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WEDNESDAY, JAN. 2,1895, The Sumter Watchman was founded io 1850 and thc True Southron in 1860. The Watchman and Southron now has the combined circulation and iu?uence of both of the old papers, and is mani? festly the best advertising medium in Sumter. EDITORIAL NOTES. Larry Gao't will probably begin the publication of a daily in Spartanburg at an early day. Alas for the Pied? mont ! "Kelley town,'* the dark corner of Darlingtou county celebrated Christmas by loyally filling up on dispensary poi? son a?d killing a man. Every voter should register for the approaching municipal election. It is true that only one alderman is to be elected, but it will make a great differ? ence to the people of the city if an undesirable or improper person should be elected. Register at once. It ?9 a duty you owe yourself and the city. The Florence Messenger, one of the livest papers in this sec'ion of the State, celebrated Christmas by coming ont in a portrait edition, besides giviog an excellent write up of the business of the city, editor Starr had portraits of the most prominent and enterprising busi? ness men The Messenger deserves a happy arid prosperous New Year after celebrating Ch ritmas in so enterprising a manner. The idea of the South sending corn to the West may appear to maDy per? sons as very novel, and of these per? sons many of them live South of Masou aud Dixon's line. Yet it is not an impossible idea by any means. There is an abundance of corn in the South, and what is better still, the South can raise a surplus for sale, every year if the effort is made. j A number of farmers will p'tnt rice i next year to a greater extent than ever ! before. Rice is a staple article of diet io rbis country and so long as our appetites suffer no change there will ai ways be a demand for rice, therefore tbote W!M? piaut rice are acting wisely. C?)U:, rice, potatoes, sugar cane, sor gum, oats, peas, vegetables and live stock will eventually displace cotton in South Carolina, and we shall once more be a prosperous people. Several business men have talked with us about the advisability of doing 1 something to attract manufacturing j industries to this city, and they agreed with us that i: would be worth trying to induce the Lozier Bicycle Company io establish their factory in Sumter, even though the effort should prove un? successful. This company emp'oys four hundred skilled machinists, and had a plant valued at more than ?300, 000 wheo ic was burned a few months ago. Could such an enterprise be induc? ed to locate in Sumter we would be ! amply repaid for any effort that might be made. The amount of money turn? ed loose io wages each month would give new life to trade, and the value of i real estate would be enhanced by the demand for houses to accommodate the workmen employed in the factory. This city has reached the limit of its growth as the trade center of an agri? cultural secfion, and unless those who are interested in the growth and pros- i perity of the place get to work ! earnestly, systematically and ener getically, the town will stagnate j and their property will deteriorate io value. This deterioration in value has already begun as a result of the j hard times, but it is not necessarily a ! permanent condition, and it lies with j the people of the place to settle whether it shall become permanent or whether | we shall counteract the tendency by energy and enterprise. Sumter is but one of ten thousand towns of five thousand inhabitants, and there are co transcendent advantages that will force investors to locate here aud expend their money in ways that will stimulate the growth of the place, and bring prosperity in the wake of the growth. We have certain advantages of location and railroad facilities, but it depends upon the people who live here whether these advantages shall be known and made of value. If we wait J for capitalists to seek us and our town I we shall expend the term of our natural j lives in waiting. There is no time like the present for making a good beginning, and wc j should be glad to see some one take thc ! initiative in thc matter. Let us find out \ ar least what inducement the Lozier Conman7 would consider. The populists are fighting the Car \ lisle currency plan, because it would ! give thc country relief and thc occupu i tion of the calamity howlers would be ; gone. I Thc plumbers arc in luck. The freeze made enough work to keep them busy for weeks "Its an ill wind," etc. The Augusta Chronicle is one of the most valued exchanges that comes to I this office. The editorial page i.? not i surpassed in the South in both amouut ! aud quality of work. I i j The News and Courier U doin? a , j great deal to arouse interest in hog I raising in this State by the publication I of the weights of the hogs killed in various parts of the State. All people ! knew that there were more hogs in i South Carolina than ever before, but J few people were aware that pork rais- j ing had made such considerable devel- | cpemeut until the News and Courier \ began to investigate the matter. !.. m . I The old year finishes its work with j to-day. For it can be said that it was faithful to its mission. Not a day was skipped nor aa hour of time lost. It is true that the year was fiiled with hard times, busiues depressions, triais | and disappointments; but these have passed, we trust, with the old y*?ar. aud we should all turn our face resolutely toward the new year with a determina tion tc work for better times and pros perity in this the favored section of the country. May the New Year, be hap- ; py indeed, and may prosperity and peace dwell in all our homes. The amended dispensary law is a ; greater infringment of lhe personal rights and liberties of the people than we ever conceived the represen? tatives in the General Assembly would have the servility to enact. . It makes it a misdemeanor for a man to have in Ins possession any liquor other than that sold by the dispensary. "Heretofore, under the dispensary law, any individual has had the right, whenever he saw fit, to go to North Caroliua and buy as much liquor as he wanted, provided the amount did not exceed one gallon, and bring it into this State without fear of moles? tation from the dispensary authori? ties. But now all that is changed. Hereafter, if a man is inclined to take a toddy at all, he must either j patronize the dispensary or do with-? out. During the session of the ; Legislature just closed, there was I passed an amendment to the dispen- ' sary law which makes it a misdemea- j nor to bring any whiskey into the State under any circumstances what? ever. More than that ; if an indi? vidual should be detected with any liquor in his possession, in other than a properly labeled dispensary bottle, he will be liable to arrest and trial for misdemeanor, and, upon con-! viction, must be sentenced to the penitentiary for a period of not less than one month. In case the solici? tor 6hould belie*"* that the defendant cannot be convicted in his own county, he has the right to practical? ly change the venue of the case to whatever county he may see fit. The law is now practically iron clad So far as the legislators are concerned, there is but little, if any, objection to a man drinking as mucii liquor as he desires; but under any and all circumstances, he must buy his sup? plies from the State, in order, possi? bly7, that he may be sure that it is 100-proof and chemically pure " The above is a synopsis of the law taken from the YorkvUle Enquirer, a paper that has always been favorable to reform. How do you like it ? And, furthermore, do you believe that the provisions of the law will be enforced to the letter ? No you do not, nor do we. The Legislature, which recently sat in Columbia and raised a big row because the pay of j the members could not be made $5 . per day instead of seemed to be imbued with the notion that by the enactment of preposterous and out? rageous laws the people could be terrified into abject submission to the will of the dominant element. Per? haps the Legislature was right in this estimate of the people of South Carolina, but we believe that when it is undertaken to incarcerate in the penitentiary those who obtain and \ use contraband liquor there will be trouble. The Legislature can pass such preposterously tyrannical laws, ? but men in office will net dare to even attempt enforce them. If this amended dispensary Saw is enforced the penitentiary will be filled to over? flowing with the best tuen in the State-Reform?is and Conservatives will be cheek by jowl in their stripes, for there aro thousands < f Reformers who are partial to liquor that has not passed through the hands of Traxler i It is not the living thal worries? the people in this part of South Carolina, ! its the debts If they could get ont of debt they could live along very comfortably, although they might never get rich The fact that the er 're cotton crop in not sufficien. : J for the coffee and sugar impoi.