1
Stato News. All tug prisoners )n the >Ben"etls- tillcjail eseoped'last' week. A new rifle company is about to or¬ ganise ifrjBarnwcH. Tjre crop prospect in Edgcfield continues extremely fine. The editor of tho Kcrshaw Gazette is"tie fiappy possessor of two whito mockirigbhfds?' . .' I ' -The dog killers of Charleston re¬ ported, vtho< destruction of .twenty-six nuiiunls-on 'Friday. * Miss Mary Booth diod snddenly at Tl'mm'oaarillo on Friday last. Heart' VTndge Town8P,o4 is holding a :spo- o&¥ iefrn of the court at Marlon. Tho re are ocata on the docket. A new post office, called Enorco, has been established in Laurens coun¬ ty, with John Lauford postmaster. Mr. John H. Adams ono of tho oldest and most esteemed citizens of York county, died on tho ^d instant. ''Damtheuicsandmosquitoes" is tho latest word which puzzles tho spelling classes iu Winnsboro." .An election for sheriff will be held in'Fnirfield County on tho 24th of August'. "Twenty-four candidates. *t;ast weelc the wife of James Scar¬ borough',1 residing nenr Gillisonvillfe, gnvo birth" to thrcp children, and nil art doing well. ' 'On the ,10th instant, Charles Tal- bor'o was * 4rownc<^ in a creek near Beaufort. Ho was seized with cramps while bathing. On .Saturday last Broad rivor, in Spartanbu-jg epunty, was stocked with 80,000. young, shad, brought in cans from Jlolyoke, Mass. .Mr* G. Washington Mooro, ono of t4ie best of tho citizens of Greenville county,: died .at his residence, near Grccuvillq, on .the 6th instant. i.Tho--chlore house of Mr. M. T. Mixon. in the Cypress' neighborhood, near Timmonsville, wns entered on Saturday night' and robbed of 200 pounds of Imeon. . The Rev. >T;H. Pope, fbr many years pastor of the Baptist church at Greeriwriod.Jdicd in that town on. the . 8th1 inst Ho was buriod at Newber- ff, his native town. . Capihiri S. B. Clowney, cashipr of ' the Winnsboro national bank, left on ThurBdayYjto attendL^jülvention in cashiers o£- the United States, i ThO'fixdelsior Cliib, of Chcraw, and the Bcnnettsville Club had a match gavo at'Bcnnettsvillo, on tho 14th instant. Scörc.Excelior, 35; Bcn¬ nettsville, 31*. bTho. letiding ttadicals of Union County arci" prowling around the country at bight rrganizmgthe Union leagues.- - The1' old' cry of Ku-K!ux will bo next in order. r-Ths Stbnewatl Club, of Timmons rille, and tho .Farmers'Club, of Ebc- n«*«r, bad -n. gaLxe on the 15th instant; .core 21 to £0 in favor of tho grangers. Middlemen, take a back seat, ' TnV Grwnvi.Io' Ba,«e Ball Club Imit* had & tussle with the Garrison Bam Ball Chub, and have boon beaten. Th% 'feoya'iü 'blue were too much for th«'ex«>Confedi. Let ushave peace. ' The . Röckhill' Grnnge is happy in tho' possession of an okrn which mens- nrcs twelve* inches in length, and which the editor thinks will supply him with okraso.up for the balance of his lifo.: A gentleman, by tho name of Al¬ lan, while-'in bathing at Smith & Melton's lorry; on the Cntawba river, Sbnday, 3d irtBt., was drowned. His body was recovered tho following Thursday, about one mile below where he lost biajife... r-Tho Barnwell-Blockville war has taken a new turn.- On Thursday last Judge Maker issued an order direct- ing the clerk of the court to re-remove h'a jfiicefrjo.m Blackville to Barnwcll. Why not/coirrpromiso by having two county scats? ¦j Aii postmaster on tho Charlotte, Columbiaand.Augusta Railroad, near Edgcfield, had his head blown off with' -a Torpedo Chicken, forwarded from . the 'war department, last week, for . charging five cents- a niece for postage stamps. Served him right. .^ir. James It. Bhnouson, of Union, oiti of the so-called Ku-Klux prison¬ ers, arrived in Columbia, Friday, on hi* way home from an imprisonment of three years niid-a half in tho peni¬ tentiary.' Ho speaks in the highest terms of thp^.kind^treatment they re¬ ceived from Governors Hoffman and Tilden: n . -'i't'i .. A coloredbase bnll cbab in Darling¬ ton bus thirty-five member?. .The average Willinmsburg farmer is not a succesHful potato speculator. :One of them made a shipment of po¬ tatoes to New York last week, upon which ho paid Bovcuty-fivc cents a barrel freight. The net sales returned him fifty cents a barrel.a loss of twenty five cents a barrel. This is the way to glow rich. John T. Grist, Esq., has been ap¬ pointed special deputy collector of Internal Revenue, fur the Third Col¬ lection District of South Caroliua, embracing the counties If Abbeville, A nderson, Aikcn, Chester, Edgefield, Fairfield, Groenvillo, Lnurens, Lex¬ ington, Jfowborry, Ocqneo, Pickets, Richlaad, Spartanburg, Union and York. NEW9&' TIMES.' ISSUED EVERY SATURDAY MORKIKO 11Y TIIH _ORAKOKHURO NEWS COMPANY._ . THAI) C. ANliRLlVSTKditQf. 