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TN H~ERALD. DITOtTI -sru Lsa 00 per quar (one inch) for tinS Inrdt - IS, PUBLISHED .isrd b ~t~ 6 nd 75 cernt for each subequet i3nISU1..' A Double column advert sements tenw Ce al KRY THURSDAY ORGabove. At Newberry,. S. C. -ei e . . BY THN'L. F. GE R 'T Aversemnsnot -nd it ~~~4i4 P mrieor. dbrd'oesI.-4 ~ .berw ofistion Ubri erep in " s.00 per mn A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture, Markets, &c aste~~~ Ltiterpiatonufr nle for ei it , is paid. T.URSDAY, D C B 14 1882. NW T50 -0-, The X4 murt denotes expiration of sub V6 NE B R Y1.$ D' YI-IUl%UI1iA.LVD! I ' o~ O EM AH -fisceManeougs. - ~TellY I@% Be four, Own Doe9r . 7ou have a bad taste in yourYnouth, or yellow color of skin, feel de t;Stupid and drowsy. apDetite un Wareqent headace or dizziness, you 2re 'biots." Nthing will arouse your Lit. act on and strengthen up your sys teequalto-.: SIM MON$' HEPATIC COMPOUND Or Liver and -Kidney Care. VES CONSTIPATION , EL1EVES DIZZENES. ABOLISEW ]UM CURSJAUNDICE. CUES LVEECOMPLAINT. 0ECoREs ~LARLAL BLOOD PoWANG. REGULATES THE sT',A.C" WILL REGULATE TUEIRM WILLREG,ULATETfl 'ELS. 'U"U MVER ANO KIDNEYS Sbe k'pt perfectly healthy in any cli *PAX onionstdoseft R9O EPITC If POND, TM GMXT VEGET I=X YNAJND KIMDNEY EDICINE DOWi& MOISE W OL_.SALE DRUCCISTS CHARLESTON, S. C. 8W- Fop SAT .iE RBS.s And in New yDr. S. F. FANT. (AT CR MSTAW&Ds) A: myBai tbi Wpee fdwberry and 41 :amkv; y fm d LWBR$A-_Wheat, Rye aW GrhamE . C1SPIEs, CANDIES at* Snake my Bread from the best quality y Candies I m aetre-myselff and 'Warrant that they-are fure. Wa if ne "r iced a ul1r aspa ronage, I ask a con nuaneE of the same. Fa Wa'lDER. -2 43-1f. ILE SUN NEw YORK, 1883. ors people have read THE SUN during year just now passing than ever before t it was lirst printed. No other news published on this side of the earth 1 ught an3redainay-year-bY:SO - r b omedtapeo0buy and like THE SuN for the fo owing Among other6: elsa itnews columns present in at- d form and with the greatest posible y whatever has interest for human- I the eve the deeds and misdeeds, w 5 hf0sophy the notable Mhe ' ans the ipoing,,non. the news of the bus t ord at con,cerini prsons' and affairs Buit makg@a"r tOO(tolling thems - exact truth -t the betof- Its ability" hundred and sixty-five days in the ,before election as well as after, about g base as.weil as about the- smal1l ahub, fasf obdisslt as plainlytand fear-: when supported by general appro -Tn SUN has absolntely. no purposes - e, save the information of its readers the fortherance of the common-good. ( Isso humble t rwESKi niffer- - -~iiwelfare.and his rihs No man h~6thatit can-allow'inustice to be him. No man, no aso&tOLof men, - erful enough to be exempt from -the I application of-szin?ciptes of right! - arost gione among nawspa-' - ashtiat has- resulted In thie re-! -ehning populnrverdict against and for honest government. 77ZA.. -~o hat party is ii power. THE ?'UN - nd wilt .ontinhUe7Ostand-tiko-a the interests of the peore ainsl *t - "~ ~u~aor bosscs, the encroachmenlts p ~olists, and the dishonest schemeInsjt ns is.what, weanrs toli almost daily I r ~ fiends. One ni holds that .I Uk - U% e th-besrrreligionUs-newspaper ever t - , bewse its Christianity is undi witkrcanlt. . Another holds taat it is I. ~ a~~1 bssalra$y v ppd halft rd *A third believes it to be the best' e of generai1itePaurin exis::ence~. bWna its readers miss nothin o rt o -. - ee that ia current in the wrdo 1 ~o.already know THE SUs, you will obev5that in 1883 it is a little better than S Ifon o nt already know ever befor e. dittob a mirror of -sl umnactivity, a storehouse of the Shumans polu2cts of commnon sense and ima n eeator the causeng year. ea goeOftion of etTEl SU resn *rsoeiau dor, a sourgs: ensa month, $8.50 ayear; wit Ei h1page of the b~.)fIealv ses: as Agri - iIOPr~~ of unequalled meri, markt vpofl.'ad literary, scientiic and domstl indg for te Tfar hd.ne o$ ofltnbs 507. 