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^ ? rn .. "I . i .. ' l "' ' ^ \ I =gT?^ : -? v.-.'- - : " v : ? ""-n i i in ii. i = -- -- ? . gmtyd iioilitulture, gamgstit (Sronouij, flolitt literature, fofitks; and the Current ^eios of the gag. XX.?New Sbbies. ' . - _ ONION C. H.. SOUTlI CAROLIN/^yASOAKT 25, 1889. ' j / ' ; ' ; *. j NUMBBfi 4. ,j- , , ? '? ." "" ? , ' '.n "' i "" " . v " .*. * " i' ? ' . iffjj =s? mm iii , ? ? , ' n ri 11" ' 1 * ' t Of^ON'S *V!Np VAU* TS I th? Treatssst of ** ? "T:> -4r'-" i n iii-T u?i vuvtb im tod . -- ^ I'hlllflfrl ! SIaI'i-.i *.1 !? = M1I1US UUI, Mills H READ CA: And Re I&XIL ' , L?:. Tkot FLYJfN has nlwayn been K-SL5v- * ; A . S ??.*?**>?? * C'yju ,r ff? J > ' t ' v?*. v ,,** j Otrt" ^ I HAVE now made the jrreatcst cf thin^H' possible. And if Goods saorifici era, I can convince tbeui that the Goods ' A li K S .A.O Seal Plusli Modjeskas advertised houses at $16 50 to $20, I will sell a Misses Newmarkets, fine Goods, a Ladies " " nice " a Those Goods are worth double wlu I have the. fashionable Tricot from >; Those Goods are 54 inches wide. Cashmeres, double width,, from 14J . I have all dress trimmings, includii 65c. worth 85c. Worsted dress Good Jeans, FJannels, Ticking, Towels, ipOOTS A]S HATS AM MY STOCK ( is acknowledged by every p ere oh, to nave ever seen above Charleston. I have thousands of other articles tion; but if you want as many Goo for $16, DO NO FA II *rr**-v i ~rr LP. U I LEADER AND CII May 27 Gcttlug Around tbo Law. Tho "secrecy of grand jury chamber" is another legal Action that i3 easily penetrated. An instanco is as follows: A justice of sessions was curious to learn whether tho grand jury in a noted case had been unanimous in their Anding of tho indictment Ho asked mo whether I had learned -conceruing it. I replied: "No, but I en readily And out for you from r. , your townsman," indicating 9 grand juror standing on tho opposite sido of the street. "Oh, 110, you jmust not ask him," lejoined tho anxious member of tho court; "it would bo an indictable oA'cnso for you to ask him, or for liini to tell you. "I don't proposo to ask him, but to get him to toll you," 1 replied. "I will pacs over and cngago him in conversation, and then you coino up and call mo asido Wr.d repent your queatiou loud enough for him to fiear." i 11 ioou oui a row minutes for mo to pngogo tho rural grand juror in conversation regarding tho crop prospocts of bis neighborhood for an "Argus" ^ item, and then tho magistrate beckbned mp full .off a few and Repeated his part of tho play, i 1 replied that I had heard two vcrbions: "One, that they wcro unanimous, and another that they stood nineteen to four." j "You're right the first time," broke In tho bucohc grand juror, "wo wcro Unanimous about it, and don't you (forget it." I have not.?Albany Argus. . . . -4* nicRctioc) Ilinltachcf In 'Vofnr. i A man wearing a bead full of black hair and n lip lull of white bristles attracted tho attention of a dealer in 1 hvim urr.l/iHlnv l-fnooiil- "Tlinl )? fKn latest fad. Tfie man has bleached his jnustnehe. Tho bleach is not applied jby hairdressers, but is sold in bottles and applied at home. One application of tho bleach will turn u norco red jBBUftacho into a lovely blonde or old gold tiut. You can't find es many red mustaches now as woro worn six ?% anontha ago. for tho bleach is becoming pophur. Beards are treated in the same way, and men with dark hair and light mustachesaro increasing every day. Tho bleach is injurious to the hair, and tho only way to re toro tho original color is to sliavo the mustache ofV and" let it grow out again. It is hard to detect a bleached ** mustache, but experts can do it every time."?Buffalo lux pre** y>. ? v * j'v . v iter Mitik&L gum Mini urn REFULLY MEMBER, ... I . . i . ; .; . t i tlie T,eadcr of tow Prices hi of couutrr. . Wl/al Off , :vt 1 . ... i ' j'! ' 1 . j. , f . . Port of my life to clean out lho whole :d in price will oouvince the closest buyRIFICEI). at Evrick's Ilidleys and other large t$12 50 and $15. t $2 50, $2 75, $3, np to $5 50. t $3 25, $3 75, $5. it wc ask for them. 19c. to the finest grades at GT^e. c to 30c. ag watered silk, which I will sell for s from 4c a yard up. White Counterpaines, very cheap. rD SHOES, ) TRUNKS. )F CLOTHING 1 r-cV, .4 ,K?. T,j : .4 v.? . ;. ! be the largest and best selected they 3 IT; ; 9 ?, that space will not admit me to mends for $10 as can he had elsewhere i TO CALL AT i'LYNN'S, " AMPION OF LOW PRICES. 