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I lamfarrg Irralft ? ? ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891. A. W. KXIGHT, Editor. Published every Thursday in The I Herald building, on Main street, in 1 the live and growing City of Bamberg, being issued from a printing office which is equipped with Mergenthaler linotype machine, Babcock cylinder press, folder, one jobber, a fine Miehle cylinder press, all run by \ electric power with other material and machinery in keeping, the whole equipment representing an investment of $10,000 and upwards. Subscriptions?By the year $150; J six months, 75 cents; tnree monrns, 50 cents. All subscriptions payable strictly in advance. Advertisements?$1.00 per inch for first insertion, subsequent insertions 50 cents per inch. Legal advertisements at the rates allowed by law. Local reading notices 10 cents a line each insertion. Wants and ether advertisements under special head, 1 cent a word each insertion. Liberal contracts made for three, six, and twelve months. Write for rates. Obituaries, tributes of respect, resolutions, cards of thanks, and all notices of a personal or. political character are charged for as regular advertising. Contracts for advertising not subject to cancellation after first insertion. Communications?We are always glad to E^iblish news letters or those pertaining to matters of public interest. We require the name and address of the writer in every case. No article which is defamatory or offensively personal can find place in our columns at any price, and we are not responsible for the opinions ex -? 1^4. t yresstru ILL au? I'ULumuuicauuu. Thursday, Nov. 27,1913. . Several new papers have been started in various parts of the State recently, and they all have a prosperous appearance. Good luck to them all. Spartanburg county's grand jury has given a fine example of public 1 officers doing their duty. It remains to be seen what sort of petit juries thev have in that county. Walterboro juries also do their duty it seems, as will be seen by the I' verdict rendered in a murder case there last week. It is unusual that 1 a white man is condemned to death 1 in South Carolina for the taking of human life, no matter what the circumstances. HURT IN GAS EXPLOSION. j Score or More Injured?Great Dam- ! age to Property. Pittsburg, Pa., Nov. 25.?A score or more persons were injured, many windows were broken and a number of buildings shaken by an explosion > of gas in a nine foot sewer in the Lawrenceville district of Pittsburg ' late to-day. None of the injured will ' die, but the property loss will amount 1 to many thousands of dollars. 3 Buildings were damaged and per- 3 sons Injured within a radius of three 1 miles. Thousands of windows were shattered and two dwelling houses in 34 th street collapsed. A sewer lid weighing 80 pounds was blown through a city fire engine house. 1 Three large tanks containing thous- i ands of gallons of gasoline were i overturned in the yards of the Petroleum Products Company, Liberty < avenue and 23rd street, and the fluid poured into the wrecked sewers. 1 Danger of a second explosion caused 1 the city authorities to order all lights i except electric extinguished. < A furnace filled with molten metal : at the Cold Roller Steel Company's plant was upset and the mill caught 3 fire. ? ] What He Wished. ] , One afternoon not long ago a cer- 1 tain Brooklyn youngster was much. 1 depressed by loneliness. His own brother had gone away for a week, and the lad across the street with , whom he played occasionally, was ill in bed. Moreover* there were no toys that he founcr amusing. In this state his mother found him. , ''Perhaps," she suggested, ""I can play with you. What is it you wish?to ( p.Iay Indians?" "No, ma'am," sighed the boy, "I T was two little does, so I could play together." Feminine Thrift. Hexler?Why didn't Randall's wife let him put up their screens last sum- ' mer? Long?She had bought a lot of fly paper at a bargain and wanted, to get the worth of her money.?Judge. Flagman Hurt. Greenville, November 23.?Bud Riddle, flagman on the Greenville, Spartanburg and Anderson Railway, had an almost miraculous escape from death on Staurday morning, when he was thrown from a coal car near Williamston and dragged for a number of feet underneatn tne tram. He was brought to Greenville immediately after the accident and given medical attention. The injured man was resting well at a late hour to-night. * -? NEW PARCEL POST MAXIMUM. Postmaster General Recommends Increase to Fifty Pounds. Washington, Nov. 24.?Postmaster General