The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, February 16, 1911, Image 2
Th« Barnwell People.
JHQ. V. HOLMES, Eoitorl Prop':
LARBCST CODSTT t’IRCKLATIOJI
l'Ht’R6l>AT. FF-BHUAKY U. 1911.
A BKTTKR DAY AHf.AI^.
. HandtBK u» onr asiall *liare of liia
bl(t cotton crop a few <Iaj» *n <?.-
turned f»nBer Btibaerlber hurried to
Otoh t l.ooi* In, iml train. »aying «• Ue
doted the door. ‘•ft’t wtnderful. tlie
tw.HrreM made by tb»' f »rm|TA. A f**w
yeara ai:*> they *H>uld hnrllr uiak*
en»p* worth itatherlng, ami they told
them for Jltll*, if nnylhlng, above the
Pi,at of prodocliiK them. Now they
wake a bale and over to the a* re. and
II cent* a pound la the average aelling
prlcf."
After be went Ida liai'pv oay we cal
e,dated that he had paid tin* year’*
a,inscription to Tint I’tori.a with a lit
tie l«*s lliau elv’vcti pound, of Mnt cot
Ion.
And we thought further that the
present proapcrlty may not last, ei*
peclally If the cotton udM people cmi
accomphsh their concerted movement
for lower prices.
A*id we thought alill further that
may he ten or twenty year* hence the
farmers of that time may wonder how
their father* of this day managed to
make buckle atld tongue meet.
For there 1* the ebauer that a greater
proaperity than the enthnslasta now
4reani of may arrive when the boll
araevtl comes and drive* the white
locked king out of the Held* where he
baa bo Jot.g been supremo sovereign
For then tbo liaruwcll and B»rab«*rg
County farmers will reach the reaMxa
Hon that their section w»» created In
tire beginning a* a part of tlie Harden
of Eden, In whfeh-no cotton grew, yet
where nature was most prodigal In her
benediction of fruits and flower*.
When the time conies that from the
kiaraonah to the Edlsto nothing rxirept
good tbtngi to eat Is grown to meet the
appetites of the over crowded North
prosperity will be aptjled In capital
letter*. ______________
OfJUD NEW Dfcl'AKTUKEa
City example* are not always suited
tf town and country conditions and
eircHiwstaiicf*, but here are two new
departures tbai are worthy of general
fol**wiwg: •
The preachers of Atlanta, Georgia,
have resolved tbat they will not be the
collet tors of tbeir own salaries. That
task Interferes with and prevents tlie
! *»t preparation for their pulpit minis
trations and the dfscherge of pa»tor*I
duties. Hereafter tbeir church officials
mast get together the money due to
»he|r splrttuti! shepherd*. ]r tltev fail
*oc«, solheir ministers tsuuM nut be
*ery oWmeworthy If ttiey should goon
a general strike so far a* preaching
goea. They should not, howev'r.
neglect their pastoral duties, tiie visit
ing of the skit, the comforting of the
Borrowing and the burial of the dead.
The school airtfrorfllet of Charleston
• re about to loangtyrate a plan for the
medical Inepecllon of the seven public
echool* In tb-.it city. The physician* of
the city hava offered tbeir free ser
ytees. Two will be a**lgr»ed to each
nchool for a limited period, to tie suc
ceeded hy others, so that the work may
be easy on all.
Tbl# plau ha* besn flowed In other
far away citte*'Whh excellent remit*.
The health of the pupil* ba* been im
proved aod the introduction and spread
of contagion* diseases checked. The
•chool building* have al*o been put
•Btkepttn better sanitary condition
We copy tbi* week from the level
beaded Abbevll e Tret* and Banner
two thought and action suggesting ar.
tide*.
One i» a communication predicting
the coining of another political revolu
tion In this Slate under the leadership
of Governor Bleaw*. That U of special
interest and warning to the powers that
b * and thosa that expect to be.
The other is an editorial partly ex
plaining the exodus of cotton mill op-
eratives back to the cotton field*. The
oooerUlnty a* to tlie future steadiness
«vf ooCtou mill employment I*, we take
it, another cause influencing the return
*f the dissatisfied and disappointed
toiler* to farm life. S mm of them,
however, are too poor and other* too
vlemorlalizsd to return to the plow and
hoe.
