University of South Carolina Libraries
7? I BY CL08$OAI;BS & LANGSTON 1. i?, i, . i < .' r^n-.M ' . .-r- ' "' -I-.:.' ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9,1901. VOLUME XXXVII-NO. 16. THE VARSITY SACK. The above picture was drawn from a garment taken ont ' of stock, worn by a living model. The Varsity is only one of several styles of Sack Suits we are showing. The style is new ; it is a critical matt er to make these garments right ; you'll find plenty that can make them wrong. Like all now styles, if they are not right they are all wrong. They'll be popular ; you'll want one of them. Better look ont what you buy ; when you can get H., S. & M. styles, tailoring ?nd quality, you're foolish to take anything else or to think you'll get anything better. H., S. & M. Suits from $10.00 to $20.00. Other good Suits at $5.00, $6.00, $7.50 and $8.50. Bememberthe place-on Granite Bow, between Brock Bros. and Wilhites' drug store. ANDERSON, S. C.; The Spot Gash Clothiers IF YOU ARE ? PURCHASER OF ntf Oar Prices and <JOO?1N will surely Tempt You. We have'always given good values in this line, and there .'ia no reason whv we should net He. ;ho ?ame for yob.' In buying Shoes you want to look at the quality aa well as the.pnce. Our* stand the closest inspe^ion and are well made and durable. . We use the L tmost caution a nd buy only those Shoes which we absolutely know to be of the very best qn??ity. We do not experiment with various lines but stick to those which have the manufacturers as well as our guarantee behind them, and enou'd hy ch? nc* any imperfection in workmanship or leather occur, you will.uiwajs lied UH ready to satisfy you. THE BION SHOE FOR HEN. This is the most leasouahly priced H gh Grade Shoe on the market. We have them in all the various leathers and styles. ^ McGTJLLY BROS Large, Fat and Juicy, weighing a full pound ! At 10c. Each-r-Three for 25e, This is cheaper than fat bacon. Particularly nice for breakfast-at Pris tilt ?fcrxl * .THE CASH' GROCER. .- . ' -, 'v.. .' .* j.'.i-.- " ." , -, . ' STATE NEWS --The polioe of Charleston are making the blind tigers very uneasy. - A colored boy had hts leg crush ed at Winnsboro while stealing a ride 1 on a freight train. - Charles G. Dantzleir, of Orange burg, will bc a candidate for judge to succeed Judge Benet. - J.C. Bobo*tson, postmaster at Cowpens, has been arrested ou tho charge of embezzlement. - The ?tichland distillery has been completed and is now making corn liquor by the thousand gallons. . ~- Tba State Baptist Convention will lml<i itu asocial senaiou at Flor ence this year early i u December. - 8partanburg. county will have a building for its own exhibits eu the exposition grounds in Charleston. - Stewart Babb, an excellent young man, was. killed by the explosion of an engine at Merna, Laurens County. ? - The government has sont a hor tioulturalist- to Charleston to arrango a grass and forage plant display for, the exposition. --Governor McSweeoey ?has ap pointed Miss Lavinia II. L aBorde state librarian. There were 25 appli cants for the place. ?--The next session of the South Carolina annual conference of the Methodist ohuroh will convene in Co lumbia the 27th day of November. - While prowling about her premi ses in Union, Charles Bobo, a negro, was shot by Mrs. A. W. Green. He was only slightly wounded, and was arrested by the police. . '-There was an attempted robbery of the Bank Of Georgetown -Thursday' at 5 a. m. by negro burglars, who secured only $3. They escaped after being fired at five times. - Commissioner Yerkes has reject ed the claim of Soulu Carolina for a rotund of tho taxes paid by thc State agents as wholesale add retail liquor delllers, amounting to over $7,000. - T. C. Mims, a young white far mer of Williamsburg, was drowned in trying to- cross Black river on Wed nesday night. The horse strayed from the road. Mims had been drink ing. - Greenville is te.bcve a paid fire department. Chief Joyner, of At lanta, has been there to organize ii. -The change from a volunteer -system is brought about by such heavy fire losses as have occurred in Greenville resently. - An old tramp, feeble and wet, was picked up and cared for by some I negroes near Greenwood recently. The tramp fell sick and when the doctor examined his person, a number of $20 gold pieces were found securely se