THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, 8. C., JUNE 3, 1807. 'r 11 rc >oicw. selves, and wo standing idly by wateh- , ing all this and not rendering them $i.oo per Year. rUBUSHED EVERY THURSDAY BY ED. H. DeCAMP. Editor. any assistance. It is a disgrace to us and doesn’t resemble in any way the patriotism of a true South Carolinian We should honor them and try to make the last few days they have on ,, T . . ! this earth as pleasant and as happy Ihe Ledger is not responsible for ‘ . ^ the views of correspondents. U8 possible. W o never \ n ^ ' j Correspondents who do not contri- things seriously enough. We should bate regular news letters must fur- a )| p U n together and see that they ! •'.ish their name, not for publication, ,, re (reRtec j May their names DIVISION FENCES. Sheaply and EflVctiv«dy filed In Ohio For IMvhUi.i; Pastnres. Waldo F. Brown, one of Ohio’s pro gressive farmers, bedieves that it adds greatly to the value of a pasture to di vide it into three parts. By this plan he changes the cows each week, so that they will go on a fresh pasture each Holiday, and each lot will have two weeks to grow for one week to bo grazed. It is made to appear that these I but for identification. Write short letters and to the point to insure publication ; also endeavor to get them to the office by Tuesday. Ml correspondence should be ad dressed to Ed. H. DeCamp, Manager. Obituaries will be published at five cents a line. Cards of thanks will bo published it one cent a word CHIVALRY AND MATRIMONY. Tlmn Honor, d h’ntton* of Olden I>.iy» Whleli Don't Stand the Tct. We all want to consider the days of chivalry as the golden days—never to be recalled—for womankind. This is by implication a rank injustice to our own time. \S ith all its fine expressions of ardent devotion to the fair sex and the multi tude of its exquisite pretensions, chival ry was the degradation of the highest ' and tcuderest human instincts—the ver itable curse of the course of true love. i division fences can be made very cheap be honored as highly in JIea\en as a j y Following is an illustrated descrip- ! Such a statement presents itself to the true patriot Honors them here on tion, originally subniiti d by Mr. Brown | romantic believer as a terrible eouuter- eartli. and may they all receive their to Country Gentleman: rewards there for all that we can pos- We make division fences with flue sibly do will never pay the debt we plain wires—one a ribbon wire to show, owe them. The appointment of Gen. McLaitrin Reading m Uces will bo published by Gov. Ellerbe as Senator until one it ten cents a line each insertion. COWPENS BATTLE FIELD. Every reader of The Ledger is aware of the fact that Cowpens Bat tle Ground is in Cherokee county. To many however, this fact means nothing, and the meaning of Cow pens conveys nothing but the remom- berance of our old pine field, and the remains of a demolished monument. Few indeed are they who have taken is elected next January by The Gen eral Assembly, meets with approval in this section Mr. McLaurin is the acknowledged lea:ierof tiie South Car olina delegation in Congress and will be a strong man in the coming pri mary—and lie insists on one.—for the so that they will not run into it, and witli posts (to feet apart. We stretch these wires perfectly tight with a ratch et, made to be used with a common Webbing Factory in Charlotte. A. C. Summerville is building a I factory in Charlotte, X. C., for the | purpose of manufacturing tapes, hraid. back bands, plow gears, etc. The building is 60x125. and will co.i- I tain 12 cards and spinning machinery to prepare the yarns for the braiding machinery. The whole outfit is pur chased second hand, mostly we are told, from the Pearce, Atkins .fc Co., factory, the machinery of Cincinnati, (>.. which was advertised a; assignee's sale in the Textile Excelsior, - * . .i— Cotton Mills in Gaston Co., N. C. The Gastonia Gazette publishes a ta ble of the 21 cotton mills in that coun ty. At Kings Mtn., the mills there all seem to be in Gaston county ex blast, but it is true, nevertheless. The reeortis of the treasury and the law courts of those days, in furnishing the expi rieuoe of popular life deeply marked by the worst shades of modern short- j cept the Enterprise. By this show- comings, provide the fullest proof. Chivalry did not make marriages, at least in the sense of those bon: of love's monkey wrench, and then staple a light young dream; it entirely ignored all paling—1' j inches thick and J inches wide—every 10 feet. This keeps tl.