University of South Carolina Libraries
k " Devoted to Affrioultter^, Horticulture, C^fT0n< A#tM <A? 2>riy. Wt^ VOL. XXIV.?NEW SERIES. UNION C. 1!.. SOUTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY. OCT. 13,1893. NUMBER Ji There seems to lie nn tank nf ?"?" I "? AA" " "[ WUings for female medical practitioners in this oountry, notos the CotirierJournal, for the Indian Bureau an* nonnces sevonteen vaoaneieH for women. ____________ Americana and Englishmen are said to bo investigating in large tracts of land adapted to coffoe, tobacco and cocoa in Mexico. It is a fact worth noticing that I twenty-five per cent, of accident in- | snranco policy holders who notify j 1 companies of au injnry never make a , t claim for benefits. r _ _ K people have usually thj fir a l?til el-istic texture which is tin baauiy o." flesh. r The farmers of Haratogu Couuty, New York, regard the golden iv> 1 :i i a nuisance, exceeded only 1?y t'l Canada thistle. It tills the mou lows, chokes out the grass and ruins the pasturing. That the "pesky stu f* had value was unknown until a ni m recently arrived from Now York nu I arranged with several agriculturists for the purchase an-l shipment of the flowers. He is to furnish- boxe? specially made to preserve tho golden rod's freshness during its seven hours' journey cityward, and hopes to reap a profit from sales on the street and at the florists' stands. A ' ^ At j The American Agrioul^tirre$ ob; serves: "In nearly every conniy 'one or more fairs are held each autumn. Farmers and their families should endeavor to spend one or more days at these annual gatherings. There is certain to be something of great interost and benefit to every branch of farming. In fruit or vegetables, if anything of merit is observed, And out the name and price, test it for next season. Follow the same with grain or other products of the field*. Talk with the producer, if possible, and obtain valuable point* or hints that will aid in future labors. Look over the improved breeds of stock, and decide whether a thorongbred animal could be used in jour neighborhood with t profit. The uaohinerj and impleHML' ments will reoeive their share of atten* Mb tion. Tou will nsually meet many of * jour friends, and make new ones, and thns add another link to the evidence of why jou should attend the fairs, both looal and State. Tako something r: with you to exhibit, and whether you obtain a premium or' not, you hav< aided in the display and snocesa of thf exhibition, and in the future, by thi* ? 7 course, be more deeply interested." i Er. Joseph Fessol, the Austrian, who is 1 said to hnvo invented tho marine ' mtow propeller, died in abject poverty. Bat a monument was erected to his memory in Vieuna tho other day. ' I "By irrigation 25,000,000 ncrcr. nro C nmdo fruitful in India alone. In Egypt ; there^^o about 6,000,000 acres, and r in Europe about 6,000,000. Tho * United States havo just begun th > > work of improving waste area, and n have already about 1,000,000 acres oi 1 ^ irrigated land. ^ tl Tho wool crop of California for 1852 is given by Thomas .Denigau, Son .V Company, at-33,521,003 pounds. The (| heaviest yield during tho past decade u was iu 1883, when it reached 40,8 H,- |a 600 pounds. The crop has not sinej o that date fallen below the yield of last y year, except in 1801, when it was but v 29,018,476 pounds. The crop oith; I' present year is expected to exceed thai n of 1892 by no*.no millions a", po.tu's. 11 u Further testimony concerning tin 3l physical charms of the Japanese wo- ]c men, a matter on which Sir Edwin A> ^ nold and Clement Scott, th > dr im it"1 p| critic, are violently at odds, k rnr- >v .i.l.j ? "xr * u.nueu uy .urs. JjouiS KrtgAU, H traveled st English woman. Mn. .'Fugn i know? oc the Mikado's l^n-1 -'.ell hu.I .sho avers :a that, though the Juonnese women are ig . not beajitiful, hal Providenan given Jc 89_Pd IP9k? in uroDyrtiou to their ih H^otHtw^traotiomTwt^^ ^,, jj, 5f. in time b'eoomo extinct, for men woultT ~ go en masse to Japan for their wives and sweethearts. 