The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, April 27, 1916, Image 10
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B
I
South Carolina Farmer Report* Satis
factory and InterestihB Results
From Two Hundred and Six
ty Acre I’lantinR in Corn
on Thin Sandy. Land
in Barnwell .
The newsujtpers of the boll weevil
vsmtpt
section of Alabama and Florida print
many interesting accounts of tho won
ders of the early maturing velvet l»ean
and the enormous acreage now Isdng
devoted to that great soil building
crop, which has been such a great fac
tor irt reestablishing agriculture on a
profitable basis after the disaster
which overtook the cotton farmers
when the weevil got in it.- deadly
work. ^
For many years, the old style Flor
ida speckled velvet bean bad been
grown to a limited extent but its
long growing seas m and the uncer
tainty of maturing a crop of beans be
fore the first frost had limited its
usefulness as a producer of Iteana,
though the forage was still of high
value in cattle grazing operations.
Unfortunately; cattle and cotton grow
ing seldom have gone hand in hand,
and there were many who were deter
red from planting this original va
riety of the beans because of lack of J
rattle.
Developed in Florida.
But, through the activities of the
Florida State yperiment station, new
vahtien were developed from the
crossing of the Florida speckled with
other beans of this family. United
States consuls throughout the world,
in tropical and semi-tropical coun
tries, were besought to send samples
of velvet Ccans from the countries to
# * • # ^
which they were accredited. In this
way, a number of varieties were col
lected ami the experiments were com
menced with vanou* croxsea. The
mess man and well known farmer of
BlackviMe said: “If it is such a good
thing, why stop at 50 acres T Let’s',
buy more and put in five times as
much."
Mr. Farrel’s Crop.
As a. result 260 acres of Ninety Day
velvet beans were planted in corn on
thin sandy land that ■'needed building
up on Mr. Farrell’s great plantation
near Blackville. The accompanying
photograph shows ihe result. Two
beans had been planned to each hill
of corn and the weight of beans and
foliage was so great that during a
high wind in August, the ebrn was
blown down. Stfll the beans con
tinued to thrive and grow and make
rpore pods and a fair crop was har
vested for the character of the soil.
Mr, Felder supplied Director Har
per of Clemson with velvet bean seed
ami inoculation for a test and Dr.
Harper has certified that at the Sum
merville experiment station the yield
was 30 bushels to the acre: that it was
apparently free from wilt and root
knot and is unquestionably a great
nitrogen gatherer. Dr. Harper has
strongly introduced Mr. Felder’s ad
vocacy of this crop, which, he says
has proved itself to be one of the best
summer legumes, making a fine
growth and yield, notwithstanding
other crops were greatly damaged by
an overflow at the Summerville sta
tion during the spring and summer.
An analysis of the feeding value o/'
the Ninety Day velvet bean, grown at
Blackville, shows that,it contains, in
the shelled beans, 24.45 per cent
crude protein, .5.56 per cent, crude
fat, 6.H8 per cent.. crude fiber and
results w«-rr interesting and in aomc . . .
, # as much rarhohydrates or starchy
until luiiu-ruui. as, mm* of. Um» Wy- . . , _ . , ,
• foml a« th<- lH-*Tcnrn.a.lutle m<»re fal
bnds were- hat the slightest resem
blame to either the stammate or the
pistillate parent. Brans witH. po«U a
yard long resulted from the crossing
of’ brans with pods scarcely four
inches long. Other varieties making
pods in huge bunches, changed en
tirely their seed forming habit and pro
duced small clusters of four to six
pods throughout the run of the vine.
And strange to say. nhen the parents
r*— 4 - season of fully an
months before maturity, some of these
hybrids matured their seed in 90 to
100 days. In other casco, where the
vines of both parents grew 30 to 50
feet long, the new varieties would
grow 15 to 30 feet long and produced
a large number of pods containing
beans of the highest feeding value
and in one notable rase -the hybnd
from the Lyon (Fhiltpmr) Florida
speckled--higher than either parent.
Through the painstaking effort of the
(>7.42
per cent. , carbohydrates
(nitrogen free extract, plus crude
fiber I, and that the unshelled beans
contain 18.16 per cent, crude protein.
