The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, August 15, 1878, Image 2
MINATIONS.
• ^ \ ■ -V"'. ^ ,-
-w~ jiii^.*n>> ij»■ iMi— '’ •"
<s*”**t ' i-'h :i
THE RAMCAt TOW-WOW. M f™
frnuds
The •ecM^l l>«y'e
^ Tor Governor.
mDE HAMPTON.
Top I4euteoft»t-ao»ornor.
W.D. SIMPSON.
Pbr Secretary ot State.
R. M. SIMP.
Tot Superibteodeot of Eduoation\
a a THOMPSON.
For Coraptrpllef-GeneraT,
> JOHNSON OAQOOI).
Tot Adjutaot and Itjapectot'OefeWei*
kw.xoss&H^H
Tor State Treasurer,
S. Ia LE APH ART..
Tor Attorney• Gene ra I,,
LEROY F. lOOMANa
ForCnDgresH,
GEORGE D. TILLMAN.
The Small White
■
K-/. '
■
(loud 1
'
. In oar editorial of laat week on the
Amoa Ladd m'arder, ease.we Intimated
$&at, notwithstanding the aaaurances
of eoDservatlro cltfaena apd acalawag
M wind-bags of flnnkeydom, the Hotted
“Statep minions are now considering
“which method of illegality, among
“their armory of forged weapons, will
“ be lees likely, in murdering liberty, to
“shook the civilization of the ntne-
“ teenth century.” The result of their
^pllberatlone and the. culmination of
their Infamy base, during the week
which haswince elapsed, flashed along
the wires and the murderers of Amos
now virtually In the hands
Pursuant to adjournment,.the Re
publican contention was called to or.
der Thursday morning, at 10. o’clock,
by President Bowen, and tho door
keeper instructed to pcrfr.U no ono to
enter unless in posaeaslou of ths little
ticket endorsed by Elllott—one of
: which a newspaper roan could obtain
under no drcumstancos.
Committee on Rules submitted
their report, which was agreed to. * «
The nest business was a partial re
port from the Committee on Platform
and Resolutions, rejecting the resolu
tions endorsing JHaapt^n Md_hie as
sociates on the Democratiatlcket) sub
mitted by Senator Cocbran, of Ander
son.
Senator Cochran took tho floor nnd
spoke at length In support of his reso
lutions. He understood that if any
other than himself had offered the res
olutions they would have been adopt
ed. He then asked all tho members
on the floor who endorsed Hampton
and tho rest of the Democratic ticket
to rise, but not oho did so. He further
requested all who favored Hayes and
his Southern policy to get up, but Me
request^ met with no response What
ever. He battled manfully for the
adoption of bis resolutions, but with
out avail, for when put to a vote the
action of the committee was sustained
by every one but himself.
The Resolution of McKInlay, of
Charleston, declaring that in order to
perpetuate the party In this State it
wfts necessary to nominate a straight-
out ticket, which bad also been re
jected by the committee, waft next ta
ken up.
Shrewsbury, Stevenson, Montgom
ery, Swails, Parker and Webster spoke
in favor of the resolution, all of whom
were very bitter In their denunciations
of the party now In power, and held
up the Repqj}licaa party na one of re
trenchment, reform and the only party
ry committed at
4 election held alnoo they ob
Mi tral of the State; and
Ojf intimidation which still prevails in
rt’.any ( countlee, ^hereby the Republi
cans are actually prohibitcdTf0ip meet
of the United States authorities under
ths unusual writ of a “babess corpus
ad faciendum et reclpltndum.”
. The United States Marshal, backed g^ey would hot endorse the Democrats,
by that wretcSed creature Earle—may
God assoilzie hjpa I—appeared before
the jail door at Greenville and deman
ded of the Sheriff the delivery of the
prlsdbers in the name of the United
States and by virtue of this unusual
writ. The Sheriff, instructed ftdm Co
lumbia, says: *T may not lawfully
“deliver to you these prisoners. I
'hold them at tbebUding of the State.
“I have no force to resist you. They
■
■
ing nod organizing.
5. We denounce the Pcmocrptlc oar
ty for the outrage perpetrated I tram
that would give equal and just rights
to all. They looked upon It as cow
ardly to give away to the Democrats
by baking no nominations, and knew
that their ticket. If the light men were
placed upon it, would be elected by an
overwhelming majority.