1 Running is tin grjafc boauti ler ol figure and movement. It gives muscular development, stroa g heart a?t:on and free lung play. Tu: :n < da sj.i.'i where it ought to be, tlio h'u raider? go back, the loins hold taj t.Mu': well balanced, and tho feat take thai1-* correct positions. It was running which made tho Greek figure. The more active tribes of Americuu Indiana have been runners from tim s immemorial, 1 nnd from tho chest to th > h vein thov are much more beautifully built than v. tho average of whito men. Running t :,uvu WERE DROWNED. The Appalling Loss of Lives in the Gulf Cyclone. More Than Half the People of the ' Flooded District Dost. 1 i New Orleans, La.?The news bns ( came in s'owly, but nearly 2.000 killid ] *nd $5,000,000 of property destroyed is ( the result ?f * n-" -* ...v kicuw vjuii srorm of two t jays ago in I,ou;8inna. More than half 8 he population in the region over which I the hurricane swept Is dead. Everything v la wrecked. Probably one house in ten is standing and the surviving population >| s lcfc in a rest tutc situation. They j, ire without food. Most of them lav.- no cloth'ag, "for they f ere aalcep y ivhen their lious a were crushed by the vind and the waves. n More than a dozen relief expeditions j, vent down from Now Orleans to disributc food among the survivors. Borae n f them had had nothing to eat sin> ? ,r ilondny, and an appeal was made 1 ?> jll Jollcetor of Customs Wilkinson to allow vv he revenue vessels to pick up the sur- j1( ivors or carry aid to thein. Tec known v, eath list is already above 1,800, ard g, nly part of tho devastate^ country is card from. It is a network of islands, ayou*, lakis, and swamps, and it will t|, e a work before the re'ief boats can g, ravcrse all the watt rwsys and discover ,j( ic full extent of the damage done. (j, The worst, however, is known, for all m ic larger settlements have been heard om, and it is only the smaller one\ :a tered along the bnvoua- and interior "jj, ikes, that will have to be v'si-cd. The r. as of life in thu nir, nh nt l? ? I ? ...ur, | ing on both sides of the Vis issippi, |j is been lu-avy. The record there is I ^ 53 livis. But the great hsi was in the terior settlements, on tlie Gulf coast, id the bayous leading to it. ' 00 The country there is mainly sea marsh, most destitute of lie s. The highest >int is only seven feet above the s a ' v#1, and the greater p it isonlythrci ? ct high. When, 111 refore, the storm led the waves up ti teen fe< t they swept er the is'nnds and ridges earning ^ crything bi fore them. There lave ^ en several similar disasteis on ihn ,,, \Y { ast, notably at 1 a t Island six yea's ;o, wheic 286 people lost their lives; nt ^ ihnston's Bajou at the sum" t;m* when ^ 8 lost numbered 220., .1 ut .y > ltj snalcr. far.jmr.noo xut. i He n *" ^ rt-r?? ^ thl VALI.KS METEORITES. an W..il 'a Ci'lumbi n Expnal ^ PALMETTO PINE TOP WHISKEY, j ? }nv fillmnn data tllA Or<t?f I W That tho Trade Mark Be Registered. ^ Washington, I). 0.?T.llman's Tal- ^ netto brand Pi tic Top whisko? his, at ^ a t, secured icgi-trntion To bring je hemsclvcs within the letter of the law . he Sout 1 Carolina authorities shipped a ^ :asc of Pa'm tio whiskey to Canada, j, where it was so'd at a nominal price. [Iavipg thus establish1 d the trado of the ^ state with a forcig 1 country, Gov Tillnan applied to tlie United States' Patent ^ ")ffice to have the Palmetto tr-idc mark p egistcred. The Commissi->ner of Paten s g ejected the application with emphasiH, p ind refused n relirnring. Nothing ^ launted, the Governor took the cafe into ^ ilie couit?, contending that the Conunis q doner was ooly nn 1 x-cutive officer, who ^ had to ohcy the order to register a trade mark which was not clearly nn infringenaent upon some one previously regis- ^ Sfted. Judge Hrackt-y*m^ the District jj Supreme Court, has sustained this contention, and Issued an alternative injunction commanding the Commissioner of Patents to register the Palmetto b-nnd befere next Saturday, or show cause why j he refuses to do so. As the Commission- ( er has a Ire id y