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Misplaced Sympathy. A sym-pathetis Fr::eIuan unluckily bou, ht an almanac that gave the dates of t!. worlds chief events. From that day on he lived a life of mourning. Thu: on April -30 he had crape on his bat. o! "Have you lost a relative?' a friend si asked. "Not exactly." said he. "But , today is a sad anniversary for the I Fren:h people. On April 30, 1524, the Chevalier Bayard died." On May 2 hi he had crape on again. "Still mourn- h< ing Bayard?" said the friend. "No,"' B said he, "but don't -you remember that on .ay 2 a great and charming poet. ti Alfred de Musset, breathed his last?" On th-e 6th of the same month, "Whom di are y;>u mourning for now?" "For an h honest man, General Caviaguac." On the 3)th, crying terribly, he said: "Ah, Joan of Arc! On this date, in 1431, a handful of Englishmen and a miser able bishop put the gallant maid to Ii death." On July 13 he took a bath in mem)ry of the assassination of Marat. On tle 16th Beranger's death gave him a faral shock. - On the ISth. having read of Napoleon's departure to St~ r Helena, he felt better, but on the 23d the bombardment of Dieppe by the Engl'sh, in 1094. confined him again to his led. He was taken with a fever and died on the 22d, muttering, "In a month the massacre of St. Bartholo- B mew!"-New York Sun. Eloquence of the Welsh. Here is a little story of an English man in Wales: "On the comparative qualities of the English gnd Welsh h tongues let me tell of the Welshman who saluted me in the Welsh. I was coml'led to confess ignorance. 'Ah,' he satid, turning fluently enough to English, 'you should learn the Welsh! h My wife was English, and she can t< speak conversations now quite well.' ir "I acknowledged my shortcomings and ::dmitted that I had always under-! stood the Welsh to be a remarkably t] elogvent tongue. 'Yes, yes, it iss so,' said the native. 'In Welsh a man can b expre ss exactly what he means. As . for the English, I call it not a language at all-only a dialect. "') ou haf noted that an Englishman or a foreigner in speaking his language waves his hands and arms about to I help out the meaning of the wordsj at? a W:lshnian who can spea'"Welsh well he hass no .Beed to move his! hand:- in the Welsh he can say all s that'ie means.'"-Chicago News. Fife Wheat. e Years ago, about a century, David h Fife., a Scotchman of Otonabee, Ont., sent to a friend in Glasgow for a small bag of seed wheat to try in a cleared patch of the backwoods. The friend obtained some seed from a vessel just In from Danzig. Unfortu- c nately it was a fall wheat and reached David Fife in the spring. Neverthe- b less David Fife sowed it in spring. One can guess how feverishly the j backwoods farmer watched for the growth of his experiment. Only three j wheat heads survived till the fall, but those three wheat heads were entirely U free of the rust that had ruined his neighbor's crops, and those three heads b really represented a new variety of wheat, a fall wheat turned into a t( spring wheat. David Fife treasured t the three heads and planted them in P spring.. Such was the beginning of Fife wheat in America.-Agnies C. Laut in Outing Magazine.t - Vanity of the Peacock. s Our favorite and much petted pea cock. says a correspondent of the Lon don Spectator, can be kept happy, any lengtEh of time looking at his reflectiond in the window pane or in a looking - glass. He comes in daily to tea. mak ing r:o mistake about the hour, and spenls much time en route in gazing at himself as he appears in the glass of y the French windows by which he en ters thxerooml. IflIam sewing anddo d not sneak to him when he comes into " the rlom, he will gently put his head d quite close, almost touching my ring or needle, for he likes bright 'things, till I have to give up working and talk ti to him as with a small child whom one: Is afraid of pricking. Salt Lakes. .The-Great Salt lake ls'gradually dry-i 2ng