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4 ulljp Eiauraatrr Npius (SEMI-WEEKLY.) .<Se K. E. WYLIE. . .Acting Editor i up8 m! ?- - ~ ?? bunks PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT: they , Published Tuesdays and j te<j g, Fridays at Lancaster, S. C., denyii by The Lancaster Publishing ' the S Company, successors to The jlas Ledger, established 1852; The ! uatioi Review, established 1878; The jn j^e Enterprise, established 1891, I .^j( and entered as second-class hankf matter Oct. 7, 1905, at the |? Jo postoffice at Lancaster, S. C., tjon , * * ? * Pnnoroaa Of , , unaer aci ui ? 0 llsm, March 3. 1879 _ that SUBSCRIPTION PRICK: vou (In Advance.) certai *\ One Year *1.50 {J? SI* MoutliN 75c keepi TUESDAY, AUGUST. 5, 1913. are a ?' ~ same Alfalfa is known out West as the "Tl << ? ii,, ,, row's "mortgage lifter. to th borro The mau with a political record even had better keep out of the race for out tl governor next year. story. ? he te Now it is Georgia's turn to witness the sad spectacle of a father and progr mother in a legal scramble for the halte< possssion of their two little girls. out tl the S ? / "N Let every farmer in the county ppnPf read the resolutions passed by the sumn Sumter County Farmers' Union, large published elsewhere in this ssue. deuce mono Don't forget the date for the elec- l' trv I) lion of cotton weigher for Lancas- 'stav ter, lleath Springs and Kershaw, which is next Tuesday, August 111th. i tl. Senator Tillman sure put it on to Mr. Charles Hart of Brooklyn, who , will now likely hurry back to the Republican, party, if indeed he has tlH ever left it. a" l' groin Mr. Farmer, come to town next ^ut ' Monday and hear Mr. Smith of the Pp?P United States department of agricul- to ture explain how alaflfa can ' t save grown at a profit. have I terin President Wilson is right not to ' voca recognize the Huerta government in ai?u Mexico. As he suggests it would be so?only putting a premium on assassina- pora tiou in that country. tultii mad( "News of 'first bales' in all the and newspapers and news of plenty of state millions in all the national banks in Clen the South makes it cheerful for the ofTen cotton planter."?Augusta Chronicle, jury And the prospect of a bumper corn plait crop, to boot, adds further to his It is cheerfulness. are i tion, Let's get up some kind of an or- aj,|e ganization, and that right early, 8Woi whose sole aim shall be to further bene the interests of the town of Lancas- jM ,| in our midst and all that is necessary a w, in our midst and all that is needed shou to have them is lor our business men to come -ogether and go after them, 8woi Who will sound the "assembly call?" goat nish We suggest to our wide-awake ' ;nuj farmers to take advantage of the offor of the federal government to .)res lend its aid to tlie raising of live t|ljs stock, by organizing a county live t stock association as has been done recently in Calhoun county. As pointed out by The Spartanburg Herald, "We have got to come to live T1 stock raising before we get the best Pres out of our soil." are feat In a conversation with a Lancas- in tl ter two-horse farmer who owns his the i own land, he remarked fchat he had vor not bought fifty bushels of corn in proh -the past twenty-five years. He said are ?cotton was a second thought with of w him; that his chief concern was to the i make at home what he would need fit fi on the farm and then the remainder tiger of his land he planted in cotton, ly ss When all of our farmers adopt this ? ] plan, the credit system will be killed votii and what cotton is raised will bring Hqu< a good price. i!ler Thej , whit Some people object to the use of < pie, the Bible in the public schools 011 the ; triili ground, mainly that sectarian teach-|,awing will follow Bible teaching. Yeti^jj' these same people raise no objecttion ' you to teaching about the gods and god- inur dish of Greece and Rome. Then |aw why should there he objection to ^ children being taught about such had grand characters as Abraham, ther Joseph. Moses, Gidean, David and <>nfc other grand characters of Holy Writ Where is there a more beautiful |<no story in all literature, sacred or thei profane, than that of Ruth? 