21 tf An Imuicnso raving Stone. Thcao is a now paving stone eomo to tovn which breaks tho record fosr size. Tho stono forming tho sidowalk before tho Vandcrbilt mansion, in Fifth avenue, has hitherto held the record, and tho honor will still bo in tlio family, for it is Frederick Vandorbilt who 1ms had tho new one brought to Now York, and it will bo nlaccd in front of his house. It is fifteen feet wide and twenty feet long. It was quarried at Oxford, Chenango county, and transported to this city on a special car. Superintendent William Buchanan, of tlio New York Central road, designed (hecnr; and, according to a?-- account published yesterday, showed great ingepuity in overcoming r 1 _ a i_ kt 11 U1U UUIII V UllltUUIllUS IJI IllSUlNiC. INULIiing can bo carried on tho Central that is wider than ten or higher than fourteen feet, but Mr. Buchanan applied mathematics to tho puzzlo of hum!ling a mass fifteen feet wide. Ho put tho stone on edge at such an anglo thut its breadth and height accommodated themselves to tho limits, brought it iu safety to tho city, and received tho well deservod congratulations of his friends.?Now York Tribune. A Pretty Scene. A pretty little sceno was witnessed yesterday at a north sido street crossing. A 8-year-old child, with glowing cheeks and sparkling eyes, holding tightly clasped in his chubby fingers a bright new penny, was toddling with all tlio possible speed of his littlo limbs towara tho nearest candy storo. Ho camo to tho crossing just as a teamster cAmo along with a heavily laden truck which taxed tlio horses' strength to tho utmost. Tho child started for tho opposite sidowalk, but stopped hesitatingly on seeing tlio wagon. With a loud "Whoa!" tlio drivor pulled ?p his horses, ami with i a smilo lighting up his rugged faco { I wared his whip, motioning for tho littlo fellow to proceed. The boy ? &? across tho street, and, turning around when ho reached the pavement, stood for an instant watching tho horses as thoy tugged and strained to start their heavy load again. Then ho raised his ' hands to his lips and wafted a kiss at ! tho driver, who lifted his hat with courtly gtneo and then wafted baek the littlo lovo messenger. Then there were further interchanges ot kisses and smiles, an<J tho wagon rolled down tho street and the littlo gpntloman toddled on toward tho candy store. ?Chicago Tribune. CIjoJoo I.lqtiors r??crv!hl in the Cellars of ] U?o 3I< trotion??(irupo Juico and Uranily. The total floor uvea at tho vaults at ' Llio LtKkdOtt docks is a million r.upcr- j Qui::I I . aid in this space 1 t f \vIuo can easily bo stowl, and ( then i\;o:n found for 7 5,000 casks of ( bra. iK\ 'i ho various vaults arc built j i ! th - 'Tit.i c i" a Crypt. Tho largest of | tlic a-Mho er.-t vault?covers four j ivivs of ground, aiul as we talco our | ii Q ! o.l 1 ?un fixed to tho end , pi' a p'tv of wood somo eiglitoen | tuch' s long, our guido informs us that ] thero arc in this cellar clono twenty- , one miles of seantluiff wire, or miniature i.'-iiv.'.iy liuts. overwhichtlio bar- , eels urorelied. , Tho roof for.yards and yartls is cov^jd^w^^T^dda^^eci^^fu^us, io-oll tho mono noticeable, as whero nc , barrels liud.a temporary resting place ,-| no fundus grows aloft. It is as light as fcatiii antl talcc3 tho most cfab- , onto unt! Oi-tirtie forms. Small hilloelrs. gignnlic bunches of grapes, long j ropes, which a putV of tho breath will < I'Jlim in lAVO wliiln /1?1 sign m o to be found hero as to mako tlio lover of hue envy tho patterns, lit the midst of ell this mushrooms ) grow, and in tho sqason a good crop is always secured, I "Tim Iprawing Room" covers nearly apacrb. This is a private vault, scru- , pulously cloifn, the sawdust carpet ] uiunKJtt.Ml. It. is rented from tho com- j pany I?y a well known firm of wino | merchant and as wo examine a cask . marked "Tho Duko," wo learn how \ t :ti: 1 r>; in tuaiu ged. Tho hung of a , barrel i.i never removed for testing , piirpi =. 