Burleson has recommended to the interstate commerce commission that the maximum weight ol parcel post packages be increased from 20 to 50 pounds for all distances. Before the weight limit may be in;t urill ha nopocearv lindPT It n in kt\s uvvv^w?? , the law, for the commission to pass affirmatively upon Mr. Burleson's recommendations. It is expected to take such action. The proposed change will not affect existing parcel post rates. The lower rates will continue to apply only to matter transported within the first and second zones. Held on Ugly Charges. London, Nov. 24.?The arrest of John Love Elliot, a wealthy consulting engineer, of New York, reported from East Grinstead, Sussex, was made on charges of the most serious and flagrant character. The arrest was made by the police on the allegations of neighbors who laid before the authorities certain circumstances which they declared had been related by two girls said to be his daughters and who were living alone with him at Hammerwood House. Elliot has resided in England for several years. He has a business address in London in connection with some rubber and other companies and for a long time his mail has been forwarded there from New York. The two girls are 17 and 19 years old, while Elliot appears to be in the forties. He is evidently a wealthy mor, hp took Hammerwood House, a fine Georgian mansion, furnished, and has been residing there with the girls since March 22 last. Elliot has been three times married. His first wife died 16 years ago, leaving two daughters. His second wife, who was Miss Ethel Irene Stewart. an opera singer, obtained a divorce from him in 1907, and it is stated that a daughter was born in this marriage. His third wife was Miss Laura Moore. The character of the charges has raised a doubt in some quarters as to whether the girls living with Elliot are really his daughters and also as to the sanity of the accused. The police maintain absolute silence on the case and the evidence at yesteriay's hearing in the local police court was given behind closed doors. It was sufficiently serious to cause the magistrate to remand the accused in custody for a week. In the meantime the girls have been taken from Hammerwood Huse, which is in a secluded spot in the center of 600 acres of grounds, ind have been placed in charge of a. Dr. Wallis, who was called in by the police. Boy Stole to Go to School. "I've been crazy about going to Oxford university, and when I saw all this money in my hands, I couldn't resist taking it." That was the story told by a lad Df 17 when he was arrested in New Fork. A few fiours more and he would have been aboard the Mauretania and off for England. Stowed iwav in his clothing was $1,400 in :ash?enough to keep him for three rears at the university. Before the boy was returned by the S'ew York police, a Cleveland newspaper man called at his home. On his book shelves were volumes of poetry. In one corner stood a copy 5f Tom Brown at Oxford?the book that had obsessed him with a desire to go to the great English university. By day he performed his duties as stock boy in a department store. sarning $7 a week, a part of wmcn went regularly to the family support. He was prompt and trustworthy and was scheduled for early advancement. Night after night he sat poring over his books. His mother recalled his keen disappointment when he was taken out of high school at the end of his second year and put to work, because the family could not afford to keep him in school longer."He spent every cent he could save out of his spending money for books," said his mother. "He's been at me for months to buy him the Encyclopedia Britannica." What the firm is willing to do in the caso has been stated by its vice president. "If all this is true, if the boy wants higher education and has the mental qualifications, I'll see that he gets it."?The Survey. 1 1 ?^ Af several weens agu <.uc uuaiu trustees of New York schools dismissed a teacher because she gave birth to a baby. They announced that motherhood and teaching were incompatible. One teacher appealed from their decision to the supreme court and after hearing the case the judge issued a writ of mandamus ordering the school board to reinstate fhe teacher. RESOURCES OF SIBERIA. : Amur River Country Rich in Mining 1 I and (.Yop Possibilities. A recent traveler in the Amur | I River country speaks of wonderful J' possibilities of development there, j 1 I j Wealthy though it is, the district is j I j but little known. The Amur is navi- j i gable for a distance of 2,000 miles, j from Nicolaivsk, at the mouth, to i ] Stretnsk. The whole country ap- c peared fine and promising. There ; ; are wide plains, wholly uncultivated, ? ; on which grows excellent grass, i i about three feet high, of fine texture. 