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<+ ? ' ? 4 V ^ I ? ^XPEML.NIES IS SOL- t1 <y DIEK LIFE. < > ? ?e> By Dr. It. c. KiDier. v -$> 4- <$ ?> ^ $ < > <? <j> <$> <s> v?> & ?$> <e> <$> / In a preliminary way, I want to say that for sometime no article has appeared from me. I kaive not been so /ell, and Rev.. Y. von A. Riser, who is my stenographer and editor, has fceen busy; but I tope to write a few more war articles. I am now at my brother, J. A. C. Kibler's, where I have lately come on an extended visit; but L my home is still in Decatur, Ga. r Two days' maroi out o. Fredericksburg, Va., one night I was on picket all night, and so close was the enei Bay that I could hear the men talking, r J felt rather lonely out there all by myself. But it was not my first experience on picket lines; so I knew I could do it, even if I did get a little ?cared sometimes. About midnight everything got quiet, and I got sleepy. Actually I in ad to put tobocco juice into my eyes to keep them open. That was decidedly the longest nigit of the war for me. When long?looked-for t Joxr ns>ma el/vwlv vprv slowly. from r ^ ? ' the east I went to where the camp had been. To my surprise there was nothing there 'but a few straggling men, most of them picket men like myself, 1 suppose. *For a while we did not *now what to do nor where to go. The Yankees had been right over ^ tfc-ere, and our army was now gone; the Yankees might swoop down on ?s few men at any time and kill us Icr take us prisoners. I did not like either foorn of the dilemma; so we finally trailed off on the track of our men, who had gone towards Fredericksburg. We learned later that the | Yankees had retired that night. We marched all day. Tirea and sleepy we were, but we never stopped anywhere long. We wanted to l catch up. Have you never heard a R> littlp r\hi]r? fallip? behind its parent F?r friend, cry and say: TvVlait for me! Wait or me! Boo, roo, hoo! I say wait for me now!" Well, that describes the feeling we ?'".ad. Tfce Yankees --were somewhere near us, we thought, and our men gone on ahead, we did not know how far. If our men could hai.e heard us we might 'have said: "Wait for us now. You had ho business to leave us." That night or very !ate in the day, we caught | up. We went into camp for tne nig t. k I knew I could sleep anywhere: so 'I got three fence rails, laid t/em across a ditch. Wrapping myself up in my blanket, I stretched out my ' "weary limbs on the rails,i and there, i in tlie rain, over rushing and angry waters below, slept ti e sleep of the | just. The next day we were up early and marching towards Fredericksburg, which place we reacthel that nitfhi. fe It <was rather late \v en we got into cart: p. I was so cold that I tremble J L'-like a leaf. 1 was so cold I did not Y tee' like making a fire. I looked L around, and Company E . ad a good fire. I asked them to let me warm. V I knew most of the men in that comW ,?)any, and they let me warm. After warming up, I sat down with my back to a tree, still near the fire, and went to sleep, thinking only to remain there a lit^e v.< ile. When I -woke it was day Tie next night I had to dig breastl wo: is. One hundred and fifty men. I more or less, worked w:ere I did all ' night. Tnat was another pretty long night, but 'hard as the work was it "was better than fighting with, "bullets flying around you all the time. At daylight the next morning our regiment was called up, and we were am-ong them, as tired and sleepy as twe were, and set in battle array. As ?6on as the fight began we were taken S out of that part of the field and sent to another place, where we "were fe needed worse, I suppose. We were ^aaarched along tie road that led to the city. Several Yankee guns of big calibre were shelling that part of the road just then and a number of shells fcurst near us. One struck a post TK)st near me and. exploding shattered - me post into splinters; many pieces shell and "post fled about me; one K fragment of shell struck Lieut. Peis ter; taking off his lef at the hip, He fell mortally wounded and expired W in about 20 minutes. He was a great I man and a good soldier. 