0K0. ItOLIVEK, HnsinoBH Manager. S A~T ü R 1>A Y^Suly 24,18751 Parkers Hani. Wo see by late papers that the jury have convicted Parker of appro¬ priating $150,000 in cupons, which at fifty per cent discount, their par value, makes $75,000 for which he has to account, there nro other indictments against him, and another jury has been impannclled to try him for other defalcations, the sickness of the Attorney General. has postponed the trial for a fow days. A Hqansh in Harness. Some accounts of the lifting power of a vegetablo in its growth, as deter¬ mined from week to week by puttiog a peculiar test upon a squash, have been published from time to time, but the whole progress of the experiment was detailed by President Clark, at a late meeting of the Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture, in a lec¬ ture on "Plant Growth." Wc take the account from the report in the Ncic England Farmer: "It had been known for a long time that plants exerted considerable force during their growth. Beans, acorns *Dthcr seeds lift an amount of rt., m lThby iTibi'Uit fromTTm soTT" in the early stages of their growth. Mushrooms have been known to li"t flag stones weighing eighty pounds from, their .bed in garden walks, and 8hadt-trec3 in our streets frequently lift tho pavements, and'even crowd in basement walls uuder our houses, with their roots. The force measured in a black birch was equal to raising a column of wator eighty-six feet, while the sap was in motion. The idea was conceived at the Massachusetts Agri cultural College of measuring the force of a growing plant, and a squash was selected as a subject for Buch an experiment. It seemed to be the most available of" anything we could try. So, last spring, a bed of rich compost was prepared and placed in ono of the glass houses at the College, where observations could bo made night and day through the summer, and during all weather. The soil was placed in a largo, tight box or tank, in which the roots were made to stay, and during some of tho stages of the squash's growth it was watched, and hourly observations made and recorded, ft r a whole week nt a time. Squashes* are made up of fibrous tissues; the outsidö fibres run length¬ wise, then another set, liko bands, cross these, holding the squashes to¬ gether the other way, and then, on the inside, is another set running lengthwise, to which tho seeds are attached. Tho vuharnessed squash was now exhibited, showing unmis¬ takable signs of having been driven in a harness much too smnll for it.) A strong box had been prepared to receive it, with boards set edgewiso in tho bottom, on which the squash was laid, like a baby in its cradle, but un¬ like the baby it was told to lie there during its entire grow th to tho period of mature squashhood. Iron bolt3 and straps easily secured tho cradle, but something must bo dono to keep the growth from rising, or if it did rise, to indicate the power exerted. An iron grate or harness, made open to admit light and air, ns the squash would rot in a tight closed box, was formed in shape similar to the saddle of a cart harness. This was placed over tho «quash and weights placed upon it, first a light one, then, ns it was lifted by thegrowth of the squash, a henvicr one was laid on.25 lbs, then 50, next 100, then, 200, and after that 200 at a time. It soon became difficult to find weights or room for them. The sad- dlo got full. Then an inch bar of steel was arranged on the principle of stcdyards; one end being fastened down to the cradle bed of the squash, and at ono foot from the end, or just over the middle of the squash, a bear* ing was |mndc, and beyond this, bear¬ ing, weights wcro hung, as weights nre hung upon a weighing bar. Woights wore piled on till the bar broke. Then a chosuut timber5x6 inches, good nnd sound, was put in placo of tho broken bar, and loaded bag* of sand and anvils till it held six of the latter,'and as