2S,7 -6t s~,~.l .jeemae atwede tS BetRine.T buns u0- We Oa d eep marketCpritel 00ggRS HA5 --------- -~ EVISITEI . [n the ailent borrs of the midnight When the drowsy world was stll; While the golden beams of the starlight Rested upon the bill; stood where the moones quiver Allthe muieil war=Jw, )n the banks of-that sleeping river Where we parted years ago. remember the -tall-tree's-shadows Made daer e te i ide, ks it wound smugshe bastUeadows Like aOlTer ribbot lIde Lnd I thoug i; if iho.,e days of giadness N W 14yag t diver itoui,t of sadness, Where~the musicIl waters flow. )ay-tbat were*efromtrouble An-dici as iright Jine sky, etrCausient as airy bubble, That kisses the shore to die. bu.+ love wish- the years tbrever. Fir out of our firiilI fl ee; Vhile tbe waves.of this same old river, Drift on and on t to the sea. THIE DEATH OF MORGAN. MHUIMOW i DT JI RETEL& he r athe - IaytIe The unveiling of a moument to ALpt. William Morgan recalls an wea of ajtring itere6t, arogs. nae up pulart ftin - ?atav'ia, to Roy, OaIanasigUa, md RQchester, then pervaing our own and other State . After reaL isgtheproceedings of .-inetigg 't Savial with The o' vid . Evans as presiding .officer, I rrote a six-line paragraph for the cezr-ph, ? which I tated that a citizen of Batavia id .be spiriLf way from his eome arifamily,zd- that after a 4ysterious absence, of several ays,' village meeting bad ben eld and a committee of citizens er ;adding-th"t-, as it was knoio hiat freemasons were concertied n this abduction, it bebooved the rcternity whose good name wai ufferingto tuke the laborlng-oai n resting I.a, lost man to his iberty. Thiat parapraph brought ozens of our most influential cit ens, greatly excited, to the dce,.stopping the paper and or eringthe discotinnance of their dvertisementsa. Mesniine tbe mystery deepen. d, and public mneetings ware hed a sveral villages,: Rochesterin luded.e In t.he~ meeting at Ro. hester it was assumed that all ~oodteit.izenk wouki tinite in an fortAovindieate the1law.e A coma nitte was appointed, consisting f sesen, three of whom Twere Ma. 'ini. It was so)on.disdovered that etree Masons .wei(froni tih >mtlmitLtee to t lbe ldg rom, I t as subsequentily useertatined that wo of hey gentlemren w'ere cou-. ered in the abdueuun, and that [organ had been comitt.ed to is~ jail in Ca:,andaigrua on a fab.e m~rge of larceny, and that be ad bIen carried froma thei'ce se retly by night to Fort Niagara. e committeo egioun tered an ob. .neile ina obtaining indictments in e of. the six counties where in. ictments were needed. The She ifs who summoned the -Grand uries were Freemasons. In' font ooties no indictments could _be btaned. In Ontario, however, he. District Att.orney, Bowen Vhiting and the Sheriff,"Joseph EarlingboUse, though Masons, re arded their obligations to tbh sWe of the State paramount. She if Garlinghouise and District At. orney Whiting discharged their uties independently and honestly. s the investigations proceeded he evidence increased that Mar. :an had been unlawfully confined the Canandaigua jail, and soe rtly conveyed to Fort JNiagara, here ho-was confined in the mag ine. There was every reason to sieve that he was takea 'from he magazine and drowned in Bake Ontario. * * * * * ~* In the autumn of 1827, the dis govery of the body of an unknowf an on the shore of Lake On. Laro, neat the mouth of Oak Or ubard Creek, gave a new and ab~ -otlgaspect to the questionl The.. description .of that body, a published by the Coroner wh held an inqLest over it, induced belief that it was the body of Wn Morgan. Our committee decide to bold another inquest. Impres ed with the importanue and r( sponsibility of the question. gave public notice 'of our inter i'tiob, and personally inyited severt citizeua who had known :Morga to he 'presen't. One of' oU-r'CoU mittee ,went to Batavia to tiecur the atendancy ' Mrs. Morga and as , manotv.