University of South Carolina Libraries
? TUE SOUTHERN ARMY AND . * ITS HISTORY. ? * . _ * * For Tho Keo'voe Courier. * The Southern army was remarka ble in its personnel, lt was com posed ol' the Mower of the youth and manhood of the South. They were the descendants of those English speaking people who had along the stream of history fought many nota ble battles for human liberty. Many of the ancestors of the men who composed that army had suffered and bled at Valley Forge with Washing ton, the Hrst great rebel in American history, and had won with him their Independence at Yorktown. Their blood was as pure American strain as ever lived In the nation. The South had played a conspicu ous part In the history of tho repub lic. Its influence had largely domi nated Its councils ami shaped its poli cies. Blot from our history the pages written by Southern hands, and erase from tho record the deeds performed by her sons, and the brightest chap ters and the grandest events In our national life would bo eradicated. No honest minded man now questions the sincerity and honesty of pur pose of the men who wore the gray any more than he does that of the men who wore tho blue. Both were American citizens, lighting with hero ism and devotion. Tho records r' io country show hotter soldiers. Alex ander never led such mon at the bat tle of Issus; Caesar did not cross the Alps with men of sterner will;, Bonapartes Old Guard never faced a foe with calmer mien, nor stood with moro undaunted courage amid tho storm of battle; Leonidas, when lu; defended the Pass against the itivad jug host of Persia; Horatius, when he stood on the banks of the Tiber and defended the bridge against the overwhelming enemies of Home, Wallace, when he battled for Scot tish Independence; Sevler and his riflemen, from the banks of the Wa tunga, as they climbed the steeps o' King's Mountain,and turned back tho tide of war in our own revolution all these displayed a splendid valor, but it was left for the American sol dier of the Civil War, to bring out all there is ir. American valor, heroism and endurance, when he charged with Pickett up tho death-laden heights of Gettysburg, and when, in gray and in blue, he struggeld for tho mastery around Snodgrass Hill, ou the bloody Held of Chlckuinauga. Painters have pictured, and poeta have sung the fame and priory of our leaders; of Leo, no pure in life ami soul, so calm, so lion-hearted "a blended image of Caesar and Paul, a model of glory and grace;" of Sidney Johnston, Joseph 10. John ston, Stewart, Jackson, Loi?g.-droe?, Hill. Polk. Hampton, Morgan, and Forrest. But, splendid and glorious a!! truly arr. they owe lt to him who sleeps, perchance, ia a nameless grave, whose very name is remem bered only by a few comrades and the widow, who, through all these weary years, has waited to join him in a belter land the PRIVATE SOL. DIER, THE MAN BEHIND THE GUN. That peace which came after Appo mattox brought rest to a sorely taxed and bleeding land, but with it cann> problems appalling in their magnitude. The slaves had been freed, hut the black man remained, and with him a problem unparalleled in its difllcultics. The Southern sol diers returned to their homes poor yea, penniless-many shot and maim ed and limping, to face those diffi culties and moot and solve; these problems; to build up the waste places, to reorganize labor, to adjust the new conditions of citizenship un wisely forced upon thc neg.o. These problems demanded the highest pa triotism and broadest statesmanship. The men of (he South met them with the same coolness and fearless courage which had characterized them in the shock of battle. They have reorganized labor, and with wis dom and justice guided lt, till the South produces many times more cotton and cereals under free than it ever did under slave labor. They have opened the mines that the South may pour forth her hidden treasures of coal and Iron, copper and lead, gold and sliver, zinc and phosphate and oil. They have