^d into this country accounts for a part of thc hard times. As a people the Ameri? cans are too luxurious in their tastes John L. McLaurin has fought the Carlisle financial plan with greater virulence than populist or republican, ile may feel that it is a slight to his dignity to have anybody's financial bill before Congress for consideration after his own little scheme was so summarily laid on the shelf some months ago, and his attack upon thc1 Carlisle bill can thus be accounted for. The Constitutional Convention must be controlled by those who are opposed to the centralization of all the power of the State in the hands of the Governor, or we shall have fixed upon us a condition that is into) erable even when we have hope that j the condition is only temporary. The convention can be controlled in the interest of democratic principles and good honest government ii the effort is made. Capt B R Tillman's name has been scarcely mentioned by the papers for several days. The phe? nomenon may be due to the fact that all Christians endeavor to put ou: of mind all unpleasant subjects during the Christmas season, or it may be that since Capt. Tillman has removed from Columbia he has uot beet) in a position to work the reporters for so much free advertising. An interesting editorial from the Charleston Post in reference to the oC?s Railroad extension is reproduced to-day. We do not agree with the Post in regard to the gift of $75,000 to the road, especially when it must be made in the form of township bonds. We are unable to stand any increase in taxation, and we are opposed to subsidies in any form. As an investment we believe it would be a good thing for both Sumter and Charleston to take stock in a road from Camden to Sumter with the connections to Charleston, but as a gift to the road it would be nothing less than folly. The Freeman, in thc issue of Friday, announced the dissolution of the firm of Dargan & Miller, by which the Freeman was established and has been published up to the present time. Hereafter the Freeman will be publish? ed weekly on Friday, under the ex c'usive control of Col. John J. Dar? gan. Mr. Miller will continue the job departmeot of the Freeman on his individual account. The Item wishes .'hese gentlemen success in their enter? prises THIS IS A DUN. The proprietor of thu Watchman and Southron dees not believe in the custom pursued by many publishers of dunning delinquent subscribers through ti ie ne\vspap?r, and hus not done so for years. However this season will be au exception-at lea?t in this instance, and for this reason : In the fall bills were sent by mail to all in arrears, at the expense of several dollars for postage. Com? paratively few have responded. It would be spending money in hand, that cannot weil be spared to go through the list again You can all see-and your wives ; and children also-by the dates fol? lowing your name addressed on the margin of the paper, the date to which you have paid and from which the subscription is due. Picase look j at those dates, and then make an effort to pay something, if you cannot I pay all. If you have no money left from your cotton, look around and 6ee if yon have a pig, or chicken, or a ; a few bushels of corn or peas or any? thing that you can spare. Bring it ; in and the full value of it wili be al lowed in settlement of your subscrip? tion Of course money is of more usc than anything else, and it is to be hoped that all who can pay in money : either in whole or part will do so ; ! but don't stand back on that account. - -- Salt Rheum often appears in cold weather. Ht tack lng the palms ot' ihr hands and other parts of the body. Ho.xi's Sarsaparilla the great blood purifier, cures salt rheum. Hood'.- "ii!?- :irt- thc best after-dinner pills, assist digestion, eure headache. 2-lc Th- prettiest leys for children :IT I' {',. Osteen fe Co s Also ? !?>t <-! books for bo vs and gills. * ' An Official I*urgatory. Messrs. Alien and Sachtleben, who marin a bicycle tour around the world, describe their journey from Samarkand to Kulja in Tho Century. Of one city on their route they say: Tashkent lias long been known as a refuae for damaged reputations and : shattered fortunes, or "tho official pur? gatory following upon thc emperor's dis? pleasure. " One of the finest houses of the city is occupied by the Grand Duke Nicholai Constantincvitch Romanoff, | son ? the late general admiral of tho Russian navy and first cousin to the czar, who seems to be cheerfully resigned to his life in edle. Most of his timo is oe . cupieri with the "business of his silk fae- : tory on the outskirts of Tashkent and at his farm near Kodjent, which a cer? tain firm in Chicago at the time of our sojourn was stocking with irrigating machinery. All of his bills are paid with checks drawn on his St. Rotors burg trustees. His private life is rather unconventional and even democratic. I Visitors to his household are particular- 1 ly impressed with the