wed up in his clothing. It waB a strange ease. - The much-talked-of consolida tion charter of the Seaboard Air Line was issued by tb? Secretary of Stats last week. The charter fees amount ing to $25,295, have been turned into the State treasury, being the largest amount in fees paid fora charter in this State in a long time. - It is stated that Senator. Till man's eye is almost entirely well, and would have been all right sooner if he pad strictly obeyed his physicians advice not to use it in reading. It ie Stated also that 1)3 has accepted a large number pf invitations Tn various States to make add re s ces . this fall and that he will leave about the 12th of this month on his tour.. He, expects tobe away from hornea, month or more. * : t - There seems to be a consider able error in the view held by a great many folks? aud especially magistrates, ".that a citizen who is disfranchised on account of conviction for crime is not liable for poll tax. A gris?t xn??y magistrates seem to think that' the poll tax and suffrage go hand in band. No matter how- often a man may be convicted, if otherwise liable, the Attorney general says he has to pay poll tax or be taken np for a mis demeanor. - The officers of the State Agricul tural and Mechanical Society ?io in Columbia and are hard at work pre paring for the approaching fair, which occurs the last week in this month. President W. D. Evana is quite con fident that the attendance will be as large as usual, if not larger; that the fair will be up to its - standard and that the oxhibitors will be more gen erally distributed. Tho foot ball games this year will be great events and willtakeplaco on two days of the fair. - While excavating on Saturday in an old cellar at the corner of Main and Lumber streets, Columbia, pre? para tory to the erection of a new building, workmen employed by% Con tractor MA;-' C=2C ?SrGS? ? ?U?i?cr CI jewels that had evidently beon buried thero during the war between the states.. The jewels are marked I. O. O. F. No. 1. It is interesting to note that the No. 1 lodge in South Carolina ia 'the Charleston lodge. How the jewels came to be buried in the old cellar remains to bo seen. - A deplorable shooting ocourred at Horse Gall, several miles from Hampton. Albert Terry and Mrs. Sallie Rivers Smith were in a party that went uown to attend a meeting at that place. Mr. Terry had h**n very attentive to Mrs. Smith for sev eral years, and it is reported that she refused him time ?nd again because ho drank, and that he had threatened to kill himself if she did not accept bim. He caught her by the hand and told her he was going to kill her. She tried to escape, but only mored a few step? when he shot, the ball strik ?*?acr her io th? bf.ck. - Last year's United States coin age was worth $136,000,000. - Sevonteen men perished in ?.a Canadian mine fire the other day. - Tho Florida orange crop is esti mated at two and one-half million 1)0X08. - One witness killed another in a court room in Memphis for calling him a liar. - All the strees car conductors and motormen at l'on saco la, Fla., aro on strike and not a oar is running. - Whitney and Wheeler is the latest presidential fcioket suggested f or tho eousideration of democrats. - A food famine is threatened io the Hawaiian Islands, owing to tho mar?timo strike in San Francisco. ? - The Lancaster ootton mill has a contract with the government, to make twi?o for the postothoe department. - Cubans have held a mooting to demand a reduction of the American duties ou exports from that island. - lu six of the northeast counties of'North Carolina 500 horses have died from moldy food and bad waler. - Hundreds of persons are fleeing from Battle Lake, Wyo., the town having been set, on fire by burning forests/ - It is proposed, in Washington, to change the name of the Philippine Is lands in honor of the assassinated president. - It is reported from Washington that Booker T. Washington has ad vised Roosevelt to drep the negro in southern politics. - President Mckinley's personal fortune is estimated at $225,000, ho having made money, it is said, in sev eral successful ventures. - Tho cash balance in the United States treasury is said to be grov inc at the rate of $300.000 a day, and wil soon be over $200,000,000. - It is stated that New York and Philadelphia will soon be linked by wireless telegraphy, and that mes ?ages of ten words will bo sent for 10o. - In a pitched battle between mob of strikers and policemen in San Francisco, seven men aro known to have been shot, one of whom wil) die. - Company C of tho Ninth infan try has almost been exterminated by Filipino rebels.