1 These plains, it is estimated, would t ? milliAnc z-kf a Vi oorv Ar r>attlo ? suypuiu XUI111UUQ L}ltVVf VI VM WVV. t ! The soil is of a good quality and of a ' deep black. i In the gardens and plantations where settlements have arisen beautiful crops of all descriptions were to be seen?wheat, barley, oats, and potatoes in abundance. Through the last 600 miles to the sea the country is one expanse of splendid forest, both on Russian and Chinese territory. In every mountain gully there were Chinese prospectors seeking gold. A 100,000,000 people could be settled in this white man's country. Easily navigable, the Amur provides a great natural highway for traffic from end to end. It is strange that neither the Chinese on the south nor the Russians on the north appear to have made any serious effort to develop the resources of the country. The Russians are adopting strong meausures to prevent the advance of Chinese on this territory, but as yet Chinese are to be seen everywhere. On the river bank opposite to Blagoveshchensk a prosperous Chinese city has grown up, but no native boatman is allowed to cross the river from that side. Chinese may only use the ferry, which is a Russian monopoly, upon obtaining from the Russian Consul a special permit. The political situation is distinctly interesting. As to the antiquity of Chinese industery in this part of Siberia, there * are evidences that the gold mines c -ivprp worked bv them centuries ago. r Growing out of some of the old work- t ings are trees of great size and age. ? ?New York Sun. ? 1: Breweries Far From Civilization. t I "There's a brewery somewhere east of the Hay river," was the re- * port brought into Sergeant R. Field 0 at the Chipewyan station a little 1 over a year ago. If some one had 0 arrived with a two-headed moose, r or a live, kicking moose with no head at all, Sergeant Field would not have besin more amazed. For the Hay river is a thin blaek line running through the white terra incog- c nita south of the Great Slave lake, fl A brewery 600 miles from civilization! And not only that, but in the n heart of a country that even the 0 map-makers have left a blank! Field t made a personal investigation, and he found a happy lot of Indians s among whom "fire-water" was quite r as common as it used to be down in e Kentucky. He found that nearly every "buck" was the proprietor of a a "brewery," and that life south of a the Great Slave lake was one long and joyous spree. A strange white r man had sold the secret of making y "fire-water" to the Indians, and they j, were making a "brew" of potatoes, hops, sugar and yeast, which, when ] allowed to ferment, was strong ^ enough to cause Intoxication, curing the warm summer months the Indians raised potatoes for this brew, but in scarcely any instance n can they be persuaded to grow any- c thing for food.?From "Unknown j Canada" in the October Wide World i Magazine. h The Prize Enigma. ^ Half a dozen men were discussing t the effects of the reduced tatiff as ^ they were eating lunch, says The s Philadelphia Ledger. This from a a ''" var Phnrlps .T. Murtauffh: "I bought a pair of gloves, for which I E paid $2. I asked the salesman from g whom I had previously purchased E gloves if the tariff wasn't going to a give me a bit of a reduction. The ^ salesman said there might be a dif- j ference of 12 cents, but the manufac- x turer would take about half and the ^ store the other half, and the customer would get nothing." i Noah H. Swayne, II., purveyor of j pig iron and dispenser of a high j grade of vocal music, added: "What a reduction will I get on this new suit?' I asked my tailor. 'None,' he s replied, 'as the difference in the act- f ual cost of the wool is only $1 or so. a Labor is the chief element in your clothes, and the tariff has not reduced the price of that commodity.' " President Ripley, of the Atchison i railroad, says the lower tariff will not 1 reduce transportation company re- i ceipts. And yet a well known man- r lifarf-nrer in Camden tells me that the t Underwood bill actually threatens to z take away every dollar of his profit. \ Whatever else it is, the tariff ques- a tion remains the prize economic enigma in this country. ' f Xmas cards at Herald Book Store, i INDIANS TELL NO TALES. Sever Turn Informer Against 3 Who Sell Them liquor. If the jointists and bootleggers Topeka and other parts of Kar lad only Indians