The Herald. THOS. F. GRENEKER o W. H. WALLACE, o 11BERRY, S. C. THURS )AY, OCT. 27, 1881. A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. TNieHerald is in the highest respect aFam fly,. 0p pCr, devoted to the material in erests he people of this County and the State. It circulates extensively, and as an Advertising medium offers unrivalled ad vantages. Tor Terms, see first page. "The Star of Bethlehem." We have seen in a score or more country papers recently the same istake in regard to the "Star ofI Bethlehem" that is made by our correspondent "P." There is no seh star now visible. That which "P." and' others mistake for it is the planet Jupiter. ' A very brilliant star suddenly a|ppeired.in the constellation Casi bein1v72; it was brighter than Ve$s, and could be distinctly seen "ifmidday. It disappeared in less tad two' years, and has not been visible' since. As a similar star ia ppeared in the same constel lation twice previously at intervals of about 300 years they are sup posed to be identical; and it is calfea the "Star of Bethlehem." If -f is a periodical star it is about ne for its appearance again ; but as"not come yet. Theh e Beraldsays: "A. .fire oeedrred yesterday evening at Bristol in a large printing and sta ionary store." Are we to infer -from this that they have movable, b" locomotive, stores in Bristol? The mistake was no doubt only a iypographical one on the part of the Berald; but we mention this a sianefor the beneft of themany who spell stationery (meaning pens, fn,Sapers, No.,) with an a .The Iowa survivors of Confede .satjions have formed an asso =cition for the purpose of securing -tio.is not local, but we invite the eseeraionof every comrade who - ejoy~ed (!) the hospitalities (?) of a , abrel-hell or camp of detention." SThey go for the old fag and an appiopriation._ __ ihe 1st Regiment of the Connec lestlatinnal Guard and a compa aye the Oovernor's Guard arrived -sg Charleston. Sunday from York Aosiby-the steamship Charleston, -ednpanied by Gov. Bigelow and ote itnuse citizens of the ,YA0eg State." .The Charleston iaagave thham a very hearty and Jwspitable reception. Two.editors of the Sussex (N. J.) egeefeat pleaded guilty of libel pig k. W. H. Gibbes, the Sen ior.editor, pas sentenced to ten n ntha hard.labor in the peniten an a f of $200; and J. J. . tston, the younger, to six months n1the same fine. President Arthur has appomnted - e x-o ,advin D). Morgan, of New iot/Secretary of 1ae Treasury, in plaeof Windom. The latter was eeted Senator from Minnesota. The Columbia Register says: ~The -pyrotachnic display in Col timbia etring the State Fair will edeed in g?anddar any exhibition of-e khbd eitver -sen here." The Code somminsion has the Civil Code ready to be submitted to the next seon of the Legisla taire. The Criminal Code will not be ready for a year yet. Uapb Bogardus, the world-re *owned "shootist," will- be at the State Fair, and will give an exhibi .tlonofhis wonderful skill with the -uhotgun_ A young man from New Jersey hia4 both arms blown off by the premature discharge of a cannon at th~e Yorktown Celebration the 19th. Col. J. Wash Watts, of Laurens Tonnty, is the general superinten dent of the live stock department at the Atlanta Exposition. Albert Smith was sentenced to imprisonment for 99 years at San Atonio, Texas, last week, for stage robbery._ -The fund for Mrs. Garfield has reached $337,000, and the subscrip tions have been closed. State News. Dr. Jno. Lynch, of Columbia, lied the 19th. Dr. Irby Dunklin, a prominent ahysician and a valuable citizen of Laurens, died the 19th instant at he age of sixty-four. Washington Letter. From our Regular Correspondent. WASHINGTON, D. C-, Oct. 20, 1881. There is an organization here in I Washington, composed of veterans of the late war, which is making prepa rations to stir up some of the nests in the Government Departments with a very sharp stick. A committee of this organization has been at work for some months gathering the data upon which to base their action, and when the developments come there will be a scattering all along the line. Dur ing the Presidency of Grant we heard a great deal on the subject of nepo tism. The