4.36 per &nt. crude fat, 12.02 per cent,
crude fiber, and, on the same basis as
above, 64.94 per C|nt. carbohydrates.
This means Ninety Day velvet beans
unshelled, contain, pound for pound
lineal sells for $33 a ton and is eagerly
bought. V
Other desirable varieties that wilt
mature in South Carolina, if planted
in April or early May, are the Chinese
and the Yokohama and the Florida
experiment station’s latest hybrid, also
a Florida Speckled X Lyon cross, the
V
Osceola:, a large flattish bean, similar
in shape to the Lyon, but with the
speckled 'quality of tKe father, which
yields beans heavily and makes some
what more vine than the Ninety Day
This is a brand, new variety, but its
type seems to be firmly f^xed.—-The
State, April 18.
Claim No.
343
little more fnl
ami 125 per cent, more protein, this
latter bring the big bone and muscle
producing compound. But corn is a
■oil robber, while velvet beans are
soil builders, since they take their
nitrogen from the air through the
bacteria in the huge nodules on their
roots. Indeed, the Alabama State
experiment station has certified that
even where the crop of velvet beans
was entirely removed, save stubble
and roots, the increase in the oat crop
that followed was 3f> bushels per acre
over the plot in the same field where
no velvet hesna were planted. Georgia
farmers claim that where they have
grown velvet beans two years in suc-
ceaaton on the same field, they do not
have to use any ammonia in their
fertiliser, and after one crop they can
cut down their ammonia to 2 per cent,
and make a better crop than whfre
they use 4 per cent ammonia and
breeder, at the Florid, station, the ^
early maturing and heavy seeding
quality of the most promising of the
hybrids was perjnam-ntly fixed, and
the two great hybrid velvet beans, tha
socalled Ninety-Day ami the Osceola,
were given to the world.
Finishing off Hogs
In 1914 Kdmund A. Felder of Co-
lumbtn heard of a perticularly earlj_
VdrlHy of VelCff neiin” 7n ffiioley
county, Georgia, that, even when
. planted after small grain matured its
seed in SeptCmliee, giving a great
yield of beans and not so much vine
that it would preclude the harvesting
of the corn in which the velvet beans
were grown. He visited the forms
where they were grown about Sep
tember 20 und saw the matured
beans on dead and dying vines. A
few days afterward_he tuld two of
the prominent hog rpiserr of Moultrie,
C.a., of this variety, ami they at once
ordered beans, for thev said that it
was just the variety they required to
finish their- soft, peanut fattened
hogs, which were discriminated
against to the extent of a cent a
pound at th * local packing plant re
cently established.- “Why,’’ said one
of tht-m, “this means more to us than
any other crop. .We can lay out our
corn in one sevenjfqqt row and then
two four foot rows, plant peanuts in
the/ middles of the seven fool rows,
a velvet bean at each hill, of corn
and cow peas in the middies of the
four foot rows when we lay by and
hog off the whole -crop and that
shrewd Minnesota manager at the
packing plant will never know that
our hogs ever smelt a peanut. This
combinatipn will make it possible for
us to grow hogs fop not more than
3 cents per. pound.going
to wait to order my beans by mail.
• f am going to telephone Col. Polhill
at Sylvester and have him secure a
lot for me, even if the price is sky-
high." * ,
Mr. Feldpr also purchased a con
siderable lot -of the beans and upon"
his return to South Carolina ap
proached some of his friends to in
terest them in th^ir^lanting. Mr.
Fyldgr specializes, iu legumes and lb
this Ninety Csy variety recognized
a grant ti Uffi —>iifrlirY~r
The ninety Day velvet bean is a
great ratrh crop. The seed coat 'per
acre from^lO cents to 91. If grated or
hogged off, the only additional ex
pense is the small coat of seed, inocu
lation ami putting them in .as they
are cultivated along with the corn,
which makes a bean pole for them to
climb on, and the Stork do the rest.
Ninety DsjljcKcL Iwans wdl put-
any farmer in the hog business. If he
has no hogs the expenditure of a dol
lar or two will enable him to* grow
them, improve his soil, gather his
Ih-siis and sell the seed for enough to
buy pure bred stock, ahd he would
still have beans enough to plant all
his ebrn in velvet beans the next year.