- Of the 72 mon in the oompany, 50 were killed and ll wounded. -Warden Mead of the Auburn penitentiary has received requests for pieces of Czolgosz's brain after:he shall have paid the death penalty,'by medical men. - A committee of Treasury officials aro considering the question of plao iog tho portrait of the late President McKinley on future issues of national bauk bills of the denomination of $10. - Bishop Statler of the German Baptist Churoh has ordered, members of that denomination to refrain from haviog iliuir photographs taken, as he considers the practice skis, tc vanity and idolatrous worship. -A horriblo accident occurred in Atlanta Tuesday morning, Oct. 1st. Ed South, assistant night engineer in the Empire building, had the upper part of his head severed from his body by a descending elovatdr. - A divorce ease in Kansas tho Dth?r day was tried on the . golden wedding anniversary cf the couple seeking divorce. It looks as if a cou ple that had stood each othor foy 50 years could have lived it out. - Tho department of agriculture ind commerce of Japan will send 2ighty-four students abroad this month for practical training. Of these twen ty-five will come to the United States and twenty-seven will be sent to Eu rope. - Miss La?r?. Lernley, 42 years ot ige, a sister of Judge Advocate Lcm ly of the Schley investigation court, was burned to death at her homo in Salem, N. C., on Monday, her cloth iog having caught from the kitchen ?tove. ' \-Mrs. Mary Minieh has beon sought for eight years by ? New York banking firm, that hod a legacy of MO.00O that was left to her. They bave just discovered that tho woman iied about a year ago in the poor bouse. - Gov. Stanley, of Kansas, has withdrawn his offer to give silver cups to all triplets born in that Sjtate dur ing his administration. After having purchased twenty sets of cups he deci ded that he would have to oall a halt owing to the expense of the scheme. A Utica, N. Y., man who re contly died, left $21,000 to bo divided among his third cousins, then der?scd cousins as ''children of those who ire related to me as cousins." Thns f?r un? y 390 "third cousins" have put in a claim for a part of that $21,000 and they are represented by only 48 law yers. - The time must come-and it can not be long distant--when ten days will be sufficient to land passengers in Asia, or a total of two weeks between New York and Manila. This is only SOO.er 700 miles a day; and while that speed could not bo maintained oxoept &t great expense, the demands of Asia bound travel will soon warrant the" outlay. - Ti*i?t?o???i??? news comes from ! o G?nerai Ruges in the far off Philip pines. A disastrous engagement-took place recently in tho island cf Samar, near Balcngiga, between Company C, Ninth United Stales infantry anda large body of insurgents. The troops were attacked while unprepared and 10 Americans were killed. It is said that tho conditions th ero are not very ! c reassuring. ' f c c U??l?S Till? MAKUftfrttCj ri???T? ? ?vJIV? ???IS nm xvii O LWU tl AL. From Our Own Correspondent. WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 7,1001. Scarcely bad President McKinley cen placed io his tomb when the Re lublioao offioe seekers here began to day a game of "graveyard insurance" nsod OD President Roosevelt's spon aneous declaration that ho would arry out all selections made by his iredeoessor for appointments to fed rn 1 flffi?fl FolloW??g ttin ?ramnla nt he Ohio Republicans, who deolined o accept the Democratic offer to pre ermit their political campai^-? out of espeot to Mr. McKinley, the pol i ti - ians hero all began to take advantage if the dead. During the last fow days careel y a Senator or Representative rho has goue to the White House to ksk for an appointment for a con tituent, has failed tn aneert in the aost positiva manner that President McKinley had promised it to his mao. ?Io doubt many of these men were tonest in their assertions, but that lome of them, at least, had been de ceived by their constituents is evidoot 'rom the