built factories and have started the spindles and looms till the South is about to snatch from New England her un challenged supremacy in tho manu facture ol' cotton goods. They have built cities and churches and school house's. And when at last war was declar ed against Spain fen- thc liberation of the- struggling patriots en' Cuba, the hour had come-, and Ibo Semth, line' te> her givat history, and hallow ed by the- memory of her horoes, ami rege aerated by tho blessings of pence, gave- her sons freely te> uphobl the' honor and defend the- (lag e>f a re> iiiiite-il country. When (he North se*nt her Dewe;. Into ?he Bay of Ma nilla, the' South sent lu>r Hobson Into (he- harbor of Santiago; when the North gave IHM- Roosevelt with his Rough Kider;, the Semth gave' he'f fighting Joe Wheeler, with his Rebel record and bis dauntless courage; when the- North gave- her Admiral Sampson, ten miles away when ibo first gun was fired, tin- South gave her Admiral Schley, in the thick of tlu> light, winnini; the> groat hattie Of Santiago. For the- strains of "Yan kee' Doodle" we- gave- them tho In spiration of our "Dixie"." ?md side? by slele, anil hand in hand, tlie sons of ibo men who fought under Le-e- ami tirant, with equal courage and equal glory, marched on te> a national vic tory. We rejoice thal the' valor of our heroes in gray and in bini" is the common heritage of a reunited coun try. As we leiok back over the his tory of the worid, we- see' that Eng land was for many years lorn and rent in twain by (ho War of (he Hoses, but who now stops lo In quire whether the ancestors of a pa triotic Englishman or this day wore the red or tho white rose in that great civil strife? Again, England was rocked and shaken te> its foun dation-stones by the shock of Crom well's Ironclads and King Charles's Cavaliers in the great civil war of that time; hut who now cares Whe nan' the- Kn gil sh m.'in of the twentieth century sprang from a Rounhead or \ i ISSI I il' COMING TO STATE PAIR President Mobloy lins Closed Con? tract With Strobel. Wlnnsboro. S. C., Oct. 8.-John 0. Mobley, president of the state Fair Association, gave out the Interest lng Information here to-night that he had secured an airship to he exhibit ed at the State Fair. Mr. Mobley stated that he had Just closed a contract With Chas. J. Stro be!, of Philadelphia, the well-known airship expert, to go to Columbia and make two (lights dally during the progress of the State Fair. It will be au entirely free attrac tion and will no doubt attract con siderable attention, ns lt will be the first visit of a Hying machine to South Carolina. Therefore, Mr. Mob ley urges that those who have never seen a real fly inti machine should not lose the opportunity by visiting the State Fair this year. Ile states that this one attraction ls well worth the trii> to Columbia, regardless of other free attractions that have been book ed for the same. President Mobley ls informed that the machine has attracted enormous crowds at other fairs, and he believes that lt will be a great drawing card for South Carolina's fair. Married Man in Trouble. A married mat? who permits any member of his family to take any thing except Foley's Honey and Tar, for coughs, colds and lung trouble, ls guilty of neglect. Nothing else ls as good for all pulmonary troubles. The genuine Foley's Honey and Tar con tains no opiates and ls In a yellow package. Sold by J. \V. ?ell, Wal halla; Stonecyplier Drug Co., West minster. Dancing Girls ?urred to Americans. Tokio, Oct. ??.-There ls great re joicing among the Christians in Ja pan because the authorities have de cided to eliminate dancing girls and liquor from the receptions planned for the American sailors when the battleship fleet reaches Yokohama. The Young Men's Chi 1st ian Associa tion, the Seamen's Mission, the Eng lish speaking churches and the mis sion school students are co-operating for the purpose of holding religious meetings and furnishing guides who will not lead the visiting sailors into temptation. A pain prescription is printed upon each 2r?c. box of Dr. Shoop's Pink Fain Tablets. Ask your doctor or. I druggist if this formula is not coni : plete. Head pains, womanly pains, pains anywhere get instant relief ! from a Pink Pain Tablet. J. W. Dell. Freak Calf in Cherokee. Ca ff ney, Oct. 8.