provision which the Ad ministration made for its own and its wife's relations was the subject of much discussion in the newspapers and undoubtedly had its effect. If that was the origin in this country of what Webster calls 'an undue fond ness for nephews and other relations' among 'those in authority, certainly the disease has spread with exceeding rapidity. There is so much of it in every Department of the Government at this time that it has come to be a crying evil. And that is what these veterans are going for. It has been understood that ex soldiers, qualifications and other things being equal, were to have the prefe rence in appointment to minor posi tions under the Government, but they do not get it. Such a large propor tion of places are filled by the rela tives of Department officials, favorites of Senators and mistresses of Con gressmen, that the soldier gets pretty unanimously left. This is not mere idle talk ; it is a solid fact, based upon actual investigation. I have seen the lists now in course of completion af ter a careful and thorough canvass of every Department and feel constrained to say that there will be some music when Congress assembles this winter. There are over seven hundred cases where from two to fourteen members of favorite families are on the Govern ment pay-rolls, drawing salaries rang ing from $900 to $2.500 per year. Assistant Secretary French of the Treasury has ten members of his fam ily snug!y stowed away, seven of them, consisting of sons, nephews and nieces, are attached to the Treasury and its various bureaus. Chief Brooks, of the Secret Service division of the Treasury Department, is happily pro vided with salaries agregating soie thing over $11,000 in his immediate family. These are merely samples. To go on through the list would re quire too much space, though it might be what Horace Greeley used to term 'mighty interestin' reading.' Sometimes a Secretary or bureau chief after providing fer a goodly number of his relations in his own department to save appearances, uses his influence to get the rest of them in somewhere else. Secretary Hunt of the Navy Department is the latest example of official tenderness for off spring and the ties of consanguinity. He has snugly located all his four sons where they can do the most good -for themselves-the Navy positions as in the Army being for life, or dur ing good behavior. Other relations have also been provided for. Ap pros of Hunt there is a strong effort being made to keep him in the Cabi net but I am certain it is wholly with out effect. Had General Garfield continued in his administration both Hunt and Kirkwood would most probably be in retirement. Both have proven failures. I am not now speaking my private opinion but giv ing the facts which must go to make up history. Mr. Hunt was given a position in the Cabinet as a Southern man, but with the distinct understanding that it was an experi ment so far as he was concerned and that if at any time a*echange was de sired his place was at the disposal of the President. It was also under stood that as he gave up a life judge ship to eDter the Cabinet he would be properly cared for in case he left it. This arrangement President Arthur will no doubt bear in mind. I saw Judge Davis this morning and could but notice that the smiles which wreathed his countenance the day he was elected President of the Senate had all disappeared. In fact the old gentleman is a little worried. That this is true is evidenced in his anxiety for some days to find out what people thought of his election. Be sides he knows that the Republicans will likely elect some one else to the position one of these days. The Judge now perhaps, realizes that he made a mistake in accepting the posi tion. But it was the first and only chance he has ever had to make one step toward the Presidency. He has had the Presidential bee in his bon net for years. Your correspondent attended the Cincinnati convention in 1872 and saw car loads of delegates come in from Illinois whose expenses had been paid out of Davis' plethoric purse. But for the obstinate and ex pensive fight made for him in that convention his State would have voted for Trumbull, instead of dividing its vote, and the result not only of the convention but of the campaign that followed would, probably, have been different. Preious to thise Ju.Tdge FOR THE HERALD. A Call on Newberry County. 