faot that in some cases as nany as three and oven four men have daimed that they had received posi tive promises for tho samo ofhoe. The 'esult of this state of affairs is, of wurse, inevitable. President House reit has shut down. When it can bc proved that a promiso was mado and :hat it is- reasonably recent, he will larry it out; otherwise, no: .There is excellent reason to boliovo .hat Mr. Roosevelt intends not only io adhere to, but also to improve on, .ho southern policy of hitf predecessor, lespite the storm of abuse that is sure 0 alight on his head when the politi cians of his party discovor that ho was n earnest and not merely talking through his hat when he declared his mentions on tho subject. It is ru mored that he intends to consult with jonservative Southern Democrats suoh is Morgan, MoEuory, Clark Howell, ito., and with their assistance to con struct, a plan for tho distribution of patronage in tho South, so as to make 1 titlo to Federal ofhco down there a doini to respect instead of tho ro /crse. as it cow is. Mr. Roosevelt, it s well known, holds, as Mr. MoKin ey did, that tho average Southern Re mblioan has done nothing to entitle lim to the r?cognition of his party bo ,'ond accepting favors from it in the iast. Unlike all former Republican Presidents, whoso nominations were as sured by tho Southern delegates, Mr. Roosevelt owes absolutely nothing to my of these, and is, therefore, freo to itrike out a radical course, and attempt 0 build up a respectable white Repub joan party in the South, unhampered >y the complications that so obstruct ed all his predecessors. Whether the South will respond to this course by rotes or not, remains to be seen. Representativo Babcock has seen ;ho handwriting on the wall and has iractically deoided to abandon his ?opeless task of persuading his party 'riond5 to adopt revenue reform lcgis ation that will prevent tho trusts, to tome small degree, from further milk Dg tho people. He now says that vhile he still favors his bill as intro luced in thc closing days of the last, lessiou and while the principle ooo ained in it finds favor in his section >f the country and tho north west gen ?rally, still he may decide not to push tat present. This abandonment is >nly what was to have been.expected. The Republican party is something of 1 trust itself; it lives and bas von of late almost solely by the avor of trusts; and it is obviously inpossible for it to turn upon its pro ector, preserver and? paymaster. Mr. babcock has been warned off tho lourso by the American Protective Tariff Association, which now claims hat it is essential that Americans ihould pay for their goods moro than hey are W?rth? HO as, to enable these o be sold to foreigners at cost, and ho las heeded the warning. He hints bat in case reciprocity-which is a iohemc to reduce the tariff solely at he expense of tho farmers-falls brough, he will again take up his bill. This, of course, is in tho future. The evidence of the prosecution in he Sohley Court of Inquiry is nearly n and next week sometime tho de en8e will have a chance to be heard. Jo far, however, the proceedings have ?eeo exceedingly satisfactory to Sohley ind his friends. By .the evidence of tis foes themselves it has been proved 0 tho satisfaction of all unprejudiced nco that everything in his conduct vas entirely justifiable with tho pos ible exception of his retrograde move neat towards Key. ?West for coal. The specification it) regard to this is he only ono .that still holds water ind the defense is yet to be heard; all vho have followed the testimony con tar in admitting this. Even if Sohloy ?bould bo found guilty nf ?n error cf udgmont on this point-and it is dearly impossiblo for the Court to id judge him guilty of moro-thc ver liot would amount to a triumphant icquittal, as there would still appear io' justification for the campaign of ibuso and villification, to . which tho f avy ring for two years has subjected lim. It is a great pity that the ength of time that has elapsed sinee he war maVds it impossible to hold my investigation into tho conduct of >ther officers who have confessed monly their gravo dereliction from luty in not keeping him informed of rnn?al ?ntAll?gAn?A. A draft fora new subsidy bill pre >arcd at Boston is now being consid red by Senators Hanna and Frye, tepresontative