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1KB WEynf? gj Jnwiow TIMES. pf,. - Sooted (0 ^gftnlturt politics, and tltq Current $tm of the ga#. . VOL. XIII.?New Series. UNION C.JI., SOU^^^^^^^fcuecember 22, 1882. NUMBER 51. ?m I IlI> ILi 'Juc-r. imiLiug.'BJ? '? ??? .. ii_i .?... . _ j.-l 'i /? , , - ; .IT-II TV? I "n I I TT.n fitntn ~r Cn.au n 1:_- 1 ~ fltiff r 1) ! HEff TORE! NEW PRICE! KECEkST purchases in (lie Northern Cilici enable us to display to buyers a very , - LARGE AND HANDSOME Fall and Winter GOODS. Adapted (o the Wants an<l Tastes of thit community. Wo have full lines of Goods in NEW STYLES AND FABRICS ^ FOR LADIES' WEAR WITH TRIMMINGS TO SUIT. Cassiineres, Jeans and Kerseys, FOR MEN AND BOYS. TOGETHER WITH * BOOTS ISOHES, MEN AND BOYS' CLOTHING. HARDWARE, GROCERIES, &C? &C. All the above goods we are offering at verj low prices, and think it would be to the interest ot everybody to look at our stock before buying. RICE & MC'TJIRE May 5 18 tf Where to Buy Pure Medicines Drugs, Perfumery, &c-, JW, l'OSEY & BRO., have on han?l and are . constantly receiving additions to a Full Liue of Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oils and Varnish, Pntcut Medicines, Perfumery, Hair Oils A. Variety of Hair Dies & Restorers Tooth and Hair Brushes, FACE POWDERS AND TOILET ARTICLES. Fancy Toilet and Laundry Soaps. Pocket Books, Stationery Lamps of All Kinds, From the finest Swinging llnll Lamp to the wet little wincy tincy llrass Lamp. Pure Wines and Liquors, (For Medical Purpose*.) Port, Claret and Blackberry Wines, Whiskeys, Brandies and Qin. Crab Applo Yiuegnr. :o: TOBACCO AND CIGARS, A Freak Supply of GARDEN AND F1 ED SEEDS, FROM FERRY Sc Co., SIBLEY AND BU1ST. onion HctH, Aco. :o: To Physicians We have a few Hypodermic Syringes and Self-Registering Fever Thermometers. we Ask the Public To call and examine our Stock. Work is oui motto, and we arc always ready to wait pn cus tomers . W. rOSEV & BRO. Opposite Union Hotel. jotersoi & Griball HAVE just filled their store with i very large Stock of FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISE. Their stock comprisos almost evcrythinj that can bo asked tor. All fur salo at thi very lowest prices. Call uud see, nud the; will savo your money. 4?ct 20 42 tf UNION HOTEL, OIBBES & RODGER, UNION, S. C. TEItMS PER DAY. W. M. G1RRKS. L. N. ROIXJKR. Sep 8 86 ft o & 1 ** Atkv i/u kjl uuutu vuruiiiKi, COUNTY OF UNION. Court of Common Pleas. Jrftiies 1*. Collingsworth, 1 Plaintiff Summons against Louisa Collingsworth, An- for Relief, I drew Hulling*worth, 8alfy [ Weeks, Fannie Adair, Adorn Complaint , J TO Louisa Collingsworth, Andrew IFolllMgst worth, Sally Weeks, wife of Jolin Weeks, Fannie Adair, wife of Isaao Adsir, Adorn Cnrtcr, tho children of Thomson Collingsworth, decensed, whose names and residence are unknown, e wept his sonaQaorge Holl toga worth and residence are not known ; the children of Elizabeth Morgan, deceased, whoso nnincs I and residence nre not known, nnd the children of Folly Butler, deceased, whoso names and residence nro not known, Defendants in this action. YOU are hereby Summoned and required to nnswer the complaint in this action, which is filed in tho office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas for said County, and to serve a i copy of your nnswer to the said complaint on the subscribers at their office, at Union, in said County and State, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such I ? service : ami if you fail 19 answer the complaint wi.hin the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Witness, .lames munro Ksq , Clerk of the Court of Common l'lcas, in and for the County aforesaid, nt the placo aforesaid, the twenty-fifth day 1 of November in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred nnd eighty two, and in the one hundred and seventh year of the Sovereignty and Independence of the United States of America. 1UON & McKISSICK, Plaintiffs' Attorneys. 1 ska 1. j-James Mi'xno, C. C. r. To the. Defendants, Andrew llollingsworth, George llollingsworth, and William llollingsworth, sons of Thomson llollingsworth, deceased, nnd his other childrnn whose names nnd residenco nro not known, the children of Nathan llollingsworth deceased, of Klizabeth Morgan deceased, and of l'olly llutler deceased whose names and residence are not known. Take notice that the summons in this action, of which the foregoing is a Copy, was filed in the oflico of the Clerk of said Court for said County 011 tho "7th day of November 188.'