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KEOWEE COURIER _% { ESTABLISHED 1049.)_ Published Every Wednesday Morning Subscription $1 Per Annum. Advertising Ilutes Reasonable. STECK, SIIEI.OK & SCHRODER. Communications of a personal character charged for as advertise ments. Obituary notices and tributes of respect, of not ovor one hundred words, will be printed free of charge. AU over that number must bo paid for at the rate of ono cent a word. Cash to accompany manuscript. WALHALLA, S. C.: WEDNESDAY, DEC HMO. MR. BACH ARV VISITS GEORGIA. Finds Resting Place of a Number of South Carolina Soldiers. Editor Courier: On the 10th of October, in company with my trav eling companion of thirty years along life's journey. I hoarded tile train at Seneca for ti trip through Georgia to visit relatives. I have a very warm feeling for the State of Georgia, as 1 spent my boyhood days In the valley of the Tugaloo, and when passing the farm ol' my old friend and school mate. (!. J, Ramsay, I could look bach with pleasure to tho many days we spent on the banks of the Tuga loo hunting and fishing. We arrived in the Cate City about .i o'clock and changed cars for New nan, where we arrived at sunset without any one to meet us, as we were two days late. However w ? soon found ourselves in comfortable quarters al the home of a kinsman, und a happy meeting it was. Xewnan ls forty miles southwest of Allanta, at the crossing of West Point and Central of Georgia rail roads. It ls an old city and said to be one of thc wealthiest, according to size, In the state, ii ls beautiful ly located in a splendid farming sec tion. The street.-, are beautifully shaded with water oaks and elms, with magnificent colonial residences and beautiful lawns, Among them was the boyhood home of the late Dr. Calhoun, of Atlanta. The popu lation is 7.ono. A $70,000 court house stands in the public square, with entrames from four sides, sup ported by columns of marble forty feel high. There are two oil and guano plants. The D. I?. Cole Manu facturing Company is located hore, and d/>es nil enormous business. There are also four cot lon mills, two papers, four banks, six churches. Kev. James Singleton, formerly of Oconoe, js pastor of the I'TrsI Bap tist church. The city has good rail road accommodations with her 18 passenger trains daily. The N'ewnan 'Marble Works is (toing a good busi ness, under the management of J. E. Zachary and lt. M. Gaines. J. E. Zachary is one of pconee's boys who donned the red shirt in lSTti abd was among the boys who captured the Radical convention held al Walhal la and put a red shirt on Johnston Wright, the chairman. While here we were bil the go most of the time in the city and country. On our drives In the coun try wo saw fine corn and colton, but none better than grown in ?conee. We visited the cemetery, which ls a large one and well ' k?*pt, with many handsome monuments. On one side are buried about 250 Con federate veterans, and these graves interested us very much. Wo were surprised thal (hey were buried there, but on inquiry learned there was a hospital kept here in the last years ol' the war and the men were sent back from Johnston's army. For the information of their com rades, or perhaps relatives. If there be any living in this country, and perhaps do not know their resting place, will give a few of the names ns I read thom from the head stones: J. M. Randal. Co. F. I ?tll S. C. I. Briton. Co. F. I lith S. C. T. F.. Norton. Co. I, S?tll S. C. h. Sheppard, Palmetto Sharp shooters. W. A. Langly, Co. I), I tltli s. c. John Harling, Co. E, 2d s. c. L. M. Howell, Co. F. 24th S. C. C. D. Davis. Co. C. 2d . . C. J. J. Cope, Co. B, 24th s. c. There was a battle near this place and Gen Wheeler captured SOO pris oners. There ls a house, riddled With bullets, still standing on the battle ground. Btu we must leave these sad re flections and hasten on our trip. On thc morning of tho I Uh ive left Newil?ll for Cordelo, and in a short while we were ;it Seitoia. where we Changed cars from the Central of Georgia lo tho Atlanta. Birmingham and Atlantic. From there it is a Straight line sou!'' for Cordele, a distance of 127 miles. Through mis section of country for fl fly miles we found a very undesirable farming country' land loved enough, but un productive, From station to station there was nothing Inviting for home seekers. The weall li seems io t<e concentrated In tho towns; bul wo finally reached ;i more