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Wmmw fjepatttMuf. a f ? ' * j 1-''ODD BITS FROM BABY LIPS. Stories of infantile wit and humor are so I popular nowadays, the New York Tribune 1 is prompted to give the following: Little Harry, three years old, was informed j by his mother that his aunt and little cousin were on the steamer homeward bound from ] England, and that he ought to ask for their safety in his prayers. Accordingly, he in- } eluded them nightly in his childish petitions, until they at length arrived. The evening after their return he said his prayers, as usual, at his mother's knee. He paused a moment, and then she was astonished to 1 hear: "And, O Dawd, you needn't bother any 1 more about aunt Fanny and little Joe. They ' dot here all right." A certain mother in a Rhode Island city < selected an inauspicious Sunday to take her < small boy to church for the first time. It happened to be a communion service, and ] the last comer was deeply interested in all , that occurred. At length he exclaimed, in an audible and delighted whisper, "Mamma, ( mamma, they're going to pass the cake, ain't , they ?" The oldest son of a Harlem household had been to Europe for an extended trip, and on his return, a small brother, four years old, followed him about with open-eyed and open-eared admiration. There was a family ( dinner to commemorate the young fellow's return, and the four-year-old appeared at the table for a moment on his way to bed. 1 He was as bashAil as children usually are at i such times, until suddenly he said, "Pa, is damn a French word?" . ( "No, my child," said the horrified parent. i "You must never say that again." "Well," rejoined the unterrified infant, "Brother Charley says it's French for 'Oh, my,' and he always says it when he puts on his collar." Brother Charley's sentiment toward his youthful relative can be better imagined than described. Greater infantile acumen, however, was displayed by the small boy in a suburban town, who swallowed a penny. "Kitty," called his alarmed mother to her sister in the next room, "send for the doctor; Willie has swallowed a penny!" "No, mamma," interposed the terrified and frightened victim ; "send for the minister." "Why ?" faltered his mother. "Because papa says our minister can get money out of anybody." HIS WATCH WAS RIGHT. He was a fierce-looking, yellow-bearded son of the soil, and he drove up to the little afofinn in a riilanidated old waaron wuuwj ovh??vm mmm. m ? ? behind a still more dilapidated horse. He had two passenger for the mail train. The station agent was on the platform. ' "Guess you're late," he remarked, cheerfully. "Train hain't gone, has it ?" anxiously inquired the rustic. "Twenty minutes ago, and late at that." "Wall, I'll be duned! I sot my watch by 1 Bill Rogers, and he sot his by Joe Collins, and Joe said his was railroad time. Ain't I right?" and he held out an antiquated turn- ] ip to the gaze of his audience. The agent 1 assured him that he was approximately correct. "Now, look here," pursued the excited granger, "the last time I was down here you : told me that the train went at a quarter past one, and here it is past ten and the train's gone 1" The agent tried to persuade him that he was mistaken, but he persisted, and grew more and more wrathy. "When did I tell you that?" the agent ventured, finally. "Wall, let's see, it was about the time my daughter Lucindy got married; couldn't been longer than three years ago, I'm dead sure." The agent tried to explain to him that railroads sometimes found it convenient to change their schedule from time to time, but the agriculturalist was not pacified, and muttered, as he gathered up the lines: UI claim that the railroad hadn't oughter change its time 'thout letting folks know. But 'tain't no use to do nothing agin one of them bloody corporations." Waiting.?A Western widow owns and occupies a cottage under the shadow of a church steeple which is supposed to be in danger of falling when a high wind blows. At midnight, a few nights ago, when the wind blew fiercely, she got up and dressed, called the children up, and dressed them, and then folded her arms, with the remark: "Now, then, if that steeple falls and kills us, people will know that we were a respectable family anyhow. George, you brush up your hair a little more, and Sarah, you take your feet off the stove-hearth, and pin your collar more to the left!" a?-Abuer Stone had lived "inland" all his days,and ;knew all there was to be known about pork and beef as articles of food. His acquaintance with the products of the sea, on the other hand, was very slight. Once, however, when at the seashore, he was introduced to shad, and asked how he liked it. "**r-n ?? TO!fk a Knva " wen, SUIU bus UIU IWIUCI, nivu h w>uiv attempt at a smile, 'I calc'late I shell, when I git kinder wonted to it, mebbe; but it does seem, jest at fust, ye know, consid'able like tryin't' eat a paper o' buttered pins!" f6T A mother, indignant to find her little daughter low in her class at school, exclaimed, wrathfully, "I'm out of all patience with you, Mollie. I should like to know why Sallie Jones is always at the head of her class and you are always at the foot." Mollie hesitated for a moment, and then, looking her mother squarely in the face said, demurely, "You seem to forget, mamma, that Sallie Jones had very clever parents?" A French Lie-Fight.?"Fancy X. is so fat that he has not seen his feet for the last ten years." "Nothing extraordinary in that. I know a student that is so tall that he has to climb on a ladder to take off bis hat." "That's noting at all. I have a cousin whose legs are so long that when he catches cold on the 1st of January, he does not begin sneezing till the 24th or 25th of the same month." iSf In a battle our army was, atone point, closely pressed by the enemy, and as the general was riding about encouraging the men, he espied an Irishman running away. "Surely, Pat, you're never running away from the enemy?" Pat replied, "Faith, gineral, they tell me the world's round, so I am running round the world to attack the enemy in the rear!" "If you lost the nomination because you refused to buy the delegates," observed the sympathising friend, "you have nothing to reproach yourself with. You did right to refuse, and it is better to be right than to be president." "Yes, I know," said the disappointed aspirant, "but it hurts like thunder to be right and then get left." I?-A chemist in Albany, expatiating on the late discoveries in chemical science, observed that snow had been found to possess a considerable degree of heat, whereupon an -1J 1-1- -1 J nkamictr,, out muy uuHcrvciij uiav uuij vuvujiovij was a vaiuable science," and anxious that the discovery might be made profitable, inquired of the professor what number of snowballs would be sufficient to boil a tea-kettle. IST There was an old lady in New England once who was wont to say that she never "felt so happy as when she could sit right down in all her misery and enjoy it." This same lugubrious old female, when she was told that there was no such thing as eternal punishment, no literal hell, expressed her disgust, saying she had hoped for better things." tST "I see by that sign," said the man in the chair to the barber, "that you hone razors for private use." "Yes sif. Have you some that you want honed ?" "No, but I was wondering why you didn't hone the razors you use on your customers." VST Fashionable Wife?Did you notice, dear, at the party last evening how grandly our daughter, Clara, swept into the room? Husband (with a grunt)?Oh, yes, Clara can sweep into any room grandly enough, but when it comes to sweeping out a room, she isn't there. If&T "Do you suppose," asked the Sundayschool teacher, "that the prodigal son greeted his father loudly and joyfully?" "I reckon not," said the bright boy. "His voice must 'a' be'n kinder husky." nVansitft1 (gathrriNjjs. I 8? France has a mine 4,000 feet deep. 8? The largest pyramid in Egypt is 438 A feet high. see 8? In Mexican theaters they pay' for each giv act separately. get 8? Sin has many tools, but a lie is the ^ei handle that fits them all. t".e 8? Salt Lake City is to have a Presbyte- u ;ian college to cost $200,000. i? An express engine consumes ten gal- ^jtj Ions of water per mile. -v 8? The liquor trade of Great Britain em- bes ploys nearly 900,000 persons. wp 8? The first postoffice opened its doors in to t Paris in 1492; in England, 1581; America, I L710. be 8? An increase of 50 per cent, in the rice gra ;rop is expected in the United States this in 1 jeason. the J?