many of the form« or as there was room for. Still tho squash grew, nnd as it grow, it raised the sand and anvils ono after another as they were piled on, until ono morn¬ ing tho timber was found broken under its weight, but the squash all right and. increasing in size hourly. A heavy, wide cart-tire was bolted on to the m xt lever, used for stiffening it, and this one lasted till the harness crushed in the shell of the squaSh, in one or two of its bearings. Thus end¬ ed the experiment of testing thq. vital force of a growingsqunsh. At this time it had tipped the beam undcrthc weight of two tons and 120 pounds, nud had carried on its back, bt.t with¬ out lifting it, n load of 500 pounds for ten do)s. Many harness galls were made dur¬ ing the trial, but in every instances tho squRüh healed itself in a short time, and camb out healthy 'ft last with perfectly formed plump seeds and a cavity in each half, when \t. as it was before tho audienco.large enough for a large sized hen's nest. The meat or rind of the squash was about three in eben in thickness, and by estimation contained sixty-four thousand millions of cells, each of which had been formed from sap pre¬ pared hy the leaves of the vine, and carried through the vino and stem of the squash itself, with instructions to appropriate as best it could under the circumstances. The forco exerted by tho vital power of tho vine was suffi¬ cient to raise a column of water forty- eight hours, at the end of which timejg us a correct answer/l^ere^l^sneen much dispute about the question whether tre»s grew except at the ex¬ tremities, ami important law eases have grown out of it. Parties on both sides were euro they were right, but the weight of evidence was nearly all against the theory of elongation ex¬ cept at the cuds of the new wood. The story of the filbert tree growing up through the centre of a mill-atona, and finally, by its growth, suspending the stone several inches In the air, not generally credited. Oui investiga¬ tions prove- that similar effects are produced every year, by every tree which grows, and that this rising of tho tree is necessary to its own pre- servation. Under the influence of winds which sway our trees to and fro, during their growth, the roots must be loosened in the soil and par¬ tially prevented from holding the tree Becurely in its placo. Now for tho remedy. Each year, as tho tree grows, it lays on a riog ol new wood entirely around every part, not only of the top, but of the roots also. It cannot build on the under side of all these roots unless it lifts the treo from its bed, or crowds the soil away from underneath, to mako room for the new cells it is bound to carry there. Finding it ensier to lift the tree than to sink the world, the tree is accordingly raised each year, by just so much as the thickness of the new wood, which is laid upon the under side of the roots. And now the beauty of the arrangement is seen, when we discover that this added yearly growth is just sufficient to take up the slack in the roots caused by tho rocking of the treo during storms and winds The tree is thus securely tightened and anchored in the soil every year anew. Kilkenny Cats. Tiie Charleston Aries and Courier calls the Now York World a third- roto paper: The News and Courier is a very tol¬ erant journal, and daily inculcates lessons of charity and good will. when a point is to be gained. But let any prominent member of its party act without reference to its wishes md designs and how quickly its tune is changed. Witness, for instance, its treatment of Mr. Youraans, who saw fit to accept employment as counsel for Parker in the late trial at Columbia. Was there ever a more glaring case of impudent and tyranical journalism ? It is como to a pretty pass, assuredly, w hen n lawyer cannot accept a re¬ tainer from a political opponent with¬ out drawing upon himself the abuse of this papor.a sheet that is notoriously addicted to the very thing it condemns in Mr. Youmans. Do the editors of tho News and Courier forgot coming to the assistance of tho chief Radical corruptionist, Franklin J. Moses, Jr., once upon a time, in the issue of 20,- 000 copies ofa whitewashing supple¬ ment.for which they were paid. If th'oy have for got ton this transaction, let £thera rake over their private jour¬ nalistic reminiscences, and they will find numerous instances of a similar character..Qharletlou Chronicle. Tho New Crop Cotton. New Yokk, July 19.