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"A Very Ordinary ;an !' What is Expected from Arthur and his Ad ministration. From the Nt-w. tnd= tou"rier': corre.;ionl dent. WAsHiNTrUN, Saturdiay. Septem ber 24.-Within one short week great change has come over the American nation. In my last I fore shadowed its character ; in this I re cord the fact that it has taken place It appeared plainly to me a monti ago that it was inevitable. In thi brief week a President has died, beet brought back to the Capital in state viewed by hundreds of thousands o people, carried off agai o to his ol( home, and there he will be burie< on Monday in his own native mold while a new President has taken thi oath of office, indicated his policy an actively assumed the direction of thi Government. This had been a great week for th, country one fraught with great con cerns. How much for good and hov much for evil remains to be seen. Th, administration of Garfield has ended It was brief and we can hardly meas ure it accurately in the grief at hi untimely death. We cake up thi new where the old left off so sudden ly and terribly. There is somethin: in the circumstances attending th< succession of Chester A. Arthur t< the Presidency which will cast shadow upon his administration th he will find great difficulty in shak ing off. Indeed, it is exceedingi, doubtful whether he will ever succeec in doing so. The task is too muel for an ordinary man, and Chester A Arthur is A VERY ORDINARY MAN. Even should he feel the desire t< follow in the footsteps of reform wbicl bear the imprint of the dead man' shoes he now wears, the faction of : part; of which he is now the officia head will not permit him. No on, will doubt the motives of Mr. Arthur the purity of his intentions as ex pressed in his brief inaugural address or 'his profound sorrow at that gravi necessjty which ealled him into office These are within the capacity of or dioary men, and Chester A. Arthu: is a very ordinary man. If he coulc be left to follow the impulses whicl now move him Mr. Arthur migh serve his country moderately well as did President Hayes, and go ou . with a minimum of obloquy and e maximum of contempt. Between th< succession of Hayes and the succes sion' of Arthur there are many fini points in common. Hayes came it by rape, Arthur by violence. Ii both cases however, the deed wa: *done by other men. Hayes was th< beneficiary of fraud, and Arthur is th< beneficiary of violence. Hayes wat -an ordinary man and Arthur is a vera ordinary man. Hayes was cordialla bat;ed upon his assumption of powe: bebiause he was the beneficiary of frand of which, however, he was entirely in noeent; Arthur is cordially hated because he came in by violence and he is -also hated because of himself. Hayes was harmless, and the oleagin ous innocende of his administratior secured the country from harm and 'himself- from anything more serioum ~than.a milder sort of ridicule. There *was one particular difference betweer the, feeling of dislike of these tw< aien by the people which in esti miting the- probable character of the sdineistration :of Chester A. Arthui must:-not be lost sight of,. for the for mer was hated by the Democratic party and only because he was the bumble instrument through whielt they' were defrauded of their right tc the Presidency. On the other band Mr. Arthur is hated by a formidable faction of his own party, not onl3 because he got into power over the dead body- of their leader, but because he is the representative of a different eetof men and a different policy. Be. sides this difference, there is still another which will enter largely intc the comparison: Hayes was voted for as a candidate for the Presidency, and came in bound by every obliga. tion to his party, expressed and im plied, to faithfully carry out its wishes. ARTHUR IS AN ACCIDENT, bound by no obligation save loyalty to his friends, to gain whose support he was -placed upon the Presidential ticket. If be should simply carry cut the tenets of the party, as understood by those friends. it would be only whit-an ordinary man would probably do. And Chester A. Arthur is a very ordinary man. Tax your mem ory with that. Having come by ae cident he is bound by no moral ties save loyalty to the general interests of