« cows from spreading the wires apart and crawling through. These ratcln ts cost hut 10 cents each and give perfect control of the wires, as with a wrench you can at any time take up the slack in a wire, and on level land a wire from Wi: learn from the Textile Excel sior that there is a great demand for knitting yarns and that most of the upon themselves the trouble touelu m j||sj mrt iij n g 8 u C h yarns are declar- in to the pages of history and Hnd j n g 0 n an average a 20 per cent, divi- out all that “Cowpens” means. The j younger generation are content to enjoy the blessings of liberty without nomination to fill out the unexpired 50 to SO rods long can lie stretched. term of the lamented Earle. j In this , f u 1 C0 ** l inst * , | must be set deep and thoroughly braced, and then the staples used on the posts Jrl enquiring as to how they were pur chased. To their mind t*m word Cow pens carries no vision of war with all its hardships and horrors. To our older citizens war has been a stern reality, it is sufficient for them to re call their own experiences, and those of their comrades, without turning back an hundred years and investi gating the hardships of their fore- over the State, father’s. If the name of Spotsyl- | vunia or Gettysburg is mentioned to ; an old soldier, what a rattle ot small ; arms, what a roar of cannon is brought to his ear, what a vision of charging troops, of falling men, what conceive and blood comes to his dend and in some instances as high as mcch 40 per cent. Let some enter prising men erect such a paying enterprise at Gaffney. A. B. Williams, now of New York, had an interesting letter in The Greenville News last Friday. Mr. Williams is one of the best writers that ever pushed the pencil in South Carolina and whatever eminates from him is always read with interest all Judge Simontox in his decision in the Yandecock Case knocks the bot tom out of the Dispensary Law. Any i body can buy, anybody can sell in original packages. of carnage Military Company for Gaffney. mind, but Cowpens means not lung i Gaffney’s military company was now but an old field. An hundred organized on the evening of the 28th years u^o Cowpens meant to the then j of May wit h 38 members. The meet- living what Bull Bun or Gettysburg 1 ing was caHed to order and Veteran , ,, . , Capt. D. A. Ihomas was made chair- means to-day. It was a spoc where man amJ J{oyd L Humes Secretary. some brother, father or husband, laid ! ']'he company was regularly organi- S WvuHrM *■' 4 I '/A 1 !* Vt4 S' ■■ . . ; ' v '■ ■■ - DIVISIOX T LXCK FOR PASTURE, must not ho driven so as to hold the wire close, but left so that they will i play back and forth, but on the palings the staph s must be driven tight. The best plan of bracing the cud pests which I have < ver found is an iron rear brace, as shown in the engraving. Br D the brace, B B the !>olts, M S the mudsill, to which the lower end of the brace is bolted. The upper end is bolted to the post P. We make the braces of old wag on tires and us? half inch bolts. W W W W W are the wires. The advantage of rear bracing is that the strain of the wires pulls the post down instead of lifting it up, us is the ease with a prop front brace. down his life in defense of his home. , It was the spot where u sturdy bund of patriots stood with Spartan cour age and resisted the onslaught of an invading foo. II was the spot where the bravery of our forefathers was demonstrated to the world. It was the spot where the British first met defeat south of the Potomac. Here it was that oppression of bloody Turleton was brought to an end and the right of .South Carolinians to the name of freemen established at the point of the bayonet. It was one of the most decisive battles of the Revo lution south, and the beginning of u series of victories that freed the zed and the following offi cers elected Jas. B. Bell, Captain. Ed L. Eison, 1st. Lieutenant. Nathan II. Littlejohn, 2nd. Lieu. H. Fay Gaffney. 