Tbere t« a provision in the charter of
Seattle. Washington State, giving vo-
. < * r * ttw> ''jg’ 11 >nd PQWfer to rota om
recall, officials who do not give satis
faction to the majority. A year ago
Hiram Uil] was elected Mayor of tbat
city. Hi* appointment of a chief of
police who had been charged with some
responsibility while he was chief of de
tectives in Chicago in the killing of the
chief of police had made him persona
Itoti gn»U with the Beattie people.
Eight month* after Gill's election a*
Xayor of Seattle the ballot was given
the women of Washington. They got
busy at once and last week an election
waa held. CHI voted out and another
»»n balloted in . Public servants tbere
wi’l have to toe the mark.
There Is nothing new under the sun,
but there are tome things so unusual
that they seem to be orlgiual. Here i*
otte: Dr. Jowett, an eminent English
Presbyterian preacher, has accepted a
call to a prominent New York church.
Id London be haa received and been
Mtiatled with a salary of five thousand
*}«tDrs a year. The New Yorkers ofer
kin/' twelve thousand. He anawera
tbit proposition hy saying that salary
woald be too high, and when be eome*
across the ocean be will consult the
ebnnh authorities, find out the cost of
living in the Ci>ite<l 8Utes and fix bis
—ctmUon proiwUouaUiy.
GENERAL 1!AGOOD'8 M2MOJK8.
Tnx 1'kom.r It sincerely glad to pub
lish the worthy tribute so well deserved
by and *o generourlv paid by the New
berry Observer to tbo last great work
of Barn w< ll'j be»t beloved and most
dDlingulthrd son.
N,. man in afl the Slat* is better
qualified to pass just, intelligent and
Ronacietitleu* Judgment upon such a
work than Mr. W. II- Wallace, the
aeh'darly, patriotic and public spirited
editor of the Observer, who*e pen
adorns whatever it touche* and whose
talent make* luminous whatever he
commend*.
In the year* to come those memoirs
will be the standards tellin to future
generation* thu truths of that great
historic period so forcefully that the
world will give ultimate justice *o the
Southern i>eople and the cause for
which thev put all In peril, aud from
the downfall of which they saved only
her splendid manhood and glorious
womanhood that Illustrated the match
less clvilixatlon and unconquered spirit
of the old South.
THE NEW SOUTH.
It has been said that the band of a
cbtlJ or Ibe call of a bird could start
an Alpine avalanche on It* reiUtless
course down the mountain slope* to the
sleeping valleys nestling beneath the
barren rm-ka.
That’* what Jerry Moore’s corn rais
ing exploit ia doing. The printing of
hi* picture aud publication of Ids story
of achievement N , E , S. and W. have
Interested thousand* of Northern home
seekers In the possibilities of the South
snd they are coming. They reason
that if a South Cmdlna kid 13 year*
old ha* islscd b tshel* and .1 peck*
of corn on one acre, that thes’ can make
Immensely larger and cheaper crops.
Men will go anvwhere and dare any
thing if they believe that a bag of gold
I* at the ground end of the rainbow
Th# oold <*f the Arctic* and the tdister-
ing heat* of the equator have no ter
ror* for the wealth hunters chasing the
golden calf.
TELL IN, JEWRY M<>ORK.
Through the Southern Cultivator
farmer T K Godhev of Georgia calls
on Jetry Mta,re for an Itemized state
ment of the cost of making JJS bushel*
and J peck* of corn on one acre
Fa niter Oodbey fix urea the cost at
JJ.YS W), and it sold at t!ie market price
of 70 cent* a bushel Jerry would have
lost )(W U.
Fanner Godbev admit* th*t his ex
penses In preparing ami fertilizing tlie
laud and cultivating and gathering the
crop on lerry’a scale would have put
him to the bad, even if he bad
made a* much a- Jerry did.
Home years ago a reformed Barnwell
County farmer sal.I to ua tbat he had
noticed that the raising of one phenom-
mal crop of any sort w as enough for
any Barnwell County experimenter
And the reason lie assigned was that
the cost of making these bumner crops
w»* inv*r|*bly greater than fbelr mar
ket value.