the Country. In the eyes of the wing of the Republican party Mr. Arthur represents, loyalty to party is loyalty to the country. They know no other patriotism. In one respect the unhampered position of President Arthur places him in an attitude of freedom unknown to Presidents elected by the people. He is absolutely un trammelled in the start, and may in augurate such a policy as best corm ports with statesmanship, wisdom and patriotism, regardless of his party fac tions. If he were an extraordinary man like Garfield or Lincoln he would so act. But Arthur is only an or dinary man. The inference is plain: Being an ordinary man he will do as ordinary men do. Being simply a politician of a pessimist school of politics, it is too much to expect the qualities and results of the states. man. Mr. Arthur may be compared with his immediate predecessor in two things only: he is a gentleman and he is an honest man. These are much, for they imply dignity com mensurate with high office, and an honest endeavor to administer it faith fully. if Mr. Arthur were more thau whole louf and deprived themselves 01 power by the concessio, it is theii own fault and misfortune It is : f:tluily quarre?, in whieh the coelntry h:s but a se'om(larv iitcrest As ,ti :a. thet w1hol!' peop'rlt' is: Ct;ncern-1 d it makes very little difference who is it the Executive Chair, provided his ad ministration is characterized by wis don and moderation. The apprehen sionl which exists to-day is as t< whether the administration of Cheste: A. Arthur will be so conducted as t< merit such characterization. Whe should it exist ? Because Arthur i; an ordinary man. That is all. A: F such, men naturally look for him ti do as ordinary men would do under the circumstances. He has begut modestly and cautiously, but it is tht wisdom of fear, of instinct, of tht animal that sees in the eye of its an tagonist a soul that brooks no trifling It is too much to expect a continuanc of THE POLICY OF REFORM inaugurated by President Garfield and crystalized in his Cabinet. Thos< who expert it will be disappointed. i know of no better illustration of the character of the coming Administra tion than that impressive scene upot the lawn at Elbercu the day afte: President Garfield died. The faail liar conferences and association be tween Grant and the newly-mad< President, their close communion and warm personal regard, as they walked about the lawn under the shadow o the house of mourning, was enough t: suggest the future. This evidently did not occur to me alone, as I coulk plainly see in the faces and hear it the tones of the crowd. There wa: the new Administration before us in a single picture, which a smart pho tographer might have sold tw< for a quarter. There was Arthur Stalwart, and there was Grant. Wha else was necessary ' Now ther I would bave been nothing in this, bu { for the history which lay behind it This history is familiar to every mat in the country, for it is a very recen one and needs no varnish to renew it: freshness. The Arthur Administra tion means Grant, means Grantism and Grantism means spoils. Ther< is the picture. That is the way it f looked in essence at Elberon. Tha is the way it looks in the abstrac from Washington to-day. Is ther anything in the record of Chester A Arthur to give the lie to such an in ference ? Perhaps you could appre ciate it better if you coild view th4 picture from this point- If you coult see the HAPPY FACES Of THE STALWARTS beaming through the outward forma of mourning, if you could hear thi sneering words of the Grant crowd hanging about the corridors, if yot could realize the departmental ani mosities which are to be satisfied then you might understand th< changes which are in store for us IThe following from the Stalwart orgar in this city is the first faint expres Ision of Stalwart ideas, and grate harshly on the ear and offends the eyc with the dead body of Garfield lying ir the rotunda of the Capitol: WANTED, THE NAMES Of THE PEMOCRATIC clerks in th< Postoffice Department appointed sine* the present Republican Adnministra tion came into power. Address confi dentially; GRAND BOUNCE, Re publican office. .The clamor for spoils sets in ove1 the dead b>ody. It comes from every Idepartment and from every section oi the country. The