3rd. Lieu. B. D. Bates, Surgeon. Rev. C. E. Robertson, Chaplain. Thos. B. Butler, Atty. Spirited and favorable speeches were made by Cols.* Wnrdlaw and and Butler, Messrs. J. A. Carroll, Robert Gantt and others. The com pany will go right to work next Thursday night when they will choose a name for t he company. This is a good step for Gaffney and we are glad to see our young men coming out in this way. May the company be successful in all its un dertakings and make one of the I grandest companies ever organized South from the British and ultimate- in this or any other state. ly led to the acknowledgement of our indepcndencs. Cowpens was then held sacred. It had been baptised in the blood of patriots, and had witnessed the heroism and valor of the American freemen, as he stood barefooted and ragged, resisting op- An Enlargement. The Lockhart (S. C.) Cotton Mills j have issued the following notice for j a special meeting of ihe stockholders to he held on June i) at their office for the following purposes: 1st, T? consoler a proposition to in- ' .‘'^•'aSe the capital sL ek of said Lcek- presslott, and offering his life as a hart Mill from .fr»00,000 to $6o0,000. 2nd. To act upon a proposition to make the increased capital stock of „ . . , , $100,000 preferred stock and to fix was an nuiulrecl years . 1 . .... ... the terms and conditions upon winch not stop the desecration Sll ; d stock shall be issued and re- Vliy Ilte* Do Not Swarm. There are various reasons why boos do not swarm. Here are some of the rea sons Hpecill 'd by Kansas Farmer: In tho first place, it is well known that the common or black bees do not increase to such an extent under the tame conditions as do the Italian bees. Tho honey season has also much to do with it. during a scarcity of hon ey, bees will not increase so rapidly as if the honey flow was heavy. Also the size of the hive has much to do with the control of swarming. If abundance of room is given black kc .s for storage, they will seldom swarm at all, even in the best of honey seasons. Plenty of storage room has much to do in control ling the swarming of Italian bees, but they are more liable to swarm than blacks. It is very important to have beehives just the right size, even if they are made old box fashion. A very large hive will never produce good re sults anj* way you take it. Hives should be made sectional, and if at any time more room is needed add another section. The required size, as given in our standard works, is about 2,000 cubic inches. sexual affections and sold its victiu with ruthless indifference to all mutu ality. There were not two parties to its bar gains. There was only one, who was al ways the third of the group and the oik* interested, notin satisfying Ihe yearn ings of the impassioned, hut in a p'-eun- iary sense of tlx fir value. He was the vender and might be either king or baron. But whichever he was, he was the incarnation of unscrupulous power. The matrimonial transactions of chiv alry were mercenary. To them there were no “contracting parties” in tho shape of whispering lovers, ardent swains and coy maidens. On «ho other hand, there was but sullen indifference or hating compliance. Chivalry canted about its faith in women and the purity of its ewn motives, because it could not sing of love. It may be said that it so canted because it knew it must cant. It knew that/its marriages had not been made in heaven and of ethereal sentiment. They were coarsely bargain ed for. either in the king’s exchequer or in the open market place. Chivalry knew itself as a social falsity and the parent of lust. As a consequence the “lower orders” have had to give us the nomen clature of our love affairs. Chaucer, the very mirror of the era of chivalry, has typilit d lust with his master hand, but he lias no picture of the gratified tenderness of longing youth. In his sur roundings it was not suffered to exist. These surroundings had no terms to enumerate the ardent swains and coy maidens of rusticity. But if the aris tocracy can produce no one instance of the coy maiden, and the rustic sweet heart remains to mock the dubious fiancee, it has a wealth of the arts of diplomacy, and an inexhaustible list of the terms of intrigue. Chivalry gave ex pression to the word * ‘ niaitresse, ’ ’ which may have and had the funniest of mean ings.