ONE OP THE FIENDS. He first appeared in a tobacco store on Michigan avenue. He had something roiled up in tin foil, and he carefully placed it on the counter and asked : "Do you ever have any use for dynamite ?" "Dynamite! Take the infernal thing away!" shouted the tobacconist, as he jumped back. "What on earth are you carrying the stuff around this way for? Here?have a smoke and take it away. I don't want any fooling around my store. The man lighted his cigar and strolled down the street and into a saloon, and when he had placed his little package on the bar he observed : "It's just as safe as sugar as long as you know how to handle it!" "What's that? Say, isn't that the stuff they call dynamite ?" The man grinned. "Now, you get out of this! I don't propose to have my head blown off to humor your nonsense. Here?come up to this end of the bar and have a glass of beer, and then pick that stuff up powerful careful and tiptoe out." Down at the corner another saloonist bought him off in the the same way, and on the next block a grocer who was asked to take the State agency, turned as white as nmAaaa flnnr his verv first iumD measured eight feet. The dynamite man asked him how he sold plug tobacco, and he stood in the alley door and called back: "If you want a plug pull it off and get out o' this! When I get ready to vacate here I want to move in the regular way !" He was trying his persuader on another saloosist when a policeman overhauled him, and sternly demanded the package. "There it is and you can take your chances," replied the man, as he placed the affair on a chair and walked out doors. It was five minutes before the officer picked it up, and then he was all alone in the place. He placed it on the bar, carefully removed the wrapping, and when he reached the compound itself he stuck up his nose and walked out and pursued his way. It was a cake of compressed yeast.? FORCING A SALE. It was a job to sell old Twister anything at a decent profit, and, indeed, to sell him at all, half the time; he hauled over goods, asked prices, said they were too high and walked off. One day our head salesman saw him coming in, and told the boys to keep back, and he would certainly sell him something before he left the store, and so we stood back and waited. "What's the price of these goods ?" said Twister, taking hold of some that were lying in an open case. "These, Mr. Twister, are twelve and onehalf cents a yard," said the salesman, naming half a cent under the price. "Twelve and a half?too high; now at twelve we might trade." "Well, we will say twelve to you," said the salesman. "Well, I dunno as I want the goods enough," said Twister; "it ought to be made an object?now at eleven and a half I'd buy." "Well, you shall have a case at eleven and a half," said the salesman, determined that he should buy at some price. "Well, I don't want but half a case," said Twister. "Very well, we will divide the case for you." "I s'pose," said the purchaser, "you'll throw in the case and won't charge for cartage ?" "Yes," said the salesman," we'll take out half the case, and sell you the goods for eleven and half a cents." "Six months,I s'pose," said the keen buyer. "Yes, six month's credit, and privilege of returning all you don't sell," said the persevering seller, "now I suppose I may ship them right up to your town." "No, no; don't be too fast, young man ; I guess I won't take 'em ; I don't like to have goods forced on me in that style."?Commercial Bulletin." A Slim Chance.?"Don't you believe that marriages are made in Heaven ?" asked Mr. Yeast of Miss Prim, the other day. "I most certainly do," replied the lady of uncertain age, brightening up at the very suggestion of a proposal, and throwing her head on one side in her endeavor to look coquettish; "but why do you ask ?" "Well, I thought you did," was the young man's satisfied reply. "But why did you think I did," persisted the antiquated maiden, almost swallowing her overskirt in her attempts to appear captivating. "Well," responded the heartless young man, lighting a cigarette, and getting at a respectable distance from his antagonist, "it doesn't look as though there was much chance of your being married before you reach there!" She Would not Listen to Secrets.? A certain fomify had some theatre tickets, which, not being able to use, they turned over to a servant girl, who said she had never been to a theatre. Alter receiving directions Jthe girl started out . About nine o'clhck the family were surprised to see the girl back, and went to her room to see what the matter was. "Why, Mary, didn't you find the place?" was asked. "Indade I did, and it was a foine place, and a gentleman showed me a seat near the front door." "And why didn't you stop?" "Well, ivery wan was looking at a foine pictur, up in front, and the place was full of foine ladies and gentlemen, and after a bit they took the pictur' up, and some people came out and begaa talking family matters, and so I thought I'd better come home." Keeping Ducks.?An Irish gentleman visited the municipal court, and walking up to the bench, said : "Joodee. the wather nine at the hydrant beyant me house has bursht, and it has flooded me cellar and is drowning me bins. Me name is McCarthy, joodge." The judge sympathized with him, and was sorry for the damp life his hens were leading, but told him he would have to go to the board of public works and complain. McCarthy went away, but the next morning he came back to the judge and told the same story about the "wather," and the "hins," when the judge said, "I told you to go to the board of public works and tell your story." "And I did," said McCarthy. "And what did they say ?." asked the judge. McCarthy looked indignant and said, "The man axed me, 'McCarthy,' says he, 'Why in thunder don't you kape ducks?' " B6S~01d Sam Kalleton was doubtless one of the most ardent legislators known to the history of Arkausas. Every bill introduced by a well-dressed man he looked upon with suspicion, and never failed to suggest an amendment. One morning, after a night's carousal, he entered the legislative hall just as the chaplain was asking divine aid. The old man took a chew of tobacco and listened attentively until the chaplain closed his petition with an effective recitation of the Lord's prayer. Mr. Speaker," said the old man, arising. "I move to strikeout the words 'daily bread' and insert 'as much bread as may be necessary for twenty days.' We have already (lone enough for the flood sufferers." The Bill of Fare.?Some of the hotels have bills of fare with the fly-leaf covered with cards of various business houses. An Oregon man recently took a seat behind one of them, when a waiter appeared with "What will you have, sir." To the utter confusion of the waiter he leisurely remarked, "You may fetch me up a new set of teeth, in gutta percha; an improved sewing machine, with patent lock-stitch ; a box of. Brandreth's pills, and a pair of No. 7 French calf-skin boots." In a moment the waiter replied, ."We do not furnish those articles." "Then what have you got 'em on the bill of fare for ?" retorted the customer. 