The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, November 21, 1912, Image 3
ts VQkttlt MiVir I Pni'r
ClBCULi f .n
>VEMBKR 11, 1111
WALLACE HOUSE/'
It of • llttU ichool book
In rbymo floated back Vo
n on Thuraday. A traveler
peaelng through a atrange country In-
falrod of a HtD* girl playing in a road-
•Ido yard how May brothers and ala-
■be bad. The Innocent maiden re-
We are seven.” A^ked where
were slM replied: “Two In
church yard lie, and two are gone
•a," Ac., accounting In other lines
for all that had vanished from the
home, leaving her alone, yst Insisting
thflexlbly that “we are seven."
The Wallace House, elected to tbe
General Assembly of South Carolina
la November, 1878, was organized on
the 88th day Of that month In Carolina
Hall, a cheerless, rude auditorium over
a bay store, by tbe election of the fo]
lowing officers:
W. H. Wallaooof Union, Speaker.
John T. Sloan Sr. of Richland Coun
ty, Clerk.
W. MoB. Sloan, son of the Clark, his
assistant.
W. B. Williams of York, a one-armed
Confederate, Reading Clerk.
John D. Browne of Willlaton, Ser
geant at Arms.
- IX & Elkin of Fairfield, AsaUtant
Sergeant at Arms.
L. N. Zealy of Columbia, Door Keep
er.
Of Its history at accomplished during
the years 187« and 1877 we shall not
now write. It Is of its first reunion
held since Its sine die adjournment In
December, 1877, that we undertake to
apeak. That meeting was held st
Barnwell on Tuesday of last week, un
dar Invitation of ths County Fair As
sociation, in connection with tbe gath
ering of Confederate Veterans and
Boos and Daughters of Veterans
Only twelve of the original member
eblp of sixty-four Representatives ere
eertalnly known to linger on tbe shore
J Ibf time. The others “In tbs church
oS yards lie" ar\4 their souls have gone
unafraid on the sea of eternity.
!? * "We are aovee." On Thursday last
for the first time el nee their parting at
moot thlrty-llv* yeara ago, aeven of
Iho twolvo aurvivora met In Barnwell,
e Suing piece for such a reunion The
vteliort were met at tha Southern Kail
Station with a carriage drawn by
r gray hoeggl and many other v
htolea, Including automobiles and an
OX-cart driven br "Uncle Joe" O Ban-
oca, eolored, a Democrat of '70. still
Wearing the red shirt and glorying lo
lie victory. A brase bend playing pa
irkXkt elra preceded the pr««eaion to
Ibe Court House, and ths County wee
given hand end heart free and whole
to Ita gueeta.
After the aigreeeee to Veterans bv
Major General B. U. Teague of Alkan
Md Ool. Butler Hagnod to the Aon*
■ ad Daughters of Veterans, (be Hon
John C. Sheppard of Kdgrteld, who
hod succeeded Judge W H Wallace
Speaker, was Introduced and ad-
tbe greet audience In front of
Court Uouao It su> h a speech a>
only John Sheppard, one of the chief
Cetera lo that great drama, could de
liver. Tliiio has dealt bleating* with
lovieg kindness to him In psrfect
health of body and brain hit longue
hoe loot none of lu wonderful elo-
fooooo and tbe passing years bare rl-
peaed hie brilliant talents Into nation
wide prominence, for aa chief counsel
Of the greet order of tbe Knlghu of
Hoeer be has been called to practice
hie profeeeloa lo forty States of tbe
American Union, and cot one of them
ll Vw>W^*a South Carolina. He bad
eut stfort Important buslneas in St.