* For every four shillings spent in Eng- *101 land on drink, only a half penny is expend- f?r. sd on edutation. anc 8?* The Methodists have built their first caf church in Spain. They begin with thirty- NVi 5ve members. I? It is reported among the fruit houses tio] that the "cholera scare" has affected sales of gta foreign fruits. ( 8?* God mixes bitter things with the sweets pre of this life, that we may seek for that life jn < wnerera an is ?weci. er , J9~ Unequaled as an advertising medium? for The woman who says "I thought I'd just alo run over to tell you." see 19* At Three Rivers, Mich., there is a firm of grocers named "Jake & Jack," and a Prc groggery kept by "Jaok & Jim." evt f&T Breech-loading guns were invented by Thornton & Hall, 1811. Breech-loadiug ^ cannon were used by the Turks in 1553. ^ 19* To keep a racehorse in even moderate mo condition, with proper attention, it is said Qr costs over sixteen hundred dollars a year. ug ' ?9* The man who never tells his wife any- rea thing of his business affairs is the first to Vei make over his property to her when he fails. ]ar 18T There are men who always take out sitj their watches with an air that seems to say ble they know the sun is wrong. ( tST A parrot is said to have lived in the mj: Zoological gardens, Regent's Park, for fifty- hu< two years without a drop of water. use I6T To mingle and have intercourse only J'111 with people whom we like is the surest way [*e( to become narrow minded and bigoted. j*01 iST You can be sure of this: if you are . doing all you can to make a child better you are doing something that pleases God. 9SF A refrigerator has been recently made j.e( in New York that will freeze 500 tons of ice an( in twenty-four hours. The machine weighs pa 175 tons. er There is a whirlpool in the Sante Fe i river, three miles northwest of High Springs, BA, Fla., into which 1,000 feet of line has been aa lowered. There are reported to be more Jews in an< three of the twenty-four wards of New York far city than in the whole of Great Britain and ha< Ireland. . his |9* It is estimated that the paintings and wa glazings of the Massachusetts State House wa extension, if done by one man, would take dis thirteen years. nui 19* It was not until the Council of Trent, ba| in 1429, that the intervention of a priest was ti?! deemed, in Europe, indispensable to a mar- ^P1 riage. | h's fST According to United States statistics, , J farm land in New Jersey is rated at an average of $65 per acre, the highest of any State e in the Union. 83 ffi?-"Will you love me when I'm old?" simpered gay Miss Oldgirl to her youthful intended. "Why, my darling, I do ?" re- ^ sponded he in mild surprise. $6T A dish-washing machine has been for we some time in use in a New York hotel. saj, With two persons to attend it, it washes one the thousand dishes an hour. ] I&T "Matrimony," said a modern Benedict are the other day, "produces remarkable revolu- Th tions. Here am I, for instance, in ten short 5 i months changed from a sighing lover to a lov- an< ing sire." am MST Modern girls are usually taller thau wh their mothers, says The Hospital and other nei medical journals. Modern boys often think est they are bigger than their fathers, too. an ?" An Iowa publisher acknowledges the receipt of an egg which "was laid on our ? table by the Rev. Mr. Smith." Mr. Smith seems to be a layman as well as a minister. ?" A dealer in cheap shoes recently coun- ^ selled in one of his advertisements : "Ladies re{] wishing these cheap shoes will do well to ^ call soon, as they will not last long." p0j ?* German railway officials are experi- cai menting with rails made of paper, which are wj] said to be as superior to Bteel rails as paper en( car wheels are to those made of iron. noj ?"The exact physical centre of the United | bo< States is the stone at Fort Riley; Kan., which marks the grave of Major Ogden, who died of cholera in 1855. i ?"The first wheat raised in the New World was sown on the Island of Isabella in ? January, 1494, and on March 30 the crop ,)!?' was gathered. ' . v ST" Denmark has a system of benevolence caj by which the honest poor of sixty years of age are insured against want. It is on the j presumption that they have always paid ^er taxes. . V3F In Iceland men aud women are ill every respect political equals. The nation? which is about 70,000 people?is governed jn by representatives elected by men and women ^y ] together. . a ^ VST A lady writing from St. Louis says that her hair is fifty-four inches in length ; erg and there is another lady in Chicago who ^ can easily stand on her hair, which is five feet nine inches long. ani 1^ In Ashantee, and around the woods re8 near Kabba, grows a tree resembling in ap- Qe pearance the English oak, which furnishes ce, excellent butter. This vegtable butter keeps ta], in perfect condition all the year round in jf Spite of the heat, and in its natural condition. W3f~ It is the opinion of many medical men is \ that variations of weights are the surest we guides to variations in health, and that in tin children especially a loss of weight is ofteu exi the earliest symptom of disease. ; rai tST The total assessment in New York City j th< of real and personal property for purposes of j no taxation is $1,828,264,275. The assessors' i pr< valuation ot real ana personal property in , u? Boston is $893,932,500. | of f&T German scientists are now making an j explosive equal to dynamite out of commoy j ^ jute. It is called nitrojuto, and is prepared 1 to( by mixing jute with a mixture of nitric and j sulphuric acids. i Pn The number of students at the University of Michigan in the past year was 2,9(!2. j uur This is undoubtedly the largest number in attendance at any educational institution in this country. pt' S8F" Bobby (to young Mr. Fatboy)?I heard ^01 my sister Clara say something lovely to ma str about you, Mr. Fatboy. Mr. Fatboy (anxiously)?No, did you, Bobby ? What was cai it? "She said you woulcl be lovely to sit on sea the family Bible to press autumn leaves." *j"? WaP" About the shortest .aarriage ceremony f on record is credited to an Italian justice of .r0 the peace in New York. This was his for- , mula : "You take hold of hands; you will I * take each other for life ! You take her ? j You take him? All right! There!" L^1 JST Guest?Tell me candidly, waiter, why { ^ do you recommend lobster so enthusiasticul- i j^,, ly ? Candid Waiter?Well, you see, if there; er is any lobster left over today, we waiters will i seu get them tomorrow for dinner, and we have i j)r( had 'em on hand a week already. ! VST" When I marry I shall try to be sure of fr0 one thing, and that is, that I have a woman urt of sense." "You mean a woman of prudence j be and forethought, with fine perceptions am} a , bet knowledge of human nature?" "Yes, that's' bni it exactly." "But they are just the ones j f}ir who never marry." vej #6T" "I have a corn from which I sutler up dreadfully; can you recommend anything gel that will cure it ?" "Certainly, madam. See, prt here you have an excellent preparation which ea; will make your corn disappear in a very see short time. I have a customer who has be used this lotion for the last fourteen years, esj and he never tries anything else." coi tH?