0??" An Irishman and a negro agreed to settle the question of who was the better man. They also agreed that as soon as one was satisfied he should indicate the fact to the other by simply saying: "Sufficient." After pounding each other for some time the Irishman sang out: "Sufficient," when, much to his disgust the negro exclaimed: "Sho,' I've been tryin' to think of dat word for twenty minutes." $3F Magistrate?I seem to know your face ? Prisoner?Yus; we was boys together. "Nonsense !" "Yus, we was. We're both about the same age, so we must have bin boys together !" , ^HisccUanfous grading. A GREAT ENTERPRISE. Among the greatest enterprises in modern 1 times is the attempt to harness the water: power of Niagara to the wheels of industry, s Few people are aware of the stupendous and difficult nature of this undertaking, or of the ; issues involved in its proposed accomplishment. The horse power developed at the , falls is said to be equal to all the steam power at present used in the world, and the i practical appropriation of but a marginal ( fraction of this power will distribute its motor power over immense areas and to remote ( distances. The project, as so far satisfactorily carried out, includes the digging of a f canal 1,500 feet long, at right angles to the river, at something more than a mile above r the falls. A vertical shaft 140 feet deep is i being sunk, and from the lower level a tunnel 28 feet high, 18 feet wide, and 6,700 feet long has been carried at a slope of 7 feet per 1,000, to debouch at the foot of the bluffs below the falls. This tunnel is being lined with four courses of bricks, the work progressing at the rate of 100,000 bricks per day. Hydraulic problems have been dealt with by leading engineers, both home and foreign, and the electric part of the work has been laid out by the best experts and practical men. Part of the power is to be used in factories built directly over shafts, and also on land owned by the .company, which has a perpetual right to use this power oyer five miles of river frontage. Railways will connect with the sys tem of factories, the power of one being furnished by an electric locomotive. Thirty acres of land have been reclaimed from the river, and a project formulated of deepening the stream alongside the company's wharves. The right of making a second tunnel under the falls has been secured by the franchises of property owners. All these phases of a stupendous enterprise simply antedate the founding of a manufacturing city or center, of which some of the streets are already laid out. On the Canadian side an exclusive right to use land in Victoria Park has been secured for one hundred years by which a branch of the river going around Cedar Island can carry sufficient water to utilize 250,000 horse power, while the tunnel from the bottom of the shaft to the base of the fall will not exceed 800 feet in length. The plans so far as carried out, have operated at a surprisingly low cost, while the energy and foresight of the directors have insured a steady and continuous progress, without relapses or failures in the orignal designs. The completion of this enterprise will be one of the wonders of modern engineering skill, as the Niagara falls are among the wonders of nature.?St. Louis Age of Steel. SOME BIBLE ODDITIES. Missprints and odd sentences make Bibles very valuable. The "Breeches Bible" is so called on account of a wrong translation of the word "aprons" as it appears in Genesis iii, 7, the translators in this instance having made it to read : "And they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves breeches!" The English reformers : A-riipri ftt. (jAnAVfl jire resDonsible for this very apparent absurdity. During Queen c Elizabeth's reign it was the regular English family Bible. The "Vinegar Bible," an edi- f tion of Holy Writ which appeared.from the ( Clarendon press in 1717, is known by that e odd title because the words "The parable of the vineyard," in the title of Luke xx, is ^ made to read. "The parable of the Vinegar." Matthew's Bible, printed iu London { in 1551, was nicknamed the "Bug Bible," because Psalms, xci, 5 was translated so as to read: "So that thou shalt not nede to ? bee afraide of any bugges by nighte." The I original idea of the word "terror" is still to ? be seen in our words "bugbear," "bugaboo," etc. 1 The "Wicked Bible" was printed in Lou- t don in 1631 and was so called from the fact t that the negation was omitted in certain of the commandments, making them read "thou i shalt" instead of "thou shalt not." Arch- < bishop Land ordered this edition suppressed 1 and forced the printer to pay a fine of ?300. s The "Placemaker's Bible" is another sacred oddity for which collectors pay a high price, t It obtained its name from an error in Mat- J thew, v, 9, where the words "Blessed are i the peacemakers" read as "Blessed are the t placemakers " The "Treacle Bible" has the passage in Jeremiah, "Is there no balm in > Gilead?" rendered as, "Is there no treacle g in Gilead?" The Dauay version (Roman j Catholic) renders the same passage, "Is there t no resin in Gilead ?" In the "Printers' Bible," David, where he j should say "The princes have persecuted xne , without cause" is made to say "The printers ( have persecuted me," etc. ? A National Failing.?"I think," said a f West End physician, "Americans should be j described as a nation of medicine-takers. g The returns from the sales of patent medi- ^ cines are astonishing; but no general practitioner is at all surprised at this, because he . has long since learned that hypochondria , exists almost universally, and that medicine- * taking is the great delight of an enormous J percentage of mankind. One great object a i doctor should have in view is to cure with as few doses as possible, and I believe ninety nine out of one hundred medical students 1 tegin practice with this idea before them. * If their experience is like mine, they have ? somewhat let down in their efforts in this { direction ; and if they have not done so, they 1 have ceftaiuly offended quite a large number of patients. There seems little to choose t between the sexes in the matter of a desire 1 * * ? 