. lliON & McKISSICK. Plaintiffs' Attorneys. Dec 1 -18 (>t 53d YEAR. iN "k. Til . I 1 JL^W M^Ld 1 ' ? LADY'S BOOK FOB 1883, will contain A COMPLETE NOVEL IN EVERY ISSUE, ItCHidcM its iiHiiul rich array of rtMhloii, Art and Literary Matter. Only $2 per Year. Subscriptions will he received at this Oillce iu Clubs with this Caper. Tho Union Times ami Gooet's Lady's Book for one Year, al $3.60 Look! Premiums to Club Raisers: ONE copy oneycar $2 00 TWO copies and 1 engi aving to club raiser 3 70 TIUIEE copies and 2 engravings U club raiser 0 26 FOUR copies and 3 engravings to club raiser G GO For a club of FIVE, wiili a remittance < f 10 50 we will give one free copy of the Lady's llook tor one year, nnd any G of the en1 gravings the club raiser may select. For a club of TEN, with a remittance of.. 18 GO we will give one copy of the Lady s Book for one year, 10 engravings and a handsome portfolio. For a club of FIFTEEN, with a remittance of 27 00 wu win give one copy o* llic I .nays , Hook for oueycnr, 15 engravings and a handsome portfolio. For a club of Twenty, with a remittance of 33 GO we will give one copy o: the Lady's Bool forotieyear, thecntire 20 engravings and a handsome portfolio. On application the Publishers will furnish a ' list of the Twenty Engravings, from which you may make your own selection. Specimen copy of Lady's Book sent free to club raisers only. ' Address nil communications, PUBLISHERS GODEV'S LADY'S BOOK, Philadelphia, Pa. Dec 15 60 tf I Pi 3 trade-ina rl;n, copyrights, etc.. for j ^ the United Htatoe, r.na to obtain pat ft AkJh Germany, and all other countries. InKzsti 'fhirlysi* jrcnrVjiraclit'O. No chargo for examination of module or drawings. Advlco by mail frco. Patents obtained through tin r.vo noticed in , tho HCIEJtTHMC AJIKMltAN, which lia3 " the largest circrtlation, rnd i.i tho most iufln, cntial newspaper ol'iis l.:iul publisbcdiu tho world. Tho advantages of euch a uotico ovorj pntoutoo understands. Thislarge and splendidly ilhicirafcd news, paper ig published WEEKLY r.t ?.1.20 a year, audio admitted to ho tho host paper devoted to science, mechanic*, inventions, cngineerum works, and other department a of industrial progress, pnbliehe 1 : ? my country. Binglo ? copies by mail, J J -?to. Bold by all nowa3 dealers. Ad'lreei, Tfotm <fc Co.,publishers of BcionV tifio A/ntocan. 261 Jtroadway, Now York. Handbook about patents mailed free. FINAL NOTICE! ALL persons indebted to the flrtn of J. T. Hill k Co are hereby notified (hot payment is required. All Notes,. Accounts, and other forms of indebtedness must be paid beforo the first day of January nest. If not paid by that lime they will bo placed in the hands of an Attorney for collection, without reserve. J. T. HILL k Co. | Oct 0 40 If tnaiuly secured, it huhooves-farVlen^to oiat^S onrly arrangeaiu 11 is for next yeifVSpora-J tions anil productions. Il is not only itn?s portant to decide m to what crops shall be grown?having in view a judicious rotation B ?but to'providc thorofoi suitable fertilis^rifyis There is so much' uncertainty ij the eommerolal fertilisers oo0 in Tt^MH that few of tWirn provo as reliable and vajH uble as reprosantcd. For this cogent fjMffil sou it will be wiso for farmers ao4 entirely. Those whodepcud solely or mainly upon homo ni ids manures, not only know they have something valuable, and that cau be reliod upon, but arc not subjected to the losses and disappointments which so often nappcn to cultivators who place their entire i dependence upeu common fertilizers. This is the season when all engaged iu i said culture should attend to tlio compost i heap, and wo trust noue of our rural readers neglect a matter so essential to their i prosperity. Speaking of "compost," and how to prepare it, a couteiaporary in the I Northeast gives some hints which are also < applicable iu the South and Southwest.? It pertinently says that many farmers manufacture hundreds of loadsofthe best manure in this way: They gather together ou the premises forest leaves, cornstalks, iu eluding the roots, weeds, vines, offal from i fence corners, muck Irom ponds aud ditches, occasional sprinklings of liuio through < the mass, layers of barnyard manure, and t thus build up obloug squares and let rc* \ main over winter. When April arrives t the mass has gono through fermentation [ aud comminution, atd presents a mound of g fertilizing matter better than a small gold mine would be to the proprietor of the farm. But we want to see these compost heaps in the gardeu, aud there is no reason why they should uot be there as well as upon