-Another freak of nature has been developed in Cherokee county. John Hannon, a I well-known farmer, living about nine j miles from the city, had a cow to ! deliver a calf that is a combination lol' several things altogether out of the ordinary. The calf has two heads, one at each end of its body, two tails and six feet. Doth sexes are also developed In it. The animal is unite a wonder and has caused a good deal of astonishment. Robbers Kill Twelve. Tiraspol. Russia. Oct. S. - Robbers have committed a revolting crime in lille neighboring village ol' Slobodse. j They entered thc house of a Jewish family named Cohen and killed 12 j persons in their efforts to get away ?with a small amount of loot. The I murderers were arrested. a ('availer? So it will be with us n the coming years. No man will ask who wore the gray or who wore the blue. Wo honor the old Confederate sol dier for the courage with which he fought and suffered for four long years during the great struggle, bUt we doubly honor him for the manner in which he conducted himself after the war. When bitterness and strife prevailed, when reconstruction hung like a pall over the fair but prostrate South, and when the Southern peo ple were disfranchised and denied the right of citizenship in their own land, the Confederate soldier, with a patience, a conservatism and a moral courage that was sublime, fought for home rule and the right of the South ern people I 'i vote and control their own affairs, and he won a victory no les:, splendid in peace than those which he had achieved in war. Listen: The South as a whole went into this war without army or navy, with no credit f i the world's mar kets, with no resources except the voluntary personal sacrifice of men and women of the South-God's very best creation in all I he cycles of lina' -misunderstood by all the world, and without sympathy from any foreign power, but fully realiz ing Hie fearful odds against them, these men hastened to offer I hem selves, their lives and their fortunes. Did they have any dream of conques! or ol' empire? Did any hope of per sonal fortune or acquisition prompt them? Did ambition to win the world's applause, or to gratify hale, impel them? Did the money value ol' every slave in all thc Southland weigh as the dust In thc balance against the life of one young strip ling who kissed his mot bei a fond farewell, then waved adieu and walk ed beyond the stars? No, in God's great name, a thousand times no. With naught to gain, with all to lose, they bared their breasts lo the storm ol' war for four long years; they exchanged case and luxury for toil and starvation; ragged, unshod and weak from hunger, they inarch ed and watched and fought willi no repining and no weakening of pur pose, but with dauntless souls they went into the jaws ol' death. Their onl) inspiration was their sense of duly and devotion to right. lt was Ibis that nerved the hearts of Pick etts Division to Immolation on the heights ol' Gettysburg. One by one tho old Veterans arc crossing the river and resting under I he shade of the trees. May their declining years bc brightened by Hm sunshine of peace and contentment, ami bc sweetened by the hope of n brighter day beyond. j. Russell Wright. Walhalla, S. C. WHAT THU K IONIO YS DO. Their CnoensiiiK Work Keeps Us s( i-iiiii* und Healthy. AU the blood In the body passes through the kidneys once every three niliivites. The kidneys filter the blood. They work night and day. When healthy they remove about *r>00 grains of impure matter dally, when unhealthy some part of this impure matter is left in the blood. This brings on many diseases and symp toms1-pain in the hack, headache, nervousness, hot, dry