'Now the fight was on in great earyv* r* -n*r? n iw*\a^a4^ n V O ?? 1^'T CI J III d II Y> CA^CVtClU t to do his duty. I tried to do mine, k and all the owners I saw did the same, M^wccept one man. I will not tell his Bie. He Ciad tried to dodge out of ^fight, but was being driven in at froint of the bayonet of Mr. George 'Strange to say, that man, Kd into the fight, as he was, was Hd almost before the fight began. Rnisrht rave hart a nrp^pntimp-nt nr I Imagined he had, and held back on count of it. I have heard some men hr they believed in presentiments, K I have not said I did; yet there [gilt be something in it. That man was the only man -we lost * ? that day. We had the advantage o. fi'.t ting behind a stone wall?after we .got to it. Tat welcomed stone wall, , it seemed to me, was a mile long. We lay there and let tae enemy come up to take us, and at 70 yards we let them have what we had for their ; reception, and tney fell?poor fellows I?like autumn leaves. We were glad j to kill them there to keep them from killing us; lbut rt was awful! Six times they came, and six times they i were shot down. Not many returned I tn their ram,i>s They did not attack us the ne:xt day. : On the nig* t aft er t're carnage I could hear the wounded Yankees pitifully calling to their friends, the enfcmy, anybody, for God's sake, to bring them rwater?"water, water." They called for some one to take them away, but fc'e Yankees were afraid to i ar.proach. A* lot of those poor men +V10+ ?JcrV?+ f/\y a <rr/\n rt/? xcfl? i * V/V U11CLI/ ^ i VMUU ? ??w covered 'with snow and ice. The next morning I went out over the field of battle. It was ghastly; Dead men everywhere! In places tfne corpses were piled up three or :our on a pile. The space was about ten acres., I never saw suca a sight anywhere else. We went into winter quarters there, | A'ith the Yankees still in t':e city be; fore us. Gen Jackson wanted to shell 'the city, but Gen. Lee would not consent, saying there were women and children there. A Yankee lieutenant! ' told me afterwards that if we had shelled the city we would fcave gotten ; all tte Yankee troops, as they were in | no position to make much of a defence, j During our stay there I had a good ; time, receiving boxes of good things | frorcn home, soaring with my fellows ^ and ibemg shared with. * White Ribbons Echoes. The Woman's Christian Temperance i union of the State of South Carolina,1 held its 31st annual convention in tte First Baptist church of Florence, Oc-; to?er 30-Novem?>er 1. It was a most enjoyable and helpful occassion. The homes of iFlcreace vied with each other in the hospitality shown us; \ and a pleasant social tea was given s by the local union at t':e residence ol their president, Mrs. W. M. Waters.! The automobile drive to tlie different points of interest in the city, particularly to the State Re ormatory, was appreciated. Here we examined carefully the baskets, ^porch swings and chairs made bv these bovs. and the processes gone through in the making were exp]ainel We visited the dormatory with its double-deckers, where three of t'.'-e little fellows were a-bed sick. Florence is cursed with two dispen- j saries; it seems that the wide-awake president cf the local union (I was j told rhat she is a jewel) and tve num- j erous churches of all denominations, j cusM to have made this impossible. ! 