shown his "cause" 01 g a demurrer, which hns boon overru i d, ] this decision is probably final. I II 1 Big Yield of Cotton from Texas Boil, t An Alabama man who is farming near , Velasco, Texan, gives thj Houston Pott t this striking account of what he is get- | ting out of Texas soil: "This is my i first crop in Texas, and before I came I here I would not have believed any i country could produce such cotton ss I < have raised with the hands I brought i from Alabama. I have seventy-five acres i in cultivation, and if this good weather continues I am sure of at least 120 bales. I have already got out sixty-five hales, and am having six bales per day ginned at the Velasco Oil Mill's gin. Those ' bales all go over 000 weigh each, and the duality of the lint and the 'turnout' from the eeed ia something as astonishing to ua Alabamians as ia the yield per acre. Yet I hear people saying every day that the season has not been by any means a really good one on cotton." PITHY NEWS ITEMS. The schooner C. C. Davidson, George Floward, captain, of Philadelphia, Newborn, N. O., to Atlantic City, N. J., went ishore on Virginia B nch Wednesday light. The crew was saved The veslel may be gotten off. The schooner Smma J. Warrington, of Newborn, N. 3., to Somer's Point, N. J., went ashore he same night near Paul Garni el's li e aving station, tfho lies high on the >cacl> and will be a total loss. The crew vas saved. The Greenville Tobacco Board of >adc, of Greenville, N. C., has burn icorpor.tcd, EiToils are b-jng maue to organic i<1m tate Unit*at Klngaui*, On complaint of a worr an on h's rente, Wilmington, Dd., letter carrier of , ugging proclivities lias been suspended. An interesting feature in connection ith ihc North Carolina State Fair i? 10 r.iad congress which Govenor Carr , as convened st Itdeigh for October 18, ( hrn ihj Stale Fair will be held, lie is requcs'cd the commissioners of tbc . irious c unties to appoint two dele- < itcs and two alternates to re pre cut ( itir county at the congicss. { Josinh Hylaad, Jr., second aulitorof j n State, has submitted arc|oitto tin 8 ivcinor of the con lition of Virginia's j >bt and an account of the transfer of ic refunding bonds to the Olcott com c iit-c in New York. The rep ut sho * s g it tbc total debtia $18,400,174 26, not D lo?ring/qj jijnpv boq.da of tt}^ origins! , sue which may never be presented for ? funding. Sixteen car loads, am unting to 4 0r0 rrels, of fall apples were shipped from oxet Station, Va.. between the mide and last of September. Winter a-'an nm wef lu* ^ ?'1 / " A""" w ...? J ... -v, lyv, ov/iu, Him niiiy $/5,0 will be icnlizcd from the apple crop that neighborhood. The buyers. " 10 are principally from Ohio, say they ve hiihcrto bought their apples from line, and did not before know that :h fine apples could bo obtained in rginia. Ex-Got. and Ex-Senator Groomc, of ryland, died suddculy in Baltimoro sdnesday night, of Bright'a disease. Hiss Suaie Herron, a young lady 100I teacher on her way from Mobile Portcrsville, Ala., ou a schooner, was own from his buggy while out (lrivWednesday, and received injuries m which he died that night. For the month of September the icksburg, S. C., dispensrry, after j iding 50 per cent, of the gross profits the State Commissioner and paying a salary of the dispenser, house reut, d other necessary expenses, has dcired a net dividend of 23 cents to go the town and .county. ?Henry Latzko, the Austrhm Comissionerto the Columbian Exposition, d cne of the most celebrated representees of the textile industry of Austria, is recently had an interview with r.?sident Cleveland and presented him til. - AAitWAWtw ?M tWft I Itll a llia^uiui/CUii OUUTUUII JU tuc r>iiojiv: ' a very costly album illustrating the xtile industry of Austria and its cxhib s at Chicago. The album is 21 inches ng and 15 broad, bound in light atherand richly ornamented with gold id enamel, bearing the monogiam, "G. aud the inscription, "Columbian xposition at Chicago, 1893." Toe title age of the album is moat aitislically snd-painted, and reads, "Souvenir of re World's Columbian Exposition at hicago, 1893, dedicated to Mr. Grover Cleveland, President of the United tates of America, by Henry Latzko, ancy Woolen Manufacturer at Brunn, .utria, Member of the Imperial Royal Lustrian Commission to the World's lolumbian Exposition at Chicago." 