University of South Carolina Libraries
2 BATTLE ON MOON TAIN TOP _____ I BAND OF MOROS WIPED OFT. Hair Knitting Story of Philippine Fight?Exterminated After a j Fieri Itnttle. Washington, July 9.?A hair-raising story of hand to hand coutlcit with spear hurling Moro savages in a battle to the death on an isolated mountain top with no quarter given or expected was cabled to the war department from the Philippines yesterday by Major General Bell. It was the commanding general's report on the campaign of Gen. John J. Pershing, which resulted in the extermination of the last considerable band of rebellious Moros and the complete disarmament of this war cucniy was vumpieieiy aeipaion ana all the strongholds were Anally taken. None of the Moros would surrender: some escaped, but the remainder were killed, including Amlt and his principal lieutenants, during the engagements, "Our mountain guns were drag- ! ged up the mountain by block and tackle, Anally reached commanding positions and rendered material asfllstance. Apparently ofllcers and men behaved without exception with admirable courage and determination. thoupgh constantly on duty Ave days and nights of little rest and torrential rains. The district commander, Captain Taylor A. Nichols and Captain George Charlton of the Philippine scouts, and First Lieutenant Edwin H. Rackley of the same organization for conspicuous courage and leadership. "Rrigadier General Pershing personally planned and conducted the Ragsak operations, commanding the forces In person and sharing all hardships and dangers of the troops. From all Information obtainable the ordeals undergone are believed to be surpassing. He has been subjected to much criticism because of patient negotiations, forbearance and efforts to avoid a resort to fighting, but succeeded In avoiding unnecessary inJury to non-combatants and minimized casualities in his own command." Hot Weather Housekeeping. Augusta Chronicle. It is a strange fact that In our Southern climate where so much of the time the weather is warm?and where for months !t Is hot?the average person or household gives so little real intelligent thought as to how to make the heat more bearable and less oppressive and sickening. In warm countries the house are planned to be as cool as possible, the wearing 'apparel of the men is very light, the food is different from colder climes and consequently the people do not suffer with the heat as we do. But here, as half of the year is not hot, we do not regulate our lives according to .the manner of tropical countries. Yet during the months thrt we suffer tropical weather the sensible thing would be to live apcordnig to tropical condition. As for the clothes, of course could not wear less and be allowed in public, and according to iitiws uispaicnes 111 some cmes me "powers that be" are cruelly trying to force more garmets upon the feminine population. That will lie a good idea, by the way, n few months hence, but not just now. But our men persist in wearing hot, heavy, dark clothes, and not only suffer themselves but make others warm to look at them. But it is in the housekeeping that the chief change should be made in summer. An enormous difference in comfort and esthetic pleasure is noticed in some homes where the housekeeper takes up all rugs and carpets, takes down portieres and curtains, packs away as many ornaments as possible, covers the furniture with light-colored cretonne or pure white, puts a few palms or ferns around and keeps the house shaded. It is a delight to enter a house like this on a warm summer day, and a decided contrast to others where crimson portieres, gorgeouscolored rugs, velvet furniture, and so forth are all allowed to remain; the walls are covered with pictures, the mantels with ornaments, and a person feels stifled on entering the room. The entire house should look different In June from what it does In January. But above all for the sake of comfort and health there ought to be a world of difference In the housekeeping, in the table and kitchen. The diet in our summer climate ought to be very light and cooling? fruits and ices, salads and vegetables the chief article of food, and if meat must be used (and the majority of Southerners are great meat-eaters, and the men of the family especially cannot be satisfied without it), why some meats are much easier of di-. gestlon and less heavy and rich than others, and croquettes made of chopped-up meat, green peppers stuffed hko irioe. Long ago most of the Moros gave tip their arms peacefully, hut the fierce tribesmen of Latiward. embracing about 20 square miles