beauty of his wife j and tho size of his liquor glasses. The example of the grand duke illus- | trates the sentiment in favor of indus trial pursu: ts which is growing among the military classes, and even among ,' the nobility of Russia. Tho government itself, thanks to tho severe lesson of the j Crimean war, has learned that a great j nation must stand upon a foundation of ! something moro than aristocracy and j nobility. To tiiis influence is largely ! due the present growing prosperity of ' Tashkent, which, in military impor- ! tance, is rapidly giving away to Aska- | bad, "the .'coy to Herat/' Appearances Deceptive. There is a well attested story of an officer of the Army of the Potomac who won great renown for his personal cour- j age. In every action of consequence his post was in the heart of danger, and ir was noticed that no matter how thickly the bullets were flying he sat his horse in apparent disregard of them and never moved, even when the enemy's fire : seemed concentrated up >n him. Ir j wasn't un eil 20 years after thc v.-ar was j over that he confessed that the secret of his apparent indifference to danger lay in the fact that he was so badly scared each time that he didn't dare to move for fear of running against some bullets. -New York Herald. Ber Devotion to a Cause. "Marguerite," he murmured, ''will you bc miner" "Harold," she answered, "I believe; in thc emancipation of our sex. My ! zealous devotion to the causo compels ; me to insist upon what may, to you, seem a punctilious absurdity. " "Nothing you say can seem absurd, " ! ho protested. "Modesty forbade me," she went on, | "to frame tiie original question, but i now that you have spoken there is no j impropriety in my offering an amend- ; ment. Do not ask me if I will be yours. Ask mo if I will permit you to bo mine. ' ' i -Washington Star. Effect of Cold Upou Metals. j A series of experimei :s was recently made with a view to : sting tho rela- j tive strength of metals when heated or i cold. The result was si: irising even to j those who conducted th- tests. Under a j very low temperature th< tensile strength ! of many metals was enormously in-1 creased. The breaking strain of tin was ' increased from 200 pounds to 400 j pounds; that of fusible metal from 140 j pounds to 450 pounds. The magnetic powers of metals seem to be in some way closely related to their tensile strength, and these as well are many times muliplied by excessive cold. New York Ledger. The Needful Inspiration. This little story is told of Mrs. Ward's most famous book. When the manu script was completed, the hero bore a i name altogether unsatisfactory to the j author. She had fixed on Robert, but, ! although she went through long lists of | names, could not get a surname which ! pleased ker. Mrs. Ward was in London just then, and her husband playfully i suggested that the fresh air about their home at Haslemere might bring her the needful inspiration. "Haslemere," the novelist repeated dreamily, "Haslemere ? -Elsmere 1 I have it - Robert Els? mere!" And so the novel was named. \ New York Times. j Egyptian Hieroglyphics. Tho Egyptians had four separate and ; distinct styles or forms of writing-the j hieroglyphic, the hieratic, the enchorial I and the Coptic. The hieroglyphic was ? probably in use as early as the year j 4000 B. C., and at first was made up ' entirely of pictures. About tho year j 2000 B. C. the hieratic form or style j was introduced. In this the picture j hieroglyphics were greatly simplified, ? finally developing into forms purely ! linear.-St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Superior to Time. It is strange, said a jeweler on Twen? ty-third street, but women seldom ever ; consult the official timepiece in the window. A man involuntarily pulls out i bis watch to set it by the standard time from tho United States observatory, and if he passes ten timekeepers in a day would be apt to compare with half of them, but a woman, unless she is very ! business.ike, wouldn't pull out her ; watch to regulate it, not if she passed j 100 standard timepieces. She is superior to time. -New York Recorder. ( hains That ?ind Us. When the protectionists of Piedmont invoked the example of the United states, ('cunt Cavour answered: "What does that prove? lt proves that these ?