Littlefields President ?riscom, of tho International Naviga ion Co. (which will he tho chief bene ioiary under the bill) and by a fow triers. From private information re cited here, lue now b: ii docs not dif er in any radical manner from the old ODO, though certain omissions ?nd additions have boen made io tho hope of winning western support for it. The principal ohanire is io regard to paying subsidies to foreign built ships bought, by Americans, against which j so strong a fight waa waged last nev i sion. So far as can be learned tho j changea in this claude aro moro appar- j eat than real, the same faots being I wrapped up and sugar coated in differ I eat language. Tim bill will bo intro j duoed aa noon as Congrus meets and will have the earnest support of the j new shipbuilding trust and ot ttic j many Republicans, despite tho faot that our shipyards are now overcrowd ed with work Portman Letter. Bringing in tho sheaves or bringing ! in the bales, it is all. tho sam? and ! means harvesting, indulging in thu i comfort of a yenr'splanning and strug- j gling, wearing tho crown of reward j that is tho recompenso of man's honest toil. On Saturday last, whilo in tho city of Anderson, to a person of ordi nary intelligence concerning a cotton market the sight was a revelation or a mystery. Tho writer who, for somo reasonable reasons, was not a frequent visitor to cotton markets, inquired of tho clerk in one of tho stores: "What is tho meaning of this-of tho crowdsY' Monday is your salesday, is it not? Is there a circus procession coming along!" "No," answered the obliging clerk, "it is just cotton salo." Tho public square was lined double and treblo deep, and the streets cor respondingly. Concourse after con- | course of men and women, and tho prettiest sight of pretty girls in tho airy array of attractive costume. Tho atoros wore rc-in forced for tho attack made upon the ribbons and laces, pretty but tons for pretty dressos, stick pins, up- | to-dato belts with fancy buckles, all going at a wager, and wrapped in sig nificant, . l?rge-lettered, advertising store paper which, with thu notable i contents, were to carry u trillo of envy and whole-souled admiration to tho companion girls of tho happy purcha sers. Straw hals ou men's heads were giving place to handsome, warm, felt hats for winter, and shoes were being fitted which wore soon, perhaps, to feel theslu8hof snow over their polished too piece, and, not tho least of consid eration, wore to replaco the old ones which for thc past year had dono faith ful service, but liko aged friends, though still beloved, were outgrowing their usefulness. These werte prosper ous signs of comfortable times, and were tho scene laid in tho States of tho ' North previous to the late calamity, ancient adherents to tho "Grand Old Party" would have rubbed the palms of their fat hands together and exulted: ,4I told you so'. It is prosperity--that same old prosperity which, in its pro cessional car, has followed tho band chariot of tho G; CH P. Z'-Z?-since time immemorial?" Tho new order, however, which, while buried deep in tho doctrines of ancient theories, has risen refreshed in tho baptism of a now sentiment toward the South, this new order, which is simply a head adjusted to the old regulation, asserts ot itself that it is half South anyway, hTed in old Atlanta, and soy to tho .v-mth iu words ns nearly ns manner cnn pro duce: "Whither thou guest, I will go: thy people (or party) aimil bo my peo ple, and thy God my God!" Beautiful! And, in its tropical meanderings will meet the processional car of the G. O. P. of tho South or "Grand Old Pros perity," itt its march from the Gulf States to Mason and Dixon's lim'. Timo was when a President in tho North had little claim upon tho allegi ance of tho South. When thu money' that was wrung out of tho war-dreneh ed soil was in turn again wrung out of 'the sweat-drenched hnndof the laborer ned cast into the unholy collers of the usurers of tho Capital City, the people of th? South-not rebels, but defenders -said unto themselves: "We shall raise unto ourselves a king. Ile shall be meek and lowly in tho virtue of quiet honesty; he shall bo born from our soi), bred from tho toil of our hands; be shall bo educated in tho for est temples, ho shall worship ip tho ca thedrals oi the heavens, he shall