~ When the Romans manumitted a slave, his head was adorned with a small red cloth fit cap. As soon as this was done he was chi known as a libcrtinus, or freedman, and his dri name was registered among others of the it. city's "tribes." In the year 2(5:5, when Sat- list urninus invaded the capital, he hoisted chi a cap on the point of his spear, to indicate I chi that all slaves who rallied around this stand-1 lin< ard should be free. This was the origin of! eat the lilierty cap. j ly bp .farm and fireside. | SOWllifl GRASS SEED. ;1 f Vhen grass seed is sown in the fall the ding should be done early. This will ft e the grass plants a good opportunity to well established before cold, freezing , ither sets in. The better the growth in . j fall the better able the plants will he to rj hstand the winter, hence the importance jetting a good stand in the fall. But so ch depends upon the season and the con- ^ on of the soil that no set time can be en as being the best. One year it may ~ t to sow in the first week in September, * ile another year it will best to delay even 1 lie latter part of the month. j'. t is only in exceptional cases that it can considered best to sow grass or small ^ in seed Unless there is enough moisture ;be soil to insure a good germination of r| seed. Of course, under favorable con- j is, seed will often remain in the ground is a considerable time without germinating ^ I yet grow later on, but in nearly all es there is more or less loss of vitality ^ en this happens. It is, therefore nearly rays best to delay the seeding until the . j iditions are such that a good germina- ^ i and growth can be secured from the p ?are should be taken to have the soil well spared. With all seeds this is important? securing good germination, and the small- ' ar finer the seeds the more the necessity thorough preparation. Whether sown ne, or on the winter wheat, use plenty of d, and be sure it is of good quality. One ^ the most important items in growing a ifitable crop of hay is to have a good, ^ sn stand of grass, and this cannot be se- j ed unless plenty of seed is distributed . snly over the surface. If sown with wheat i broadcast grass seeding attachment can used, and this will distribute the seed ^ re evenly than can be done by hand, g , if sown alone, a broadcast seeder can be ^ id to good advantage. With the soil aldy well prepared the seeding can be done ^ y rapidly, so that if only a reasonably ^ ge acreage is to be sown there is no neces{ to sow until the conditions are favora- ^ Clover and orchard grass make a good ? Kture to sow together for meadows. In tj ting grasses for meadows, it is important to a i such varieties as ripen at about the same le; otherwise a part of the crop will need to sut too green or part too ripe. For pastures, >vever, it is an item to have a large num of varieties that mature at different p ' * ?i r les in order 10 Keep up a suppiy ui gruss long as possible. One advantage in sow- ^ ; grass seed with clover is that it helps to c ;p the clover from falliug down so badly, n 1 this is in some seasons quite an item.? rmer. 1 " ' r liVhat to Do With Non-Heading Cab- g ge.?Last autumn I was mourning over unusual number of half-developed cables, which were only fit to be fed to cows, 1 mentioned the fact to a Duchess county mer, who is in business in New York, and ' i lately bought a furm near us, asking if crop had turned out badly. His answer s that he had no more soft heads than he b nted, or to the effect that he would feel c appointed if he had not a considerable ^ mber. Now, we neither of us raise cab- e ;es for market, but for our own consump- r n mainly, and I was utterly at a loss to v ow what he could do with a quarter of 1 crop that failed to make heads. He told me that he dug a wide trench, so 8 ?p that after some top soil was thrown in, c could set the cabbages out in the trench e close as they could stand, and their heads ^ uld not come up level with the top of the b lund. When planted, he covers the trench c ih boards and some brush, corn-stalks, 8 t-hay, and earth ou the top, keeping it n jn at the ends or elsewhere until cold & ather, and then covering it in close. He J1 d they would have firm, solid heads in 8 s spring. [ tried it, at the time I write (April) we c ! enjoying the best cabbage we ever ate. * ey are small to be marketable, say 4A to ? uches in diameter, solid and sound, crisp " 3 tender, and as delicate as cauliflower, u 3 what is most remarkable, I never know * len we are going to have cabbage for din- v p until I see it upon the table. The great- d objection I have to this most wholesome d delicious vegetable is, that it usually ^ s the house with its perfectly detestable 0 3r, so to have cabbage without this draw- F jk is worth all the trouble that it costs. 1 these winter headed cabbages could once r :ome known in. the market, I am confident ^ sir merits would command for them a I idy sale all through the spring. The cab- F ;es in market at this season are pretty a 5r. They are very apt to be slightly de- P ped, will keep but a little while, as they 8 It at once and soon rot. I wish I had F )ugh to test the market with, but I have 1 t, and write this in the hope that some3y will do it next year. 11 , m , 1< ECONOMIC WEIGHT OF A HOG. 1 A writer in The Inter-Ocean says that a g ;at majority of the fanners, in fattening j, ;s, adhere to the notion so often expressed 'hen you get a hog a-going, keep him at p is long as possible." This means practi- s ly that a hog should be fed to a large ight. Experiment made for the purpose of demining the economic weight of a hog o >w conclusively that he should never be t d beyond eight or nine months of age, b 3 that the largest profit is found, as a rule, a a weight not to exceed 200 pounds, b hat is known as the food of support plays a 'ery important part in the prolit or loss I h large weights. Suppose, as many farm- i t i say, that a resolution is made to turn ! v i hog when he reaches 300 pounds. He j a ist take from his food an increasing! a louut each day to support the weight al- t idy gained, or else he drops hack. The j. rman experiments indicate that 2 per t it. of the live weight in food must be i :en each day to support that liye weight, t the hog weighs 300 pounds, this amounts n G pounds of food daily. The only profit! c in the food that is applied to make new 11 ight. A recent pig-feeding experiment at i j. } Maiue station illustrates this principle I h cellently. The pigs were taken at agesj i iging from 5 weeks to 8 weeks. During jr i first hundred days of the experiment t t far from two pounds of digestible, food i t] iduced one pound of growth, while during ii i last fifty days the ratio was four pounds a digestible food to one growth. I v Every pound of pork made during the I f> t fifty days cost double in expense of food t that made in the first one hundred days. E rhe lesson taught by this principle is ictically stated that the most money can e made from young hogs turned at a medi- c l weight. j t j.v riiK Disposal ok Wkkds.?Weeds are t rsistent foes of crops, and much of the la- 1' r expended on the lields consists in dc-jb oying weeds. In the nature of things' <1 ;y cannot be wholly extirpated, but they j v 1 be reduced to a minimum by repeated v isonable cultivation. Many of our most r ublesome weeds can be greatly lessened in sir number by preventing their propagation j m their seeds. Burying useless vegetation v the soil by ploughing it under is sometimes 11 vocated in preference to burning it on the j t >und that in the former case all of itsfer-' j: zing elements are preserved, while in the 1 j: ter a portion is lost. Circumstances alter , t ;es, and each farmer should determine for i h nself from the nature of the stuff wheth- a to burn it or bury it in the soil. At this j n ison the greatest care should be taken to t ;vent weeds not only in the fields but in J t ; fence corners and out of the way places 1 f m maturing their seeds, for unless they : r ; cut down at an early stage, weeds may ' n expected to follow. Where they have! fl .11 ollniirnil <n (ri-nw until lntf> ill tllPSCIlSlin. ' V ... , . ? ruing them is the only preventive. On nil p ins there is a large amount of rubbish and 1 ii actable matter which should be cleared v and raked together in the fall, and as a ; b leral rule it will in the end be found more ' ifitablc to burn it than to permit it to de-! ; in that state. In the burning both the ; t ds of weeds and the eggs of insects will ! e destroyed, hut the remains of farm crops, y iccially of leguminous plants, should lie in-! <] porated in the soil without burning. \ h ;o aT Lime-water has a tendency to make; o ldren grow, and in countries where the li nking-water is heavily impregnated with i v the men are upt to be tall. It is now c ;d very extensively in the milk for s ldren ; but it should not he restricted to! f< ldren. Kor a perfect sanitary diet alka-! ft e water is needed for every person who s s heavily of meat ; and this means near- s everybody excepting the vegetarians. r IjtfmWimm finding. ? CONTRACTS BY CORRESPONDENCE. * A3 a first requisite to the forming of a val- . 