1 ? - -A. f to take mediane regularly, anu it is onen ? impossible to persuade an apparently ra- c tional minded patient that a cure has been 2 effected, that no more medicine is needed, and that nothing but good diet and careful j habits are required to build up the constitu- c tion. A number of doctors save themselves i from falling from grace by prescribing a j harmless tonic after effecting a cure, but g those who pride themselves in disposing of cases by aid of a dozen doses or less seldom t attain to any great popularity. ] "The often quoted and much vaunted t practice in China of paying a physician while t his patient is well, and stopping his pay dur- ^ iug sickness, could never be introduced sue- c cessfully into this country, because so many people who are perfectly well are prepared j to file affidavits that they are dangerously < j sick that 110 doctor under the China regime ^ j would be able to earn his board." I A Mother's Opportunity.?The moth| er who always sends a servant to put the children to bed, or who allows them to go j upstairs alone, loses a rare opportunity for j learning their true characters. In the sub- ! 1 dued light after the prayer has been said and . j the son or daughter is tucked into bed, the j. j mother will find them in a mood for couJ fideuces. It is easy for them to make con- * j fessions of naughtiness >r to tell their small | victories over a bad habit. This begets con- * ; fidence between parent and child, and N ! strengthens them in future efforts to do 11 i right. The errors which have been learned 1 j by contact with other children may be cor- s J rected more easily at this bedtime hour than ! * in the restlessnessot uaj light, when it is more difficult to hold a child's attention. The mother, too, often sees the relation of things i more clearly. Perhaps she finds that she ( i herself has not been without fault in the * ; governing of her children. By mutual expla- j > | nations and apologies, if need be, everything ' > | can he made right, and a new day begun j t with a better understanding of each other, I Let her not hesitate to apologize if she has n I been hastily unjust. There is 110 danger of ! 1 j lowering herself in the eyes of her children j by such a course of action, and she will find j t them more ready to ask her forgiveness i \ ' when occasion requires.?Anonymous. j + ! J B?" The World's Fair buildings will lie ded- 1 I icated 011 the 21st of October instead of the ' ??- j '1 83T A lady of Germantown, Pa., values j ii her collection of cats at five thousand dollars. J11 Wagsidc dathmttgs. I B&T There are eight Warterloo veterans still ilive in France. *8&" Dancing is taught in many of the public >S schools in Scotland. S 8??" There are 300,000 commercial travelers *1 ,n the United States. ^ Pair Silence is the best weapon to use against a vulgar and spiteful tongue. 8?" The party who won't forgive is the i, me who is always in the wrong. is 8?* Brass can be kept beautifully bright by p )ccasionally rubbing with vinegar. b B&F Washington city contains in its streets p ind squares over seventy thousand trees. a; 8? Rumors are like a swarm of bees. C The more you fight them the less you get id of them. 01 8? Foreign physicians are now experimenting with frog lymph as a preventitive of lydrophobia. ^ 8?" Near Nisch, Servia, a building wholly e{ :onstructed of human skulls and bones was ? ecently discovered. 8? The Jacksonville (111.) Institute for f,( leaf mutes has the only deaf mute military w sompany in uie worm. . a, IST In one day the human body generates c< rnough heat to melt forty pounds of ice and st aise it to boiling heat. g< 16?" There are about sixty-five million peo>le in this country, aud about twenty- gi nillions are church members. tl 86?" Personal matters should never be in- 01 roduced at a chance meeting if the third ti >arty is not conversant with the facts. st ?6T From the cotton seed that used to be hi hrown away there are now, it is stated, A ifly thousand tons of oil made every year. 1? I?* The question has arisen, "Has the 111 levil a wife ?" He has several wives, we hink ; but they belong to some other men. ^ 8^* For inflammatory rh jraatism, dissolve (j( nto a pint of sweet oil, one ounce of pulver- ^ ze saltpetre, and thoroughly rub the parts , iflected. gt 86?" Some one called Richard Steele the g( ,'ilest of mankind. He retorted, with proud j( mmility, "It would be a glorious world if ^ [ were." e( According to Mr. Dana, of the New fe ifork Sun, it costs an average of $4,000 a 0 lay to run a leading morning daily paper in ai Sew York. in 86?" The name of Maine was given to that s? state descriptively since in the original char- st er it was considered "the Mayne Land of fi< Sew England." 86?" Father?That cat made an awful noise ^ n the back garden last night. Arnold?Yes, U1 ather, I think that since he ate the canary ^ le thinks he can sing. ,c 16?" The first society for the exclusive pur- ct >ose of circulating the Bible was organized P' n 1805, under the name of the British and 0 foreign Bible Society. 86?" Not one member of the United States lenate was born west of the Missouri river, ind all but two out of thirty-three were ^ >orn east of the Mississippi. 86?" It is said that Mexico will purchase ^ ?15,000,000 worth of corn from the United States this year, owing to the complete fail- g, >f the crop in Mexico. k, V&F The largest bell in the world, the a' amous "Giant of Giants" at Moscow, has a di :ircumference of 68 feet, is 21 feet high, m ind weighs 443,772 pounds. ai fSTThe czar of Russia is the largest iudi- hi ddual land owner in the world. The area st >f his possessions is far greater than that of he entire republic of France. n IST White-wine vinegar can be made by K1 idding five gallons of rainwater to ten 2 >ounds of mashed raisins, and letting it ,r ftand in a warm place for a month. u! B&r The Bell telephone patent expires J? lext March, and after that date it is free to . he public, and any person can manufacture he instruments described in the patent. P' 6T* When a man is no longer afraid, but ] s prepared to welcome whatever comes, bemuse he sees in it the appointment of a jy oving Father, why then he is in a happy t state. a JjST Numerous experiments to determine C} he best fire resisting materials for the con- Bj itruction of doors proved that wood covered tj villi tin resisted the fire better than an iron ^ loor. u tap" Three men in France competed to see fc ,vho could drink the most water. One iwallowed twelve quarts, the second nine, w ind the third seven. All three died from ai he effects. tl 8ST A Jersey man married five wives, ana ai hey were all red headed. He explains it by si elatiug that the first one clawed the spirit st >ut of him so completely that he didn't care ifter that if he married a porcupine. d |gy It is announced that the postmaster ci general of the United States has decided to tt ssue a new series of postage stamps with de- S{ ligns appropriate to the commemoration of d< he discovery of America. ol 86T The total colored population, as reurued under the census of 1890, is 7,038,- ft( 560. Of this number, 