-,ers *hoteN him a "wiuld 'iaetd. To&i had beeu. interred _where it wa found. Terade coffin Was oper ed -in the. preaene of obeLwee forty and fifty persons. Wbe'n- i was reacbed, and before removin the lid, I recetivedfrow Mrs. -Ko gan, and. others who knew hy woll, descriptiomr of, as,,peisot Mrs. Morgan .described the colo of bis hair, a scar upon his loo and that his teeth were double a round. Dr. Strong confiimed Mrg Morgan's statement about doubb teeth, one of which he had ea tracted, while another was broken iudicatiog 'the position of the' ex ctra,d and broken teeth. Whei tbe-coffin- was opened the bod disclosed -.the pecliarities d scribed by' Mrs. Morgan and D Strong. This second- iquest and thei ex aminations .of the.body pr9ceede in open day, and in the present of asons and Anti-Masns, no one of- whom dissented from tb Coroner's jury, -by which-tbe.bod; ,was unanimously declared to: b that of William Morgan. Mr Morgan, in -her testimony, faile to recognize the clothes. Th body was taken to Batavia, wher it was reinterred, no one a yet expressing any doubt of it identity. Subsequently,-however, we wer sur.prised, by a statement that tb body supposed to be thaz of Moi gn -was ..alleged to be the body Timothy Monroe, who had bee drown.ed. in the Niagara Rive several- weeks before holding th 'first inquest. This #wakened ger eral and intense feeling. VNotic was given that a' third inques would be held at Batavia, wher the widow'and a son of Timoth Monroe appeared as-witnesr.e Mrs. Monroe swore to abody e sentially different from that foun Oak NOrchard' Creek; Her hui band, she said, had black hai that b ad been recently -cut an rtood erect. [er testimony; mad her huisband froui 'threer to fos inches taller t,h'an that ofth bbd in question. She testified thz 1that her husban~d had. donbi teeth. all aound, 'and described a extracted t.ooth from the wron awand dknew nothing of 'th broken tooth. The hair upon tb head of the drowned man *wa long, silky. and of achestutcoloi Iw hile that of Monroe, according t rh-i teQtimouny of Mrs. Mo.nrue.au ie son, was short, black, an close cut. Wjl 'i zr. Mounro aieindescribig.the body, he description- of the clothing' wa miinutely accurate. The heel c his.. steeking was described a having been darned with yn-r diffceaent 'in color. Hier cross-es anmation was very rigid, and he answers throughout were fo,un to be correct. The clothing thu described .nad been in possessio of the Coroner, who testified tha it had not -been seen- either b Mr's. Monrcoe or any, strange from whom she could have ot tained information. On t,he othe hand, .Mrs. Morgan's descriptio of the body, before she had seen i' was qunite as.satisfactory as Y.r Monroe'sadescription of the clot.be Our committee togk no Part i the third inquest, and th-e bod; as is known, was,,declar'5d to I that of' Timolby Monr'e. .* ..* * * *.- * 'Our investigationsi 'were emba rassed and protracte d by e. a sence and.concealrm'ent of, impor ant witnesses. On e of these wi ne.sses was an invalid soldier wb had had the care of Morgan whi cohfined in.the 1Eagazmne at, .Fo: Niagara,. bnt he disappeared, as all efforts tio find him wei unavailing for. more than a-yea I finally 'taced him (Elisha A al'town im Vermont. We reached o- the log house of Adamss bro a ther-in-law, with whom he was . biding, between 12 and 1 o* lock d 1 at night. Our rap was responded 3- to by the owner, to whom on opening the door,:tbeSheriffintro I duced me., directly after which, and - before anything more had been I sv.id, we heard a voice from the D -4econd floor of the cabia saying, - I am ready, and have been ex- I e pectintg you all winter.' lnme . diatey afterward the old man t came dowr the ladder, and in ten r minutes jra dep~arted n :*ou re a turn. * * * * r On our way back Adarms at t differa-o,. timas stated that, hearing Ia nois.e in 4he -nagazinie,' he-re. - portel it to Mr. Edward Giddins, i keepf r of the fort, who told him that a stranger was lodged therq r who in a day or two would be take:o to his friends in Canada, but 1. noth ing must be said about it. He then. from time to time carried a fooe' to the person. Soon afterward, nea r midnight, he~ was told to have a .boat in readiness.for the Ipu -pose of taking away the man in, te magazine. Several