'aw one . tion / The Columbia State of Saturday (jp.r announced that William E. Gonzales, to t its editor-in-chief for the past ten oon t i see years and recently appointed minis- ^ ter to Cuba, had been given indefinite con leavo <?f absence. Also that W. W. we BalJ, Managing editor, had been put Pen ill charge of the editorial depart-1 aient of the paper. No more worthy jPA' successor to Captain Gonzales could | 1 have been selected. Mr. Ball, be- Tin sides being a veteran newspaper ron ' editor, is a man of first rate ability dor and high character. He is the same cor typo of man of his lamented father, his I the late Colonel Ball of Laurens. con 4 } THE LANCASTER ] MONEY BECOMES TIOIIT. concern deserves to be given his o i Spartanburg Herald says: medicine. Says The Times: cretary McAdoo bus taken a "What do you think of a merch >n that is calculated to loosen who complains because people s< oney this fall. If Southern elsewhere for goods, when while cannot get money In New York complaining there arrives in :an get it direct from the Uni- place of business a package of i tates treasury. There is no tionery amounting to about two < ng it, money has been tight in lars in value that he could have i outh this summer. And there cured here for the same money, een no explanation for the sit- instead of giving the work to 1 except that the money lenders local office he gives it to a travel w York felt a little nervous. solicitor from an adjoining to ere is the story: A Southern Such a merchant has no right to V :r goes to New York. He goes if every local person left him In see the president of the instttu- lurch and did not trade a cent v with which he has been doing him. the merchants send a' ess for vears. The president of from home to have done what t institution says: 'Well, I tell can get done at home just as g now we are feeling a little un- and Just as cheap, how can they a n as to what Congress is going plain of other people who trade e and we are not disposed to where, even if they can buy at h< any more loans for the present. ! well? All of us should patroi re not extending credits, we are borne see whenever it is possible ng close to the shore, and we ^o so." dvislng our friends to do the u , ALFALFA IN LANCASTER, tie Southern banker is at his end. He comes back home and publish elsewhere in this e first fellow who comes in to sue a letter of Mr. A. G. Smith w fifty or a hundred dollars? the United States department of so small an amount?he hands irlculture, having ln charge the 0 16 Now, Jh^Tfenow'goerout and ! ??? of the planting and growln, lis his friends that there is alfalfa, to Mr. L. C. Lazenby, a Ing doing' with the hanks, ing that he will be in Lancaster y is not to be had. The whole | Monday, August 11th. for the 1 ess of the community is soon organizing one or more il. Everybody has soon heard tv ? " le New York banker's hard luck 'falfa associations. Other couti iouthern banker. 'in the state, notably York cou ow that sort of thing has hap- have strong organizations and 1 in every Southern town this mpnij)prs aro making money on ler. And. since business is " * ly based upon faith and confl-ifnlfh* therrv has you can readily see how the over a hundred acres in alfalfa y lenders in New ^ ork are in intends to increase his acreage lition to tie up the whole coun- t. ..... , , ..., i m ........ i fall. It is unquestionable a nu v just passing down the word? , close t6 the shore.' " , roP- ^Vh>' should our farmen jbuying Western hay at from $2 THOSE Alll.K TO PAY. I I"'r ,on- ?f which or $7 e Herald and News of Newberrv, I,on freight. when they c, It is gnerallv sound on matters oa8,ly ral8C il at a ??ntlnal cosi inlng to education, advocates .thelr own ,and? Mr' J' Roy ( abolition of tuition charges in 1 nlngham has something ^ike He state colleges mainly on the a<ros in alfalfa from whIch he ad that "It is not only an evil. already had thre<> ^"ings. Ho t offers an inductment to many pects to put ,n ,nore ,hls faMle to make false statements as have heard 8everal farmers say leir financial ability in order to wlU p,ant one or more acrps the pitiable tuition that thev fal1' We hope that every farnu to pav for their bov or girl en- the county W,U be ln town next 1 g college. ' The editor also ad- day and hear what Mr" 8mith tes the abolition of free schol- to say on the subJect of alfa,faip practically for the same reaWe take issue with our contem- HELP <?I\ E THE XEHS. ry. Those who are able to pay Each individual in the town on