19.sIAalat, S C., Oct. 24. 1 1. EDITORS RHERAD1,: I desirc,thruugh ,our columns. to beg that our ,ood riends of Newberry County contribute iherally in the way of exhibits at the pproaching State Fair. The County Fair in your town was a grand sue e t; not only in the number of x iibits. but more particularly in the luality-in the display of horses es pecially. I trust, therefore, that our people will send their entries to me at this place until the 30th inst. ; after that time my Post Office will be Columbia. Respectfully, Tlios. W. 11or.o\wAY, Secretary. FOR THE HERALD. R. R. Meeting. JOINTOiVN ACADEMY, Near WILLISTON, S. C., Oct. 18, 1881. Editors Newberry Herald : DEAR SIRS : The Committee of Arrangements direct me to extend to you, and through you to others, an invitation to attend a public meeting and free Barbecue at Dean Swamp Church, on the line of Aiken and Or angeburg, 12 miles from Blackville, on Saturday, the 29th instant, in the interest of the proposed railroad from Newberry to Blackville. Eminent speakers have been invited, and our people, fully alive to the great impor tance of the enterprise, wish to join hands with their friends all along the line and push forward in the matter of this road. Please do us the favor to extend, pressingly, this invitation to your speakers and public-spirited citizens generally. Respectfully, BOYNTON O'BRIEN, Cor. Sec'y. FOR THE HERALD. I'd Be a Star. On a cursory view of the heavens, the stars appear to be very irregularly scattered over the concave of the fir manent. There are certain groups of this description which strike the attention of every observer ; of these the group called the Pleiades, or seven stars, is the most obvious to observers. You may see these seven stars every clear night. To the South of the seven stars you can see a beautiful star that makes its appearance three times in a thousand years This star is called the Star of Bethlehem. This new and uncomuon star appeared in the heavens over the city of David, which served as a signal that the Star of Jacob had arisen upon the world, and as a guide to certain persons called Wise Men who came from the Fast to Jerusalem to inquire after him who was born King of the Jews. This stai- is the guide of all good men and women to heaven. It stood over the Louse where the holy family resided at 1Bethlehem. Read your bible. P. Early Nomiinations. The following nominations for State officers and Judges, which we find in the correspondence of the Aiker Journal & Reviewo, are very good but exremely early : Editors Journal and .Revieto: It has heretofore been the custom of the people of this State to delay making any nomination for State officers till just prior to the electio~n. I don't think that a good plan ; men and measures should be thoroughly dis cussed before the time comes for nom inating Feeling as I do, I propose the fol lowing gentlemen to fill the various offices of the State: For Governor-Gen. John D. Ken nedy, of Kershaw. For Lieutenant Governor-Hon. John C. Sheppard, oif Edgefield. For Attorney General-Hon. James Aldrich, of Aiken. For Adj't and Inspector General Capt. Wiley Jones, of Richland. For Comptroller General-Hon. J. Walter Gray, of Greenville. For State Treasurer-Hon. C. R. Miles, of Charleston. For Secretary of State-George Johnstone, of Newberry. VOTER. Columbia, 5. 0., Oct. 8, 1881. A Wise Deacon. 'Deacon Wilder, I want you to tell me how you kept yourself and family well the past season, when all the rest of us hav.e been sick so much, and have had the doctors visiting us so often.' 'Bro. Taylor, the answer is very easy. I used Hop Bitters in time ; kept my family well and saved the doctor bills. Three dollars worth of it kept us well and able to work all the time. I'll warrant it has cost you and the neighbors one to two hundred dollars apiece to keep sick the same time.' 