gentle. men arrived in a carriage by whom the man wits Laken trom the magazine and escorted to the boat. Adams ,was told to reiiain on the dock natil the I boac should return, and that if a in ihe meantime a, alarmi ould t be given he was to show a signal e to warn the boat away'. As noth r ing oftbe;.kiad;oc6ared.tWs~boat 3 returned quietly, and as of the . six who. left in the boat only five d returned, be supposed that one e had go"o to his friends in Cana e da. a Adams was wanted as a witness ; in trials then pending in Canandai gu.a. - We reached that plasce in 6 the afternoon.of the day the court a convened.. Three-.men. -were on trial for abducting Morgan. The 'f tes-imony of Adams was ebsential a to u:omplete the link. On heing r callc-d to the stand he denied all. B knowledge bearing upon the ques tion.. B *' * * *. * * 5 On our return to Rochester the B witness Adams was in an extra y stage with his Manw friends. '. As therv -wus longer acy ueed of i- hiding, he ,was on his way to I Nia;gara. In passing the Man' t sion Honce. .R'bolater. -Adaims, r 'u ho> was standing in the doorway, d askc ed me to stop,saying he wanted e Ito explain his -testimonya- The r lawyers, be said, informed htsm v tha-t if he: told w bat be knew about, t the magazine and the boat it e wo id be a confjession that wonld E ser .i him to the State prison. g Theoy also :told him t-hat: the law e did n'ot compel a witness to crim e insate himself, anad, to.avoid pia S is:hment, he mnust deny the whole ystury. D 4udS83; after my removal from i R&c'ester 'to Al,azjy. a libel:.uit 3 waa ommnenced- against moe by o Geu. Gionid f-Rochester. It was r trind- ato Albany,: Judge James s V adergioef" pres.ling. The li bel f charged Gen. Gould; with giving s in otrey he received from the Boy. alii. Arch Grand-Chapter to enable B,arrage.Smith and John W hitney r t escape from justice. Gerrir. L i ~Dox, Treasurer of the Grand S Chapter, and John Whitney, one I of the recipients of the money, t 'were in court to* establish the & rsnth of the libel. Mr. Dox testi r :ifie that a 'charity tund' bad been -:in trusted to Gen. Gould. John e W,hitney was called to prove that a he received a part of the fund, L, with which, in company with s. Burrn tge Smith, he left Rochester, s and was absent nearly a year. n Genr. Gould's consel objeeted to 1, witnes sB LestimhoDy until it had e been sh own that Gen. Gould -knewa Lhat th.s. money furnished was to enaable S3.tc and Wb.itney toes-' r. cape. frptL" justice. Tne Court . sutai6ed tius objection, and. W ihit t ney's 1iestiLXiony was excluded. t- As it was .impossible to prove o what -was -it o wn only to -Gen. e' Gould himself, .the trial ended ab L ruptly. Judge -.anderpoel, in d charging~ the jury..diwelt at length e upon :;he licentjim;ness of the r. press, and called upon the jury to. [ give. exeropiary damage5sto the n -ininrmA and innocent plaintiff. The jury, thus instructed, but with evident relactance, found a verdict of $400'!against me. My offence consisted in asserting a fact, the exact truth of .which would have been established if the testimony had not been ruled out by a monstrous pervertsion of justice. - - Col. Simeon B' Jewelt *of Chirk. son, Major Sanuel Baron of Lewiston, and. John Wbitrly of Rochester pamsed that.eal4'g at' my house. Jewett wait prepared to testify that be fu'riished a car riage fbr those who were convey ing Morgan secretly from Can andaiga 'uto Niagara. John Whit ney was.one of tha. patty. Major Barton. would have testified that he furnished the carriage which conveyed the parny from Lewis ton to Fort Niagara. John Whit hey being uue uf that .party. Whitney would have sworn: that Gould supplied money to euable him to 'escape 'from jUstiU%..' In the. course of. the eening, the ILorgan affair being the principal topic ot con.viraAtiol. C4. Jewett turned to -Wbitney with emphasis and said: John, what if you make a elean bkeast ofit.' Whit ney lo5Lkd i qui:'ir.g - rton who added:, -Go ahead.' Whitney then related in detail the history of Morgan's