for customers t vould be happy and their law-bre ng life would be a long round joy, says a Kansas City (Mo.) latch. The Indian who buys a dr if "40-rod" liquor from a Kar jointist never tells the police t >old the liquor. He will tell lumber of his own people, but nc vhite man will learn who furnis he "booze." It is seldom that government ever is able to bring i iourt a man or woman for sell innnr tr? thp Indians. Twelve miles north of Topeka he Pottawatomie Indian Reser ion, all that remains in tribal fc )f this once powerful people, me time the Pottawatomies inha id all the Northern Illinois < Southern Wisconsin and number ibout 80,000 persons. There are r ess than 400 on the reservation i t is asserted that about 200 have ;urned to Wisconsin and now iving there. There are two railroad stations ;he reservation and no train e :omes to Topeka without bring rom one to a dozen Indians. Mi >f the Indians get drunk every ti hey come to Topeka and they cc o Topeka every time they can n snough money to pay the railr< are and buy liquor. "We have arrested scores of dru sn Indians, but not once has one hem ever given us the name or ocation of the man who sold him iquor," said J. W. F. Hughes, cl ?f police of Topeka. "The Indi; vill actually work on the rock j ather than tell the name of the n ir the place where they got dru ^hey generally won't tell why t] efuse to give us this informati >ut the other day an Indian said ras afraid the supply would be s! iff. But we never have been able nake an arrest on information ained from an Indian. A white n rho gets' drunk usually tells there he got the liquor even bef ie is sober and is always willing ell us soon as he has sobered T? 11 inf/vrrr JUt an inaia.ii ucv? lUliiO 1U1VA u "The Topeka police have never 1 o fight a drunken Indian, as tl ften have to fight white men. 1 ndian doesn't mind being 'pinch r even being put to work on ock pile for three or four days." Not Quite That Bad. ________ / Judge Raiph S. Latshaw squelch a Kansas City the other day, an ipient movement against the clc itting skirt with a slash. "Narrow skirts don't mean aorality," said Judge Latshaw. "( f the most vicious epochs was wl he hoop skirts were worn. "Why I remember when it was c idered immodest for a woman to ange her coiffure so as to show ] ars. We have advanced. "Y?'e have advanced, but we have dvanced as far as the cartooni nd the jokesmiths would pretend " 'Doctor,' said a pretty girl? uns the latest joke?'doctor, I w; ou to vaccinate me, please, wh t won't show.' " 'Humph!' said the gruff doct [ guess you'll have to take it ernallv, then.' Mad Cow Makes Him Toreador New York, Nov. 21.?Harry Cr ing, weight 265 pounds, a lead itizen of South River, N. J., 2 arrfes K. Peterson, an almost eqr y prominent citizen, went qa unting before daylight yesterday he swamps between South River t letuchen, near the Raritan River They had bagged a few birds wl here came a smashing of the und rush and a cow changed them. Pet on went up a chestnut tree w lacrity. Crenning got to the tree but co tot climb it. He faced the cow i ;rappled it by the horns. The a aal swung him off his feet again 1 gain and smashed him against ree. But Crenning held on. Fir y a horn came off, the cow Daw vith pain and then rushed oft i he swamps. Crenning had been badly cut i iruised. At a nearby farmho3eterson telephoned to Mayor Jc ^ee of South River, who arrived w ,n automobile and doctors. It was learned that the cow 1 uddenly gone mad and had run a\ rom the Culver farm, about a n iway. Negroes Put Out of Office. Atlanta, Nov. 22.?This is a v inhealthy season for negro off lolders in Georgia. The last th legro employes under A. O. Blalo lew democratic appointee as coll or of internal revenue, went do tnd out yesterday, and white, n rere put in their iplaces at the fed l1 building. Charges of incompetency w iled some time ago against the roes, and the charges were sustaii n Washington. i DYNAMITE IN AUTOS' PATH. len | Pittsburg Motorists Have Been Driving Over Scattered Explosives. ; of i Pittsburg, Pa., Nov. 24.?The poisas lice let it be known to-day for three hey weeks automobilists have been flirt>ak ing with death as they drove along of Grant boulevard, the favorite motor dis- track between the fashionable East ink End district and downtown Pittsisas burgh. During that time they have vho collected 120 sticks of dynamite, ap any parently scattered systematically , )t a over the road. Yesterday they locat- ; hed ed another lot in the boulevard and the arrested Herman Leidman, alleging nto he knew something of the robbery | ing of