VERY BAD NF.WH.
l)l*|>en«ary sale* f ir January In the
six counties of Aiken. Beaiifoit,
Char] ••ton, Florence, Georgetown and
Kichl*mJ retaining lhaf system footed
up a grand total of 5l*.'t AtCI IA If the
dtinking all the year continued at that
rate llie heer and whl-kry exfiendl'ure
would amount to Is.190 d.17 HO And If
all the 4* counties were proportion*,elv
bibulous It wool I take #1 'Vhl7, l^* tWI to
settle the hi Is . The additional sale*
of mail order house* for personal use
and blind tigers cauuot be even guessed
at
According to reports from China
sent hv United States consuls two mil
lion Chinese are on the ragged edge of
starvation. Mtnv have died and unless
speedy relief come* to the amount of
two million dollars In gold or it* 1^4111,-
alent in provision* the mortality will
he terrlldi. I’arent* are giving their
children away because they are unable
to fved them. One of the Mg United
HUtes transports will sad from Heattle
on the 'ifltb l»*t with a full cargo of
provisions to be given to the Chinese.
New York lias *ent to the trans|>ort a
thouaand ton* of provisions
Governor-elect Hn'te Smith of Ge«r-
gl» gave oul for publication on !*arur
day an unsigned latter he had received
In which the writer said that two men,
one of Chicago, the other of Tex**,
bad secured luo.OiO live boll weevils
which they intended to scatter through
the cotton growing section* of Geo'gia
and South Carolina. The Georgia
State Department of Agriculture is In
vestigating tlie matter. The letter
writer said that be knew the men but
bad promised not to t< |l tbeir names.
The plague, or black death as It was
called centuries ago when it reached
England, tlie deadliest disease that has
ever scourged the world, continue*
with unahated violence In tlie North of
Asia Recently It was necessary to
burn hundred* of dead bodies at Har
bin, Manchuria, because the grtfuud
was so deeply frozen that graves could
not be prepared, though dynamite was
used. •-
Last week another centre of infection
w*« found in the Chinese city of A«*e-
bo, forty tulles from Harbin, where the
dally death rate was 4U0.
FROM THE MILL TO THE FARM.
Here and elsewhere there seems to be
•u exodus of people from the towns
back *0 the farm. The mills are losing
laborers rigid along. Such a move
ment is common at tbl* time of tlie
year but it seems to be greater just
now than usual.
There may he several reasons for this
movement, but tlie principal reasons
sre the high prices of cotton and the
Urge number of nutenauted or partly
tenanted farms.
The average man with a family doe*
not make as much on the farm as he
doe* working In a mill. The reason of
this is that when working at the nil]
he works from davlight until dark,
from Monday morning until Saturday
evening, with an overseer to see that
he work*. If tlie farmers worxed this
way year in and year out they would
aoon own this country. But the farm
er rests when it ralus, lie hunt* aome
iu winter, be (IsFessoine In summer and
ganerally live* easy.
If cotton remain* at the present price
there will he fewer abandoned farm*.—
Abbeville Press and Banner.
A SUDDEN SUM MONA.
Mr J. D. I'resss-y died suddenly at
his home In Barnwell on Fridav even
ing of heart trouble, aged shout HO
year*. He was »e*ted In hi* ac
enstomed chair conversing pleasantly
with his sisters, Mr*. E li* and Mr*
Knepton, when the last mea-enger
came and in a few miunte* hi* spirit
had obeyed the call. His body was
buried In till >am Chinch yard on Sun
day, Rev. W. J. Hiiyder conducting
the I tat service*. Hew** a good and
gentle man, who had main friends and
who passed through life without ma
king an enemy. He helped to make
the world In which he lived better and
brighter, both by example and advice.
JAMES I>. PKK3SEY, Hd-UMl.
"Gnd’» finger touched him and lie
*1 •r>t.'’