skin, rheuma tism, gout, gravel, disorders of the eyesight and hearing,, dizziness, lr regular heart, debility, drowsiness dropsy, deposits in the urine, etc. Hut if you keep the filters right you will have no trouble with your kid neys. Mrs. R. A. MoLees, living on W. .Main street, Walhalla, S. C., says "To say that noun's Kidney Pills have given me great relief ls express ing my opinion of this remedy very mildly. For some time I suffered from dull headaches and had pains across my kidney regions which oftc" made nie feel miserable. I sent to Dr. J. W. Hell's drug store, procured a box of Donn's Kidney Pills, used them as directed, and they helped nie In every way. My kidneys are now much stronger and my general health much Improved." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-MUburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name-Doan's and take no other. Night Telegraph ()|M*rator Killed. Waycross, Ga.. Oct. 7.-A. ll. O'Neil, night telegraph operator at Nahunta, was assasinated by robbers at 2 o'clock this morning and the cash drawer rilled. A train crew found O'Neil dying at f> o'clock this morning with two bullets In his head. The sheriff and bloodhounds are on the scene. O'Neil was from Ludo wie, tia., and was unmarried. Baby won't suffer five minutes with croup if you apply Dr. Thomas' 10c lectrlc Oil at once. It acts like magic The Importance of the Oat Crop. (Carolina Spartan.) Your attention should now be di rected to the oat crop. Corn will be scarce next year. The fodder crop is light. Oats will be greatly needed. We know a lot of land, about 2 % acres, in corn. lt looks as if there will be 12.") to 150 bushels of fine corn on the lot. It is well ,covered with peavlnes. If that lot is turned by the 20th of October, harrowed and planted in Appier oats, it ought to make lf.O bushels. All the ferti lizer needed for the oat crop would be 300 pounds of nitrate of soda OM the lot. Followed with peas it would make ?ive tons of hay. Or if planted lu corn C> feet by 18 inches, as soon as the oats are hauled off, lt. would make 120 bushels ot" corn, A Hood crop of peas ould also be made by sowing the whippoorwill or other early pea, or planting a row in tlv middle. Bittier wa> would beat col ton. The oats and hay would be worth $17",; the oats and co. n $10(5. Such fanning is pia tlcable. The vonng farmers of the county can do it. Will they try? Woimiii Interrupts Political Speaker. A well dressed woman interrupted a political speaker recently by con tinually coughing. If she had taken Foley's Honey and Tar lt would have cured her cough quickly and expelled the cold from her system. The gen uine Fe l< y's Honey and Tar con tains no opiates and is in a yellow package. Refuse substitutes. Sold J. W. Bell. Walhalla; Stone?ypher Drug Co., Westminster. Chairman Mack is Optimistic. Norman IO. Mack has recently re turned to Chicago from the Fast, and he says he has noted every condition and If the Democrats hold the steady gains of the last two months the election will be certainly Democratic this fall. He says New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Maryland. Del aware, Ohio and Indiana will he found in the Democratic column. "The Blood is The Life.* Sclonco has never gone, beyond th? above simple statement of scripture. But it has illuminated that statement and given it a moaning ever broadening with tho Increasing breadth of knowledge. When tho blood ls "bad "or Impuro lt ?8 not alono tho body which suffers through disease. Tho brain ls also clouded, Him ni I nd and Judgement are effected, andvnvtny an ovli deed or Impure thoWlitvjjjftj^^jc^Skroctly traced to tho rmpu*#?yof the bhx^> Foul. Impure blood, can be made niir<- bv tho _ma_of Drt Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery^, enriches and on ri ties thc: bloodI thereby curing, pimplos, blotches, eruptions and other cutaneous affections, as oczema, totter, or salt-rheum, hives and other manifestations of Impuro blood. ? e> ? ? ? ? In