--The first bale of the new cotton crop was put up for sale to-day at the Cotton Ex¬ change, and was bought by Merrill A Co., brokers, at 18 cents a pound. Speaking of this bale, the New Orleans Price Current of Wednesday last Bays: Our cotton circles were com¬ pletely taken by surprise this morning by the receipt of a bale of new cotton, not from Rio Grande, as usual, but from St. Landry Pariah, shipped by Mr. Joseph Bcrand from his planta¬ tion on tho Teche. There can be no mistake about the bale being all of a new crop. It in well ginned, of gocd color, classing middling fair to fair, new classification, and weighing up¬ wards of 400 pounds. We learn that this cotton is mostly from Mr. Bernnd'a plantation, but received liberal contributions from his neigh¬ bors, who were furnished by him with the seed, which Is of an unusually early variety, known as the 'Herlong,' selected with the anticipation of get¬ ting an early yield. Owing to recent rains, no moro can be expected ior somo time from the same locality. The bale was purchased by Col. W. N. Owen, at the fancy price of 25 cents, right for premium to be awarded for first bale being regflfyja^afiSBa tor." _^-<rV >\ - For nuTnerThforniation apply to V».. Perrcyclcnr, Acting Foreman of I. E.H. A L Co. Orangeborg, 8. C, July 13th 1875. L. H. WANXAMAKXR, Sec. July 17 1875_3t Billiard Tables lor Sale Under Foreclosure of Myrtgag«. I will fell on Sales Day next first Mon¬ day in AugiWt to the highest bidder two fine Billiard Table«, with fixtures complete, and equipments for a first claas bar-room. Terms Cash. PHILIP GRAY, Agent. jnly 17 1875 St a % i o O Pf» o Building Material &c. The subscriber would ask the attention ef the readers of the Nfw*A Times to bis Stock of Hardware, Building Material, House Finishing and Carrige Building and Trimming Material, Ac. Consisting in part of Fresh Stone lame, Hydrnlio Cement, Calcind Plaster, Nnils, Hair, Laths, Locke, Hing", Bradcs, Tacks, Window Gloss, Putty, Varnishes, Pa int«, Oils and Brushes. In short, the largest variety of goods to be found in any one house in tho State. All goods warranted as represented, and price* gnar.mtccdjas low as the lowest for same quality of goods. All orders accompanied with Cash or satisfactory City references, will have prompt and careful attention. JOHN C. DIAL, i Columbia, C jnly 10 lo75 3m. Rtl ;:< Ii Ii il ml qf\ T, Pill M M I/TjJ()7 \ > Ii. i- « - .. \mitiA g,{ .40 .KOT-*.?U*U)i'..» HO titic ii L) 1 I 0 *1 ,?}}] iH.-i \sY.t'..{10 ?*H=bf r»,'-;-'! . .i.- .*' "OtHI .]/. * \tf t'A \fc Ml I'tji '.t^'l-o'o) >'."Jl i{ i:v .' . \l; \-;:v.viu 'IT'/..I ..>. '.5 -1 -.--rJff.-J-ir i ot J;f»ivv9c*- .;' . l i t . ..'. i.'". » '. :».( b;»"-.»V<i,» m »"»t*> y'jj.J it. it:u,u> itili Uli .1 ..¦:.».' ; i («'* rffnGi _irasiii L ways to maintain it in Dry Goods Until, CIpthing, Uhots, Ac". »h bftiiif -.-At? I IHK LA55EST ÄSSORTSEKT-isÄ 1 ' 1 r ;»i l Wiltfoa ui .-.'. THE MOST FASHIONABLE STYLES. Whilst v?o will Rluaya haro . "plain nnd medium Styles" for thorn* wfco prefer them, yet wtty will aim to be up with the high- , The Lowest Price**.None can buy guoda Cheaper than- ifeia \i £fl Houm. None watch the baslnem !o u large a bud» article tlit nhm examined-at home will prove ntuwtisfactorr.... Further.<>."«¦ N«* Bfiek^EstaMUk- liphmcnt and Knew .rooms in a model of eWiiVetttmre' and eon-, fort, being pronounced by eeery-. I bode to be the Largest of It* kinil i in the State. We matt cordially invite a generous public to pax* judgment on our taute and nkill by a personal inspection of the. .premises and ntock Our frigcrU tar and near are amared that everything that patient deftra¬ ined effort caYi do nlll alvr.»Ta ha done to keep our House at the head of tho trade.. ? t'/' Lot* ef NEW STYLES in . un\v v . *ii 1U »I FOR Ladies. Gents aad ClaEtoiaiu' .») -.'burn «":-,.xv to'-i Special Notico.-A n.w^ef^O.l.bJ.VrfDIAMOND P.r- feet fit SHIRTS arrived ;ti;i 'jr.i;.. i|l imj tjn > "fl.-. 1 i ..'»<«¦:" »-»rS^ »rf V .0« ) or. r.fi Isii h btf A r i'« >»»-t«l)4." ... 1.7th .'...1. : ir./yii'.!« T. KOHN A BROTHER. T. KOHN & BROTHER. T. KOHN A BROTHER, V |tj ,u r, 0h| > .\.j,r' : j g föo.fuxa t v^aj-a