for their children should he : county can help the editor mate e to do so. If, as The Herald , >' in publishing the news. News says, parents make false often the case that he does not ments to get their children in ?f happenings until they are tot ison, they perpetrate a serious f?r publication. If you are in i ise and can he punished for per- j ca" by our office or over the 'p We have heard the same com- and let us know what is liappci it made as to Winthrop College, i 'f 'n *be rural district 'phone said that each year many girls write us the news. The Fort given free tuition at that institu- Times, In speaking of this same whose parents are abundantly ter ?f news gathering, says: to pay for it. but who have 1 "We presume there never w n falsely in order to get the T?paper \\ any ,?ca,lty Ttbat , . ... . ? all the local happenings. It is < fit ot something like $40 or $.?<) that some one comes or goes a le way of free tuition. There is which the reporter does not k iv to correct this outrage and it " happens that the family is m ild be done at once. Our recol- '8oypraI t'I7lof tl They get , tbe .. .. . . , . prossion that (ho oclitor clo??s on o! the law is that besides the <.arp to mention them. This ii statement of the parent or mistake. In most eountry towni Pdian, the countv auditor fur- local work is the hardest work es a certificate showing the kind nprtp? wlth a n??;*Pnper. A , , may be a good editorial writer, value of all property owned by a (ja^ failure in the local work, applicant's parent. Hut if the vice versa. Editorial material ent law falls short of correcting obtained by study, by reading n evil it should be amended so as P?P?* . ?>me times using the scis Personals and local happei >rrect it. can't be read and clipped front < newspapers, not by a jugful , , takes physical as well as nv ItKI.M) I It>KHS. exertion to get out four to six te Abbeville Medium and The I umns of local matter in a towr s and Banner, both of that town, s'ze ot ort Mill. Most people _ . ? A . a local paper to get the local making a strenuous fight to de- penlngg. I)on-t ,)P afrai<1 to tel the voting in of the dispensary editor or reporter that you te county of Abbeville. One of friends visiting you. There are main arguments of those who fa- of people ^ho arp interested In .. ..... .. friends. You owe it as a dill the dispensary is that under the j}iem your friends know ibition system the blind tigers their doings. Perhaps you 1 reaping a harvest from the sale the paper shows partiality, but hiskey and that it is better for afp.if.I*1P PaPpr ..^oes\'1 trpa' ... ^ ' right if you give it a chance." itate and county to get the bene- | r?m T r""""r th"", T< IIN <MT TO THIS MERITS s. The Medium very pertinent- ; ^g. We trust that there wll be a M gathering of the farmers at ea< riie excuse some people offer for .. .. ..... . . . . ig for the sale of intoxicating thP thrpp Institute* to be hel, vr in Abbeville county is because Lancaster county, namely at I e are so many 'blind tigers.' ant Valley 011 August 21, I)ix / want to change a law made by Angugt 22 and Heath Spring? e people, enforced by white peo- . . . because a few negroes and a few AuK1,st 23' Thpap arp *ood ng white men are violating the munlties in the midst of fine That is a great reason for ing lands and the most hosp iging a law isn't it? Just be- |lonlPs. The meetings are to be ie it is violated All right, do direction of Dr. W want to repeal the law against der because it is violated? if a Long. the government demoi were not violated there would tion agent, and other experts o 0 use for it. As a matter of fact riculture. So let the farmers e were 'blind tigers' when we talklng , thpse mPPtings a a dispensary and you will have ..... n if it is voted back. The law is their neighbors so that they w reed just as well as the officers largely attended, t to enforce it. and many of those complain of the 'blind tigers' j Th FUbept meetinR has coni w who they are yet will not lift , , r hand to aid in enforcing the K?ne without producing any i If there, are 'blind tigers' every tional Incidents and tho go; Is bound to admit that condl- was there, too. Well this is s are much better now than tin- 1 Bomewhat ,)etfor than the goc the dispensary. Those opposed . . , he sale of whiskey propose to days reform when the inn tinue fighting until the 'blind Ben used to raise so much cam x' is driven out of the county, year at Cansler's home, Tlr/.a we certainly cannot improve j ditions by going backwards which 1 will do if we vote back the dts- j Senator Tillman must have sary." ; some impression on the New ? j "ass" when he received the sen TRONIZE HOME INDUSTRIES, letter telling him that "the Be 'he following from The Manning can party, ever since the war ies shows the importance of pat- systematically robbed the peo izing home' Industries. This is enrich the favored classes." le in all wide-awake, progressive amunities.