—New York Herald. ing the Gazette claims the honor for that county of being tho banner coun ty in the state as to the number of .spindles having lOo, 120, though. Al amance leads in number of looms. Mecklenburg county ranks second in number of spindles and Alamance third. . -• *- - — Stands at the Head. Aug. J. Bogel, the leading drffg- gist of Shreveport. La., says: “Dr. King's New Discovery is the only thing that cures my cough, and it is the best seller 1 have.” J. F. Camp bell. merchant of Safford, Ariz., writes: “Dr. King’s New Discovery is all that is claimed for it; it never fails, and is a sure cure for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds. I cannot say enough for its merits.” Dr. King’s New Discovery for Oomsump- tion, Coughs and Colds is not an ex periment. It lias been tried fora quarter of a century, and to-day stands at the head. It never disap points. Free trial bottles at DuPre Drug Co’s. If you are in need Of :t u r o.«l Mule. Horse. Itritiid new or seeoml- IniiUled llie.-^y :irxl Huruess. I will sell you tlie elie.'ipesi Hujory amt Harness you ever lioucht. li will nay you to confer with me before huyiir.v. I mean to sell (cash or good i)!‘i>< is.) j. o. snr.NcnR. POWDER Absolutely Pure Celebrated for its great h avenlnc stren-tli ami henlLlifulucss. Assures :h< food a-iinst alum ami all forms of i«ui Herat ion common to t he dies |» hrituds. Hovvi. H'.atm. Powm: Co.. N*kw y OHK Notes from Spring Hill. (Correspondence of The Lodger.) Si ring Hill, June L—Crops are fine in this section, both cotton and corn, and this being on Broad river, we will turn out a large lot of water melons. I never saw a better pros pect for watermelons in my life, both bottom and up-land patches. Wheat and fall oats are looking fine, but spring oats will not make much. Mrs. Myra Gaffney raised a gourd on her place last summer which had a handle 37 inches long. She has an old time coffee-pot of the resemblance of a tea-pot that is at least 12o years old. It was brought by her grand mother from Louisa C. II., Yu. Perhaps the many readers of The Ledger don’t know where Spring Hill is. and in case, I will just say that it is situated on Broad river about a quarter below the Southern railroad bridge, and it gets its name from the fact that there are about 9 or 10 springs gushing from the foot of one grand hill where no chills and fever can exist. More anon, Big Boy. — — i Wliy will you buy bitt'T. iiiiusoutingtonio when drove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic is u- picas- nut ns Lemon Syrup> Your druggist is au thorized to refund the money in every cast where it fails to cure. Notice of Charter. TltEASfKY IlKPAHTMEXT. OrncE or COMI*'UOI.I.HU OK TIIK CrtlHKXCY. V. ASHINUTON, I). C., April 3.H. J Y.’.oiur....-, Ly suiisiuetory «. "’ .I. nee pre sented to l he undersigned, it ha-, hei n made to appear that "The National Hank of tialf- Tfie State ol South Carolina.' By rut: Sechktauy ok Statk. I W hereas. » t hal los M. Smith, of (ialTney S. I’.; \V. II. Smith. \V. U. Hamrick. S. L. Cutting. “ K. S. Lipscomb. did. on the:>t h day of May. 1.-97. Me with the Soeretary of state a written declaration, signed by themselves, setting forth: First: The names and residences of the said petitioners to he as above given. Second: The name of the purposed cor poriition to he that of “The Mountain View Land Vo.” The principal pin.ee of tnislm-s will be Gaffney City. S. U. The general pur pose of tho corporation, and the nature of 1 he business it propose.