The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, August 10, 1905, Image 6

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- - 'WTO gP" -c ?????????^?? PATE. The sky is clouded, the rocks arc bare! The sprav of the tempest is white in ait; The wind- are out with the waves at play, And 1 shall not tempt the sea to-day. The trail is narrow, the wood is dim. The panther clinys to the arching limb; And the hon< whelps arc abroad it play, And I shall not join in the chase to-day. Jtut the ship sailed safely over the sea. And the hunters came from the chase in 1 glee; And the town that was budded upon a IVas jv. aiiy.vc J up in the earthquake shock. ?IJret Harte. A NIGHT ONTHE PUMALLAM. -{*-O?O?O? D.v OI1S LANDSEER SEIBERT. 99???*9999*9 Prora ?-I- wild boasts are now I much more afraid of men 7\ I than in former times, and ~ 'His ureau 01 lnaiiKinu i EM f(u.f increased as human weap-1 ?us na.e grown more deadly. Once and once only have I seen a ! panther that was other than a skulkins. timorous brute, intent only on escape. It w.?< fifteen years ago, on the Olympic shore and rang *, south I of the Strait of Juan de Fuca. I then | held a kind of roving oouiiuission from j * the Smithsonian Institution. I was but twenty-two. and was thus put on my nut tie to penetrate unvisited quarters of the world and keep my eyes ?pen. And that time the region was a veritable terra incognita. On the map it is termed Clallam County, but for a hundred miles east and west, particularly among the mountains, it was then as primitive and savage as when our race first set foot on the content. It was one vast tangle of brush and rotting tree trunks, which gave way like wet paper underfoot.' letting the unwary explorer through into unsuspected holes, where he might, very possibly. fiml himself in the lair of a grizzly that had never yet learned gunfear. Bears and panthers were the - monarchs of this solitude. Humanly speaking, too. it was a lawless coast. Scattered along the shore, often leagues apart, were a few ^ ''lookouts" of otter-hunters, who were a law unto themselves, and did not hesitate to send a far-killing bullet after those who intruded on their "ranges." The flakes of a few Victoria fishermen 11 ight be stumbled on during the season. Auum (lit* rivrr iuuuius v?uv wouid at times catch glimpses of an v Indian canoe, or a thin line of smoke rising at sunrise or sunset. But the forest was too dense, rank and tangled for good hunting, and the Indians and half-breeds here were mainly those whom murder or other crimes had rendered outcasts. In sciue expectation of finding the precious metals, I had been trying to reach a high mountain valley, visible from the coast, by ascending the gorge of the Puy-Clnllam. from Port Townsend, in a sailing dory, which carried my small kit and stock of provisions. * A little way up the tidal portion of the river I had come upon an old log hut. in a secluded nook of the shore. It had evidently been deserted tor several v ais. but it served me as a base 1 for my tramps up the gorge. On the ; night of uiy story I had returned to it 1 rather late and thoroughly tired, after 1 a solitary jannt of twenty miles or i more. 1 put on half a salmon to boil < in my porcelain kettle, over a fire 1 which a rock and the end of the hut 1 sheltered, and I also made a skilletful -of hot "breakfast food:" this, with sugar and a spoonful of diluted canned i milk, appeased my hunger a little, till ( the salmon was cooked. Meanwhile dusk had fallen, and the swarming mosquitoes drove me to don npt and gloves. The hum of thousands 1 of vjiese insects blended with the dis. tant rear of rapids up the river. To eat my salmon in peace it was necessary to smoke out the hut and retire inside?for the insect pests dashed blindly into my platter and into my month. The mocn was not yet quite in sight over the wooded mountain across the \ stream. but its light was slowly diffusing itself athwart the wilderness: and presently 1 heard two sea-otters uiinnJiiir at tach other down in Little Bay. They seemed to be close in to the shore: and as my supper had revived me considerably, I took my carbine end stpj pod outside. It was possible. I thought, to get a shot at them as the moon c.uur- up: and a sea-otter pelt may l,e worth a couple of hundred dollars. My Httlc cooking fire had burned down, and 1 scuffed some loose sand over it with tny foot as I stopped to listen to the otters again. But a dense gust of mosquitoes dashed into my face as 1 stood there; and reflecting that I might have to lie or stand quiet for sonic little time if I stalked the otters. I went back inside for tny head iiet and gloves, standing my carbine against that end of the hut as 1 did so, for tlu door was at the other end. It tool: me a minute or two to find 1 - -- *1... ' * !?? +bo <lo fl* i ntuiM, ,v jlhcl plU UIj llii* lit*l jii lilt- uui IX uuvi jvn of the hat; but I was coming