on tfte northern coast of the island of Jolo, made ready for war when ever there was a suggestion of depriving them of their weapons. Recently nearly 10,000 of them stampeded to Mount | Bagsak, a wild peak which they be- , lioved impregnable. Many confer- ( ences and patient diplomacy drew ; most of them away and sent them to their homes, but 200 or 400 of the most desperate fortified their stronghold and prepared to fight it out with the American nation. "When no reasonable hope of a peaceful conclusion remained." says General Hell in his report yesterday. "Brigadier General Pershing arrived nt Joio with boats during the n'ght .Tunc 10, f< r??tly embarked hi- >mmand, and. lauding nearby, surrounded Dagsak the same night to prevent a stampede of the women an 1 children and non-combatants to the mottntain again. Assault began a* daylight and there was fierce fighting. part of it hand to hand, during five days, marked by tenacious resistance and eounter attacks from Moros rushing on troops with barongs and hurling spears at the storming lines. "The control of troops by the officers was admirable, thus preventing a greater number of casualties. The 1 with veal or beef, etc., are better and more apetizing than heavy roasts, i And another good idea for the Bummer, and one that needs only to be tried to be proved advantageous to a marvelous degree, is to let your cook be excused from at least two dinners or two suppers a week, and go out to a cafe, restaurant or tea room for the meal. At first some one will say that Is very extravagant, but it need not be. A meal can be eaten at a cafe for just what it would cost at home if you know how to order, and the tea rooms only serve light and inexpensive lunches and teas as a genera! thing And it makes all the difference in the world to a housekeeper to occasionally get the jrdering and arranging of a meal off of her mind, and it does a servant -wv-d to get out of the hot kitchen. occasionally 111 in'1 sumiu?r. n.uu all Rood housekeepers know that whatever keeps a servant in good health and eontented is wisest in the ' ?ng run. Experience would teach any housekeeper that It would make a great deal of difference to the fam"y appetite and enjoyment of the meals?to her own heakh an l spirits, ud, to the cook's?if she would try the experiment this summer of taking Sunday dinner out at a hotel or cafe, or taking a picnic lunch at home, or at least going out for supper now and then, so that occasionally in the week during the hot weather the kltoher could be shut up, anl th1 family g> v:t for a eha nge Hot v.- vit' >r need n >* >e either unhealthy ->r very unpleasant if p opie won I I lres<. eat. ar. i arrange their home* an i order their live* a cor ling to the weather Tkif when a rnon *v iilra ' Mi r.Hi or'n i .T:i?v i'.tn clad in a lark woolen suit and ->tiff collar, and enters a hot house an 1 sits down to a heavy meal just as he would on a freezing January day, he need not wonder if he Is i In the words of Kipling) "frequent deceased," or gets so cross that his wife wishes she could he deal, almost! "THEY SAY" Pictorial Review "They say." "Have you heard?" Two wee phrases! Five short woflls! Rut they have done more damage than all the rest of the dictionary rolled together! They have wrecked homes and broken hearts. They have ruined promising careers and thrown business firms into bankruptcy. They have disrupted churches and plunged old friends into bitter legal fights. They have driven men to drink and women to insanity. They have robbed inocent Iittlie children of their parents, and sent young girls, broken-hearted and unwedded, to their graves. They have turned merely foolish girls into wicked ones and they have sent innocent men to prison. And they belong particularly to thi vocabulary of women. They are peculiarly the weapons of the socalled gentler sex. "Marshal Briggs arrested Jim Jones for heating his wife," remarks a man to the circle of loungers in the postoflice. And it is so. Jim Jones is tried and fined in open court. This is not gossip. It is a plain, brutal statement of fact. "Have you heard that Mrs. Blank has left her husband?" inquires Mrs. Meddlesome at the Sewing Circle. I "They do say he treats her something awful. Last night soming home from prayer meeting my Mary heard her carrying on fearfully, and this morning I saw her, bag in hand, hurrying for the 7:40 train. They say she's gone back to her folks." And so Tom Black, silent, perhaps nvdn snriv hut ndnrod hv his under standing wife, acquires a reputation for cruelty, when in reality Mrs. Black was "carrying on" over a