the farm. There is rubbish enough in the garden, with the assistance of leaves, some mould from tho woodi, if attainable ; if not from portions of the premises w.iero it can be spared; scrapings from tho turnniko - 1 1 manure from the stable, and every nttaina- t ble suftfiiancn that, will iLuuji Lhriuivh llui J winter. A little slaked lime will be a good r assistance. A half dozen loads of excellent t manure will be manufactured by the time I it is wanted iu the spring, without incur* I ring a cent of actual expense, and at the same s time tho garden will bo cleared of its vines* i stalks, weeds, &c. j These suggestions are timely and w irtliy t the attention and action of all interested i in the culture of the soil, whether in Geld i or garden The making of fertilizers at home ] is nil important and proGlable industry, aud uo one should neglect that great source of large crops aud cousequeut prosperity, the compost heap. There are various other sources of fertility which it is tho peculiar 1 province of tho wise cultivator to utilize, but which wo will not attempt to evou 1 enumerate in this councctiou.?Hon D. DT. Moore in Southern Industrie*. 1 .?. i Flowehs Fuiuiidden at FuNEtt.vr.s.? ^ The ecclesiasticil Synod, which held its 8 sittings in St. Patrick's Cathodrcl, New , York, and whoso deliberations came to a , close on the Dili of last month, issued do- | crocs which arc now iu tho hands of the | printer ami will bo published about the , middle of this uiouth. They arc not to bo L sent to Rome for ratification, as has been j supposed, lor they relate to mutters ol rnor- { uls and not of faith, and therefore do not | require Roman ratification. Thoso most | interesting to the public aro a decree for j forbidding priests to attend dramatic oper- . atic performances in theatres, one forbidding y clerical attcndunco at race courses uud ouo ( making the wearing of the rabba or Roman collar obligatory upon p.iests There is also a decree prohibiting tho use of flowers ] at funerals, oxccpt in tho caso of young s children, where they may be appropriately j used as typifying the innocence and purity ] of the dead. None of tho decrees deal with I the amusements of the laity. 1 For Burns and Scalds.?Nothing is f more soothing than the white of an egg; J which may bo poured over the wound. It i is softer ns a varnish for a burn than collo- ' dion, and being always at hand cau be ap- < plied immediately. It is also more cooling than the sweet oil and ooltou which was fui* j merly supposed to be tho surest application 1 to nllay tho suiartiug pain. It is tho contact with the air which gives tho extreme discomfort experienced from tho ordinary 1 accident of this kind and onythiug which excludes tho air and prevents ioflauinatiou 1 is the thing to be at once applied. "Have you any nice fresh farmer's eggs?'' inquitea precise old lady at a grocery store No ma'am,'" replied the practical cl ek "but wo have somo very good hen's oggs.' She took thrco to try. ok Wm. C. PiiestonI ft Bur* nod W ho odco a H K Europoau Cou.t- was il'c Capitol at Wash* had both been listening PJb?B8HH|Hm opcech in t he House of SfflRjgH^^BpHbpon which we were corniMma^^mi^Bning to us, he said : ^jQflf^^flBld enough to remember ?hen in public life.? j^#jn|fl|^^^^Eeu|rcatcst orator that I W Her equalled, perhaps, by rmT^r^^r^WP^f rif r i ay ~U 3 d often heard him and all his groat cotemporaric%spenk, but, although sometimes overwhelming, ho was not the equal of Mr. Preston. Clay, Webster, Calhoun, Choato, Sargcut S.Prentiss, and ell the other great orators of that day had each his own peculiar style, and each 'was different from the other; but Preston sccuied to combine all,!I once witnessed a sccno at Macon, doorgia, which I can never forgot, aud which, ridiculous as it seemed afterwards, furnished for that very reason the most joticlusivo and striking proof of Mr. Preston's absolute control over an audience. I have thought of it a thousand times, and I know of no parallo' to it. "It was iu the Clay campaign of 1844.