Tjre T, Pill · 2011. 1. 7. · grate or harness, madeopen to admit light and air, ns the squash would rot in a tight closed box, was formed in shape similar to the saddleof a cart

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Page 1: Tjre T, Pill · 2011. 1. 7. · grate or harness, madeopen to admit light and air, ns the squash would rot in a tight closed box, was formed in shape similar to the saddleof a cart

Stato News.

All tug prisoners )n the >Ben"etls-tillcjail eseoped'last' week.A new rifle company is about to or¬

ganise ifrjBarnwcH.Tjre crop prospect in Edgcfield

continues extremely fine.The editor of tho Kcrshaw Gazette

is"tie fiappy possessor of two whitomockirigbhfds?' . .' I '

-The dog killers of Charleston re¬

ported, vtho< destruction of .twenty-sixnuiiunls-on 'Friday.

* Miss Mary Booth diod snddenly atTl'mm'oaarillo on Friday last. Heart'

VTndge Town8P,o4 is holding a :spo-o&¥ iefrn of the court at Marlon.Thore are ocata on the docket.A new post office, called Enorco,

has been established in Laurens coun¬

ty, with John Lauford postmaster.Mr. John H. Adams ono of tho

oldest and most esteemed citizens ofYork county, died on tho ^d instant.

''Damtheuicsandmosquitoes" is tholatest word which puzzles tho spellingclasses iu Winnsboro.".An election for sheriff will be held

in'Fnirfield County on tho 24th ofAugust'. "Twenty-four candidates.

*t;ast weelc the wife ofJames Scar¬borough',1 residing nenr Gillisonvillfe,gnvo birth" to thrcp children, and nilart doing well. '

'On the ,10th instant, Charles Tal-bor'o was

* 4rownc<^ in a creek nearBeaufort. Ho was seized with crampswhile bathing.On .Saturday last Broad rivor, in

Spartanbu-jg epunty, was stocked with80,000. young, shad, brought in cansfrom Jlolyoke, Mass..Mr* G. Washington Mooro, ono of

t4ie best of tho citizens of Greenvillecounty,: died .at his residence, near

Grccuvillq, on .the 6th instant.i.Tho--chlore house of Mr. M. T.Mixon. in the Cypress' neighborhood,near Timmonsville, wns entered on

Saturday night' and robbed of 200pounds of Imeon.

. The Rev. >T;H. Pope, fbr manyyears pastor of the Baptist church atGreeriwriod.Jdicd in that town on. the

. 8th1 inst Ho was buriod at Newber-ff, his native town.

. Capihiri S. B. Clowney, cashipr of' the Winnsboro national bank, left onThurBdayYjto attendL^jülvention in

cashiers o£- the United States,i ThO'fixdelsior Cliib, ofChcraw, and

the Bcnnettsville Club had a matchgavo at'Bcnnettsvillo, on tho 14thinstant. Scörc.Excelior, 35; Bcn¬nettsville, 31*.bTho. letiding ttadicals of UnionCounty arci" prowling around thecountry at bight rrganizmgthe Unionleagues.- - The1' old' cry of Ku-K!uxwill bo next in order.r-Ths Stbnewatl Club, of Timmons

rille, and tho .Farmers'Club, of Ebc-n«*«r, bad -n. gaLxe on the 15th instant;.core 21 to £0 in favor oftho grangers.Middlemen, take a back seat,

' TnV Grwnvi.Io' Ba,«e Ball ClubImit* had & tussle with the GarrisonBam Ball Chub, and have boon beaten.Th% 'feoya'iü 'blue were too much forth«'ex«>Confedi. Let ushave peace.

' The.Röckhill' Grnnge is happy in

tho' possession of an okrn which mens-nrcs twelve* inches in length, andwhich the editor thinks will supplyhim with okraso.up for the balance ofhis lifo.:A gentleman, by tho name of Al¬

lan, while-'in bathing at Smith &Melton's lorry; on the Cntawba river,Sbnday, 3d irtBt., was drowned. Hisbody was recovered tho followingThursday, about one mile below wherehe lost biajife...r-Tho Barnwell-Blockville war has

taken a new turn.- On Thursday lastJudge Maker issued an order direct-ing the clerk of the court to re-removeh'a jfiicefrjo.m Blackville to Barnwcll.Why not/coirrpromiso by having twocounty scats?