1 it the attendant liasto boro j a : nail hole in the cask, and tho wino : flows into tho "dock glass. Tho , taster having satisfied hunsclf as to ( strength, fb'o flow is stopped by tlio' | insertion of'a small stick of wood. :j Every hole has to bo accounted for, > and ( lie tclil lmr ! coiTospond with tho number of "lasting orders" issued from tho owner's oilice. (sometimes a whole barrel runs away in tasting. Tlio I livelier covers about seven 1 ? ? :' ;,;'niind and somo 21,000 casks ! i ; thi \ just now; but during the 1 iMueo-tlcHuan war tho author- 1 itii'.i conirived to provido aecommoda- 1 tion i\<.' < -k'J'JJ casks. All tho brandy 1 was driv u< ' if France: its value J v: C 13,0 0,000, and on official who J he" ; > r c ivo tlio barrels at tho time 1 x w.do tlio interesting calcula- ' tinu t ..at if they had been placed in n ii: i t' v/.uld liavo stretched for 1 i : dl< Tiierp aro casks of f Lrundy here?profusely decorated with c /web??over twenty years old.. ' One of tho gangways is nearly a quar- t' t r of a niilo long, and in the midst of this liugo cellar rmis tho snow tank. 1 into Iho .aluicc, ' mud of winter is poured. Tho "vatling lloor," where brandy 1 is improved by mixing ono quality with ; noth'cr, "contains some of tho 1 1 r/ovf spirit' receptacles in tho world, 1 gigantic yellow tubs symmetrically 1 mad", on each of which is painted its l.ouiii; .; <:. i abilities, llerc is one which 1 require 10,00 ? gallons of liquor to fill it, another takes .*>,000, others 2,440, i ISO, 1,SOO and 530, something lilt? a 1 thonsnnd gallons of brandy running J throu h the tups ovcry day. Th mixing process has ceased at tlio 1 Hi' I of our visit, but it is Wilis- '' per 1 t: t in another corner of tlio 1 doe!;a large quantity of pin is about 1 to bo con wi ted into sweetened." Tlio 1 4,:;\ve -ten log" barrel, holding tho mod- ' est i ; . tity of 6,07P gallons?into ' win h tho gin in it.; unsweetened stato 1 to 1 o jinuivd?ison one lloor. ?.bovo 1 it, inunc diatoly over its hug? mouth, ' is an o. ening soino yards in length i.ncl four inches deep by nino inches \ wide, and into this a rivulet of gin is bowing from the interior of five largo e::s!;s which are emptying themselves into tlio barrel below. * Ah soon as theso ere empty otherg take their place, and tho "vat' filled, tlie sugar iu a liquid 1 i i . added, tlio wliolo mixed torrof lion iiii 1 t-h/Mitlir ! 4 ?' . i.ciiv. v. ?vu\i ouMi n> uiivruaru it irj bottlcu, font abroad and approved of us tho choicest ''Cream of tho Valley." A word rbout tho lmttling department. Am last as tho wino is put into bftllo it goer, out for export, tho average number of dozens, sealed, i !). !( 1, can.ailed and packed in eases every day Iran,* 400. A good packer ran ee.;.oa\ hundred dozen bottles between b i nd 11 o'clock in the morning. In tiic.cc liar below tho bottling room? *yberc. by-lhe-bye (i(J0 dozen bottles :an ho placed sido By sido of tho floor? the barrels lira kept and although tho cellar is lighted "with gas, fifty-four lamps uro needed for dark days, nine of thc^o bciiig "Davy's," Jlcro in ono eomer^uro tl>o wax pans, tlio morchants not only having to provido their own bottle.; and labels, out wax into tho bnrgafcn. It takes five minutes to melt a pan of wax. It is placed in 4 copper pun, heated over a gas stove, and wlion uicltcd i; placed in a receptacle containing a small spirit lamp, which I: ; ; i the wax in a liquid state, and i.r-'.Mv the caso is locked.?Jxmdon Tid-Bits. * alio Perusnl of A Book. Select books tlmt are informing, and 9.1 far no in your power equip yourselves I v\ i;will.'* t'linwloHirn in nil lirnnnhoa rtf I history, literature and affairs. Aro'you' deficient in any of these? Then soek the best authorities and bring yourself to the highest standard in that field without delay. Lot your intellectual progress be marked with positive accumulations. | When, you read n book that is really j worth iLo timo you spend with it, do not cram your mind with others as a man in '? a hurry is apt to cram his gripsack, but do n liltlo earnest and profitable thinking U'foro you tako up its successor in yonr leading course. Tho perusal of n book giv- i hu ll) to ideas in no way connected ' with the snhjeot of which it "treats. All careful readers should, however, avoid 'dwelling bx> long upon ono lino of study or thought. Light and varied reading should txj inters])eniod with tho solid and useful". An extromo in either direction is to lx> avoided.? Magaaine of American History. I ?