abduction and fate.. The idea of suppressing Morgan's intended exposure of the secrets of :Masonry was first snggested by a man by the name of Johns. It was discussed in lodges at Batavia, Le Boy, and Rochester., Johns suggested that Morgan should be separated from Miller and placed on a farm in Canada West. For this purpose he was taken to Niagara and placed in the magazine of the fort until arrangements for settling him in Canada were completed, bu-t the Canadian Masons disap pointed them. After several meet. ings of the- lodge in Canada,.oppo site Fort- Niagara. a refusi dto have anything to do with Morgan left his 'kidiappers' greaLly per plexed. . Opportunely . a Royal Arch Chapter was installed at Lewiston. The occasion brought a large number of enthusiastic Masons together. 'Afte labor,' in Masoni- language, they 'retired to refreshment.' Under the ex hilaration ofobampagne and otber viands, the Chiapltain (the Rev. F. H. Oummi ngs of Rochester) was called on for a toast. He' rospond-. ed with peculiar emphasis and in the.lagu~age of their ritual: "The enemies of odr order-May they find a grave six feet deep, six feet long, aud 'six feet due east and west.' immediately after that tosst, which was received with great enthusiasm, Col. 'William King, an officer in our war of 1812, and then a member of Assembly from Niagara county, 'called Whitney of Roebester, Uow ard of Buffalo. Chubbuek of Lewibton, and Gar side of Canada wut o'f the roomi and into a carriage furnished by~ Major Barton.. They were driven to Fort Niagara, repaired to the magazine, an nomed Mor-gan, that the arrangements for sending him to Canada were completed, and tbat his family would so<n follow him. Morgan received' the information cheerfully.and walke d with supposed-friend, to the boat, which was-ro.vdd to the mouth of the river, where a rope was wound around his body, to each end of which a sinker was at t,aehed. Morgan was then thrown overboard. He grasped tbe gun wale of the boat convulsively. Gar,ide, mn forcing Morgan to re-. linquish his bold, was severely bitten. Whitney, in concluding his narrative, said he was now re. lieved from a heavy load ; that for four years he had Dot heard the window rustle or any other no(ise' at night. without thinking the Sheriff was after him. CoL Jewett, looking fixedly at Whit. ney, said : 'Weed can hang you now.' 'But he won't,' was Whit ney's prompt reply. Of course a secret thus -confided to me was inviolably'kept, 'and twenty-nine years afterward, while attending a National Republican Convention at Chicago, John Whitney, who then resided there, called to say that hae maned me to write ont what he once told me about Mor 4an's fate to be signed by him in the presence of witnesses, to be sealed up and published after his :eatb. I promised to do so before leaving Chicago. There was no eisure, however, during the sit. ting of. the Convention, and even befo:-e its final adjoarnment, for oetting what I had told Whitney, hurried t, Iowa, retur~niag by Pay. of.Springfield to visit Mr. Lin ,on. In. the excitement of the annase which followed, and the wecession of the Southern States upon Mr. Lincoln's electio,n, I 3eglected the important duty of ecuring the confession Whitndy was so anxious to make. In -1861 L went to Europe, and while ii0 London wrote a letter' to Whi aey aking him to get Alex. B: Williams, t0en a resident of Chi zago, to -o what I bud soun pardonably neglected. That let ter reached Chicago one week after Whitney's death, closing the last and only chance for the reve lation of that important event. * * * * * ** City and County of New York, s&: Thurlow Weed, being. duly swora, says that the foregoing statements are true. TnuELow WEED.. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 28th day of Sept,ember, 1882. SPENCER C. ..DOTY. Notary Public, 17 Union square, New York city. If we disobey the dictates of our conscience even in .tie more trifling particulars, or allow our selvos to - do what we have some fears may not be quite right, we shall grow more and more sleepy, until the voice of conscience has no longer the power to awaken us. How prone .we are to impute to others motives, which they have not; how easily under such mistakes we .can inflict a terrible wound upon a pure person's feel ings or reputation I - We must walk -softly amid our fellows,-and judge as we would be judged. If a fool knows a secret he tells it because he is 'a fool. If a knave knows one, he. tells it whenever itis his interes to tel it. But women and young nen are very apt to tell whatever so crets they know from the vanity of being trusted. i The Clifton Manufacturing Corn pany has just received an order for 500 bales of their popular shirtings to be sent -to China. This imill is now spinning nearly thirty bales of cotton a weed, and- there is a ready demand for every bale of.goods. [(arolina-Spartan. Our people must go to raising hogs, if for nothing else than .to get our horses accustomed to them. Last Mionday there were two runaways, one~ in town and thes other near.-Major Duncan's, both horses having been frightened by hogs. (Carolina Spartan. The love of display which results in vulgar ostentation is thie result of selfishness, of a desire to excite the envy of others rather than the wish to share benefits with them-an effort to appear great without striving toib great in reality. The high price of life, the crown ing fortune of a man, is to be born tc some pursuit which finds him in em ployment and happiness-whether it be to make baskets, or broadswords, or statutes or songs. Troubles borrowed and stolen out-number by far all others in the world. It is a barren kind of criticismx which tells you that a thing ii wrong. A cheerful face is nearly as good for an invalid as healthy weather. Use every man after his desert and who should 'scape whipping ? Treat all with due respect, and none will think you the worse for it. Self-inspecticon is the only means t< preserve uos from self-conceit. AGRICULTURAL PROSiPERI TY OF 186*. The aannual report of Col. A. P Butler is an interesting and linstructiv exhibit' of th,6p,. exhiit~o t,e jogre s 6f the State The' State 'bs realized' this year as royalty od feiiirlrs 138.254, an ei ces' over last year's Nc:it~o f3,' 713;s:are. epgaged. is shippig p h roek and 14 ,7M touswere htp., ag increae of 16 .2Z t6z"s orer tbeg-?receding year'j shipment. South Carolina., tome twenti.tb- in te-ist. of the 64pr and::+roducts valued -atr $212,482 Her shrimp fisheries are more impor tant;ad extensive than .those of an other, 2-ste--Carp irae-.benzstri buted .t 87 :4tarion 4hrioMU th State.' Beside rp ,as i stream~s on 1660 Jlfruia a qnoap4a 1, 94,094badi - i: The estiNiates -of tiieiepaien show ii increase of 144 9vie e cotton 'over 'tie last y4is crof vouey value $$,624,87. The on was 8,946,570 bushels imzeue the preceding erop, Otver diae iro of 1881, oUts is 5,011,018 ushe1 ah4 ad iad' wheat 951',268. Ricei 28 193,277 pounds in ecess .of th .dop of 1881. This year-the Stat wads 198,677 gallons of saha nore -han lasi year, nd 182,510 ga ons Ore sugar cane syrup. O, potato crop is increased to the :foli inggures4 Sweet potatoes;1,712 299 bushels and Irish potatoes 181,83 bushebl. The increase of "the"i arop -is estimated At 57,379 busheL 19,0:more gallons of milk were ol this year than last year, and 824,05 more pounds of butter, 58,522 mor head of poultry were raisedthis yes thin last year add 179,626, Moi dozen of eggs._ The number of4oue has docreased 1,847 head, milch ow have deareand 1,086 bead ad t decreaise in' other cattle amouintsi 14,833 hea& The decrease.in sNa amounted to 62,014 head. The im crease of value of the products of th State is estimated at $18,801552 while the decreae is put at $229,027 i.cotton the a.reage has decreasie 44,455. acres, while in corn A icreage l-a increased 58,019.: T.h oats aereage livi inereased 104,031 and wheat 35,244. Rice is planted i every edinty of the State and ha a aerpage of 75,270- and a product c 64,684;577 pounds.