'Deacon, I'll use your medicine hereafter.' .?Iarried, October18, 1881, by Rev. J. P. Smeltzer, D.D., Wx. E. LAKE, M.D., of NewberraV County, to Miss JULIA A. SCHRODER, of Wahala. Obituary. DIED, in the city of Columbia, on the 20th Oct., ss1, LILLA, grand-daughter of Col. 3. P. Pool, of Newberry. No gentler, sweeter child ever passed from earth to heaven. Possessed of great personal beauty-petted and caressed by all, yet was she without vanity. Tender and sympathetic, she laug'hed with the hap py and wept with the sad. Her considera tion for others was a marked feature in her character. Her presence, her mind, her heart all united to make her an unusual, winsome child. At home, at school, at church-by her teachers, by her school mates, by her Pastor--every where by every bod who ever kew her, she was beloved. 20 PERFORMING ELEPHANTS! 00 Plumed Horses !-Lions and Tigers Loose in the Streets !-A Monster Parade ! Forepaugti's trem;.dous combination of ircus in two rings, net,agerie, trained vild beasts, hippodrume, aviary and aqua -iumu is to exhibit aftern:oon and evening at ew berry, Tuesday November lst. On the morning of exhibition day, the ntire establishment appears in a grand, ree, public procession, which the press lsewhere assert is the most superb main noth spectacular display ever seen upon he st-eets. An exchange, before us, thus lescribes the affair: "Forepaugh's show parade sho:.ld be seen to be appreciated ; aothing in the way of s:reet pageants, show parales, or public procession has ever been made, that in extent., novelty and lavish display, could be compared to this monster and marvelous display made by Forep-ugh's great show. The pageant of Lalla Rookh, wherein is seen TWENTY RICHLY-ROBED ELEPHANTS, and the beauti'ul maid of India, personated by Forepaugh's famous ten-thoussnd dollar beauty, whose loveliness is said to exceed that of Mrs. Langtry, the famous English beauty, is one of the many novelties seen in this parade. This lady personates Lalla Rookh, and appears in the pageant, seated in an oriental howdah, upon the back of a kingly elephant ; all the attendants of the Court of Delhi are represented in this pa geant, and the spectacle is really the most beautifully realistic Eastern pageant ever produced. Following this, appear a mile of massive and magnificent chariots, drawn by fully five hundred handsome horses ; the colossal CAR OF THE UNIVERSE, costing $40,001, is the most elaborately constructed and the most grand, and unique piece of chariot work ever constructed. A herd of desert dromedaries, droves of Shetland ponies, and ONE HUNDRED ARABIAN HORSES, all appear in this colossal and costly pa geant, and tigers, lions and other wild beasts, are seen loose in the street, and performed as the procession moves. THREE UANDS OF MUSIC are stationed, equally distant, along the line and discourse the popular airs of the day. Then, in addition to a long line of richly-robed processioni.ts, there is to be Mardi-gras masqueraders, and illustrations of the "Kouikal Ku-Klux-Klan." serpent charmers, steam-pianos, jubilee singers, human curiosities, wide open dens of wild beasts, and hundreds of novel and suprising sensations, make up a street display which absolutely surpasses in originality, extent, magnificence and grandeur, any and all show parades hitherto seen, and to see which is really worth a day's journey, and when seen, cannot fail to please and as tonish the old and the young all over the land." Of course all our readers will be on hand to witness this huge holiday parade, and, our advice is, take the little folks alorg, also ; it is a free show. It generally takes place at about ten o'clock in the forenoon ; remember this, and prepare to reach town by that hour. All railroads sell tickets at reduced rateq to and from Newberry on the day Forepaugh's show is there. Get ready for it. POST OFFICE, NEWBE RRY, S. C., Oct. 22, 1881. List of advertised letters for week ending Oct. 22, 1881: Bolantl, A, P. 1Hanes, Isam Chston, Cokes Lewis, Lias Capers, Refinia. Meredith, Lewis Coulty, Martha (2) McNelis, Wmn. Drumolds, Mrs. Caro- IPark, H. S. line jWright, Mrs. Ella Glenn, Eliza Parties calling for letters will please say if advertised. R. W. BOONE, P. M. .i'ew .6Idtertisements. FOR SALE. A large lot of Game Ban tams, almost any size or color desired, at $1 per pair. T. E. GRENEKER, Oct 27, 43-3t. HERALD Offiee. FOR SALE. A VALUABLE FARM, 11 miles from Court House, on Hender son's Ferry Road, containing 53S .Acres. 