out when, not twenty feet away, I discovered son:-- large animal with eyes that glowed like coals in the obscurity! It was in the very act of crouching to spring at me! I heard the sough of its breath as it drew itself together to jump, and 1 leaped hack into the hut and slammed the door. I had no time to spare. The beast came plump against the door with a violence that nearly hurled it back and me with i<! One paw came at the crevice by the door post. I s*t my hack a gains: the doot and dug my heels Into the earth to hold it fast, yelling all the while to scare the creature away. But my slicnts did not frighten it in the least. ^With et.ger growling it dug and tore althe door with its nails. It even tried to dig the earth away beneath it. Then it coursed eagerly round the hut in long bounds, and leaped 011 the roof. Some slight smell of my fire lingered at the fafther end of the hut, and my carbine, too. standing there, must have given off odors: but these smells appeared not to deter the animal. With low growls it dug at the poles and boughs of the roof. The old dry stuff rallied through on me as I groped > for a'log bencn in the hut to set against the door. I feared that the beast would tear a hole in the roof and spring down on me; but the thick, matted mass of sodden boughs embarrassed it. All the time I was shouting savagely, and I maderhaste to strike a whole card of matches, hoping that the odor j of brimstone or the gleam of light I would deter the beast from its attack, i But immediately it came digging at the door again, as if transported by ferocity, and again I threw my weight against the inside of the door, for I dared not trust to the bench. My disgust with myself for being I such a fool as to leave my carbine outside can easily be imagined. I was at my wits' end to know how to beat the creature off. Plainly it was bold from hunger, and had no doubt smelled my salmon, half of which was on a shelf just inside the hut door. I had thoughts of throwing the fish out to it. and then an idea came into my mind. For preserving the skins of birds and small animals I had taken along a quantity of arsenic in a bottle. When the violence of the creature's efforts at 1110 tioor Hall Miu,Muni aim n m<i> i<uing round tlio litit again. I hastily out a (loop gash hi tho tish with my knife; then, striking another matoh. I put in as much as twenty grains of the poison. By this time tho aniiual was on the roof again, scratching and snarling and snuffling. Opening the door a little, I flung out the salmon. I had scarcely done so when, pounce! came the beast to the ground. With a sniff and snarl it seized the fish and ran off a liUle way. Not so far. however, but tha^^ could hear it eating, its teeth gritting on the backbone. There must have been five or six pounds of the fish; but within half a minute the anjmal was back, sniffing about the place for more. I listened anxiously. It jumped on the roof again, then prowled round the hut. Presently there came an interval of frightful staccato screech! Then followed some lofty tumbling all over the ground about the hut, enlivened by the most blood-curdling yells it is possible to imagine! Peeping out, I caught glimpses of what occurred. Sometimes that poor brute went ten feet in the air. then it clawed up the earth and brush, turned wild somersaults. and tore and bit its own flrsh. It tried in vain to vomit forth the poison. If not hard-pressed in self-defense. I would never administer arsenic to any living creature. Pathetic moans succeeded the screeches, and then the suffering animal dragged itself to the stream, where I heard it noisily lapping water; and after that the end came very soon. Fancying that its mate might have been attracted by the yelling. I hastily secured my carbine and stayed inside the hut till morning. At sunrise I found the creature dead, less than a hundred yards from the place where it drank. It was, as I had supposed, a mountain-lion, or panther, a big- male that would have weighed two hundred and fifty pounds. I am sure, and probably one that had never before seen a human being, or learned aught of the deadly guile of man.?Youth's Companion. Cultivate a Pleimant Voire. Kind hearts are more plentiful than ! persistency kind and gentle voices, j and yet love loses much of its power . when the voice is sharp and harsh, j Try, therefore, most earnestly to ae nnirA n ntnogunf tntm in enrufinil 1 guard yourself carefully from falling ! into careless and bad habits of voice. | Often a sharp voice shows far more j ill-will than the heart feels: but people ; ilo not know that the speaker's "bark is worse than her bite." and they believe her to be ill-tempered and disagreeable. It is very easy to pick up a sharp and snappish manner of speaking. Very often it is acquired in mirth, and in the playful battles of words, in which boys and girls delight. There is 110 malice in their sallies, and a great deal of fun: but, meanwhile, the voice is often acquiring a sharp and shrewish tone, which clings through life, making it stir up strife and ill-will among its listeners. So be careful of the tone in which you speak, and be certain that it is gentle and sweet. A kind voice is like music in the home, and is to the heart what light and beauty are to the eye.? New York Weekly. Does In the Ambulance Service. The Austro-H angaria n AA'ar Dogs' ; Club has just held its first show of { dogs for war and ambulance service. 