the euro of scrofulous swellings, en larged glands, open eating ulcers, or old sores, the "Golden Medical Discovery "has performed the most marvelous cures. In casos of old sores, or open eating ulcors. lt Is well to apply to tho open sores Dr. Pierce's All-Healing Salvo, which pos sesses wonderful healing j otency when used as an application to the sores In con junction with tho uso of "Golden Medical Discovery"as a blood cleansing consti tutional treatmont. If your druggist don't happen to have tho "All-Healing Salvo" in stock, yon can easily procure lt by Inclosing fifty-four cents In postage stamps to Dr. R. V. Pierce, 603 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y., and it will une to you by return post. Most druggists keep lt as well as tho "Golden Medical Discovery." (?> ? ? <$ (*> . You can't, afford to accept any medicine of un knoll n comjtottttton as a snlwtltnto for "Golden Medical Discovery," which ls a medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION, having a complete Hat of Ingredients In plain Kngllsh on lt? bottlo-wrappcr, tho ?ame being attested as correct under oath. Dr. Plerco's 1'leasant Pellets regulate and invigorate Btoniach, liver and bowels. \ ? ? ' COMPARES BRYAN TO JACKSON. Kern Snjs that Brynn will Rebuke the Mullein Diddles. Greensboro, N. C., Oct. 7.-John W. Kern. Democrniic candi late for Gie Vice Presidency, in a speech here lis', night deda.ed William J. Bryan to be a second Andrew Jackson to rebuke the modern William Biddle?. "In Jackson's time." he said, "there was a condition In the finan cial affairs of this country in a mea sure like that existing to-day. A banker, William Biddle, a power in the co.untry, attempted to dictate i lio policy to be pursued by Presiden* hickson, and threatened financial disaster to tho country. 'You tell me that vou have the power to bring disaster upon the people? Then vou should have, and we will take lt ha vt more power than you away from you,' was Jackson's an swer." said Mr. Kern. "You have a second Jackson in W. I. Bryan, to rebuke the Rockefellers and Harri mans and the Coreys." Mir. Kern related the alleged domi nation of the financial world by a hundred men. and continued: "You men must/meet the situation as fearlessly as a handful of your forefathers met the attempted over riding of their liberties on Gulll ford battlefield a hundred and twenty years ago." Mr. Kern read from a newspaper (looting Wm. E. Corey, president of the Steel Corporation, approving the candidacy of Mr. Taft. "He ls an ideal candidate for Corey," he said "because Ibo Coreys and men like him want to bo let alone. Mr. Roosevelt says, the effect of great corporations like that of which Mr. Corey is the head, is the breeding of immortality. They do. They breed Coreys and Merrimans and Leeds. "When the Democratic ticket was nominated the president of the stee1 trust returned from Europe," con tinued the speaker, "and asked who was nominated. 'Who's Kern?' he asked when told who were the nomi nees. Let us hope that on the fourth ol' March, he will find out who Kern is." How's This ? We offei* one hundred dollars re ward for any case of catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. P. J. Cheney ?fe Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known P. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transact ions, and fi nancially able to carry on* any obli gations made by his firm. Walding, Kinnah ?fe Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure ls taken in ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tho sys tem. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold bv all druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation. Pointed Paragraphs. The excursion of Western farmers into South Carolina sounds good. The coming of Western farmers means something-much more than the coming of any class, however good, of Immigrants from Europe. The State Immigration Bureau has gotten to work on the right lines at last.