telegram announcing the death of her favorite sister. In her grief she had forgotten to announce to her curious neighbors that she was going home to the funeral. Had the meddlesome and imaginative mother of Mary, the eavedropper, been pinned down -) facts, she must have admitted tha* no one had really heard of Mrs Black's leaving her husband, and that no one had said that he treated his wife illy. The entire story was built on the imagination, and sensational tastes of a gossip-monger. Innocent, if surly. Mr Blank wonders why his neighbors look at him coldly In his hour of loneliness. When Mrs Blank returns she must add to the burden of her grief that of denying an ugly story about her home life All this does not mean that men are devoid of curiosity or malice, only that they have a more direct and safe way of satisfying both, They go after the facts Men do gossip; but they repeat what, they know. Women take a chance on re peating the little they have seen plus the much they have heard, and color the result with a third appllca tlon of imagination. Men rarely u? the phrase "They say." "Rather It is "Brown told me." And then Brown is held responsible for the rumor 01 the statement. Men may he curlouf about the doings of their neighbor? or what goes on in the office and stores of their competitors, but they also have a wholesome respect foi scandal and libel laws, and a simple and practical way of demanding facts concerning current stories. The story which Is built on facts Kit mkloK fa oeno1 > l l11 ~ lilt til ftunoi |7 "Hit ii in v? i ut; ihut true, will not work an lnju?tlc? nor injure the Innocent. But th< tnlo prefaced by the little phrase "They say," la reasonably aura tr drag some guiltless parties through the mire of scandal and suffering. Proof Posit Ire. Mrs. Bacon?"My huRband Is al ways on the wrong side of a que* Hon." ! Mrs. Egbert?"How do you know that?" "Because he never agrees wltt me." t T1IK LANCASTER NEV WHAT HAVE WE 1H?XE TODAY? We shall do so much in the years to come, I But what have we done today? | We shall give our gold in a priucely sum, But what did we give today? We shall lift the heart and dry the tear, We shall plant a hope in the place of fear. We shall speak the words of love and cheer; , But what did we speak today? | ^ We shall be so kind In the after- i while. Hut what have we been today? We shall bring each lonely life a smile, But what have we brought today? We shall give the truth a grander birth, i And to steadfast faith a deeper worth, We shall feed the hungering souls of earth, But whom have we fed today? We shall reap such joys in the by and by. But what have we sown today? ) We shall build us mansions in the sky, But what have we built today? ; 'Tls sweet in idle dreams to bask, ! But here and now do we do our task? Yes, this is the thing our souls must ask. What have we done today? ?NIXON WATERMAN. To "(live anil Take" of Kife. Charleston News and Courier. experience is a hard school but it is the only one in which we can o ; lify with any hope of achieving our ultimate destiny. Its training mast be first-hand in order to bo of at.v real good for while some of us may try to believe that we can benefit by the experience of others it is seldom. Indeed, that we avail our- ' selves of such opportunities as come . our way. The older we grow the more we realize how little we really know and how ill prepared we are ' for solving problems which present 1 themselves from day to day in different forms and with correspond- ' ingly varying effects upon o< r lives. - >me of us take a long time to mature, not that we do not grow in | moderate experience with our advancing years, but because we are so sure of ourselves and so confident of the ground upon which we stand hat it requires an experience of surprising character and far-reaching ? ? ??- ?nim,ilniltv find envois lO upari UIII . M......... makp us realize that we, too, are but ' 1 ordinary mortal men capable of faulty judgments and mistaken conclusions. Such realities cannot possibly come to us through the experince of others, even though we try to turn them to good account; we must have the benefit of the awakening that comes through our own actions and until we know what it means to pass through such ordeals our natures cannot expand into their natural proportions. As a rule, however, It is in the "give and take" of life that we meet j with the most vital and potent of our ' experiences, experiences that mould ii- into better men and women, that | smooth down the rough edges and J round off sharp corners, that make i us less certain of our claims