'he President has expressed himself as xtremely delighted with this interestQg souvenir, which will be placed in he collection of interesting objects at he White House.' Sugar Beets in North Carolina. Representative 8. B. Alexander, o. tferth Carolina, has been invited by th lermsn capitalists who own the beet njK*r factories in Cnliforni.i, Oregon, Nebraska and Utah to visit this oca'.ities and make full exsminations of lie maimer of cultivating beets nnd ibstracting the sugar from same. Mr. Alexander is a practical farmer, and the tyndica'e desires te obtain hi4 views 011 the subject of the cultivation of the lugar beet in North Carolina, as they have thought that the State would make a very profitable field. The syndicate is desirous of extending its field of eperabens. and. in case Mr. Alexander thinks the beat can be profitably grown in the nb)T? State, will furniah 3 veral tons of se_d for distribution among the farmers on condition that the farmer furnishes n report of the number of pounds of beets' grown per 1 ere and supplies a doz n beets for analysis The invitation to Mr. Alcxand r has been accepted ard he will make the desired i> speciion If ti < experiment in growing the be-t* should be successful the syndicate int nd? to r cot a number of beet-sugar f ?ct riet in North Carolina. WJZZARD WORK IN FINANCE. How Thomas A. Edison Would Change Our Monetary System ? -Wheat and Iron as Money. A new solution of the silver question has been offered by Thomas A Edison. In an interview he says: "The hankering nfttr gold and silver is largely traditional. Pcoplo all allow themselves to be governed by the old ideas on the subject of coinage forniu lated at a time when natioual credits did not exist aud currency could only bj taken at an intrinsic value. What we need is a new standard of value. I ihiyk - - ? 'LOSS TO PHILADELPHIA LABOR. The Textile Workers there are Losing About a Million a Week. Reporters of the Philadelphia Press linvo made a mill to ini'l canvass in the tcxtilo districts of Kensington, Frankford, Fturmount,Manayunk and Germantown. In all 1^1 nulls were vi itcd. These are about one-sixth of the total number of tcxtilo mills in Philadelphia. It was found that of the total of nearly 30,000 normally employed in the 121 mills, only a few more than^ 0,000 aie at In sixty mills of Ken*igJ^0J?2,762 are unemployed, wliilo V tBfkiug on 1 $80,334 is?cpt from circulation each ' wtck through the idlcn s? of them 12,- ' 702 men. Iu seven'oen Fdirmount mills 3,595 ' ire unemployed and 1,083 working? 1 ionic o 1 fail, some on part time The ivage loss there is put at $30,830. Iu twenty-six Manayunk mills 2,614 arc idle ' ind 1,830 report for duty. The cstlmat- ' id loss there is $21,000 a week. In tho ' Icrinnntown mills 1,843 men were laid 1 iff, while 007 have employment. The v Iccrcaso in pay-rolls ia $14,700. Of 1 ,300 Frankford employees 300 only are v it work. The money loss in pay alone " 8 put at $0,100. " This makes a total loss in the distric's 8 lamed of $165,884 every wcu*k. If these Igurcs cover but a tixth of the textile ' nills of the eity, the total wage loss each i c reelc to the textile workers must be | esrly $1,000,000.' j " | J 5 ^ i igp jf (i%\ ] f \ A MTItCKT IX CAIU??, ;jIDWlV$J'l.MSAXCK. Q World's Coluin' i n Exp<?i?i<??>. ? KILLED NEAR GREENWOOD. A. Old Negro Run Over by a Train, and the Coroner's Juiy has a Narrow Escape. | Greenwood. S. C.?An old negro wiu Mlr% nuor onrl L-illorl o faro mllpfl fthliVP. I hero by a freight train going from Spar- I * tan burg to Augusta. Both limbs were i ' severed at the thigh, The coroner's ' jury were sent by railroad on the same 1 engine and caboose to view'lhc the body ' The verdict was accidental death with ' no blame attached to the railroad. 