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sta?rod mi U?< IMraotnev at Snoiler, 8. 1" . ?4? .,u,t Clae* Matter. ~ tsj"" Mr . J M rcer went to Co? lumbia last lUday for a day In the capital city Mr. Arthur Qreen of W.f^ky, is sjulte sick with typhoid fever. Mrva I morning elsit to f: Mr. T. was in ths .... ? i i?lav? Xlr R V ? ? ? ky. was In the i if;. Frida>. Mr ? M ? , is in Moskog ?m?. Oklahoma, for several month*, nna returned to the city and to now at work with the Sumter Lighting Company. Mr. R. A. Dennis of Blshopvilld. I topped In the city for awhile Sati.r <tay mornimc on his way to Colum 14a. Km Mr. U L Baker, of Blshopvllle. looed through the city Friday sven lag on his way home, after an extend ? ?d trip through the upper section of iho Btate. Mr. U K. Wood, court stenographer lor this district, was callad to Cam daa Friday e#te?*nc? n to altert* court It that place aa a witness in a case vhtch wm then being heard. Mr. H. s. Cunningham, editor of the Blshopvllle Vindicator, paaaed through the city last night on his way . 'to W**r**"M r?*nfHhMj through the lay on his way oome v 4t s\ ' ibN returned tTOSfl Charleston Saturday morning whet*? he went Friday night to attend the Chamber of Commerce supper. Mr. Dabbe reports having a most enjoy? able trip, although he was kept up .; itch of tiie night In getting ,o and returning from Charleston. Secretary A. V. 8nell of the Cham ber of Commerce went to Cha-loston Friday evening to attend the Cham? ber of Commerce smoker at that place. Mr. T. B. I nab in et. the popular flagman on the Oreenvllle-Charles ton train of the A. C. L. has returned from a stay of several weeks In Ten? nessee and Mississippi. Mr. W. A. Ouerry. the architect who had charge of the construction ?# lite pon'offl *\ was in the Clt" tivOduy. ' Me**.* ,T i *nd f.0 t "?rweMleaca. ewers In the ct lay Mr. Willie Burroughs, of \\ pent Saturday in the city. Mrs. R. M. Jenkins, of St. 'Thswlee spent Monday in the city. KTlth Mrs J?>nkiris were her daugh sr. Mlas Elolae Jenkins ard Mb Vnnle McCown. who were on the! ray hack to Columbia, where they vre attending the College for Women, ?fter ?per ling ths week-end at 8 flajglfj on. proprlotor o th. has returned t Ute siVj alles *?>?oral days of last week at Statesvtlle and Charlotte. X. C, where be visited his mother, wi. Is In ill health, and sister. Mrs. Jackson spent ? \>ral davs at He? ather while Mr. J/.ckson was away d. ono of the star " ton football team oasse u.?r to the city for a short visit to his mother, after the Dav'd son-Carolina game of Saturday. Mr. Noble Dick, end at Carolina, wss also one of the Sumter college boys to play In the C iroiina-Oavldson game Saturday. Married. Mr. C. W. Young and Mrs. Mar gaiet M. Chandler were m irri. d at thi bride's horn* on R'.mding street. Wednesday evening. N.v-mb. r 15th, Rev. V. M. McLeod officiating. Only the immediate family and a fee- frien.l? of th?? bride r>nd groom wer** present. Mr. and Mrs. Young have the test wUhee of their many friends. ? I Speiial \ttrnrtlon. For Bargain Day will he 100 la? dt?* silk waiats. abut ehlffon waists ths' sold from 13.9ft to 11.60, Entire lot foes on table and will be sold for the day, only at $3.no. Schwarti Brsa 11-21-It. Cotton brought | the | market Saturday. The reerlpts IT0J1 light. Furs ftiisrentred. The Surnter Dry Good* fat s.ile on Bargain Day will deal With the guaranteed kind and that rn mm.< greet deal. An assurance from the Arm Immediately establish s that feeling of SSSSfHy always d.sir??l by the fair fur Investor. 11 21 - It T>* Useful Goat A goal Mesa about ten years and fjO girt abtut a quail of milk a day HAIR. AIN DAY IS COMING. Will You lk? There? Bargain Day will be here Thursday and every person in Sumter should aid in making'this day a succ ess. Circulars have bet! distributed far and wide and left at almost every home in this and In the nearby eotiu The merchants ..re dolnj fplegjdtdly and are going to have bar? gains, real bargains, for sale that will open your eyes. Flat discounts are to be mad? ir many stores of Bj 10 to 20 i>er OORt off. Th f pa? rs are carry'-;.; special ?dlt'ons the local paper! In the bordor ing counties ars carrying apeclal aO \ ertlsements. ? ? ? Remember the raoei and parades j Rvsay Hutomo. i-t in the city should get In line on Thursday at 11 a. m. loaded down with friends. Mr. Wil? liam Bultman has charge of this fea? ture and the am? mobile dealers in the city are iequated to aid him. Mr. Scott will captain the bicycle parade. Messis. Tisdale. Reynolds anu Hill will arrai.ge the details. Make your entries for the races at once. The bicycle and motor cycle races with Mr. Tisclale and the other races with Mr. Lucian Strauss. The Judges for the races are, Gen? Miller, Qeo. D. Levy and L. LeGrand. ? ? ? Remember that Bargain Day Is also Publicity Day and that you ara expected to send out at least one "RoostIng" pesia! catd on that day. These cards will be distributed broad? cast throughout ?he city and can ?