- flrgham I planted in every county of'the Stati id has an aereage of 8454 and apre duct of 507,197 galloni. Sigar can as growaca every county except foer #nd ia an acreage of 2,424ao41 product of 307,165 gallon.. Thi acreage 'of sweet potatoes is represeni ed. by 40,389 and the yield by 3,844, 879 bushels. Irish potatoes have as agreage -of 3,619 and a yield of 887, 190. bashels. Peas are planiedo 116,792 acres said yield 881,04' bashels. Edgefield has tho most prc ductive hens and' Georgetown the least. E~dgefield -baa the largest nun ber of.cattle and Chester the smallesi Hurry has th.e larg'estnnbe aee and Marlboro the smallest.. Marios leads off on swine and Riphland standi foot 'Fairfield has - a agjgae yiek of cotton per acre of: 300' pounds which is the best in the State,~ ani Colleton has the poorest, 135. Beau fort uses the largest amount of cm nmercial fertilizers and Oconee chi smallest. Georgetown had an averagi yield" of corn per acre of 25 busheli which was the largest in the State and Barawell and Kershaw, each hai ing 9. tie for the smallest yield. Kei shaw has the largest average yield oats, being 28 bushels per acre, an< Greenville the smallest, being 11. I wheat Fairfield has the largest averag yield, being 13 bushels per acre, an Clarendon the smallest, bei.ng 74,452 tons of commercial fertilizer were purchased, a decrease of 7,881 tons of the use of 1881. Georgetow! pays the best wages to farm handi $12.50 per month, and Charlestoi the lowest, $6.00 per month. Das lington purchased the largest amoun of farm supplies and Kershaw t12 smallest. There is no funeral so sad to folio1 as the funeral of our youth, while.w Ihave ,been pampering with fond &~ 1sires, ambitions hopes and all th bright hopes, and ali the bright bei ries thait hang in poisonous clustea ove the path of life. Jff#T4 FOR VUasug GIFTR. - ha I keforabraistmeas4,eI is the. question that-is.now-heseM* all sides, a fi tsforimpts and easiy-made,fancy - lef na .provei of'uso to frai-nra -hm the geese are kiM4edbae and core QI-th isttdovrny;fiikchiai down 116we are one u newest fa4eies, idhy delightfazVfor sofai, andIi~ ij chais 'iese pdiksseayM4 4inuare, -overed wi" pliaie 5satinz *tir6iejj&e:, f gg in=4aNuydetigiike eg made of the India s9 1iseE in sezq~iiite' patterua. iofit$r,t mod-, ieMn-M d a ese of tine. ty e a thv;thsreibi: Abd: For -a young lady, a w&easeg sThew;,baij he rne4Land. es ..i. . SThag aabe !th u~i which .they'arc worap4 wear are~masdeia pet, an ate,inte& ties hovering over them holly with sbriliant e.woulatls bE pended from' t1ie&r sizes, G tabls;de aite sW n!I *hia .wsper aybe ma rt~u cIthree brow e - Cut one o each:eolor,bet 6f . a sizes, -into~ the-r e xovernipping kl r miedium-bir;ei Mei'ihf piece -af iie o fastening all to4ether wif * Arittyflasgfr a paWieo4bRis. 'T bellows should e cuob wood or ate-oad~ e reonne satin, or a s deied.Yre pasze is ord cf a The frons may be decoat' way that fanc)fdi-mE . 'uw, B .&nAmerkcn &ic4ltait No~ the universaljhope ofl in' the prospenity of th b that the conliiued $an K oat .crop made tbis yeN 1 worth thosandsifolisir a i next crop of corn may not e ~ndii'tly as 'the rlenfinot goodsad ibxtenisive cot ct $b~ - come in opportunely to and supply the dedciency. '95 a most easily made, and one oft. most econothical" of all 6~s,tn the head of the ist. e -ThE Powia o~ THU C6xes ? ,PRESS.-Tbe defeat Ofb EnaeoB Sty amendment -illustrates dAfe of the country press. in e#etynij -ty'in the State where ifke' :I fpaper tot grounds aest tiiianfil went, the vote %s ovr ieleig Sagainst it, whila i *"ober e~m e where the papers wereaitebiotiwk grounds in favor of tle asmendek -the majorities were large in it~i 'r (1XPikens 8eii n A CHILD WITH FOUE 1ABME AND ,Foua LEGS.-Isaiah Pair's wife, cot - a ored, of E~nterprise, recently gae ebirth to a child with four armaad t four legs, each perfectly formed.Th e child seems to be perfe:tly be!lkhy and promises to live forever.-.Aie. ville .Press and Banner.- . e There Is always a betwa Im i- everything, if i h osi aw e Manners are'the ham a i4s r- things; each oofs2Wak a or4r-eser repea e mis que.