Half a bushel of the seed have been
known to produce 90 bushels of beans.
The richer the land the bigger the
yield. If corn is planted in narrow
rows, close in the drill, plant every
other row, a bean to every other hill
of corn. But in five or six foot rows
with corn 18 inches to three feet in
the drill, onu bean to each hill in each
row can be planned to fine advantage.
In Richland county, W. T. J. Lever,
farm demonstrator, planted * some
inoculated beans given him by Mr.
Felder on heavy clay soil near Blythe-
wood July 3 last, and had matured
beans in the Richland county’booth
at the State fair Ikst October.
Records of the Alabama station
show, Mr, Folder says, that while veL
vet beans respond to fertilization, in
no case was the iticreh.se sufficient to
Pay for the fertilizer, but that the
Florida station recommends that marl
or v limestone be used, as this in
creases the yield of both hay and
beans—particularly the beans.
When every stalk of corn grown
in Richland county has a velvet bean
running up it, Riohland county will
have begun the movement that will
put the boll weevil out of business
when it gets here,” he said. “It gives
increased soil fertility, cheap and fine
beef and* cheap and big hogs at low
eost. jKwill make these unproductive,
sand - hills blossom and bloom, and
enable farmers to grow the crops that
can be marketed always in meat prod
uct*. A ton and even two ton* of
(wans per acre ip the pods are often
Claim No.
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
* 198
’ 199-
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
,
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
’ 227
’ 228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
. 236
237
-r- 238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
256
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
266
266
267
268
269
** 270
271
272
273
* 274
275
276
—8*v
278
279’
280
. 281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
291
296
297
298
, 299
300
*301
302
;l03
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
' 312
313
314
315 .
316
317
318
319
320
„ .321
322
323 .
\j
326
327
328
329
713(1
331
332
333
334
33fi
336
and stock feeding crop* of the State.
When Mr. Felder - told John M.
Farrell of the woadertf of the new
Ninety Day he—, that
$20 per ton for thehra, unshelled. B. R.
Cooner of the Adluh mills in Coliun-
>i* statesxjfcs would be a fair price
for the unshelled beans Velvet bean
_____ ■ , 1 . .
Continued From Local Page.
. Claimant * . .
J. P. Harter, Constable---*- — ----—
J. F. Rountree, Constable — --— — - — -.- — — — — l ——
G. M. Williams, Constable— ———-, — - — --- i —
H. D. Best, Constable-
J. L. Carlton, Constable — - — -
U. D. Cook, Constable------ — — *-
J. G. h'anning, Roads and Bridges. ----
J. D. Morris, Roads and Bridges. .—
K. Diamond, Lumber--*--. . —: — —
G. W. Halford, Roads and Bridges.
W.'J. Myrick, Roads and Bridges
h
Amount
15.83
15.83
' 15.83
W. 1’. Ussery, Constable—* •
J. Staff Halford, Coroner.. —
Dr. A. B. Patterson, Salary C«. Physician.-.-
J. B. Morris, Salary
Harley & Best, Co. Attorneys
J. P. Harley, Jr.,-Com. Red Oak
H. E. Creech, Com. Geo. Creek — - —
O. C. Baxley, Com. Red Oak
W. T. Still, Com. Barnwell- ..*
F. J. Gillam, Com. Geo. Creek ---
P. P. Carter, Com. Red Oak
G. P. Morris, Chain Gang .j —
Lightsey Bros. Hardware Co., Chain Gang
L. W. Green, Chain Gang —
P. W. Price, Chain Gang —
6.40
30.25
2.50
60.00
33.33
25.00
25.00
29.16
29.16
2.82
3jOO
100.00
'75.69 1
60.00 ;
35.00
35.1 hi
16.76
565.00
29.15
15.83
March 7, 1916.
A. J. Owens, Poor Yard — —-
T. J. Attaway, Poor Yard
A. M. Hill, Poor Yard ------
P. W. Price, Jail; . —
Horace J. Crouch, Postage —
The Barnwell People. Stationery
Alonza Harrison, Public Buildings
J. 5. Still, Chain Gang I —
S. R. Boylaton, Salary Co. Commissioner
J. M. Weathersbee, Salary Co. Commissioner
N. M. Walker, Salary To. .Commissioner —
L G. Stivender, Constable....