up, and the inhabitants of Salt. Lake City seem quite surprised. They a ouglht not -to be. All salt lakes owe " their salinity to the fact of their hay- h ing no outlet, and a lake without an d outlet-ais a dying lake. t Nor is death 'isually long delayed,t speakcing geologically. Lakes Koko ' Nor and- Lob Nor were undoubtedly is extensivre inland seas not so very many o: decades ago, yet Sven Hedin found b. them reduced to mere acrid puddles :N set in the midst of well nigh limitless salt deserts that once were-their beds. The terrible Taklamakan desert, too. in which Hedin nearly died of thirst, ci ivwas once the bed of just such a lake. tl * So also -were the salt deserts of Persia. u) Northern Tibet is studded with salt*" lakes in process of desiccation, The Ej Aral and the Caspian seas were at one *time far more extensive than is- now " the czase, proving that they, too, are n- :S dergong the inevitable process of des lccatio~n to which all such bodies of! water are sooner or later invariably subjected-St. Paul Pioneer Press. ce Negro Eloquence. Some years ago one of Texas' widely " known statesmen who is now dead it - was passing along a street in Dallas when an old colored man who had once belonged to him approached, took off his hat and passed a hand over his * white wool as he asked: di "Marster, gin de old man 50 cents." es "Dan. you are a robber." n< "How?" asked the astonished darky, la ppening his eyes, around which rough- b: shod age had walked. "Didn't you see me put my hand in my pocket?" b "Yes, sah.-" "Well, you old rascal, you rob me of the pleasure of giving you money with-: out being asked." Li The old man received a dollar. Bow- ae ing almost to the ground, Nwhile tears came 'out and coursed through the aged prints around his eyes, he replied: "-Marster, wid-wid such a heart as you ii ib and wid Abraham and Isaac and de Lord on your side I don't see a what can keep you out of heaven." d . Harsh Music. h The politician caught with the goods a was counseled lby his friends to stay and facee the music. 51 For an instant ~he listened to the si clamer of denunciation. "Gr at Scott," he exclaimed impa- '' tienti. . "do you call that musicc?" A :: ment later he was out of hear- SC ing.--Philadelphia Ledger. di How Rows Begin. "Hnh~by, I dreamed last night that you G dn't love me." "e foolish you are!" "Fo- lish, am I? As if I could help th what dream about!" le: AnC the fracas was on.-Louisville th Couri r-JournaL. cu The Wrong Horse. Bridget had been in America only a w months, but she believed in the -inciple of pretending to know what on ie ought to kiiow. She had been en ged as laundry girl in a small family well to do people. When asked if us 'e understood all the <:.,tails of her ork she unhesitatingly replied. "Sure do, ma'am." be Her mistress was not quite satisfied, uP )wever, and while she was busy with of r first washing looked in up:n her. to ridget seemed to be doing all right, cu id she left without offering sugges- tir Next morning the ironing was in or- <u r, and Bridget was hard at it when w. r mistress looked in to say, "As you ta !t the clothes ironed, just throw them er the horse." se "All right, ma'am," the busy laundry If rl replied without stopping to raise wi >r eyes from her work in hand. IJ The laundry room was located in an of ithouse adjoining the barn, and occa- ba onally the neighing of the family NI >rse and the merry voice of Bridget sounded throughout the house. Returning to the laundry house a >uple of hours later, the lady could fo 'arcely believe her eyes nor restrain he er mirth when she beheld the fam- ch r horse, standing patiently beside ridget, loaded down with newly fo oned sheets, pillowcases, tablecloths id lace trimmed waists'and skirts. an ith an anxious look on her honest . .ce Bridget observed. "I'm glad fo yu've come, ma'am, for I'll have to ive another horse." to th Working Too Hard. dr The owner of the farm had been en- sb ing