* The fellow who sends We suggest to Columbians orders out of town, when he new name for Main ^treet, "I ild throw the business to a home way." J NTEA\ S, AUGUST 5, 1913. wn BE Sl'HE TO ATTEND. f?V?V?V?V?V?'?V?y< The welfare conference for the * ant common good will commence Ui Co- ! SI^ lumbia tomorrow and will lust for y his two day?- This Is one of the most J jta- Important meetings ever held tn "the ! ! lol- state. There Is no political slgnifl- J B J" *ro" cance whatever attached to the meet- J J lng. Everybody is Invited to attend ! 1 ling Prof. W. K. Tate, state supervisor of V wn. rural schools, will be president of J ilck the conference. See his article In ' f j/\. CI /V Vth t'1'8 '88Ue entitled "Owning the ' kvay Home. y hey ood OWNING A HOME. > am >me Tate Discusses the Con- * Ecipit<ll 3.1 lize ference for tlie Connnon Good. j , ^ 5 to To the Editor of The News. : Total Rt i A blessing it is to have a real ? home, and a greater blessing to own one's home. Thousands of families ls_ in the state have no home that they ? may call their own. They live In 1 ?' houses that belong to some one else. T T I ag- They cultivate land that belongs to y i. w 1. ver- some one else. They have no fixed , place of abode. Is it not a wonder * Uopb o that they can call their souls their y <X U lta own? When so much, too, depends *< . ' on upon environment what chance have m?1Q rlPCir* pur- the children for the rich childhood y al- which makes ready for a well-round- , ., ed citizenship? These matters are DOSlfJirV \ the concern of every good man and V pwouai ^ 1 ntv, woman; but especially are they vit- J, the ally of interest, at this time, to all v Sfufpc al- who will Uike part in the Confer-. V *-h.c*lv*o V-fv . enc for the Common Good. If It Is i ? 1 f nou possible, all In the conference would y QCHCC Of and secure a home, owned at home, to V this pll workers who are not at home in < fnn<.Jc ^ T* ^ m. v'tho houses whithin which they are g#j ? uiiuj ?? u dwelling, hut who are only existing V " in a place more or less limited in ex- > < * I " 0 ?<< t, 111 To 'in' children, shall the spot y *1' llilb JD per of ground upon which they are makmild ing frog houses and baking mud pies **1 ! , remain as their little world of love V 1 ?then know no other except vag1 "un iy jUSt now?or as a world owi 1 v r ten by outsiders prone to swoop down V I 1 has und dispossess them? 1 . X lit/ Jl J )>x Homos, child welfare, citizenship, I these will he considered at the Con- ' ) forence. A plan will be discussed J. they for helping mill workers to pur- y (Under Direct this chase homes, and for tenant farmsr in to aC(lu're land they culti- >*< vate. Education, attendance, health VIon- amj child labor are down as topics 1 1 has upon whch practical educators and ? others will speak. Nor will other momentous problems of citizenship be neglected. fAIINl V I Every landlord and every tenant vUUlll I and in South Carolina should read Hamirlal Oarland's "Under the Lion's Paw," In his book of stories entitled, OAKHl'F ,s "Main Traveled Roads." With a hoar short term lease and a vague prom- SDeclal to Th N > old ise to sell at a price from his land- %/ , 1 10 1 ue News, town l?rd as his security, the tenant toils Oakhurst, Aug. miserably, heroically, triumphantly ralns have done w none at jast> an(j seeks then to buy the cr?Ps iae last two wet ling, land he has made profitable: he finds pronounce them bea or the price doubled as the result of his melons and vegetabh Mm toll. He finally buys the land, and 80 .