-Anderson Mail. There is one redeeming feature about the new style hats. If you are not 'hie to buy one you can just use an old lamp shade and get the same effect.-La von la Times. And now Tom Watson announces that he doesn't want to be President. Having shown all along that he doesn't want to be right, it looks as if he'd rather be merely troublesome. -Augusta Chronicle. The one best maxim: "Burn this letter."-New York Mall. The Republicans are raising a . lighty hullabaloo over Col. Kern's possession of a railroad pass, hut li should he remembered in his favor that he hasn't much besides.-News and Courier. A man named Moon ls running for the Legislature in New Jersey. They say he never gets full, however, but often gets down to his last quarter. Anderson Mail. Or. in other words, the President wants a vacation, and In his absence he wants Judge Taft, lo hold down the job.-Greenville News. To quickly check a cold, druggists are dispensing everywhere, a clever Candy Cold Cure Tablet called Pre ven tics. Preventics are also fine for feverish children. Take Preventics at the sneeze stage, to head off all colds. Box of 48-2.r)C. J. W. Bell. Brothers light Fatal Duel. Coldwater. Miss., Oct. ??.-In a duel with knives at Wakefield, Miss., on Monday. Manning Jamison, aged .".n years, was killed and his brother, Edwin Jamison, aged 22. was dan gerously wounded. Edwin Jamison and Will Kountz, according to infor mation received here, were engaged lin a wrestling bout mid a fight was about to start, when Manning Jami son Interfered, acting as peacemaker. This angered Edwin Jamison and he drew a knife. Manning whipped ont his knife and the two fought until both dropped to the ground. Man ning died in a few minutes. Foley's Honey and Tar cures cough? quickly, strengthens the lungs and expels colds. Get the genuine In a yellow package. Sold by J. W. Bell, Walhalla; Stoiiecypher Drug Co., Westminster, Army Dogs. (Animal World. London.) The German army dogs are so trained that when they find a doa.', body they set up a prolonged howl ing. If no one comes they take the dead m..n's cap or some small article, and with this in their teeth go on a hunt for their trainer, whom they lead to the spot. If the man \u wounded he gives his ('ap to the dog, and the same object ls accomplished. ls 1 L SOME RARE BARGAINS! Dress Goods, Dress Goods. Big lot of mill onds in Dross Suitings and Broadcloths in solids and plaids. Sorgos, Henriettas and Brilliantines, worth $1, $1.25 and $1.50 per yardi to closo out at 75c. at 85c. Ono lotof All-Wool, 54 inch wido, worth 05c. and 75c, to close at 50c. ; also big value in 15c. and 20c. goods. Calicos-blue, red and black-at 5c ; best grado 6c Outings, 5c. up. Clothing, Clothing. Our Clothing Stock is brand new and the best values and styles. Do not fail to seo what wo have to offer you before you get your Fall and Winter Suit. Big Stock of Men's and Boys' Ovorcoats and Rain coats and Ladies' and Children's Cloaks and Jackets at lowest price. Shoes, Shoes. Men's Fine Shoes in Patent Leathers, Tans, (Jun Metals and Calfs* heavy weights for winter. Ladies' Fine Shoes in Paton ts and Tans on all the newest lasts and toes. Children's Shoes in tine quality and heavy weights for winter. Underwear, Underwear. Big stock of underwear in wool or cotton. Can fit everybody in quality and price. Trunks, Valices, Suit Cases, Embroideries and Ribbons at lowest price. A full and complote stock of Doors, Sash, Blinds, Lime, Cement, Stoves, Hardware, Bagging and Ties. Wo are also agents for the celebrated Mitchell Wagons, Oliver Chilled Plows, Columbia Buggies and Carriages. Do not fail to come and get our prices and see what we have to oiler you. We pay thc highest market price for Cotton and Cot ton Seed. Yours for business, W. P. NIMMONS, SENECA, S. C. P. S. : NOTICE.-With each and every bill of Dry Goods, Clothing and Shoes, amounting to $10, we will sell you a 25-pound sack of New York Standard Granu lated Sugar for $1.25. 