J. W. Hair, Magistrate
J. B. Armstrong, Stationery — — —rrrrr - -
W. V. Richardson, Stationery -
*W. V. Richardson, Salary.. —
<; J Diamond, Salary . . ."Jiteii
B. Armstrong.' Salary
• P. F. Parker, Chain Gang. .1 -
J. W. King, Chain Gang — ..
J. A. Green, Cham Gang —
8, T. 4Jwas, P—v Vneffl.
• Q. A. Kennedy, Cham Gang
I W Holrnsn, Magi«'rate
K. J. Black, Constable >
March II. 1916. *
E. J. Black. Lunacy
W. C. Jennings, Public Buildings
T. A. Holland. Chain Gang.. —
J. R Morris. Dieting Prisoners .....
J. B. .Morris. Telephone *.
R. A. Deaaon. Public Buildings...........
K. A. Deaaon, Jail................. ............
R. A. Deaaon. Poor Yard
F. H. Hm. Com. Widiataa
G. J. Diamond, Chain Gang
G. J. Diamond. Com. Four Mile...... ..........
W. A. Hayes, Lunacy —
E. W D. Morris. Road* and Bridges.’.
B. O. Norris. Com. Red Oak
W. A. Moody, Roads and Bridges ......
Charlie Morris. Chain Gang...
Joseph Baxley, Chain Gang........ ........
Dr. R C. Kirkland, Lunacy...............
Dr. R. C. Kirkland. Vital Suti’cts.......
Good. Roads Supply Co., Cham Gang
A. P. Colkns, Constable.. ....
G. T. Boylston, Cham Gang ... "
Alfred Mitchell, Cham Gang
Alfred Mitchell, Chain Gang
R. H. Boaters, Cham Gang *
E. E. Morris, Constable
The Best Pharmacy. Poor Yard
Lenion Bros.. Cham Gang $9.0(1, Poor Yard $3 <hi
U. A. Calhohun, Poor Yard
C. F. Molair, Poor Yard
Lemon Bros., Jail
N. A. Hiers. Magistral*
K .» Rountree. Chain Gang
B. Mazursky, Chain Gang.r
C. F. Molair, Cham Gang— * ...
Charlie Broum, Jr., Chain GangT . _ _
Charlie Brown. Jr , Cham Gang .
Blackville Hardware Co., Chain Gang
D. P. Martin, Com. Blackville
’Charlie Brown, .1r.. Public Buildings.
Charleston Provision Co., Chain Gang
Armour & Co., Chain Gang
Armour & Co., Chain Gang
Williston Hardware Co., Public" Buildings..
John K. Snelling^alary. j
R. W. Riley, Salary
John K. Snelling, Lunacy • %
W. H. Duncan, Stationery* ,
J. B. Armstrong, Postage ; -
John K. Snelling, Stationery..
Dr. J. G. Wooley, Lunacy
Dr. H. R. Tison, Lunacy. .
F. W. Manuel. Lumber
W. I. Johns, Lumber.- ... ♦
W. F. Bates, Roads and Bridges..
C. M. Bell, Lumber rssr- 17.11
T. J. Penwell, Com. Red O.ik
L. B. Collins, Com. Blackville
Mutual \Trading Co., Com. Blae'vVillo
D. W. Brown, Com. Four Mile..
S. E. Bailey, Com. Sycamore ..
J. L. All, Com. Great Cypress l
Maxie Miller, Com. Great.Cypress
W. C. Creech, Com. Great Cypress."
Isaac Lawton, Tom. Great Cypress
G. W./Bodiford, Com. Gx’of Creek,
S. F. Sease, Com. Red Oak..
22 04
33.37.
18.27.