-y*- -- ; ? tit* 1A X We 1 ' 0 Recipes for sleeplessness contiiiuo to present themselves. A correspondent of Llio Lancet hap,found tho following to bo m effectual remedy in his own' case: After takitig a deep inspiration ho lipids lis breath till discomfort is felt, then repeats tho process a 6tcond and a third time. As a rulo this is enough to projuro sleep. A slight degree of asphyxia is thus relied on ns a soporific agent, but tho theoretical correctness of this met nod is 6omowbnt open to question. Certainly thero is' proof to show that tho daily expenditure of oxygen is mq6t active during the waking period, and that nightly sleep appears to coincide with a period of deficient tL>sua oxygenation, it is at least as probable, howevet*, that other influences aro associated with tho production and timely recurrence of sleep besides that just referred to. This plan, moreover, however effectual andi beneof deficient oxygenation is to increnso blood pressure and slow tlio licnrt's action. Witb a normal organ, as aif occasional occurrence, this migiit not bo of much consequence. If, however, tho impeded heart should also be enfeebled by disease, the experiment might bo repcatod once top often. Another combatant in tho struggle with insomnia lays down a scries of rules, for the most part very sensible, to which ho pins his, faith' Considering that tho chief causes of sleeplessness aro worry and tho want of a due amount of exercise and fresh air, he advises his fellow sufferers to obsprvo tho ordinary rules of liygieno relating to such matters, to tako food and drink in -.moderation and to avoid of mi evening tho nso of ton, cofTeo and tobacco. In dealing with severo nervous irritation from mental or physical work, ho has found a daily rest an almost essential preludo to steep at night. Thus hO treats of sleeplessness rather as a - tendency requiring constitutional remedies than a eymptoueof mere brain excitation. Thcro is much to bo said for his theory and means of treatment.? Therapeutic Gazette. Various Hints Concerning Diat. Children, especially young girls, aro rarely properly dieted. There is ' almost universally a repugnance to meat and a hysterical liking for sweets or ncids, that .s unhealthy. When nerves cry for feed, thoy are given a stone, and "rebel -in consequence. A plentiful supply ctf meat should bo eaten ut least onco da^ly, and, his at breakfast, when tho body needs roistering for tho day's \*ork, anji when .hedigestivo tract is empty. Taken then, svith moderate exercise, such food is promptly assimilated and goes whero it Joes most good, directly into tho Wood. I heartily approve of late suppers, and am convinced that tho human animal, liko others, sleeps best upon a Stomach filled with light, digestible food. Of courso thero are idiosyncrasies; tnero aro many kinds of people, and yja kind of food" proper for oti4 uob suit another; yet thero need be no doparturo fronj tho rule. An elderly lady came to mo not long ago and said that it was no manner of use; she could not sleep if sho ito anything before she went to bed. "What had you for supper last night, madam?" I asked. * "Oatmeal porridge, doctor." "Weil, you could not havo had anylhingfc better calculated to kcip you iwake. In tho first place, oatifieal, no matter how prepared, is devoid of nutrition to any ono save tho very strongest 1TT,1 Imwlnct i T. J .wv. MIMUVOV nviuiu^ VI UiCli. ' JLL UU" cuands for conversion into cftylo an unount of nervo power tliat no invalid wns and few well people can give; in every other instanco remaining unchanged in t ho bowels until .ejected as a foreign substance. Do not touch it tgain. Try instead a broiled bird or lumb chop, with a bit of toast." And the change was all she needed to mako her sleep peaceful.?William F. Hutchinson, M. D., in American Magazine. "7 . The Recall of the Hawka. Tho recall was interesting mid forms one of tho most wonderful features in hawking. It was nchioved by tho falconer calling out several times with a loud, far reaching cry, "coomabce I coomabeel" an evident corruption of "como (or coonie) my bird." Tho falconer's voico at onco arrested attention as being, from long practice, what authorities