7,470,040 arc persons s' >f African descent, 107,575 are Chinese, 1,039 are Japanese, and 58,806 are civilized udians. Ja 8&T Thou hast too much to say about thy . ights, and thinkest too little about thy du- '5 ies. Thou hast but one inalienable right, ind that is the sublime one of doing thy iuty at all times, under all circumstances, ?! n all places. W8T A preacher being requested to perform he last sad office for a young woman at the joint of death, pressed her to believe that ^ iesh and blood could not enter the king-! g lorn of heaven. "I am safe," said she: "I | im nothing but skin and bone." j ti&F Aunty?I feel provoked to think that c( rou and your mamma were in town the other a lay and went to a restaurant instead of com- w ng to our house to dinner. Why didn't a] rou corned Little Nephew?We was hun;ry.?Exchange. jr fiST" One of the worst "calamity howlers" H hat has appeared lately is Howling Bear, an s< ndian who proclaims that within two years i great fainine will spread over the entire Y :ountry, and that there will be neither corn, tc vheat or grass, and that all animals will die tl >f starvation. j 01 Sharpo?I saved a girl's life this morn- in ng. Woodman?Why, how was that? vi )harpc?Well, I was smoking on the hotel ,'eranda, and she said : "Pardon me, sir, p? >ut that cigarette is killing me." So I threw tc t away and smoked another.?Boston C'ou- st ier. g< fife#" A lawyer sent a very heavy hill to a 111 voman whom he wished to marry. As she 81 nade some severe remark on the matter, the " awyer replied : "I wish to show you how ucrative is the profession of a barrister, fou can now see for yourself in what a ! hi irofitable business I am engaged." ; tc fife#" "What comfort there is in the thought, i j." hat although God could not depend on us, j,0 ve can always depend on him, and that, i w ilthough He could always get on with out ^ is, He is willing to make use of us when we " ire ready to stand in His strength, and that ic does not despair of us, even when we Y" lcspair of him." CI fife#" In Persia the first time a man is caught.. nthe act of stealing lie is "bastinadoed"! beaten 011 the soles of the feet with an iron ^ j oil), and made to sign a paper declaring that I vill be his last offense. If lie forgets this! vheu the soles of his feet quit burning, and ^ .j ries it again, the second offense calls for the ; - * . ? ? 1 1 it* 1 I 01 imputation ot MS rif^iic nana. ir no goes i it it left-handed, the third, and of course a.st resort, is decapitation. [ ,,j Bfsf* Richard Reverly, who for $350 a year lh akes the mail from Rucua Vista to l'leasant j fa i'ic\v, in Amherst county, \'a., carries it the w listauce of eighteen miles on his hack. Overy day except Sunday, he walks from iuena Vista to l'leasant View and hack, a listauce of thirty-six miles, and on Saturday . calks hack again to l'leasant View to he j vith his family on Sunday, that day's walk j icing fifty-four miles. He is 50 years of age, I ft. in. high, weighs 1G0 pounds, and is I n perfect health, lie has heen carrying the i nail for two years and three months. A farmer in Iowa has invented a meth<1 whereby he keeps his neighbors' cowsi rom stealing his hay. He described it thus :' A certain quadruped had a sweet tooth fori ur haystack and did much damage, throw-1 iig down a seven-rail fence and roosting in | ur hay. We bought a box of cayenne j leppcr, took a nice lock of hay, placed it j utside, 'baptized' it with pepper, and watch- J d. The animal came along and pitched 1 nto the hay, when suddenly she took the j iut, and, with nose at forty-five degrees and I ail at ninety degrees, her soul went 'march- j j ig on,' at the rate of 2.40. That cow has, j" ot come hack." j ' [Hkc (fiwitt and Reside HOW TO Cl'RK PEA VINE HAY. In a recent letter to The Watchman am outhron, Mr. E. W. Dabbs, formerly c umter county, but now of Alabama, give be following points on curing peavine hay The first thing to consider is the prope :age for cutting, aud this is determined b; ia?proportion of grass among the vines. I II pens or very little grass, not enough t< e of auy consequeuce, the best time to cu ; after blooming when about one-third of tin ods are turning yellow, but before the leave egin to full. You then have some ripi eas that cure without shelling and the bal nee in the state for table use, and snaps ut at this stage, peavine hay comes neare ) being a balanced ration than any othe tie stock fbod. Experience has prover lis and it is backed by chemical unalysif lade by Dr. W. B. Burney, as shown ii le S. C. State chemist's reports of three 01 >ur years ago. On the other hand the grass i and clovers should be cut when in bloon ir the best hay. So we must keep the dif rence in view in deciding when to cut i eld of hay ; if all, or nearly all grass, cu hen in bloom, if all, or nearly all peas, cul i the time indicated above ; and if nearlj lually mixed with grass and peas, cut at tin age that will insure the largest amount o eod hay from both. Having determined upon the stuge o) rowth when the hay should be cut, the nex lino- is tn wnteh the weather and try to hi a good, hot sunshine for the curing. Some mes you may have to wait uutil the bes age is passed, but this is better than tc ave a week's rain 011 a field of mown hay hard shower, or even a heavy rain if fol wed by clear weather, rarely injures lmj tore than to discolor it slightly, if it is prop *ly handled afterward. The stage of ma irity, the rankness of growth, and whethei is cloudy or fuir, must be considered it Btermining when to rake after cutting. Tin nest hay I ever cured was cut between f clock a. in., and 4 o'clock p. m. Rak< arted just as the mowers were leaving the eld, and wagons started next morning abou ) o'clock when thoroughly dry of dew lthough no more than wilted it was pack 1 away on a barn loft, (rails being laid tw< et apart across the joists) and salted down ne man was kept on the hay all the time id packed it down as tight as possible, fill ig up to the comb before starting anothei iction. (This hay was just at the righi age for putting in ventilated stacks in th< eld which I will describe later.) The lower floor was then filled with hay lat was cured in the field as follows: Rakec p in the morning after it was mowed anc lat evening piled iu cocks five or six feel 1 diameter and six or seven feet high, beinj ireful not to pack, rounding up nicely anc utting a big forkful on top for a cap. Some F these cocks stood iu the fields two weekf id had two hard rains on them and non< ere damaged except where toppled over bj le wind. These rains were not continuous id bright sunshine followed soon atfer /kere one has plenty of house room, bui 111 not give it ventilation as 011 lofts, this is le best way to cure hay. Sometimes ii iay be necessary to open the cocks for a feu Durs, but always recock it before night t< eep out the dew. When ready to pad ivay, it is not necessary to wait for th< ew to dry off the cocks, but the wagons iay start at sunrise. If there is no grass mong the vines, I would not like to risk 1 ig rain on the cocks, but would want ii ncked permanently or put on a burn loft. To cure in stacks: Build a pen six or eigh lils high, or put four strong crotches in th< round, so that the floor will be 18 inches tc feet high clear, floor with rails or poles 15 iches apart. In the center of the pen pui p a 16 foot pole, and around pole nail eighi ? 