-\n immense audience, fifteen or twenty thousand, had assembled to hear Preston. A. largo stage had been erected, which was srowded with prominent persons and the nultitude was packed around it. There was the usual buzz an l confusion incident ,0 such occasions, uatil after l'rcaton thud >ecn speaking a few momenta, when it be ?un to subside, and soon there was a'% dead uleiicc, except the music of that wonderful ,'oico. lie was in fine condition for his vork, and went at it in his host style. The ileuce seemed to intensify as the tide of his ilofjuencc poured over the dense mass of iuehautod listeners. With tho swell of his iouorous voice the audience seemed to rise >u tiptoe,aud to sink back again with its :bbing cadences j aud again they swayed villi the sweep of his arm like a wheat Geld o the breeze. At length, in a uiugniGccut uirnl ??.. inanLsatiou?with bis louir ariu aiscd high, his eyes flashing, and the uiulitude hanging breathlessly upon his words, le seized the brown wig which ho wore, lelJ it up over his shining bald head, and, .'ill soaring in hisspendid flight, replaced t cross wise aud soared on ; and, sir t assure fou that there was not, in that vast audience he least ripple of laughter at this most riliculous performance, but, on tho countra y no one secuied even to notice it. so completely entranced was every listener."? Charlotte (iV. C) Journal. A White Lady Assaulted uy a Mod. ?On Wednesday of last week a uiob ol colored women wont to the residence of Mr. 1*. 1<\ Boone near Doru's Mills, and made in assault upon Mrs. Bonne, one of the women with an opeu .knife and several ithers with clubs. Mrs. Boone's daughter, iged 14 years, attempted to interfere, to protect her mother when she was struck a iovere blow with a stick by one of the aegro women. Mrs. Boone succeeded in warding off their attacks aud finally made icr escapo into tho house and taking down lcr husband's shot gun weut out again when he negroes fled. It appears that one of the women had been in the employ of Mrs. IJoone aud had been discharged on suspicion >f having stolen som! articles from the louse, and being inccased at this she coL ected a mob and made the assault upon Mrslioone aud her daughter. Mrs. Boone is a lister of Sheriff Ouzl. Three of tho negro women havs been arrested and are now in ho County jail.?Edgefield Chronicle. Body-Ssatchkbs Cauoiit.?Philadelphia. Pa., December 0.?Frank McNameo, Dutch Pillet in ll f .ft V t f'llaw f hft 1 rt ' r a /lrtlrtho.1 "?" ~ ir rested late Monday night while driving a wagon tonlnining five dead bodies to the Medical Colege. The bodies had been stolen from tho Lebanon Cemetery, a burying ground for colored jersons in the lower part of the 'city. The jrisonera are professional "Resurrectionists" ind their operations have been carried on for a ong time. The detectives visited the cemetery ground and arrested Robert Chew, its supcriuendent, and Andrew Mullen. When the bodymatchers were brought to Court yesterday they narrowly escaped lynohing at the hands of a mob which gathered around the Court. l'tiiLAUKLPiiiA, December 7.?At Lebanon Cemetery thirty g aves were opened to day. Prom about half of them the bodies had keen itolen. The health department will not allow any more graves to he opened until it shall have ascertained whether tho person interred died from contagious disease or not. Lynoiiino itt Louisiana.?New Orleans, December P.?On Wednesday night the jail doors at Bastrop, La., were broken down by a determined body of indignant men, and Tom Robinson and Rill Cepas were .taken out and hanged. Publie opinion it in sympathy with the lynchers, no desire to And them out being manifested.? Last Saturday ? negro named Wesley Andrews endeavor d to murder a white man named McDowell, eight miles from Bastrop. The negro has been captured, and reports nre that Judge Lynch settled his caso Inst night. Indulgent juries have aroused the people, who are determined t tat outrageous crimes shall not go unpunished. i S IIow to Impuovk tiik Housk's Walk ? Wo will take, to begin with, a horse ol tho slowest walking pace, say about three miles per hour. To improve this, put him alongside of a horse, cither led or in harness whose walk is about three and a half miles per hour; and when tho three uiilcr has couio up to this, then pu' him alongside ol a four uiilcr. and so goon increasing until he has reached the utmost limits of pace it is possible to get out of him.' Af.or this in riding or driving keep him up steady to this best pace, and in process of time it may become almost natural aud easy to him. it is best to begin with at cmpt to only increase his pace half a mile per hour is, if we tried at first to do it fastcv than this the horse would bo constantly breaking into a trot to keep up with his companion, aud iu consequence, his walk would not ho improved. The object is to keep him steadily to a walk, and not permit him to break it. Trotting horses are improved iu the same method; they are kept as strictly to this pace as possible whenever exercised or