Mobley, Taft, Mackey, Strnker and
Bowen opposed the resolution. While
§$$
“are in safe keeping under the laws of
“ths State and under the keeping of
"flit key hanging on the door post-
“Do frour pleasure, if you will in
Ahd io tire delighted United
States flunkies take the key from tho
naU Indicated by the Sheriff and presto
the prisoners are snatched from State
tc Federal custody, ■; '
Node have a higher admiration than
we have fof the wisdom and prudence
which have hitherto characterlaed out
present Stats administration, but we
oannot for the life of us get our Intui
tive sense of right and wrong to ac-|
quieeoe in the above rented act of
State humiliation. It may be legal
“flnesee” but tt is not true atatesmnn-
\ 4-
< ..Tbe blunder lay in yielding to ron-
"'gcructlve force and not to an actual
maotfeataUon of force, however small.
Hk'Sheriff of Greenville was to our
poverty-stricken States Rights
Anderson In Sumter was to the
rsl Union. Anderson yielded only
i bis tiksons ' bad exploded, bla
were dismounted and his case-
•tes’wrtS bhtenable. He need not
bars gone so far. Neither neftd the
Sheriff of Greenvllie have called for
. v , the “posse osmiUtus’* or even so much
«. as an infant's finger to 'defend bis poet:
the sovereignty of the State, at least
*o much of I( as is left from the de
vouring career which bos destroyed
the „ better .part thereof, should
have been an ample protection
against all authority,except that which
Vj was backed by thb bayonet. In yleld-
' ' to an unlawful #r!t unbacked by
as made to desert hid post
excuse: Tbe'Sheti^feiras far
as Anderson of Sumter went
the necessities which vital
called for.
!c party has lost a
unity. We feel assured
tration at Washington
,ve stopped short of military
gained the day by
bhift Evil times are
’od the heels of a former
driven dhwafds and down-
M tidal wave of so-
dagradatlon.
altil they thonght the proper thing to
do was to wort for Congressmen and
the control of the Legislature, aud this
they could accomplish easier by not
putting up a State ticket. Once the
dfcnernl Assembly was in their power,
they could elect a United States Sena
tor, which would be Worth more to
them than all the State offices com
bined. - *
The resolutions were voted down by
a vote of 69 to 85.
The Committee on Platform and
ReAolutlons, desiring to finish their de
liberations, at J:45 h recess until half-
bast 4 was taken fn orderto allow them
time to prepare a full report.
At the appointed hour tho conten
tion reassembled, and the members
having said all that they desired to be
kept from the outer world, a motion
was made and adopted to hold an open
session.
The Committee on Platform and
Resolutions submitted their report.
Swalls proceeded to road the plat-
orm, which was listened to with the
closest attention and vociferously ap
plauded elevCral tlmeff. It Is as follows:
i: The Republican party of the State
of South Carolina, in convention es-
aembled, believing that the principles
of equal civil aud political rights are
vital to the Interests of good govSrn-
meut, $nd that they can only be en-
’orced by the party which has engraft
ed them upon the State and national
obhstltations,' hereby reaffirm their
earnest adhesion to the plarferra and
principles adopted by the National Re
publican Convention at Cincinnati on
idle 16th day'of June, I87G.
2. We reiterate our abhorrence and
seating Republican members of the
General Assembly, so ns to Increase
their majority in the Legislature, and
especially tot depriving the seventeen
Republican representatives from Char
leston county of their scats to which
they bad been elected by om aix
thousand majority; ami wb«r elec
tions were held to lid these vacancies
in Charleston, Orangeburg, Beaufort,
Sumter and other counties for refusing
to give the Republicans apy-represep-
tatlon whatever on the'CommWsloners
of Elections or the Board of Mana
gers ; for the frauds committed In the
management of those elections, and
particularly for stealing six ballot-
boxes containing Republican majori
ties In the county of Sumter, and for
refusing to count the votes cast atotr-
talu products at pitch elections In
Beaufort and Orangeburg for alleged
irregularities on the j>art of tho man
agers appointed by themselves.
6. We arraign the Democratic party
for enacting at the last session of tho
General Assembly the law.whereby nu
merous voting precincts in. large Re
publican counties were abolished so
that thousands of Republican voters
are virtually disfranchised or else com
pelled to waKc twenty miles or morein^
order to vote, and in some places to
cross rivers in order to reach a polling
place. %_
7. While condemning the conduct of
all public officers who may have in
years post violated the ti iists confided
to them,,and while denouncing aH
fraudulent and dishonest practices, and
disclaiming any desire to shield any
individual proved to bo guilty of such
offences, we denounce the method by
which the Democratic party, through
manufactured testimony sought to in
culpate men whose only offence, was
their Republicanism, and we further
denounce the unfair nnd partisan char
acter of the recent legislative investi
gations in this State whereby the
frauds committed by Democrats have
been carefully screened from public
view and all testimony looking to their
exposure has been studiously sup
pressed. . _
8. We reaffirm the declaration made
from time to time that at the general
election held in this State on .the 7th
day of November, 1876, for Ereeidep-
tial electors, Governor and other State
officers not only were the Republican
Presidential electors duly chosen, but
that Daniel H. Chamberlain,, tocher
with the entire Republican State tick
et, were also elected by tho votes of a
majority of the qualified electors of
this State.