1 Returning to thia point in our special 1 cab, with the dead body, we saw, with alarm, a heavy freight train beariug down on us around a curve and on down ! grade. There was a collision, of course, 1 but excepting sprains and bruises there was but little damage, and that to the j ruiload. It seemed that a misunderstanding of orders caused what may 1 bnvc been a very serious accident. The offending freight train with our caboose ! then returned to Greenwood, after pick- j ing up a lot of frightened men who had jumped from the train beforo the collision. DIDN'T KNOW ADLAI. A New Treasury Watchousn who * Barred the Treasury DBor to the Vice-Pi-esidanta Washington, D. C.?Vioe-President itevenson had an engagement with Secretary Carlis'e, at 4 o'clock, at the Treasury in regaid to the Silver Repeal ilil, and arrived at the building promptly on time. He tried to enter by the South doer on Fifteenth street, and when the watchman barred his way he aid he waa Mr. fMcvition. That gavo ittle light to the watchman, who showed 10 sign of relenting. A newspaper man same along just then and addressed Mr. Stevenson as "Mr. Vice-President," and ;ho watchman opened the doors to their widist extort, like a flash, and made irofuso npohgica. lie is a new man. jr? New Idea in Bankiag. Tl e Savings Bank o[ jjTolchez, Miss ,is trying a uow plan to/u-FSrage pceple to save th ir earning*. \m issues what it terms hundred-dollnr listalment savings hou's, on which p ivmAits of fl.O') and upwards can lie made p'hen the ainou it p id equals the f ce of tVe bond the bank allow-. 4 | or cent, intf rest. The 4 per c-int. ean slat .I e xrhA' ged for a- other ef what is calle I tho ' if id-tip" eoiios.on J which (I per cmi f. *ntc-rcw is pjiil M long m thy tuuiuy is loft on ?]Upo?it. i 1 rnd then compress it into a hard cake [he size of a silver dollar and stamp the government mark upon it. That would epresent actual value and labor per formed and then you could cat yourdol ar when you wanted to use the wheat. Ml that would he necessary would be to tut your tneney to soak. We should hen have the bushel of wheat as a punanent unit of value, which all farmers voul 1 appreciate, and the currency of s he count?y would represent actual vorth and labor p<rformed. both gold md silver could then be dispersed with j tnd the preset t bi metallic problem ! olved. Our currency, moreover, would j >c as good as gold or silver in foreign , xchange, for our wheat goes to all the , ountrics of the w< rid. ( In all (till talk about metal for coin | ge," continued Mr. Edison, "I am sur- , trised that no one has suggested iron, ron is the most, nn?omii? n-i-> t - , ?'VVUI, UU1U IN j f do use or silver cither. Mankind has ! | 10 use for either gold or silver, but iron \ ouhl not bo dispensed with. If the eop'c would only give up this foolish, ) rnditioual idea of hauktring for gold | nd silver those meta's would not be i rorth the price of old lend and would ( c kicked aside by c vilizntion. The human race, on the other hand, , annot dispense with iron. Iron mirt be reduced to keep pace with consumption t r its price will steadily rise. The dcinnd for iron is steady .^d will never ? iisse. Therefore, why not issue Trcasry cerlifientes on iron? This is the t roatest iron-producing country in the j g > accompany the wheat dollar, wliy hot "i uy irou or steel iu tend and issue Treas- { ry certificatrs upon that?" t Delicate Machinery. * ' After going through a pin factory , ne is easily persuaded to believe that ( aacliiuery can bo taught to think. In | he first place, the wire from which he pins are made is examined l>y a naehino that scorns to scan every paricle of it, as though to detect any deect that might exist iu its substance. Theu it measures off a bit, just long :nough for one pin, and handa it over ;o another piece of mechanism that j lolds it against, a tile-wheel until it is i jointed. It is then passed on to an- j ahai- flh>.wheel where it is smoothed 1 unl finished; then travels a little further, where it is seized l>y a grip and forced into n recess, where