bo ono of us, and shall represent us in the open face of day with a white heart and a clean conscience " So was tho kingly child born, lib mt uro doveloped in beauty and modesty, and ns ho grew in stature ho grew in favor with God and man. Tho people enthroned him upon tlio hills asa pedestal, his royal ermine floating behind to the valleys, and with great cries of rejoicing they shouted: "Great is tho King! Long live King Cotton!" - Under this benignant rule the people of the South havo dwelt many years, and now that the now President of the North lins recognized tho respectful King of the South, and both prosperity wagon? aro to meet amid shoutings from mills of tho South and factories of tho North, tho people will cry: "Great is King Cotton! firent fa thc Presi dent of North nnd South! Long live tho Union of the federate States of America?" Tho Southern man has done it all. He might have gono down in disgrace and humility that sometimes follows in tho wake Of poverty, but he didn't, he rose with the sublime fortitude that follows an honest purpose and clean heart--and ho has won! Tho women, they are not out of tho shade of tho laurels. Tho women, who havo hoed and weeded and picked and gathered and carried: with tired backandaching sides, with little children murmuring before them and littler ones crying bc nind them, with families to wash,abd cook for, to mend and make, to suffer for and pienso and nurse-the women aro not from under tho shado of the laurels; and when man claims a crown of prosperity as tho price of h*t> labors ic must ho n crown that shall also lit his wife and daughters. Let these helpmeets be decked with ribbons and ! laces and bnck?cs nud brooches, and ! while tho patriotic shout arises: "Great ' is King Cotton and his men!" lot there not be a courtier of the South who shall forget to erv: "Long live the women of tho cotton field!" R.R.L. Executor's Sale of REAL ESTATE. lix" virtue or the Will or the late John vv. Daniela, deceased, I wilt sell at nubile outcry at Anderson ?. H , S. C., on Sales day In November next, the following d*? acrlbed Real Estate Hituate in \nderaon Couniy, 8. C., to wit : 1. All that Tract containing ??89 acres, more or less, known as tba Hill and O'Brlaut-comprlsine 272 aero? tim Hill Traci, and 17 72 100 acres tho Wm. O'Brlant place, adjoining each other, on v.*filers of Crooked Oroek, <? >rn??r Town ship, adjoining lund* lut?-tv owiifd by Joshua Hurries, Wm. O'Brlant'and others. 2. All that Traot containing 210 acres, more or les?, comprising thu .1. II. Har per place 103 aeren, and the P. H. Harper place 23 acres in Monea Path Township, on waters or Kilud* Jtiver. adjoining lands now or late of A. H. Cox, Mary J. Harper and other?. 3. All that Lot in,. Williamston, con taining one and three fourth 11 ; i acres, known as the Richardson or Shop Lot, adjoining land? of J. J. Cooley, R. A. (?ray and others. 4. All that Lot in Pondlelon, known as the old Homestead, containing 12 acron, more or lesa, adjoining !a?ds of Mrs. E. N. Trescott, S L. Eskuw and others. 5. All that Tract containing 20 acre?, more or leaf?, being the balance of a 27* aores Tract described in plat reoorded in Book PP, nage 301. R. M. C., Anderson County, adjoining J. y. Fowler and oth ers, of which a part was sold to J. S. Fowler. 0. All that Tran', adjoining, containing 571 aerea, moro or lean. Plat recorded in Book PP, page 302, K. M. C., io wLich j the lines and quantity ia ohauged, slightly reducing the quantity about 3 acre?, as explained on tue plat. 7. All that Tract adjoining, containing 14 acre*, more or less, being the three placee, comprlBlog the White and Dan iela land?, containing the mill placea. 8. All that Traot, known ns Tract No. 2, containing 43 acres', adjoining lands of Dr. D. 8. Watson and others. Plat reoord ed in Book-pago li. All that Traot, containing 55 aores, more or leas, adjoining lands now or late of Henry Crawford au.1 others. Plat re? corded in Book-pftge 10. All that Tract, containing 14 acres, moro or lesa, known as No. 10, of the Fant land?, adjoining lands ot W. G. Watson and other?, heine on the west aldo of extension of Mci Hillie street. Plat recorded in Book XX, pago 016, R. M. C. 11. All that Traot, containing 15Jnore?, on east aldo of the General's Hoad, ad joining landa of H. H. Dean, formerly M. P. Tribble. Dr. M. Li Hbarpe and ethers. Plat recorded in Book XX, page 613. 