Graut and Conk lhng crowd raise their glad eyes to ward the new President and demand with confidence, their share of tb raiment of the dead man lying in th rotunda of the Capitol. What wil] the answer be ? If it. were such a man as Garfield, we know wha< it would be; but Arthur is a very or dinary man. The picture on the sward at Elberog was the index ol what was and is to come In Arthur. Grant will live over again. If he has gained wisdom by experience he wilh see to it that he advise better than he executed. Here in Washington this is not anticipated. For a time all will go weil, but;bhe ordinary man will not rise above ordinary things. There is something severely comi eal in the gathering of the Stalwarts about the throne. Star Route walks erect upon the streets -si and joins the throng from his long seclusion. Belkuap comes forth and promenades arm in arm with Grant. Dorsey hurries from his sheep in Colorado to gather political wool in Washington. Aloiig with hundreds of others who need whitewashing they press forward to the new Stalwart star made President by a Stalwart assassin. 'Will they become part and parcel of the things to come? Well, Chester A. Arthur is but an ordinary man. THE BICYCLE INVESTIGATION. The hearing in the bicycle case was continued yesterday, before Referee E. L. Parris. Only one witness, a stable keeper of Mount Vernon, was examined in behalf of the bicyclers. He said he had kept a stable for many years, and had reared and driven many horses in that time. 'While driving horses he had frequent ly met bicycles, but had never known a horse to be frightened by them. Iorses were much more apt to be frightened by barking dogs, steam en gines, and other objects. The counscl for the bicyclers will apply to Justice Lawrence for a com mission to take testimony in Boston and Philadelphia. -New York 8un, Sept. 30. Set Back 42 Years. 'I was troubled for many years with Kidney' Comnplaint, Gravel &c.; my blood became thin ; I was dull and inactive; could hardly crawl about; was an old worn cut man all over; The ilirl 'IIOS. F. GfENEKFR. W. HI. WALLACE. I:i>rro'iis. NEW_E RY,. S. C. N()C SI', C. 5. 1881 P. 'AI'EIR FOR l!E PEOP.E. The lieral.i is in .hi' highe1 res.pect :t F:ti 1tN telr. d 1evu- to the totteriil i:1 ten-4s %t' tht peo let o Ihis ( tounty ali il st:te. it c"irCtl:lates exteiively.:autd a- ar Adivertising iedium otTers unriva1ett aul v:antages. For Terms, see first page. Publication Day Changed. The HERALD has from its first issu been published on Tuesday morning o each week. and we dislike now to mak change from that day, but we feel th necessity of doing so. Monday is th busiest and most important day of th week, meetings are generally held and everything that can possibly take placI occurs on that day, hence we are al ways pressed with work and crowde< to death to get the paper ready fo press on Tuesday. We think, therefore that a change of publication to Thurs. day morning will be a decided advan tage, not only to the pnblisher but tc the reader, and will consequently iSsul the HERALD next week and from tha time hereafter on Thursday morning. The Prohibition Convention zet in Col; nibia the 27th ant 28th ultirno. The attendance wai not large, a majority of the Coun ties sending no representatives Dr. James H. Carlisle, of Spartan burg, presided. On the first day i resolution was offered to memorial ize the Legislature to pass a probi bition law. Rev. Mir. Tillinghast of Columbia, opposed the resoilu tion. He said a majority of th< people of the State did not wan such a law ; they were not read~ for it ;they must be e.ducated u~ to it. He favored an amendmen prohibiting the sale in towns of no less than five hundred inhabita.nts Mr. Div ver, of Anderson, agreei with Mr. Tillinghast. except as t< the proposed amendment. He be lieved that prohibition should b< wrought out by the different incor porated towps through their loca option laws. Col. Edwards, o Darlington, advised caution in th< matter. The meeting then ad]journed t< the 28th. The second day's proceeding: were of little interest. The attend ance was very small, not over tw< dozen, the majority of these be ing young men. Resolutions wat adopted, among them one directing the Executive Committee to mec morialize the Legislature