20 acres creek bottom, well drained and emnbanked, and 10 acres branch bottom. Lands lie well, and are well adap ed to Corn, Cotton and Small. Grain, and are in a good state of cultivation, well watered and timbered. Inexhaustible Granite Qua ries abound. A Two-story Dwelling, seven rooms, four fireplaces, a kitchen and dining-room attached. Gin house, Screw, New Stables-six stalls Barn above, Crib, six laborers' houses, and all other necessary buildings. The good will -of a large country practice is also offered with the place. L. B. BATES, M.D. Oct. 27, 43-6t. NEW LOT OF JUST RECEIVED --AT THE HU.LDBOK STODJ CONSISTINO IN PART OF Memorandum and Pocket Books of all kinds-some large and fine. Blank Books, all sizes and prices. Counting House Rulers. Letter Clips. Indellible Ink and Pencils. Mucilage and Erasers. Writing Desks-something nice. Tags and Suspension Rings. Ink Stands of various kinds. Bill Files, Music Paper. Camel Hair Brushes. Pants, Chessmen. Sunday School Record Cards. Pens, Ink, Pencils, Slates. Paper and Envelopes, all kinds, Photo. and Auto. Albums. Miscellaneous Books. A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT Of Order of~ Dance Cards. Wedding Invitations. Party Invitations. AND A GREAT VARIETY OF OTHER ARTICLES. T. F. GRENEKER. Oct. 27, 43-tt. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF NEWBERRY. IN COMMON PLEAS. Ellison S. Keitt, PI'ff', vs. G. B. Counts and E. B. Suber, Def'ts. Relief By order of the Court in the above stated case, I will sell at public outcry, before the Court House at Newberry, on the first Mon day in November, 1891, one Five-Horse Power Portable Steam Engine a'id Carriage, MiFscellaneoms. Notice of Final Settlement aud Discharge. I will make a final settlement on the es tate of Samuel Sbunnert, deceas"'1. in the Probate Vourt for Newb.-rry tounty, " the 27.1 day of November next., at 10 o'clock in the lorenoon ; and immediately thereafter will apply for a final discharge as Adminicrator of said estate. PETER M. SCHUMPERT, Adm'r. Oct. 27, IS81. 43-4t FIRE INSURANCE AGENCY ESTABLISHED 1876. North British and ?ercanti1e Insurance Co. Queen Fire Insurance Co. London Assurance Corporation. Underwriters of New York. (CASU CAPITAL $50,000,000.) The undersigned with .5 years experience iD Fire Insurance, and representing the above reliable Companies, respectfully so licits a eontinuance of a portion of the busi ness of the To.vn and County. flwelling Houses insured on 3 and 5 year plan. Refers by ermission to the National Bank of New berry. 1. A. SCOTT. Sep. 28, 29-2m. S. P. BOOZER & SON'S FIRE iNSIJEUNCE AGENJY, NEWBERRY, S. C. Representing the following strong and reliable Companies, for many years in the Agency of the late Maj. W. F. Nance, to sit: Liverpool and London and Globe Insur ance C ompany. Insurance Company of North America, of Philadelphia. Continental Insurance of New York. Star Iuisurance of New York. TOTAL ASSETS OV E ! $10,000,00. Large facilities for Insurance against Fire on all kinds of proporty. The Insurance of Farm Property a spe cial feature in our Agency. Liberal and prompt sett.lements guaran teed. Sep 14, 3.3-1m. CHOICE BEEF, STALL NO. 3. The subscribers would inform the citi zeus of Newberry that they are now fur nishing the BEST BEEF that can be pur chased in the market. They kill none bu the choicest beeves-youing heifers am steers-and Aothiung that ever had a calf They will pay the highest prices for younc cattle, the only kind that they will buy Orders left at their SL41 over night will b< promptly attended to. J1. S. HAIR & SON. Oct. 20, 42-im. Superior Red Ash Coal CRATE OR STOVE, Delivered in Newberry by Car Load, AT $10.04) PER TON, 2,240 lbs. FREIGHT PAID. Address, TRENHOLM'8 00AL DEPOT CHIA RL ESTON, S. C. Oct. 20, 42-1m*. KING OF THE SINGERS Above is the exact representation of t.h SEWING MA(CHINE we sell for TWENT DOLL ARS. It is in every respect the ver best of the Singer Style of