The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, May 30, 1913, Page 2, Image 2

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2 THE " ECONOMIC MORAL OF THE PRES Substance of an Address Delivered he may get yoi llefore the Credit Men's Associa- must command tion of Fort Worth, Texas, by a c?mmunity thro ? ? ' . resent you. 1 Former South Carolinian. movement to g Following is the substance of an ^lare ^u: address of Rev. John A. Rice, D. I)., ?a\f , Pn>P formerly of South Carolina, before . ow"e the Business Men's Credit Associa- \ !y Intereste tion of Fort Worth. Texas: business, to I cannot do better tonight. Mr. M,,ise ?t their President and Gentlemen, than to POftance. Agaii suggest some phases of economic ralV** mo\ement morality, some commercial and in- t,ie hrm dustrial forces, that are making for mdents to the ei righteousness a, s*ns,e of sec' I remember perfectly well the 0 ,r?? , , dread that we all felt at the coming e...? of machinery, that the man would "! r " * * "u be less and less. The reverse has ' J 1 * t'^j happened. The complexities of v??r . . V ? modern life are making the man * "?dy of . lopo more and more. The bigger the tears; of "leal' business, the more complicated the <orps altogether machine, the bigger the men re- w or ' ls Krowl" quired to run it. Unless our Intel- pow.?r ever>" lectual and moral development ' comir keeps pace with our economic we |"l8^eousness ol will come to grief, for even the men po able to mt higher up are utterly dependent on |Va a 1,vlnRthose lowest down. The personal .e slogan 01 tn efficiency of the very least concerns hours and vitally even the very greatest, and Plastically acce whatever improves one helps all. !? coming ?? *>| A prominent banker said to me ",nit a man last fall: "Don't let me shock you, Rn<; ,V\ re' but the business world does not care prol>ablv . anything about the morals of a man. n.,on> ^1X. He may drink and carouse as much sixteen. It is ct as he pleases just so lie pays his that a firm debts." That banker was wrong. ''uiployes '? ,)at The business world does care for comforts at personal habits. Every now and a 11 necessary ris then I got letters from bonding heads of the tn companies, and I am always interest- , vvork must be h od in the line of questions they ask, txvaPe- reasonab all of which pertain to character. a m.e c?hdi?i The bead of a big corporation went ?> efficiency, out walking one morning a year or ow n a two ago and came upon one of his u,? , ^ -? employes, an old friend, reeling >tajll1ar'' ?' n: along the street drunk. He called y a I113? ,? ? a cab and sent him home, and then account o* illnei went to his office and issued an or- 0 nu>- '* have der that every employe of his com- oraPr- lo, keep cl pany should take the total ab- ,,s>(MMatlonP the; stinence pledge. Other corporations a. tnan are now following suit, and the can ' get anvthi drinking man is having less and less ?a.l.a WPar. 1 chance. So with the cigarette fiend. ^ to pay ni How a man spends his nigtits is a as e ,n a matter of grave consideration "?j published _ ? .1. . - .. ? i.? .. ?_i. . and tli whole c LUUSt.* LUI w II(Jill II** wuins. . _ . . I was surprised to hear the other ,'V1??. .I1"' dav of a prominent man who lost his , ' 11 1 ; ls job for no other reason than that V, ,ls *?'"* r he had domestic infelicity. It look- debauching of i ed for a while as if the trend of that modern business, the demands of ? ' " ' ea" ail< modern life, were to destroy the , < on e.*s I1 homo. There are still many forces '' .""P'M. n? ? that are making against its integrity ? "f >us'.noss but by a strange law. if we go east w?uId 8efem at we pull up west. And hero we have r,1Ij^'. ,or a.1 pulled up west, Business concerns _ a< n sR sl", are beginning to ask what kind of ."s<InK f, a wife a man has. what kind of A"d >'ot- ir lfhe children, what are the economic .