1 The highest officers of the army wit- j uessed the performances of the dogs. Soldiers had dispersed all over the lield of action, and were concealed behind hedges, among shrubs and bushes. These were supposed to be the wounded. The dogs found them all, and either stayed with them giul barked if the trainers were near enough to hear them, or ran for the trainer when the distance was too >ong. Then they were sent with messages contained in a loeket fastened to their collars, to which they had to bring answers.? New York World. Sincere Quackery. A rather remarkable case of sincere quackery, which perhaps may not lie as rare as is generally supposed, occurred in London some time ago. An old lady sued Sir William Broadbent, a leading London practitioner, because he refused to buy or try her elixir. This "was no common remedy, being free from those minerals which are the root of all evil, but the skillful blending of an herb of which medical men know nothing." Needless to say, the old lady lost her case, which she pleaded in person. Her sincerity was as obvious as her stupidity, and made her a pathetic rather than a ridiculous figure. Russian Diplomatic Siren*. The Russian Government, too, is also represented abroad, not only by its ambassadors, but by unofficial diplomats of a most interesting description, "a corps d'elite of ladies who are despatched to the various capitals of the world. In Washington Czardom has no less than ten of these ladies. They entertain lavishly, and their drawingrooms, with shaded rose-colored lights and luxurious furniture and hangings, are palaces of ease for weary legislators and Senators." These fascinating sirens then dictate in whispers what laws shall or shall not be passed by Congress.?Joubert's Fall of Xsardoiu. ."*r~ 'iy . fllilSI i The I'aramount Quention. T is taken for granted tha J( Y ^ every citizen is interostet 0 | 0 in the discussion of tin 1 f good rosids question nn< TtfOXT and the proposition tha the Government of the United State shall co-operate with the States ii highway construction and improve merit. There are always political qucs tions of importance, of course; lm the question of good common roads i n.ii'nnin.mt ?l>om oil oc ?-11 rwnlintllii IMKUIIVUIIl IV7 lunil .111 ,.o .... proposition, because it roaches al classes and callings in town and conn try. It is pregnant with intfrest t tlie consuming population of towns am cities, and to railroads, manufacturer and tradesmen as well. But th weightier consideration is. that church ss-hool and farm interests must in cvitahly be retarded while road con ditions remain as they arc to-day If the American home is to be pre served, the American farm must b fostered. The logic of this deduetioi will readily present itself. If ignoi a nee is the parent of superstition am superstition shuts out the light fron the soul that should bo free, then tin progress of civilization and the whole 1 some growth of the religion of tin Lord depends upon tiie universa spread of education in the land. Tlr higher schools and colleges are doinj n grand work, but the free eommoi schools arc the more important, ho cause thov are the schools of tin masses in which are laid the doe] and lasting foundations for eomin; lives of usefulness and for the better irent of mankind. The eommoi schools are the schools of the rurn population. "Whatever tends to bette these schools, to make them strouge and of higher curriculum, to give great or efficiency and better discipline, anc to make them easily accessible all tin time, should be the concern of ever: patriotic citizen. Aotning can possioq comltice so much to these results ai improved highways. Neither rura church or school, nor yet the farm can flourish where impassable roads abound, and if these cannot flourisl our free institutions will soon or lat< topple and fall. The question of na tional aid to pood roads is one tin (Jovermnent cannot afford to iguon much longer. The necessity for it is so apparent that it is witnout the do main of controversy. S^itesmen am philosophers know that good roads develop good people. Improvemen of highways means not only advance lr.ent of commercial interests, hut als< moral welfare. The highways are th< paths along which civilization and de velopment move. TVlrie Tirea. One of the means of improving thf condition of the highways which is of importance, but generally disregarded is