1/1 c 1 4 hnm of Knf ir\m c/ t'flCCS JU IUCl/ 1UII^? CUU lliCiii at uui wu? lere will be a flue three feet in diamter ai ie floor. On this pen and around the flue ack the hay, keeping inside a little high : and packing it closer than outside. Wher tiove where the braces are nailed to pole ack around pole to top. I usually earriec ie sides nearly perpendicular to a level witl >p of flue and then draw in to top. Mak< rope of grass and vines and tie up a bij ip, force this over the top of the pole whicl lould be clear of knots and sharp to allov ie cap to settle as the hay cures, force ii own as tight as possible, and iu a week oi vo, if the cap does not settle with stack irce it down again. I had hay put up in this way that took th< eatlier for eighteen mouths and was as brigh' nd sound as the day it was stacked. Anc ie peas in it did not have a sign of a weavi bout them. The loss from exposure on out de to weather was about 200 pounds to tin ack of from 1,600 to 2,000 pounds each, l'ut up this way there is very litth anger of fire. It is not in the way; yoi in haul in a stack whenever needed. I ie sides are carried up nearly vertical foi sven or eight feet, cattle may eat a grea eal out around the bottom without dangei f the inside being damaged by the weather And I will guarantee a bale of cotton pei 3i*e the next season where one of tliesi acks has stood six or eight months. I never lost any hay put up this way ex jpt in '88. Then the peas were sown ai ite as the 16th of July, and after beinj idly nipped by frost, were cut while stil i bloom. It all rotted in spite of all I coult U lU ?itVt3 1U Last year I tried curing in ricks instcat f stacks. Put up a pole on forks five fee igb ; on this laid other poles two feet apart lie end resting on the ground about twelvi :et on each side of the center pole. My best lot of hay, fourteen acres, I triet ) stack on a rick of this sort fifty feet long ut one of the forks gave way and threv le whole rick out of shape, and I was to< usy to tear it down and rebuild, and tin msequencc was a total loss of the hay uother larger one that I put up, the ha} sis damaged before being put on the rick ad I do not know how it turned out. This is a cheaper way to handle it thai i stacks, but with me costs more in the end .'owever, if I had a crop of buy would tr} )ine of it this way again. Never stack pcavines after they are cured ou can not put them up when cured so a; > turn water, and the first rain will sout lem. Stacked when half cured, and curet at in the stack, they hold the leaves; ami i settling the outside forms a roof imper ious to rain. My observation is that most farmers cul eas too early for the best results, and grass >o late. With a mixture of the two, as 1 lid at the first, you must cut when yoi jt the best results from whatever predoini ites. And if about equal parts peas am ass, try to strike the "happy medium' mt will cause the least loss from each. Effect of Pad Positions.?An creel idily altitude is of vastly more importune* i health than most people generally iinug 1?i i i:i.. :? IC. ^FOUKCU UUiili^ puniiiuu^ iiiaiiuauitt ir any length of time, are always injurious hether in sitting, standing or lying position hetlier sleeping or waking. To sit will; le body leaning forward on the stomach 01 ) one side, with the heels elevated on a level ith the hands, is not only in had taste it exceedingly detrimental to health, ll amps the stomach, presses the vital organs, terrupts the free motion of the chest, and lfeebles the functions of the abdominal and loracic organs, and, in fact, unbalances tin hole muscular system. Many children be>me slightly humpbacked or severely round louldcrcd by sleeping with the head raised 1 a high pillow. I'okk FltlTTKHS.?Take two eggs, one-hall nt milk, one teaspoon salt, and two cup.? mr; drop thin pieces of breakfast bacon 01 t pork into this hatter, fry brown and you ill be surprised to lind how nice it is. ppu ???f ||| &AKIN0 POWDER Absolutely Pure. V cream of tartar talking jMiwtler. iti?licst or all leavening strength.?Latest I J. S. Government oil Hejxirt. ltoYAI. HaKINO i'oWllKIC Co., JOti Wall St., N. V. j AVER'S i Sarsaparilla : Is superior to all other preparations r claiming to be blood-purifiers. First y j of all, because the principal ingrediM ent used in it is the extract of gen? I uine Honduras sarsaparilla root, the variety richest in medicinal proper; Cures Catarrh low dock, being raised expressly for the Company, is always fresh and of the very best kind. "With equal discrimination and care, each of the other ingredients are selected and compounded. It is THE Superior Medicine ? because it is always the same in apt pearance, flavor, and effect, and, be'T ing highly concentrated, only small ? doses are needed. It is, therefore, f the most economical blood-purifier p in existence. It F bUreS makes food nourfc QPRfirill A ishing, workpleast OtnurULM ant, sleep refreshing, and life enjoyable. It searches out all impurities in the system and expels them harmlessly by the natural channels. AVER'S Sarsaparilla * gives elasticity to the step, and imparts to the aged and infirm, renewed health, strength, and vitality. i AVER'S ' Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aver Ac Co., Lowell, Maes. 8o1a by nil DrugfttiU; Price >1; tlx bottles, |5. ; Cures others, will cure you 1 RICHMOND AND DANVILLE R. R. CO r F. W. Huidekoper and Reuben Foster, Receiver t i SOUTH CAROLINA DIVISION, C10NDENSED Schedule In effect August i&tli, 18S > Trains run by 75th Meridian time: south bound. ] No. 9. | No. 11. | No. ? stations: Dally. Dally. Daily 1 Lv New York 12 15ngt 4 HO pin 4 30 pi Lv Philadelphia 8 50am 0 57 pm 6 67 pi ' Lv Baltimore I 6 45am 9 '25pm 9 25 pi Lv Washington.... 11 10am 11 '20pm 11 00pi t, Lv Richmond 8 00 pm 3 20am 3 20 ai Lv Greensboro 10 15 pm 10 20 am 7 09 ai 3 Lv Salisbury 112 22am 12 00pm 8 28ai t Ar at Charlotte 2 00 am 180pin 9 35 ai Lv Charlotte 2 10am 1 50 pm f Lv Rock Hill ! 