81.60
11.68
1.05
2.20
16.85
M 7"
2.00
2.00
16.54
12.00
3.00
S.75
35.00
35.00
10.00
M.75
225.00
12.50
35.00
35.00
3.00
N M
29.15
6.85
12.00
6.00
2.35
12.50
10.13
17.00
6.95
27.50
23.80
30.16
3.00
7.80
2.99
41.02
,84.13
220.00
25.00
48.61
20.00
11.35
4.26
5.00
5.00
23.70
11.24
93.00
17.92
10.00
5.00
4.30
12.00
7.25
8.00
10.00
2.00
6.00
4.50
’ 2.00
20.00
42.90
1.50
28.65
Dr. J. G. Wooley,Tost Mortems
Morris and Co., Chain Gang \ -if- L —
R. L. Birt, Chain Gang—I
Farmers Union Merc. Co., Chain Gang — — r.ZHZ
Simon Brown’s Sons, Chain Gang.^ — 262.50
Simon Bpown’s Sons, Chain Gang
C. M. Bell, Chain Gang. ..
Young and Kearse," Chain Gang
F. M. Young Co., Chain Gang. _
April 4th, 1916.
S. R. Boylston, Salary Co. .Corn. ——
J. M. Weathersbee, Salary Co. Com.-.*. —
N. M. Walker, Salary Co. Com.—- —I 25.00
L, W. Creep, Chain Gang
J. S. Still, Thain Gang.
G. J. Diamond, Salary.
W. V. Richardson, Salary.
G. M. Folk, Chain Gang—
Morris and Co., Chain Gang
Dr. R. C. Kirkland, Lunacy..
J. B. AriBiirang. Coujt Claims—
John’KTTSnelling, Lunacy t__
G. M. Shepheard, Lunac
pr J. G.
L. C. B<
Wooley, Lunrcy.
Dr.
S. E. Moore. Sum Corner’s Jury”!
G. M. Williams. Stub Corofltr’s Jury.
262.50 !
_}
63.75
J
15.50
_
130.00
“
52.11
33,33
25.00
25.00
_
6.25
60.00
100.00
100.00
202.95
-
86.68
5.00
_
48.00
75.69
1385.70
20.00 ;
.
21.28
- 5.00-f
5.00
8.50
1000
2.00
2M
348
349
350
351 ' !
352»
353
354
355
356
357
358
30.41
360-
15.83
' 361*.
362
17.84
8.00
363
9.85
364
r 1.50
365
3.50
366
5.50
367
20.40
368
27.91
369
27!08
370
12.50
371
100.00
372
125.00
373
50.00
374
7.50
375
5.50
376
19.50
377
6.00
378
5.00
379
1.U0
~ 380
7.35
381
• 21.15
382
5.00
383
1.00
384
42.04
385
20.30
• 386
387
• s-
388
15.00 : ' 389
6.00
390
8.00
391
4.00
392
Claimant , Amount
J. B. Morris, Salary —— 125.00
Isaac Pitman and Son, Court Enpense ,*—-- — - 11.07
J. Staff Halford, S.alary —— -v • 27.08
Harry D Calhoun. BarnweQ County Fair 57.33
W. H. Duncan, Calary CT. C., first quarter.three
months. — -—.
C. W. Dunbar, Magistrate — 14.il
J. W, Hair, Magistrate V r - , 25.fi
L-C. Bennett, Magistrate.-- r —— 14.58
J. E. Tobin, Magistrate.---— —— 29.1
L. H. Williams, Magistrate 14*
>M. C. Kitchings, Mwaistrate.,—•— — — 25.00
' ur Tirtimnn MficTstrate—— 1 *
14.58
14.58
27.91
15.83'
29.15
12.60
12.50
30.41
15.83
1
4.5jL
J
, Mayi
E.“W. Holman, Magfktrate—--V T — 29-15
G- L. Hill. Magistrate.. — J—
C W. Dunbar, Magistrate——,—U - —
L. G. Stivender, Constable y. — —
J. F..Rountree, Constable-------
E. E. Morris, Constable—
A. P. Collins. Constable — v
H. D. Best, Constable.. i -
J. L. Carlton, Constable — "-
J. P. Harter, Constable — ---—
U. D. Cook, Constable- — -*— 15-83
E. J. Black., Constable ----7 1 5 ”3
Home Furniture Co., Public Buildings—- r - 3.00
W. C. Jennings. Public Buildings r 27.25
R. A. Deason, Public Buildings.- — -- 4.25
D. A. Dyches, Poor Yard. — —- —6.00
J. A. Porter, Poor Yard... 13.6o
Lemon Bros., Poor Yard “-70
Easterling and Co., C. G. 45c, P. Y. $2.80 T — 3.25
T. J. Attaway, Poor lard 3.00
J. F. Ready, Poor Yard - 9-00
Georgia Hair, Poor Yard ' 290
Briggs. Buist and Co., Poor Yard - - 6.00
C. F. Molair, Poor Yard.. 66.75
R. A. Deason, Poor Yard o —— 11.90
A. J. Owens, Poor Yard 15.00
A. J. Owens, Poor Yard* °.00
C. M. Turner, Vital Statistics ... 5.25
J. C. Mayer. Vital Statistics - 20.75
W. F. Harfer. Vital Statistics — 2.75
J.’A. Rouse, Vital Statistics -i 32.00
Lemon Bros., Public Buildings 4.05
Alonza Harrison. Public Buildings. 2.50
L. Cohen, Poor Yard* 3.00
G.