the use of wide tires on drays an<! wagons carrying heavy loads. Sueli tires are of great value In rolling tinsurface of the road and avoiding the formation of ruts. The belief that in creasing the width of the tire increases tiio draft probably arises from tho fact that as a rule the increase hi width ol tire is accompanied by a decrease in the diameter of the wheel. Of course diminishing the diameter of the whee increases the draft, and increasing th< diameter of the wheel diminishes the draft. The radius of the wheel consti tutes the lever arm through which the power of the team acts to move the load. The shorter the lever the greatei a power required to move the load. Experiments invariably show the ad vantages cf wide tires 011 good roads both in the loss power required tliar with narrow tires and in the beneiicia effect upon the road. As to the effect ol' the width of the tire, where the dia meter of the wheel remains the same n trial was made where forty per cent more power was required to draw a load 011 a wagon having one and one half-inch tires than on a wagon having three-inch tires. Many European countries have laws regulating the width of tires. In Ger many four-inch tiros are required foi heavy loads. In France the tires rnusl be from three to ten inches, according to the load, and the front axle must be shorter than the rear axle to prevent ' tracking." In Austria wagons carry lag two and a quarter tons must kav< tires at least four and one-third inches wide, and every load over four and .1 half tons must be carried 011 tires six and one-fourth inches in width. Switz crland has similar regulations. Ir some sections of the United States laws have been enacted regulating tin width of tires on wagons carrying heavy loads, but in many instauce; they are ignored. There seems to be a general awaken ing upon the subject of improved road< throughout the country, and more lib oral appropriations for this purpose should be made in the future than have been made in past. On the contrary however, at present, roads once gcoi are not being kept up as they shouh bo. It will not improve the tinaneia condition If roads are not kept good t< facilitate the marketing of produce It is poor economy to let made road: fall into bad order, for it is an e::p?n sive matter taking them up again However, this year is an exceptions time for tightness of cash, and a litth patience must he exercised In the mat ter of roads. Along with a general im provemeut ii? road mattors.tliere shouli be developed a better appreciation 01 the importance and value of wide tire; iu road improvement, that laws maj be made on the subject and gradually brought into force. The subject needs frequent and earnest discussion in or der to securj this.?Journal Jamaict Agricultural Society. In Artificial Face. An old Sadler of 1870 has been goinj about Parl^Npr thirty years with. n< features, eyes, cheeks, lips and nose having suffered severely by the explo sion of a shell. Modern science has re stored his face. A mask was made part of silver, part of wax. neatlj tinted, two eyes in enamel, an excel , lent nose and serviceable lips iu rub I ber.?Ne.w York World, rftriri'Al itftVaHfr i ilrtfritfltf y With the Funny Fellotus lMM ! ; fTi i " t Where Danger Lnrk*. s The learned who in ten languages Can voice their thoughts still run More risks than those who know enough To hold their tongues in one. i- ? Saturday Evening Post. Uncle Allen. * "They say that worth makes the I man." philosophized Uncle Allen Sparks, but nowadays he has to be worth a million to be much of a man." j ?Chicago Tribune. s Kxlrnordlnary. e "But is Eva really such a pretty i. jriv" '* "Pretty! Why. she would look pretty " ?n a photograph taken on an outing trip."?Chicago Daily News. 0 Ills Old Hope. II "The Japanese attribute their sue* * cess to the virtue of the Emperor." 1 "Yes. It is up to Uenernl I.ifeviteh 11 to devise some plan to allure the Mip kadau from the straight and narrow patj#' p I " Told in Confidence. t> The Caller ? "The man who wrote 5 that poem 3*011 printed yesterday didn't 1 know what he was talking about." The Editor?"Of course not. Othere wise it wouldn't have been poetry."? 1 Chicago Daily News. r In Hard Luck. j The Judge?"Have you anything to I offer the court before sentence Is passed on you?" The Prisoner?"Xo. your honor: I had $13. but my lawyer appropriated j it."?Chicago Daily News. ?_ . Not Ready to Die. "If." said the chemist, "you will give this new tonic a trial. I'm sure s you will never use any other." * "Excuse ine." rejoined the custom? er. "but I prefer something a little 5 less fatal."?Chicago Journal. ) i A? cravat lnp. "Gracious!" she exclaimed, "you J fook hot." ? "So I liab," replied the man with s the handkerchief, "id's edough to bake eddy-body hot to hab a cold like dis 1 i id subber."