¦j Aii postmaster on tho Charlotte,Columbiaand.Augusta Railroad, near

Edgcfield, had his head blown offwith' -a Torpedo Chicken, forwardedfrom . the 'war department, last week,for . charging five cents- a niece forpostage stamps. Served him right..^ir. James It. Bhnouson, of Union,oiti of the so-called Ku-Klux prison¬

ers, arrived in Columbia, Friday, onhi* way home from an imprisonmentof three years niid-a half in tho peni¬tentiary.' Ho speaks in the highestterms of thp^.kind^treatment they re¬ceived from Governors Hoffman andTilden:

n . -'i't'i

.. A coloredbase bnll cbab in Darling¬ton bus thirty-five member?..The average Willinmsburg farmer

is not a succesHful potato speculator.:One of them made a shipment of po¬tatoes to New York last week, uponwhich ho paid Bovcuty-fivc cents abarrel freight. The net sales returnedhim fifty cents a barrel.a loss oftwenty five cents a barrel. This isthe way to glow rich.John T. Grist, Esq., has been ap¬

pointed special deputy collector ofInternal Revenue, fur the Third Col¬lection District of South Caroliua,embracing the counties If Abbeville,A nderson, Aikcn, Chester, Edgefield,Fairfield, Groenvillo, Lnurens, Lex¬ington, Jfowborry, Ocqneo, Pickets,Richlaad, Spartanburg, Union andYork.

NEW9&' TIMES.'ISSUED EVERY SATURDAY MORKIKO 11Y TIIH_ORAKOKHURO NEWS COMPANY._

. THAI) C. ANliRLlVSTKditQf.0K0. ItOLIVEK, HnsinoBH Manager.

SA~TüR1>AY^Suly 24,18751Parkers Hani.

Wo see by late papers that thejury have convicted Parker of appro¬priating $150,000 in cupons, which atfifty per cent discount, their par value,makes $75,000 for which he has toaccount, there nro other indictmentsagainst him, and another jury hasbeen impannclled to try him for otherdefalcations, the sickness of theAttorney General. has postponed thetrial for a fow days.

A Hqansh in Harness.

Some accounts of the lifting powerof a vegetablo in its growth, as deter¬mined from week to week by puttioga peculiar test upon a squash, havebeen published from time to time, butthe whole progress of the experimentwas detailed by President Clark, ata late meeting of the MassachusettsState Board of Agriculture, in a lec¬ture on "Plant Growth." Wc takethe account from the report in theNcic England Farmer:

"It had been known for a long timethat plants exerted considerable forceduring their growth. Beans, acorns*Dthcr seeds lift an amount of

rt., m lThby iTibi'Uit fromTTm soTT"in the early stages of their growth.Mushrooms have been known to li"tflag stones weighing eighty poundsfrom, their .bed in garden walks, and8hadt-trec3 in our streets frequentlylift tho pavements, and'even crowd inbasement walls uuder our houses, withtheir roots. The force measured in a

black birch was equal to raising acolumn of wator eighty-six feet, whilethe sap was in motion. The idea wasconceived at the Massachusetts Agricultural College of measuring theforce of a growing plant, and a squashwas selected as a subject for Buch an

experiment. It seemed to be the mostavailable of" anything we could try.So, last spring, a bed of rich compostwas prepared and placed in ono oftheglass houses at the College, whereobservations could bo made night andday through the summer, and duringall weather. The soil was placed in a

largo, tight box or tank, in which theroots were made to stay, and duringsome of tho stages of the squash'sgrowth it was watched, and hourlyobservations made and recorded, ft ra whole week nt a time.

Squashes* are made up of fibroustissues; the outsidö fibres run length¬wise, then another set, liko bands,cross these, holding the squashes to¬gether the other way, and then, onthe inside, is another set runninglengthwise, to which tho seeds areattached. Tho vuharnessed squashwas now exhibited, showing unmis¬takable signs of having been drivenin a harness much too smnll for it.)A strong box had been prepared toreceive it, with boards set edgewiso intho bottom, on which the squash was

laid, like a baby in its cradle, but un¬like the baby it was told to lie thereduring its entire grow th to tho periodof mature squashhood. Iron bolt3 andstraps easily secured tho cradle, butsomething must bo dono to keep thegrowth from rising, or if it did rise, toindicate the power exerted. An irongrate or harness, made open to admitlight and air, ns the squash would rotin a tight closed box, was formed inshape similar to the saddle of a cartharness. This was placed over tho«quash and weights placed upon it,first a light one, then, ns it was liftedby thegrowth of the squash, a henvicr

one was laid on.25 lbs, then 50, next100, then, 200, and after that 200 ata time.