declare it ought to be, "full, clear and loud" if not ''tremulousj" whence ho jvas designated as "tho sonorous falconer." Theso qualities wero moro than onco required that day when tho hawk flow afar; but Peter's voice never tailed to reach her and securo her return. Tho cry varied with different men and in different places, being with some a long drawn "hoi hoi" and witty others "hool ha-ha-ha I" oil, however, being known as the "hollowing" of the falooner. Ip this first encounter the recall was quite fornh Sfitt* of her disappointment ibid hovering watchfully for the reappearance of the lost quarry, tho hawk at once obediently returned to tho falconer's wrist. She was then smartly hooded and set upon tl^o cage, for both the falconer arid the laiH successfully achieved this- rather jdifllcult feat. There she took her place in silence, and apparently without discomposure, among her fellows, who had betrayed not tho slightest excitement during tills clamorous passago of arms. ? Good Words. ; r-*~? UUmm of Orape Vinos. . 3' Tho vinfl ornwpra nf tlio Onnin A wv.rt o"v " V??v PwfMtifn nimn and San Gabriel valleys of California think that e now disease has attacked their vines. They coll it "sap sour." When attacked the vines wither and die at once. It is infections and spreads rapidly. The best joinedy thus 1.1 known is to pull up an<J burn the vines tho tnomcnt they ehoW the blight.?-New York Sun. , ; An Electrical PSiUrai, In the ordinary sixteelv candlo power incandescent lamp, according to Profeesor Ernest Merritt, only from 4 to 6 per cent, of *he energy actually expended is available os light, tho remainder being wasted as heat. To Icfistfe tills Waste is one of the greatest electrical problems now awaiting solution.?^ Ark ansa w Traveler. :W... sEpSHB f v < 'm ' i ' '.v\ , y . .'WA v at * AjoiAikAiii ua iax> i/uaaugAviAli FERTILISER XiTJESTION. ] To the Editor of the Aries and Courier: f 0oe ff.thp .obief causes of tho i mpover- ( ished condition of the farmers is the ( use of too much commercial fertiliser < and the injudicious application of the * same, For twenty )car? wo havo bought ' any and every thing that hus beon1 offer- I cd for 6ale. All that hus been ueoessary c was to put something in u sack or bar- t rel and brand souio unusual or peculiar f name on it. 1 do not accuse manufacturers c of fraud, but do accuse my brother v funneis of being tho biggest ?ot of ? fools' thoro tertn all tho laud, and tho i writer tho king of fools, or tbo biggest t Fool of all. '* ",l' * ' s For several years I bought ammoniated fertilisers at high prices, arid applied in connection with cotton seed meal or ' cotton seed in the natural state. After j spending thousands of dollars in this ' foolish way/., I-dropped the nuimoniated 1 goods to-a great degree and bought acid ( phosphate and acidulated rock, audmix- 1 ed it half acid or acidulated rock nnd ' half cotton seed meal. Three or four years ago I concluded I had enongh sulphuric acid and phosphate in my c laud, and began to put in less phosphate 1 and commercial fertilisers, and brought it down to one hundred noun da w> h 1 what ever amount of uiool L us$d per ' acre. I am uow satisfied that where c lands l.nve beeu continuously planted in ' cotton, that it js unnecessary to apply ' coiuiucrcial fertilizers of any kind; the ' land needs rest fioui them for at least 1 one year. If you buy at all, only bay 1 to uiix with uieal, where your plant 11 < u lands that were grown in some- u thing beside cotton, and put uot over ouc u hundred pounds to tho acre. There 8 are various reasons for this. By using * little or no commercial fertilizer the plaut will start off in the sprirg a little $ slow, will havo less fruit in July and $ stand the July and August drought, j Take the lower and middle cotton belts ] of the cotttJb States and we want to fc make a late or August crop. We need |i but little if any commercial fertilizer, p The upper or clay belts need a . little <] to get a July and Angust crop, will suy t ouotpoLud of, commercial ,4o three ol* a meal or its equivalent of seed. The t clay lauds do not require any katuit or % potash. ? This is not all theory. I know what I I aui talking about* _ * I know it from a actual practice. if the farmers of tho i cotton iountry who