?Philadelphia Press. ? t Same K fleet. "I notice that since Jack's engage> Aient to Beryl he has stopped smok? Eg. Did she exact that promise?" "Xo; but every time he calls on her he leaves with all the cigars in his vest pocket broken and crushed. > No Failure. Bosh?"Do you think marriage Is a . failure?" 1 .Tosh?"Mine wasn't. I've tried every i way 1 could think of to get out of it, ' but can't. It's the hardest knot that ' j ever was tied."?Detroit free Press. I ! Other* Juot Like Her. t ^ '! | : i ; "I thought you said you wrote for the magazines':" ; "I do." ''Do they ever print what you * write?" t "No."?New York Journal. > Gets What He Likes. I "Jones grumbles at cold weather?" "Yes." . "And lie grumbles at hot weatherT i "Yes." t "What does he like?" "lie likes to grumble."?Chicago . j Journal. Tin Talk* Jtnclc. ' "So lot that settle it." Mrs. Honpeck ^ concluded; "a l'tile word to the wise ' is sufficient." "Yes, my dear." replied Henpock. "and to the average married man a word in edgewise is sufficient."?Philadelphia Press. Overheard by the Offlce-Boy. "The editor looks downcast. What's the matter with him?" "He received a letter yesterday inl forming him of an inheritance, and in ' the rash he replied: Declined with ) thanks."?Translated for Tales From Meggendorfer Blactter. i Taking Down the Sadllng. "This hat's too small for me." said 1 the man who had come into sudden ; prominence; I'll have to have it ex ?hanged for a larger one." "Ah!" exclaimed the hatter. "You 1 haven't read to-day's issue of the mornf ing Wasp, have you?" ? "No. Why?" "Just read what it has to say about r you. I think that will tix you."?Philaj delphia Press. t r.obby Was Wise. lie was e of those proud fathers who are : ays trying to teil their sons to gr- up with an ambition for ? a high oftii . "Now, Bobby," he said ) one morning, "suppose you aspire to , be President." "All right," replied Bobby, "and now - please give me the price of a 'big , stick.'" , "A big stick? Why. what kiud of - a big stick, my son?" "Why. a big stick of caudy."?Chi - Daily. Neyvs. SOUTHERN * FA 0? r>.<5).fi: J TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTER,i K_??. Farm Poultry. ha1 Many practical poultry raisers depend ant on the money received from eggs as the a substantial and perhaps the larger fail part of their income. Hence the egg problem is to them one of great importance. But in the solution of this ^ problem I recall forcibly one of the j)?n copies which had to be set in my writing books at school: ''Many men of ' ^ many minds," for there are many dif- jn? ferent methods pursued, and each one thinks his is the best. If I give mine, thp while it may not be the best possible ^ method, I am sure it is a good one, for ^ it helps my birds and I trust it will prove helpful to others. Were all to or write .1 strictly sclentinc essay on mis s subject it would naturally commence prf with an analysis of the egg, showing t0I] the proportions of albumen, fat, lime, etc.. that enter into its composition, but for practical purposes this is un- ^ necessajy. We know that in some way from the food must be extracted the ^vo constituents of the eggs, and we pro- wo pose to show only our methods of s supplying the food to the hen. ?*, First?We see to it that the hens vo, are well fed. not overloaded with fat, nor as lean as a lost dog. A very poor 0f hen is as unfitted for laying as a very ^ fat one; either extreme should be c1h avoided. ^ Second?Scanty feeding is not adapt- an ed to abundant egg production. Hens jnf that lay many eggs must be fed wcl\ as much as they will eat and digest a without getting too fat. We cannot rjc manufacture a thousand yards of tot- ^ ton cloth out of raw material necessary spj for a hundred yards, and we cannot ex- j pect a hen to lay two hundred eggs a?( per year if we furnish only enough 0j food to produce a hundred. vei Third?The food must be of the right j0T nature as well as of the proper quan- rfij tlty: as an egg is rich in albumen we ^0( need considerable albumenous food; as a , it contains fat and oils, we must have wj a proper amount of fat producing food, in order to produce a well balanced ?n ration. f0! Having these principles in view I js ( have found the following an excellent method of feeding for eggs: sr. Clover as much as the liens will eat, {]? green in summer and either dry in ^ winter, or what is better, cut line and js> covered with boiling water and left 0V( to steam. The water in which this clover is steamed can be profitably flei used to mix up the evening ration. The tw first thing in the morning feed the ca, clover, and after the bens have pecked mc up what they want, give them equal ap parts of cracked corn and wheat and j the next morning oats and buckwheat -r.; or some other grain. Throw this in thi litter and make them scratch and hunt an for it. At night give a feed coinposeel su] of two parts of ground oats, one part jea ground beef scrap and two parts corn 0(j, meal, mixed with hot water and