9. We deem It inexpedient to nomi
nate candidates for Governor and oth
er State officers,-beea use, offilng-taJLiLlt
condition of affairs in this State, occa
sioned by rifle club rule and two years
of Democratic supremacy, it is impos
sible for the Republican votere In many
counties, without Incurring great per
sonal danger, to organize for the cam
paign or to vote at the election when
held.
IP. We pledge ourselves to nsslst In
the work of purifying the public ser
vice, and we demand that the local Re
publican conventions throughout the
State, wherever they make nomina-
tioDB, shall nominate only such eandi-
dates as are recognized as men of in-
telllg&ice and integrity as well ns of
established devotion to the Republican
principles.
THE LAST or THE KAIXt—SIJOKT AND WEAHT
SESSION.
Friday was the third and laat day of
the Radical convention.
The body was called to Order about
10 a. m. by Bowen.
Mackey moved that the convention
go Into an election for chairmen of
each Congressional District and the
various counties; also, that a recess of
five minutes be taken lb order to.al
repudiation of 4U forms of violence,
intimidation or fradfrin the conduct of
elections, or for political purposes, andP 'low the several delegations to make
Mb*.-
denounce the same as a crime against
the liberty of American citizens as well
as the ootqtoon'ffght* Of humanity ;
and while we Insist upon and will zeal
ously guard the right of every citizen
freely tQ choose hW political party, and
deny the unfounded charge that the
Republican party countenances any
Interference with the colored voters
who may choope tp ‘vote the Demo-
.orotic ticket, we do protest against and
depounce the practice inaugurated in
the campaign Of 1876, and again re
vived in some counties by the Demo
cratic party,'of attending Republican
meetings and conventions, and by show
of force «nd other forms of intimida
tion disturbing each meetings, or tak
ing part therein without the consent
or invitation of ths party calling them.
3. We charge the Democratic party
with bring unfaithful to'the many
the Information of .thoee of the dete-
y obtalo.edjpkjlr jates, wbOr were not aware of the fact
far _|be system ps stated that the.committee bad its
treasurer, into Whose possession all
moneys for campaign- purposes were
placed for safe keeping. He Challenged
any mah to place bis flnger'on a single
instance in Ms lob? pplltiffeal life, and
particularly since his stewardship on
the'fcdftimittea, where he had defraud
ed the party or anybody of ft stfigle
penny. He had been told that some’
of their friends in distant States, de
siring to eld them in their struggles
during the exciting days of 1876, bad
sent funds down here to prlvatejndi-
viduals for this purpose, but these 1
never canje into the hands of the com,-
rpUtgje, and Consequently there was
pnfd could be no record ota the corp-
infttee’s books as to their reception, as
bad been whispered by several parties
was the case, during the past few days.
Tho committee, he said further, had
been unable to : ascertain where this
money went fd, but of one thirtg the
convention could bo assured, namely,
that it never wafe in the committee’s
hands. lie did not forgot to put in a
good word for R. B. Elliptt, the way he
bad dealt blows to the Democratic
party and had always been ready"and
able to defend himself against those
struck in return. Be concluded by re
questing that a committee be appoint
ed to examine the books of the" com
mittee for the past two years. ; :
The investigating committee was ap
pointed, and is composed of the fol
lowing "intelligent and honest” gentle
men : Samuel Lee, W. N. Taft, J. 8.
Fillebrown, June S. Mobley, T. E. Mil
ler. —...
A resolution was adopted thanking
the chairman and secretary for thetr
faithful services during the sessions,
when Washington, of Charleston,
moved for an adjournment, and, at
twenty minutes past 12, the Radical
pow-wor, after a season of disorderly
and disgusting proceedlngs.lvaa'ad
journed sine die, and the members im
mediately began making preparations
to go to their homes, from- whence we
hope and trust they will never again
be permitted to return and pollute our
legislative halls.
consumed twelve days at a cost of $3 50
per day, or $42 for the job. Twenty-
tlrg bushels of oats were sown on the
aim, .. ill... 111
Our OutOop.