1 I contract, there must be a meeting of finds of the parties thereto. An ofTer can COi e revoked before its acceptance, but after by tie acceptance the offer becomes a promise, bei 'he time of acceptance of the offer is the in< loment of the meeting of minds. It is not its difficult thing to determine this moment in siz le case of contracts made in the presence ? f both parties, but the question becomes difcult and very important when the offer and cceptance arc made by letter, telegram, lessenger, or otherwise. At what moment i the contract consummated ? Is it the molent of the posting of the answer or the sceipt of same ? Is it the moment the meslge is started on its way, or the moment it ;aches and is communicated to the offerer ? n general a communication of an acceptance i necessary to a forming of a contract. Is iiis essential requisite complied with when ie party to whom the offer is made does all ~ ??? Ti!o ononntnnPA (urlioflinr if, C unu lu UUUTVl Alto yn mvvuv> .? ver reaches its destination or not) or must ne acceptance have reached its destination efore it can have the effect of binding the arties ? It is now decided that the acceptance is lade when the acceptor has done ail that he an to communicate his intention. The molent, then, of dispatch of acceptance, is lie moment the contract has its beginning, j,/ nd once having dispatched the acceptance Ko i irrevocable. It is understood that one inking an offer by letter is making that offer ~ ontinuously during every instant of time "I tie letter is traveling, so that if the letter is elayed in transit, and on its receipt a letter i at once posted accepting the offer, the ontract is complete, even though in the leantime the party offering may have sold be goods which were the basis of the Offer, uppose the letter of acceptance be lost and oes not roach the party offering; is there a ontract? The logical result of the position liat the contract is made when the accep- p nice is posted, leads us to infer that the ^ uestion demands an affirmative answer, and _ ucli is the law. The settled rule in our ourts is that the time of mailing the accep- Lv ance is the time the contract is complete, and Lv lie subsequent fate of the letter is immateri1. . This is so on the theory that the post lv fBce is the agent of the person who makes n offer by post, and the delivery of the letter Ar o the post is the delivery to the agent of the ?v erson making the offer. i,v Suppose that a letter revoking the propoal is mailed before the acceptance is mailed, lv his does not affect the result unless the revo- pv ation is received before the acceptance is nailed. One in making a proposal may Ar tate it as a condition to the making of the A? ontract, that the notice of the acceptance be eceived in order to be binding.?William C. prague 111 The Age 01 aieei. ANECDOTE OF LORENZO DOW. Lv IjV A farmer came to Lorenzo Dow one morn- i,v ig as lie was preparing to preach before a Lv irge country audience, and said : Lv "Mr. Dow, I am told you know a sinner L* y his looks, and can tell a thief from his lv ountenance. Now, sir, I have had an excel- ?r jnt axe stolen from me, and I shall be for- lv ver grateful if you will point out to me the Lv ascal who took it, as in all probability he Ar rill be at your meeting to day, judging from Ar he crowd that is coming." Ar Lorenzo was not the man to deny the pos- essiou of any wonderful faculty that people * hose to ascribe to him, so he told the farmr he would get his axe. Lorenzo mounted xe he pulpit, took out of his pocket a stone as ig as his fist, laid it beside the Bible and [ ommenced the exercises of the day. His Wi ermon was on the subject of all the sins an lentioned in the decalogue, and he went on no 0 give proofs from history of the retributive tlr Listice of Providence in punishing transgres- va ions in this life. h. "Murder, will out," said he ; "guilt cannot v. onceal itself; and I am about to give you, ^ his morning, my dear hearers, an example f a terrible vengeance to follow the break- (!. tig of the eighth commandment. Two nights go a fellow stole John Smith's axe; and have been commissioned by an authority ihich no one will question, to knock down, Irag out, sacrifice, destroy, and utterly anililate the miserable wretch, and send him ?ody, soul and breeches to the pitchy realms f an awful eternity ! Poor sinner, you turn ale before the rock has crushed you," con- 281 inued Lorenzo. He grasped the stone and aised it in the attitude of throwing. Don't Le lodge, you rascal! You can't escape me! )on't dodge! He paused a moment, and At lointed his long, crooked, significant finger ,t a poor fellow in the audience who ap- Ai eared to be in an ague fit, with his hair tanding on end like the quills of a fretful Lc orcupine. "John Smith," cried he, "there's he man that stole your axe!" Le The eyes of the whole congregation turned ipon the conscience-stricken fellow, who ? Doked as if he wished the mountains would & umble on him. "You will return Mr. Smith his axe, and teal no more if I forgive you?won't you V" Le sked Lorenzo. j* ''If I don't darn me!" exclaimed the cul- ai ...Ul. ? 1/><->L on/1 tnnn flint, allowed tllfi >111/, Willi a iuua t*u?i vw?.v vmv 1A; incerity of his declaration. John Smith got his axe. Ar Marriage for Money.?Seldom docs n no hear of an elopement when the man is > he moneyed one of the partnership about to j e formed. If he is able to take his wife to j? pretty home, has an established position ii i business and society, neither of them sees ny reason for running or walking away and s. aving the ceremony performed clandesiuely. They have either a church or home w /edding, with all their friends around them, H<J nd start out in their married life in an open j " bove-board manner, which, even though! he future years may bring much of sorrow, j i the only correct way to begin a venture i hat is for life. When couples elope it is their excuse that i hey loved each other so much that they saw j 10 use iu living apart any longer. Hardly i ver has the groom enough to more than pay j he minister, and nine times out of ten his ; ;reat love is for the prospective future of the | ride, who is a young thing believing implicit- j y iu his vows of love, and thinking it a very j omantic thing to defy parents and friends by i bus beginning her married life by an act of ieceit. There is not so much romance about j t when the necessaries of life seem far more ' niattainahle than did the luxuries when she | ras in her own home, and too frequently the : ;reat love that prompted the hasty step' nrno hittprnpsu hpfnrp Hip first, VCRl" of! narrie<l life ha# elapsed. Now a marriage purely for money, whetli-; r 011 the bride or groom's part, is a commcr-1 inl transaction thoroughly despicable in} he eyes of any right-mimied man or woman, et many such have proved more happy | ban the one which started out in the' ove of two young hearts with no financial; nicking, "When poverty comes in at the | loor, love flics out of the window," sounds. rery cynical, but there can be no sentimentJ rhen there is no steak, no romance without | oast beef. BST This world is full of deluded mortals I rho fancy honor and success will come to ' hem if they do but possess sufficient fortiude to wait. Hut this waiting quality will rove a very poor factor in solving the bard troblem of success. Remember the trite but rue saying that "neither birth, rank nor! ?tate constitute success in life?but get up .ml get." The road to any goal, be what it! nay, is not a flowery one through which the 1 ravcler leisurely journeys, encouraged by i he cheers of approving friends. It will be mind, on the contrary, to be exceedingly ougli and bleak, enlivened only by the nany who have made feeble but unsuccessul efforts, and who now earnestly admonish ' ou to "turnback." He of trood cheer and ircss on, notwithstanding their disheartenng words, lor since the world began, those ; rho can't catch on have ever cried "lick ichind." 