used, aud not allowed to gallop. If they break into a gallop at any time on being urged to do their utmost on tho trot, they are instantly chocked aud brought hack to the trot. Hut if a horse is naturallv n J ? slow walker, it will require considerable time and no little patience to much increase his speed at this gait. A reliable last walker must be lorn so, and the best, quickest, and in fact cheapest way to get at this is to breed him. For the purpose, select the fastest walking st .1liou to be found, aud breed him to the fastest walking uiare obtainable. As a gcucral rule these will drop fast walking colts. The fastest of these when grown should bo selected for breeding and so go on rearing and selecting till the breed is as well established for fast walking as those of fast trotters or racer * now arc. Sumo itiintt that special breeding to obtain fast walkers is uot necessary; aud that any sort of a horse can be trained to it. Such doubters have only to carefully com pare the anatomy of a fast walking horse alongside of that of a slow walk.w, to bo couviuced of the necessity of breeding for this special purpose, lor tho differcuce between the two in various nice points will bo found considerable in bone, uiusclo, ten. don, cord, aud to sum up, iu general structure. IMacc a heavy farm or cart horse alongside of a fast trotter or racer, aud see how very diQcrcut they are in make -up ; and how impossible it would be to increase the p ice ol tho former, cither in a trot or a run, to that of the two latter. Tho thing l.i out of the nUCStion?all tho teaching ? ? ? aud training of the worhl could not do it. Now, like, as a general rule, begets like, and if you want fast walkers, in order to obtain tl.eai of a natural, easy, reliable gait, they must be bred from fast walking pircuts.?London Live Stock Journal. ?# ? 1'eksimmons.?Although this fruit grows wild in our Southern States, it is a most delicious one, and there is no reason why they should not form a source of revenue to farmers. Mr. James A. llarwood, of Davidsou County, N. C., has recently shipped to Chicago a lot of this fruit, for which he received ?12 per bushel This gentleman devotes a goat deal of his lime to agricultural experimenting and propagating new varieties of fruits, and it is his opinion that the common persimmons could be greatly improved in quality by cultivation, a id he has now numerous cuttings of the tree from which he gathers the fruit mentioned above and has plunted some of the seed with n view to practically test the advantages from domesticating the wild plant. A U.nivkr9ai. Blizzard.?Washington, Deocmher 7.?Intense cold prevails all over the Northern United Slates and Canada and Great Britain. In the Northwest this morning the thermometer ranged from 5 to lo degrees 1 olow zero. In the Hudson River Valley the thermometer has fallen 25 degrees in twenty-four hours, and is still falling. All over great ltritain a fierce 9torm rage9. Telegraphic communication between London and Glasgow is interrupted, and also in other diiections. Many wrecks are reported along the liritish coast. Washington, December 7.?At midnight the thermometer stood at 0? above zero and was falling 1? in every forty-five minutes. Cairo, III., December 7.?Navigation was suspended to-day ou the upper Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. * Tiib Dctv on Cotton ties.?In a case before the Supreme Court of the United States lately it was decided that cotton tios, each consisting of an iron strip and an iron buckle, imported in bundles, each bundle consisting of 30 strips and 30 buckles, each strip 11 feet long and the whole blackened, aro subjected to a duty of 35 per cent, advalorentas manufactures of iron not othcrwiso pr vided for under the schedule in Section 2,504, Revised Statutes, and not to a duty of one and one-half cents per pound under the said schedule as band hoops and scroll iron. .?. Taking tho human race as a wholo, says an exchange, it is observed that races living almost exclusively on uioat have been the most s.