^ e tklok t*1'8 a K? says to the landlord words that r- Roberts na " should not be said in South Carolina. a, f P'cnic In a case of this kind can the indi- Thursday, as a vidual take care of himself? It is ( Mrs. w. A. King gave matter Of the Common Qood. Land- j* n'a nave been vl )ft?'ii lonls and tenants can get valuable C? bout assistance in their problems and be , ' Ussery now. mutually benefited If they will at- with fever, Is Issed tend the Conference for the Com- mother. lie Is rap lm- moil Good. At this meeting. W. W. we'arer K ,, to sa>'not Long will show the relationship he- *r- , Rollings is a tween farm ownership and good ?Jf ?' !''S Parentss the farming; Dr. E. A. Ilines of Seneca Miss ( arrie Heckl con- will speak on home ownership and (':l8,J*r. spent a few man health; Rev. E. O. Watson and Su- wef. , hut perintondent J. E. Carroll will show 'r- ( hapman of T and the effects of home ownership in a a plf*asant visitor in is mill village. ^or ton days, lews- These are but a part of the prob- , v*' Irvn of sors. lems, vitally affecting the welfare of relatives in the com tings every human being in the state, weF.^* , >ther which will he taken up for solution r- Robert It or amelioration of evils, when the 'floods at Abbeville. ental conference meets In Columbia, Au- . one ?_7 fn Iho nrnirrani nmnlp time HIvXTM MP i the has been allowed for discussions. take All in attendance are invited and sohap lirited to speak, vent, or promulgate. ?Pec,al 10 | I the their ideas and to swap all unex- Heath Sprinfg, have pressviews with their neighbors. Marshal S. J. Vincei lots Leaders in the movement regard this mended on every hr your feature of free interchange of opin- effort to r ty to fon as perhaps the best part of the * 1r of program, tigers and for his su think W K. TATE. line. One night last just ed a colored rowdy c >()U Alfalfa Association. for dhSorderTyco'ndu I The following letter is self-ex- formation also whlc planatory: rest and conviction < ITrbana, 111., July 25. 1913. who sold the liquor, good L. C. Lazenby, fined $50, and the rh of Lancaster, S. C. who brought the ll< . . Dear Sir:?I have yours of July $10. Mr. Vincent 1 20th. I will come to Lancaster SPif to be a most f ''ea*- August 11th. I will leave Columbia cient officer, le on in the morning and put in the day Principal-elect J. , on with you. I would like for you to the Heath Spring s com mpet w,th an auto an<1 take me family, took up his to see the fields of anyone who wants town last Wednesda farm- mp to inspect the land for alfalfa. Mrs. Sallie Butler ltable Then sometime during the day have ter Maggie Lee, of held meeting called. I will talk to the are' spending a whib w people on alfalfa, organize the asso- Y,ert Horton and R ' elation, leave full directions for tnond. nstra- planting alfalfa, and assist the asso- y)r g l. Allen of II ag- elation in naming committees to buy removed to our villi begin tho limestone, etc.. co-operatively. tlo<. of i,iH profession mong 1 want to pnt ,n a buay hard day'8 The auditorium in work. Later I will come back and church has been 1 III ne spp thf. fields as they are growing. recently. The walls Yours truly, Pd over, church ch A. O. SMITH, cular rows take the e and Agriculturalist. pews, a new carpe aensa- an(l PU'P'* furinlt ernor Nancy Lindsay and Mr. meeting is In progri Lindsay of Camden are guests at the n\ tb,a ,tirafT' J^PV,' reany .. Charlotte, N. C., It .<i nomc 01 ivir. w. i-. otriuu-n. "I old # pastor. nortal * Miss Pearl Vau 5 each ^r' ^am chief operator over on her return )( and manager for the Postal Tele- Sumter, with her i graph Company, Charlotte, N. C., Vaughn and family, spent Sunday In Lancaster with his Mrs. Claude made uncle, Mr. M. Pollakoff. ?' Charleston, are York Williams. r . _ Dr. Dyches bap lator's j Minister Praises This Laxative. verts at Flint Rtdg publi- ' Itev. H. Stubenvoll of Allison, Ia.f afternoon. has 'n praising Dr. King's New Life Pills Misses Effle and ni*. ? 'or constipation, writes:?"Dr. spent Wednesday nl King's New Life Pills are such per- Clyburn at Dixie. I feet pills no home should be without Mr. P. B. Mob | them." No better regulator for the Junction is visiting as a liver and bowels. Every pill guar- Mr. II. E. Willi q , nnteed. Try them. Price 25c at the again and greatl; ..peen- gtandard Drug Company and Lancas- health. tcr Pharmacy. j Dr. J. A. Rutled =h\ THE 4 National Bank j STER, - - - S C. I ;? ' nd Surplus - - $80,000 00 j ^sources - $360,000.00 : ________ < IZI=Z=IZ==Z=ZIZZZZ=Z===Z=====III==I?? # #' .E SAM has given this eposit of $10,000.00 and nated us as an active de* V For the fundsof