>eople, though Republicans, knew n<>t j how to give up privat?; interest to public interest and that Republican forms of government are not sufficient to tear selfishness from the human heart." Tariffs, have done nothing but "crib, cabin and confine ' the grains of Amer? ican industry. And now that a major? ity of tho American people would snap these bonds they find that the great in? terests, tho fearful power they have evoked, cannot so easily be destroyed. - Joseph Dana Miller. captain Book-hart The many friends of Dr. Tom VV. Book '.in*; who temovei from lit-rf to Asheville. N. C . abolit two ;ea-> egt . ..?ii 'of {deased to Katu of bis success professionally and other? wise, i? his new hume. The following cl'pp?nj: ii from rt lats issue of tire Asheville Citizen : Asbevilrfc's milltnry company, the Light Infantry, ?asl evening at irs regulnr meeting choose a successor to Capt Whiie G Smith Dr. T. V.' B.,uk!iart is theluckv man, i.av?ug i.uiouio!ed from the proposition of M corni lieutenant, io \\i.?'.?i tit ?vas fleeted two weeks ?go, to the hiebest iii the company's gif;. The vacancy caused ny bis promotion was filled bj the tlection, hy r-cciamanon, ot Arthur Rankin, who is also secretory ?.ii i treasurer of thecompaoy. Capt Bookban has risen from the ranks within a year, mid it ;s believed ?hat he will prove a most worthy successor to Catii. Smith, v. ho retires from the company with the best wishes cf every? one of hi; rne;i. The newly-eleeted officers of th? company wiii tiivfcMti oyster sui per on the evening of January 4 High-way Strategy. "I don't want notbin to eat, ma'am," said the tramp, ''but would you mind tellin me who lives next door south?'' "A family named Higgins," replied the woman of the house. "Do you know anything about 'cm?" "No; they've only lived here a little while. They came from Kansas City. ' ' "That'll do, ma'am. Thauky. " * A few moments later he appeared at the kitchen door of the Higgins man? sion. "I don't suppose you want to he both? ered by beggars, ma'am," ho said to the woman who came to the door in re? sponse to his knock, "hut I ain't no perfessioual. I'm a pore man that's been tryin fur 10 years to make a li vin in St. Louis, and I've had to give it up. The town's too dead. I'm makin my way now to Kansas City, where a man's got some chance, and if you can give me a hite o'cold victuals and a kind word I'll he ever so much" "Why, certainly, certainly! Come right in. It won't take five minutes to fry yon a slice of nice ham, and I'll put the coffeepot on right away. Ten years in St. Louis! Well, well!"-Chicago Tribune. _ i Dog or Snake Bite. If you or a companion should be bit? ten by a dog or a snake, suck the wound as hard and as long as you eau. You would not be likely to swallow the blood, but if you were to do so it would not hurt you, for such poison is serious ; enly when injected into the veins or ' arteries. The lift- of au English king, Edward I, was once saved by his bravo wife, the good Queen Eleanor, who sucked tho wound made by a poisoned "A crick in the nark." n pain urrder the shoulder-blades, water brash, biliousness, and constipation, are symptjus of disordered stomach, kidneys, liver, ard bowels For all ailments originating in H derangement o' ih*se organs, take Avers Pii's. World's Fair MEDAL, And Diploma Awarded AYERS if FOR THROAT and LUNC COMPLAINTS STOCK HOLDERS' MEETING. Tn s SIM?NOS NATIONAL HANK, SUMTER, S. C., Dec. 26, 1S94. TBE ANNUAL MEETING of the Stock? holders of the Simonds National Bank for the election of Directors for the ensuing ye>?.r. and for consideration of such other ' business as may be presented, will be held ! a: Mle Hank Tuesday, Janu?- y S, 1895. at 12 o'clock noon. R. M. WALLACE, Jan 2 President. QUARTERLY STATEMENT OK THE CONDITION AND BUSINESS OF Tlie "Bank of Siter Siter, S. C. For the quarter ending December 31. IS94. published in conformity with the Act of the General Assembly. ASSETS. Loans and Discounts, S* 34.385 42 j Biils Receivable, 615 67 ; Furniture and Fixtures, and vault 1,975 91 I Cash on hand and in other Banks. 53,C30 80 : Total, S190.007 80 LIABILITIES. Capital stock, 575,000 00 Deposits, 95,427 31 Dividends payable on and after Jan'y 2d, 1895, 3,000 00 I Undivided profits, 16,325 61 Due to other Banks. 254 SS Total, $190,007 80 : STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, "I ^ SUMTER COUNTY. / I, W. F. RHAME, Cashier of "The Bank of Sumter," do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. W. F. RHAME. Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 2d day of January, 1S95. L. S. CARSON [L S. ! Notary Public tor S. C. ! Correct-A nest. W. F. B. HAYNSWORTH, j Presiden :. ! n H. P. MONAGHAN, h ??rectors. MARION MOISE, J Jan. 2. G. W. DICK, D, D. S. Office over Levi Bros.' Stott. ENTRANCE OS MAIN STREET. SUMTER, S. C. Office Hours,-9 to 1 : 2.30 to 5.30. I Sp 5*:4? S ? 8 ?&}! Li ?^j _ u J ?J JS2 a ? ?ss s j 5?lkk^9?3"?.HM-.v: j SSJTW.Duke Sons ^Co-^TTZS?r aS?/THEAMERIC?N TOBACCO CO." ggf r&TjJ SUCCESSOR Tptv'??r ggf DURHAM, M.C. U.S.A. Z?