Louis and endured tbe discomforts of
two diya of railroad travel that he
might meet his comrades here
Grouped behind him were—
Jeha G. Goigoard of Columbia, for-
m** marly of Alkeo, the eenlor of tbe ses
sion In years, ^|it with the strength of
jonng manhood In the citadel of his
brain and the clear fervor of paldot-
lem la hit stout heart
J. Walter Gray of Greenville, the
nly survivor of tbe Wallace House
bolding elective oflire In tht*
In the last election he was
n for e thi^d term Master In
ty for hit emsoty. Gray’s front
)i aa brave as the mountain p<-ak that
guards bit home city, hit eye as clear
•a that of tbe eagle that once rested
there and bit mind and thought at
nd unf tiling as the rry*tii) wa
gushes from the mountain
aprloga,
Joeeph B. Humbert of Lauren*, our
eoliege mate of mere then half a cen-
o, then and xince a high type
Ipdera, which are aowad In fllffaraot
ride and aa one B«M la rooted up the
w.~s w,- i. .k. .-a I *• »»r»*d Into another. One of
lofci herd with him la the elxtiee and I —#B u i(] that he ooold toll,blindfolded,
•any were tbe eene of tboeo wearers' W {, CB |, a reeohed the plndar country
Wf lie gray that have eroeeed the'rlver 1 by the delicious flsvor of the hams.
•k« turn H kso* bla, tb, wn of * f'“' -f >•
hare fotbon ond aitoblOH .olboro. I" “ M ' u '
The seventh and last of the group la
known here so well that he Is passed
by.
May the water of the. White Oak
Spring bring them to ua again and for
long tlm# to ooma.
bar.
lore
busy,
oropa. From two counties that are
•eld to oooelet almost entirely of pota
to patches, the tubers ere shipped out
by train and boat loads.
.If the farmers of this county would
only learn to profit by tbe experiences
of others, there would be no cry of
’bard times” heard In the lend.
WHAT WOULD HELP.
A one day school of political teach
ing In every county In South Carolina
would be a new departure that could
not fall to be beneficial. It should fol
low ssch b.enntsl election. Huppose
that Barnwell, as ths bsnner county,
■tart tbe bell by Inviting all the iegts-1
letors who hsve served the State and
County since tbe Wallace House went
into retirement to make speeches at j
tbe court bouse on sale day in Decem
ber. It wenld be helpful to tbelr sue-j
cessors for the ex-State Senators and
Representatives to tell tbelr experi
ences.
Everybody of voting age and discre
tion would be glad to see again and
llaten to tbe wise words of
Senators Thomas J. Counts, Stanvlx
G. MayHHd and George H. Bates and
Representatives J. Wyman Jenny, J,
B. Guess, I. L. A It a way. W. C. Smith,
R. A. Oyles, O. D. A. Wilson, R H.
Walker. J. E. Herlev, T. H. Peeples,
Jas. K Davla, R. P. Searaon Jr. and
also ths new delegation. Senator A.
Bethnns Patterson, Representatives
Robert C. Mlxson, Clayton 8. Warner
and Vornian C. Creech.
For Chancellor of th0t school ws
nomlnsts Major K. Spann Hammond,
who as a member of tbe legislature
before the war began ■ continuing ca
reer of honor and usefulness during
which the splendid Intellectual talents
Inherited from hit great father have
never been dimmed or dust covered by
(ilsuse.
WALLACE HOUSE — SENATORS
Prof William flood, now of Bartow,
Fla , Then a repreaentatlve from Abbe
ville County, waa entirely correct In
writing to Ptesldent Han jr I). Calhoun
that the Democratic Senators of tbst
line were virtually members rf tbe
Wallace House For ther slept on the
floor and endured many of tbelr bard
ship* with the member* of the lower
bouse. The lamented death of Sena
tor Jones M Williams of this county
was probably battened by oipoeure
duMng that btmk period.
We wr|: remember how wvlnome was
tbe snlrsnoe of ttenstor I. I> Wither
spoon of York, afterward Circuit
Judge, late on tbe cold r.lgbt of
day that tbe I>emocra(lr members had
forced their wiy Into (be Hall of ths
House. He bad gathered ip all tbe
overcoats at our bole) and breught the
bundle that would have tated the
strength of a stalwart p dler • half
mile. H* was as g’tdly greeted as
Santa C|sua would have been.
W# regret oar abeen^e without leave
from tbe special session of ths Wnlltoe
H>us4 survivors on Thursday. W»
missed tbe moet enjoyable feature of
tbelr reunion day because we were not
Informed that the eessloo would be
held.
The Brown House we* the very ap
pmprlate place of meeting Judge
Wallace had bis chamber* In that
building when he presided st Barnwell
for the last time He was serenely
confldsnt of reelecrion. hut was dls
placed by Judga Townsend, who In
turn was defeated by Judge Hydrlck.