It soon became difficult to findweights or room for them. The sad-dlo got full. Then an inch bar ofsteel was arranged on the principle ofstcdyards; one end being fasteneddown to the cradle bed of the squash,and at ono foot from the end, or justover the middle of the squash, a bear*ing was |mndc, and beyond this, bear¬ing, weights wcro hung, as weightsnre hung upon a weighing bar.Woights wore piled on till the barbroke. Then a chosuut timber5x6inches, good nnd sound, was put inplaco of tho broken bar, and loadedbag* of sand and anvils till it held sixof the latter,'and as many of the form«or as there was room for. Still thosquash grew, nnd as it grow, it raisedthe sand and anvils ono after anotheras they were piled on, until ono morn¬ing tho timber was found brokenunder its weight, but the squash allright and. increasing in size hourly.A heavy, wide cart-tire was bolted onto the m xt lever, used for stiffeningit, and this one lasted till the harnesscrushed in the shell of the squaSh, inone or two of its bearings. Thus end¬ed the experiment of testing thq. vitalforce of a growingsqunsh. At thistime it had tipped the beam undcrthcweight of two tons and 120 pounds,nud had carried on its back, bt.t with¬out lifting it, n load of500 pounds forten do)s.Many harness galls were made dur¬

ing the trial, but in every instancestho squRüh healed itself in a shorttime, and camb out healthy 'ft lastwith perfectly formed plump seedsand a cavity in each half, when \t.as it was before tho audienco.largeenough for a large sized hen's nest.The meat or rind of the squash wasabout three in eben in thickness, andby estimation contained sixty-fourthousand millions of cells, each ofwhich had been formed from sap pre¬pared hy the leaves of the vine, andcarried through the vino and stem ofthe squash itself, with instructions toappropriate as best it could under thecircumstances. The forco exerted bytho vital power of tho vine was suffi¬cient to raise a column of water forty-eight hours, at the end of which timejg

us a correct answer/l^ere^l^sneenmuch dispute about the questionwhether tre»s grew except at the ex¬

tremities, ami important law easeshave grown out of it. Parties on bothsides were euro they were right, butthe weight ofevidence was nearly allagainst the theory ofelongation ex¬

cept at the cuds of the new wood. Thestory of the filbert tree growing upthrough the centre of a mill-atona, andfinally, by its growth, suspending thestone several inches In the air, notgenerally credited. Oui investiga¬tions prove- that similar effects are

produced every year, by every treewhich grows, and that this rising oftho tree is necessary to its own pre-servation. Under the influence ofwinds which sway our trees to andfro, during their growth, the rootsmust be loosened in the soil and par¬tially prevented from holding thetree Becurely in its placo.Now for tho remedy. Each year,

as tho tree grows, it lays on a riog olnew wood entirely around every part,not only of the top, but of the rootsalso. It cannot build on the underside of all these roots unless it lifts thetreo from its bed, or crowds the soilaway from underneath, to mako roomfor the new cells it is bound to carrythere. Finding it ensier to lift thetree than to sink the world, the tree isaccordingly raised each year, by justso much as the thickness of the newwood, which is laid upon the underside of the roots. And now the beautyof the arrangement is seen, when wediscover that this added yearly growthis just sufficient to take up the slackin the roots caused by tho rocking ofthe treo during storms and winds Thetree is thus securely tightened andanchored in the soil every year anew.

Kilkenny Cats.