-, to do. is 1 he buying, selling and improving real estate: quarry ing and mining marble granite and other minerals, owning and operating lime quar ries and kilns; building and operating rail roads of any and every description: and building and ope rat ing manufacturing pin nt s for t he mnnufuct lire of dot hs. t wine, roping aud such like from cotton, wooi and other material*; and t rocting and equiping and onerating mills for making eotton seed oil. grinding wheat, corn and ot her grains, sawing lumber, making bricks: and con structing and manufacturing water-works systems: and erecting and operating elec tric plants for .the generation of electricity for lights, power and other purposes: anil creel Ing and maintaining lines i f electric light wires, and the wires for i ! trie rail ways: and the building of machine shops for the xcoiufacture of all kin ! , if ma chinery and buying and selling merchandise; and tin- transaction of all business that |AfONDERFUL are the cures by llood^ Sarsaparilla, and yet they are simple and natural. JIood : s Sarsa parilla makes PURE BLOOD. Shingles! - Shingles! DRESSED LUMBER ! Sash, Doors, Blinds, Brackets, Mouldings, and All Kinds of Building Materials, For Sale at Lowest Cash Prices. No charge will he madetfor infor mation aa to amount required for building. Call on i L. BAKER. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. ncy.” in t he Town of Oaffnev. in t he County ! niay he connected v.ilh any of the above > . . * ‘ .i >• • * m . i . 11 1 •. i i i < i • i . » • ' i » . . - of t ’lierokee. and St ate of Sou Hi Carolina, has complied withal) the provisions of the Stat utes of the United States, required to be com plied with before ;iu association shall lie au thorized to commence the business of Hank ing; Now rilKHK.KOitr. I. .la: "s II. Eckels. Comp troller of tiie Currency, do hereby certify that "Tiie National Hunk of Gaffney.'’ in the Town of Gaffney, in tin* County of Cherokee, and in the State of SoutliCaroiina. isauthor- i/.cd to commence the nusiuos of Han king as provided in Section f ifty otc hundred and 1 sixty’ nine of the Revised Statutes of the United States. In testimony wueukok witness my hand and Seal of office tills Twenty-Eighth day of April, is'.i;. James 11. Eckels. Comptroller of the Currency. sacrifice on the altar of liberty. Why not make Cowpens to-day be what it was an hundred Why ago? of this sacred spot! Get tiie Govern- deemed, or converted into common ment that was established through the patriotism of the heroes at Cow pens to show its appreciation and pre serve Cowpens Buttle Ground as a fit monument to the valor of heroes, not of the General or officers, but the American freemen that fell on its bloody field. When we hear an old soldier like General John B. Gordon giving de scriptions of our terrible war of 1861, and of the many bloody battles fought by our gallant boys in gray, while suffering all the pangs of hunger and thirst, with ragged clothing and al most bare feet, struggling for their country’s rights, facing a foe nearly always double their number, and many times against decidedly worse stock of lite said mill. By order at/d resolutions of the directors. Jno. C. Clary, Pres, and Tre-as. Hcw’s This! \\V offer One ilumlrcd Dollar* Reward for any c.t*c of Catarrh that cannot ire cured by llall'* Catarrh Cure. ' 1\ J. CHEN Y & co.. Drops.. Toledo. O. We. tiie undersigned, have known E. J. Cheney for the last la years, am! believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by tlu ir firm. West iN Tit lax. Wholesale Druggists, To ledo. O. Wai.dixg. Kinnan & Mahvin, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. O. Haii’s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, iiellug dlrcetly upon tin blood and inueous stirfaeesof tho*ysteiu. I’rice TV. per bottle. Solti by all druggists. Testimonials free. BEST 11E ART-PI XE SHINGLES ment ioned enterprises. Third: '1 lie amount of capital stock to be four thousand live hundred dollars and tiie numhrr of shares into which t lie same is to lie divided to he ninety of tiie par value fifty dollars each. . Now. Therefore. 