President elect Woodrow Wilton,
wife, two daughters, a secretary and
ten newspaper oorreepondsnta left on
Saturday for a month’s rsst on Bar
muds under tbe British flag In that
great onion garden he can strengthen
himself for the detlee and dangers of
ths White House.
W* do not attempt any reproduc
lion of the admirable addresses on
Thursday of Gen Teague aad Col.
Hsgood, for they may weM be spoken
sgsln whsreyer Confederate Veterans
gather and their honoring cone and
daughters assemble.
The speech #f President Taft to tbe
United Daughters of the Confederacy
in Washington proves that he belongs
to wbst the forgotten humorist, Sam
Slick, called ths Soft Sawder Clast.
of bipri
If Theodore Roocevelt continues
Progress!ye at the gait he bat traveled
the paat four yeart he will be a full
fledged Socialist when he agslu throws
hit hst In the ring in 1016.
-V--F'
Ipright 'Xsenllness. one who has
ooonted daty tbe noblest word In the
English language, and if we were
•piled upon to nominate a farmer can-
dldate for Governor, one sure tn<J
steadfast, upright, outright, d-.wu
Tight and all right, Joe Humbert would
[ Aeour choice.
Claude E. Sawyer, youngest member
Wallace House and still game
mothers with darling
•• palm and confident aa in
morning, la following
tte (mil of time along which
■•neintea have pasted. He hea
with distinction tbe office of Cir-
* •Observed with Palmet-
M a captain In tbe moun-
marshes of tbe Philippines.
m good to hays Ml Hedge
•arawall agala, the tame
Ms gaBllamaa
ism the gllat-
Travelling men —’‘drummers’’—are
usually a pretty well Informed clast of
poople. They travel from one State to
another and. as a rule, cover the rural
dlsttieta thoroughly sod are more or
less well acquainted with agricultural
conditions. One of tbs things that
strikes them very forcibly when they
reach this section is the large acreage
devoted to cotton and tbe comparatlve-
Iv little attention paid to raising tbe
neceaearlet of life.
A short lime ago two knights of the
grip were comparing farm life in thla
Htate with that in Maryland and Vir
ginia. There cash money is of very
little use to the farmers who raise
practically everything they eat and
have little to buy. Oa the Eastern
Shore of Maryland there are canneries
on nearly every farm and the surplus
fruits and vegetables are earned for
home use and axle eleewhera. These
canneries are run on the cooperative
Un. A number of farmers sail] com
bine together and adopt ascertain
brApd for tbelr products and use It on
all of their goods, giving tbe caaa an
uniform appearance. All of their out
put Is sold by an agent In tbelr em
ploy. The amonnt of money brought
Into tbe Mute from the sale to the
far mere of other States of things thet
they should grow for themselves It
said to be enormoua. ^
Hog ralaiog la engaged lo by every
farmer, tad fl la a very aaueoai thing
for one of them to hay meat from tha
. The begs are fatteaag aa
A Woman’s
Vigilance
By CARROLL H. PIERCE
The rapid advance of civilisation In
America has. placed far In the back-
ground the stirring rcetit* of Indian 4
warfare that lasted from the first occu
pancy of tbe continent to the annihila
tion of General Cuator and hU 111 fated
command. Yet this last great event
of tbe long struggle with the aborigines
of ths country occurred but a genera
tion a gone.
There still Uvea a woman more than
ninety years of age who passed through
one of theoe Indian events. At twenty
ahe waa married to a lieutenant In tbe
army on duty In the east, but who had
been ordered to a small fort in what
waa then tbe far west. Immediately
after tbe wedding the couple started
for tbe offleere’ station, pursuing their
way by canal, stagecoach and, laatly,
an army supply wagon.
At that time there were white men
In that region who were worse than
tbe Indiana in that they often Incited
the latter to pillage and bloodshed.
They were not tbe settlers, but a class
of desperadoes that ere always found
lounging about tbs skirmish line of the
advancing army of civilization.