\K ir'' ., ni habits of the home and what the "P nf ? ,10 general conditions there. Can the " -P? ' ? . man rest and he refreshed in the [Tv \?ur bu evening, is he happy? It will not ,' . ?t u.r. "u ''' he ten years until a man cannot get ' )>0 1 ' } employment with big business in w,1? .work :or important positions without giving i-""' assurance on these points. |-r you uill or n Religious workers felt a few j . |S " yer.rs ago that the American Sab-;. ,*,ra' ''f >" t'1' bath was in jeopardy. A series of i conndence tests was made a few years ago in |?omt' ><ar^ af.? New York with mules in the service i a . of the street car company, and it 7 ? Tli ,U1IH was discovered to the surprise of | *f? ,W, ?Ut everybody that the amount of time , was w necessary to he given to a mule for j '! nir>1,I,. * absolute rest, to get the best results V' n,"p. K of the investment in his life, "'.""'V V,""."l'"* amounted to one day in seven. They were not trying to estal>lish religious ^ i-1Y'rv<M tV*' dogma hut to discover an economic ^ law. If this is true of mules, why l,t. , ,v ,l's. " ... I . could get tile \ not ot men? In Dallas onl\ a tew . , .. less money. Ti weeks ago the street car conipativ . . .. . , , het tier con tid was considering a nn-ans liv which ,, , . . their men could all he given a Sab- , ' *t wa? work' hath. So are many other corpora- tl, , . lions. We are pulling up west ^ '^rt J*" ag, , . was called up ? I discovered recently, to mv sur- , . ..... , . v. admitted the sin prise, that the heads of big business tj,,,v .lsk are regarding themselves more and -w,. I?(| ' Uiore as educators. charged with re- ,j.|r'v ' sponsihility for those below. Some , ' ' weeks ago I got a young man a Job. wj? haV(. th(. ^ The mat, for whom he was to vvork vu he , suggested that lie keep his o il job woul(, not I)r|,S( until he tried out the new Hut he i . . would not The employer remarked }tiling .0 me that now lit.- had him on hi* wapIke?i nno Um hands and would have to make the! thr-w five rtiou best of him he could. I have re- ,. havjrig peatedly been given booklets that tiiat afte were distributed in the stores and ,.ount for som? business places of our city. I11 u>u vou tj ( j meetings between employers and en, ,,rninm,.n, 'harik ployes matters fundamental in M,JotG(1 as savIn business, matters of morals are fre- , (im?s to ,)MI| t quently discussed. The heads of ,ooks flpf;t n()t . business are reallv down at the fhl. m for work of training the men below vou tkp oollater them. They are feeling more, and jittp. h,,' wa more that business is not a cold- ,.ollateraI is no1 blooded proposition, that there is Th#. ero?omj(. a personal a human, element in it ther(>fore makin nj?t rm business men HI The samp tiling is true in politi- habits, to ho oal life. We prefer good men on chance for rest nrt platform at all to bad men on the education, to best platforms The boss, the policies as will i crook, the heeler, the professional and the greater politician, are less and less. Man- employes. They hood, character, education, capacity principles of ail for growth, culture, ability ?.o rep- give those belo resent the nobles it and best ele- !t chance to ma ments in our society?these are make a living, more and more Even politics is before the worl becoming a school for fne levelop habits of tho-e ment of character. to do. All thes Certain new phases of our busl- crooks ovt of lo ness life are also making for man- manding tliat t liood. Within the memory of most you or trade w of us the purchase of an article lint-footed and over the counter was a matter of world, shall liv trading, of j -wine, of making the shall be men, best out of the bargain that was looking in<ei Fc possible, and then sticking to it. '-rn bulsm-ss is It is altogether different, now men anch >r I "Your money's worth or your moil- heav.n-higli, an oy back," is the motto by which widening areas i every store must be run. Now can and win. The you have a liar behind the counter0 order was on. You must back his lies, and you dollar- the new cannot foresee what complication- ushered in by t THE LANCASTER NE\> F'T"'\/,, revolution ever seen on earth al I l he organized around the man It is not so Strang, therefore f7\JrT' /") A V/ a man who is gviing every dr LJ1V M LJI his blood to the one only ta: working at the simple elemen manhood and womanhood tha at the foundation of society s the confidence^ of the be asked * addr*8S the uieh those who ren- tives of b,K business. Your rifen there is that and m,ne are the sarae We ive the employes a rklng at. th* S?meJ?bV The sin ess to make them difference 8 that while I can , rietarv feelina the with moral authority, the autl hr? .n