[Nows and Oourict.]
Early in September, 1877, we began
sowing our oat crop. With twelve
ploughs, roost of the animals being poor
and feeble because they were the prop
erty of freedroen, who are not notorious
for having able plough animals, (each
plough-stock having on a sweep or short
shovel and a heel sweep, we entered a
cotton field ami began by running
two furrors to the row. Following the
ploughs vve had two men sowing oats at
the rate of one bnshcl and a half to the
acre, or a little heavier, as we sowed
foity-six bushels in twenty-eight acres.
The oats were covered bV a single furr-w
generally, and occaslonaly two furrows
behind tlVsawera. L’Ue in the after
noon of the second day we had 'the field
of twenty eight acres sown.'
Three of the plough animals were
jOn both these flields a beautiful stand
was secured;-the cotton firid looked as
if it had been drilled, and was .perfect in
the stand except in about foiir ace*,
where the oats were so thin on the ground
but for our faith in the grain we would
have ploughed up and sown over. The
Stubblefield was regularly covered before
the end of 1877. . u '
Tlie first week in February last the
twenty-eight'acres of cotton
ceived a top dressing pf twenty
hundred pounds of the Charleston super
phosphate, apd the fourteen acre stubble
field twelve-hundred ponhds of the same.
. These 3,GOO pounds cost ninety dol
lars delivered at the field and broadcasted
on the grain.
In less than a week the cfiect of manu
ring was perceptible. The four acres
mentioned above as being very thin ref
crivcd no fertilizer, nnd though growing
on the best land in the field, and having
started out so as to make beautiful oats,
the grain there never did equal that
grown in other portions of the field. m “'~
The last week in May the same cra
dling or htfl-veating force began reaping
tne oats in the stubble field, and in one
day and an hour of the second morning
they completed the job, remarking that
though the crop was an unusually heavy
one the harvesting was easily done, be
cause the land was so smoothc and the
grain so even in height. At the esti
mate made for the other fiejd, the cost of
harvesting these fourteen acres was^
$11 75.
As soon as the grass in our summer
orops was sufficiently conquered to en
able us to take time to haul up the grain,,
one wagon Th-nvm by three mules antj
one drawn bytwo herses, accompanied
by four men and five women, entered the
grain fields, and in two days and, a half
had those two fields cleared of their
shocks, and the grain securely packed
away under shelter, .
The three Tuttle wagon with two men
I
wc valued at S4 per day, or $10 for
hauling in the grain. 'The two horse
wagon and two men at $3 per day, or
$7 50. To the five women we paid
$2 50 per day, or $0 25 for tlie job, aud
they fed themselves. Thus hauling np
the grain and housing it cost $23 75
On the 22d J ulv a neighbor came
with jtis engine and thresher aud thteshed
‘outcrop of small grain. From these
two fields he threshed thirteen hundred
bushels of as heavy oats as we have ever
raised. In a vacant house we had
packed away every filth load to keep ffir
winter feeding,, and Ibis w6 did* not
thresh. We fed warranted *in Saying
that house contained over three hundred
bushels, and are assured, that sixteen
Down go Hi
A.
Williston, South Carolina,
. ’Leader of l/iw Prices in Barnwell County,
ffr"' ~ >*»•
nc guarantees great uargajua ih —»
Shoes, Clothing, Glassware, Crockery-.were, Tobacco and anything else
needed by people to rftake them happy and comfortable; Two store^L-
seven salesman—hard-pan prices and a wide-awake merchant.
augl 5-3in . i ^ 1 .. ■■■ •'
"t. s. nipson.
J. C. UAHMING.
ITipsoii & Hahming,
*
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Is-
Boots and Shoes, Trunks, Bags, Etc.
r ■« - r - •/ •• . „ c_' V
p3 King Street; Near Market Street, Charleston, S- C,
. ' ' ; H
Particular attefltiQnjnvcn to filling of Qrdcrs, and all Goods guaranteed as rep
resented. . ........ -b -• i-;~~ - ■ augl5-6m
i ■ 11 11
New Goods!
JAM NO AT RECEIVING A FRESH STOCK
of Gootle, eousleUnit of
Dry Good?,
Hoots and Shoes,
Hardware,
Groceries,
Oroekery-Ware.
Machine Oil..
Kerosene Oil,
Neat Afoot Oil,
Turnip Seed,
BatfRlng aud Ties.