feed jrr. warm, not hot. For green stuff supply tyi cabbage, hung up by a string to help y0 themselves, or beets or turnips cut j0I in half and stuck on nails on the side of the house. Keep ground oyster shells, grit and charcoal in boxes or hoppers before them at all times so they cau eat as much or little as they choose. * ^ Now. there may be better ways than this, but this is certainly a good methotf 1 and will be found to answer the need of .practical poultry men. If you ob- ? tain jt and can afford to do It, feed your . hens skimmed* milk; it is one of the in best egg producing foods known, but ?" A. ? - nr. *, ? * ? - li. ,1 01 rne cumeuity is rne price puis it ucjunu the reach of most poultry raisers. But our farmer friends would find it very advantageous if they would save some ' " of their surplus milk for the hens and ' not give at all to the hogs. One hundred hens, with proper care. ns should produce at least $100 profit clear each year. The pullet that begins to " ^ lay earliest in life will lay the largest * number of eggs. Charred corn on the il1 cob is a good way to feed charcoal to !)0 fowls and nothing is better for bowel troubles. Have you ever made an honest effort 11 to Improve your stock by tin? infusion of new blood? * tul Laying hens may enjoy eating snow ?" and drinking water out of stagnant u! pools, but neither is good for them. ^1 On the contrary, both are quite in- .n jurious and if properly traced many sicknesses among the poultry both win- a' ter and summer would be found as a * 1 result of these practices. Poultry raising is being gradually re- 011 duced to business principles, and is be- 10 coming an actual and important feature * r\f firrrirliltiirn mufA :ind more each your. Do yon subscribe for anil road a potil- J try paper, or are you opposed to "book ne laniln" and think you know more than thi the editors and men who write for the ffr papers simply to see their name In ui' print? an You farmers that raise pure bred I?* poultry. look on your youujr stock. Pick out the most likely ones and push l>a them by good feeding. Have them as pa exhibition at the county fair and show t'o; your friends aud neighbors what you tie News of the Day. Announcement was made at the Department of Agriculture last week iai that Mrs. Bertha Burch, private secre- wt tary to former Statistician Hyde, had in resigned and that the resignation had Sa been accepted. mt In a heroic effort to save his mother and his sister, who with a score of to others, were for a time in great peril wt from fire. Nathan Newman, aged 20 ha lost his own life in a burning Brook- ro lyn tenement house. | sa Charles M. Pepper, one of the government special agents, reports that p, the advance recently made In Canada by the manufacturers of cotton goods Is attributed to the rise in the price of fr the raw materials. The blocks of man- m ufactured goods are said to be very j light, and in consequence the advance * will be immediately felt by the retailer. It seems, also, that the stock of raw cotton held by the Canadian mills B Is small, and that they are likely to be compelled to go into the market B shortly. sc Mr. Alfred Wallace has been m^le 1( superintendent of the Columbia Street ri Railway, succeeding Mr. A. E. Legare, th ^ RM 4 /faffS. ==?DSTOCKMAH AND TRUCK GRC WER. f re. You may win some prize money 1 it only costs the trouble of taking m to and bringing them from the r grounds.?Charlotte (X. C.) News. Co*t of Harvesting Hay. Vhat does it cost you to put up your f? This question is discussed in tne ithern Planter. Vestern farmers use more labor ^av: tools than their Southern brethren, lile our laborers pet lower wages, y are, as a rule, less efficient and iir labor is really more expensive, 'he claim is made for the South that have cheaper labor here than North West. In Nebraska and Kansas the it of harvesting a ton of hay will ibabl.v average Irs* than $1.73 per i, whereas the yield is a ton or re per acre.. Here in Virginia as ich as half of the crop is being trgeil for cutting, raking, etc., and ding the hay in stack. Hay being r!h $14 per ton in stack, this charge uld amount to $7 per ton. Having m hundreds of tons of hay sold out ??t in stacks at $3 per ton twenty trs ago when labor was higher than day, it seems to me that the cost haying should certainly not be more in $3 per ton here, where labor is ?ap. Vliat is the actual cost of mowing acre of grass? How much for rak;? How much for tedding twice? >w much foj dragging the hay with sweep from the windrows to the k? How much for one horse and a 7 to operate a stacker and a man to ead the hay on the stack? Ls anybody can make a hay sweep U U Slill'iktr, uic uuuiQtr iui mc uov these simple implements should be ry small. Something should be aired for -wear and tear, on mower and ie. While we are at it. how much ?s it cost to load a ton of hay on ivagon with pitchfork? How much ten the work is