1 Thk Hoots ok Tricks.?The roots of a ~ rec do not cover the same area beneath the arth as they do above. A gardener of many , ears' experience, having hail a vast deal to o in digging and transplanting trees, says e has found that the roots of trees cover, 11 an average, about two-thirds of the area j f its branches. The tree which has the irgest area under the ground is the weeping allow. This tree's roots spread to such an xtcnt that should there be any trees or limbs planted within thirty feet of it, in a sw years the roots of the willow will be I mini intermingled with it. Fruit trees, iff ueb as apples, pears and plums, have very j mall roots in comparison to their size. The j |![J oots of currant bushes do not occupy more j in a quarter the space their branches rer.?Brooklyn Eagle. ^ Asiatic cholera, so called from the fact it it is a disease endemic in parts of Asia, a malignant disease of the blood, caused * the presence in the intestines of bacilli in untless myriads. This bacillus, discovered Koch, and named the "comma" bacillus cause it resembles the comma in shape (,) jreascs by segmentation ; that is, it divides , elf into two parts, each becoming of full e and dividing again. nmi' POWDER Absolutely Pure. l cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of all leavening strength.?Latest U. 8. Government od Report. EtoYAij Baking Powdkr Co., 100 Wall St., N. Y. [fHMOND AND DANVILLE R. R. CO., W. Iluidekoper and Reuben Foster, Receivers. SOUTH CAROLINA DIVISION, ONDEJN8ED Schedule In effect August 28th, 1892. Trains run by 75th Meridian time: south bound. r 1 fco. 9. | NoT II. | No.jlt* stations." " " *r Dally. Dally. Dally." New York 12 15ngt 4 80 pm 4 :10 pm Philadelphia- 8 50 am 0 57 pm 0 57 pm 1 Baltimore 10 45am 9 25 pm 9 25 pm j Washington 11 10am 11 20ptn 11 00 pm Richmond 8 00 pm 3 20 am 3 20 am ? in ir.nm in 90 nm 7 Oil am ureenauuru ... Salisbury 12 22urn 12 08 pm 8 28 am at Charlotte 2 00 am 130 pm 0 35 am Charlotte 2 10am 1 50pm _... 1 toe It Hill 3 03 am 2 42 pm 1 Cheater 3 44 am 3 22 pin * Wlnnaboro 4 40am 4 25pm 1 at Columbia 0 07 am 0 00 pm ^ Columbia 0 25 am 0 25 pm Johnaton'a 8 12am' 8 10pm Trenton 8 27 am 8 24 pm Granltevllle 9 02 am 8 51 pm Augusta 9 37 am 9 25 pm ] Charleston 10 20 am 11 06 pm , .Savannah 0 00 pm 0 00 am t north bound. | No. 38* | No. 12 | No. 10. htations. Dally. Dally, j Daily. * Savannah 8 45pm 7 lOum * Charleston, 0 50 am 5 30 pm < antriiHtA. 8 15am 7 00 pm J Granltevliie 8 48 am 7 55 pm Trenton 9 15am 8 29 pm Johnston's 0 29am 8 43 pm f Columbia 11 15 am 10 40 pm . Columbia 11 35 pm 10 50 pm ! Winnsboro 4. ..4...., 1 10 pm 12 2B?m 1 Chester ' 2 80 pm 1 -23 am Rock Hill 3 20 pm 2 03 am Charlotte 4 30 pm 3 10 am ] Charlotte 8 30 pm 0 30 pm 0 48 am t .Salisbury 9 43 pm 8 15pm 8 25 am Greensboro 11 02 pm 10 20 pm 10 20 am Richmond 0 18am 5 30 pm ! Washington 7 00am 10 25am 9 20pm Baltimore 8 23am 12 05pm 11 35pm Philadelphia- 10 40 am 2 20 pm 3 00 am New York 110 pm 4 50pm 0 50am Vestlbuled limited. SLEEPING CAR SERVICE. )n trains 9 and 10 Pullman sleeping cars between ^ w York and Atlanta, Danville, Va., and Augusta, i.; and Augusta, Ga., and Salisbury and Columi and Augusta. ' ' ' )n Trains 11 and 12 Pullman Sleeping Cars between dshlngton and Atlanta. .'rain 12 connects at Charlotte with Washington d Southwestern Vbstibuled limited train No. 38, rthbound. "or detailed Infonnation as to local and through ne tables, rates, and Pullman sleeping-car resertion, confer with local agents, or address? . A. Turk, Gen'l Pass. Agt., Washington, I). C. H. Hardwick, Ass't Gen'l Pass. Ag't., Atlanta Ga. E. MpBee, Gen'l Hupt.. Columbia, S. C. , H. Green, General Manager, Washington, D. ('. I. Hass, Truffle Manager, Washington, I). C. & L. NARROW GAUGE RAILROAD. CHEDIJI.E or Mall and Passenger trains from Lenoir, N. C.. to Chester, S. C., and from Chester to ncaster, dally except Sunday, taking effect August h, 1892. SOUTH BOUND. | NO. 11. uvo Lenoir ...~ .-.77.77.7... - -..7.77, 8 00 am ave Hickory ? I 9 05 am """ 9 39 am ( rive at Llhcointon, 10 29um 1 ave Llncolnton 10 30am ave Dallas 11 15nm rlvcat Gastonia, II 28pm : ave Gastonia 11 32pm , ave Clover 12 12 pm avo Filbert, 12 27 pm ave Yorkvllle 12 42 pm ave Guthrlesvllle 1 03pm ave McConnellsvllle 1 12pm avo Lowrysvllle 1 30pm rive at Chester 2 00pin | NOHT1I BOUND. _ | No. 12. ' avo Chester 2 55 pm ave Lowrysvllle 3 25 pm ave McConnellsvllle 3 43pm i ave Guthrlesvllle 3 51 pm ave Yorkvllle 4 12pm ave Filbert 4 27 pm ave Clover 4 44 pm I rlvcat Gaston la, 5 22 pm ave Gastonia 5 28 pm ave Dallas 5 40 pm ? T.lnmlntnn (I 28pm avo Newton "> -1 P"i ave Hickory 8 15 pm rive at Lenoir I* 20pin I b. 0. | ClieruM' *fe Chester. I No. 10. 05pm Leave CHESTER Arrive. 11 38am :<8 pin KNOX'S 11 05 am 5(1 pm RICIIBURU 10 40am 13 pm BASCOMVILLE 10 24 am I 38pin FORT LAWN n 58am I 28 pm Arrive LANCASTER Leave it 20 am : . A. TURK, Gen. Push. Ag't., Washington, 1). C. II. HARDWICK, Ass't Gen. Pass. AgL. Atlanta, orgln. E. McREE. Gen. Siijicrlntendent, Columbia, 8. C. . II. GREEN. Genenil Manager, Washington, 1). L HAH8, Traffic Manager, Washington, 1). ('. To Preserve The richness, color, and beauty of the I hair, the greatest care is necessary, much harm being done by the use of worthless dressings. To lie sure of having a first-class article, ask your druggist or perfumer for Ayer's Hair Vigor. It is absolutely superior to any other j ( m elioration of the kind. It restores the original color and fullness to hair which has become thin, failed, or gray. It ( keeps the scalp cool, moist, and freo | , from dandruff. It heals itching humors, prevents baldness, and imparts to THE HAIR a silken texture and lasting fragrance. ( No toilet can be considered complete without this most popul^and elegant I of all hair-dressings. ' "My hair began turning gray and fall- j ing out when I was about 25 years of j age. I have lately been using Ayer's Ilair Vigor, and it is causing a new growth of hair of the natural color."? It. ,T. Lowry, Jones Prairie, Texas. "Over a year ago I had a severe fever, and when I recovered, my hair began to i,, fall out, and what little remained turned s pray. I triad various remedies, but 'f without success, till at last I began to i j USE |. Ayer's ITair Vigor, and now my hair is N growing rapidly and is restored to its t original color."?Mrs. Annie Collins, 1 tighten, Mass. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for nearly live years, and my iiair is moist, ! t glossy, and in an excellent state of preservation. I am forty years old, and 11 have ridden the plains for twenty-live years."