-hundred bushels i$ an-aumunt lesa Jjiau--5L^..;'I akj£
for ward am
their selections. Adopted
Fred Nix, Jr., was elected County
Chairman of Barnwell county.
A motion was adopted empowering
the executive committecd of those
counties not represented In the con
vention to elect their several chair-
(bet).
Bowen here read tlie report of the
floance com mil tee, showing the total
amount collected tc defray expenses of
very feeble, and were not equal to more
than one first rate mule. The oats
were hauled half mile to the field by
one of tlie mules in a one horse wagon as
they were needed. These hands were
paid one dollar and a quarter per day lor
each with his own plough and mule, and
they fed themselves. Tho sowers were
paid sixty-two aud a half cents each per
day. So that the labor of sowing, those
twenty-eight acres cost us $16 25 per
day, or $32 5 0. nearly all of which -
might have been saved had we sown the
oats when we laid by the cotton, which
we were, however, not prepared to do.
Last March the 'cotton stalks were
knocked down, for which we paid $10.
On the 20th May, v*e began cutting
these oats, and in two days-ami a half
with four cradles, four binders, one shock
er, one hand to pile the sheaves for the
'shocker and one girl to carry water, the
crop was harvested. The crad'ers were
paid each $1 25 per day ; binders 62*1-2
cents; shocker* and assistant 75 dents
each, ar.d water carrier 40 cents. TTe
fed the entire party at a cost of $1 25
per day. Hence laivesting the crop
cost os $10 65 per day, or $26 62 for
the two and a half days. There were
many stumps and piles of small stones
in this field that made the harvesting a
tedious job, and of course was not as .
perfectly done os if the fitdd had been
- ■'V
must deduct
the quantity burvestei from th -se, two
fields.
From this amount wc
the seed sown 68 bushels, and also the
toll, 118 bushels, for our frieud threshed
for otic eleventh, and fed his bauds.'
Thus taking 18.6 bushels from 1,600,
and we have left 1,414 bushels of very
heavy oats from the-e two fields, aggre
gating 42 acres, or 32 2-3 bushels pet-
acre, net. The gross yicl(5 was almost
exactly 39 bushels per acre.
As rapidly as threshed wc had the
shelled oats put away safely, and secure
ly penned or housed all the straw, and
to do this we had to hire extra help,
amounting to $7; but this included the
hands who were hired to assist in hous
ing the s’raw bfbver 300 bushels of
spring oats, liamTing 135 bushels erf
whoa*, and rlearjugup after threshing;
and $2 of this was paid in chaff and
straw to hands that wanted'such food for
their cow*. ' .
To recspitulotc then, we make the
1,414 bushels of fall oats that we have
housed, (300 in the. sheaf and 1,114
threshed) ebst us as follows
Ploughing and sowing the cot
ton field $ 32 50
Knocking down cotton stalks.... 10 00
Hnrvestlog this field
Ploughing and sowing the four-
, teen acre stubble field
Fertilizer Scattered on Doth
fields
Harvesting the fourteen- acre
field•. «........•
Hauling up and bousing the
CFO•••»•••
Extra help while threshing....
sf 1
15 C2
42 00
90 00
11 75
23 75
5 00
the three days’ session to be $13.54, ofa ,i the90 hindrances.
Advocatk.— pledges and promisee made during the
rfa pfaciog the
to en our the legislation dfttte last General A*= *- Elliott was here permitted to take
aodisto ofthls
le ifa retqfo to
map-
the
it Its
In
campaign of 1876 as demonstrated by Saltern in this State.
which amount bad been expended for J
salaries of doorkeepers, messengers,
stationery, ice, etc. One cannot but
admire such great economy. It is in
deed wonderful how closely they must
have figured in order to furnish so
many supplies and conveniences to so
large a body for such a small snooont,
and they are entitled to tbe medal for
having held the most economical con
vention known in Jthe history of Kadi-
The lost week in'Scpfember, 1877,
we hitched four mules to a Holbrook
hillside turning plough, and began turn
ing under a fourteen acre stubble field of
old, red sliff clay land, upon which there
was neither stump nor a stone^ but a
fair crop of rag weeds and crab gras?,
The land is almost level, having a slight
northern depression. 'The Holbrook
plough is not unusually heavy, but
sembly, tho journals of whloh show
that Ute only pledgee redeemed wore
those Tor which too entire Republican
vote of'both branches of the Legisla
ture wore cant.