prosperous country, with land level and pro ductive (said to bo), bul crops al most a failure on account of too much rain in summer and then the excessive drouth. The cotton Heids were mowed for hay, We arrived ul Cordole at I p. m. n* : took up lodging in the Suanneo (.ouse, managed j. Edmond Zachary. Cordele ,s a hustling town Of 8,000 population. Twenty-one years ago it was a forest of pines. Cordele bas all modern conveniences n $6,0,000 hotel building, five hanks! iee fa?tory, oil mil), four machine shops, four newspapers, elegantly paved sidewalks, paid lire depart ment, a $75,000 com? ? ouse, at tractive churches, and other things foo numerous to mention in this sketch. Wo left Cordelo al Lito ai mi Monday for homo by way of .Macon. It being in the night could not sec the country we passed through, but after dawn found ourselves speeding through a most beautiful country, HAPPY WOMEN. Plenty of Them in Wnlhnllu, and Good Reasons for it. Wouldn't any woman he happy, After years of backache suffering, Days of mlsory, nights of unrest, The distross of unlary troubles, Sho linds relief and cure? No reason why any Walhalla reader Should suffer in the face of evi dence Uko this: Mrs. ll. D. Oolkers, W. Main St., Walhalla, S. C., says: "I hope that other persons suffering from kidney disease will try Donn's Kidney Pills. I speak from personal experience when I say that they are a most re liable remedy. For some time I suffered from headaches s?d pains across Hie small of my back. I felt weak and nervous and the kidney secretions were Irregular in passage. I finally procured Donn's Kidney Pills at Dr. J. W. Bell's Drug Store and the relief 1 derived from their use was entirely satisfactory. 1 am still using them and feel that lt will only be a short time before I nm entirely free from kidney complaint." Por sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the Uni ted States. Remember tho name-Doan's and take no other. Faith is not much to you when it stays with you on your way only when you are feeling weil; faith is faith when it will shine, whether the shadows are nigh or you have a cloudless sky. -_--4??* Woman loves a clear, rosy com plexion. Kimlock Blood Bitters pu rines tlie blood, clears the skin, re stores ruddy, sound heatlh. WE WANT our friends and patrons to leave their Printing and Engraving erderd with us. Prompt attention and best service. Call and s?e oui line of samples. THE KEOWEE COURIER, Walhalla. S. C GOWANS King off Externals Accepted by thc Mothers of America as the one and only external preparation that positively and quickly CURES all forms of In flammation or Congestion such ns Pneumonia,Croup, Coughs, Colds, Pleurisy. Since Gowans Preparation hus been mt roi I nevi} here it has gained a strong foot-hold III many ol our best f;t indies whom I know aro giv ing von advertisement right along without solicitation It always ma ken good Weidhng A: Son, Tillin, Ohio. Druggists. BUY TO-DAY! HAVE IT IN THE HOME All Drn??Ut*. St. SOo. 25?. GOWAN MEDICAL CO.. DURHAM, N. C. Guarantied ind mom/ refuriitf b) four Drugglit Dig Things of thc World. A recent number of Harper's Weekly gives an interesting list of some ol' the highest, largest, longest, or costliest things of the world. The lallest monument is the Washington obelisk, 556 feet big!1. The highest chimney, measuring 474 feet, ls in Glasgow. Tlie largest aequeduct in use is the Croton of New York, which is :18 miles long, but the longest ever built ls in Peru, 360 miles in length. The deepest coal mine ls near Lam bert, Belgium, 3,500 foot deep; the biggest dock is at Cardiff, Wales, and Hie strongest electric light at Sydney lighthouse, Australia, while thc largest lighthouse is at Cape Henry, Virginia, being 165 feet.high, Tho greatest bank ls the Bang of Eng land, in London; the oldest college is University College, Oxford, found ed In 1050; the largest library, Hie National, in Paris, containing nearly 3,000,000 volumes. The largest bronze statue is that of Poler thc Great, 111 St. Petersburg, weighing 1,100 tons. The biggest stone statue is in Japan, 4 4 feet high; thc largest college is in ('airo, with over 10.OOO students and MIO teachers. Damascus has the honor of being thc oldest city. The most cosily book In (he world is a Hebrew Bibb;, owned by tho German government, which a few years ago refused the Pope's of fer of $125,000 for it. The most cosily medicine a few years ago was metnllc gallium, which ?old foi % I .Mi,uno a pound; but radium ie HOW tho priceless gem of the mineral world, selling for moro than thal price an ounce. Though orchids fre quently bring prices that make Hu poor man stagger, the highest price for a single flower was given for ii tulip In Amsterdam by an enthusiast who paid ?250,000 for it. which, however, 1 id suffered from short crops, as had oilier paris wr had passed through, Don't i hink flic trouble will be overproduction as heretofore. We arrived in At lanta in time to he left and causing a stay of three hours, which time wc took up in sight-seeing. Al about I o'clock we boarded the Southern foi Seneca, where we ^arrived about f O'clock p. lil. J. R. Zachary. Torturing eczema spreads lu burning area evory day. Donn's Oint ment .quickly stops Its spreading, in stantly relieves tho itching/ cures ll permanently. At any drug store. HOUSE SWAPPIXO. Ill thu (?(xxl Old Days it WHS Sport, Not ( 'oininncialism. (Wnlt Mason, In Chicago Nows.) "1 have boen reading that David Hanlin story," said the i'.nclont liv eryman when his cronies wove com fortably seated In his little olllce. "A frlond'told nie that story was the last word on horse trading, hut the man who wrote it didn't understand tho Kp!tit of the game at all. David Ha rum would have hoon skinned out of his teoth if he had blown into any Western town In tho palmy days of horse trading twonty-llve or thirty years ago. "I tell you, my friends, all the doad game sports are asleep with their fathers. Nobody ls willing to take a chance nowadays. If a man buys a cigar,he wants a bill of sale with it. Tho othor day a cheap skate pestered mo a whole afternoon talk ing about buying a horse. Ho tried out all tho nags in thc barn mid finally decided that the glass-eyed bay would suit him. And ho actu ally wanted a written guarantee that the nag was sound! A written guar antee! No, gentlemen, I am not jok-j lng. That baldheaded travesty on a man actually asked for such a docu ment. 1 regarded il as an Insult, and after 1 had rebuked him they j had to pour four buckets of water over him before he recovered. "In the good old days horse trad ing was a game, not a commercial transaction. If a man wasn't willing to take the chances when ho wont trading he was advised to try some other line of business. Many. and many a time 1 had the harpoon ad ministered to me. Ono day Major Charlie Slaughter drove to my barn. " 'I have unite a neat package of horseflesh here,' said the major, and 'I have a sort of presentiment Hint he can travel a few lines when the wind is blowing in the right direc tion.' ( "His horse was a handsome roan, a regular peacock for style, with his head away up in the air so you'd need a stepladder to see if he had a star in his forehead. And the way he hit the road was a sin. Talk about gaited horses! That roan handled his legs as though he had taken spar ring lessons. Xow, my weak point in Hie horse business ls that when I want a certain nag the worst way I can't conceal the fact. 1 just can't sleep or eat my victuals until that horse is in my barn with a new hal ter on him. The major was wise to my weakness. " Mt's no use, Jake,' says the ma jor. 'This boss isn't on my swap ping list. Every roan hair on him Just suits me, and I'd he a chump to let him go.' "Well, o' course I got the roan all right. The major was just binding. And I gave him the biggest trade you ever heard of-gave him a matched team and several bills for that gang ling roan. And when I took the roan to the water trough foe a drink I found that ho couldn't lower his head. He had to carry it about ten feet in the air all the time, owing to some injury in his neck. Ho had to oat his tlaked rice off a shelf and drink from a garden hose, and a man needed an aeroplane to put a bridle on him. "DM I raise a fuss with the ma jor? What sort of skate do you take me for? Next time I mht him I told him I liked the roan better than any horse I ever saw. Tlc isn't always That Co ' which can be kept Qt full or 1< Four quarts of oil will giv without smoke or smell. An indicator always show 1 Filler-cap does not screw on; b end is attached by a chain and ( , An automatic-locking wick from being turned high < ! remove and drop back so that Thc burner body or gallery cannc In an Instant for rewtcking, Finished made, built for service, and yet light ai Dtaltrt Bvtrywhtn. If mt at ; Jf?y Standard C rooting In the ground like a pig,' said I, and If you had told me about his patent dirigible neck I'd have given you $10 more.' We wore sports lu those days. "Ono time tho veterinary surgeon told me about a line trotting horse In a town some distance away which had been doprlvod of lf" tall by a surgical operation. 