to su- I neriority and help us to better ap- j predate the heights and nepms 01 human nature. We cannot learn these things in a day, a month or a year. It takes time and effort and .actual participation in affairs to help l us into a better and more appreciative understanding of the needs of others and a truer conception of their rights. The experiences that we meet with in our every-day life do not appear at first glance to offer many opportunities for learning the facts essential to our higher happiness and success. We think probably that they are too ordinary and uninteresting to be of any real value and that their monotonous aspect dulls our mental energies. This is true if we permit our lives to be dominated by "ordinary and uninteresting" influences, and that many of us do allow this very thing is not to be denied. However, there is no duty so trifling and apparently useless it cannot be lifted from its ig noble aspects to the levels or our higher vision, and the experience that we get from doing this helps to develop a very ne.cessary phase of our natures. Besides, it is not beyond reason that some of the experiences which come to us are possess1 ed of far deeper significance than if 1 they happened to others, and vice versa. It may be that our natures ' may be just at the point where we : LIVER GETTING LAZY? DON'T STOP WORKING i Take Dodson's Liver Tone and (So About Your Business. It Will Liven Vp Your Liver Without Harm. A bilious attack or constipation ) can be relieved in a short while by a , spoonful of Dodson's Liver Tone? i the mild, vegetable remedy that ! every druggist guarantees. i Just ask the Standard Drug Comi pany about Dodaon's Diver Tone. I They know that It Is a harmless prepr a ration that starts the liver without violence and puts you Into shape ? without Interfering with your i habits. This storo guarantees It to be all that, and will give you your , ! money back If you don't find Dod| son's Liver Tone gives you quick, i easy relief. Dodson's Liver Tone Is for both L grown-ups and children. It has a t pleasant taste, and Is safe and rei liable. The price Is 60 cents for a large bottle, and your 50 cents back to you If you tell the Standard Drug Company that It hasn't been a bene. fit to you. Don't take calomel and don't buy Imitations of Dodson's Liver Tone? r you may run Into danger If you do. Buy Dodson's?the medicine that i Standard Drug Company recommends > and guarantees. VS, JULY 11, 1913. teed the exact experience that we eceive, and in these circumstances ve are bound to benefit more than f it came to us at some other time vhen it meant little or nothing to us. We can learn to "take" things as hey come, hard though the lesson >e to master. We cannot deny that ve "give" with small concern for the onvenience of others, and yet we sxepect others to accept with cheerlilneRR whut wp rhnnsp to rlfsnnnao ind are surprised if the contrary iappens. The wpnderful "give and ake" of life holds the key to the ;reat problem of existence, yet we vho share .its experiences do not alvays remember this fact. It is only latural, we suppose, to try to extract rom it more than our share of its l dessings, and to try to avoid its lardships, yet it is only by accepting vith courage whatever it offers that ve are able to advance in wisdom ind knowledge and grace. It does ?ot make very much difference where >ur experiences come to us, whether J ve meet them at home or abroad, in I he earlier days of our maturity or n the middle stages of life, or perlaps even when the future seems all oo short; each new one makes us hat much richer and better able to solve the riddle of life. That we are lever too old to learn is daily made dear to us, and once we have our nterest aroused and our minds made nore alert we can always find somehing new to reflect upon and some resh point to argue. We need our xperlences, however great their demand upon our courage and however jitter their effects, and it Is not unil we have learned how to best ulapt them to our Individual needs hat we are in position to truly profit ( >y them and to realize their full alue. The "give and take" of life nay mean for us perhaps only the larrow circles of a limited companonship or it may comprise the larger nterests of life, hut whichever it nay he and however trying it may trove, it is full of experiences that nean strength of soul and vigor of haracter if accepted in the right spirit. xt uuununuu iur iiiu r**3W?. i 10 v_urc a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMOQuinine. It itopi the Cough and Headache and works off the Cold. Druggists refund tuoiiry if it fails to cure. | K VV. GKOVK'S signature on each bo*. 