epar-
|and intiml-
duriog the general
the
the floor, and sold that he only desired
to dboOfor the purpose of Oorrecting
some false rumors. Be had heard that
there were tdurtuurlnge in the camp
about some llttie ntrisapprcprlaUen of
fuuds wbich had cotpe into the posses
sion of the State Executive Commit
tee, *&d some* dissatisfaction was felt
bedtfuse, si chairman of
be was suspected of
vmild hire been • bir fo, thr^ -hen « w<!« MjWjbat .,
are out of pocket one hundred dollar*
for the entire crop, beside the amount
paid (of the fertilizer, for the bulk of the
work or harvesting and hauling np was
done by hand* we_ had birr d
mules. Our mules were light and hot
in first rate condition, but they easily
turned a furrow averaging six inches
deep, .nd arfioo .lo Ul , . .
biding tot ,at,.(.ctordj tl« gtm, ^ wbom £ vMh .„ pKl ^
I * v ~ |p
Every'third morning the ploughed
land was sown in tod oats, one bushel
and a half per nope, and covered by a
pole drag Jrawn by the same team, leav-
ft
or a total of $241 00
If we value the straw at nothing these
oats cost ns,' securely housed, just a frac
tion over seventeen cents per busbol. If
three bushels are worth as mnch for
feeding purposes as two bushels of cor a,
this is growing corn at twenty-six cents
per bushel.
We measured up twenty-five bushels
of these oats, arid they weighed just
twenty.seven bu-bels' at thirty- two
pnotkhj to the bushel. ~ 4 .-
- We litre estimated this crop an if it
bad been bought and paid for in cash;
st iat
Toossbleh I Invite the attention of the
>e<yfle of I tarn well and Orangeburg coon-
i*f. I will guarantee v'» sell as cheap as
hegoodgejm be sold-for oesh. ^
"‘YourpifCronaga is respectfully soTieUetA
G. E. STEADMaN, Agent, —
BLACKVILLE, S. O.
auartS-tf
~LOCRIIART “& HflC&HAM,
tileal Estate .AerentfS.
■ AUGUSTA; GEORGIA.,
W j Martin.
f i
A Htoi ne,
Mrs. E A Wise,
C R Hart zog.
t Kritsyj
8 • rywn,
Fst. h / Reed,
3 V Bnxlej
RUhaid.
HSFivkling,
J I) Easley,
W 8 H I'ruoicr,
Ann A Ray,
L Robinson/' J
rt E Steadman,
w Whaley. -
Mis 1 * O C Hart,
M Keeler,
ODyches. .y .
- .Four Mile Township .
Joseph Ashley. Mrs K X Addison,
Mrs. Amandam Bush, Mrs. E J Boyd,
Mrs. O HBnsh, , . Mrs. Eugene Dunbar,
W Rt’arkor, ^ ' Jas, ft BuriL. , ^
Wra. Newman, agent, rv McElhenny,,
mis. Jt E Wilson, Miss 8 N Ross.
Andrew Chisolm, Rof- rt Turner,
Mrs.(’A r.Wsh. GW Bhsti, _
Mrs Tnlla A Hotrr, Wm. Newman,
“hilpwk, - W -f W
Sycanore lAwnship
■persons having lands for sale in Bun);
jr y
well county will do well to correspond
with the above firm, or 8. N. Gkkhk, at
Williston. ‘ augl5-tf
DKNTIttTllY.
H. ALEXANDER, BiV l>. S.
COLUMBIA. N.c;.
Will ^Isit Blackvlfle and Barnwell
professioually about tbe Istof October
aagl r -tf
R. M. Alexander,
-m i t • > -t-'fc tV torn a ix wan
Alerchandisel Idroker- wFPat.rtrqr.
- . F. 1* NePev.
173 EAST HAT STREET,
i
Charleston, South Carolina..
k^rCortsignirieuts Solicited.
Prompt llcturns Made.
n'inri Vtf
Nuke lo Dtbiors asil Crolt^rs.
t s
ALL persons IrwleMedAo-the e-tate ot
t Kr Iitix.ii will pi^us-. oiu.)
.tieflPT Tribed'to wnothrae
rotate is lots btbd wUl present their claims
duty ;tttwt»*<ttn *'.-trrr
JAMES LUIZ, ..dmlntetrittor.
AugS-lt • *'»
R.) «e«!a nallev,
' i Brabham,
G V\' B ai.L
Qoo. bus**— ‘ •
F A H i ter,
M’s R S I.ipscy,
Ad Am All,
H 8 n irker.
j M Brat>ham, Sr. 4 ,
H W Deer. >—
O B Harden,
jD/enov,
j J LosdJuitt,.