himself at the county fair, while ] is hardworking wife stayed at home o o see that the farm suffered no loss s his absence. "Well. Sarah," said the owner upon st Is return, "I'm about all tired out. Is ed ie cows in the barn?" "Yes; long since," replied his wife, rely looking up from the task then c thand. "Is the hosses unharnessed an' fed?" "Yes." "Chickens locked up?' "Wood chopped for mornin'?" PC "Yes." fr "Wagon heel mended an' ready t' b art in th' mornin'?" fr "Yes." in "Well, then," concluded the exhaust- at 1 owner, with a sigh of relief, "let me: w ve my supper. I'm goin' to' turn in. de armin's beginnin' t' tell on me."-New of ork Herald. TI Sw. The Popular Coral. The dealer held up two strings of >ral. They were of equal size, but one to as dark and dull in hue, the other he cautifully pink and translucent. t "The dark one." he said, "is worth w cents; the pink one is worth $500. s hat is what makes coral so popular. suits all pocketbooks. All over the orld it goes. These strings of rough, acut beads are for the dead of India. su hey are put round the necks of the yc dies about to be burned in the gbt's. Ill hese large and blood red beads go > Africa. They are much liked by as ie natives, whose dark skins they anrectly suit Here are a lot of coral kr inds with angers extended in a V- hz ze gesture that wards off the evil eye. pl he coral hands are for Italy, where le belief in their efficacy Is wide 3read."-Buffalo Express. su He Would Return, it: Marlow was three years old. One ay his mother said to him, "Now, m arlow, you may go outdoors to play >r awhile, but If I see you crossing ie street to play with that naughty . ttle boy Willie Burr again I'll give-e un a hard, hard spanking." b Half an hour later the mother looked It at after her boy and saw him playing de lih Willie Burr. She raised the win-; "s zw and called with forced gentleness: d "Marlow, come here to me!" ta Marlow came, but as he did so be ITI rned to his companion and said: p1 "You stay wight here, Willie. I'm s yin' in to det spanked. I'll be wight sa ~k."--Delneator. . . 9 Catching Rats. The best way to catch rats is to put iy animal substance, well perfumed Ith oil of rhodium, Into a- trap. This sa duces them to enter readily and evens1 aws them from a considerable dis- " nce, as tbhey are extremely partial to ax ds oil. An ounce of oil of rhodium tl cost you 50 cents. Catnip to a cat ca nothing like rhodium to a rat. Oil w: rhodium is made from a species of .ndweed and is used In perfumery.- jfo ew York Press. The Wrong Shoulder. si In a timber yard two workmen were Tj rrying a large piece of wood when te manager, who happened to come >at the time, accosted one of them. roe," said he. "you've got that batten p1 on the wrong shoulder." "I know that," was the ready reply.." t should be upon yours!"-London raps. th Extendin-g Zone. d "Teacher says," exclaimed the preco- C ous child, "that we live in the tem trate zone." "Yes," answered' Colonel Stilwell,. td if these Prohibitionists keep go- H< .g it'll be worse than that."-Wash gton Star. bil Worrying. Worrying is one of the greatest awbacks to happiness. Most of it a be avoided if we only determine - >t to let trifles annoy us, for the Y( rgest amount of worrying is caused th Sthe smallest trifles. TI _____________da Let him who has bestowed a benefit silent. Let him who received it tell e lt.-Seneca. . pillln time that will save nine is Rinds ttle Liver Pill. For b'lliousness, sick bead he constipation. They do not gripe. Pr-ice ab .The Manniny Pharmacy,.a Her Own Docior. the A Washington woman recently hired Fo negress. Going to the kitchen onem y, she was amazed to find the no ess sitting on the floor, with her ir standing out from her head like black nimbus. .-The gil was pull g one curly lock and then ainother in pa tch a way as to suggest that she had cWt Lddenly lost her reason.te "What on earth arc you doing. U ary?" gasped the lady of: the house.01 "Nawthin', ma'am; only I has got a d re throat an' was jest tryin' to fnd 'W lock dat would pull mali palate up d relieve de tickle."