Mrs. Lieutenant—w# shall call her
Whittlesey—fonnd herself in a one com
pany poat. and. tha company’# captain
betim absent and her husband being
tha ranking officer, be was comman
dant. Indeed, there wes but one other
officer there, and Mrs Whittlesey was
tbe only woman among some sixty
men. Indians now and again wonld
coma Into tha fort and their appear
ance was quite enough to scare a wo
man out of her senses, for of all the
names moat appropriate to these peo
ple—Indians. redskins, savages the last
Is the moat appropriate They looked
savage and acted savage, were fierce
la tbelr natures aad made themselves
hideous to correspond with what they
The dsy It ours. We
restless dsy;
It holds our meed of Joy. our hours of
work and play;
And yet the day la Dill of noise and
garlah light,
Indexing all too clearly to our human
Bight
The walla of difference men build
about their Uvea,
The bitter want and cruel greed that
ever drive*
And follow* men along tbe pathway
of the Nat
For gain—where souls are bartered for
k bit of dust,
The peasant’* hut, when in the light
of dar ’tla seen
Betide the palace of the king, looks
poor and mean.
The day Is full of toil and evening
shadows close
About a weary world that’a hungry
for repose,
The day doomed—no dawn, however
brlgh’,
But tread* the path of yesterday unto
the night.
TfllCASI UF.K1 Ni'TlCK.
The Tres* r. r * ‘•tli. r • , ' 4 ‘
for the colleen-" of I**’'* j
th* fl*cal year .•-•iitttre'K ing J > •
101 j. from the Kith of o. tnber, >
the 15th .lav of Marc •, im l»
From the 1st to the :U«t day of J*'-'
nary, 1UU, Inclusive, th.re wi >
penalty of one per tent "
the I*t to the J^l) d.t) of lebruart ,
l.tlS. inclusive a t'"'aity of two l 1 '
cent will h.- a ’de.l to *11 taxc* paid
Februarv; fn.iivdat to the loth day
March, lillll, IncloMve * penally
aeven per cent will he added to all u "
pah) taxes.
I.SVV.
For Slate purpose*, 5} milli.
constitutional school
PORTER-SNOWDEN CO
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchant\
90 East Bay Street
CHARLESTON, - - S. C.
Ml Cotton Handled on Commission
Om day a dirty whits man clad In
■kins cam* Into tbs fort and. claiming
to be a settler, mid a pitiful story of
a wife and chUdrww at eome distance
from the garrtoon who were having a
hard time His Httle girl had been
shot by an Indian wtth a berbed ar
row and the father wished fo rut It
ooL Would the surgeon let him have
•ame chloroform?
The surgeon gave him tbe chloro
form. telling him how to u*e It and
the precaution* he must take Then
the man went sway
Though the redskins were at peace
with the white*. Mrs Whlftleeer
would not truat them She did not
consider tbe poet free from danger of
attack at any time It waa nothing
more than a blockhouse or etockadr
with a raised platform for the aentrlee
to pace upon and little tower* with
loopholes from which they might fire
upon an enemy If attacked
On# night Mr* Whlttleeey ati.le out
of bed leaving her huatend asleep
and. putting on some clothing, she
went out to tnapert the guard Fhe
found on* aentry nodding aud another
faat aaleep f»h# took the *l*«-|.er'a
mnaket and awakened him to see him
■elf covered by a woman with hlaown
gun
Mrs Whlttleeey told her husband In
the morning that ahe had gone out and
found the guard unwatchful Though
knowing that sleeping on poet Is death
te a sentrv. she mad* no definite
charge* The commandant endea\or
ed to arouse bla guard* to greater efll
elency hut hi* effort* were abort lived,
and discipline soon relaxed again
Mrs Whlttleeey, Iwlng ■ woman, whs
discredited In the matter, and her hus
band told her to make no more visit a
to the guards lest she put him. as
commandant. In a ridiculous position
One night tbe lady, not having a
man's confidence In the peacefulness
of tbe Indiana, got atealthlly out of
bed and weut to assure herself that
the guards were awake She found
three of the four nodding, while tbo
fourth had sank down unconscloufl,
his mnsket lying beside him. But
what tspoclally attracted her attention
waa a strong odor of chloroform.
It was this odor that led her to sus
pect an eope'dal danger and to make
an obsorration. Rising on tiptoe, she
saw a dark body moving toward the
fort Seising the unconscious sentry’s
gun, she ran to tbe nearest tower and
through tha narrow silt left for firing
sent a bullet Into the coming warriors.