?Win. Henry OU, uliun "Mustang Hill," Newcastle, Wyo. j ^ Ayer's Hair Vigor Prepared by Dr. J. 0. Ayerfc Co., Lowell, Mum. I bold by Drugging Everywhere. J v Cim (J^Wr. ' LAND WHITE FOR 111 K SI'l'KKWK JjAND KoLLKU is the I! . Iirst on the market. I can furnish them of I I v tlesireil length from two to eight feet, ami | I her -I or -in inches in diameter. SAM M. ( It 1ST, Solo Agent. | The Best Bargain Ever Offt k $55.00 SEWING MACH NCLUDING ONE YEAR'S SUBS< THE "PE1 [h the Name of a Strictly High Gri Now Prepared to Offer to a Machine with all Modern Ii Low Prices. Its Mechanisi Graceful, and the Finish a It is Light Runnii oth? cha The PEERLESS is so simple that any one car instruction Rook which is sent with each Ma< mrpose of a competent teacher. It shows how I Complete Set of Latest Each PEERESS Machine is furnished with a c< dated Attachments in a velvet lined case. Fo] ihirring plate, 1 Hemmer Set (4 widths) and Bind . Hemmer and Feller (one niece), 10 Needles, 0 B< vith Oil, Cloth Gauge and Thumb Screw. DO NOT ALLOW YOUF into paying the prevailing high prices charged b} vhicn has been entirely abolished in the sue of tl hns furnished to the people at a slight advance c purchaser from contributing toward paying the sa! Every PEERLESS machine is guaranteed to b >r money will be refunded. A registered Cortllica igreeing therein to furnish any parts that may pi marge (except Needles, Bobbins and Shuttles), so PEERLESS. Price, including one year's subscription to THE Onr price?$?2.50?is for the Machine well crated ill attachments and accessories. The Machine w 'reight will be paid by the person who receives ho freight to any point in tnis section will avera Give name of freight station if different from pc Every order must be accompanied by the c Registered Letter or New York exchange. Don' iO cents. March 9 1 A PREMIU To be Awardi A $90 Buggy to be Given i THE CAROLINA BUGGY COMPANY'S veh lie equal in style, finish and durability to a North, East, West or South, and no betterproofo fact that at the last State fair, held in Columbia, S of South Carolina made vehicles, and another for i The Carolina Buggy Cc And why ? Simply because the judges, who wen were ahead of all competitors. Another proof of the demand for them is on the increase, especia TESTED. It is, therefore, with pleasure that v "CAROLINA" buggies us a premium to the p number of subscribers to Thk Kkquikkk, BET TUESDAY IN OCTOBER. 18P2, AT 1 O'CLOC we are offering something that will be liberal cc testimonials are samples of tho hundreds that are them and if you want more they will be furnisher Mn. M. C. Willis, President, Yorkville, S. C. in April has been in constant use ever since, ai: most hundsome and durable buggy on the inarke gy Co.'s vehicles will be well pleased. Very " Hi-../ii- rv> Ynrlfvilln. S. C.: Gen ? m,...... . from W. I'. A A. A. Isaley, Hiirlin^rton, X. an any buggy that I have ever owned. I have use* nickel for rcjjairs or tightening a nut. I heartily buggy for durability or looks. Very truly, consrrxr; In this contest OLD AND NEW SUIJSOR] name of no subscriber now on our list, whose si 1802, can 1k? entered on any club maker's list t The following are the three classes that will cot 1. Those who have never been 2. Tliose who have at any tin hut whose names are NOT NOW tt. Those whose names are liov tions will expire before October ,,r ?.i.i ...... i>. Mminl in tliw nrnmimn that it ? 15 WIMIIII JNIJ ill " III this contest,TWO SIX MONTHS' HUBSU univalent of one yearly subscriber at $1.7;?, and s< The propsitioii contained in tlio above is open aire. Why not yon? Go to work today. If further information is desired by any one wh ?iven on application. GARRY IRON RO( Manufactures all kinds of IKON HOOFING, UtlMI'ED AND COKKL'OATED SIDINO, Iron Tile or Shingle, 'IKE I'KOOE DOOKS, .HHUTTKILH, AC., ' ' ~~ THK LARGEST MANUFACTl RERS 0 j&?rOrders received by L. M. (1KIST. PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY. rllOROUOIILY fitted up with new backgrounds, accessories, Ac., and with a line iky-light, I am prepared to take a picture iu any itylo of the art, as well executed as can be done >lse where. HILRREYS PICTURES A SPECIALTY.! By the dry plate process I can take them in-, tantly; makes no difference about fair or cloudy veather. I do all my own printing and finishing, and here is very little delay in delivery. ' ENLARGED WORK. Pictures copied and enlarged and finished in he highest style to be had, and prices reasonable. (Jive me a call and see specimens of work, at ii v Gallery on West Liberty street, near the jail. J. H. SCHORR. THE PARISH HOTEL. yy IIKX you come to Yorkville, you are in riled to stop at TIIK PARISH IIOTKL. YOU WILL 15K ROYALLY TRKATKI). The building is located in the business portion if town. The rooms are large and provided villi every comfort and convenience. j Til K TA 15LKS are supplied with Til K BUST he season allbrds, prepared liy experieneed ooks, and served by polite and lively waiters. LAROK SAMI'LK ROOMS for eoininereial nen. We study to please. Mis. ('. <?. PARISH, Manager. Mareh -I 4 tf PAVILIOKT HOTEL. KINO STIIKKT, <'liurl<?Ht oil, ?-?. <'. rlllS Ilol'SK has been reeentlv, NKWLY KI'RNISII KI> AND RKI'AINTKD, IS 'KNTKAIjIJV I.OCATKD ON KINO ST.,. S'KXT TO Til K ACADK.MV OK Ml'SIC. ItOO.MS LAROK AND t'll KKKl'TL. TA5LI0 KXt'KLLKNT. K. T. OAll,LARD. Rates $1 .oil, ?i.uo andS'i.fiO per day. Oetober 11 .Hi ly >red in Sewing Machines. T - **i .it- . 4 r INE FOR $22.50, URIPTION TO THE ENQUIRER. ERLESS" ide Sewing Machine that we are 11 Who Want a First-Class improvements at Unheard of in is Superb, the Design 11 that Could be Desired. th lg and Noiseless. jjjj LL of the DESIRABLE features contained in rec jr well-known modern style machines are to be crc id in the PEERLESS, improved and simplified ev< .he best mechanical talent until it stands, as the le implies, the peer of any machine in the mar- We ficl 11 wearing parts are of the best quality of case- to iened steel, possessing great durability, and by turning of a screw, all lost motion, caused by ir, can be taken up. All parts are fitted so accu lv that'these machines are as nearly noiseless ow lis eiwy running as fine adjustment and the best vui ibanical skill is possible to produce. No expense ime is spared to make them perfect, as every Co> bine passes a rigid inspection by competent P?' i before leaving tne factory. It has no cogs, he Bulnnce-Wneel and many of the line parts US nickle plated, with other parts finely enameled 0nl ornamented, giving it a rich appearance. ha' very Machine iH furnished wftn an Improved cla tomatic Bobbin Winder, which is so simple that Ev rild can easily operate it?winding the thread i? rmatically on the bobbin as evenly and regularly ?5, the thread on a spool. This valuable attach- ne< it renders possible a perfect control of the Shuttle 00c ision, and all annoyance resulting from shuttle hoc rad breaking, while the machine is in motion, M ich is common to many machines, is entirely ob- jjjj, ed. Ijg self-setting Needle and self-threading Cylinder ittle are used in the PEERLESS HIGH-ARM WING MACHINE. The self-threading Shuttle 0 simple that with two motions of the hand, kward and forward, the shuttle is threaded, he Woodwork is the best that tan be procured, x ither Antique Oak or Black Walnut, as the purser may prefer. Ocl t easily operate it in a few minutes' time, as the da! tfiine is profusely illustrated, and answers the 1 to do all kinds or fancy work with attachments not ga' Improved Attachments, p2 rmplete set of Johnson's celebrated steel nickle ^ llowing is the outfit: 1 Tucker, 1 Rufller, with be; ler, 1 Braider (Foot and Slide), 1 Thread Cutter, bet )bbins, 1 Wrench, 1 Screw Driver, Oil Can filled an> tbf 1SELF TO BE MISLED HUl r agents and peddlers under the old system, and do re PEERLESS by our plan, and the machine is < ' iver the manufacturers' price, thus relieving the laries and expenses of traveling men and agents. e as represented and to give entire satisfaction, an to of Warranty is furnished by the manufacturers wli ove defective WITHIN FIVE YEARS, free of /. 