the head is made. A pair of pincers then takes it from the die and drops it into a tiay, and the work of the machine is done. Tho whole process does not occupy five seconds, for the pincers that catch and drop the pins work so fast that the pins are coming all the time in a stream from the machine, but s<> remarkable is the mechanism, so infallible in its action at every point, that it really appears to reason as it works. ?New York Journal. Little Ivy in America. Tho English ivy cannot be successfully grown in this country except under shelter or in hot houses. Tho summers are too hot and tho winters too cold. It takes a wet country, wliero the thermometer seldom rises above eighty degrees in tho summer or sinks bolow twenty degrees in tho winter. Tlje English climate exactly suits it, and in no quarter of the world does the plant attain such luxuriance. Many attempts have been made to raise it in America, but outside a few limited spots in Virginia and the Cnrolinas, where exceptional climatic con ditions prevail, all have failed.?New xork journal. Port Royal's Celebration. Invitations 1 ave been extended by th< Port Royal Shipping Company to Presi dent Cleveland, Vice-President Steven son, members of the Cabinet, Governors, Scnatois of Georgia nnil Sontli Car. lina, and to exchanges, newspapers, mayors and prominent business men throughout the 8outhwest to attend a celebration at Port Royal, S. C., October 9th, in honoi of the inauguration of direct trade wit) Europe irom xnc pori. unv nrmnn of South Car -lina will preside. An the Bumpcan steimer has nniv.d ??-, l'or Rojnl. MOBILE IS AFFLI('TEl). She Experiences Charlnston and Savannah's Plight. A Fearful Storm on the Gulf Destroys Dife and Property. Mobii.e, La.?A southeast gale broke out here, and the wind h is blown the water from the gulf until the river has ienclicd Hoval street, which is four blocks from the liver and at an elevation of about fifteen feet fr m the nvtr height. There is no possible chance of estimating the money damage. The wholcsal i and a great portion of the rc , The pilot boat Ma b ov has ii- en drivcn on the wharf at the foot of St. Fran- \ cis street. The bay boat Heroine was driven on the Mobil; and Ohio wharf , and almost totally wricked. The Crescent City. another biy boat, left Poi .t , Clear st the same time the Heroine did s in the morning and lias not since been heard from. It is icpoited that three ! drcdg? s working on the channel have ] hccn lost It is also repor cd here that l some fifty miles of the Louisville ami '] Nahhv.lle railroad, along the coast, arc under waXtr and that the llih xi bridge | has been swept away by the gale. Noth- ' inj> has been heard from tlie garde, ers i in the marshes east of the city, and the 1 worst is feared. Telegraphic communication is cut o(T ia almost every direc- 1 lion snd Jr.oii tlio jiiiwont untlmik will s l?c entirely mt off from the ou'side woild when dark c ines. ,. In this city houses havcheen unroofed, ' Irees blown down, and one cotton ware- j liousc has succumbed to the fury of the ^ gale. j All the smoke stacks of all the mnnii- f Picturing establishments have h en v down down. Street c ir trallic has been ' otally susp nded because of the damage o the electiic wires and the ciiy will no louht be in dn>knessat night as the waves arc fast cncroachbig o:i the elec ric works. The busitiesi thoroughfares o/ he city arc being navign'cd in boa's and l> tatties arc wading up to their armpits in y m effort to save their goods. It is i'ivcu uo hv nil t.i h? it' > * 11; torm that evu- visited AJobile^ Tli?.j j* liu niil'j wn\\ ?t Giiiil Pi rt. Tlia / :rew of the tug Captain Sam, steamed to ? lie rescue and saved two of the men, s lie other being lost. An unknown white 1 nan lost his footing while wading from lie nil".on depot at the foot of Govern- * aicnt street and was swept under the ] bridge and drowned. RAIDING ^SALOONS. ] A Number of Charlestoniau Ex Bai- t Keepers Airested nud Bailed. Cii Alt i.kston, S. C.