25c REAL 2,100 Acres good sand hill land, level, 8 miles of Bethune, Kershaw county. Easy to put into cultivation. Same kind of land as that adjoining, which produces a bale of cotton to the acre. Easy terms, price per acre $10.00 r A A neon TT??*U uv avigo, i uti i uiiicn nuuin ui I lUULU Springs, close to church and school. Good buildings, 15 acres heavy original growth pine timber. Joins lands of Alex Cauthen, etc. Owner, D. J. Bailey. Price 91,000 343 Acres on Browns ferry road, near Camp Creek church, 8-room dwelling, etc. Owner, Mrs. W. 11. Green. Price per acre $21.00 900 Acres, six miles from Lancaster on Catawba river. Ask for price. 24 0 Acres, 5 miles south of Lancaster, close to two churches, four farms, rents for 3,600 line cotton, splendid dwelling and tenant houses. Property of J. F. Williams, price per acre.. ..$20.00 600 Acres extra fine land, west side of Catawba river. Rents for 40 bales cotton, two miles of Catawba Junction. Owner, A. B. Fer guson. 62 Vi Acres on Buffalo Road, 5 miles east of Lancaster. Close up to Zion church and school. An excellent small plantation with splendid buildings. Price per acre $32.50 134 Acres near Riverside Wadesboro and I.andsford road, Joins lands of Wm. Sistare, etc., close to churches and school, per acre only $12.75 4 4 Acres 3 miles cast of Heath Springs, good grade, close to church and school, good road, etc. Owner, J. M. Knight, price per acre $25.00 120 Acres two miles north of Riverside, two farms in cultivation, close to Waxhaw church. Owner, Mrs. Mary McDow, price per acre $20.00 284 Acres 3 miles west of Taxahaw, Known hh the Irvine Knight place, 150 acres heavy original forest timber, two farms In cultivation. Owner, Miss Annie Gregory. Price per acre.. ..$20.00 148 Acres, 4 miles north of Lancaster on Charlotte-Camden road, two good houses, barns, etc., close to church and school. Owners, T. C. Harden & Bro. Price per acre $20.00 53 Acres 5 miles north of Lancaster on Wadesboro and Monroe roads, two dwellings, painted and all buildings in good repair, a well, Improved place. Owner, N. J. Hineon. 800 Acres 4 miles north of Lancaster on Charlotte-Camden road, 20 farms in cultivation, strong luiiu, win cut inio Bmau iracis or sell all, a special low price for quick sale. 70 Acres, J. A. Cauthen's place, joining lands of Dan Bailey and others, on Coil road. Price per acre $20.00 571 Acres 1% miles from city, land strong and well Improved, will cut into small tracts and sell cheap. Better look at this place now. Owner, Col. W. C. Hough. We have arranged to make interest to buyers of land, "no touch with a "live wira." Df T. M. i DAVi nv ni BAKIN POWI Absolutely Economizes Butt Eggs; makes the ; appetizing and v\ The only Baking P< from Royal Grape Crc Terrified Tommy. get a Little Tommy, at the "movies," ..y' saw a tribe of Indians painting their , j faces, and asked his mother the sig- ,.y( nifloation of this, according to The n t Detroit Free Press. l!istei "Indians," his mother answered, j j "always paint their faces before goIng on the warpath?before scalping nana' and tomahawking and murdering." Jo^nd The next evening after dinner, as w the mother entertained in the parlor sii;ivp her daughter's young man, Tommy y jn^ rushed downstair^', wide-eyed with , fright. "Come on, mother!" he creld. i Let's get out of this quick! Sister g; is going on the warpath!" I T Hruitnl Conduct. grovi C1 icago Ledger. ! "But why are you determined to j the dei CiQ 4 68 Acres 3 miles northwest city, 65 A known as the J. A. P. Sistare ing place, lias large 10-room house nei and splendid barns and tenant ert houses. Simply look at land and aci hear low price, or will rent por- 150 j tlon of it. jol 4 40 Acres between Fort Mill and etc Pleasant Valley, 10 farms being P*a cultivated on It. Terms 8 years 190 at low rate of interest. Owner T. c^? M. Hughes. Per acre .. ..$32.50 C^1 50 Acres in and adjoining Fort ba' Lawn, level. Owner, T. M. R? Hughes. See It. 30 A 1127 Acres 5% miles west of Heath on Springs, on railroad. 