1. I), il. Tompkins. Secre tary of stale, by virtue of tin Ulit liol'lty ill me vested by an a d of the General Assem bly. entitled, "An act to provide for tiie formaiinn of certain e >r|ioratinrc . ami de fine tiie power* t hereof.” approved tiie ninth day of March. A. it. lS9ti. ho h rehy commis sion tiie above mimed a iioatd of corpora tors. and do hereby authorize : nd empower them to i.pen hooi.s of subscription to the caph stock of I he company put posed to he organized, as set forth in the above men tioned declaration. And I hereby require that said board of corporators *h:i!l give not less than one day’s previous notice by advertisement in a newspaper published In the county of Cherokee of tlie t ime an place when and where said hooks of subscription will lie open. Given under my hand and seal, t hi* tiie ^-tli day of May in thegyear of our Lord one thousand eight' hundred and ninety-seven, and tin-one hundred and twenty-first year of the independence of the Unit I States of Ameri.’a. [seal.] n. h. tomdkins. secretary of St ate. Hooks of subscription to tiie capital stock of above company will be opened on Friday. lock, at bunk of A. S’. rzenuoxi ahc mnb. CotiA’iturtl Sohoiu'.e i»f Dassee^sr Tralaat lu t.ffect M*jr •#, TStlJ. Kortiii)oiiii^ityl L'ally-i —I 12 . 6 2* p 7 usi> 7 Ti p 3 Osp 8 ;t:, pi 8 40 pi Pst.Att No. M Dally. “ f-'ea.jca “ Central ** Grecmrifirt... •* ripartauburff ■ (•raffnev* “ Bl:tc|c*1)urff .. “ King's Mt. .. ■' Gastonia.. Lv. Chnr'.utto. Ai Daiivillo . Pi’ a: “IheFoot Bonds,. ' of a Fly" savs an eminent English doctor, “will carry enough poison to intect a house hold.” Ri summer-time, more espec ially, disease germs fill the air, ma.ti- tudes are infected, fall ill, d:e ; multi tudes escape. These messengers of mischief do not exist for millions. Why not ? Because they are healthy and strong —protected as a crocodile is against gun shot. It is the weak, the wasted, the thin-blooded who fall; those who odds, it made our tears flow despite 1 have no resistive power so that a sudden cough or cold develops into graver disease. We hear of catching disease! Why not catch health ? We can do it by always maintaining our healthy weight. ScctHSmtilaieri* all our efforts to control our emotion. To think of our fathers, husbands, ; brothers and kinsmen, fighting des perately in such fierce battles while suffering sucli privation, and of the necessary rough treatment they were bound to receive in case they were ; killed or wounded, while their dear ones at home were constantly pray- j ing for their safety is enough to bring system to resist the attacks of disease, tears to the eyes of any man whoso; It should be taken in reasonable doses heart is not of stone. And then to all summer long by all those whose think of the rough life some of these weight is below the standardofhealth; same men have to live now on account j R you arc losing ground, try a bottle of their poverty, being too old to 0VT * notice. Fur Officers -.TuiH- iali.Kxvcutor*. Ad ministrator*’ iiml ontraeturs.at short At the very lowest prices. Apply Jum iitii. ish.tuHov 1 .v.” /.ir /-. i Woo I, Gail my. S. U. tit the olnce ol the Lime Co. 1Z« pi * 18 1 fit! p 4 •**. 2at piau 8 47 p ii Is 4p! , 4 47 ;»l 7 CS pi I & } •} P 1 j | 8 J) pi i- n40 p S 80 pi- 'll ?5 p 12 0.1 it). Ar. IHchmvtid ...! ii OX J (i 01' a!. Ar.W ashinv'ton.. I. •’ BHlf.ii’e PRR.!.. “ Phila.IHphift.; “ New York ...I.. It 50 ti ;*) 1 .< 2 » 2 47 8 4.i t 17 4 27 4 .Vi 5 O e r 7 Li 7 Y .* 8 20 «. ;m .. t; rj a'. ... 8 Oil a . . .10 lo a! . .|12 43 mi. I p II 40 p ..] 9 40 p ...111 8’> p ... 2 5‘j a ... 0 23 a 4. 22 .’n. R. O. SAMS. For Sale 1 Family Horse. 10 Share* Lockhart Uotwn Mill Stock. 3 Shares Klehlaiul Cotton Mill Stock. 2Sliares Victor Cotton Mill Stock. 50 Shares Limestone Springs Lime Co. stock Tiie Dr. Homes 8 room house with fine gar den.stuhlcs and out buildings iittuehvd, 5 room cottage on Limestone street. 8 room cottage on Gaines street, with splendid garden. 2 vacant lots on Gaines street. 1 splendid farm containing 101 acres 2!4 miles from Gaffney. 80-acre farm one mile from Gaffney. 1 house and 5 acres located at Limestone Springs. 2 nice lots opposite Chesterfield Scruggs. 1 new tl-roorn Cottage East Logan street. Real Estate bought, sold or transferred; lands surveyed and platted ; titles drawn ; signatures pro bated ; dowers taken, etc. OFFICE—Hotel building, near Cherokee Drug Co. Notice of Sale. Tiie State of South Carolina, Cherokee County, Soat hltound. / In Court Common ) Picas. of Cod-liver Oil, is condensed nourish- Ir)^]l VrjTir.P ! ment; food for the building up of the idL-. ai UH JU • work and make u living for them- For calo by all druggists a: 50c. and ti.a 1 represent none but the Life ami Accident Tnsur Am prepared to furnish cyclone and tor- iiimIo Insurmice at moderate cost. Your patronage will be duly appreciated 1T\ O . SStsicyr. 