-The raiding of the saloons was resumed in this fit)*. The dispensary constables, headed hy Chief Com table Thomas Gilford, aires cd nine of the ex-saloon Kcepcs of the city and confiscated property which could not by any 111 ins be const Irred contraband. Largo quantities of i ce beer and other soft drinks were cairied oil to the county jail and the nroprle ors were required to give bond in the sum of $500. The saloon keepers arrested wi re Vincent Chicco, J. I). Kennedy, C. F. Ileitis, II. Hcmm, Frit/ Molleanr, William Meftin, llenry Nolle, August No tc and L. Murphy. They are among the most prominent siloon kecjers in the city. Constable Swan swore that James lIofToritn ami ?t na .?* n i<nn 1 I f'irric liml I obtained liqmr at. llcmm's. IlclTron tlcni*.?l the charge an I swore out a warrant of perjury agahist S va i, Swan swore out a warrant for II IT ron on the same charge. A warrant was likewise sworn out for a constab'e named McDonnell. McDonnell is an cx-tiuployeo of the Evening Sun. lie \v..s discharged some time ago. and it is churned that recently he coMcc'cd money in tho name of that paper. A Kingstreo Lynching. Ciiaui.kston, 8 C.? A sj 01 ial fiom Kingstree, S. C., says: Judge Lyncti held court in this county Monday nigh! in the vicinity of Moore's Crosr Roads, about 4 miles from Lako City, near th< Clarendon line. George MoFaddcn colored, wns arraigned before Judgi Lynch ami a jury of his own countrymen charged with a criminal assault upoi Miss Saliie llubose, ti e 1G yeira oh daughter of Mr. S. C. Duho-e, a highl; r. cnool oKlo (armor A'* t li<if C(>r<t in*i i McKaddcn vrns brought before ill young lady, she identified him and li oonfefscd his f. ni 11. Pleading guilty, li , ' was condemned and was allowed a r<.n , sonable. time to prepare to mc;t hi ? death. t There were possibly 200 white m*; t presi nt at the lynetting and three coin; r ed men. The coroner cut down tho bod ? and empanelled a jury of inquest whie . rendered a vetdiet that the deccas* r came to his death front hanging by tl t deck until dead, at the hands persons 1 the jury unknown. FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Tlic Sennte. >1r> Day.?Mr. Cameron presented a petition signed by Wharton Dark or, of Philadelphia, nn<! many business firms of thnt city, asking Senators to legislate so as to preserve the protcotivo character of tho tarilT and tho intogrity of silver as a money met a'. Messrs. Harris and Morgan mailo speeches against the silver repeal hill, the latter making a severe attack upon tho New York newspapers. - Executive session. IItiiDay.- Two proposed amendments ot the Silver Purchase Hopcnl bill, by Messrs. Woleott and Perkins, were sent to tho Clerk's desk and rend. The resolution heretofore offered by Mr. Chandler as to tho Fnlrchild Custom Houso Commission was taken up for consideration. In Jiis speoch Mr. Chandler > i Uiado an attack on the President.-7?rThe Sll- "> I",Til Dav.?-The House hill extending tlio timo for concluding tho work of tho eleventh census from December 31, 1H!?3, to Juno JO, Is'-'!, mul authorizing tho Commissioner of f.ii.or to perform tho duties of Buperlnn iont of tho Census, was passed.??i' Silver I'llrohuso Repeal hill was then a'ten up. mul Mr. Kvlo rose to address tho > mate. hut yielded to Mr. Dubois. Other i>-e.-lics were made by Messrs. McMillan. i'eUer and Dolpli. It'll DAV.- Aftor tho routine business ' i: i been disponed of. an amendment t<> Silver Purchase Repeal bill was offered ^ y Mr. Morgan. It revives the coinage of lv!7. Mr. Dolpli then continued his speech igaiust repeal. Ho was followed by Messrs. i'ower unci Piilmer. 