>*? procured at any store. sei Get busy and talk about Sumtr, write ibnut Sumter and do something for Sumter now. Do you know that Sumter has in the last nine months formed new corporations and In? creased the capital stock of those a' ready existing to the total sum of $600,000? Add to this the Increase In buildings and other expenditures and you have a sum that will total anout $1.000,000. Sumter easily sur? passes any other city In the State per Inhabitant. Not bad. Is it? More New Suits and Coats. The Sumter Dry Goods Co. have received a special shipment of suits and coats for Bargain Day \ls.tjrs The coats are the popular reversi? bles, and they are beauties The beginning ? .* the vcar w?v mat K?d by a aoahplete Bt< ppegl " AigtilH&g in and nr? und Cans, owing to the floods, which ia>. I from .v> i ui'ddl* cT January to the and of February. The warehouses along the Seine were tilled with water for thfai or four weeks, but so many people were Idle, and so had no money to hu, brandy, that consumption was at a minimum and equalized what would otherwise have caused a large short? age In supply. A Cruel Gash. Kvery suit. coat, evening wrap, skirt, kimona, Infant's cloak and pet? ticoat will receive a deep cut on III price card at the Sumter Diy Goods Co. on Bargain Day. It The slides of the city schools an", school children and of the football twim and batalion officers attracted considerable attention wh-n they were shovt n at the Lyric. Remember This. Forget your dinner, the time your train leaves, the baby's bottle or teethina* ring; in fact, forget every? thing except the big fur sale at the Sumter Dry Goods Co. on Bargain Day, but remember this! ll?tt?li Sumter lias a - ? many things that mark it as a progresive town. (?r.e t'dng about the stores that al? ways attract attention Is the dis? play In the show win.lows and Bum leg may well BO proud of the attrac? tive way in which the majority of the windows are arranged and decorate 1 by the ntfO ifcoepefl and merchants. This Is an of the thingi that Bum let l ads a great many other towns oi Its sizo in. The Sumter Dry Goods Co.. by their bargain giving methods \vi MV! yoUf railroad fife many times o\ er og Dargaii 111 , beeidei you win enjoy the many out*door at* traettom provided for your sntsr? I iiument. 11-21 It Cotea receipts for laat week amounted to |,tlfl hales, an ln rrease over the receipts the week l?e fore. but .i f MiriK off for oth'T weeks pfSS. ions. I'OH KALI'*.??o will exchange, for e.-untry property, neat Avo>fOOJII tattage two hlr.eks from passenger station. Modern conveniences; lot ;.*.xl:.s feet. See me f-?r a bargain. L J- I#eonhlrth, Wlthorspoon's Coffin Fs^ory. 11-21 -tf They Are JVoduced by American Talent and Methods. HARDEST TO COUNTERFEIT. From the Tim* of Paul Revere, the Firot American Banknote Artist, Ours Havs Bjon Mora Di.'.'.cult to Imitate Than Thoso of the 0!J World. To say that Anierl< aiis make lUo baai banknotes In the world may sound at first rather boastful, and yet nay His? tory of Uie art and industry of uote engraving which failed to record that fact would he incomplete. Paul Se? vere was the ttrst American banknote artist, and from the time of the char? tering of the Bunk of North America under the direction of Robert Monis, In 1781, up to the preaeut American engravers have excelled not only in the artistic quality of their designs, but In their provisions against counterfeiting. Marco Polo found banknotes iu Chi? na ages ago, printed ou paper made from the hark of the mulberry tree. One of t he notes upon which the great Venetian traveler himself runy have gazed is on exhibition at this day in the office of an American company. It is one of a series Issued by the Ming dynasty about 1309 A. D.?"curreut anywhere uuder heaven"?and seems to have beeu printed from wooden blocks on I sheet of paper nine by thlrteen^lnchos. a bigger surface than any man could cover with both hands outstretched. It Is good for "one string of cash." The provision against forgery is simple to the point of sever? ity. "Count erf elters