Her shot wee a twofold advantage.
It showed the Indiana that tbelr corn
ing bad been detected and roused the
garrison. The former hesitated a few
minutes, then continued their advance,
•ending arrows and bullets against the
stronghold.
Men came pouring up from below
In tbelr night dotbee, among them the
commandant He saw fire flash from
one of the towers, and tbe next mo
ment hie wife came out, blood drip
ping from her right arm. She swoon
ed In his arms.
Tbe stratagem of the sevages, which
had baen conceived by the white man,
who had begged the chloroform, bad
been averted by tbe watchfulness of
tbe only woman of tbe garrison. Not
a man but hung his head In shame,
while their commander's assurance
waa only kept op by hU pride in his
wifi’s feat
Mrs. Whittlesey’s wound was not
dangevoua, and aha soon recovered.
The account of how she had saved the
fort having beta reported to W
*;
NIGHT.
The night is God’s. He *preads the
riarkuf**, calm and blest,
About hi* weary children like a robe
of real;
The gnrb of wealth, the cloak of rag*
is Uld a*ide
And in the quiet night there is no
voice of pride.
The darkness fold* with iqual love the
humble home
And the proud palace, with Its 1 >fty
tow’r and dome.
The night i* full of peace and re*t and
folded wing*,
And the soft breathing* of a thousand
keeping thing*;
And o’er the slumbering world a boat
of kindly eye*
Are looking down through countless
window * in the akje*;
The darknet.1 cradle* f*lth, and
through it* hour* of reu
We feel tomorrow pu»hing In the mid
night breaxt.
For night I* pregnant with the promise
of the dawn.
And darkest hour* bre*k even into
glorious morn.
— Fr»nrl* M. Kinnen Morton, in the
American Journal of Clinical Med
icine.
TAX SALK.
By virtue of a certain tax eie.-ullon
dlre.-te.l to me by J 1J Armstrong,
Tre**urer of Barnwell County, I hare
levied upon the following prop-rty for
taxes for the ve*r KM1, and will lei! to
ordinary county pur-
pn*e»,
back Indebtedness,
6
1J
Extra
Total,
Commutation’tax will be »1 50 and
must be paid by all person* liable for
road duty.
SPECIAL SCHOOL LEVY.
Cedar Grove, 1 "J 1 . 11
Barbary Branch, Calvary. Columhi '.
Edisto, Friendship, UrPenV, Hilda,
Healing Mprlng, Kline, Morris New
Forrest, Oak Grove, Pleasant Hill, Rich
Land No. 12. Man Hill, Seiglingville.
Seven Tinea and Tinker’s Creek, j
2 milK
Barton. Blackvllle, Bloomingdale,
Cave, Hickory Hill. Owens Cross
Road*, Reedy Branch, Shady (trove.
No. 51, Ip per Rich Land
Staple Cotton
Specialty
.'sycamore
;t mills.
Hercules
4 mill*.
4A "
o "
C, "
4 “
gold and
I
Would be pleased to receive consignments
from you which will command our very
best attention.
and Uimera,
B.g Fork. Double Tom!,
and Lee’* and ton,
Barnwell,
Elko,
Al'endale anil Fairfax,
W illiston,
United Mates currency,
silver coin, countv and school claims
properly approved will be received for
taxes.
Checks and draft* will not he re
ceived for tsxe* except at the tiA of
the tax p*ye>-.
.1. B Arm*trong,
Treasurer Barnwell ( uumv .
Barnwell, S Sept. lUh. P'lJ.
FOR "L\ 1.K
HI Y * (il.Oli FAKW (>u A 1IMBSK I KACI
IN «<>( I li I. KI'IO.I A
Write t< d»y f'.r mv ho'.kb-t of "one
hundred Fa'in* aoj I'lmner T r *et« for
• ale, ’ in the humer ooiintie* of I hom-
* a, Bro. k». Gth.Ia, In.oot mol Miioh-
ell. L*i ge -inti. Irm'tv >'o
proved or U nimorov e.l, ti ue 1 V el rnttnl V
loam and red pebbly land with red
H*rnweJ. ■v.uth Carolina
No»ember II, 1014
MASTER’S SALE.