buy commercial for- 1 tifzera will adopt this plan, say Use at I least one-third of the amount they have I been iu the habit using it will add many millions to their purses, and enable them to pay for fertilizer they.foolishly thrown away. Don't blame the men who manfacturo or.sell the fertilizers. We have encouraged thcui; and the demand is niW so great that wo can't be supplied, t except at a price beyond our reach. The v high price will coutinue. It is iuipossi- 1 ble to check it in any way, except by i giving the laud rest for 6ay ouo year. 1 If you make the experiment one i year ypu will continuo it, and prices w-11 for many years be in duo bounds , Our manufacturers do not claim that the home demand has increased so much but foreign demand. Just let the 1 foreigners have it all this year, wo wilt savo millions. Wo will have as much or more cotton, and pay up back indebtedness. Let tho agricultural clubs, the Al- j lianees and Granges consider this mat- J ter. It there are no societies in your , neighborhood, call the neighbors togoth- | er and calmly consider this matter. If | you caonot do this let every farmer de- , cidc for himself, and say I will for one | year let my land rest from fertilizers s It will not look so bright for us in May t and June, but October and Ndveuiber f will show you where the millions have ( been foolishly spent for the last twenty years. s I have been told of late that farmers oould not buy it; that his only chance was to get it through his or some one eIso's merchant. This may bo truo to some extent. Of courpe money enough i will buy it, but we don't need it. Thai is the subject for us to consider, and let them that huvo it keep it. Spin out your cotton seed from fifteeu to twenty bushels to the acre. Mix the stable manoro fino and spread it with the hand. Make it go over a large area instead of carelessly throwing it down in pilee from a pitchfork. Too many fertilizers are dangerous. They have never done the great amount of good WC have imagined. Good and proper cultivation pays belter than large quantities of fertilizers. There is such a thing as too muoh ammonia, and we oftener put too | much than enough. The phosphate and kainitor potash sultare there to stay. Our land needs rest from commercial fertilizers as much as they do rotation. 1 am almost tempted to say if you take my udrico in this matter and it proves wroDg, appoint a day next fall and hang me. James A. Peterkin. FortMotte, January 10. ... .? ... ' SOT.ID FOR (JLRVKLAND.?The Presidential elector* of South Caroline met ?t Columbia on Monday, 14th instant. John T. Sloan, Jr. whs elected proei lent and C- C. Culp secretary. Qrover Clo'**lund and Allen <jr Thurman received nine vote* and were deolarod the unanimous choice of the electors for the office* <>f Prefident and Vice-president J. J Lucas, of Darlington) was chosen moe> sender to carry the return of the voteto Washington. H f , AN EDITOR'S Ausenai..?Chicago, [II., January 12.?It looks like a state siege in the Chicago Times office nowalays. A force of private detectives is so guard there day uud eight. AH the mtraooes are watched and all its Visitors topped. Editor West writes ed^toiids vith a big revolver ou his desk ai>d a >ody-gunrd by his side. lie aod five if his subordiuatcs have taken out purnits to carry sruis, and go about with listols bulging their trousers' pockets tut of shape Tbo assaults of the paper I poo the police and the gamblers have uade life insecure about the buildtig, aod there are vague stories of hrcats to shed a great deal of blood iround there. Iospector lioofiold wrote to tho Times offering to submit the quarrel vith the polioe to aoy three Judges of* .ho Ciroait Court the Times might seeot. Iftheyornny two of them coo:!udad he had beeu guilty of ooo act of lishonesty as a police officer, he wonld esigo from tho force withdrew his criminal and civil suits against the Times and acknowledge himself beaten. The h'mcs will probably dcclino the itfer and will insist upon a court riartial. T *- * it was expected mat tho rvideaco ho Times says it has collected against lonficld and Schaack would be brought mt iu the Policu Court. The editois, mwcver, waived examiuatiou and were leld to the grand jury. Meantime lonfiotdand Schaack continue to pile ip libel suits agaiust the piper. The otal amount claimed by such notions iow pending is SI,250,000. It is hintd that there is m >rc trouble than this ihcad for the Times people, and another ensation will be duo within the next reek. . 