Maclines. Finished in the finest manner, with th~ latest imiprovements for winding the bol bin, the most con venient style of table wit extension lear, iarge drawers and b'eautifuJ gothic cover,-it stands without a rival, The King of Sintger Machines We do not ask you to pay for it. until yo see what you are bnying. We only wish t know that vou really intend to buy a me chine, and are willing to pay $20 for th Best in the Market. Write to us. sending the name of necares rairoad Station and we will send the ma chine and give instrnetions and allow yo to examine it before you pay b r it. A adres WILLMA RTH & CO., 729 FILBERT STREET, Oct. 20, 42-3m .PHILADELPHIA, PA. Several valuable BUILDING LOTS ii the Town of Newberry ;also a few goo< PATUffE LOT8. These lots I will dis pose of on easy terms, or will sell thema los for cash. Plats of the above lots may bi seen, and1 :tl in,forna*tion obtained by ap plyincg to the underaigned at the oilice o J. K. P. (iGo-na, Esri. Oct 5 4" 4 G. M. GIRARDEAU. THE LARGEST, CHEAPEST AND BES1 ASSORTED STOCK OF LAMPS EVER SOLD IN NEWBERRY. Please call andj examirne before puirchas ig elsewhere. S. F. FANT. Ocet. 12. 41-tf. ROUND TRIP RATES TO THE RIntIlaiQaI 0oo E0pI sitoii At Atlanta, Ga. pig 6th 04., ad Closig 31st Nc., 1881 Visitora to the Exposition canm obtain, on any day during its existence, round-trip tickets fro e. thme principal utations onth lines comprising the Associated Railways of Yirginia and the Carolinas, at rates ap proxiating FOUR CENTS per mi'e for the round-trip. Tickets good for t days on the Columbia Jlscellaneous. li. viing' lessed thl s iv, rv Lahiis from Mr [I. II. Rie't'e, the subrib'iirs :c pl;asur iin nfrming the nub!e 1hat thev w:ll k- ep FIRST CI,AS LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLES, Where they will be aMe to accommodate all who favot them with th.'ir pttronage. M1YE1S & DICi ERT. Oct. 5, 40-4m. GLENN & POOL, (Successors to Wm. F. Nanca, dec'd.) Thi' undersigned having associated them selves together for the purpose of conduct ing the INSURANCE BiUSlNIE.SS, wo;uld respectfully ask for a continuance of the business lately entrusted to Major Nance, and also any new business that may offer. JAMES F. GLENN. TENCH C. POOL.. Aug. U, I8S1. 32-tf. VALUABLE LAND FOR SALE. The following lands belonging to the es t:.te of the late Madison F. Workman, and situate in Newberry County, are hereby of fered for sale in three separate tracts, as follows : The Smith Place, Cantaining Two Hundred and Eighteen (218) Acres, more or less, lying on the waters of Bush River and bounded by lands of Henry 0. Henson, James Reeder, Dorsey Gary and others. The Red Mill Tract, Containing Eighty-three and one-fifth (83 1-5) Acres, more or leas, lying on the waters of Bush River and hounided by lands of John & Robt. G. Wallace, J,ames Reeder and others. The Meats and Gary Tracts, Containing Two Hundred and Eighty-one and one-half (2811) Acres, more or less, bounded by lands of John & Robt. G. Wal lace, I. N. G-try, James Reader and others. The above lands can be bought at pri vate sale between this time and the first Monday in November. If not sold before that time they will be sold at public sale at Newberry Court House, the first Monday in November next to the highest bidder. Plats of above tracts can be seen by ap plying to any of the undersigned. Titles guaranteed. TRMs o. SALE-One-half cash, the bal ance payable in twelve months, secured by mortgage of the premises sold. J. A. WORKMAN. J. M. WORKM AN. MRS. E. F. DAVIS. MRS. M. S. McKITTRIOJK. R. C. WORKMAN. P. B. WORK MAN. . T. R. WORKMAN. W. B. WORKM AN. Oct. 13, 41-4t. FOR SALE. We the undersigned distributees of es tate of Jacob Bowers, dec'd., will sell, at -public auction, at Newberry C. H., S. C. on the 1st Monday in November, 1881, : certain valuable tract of land, containing One Hundred and Seven Acres, more oi less, bounded by lands of Jfames Wood Ghristina Downing, Andrew Kreiler, Jacol Mills, A. Amaick and T. B. Hawkins, situate in Newberry Gounty. TERaMs oF SALE--Cash, purchaser to pa) for papers. Unless terms of sale are comt plied with within 8 days the s.dd tract wil be resold at first purchaiser's risk on 18 Mondayvin December, 188I. E. L. HIEN DRIX, A. F. HEINDRIX, J. S. BOWERS, M. E. BOWERS, ELLEN N. [ilR, WILLIAM P'. H AIR, J. L. BOWERS, J. L BOWERS, G. B. BOWERS, J. E. ST1OCKMAN, J. W. STOCKMAN, Diistribu tees of Jacob Bowers SOct. 13, 41-4t. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA SCOUNTY OF NEWBERRY. IN THE PROBATE COURT. Thomas 1F. Ha.rmnon, as Administrator o: the Personal Estate ot John .M. Harmon deceased, Pl:&intilf,' against Sallie M. Go Sred, Ninnie C. Reagini, Nora Lee liar mon and Mary E. Harmon, Defendants. Complaint for Relief. PrIIsuant toaun order herein passed thl 4th day of October, A. D). 1881, I will sell at pubice outcry, at Newberry C. H., S. C. on the 7th day of November, 1 881, as the property of John M. Harmon, deceased, al that tract of land situate in said County, containing Two Hundred and Fifty Acres, more or lms, and bounded by lands of Jes se D. Hornsby, 8. M1. Goree, P. J. Stephens. William Langford and others, on the fol lowing terms, to wit: IOne-balf ot the purchase money to be paid in cash, and the balance thereof ona credit of twelve months wish interest from the day of gale, to he secured by the bond of the purchaser and a mortgage of th' premises sold-with'leave to purchaser to pay all cash if desired. J. B. FELLERS, a. r. rx. c. Oct. 141, 1881. 41-4t. Notice of Final Settlement. I will make a settlement ott.the estate of Minnie M. Ridlehuber in the Probate Court for Newberry County, S. C., on Monday, the 14th day of November, 1881, and im mediately thereat ter apply for a final dis charge as Guardian of said Estate. And I will at the same time apply for a final dis charge as Guardian of the estates of John J. Ridlehuber, Henry C. Ridlehuber, Laura Amelia Ridlehuber, (now Wicker), Martha Louisa Ridlehuber, (nov Epting), and Le onora L. Rlidlehuber. AP4M F. CROMER, Guardian Oct. 11, 1881. 41-5t. Annual Meeting of the County .Commissioners. Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of the County Gom,mssioners for Newberry County will be held at their of fice on Tuesday, Nov. 8th next. All perons holding hihs, accounts or de amda of >ny kmdi again.s the said County which have no0. been befori e presented, are hereby~ required to depo-it the 51m11 with the undmigjnt-d on or before~ he first day of N ovemnt-r un ot for eximizntionl by the County Cormumn.ioners. F. XERBER, Ja., Oct. 5, 40t -4t. Clerk. New berry News copy 4 t. Notien of Final Settlement. lt s umer one manIgemtent-n1ev'r obliged to - 'comin1." or change ownership po1itiv -!'1eIy r e ts : grl:Lter c:sh in.tstleltnt, owus and exhibit" more novi"ltis, has more and better performers. mere iiare a:iimals. :aore of everything in the ,vorl l o show than any and all oiler exilibitions, ringt or eombinel, a:nd now, as im the lr.,,s.,is the LWGET TENTED EEIIBITIO? IN TilE tiOtLD Will exhibit, itei lnOon and eVenlin;; at NE=WBE RRY, Tuesday 1\TOv. 1st Everything fresh for this season. Millipns expended for a .iugle holiday; the new world s wondcr, HUGE PERFORMING And the only Colossal Circus in 2 Rings Mammoth M~enagerie, Trained Wild Beast Show, and World's Fair Glathering of Eart.hs Living Wonders. ,Just added _n REASON-Cl FTED 22!ST AL LIONS Trick Horses and Ponies. All Europe swept ot its attractions. Engagement there, first appearance here of the Old World's latest surprising sensatijon, the great SELBINI & VILLUON TROUPE GYMNASTIO BICYCLERS TH FIRED FOM TH BCANNO ThyTrnSmrsut fo holc t hule.SAEIMuo h OUtrs Heds 3 ctigo teWccnu an\ . ';ad\Fr P;aus n Enag n uglnUad llmnnr fSupisngAts AiDoeUpn zyce Dasin \run th iga 2 ieSed Th ol mae,a hemrclu fasoI heercls RIDERS\ OFT E UBR-OFD TE ZUILA, ~ the FeaeBli, at eahehiiin WHEELNG HE BAB BLEDOMNh FRNOMI{ANO Perrigns' igers, a tn otheJVcrninals. 3 Behmo~th Uin, Serarins a ilEness of Jugglinm and Birds Evnery foS~renon oft e/ xDibtone ay, Bthese Dustraing hrn detre frog at elhi. Now Sprced frth f:. tim inA eia Woo.co hexe ford Asmrvelou, movt ng pu.norama of att, w-ni h. ande;;gndeur WHEELiNTG3 T HEQR ABY ~2~h ?Oi) ~. ~pei 1ed ~,z lha marvelous. moving ;k:ui3Jr ura ot I L.~t\ I.i ' Pi,li and ~r~i.ndC,4r, iii addition to the ~RA.~D DRESS PARADE