to pro hibit the sale of liquor in towvns o less than five hundred inhabitants In other respects, there were fl( recommendations as to a change it. the present liquor law. Guiteau 's Line of defense, it ih hinted, will be that the Presideni was not killed by his bullet, but bj malpractice of the doctors. Fail ing in that he will fall back on th< insanity dodge. The impressior prevails that the government wil: probably be as anxious to prov< him insar;e as the defense will be for this reason : if he be proved in sane when he committed the deed the assassination will have no sig. nificance-it would be simply an accident, like death from a railroad collision ;but if it be proved that the President of the United States was shot down in broad daylight by a sane man, what more security is there to the President of this Republic than to the Czar of de* spotic R assia ? There. are some very delicate questions in connection with this assassination, besides the question of jurisdiction. There is nothing unusual in the fact that Arthur is an ordinary man: Vice-Presidents are nearly always so. They are not nominated on the ground of any ability or fit ness they possess, but simply for the purpose of a successful camn paign. The last three Vice-Presi dents were from New York, a cir cumstance owing entirely to the fact that New York is a doubtful State, and giving her the second place on the ticket makes her put forth all her efforts for its election. Arthur is certainly an abler man than Schunyler Colfax, or than Hen ry Wilson was, or Win. A. Wheeler, his immediate predecessors. A Washingtou Scare. A young man named Baylev. a clerk in one of ti, various govern wont oflices abSont \V;shington, mad( a1 affidavit at p:liee head quatrtr:i the 2tth that on the pre vious night he heard two men talk ing under his window about assas sinating President Arthur. He swears that one said he would kill the President within a month ; the other said, " Will you swear to it." His reply was. "Yes. I will"-and t;.eu he took an oath. A third man was, stardin by. Bay!ey got up out of his bed and opened the shut ters the three then ran oti. We would like to know what Mr. Bayley had for supper that night. Suall Farms at the South. The Census repoits show some f great changes in the industrial con dition of the South in the past twenty years, especially in the sub division of plan tations. The fol lowing table shows the number of farms in South Carolina in 1860 and in 1880, and by whom they were cultivated in the latter year, whether by owner, renter or on shares: Nber of Farms. Fixed '-On i1u. 18S . Ownter. Rental. Shares. 3).171 93.:64 46,645 21.974 25,45 The other Southern States make the same sort of showing. Let no one, from a mistaken idea of economy, refuse to take his County paper because the times are hard. Two dollaYs is a very small saving, compared to what one loses by being without his County paper. We say this without reference to any particular paper. There is, we admit, a feeling of self-interest in these remarks ; yet they express our honest judgment, in which the reader will no doubt concur. it gives us pleasure to say that the hard times have caused no fall ing off of either old or new sub scribers to the HERALD. On the contrary, our subscription list was never better. The first business of the Senate which convenes the 10th will be to elect its President, who in the event of Arthur's death would become the President of the United States. The Democrats will have a majori ty, as Lapham and Miller have not -yet been sworn in, nor has the suc Icessor of Senator .Burnside-all three Republicans. So that the President of the Senate will un doubtedly be a Democrat, and will very likely be Senator Bayard, of Delaware. Four wor-kmen were killed on a landear by r. tr-aip going to the President's funeral, and a man from Canton, Ohio, fell from a wall at Cleveland during the funeral cere monies and was killed. At Tarry town, N. Y., two men were killed in firing a cannon the day of the fune ral ; and a man at Wilmington, N. C., had both his hands blown off by a cannon. Arthur ani "Ordinary MIan." So thinks the Washington cor respondent of the News~ and Courier. And so he has proved himself to be heretofore. The letter of the News (ad Cou