To those who Intimately knew the
subject of this brief tribute, who de
parted this life on the evening of the
10th in*! , eulogy is •nperfinou*; but
the innste modrsty of his gentlemanly
natine, perhaps, obacured to many a
combination of manly viitue*. lie was
lioiie<t, sincere, courageous and modest
withal. What hi* judgment and con
science approved were tenaciously and
loyally maintained with a fortitude
that power was Impotent to quail or
favor to disarm
He hated mean tie**, inslncrrlty and
hypocrisy without entertaining malice
towards their subject*.
He believed in and practised without
fanaticism the cardinsl principles of
Christianity.
Ills kindly feelings towards his
kindred, especially toward* bis sister*
and bis brother, were equalled only by
theirs toward* him.
In a word, tbere lived amongst u«.
with an Individuality »n unohtttislve
that death alou* startled u* Into ade
qtiate recognition, a *<>ul made knight
ly with Uod’« accolade; who. s]tlimigh
wearing as the garb of that »<*nl a body
»or*-ly marred by disease and Infirmity,
bore hi* infirmities with heroic pa
Hence; who, living without f ar and
without reproach, died ** lie wool I
have wished to die—in an lust**', with
th« fia-h-light touch o', the Huger of
God
“Afterlife’s fiifiil fev r Its -hen-
well." GeriiiH"iru*
CLEM AON’ EXTENSION WORK.
* SKIKTIK* nV YSi.KTtHI.KH *H|-Kt.'l A I.I Y
RXC'OMMKNDKD YoR TU K
UOMK OARDK*
In the Spring when the gHrdeoer i-
prepariog (<> place hi- ori’t-r fir . ■ t.-c
*e» d* lie I- fr?quen ]> at a i.i-- i .
termine juU what viirietie- me t b
a- t e seed catalogues o-u;«llv re. <nn-
tnend -11 tlicir varieties verr 11^111*.
Tlie fnfli.wlug list of varieties of vege
tables |» especially recommended We
have been testing varieiies at the i ol
lege and Station for tear* and the ones
given In this list have given goo., re
sults
Irish Potatoes Irish I' dhler, Tri
umph nr Red lt|l*‘. Peerless
Cabbages. Chat 1-slon Wakefield,
Hsnderson’s Succession.
Beet* < rnsbv’s Ka 1 v Kgvplian.
Extra K*ilv Bas-ano, Cruu-on (.lobe
Canlifiower F.aillest Hnowliiil , Ex
tr* Early Erfurt
(J* I uy. W Inter (pieer., V»iant Pascal.
Golden Self B1 inching.
I.etiuce. Boston Market, Improved
IT maoti
I, ale. C ir| J Siberian.
Onionaffmiii see.lj Yellow Globe
Itanvers, Prlr.- Taker.
Onion* ( from sets). Y-I’oa l>»nver«.
White Multiplier, Yel| iw Mo|t|p],er.
tireen Pea- Philadelphia exfa ear
tv Cij ft tap); A1 >• ka r.M ft Isll);
Hursford’s Market (iardeu \1 ft tal|>;
I'olcpiione ( I ft ta 1 1)
Kadishe*. Extra Early Scarpt.
French Mreak'**f Long White Naples
Parsnip* H 'M >w Crown
P* rsle v M uss < it r led
Splnar b Bound Thh k -'ea V' d
8 l«tfv. Mammoth Sandeicli Is
lard
Turnip Extra Evly Whit- Milan.
Red T Ip White Globe Wmte Kgg
Asparagus Conover's CuiOssal. Pal
metto
The above list r>f vegetables sh uild
be planted during the month < f F-b
r u a r v
A 1 Imgton White Spine
Cucumbers
Davis Perfect.
Garden < 'orn
er*’ Favorite
Sugar Corn,
trv Gentleman.
Cantaloupe*
Ka11y Adams, Tr tick
White Evergreen Cuun-
Texa* people were eating ripe atraw-
bente* Dak taavk.
Rock y ford. Extra
F.arlv Hanover. Baltimore or Acme
Okra White Velvet
Hunch Bran* B mtulfol. Early
Speckled Valentine, Currie's Must
Proof tVax
Lima Bran*. Fordbook, Huneb Lima,
Ford Mammoth Podded Lima, Small
Llm t ( butter bean i
I’ole Beans ()] I Homestead or Ken
tucky Wonder, Fat Horae or White
Creaae Back
Egg Plants Black Keautv
Bell Printers. Chinese Gisnt, Hell
or Bu'l Nose
Snail Pc|>prr* Long Red ( ay-nne
I'lte above Hat should not be planted
until after the middle of M arch, except
In tiie Southern part, of the State where
they may be planted earlier.