hereof will be ex? ecuted. Ferrous giving information of counterfeiters will be rewarded with taels 250 nnd in addition will receive the property belonging to the crimi? nal/* Another great government has placed much dependence upon death as a de? terrent to imitators of its promises to pay. When Jacob Perkius of New buryport, Mass., inveuted the method of transferring designs from hardened steel plates to steel cylinders and re transferring to flat plates, thus en? abling the engraver to devote the time necessary to accomplish his best work in the original and reproduce it at will, the new process aroused international interest. Mr. Perkins and his asso dates went to London in 1819 at the instance of the British minister at Washington to help the Bauk of Eng? land to Issue notes not easily counter? feited. But the conservative old bank refused to adopt the new method, pre? ferring, as one of the Americans said, to rely upon the hangman rather than the engraver. Nevertheless the Eng? lish heran in time to follow \nieilean Bethodi after tlx geometric lathe had bejah Invented by Aas :\*t. r <>f Nor London, Conn., an.1 Improved by Cyru Tun Lhd The governments or continental Eu? rope depend exclusively upon color work to protect tb^lr paper currency, and several of the large banks of isstio hsve civil engineers in charge of their bureau of engraving and printing, though what connection there may h?? between engineering: and oncraving Is a mystery. Many Italian banknotes are easy to counterfeit. The Bank of Spain has of late abandoned Its own plant because its notes were imitated so successfully that counterfeits were accepted by the bank without ques? tion. A private concern now does the work. The Bank of Greece now uses the Americnn method, having had sad experiences with notes of Austrian. German and English fashioning. A myth that probably will never die tells us that the notes of the Bank of England cannot be counterfeited. .A* a mutter of fact, they can he imitated readily enough, for little attempt in made t-> presort the notes beyond the use of n watermark paper. The wa? termark can be easily copied. One pract'i al safeguard of great ef? fectiveness i-: the custom of the Bank of England to cancel every note that Is returned to the bank and issue anoth? er In Its pla? e. This and the practice Of keeping | record of the numbers of all bank notes used in every business establishment keep alive a keen sense of responsibility w^'ch adds to secu? rity. The custom oi circulating soiled banknotes, of course, gives the coun? terfeiter his best opportunity. Forgery is much more readily detected in a crisp, stiff, new bill than in a rumpled and dirty one. Th*1 American style of banknote has become the standard In the countries of Central and K uith America. Tbe experience of the Brazilian government led the way In this after various dis? appointments. First the much vaunt? ed Austrian system was triad, the . being engraved and printed 4.n I snd under that system. They ?<i a complete failure. Counter* N t irishod. The Brazilians tried DO DUldS In France, and these I promptly and extensively Imitat? Od v- POOH as the counterfeiters could get their Plates and paper read v. Bra zil tried German and English establish meats, but still without securing pro? tection to the banknote circulation, and at last turned to the United States nnd found a type of tolls practically impossible to counterfeit. So It H DO boast, but a inen? record of fact, to state that Americans make the best banknote! in the world. Detroit Nous. The Pessimist. Tommy Pop. what is a pessimist? Tommy's Pop A pessimist, my son, H a man who loves himself for till enemies he has made Philadelphia Uocord. Mr. Ben. II. Harvin. was In town Saturday. . . ? THE PARTHENON. It Was tha Most Beautiful Edifice Ever Erected by Wan, The Parthenon on the Acropolis at Athens, the most beautiful edifice over erected by the band of man, was ?wrecked by a Venetian bomb on Kept. 20. 1G37. When the sun rose on the morning of that evil day the "finest building on the finest sire in the world" stood ar* rayed in ail its glory, just as it did when Pcriclea received it from the hands of iis divjiv architect* and builders, just as it did when Plato and Socrates gated with wonder upon Its simple majesty, ami when thai day's sun wont down the glorious temple wi a wreck, its majesty dismantled, Its beauty marred forever. This wonderful building, even in lta ruins, has charmed the vrorid for go* lug on three centuries, and while thoae ruins eudure they will continue their hold upon the artistic sous?