rier's correspondent is so entertain ing that we take the liberty of re producing it. Dr. Boynton, a hotpeopathist, who as a fiend of President Gar field was with him dur-ing his last illness, charges that the autopsy upon the body was not honest; that the surgeons who made it con cealed some important facts. The public will put no faith in such charges. An editor in New Brunswick, N. J., was hanged and burned in effigy because his editorial on the life and character of the dead President was not altogether complimentary. It was not abusive, but only critical. This did not suit the prevailing toadyism. Are you going to Yorktown, or to Atlanta ~? The former will re present the triumph of arms, the latter the triumph of the industrial arts. Atlanta will no doubt have by far the largest attendance, as the Southern people are much more inter-ested in arts than in arms. Mr. Joseph Austin Holmes, of Laurens County, has been elected to the Chair- of Geology and Natu ral history in the North Carolina tUiver-sity. Rival delegations will go to the New York Republican State Con vention from ITTa -onk linrr heads It is said that only one Presi4ent of the Ufnited States was born in a town or city: all the others were country boys. State News. B. W. Hicks, white, was hanged at Spartanbnrg Friday, 30th ult., for wife murder. The Greenville police are going for the gambling and other disrepu table establishments of that city. James D. Turner was shot and killed by James F. Walsh in an al tercation in Charleston the 26th nl timo. Recent deaths in Edgefieid : Mrs. Eppes Norris, (formerly Miss An nie Laurie Bryan), Sept. 25th; Mrs. Chas. W. Creighton, (formerly Miss Fannie Leard). Sept. 21st; Mr. Lee Holson, Sept 24th. FOR THE HERALD. I Wish I Knew. I wish I knew the incomparable workings of our double-geared courts of justice (so-called). I wish I knew how a man convicted of an atrocious burning, avd who has been a curse to his neighborhood, an expense and nuisance to our courts for years, when sentenced, after a fair trial, to five years at hard labor in the penitentiary, with a youlh of a negro boy--his accomplice-his tool-no thing more, is permitted to escape, while the negro is sent to serve out his time. I wish I knew that the same court and machinery of law that ieleased Bony Satterwhite-the criminal with money-would release Isom Workmain -the innocent wan of the two, with out money. That would be generous. I wish I knew how much of his bond would be collected and offered as a reward for the escaped criminal. I wish I knew why the oflicers of our County are required to give bond for a proper discharge of their duties, when we have ex-Sheriffs, ex.Clerks and ex-Treasurers who are reputed defaulters, and neither they nor their sureties are brought to grief. I wish I knew why some things of such general public interest have to be kept so "mum." I wish I knew what good it does to put property on the Auditor's books at small fictitious values. I wish I knew why the true value and a smaller per cent. would not an swer the same purpose, and b'e more conducive to truth. I gieh I knew by what nection of law' or exposition of the Ten Comn mandments, improvements on lands, worth from five hundred to five thous and dollars, creep into the Auditor's books at from one to ten hundred. 1 wish I knew why property in the shape of cash does not show to near such adv.antage on the Audito:r's books as it does by the report of bank deposits. I wish I knew how some men ac quired so much cash and notes, over and above indebtedness, between 1880 and 1881. The difference being in some cases from two thousand to nine teen thousand. There was rapid ac cumulation, or just a little oversight. I wish I lknew wlien people would be expected to tell the plain, unvar nished truth when they assess their property, and not to lie according to a given scale. I wish I knew much more, but will not recite it until another time. ALiBI Value ut' the Di)scipline~ En forced at the state Military Academy --- Respect for Lawv and Order---Phy sical and MIental Training.' The efforts to re-establish the Cita del Acade.my as one of the IFducation. al agences of the State meet with a ready sympathy from all who have known thiroughi their own experience or have recogznized in