Tiie Charleston Aries and Couriercalls the Now York World a third-roto paper:The News and Courier is a very tol¬

erant journal, and daily inculcateslessons of charity and good will.when a point is to be gained. But letany prominent member of its partyact without reference to its wishes mddesigns and how quickly its tune ischanged. Witness, for instance, its

treatment of Mr. Youraans, who sawfit to accept employment as counsel forParker in the late trial at Columbia.Was there ever a more glaring case ofimpudent and tyranical journalism ?It is como to a pretty pass, assuredly,w hen n lawyer cannot accept a re¬tainer from a political opponent with¬out drawing upon himselfthe abuse ofthis papor.a sheet that is notoriouslyaddicted to the very thing it condemnsin Mr. Youmans. Do the editors oftho News and Courier forgot coming tothe assistance of tho chief Radicalcorruptionist, Franklin J. Moses, Jr.,once upon a time, in the issue of 20,-000 copies ofa whitewashing supple¬ment.for which they were paid. Ifth'oy have forgotton this transaction,let £thera rake over their private jour¬nalistic reminiscences, and they willfind numerous instances of a similarcharacter..Qharletlou Chronicle.

Tho New Crop Cotton.New Yokk, July 19.--The first

bale of the new cotton crop was putup for sale to-day at the Cotton Ex¬change, and was bought by Merrill ACo., brokers, at 18 cents a pound.Speaking of this bale, the New OrleansPrice Current of Wednesday lastBays: Our cotton circles were com¬

pletely taken by surprise this morningby the receipt ofa bale ofnew cotton,not from Rio Grande, as usual, butfrom St. Landry Pariah, shipped byMr. Joseph Bcrand from his planta¬tion on tho Teche. There can be nomistake about the bale being all of anew crop. It in well ginned, of gocdcolor, classing middling fair to fair,new classification, and weighing up¬wards of 400 pounds. We learn thatthis cotton is mostly from Mr.Bernnd'a plantation, but receivedliberal contributions from his neigh¬bors, who were furnished by him withthe seed, which Is ofan unusually earlyvariety, known as the 'Herlong,'selected with the anticipation ofget¬ting an early yield. Owing to recentrains, no moro can be expected iorsomo time from the same locality. Thebale was purchased by Col. W. N.Owen, at the fancy price of 25 cents,right for premium to be awarded forfirst bale being regflfyja^afiSBator." _^-<rV >\ -

For nuTnerThforniation apply to V»..Perrcyclcnr, Acting Foreman of I. E.H. AL Co.Orangeborg, 8. C, July 13th 1875.

L. H. WANXAMAKXR, Sec.July 17 1875_3tBilliard Tables lor SaleUnder Foreclosure of Myrtgag«.

I will fell on Sales Day next first Mon¬day in AugiWt to the highest bidder twofine Billiard Table«, with fixtures complete,and equipments for a first claas bar-room.Terms Cash.

PHILIP GRAY,Agent.

jnly 17 1875St

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Building Material &c.The subscriber would ask the attention ef

the readers of the Nfw*A Times to bisStock of Hardware, Building Material,House Finishing and Carrige Building andTrimming Material, Ac. Consisting inpart of Fresh Stone lame, Hydrnlio Cement,Calcind Plaster, Nnils, Hair, Laths, Locke,Hing", Bradcs, Tacks, Window Gloss, Putty,Varnishes, Pa int«, Oils and Brushes. Inshort, the largest variety of goods to befound in any one house in tho State. Allgoods warranted as represented, and price*gnar.mtccdjas low as the lowest for samequality of goods. All orders accompaniedwith Cash or satisfactory City references,will have prompt and careful attention.

JOHN C. DIAL,i Columbia, 6« C

jnly 10 lo75 3m.

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;»i l Wiltfoa ui .-.'.THE MOST FASHIONABLE STYLES.Whilst v?o will Rluaya haro .

"plain nnd medium Styles" forthorn* wfco prefer them, yet wttywill aim to be up with the high- ,

The Lowest Price**.None canbuy guoda Cheaper than- ifeia \i £flHoum. None watch the baslnem

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article tlit nhm examined-athome will prove ntuwtisfactorr....

Further.<>."«¦ N«* Bfiek^EstaMUk-liphmcnt and Knew .rooms in amodel of eWiiVetttmre' and eon-,fort, being pronounced by eeery-. Ibode to be the Largest of It* kinil iin the State. We matt cordiallyinvite a generous public to pax*judgment on our taute and nkillby a personal inspection of the..premises and ntock Our frigcrUtar and near are amared thateverything that patient deftra¬ined effort caYi do nlll alvr.»Ta hadone to keep our House at thehead of tho trade.. ?

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Lot* ef NEW STYLES in .

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Ladies. Gents aad ClaEtoiaiu'.») -.'burn «":-,.xv to'-i

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T. KOHN A BROTHER.T. KOHN & BROTHER.T. KOHN A BROTHER,

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