a contractor's magazine, from which they declare the dynamite was lies stolen. va )r For the Blessings Bestowed. At Thankfulness makesMhe ordinary md 3n(* simp*e of s^ine a morning luster, and exudes the rarest *ng perfume. There are two ways to get l0^ rich?one is to increase the number in of our dollars, the other is to inre" crease the values of the few dollars; we already have. Thankfulness raises' the blessings we already have to on higher degrees of worth, and thereby i >ver enriches us. If thankfulness does not , ing create new roses, it paints a finer my , hue on those we have; if it does not ime load our table, it puts a delicious , e sweetness in our simple fare; if it 11S6 ^ does not clothe our bodies in costly * raiment, it lends a sweetness of be- , havior to our bodies, so that we do ^ not need such raiment to make us ' attractive. All other beautiful graces til 6 _ of Christian character are lacking in the . . luster without the shining grace of ' 1161 gratitude to God for His abundant ans * j mercies and unceasing loving kindness to the children of men. lan nk. Thought to Have Fun. hey . on, Saul Vaughn, a well-known and . he prosperous old negro farmer of Lanhut caster, sustained a loss of about $400 i to early Tuesday morning in the de- , ob- struction by fire of his barn and its ? lan contents. His grandchild, a boy of us 10 or 12 years old, wishing to see a ore blaze, it is said, deliberately set fire to to the building, probably thinking , up. he would extinguish it after scaring ter. the neighborhood with an alarm of ' lad fire, but as the barn contained about hey a bale of ginned cotton a lot of cot- i The fbn seed, several bales of hay, fodder, i ed' corn and other highly inflammable i the material, the fire soon got beyond control of the little negro and in a } few minutes all was lost. Prom Pole to Pole. e(*? Dreams of a Pan-American rail- . *n" road that will fink the Hudson Bay >se~ with the Artie Ocean are within measurable distance of realization. Last week the rails were joined of the ^ne great longitudinal railway in Chile < ien from Idulque to Puerto Montt. This 2 line covers about 1850 miles. When * on" completed the road will extend fitom J ar~ the frontier to Peru to the Straits of ] her Magellan. < So far back as 1881 the idea was ] *n * mooted of a railway joining the North ists and South continents through Central America, but practical railway { *"80 men scouted the scheme at the time . ant as visionary and impracticable. In ere 1890, however, practical steps were 1 taken at an international uuuieicuvc I -?r- to carry out the work, and steady ' in" progress has been made since then, } with tne result that the undertaking < is now regarded not only as feasible ( but as a financially sound proposi- j en" tion.?Toronto Globe. < ing . j md Baptist Union Meetings. j Lai-. 1 mil T0PICS- ( in 1. S. C. as a mission field and as , ind a mission force. 2. The State mission board?its ien achievements and needs. er_ 3. How to avoid panics in our ;er_ mission work. ith -1. The Judson centennial. < Union No. 1 at Barnwell. Speakers: uld 1. W. M.; Jones, T. P. Lee, and J ind T. J. Grubbs. , T7. TT T7I jlAwKraflr P.OA T^rvcla- { -. r . n. JT UUUClUUla, VIW. m(j ton, and A. P. Maaville. the 3. W. L. Hayes, G. E. Birt, and | iaj_ R. R. Johnson. < led 4- w- F. H. Fundernt0 burk, and W. L- Hayes. ! Missibnary sermon Sunday a. m.? 1 Lnd F. H. Funderburk. < ase No. 2, Double Pond. Speakers: J jhn 1. Paul Bolen, Henry Grymes, j j^h an(* Wm- Hutto. 2. J. D. Huggins, C. C. Ellzey, ; ia(j and S. G. Mayfleld. ?ay 3. W. R. McMillan, Dr. J. B! J jjje Black, and Geo. Smoak. 4. Geo. Hopkins, H. J. Hair, and j Paul Bolen. Missionary sermon, J. Q. Huggins. ery No. 3, Aliens Chapel. Speakers: ^ ice- 1. W. G. Britton, E: A. McDowell, < ree and H. C. Creech. < ck, 2. W. D. Heckle, .J. A. Jenkins, ( lee- ! and W. E. Brandt. I wn 3. J. R. Cullom, F. J. Deer, and ] len J. W. Carter. ( ler- 4. E. A. McDowell, W. D. Heckle, ] and W. G. Britton. ! ere Missionary sermon, W. D. Heckle. < ne- ^ ' 25 head well broke mules for sale ied by J. M. DANNELLY & SON, Ehr- ; hardt. Weight 1,000 lbs. and up,-ad. < DRUGGISTS ENDORSE DODSON'S LIVER TONE. It is a Guaranteed Harmless Vegetable Remedy that Regulates the Liver Without Stopping Your Work or Pay. A dose of calomel may knock you completely out for a day?sometimes two or three days. Dodson's Liver Tone relieves attacks of constipation, biliousness and lazy liver headaches, and you stay on your feet. The Peoples Drug Store sells Dodson's Liver Tone and guarantees it to give perfect satisfaction. If you buy a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone and J- ?