Wm. Prlesrer, y
^ C Wlllrtme,
Mrs. H S Borsinger,
j m Dkv r.
* W
jj Young.-
. Bgmberg Township
j.m •• (’ Myrich,
Willi,
W b Williams,
j M Mien
Charley jtrant,
H W Harter,
itil's i oadholt.
JK Borns.
Mrs m F. Holman,
AV m K-ish.
MrsE F. Cos,
j I j Ploe,
CHRiee.
Mrs. M A Smith.
M-s. P L Weeks,
Mrs A H Waiver,
F M Dowling,
G P B.mberg.
Mrs Sarnh Inablnett,
MB ..dman.
Guess.
ia
y.
i 'fi steudman,
> W D“
M R Hilny. goardlan,
Klit-l
4
Mi“S K A
H M Faust,
M vry K !>».
Jtjtartla
W j Terryl>erry,
I ■- nsstbi’rg,
J G Guess.
Mrs. P Bamberg,
K Lehman,,
win. B■ rnes,
' Mrs L.H. Browning,
Flslt Tond Township.
w J Fnglsod, ixrs. Fund) Byrd.
E R Hne hos, K S Ch unih,
jN’ Huirhea, j.ia, 11 Mey.
lywis Neal. AwWniolm,
urs Susannah Rayson Eft. D-Vld Steely,
4 F stokes.Mrs. M w Stokes,
Jefferson ytokes. ; ™ ^
Three TLUe Thwwshla.
C Eliharujv
o n'shon.
m i; Yarn Jr. itro. ,,.
(irorges Creek Township. ^
A r Bfevlls, ccj8u-h.
Kst. J is.-Sanders,- Mrs 1 stharlne Zorn,
.j* Z’in., E l Eubanks,
JiuU Lubanhs.
4
A rniToK's Office, B. O. I
Dr.ACKVlLIiE, ». U, Aug. iJ, 1S78. |
The assoesiueut of tt^e following names
of pci sot s having lioep rnlaudAhe Foard
of Equalization will meet to hCtfr grievan
ces at this office on Monday^the mirinst.,
at n oYlbc-k a. ra. ar.d rerualn In session
from day to day,,until all cases are dis
posed of. ; , .
j\. llemtoJe.
51D Fitts, Franklin Bess,
il L Kean, 8 P iluner, Jr.
T O Law tod, 4 8 Ulxsou,
Alice Robinson, Mis (>M 8a dors,
S D Htoney. trustee, F M Young,
5lt s A6n II llay ( Mrs U (J Hlers.
T 8 Moyers, - -. Mrs Rena Sanders,
Ur.ldook.
E H Rennett 1N Walker,
Mrs J It F-stes, W J Brooks.
W A Martin * • Mrs 518 Johnson,
J S Oswald,- i EH Oswald,
E II Feeples, sr. K H Walker,
XStxrnwoll. v .
Billy Allen. W Pjind d H Plume,
Martin Allman W 8 Dick,
B H Buxley, ’ El'za Hair,
James I"tz, G K Bert;
AR>ert Nix. DTI Brown, ^
JaPatterson, Agt. Wm. Dunean,
C Dechraann, Hinton Allen,
J.I VV'eisslnger, C E Ashley, ,
Elizabeth Nix, 8“A Hair, l ",
E W Peacock, WCMathevra,
T C Pender, 8 M Youngblood,
JHBIrt. 8 Brown,
Mra A EHagood Mrs EG Hagood,
DSHnfr ‘ WJHal-,
W J Mixson, W H Ogden,
J A Peacock, -~y 8 W Tyottl.
Hull Pond.
Mr« K5f Addison, J J Brown.
williston Township. »
Mrs I, H Brown, * E*t. Jolta (jnthntan,
EGrimes.
Mrs N Hair,.
5lrs M P H-iiwe)',
J jr Hair,
MiwE A ttnyden,
R Hutiion.
W H Kennedy^
Solomon Lee,
J 8 Mniheivs,
8 S Owen*.
MarthaS Smith,
J T Smith.
A 8 Stanrrll, .
11 M Thompson,,
A M Weithembee,
WeatherstteeA others, M WilUa,
^ B Woodhctry. w w Willis,
HMWilfis, "
• Great Cypress Township
Jm w Fnnninr.
R»t M D HornmeB,
Z T //utson,
Henry I.ard,
Ann E .Mathews,
W l! McDonald,
8^ Owens,'trust**,
W M Smith,
B O StansclU
Thomas Stanseti,
l B Tool,
A J Weathersb**,
*
■
J B Boylstoa,
IF H Borenton,
DOBrr'dly.