4 fe * COUNTY CLAIMS AUDITED. At the regular meet lng of tho Board of County Commissioners, held Friday, October 2d, 11)08, the following claims were passed upon: In Whose Favor and Nature of the Claim. 83] J W Holleman, Coroner, salary ?ld quarter, paid express.. 784| Jos Kerr, paid for road work, Dist 25. 7Sf, T (1 ('rooks, road and bridgework, Dist 28. 780 A 1* Grant, Magistrate, salary ?ld quarter. 787j T R Jenkins, road and bridge work, Dlsts 75 and ll. 788] J V Stribllng, seed oats for poor farm . 789? J S King, lumber for bridge. THO Dr Hurt Mitchell, lunacy examination . 791iW N Moore, supplies to road hands . 792 C D Corbin, road and bridge work, Dist 48. 7941 T M Littleton, aid to soldier. 79l5i C L ti Bl rod, cross-laying road near Ravenel's . 797, J N Hopkins, fees as constable. 798 B F Sloan, Magistrate, salary for three months. 799| C B Fuller, bridge work. Dist 0. 8001 R 10 Fendley, road work, Dist 7. 801] W J Schroder, Treasurer, salary September . 803: S N Hughs, road work, Dist 19. 801! Wm IMtts, fees as constable. 806* S '1 i Marett, Magistrate, salary 3d quarter, jury fees. 807' W II Cobb et al. special constables . 808! J R Mahoney, fees ns constable. 810; Dr W R Doyle, post mortem examination . C M Caines, fees as constable. F A II Schroder, Clerk of Board, salary for Sept.. K C Butler, Janitor, salary for Sept . J L Miller, County Commissioner, salary for Kept. J L Talley, County Commissioner, salary for Sept. I) F McAllster, County Supervisor, salary for Sept. R V Stone, road work, Dist B. lt 10 Fendley, grading new road, Dist 7. Dr J W Bell, salary as county physician, lunacy and post mortem examinations. J Abbott, road work. Dist 21. J M Abbott, bridge work, Dist 03. T M Lowery, fend for road mules . Keowee Courier, advertising, 3d quarter . Keowee Courier, stationery, printing, gasoline, 3d quarter. . W M Kay, Sheriff, salary for Sept and conveying lunatics. L W Grant, lumber and material for bridge, Dist 4 2. ll C Harbin, special dispensary constable, salary for Sept. . I* L Given, lumber for bridges. II C Harbin, special dispensary constable, salary for Aug... lt S Boleman, road work, Dist 6. W M Kay. Sheriff, dieting prisoners, Sept. Walker, Fvaiis & Cogswell Co., office supplies . J C Mulkey, road work. Dist 09. M Abbott ot al, work on roads with machine., W R Cobb, Steward, salary 3d quarter . J C Alexander, road work, Dist 43. James Nichols, road work, Dist 4 3. J M Phillips, grading new road, Dist (?0. John O'Leary, road work, Dist 48. J B Burgess, Jr, road work, Dist 43 ., Whit Knox, bridge work, near Jocassee . Marcus Hughes, bridge work, Dists 27 and GO. T Y Chalmers, bridge work. Dist 47 . Q R Carter et al, work on roads with machine. 8 47! White Durham, damage to in.?. 818 E R Waldrlp, bridge work, Dist 42. S lit J B Collins, road and bridge work, Dist 38. sr.O S G Porter, bridge work. Dist 39. 8f>l| W J Schroder, County Treasurer, court expenses, summer term . R W Grubbs. Auditor, salary for Sept . 853 J J Rankin, lumber for bridges. 854! C L Craig. Supt of Lducation. salary for Sept. 8r.fi S M Butt, bridge work. Dist 77. 866 Jesse V Woodall, road and bridge work, Dist 56. 857! J T Davis, road work, Dist 13. ll 5* 8111 8 1 2 S I 3 S 1 1 S I f, S 1 ti 817 8 I 8 S 1 lt 8211 822 8 23 s 2 I S 2 ii S 2 G 827 S 2 s 82!) s:: ti 83 I 83 2 S33 s:: i 836 8 3 6 s:: s 830 .S III SI 1 8 12 843 844 8 4 fi 846 25 55 3 50 2 15 G 25 12 00 18 50 1 50 6 00 5 98 2 00 6 00 36 00 16 20 36 00 3 00 7 00 31 91 34 10 10 GO 37 25 12 90 6 70 5 00 9 70 IG 86 7 00 33 33 3 3 33 5 8 83 7 00 43 15 98 95 10 50 8 33 G 00 46 50 26 75 128 33 25 29 67 00 1 52 66 50 2 00 4 4 40 5 90 58 97 114 55 7 5 00 J 21 5 0 53 25 '35 00 li 84 4 50 25 40 89 4 3 55 00 2 00 1 95 3 60 852 573 00 31 94 22 40 5 8 33 4 50 37 75 3 4 50 Note.-All daims wero allowed for amount claimed, nnd ror this reason tho column "Amount claimed" ls omitted. Whore there is a missing claim samo was laid over for investigation D. F. MCALISTER, Supervisor.' F. A. H SCHRODER, Clerk. 1