C. Nawmati.
Horticulturist S C. Experiment
Station.
"ANOTHER REVOLTION COM
1NG ”
The following significant communi
cation wa* published In last week’s
Abbeville Pres* and Banner :
Bleasa will likely lead the coming
revolution, which. In the course if
time, is about dne. Fifteen or eighteen
year* usually marks * |>olltieal up
beaval In South Ctr<Htia. Oppressive
taxation ami the persecution of cotton
mill opera'.lvc* will combine to bring
nhont an organization that will be ef
fectlve and powerful. ’’The uncon
scionable oppression of men for no
other reason than that their poverty
which compel* them to work and
which compel* their chiliren to leave
Ibe cotton nrlD to take a place In the
devil’s workshop of Idleness will do the
work.
Force two hundred boys snd gM* in
the mill village* to hunt bltckberrie*
and pltttii* when not romping wild
over the hill* may unfit them. In many
Instances, fur their proiier sphere in
society while injuring their usefulness
as good citizens. If a buy must re
main Idle until he ia sixteen years of
age he may be a work dodger the b*l
aticc of hia life.
Another matter. Interference with
the control of a mill man’s family is
class legislation.
Recently objection vaa made, a* wr
understand, to lawyer* who were cor
poration lawyers sluing in the le-gisl*.
lure. Vigurou* protest was made be
cause it was class legislation But cot
ton mill people have nobody to defend
them when their rights are encroached
upon For this reason they must make
their Influence felt to the primaries.
They must elect others than tbeir op-
presaora.
GRIME IN CAROLINA.
The report of Attorney General I,von
show* that during last year th-re were
J1.17 criminal ca-e* Iwfore the Conri of
General 8-«*ions in tins State Sixty
different offence* were charged in the
Indictments. There were 17)71 convic
tion*. The principal crimes were a*
follows:
Assault with intent to kill and ag
gravate'! ns*auli and batt“rv, Ml cases
— 29k verdicts of guilty, KJ acquittals
and 100 no hills and discontinuance*.
Housebreaking, 311 case*—2-’. r »guil'y,
7)1 acquittals, 23 no Tills, Ac.
Larceny, 27H cases—il'.t convictions,
3<; acquittals, 21 no hid*. Ait.
Murder, 207) ca*«a—HI! conviction*,
KM acquitt*!*, 1C no bf !•. Ac.
Dispanaary ] iw vi> Dtions, 407 rases
—21b convictions, 71 acqultthli. 120 no
bill*. An.
NOTICE OF FINAL DISCHARGE.
Notice is hereby given that the nn-
derslgr><*d will 111' with H >n John K.
Jnefling, Judge of Probate for Barn
well County, on Friday, 'Jitli day i>f
February. Kill, hi* final reiurn a* Ad
ministrator nf tire estate of April Park
er. deceased, and apply for Letters Di«
mi-s-ry.
M. I) Still.
5t Administrator.
January 2flrd, 1911,
" Ort/urn'zc<l hy (hr I'cojiIp for the
IJoots for Sale.
I have several thousand asparagus
roofs, or crown*, for sale These roots
a r e of the Earlv Argentcnil variety
tliat experience has proven to be be-t
for this part of the South.
!Ligh*lll Reed,
I f Elko, 8. C
MONEY
5 Fop SALE I
A r. ;
i j'Far the p*»t. six years I iiave (J-
tiecn carefully seteciiiog in iuk &•
T ail, and in the field, mv (<>tton '*#
^ seed for the foil »w jug rear's T
w. planting, choosing tlie most |»er Z
,J feet aad prolific stalks beaii’ g -J
tlio gr. a'est number of the finest S
•. and largest bolls. if
^ VTbe past season I did tin* and ij!