J J Croddorir,
w M Davis,
Robert Hanlon,
■Jt A Harrison,
T E IlQIg. ^
H if JxlcoaJ,
— ti
H’M BoyenUn,
J B Brabham,
ZJ Carter,
IF IF DaTta,
M A Harden, b, .
A* R Harley,
Henrietta Hat*!,
iFRHoa
B .1 Morris, sr.
hi*
Mrs A S Bellinger Adam Bishopp,
W M Bostick,
B H Brown,
Ooftti *
Wm. Bos'iek, Ir.
per Coon,
JD Erwin, jx.
Gray Bros.
Joseph Erwin,
Mrs Ml
E B Kirkland,
Mias J A Lufitto,
Mrs P 8 W done,
Mrs. 51 U Martld,
J D Erwin, ex.
J J Grayr
8 Flowers,
JPGray,
J N LSKtte,
B W Ijtwton, agent,
Mrs Anna Ji Maner,
A W Owens,
J C Smart,
MrsJC Brown,
j <i uravr J B Best, agent, -
Mrs IIS Killlngsvrorth Mrs s M Lawton,
W D Dobs’in, W E Martin.
MraE EMlmnjs. ’ '
Ttosemaiegand Richtond. i
G WBrum, NPowelL
Wiley Bush. FsL B Buckhalter,
Wm. Diokg, • ; WG. Dicks,
Jno.J Green, / Judson Green,
Miss Bell Htekoon, WBlghtower,
Jho A KHUngsworth, Glover Moore, < .
1) H Owen, Edward Patteison,
Eli Myrick,
MraiE/fee<t,
mt ami,
HTUmer, • r
-Eet, Angus IFilliam*
Midway Township
fa
J F Buist, hi A Burk,
J L> Carter, Nt 'riden,
G H r Folk,
Mrs L GHsioger,
H H Jennings.
If FrPatrinY,
Est J J SandorCsr,
C Smith,
Georgetta Siecdly.
elior Rodger* & Co., *t1
AifiSMwe, ^ *
Ephany l lmsr.
Hansford WHHasie,
J E Ue, .
MVs M .S Hfigh**,
W H Morris,
Ea t M C Aoacb,
B N Sroilh.
Geo w Asmoke,
■
j
Bennett Springs Township,
MrdB RTlIllncliaflt. Z L Ttmier,
Mrs R J Weatlierebeo MrsM A WilHe, .
B Anderson,
Joseph Ashlar,
B M Darlington,
T Jbiock3|~
EUulBrown^
Mrs A & George,
I*rts!on Harley,
H C Haiqwr,
Win Harper,
ty IT Halett,
we mads the calculation upkm'a
basis just to show what can he done in | Mrs
the way of planting red oats. And • we j v- fcra }(
know we have foil valuation in the <*ti *
mate of labor and feeding. We know
I who have done better on a
Mi
B W Wenthersliee; agt James Dicks,
Mrs M Drummond, l awrenee Green,
hist J J Holland, W m Moore,
John J Beady. , - M O Wall,
The land of SIM. nnnyHafrwas divided
part to estate of E. Woodward. -
Xled Oak Township.
Jas. Dicks,
H D Andereon,
J J Cameron,
C J Davis.
W W Hsrle
cy.
slham.
J J Aaron, trustee,
K {’ Anderson, - ’
M C Cook,
Ed. DoS. ‘ -
J G Holly,* •
J^MJ^wis,
_ Aaron,
J F Crawley,
But
money E* Boo
W F Hohwes.
iountrw*.
M Parker,
fi Btown,
WHj
Irs. Ml
Mrs M B Aaron
R J Barker.
Mary Berry,
M Black,
IFA Dicks, •
G P Dunbar, ’ ,
E A Furs, '
Mrs Ally Dunbar,
IFm P Dunbar,
51rs A M Ingram,
Mrs J F Holly,
Mrs James Aountree,
John Aozier,, _ -
IFm Aounlree,
G wMoralLi- >
Hercules fiingleten,
J 11 AllifKHiingsworth, Tltoa
Bufords Bridge To
T J2 Ayer,
Mrs J E Counts, J J 1*
A C Free, v A P
LB Awls, It U Aice,
MrsM A KeWrell.
'-A
J«!j*on /I’mmfree,
C Lifouatree,
■
•lames Morgan,
Mary A Aoumree. ?'
Lst Jobs
Joseph
I ooafosiirti, I w*