others the value of the system of training thjere adopted for fitting young men in a practical manner for the great busi. ness of life. This result of her teachings was due in large degree to the military feature of the establishment. The rigid discipline possible under this system was of great benefit in many ways. Receiving youths fresh from home, at that supreme moment when charac ters are made, or marred, by sur rounding influences, the wholesome restraints of military discipline served to preserve the inexperienced from the temptations found in pro miscuous society, to enforce attention to study, and generally to would both mind and body into a recognition of authority and obedienee to law. The intense individuality which is the peculiarity of American character, and which in after life has often been the inspiration to high achievement and signal success, requires whole some restraints and checks in youth to inculcate a reverence for law and. order- The tendency of the educa rien at the Citadel was powerful in this direction, and all the recipients of her teaching, rich or poor, what ever had beer' the faults or merits of home training, were placed on the same platform and compelled to obey the same rules. It was an education of the whole system; body and mind received eq1ual ttention and were developed with equal success. Whatever objections may be ad vanced to the military training of West Point as creating an excess of ~oldiers in the Republic, the educa ion at the Citadel was open to no uch strictures. No prospects open, d before these 'r~alimto.~ of' nrnInnc~ed miitaru ~pr ficant agent in shaping the future, and adapting the constitution to the roughier :5p n sibiittiees (if ':if. 'he who.le tertcr if life at the (ita de"l was to maeke tihe ymn.h ireten-:ely i - iti,al. lie was 1ade to wait on hielf, clean his own shoes :and ac"''ntre nint&, scour his own flo',r. police his oWn room, and gcuerally to recognize the fact that in confotring to the rules of the Academny he was doing his duty. This was the secret of the high measure of success reacht-d by this system of education. In after years, no matter where the scene of labor might be, the etleet of trainingr was to inspirc strict attention to duty and obedience of orders, and und,er zuch circumtstanc"es some de .ree of success was sure. The great lessun hal been incul cated that the "duties of life are wnore than life." Jlarried. September 14th, 1881, at Whitesburg, Teui, by Rev. Jno. W. Bachnau, Mr. SA't.A W. JACK, of Newport. Tern., to Miss M. Lrra KYLE, daughte. of Gen. W. C. Kyle, of Whitesburg, Tenn. Mr. and Mrs. Jack are in Newberrv for a while, stopping at the Newberry Hotel. R ,POT OFFICE, NEWBERRY, S. C., Oct. 1, 1881. List of advertised letters for week ending Oct. 1, 1581: Butler. Pickens Hays, Mrs. Annie Boy. Mrs. Susan .iulian, Mrs. t. Cannon, W.S. Lake, Willie Cannon, Mrs. Texie tdam, Mrs. Francis Canon. Andy Spence, Mrs J. E: (3) Glymp, Andrew Suninions, Dr. C. . liopkins, T. E. Williams, It A. Herbert. Hattie Wright, Franklin Parties calling for letters will plea.4e say ifaudverJised. R. ui. BOONE, P. M. .Vew dmert,iseents. THESPIAN HALL ! Friday Night, Oct. 7, 1881. An entertainmient will he given at es pian Hall nWxt. Friday night, to cnint of 1GSIC, READINGS AN!) IIAWAES. Doors open at 7 o'clock. Entertainment to begin at 8 Admission 25 cents. Oct.F 540 1 IIE Y SA L NOTICE, LV R STBEHaving leased the Livery Stables from Mr. H. H. Blease, the subscribers take pleasure ininnformin the ublic that The wialtal eep FIrST a nihtLtAcnSto IVERYAI,O AFE0AR$$ alto gin atheAdmitsion p5trna. Oct. 5, 40-41 Seeavlabl te BLIN Otes ino M..HBes,the Tosubscribr~ ao ers good plasTURE LOTS Tnomnete pulicts a theyis wile oee FIRS e CL terSSrwl el n o pWyigrt the wnuiedle the ac cot Oct. 5, 40-4m . M IADA Several yahil oULDN LOTS iony ote ofines tery gire wtlhset them Anow Mercasting of the aomsverls ayob pelbinr o eunyrwillnehd at theotire of J.c on Tuesdgan, Es. tne. andfan y keein gains the sadCounty te i heriueby gvn obtore the Annut al Metn fteCounty Comissionersrfo Newberry Conywsl cop hedattei.f maends tof any id aigst ei 1ounty whisior tov ntbe oe presetocn tain, are ticetb requietdoit the prniattosam onth the rundr.ndo rbfr h is a Tickoetse good for