let as a stimulant and
fertilizer, ami, at the same time, not
operate injuriously to tho germinating
power of the lender seeds. A
Uecp and mode of aplicution has recently
been incrodueed here, in which
ipprcars, from the ready sales it is
necting with, to have some claims to
mecess. We have ourselves seen some
strong testimonials from parties ol exlerienee,
and in whose opinions we ,
lave great faith. They speak in high <
erms ol it. Air. John commins, '
>f Charleston, introduced last season a
nucilagc which certainly lias great ad- (
,-antnges over water, as by the aid of t
ll!? miU'l I'liril ?l ol p?nr. ? I." '
- w ti VI .'1^^ ?w DVIUHi^ Cilll U L" v
mule to adhere to the seed?such as :
vood ashes, dry earth an<I other kin- .
Ired substance. The mucilage, it is >.
laimcd, has all the elements of fcrtili- 1
Ly suited for the seed in its infant 1
late, which helps to nourish it whil j
i that condition, It, has been ascer- |
ained of late that the Chinese have <
>ng since adopted the plan of apply- h
>g mucilage to their seeds before 11
hinting, containing the essential food
squired at tlie stage when the young v
lant mostly requires it.?liural Car
The Pooling Ectweon the Races. J
We do not and cannot, admit that 11
lore is an incurable antagonism be- ^
veen the races in this State, as some '
ilorested politicians would havo us ''
ulieve. Whatever bad feeling there n
has been engendered by unnatural
reninstances, and is not indigenous 11
> the situation. When we look back ?
i the sober light of reason we think S(
e can see, in one particular of the ,f
3Count, the balance fairly drawn in
ivor of the laboring class of the poole.
The record of the late war in the ?'
mthern States will furnish llxtm with P*
i imperishable claim to the respect
nl gratitude of those who, from the )v
adle to the grave, had rallied to the ,H
'Id and the trench in discharge of a ct
ity that a misguided patriotism im- Cf
"mod upon them. Thero never 1ms l,:
)en a story ;n the civil wars of any Cl
ition on the (aco of the earth in
liich a strong people, bound as they a
ere acted as they did. The exact 81
Uiaiion of atlair8 in those terrible H0
lies never can he forgotten by those
!k> moved up the shifting stago of
at tragedy. F>y the iron inconsist* ?l
cy of war, a government professedly e,J
tablighed on the theory of States m'
;hte, and the inviolate sovereignty la
the State, was compelled to lay the ,t!
ate, by the conscription of its eiii- ml
ns, at the loot of its military power
was compelled to defeat the original ar
inciple of its organization, lly the 'IC
spotism of this military conscription ?.i'
ery arms-bearing white man was
? ~ -v""if?t
v-%^ T V-Sf 'S3
JN?L
dent Journal.
[OSDAY, APRIL L L 1
forced to the Iront, n?>?I their wives
and children were left on the broad
plantations to the rare of their slaves.
These people were in the stagim* ion ?>l
i gnorance, in its deepest slough, hnt
they knew one thing, by the very distinct,
of human nature, that the rush
and roar ot the struggle meant the life
or death of the Union, and t he freedom
or slavery of t heir raee. They knew
this fact by heart, 'fhey understood
it ill its fullest st gnilieanee. They
thought and talked of it hy day and
dreamt of it in their cabins hy night.
They longed for tin; breaking hour
with a longing that was unspeakable.
They watched and followed the new
star that had risen in tlm American
firmament until it became fixed at A ppo
mattox. and beneath its essential light
t he eleetiieity of lihert v invested them.
Hut, never a hand did they lift, through
all those long years against the lives
and the homes that lay breathing and
helpless before them, and thai gave
nerve ami hope to the hlow that was
internal to ri\et the shueklos. Willi a
fidelity that was uparalleled, ami a
simple virtue that was unapproachable,
they rose up at the earliest dawn,
and laid the rich fru'ts of then* mireauitled
labor at the feet of the lonely
lady whose husband and son were
striking against their dearest rights.