the United * >venment, which is an evi* ; the safety in which your : 1 be held when deposited : ank. | J MB?B?M??M V irst National Bank j OF LANCASTER. V Supervision of the Unite<l State* Government.) -------- V >****************** ********* *_ ? day from a visit to Mrs. Rutledge at 11171170 the F?011?11 Infirmary. He reports NFWN that Mrs. Rutledge is Improving Rev. L. R. Pruett, of Charlotte, will preach at Rich Hill Baptist " * church next Sunday afternoon, August 10th. ! The recent rains In this section 4 Bountiful have been abundant and the crop onders for the Pro8P?cts are excellent. sks. and we now .uttful. Fruits. FARMERS' UNION. ?s are plentiful, ' od place to live. .. on aIuj family Resolutions Adopted by the Sumter at Dixie last County Farmers' Union. * ...? u**!.. \m_ Whereas, Cotton is the foundation. sltYng'" relatves of the flna'lces of the South, and Whereas, We have seen our peo, who has been pie lose from 100 to 300 million now with his dollars in a season because of big idly recovering, ... . .. . .. crop talk, and the constant predicts visiting at the Hon of low prices, and Whereas, The average of prices lam, from Lan- for the past 12 months in the face days here last of the two biggest crops on record, 16V4 million bales in one and 14 14 ampn, Fla., was million bales in the other, and with a this community European war for more than a year, and the threat of adverse legislation Chester visited for nine months which has been used munity the past to tighten money and generally work for lower prices, tson is visiting Whereas, In spite of all these adverse conditions the spinners of the world have needed all the cotton niN't' that has been grown and have re duced stocks to a lower point than ? usual, while there is also a scarcity i. of manufactured good, and Aur 4 Town Whereas, The intense heat with too 4 "? ,* much moisture in the Western secit is being com- Uon Qf the eQtton beU ,8 maklng the ind for his per- crop run too much to weed to yield un down b'lnd a bumper crop, and ccess along that Whereas, So much talk of a bumpweak be arrest- er croP and low Prlc?8 18 doing more >n the road near d?P 88 price8 than the money tin stringency and all other causes comet He tave in- bIned- now therefore be it k the r Resolved. That we call upon all of # our fellow citizens of the South to do mm wis everything In their power to stlmn ,. . a late a more healthy tone In the minds railroad hand Qf ^ Krowerfl of the CQtton duor was fined ReaoiVed. That we make every ef^?wpri?Ver\? ' fn 'ort to ahow them that even with a alt h nil ana em- {ng cfop 8,ow marUetlnK wlll save tj n the South many millions of dollars, B. Busnar i, while the loss from a stampede to chools, \Mtn n ruah the market will he so studenresldence In 01 dous that It will paralyse all busiand her daugh- Resolved, That we call upon all * Richmond, *_ hanks as tliey have regard for the p with Mrs Her- progperRy cf our section to use every Irs. hi. W* nan - 0pportunity to reassure the cotton , growers and to aid them in everv Spartanburg lias 1(.glttmale way to the extent of their ige for the pra - reROurcea to carry out a tiniform poll* o tic< ic>' gradual marketing. of the Hapu. To this end we do recommend that sreatlv improved fof every half. ?ol(, anoth,.r bale be have been %vorK" held off the market, preferrably at airs in semi-cir- home, but wherever there are debts place of the old aRajnst it In the nearest warehouse t has been laid that the creditor mny be secure In ure put in. a advance, and may use it as a ?ss in the church ^asls nf credit to help his customers Li. R. Pruett or carry out the Purpose outlined ? assisting the above Resolved", That a committee of this ghn is stopping Union be appointed to bring to the from a visit to attent|on of all the unions of the tncle, Mr. \\ J. c?n?th v..v,w. II1MW1 iO| nilU l C(|UUM , them to secure the co-operation of :er and children, ajj hoar^8 Gf trade and the bankers with Mrs. J. L. Qf the South for uniformity of action. * , ? Unanimously adopted. I ttzed three con- L c Ttedalfi / e church Sunday Secretary. J , ? . 1 J. FRANK WILLIAMS, J MaKKte Vaughn President, / ght with Mrs. fcd E w DABB3( v W . _ . . J. FRANK WILLIAMS, wF ley of Catawba R M COOPER, his parents here. K c hAYNESWORTH. A ams is at ?">*"* j m BROODEN. At r Improved In g Ke returned sun-1 Subscribe for The Vr