^Af MADE FROM High grads Tobacco AXD j ABSOLUTELY PURE | Claremont Loflp 164 A. F. M. THE REGULAR MONTHLY COMMU? NICATION of Claremont Lodge, No 64, A. F. M.. will be held on Thursday Evening, January 10th. at 8 p. tn. Brethren ..vi!! trike due notice and govern themselves accordingly. By ord?T, A. C. PH ELFS, VT. M. H. C. MOSES. Secretary. Jan 2. aster's Sales. By J E. Jene)/, Auctioneer State of South Carolina. COUNTY OF SUMTER. IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. PURSUANT, to the judgments and orders of the Court aforesaid, spversl'y mude in the following entitled cases, I will offer ior sa:<. ?t Public Auction, before the Court Hour-t in the City of Sumter. County and Stat* aforesaid, on the FIRST MONDAY ir. JANUARY next, 1895, (being the 7th day ot S?id month. J between the hours of ?lever, o'clock ii: the forenoon and rive o'clock i : afrernoon of sa:d day. the rea! estate in eac: case desciibed. CG Lea terms u each case specified. In thc case of Thc Dundee Mortgage and Trust Investment Company. Limited, Plaintiffs, against, Har? riet Rebecca Saunders. Willia1&- L. Saunders, Ann Catherine Saunders Robert C. McFadden and Marion Moise, Defendants. I All that plantation or tract of lane, known ?s the "Wash Bracy Plantation.' situate, King and beir.g in Rafting Creek Township, in the County of Sumter and S'ate of South CaroliuH, containing four hundred and twenty-seven and one-half (427;\) acres'raore or less, bounced North by lands formerly of Benjamin Gerald. East by lands now or formerly of Burrell Cato and South and West by lands formerly of Marion Sanders. II. All that plantation or tract of land, known as the "Moody Tract," situate, lying ?nd beiug in Rafting Creek Township, in the County of Sumter, ai d State ot South Caro? lina, containing three hundred und one acres (301) more or less, bounded on the North by lands formerly of T. H. Sanders. South by Rafting Creek and ?ands of Mrs. M. F. Moore, and West by lands now. or forcDerly W. W. Anderson and T. H. Sanders, :ogether w1*i the buildings and all the improvements there? on. Terms of sale-One half cash. Bal? ance on a credit of one year from day of sale, secured by bond of purchaser bearing inter est from day of sale and a mortgage of the premises sold. Buildings on last named place to be insured in such reasonable sum ns Mas? ter may determine and poiicy assigned, or be made payable to him. Purchasers has O? tion of paying the whole amount of tuc :r. cash. Purchaser to pay for all papers, recording fees and insurance. _it In the case of Thomas B. Johnston Dla int i?, against Rosa Rosendorf. Sallie Asher, Davis Kosendorf. Marion Moise, Trustee, B. Smith, The Palmetto Brew in j Company, Thc Atlantic Glass Company, An? thony White, jr., Hie Murray Drug Company, and The Simonds Nation? al Dani' of Sumter, S. C.-De? fendants. First. Ail that lot, piece or parcel of land, with the brick building thereon, sKuate. lying and being in the City of Sumter, in the County of Sumter, and State of South Caro? lina, having a front on Main Street of thirty one (31) feet, and running back westwardly. of a uniform width of thirty-orre teer, a distance ot one hundred and twenty-five feet and eight ?riches (125-S) be the said dimen? sions, a little more or less ; bounded on the North by the Court House square & said City, on the East by Main Street of said City, on the South by the lot of Selina B. Walker, and on the West by a lot of Marcus G. Ryttenberg, or J. Rytie?be-g & Sons. Second. All that lo: of land with the new dwelling house thereon, situate, lying and being io the City of Sumter, in the County of Sumter, and State of South Carolina, bound? ed on the North by lot of Mrs. Carrie H. Dick, on the South* by lot cf Mrs. Emma S. Mason, on the East by lot formerly of John B. Carr, (now owned by Mis. Tribble and Mrs. Simona, ) and West bv Main Street of said City. Terms of sale-One third cash. The bal? ance on a credit of one and two years trom day of sale, the credit portion to be secured by the bond or bonds of purchasers, and a Mortgage of the premises so d, the credit portion to hear interest from the day of sale, and the buildings, to be insured in such amounts as the Master may direct and policies of Insurance assigned to him The purchas? ers have the option ot payiug mme than one third or all their hui's in cash. Purchasers will pay for ai: papers. W H. INGRAM. Dec. 12 Master for Sumter Countv. NOTICE. T WANT .. very man and woman in thc United States interested in the Opium and Whis habits to have one of ?nv books on the oases. Address [>. M. Woollev, Atla Uo.\ 352, and one will bc sent von free.