'Died With Tiikmi Hoots On/? Stanford, Ky., January 17?Cage llowey, shot by youug Hlackerhy list week, s the last nf the male portiou of the towscy family. There were six of the toys, and every one of them 'died- with, lis boots on ' They certainly left tootirints in the sands of time, and blood-' Irops, too. for that matter. Jasper was he first to die. He shot three men ud was hnng by a mob ho re iu Ken-ucky years ago.* Tom, the Second, vas killed by a man named Atkius. Smith, the third brother, waylaid Attins, killing him and his father, aud was ifterward shot to death by a detail of uilitiamen sent hero to suppress the Lincoln County war. Arch was killed jy Sam Williams aud Clay Powell in a jarroom fight at Houstonvillo. Cam, j he fifth brother W:lQ ullAfc in O \ \ , ...... wmv? ?u ? ^vuciai j itreet fight at Mooreland. Cage,_ *ho, 8 believed to be dying now, has 1>ee?i 1 ihot eight times by an many different ncn. The history of this family would corniuly furnish material for a thrcoroluino novel of the 10-ccut order. iVhen not drinking they were 'a? mildnannered men as ever cut a throat;' tut a few glasses of whisky turned them nto demons. A Best GirlTrust.?Adrian, Mich., fauunry 17-?Among the features of Vdrian College which are uot set forth n the annual cataloguo is a 'best girl rust.' The young men are sworu to ecrecy and to abido by the rules of the i rus?, the object being the monopoly of he best girls in the college. The or;anization began by selecting as many ?irls as there were members of the rust, who were divided by lot, the prorision being that each man should entirey monopolize tl c lady assigned to him or one month, and to allow no other nan to escort her on foot, on pain of n leavy fine and imprisonment in n coal bed until released by the faculty. At he end of the mouth each member must rade girls with some other member, if sailed upon to do so. The trust has been in operation for ! iouao time and is said to be fiourshing. | * ? Tiiey Lived and Died Together. ?Caernavoon, Pa.. Jan. 5.?Mr. and Mrs. William Smith, aged and highly respectable people, have just been buried togctbor. Ever since their marriage they spent their lives quietly on a fine piece of property in this district, apd they were rarely separated from ...L .?i rv_ /?.! ? i imuii uvuur. uno 01 meir lonaest hopes frequently expressed, was that when one should die the other would quickly follow. They were earnest Christian people; fondly attached to each other, and frequently included in their prayers a petition th??t both should bo taken to neaven together when tho Lord was ready. Mrs. Smith was taken sick with pneumonia. She was tenderly nursed by tho husband and others, but death came in a few days. T will soon follow,' said the husband, as the wife breathed her last. The husband was then taken sick and died on tho day set apart for tho funeral of his wife. A Strange and Fatal Disease. ?A disease not unlike oholora is doing some very fatal work in the family of >lr. James Bailes, of Indian Land township, in this county. Ho has lost four children in the past threo weeks, and a young man named Pitts, living on Mr. Bail es'plantation, has also died within the aamo length of tirno.' All the vioims wero attacked in the same way? with some peculiar form of bowel complaint?and survived but a few days ifter the first symptoms appeared. Mr. Bailes has two other children now si ok with the same disease. Ho has the full 'Vtnpathjr of bis many friends in Lanoas ter in his terrible affliction.?Lancaster Review. j RECIPIS. EsCALOI'EO Tomatoes.? Olio hair or one pint of lotuntoo-i, a little pepper, salt, butter and breed crumb!. liuko ouo IihIK hour ;n a baking dish; sprinkle bread crumbs on top. Cottage Souffle.?Ouo otfir beaten separately; ouo sourtt cupful of sugar; two tablespoouful of melted butter, 0110 heaping cupfn! of fl >ttr one of water one t iblespoonful of baking powder; bake ouo half hour. Sauce. ? ltub one tablospoonful of butter with two of pu'veritad sugar in a bowl); place tho bowl in a pan of boil ing