-New York Her- of wi Gnilty of CounterfeitinE- c-ir Passing counterfeit money is no worse thr an substitutina- some unknown worth- Gc ;s remedy for Folay's H-onav and Tar, e great cough and cold remedy that res the most obstinate coughs and Insomnia and Alarm Crocks. he patient complained of insomnia. 'You must get an alarm clock at ce," said the physician. he patient stared. I mean it. What time do you waken sally in the night?" Two o'clock lately." 'Set the alarm for fifteen minutes fore 2. As soon as it strikes, get , dress for the day and take a walk not less than two miles. Do not go bed again that day under any cir mstances, nor take a nap, even sit g in your chair. The next night set the alarm at a arter past 2. You will sleep until it tkens you. Get up as before and ce another two mile walk. 'The third night you can venture to your alarm at 3. Repeat the walk. you are not cured by that time, you 11 be a more difficult case than any iave had heretofore, but if the habit lying awake is not broken begin ck at 2 o'clock again and repeat." w York Press. Wonderful. Cwo sailors noticed that a shark was (lowing their ship. Not knowing w to get rid of it, they threw a air overboard. Che shark swallowed this, but still 'lowed. Che sailors then threw a box of or ges overboard to it. Ehe shark swallowed this and still lowed. Che men seemed completely beaten r a moment what to do until one of am said that those on board should aw lots for who had to satisfy the ark. :t fell to an old woman. So the sail s tossed her overboard, and the ark ate her at one bite. ('his did not content the fish, which 11 followed. So the sailors harpoon it and dragged it on board. n opening it they found to their rprise the old woman sitting on the air selling oranges--tbree'a penny." Pearson's Weekly. Fresh Water From the Ocean. Mfanama. the principal port of the threin islands, the center of the srI fisheries, gets its fresh water )m the ocean. Visitors often note ats anchored a few hundred yards ym the shore, the boatmen engaged drawing fresh water from springs the bottom of the sea. These springs 8ll up strongly at a considerable pth, and the entire water supply the town is obtained from them ie fresh water is procured in twc iys-either In a goatskin water bag, tich a diver takes down with him d carefully closes before bringing it the surface, or by letting down long flow pipes of bamboo, weighted al e lower end, through which the ter rises up uncontaminated to the rface.-Argonaut. The Mere Formality Won. 'Yes, sir," said the pale, youthful itor; "I have come to ask you for ur daughter's hand. She Is fair as ies, charming" 'Is that Mary you're talking about?' ked papa. 'Yes, sir. It is a mere formality, . ow, this asking for your daughter's nd, but we - thought it would be easng to you If It were observed." Iary's papa stiffened. 'And may I inquire," he asked, "whc ggested that asking my consent tc ary's marriage was a mere formal "You may, sir," replied the young in simply. "It was Mary's mother.' Paraguay's Sweet Plant. & herb called by the natives cas e, but botanically Eupatorium re udianum, grows wild In Paraguay is remarkable for its sweetness. In ed, the native name means the ugar plant." It grows along the bor rs of the river Amambahi and at ins a height of only about five Inches ie smallest bit of this plant wher iced upon the tongue produces a rprisingly sweet flavor, which, it is id, lasts for hours. The saccharine wer is much greater than that ol gar.-Youth's Companion. The Sleepless Seven. "There were seven of the twelve,' id one of the discharged jurors i eating of the matter next morning ho didn't want to sleep themselves .d wouldn't let the rest of us sleep, henever we dropped into a doze they me around and shook us till we were de awake again." 