8 03 am, 2 42 pin ) Lv Chester 3 44 am 3 22 pm Lv Winnsboro 4 40 am 4 25 pm ' Ar at Columbia 6 07 am 6 00 pm ; Lv Columbia 6 25 am 6 25pm ' Lv Johnston's 8 12 am 8 10 pin ? Lv Trenton 8 27 am 8 24 pm S Lv Granitevllle 9 02 am 8 61 pm Ar Augusta 9 37 am 9 25 pm 1 Ar Charleston 10 20 am 11 05 pm t Ar Savannah 6 00pm 0 00am SOKTH BOUND. t I No. 38* I No. 12.1 No. 1 ? stations. Dully. Daily. Dally * Lv Savannah 8 45pm 7 10a: ) Lv Charleston, 6 50am 5 30 pi ) Lv Augusta 8 15 am 7 00 p: " Lv Granitevllle 8 48 am 7 65 pi t Lv Trenton 9 15am 8 29 pi i Lv Johnston's 9 29 am 8 43p: Ar Columbia 11 15 am 10 40 p ) Lv Columbia 11 35 pm 10 50 p: I Lv Winnsboro 110pm 12 26a: Lv Chester 2 30 pm 1 21 a , Lv Rock Hill 3 20pm 2 Ola . Ar Charlotte 4 30 pm 3 10 a; Lv Charlotte 8 30 pm 0 30 pm 6 48 ai 1 Lv Salisbury 9 43 pm 8 15 pm 8 25 a Lv Greensboro 11 02 pm 10 20 pin 10 20 a Ar Richmond 6 18am 5 30p ? A r Washington 7 00am 10 25 am 9 20p 1 Ar Baltimore ? ssiam 11 i*>pm n?p Ar Philadelphia 10 4(1 urn 2 20pm 3 00a J Ar New York 110pm 4 50pm 0 50 a ' *Vestibuled limited. 1 ' SLEEPING CAR SERVICE. f Oa trains 0 and 10 Pullman sleeping cars bctwe< t New York and Atlanta, Danville, Va., and August Ma.; and Augusta, (Ju., and Salisbury and Colui P bla and Augusta. On Trains 11 and 12 Pullmun Sleeping Cars betwe< ' Washington and Atlanta. Train 12 connects at Charlotte with WushlngU ; and Southwestern Vestibuled limited train No. J . northbound. & For detailed information as to local and throug I time tables, rates, and Pullman sleeping-car rest i vation, confer with local agents, or address? ' W. A. Tukk, Oen'l Pass. Agt., Washington, I). C. - S. H. Hakdwick, Ass't Gen'l Pass. Ag't., Atlanta G V. K. McBkk, Gcn'l Hunt., Columbia, M. ('. * W. H. Gkkkn, General Manager, Washington, D.1 Sol. Hash, Tralllc Manager, Washington, D. ('. ; C. & L. NARROW GAUGE RAILROAI r SCHEDULE of Mail and Passenger trains from L j ?5 nolr, N. C.f to Chester, S. C? and from (Chester: Lancaster, daily except .Sunday, taking eirect Augu 2Sth, 1802. SOUTH BOUND. | ? u._i * LeavtT Letiolr..T....T s 00 a; * Leave Hickory 9 05 a I Leave Newton ? 39ai * Arrive at Llncolnton, 10 211 a; 1 Leave Llncolnton 10 30a; Leave Dallas 11 15ai Arrive at Gastonla 11 28p: 1 Leave Gastonla.... 11 32 pi I Leave Clover 12 12pi Leave Filbert, 12 27 pi , Leave Yorkvllle 12 42 p , Leave Guthriesvllle 1 0.1 p. " laiavc MeConnellsvllle '..... 1 12 pi Ixjavc Lowrysville 1 -'10pi j Arrive at Chester ... 2 00pi NOKTII BOUND." | No. 12 Leave Chester 2 55 pi r Leave Jsiwrysville 3 25pi ) Leave MeConnellsvllle 3 43 p Leave Guthrlesville 3 51 p ' Leave Yorkvllle 4 12p . Leave Filbert 4 27 p; Leave Clover 4 44 p: ? Arrive at Gastonla, 5 22p , Leave Gastonla 5 28p Leave Dullus 5 40p Leave Llncolnton 0 28p l Leave Newton 7 21 p Leave Hickory 8 15p * Arrive at Lenoir..., 9 iJOp, No. 9. | Clieruw ?fc ClieHter. I No. 1 4 05pin Leave CHESTER Arrive 11 3Hu 4 38 pm .: KNOX'S 1105a 4 50 pin RICH BC KG 10 40 a i 5 13pin BASCOM VILLK 10 24a M 5 38pm FORT LAWN ! 9 58a I j 0 28 pm Arrive LANCASTER Leave 9 20a I | W. A. TURK, Gen. Pass. Ag't., Washington, ]). ('. is. H. HARHWICK, Ass't Gen. Pass. Agt., Atlant I Georgia. | V. E. MrBEE. Gen. Superintendent, Columbia, S. , W. H. GREEN. General Manager, Washington, D. t 1 SOL HASS, Traflle Manager, Washington, I). C. || L1VREY AND FEED STABLES. I WGlILI) respectfully announce to my ol friends and the traveling public that I hat [! returned to York ville, and in the future will git ' my personal attention to the LI VICKY AN i FEED STABLES so long conducted by in ! Determined to merit public patroiwge, I hope I I receive a share of the same. i| 31Y OMXIRUS | Is still on the Btrect, ready to eonvey passcngei J to all departing trains, or from the tminstoan ' ! part of town. FOR FUNERALS. j ! I have an elegant HIOARSJO and also a CLA1 ilONClO COACH which will he sent to any pa of the eounty at short notieo. Prices reasonabli Rubies and other Vehicles [, j On hand for sale. Bargains in either new < j second-hand vehicles. i HAVE YOUR HORSES FED ' ! At the Yorkville Livery and Feed Stables whoi ' they will receive the licst attention. . F. K. SMITH. j| CM>i:i AND ItlOI'A INTIOI), I j CIONTKALLY LOCATIOI) ON KINO ST iNKXT To TDK AC.\ I>10M V nF Mt'SD j ItOO.MS LA It*' 10 AND Oil lOIOKFCL. T.\ 1 l$LK KXCKLLKNT. K. T. liAll-lMUw. I /r'.v Kates S'J.iM) iiml ^-."><1 jierday. Oelolier N '!'? * ly II. K. FINI.KV. J. S. IIKIl'l I'IM KV it IIKK I:. ATTOKMIVH AT I.AW, Yorkvillc, S. C. ALL liiisini'ss entrusted to us will liejjive )ir<>i111>l attention, j oKKK'K IN TIIK IM'I LI>IN J late. For sale at TIIK 10 Mil' I KKK OKKK'I THE CORBIN 1 DISK HARROW. * o It if the Best Labor Saving Panning Implement in the World, and Will do More to Increase Crops and Eeduce Cost of Production than any Farming Implement Ever Introduced. PrT?" Vi ~ ^ v.--SjB gg - 1m?SL:' \ ' \ - jWbmS A GREAT (leal has been said about the Corbin Disk Harrow during the past three years in the columns of Thk Enquikkr. If it was anything else than what is claimed for it, the people would long ago have branded it as a fraud, out instead of being denounced it is endorsed and recommended as the greatest money saver and crop increaser ever introduced in this section by every farmer who has tested it, and there are scores of them. The following testimonials from well known farmers should, we minx, do huilicient to convince even those who do not want to he convinced. Read and then act: Chester, 8. C, March 27, 1890. Sam M. Grist, Vorkvllle,8. C.: Dear Sir: I have owned a Corbln Disk Harrow for several years, and consider It the most useful and economical farming Implement of which I have any knowledge. Mr. Corbln has done more for the farmer thun all the politicians, reformers, etc.,.combined. He lias done something practical. No farmer can fall to be benelltted by the use of the Harrow, and the more It Is used the greater the benefit or profit. It Is almost the t only so-called Improved farming implement that I I have ever seen that would do all its manufacturers claimed for it, and the only one that would do more. Every farmer should have one and a man who is able to buy fertilizers for his hind is more able to buy a (Sorbin Disk Harrow. The time will come when the j, Corbln Disk Harrow will be considered as much of a necessity on the farm as the wagon, sewing machine, *" cooking stove, and I might say, the plow; and the sooner It comes the better for the farmer. It only takes a farmer, who lias l>cen accustomed to the old way of doing things, about one hour to realize how much time and lubor he has literally wasted before lie used the Corbln Harrow. In conclusion, let me say that I would not pretend to farm without It. Respectfully, W. Holmes Hardin. Orover, N. C., May 15, 1891. Mr. 8am M. Grist, Yorkvllle, H. C.: Dear.Kir:?I ' bought a No. 7 Corbln Disk Harrow from you last October. The first time I saw it I pronounced it "a daisy." Now I pronounce it Indispensable. I would not sell it for double what it cost If I could not get another. I sowed all my wheat with It and