They led and supported the armies of
the Confederacy.
A*, many a juncture of the conflict,
these laborers, comprising a million
of men, might, have risen in rebellion
ami shattered the arm ol the S mth in
an hour. They not only refused to
do this and waited on the Lord, hut
in thousands of instances they followed
* he fortunes ot the fit I 1, and in
many eases were actually killed and
wounded by the side of those with
whom they were horn and taised.
These are Tacts known of all men.
Hut the secret spring" of this wonderful
fidclit) to their humble place and
singular confidence, in 1 *ro\ idenco is
only understood by those who weic
intimate with the institutions, rel.tlion.-*
ami associations of the races, ll
O'es not the mushroom growth ol
a day, nor a year, nor a decade. It
W'?s ib*- growth of ccntnres, with a
touch of ike old so I in its spirit, ami
the echo of immortal in.miotics in its
voice. It. was a kind ol second nature
engrafted upon the races. It w-m
part and parcel of the brain-ide and
heart-life of the Louth. It was strong
in the swamps of Carolina in the days
ol 1 77<?, and when the brightest blade
that flashed in the mootilght, by ihe
side ol i'Yancis Marion, stvuT'tr in the
hand of a colored man. It. was s?\'<mg
in the days of 1803, when the hi vxi oi'
tin* present Speaker of the of
licprcsentatives flowed by the sioe ol
OIIC ol the most (r ill ml
" to *" ?? ?" ? I II H
ever rallied his men around the colors
r>f the Slate. It is strong to-day, dc-pit*'
all 11 jo heal. ;i>:? 1 tea,per, passion
uid picjiidice, wrong ami corruption,
dial, like l!?e serpents o! old, wrapped
liemsel ves aro und the. hody of Lnojoon.
Outside of politics, at tho donest
ic fireside, it is still strong, and
a lien tlie cloud lias vanUhcd, it will
>e seen stretching forth its mystic,
piritual hand, brushing away the hit
?*r, miserable ghost that has been
aiscd by the designing demagogue,
111 d leading the people of both races
lefore the broken column of the State,
t will be seen lining thorn above the
lust, stir and ashes of the past, and
wearing them to stand by the honor
d the Stale, and to restore her star i<>
he galaxy of the Union, redeem* d
ltd undiminished in all its original
i it tic and splendor.
Tho Hypothecated Eonda.
* '
Editor Union-Ut raid:
Sin?An "interesting letter," as it
lodestly styles itself, appears in tin?
Mil// Union denouncing Senator
hum's resolution concerning the
ypothccated bonds. If "Knileigh" is
ght, tlio resolution is ,4a blunder."
L is the result of the ignorance of "a
yo in mathematical calculation," or
I a purpose to affect t he successful
dtlement of llio public debt, as artnged
by the Funding Act."
"Italcgli" seems to have indulged in
?e most careful study of every class
[ our public debt. J It! has made a
L'rsoiial, laborious examination ol
;ery minute circumstance connected '
itli the authority to issue, the actual 1
sue, and the disposition of tho pro- I
edsof this sale. He hasconducted a '
irrespowlence with the bank note com- 1
wies of the Noith, and made an ac- '
irate comparison of their replies with I
10 material at hand, lie lias made "
careful celoulation of every bonder '
ock printed, signed, sealed, issued, *
kl, exchanged or cancelled, and he ,
ves, as the result of all these cb'eum- '
anee?, an unqualified expression of 4
>inion, that all the bonds are pres- 1
it or accounted for. If the state- 4
entfl of his oportunitiofl is enough to \
kc one's breath, the conclusion he n
aches is enough to awaken one's ad- i
iration. t
1 will not discuss the unfortunate 1
rangenient of the figures with which t
is made to fortify his expression of h
inion. The printer does him injus- l
c, and I will not repeat the injustice e
(
WB.j
.... I
874. NO. 15.
? ??