-vago ones. Nothing is so apt to transform a htitran being info a savage as to pay thirty cents a pound for a roist and then liud it almost us tought as leather. \ Our of tiik Rkptiis.?Mary Jackson f entered the Cincinnati police court-room i and asked to be sent to the work house, i Iler story as told the court was a sad one, , and we give it here : Do you thiuk, Judge, if T had any place to go to that I would conic here and ask r that something be done for me ? Do you i think I would ask to be sent to the workhouse? Look at tnc, Judge! I have nJ money, and who will give ute auy ? Look i i.tinj! 1 aui'clothcd in rags, and who will give me clothing? I aui hungry, who will feed me or give uie a home? lam can't do as I once did. For ten long years ^ I have had no houic,'ar.d I have done nothing but make the same old rouud front Duck town to the station-house; from the station to this court, to listen to the saute old scutcucc; from the court-room to tlio workhouse, from the workhouse to the wh'skcy shops, back to the station. And so year after year I have been kept moviug. Oh ! l'ut terribly tired of life ! Relatives? Yes; I have two^brotIters, but God knows where?I dou't. I have not seen them for iwcniytwo long years. Ouec I wis somebody?now, as you see, I aui nobody. What lias brought nie to this? Why, driuk and bad company. What else ever brings anybody to my condition ? I was born and raised in Owen county, Ky. Iu 18G1 I came to Cincinnati. There was plenty of bad company here and I fell into it. Why uot go to Kentucky when I get out of the workhouse and find my brothers ? Where in the last ten years was I'to find respectable clothing, where was I to get money ? Who would give me either ? I tell you it has been from one whiskey shop to another, then to the station, then to the workhouse, for ten years, and I am getting old. M" right name is Ellen Smith -At_' hnu*-' 30 a p'acc I have been in worse, much worse. I come before you iu my sober mind, Judge, and ask you to send mo there. There is uothing more for me in the world but misery. I am broken down. I can never bo anybody now. But onej, Judge?once ?I?was?" Her despondent tone and tearful face, together with her graphic description of her condition, moistened the eyes of many who listened in the solemn quiet that prevailed iu the court room. "Yours is a sad, sad story, Ellen !" said Judge IIigb-y, visibly affected. "Would the infirmary not bo a better place ? "Ob, I would like to go thero if they would take nie. I am very tired." The court continued tho case with a view to have her admitted to the iufirmary if possible. An exchange remarks that if subscribers to newspapers generally kuew how important it is to publishers to have each individual subscription paid at the proper time they would set down in their memorandum book the date when a fresh new voar begins y ^ and would be as prompt as ia the payment of a note in bank, in meeting jit. It is true that so small a sum as a few dollars is not much in the eyes of ninety-nine in a hundred subscribers, but the aggregate of several hundred amounts to considerable and any one can estimatojaudjjudgc what it may be to any publisher engaged in au activo busiucss. . e ? Economical india.n Pudding.?Scald ouc quart of sweet milk, into it stir five rounde I tnblcsponfuN of Indian meal, ono teacup of brown sugar, or five table spoonful of molasses, one teaspoon of ginger and a little salt; put in a moderate oven tobako and in half an hour stir in one cupful of? cold rich milk ; bake two hours. This it/ improved by adding a teacup of stoned raisins wlieu the cold milk is added. Servo with cream or hot sauce. -- A Docbi.k Calamity. ? Mr. Win. Ilarncs and his estimable lady were riding in a buggy last week, near Bamberg, when, from some cause unknown, the bottom of tlie buggy broke or came out and Mr. Barnes foB. through, breaking his arm in the fall, and on that or the following uight Mrs. Barnes, while giving him tlie necessary attention, fell from the steps of their dwell* ing and brcke both of her arms. This is certainly a sad nllliction to this agod couple, ns Mr. Barnes's age is 75 or 70 yoars and that of his lady over 00. Farmiko W ill Pat.? I.ast year Mr. J. J. Kelly of Anderson bought a tract of land nenr Bellou ironi air. j. tv. nrenzeale for ?Z,5(X). This year ho raised 55 bales of cott: n and 600 bushels of com. Tho colton was sold at an average of 10 cents per pound, making enough to pay for the place and support his fan ily. lie expects to make 75 balc9 of cotton next year. This demonstrates the folly of going West when such success can be attained at home. T fnu r\%? P 'tinr o A ? J - jiivn vAiii<B.-a;i writes the following to tlio Mirror and farmer : "Say to the readers of tho Mirror that fino salt sifted over oattlo from head to tail about this time, again in December and February, is a sure prevcutivc or lemedy for lico. I have used it six years without fail. About a pint to a grown animal. Have occasionally skipped an animal for experiment, and they would lousy "