n k0' fhtm ?f the m?ral ?rder ?f th? UI?i Mvl, ^ the authority of God, back of I yet in the last analysis I can own tninispeak; but you have the big own \ BiU0 All ?1 till- i | .. . .. ? n,?r,. ia and can, by the use of the l there is the msur- , , # _ . . . . the movement that ??prcial forces at your hands responsible for ac- Ub?" Ttbe practical applicatio. nployes. These give wba 1 ,tr>' to sa-v- , V,et U8g? iritv and make for pith a keen appreciation of th< that back of our homes and ch nor to be a member ** ..toar fbcoo,f and colleges, irth "Trades Assem- Polltlcs aid statecraft, our discovered there a * d ,fdustr>?ba^ of e d not know existed. hing 3aori:d araon? is the , s. of traditions, of me": gr?win? wo en< s and a . > sprit de ba Perfecting these in a Chri iacu ouviai umci is nit: ait unique. Ana that tas|j Qf twentieth century. g in importance ana lay. The business ig to recognize the Ignorance! ' their simple claim John A. Sleicher, in Leslie's, ike a life while they Ignorance is always expei Here in Fort Worth The ignoraut seldom foot the inimum wage, limit- but some one must pay for safe conditions is folly. The wise must settle pted.. Fight hours costs of the mischief-maker, e recognized as the in this country, where edut 's work, if he is to offered so freely in our i itrns. We shall yet. schools, no man or woman hi that a man can do excuse for being ignorant, at urs than he can in far as eliuentary education is >ming to be impossi- cerned. ignorance is not so cot i should subject its jn this as iti many other land 1 sanitation, to lack "A little learning is a dang id conveniences, to thing." The man who learn ks The personal read and not to think is the e en and women who victim of the muckraking w eld sacred A living The sensationalist doesn't care le hours, congenial be says as long as he can accon ons are iudispensible his purpose. He is skilled in the use of i siociation Is having tives. He knows how to mal i with raising the appeal to the passions of men lorality The otht>r knows the easiest way to ere had lost his job on prejudice is by appealing to tin ss in the family said ish instincts of the readers. Ii to pay my bills in | country, where everybody read ear with these credit cheap newspapers, the capaci y have around here tbe muck raker to do mischief out w ith them he i bounded. Here where the \ ng for his family to privilege is so freely bestowed. IVhether I can or not j out an educational qualificath y bills." That which is easy for the glib-tongued corner formerly is tor, with the help of the sensa from the housetops press, to put himself forward ; ommunity is coming people's champion. And he i hits of ev. ry citizen itlg it every day. slogan of the hour. so we find dangerous, evei ender impossible the ignorant and illeterates in out nen by big business, eminent, and especially in we ail keep our reo- municipalities. As a result, we live in the open all soft or hard-baked, ill-con not a little timidity tMj> impractical and uneonstitu you representatives |uws passed bv legislators m Fort Worth It over-looking matters of sui first blush a little public importance. Kverv tlie ninister to be called ful man knows that the nu men as you are, rep- tiuancial system is utterly v gigantic interests, yet no administration at Was things I have been ton lias been able to reform i ie, you have been a plan is thought out careful same job 'hat I have those best informed regarding inking men an 1 wo- ing matters, the demagogues sfite-s depends upon ;ln outcry that "the bankers' \ ss. your eareer-. ar<* 1- emleavoring to secure legis the hands >t those against the people's interest, rou. who work with the people are fooled, p condemned, wlteth- it is too bad that the publii ot. to cultivating the 11(>t listen to appeals from the 1 those about you. fill men. It is too bad that basis o" 'ontid'Mice business men will not organ! the ba.