j of the printer. I iulonl>te?l'y his own
figures won! I show the amount of
I 44l>nnt|s plaeetl in Kiinptoti's lunuls'' to
be $0, 4 14,000, u ul the amount ot "sales
, re port til hy Kunptotf to l>e
r?()0. Admitting these lion res, tiio re
i result ot Ins < \:vmin:?ti comparisons
:iml calculations amountsto this:
Tint. $ 1 , l.r>t?,500 o( bonds were "on
baud at last report as collateral sccor'?- j
i tv lor loans." lit1 vouchsalos no ex- 1
planation to Ins impuriuo tenders. lie |
simpls states "as one having authori- '
; tv?" that ><1,150,500 <>i bonds were on i
hand with Kitnpton at last report as
colle.teral security lor loans, aid trusts j
this "proo! is satisfnclory'* of his con- i
elusion, that "lite statements made in j
the preamble of 11. resolution are utterly
and absolutely lube."
I ndcr any eireuiiistatices these
I words would he v< ry sir ne_j. Hacked j
by his Latin quotation trout a llorn |
'look, they are very s?.\i re. Let us j
see whether their use is justified by
t he facts of t hit case.
" The statements made in the preamble
ol the resolution are these!
1. That the financial Aoeut was!
authorized ij>y a certain Act of the
(leneral Assembly to ph'doe certain
bonds of the St ite as collateral seeuriiy
tor State loans.
'2. That the financial A?yrnt made
mo report ol the bonds so pledged.
U. That ol the $0,11 I,ouo of "new !
^ j
bonds" issued ?lurino the late administration,
only v7,7o7,appear to
have Ik en sold, lea\ino 1,7oG,ot)<) en- I
tirelv unaccounted for.
1 presume that not. even his cxperi
eneo in "mathematical calculation"
will tempt "Ualeigh" to deny the first
ami second statements made in the
preamble. llis domm-M > I.... n.
K'II in r \ i
denlly directed against 'lit; thud; and
hi; denounces it as uIUtIv and absolutely
false, because, as hi; stales,)
J $I, !.">(?,500 nl' the bonds were mi hand
with Kimpton, at last report, as collateral
security lor loans. 1 cannot, a11swcr
41I ialeigh" in his own lanoonce.
1 cannot atl'ord to denounce his stale- >
nu'iil as utterly and ahsolutclv false.
Ai too same Iiiiic i say his statement,
is utterly and alsolutely without authority
front the record. 1 have Ivimpton's
last, report before me. I had not
not iced it before seeing ^KaloighV' let- 1
let*. IVrhaps "the author and support
er of t he resolut ion" had not noticed
it before presenting the statement
"Kalcgh" criticises. Uut, though referred
to hy "Kalegh" with gro.lt eon- ,,
lidence, it dees not say what "Ualei"h"
would seem to make it say. It
Cj o
says:
"On hand, ,850,500 S. O. bonds,
which is including ?<200,000 S. t \
I ,u^< account, sinking fund account ; :
a'so ()Q0 JJluo Kidgo Kailroad
bonds."
I hit, it does not say vn^c word about
these $ 10,500 bonds,or -hd-boOo ol
these bonds being on hand *S'ts culloteral
aecurity for loans."
it is evident that "I Jaleigh" has pro
sutned to add these words in his recital
of Knnptoii's last report from his
'possession of a knowledge ol these
I matters outside ol the record?a '
I. - ? i " -
kiiow icugc "llie author and supporter j
of the resolution" arc oreatlv to bo
1 '
pitied tor not possessing.
lint Ictus got at the mat row of ilio
mutter. W illi Parker'# reports and j1
Kimptom'rf accounts ami Kaloigh's \
cookeries, it is not easy lor ar.y one, I t
without a secret key to ascertain the j
exact figures o( anytime* connected
with 'lie past adininist?ation ot tho s
treasury department. J?ut ono thing a
is clear beyond a (pustion, ?i:.d t hat is, v
that a considerable pait ol the $!>,.'.? 1 ' t
000 of bonds issued under the last ad- !