done with a loading ichine? How much does it cost to load a ton into the barn with pitch ks, and how much when the work done with a horse fork? iVbile I have but twenty-five acres of iss, yet, to pay for the harvesting at ? rate of S7 per ton is quite an item, farmer doing such work for another of course, entitled to a fair profit of ?r and above the actual cost of doing ? work. Merchants are usually satisrl with a net profit of from ten to enty-flve per cent, above cost. In a se like this perhaps fifty per cent. >re than the actual cost should be owed for profit. f the readers of the Southern Planter II give their actual experience as to i cost of harvesting their hay crops, exchange of ideas is likely to reIt in giving all an opportunity for rning the cheapest and best meths. Supposing we start with real jss crops or grass and clover mixres, what does the harvesting of ur hay crop actually cost you per ). figuring your time as well as the ae of teams and help? Rape and Artichokes. 3. M. C.. Silcott Springs, writes: I >uld like some information regarding ? culture of rape and artichokes. Vnswer: The culture of rape is a mparatively small matter. It should seeded as early in spring as possi?. the sooner now the better. Plant drills about twenty-four inches apart the level, using about four pounds ooiul nor nnro Cnltivato liffhtlv lin the leaves touch the rows and then u can graze with hogs or sheep. In se of sheep you should watch out for >at. \rtichokes should be planted as soon possible in rows about three feet art and llfteen to eighteen inches art in rows. From four to six bush; are required to plant an acre. The ound should be prepared as for Irish tatoes and the cultivation is practiIly the same. As a rule artichokes II yield about twice as much as sh potatoes. From two to four ?eks after they bloom hogs may be rued in the field and allowed to root t and feed on the artichokes. They II live on the crop practically all the nter except when the ground is izen. They make an excellent graz? crop for hogs and are fairly satisetory when fed to cattle and sheep, tichokes grow rapidly'and are heavy d will remain in the ground for sev? il years, unless the hogs arc allowed fViAm Aiif rnrr thnvniichlv ?_ ivut IUCU1 vut IVi; liivivuguij, M. Soulc. Permanent Paalurc*. Every farmer should have a permant pasture, depending in extent on 0 size of the farm. Of course the eat permanent pasture grass is Beriida and Japan clover. Bermuda d winter vetch also make au excellt pasture; also orchard grass and teh make an excellent permanent sture, and so on. These permanent stures are of the greatest importance r the farm work stock, the farm cat* , hogs, etc.?Progressive Farmer. Pointed Paragraphs. A. French journal thinks that hlstoris the world over must feel somelat uneasy because of a recent case the Paris courts. M. de Bertier de uvigny has brought suit against Armd Dayot for alleged defamation of 1 grandfather, Bertier de Sauvigny, hia iiinatratpH historv of France, in lich the said grandfather is pictured nging from a lamp post with the pes around his neck, while the text ys he deserved his fate. At Williamsburg Councilman E. H. roctor has introduced an ordinance the city council prohibiting cows om running at large in the city, any residents own cows and it is like that a fight will be made againsl :e proposed ordinance. At Smith's Cross Roads Bruct arnes, youngest son of Mr. W. L arnes, was thrown from a horse anc iriously hurt. Little Bruce is about ) years old and was attempting tc de an unbroken colt, when he was trown against a large tree. Cotton Men Take I'p An Snt>restin#B AN ADDRESS 10 TltE ASSOCI>nO/^| \ Dr?oi<4*n+ Jordan and Secretary Cheatham Declare That Efforts Are Being Made to Divert Attention From Deficiencies of the Agricultural Department System Itself to the "Thieving Propensities 'of a Few Unworthy Officials." Washington, Special.?President Jordan and Secretary Cheatham, of -i^e . Southern Cotton Association, issuedif"%^ statement addressed to the membere of the association, calling attention to the recent disclosures in the cotton statistical work in the Department of Agriculture, declaring that efforts are being made to divert attention from the "deficiencies" of the system itself "to the thieving propensities of a few unworthy officials'* and setting forth demands to be made on Congress to reform conditions. The statement fol- , lows: "Tn * hp Mpmhcrs of the Southern Cot ton Association: "The members of the association * have been apprised through the public press from day to day of the work done by the officers of the association at Washington. As a result of their charges the unreliability of the reports of the-Department of Agriculture relating ' to the co^Jon crop has been fully disclosed, and the mal-administratlon of that Department under its present head hfui been made evident. "Following these exposures, efforts are now