-is of credit secure legislation the countr I went to the presi- quires, if its posterity is to be and told him I need- tinned. ireil dollars, and I Demagogues and disturbers a cent of collateral. (occupied the field too long, hen li* was turning business men's organiza and left who were chambers of commerce, boar ed security. I have trade and transportation shou! of the young man |>e marshalled in a solid body I working for a bank mand the recognition that bu: i<i asked for a raise men, large and small, have a president told him to expect from their legisla npossibie; that he j from tlieir governors and from vork "lone for even President. ie young man asked if men of affairs would give ence counted for th? more of their time to the ank or not He said siderution of the dangers that he demanded YVhen the country, not from the ou iner came tb<' man i but from the inside, they wou housand dollars lie : performing a pressing and pat md questioned He j duty. >rt.tg? ' Where was j - -. i n > matter j , aml Liberty, ou in the peniten- ! ,, ,, 1. "Yes. and while Anderson Mail, mitentlary my wife Huskin. in pointing out e thousand dollars" obedience to laws is far more .posed that if they arable than liberty, as under scute him he would many, says. money They ac- "You hear every day, gi helpless Then he numbers of foolish people spe directors' room andiabout llbertv. as if it were sand dollars on the honorable thing; so far from fjentlemon, it ..cms that, it is, on the whole, and i r all character does broadest sense, dishonorable' thing." I need not an attribute of the lower crea e got the raise \ "No human being, however, er in the city is or powerful, was ever so free g that when a man fish. There is always some o borrow money he that he must or must not do, it the collateral, but the fish may do whatever he if he wants to beat * You will find, on al will be worth but thinking of it, that it is his res nts to be square the that is honorable to man, nc t really needed liberty, and what is more it forces of today are straint which is honorable ev g for righteousness, the lower animals, e loking to personal ..^ butterfly is much more me conditions, to tjjan a pf.e> but you honor th and recreation, fo just because it is suhjt such methods and CPrtain laws, which fit it for < create the bos<. spirit j furictioti in bee society. Th it. efficiency in their no liberty?a dead leaf ' are looking to such ministration as v. 111 w a chance to rise. ke a life while they liest Medicine for Colds. You are spreading When a druggist recomme l the letails of the remedy for colds, throat aud i'- vhom v < >1.1 troubles, you can feel that he 1 " thing .ir putting what he is talking about. C. I. is in ess You ur<- ie Druggist, of Marion, Ohio, wri .10 h? work >t Dr. King's New Discovery; i'h you I. 1! 1 1 in 1 know Dr. King's New Discovt to ir-squ tied ?o tl the best throat and lung me hi'. in th-> op n. j -.>11 It cured my wife of a i supermen. :'orw ird- bronchial cold after all other >r the strain of uio i- edies failed." It will do the so great that only for you if you are suffering v hell-deep, reaching cold or any bronchial, throa 1 ompassing ever- lung cough. Keep a bottle on an resi t the tension all the time for everyone In vanishing economic family to use. It is a homo d janized around the Price 50c and $ 1.00. Ouara order now being by Lancaster Pharmacy and ! he far-reaching ard Drug Co. 7 S, MAY, 30, 1913. will The Kind Word. fill I Nil We shall never reg.d the Kind yUlllll , that things that we may do ur others. rrrrA op of if they really sr'ing from kindly tirtu sk of feeling and are not prompted bv sel f its of interest. Many a man has won In- Grove's 1 t are tiuence and power slir.p'y hy his . T hould kindness of hear.t when he had few m " lenta- other qualities to recommend him, out J task and without such kinr'.nesn great '?* are talents have gone to wuste. chief of all forms of kindness the speakspeak ing of kind words is that which lies You ki lority most easly within the power of all vou take rerse, of us. Not that words can ever take TONIC, me; the place of deed. Where a deed Is out the only required, words sound hut as a Chill an stick, mocker. But there are many, times Strength com- w hen the word is all that is needed the stror insist to make the difference uetwoeu Lap- taste th< i of pinefes and despair. Most of us are no* ^1 home starving for a little appreciation, solverea* ? fact Most of us will work harder for f?uarant? urch- praise thah for money. What a pity '* our it is that thousands who really ap- There is com- predate their friends and think the Look for very- world of them are tonguelied and grow- never speak the word of praise until !