* of man? kind. The master artists of the nations have been trying for mor^ than 200 years to make something that would look like the Parthenon, but so tar their efforts have been in vain, and the dismantled pile on the Acropolis s?* ill wears the crown of architectural ex? cellence. This famous building, made of the finest Pentelic m irble, Is E2S feet iu length by 101 feet in width, with a height at the apc*x of the pediment of sixty-five feet In cost was $S,250.ooO, reckoned in preser1 day values. The renowned frieze of the Parthenon ran ulong the top of the wall forty feet from the ground. It was three and n half feet in height and 520 feet In length aud represented the great Pan athenlc procession, which was held every five years iu honor or Athena, the protecting goddess of the city. For 2.000 years this glorious temple stood there on the Acropolis as perfect as it was when Phidias completed it nearly 500 years before the birth of Christ, and it would have been stand? ing just as complete today but for that rascally Venetian shell. Iu the year mentioned above Athens, still in the possession of the Turks, was besieged by the Venetians, aud a bomb from one of their guns falling through the roof of the Parthenon, in which the j Turks bad stored a lot of powder, left it the ruin it has ever since remained. | ?Rev. T. B. Gregory in New York American. A Way They Have In Germany. "One day while I was iu a big beer garden in Bavaria," said a returned traveler, "a handsome young officer iu a magnificent new uniform came in and seated himself at a nearby table. There was brought to him a big radish, several slices of rye bread and a tall mug of beer. Theu I saw that hand some youug officer draw from the tab pocket of that magnificent uniform something wraprw?d in mnor f^to j,r unroiied, a sweet smile pi ping about bib blond mtisi.o he as in . .! s.. .. i] at last a piece of sausage seven oi eight Inches a-rig v..is re.-.tied. My , astonishment at this sight was care fully concealed. I doubt if any officer : of our Infantry would dare attempt 1 such a movement on the subsistence : department."?Iudlanapolis News. Ths Cleanliness of Animals. j Man seems to be the only auimal j whose food soils him. making neces? sary much washing and shieldlike bibs and napkins. Moles living in the earth and eating slimy worms are yet as clean as seals or fishes, whose lives are one perpetual wash. The squirrels in these re8iny woods keep themselves clean in some mysterious way; not a hair is sticky, though they bundle the gummy cones and glide fiuout appar? ently without care. The birds, too, are clean, though they seem to make a good deal of fuss washing a-d clean? ing their feathers. From First Summer In the Sierras," by Jena Muir. Old Wedgwood. Modern Wedgwood is of gre . tly in? ferior Quality, and it seems improba? ble that-the success attained hy Joeiab Wedgwood will ever be reached again. Of all his creations (a jasper his reproduction of the Camoua Port? land, or Barberini, vase (thv> original of which is In the British museum) is the most important. About 1700 Wedgwood at great expense attempt? ed to make fifty replicas of his vase, but it is believed that not more than thirty-five were actually finished. Of these original pieces only about fifteen have been identified.?Argonaut Ancient Sausages. Antiquaries are baffled in their at? tempts to ascertain when sausages first became an article of human con? sumption. We know at least that among the ancient Creeks sausages, called "allantes" and "ehordal," were a common article of diet, and every ?choolboy knows, or ought to know, that sausages, black puddings and mu sage sellers appear in the comedies of Aristophanes.?London Telegraph. Sad Feelings. "Jaggsby takes even his pleasures sadly." "He does?" ?'Yes, and to such an extent that when he goes on a spree he never sees green serpents, pink monkeys or pur? ple elephants like other fellows, lie sees nothing but black snakes."?Balti? more American. Easily Spotted. "Is this dress apt to be easily spot? ted?" she Inquired. "At least four blocks off, I should Judge,'* answered the gentlemanly clerk.