1 went and look ed at tho ho rsc. Ho was a perfect boauty and could trot like an ava lanche. But ho had just a stump of a tall, and the owner was ashamed to drive him, so 1 bought tho critter for a song. 1 wen) to a lot of trouble having a tail mado for him. It was a beautiful flowing tall, a credit to the hairdresser's art. It was fixed to slip over the horse's stub tall and was then fastoned to the crupper of thfl harness, and a man needed good eyes *to seo that lt wasn't the real thing. "The major had poor oyes, and when 1 took him for a drive bohlnd that black trotter he simply had to bo tied down to the seat ho was so excited. He said he'd always wanted a horse with a ta?! like that. He had my own weakness. Ho couldn't pre tend Indifference when he wanted a thing tlie worst way, and he wanted that horse so bad that his hair was falling ont. After a great deal of de liberation I issued my ultimatum. " TU give you the horse, harness and buggy just as they stand,' said I, 'for your sorrel three-year-olds and $r>0.' Either of the sorrels was worth a herd of horses Uko that black. " 'lt's a trade,' cried the major. "Next morning the major came around to my barn all smiles. 'Ever I since I was a child and quit playing j with a rattle,' says he, 'I have want i ed a horse with a detachable tall-a I tail that a man could take off and uso ' as chin whiskers at a masked ball. I i just called to pay you another HO i cents, so that when I meet you after i this you can't say I look advantage j of you In our trade yesterday.' I "Oh. there were real sports in , those days." . Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO R IA In twenty-seven years tho Kimber ley diamond mines yielded $ 120,000, 000 worth of diamonds. j . . . ll I'NT'S . . ?|| ^leTONi?fe ll IL ! is (lie one unfailing scientific j dressing which instantly relieves and permanently cures all I hurts, cuts, burns* bruises, sprains nnd wounds of every j kind. Path leaves at once bo j cause the nlr ls excluded, and the oil covering acts as artificial I skin. Tlie quickest, fastest healing oil known-HUNT'S LIGHTNING OIL. 25 cents and 50 cents bottles. A Ii li I) lt i'd (?IS T S ALWAYS A. B. RICHARDS MEDI CINE CO,, Sherman, Texas. For Sale by NORMAN CO., Druggist, 'Walhalla, S. C. ld Room the side of the house where ter blasts strike hardest always a lower temperature than thc of thc house. There are times n it is necessary to raise the perature quickly or to keep the perature up for a long period, t can't be done by the regular hod of heating without great ble and overheating the rest of house. The only reliable hod of heating su,ch a room e by other means is to use a >ERFECTIO SMOKELESS Absolutely smokeless and odorless nv heat for a short or long time, e a glowing heat for nine hours, 's thc amount of oil in the font, ut is put in like a cork in a bottle, cannot get lost. Hame spreader prevents the enough to smoke, and is easy to it can be cleaned in an instant. it become wedged, and can bo unscrewed In ppan or nickel, strong, durable, wcll id ornamental. 1 as a cool handle. yours, writs for dtscriptivs circular st ogtncy of tht )il Company rporMta) Foley's Kidney Pill ? What They Will Do for You They will cure your backache, strengthen your kidneys, cor rect urinary irregularities, build up the worn out tissues, and eliminate the excess uric acid that causes rheumatism. Pre vent Bright's Disease and Dia bates, and restore health and strength. Refuse substitutes, BARTON'S! PHARMACY, Walhalla. W. t7. LUNNEY, Seneca. In the British museum library there are more than thirty-two milos of shelves Ulled with books. MASTER'S SALES. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF OCONEE. In Court of Common Pleas. Pursuant to decrees of tho afore said Court, lu tho cases named below, I will offer for sale, to tho highest bidder, lu front of the Court Houso door, at WALHALLA, S. C., on Tues day, tho 3d day of JANUARY, 1011, between tho legal hours of sale, the tracts of laud below de scribed: Luther Williams ot al., Plaintiffs, against Jas. Lee, as Administrator, Etc., ot al, Defendants. AH that piece, parcel or tract of land, situate, lying and being lu tim County of Oconee, State of South Carolina, on waters of Oconee Creek, waters of Cane Creek, waters of Keowoe Uiver, adjoining lands of the Norris Estate, Roxford lands, EVvtn lands, lands of James Lee, lands of Ihc estate of Mrs. Margaret 10. Ross and others, and supposed to contain four hundred and soventy acres, more or less, lt being a part of a tract of one thousand acres con veyed to the said James Lee by Samuel Lovingood. Terms of Sale: One-half cash on day of sale, nnd balance on a credit of one year, credit portion to bear Interest from day of sale until paid in full, at the rate of seven per cent per annum, and to be secured by bond of the purchaser or purchas ers and a mortgage of the promises, with privilege to tho purchaser or purchasers to anticipate the pay ment of the credit portion at any time; that lu the event of the fail ure of the purchaser or purchasers to comply with the terms of tho salo within live days from day of sale, that the Master do re-advor tlse and resell said premises on the following salesday, or some conven ient salesday thereafter, at the same place and on thc same terms ns heretofore sot out, at the risk of tho former purchaser or purchasers, and that ho do continue so to do until ho has found a purchaser or purchas ers who shall comply with the terms of the sale. Purchaser to pay extra for papers. W. O. WHITE. Master for Oconee County, S. C. December 14, 1910. r>0-.r>2 J. Allen Thrift. Plaintiff, against T. J. Thrift et. al., Defendants. All of that piece, parcel or tract of land, lying, situate and being on Fall Creek, Pulaski Township, Coun ty of Oconee, State of South Caro lina, adjoining lands of John Mooro, Southern Woodland Company, H. T. Shed and others, containing two hundred and II fly acres, more or less. Terms of Sale; One-hall cash un day of sale, and balance on a credit of one year, credit portion to bear lnten st from day of sale, to be se cured by bond of the purchaser or purchasers and a mortgage of the premises, with privilege to the pur chasers to anticipate the payment of the credit portion within thirty days from day of sale; that in event of failure of the purchaser or purchas ers to comply with tho terms of salo promptly on the day of sale, thal the Master do resell the said prem ises on the same or some convenient salesday thereafter at the same place and on the same terms as heretofore set out, at the risk of tho former purchaser or purchasers, and that he do continue so to do until ho has found a purchaser or purchasers who shall comply willi the terms of sale. Purchaser to pay extra for papers. W. O. WHITE, Master for Oconee County, S. C. December 14, 1010. ?0-52 MASTER'S SALES. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF OCONEE. In Court of Common Pleas. Pursuant to decrees of tho afore said Court, In the cases named below, I will offor for sale, to the highes! blddor, In front of the Court House door, at Walhalla, S. C., on Tuesday, Hie lld day of January, 1911, be tween the legal hours of salo, the tracts of land helow described: William il. Mottgold, Plaintiff, against K. A. Hull, Defendant. All that piece, parcel or tract ol land, situate, lying and being* in thc County of Oconee, State of South Carolina, on branches, waters of Whetstone Creek, waters of Chat tooga River, and adjoining lands of J. R. Jolly, J. C. Powell, Jolly lands, Elk Alberson, Sam Hunt, C. W, ANE HIGHEST I FOR it AV Wool on Com lilt montlonln JOHN WHITE & CO, LOTIS i I Hunt, John Itainoy and H. sAu9lder,t and supposed to contain six hundred and thirty (630) aerea, be tho ?ame more or lesa, and1 having su?h forms, metes and bounds, .couraea sand dis- , tauceB as are represented and shown by a plat of a survey .of tho said tract of land made by Evan^CalJas, Survoyor, lt hoing tho tract t>f land that day convoyed to the. said E. A. Hull by the said W. H. Mongold. Terms of Snle: Cash on day of aale. That in the event of tellure of the purchasor or purchasers TO com ply with the terms of the salo forth with, tho Mastor do resellvthe said promises on the same aal^day or some convenient saleday thereafter, at the same place, and on the samo terms as heretofore sot out, s at the risk of the former purchaser or^pur chaser8, and that he do contlnug-g-? ?J to do until ho has found a MU^ty or purchasers who shall (,01>jBY tho terms of tho sale. V/ Purchasor to pay extra for papers. W. O. WHITE, Master tor Oconee County, S. C. December 7, 1910. Campboll Courtenay, Plaintiff, against C. G. Rolston, Defendant. Tract No. 1.