It gave entire satisfaction. ., The best prepared piece of land I ever saw was a piece of stubble bottom land turned last winter with H. un Oliver chilled plow and cut this spring with the Corbln Harrow. I also tried it on stubble land bottom that luid not lieen broken and It was a success. It Is uctually tlxc best farming Implement I ever saw. With two mules undone hand I can do.more work, and better work, thun four mules and four hands in the old way. Clods and baked ground would soon be a thing of the post If furmers would all use the Corbln Disk Harrow to pulverize the land. To see one at work is sufficient to convince the most skeptical that It will do all that is claimed for it. One old gray headed furmer who saw me harrowing 2. my stubble that had not been broke said, "I thought it was all talk about that harrow, but it will do." Another furmer, and a good one too, said, "It beats anything I ever saw, and I wunt one to sow my wheat 7? with this fall." After such a winter and spring as we have Just passed through, and the farmers are all behind with their work, nothing saves tlmeurid labor like a Corbln "J Disk Harrow. Respectfully, C. C. Hi'OHEH. m [" yorkvili.e, 8. C., January 11,1892. in 8am M. Grist, Yorkvllle, 8. C.: Dear Kir:?About 1 rn the first of September I was induced to try one of your ... Corbln Disk Harrows. I have given It a fair trial, and ^ am say without feur of contradiction that it has no equal as a farming implement. I liave sowed my ? wneat and outs crops with it. and I am satisfied ft b was done at far less expense tnan the same size crop o was ever before put in on the county farm, and better. All tliut is necessary on cotton stalk laud Is to rip up the stalks, sow the wheat or oats on the ground, ana run the harrow over it. I can take a disk harrow and two strong mules and sow six to eight acres of wheat i* or oats in a day. Now Just think what a saving of \ ? time and labor this is?tho work of at least six mules t and six hands by the plan commonly pursued by our n a fiirmers! Another point In favor of the harrow Is ? this: You can take almost any kind of improved fanning implement, and in order to succeed with it J; 01 you must huve your land in apple pie order, while i m with the Corbln Harrow the rougher the land the v m bettor the work It does?It asks no favors. I liuve a t, 11 great deal of wire grass on the Poor House farm and ? rn am sure that by running the harrow over It about m twice, I will have It in a shape that it will give me n1 no more trouble. It will put stiff bottom land in a m shape that it can be worked without difficulty. ,n I want to say to the fanners who may read this, that ii m you are standing in your own light when you fail to n m buy or even postpone buying a Corbin Harrow. It o will pay for itself over and over again every year. I ,n would not undertake to farm without it, since I have m learned its value, for three times its cost, hi in regard to the Seeder Attachment, I will say that . m I have tested it thoroughly and it Ik nil that is claimed 1 m for it. It sows wheat or oats in the vety best manner, a hi and can be taken otl'or put 011 the Harrow in one u hi minute. ) in Again, I say to the farmers, buy it, even if you have to use less guano this yeur in order to pay for it. It will pay, and pay well. Wm. I5. WYLIB, Hupt. York County Poor House. Yokkvjj.j.k, 8. C'., July 8, lssi). Ham M. Grist, Yorkvlllc, H. C.: Dear Sir:?In rein ply to your Inquiry as to what I think of the vulueof j j the Corbin Disk Harrow as a funning implement, I q would say that I consider myself Incompetent to do ' the implement Justice, but will try to give some idea [j) of my estimate of its value. I consider the Corbin !r. Disk Harrow to be the most voluuble tanning implement I have ever used, or ever expect to use. There . is no other iinpleinentof which I have any knowledge I inn will ?l<> 11s manv different kinds of work, or ao | tin* work ax well. There Is no implement which will C, do equal service thut I have overseen, that is so slm- pic In construction or which Is less liable to get out of I - order. It Is one of the few Improved farming imple| monts which can be used to advantage by the ordl nary negro. The C'orbln Harrow will more than j>ay for Itself In one season if given half a chance. I now o have 011 my farm a Ill-Inch, 12-dlsk t'orbln Harrow, the original price of which was (MO, and although the s Implement lias been In use nearly tive years, if it was Impossible to get another. I would not take five times its cost for it. Di conclusion, let me say that some of 8 my assertions may sound extruvagant to some of my brother fanners who are not familiar with the C'orbln Harrow, but I will say to those who may doubt any of my statements, that I will takcplcakure In demon'! stinting the truth of each and every assertion to tlie 1 entire satisfaction of all who will call at my farm near i town. I lioiie to see, or hear, at an early day, of a Cor-1 1 bin Harow being on the farms of hundreds of farmers ^ In this section. Itrespectfully, W. M. Waj.kkh. in J tn iiOWKYSViJ.i.K, S. ('? February 11,1892. * in Mn. Sam M. Uuist, Yorkvllle, H. C.: Dear Sir?You j ,n request me to give my opinion of the worth of the UJ C'orbln Disk Harrow as a fann implement, after a tn long exiierlence In using one on my farm. In reply, I in would say that I place a very high estimate on the in Harrow. It does its work so thoroughly, and so rap- , m idly, that I think it Justly entitled to tie classed as one 1 in of the greatest labor saving Implements used In farm in husbandry. in I use my Corbin Disk Harrow to put In my small! in grain crop very successfully. The Harrow pulverizes ! - ii,a u?n u?, timmiiiriilv ilenvlnif 110 clods behind It) ! tliat 1 invariably secure u gcsrd stand of sinull graiD, I m and leaves the land smooth and in a condition to i ,n harvest the crop with machinery, without further j ,n lubor or trouble. ; l in The Harrow Is a grand Implement to use with a ! J 'n pair of mules, but It Is a far more efficient one with m four mules attached. I had used my Corbln Harrow I" but a short time with a pair of mules until I wasthorm oughly satisfied that I was not utilizing Its full eapaci" ity, or In other words that it was capable of doing a in great deal more work in a day If I would weight It ! in down, add horse power and give it sliced. Since then ' in I have used four good, strong mules to my Corbln | in Harrow, and have more tliun realized my ex pec tain tlons. The draught was so much lighter for the four in mules, notwithstanding the increased weight, that ! they could travel at greater speed and the harrow j m accomplish greater results. The area of land I can in harrow in a day with four mules depends 011 its char- j m acter. On my level, sandy lands, when I can secure ' m long, straight furrows, I can, with an experienced 1 in driver, harrow an acre of land every hour, or usually j in ten acres a day. I find my Corbln Harrow very useful in breaking stubble land thoroughly and s|>cedl!y. a? It Is Invaluable to pulverize cloddy bottom lands. 