exdamintonb the mi Contyi oads.ines For ickes Fn al iRBERio, ca., o Oct. 5, 40 4t. n Ps Clent. wit beAurrypNew col gebyt.m *7l.00t prOI0 hudeXp8 l Sinn a0. ng d oesin 25 c ec.,81 Coy day dutoring t-gisen wintripa picte. comprsnsh. sscaeRiwy proimtin FOU CqCENT er mileo f'or theround-rip. t,Chcao NTice gofo Finaso SetleCmnt. & Greenviale an setleant on tharlotte Aif C.n TRaqila as.hmet n h rbt Cufor icketsy anoulnfotiCon calldo eneended uner~ ay ofircumbne, no iSl atdihetey thccfter applorafinate dishre xiati Gof the perid oftthe.rvld itv. . POPEiN, POTATAIT SOFT GAROFIEi.D Bit Jais B Autog r ackowltedge. yhm suit to me the best liikees on exine. Sroh, le coies 2ecets piTeeure Address,t ct n amns all ober &ing arqeildre anthd ciors of thae sadcased,thamet othe esad ap pear befraeuil Scuer, in the uto Probate istration, of the Estate and efi'ects of Jacob Grouch, deceased. These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said deceased, that they be and ap n ornra ma in the Caner af Twhata Frui1s aj ERUlIT. Hand-Pick,d Virg APF.ES. ORL1 NGErS. DA.XNA: PE.l l.S. Pu T 1 TOE P ' : 1 f . p 7 1)A , .u p p l y L ) ! " i nt k in S 1 : t s < .' 1 l w a y - 4!1h-d. ian Ire :--r- c:m 1h: tkir I''rt alii;ion r.'en1 to) nie0l C. BAtI 55. i & 59 Market Street, - CLOTHING. CLOTHING. 3i. L I CLOTHING. CLOTHING. COLU1 IS PREP CLOTHING. FALL AT With the Larg CLOTHIING. CLOTHI NG. CLOTHING.g GET'[J CLOTHING To Be Fouw CLOTHING. To all of wit CLOTHING CLOTHINO.'. Se p. 28, 39-I f. Dry 4QQd There is now in Stock Shiver's Corner, A Full, Fresh a D R Y 4 Ladies', Mens a: CARPETS, MATT STRAW GOODS, UMBREL] WINDOW SHADES, CURTA These goods were purchased under I are OFFERED AT FAIR AND POEULA C. BIJKIIIiT May 11, 19-if. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLIN COUNTY 0OF NEWBERRY. 1N COMMON PLEAS. Thos. T. Moore, Ad:dr., ys. E. P. Lake, P. Reagin and othere. Relief. By order of the Court, I will sell, at p lie outcry, before the Court House at N4 berry, on the First Monday (7th day) November, 1881, a lot of land, in the to of New berry, tbe property of Elijah P. Lal fronting on Boundary Street, and bunc by lands of the Esat el Stanmore Lai ford. deg'd., linds of J1. B. Werts and. J. Fowles-containing Forty-four Acres i One-fifth, nmore or less,-in six separ; parcels as follows: Lot No. 1-(On wihich is a two-st< dwelling), containing Twelve Acres a Four-fifthis, more or less, fronting on Boi dary Street, and bounded by lot No. lands of estate of Stanmore Langford. ceased, lot No. G, the grounds of Nar Cemetery, and Ln King Street, which aej rates it from Lot No. 3. Lot No. 2-Containing Two Acres, mt or less, fronting on Boundary Street, a bounded by lands of estate of Stanna Langford, deceased, and by Lot No. 1 Lot No. 3-Containing Eight Aeres, na or les.e, fronting on Boundary Street, a bounded by King Streer, w hichl separates from Lot No. 1 and by .ots No. 4 and 3' o. Lot No. 4-Containing Five Acres a Three-fourt hs, more or less, fronting Boundary Street, and bounde~d byv Lots Y 3 and No. 5, and by lands of J. N. Fowl Lot. No. 5-Containing Seven Acres a: Twelve-hundredths, more or less, a: bounded by King S!.reet, (which separat it from. Lot No. 6.) inds of J. B3. Werts, N. Fowies and Lets No. 41 and No. 3. L1ot No. 6--Contain?ing Nine Acres al Four::een hundredths, m;ore or less, a: bounded by lands ol estate ot S. Langfor lands of J. B3. Werts, by King Street (whi separaies it from Li't No. 5,) and by L No. 1. TERMs-The purchaser Will be requirl to pay one-half of the purchase money a,b, and to secure the balance payable twelve months with interest thereon fre the day of sale by bond and mortgage the property sold-and to pay for conve nce. gg The several lois will be sold by pla af the same. Ini the meantime the pla may be seeni at the Master's Office. SIL AS ,JOU)NSTON E, Master. Master's Office, Oct. 4, 1881. 