C.
N.
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413 *
414
416
417
418
419 '
420
421
*•>■•
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
447>
446
447
448,
449
450
451
452
47>3
454
• 455
456
457
458
459 "
460
-461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499 -
500
501
502 .
503
504*
505
507
508
ifB
If]
C. Best, Jr., Magistrate —i 12.50
S. Anderson, Magistrate— — 14.58
A. Hiers,, Magistrate 12.'50
L. Cohen, Jail. ' 4.50
C. F. Molair, Jail — * L40
W. F. Ussery, Constable 27.91
John K. Snelling, Salary 25.00
J. L. Carlton, Sum. Coroner’s Jury*^*., 2.
Horace J. Crouch, Salary —- ... ....... 100
J. B. Morris. Dieting Prisoners ... — — 99.y
Ybrk Publishing Co., Court Expense.. — 6.3
J. B. Morris. Telephone ... — *.... 6.2'
Dr. R. C. Kirkland, Post Mortems 10.00
i jr. J. G. Wooley, Post Mortems .... — .... 10.00
. E. Tobin. Inquest -
R. W. Riley. Salary - 48.61
R. A. Deason, Jail , — 3.60
t+r "A B 1 Pmwsiin. SMtaiT—. - - ■ ™. 18 no
C. E. Falkenstein. lV>stage... . ....—^ 18.35
J. B. Armstrong. Postage 1.67
HantM J. rrouch 4.35
The Barnwell Pe«iple. Stationery and Advertising . • 43.25
National Office Supply Co., Stationery J 54.95
W. H. Duncan. Stationery ...1 .... .. . “ 7.81
H. L. O’Bannon. Stationery SI
W. J. My rich. Roads and Bridge*
V W Manuel. Luml»er 14 40
J. A. Myrick, Roads and Bridges. . . ... 7.00
V W ManueJ. Lumlx-r 31.84
. F. W. Manuel. Lumber 19.00
Brunson Tie and Lumber Co, Lumber 9.90
J. B Bagnall, Roads ami Bridges 19.85
K. Diamond, Roads and Rndg*-* 26.06
The Weston and Brooker Co., Roads and Bridges... 131.26
G. O. Barker. Lumber ........ 9.62
J. B. Morris, Contingent.. 80.96
J. B. Morris, Contingent... • ... 28.95
J. B. Morris, Contingent...... ... ............. 10.00
Home Bank of Barnwell, Contingent................ 9.20
» . C. Kitchings, Contingent........ ... 6JO
. H. Duncan, Contingent ... ....... 3.00
Dr. E. L. Patterson, Post Mortem...... .......... 10.00
E. D. Peacock, Equalisation.. ... ....... 4.00
J. E. Lain, Equalization........ ..... 6.00
E. B. Sanders, Equalization .... ...... 9.30
Sam J. Bailey, Equalization........ ... 27.00
K. D. Rowell, Equalization 6.00
Baxley, Equalization... r. .* ... .... 8.70
Bell, Equalization.' ....... 14.60
W
W
G.
R
R
W
1.
0.
F.
J.
J.
W,
M. B. liagood. Equalization
W* P. Sanders, Equalization.....
W. B. Warren, Equalization...
J. L. Box, Equalization
L. P. Blume, Equalization .•
J. M. Gantt, Equalization
W. F. Holmes, Equalization ,
P. J. Zeigler, Equalization
J. A. Meyer, Equalization .
W. E. McNab, Equalization, •
J. C. McDuffie, Chain Gang
C.