== , and they speak it over the coffin. the wor stian- "Kind words are more than cor- all the epted man struggle. He who withholds a lover, the word which has been richly awardin sought is defrauding his friend. lie sought who cannot, in looking back upon dems; i his life, remember one little sen- mine th tence which overpaid him for years man wh usive. 0f toil, js a poor man.? Great in rang* Thoughts. High "52 have be Tiie Stuff in Heroes. men ?li ation Philadelphia Ledger. charges lublic Heroism is a combination of qual- belching an ities. The real hero is he who shows in lamb Con- a mingling of the attributes of moral t'ie. ^oy rather nmon fibre and physical daring, who will tjUJ gj^p bear the taunt of having wagered panlons erous on baseball team with the same ' perishal s , '1 display of equanimity with which Horatiui as est would rush into a burning build- his two n er ing and save the janitor. However, death-bi , either 1 ,plish with in* There never was a time when peo- i idjec- pie appreciated the real merits of From ie an Chamberlain's Cough Remedy more of Xel He than now. This is shown by the in- Ironside ate a crease in sales and voluntary testl- over r ? self- monials from persons who have heroic i a this been cured by it. If you or your Its is the children are troubled with a cough from tli tv of or cold give it a trial and become Manila is un- acquainted with its good qualities, to dim -otiitg For sale by all dealers. the din with)n, it Si ms~ m? m I FiEAL gov- ? our 2,100 Acres good sand hill laud, 408 Aci have level. 8 miles of Bethune, Ker- know sider- shaw county. Easy to put into place, tional cultivation. Same kind of land and i while as that adjoining, which pro- house jreme duces a bale of cotton to the acre. hear night Easy terms, price per acre $lU.OU tion < tlon's | 60 Acres, four miles south of Heath 44,1 ^c] springs, close to church and Pleas diing- school. Good buildings, 13 acres cultiv 1 1; heavy original growth pine tim- at j0, 'y hy ber. Joins lands of Alex Cautheu, pj, bank- etc. Owner, D. J. Hi iley. Price \,.r, raise $1.000 " haVn trust 343 Acres on Browns ferry road, Hugh lation near Camp Creek church, 8-room . And dwelling, etc. Owner, Mrs. W. q/ri/ 11. Green. Price per acre $21.00 1 l'r 1 will 900 Acres, six miles from Lancaster "Jf ^ night- on Catawba river. Ask for price. s<'(. 1 tin- 114 0 Acres, 5 miles south of Lancas- * ze to ter, close to two churches, four ' y re- farms, rents for 3,600 line cotton, 1 1-^CI s con- splendid dwelling and tenant ler' houses. Property of J. F. Wll- 250 Ac have llams, price per acre.. ..$20.00 Lanci Our 0 00 Ai res extra fine land, west side tions, of Catawba river. Rents for 4 0 543 Ac ds of bales cotton, two miles of Cataw- qua Hi Id all ba Junction. Owner, A. B. Fer- Rips. Lo de- guson. . . , siness 62 Acres on Buffalo Road, 5 miles ( ,U)(, right east of Lancaster. Close up to iV>use tures, Zlon church and school. An exceltheir lent small plantation with splendid buildings. Price per acre -^CI a lit- $32.50 cu con- 134 Acres near Riverside Wades- Good beset boro and Landsford road, Joius Prope tside, lauds of Wm. Sistare, etc., close Price Id be to churches and school, per acre 103 Acr riotic $12.75 north 4 4 Acres 3 miles east of Heath Camd Springs, good grade, close to two-s church and school, good road, buildl etc. Owner, J. M. Knight, price quant per acre $25.00 ber. that Acres two miles north of River- Price lion- side, two farms in cultivation, 3^3 Aci stood idose to Waxhaw church. Owner, town Mrs. Mary McDow, price per side, reater acre $20.00 5-roo aking 284 Acres 3 miles west of Taxahaw, house ch an known as the Irvine Knight ham being place, loO acres neavy original ,,s . n the forest timber, two farms In culti- ' ' , and vation. Owner, Miss Annie Greg- iiV.niT tares. ory. Price per acre.. ..$20.00 Trues great Acres, 4 miles north of Lancasas a ter on Charlotte-Camden road, 08 Acn thing lwo K?od houses, barns, etc., close miles while lo church and school. Owners, T. John likes C. Harden & Bro. Price per acre fairly $20.00 ^c) traint Acres 5 miles north of Lancaster farm >t his on Wadesboro and Monroe roads, ' is re- two dwellings, painted and all 23 fa in buildings in good repair, a well. , rt improved place. Owner, N. J. j t f Hinson n rree 8yy Acres 4 miles north of Lancas- . 