'And you had to submit, I suppose, e they constituted the majority?" 'Yes. They were a rousing majority,' id the hollow eyed juror, with a pen re attempt to be facetious.-Chicagc ibune. A Life Note. 'Life Is what we make it," said the losopher. 'Alas," exclaimed the practical one, iat we can't make it a million!" W~e ask Providence -to make us ankful for what we receive and then to figuring on just how much Provi nce is going to send us.-Atlanta institution. A Present. 'That's a very fine purse you have, mry." 'Yes. My wife gave It to me on my -thday." 'Indeed! Anything in it?" 'Yes; the bill for the purse." One Exception. The Husband (during the quarrel) u're always making bargains. Was re ever a time when you didn't? .e Wife-Yes, sir; on my wedding urn thyself to the true riches and rn to be content with little.-Seneca. A Personal Appeal. f we .could talk to you personally >ut the great merit of Foley's Honey 1 Tar, for coughs, colds and lung trou -you neve-r could be indueed to ex -ment with unknown preparations tt nay contain some harmful drugs. ley' s Honey and Tar' costs you no re and has a record of forty years of es. W. E. Brown & Co. The Aanturous Feline, -elo! Is this the electric com ay? D~o you take cats down? Yes, s: One is ou a 1pole and crying just ribly. She must have beeni up there veek. for she's just as thin- What? this is Fifty-ninth avenuel A big is barking at her, too, and she at street? Why, I don't know. I t lire on this street, do I? Oh. yes, course: Bristol street, the d~g s. Oh, will you? You are Mo E'od. d a man just said she isDai 3 the transformer and -might~ short cuit herself or' something- Well, nk you very much. I am so glad) .odby"-Success Magazine. in es alve Acts UKEA P ouLtrIe A l'Espagnole. "I wonder why it is." remarked the stranger to me. "Why what is'? I queried. He groaned and explained thus: "Why is it that chefs at restaurants think that the mere addition of a to mato to anything under the sun justi fies their calling the combination some thing 'a l'Espagnoley "I see 'eggs a VEspagnole.' My curi osity is at once aroused. 'What,' I. ask myself, 'do the Spaniards do to eggs? So I order 'eggs a l'Espagnole.' What are they? Eggs with tomato. . "I see 'chicken fricassee a l'Espa gnole.' Nothing but tomato mixed with chicken. And thus it goes on and on through life, a continual round of hopes deceived. Spanish sauce is to mato catchup. It is absurd; it is care less. Chefs have no right to be so lazy. Why, if the same degree of care lessness is allowed to run rampant through other classes of men besides chefs I do not doubt" Here the stranger got positively tragic. "I do not doubt that the good old phrase 'walking Spanish' will be ap plied to stepping on a tomato. I fear it; I fear it." And he faded thence, shaking his head with gloomy foreboding.-New York Times. Tennyson and Lowell. Mrs. Procter, the wife of Barry Corn wall, was a great figure in London lit erary society when Mr. Lowell was United States minister at the court of St. James. Mrs. Procter was miost - anxious to bring Tennyson and Mr. Lowell together. Tennyson, who was whimsical in his prejudices, made va rious excuses and affected to believe that Mr. Lowell was a poet of little importance and an after dinner orator whose graces of style were overrated. One day Mrs. Procter told Mr. Ten nys'n that Mr. Lowell had written some lines on her birthday and that she must insist upon reading them to him. The English poet looked at her askance and submitted with bad grace. Mrs. Procter did not go further than .the opening line, 'I know a girl-they say she's eighty." Tennyson scowled and sprang to his feet with a gesture of impatience. "Too familiar?" he growled out in high disdain and re fused to listen to the remaining lines. Mrs. Procter persevered in her efforts to bring the two poets together, and they finally met and became intimate friends. Mr. Tennyson was a man of many caprices and had a touch of shy ness and cold reserve which made him unwilling to meet a stranger. A Dangerous Operation is the removal of the appendix by a surgeon. No one who takes Dr. King's New Life Pills is ever subjected to this frightful ordeal. They work so quietly you don't feel them. They cure consti, pation, headache, biliousness and mala ria. 25c at Dr. W. E. Brown & Co., and Dr. J. E. Arant's ce store. Srr. - Smyrna figs r- >en e beginning of August. Tb . .'