'The Srete president o-f Plentucky W. j C. T. U. ^rs. Francis E. Beaud; amp, j was our principal speaker and she j made several fine addresse to crowd j ed houses. Her address Sunday morn-! ing at. t" e Baptist church, treating the subject of temperance from the stand-1 point of science, was one of the best | presentations of the kind I ":ave ever j heard. Sunday evening the exercises j were held in the largest church in the j -"x? .n? Al ^4- ; cilj?Lilt' utrdUL.iUi ucv> ;viui< uujol? | but the crowd was so immense that! the s.'ides to the S. S. room were let j up; and the contribution to t^e cause ; of State-wide-pronibition was over i $400. r\ ? j < t A-.i-mlt t uur c tan.tr pi esiueiii,, .vn &. uusc^" j Spratt, of Maning, told us in one of cur j executive^ .committee meetings, tat; Mrs. Beauchamp had said to her, that j the personnel of our convention, both j as to appearance and intelligence, was , as fine as she had seen anywhere,: and way above the average in our South ern States; and Mrs. Spratt added: ' "You know that Mrs. Beauchamp is ; not given to throwing bouquets but j ? a ^ m n * m r* A ' ' iducr uiuci v> iou. ' The singing all through the conven-! tion was unusually good, "being lei 'by ! 'Mrs. J. L. Wysong with a large choir, i The children's exercises, Saturday j evening attracted a great crowd. The very large space next tfce organ could not hold the choir o: children, many of whom had to help sing from the ' hrvdv of thp church. The cutest thing: was the 3 or 4 year old boy of Mrs. Wysong's standing ia the front row ,and singing with all his might and main. rPbe white ribbon tied around the arm of Mrs. C. A. Waters little j two year old formed an interesting I feature of this entertainment. What j j took Mrs. Beauchamp's eye was the j use made of young boys just budding j into manhood in a rollicking quartette j Saturday evening and again in a re-j j ligious quartette Sunday afternoon at j citizen's meeting. She said we ought to make just t':is use of boys of this age before they become so self-conscious as to break down before a j crowd. One of the most thrilling o" j the duets was "My Mother's White Ribbon.*' Because tlbere were not a sufficient j number present to mafc-e a quorum j (six being required) the regular ^ ^ j J2& IB -Mr iIBSBB \i & Every individual flatters himself that KS he knows how to select clothes. If you feel that you i % can point out and nut on ihe best i style, have a look at II Adler's I Collegian 1 r?i .1 I Liotnes They are tailored as you expect the best |J| clothes to be tail- ! igj? ored, and they are f styled on the mo- i state < r^ottv ment. v ' Coax J. B. Ii^rry C< E wart-Perry EugeD Company i' r'Z Newberry, S. C. ^ 1 wj ; "before t i^rry, S ) s&Je, 01 j same be . UUi-U^ Si j of the R YOUR CORX WILL YAMSH j for New j page in a lew days if you will use gut corn ; Terms cure as directed. And going to the j 1>urc}ia'st and the other extreme our scalp lotion will annuaj remove dandruff just as quickly ano the cred effectively. Those are only two of at t)']e r< nam, in! '* 1 * ? J tViie jix me gooa miugs l<j uc uuu av. erean p* drug store. We'll tell you the others & P1 premises if you ask. v?de Tor sa:d pre Mayes' Drug Store ,; Phone 183. Newberry, S. C. :ional Sl for t(iii i ??