being made to divert publle attention from the main issue, which is the imperfections of the Department, toward an attempted prosecution of anybody who can be found as a scapegoat. Their punishment, even if it is accomplished, is of secondary impor tance as compared *vith the reformation of the system which has made their performances possible, and the purpose of this address is to secure the co-operation of the members of this association in influencing In every legitimate way a reformation of the system, and a re-organization of the Department. ? "The membership of this association, numbering nearly one million, includes the producers of the most valuable product of American agriculture. The cotton crop of the United States, and its by-products is worth between $600,000,000 and $700,000,000 annually. It furnishes two-thirds of our annual trade - * - \j balance, and In its production ana manufacture employs many million individuals. No other product of the United States is of greater or equal importance. The practical monopoly of cotton which America enjoys, and the , narrow balance which has existed for years between sufficiency and scarcity in the world's cotton supply, render the cotton market peculiarly and acutely susceptible to the reports of the De- .< partment of Agriculture regarding the condition and prospects of the cotton crop. Under the present circumstances a great duty devolves upon the mem| ber3 cf the association. We are less i concerned with what has been done by * a few individuals and the consequences thereof, regrettable as this may be, than with such reformation of depart- < mental methods as shall secure for us just and accurate reports in future. "Under the system at present in . vogue, and which promises to be undisturbed unless public attention shall be aroused to the need of reform, the reports issued by the Department of Agriculture are, in their last analysis, simply the individual opinion of a fqw officials of doubtful experience an2T . j hopor by which the value of the cotton I crop may be, and has been, affected as I much as $75,000,000 in a single day. No such power should be delegated to hu/ individual, or statistical board, except under conditions which guarantee the most incorruptible, expert and intelllI gent opinion, arrived at by the appliI cation of the most scientific methods ' : and safeguarded by the most scientific precautions. It is, therefore, urgently recommended to the members of the ; Southern Cotton Association that | through their representatives in Con, gress, and by every other means av&ili able to them, they exert their influence and that of the association toward sej curing the immediate re-organization i of the Agricultural Department, especially with reference to its reports on tLa cotton crop, and that their Representatives in Congress be requested specifically to demand: j'* "1. The establishment within the Department of Agriculture of a bureau, to be known as the Cotton Bureau, charged specially and solely with the duty of reporting upon the cotton crop and all matters concerning that staple. "2. The appointment as the head of ' ? ??!.?, nt that bureau, at an aucqume sua,/, ?i a man whose reputation and antece- ' dents shall be beyond reproach, and whose familiarity with cotton cultivation shall be an additional guarantee of his fitness. "3. An organization of the bureau so established upon thoroughly scientific lines, as will insure no possible bias in favor of either buyer or seller, or producer or manufacturer can be presupposed or asserted. "4. The passage of a law that will be more specific In its scope, and under which government employes can ha prosecuted for giving away or selling valuable information, as has been done in the Statistical Bureau. "We have no doubt of the zeal of the officers of the Department, but it seems*to be as misdirected in this crisis as it was in the antecedent period. All the powers and influences of the Department, of the lawyers and of every man of the government, seems po be devoted to the attempt to drag-netfpa lot of irresponsible speculators. That there have been for years leaks In the ri-moffmoBt in a<j w#>ll known to the trade as the existence of the Dpartment Itself: but these are insignificant, as compared with the fundamental mismanagement. At this time, however, t there is a manifest endeavor to divert attention from the radical errors and jJ. 1 deficiencies of the Department itself to t j the thieving propensities of a few un. worthy officials. Let us not be misled . by any such misdirected energy. Let ' us reform at the top and not on the side. Let us root out the offenders,. , cleanse the personnel, change the methods and renovate the Department from root to branch. Then the cause of cot1 ton and good government will alike be served in Rooseveltian fashion. J "HARVIE JORDAN, "President Southern Cotton Ass'n. t "RICHARD CHEATHAM, Sec'y." ^