. picked, but when they reael -ertain maturity they begin to dry. -and consequently they drop on the'ground. In the morn ing everybody on the plantations goes around with buckets gathering the fruit, which they. carry to a certatn place where the ground is acovered with dry leaves and straw (sergei). and on which they spr,s,d the frnlt, exposing it to the sun,. aliewing it .to remain there from two to three days. It 'takes about three days to dry the fig If north winds prevail, as the at mosp~here is then very dry. If, how. ever, westerly winds are blowing, whiehi means heavy dew at night, the fruit must remain exposed to the sun from five to seven days. This is a dangerous period, as rain or -even a shower might ruin hundreds of tons of fruit lying on the ground. Heavy dews sometimes are just as detrimental. The proper atmospheric conditions to insure a crop of large, sound. rich figs are west winds in June and July, fol lowed by north winds in August, and from th~en on an occasional west wind every five "r' six days. Not a Nursery. "Before I got this-Job I had no idea so many funny things happened on street cars." said a new conductor, ac cording to the Denver Post. ~"Every day I see and hear things that are amusing. For instance, a woman with a baby about two years old boarded my car and rode downtown. When we reached Fifteenth and California she rose to get off. The baby was tucked snugly In the corner of the seat. The woman hesitated in the aisle. 'Say,' she said to me. TId like to ask -a favor of you.' "'What is it?' I asked. "' TI'e got some shop:>ng to do(' she said. 'Would ycu pkcase take~ baby around a tri with y'ou? I. don't want him with me. P1l be back when vou return to this cor-ner nad take him.' "'Madam,' I repilied, 'I cant take care of your baby. Suppose he should get to crying, as he undoubtedly would?' "'Well, goodness me,' she said, ayou could slap him, couldn't you?" The Complete Alpinist. The young millionaire had climbed the Jungfrau, Monck and Eiger. "It is more dangerous work than mo toring," he said, "and, dear me, how the climber is loaded down. He re-J sembles a peddler more than anything' else. He carries wood to make a fie with. He carries nails for his boots. He carries a lamp. He also has an ax wherewith to cut steps for himself i perpendicular ice walls, and he has. a] cord wherewith to ropa himself to his~ companions, and he has a staff to hrelp him up and down the steeps. .In the sack on his back there are all sorty of things--tubes of concentrated sor' tea, coffee, candles, socks,. extra s" '9' gloves, pins, br-andy, meat er .irts, smoked glasses. And dang' -tract, tween his shoulders is a &fng be snowshoes, without wath- pair of August sun he woud sto in'the hot snow quite up to lhia , aC In the soft step"-New Orleana er snees at every _____.:Imes-Democrat. More people t.r uey Remedy v. ta~king Foley's Kid ed t be he i, e i-. It is consider kider anid b1 Jst, etlective remedy for cal sci ece r .adder- troubles that medi 1kme- can devise. Foley's Kidney unwe ' rrects irregtlarities, builds t:iy ut tissues and restores lost yi: aio. f t will make you feel well and '.ell. W. EC. Brown & Co. A Noble Parent. In writing a sketch of Washington2 a pupil ended her essay by saying.t "Washington married a famous belle;.: Martha Custis, and in due time bedI camne the Father of His Country."' Delineator. . Kind words are benedictions. They are not only instruments of power, but" -of benevolence and courtesy, blessings both to the speaker and hearer of , i.nmllilJm,,n,, 1immmril nimmmmtmIl IwGenuinet Per' Untouchec Fo . C Perta / uiLuluuuw1 ~wu "7i 3LLu u iiiLU UU EXCU SION RATES VIA ATLANTIC COAST LINE ACCOUNT Christmas Holidays. Tickets on sale December 18th, 19th. 23rd, 24th, 25t, 30th and 31st, 1008, and January 1st,. 