1. S. D. Jones. Plaintiff, against John F. Jones and A. it. Gautier, Defendants. B Y VIUTFE of a decree of foreclosure made.in the above entitled cause on the 7tl. day of October ivti. and amended on the istli day of May 1*'.<7. 1 will sell at public auc tion, to the highest bidder, nt Cherokee Court (louse. '*outh Carolina, on tiie 7t It «lay of June is'.i; (Salesday.) tlie fol lowing dyscrilied proper! v.locate.f a t Hlacks- hurg, S. t'.. to wit: The llouscand I»t Nortli of Cnertikec Inn lot. on Wliittaker avenue. Hounded north hv t>. K. & C. Railway cut. fronting on Wliittaker avenue; the House and Lot 011 Mouniain street, south-side for merly occupied by Pierson; the interest of .1. F. Jones, in the Gibson lot at tin North end of Mountain street, and next tothe Mar shall place; t lie lot nti New street lorinerly occupied l»y Knox; the lot occupied by Fer guson, the lot occujih d by WeUb, and tiie lot .M‘.*upled by Hlai.M-k; the last four lois and houses more fully described as follows: bounded S W. by the Hudasill lot. N o-or West. Iiy Whltta’..er uveiilie, N. E. by lands of Wlilsonaiit. Jarvis mid Jones. E. by New street, all situated in Blacksburg. Cherokee county. Soutl. Carolina. For a ful. descrlp- *tion reference Is had to si plat on h.e in mj offi.-e. Also, aii the furniture, fixtures, cur- pet. window hangings, kitchen furnlture. stoves, range, dining room furnii ure and fix tures silver, glass and other ware, lied* and bedding, parlor and silting rixmi sets, pic tures. Instruments. I««>k*. ornaments, sup plies for house and kitchen now used a* : lie furnishings, fixtures and hoti loutfitofihe Clierokee Inn. at Hlaeksliurg. X. t. Terms of Sale One-lialf i-asli. Iialance of the purchase money to lie paid in one year from .1 i*e of sale, secured by bond and tnort- ' ' witli Me . , , i,, , HMnuttHy. until the whole debt is paid, witli the lowest prices, by calling on u-nve totlie purcliaseror purcliasers at said A * sale, to pay all cash. Property to lie sold in sttelt pa reel* us 1 lie plaintiff may d l reel. Purchaser or purchasers to pay for all pa pers. J. Eb. JrrKK.iurs. clerk Court Ciimnion Pleas. N. W. narditt, IMulntlff's Attorney. May 17—3t t! DaiU.'l^'^; 4 .v i-;. p|. 2i» P| I. ill 43 pi.. J. 2 no a! 209 a! Sometliing New Under the Sun! Lv. I»a-,v'!!c .. 6 :fa p 5 .VI a 0 05 a| Ar ('Itprlotto .. lu u3 P ow M 1! L) a Lv. ttaslou!-; lu ») pi 1 loj> ’’ Kmc * Mr . . . 1 . . 1 85 p ....*•« ’• B'-i •’.•-inirg . 1! 32 p 10 A) 0 •2t.-’. p ,f tiHtf evy* h 17 P 2 2') p . *.••« “ Sp:>rr:inl>arg. 12 20 a ’ I 37 a 3 Us p •• (4r*s>neille.. . 1 JO a,J2 23 Pi 4 p|. .... •• Central *' Senega J Uo •J Jtl 11! 1 17> a! 1 33 p il F) l»j .CTTl P •' 4*) PI I-. •• Westminster .. .. >8 p Bnn. M . . . r: ij a 2 H P C3S p •• Mt. Airy . | 7 30 p 7 37. p 0 -j » “ Cometiu li3. a *• Lula 4 03 a 3 i t p 8 0S ji 6 37 a •• Gainesvil'e 4 35 ai 3 31 1>>S V» l» 7 *,*0 a " Bufonl .. - >I0: p 7 ti a '* Kontrosr.. . .. , !! 43 1) M 27 a Ar Atlanta, K.T. 0 10 a 4 55 p 10 30 p ii;i) a Ar. Ali.inta. G. T, 5 1U a 3 55 Ti USD p 8 :*i a ’’A'a. in. ••P” 1. HI. “M” noon ’’N” night. We have just put in a nice Refrigerator, ami hereafter you he best of Fire ! can get nice beef, cold as ice, at j ««-«• au«ii»r.'«.i*c,so: i. wj , 0 ’ | s p, r cent, interest from day of sale, payal ance< ompantes. , t • annually, until tlie whole ilehl i* paid, wi Clary & Kendrick. No*. 37itti‘1 38—D:uly. Washington unci South* w»-si<-rii Wstibul** L> 1 id tod. Through Pullmaa riewpiiig ears Imixvrou New York and Now Or* lea a*, via Witshiiiglou, Atiantii and M >ntgom* try. ••itnl nis« ImCwc-u N«*w V'>rk ar«l Memphis, rinWashiugton,At Inula anil Uinnin *huin. rirui c’a - tlioi-iuightiou loaclni* iielivo*:ii WaMiing* t«n ami Atlanta. Dint Of cars kfl « ail tin-alt •n route. No*. .35 and Jft-CnltcJ Staten Past Mail rnn* solid is-twen-. Wa-h ug-oa stI New Or- lenns. via Southern Rattway. A 4S W. P. Jl. K., and Ij ,tt N. K. K , ix-mir comismod of baggage oar ntul coacho*. through witliout ciiauge for pii»-!»-ng