't ter on Charlotte-Camden road, ct to 20 farms in cultivation, strong 370 Act >rder- land, will cut into small tracts or inga, e sun sejj ajj a 8peciai iow price for barga has quick sale. About I 70 Acres, J. A. Cauthen's place. and ' joining lands of Dan Bailey and a sm others, on Coil road. Price per ment nds a ucre $20.00 inrt . lung r'71 ArrfiS miles from city, land 'f Jr fnowa strong and well improved, will pri,.,. ,ower rut ,nto small tracts and sell ten of cheap. 2 23 Aci ... Better look at this place now. build ry Is Owner, Col. W. C. Hough. L. Mi dlcine ; 'rem* ^ave arranged to make loans same interest to buyers of land, "no strings rith a touch with a "live wire." DO IT N1 It. m. h 1 NEANDIRON-THE MOST, RELIEVES PAIN AND HEALS TUALGENERAL TONIC AT THE SAME TIME *astcless chill Tonic Combines both The Wonderful, Old Reliable Dr. Porter'* elessform. The Quinine drives Antiseptic Healing Oil. An Antiseptic dalaria and the Iron builds up Surgical Dressing discovered by an t System. For Adults and Old If. R. Surgeon. Prevents Blood Children. Poisoning. P now what you are taking when Thousands of families know it already, flROVR'S TARTKI.RSS chill and a trial will convince vou that DR. recognized for 30 years through- PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING South as the standard Malaria, OIL is the most wonderful remedy ever d Fever Remedy and General discovered for Wounds, Burns, Old Sores, ening Tonic. It is as strong as Ulcers, Carbuncles, Granulated Eye Lids, igest bitter tonic, but you do not S^re Throat, Skin or Scalp Diseases and : bitter because the ingredients ail wounds and external diseases whether issolve in the mouth but do dis- slight or serious. Continually people are dily in the acids of the stomach, finding new uses for this famous old ied by your Druggist. We mean remedy. Guaranteed by your Druggist We mean it. 25c, 50c, $ 1.00 Only One "BROMO QUININE" That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE signatu*-" of E. W. GROVE on every box. Cures a Cold in One Day. 25c Id, which admire a hero with there are others. There Is a hero Intensity with which It loves j whose name still remains unsung, has not been impartial in and for whom no minstrel raptures g its laurel crowns nor j have as yet swelled. He la that mild, equity In scattering its dia- domesticated animal who with rare 'ancy more than fact deter- j fortitude thrusts aside the covers e status it would accord the and at 4:30 these frosty mornings iose exploit br-ngs him with- ' rises to turn the draft on the cellar 3 of a prize. | furnace. upon the pillars of fame en written the names of 1 APRIL AND MAY. 10 have figured in earth's vps or participated in the And after April, when May follows, that drove the enemey s And the whitethroat builds, and all ; cannon from the hillcrest: i the swallows! ' ent verse is the dcc'.s.on of Hark, where my blossomed pear to stay on the burning deck tree in the hedge than pull for the shore in Leans to the field and scatters on i 8 boats with his saner com- the clover while epic lines make im- Blossoms and dewdrops?at the >le the day that saw bent sprays edge? u hnnLr lo r\ ti Liu o rm/\?? . . . ^ -'"v.v.v, v,.. u.o aiuiui uuu mats the wise thrush; no sings companions respond to the each song twice over, 'eahting appeal to "stand 011 Lest you should think he never land and keep the bridge could recapture The first, fine, careless rapture! the gem-decked immortals ?BROWNING. xes to the rudely garbed s of Cromwell is a long leap If a man and wife are one lg enturles flamboyant ** h because they are tied for first place. jages, but no more brilliant _ roster than that stretching p,Ies Curcd 6 t ,4 D le plains of Abraham to . .. Rav and far be It from us Your dn|KK,st w,n rrfutid money if PAZO lia> , ana Mr he It irom us OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching. the lustre won by heroes in ntiml.Blrrdingorl'rotriKtinKPilc^itifitoRdaya. and smoke of battle. But The first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c ESTATE res 3 miles northwest city, 65 Acres with good six-room dwelln as the J. A. P. Sistare ing and 3-room tenant house, , has large 10-room house near Rocky River road. Propsplendid barns and tenant erty of W. W. Parks. Price per is. Simply look at land and acre $31.00 low price, or will rent por- 150 Acres on Turkey Quarter creek, 3f it. joining lands of Walter Stewman, res between Fort Mill and etc-. level, good buildings, a fine ant Valley, 10 farms being plantation. ated 011 it. Terms 8 years 190 Acres in Camp Creek section, v rate of interest. Owner T. close up to two good schools and ughes. Per acre .. ..