^ of suit i with pate the '*U'~ rRE^DYF^Mlfei c a - f AT YOUR DRUGGIST. | of iis b ^, l , sale the ??? | resell th Medal Contest could not be held 'out lowing s three who were there did credit to the mer Pur< occassion?the girl taking off the hon- papers a: ors. Interesting demonstrations weregiv- Octobe en of parliamentary usage, medicai temperance, palmetto white ribbon, ( union singal and young crusader, by their several superintendents. The | ,,, i iC our principal address at citizen's meeting ' ^ i K'-nry Ciki-Iov o""+orn rvrvn was mnflA hv Mr. MUUUUJ U.IVJ UUUiJ, Charlton Durant (teacher of Men's Bible class, Manning) was straight to -John I the point, and was enjoyed by a large | Pursua audience in tfce city auditorium. Wejherein. I were so glad to see the interest, tak- j the 'high en by :he community as a whole in house dc our meetings. o'clock ii I jLA CHASJ l rpTTF* JFKUivi inn PERI SMOKELES i START the Perfectioi the breakfast hour; the whole room is warm The food tastes better ? everyl for the whole family. The Perfection is*an ever-read; extra heat is needed ? sewing kerosene ? easy to handle and use. It is smokeless and odorl At hardware and furniture stores evi STANDART Washington, O.C ( N E Norfolk, Va. n Richmond, Va. ?). a OF SOUWH CAROLINA, TY OF NEWBERRY, rmv/ii x icao uvui v. yj..jj? Hunter, as Treasurer of Newallege, Plaintiff, 61 against re S. Werts and South' Carolina I&J d Trust Company, Defendants. Jr* > ant to an order of court here- W I < m sell to the highest bidder |M J \ he court house door at New- \ . ., within tfte legal hours of ? 1 saledav jOI November, the pS&f 1""^ in-g the 2nd day, 1914, all that i vi;* V* 3TftAi nr Inf e*f land Ivine and I :??$ tuat-e in the tcrwn of NeWberry, | and State aforesaid, captain- j BIG y-four one hundredths of an ! n*e or less, fronting one h*un- Lottli d forty 'feet on Mayer Avenue jj"' ning back therefrom the some' L f vo huntJred feet, 1>ounded by 1^1 Avenue, lands of Mrs. J. R. <{eand others, and land of the j j?| y Real Estate Company, this j {si le same lot of land conveyed j KJ idant by the Newberry Real i fgjj Company on the lota day of! hj .. *f'if* f'Xpr.' y. 1907, which said deed of con- ! . ^ J is now of record in toe office j .egister of Mesne Conveyances ] berry in Deed Book No. 13 at J - mmam u mm of sale:?One-third of the j I TT( i money to be paid in cash ; I Xli balance in one and two equal ! I t payments, wftft interest on ! I all poul lit portion from day of sale I a.tp c\? cle-ht npr opnt ner an ~-<=r m -7 ^ | A WWVUllii terest payable annually, said j )rtion to be secured by bond I jO> p ircbaser and mortgage of the : ;bond and mortgage to proinsurance of tfne house on raises for at least three-, -* ii. 1 -J ~~ ?A. I HhOBBH jl it vaiuc auu <a?u iuss-i^iwucAU/ " olicy to the Master as addi- ???mm ecuriUy, and also to provide xov ember, >er cent attorneys fee in cash lan(jt to >r collection by an attorney, jan(j lying ire to the purchaser to antici- county of credit portion in whole or in Carolina, c< he successful bidder at said Q09) acres 1 be required to deposit with pu.biiC r0ad pr nt Anrp rvnp bnn^T<w? nol- i j-j t ~~~ ? Dounueu in evidence oif good faith and ian(js 0f th< his hid, and in case the pur- on eac lils to comply with the terms , t . id within ten days after the Waster shall advertise and Terms oj ,e -said premises on tie fol- .pup6lase n aleday at the risk of th? Cor- ^ telailce chaser. Purchaser to pa> for A_ . s-taiiuieiiis . ad for recording 01c same. day Qf sa,e H. H. Rikard, cure(J fcy ^ r 12, 1914. Master. gage of pre. ? terest from }F SOUTH CAROLINA, in fu,W' at 1 rY OF NEWBERRY, per annum> mon Pleas Court. DUally or tC C.Holloway, Plaintiff. Iy and Dear until paid asrainst nave leave I. Foster, Defendant. ; the credit nit to an order of tie Court! part. Tlie : will sell at public outcry, to t'r-e paymen est 'bidder, b-efore the court principal a or at Newberi*y, S. C., at 11 fees in cas 3 the forenoon, on salesday in through an PUTT T ^ C/ 11JLJJ/ V-iX HJL/ij | | BREAKFAST ROOM H ACTION | heaters I i Heater going five minutes before by the time the family gets down i and cozv. | j J body feels better. It's a bully morning; send-off B I y comfort. It is light ? you carry it wherever -room or cellar, bedroom or parlor. It burns ||ri inexpensive ? and costs nothing when not in I 1 erywhcrc. Look for the Triangle Trade-Mark. ) OIL COMPANY II IW JERSEY) Ckarlotte, N. C. I 8 ALTIMORE Charleston, S. C. Ill ? fl j feel bad, do you? Worn out? f^ls busts HEmoHJi JHnh mrm mm k n .