17iii Day.?Mr. Morgan reported buck from h-> Co-.unit too on Foreign Relations, tho ill tanking appropriations to euforco tho i ' iliioso Kxeluslon net. Then the Silver f Mfehaso Repeal bill was taken up. Mr. V,, hitler addressed tho Senate in opposition to bo bilk Speeches favoring compromise t v. re made l?y Messrs. Blackburn and Call. 1 4Sth Pay. Tlio open legislative session of l ' |e> Sen .to lasted fifteen minutes. Tiio re- ^ na.'nhi of tho day was spent In exoeutlvo ' I VH ii DaV.?Thl Kennto proceeded to tho \ uC deration Of (bo resolution for n select \ V e irnittoc to Inquire what legislation is nee- \ x i-try to improve the I inking system of tho \ oii'itry. Mr. Stewart spoke. The Silver % 'ur -haso Repeal bill was then taken up. and ^ ir. Blackburn sent to tho Clerk's desk anil iad read an amendment to the Repeal bill. |e=?.rs. Call, ltutler and Teller spoke against ^ epe.il. Mr. Morgan's r<?solution. Instruetiig the Judiciary Committee to iu<|itiro rhat provisions of the Free Coinage net of vt? are still in force, was agreed to without lis sion and without division. The House. ; 1 ?:? Pay.?After the transaction of soma otuino business the House resumed cons id ration of tho Mil repealing the Federal ile-tioii Inws. Messrs. Lacev flowaf. Oil i'l!" ' mm?' \iUn l ,,la'r (N. H.) opposed the i ? "^I^urlii (S. C.) aud ' [T ^ ; ) sl,oko '? ?t? favor. 4.JD Day.?Mr. Cooper introduced a rosoluliettinh0nf/ s n' "'? 9,lbmissin" Of tllO a-tion of freo silver colnago to n popular iryi ill ? "sent b:f ullf'.MeN'iiKnv, Warner 44th DaTv?Tno delate on tlio Foderal V/' lleolion ltcpcal bill was resumed, And tho fouse was addressed by Mr. Dlnsinoro in upport of tho measure, Messrs. Benson, .. loo per, Clark and Wilson. 45tu Day.?Tlio House, without trausaetng any morning business, resumed the couideration of tho Federal Election Repeal ill, and was addressed by M<*ssrs. Northwny, iyle, Rowers and l)o Forest. i l('?ric Day.?These bills were placed ou \ he calendar :Tho Gates Bankruptcy bill, tho MeCrenry bill to amend the deary Chines? \ Exclusion net. The Federal Election Re- j peal bill was then taken up, and Mr. Comp[on advocated tho measure. Mr. Sweet opposed the passngo of tho bill. Mr. Fitch offered a substitute for tho Tucker bill. 47 ru Day.?The bill placing the Secretary of Agriculture in the lino of the Presidential succession was pnssed. Speeches on tho Federal Elections bill were made by Mr. Murray aud Mr. Haines in the negative, and by Mr. Russoil and Mr. Money in the nfllrmative. Htii Day.?Tho call of committees for reports was dispensed with, and the Federal Election bill was taken up. It was discus.se I by Messrs. Hainer, Hicks, Brookshire, Cummings, Tawucy, Talbort and Ocisseuhulucr. The Virginia Peanut Crop. The condition of the "goober" or peanut industry of Virginia is said to ho fairly satisfactory, aud speculation is life as to the production or size of tho crop for the current year. The acreage <>f 'he Virgiuia pctnut crop this year is est incited to be about !?."?,000 acres, about 5,000 less than that of 1802. Tlio jiel 1 lust year was cons'dcrud large to the acre, and the output was over 8,000,000 bushels. Under the present conditions of the crop for 1802 tin output it expected to reach about 3,500,000 bushels. T he sudden advance in prices iu the early spring of this year luduced planters to put in a full crop, and if good weather during harvest should prevail and prices hold firm, planters will reap the benefit. The demand for gooberi has doubled within the last five ye irs, and yet the supply does uot till all the requirements. No other plant in this country can be utilized in so many difi ferent ways, and hence the possibilities > < f the industry are great. , Baby Ruth Two Years Old. i Washington, I). C.? Ruth Cleveland 1 , and her sister Esther a'-e 21 months and n 24 days old respectively. Ruth's .second , birthday was celebrated in a fitting ~ xr .... 4..i? ?r II IllUUIltl. 11UIULIUU3 Ul LUU1 grntulatinns were received ut the White y House addressed to her. Several babies who are also 2 yeais old today, and e whose names have a "Ruth," or a c "Cleveland," in them sent messages, o Esther is thriving. Mrs. Cleveland has i- taken a drivo daily since Saturday. According to tho latest available returns Russia has the largest prison population, 108,840; next comes India v with 75,510, Italy with 68,828, Japan with 68,828, Franco with 00,880, the 1(t United States with 59,258. an?l Great 10 Britain with 80,474. ^_____ to A San Francisco "doctor" produce* 11 dimples for $5 apiece.