12. All that Tract, known aa tho Hnel grove place, con tain bur ^3 ncres, more or lean, adjoining landa of Estate of J. II. JoneB, deceased, W. G. Watson and oth ers Described In Book BS, page The foregoing 8 Ti acta of land lie from. 1 ? to 3 miles BOU th of the Court House at A nd o THO n. 13. Tho C. A. Heed Tract, containing 105 80-100 aeres, situate partly in the cor porate limits of the City of Anderson, is divided into 8 Lots and will be Bold sepa rately as follows, beginning at the east aldo on the General's Road or North Main street: 1. All that Lot, containing G aores, known as Lot No. 1, adjoining lands of B Frank Mauldin, Rev. W. W. Leathers and M ra. Mary A. Stephens and No. 2. All that Lot, Weat of No. 1, containing 4 32-100 acre?, known as No. 2, adjoining lands of B. Frank Mauldin, Mrs. Mary A. Stephens, Lota No?. 1 and 3. 3. Ail that Lot, containing 2? 88-10? acras. hAlnj? Let Nc. 3, Adj?i??hg ianda or B. Frank. Mauldin, Mrs. Mary A. Ste chens, Lots Nos. 4, 5 and 0 " 4 AU that Lot, containing 13 18-100 nares, being Lot No. 4, adjoining Lots Nos. 8, 5, 0, Fred G. Brown, Anderson Water, Lilgbt and Power Company and others, reserving the rights of Bald Co. 5. Ail that Lot, known as No. 5, con taining 13 22-100 acres, adjoining Lots Nos. 4, 6 and 7 and Anderton Cotton I Mills. 0. All that Lot, containing 12 16-100 ( i acres, known aa No. 7, arJjoinlog lands of B. Frank Mauldin, Lots Nos. 3, 4, ? and 8. 7.' AU thai Lot, known as No. 7, con - ' talning 15 aores, adjoining Nos. 0,8 and 5, Anderson Cotton Milln, M ot nod ist Church and Blue Ridge Railroad. 8. All that Lot, containing 17 1-10 aores, adjoining landa . nf Mrs. 8. J. Peoples, Lots Nos. (1, 5 aud 7 bnd Bluo Ridge Rail road. . ! H AU that Lot in the northern part of the City of Anderson, containing two thirds (ri ) of an nore, more or less, adjoin ing Lot No. ;-of the C. A. Reed place, atrett intervening, Lota now or lately owned by Sam. Situmoos, Joseph N. Brown aud other*, heine on tho ?outh side of a cross street from Mainstreet run ning weet. 15. All that Lot, containing 2-3 of an acre, more or less, on the south sl^e of said-croas street, adjoining the Sam Sim mons Lot, Joseph N. Brown and others. Also the following described property near tbe Publio Square in theClty of An derson: 10 All that vacant Lot, containing aboat three-fourths (3) of an sore, adjoining lot of J. M. Cathcart, 8. V. R. R. and others. 17. AU that Lot opposite the County .Tail, fronting on Chnroh street 120 feet, and Jail street 00 feet, adjoining lots of J. L. McGee, J. P. Todd and others. 18. AU that Lot, known as the Murphy Loton the westside of South Main street and south of Church street, adjoining lots of D. C. Brown and Brother-Church street intervening-James M. Payne and others, fronting on Main street 100 feet, and on Church street 157 feet. 10. All that Tract, known as the Sam. Stewart place, containing 100 acres, moro or less, situate in Oconee County in said 8tate, on waters of Corn House Creek, adjoining lauds of- MOBS, -How ard, -Sanders and others. If for want of time or other reasons, the said Tracta or T.nto of lend ssnnc-i all be soid on ' desday aa aforesaid, the sales will-be t intlnued on the next day (Tuesday) until all are disposed of, re serving tho city lots for the last sales. Plats and further descriptions maybe bad on application to the Executor. Terms of Sale-For Lota under 8200 all casb; over $200 and less than f 100 one half oasb, balance 12 months credit; over ?-100 one-third cash, balance 12 months credit, with interest on all credit portions at 8 per cent per annum from day of sale, payable aunually until paid, scoured by mortgage, with 'leave to pay all cash, or . anticipate payment at any time. Pur chaser to pay the Executor for papers extra. Buildings to be Insured and policy assigned, j JOoEPH N. BROWN, Executor of the Will of John W. Daniels, Oct 0, ?001 10_4 Thia ls our greatest yoar. We are proud of our reoord, and are striving by every honest moans to win you for a cus tomer. Give ua a trial If you have sever done so before. Vandlvor Bros. If yon are in the market for a Mower, Reaper and Binder, call at Brock Bros. and bny the Deering, the moat durable, lightest draft and best adjusted machino on tho market. ?