' { I
ministration, so far as the? record
' |
shows, has not been sold. The I
amount may he $1,75(1,500 or $1,450,- |
500; but the amount, whatever of j
these sums it is, has not been accounted
lor. The resolution states that 1
only part of the $0,514,000 of bond# r'
appears to have been received by the |
Financial Agent; but t he whole drift H'
and direction ol the resolution shows ( f'(,
that its "author and supporter" sup-!
posed at least a part of the bonds un- j
accounted lor had gone into the Finan- |
cial Agent's hands. "Kaleigh" de- '
edares that all the bonds not sold were
on hand with Kimpton at last report
as collateral security for loans, arul ,f<
thinks that this declaration is sutlicient
proof that the bonds are ac- !M
counted for. "Raleigh" seems to
(lave drawn his inspiration from the <M
sailor who thought that a thing could | ^
not be 1 ost if In; knew where it was. I *
ind that the anchor was not lost for , SI1
no knew it was at the bottom of the )(
ica. I eay that these bonds are not
iccounted for in "Raleigh's" simple
itatement that they weru on hun.l ad
aith Kiinpton, at last report, as col- 1'-'
at oral scent i'y for loans, Webster up
lelincs "uncounted for" to mean 4'cx- "><
dained." And what is explained by to
'KaleighV' statement? Does ho oxdain
the amount of the loans for
vhich those bonds arc held an eolafe- fa*
al security? Does he explain the Hi
erms on which the loans wore made? mi
)oes ho explain the periods at which ire
he loans will mature? Does he ex-< be
lain whether these bonds are still in th
he possession of Kirupton?or whetli- th
r like the $o98,000 l>luo Uidge ltail- ge
: ' IK.HTS
jir >i. squaro for Hi-fi ant
f>I \ i Col miV> ii ?il Insertion.
< ?n?' i- oli jwii-o will ci>n fiHito a Mipnr",
whoth-r in hp'vlor or display t> |??*J 11 m
.ui inrli will ln? for an a square**
Mart i.t c noi loos fro?.
I><at! and Funeral noflees IV .<%.
OhifiMrioy of otto square fret*; i#V'*r<vt?
siinvt' churned af .*?I\ ?*i Iisi1114 rates,
Holl on- notiovs of oit? square f ? #?.
A 11 ? ! d tcoutit will bo mad fi h
wlioso nd\ I'll i ipipon's are If ho kepi i 1 ! >
term of 11 tree months or longer,
ro*i?l loonls "on Itrnul" at tho flame
time ns them* hoinls, tliev nro in the
. : ? \? .... - '? -
. , < . ^ 1 ? - i I 11 1 ill M > I LI MI , I ? I ! * S l\ ' ' ?.
Docs ln? < x|?1 .ii11 whether those bonds,
are still within Kimpton's control, or
whether, like the ?p>98,000 Blue Hidgo
Kadroad bonds, they are within tin)
control of Morton, Bliss it ?
Does he oven explain whethel these
honiD may yet he rcdei rued I y tho
Slate on the ic-pnymeht of the loans
tin y are held to secure? lie explains
nothing. lie simplv h*nI s that these
Bonds were on hand with Kiinptov, at
last report, as collateral security f??c
loans, and thinks that is prool they
are accounted tor. KimptonV la t report.
he i. remembered, was tu i lo
move than eighteen months ago.
Nor doeH l'l?.deigh" explain in what;
way the resolution can injur om I a Toct
the suecessfu 1 settlement ot the publm
deht, as arranged hy the Funding A.it.
These hunds, at least aueh ot them vh
are not Iraudulent couvorsion bond
might, under conceivable, circumstances
be exchanged under the Funding
Act for new bonds, and the controlling
object of the resolution was to
prevent such an exchange being made.