Mat# of M.iith ( arolin*. >
( ountv of Barnwell i
( ouri of ( oinmon I’leaa.
Mortgage C->m
I lalnilff.
Hr|: i • h * -id A ner lean
p* ' > I . I M le.l.
th# hlgh* , »t tii'htt'r f<<r i«»h, *t lUrri-
< Dy *ut,»oii
Ui
•or »
hiii.Uni,
tic* I
*111 Court H'>u*# or, Deevmher 2'i>l,
road* In (ierg
in.
Ec»t i*
• M'-n lu
d* in
1912 at 12 M the following da*cribeU
the South, good i
i £ fi t»(»
' Ei»«m1 ». *
hoolk
properl y. to w u
and i huretie-,
pur
•• i r« e
• ' < • ll ♦’ H '
d ar-
Two or more acre* < f land In Wil]i*
te»!*n vvatci. i
1 V
y h. i
ii n l h<
in i r< v.
ton lown»h!|>, bounded on the North
• aw mill llinhr
r, t
<irp. n
:1.)( «
it ton*
by * ■trrri; Karl by K. Ua Jower*;
cut ovcr land.
t 1 •
( Il / i
..•n m ii ' 1
.. n* »•
•v-iith t.y Mr. T Ixut, an,l Wr-at hv Sir
• lock rai*ing
8»»i
t i*l t» ,
r y r
U Lott and St. Teter'a Colored Church.
paving lu per
n
t tn.i
• v» r
levied n»on a* ttie proi-erty of tfie e*-
Write mt w
mi
V ( M 1 *
n nr mn«l
tail
laie of Gilbert VV illUin* to aalUfy
answer by far
l >'
nmil
Jcmcritiii
g tb<-
taxr* and coat*.
property <» t<h
h \ <
1'1 ta rv
t.
Ter'ii* < f ta.e ca»h [iim h**er* to
»U r «<
’ 1 » » »
\ • ,
par for jiaper*
w
K
• t
Frank H ('reach
1 h
i n »• v i*
» a 4
Sherifl harna*.!! Couu y
- -
-♦’IB
£ jr
Ml
rv : r
?£rr-
Everything
in
Building
- Material
No matter what
style of archi
tecture you con-
-=*r/J- . template, you’]]
find here, the
material needed.
Our stock of
^ ~ sash, doors, blind?,
screens, newel posts.
columns, grilles, interior
finish, is large, the designs varied. W
S
rge, trie designs \aneu. w e have facili
ties for producing anything your plans call for.
We specialize on complete house bills. Get
our estimates before you buy.
Quality, quantity and prompt service are at
your command. Write, phone or call.
“Buy of the Maker"
AUGUSTA LUMBER CO.
AUGUSTA. GA. .
\\D
r*
K a l ir Hrrd, * (
Dafrndanta.
Hv vOfnf i f * .Ir. rr(»l ord.r to m«-
dirretr I mi ttir »t.«nr rutltlid cau»c I
<*111 »ri| »t Ban »r I, In front < f the
• ourt Hou-e. o.< M'.ri'lar,
4ii<1 A l> 1<!4 it bring **|r*dav lii ‘aid
inooih. witiitfi tbr legal hour* of aalr.
ih<' fo |.iwii g <1e»erlbe<i real proj>rrlv
Ail <h*l i r *. t of land, •ilual#. lying
• ml (»• rig l'< W I It t>n I'owu.hlp, con-
' ■ i. 11 > i g one lo.ndrnl «id line y tix
1 e. a, re*, and bound'd a*
N o 11. I.a ■•i-dt o( M K Hair and M
II ht lirifCy . Kt»t fry pub ie roa<l I'-arl-
ir g from W i,|i*t< n to Kdltto K.uer,
which road teparale. it from land* < f
M-* Harvey. M uth by land* of M'*
H. J Har>rj and W «al by land* of .*>
V Wite.
Irrm* r.f ailr i-ath. Turchatrr to
[■ay for i »|n>ra.
H !. O Bannon,
M atir r.
Mattrr't r-ftlv-r, Nov 12th, l'M2
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r
Til
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IMF
BLM MAL>h.
For Sarr at
MASTER’S SALE.