& also bad the seed hand ri< !kKD, f
w and now otter tlis-c fn-t (dioicc •
j seed at $1 ()i) tier bos’iel. General
(jj Crop 77) cent* per bn-h. I ( ’.‘
® specially selected seed ^
^ averaged CuO pounds of lint per *
A act a last year.
i G. A. STILL J
Hlnckvilie, S. (..
On Improved Farming Lands.
Long Time! Lasy I’aymcH’s!
Horrower (fays actual cost
of perfecting loan.
«*r lay r* fr* re.. -ac; wt * .••
FOR SALE.
" anted, to sell 1 '.'i acres of land
knicvn as the Vlaria .1 Greecli
I p s' four miles and a half from Al-
I lendale. tlircc milts fr..ui >cigling snd
three m l-- Imui f ycantore, .Seaboard
An Line K t Iroad .
Wdl
time
ll fur l.aif cash, balaiii^v on
Sylvan Building.—P. O. Box 2s2
Columbia, S. f.
i i
k . I
The Opportunity
Yours Now!
II 1
..(.repch, Ageii
t.
Itarnwell. s
c.
\
l Dl 1'
tR’.s NOTICE.
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oe Au
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" , Mooilv, A
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Is
You OU'.dlt not to p )-f !).)!!•• r')S
Savings A •enunt simp!v !>?('.rise \
posit may Iu: a sni dl n ;c \Y ,
you to heyin now hv »l;*j)o*it in y < t..
tins strong hank iviictc in 1 ■ .r
interest, ,ind is protcete I in' ’ la
and Surplus of anv State Hitr; in S
pen p ■
tii.i
4 o|o Paid on Savings
BANKofWESTERN CAROLINA
BARNWELL . S. C.
CAPITAL <3. SURPLUS SSOO.OOO.op
~~ : ' 1 LOCAL D/RECTORS I—~T7~.
Geor^e M Bates J.M. Easte r 1 in<7
Butler Magood P.M.Buckin^Iiarn
HORSES & MOLES
ONE CAR
OF
Fine Horses
AND
Three Cars
OF THE
Best Mules
THE
West Produces
Just Received
AT *
Idcpliftcd will) dje f’anr^i’s’ I.'pioi)
Deposit your Money and receive 4
per cent in Savings Department
OFFICERS:
Harry I). Calhoun,
Lrcsident
N. G W. Walker,
Cashier
William L. ("ave,
Vice Lrcsident
K. C Carroll,
Asst. Cashier
*
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(). Miller Greene, Attorney
Another Car Load Arrived Sat-
urdav, Ftdtnuirv tlh
• •
25 MULES A NO 4 HORSES!
i'c:
^ a ’, i p.
me in t. e lu A m.o si :
: ot the
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V on ’ an ! '
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11 tliemselx
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at ■ aw '* a:;-!
d ui t m:si the hest op|
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of la-.t vi ar
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id next ve.r
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• W* g-ns. 1
1 iggies. S'.trrevs, It trm
•s'-, e’l t
go with these
: • * s c r.
1 ’ i ices u '
1 'C as al iv a v > at the ! 1 • w •
■st ; issili
‘ * P ’MIC
CHARLIE BROWN. : "'.l, 1 ,.
^><^>^> $<§>'§ i
UP-TO-DATE BLANKS
FOR SALE AT
THE PEOPLE OFFICE
Note and Crop M utpa^es that take the place ef
the (Li Mercantile Lien for Advances, Kent
Lien-., Land t itles, Mort^a^es, M'dicy Ronds,
( hattcl Midt^a^es, Hills of Sate, Liens for Ad
vances hy land owners to tenants, Share Crop
Agreements, DiNtress Warrants, Ltc , Lte.
l
J. D. WHITTLE S
ULA.CKVIU.E, - - - . SOUTH CAHOLIXA.,
HARNESS
As Manager of the Allendale Live Stock Company I
have just arrived with a car of Kentucky raised and Ken
tucky broken H igh Class 1 torses and a chr of Tennessee
MTi i
Mules, all yoirn^, sound and ready lor work of any kind.
We will sell at reasonably low prices for cash or satis
factory paper.
ALLENDALE LIVE STUCK CDSIPAM,
.1
J. L Lllis, Secretary and Treasurer
Allendale, South Caiolii^