Will those who hold bonds they hivo
bought, at the market price bo the less
likely to accept the terms of settlement
proposed in the Funding Art,
because those who have obtained
bonds under hypothecation for a tnero
song am prevented from fraudulently
accept ing t hose terms? The theorv of
the tumling act is, t hat t he smaller the
debt the surer will be the ability of
the Slate to pay the interest as it. noI'lMlc;
-.li 1 lhi> lilliwiii'il !? mill hi.!i .
, . . , , . . ('I..IV iimi. i % v? Hhlllll H > ?
and flic better, ihorcfore, will be tho
senility of the holder. And surely
every in' el iigiu.t friend oflhc Funding
Art, must, leel ;t11< 1 know that Lite repoItition,
bo fur from 'njuringtho siutc.-h
ol the I 111>%;i11?jf Act, as an "invidoua
intimation of tho uncertainty of tho
volume of the public debt," must need*
help the Funding Act, not only in
making more certain the volume of
tho public debt by ascertaining tho
amount of tin? loans for which these
bonds are pledged, hut also in keeping
down the volume of tho public debt.
l?v pfe\cut tog I he e.\ change of f'1,7no,"
500 or & 1,4ot>,,r,00 of bonds at their par
value, by those who hold them as eullateral
seem it y for loans of only &
fraction of their amount.
Notics AND Qrnnirc*.
Girls Bathing.
Ono of the bathing-place gentry
writes to an exchange: ''Hid you
ever sec a thin girl take a bath in tho
surf, and come out with her bathing
dress sth king light to her like a poor
woman's plaster? Funny, wasn't it?
i-ll it's nothing compared to a fat
girl in the same 'posish.' 1 do t.hinlc
ol all tho comical sights in t he widn
ivo,"1,1' ,h" funniest i* a fat girl when
die comes of the surf. I havo
<een puppy tio^*4 tv*.vh blue ribbons on
.heir tails, and neatly tC'nbroidcrcnl
lannel shirts on their dear lil * .knocks,
ind 1 liavo seen Iloraee (Jrecdy tf?
Miriy, i>ut they art; as naught and
lust, in the balance, alongside of a fat
vom.ii; in her 1 >athing clothe*. I don't
liink men look Any belter, but we?
lon't expect grace and beauty in our
ex, and can stand the sight. If you
.re vim y much in love with a girl, and
rant to break the spell, take her to
he beach and sec In r in her Hurt tog;ery.
11 that don't knock the spooney
lit of you, you'd better marry her
nd cull it. square.
One. night list week the signal sfa
ion on t he I op of Mount Washington
ported n nor'.hwest gale blowing at
he rate ot 110 miles an hour?as
howu by the anemometer--and x
mpovatiive of 18 degrees below zero,
'his is probably the highest force
vr attempted by the wind in New
higland. A gale GO or 70 miles an
our will often blow down trees.
i the hurricanes of tho tropics a
uco ot J00, evon 110 miles p.n hour
not uncommon. Xo human being
mid stand betote such a gale. Tho
L'Oj'ie in the cb.iine(l*down hut <*onived
to ex imine the anemometer withit
emerging?oUo I hey would bo
vept otr bodily and huitivd down
nckerniiiu's bbivine. Tho roar of
eh a moniitain gale is tarriblo be>nd
words.? h'.cchunrje 2d, in at.
The Cincinnati Times shvm XobuohInez/AM*
w:?s not th?* 1:rest "Cian^or."
i*o in.ulo ii:o a rejmt ition in t i*
iplo busim**, and hiSil-1* He A* 1.x i
Duopoly, and was :?.U the very tirst
j? itrom/.u husbandry.
Fa vet to v iilo bJacjle sav*.' A out ton
lory has just boon si.irhsl on llaw
ivop, ,'i(. Iiynunds mill, and a tow
les above l'ittsboro. The mines of
>n and ? .}>]>ev along Drop liivor aio
ing worked, but nothing i<* doing in
o, coal n.'i Country 8ior#?? am
ink and ' i i!*! y, and all tanning
no nil buainesa are improving