C.
w
R.
J.
A
W.
B
M. Young,
V. Sanders,
J. Cochran,
S. Creech,
Jenny, Equalization 21.00
Johnson, Equalization ... ...... 12.00
Rountree. Equalization 1
Gyles, Equalization *
Rountree, Equalization) >.
Harden, Equalization
Equalization
Equalization.. ..... ......
Equalization
Equalization......
7.20
12.00
8.40’
18.00
15.00
9.60
7.00
6.00
6 DO
6.00
19.20
26.80
9.50
6.00
6.00
25.60
12.0'
4.0l
43.91
Adluh Milling Co., Chain Gang _: , 44.25
L. E. Hair, Chain Gang..
Lemon Bros., Chain Gang.. *
G. J. Diamond, Chain Gang
C. N. Burckhalter, Chain Gang.-.-*------
W. H. Woodward, Chain Gang
Dr*J. L. Palmer, Chain Gang
Dr. W. R. Tuten, Chain Gang..-..
C. F. Molair, Chain Gang.
L. Cohen, Chain Gang —
R. A. Deason, Chain Gang...
W. I. Johns, Chain Gang *
Lightsey Bros. Hardware Co., Chain Gang.
J. T. Wilson, Chain Gang...
lang
V
J. 1. Wilson, Chain C.jan^_
Josephf Baxley, Chain Gan
J. A.. Green, Chain Gang..
R. H. Bowers, Chain Gang!
G, T. Boylston, Chain Gang *
Charlie Morrjs, Chain-Gang—..
Alfred Mitchell, Chain Gang*.—
W. H. Duncan, Chain Gang
L. A. Best, Chain Gang—
J. W. King, Chain Gang
P. F. Parker, Chain Gang._..__
McDuffie & Sq^b, Chain Gang..
J. B. K^el, Com. Williston
J. B. Keel, Com. Williston.
§- B. Creech, Com. Geo. Creek. _
Com.
Oscar Gryson, Uom. Williston " 10 00
H. W. Sanders, Com. Barnwell.-*---.. _ ~ . s ' 0 a
E. D. Priester, Com. Sycamore ■ ~~~~ ~~~ g'fin
W. P. Sanders, Com. Red Oak , ... ~
Owen Platts, Com. Sycampre. —.....Ij!!!'!^’’"V'
F. W. Manuel, Com. Sycamore...... /
F. W, Manuel, Com. Sycamore*...tl’T.—I! ~S Zl
G. P. Morris, Com. Red Oak?. ^..._ ’ “ c’oc
J. D. Morris, Com. Red Oak
E. “ ~
3.00
24.15
3.40
1.25
10.00
3.50
6.50
2.25
5.85
2.75
27.19
14.30
42.65
35.00
35.00
50.00
35.00
35.00
35.00
•17.36
6.20
35.00
60.00
34.20
24.00
7.00
1.00
J. P. Boyles, Com. Great Cypress - g'oo
40.00
1.50
2.50
1.00
20.00
6.00
D. Peacock, Com. Barnwell-
W\ B. Norris, Com. Great Cypress...'*"” o'XX
John .Wallace, Cpm. Red Oak.— — II!! 1 00
.!’!” i7!s2
Mf
515
C. C. Boyles, Com. Red Oak
Charlie Peyton, Com. Red Oakj....!"!! ^ "
E. S. Hammond. VitalStatio’U.....'.!!!!!!!!!
G. J. Diamond, Chain Gang
J. G. Fanning, Roads and Bridges *..„!
G. M. Williams, Constable ' "T
"JrW. WMivr. Lumber..'*
J. R. Armstrong, Court Claimi...’.-.....!!!’!!!
Farmera Union MerrantiUf.. rt..., ^ 1
W. V. KHrhaaaaon, Stationery
B. Mazursky. Cham Gang
R. F. Creech. Cour Red Oak
A. B. Metz, Chain Gang
Norm ^ Co, IXxm Gang.
-T. F. Hogg, Emnimtioa.
26.00
39.25
5.00
73.51'
158.^
6.49
477.30
4.00
22.65
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