-Washington Herald. Who keeps one end in view make? ill things' sure.?Browning. Mrs. Edwin Wilson, of St, ?'hui \ as in the city Monday, iEAM FANTASIES Cause and Effect In the Visions That Come In Sleep. A DREAM'S CURIOUS SEQUEL It Explained the Meaning of the Oft Recurring Fancy That a Cat Was Clawing the Slumberer's Throat. Rapidity of the Dream Process. It was a personal experience of a singular character that tlrst Impressed upon me. some years ago, the impor? tance of dreams as a subject for se? rious investigation, says H. Addington Bruce in the Outlook. Until then I had shared the opinion prevailing among laymen?and, it would seem, among most scientists also ?that dreams are entirely fanciful and meaningless. But my experience was su"h I could no longer believe this. To state it briefly, it involved the recurrence of a most bizarre dream. At least twenty times during a period of six months I had the same dream namely, that a cat was clawing at my throat. The stage setting and the mi nor incidents might vary, but a'?ays j the central episode was the same, and Qtnnlly the fury of the dream cat's onset was so great that it would awaken me. Naturally this recurrent dream puzzled me, so much so that I spoke about it. Then one day the accident of a heavy cold that settled in my throat led to a medical examination, which, much to my surprise, revealed the presence of a growth, requiring imme? diate treatment by the surgeon's knife. Some time afterward it suddenly oc? curred to me that since the removal of tiie dangerous growth I had not once been troubled by the cat clawing dream. Its significance now began to dawn on me. I had suffered no palm not even in? convenience, from the growth in my throat. In fact I had not consciously been aware of Its presence. But un? questionably the organic changes ac? companying it had given rise to sensa? tions which, slight though they were, had made an impression on my sleep? ing consciousness sufficient to excite it to activity. My recurrent dream consequently was to be regarded as a symbolic representation of the disor? der in my throat?an attempt to inter? pret it, to explain It. And. indeed, even in the dream, for all its fantastic imagery and symbolism, the seat of the trouble was Indicated plainly enough as I could appreciate after the surgeou had completed his labors. An experience was reported by Al? fred Maury. one of the earliest scien t\f)o Investigator* n^ *w" pbei '*" ' of tieep, Wh? dreamed that he was living In Paris during the Terror *nd had been put on the proscribed list. After many exciting adventures he was csptui d. tried uii i sentenced 10 execution. He saw himself dragged through the streets amid a clamoring multitude and forced to mount the scaffold and bare his neck to the fatal blow. In that instant as the guillo? tine knife descended he awoke to find thai a piece of the cornice of his bed had fallen and struck him on the neck. Testifying even more Impressively to the twofold action of the dream proc? ess and to its rapidity is a dream ex? perience of my own. In this dream I was walking alone at night along a country road. It was lined on both sides by trees which, as I learned from a man vho presently joined me. were laden With fruit. I picked some pears and ate them as we walked and talked. The road seemed to overlook a broad valley in which I saw a soli rary light. My companion told me that ft was In his home and invited me to pass the night with him. Alter a tir? ing walk we reached the house, a small two room cabin. He retired Into the iuner room and I went to bed in the outer. I had not been long asleep when, in my dreams, I was awakened by the noise of somebody running, and the thought Instantly Hashed into my mind that my host was makiug ofif with my money. I leaped up shout? ing, "Stop, stop!" Then I veritably invoke and as I did so distinctly heard on the pavement below my window the sound of hur? ried footfalls and a voice crying ex rltedly, "Stop, stop!" At once it was clear that these two words, penetrat? ing to my sleeping consciousness, had provided the necessary stimulus to set up a dream process which, in the frac? tion of a second, had interpreted them as best it could and had presented the results of its interpretation in the form of a curious little narrative of noctur- j nal adveuture. Dreams may he produced by the use of artificial irritants. One sleeper, whose nose was lightly tickled with a feather, had a horrible dream of a mask of pitch being alternately ap- ! plied to and drawn violently from his face. Another, at whose feet a hot water bag was placed, dreamed that j he was walking over hot lava. In a second experiment of the same sort the accidental slipping of the cover . from the hot water bag led to an elab? orate dream of capture and torture by Rocky mountain bandits who insisted that the dreamer