1 great is their confidence in the excellence of the ! YORKVILLE ENQUIRER, $22.50. u" , and delivered on board the care in Chicago, with ill be ahipped direct to the purchaser, and the the Machine. The manufacturers write us that h ge about $1.50. tin wt ofllee address. Oo ash. Send money by Post Office Money Order, ^ t send postage stamps for any amout exceeding L. M. GRIST, Yorkville, S. C. ^ 0 tf wa ^^mmm?mmm WO M TAKER i tin an Car ed as a Prize. I bel \.way by THE ENQUIRER. | icles are today recognized by competent Judges to ny work on the market, whether manufactured da f this assertion could be asked for than the simple tbi . C., a premium was offered for the finest display In the finest display, open to the world and >mpany Captured Both. d1 3 entirely disinterested, were convinced that they the superiority of their vehicles is the fact that , lly in sections WIIKRE THEY HAVE BEEN thl re announco that we are able to offer one of the i*, lerson who may return and puy for the largest da WEEN APRIL 13,1892, AND THE SECOND 1 K, P. M., and we do so with the assurance that nupcnsation for the work done. The following L<] in possession of the Carolina Buggy ('o. Read jy I on appplication: po wl *Stkki. Crkkk, N. C? Septemljcr 25, 1891. : Dear SirThe buggy which I bought of you id has .given entire satisfaction. I consider it the t. I feel sure that all who buy the Carolina Bugtruly yours, C. E, McDonald. ^ El.r.KN CoM.kok, N. C.. August 13, 1891. th tlemenI bought one of the Carolina Buggies w< d I must say it lias given me better service than th 1 it regularly for two years without paying out a of recommend it to any one who wants a first class Dl Pktkr Huohks. rionsrs- I or l'BERM WILL COUNT THE SAME, but the lbscription expires AFTER the 10th of October, foi o lio counted in competition for this premium, h? int: p in subscribers. . }{J le ill the past been subscribers, gj oil our list. " J 1 i. 1 J f Oil tile USD, OUT WIIOMti HUUBcnii- ? 10,1802. to 7 bl is worthy ol'tho bout oH'orta of anyone. in RIlTlONSat jil.00 each, will l>o considered the icounted. i to everyone, and soinelaaly will get the buggy, o desires to compete for the premium, it will he re< LEWIS M. (JKIST, Yorkvllle, 8. (*. Ct 3FING COMPANY, |J IRON ORIS PAINT of ' ~ and Price List No. 75. ,M, F IKON U00FIX0 IX THE WOULD, j t ! on : III ?I IT IV LIVERY AND FEED STABLES, j," T WOULD respectfully announce to my old tto friends and the traveling public that I..have | returned to Yorkville, and in the future will give i my nersonal attention to the LIVERY AND |,u FEED ST A BLEH so long conducted by me. uri Determined to merit public putronage, I hope to lot receive a share of the same. dr I tel MY OMNIBUS LJ Is still on the street, ready to convey passengers i ^ to all departing trains, or from the trains to any I |aI part of town. | ov I 1 FOR FUNERALS. i ,,n I wc I have an elegant HEARSE and also a CLAR- dr, KNOW COACH which will be sent to any part! do of the county at short notice. Prices reasonable. |,l" * oil Buggies and other Vehicles On hand for sale. Bargains in either new or j J'.| second-hand vehicles. wl HAVE YOUR HORSES FED " At the Yorkville Livery and Feed Stables where Hn thc\- will receive the best attention. 1 ... F. E. SMITH. j it? ?he ^ovlniUr (JNquim.lj! PUBLISHED WEEKLY. U j lai TKltMS OK SUHMitirTIONi j gc Single eopv for one year, * 'i lM> j (>?( copy tor two yours, :i SO j For six months I <M) j For tliroo months, SO j Two copies for one year, 3 30 I Ten copies one year 17 30 | And an extra copy for a club of ten. A DVEUT1HEMENTH Inserted at One Dollar per square for the first insertion, and Fitly Cents per square for each j T subsequent insertion. A square consists of the j JL space occupied by eight lines of this size type. In Kir- Contracts for advertising space for three, six, or twelve months will lie made on reason- at able term. HE CORBIN fj DISK HARROW. is the Best Labor Saving Fanning Im- * ilement in the World, and Will do If ore to Inorease Crops and Bsduce Cost of Production than any Farming Implement Ever Introduced L Disk Harrow during the past three years in ) columns of Thk Enquirkr. Ifitwasanyng else than what is claimed for it, the peo1 would long ago have branded it as a fraud, t instead of being denounced it is endorsed and 4 ommended as tne greatest money saver and ip increaser ever introduced in this section by 3ry farmer who has tested it, and there are ires of them. The following testimonials from 11 known farmers should, we think, be sufient to convince even those who do not want be convinced. Read and then act: ^ Chester, 8. C, March 27, 1890. ax M. ORlst, Yorkvllle, 8. C.: Dear Sir: I have ned a Corbin Disk Harrow for several years, and isider it the most useful and economical forming plcraent of which I have any knowledge. Mr. bin has done more for the former than all the itlcians, reformers, etc., combined. He has done netblng practical. No former can foil to be beneed by tne use of the Harrow, and the more it Is d the greater the benefit or profit. It is almost the ly so-called improved forming implement that I re ever seen that would do all Its manufocturers Imed for it, and the only one that would do more, ery former should have one and a man who Is able Juy fertilizers for bis land Is more able to buy a rbln Disk Harrow. The time will come when the rbln Disk Harrow will be considered as much of a -jessity on the form as the wagon, sewing machine, iking stove, and I might say, the plow; and the ner it comes the better for the former. It only :es a former, who has been accustomed to the old y of doing things, about one hour to realize how ich time and labor he has literally wasted before used the Corbin Harrow. In conclusion, let me ' that I would not pretend to form without it. Respectfully, W.. Holmes Hardik. Ghovkr, N. C., May 15,1891. fr. 8a* M. Grist, Yorkville, 8. C.: Dear Sir:?i lght a No. 7 Corbin Disk Harrow from you last iober. The first time I saw it I pronounced it "a By." Now I pronounce it indispensable, would not sell it for double what it cost If I could I get another. I sowed all my wheat with It and it re entire satlsfoctlon. 'he best prepared piece of land I ever saw was a ce of stubble bottom land turned last winter with Oliver chilled plow and cut this spring with the rbln Harrow. also tried it on stubble land bottom that had not >n broken and H was a success. It is actually the it forming implement I ever saw. With two mules d one hand I can do more work, and better work, in four mules and four hands In the old way. Hods and baked ground would soon be a thing of i past if formers would all use the Corbin Disk irrow to pulverize the land. To see one at work Is -? Relent to convince the most skeptical that it whl all that is claimed for It, >"? "W trrav hMiUS fiirmpr who maw me hivrrowlnsr r Htubble that hod not been broke said, "I thought won ail talk about that harrow, but It will do." lother farmer, and a good one too, Mid, "It beat* < ything I ever saw, and I Vant one to now my wheat fhthts foil." Liter such a winter and spring on we have Just wed through, and the formers are all behind with ;lr work, nothing saves tlmeand labor like a Corbln <k Harrow. Respectfully, C. C. Hughes. Yorkville, 8. C., January 11,1802. lA* M. Grist, Yorkville, 8. C.: Dear Sir:?About i first of September I was induced to try one of your rbin Disk Harrows. I have given it a folr trial, and l say without fear of contradiction that It has no ml as a forming implement. I have sowed my ieat and oats crops with it, and I am ratisfled it s done at for less expense than the same sice crop s ever before put In on the county form, and better. I that is necessary on cotton stalk land is to rip up ; stalks, sow the wheat or oats on the ground, ana i) the harrow over it. I can lake a disk narrow and 0 strong mules and sow six to eight acres of wheat oats in a day. Now Just think what a saving of tie and labor this is?the work of at least six mules fs d six hands by the plan commonly pursued by our mersl Another point in fovor of the harrow Is Is: You can take almost any kind of lmprovod nilng implement, and in order to succeed with it u must have your land in apple pie order, while th the Corbln Harrow the rougher the land the tter the work it does?it asks no fovors. I have a at deal of wire grass on the Poor House form and 1 sure tliat by running the harrow over it about ice, I will have it in a shape that it willgiveme more trouble. It will put stiff bottom land in a ipe that It can be worked without difficulty. want to say to the formers who may read this, that u are standing in your own light when you foil to y or even postpone buying a Corbln Harrow. It II pay for itself over and over again every year. I iuld not undertake to form without it, since I have nied its value, for three times its cost. n regard to the Seeder Attachment, I will say that f * - - ?