Mate r.f .'Aoulh ( arodna, /
Count \ of Barnwell f
Court ol Common Tlr*a
Olivta Hoily, #1 al ,
TlalntlfT*.
VV. T. Still, Truatee, rt al
fiaktu-
Defeiuiauts.
By vrtue f f a (le«-ret*l order to me
directed in the above entifled cauae, I
will *e11 at Barnwell. In front of (tie
Court Hou*e, on Monday, lirrember
2ml, TJI2, it being **le»i1ay in **id
month, within the legal hour* of tale,
thr following deacrlhed real property :
All that certain tract of land, contain
ing three hundred and fifty acre*,
more or le**, bounded aa follow*:
North by lands of W. T. Sander*;
North e*«t by land* of Mr*. O’Neal
Sander*; Ka*t by hnd* of Rebecca
Morii*; South by land* of Mrs J. M
Holland atll We»t by roa>l leading
from SHosm Church by <V. T Saudera’
home.
A’so:
All that tract of land containing four
hundred acre*, cut off from the north
side of the p alliation of Mrs. Eugenia
Rountree, adjacent to adjoining land*
of Mrs Sue sandera, W. Herbert San
ders and VV. G. Simm*; East by a road
leading from Siloam Church by VV. P.
Sander*’ hnu*e, which said road will
partly divide thi* four hundred acre
tract; South by land* of Eugenia A.
Rountree and A’e*t bv lands of Daniel
William* ami ?aiauel Williams.
ANo:
All that tract of Uud in the County
and State aforesaid, containing three
hundred and thirty acre*, more or less,
and known a* the Leila Smith tract of
land, bounded on 'he North by land*
of Lina S'ill; Eai<t by land* of S
Townea; South by land* of William
Holland and Lina Lamar and West br
land* thi* day conreved by Frank H.
Rountree to George W Easterling.
Ke-aold at rt*k of former purchaser.
Term* of sale caah. Purchaser to
pay for papers.
H. L. O Bannon,
Master.
Matter's office, Nov. 12lh, 1918.
Molair’s Hardware Branch.
Pump w»ter I* purer and »aft>r from
Infection than lb*’, drawn from nper,
exposed well*.
The pump It et * ir r to operate than
the old fashioned w indlaaa or chain and
pulley .
Make home hfe ea*l*-r for the wife
and children BI’Y A Tl Ml'.
Calhoun *& Co.
Life, Accident,
CYCLONE
LIGHTNINC
AND
Live Stock
INSURANCE,
—At Lowest Rates In—
Strongest Companies
-OFFICES AT-
THE BANK OF BARNWELL
Just Received!
And no^ ready for speedy *ale at Hill
Top Staple*, the first new lot of aound
and gentle Horse*
Also a complete line of Buggiet.
Wagon*, Harne**, etc.
Charlie Brown,
Barnwell, S. C.
When you bav SHINGLES, you
want those which will give you
service at the lowest cost per
day. Cheap shingle* will not
meet thi* requirement.
TRANSFER BRAND Red Ce
dar SH 1 NfiLK'* are the highest
grade shingles produced
Ask your Dealer or write u*.
The Transfer Iumber
& Shingle Company,
North Tonawawda, Nbw Yoke
HILL TOP STABLES
Turns the Mow Year Leal’
There'* life in the old 'and vet” an ! f'hariie H
r <wn
fads to pr >ve it in the re<.ei|
«.t
Choicest Horses and .Mules
from the heat "took farm* of the H ue (ir.^s >• j
pose stov k ami a.', nl ^;11 e !„e ! a ;’»
t v e r v il a \ *.; r e * <. I \ < e
ALSO TWO CAR LOADS
of excelsior Wagons, single and doub’e, B
Harness, Saddles, Bridles, and tveiythm^ :i
his specialty lines at speualtv
bed rock prices.
COME TO SEE AAOSAVL
CHARLIE BROWN,
Barnwell, S. C.
Deposit your Money, Checks and Drafts
with tbe
ome flanls o2
(The Farmers’ Union BankA
Quick and Courteus Service
Money Furnished to Cotton Pickers
e
t
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r
| “Watch the Hoiyte paqk Grow 51
l
|For RESULIS, ADVERTISE in TBE PEOPLE
j h*
•*. i 31 rev
waokta
- . -ce.