1909, limited to return not later 'than January, 6th, 1909. For further information, reservations, etc., ca1L on nearest Ticket Agent or write W. J. CRAIG, T. C. WHITE, assanger Traffic Magr. Gen. Passenger Agen - i1nington, N. (C. BRING YOUR TO THE TINES OFFICE. A CAR. OF FINE. and some fine driving ust received. Come and ge your wants supplied. R .hma LWITLan r by the Chemist or thE r TOBAC( )TTON, T rianGuano C CHARLESTON, STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Clarendon COty COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Mary J. Murray, in her own right, and as Administratrix of -the Estate of Marshall D. Mnrray, de ceased, Mary Elizabeth Connor, Martha Washington, Rosenger and William W. Murray, Plaintiffs against Julia S. Brailstord and Warren Con yers, Defendants. Decree. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A Judgment Order of the Court of Common Pleas, in the above stated action, to me directed, bearing dite of December 5, 1908, 1 will sell at public auction, to the highest bid der for cash, at Clarendon Court House, at Manning, in said county, within the legal hours for judicial sales, on Monday,the 4th day of Jan uary, 1909, being salesday, the fol lowing described real estate: 1. Air that certain tract or parcel of land situate, lying and being in Calvary Township, in Clarendon County, in said State, containing twenty-two acres, more or ress; bounded on the North by lands of James Rhame and Toney Kennedy; on the East and South by lands of A. L. Lesesne, and on the West' by lands of A. H. Geddings. - 2. All that certain lot or parcel of land situate, lying and being in Ful ton Township, in Clarendon County in said State, containing six acres, more or less, and bounded on the North by lands of H. B. Richardson: on the East by the Publi - Road, and on the South and West by lands of J. Mathis. 3. All that certain lot or parcel 01 land, situate, lying and being in thE Town of Pinewood, in Clarendor County in said State, known as 101 !No. 3, in block 0, of the said TowI of Pinewood, and bounded on th4 North by lot No. 4; on the East -bi a lot known as the School House Lot on the South by lot No, 2, and 01 the West by East Avenue.. 4. All that certain'lot or parcel o land in block 0, of the Town of Pine wood, situate, lying and -being i1 the Town o3 Pinewood, in Clarendor County, in said..State, bounded oi the North by lot No. 5: 'on the~ $by a lot known as ti. L 1Xot; on the South by . 5.All that etain . i ' --a ln, wvith the buil o ro noWn as the Hotel I >t -ium iugendA being in the . .. .. wood Clarendon County in sal State, fronting on a public roa known as the Fulton and Mannin Road, and measuring on the fron and rear lines respectively 60 feel more or less, and on the respectiv -si'de lines 200 feet, more or less; an bounded on the Nortli by said pul lie road, known as the Fulton .an Manning Road; on the. East by Sa le Street; on the South by lot of I F.' Epperson, and on the West by c lot the late Dr. M. D. Murray,know as the office lot 6.Al that certain lot or - parcel Sland, with the buildings thereon, si uste, lying and being in the Town Pinewood,. in Clarendon County, said State, fronting on the public roa known as the Fulton and Mannit Road and measuring on the front at rear lines resp~ectively, 60 feet, more< less, and on the respective side lhn 200 feet, more or less, and bounded< the North by said.public road known the Flton and Manning Road; on ti 1East by lot-belonging to the estate< Dr. M. D. Murray. deceased, known: the Hotel Lot above mentioned at Sdesribed; on the South and West 1 'ot of R. F. Epperson. Purchaser to pa r( pM1fE, Sheriff Clarendon Count