40-3t STATE OF SOUTH CAROLIN2 COUNTY OF NEWBERRY. IN~ COMMON PLEAS. William Langford and George A. Langfor E.'ors. of Julius B. Smith. Plaintifi against Teach C. Pool, 0. L Schumpe and D. HI. Wheeler, Defende.nts. Foreclosure. By order of the Court herein, dated 111 une, 1881, I will sell, at public outcry, b) ore the Court House at Newberry, on tU irst Monday in November, 1881, "tho, two lots of land in the town of Newberr' in the said County and State, known Lot No. 4 and Lot No. 5, of the lots fo merly belonging to the estate of Julius Smith, deceased, fronting on Gaidwe ~Street for the distance of Fifty-four an 'Four-tenths Feer, more or less, and rur 'ing back to the depth of Seyenty-five an 'Fivetenths Feet, more or less, containi 'in the aggregate Feur Bundred andi Filti nine and One-tenth square Yards. mo10 or less, and otherwise bounded by Frien 'Street, Smith Alley, and lot of C. & G. 'Mower. id Pe*etables. POD'>UCE . nia Peanuts a Specialty. S. C(.110X. CICYh VU TS. R.A ISINS. S. 0Nlo.S. lAlI>:AGES. ,n hand N4 Couiz~1iOfn ~r Ati(ton1 G;oOtd3 han rttore epl"i U pti onI( lir>: class stock. ? T & Co., - - CHARLESTON, S. C. atltpiia . CLOTHING. -1'NARD'SC CLOT HING. jB,, CLOTHING. AHD FOR THE TD WINTER CLOTHING. zst and Best Stock of P'H ING CLOTHING. CLOTHING. -AtiD tNISHNG 8OOOS CLOTHING. id in the State. CLOTHING. h he inZites attention. CLOTHING. CLOTHING. CLOTHING s, Motions, Sc. at the Old and Noted louse1 in Columbia, S. C., nd Complete Line of rOODS, ad Children's Shoes, INGS, OIL CLOTHS, ARASOLS, LACES~ LINEN, IN LACES, CORNICES. aivtrab'o auspices by an experienced buyer, and ia PRIGES. Try themi. X'OhI ? Cl. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF' NEWBERRY. IN COMMON PLEAS. rMergaret Spearman, Plaintiff, against Cfies ley D. Spearmtan, Defendant. Foreciosure. By order of' the Court herein, dated 19th February, 1S81, I w'ill sell, at public outer.1, on the First Monday ini November, 1881, bf efore the Court House at Newberry, all lthat tract or plantation of land lying and. bieing~ situate in the came State and County ed afoead nwaters of' Little River, con taining Two Liur dred and FryArs N-more or less, and bounded by lands of ttd Jackson Teague, Travis Hill, and lands bh> deceased, .id others. ryl TERMS-The purchaser will be required~ dto pay one-fourth of the purchase money it; cash, and to secure the balance, payable in: interest frotm the day of sale, by a bond ce and a mortgage of the premises, and pay. -for dleed - with leave to paLy the whole amount of the purchase money inl cash. reC SIL AS JOHNSTONE, Master ad jMaster's Office, Oct. 4, 1881. 40-8& rSTATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF NEWBERRY. ItCOURT OF PROBATE. Henry Hlendrix, as Adminiustrator of Rebee id ca Hendrix, dec'd., Plaintiff against Re ,t beccai J. Uenidrix, John Longsho.re, Levi o. Longhore, Lark Longshore, Antoitnette -s Pitt, A!iee Johnsoa, James Hendrix, d George Hlendrix, Levi Hendrix, Blelton d Hendrix, Heniry D. Hendrix, Hamte es Teague, Sallie Nichols and Lucreti Ilut J. !er, D)efendai.s. Summtons. For Relief. dTo the De fendants-Rebeeca J1. Hendrix, JohnLongshore, Levi Longshore, Lark Longshore, Antoinette Pitt,s, Alice Johte so, 1dames Hendrix, George Hendrix, OtjLevi Heudrix, Belton Hendrix, Henry .D dIBendrix, Hlattie Teague, Sallie Nichols and Lucretia Butler : at Yon are hereby summoned and rbquired mto answer the complaint in this action, wf hichi is fied in thteoffice ofthe Probate Judge tot said Coun;ty, in said State, a nd.to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint tson the subiscriber at his offien, Newberry C. H., Soth Carclina, within tweutyv davs af ter the service hereof, exclusive of the day of uchsevic ;and if you fail to ansawer th copan within the time aforesaid, (ourt for the relief demanded ini the coim plaint. .- Dated October 3, A. D. 1881. T. J. POPE. laint.iff's A ttorney, 3 J. B. FE L LERS, J. P. N. C. [ss.] rt To Levi Hendrix, absent Defendant: Take notice that the complaint in this ac tion, together with the sumnmons, of which th-- foregoing is a copy, Was filed in .he h joffice of the Jundge of Probate for Newberry I- County, at Newberry Court House, in the e County of Newberrv and State of South e (arolina, on the 3d day of October, A. D. , 1881. Y. J. POPE, s Plaiutiff's Attorney. - Oct. 3, 1~81. 401-6t. 9 Notice of Final Settlement. I will make a sett'ement on the Estates d of Julius B. Cromner anid George B. Cromer, gin the Probate Court for Newberry County, - S. C , on-Tuesday, the 8th of Nov., 1881, e and immediately thereafter apply for a final d discharge as Guardian of said EAtates. i-POLLY M. CROMER, Oc. 5. 4_.n Guardian.