1 ., The disks cut the clods and pulverize and smoot lis the l,' land more effectually than any implement I have 1 ever used for that purpose. In a dry fall I consider the Corbln Risk Harrow in dispcnsible in putting In my crop of winter oatsat the ; proper time. 11 think the last of August or the first week in Scptemlrer the pro|>cr time to sow). If it Is ' dry weather and the land hard, I can, by weighting f Id down my harrow, and going over the land two or e three times, secure a well pulverized seed bed for my (. oats?when I could not possibly plough up clods 1, I enough to cover the seed?and when the mills come, j the oats spring up, grow and take g should have a Corbin Disk Harrow. Right now ! k" ' 1 1 ...sit l.? ?? Oiiote I I !/ i j)rices ami (five terms. SAM M. OR 1ST, State Agent, Vorkville, S. ?"' I am also agent for t'nion, Mecklenburg, ,r Hasten, Lincoln, Catawba,, Caldwell and Cleve- j land counties, North Carolina, for the sale of the genuine Corbin Disk Harrow. S. M. O. j THE PARISH HOTEL. | ~yyif K.\ you come to Yorkville, you are in vilcd to stop at TH K PARISH HOTKL. VOL' WILL UK ROYALLY TKKATKI). si The building is located in the business portion j of town. The rooms are large and provided with every comfort and convenience. s TH K TA DLLS arc supplied with TH K HKST , y j the season affords, prepared by experienced w c I cooks, and served by polite and lively waiters. I.AIttiK SAMl'LH ROOMS for commercial ' I | until. We study to please. ? Mrs. C. O. l'AKISH, Manager. "j .Marrh 1 -1 tf | - (The ^ovluillc $nquirrr. . , l! PUBLISHED WEEKLY. , : II j TKItMS OF srHHCHIPTlON: , * | Single copy for one year, $ 't OO ? One ropy tor two years, tl 5(1 For six months, I OO | For three months, 50 Two eopies tor one year, ?'l 50 ,, Ten eopies one year, 17 50 And an extra ropy for a eliih of ten. |{ A DVKItTIMKM PXTW j n ! Inserted at One Dollar per square for the lirst j insertion, and Fifty Cents per square for earli subsequent insertion. A sip tare is insists of the j K spare occupied hy eijjlit lines of this size type, j s Contracts lor advertising spare for three, i- six, or twelve months will he made oil reason!. aide term. IUNTEESVILLE HIGH SCHOOL, * FOR BOYS AND GIRLS, ,. other well-known modern style machines are to ho ^L Al'llliii*. found in tlie PEERLESS. improved and simplitied hy the best mechanical talent until it stands, as the flMKname implies, the peer of any machine in the marWmgggmaajtB^^jlMn All wearing parts are of the best quality of caseImBKBS' the turning of a screw, all lost motion, caused by wear, tail be taken up. All parts are fitted so aeculately that these machines are as nearly noiseless and as easy running as tine adjustment and the best mechanical skill is possible to produce. No expense Y JOW or time is spared to make them perfect, as every machine pusses a rigid inspection by competent men before leaving the factory. It has no cogs. The Balance-Wheel and many of the tino parts ?-~^|K?|Bfl are nickle plated, with other parts finely enameled MMBbI //UBK?| all<* ornamented, giving it a rich appearance. Every Machine is furnished with an Im]>roved ?|P| \ ^ y Automatic Robbin Winder, which is so simple that A. ^ fHH! aiitoinatically on the bobbin as evenly and regularly iis the thread on a spool. This valuable attach S 3 m Tension, ami all annoyance ri-sulting froni shuttle U , fc-\l] \ ~!t which is common to many machines, is entirely obfeivgfofci1' i-Mfc i \ self-setting Needle and self-threading Cylinder lijijip 'j|jv Shuttle are lists I in tin PIOIOKIJOSS HKJIf-AHM \ "j i-s s" aim pie that with two motions of the hand, I backward and forward, tlie shuttle is threaded. 'i ,' ', AV " . r%~ 'V .&&''! The Woodwork is the best that can be procured, ^iL/'ilT..,:T ; l.'l ' ;';u. of cither Antique Oak or Black Walnut, its the pur. " chiLscr may prefer. ? The PJ010RLRSS is so simple that any one can easily operate it in a few minutes' time, as the nstruction Book which is sent with each Machine is profusely illustrated, and answers the urpose of a competent teacher. It shows how to do all kinds of fancy work with attachments Complete Set of Latest Improved Attachments. JOach I'KKHMSS Machine is furnished with a complete set of Johnson's celebrated steel nicklc lated Attachments in a velvet lined case. Following is the outfit: 1 Tucker, 1 Itulllcr, with liirriug plate, 1 llcmmcr Set (4 widths) and Binder, 1 Braider (Foot and Slide), 1 Thread Cutter. -? 1 leinincr and Feller (one piece), 10 Needles, li Bobbins, 1 Wrench, 1 Screw Driver, Oil Can tilled 'ill! (HI, < 'loth (Jange and Thumb Screw. DO NOT ALLOW YOURSELF TO BE MISLED nto paying the prevailing high prices charged by agents and peddlers under the old system, and Inch lias been entirely abolished in the stle of the PIOIOKIJOSS by our plan, and the machine is ins furnished to the people at a slight advance over the manufacturers' price, thus relieving the urchascr from contributing toward paying the salaries and expenses of traveling men and agents. 10 very PIOIOKIJOSS machine is guaranteed to be as represented and to give entire satisfaction, r money will be refunded. A registered Certificate of Warranty is furnished by the manufacturers greeing therein to furnish any parts that may prove defective WITH IN FIN K YKAKS, free of barge (except Needles, Bobbins and Shuttles), so great is their confidence in the excellence of the 1010 HI JOSS. ^ ^ Price, including one year's subscription to TII K YOKKVIMJ'; k.mji i iu'.h, Our price?&?i.o<)?is tor the Machine well rated, and delivered on hoard the cars in < 'hiengo, with II attachmeiils and accessories. The Machine will ho shipped direct to the purchaser, and the eight will ho paid hy the person who receives the Machine. Tlie manufacturers write lis that ic freight to any point/in this section will average ahout jd.oO. Jive name of freight station if ditl'erent from post ottiee address. AC" Kvery onlor must he* accompanied hy the cash. Send money hy Post Ottiee Money Order, [egistered Letter or New York exchange. Don't stsid postage stamps for any amoiit excecdintr > cents. 1/. M. J It 1ST, Yorkville, S. '. March It to tf 4 (;aimiy iko> roofing company, Manufactures all kinds of ^ ^ ^ IKON OltM PAINT IKON ItOOliNtJ, And Cement. tiMi'kd ami cohiii'uatku si in so, 1*>2T<) l'ss M KltW IN ST., Iron Tile or Shingle. t'levelund, O. M 1 uk i'kook iiooits. siiri i ki:s. | ^ Nend for Circular and Price 1.1st No. 7"?. THE LOWEST MAM E.\( TI KEHS OF IRON ROOFING IX THE WORM). iHH" (trders received hy L. M. t J It 1ST.