knew how to convert copper into gold and held his naked j feet in a fire in order to compel him to communicate his valuable >e< ret. Sind larly the application of a slighi degree of hent to the feet of ? patient with ' paralyzed limbs was followed by a dream of being transformed into i bear and taught to dance by being placed on red bot Iron plates. Life without laughing ia a dreary blank.?Thackeray. Mr. Fr?ser James, "f Darlington, ] w*is In the <>itv Prld^y, WISACKV \i:ws LETTE! Cotton Still in Fields at Wisack: Pastor In-tallod at Mt. Ziol Church. Wisacky, Nov. 20.?We iu ve had a great deal of rain, high winds, and me every cold days The ftrmefg are still working with thai* ?.ouon. Many fields u*e white. Mr. J. s. Williams had Jug< begun to gather his cotton crop, it hav? ing been plant*-! late Very ftw farmers have planted oats. There Is much sickness in the community at this time. Mr. Arthur Green has been very ill with typhoid fever for some time. His uncle, Mr. James Green has been confined to his bed for several weeks, suffering from extreme de? bility. Master ttarry Smith, of Bl'bop ville, has Veen very sick n his grandmother's, Mrs. J. K. Williams, having had a stroke of facial paraly? sis. His condition tod*y is m^re en? couraging. Little Freddie, youngest son of Mr. y. L. Williams, is quite sick with malarial fever. Iflan Eunice Williams went to Co? lumbia this week to complete her course in stenography at the busi? ness college. Mrs. Robert Stackhouse, of Marion, has been visiting her brother. Mr. J. C Ledingham. She retu red to her home yesterday. The Santee Baptist Association met with the church at Elliott s, Novem? ber 7. On account of bad weather the delegation from the church was small. The next meeting of this body of Baptists will be with the Dudley church in Clarendon County. At Mt Zion new brick church, the pastor, Rev. Hammond, was installed Sunday. IN THE POLICE COURT. Many Offenders in the Toils of the Law; Fines Are Heavy and Many The city policemen gathered many offenders against the laws and or? dinances Saturday, Sunday and Mon? day morning and the Recorder had a \ont' session of it before he had administered various doses to the culprit3 brought before him. The amount of money collected in fines was $61 with a considerable larger amount sti'i on the docket to t>e j pa?d >r served out on the county I a*? '*?* ?? I w i>. White, Robt, ? . Ue, and Charley Curtis were fined $2.00 each for riding bicyces on forbdiden side? walks. George Winn struck it heavily. He was arrested for indecent exposure of person on the sidewalk and resisting arrest. He also was carrying a pis? tol with him at the time of his ar? rest. The charges against him were indecent exposure of person, resisting arrest and carrying concealed wea? pons. He was fined $15.00, $50.00. and $30.00. respectively, or o0 days !on each charge. i Dan Richardson. was charged I with creating a disturbance and ' public drunkenness. He was fined I $15 and $10, respectively, on the ' the charges. If OSS Fuller and J nkinson Davis were fined $5.00 each for fighting. Their's was a most unusual case for ' they engaged in their altercation (- i 1 while seated upon top of a building, I which they were tinning, and fought I ; because one cursed the other, i Sam Rlcardaon and Camilla Rich I ardson were Charged with creating a , disturbance. Camilla plead not , guiltj and sam pl^ad guilty. The evi? dence warranted the Recorder In dis? missing Cam da and in fining Sam $15. Ed Wilder violated the vehicle or? dinance when he backed up his wv.g on to the sidewalk. He paid $2. R. L. Scurrv. a white man. and I Paul Spears, I n^pro. engaged In a ; difficulty in the rear of O'Donnell * Company's store Saturday afternoon. , They were found guilty of fighting ' and fined $5 each. B, Watson did not appear for triai on the charge of violation of the Sun? day ordinance by selling Coca Cola on Sunday. He forfeited bond of $10. In Tin* Magistrate's * ourt. Lucius Tngram plead guilty in Mag? istrate Wells' court Saturday to as? sault and battery and was fined $15, which was promptly paid and he was released. The ease of Tom Ford for failure to support his wife and children was taken up Monday in the M a >zi> t rat e's court before Judge Well* A number of civil cases have been ?et f<?r this week to be heard by Magistrats Wella. The supreme COUtl Of appeals in Virginia, has refuaed to grant Hen ty Clay Beat tie. Jr., a new trial. j Unless the governor intervenes, he will die in the electric chair on the I .... .