-All that certain ploco, parcel or tract of land, situate, lying and being In tho County of Oconee, of tho State of South Caro lina, on Tugaloo River, beginning at a point on the bank of aaid river, known as tho "Shut-in Rock," and running a straight line at right an gles to the conreo of said river one hundred feet, thence on a lino par allel with said river to a point erv Dottie Creek, one hundred feet from the mouth thereof, tho same being ono hundred feet from the bR-uk-c-f Tugaloo River from point to point along said lino^.runfiihg parallel with the bank t).or*eof, and being tho same tract of land conveyed to Campbell Courtenay hy William D. Doaton by deed bearing date the 22d day ot September, 1903, recorded In the Clerk's oflleo, Walhalla, S. C., Janu ary ll, 1909, In Dook "BB," page 1 OG. ^ ALSO, Jr Taret No. 2.-All that p(Jtb, par cel or traet of land, situate, lying and being in Oconee County, South Carolina, on the east sido of Tuga loo River, having tho following metes and bounds, beginning at the point whore Battlo Crook flows Into Tugaloo River, thence up said creek to the line of tho traet of land now or formerly owned by Howell Carter; thence north of old hickory; -thence N. 5 W. 13.10 to stone 3X0; thence S. 74 W. 9.20 to stone 3X0; thence S. 32 W. 16.40 to stake 3X0; thence S. 59 W. 4.7 5 to pine 3X0; thence S. 71.50 W. 34.20 to whito oak 3X0; thence down Tugaloo RI vor to tho beginning point, containing two huif dred a^res, moro or less, hoing the same tract conveyed to- Campbell Courtenay ha: Emily C. S. Verner by deed dated .'iV,c 8- 1003, recorded in Clerk's omeo, Oconee County, January/ li, 1901, in Book "BB," pago 105. j / ALSO, Trafct No. 3.-All; that certain piece.'parcel or traet tVr htnd\ situate; . ?yiny and being in tho County of Oco/iee, South Carolina, on Chnttoo ga/River, adjoining tract No. 2, ? above mentioned, and lands now or formerly belonging to Howell Car ter, Robinson and Taylor and others, containing two hundred and eighty seven acres, more or less, and more fully shown by plat of survey thereof by I. H. Harrison, Surveyor, dated May 20, 1905, and hoing the tract of land conveyed to Campboll Cour tenay by H. M. Pitts by deed dated May 30, 1905, recorded In Clerk's oflleo, Oconee County, South Caro lina, October 19, 1905, In Book "EE," page 66; subject, howover, to water easements and privileges conveyed by Hi M. Pitts to Chat tooga River Development Company hy deed dated December 13, 1900, recorded in Clerk's oflleo, Oconee County, South Carolina, October 3, 1901, In Dook "X," pnge 542. Easements and Water Privllogcs. Also, the rights, easements and waler privileges convoyed to itetnp boll Courtenay by M. D. Valullver by two separate doods, both dated November 15, 1902, and one re corded in the Clerk's office of Rn bun County, Georgia, Novombor 24, 1902, in Dook "O," page 357, and the other recordod In Habersbam County, Georgia, November 17, 1902, in Dook "OO," page 486, sahl easements relating to the tract of land then owned by M. D. Vandlvor, situate on Tallulah uhd Chattooga River, in Rabun County, Georgla, contalnlng 156 acres, more or loss, and to the other tract situation Tugaloo and Tallulah Rlverdfeln Hnhersham County, as descrill^Pfln said deeds; subject, howover, to tho easements and water privileges conveyed by M. I). Vandiver to Chat tooga River Development Company by deed dat ?d December 18, 1900, recorded in Clerk's oflleo, Rabun County, February 4, 1901, in Book "N," pago 193, the samo being tho real ostato and water privileges con voyed to mo by Campboll Courtenay by deed bearing ?date October 30, 1909, and for the balance of tho purchase money of which this niort ! gage is given. TERMS OF SALE: CASH. That in cxent. of failure of thc purchaser or purchasers to comply with the terms of tho salo within live days from day of sale, tho Master do re-advert iso and rosoli said promises, on tlio following salesday, s or some convenient salesday there after, at ?Ito same placo and on Hie same terms as heretofore sot out at tho risk of former pur chaser or purchasers, and that ho do continuo so lo do until he has found a purchaser or purchasers who com ply with tho terms of sale. Purchaser to pay o.xtra for papers. W. O. WHITE, Master for Oconee County, 8. C. December 7, loio.* 49-52 i HIDE.S MARKET PRICE PAP* V FURS AND HIDES mission. Wrlto for price? ? thu ad. Hobed 1887 VILLE,KY.