10 farms be- w' ing cultivated, 610 acres of heavy ch' second growth pine timber. Prop- 285 erty of W. K. Williams. Cheap, mi per acre 91B.DU aci 119 Acres, 6 miles north of Lancas- sa' ter. Owner J. H. Neil....Sold J* 250 Acres, 6 miles southwest of 7_^?' Lancaster. Owner R. B. Sowell * Sold no 512 Acres near Riverside, a fine aCJ quality of land and good build- tw ings. See me. e(j 64 Acres, 6 V4 miles southwest of Hi Lancaster, good land with 3-room pit house. Owner, Orln C. Black- 80 A mon. no 348 Acres at Tradesvllle, 150 acres S? in cultivation, extra fine timber. lai Good dwelling and outbuildings. Ht Property of W. A. Funderburk. Pr Price per acre $20.00 Ea 103 Acres extra fine land three miles 99 6 north of Lancaster on Charlotte- 9 Camden road. Has seven-room Inj two-story building and other good of buildings worth $3,000. Also a a< quantity of original growth tim- 1,00( ber. Property of John H. Steele. wc Price per acre $42.50 lai 392 Acres 4 V4 miles northwest of Dr town of Lancaster, near River- W side, 6-horse farm In cultivation. T. 5-room dwelling and six tenant houses. Property of Cunning- 52 A ham and Steele. Price. .. $9,800 cai 148 AcreB 2% miles west of Lan- "e caster, joining lands of W. J. ac Hammond. Property of Robert Truesdale. Price per acre $21.50 $1,6! 98 Acres, J. A. Cauthen's place, 6 miles south of Lancaster, Joins ha John Kirk, etc. Price per acre 5?1 $21.50 760 Acres, the great "Cedar Grove" farm, four miles west of Lancaster. Touches rail and dirt roads. 23 farms in cultivation. No finer liiuu IU IUH BUI LB. Will divide Into small tracts to suit you. Owner, T. K. Cunningham. Easy $4,5i terms. on cli 370 Acres extra flne land and build- g lngs, 2 miles from Lancaster, a bargain, per acre $40.00 About 37 lots on "Sinclair Heights" 114 and "Olenwood," all owners want $1,3* a small profit on their Invest- Ai ment. Jo # 2 r | 100 Acres at Tradesvllle. Property I, of John Stevens, Kershaw, B. C. Price per acre $15.00 223 Acres 6 miles east of Lancaster, $2.5* buildings cost $5,000. Owner E. 40 T, MnMonns *T loans of money for a period of ten strings" to this proposition. When j ) IT NOW. HUGHI V M IG BER Pure er, Flour, food more ^ rholesome >wder made am of Tartar divorce from your husband?" acause he is an absolute brute." ou amaze me. You used to say le was as gentle as a child." es, that's what I used to say. i'ou ought to see him now! , t U.. tAntli i: ouiuu lutj uciu> ucgau tuuvulothing would quiet the little lg but being allowed to pull IiIb b whiskers. And when he I out, what do you think he did? ent down and had his beard d off, that's what! Do you I'd live with a man who has 3ort of a disposition?" nbscribc for The News. he Best Hot Weather Tonic S'S TASTRI.KSSchill TONIC enriches the builds the whole system and will wony strengthen and fortify you to withstand pressing effect of the hot summer. 50c. ATE 1 cres with good six-room dwell; and 3-room tenant houas, ir Rocky River road. Propy of W. W. Parks. Price per e $31.00 \cres on Turkey Quarter creek, ntng lands of Walter Stewman, level, good buildings, a fine intation. Acres in Camp Creek section, se up to two good schools and arches, level. Rents for 10 les cotton. Property of 3. B. berts. cres 5 miles east of Lancaster New Cut road, lies level and kinu va luiio i^amp ureei urch and school. Acres In river road about four les north of Van Wyck, SO res In cultivation. 300,000 ft. (v timber. On "River road.'* A. Hyatt's place. Price per re $10.00 Acres, % mile south of Moni and Wadesboro roads, 7 miles rtheast from Lancaster, SO res fine wood land, strong land, o 4-room dwellings, large, celland plasxas. Property of B. M. irdln, known as the "Bob Steele ice." Price per acre.. $26.00 ,cres on Coll road 1 % miles rth of Stoneboro, with 40 acres od timber, lies level. Joins ids of Wm. Crenshaw and T. 8. >ndrix. Has good 3-room house, operty of Sirs. Ella Cauthen. .sy Terms. Price per acre $20 Acres in Cedar Creek township, farms in cultivation, lies roll- -+U ?, 6 tenant houses. Property Mrs. Lida B. Jones. Price per re - ?? - ) Acres, with 8-room dwelling >rth $5,000, 600 acres extra 'ge second growth pine timber. T. F. McDow's Lome place. Ill cut to suit you. Property of Y. Williams. Price per acre $12.60 icres, 1 V6 miles south of Lanster on Charlotte-Camden road, s well, one building. Price per re $60.00 HOU8E8. 25 For house and lot on West ch street, 4 large rooms and 11. Property located as this lis well. A good new house, vner, L. F. Dabney. 30 For house and lot Is Heath rings, size of lot 100x260. vner, Rev. 8. N. Watson. 75 Near Southern Railroad, 4 rge rooms, lot 70*126. Owner, M. Ferguson. DO For elegant 10-room house Marr street, large lot and very eap. Owner, Mrs. Mary O. well. DO For good house, 81nolelr sights. Owner, C. W. Ortffln. DO For 4-room house on West ch street. Owner, Mrs. M. J. hnson Sold DO For 5-room house on W. imetery street, with all ujhte* te conveniences. Rente for 4.00 per month. DO For lot near Cotton mill, slse ixlOO. Owner, Sheriffs Jno. P. unter Sold years at regular rate of 70U think of dirt, get in lyjj Agent