-J I* AV. ? mAa* nlAOO. UU JL1UL iliiu it LiiC MICDl! 1JJAJO l> [/iwant and successful liver remedy you ever took, this store will give you * back the 50 cents you paid for it without a question. This guarantee that a trustworthy druggist is glad to give on Dodson's Liver Tone is as safe and reliable as the medicine, and that is saying a lot. TWO CAR LOADS. M I have received direct from the ? West to-day one car load of horses J and mules and expect another car to reach me tomorrow night. In these ^ these two cars I have several nice horses, and some large mules. I can suit anyone wanting a small or large ~ mule, or nice family horse. Pros- a pective buyers will save money by seeing this stock before buying. C. F. RIZER, Olar, S. C.?adv. SPECIAL NOTICES. Advertisements Under This Head 25c. For 25 Words or Less. For a" good tailored^;o-measure suit call on the Dixie Tailors, opposite post office. Cleaning, pressing, and repairing of all kinds neatly done. Dixie Tailors, opposite. post office. For Sale.?Appier Seed Oats, home growm 75c the bushel, sacked. J. K. * jj MAYFIELD, Denmark, S. C. For Sale?Pine and cypress timber. A good proposition for saw mill menv ?? = 4 T3 T7> r? Mrt 1 Ran. H I lie UUA U 1 f u. X- . berg, S. C. Automobiles Insured.?1912 models 2*4 per cent; 1913 models 2 per cent. Old line company. H. M. GRAHAM, Agent, Bamberg, S. C. . LANDS FOR SALE .. . > v ' ' v V ; One tract containing forty acres, ^ known as the Alledine Smith place. One tract of thirty acres, known as the James Kinsey place. One tract of twdve acres, known as the L. E. Cooner place. These are the lands belonging to the estate of G. W. Farrell, and are situated in Fish Pond Township, , Bamberg County. , Terms cash. For further information call on or write' JOHN COONER BAMBERG, 8. C. FORSALE J 75 acres of land, 3 miles of <Har, SO acres under caltiratloD, with 4- I room house, barn and stables, for I sight hundred and fifty dollars cash, A real bargain for some one. Only reason for selling at this price owner l ' M 1 .ml. living flwuy irum iuc oiaic* . Co H. M. GRAHAM or J. T. O'NEAL, Bamberg, S. C. , " - CITATION NOTICE. :| ? . . . ...; J The State of South Carolina-? ; ^ County of Bamberg?By Geo. P. Har- 4 mon,. Esq., Judge of Probate. Whereas, .Mrs. Alvina Johns bath ' made suit to me to grant her letters of administration of the estate of and effects of R. C. Johns, deceased: These are therefore to cite and admonish1 all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said R. C. Johns, deceased, that they be and appear before me in the Court of Probate, to be held at Bamberg, on * Saturday, December 13th, next, after -republication thereof, at 11 o'clock in ' Che forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administra- X* tioc should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal this 25th day of November, A. Ih, 1913. GEO. P. HARMON, /:m:Judge of Probate. JUDGE OF PROBATE SALE. : ___ \\ State of South Carolina,?County >f Orangeburg?In Common Ppeas. Ada V. Simmons, et al? plaintiffs, igainst Benjamin F. Simmons, et al iefendants. By virtue of a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas in the above entitled action, I will seW at public luction, at Bamberg Court House, on ; the first Monday in December next, luring the legal hourse of sale: < All that certain piece, parcel or % tract of land situate, lying and being in Fish Pond- Township in the conn- * :y of Bamberg, in the State aforesaid, containing four hundred (400) acres, more or less, bounded North by the Barnwell road, lands formerly of Z Kim bell and Daniel Jones, on the East by Elijah Minus, Peter Minus md George May, on the South by S. x J. Hydrick, and on the West by the Church road leading to Walterbor? Road. Being same land conveyed to Ino. F. Simmoils by Mary E. Stokes md J. V. Stokes by deed dated the 1st day of May, 1907. - ' ? JJ1 KA O/vl/? And tne saia reai esutie win ^.u in two parcels of two hundred and twenty (220) and one hundred and eighty (180) acres, respectively, more jt less, and plats of same will be exhibited on day of sale. Terms: Cash. Purchasers to pay for papers and all taxes becoming ,-'J payable after day of sale; and in sise the purchaser shall fail to comply with the terms of sale, then the said premises will be resold on the K.me or some subsequent salesday, 3n the same terms and at the risk of the former purchaser. ANDREW C. DIBBLE, ludge of Probate, as Special Referee. Orangeburg, S. C., Nov. 10th, 1913. 5 ' .r'