TATE OF SOUTH &ARO~LI gagoNty of Clarendon. CURT OF COMMON PLEAS. D avid Levi and Abe Levi, Execntc and Trustees of the Last Will al Testament of Moses Levi, decease Plaintiffs- ag i.t i dward P. Briggs, and John Wi r. uie dward N Wulbei eah in his own right, and J. H lbero,. Edward N. Wulbern, SE Wlbern and Clara Wulbern, Eetors and Executrixes . satate of C. Wulbirnl, decease aM being copartniers doingd b less jider the firm name and st3 CWulbern k Company al 0 jfMoeDefendants. M. Decree. ?. A3D BY VIRTUE OF TND tOrder of the Court of Co Ju gme -- jath above stated on , ereted, bearing date tion, to me g will .sl at pub Otober 2nd, ,ighest buder action,to the. >don Court floqs cash, at Clarez' i county, w'teia t Manning, iDSIl saei.'Ulaiaes, on legal hours for jur of January, 19 day, the 4th day ' olwn beng salesday, ti. sribed real estate: -elrtrt " All that piece, pai 1o lL~ land lying, being and a lteafosalC e ndon County, in th eSt ( tafoer 4.containing eighty- three ac Limore or less, as per pla to B rowne, surveyor, dated bt 3rd, 1900 and bounded andbut as follows, to wit: North, N and East by lands of Mrs. . Biggs; South and Southeah i lands of Rufus Brunson; South - by lands of 11. B. Tinidal; West a'ns of Jacob Butler, Sr., and Nor wet by lands of the Estate of. Ma: C. riggs, represented on said p1 as lands of H. S. Briggs. . Purchaser to pay fr ppesE, Sherif of ClarendonCount Rd g ir JobWor to T TIm o tic 00- -~ a B' u . .. :o. Lei coprer asLe ...EDe fenan. ee flren JOUgeT OrdeFah -COdorEA mone L Please'3tido agions to aedier.de ealto Bt CAr _Ro_ Mannin Biussalrg"B1Ips d - day, Mi el 4teda fanFduary beig soaresda thev oothrs -Elstehat p'arei, J.andei C d. Countygi sa:d aTstee U rdof the estae C o leand of B3 W G t Waton Bire ctdpbs 'Biups o. ardso, H dend r densaM n Manorie, iid eti Finand levl oaurs acsatei Bhers-$n and th . Fike, a re, r" " bendaed Nth seon Peaeestate{ofLou as a t ared ou l Daniln, in said -untv, whnthe ;i legySal hors re c:lss, boonCd'r oan .the 4oth ylda oy aury, 19...,y sey estate ."" snrst ofha. acelo adCn~T done Feuy'a di 1898econ ng1' ; ion thap erce of adoni yand ofe es ute r rs6C d d WtharontBaste o Cla r, Sad outib d;Stih-Pas Dnel Biodg s: da W West n fi .bindc ofbndater SivoannahB psntidthuillep nd thre ou,*;W aresl fnkbor s e -bounded wotjangs fm-fhe - est sate of Des~ m land abonveydsed ,ot.ba fl& Danhel Billip a eon the Ca aannah odadei lci e Wal ton Bilhptoiru% chdrieeu d ate i d cury 1and89atecOnd bo e'd a nage 16r0h, langu e inta-aeo ad coytofnnA. D' ty. noe ac~frely 'o udeDes.Gor-armpd s ioh ,Ort oad rfPsi B Haodd Paehapsr Sot y~n !PiV. HogSn W larand6 f - Coate hr COURTps 0 aitigonh PLinSa . n aecd sTAminitariof te-taite oHae W Btnlilip o Artis, deceasd aiU-m Cale saScunal tesainffs C d Horac B.D.CaWithesp nfEan fouteeny larof age Deia t.i >f WeyaDeeroe - Sinht-e diectdOlarm~daiCot vf autin Tet theofh htb r cah tClarno uarenouse bnsaEsdy Cutiher ocr~ rs serid a~ilifestatu fteE - HoadSe afrsad desen~ C. I.ac AB. tha Ctrats rare infatn C-foundyeorgDfends :'T.o asPringtOeafthey Cors of Coarle of.Broadae and~ tes boy staeds . -, tand o e iredaeaia'~o csh-,W hatpareo CoratHos lad Ma cntaning 'nsityaeres, mioren r le dbday the North lnd of:10' eistafley, tewrs outhbyde ras ofbe reanesa: Tida Eas A b lnh olO8 rds of Hnr Bow..nd es d-sia laing anes bedings.~Bavfl~ C. All that atparejing ame bod e"ofla containing eenacres, morels. C. bounded- North by lands of Eliga orTaBkon; Sut by lands of Wistatem at Prng; Esotby aands of Uharles of Broadway an4d . West by lands of d, stater fTidgle an ina Sir has. r A to pay .for-tp pef an Sdbuddo hef CNrhndondof esof o ieyEwrd;S-t b Oin to Saendelapd ida Easdtion Abyanes it L.nr Lrw..aelstC. S tby hande scool boks ford me.Caln - themAll that LeviBlckfor shool books ofboyan)00 E~.eJ. BRWE8, -or Crbunt ot y'S of- Educaio. 'aWJkoodmea ynd of Wld.a yhMet oynt ourth bMolndyofiChtrleat S o vereign~~d st y in ait ds f