$32.50 churches, level. Rents for 10 . es In and adjoining Fort bales cotton. Property of 3. B. , level. Owner, T. M. Roberts. es. See it. 3 0 Acres 5 miles east of Lancaster rres 5 Vi miles west of Heath on New Cut road, lies level and gs, on railroad. 10 farms be- within V& mile Camp Creek ultlvated, 610 acres of heavy church and school. d growth pine timber. Prop- 2S5 Acres in river road about foaa^B^^ of W. K. Williams. Cheap. miles north of Van Wvnh $18.50 acres In cultivation. 8 00,000 ft. es, 5 miles north of Lancas- saw timber. On "River road." Owner J. H. Neil....Sold J- A. Hyatt's place. Price per res, 6 miles southwest of 77'1) n'i ' ' ' * J, mt??r Owner It B Sowell ' ' * mile south of Monowner K. u. sowen roe aQd Wade8boro roads. 7 mi lea northeast from Lancaster, 30 res near Riverside, a tine acres fine wood land, strong land, v of land and good build- jwo 4.room dwellings, large, cellSee me. ed and piazzas. Property of E. M. ;s, 5 miles southwest of Hardin, known as the "Hob Steele it-ter, good land with 3-room place." Price per acre.. $26.00 Owner, Otln C. Black- 80 Acres on Coil road 1V4 miles north of Stoneboro, with 4 0 acres es at Tradesville, 150 acres good timber, lies level. Joint ltivation, extra fine timber. lands of Wm. Crenshaw and T. 8. dwelling and outbuildings. Hendrix. Has good 3-room heuse. rty of W. A. Fuuderburk. Property of Mrs. Ella Cauthen. per acre $20.00 Easy Terms. Price per acre $20 es extra flue laud three miles *096 Acres in Cedar Creek township, of Lancaster on Charlotte- 9 farms in cultivation, lies rollen road. Has seven-room & tenant houses. Property tory building and other good ?' Mrs. Lida B. Jones. Price per digs worth $3,000. Also a acre $14.00 ity of original growth tlm- 1,000 Acres, with 8-room dwelling Property of John H. Steele. worth $5,000, 600 acres extra per acre $42.50 large second growth pine timber. res 4 V4 miles northwest of Lr. T. P. McDow's home place, of Lancaster, near River- Will cut to suit you. Property of 6-horse farm in cultivation. T. Y. Williams. Price per acrs m dwelling and six tenant $12.60 s. Property of Cunning- 52 Acres, 1 % miles south of I>anand Steele. Price. .. $9,800 caster on Charlotte-Camden road, res 2Vi miles west of Lan- lles well? one building. Price per r, joining lands of W. J. acre $60.00 nond. Property of Robert HOUSES. .dale. Price per acre $21.60 $1,625 For house and lot on West is. J. A. CautWs place, 5 Ar?b street, 4 large rooms ajad south of Lancaster, Joins }}' 1 roperty located as his Kirk. etc. Price per acre ae,la W?U- \*??* new houia$21.50 Owner, L. F. Dabney. , ? ,, $2,000 For house and lot In Heatli es, the 8r?at Cedar Grove Springs, size of lot 100x360. four miles west o Lancas- owner. Rev. S. N. Watson. Touches rail and dirt roads. inns in cultivation. No finer J1.676 ^ear ^ , Si?1, r5L ' in the state. Will divide ,ar?? roomn. lot 70x126. Owner, small tracts to suit you. 'M* rorKuson. r, T. K. Cunningham. Easy $4,500 For elegant 10-room houM \. on Barr street, large lot and very ? iar.A k..u^ cheap. Owner, Mrs Mary O. es extra fine land and build- Sowell 2 miles from Lancaster, a ' tin per acre $40.00 $1,200 lor good house, Sinclair 57 lots on "Sinclair Height*" Heights. Owner, C. W. Grifflo. 'Glenwood," all owners want $1,300 For 4-room house on West all profit on their Invest- Arch street. Owner, Mrs. M. J. Johnson Sold , ? . ... $2,500 For 6-room house on W. ai, , 5 ,ih.L T p Cemetery street, with all uptown Stevens, K ;rs ,8. C. date conveniences. Rents for m. Pftr acre 115 00 $14.00 per month. res 6 miles east of Lancaster, $2,500 For lot near Cotton mill, slxs ings cost $5,000. Owner E. 40x100. Owner, Sheriffff Jno. P. cManus. Hunter Soli of money for a period often years at regular rate of to this proposition. When you think of dirt, get in QW [TJGHES Agent