-? -J U I--II l? Al?lWn/i lave lestea 11 morougmyanu u umi uiw ? tiauucu It It hows wheat or oats in the very best manner, d can be taken off or put on the Harrow.in one inute. tgain, I say to the formers, buy it, even if you liave use less guano this year in order to pay for It. It T 11 pay, and pay well. Wm. P. wylie, 8upt. York County Poor House. ^ Hickoky Grove. 8. C., March il, 1891. Ur. Sam 31. Grist, Yorkvllle, 8. C.: Dear Sir?I ught a No. 7 Corbin Disk Harrow from you in Oojer, 1889. I was delighted with it the first time I ed it. I now consider it an indispensable imple- ?"~ snt on the form. No farmer who looks after his own terest can atford to be without it To give an idea its value at this time, when every former is so for hind with his work, I will say that I can take my irrow, with one hund and four mules, and put 300 400 pounds weight on the Harrow, and break eight nwof corn-stalk, cotton-stalk or stubble land in one y, and prepare It deeper and better in every way an can be done with eight mules and eight hunds the ordinary way. (I nave a weight box on my irrow. It is the length of the beam, and is 9 Indies de at the bottom. 11 at the top, and ubout 10 Inches ep. It is fastened on to the beam with bolts.] Last spring I plowed up my cotton stalks, and with e Disk Harrow und two mules, cut up the stalks d pulverized my land to the depth of five Inches at e same operation, and at the rate ofan acre an hour. IV heat and oats can be put in with it much better an in the ordinary way. One liund and two mules all thnt is necessary to put in eight to ten acres a fiie best prepared land I have ever had was a piece weed stubble turned in the foil and cut up with the rbln Harrow in the spring. in conclusion, let me say that the Harrow thoroughbreaks and pulverizes the land and leaves it in a mux condition. Land that bos been pulverized th u Corbin Harrow will not bake. Respectfully, W. h. Wimcersox. Yorkyille, 8. C., JulyS, 1888. Iam 31. Grist, Yorkvllle, h. C.: DearHIr:?In rey to your inquiry as to what I think of the vuluoof e Corbin Disk Harrow as a forming Implement, I iuld say that I consider myself incompetent to do e Implement Justice, but will try to give some idea my estlmute of Its value. I consider the Corbin sk Harrow to be the most valuable larming lmpleent I have ever used, or ever expect to use. There no other lmulementof which I haveany knowledge ut will do us inuuy different kinds of work, or do e work as well. There Is no implement which will i equul sendee that I have everseen, that Is so slim e In construction or which is less liable to get out of der. It Is one of the few Improved tormina lmpleents which can be used to advantage by the ordliry negro. The Corbln Harrow will more than pay r Itself in one season If given half a chance. I now ive on my farm a 10-Inch, 12-dlsk ('orbln Harrow, 1 e original price of which wus SK). and ulthough the iplement has been In use nearly rive years, If it was N ipossible to get another, I would not take Ave times i cost for It. In conclusion, let me say that some of y assertions may sound extruvagant to some of my other farmers who ure not fkintllar with the Corbln arrow, but I will say to those who may doubt any my statements, that I will tako pleasure In demonrating the truth of each and every assertion to the tire Mutlslhctlon of all who will call at my fltrin near wn. I hope to see, or hear, at an early day, of a Corn Harow being on the farms of hundreds of fanners this section. k respectfully, w. M. Wai.kkk. 1/OWHVMvii.i.k, S. February 11,189*2. Mr. Sam M. (Jrist, Yorkvllle, K. C.: Dear Sir?You quest mo to give my opinion of the worth of the " irbln Disk Harrow as a farm Implement, after a ug experience In using one on my farm. In reply, I iuld say tliut I place a very high estimate on the nrrow. Jt does Its work so thoroughly, and so ruply, that I think It Justly entitled to he classed us one the greatest labor saving Implements used In farm isbnndry. I use my Corbln Disk llarmw to putln my small uln crop very successfully. The Harrow pulverizes c soil so thoroughly (leaving no clods behind It) at I Invariably secure a g?s?d stand of small grain, id leaves the lund smooth and in u condition to irvest the crop with machinery, without further ls>r or trouble. I'lie Harrow Is a grand implement to use with a Irof mules, hut It Is a far more eftleieiit one with in* mules attached. Iliad used my Corbln ilurinw it a short time with a pair of mules until I was thorghly satisfied that I was not utilizing Its full caluie', or In other words that it was capable of doing a iiit deal more work in a day if I would weight It wn, add horse jsiwer and give It speed. Since then have used four g<HHl. strong mules to my Corliln irrowj and have more than realized my cxpcctn>ns. The draught was so much lighter for the four ulcs, notwithstanding the Increased weight, that ey could travel at greater speed and the harrow i-omplish greater results. The area of land I can rrow In a day with four mules depends on Its charier. (in my level, samly lands, when I can sir ure ig, straight furrows, I can, with an experienced Iver, harrow an acre of land every hour, or usually i acres a day. IIIIII my ( muni iiunun ici) iim-tui in ?minuiK ibblt- land thoroughly and s|>eedily. t Is Invaluable to pulverize cloduy bottom lands, ic disks cut the clods and pulverize and smooths the id more effectually than any implement I have pr used for that purpose. 11 u dry full 1 consider the Corbin Disk llarrow ln<l>enslble In putting In my crop of winter ontsut the i|mt time. [Ithlnklhc last of Anirnst or the tlrst rk in Septemlier tlie pni|S'r time to sow). If it Is j. y weather and the land Isird, I can, bv weighting uii my harrow, and going over the land two or ree times, secure a well pulverized si>ed Issl for my Is?when I could not possibly plough up clods ough to cover the seed?and when the ruins come, foals spring up,grow and lake gissl nsit before i'cold weather, and are prepured to withstand the titer freezes when later sown oats, not so well ns>t, an* often spewed up by the frost, the stand badly lured, and the winter crop ofoats a failure. * Yours Truly, K. s. Homo. r%t At* r - i jp.11 ..j i ] 1 lit) rmic Itir flowing inn twin ijs ui imiiu, id il?|* ill soon he time to preparo the land for i lieat.^M you want to have your crops put in (1 its they .should he, and thereby insure larger Dps than would otherwise he produecd, you ould have a ('orhin Disk Harrow. Right now the time to buy and I will he pleased to quote ices and give terms. SAM M. (ill 1ST, State Agent, Yorkville, S. C. i-ir 1 am also agent JPJUV?>lh?h .MerkJepburg, iston, Tuncoln, Oatawha, Caldwell and Cleveiitl counties, North Carolina, for the sale of the inline Corhin Disk Harrow. ** S. M. <i. IINDERTAKINC. AM handling a first elass lino of COFFINS * AND CASKETS which I will sell at the very west prices. Personal attention at all hours. I am prepared to repair all kinds of Furniture reasonable prices. J. ED JEFFERYS.