-.r/ Ssillds mtHrfeami flesh- Sands th a joy of $j j?*Zl?|l 5txjJh bocrtlinr:through y-*?medicinal 31 -77^* ~ 1? %?ZZ&^ Ihtf palatal lie any good whiskey. ,1 ^y'3ll,'V n ! FM CfFER j f3B>W3HAl. I rii?J 3iail a. d I Ttviil send yen free one cstra krge 8 MAllT ^ 5, ctai-i-Tf five; Ixfflies of Itlaferi lal, exprcscpnjxiid, $ 1 IjrCyW 5 COUPON |" "cOUPCr:-Thi? offer cxplrJ OeceabeT 20 w i *T"_r:9 Duz.*t forget lh? extra fcotelt; of Aiwikinai il.-co B . TEKEC JSTTirY B 33, oAWT'"Id I P-OSE: Picas* ship the following: B BfUCLT I I Oaselo. jMuc 1 rmOCA, TEKIL I Express Office _ I ev orepai'' Ea?tf tA w U>trky Mountain* 2 PoSt OfftCC 09SL S1ale i ave You Poultry Troubles ? | e the liver and you cure the bird. Nearly r"" - ] I try troubles are due to a disordered liver. Bee Dee STOCK ? nds of poultry raisers who use it all year ?a^pffid?re?oSi?er I o keep their flocks in good health, highly trouble, roup and chicken I. tend cholera. Given regularly H. ICI,U with the feed, in small 0 m _/xfT. _n.. doses, it also makes an | \fk T\aa STOCK & POULTRY ?^raW|tow. I tw H JImW iimM/TiiTn n . ~ ? uitmunE, rarccu, ujua. j d It's a Liver Medicine. ' rft_ ? ? I 25c, 50c and $1. per can, Also a strengthing Tonic. At your dealer^ , IIIIIBHIIIIIIIMIWM J ' tMBKaRaMMHBnHnMMMMBBBBMHHmnHBHMBHaaai 1914, the following tract provide that if the first installment, wist: All that tract of or any part thereof, or any interest and being situate in the due, is not paid when due, the whole Newberry, State of South amount of said bond and mortgage, >ntaining one hundred nine with interest, attorney's fees, costs, , more or less, lying on the insurance and taxes as therein providfrom Jalapa to Whitmire, ed shaM became -due .and payable' lands of John M. Foster, at once. The mortgage shall require e estate of W. Ernest fYJer- the purchaser to insure and keep into dollar of premium. sured from loss or damage by fire the a,sed, and by lands former- buildings on the premises and assign 4|| g to M. C. Hallman. the policy to the Master and shall i : sale: One-third of the provide that if the purchaser fail to loney to be paid- in cash, do so, or foil to pay the taxes, "one Masto he payable in equal in- j ter, or his assigns, may pay said in _ ? ?J I -qnr? taypir and nav anv oen Ill une emu iwu jcaic nv/m . aui?uw , ?-?? . _ credit portion to be se- j alties incurred thereon, and reimburse >nd of purchaser and mort- themselves tor the same under the mises sold bond to bear in- mortgage at the rate of eight per cent, day of sale, and until paid per annum from the day of such. t?he rate of eight per cent, payments. The purchaser shal'l be reinterest to be payable an- quired to pay the Master the casli por) become principal annual- tion of the purchase money immrd interest at the same rate iately upon the acceptance of his bid in full, the purchaser to and t_e purchaser fhil to comply the tr? nnti>mntp. nt anv time. Master will resell at the risk of the portion, in whole or in defaulting purchaser. The purchaser mortgage shall provide for to pay for drawing of deed and inort:t off ten per cent, of the gage and recording of mortgage, ud interest as attorney's H. H. Rikard, te of suit or collection Master, attorney, and it also shall Octol>er 12, 1914.