water, stirring 'in two trblespoonfuls of cherries an! juico or any cauuad fruit you have npcuc.l tba*. is tart. Roasted Chicken.?Sin .' ? tho :hio eo and split down tho back, wipe dry, dredge well with salt and pepper; cover with softened bultej and dredge both sides with flue d*y broad crumbs; place in a pan inside down; bako in a hot oven forty minutoi, serve with celery leaves or parsley. vjc.ur.il I ovur. V7HU pull Of 111IIK and a liitlo over a pint of boilinir water rub together otio tiblespoonfnl of butter ami two nf flour; stir igto boiling milk until smooth- add one (o> spoonful of salt and one of celery extract; use onehalf a bunch of celery, boiled leaves and all in the water given in ihe recoct boil one hour, ! ;#!? Fried Apples and Bacon,?Core and b!ico round, without paring, some tart. w*ll flavored apples. Out into thiu slices some middlings of excellent bacon or pork, and fry in their own fat tiniest to crispncss. Take < ut the treat and keep hot while you fry the apples in the fat left in the pin; add a little sugar"to laste. Drain and lay upon tho slices of meat. ! ? i Cheese Straws.?Gate three tablespoon fuD of any k ind of cheese; add* throi tablespoonfuls of flour, a little red pepper and salt; add to dry ingredients one tablespoonful of molted butter, one of water, and the yolk of ono egg, lloll thin as for cookies cut in strips five inches long and ono half inch wide. Bake fifteen miuuteB, Serve on plate and fringed doily. Build the straws up like a log cabin. They arc delicious with salad. Wit AT is Farming.?It is something iuuiu bunu uviug oil a iurm it 1 - a)tu>.m'ar?' than^akinoiag tliu ft'oil. w > It is something more thin s l!iag hay.or potatoes, and bulkly cropi unanimailecd. Farming is a business, a profession; a practical and scientific operation whereby the soil is used for profit and improved under the operation- The procoss of nature inu>?l bo uudcrstioi and worked iu harmonv with tho chemistry of the earth aud air. The proccsssesof the elements must be understood >f not in their teo'inical terms and language, in that sensibla understanding, that common-sense way, and that their own advantage and c ip:thiliti?M may ho turned tobest nccoun's. Tho lawyer works by law and precedent the physiciains by symptom-- an 1 indications, the merchant by rules and rra-.i ms, the mechanic by measurers and capacities. The farmer must work by all?by rules laws, observations and experiment, lie must be a practical lawyer, doctor, merchant, mechanic of the vegetable, tho animal und the trade-world about him lie must bo a skilled workman in tho productive, operative aud commercial />;??)..? 1.i : ? v?viB? lu nmvii ins uuMuonica aim ins 9phercof circulation extend-1. Terms for White Trash ?Columbia, S. C., Jan. 15.?There was a full meeting held here to-day of the State Republican Executive Couluiittce. The putpese was to recommend certain pcrS0U9 for office under the now administration. The negroes declare that they propose to have all the offices with the exception of four white Republicans. They will tolerate only those Republicans who made (he fight in the last campaign. The following were the unanimous endorscmentf: Mtthone lor Postmaster General; K. M. Hruytoc, South Carolina Stato Chairman, for tho place held by Secretary Thomson or Comptroller Trenholm. The fight of Thorn is Miller in tho Seventh District was commended, and tho recent address by E. M Drayton endorsed.? G recnviUe News. A Colored Woman Claims an Estate of 8250,000-?Richmond, Va . Jan. 16.?Bcttie T. L?wis, a colored woman, who claims to bo the natural diughterof William A. Thomas, who recently died in llcnrico County, lays claim to his entire estate, valued at $250,000. Tho heirs at law as*well as tho 1 woman has socured eminent counsel. Curators have been appointed for the cstato. No will can bo fouud. The courts will test the matter. Incendiarism in Chester.?Chester. Jan. 16.?The stables of John K. Corn well of this County were destroyed by fire, with their entire contents, on i Monday night. Three horses were consumed by the flumes, ono of which was a flue young horse that took the prcuiI ium at the two Utt fairs held here, and for which he had refused au offer of $200 only a few days before. It is believed the firs was incendiary.