University of South Carolina Libraries
A. Papci' fbt* tlie People; suBscuJi-Tiofr. OnerYe*r?..>.>,..;,,.-., #1 ?O Six Months.1 OO Ministers of the Gospel.1 OO j ^Flrdt IitBtrrtonrl>w square.1 OO T'aeh Subsequent Insertion............CO fiQF-Liberal contracts made for threo months and JonxvK.yerlods- i r i AH'.transient adrcrtisci'ientff must be paid for in ndvanci*. " ?iarrfujrti? and Notices of Doaths. not - maid*? mvvr one Fquare, Inserted free, -.mi' r.o?i?til. |0r > .* i r ??o? . 8Sr-*vW5 are not responsible for the views oflour Corresponpcnts. .. >,:'. A]i iWaftV,088donimunlcjitIons. Letters I for Publication, and Order.? for Subscrlp 'tlbn'.' *s well as nil Advertisements, I .wlietdd be addressed to H , HUER I DAN & SIMS. r 4 " 11 ' ? ' ?rnngcburg, S. C. ' t? ? i;t . /?, j ... ?_I j_, OitANOEtitJito, CM Jan. 24, 1879. ..'?vi ? Northern Humanity. ,j The, responsibilities of the duties ,pfd),uman life arc always modified by the, circumstances which surround (men?tlie state of society and the j light which they have to guide them hin their performance. The ruder the Tormcr and the more obscure the lat ter, the more excusable, are the irregularities and the less ?f crime in human conduct; on the other hand the more refined and cultivated the former and the more generally dif fused the latter j the less excusable ,and the greater criminality of human .conduct. Judging from theso modi fying conditions Of our actions wc .are. lead to conclude that people to be greatest both as individuals and public benefnclors wlio do the largest portion of public good according to .the stale of society in wlrcb they tuny be called upon to act. In the rude ages when light was but scant! ' ly distributed, every principle of gen uine vittue i e verted, and the human mind locked up in ignorance, the most superstitious man was the great est. Among barbarians where neith er law nor society is recognized, and virtue and morality are unknown, ?itip ' most cruel savage whoj wields the heaviest tomahawk, or! counts his noble deeds of daring by tlie' greatest number ,of Innocent scalps, and- wlVose savage heart de lights most? in the shrieks of ttra-dy ing or the stench of the dead, is the greatest". So in a land of fnedom and an age characterized by light and action?an age of science and art, of oivil and religions liberty, of popular education, and of common and geher " til improvement, that man is greatest, 1?nb, as a scholar, subdues the ele ' tncnts and'makes them subservient to human will; or as a citizen, plans and executes the best scheme to di minish crime and benefit civil socie ty : as an educator transforms the Tude ashlar in the brain of the child to the magnificent genius to direct States and bless his kind ; or as a re* ligionist,enihronee virtue in the hearts ' Of men and thus exalts his being and makes him answer to the great pur poses of his creation. Such an age is the nineteenth cen tury and such a land is essentially the United States of America. What are we to say, in the light of ' these propositions, of Northern Hu manity; when her education yields such a brute as A. Webster, a Profes sor at Philadelphia, who murders Parkman, and, to hide his savage crime, cuts the flesh from the bones and burns it; of its religion, which tolerates Henry Ward Beecher, of , Brooklyn, lauds the roan and magni fies imaginary virtues to obscure the enormity of his guilt; of its states manship, which conceives and exe cutes the Reconstruction Acts in the South whereby the intelligence of eight millions of American citizens is put' under the domination of the ignorance of four million African slaves for political purposes?to per petuate .the power of a party .which withont it is a failure ; of its civiliza tion, which hangs Benjamin Hunter in Camden, N. J., when in the act of dying?not only hangs him, but, in their brutal haste to execute the mur derous act, the ollicers of the law seize tho rope to which the weight is attached, pulling hard draw the body several feot in tho air and there hold it until strangulation ends the .unconscious man's life ; and of its hu manity, when socioty can brook the brutality of theso and other crimes without making a single successful effort to prevent them. The enormity of any one of these crimes is enough to damn an age ; but their multiplication assigns the people, though educated and profess edly refined, among whom they arc perpetrated, the highest position for savage brutality in human ?oetety. The question naturally\ arises: Who istoblnme? Is tho cause to bo fOuiirt'in any one element of their society,-of cdufeatiorf, of religion, or of the climated Is \V rtot the result of a corrupt Body, some of the limbs of which are healthy and sound though tho body be diseased ; or is it the mature fruit of n corrupt tree? Were such crimes committed at the South and particularly in South Carolina, a hundred news mongers or political capital gatherers of the Northern press would weave together as many fabrics ot shoddy morality and fjalso humanity to poison the heart of every good thinking mind in New England against the people of the South ; yet the brutality in ?enjninin Hunter's hanging finds ex pression only in a highly colored ar ticle of the New York Sun and other sheets.to pardon a vicious taste rath er than condemnatory of the act. Who does not therefore fear for Southern humanity when such a cor rupt clement has been engrafted upon it as that represented by the thousand carpet-baggers and political cmisarics who were busily engaged for eight or ten years sowing the seeds of North ern humanity in our Southern sow. Already we see its fruit among us in tho absolute impossibility of bringing corrupt Radical officials to justice, in the willingness of our pcoplo to for get and forgive the crimes of those who used every effort to slander and So plunder our citizens and to bring ruin upon our society, and in the doubtful propriety, to say tho least of it, in many of our leading Demo crats of pandering to lending Radi cals because of their support or of a questionable past connection with them. Such is the case in many of our counties . to day notwithstanding the monuments of Radical trickery are everywhere about us and express their guilt as plainly as the hand writing upon the wall. To keep our citizens pure, all the elements which make up a correct civil society must be fostered and cultivated by our people. Our schools must be taught and the chairs in colleges filled by our own educated young men that our youth, both white and colored, may be properly instructed and such ele ments cultivated as will give them a just conception of the relation they sustain to the State and to one an other. State Officers. Before the war. Presidential Elec tors wero elected 4c* the General As sembly of this Stale, so likewise were the Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, Judges and chiefs of State Depart ments, and never did a State enjoy a better government, or was blessed with officers of a higher order of tal ent and purity of character than South Carolina. Since the war the election of these officers has been sub mitted to the people, and with the change has been introduced a thous and and one evils to corrupt society and so vitiate the political life of our people. Not the least among them is the electioneering trickery which divides our citizens and keeps them divided, and which brings them in contact with the most corrupting in fluences known in the catalogue of political crime: deception, persecu tion, slander, bribery and even vul gaiity. Familiarity with which can not but corrupt the purest character. We do not desire to be charged with the imputation of fogyism but con fess wc would rejoice to see the good and time-honored modes of ante-bel lum days rc-instilulcd here, Ala bama has in part adopted them and shows her wisdom in doing it, not so much in freeing herself from Federal influence on election occasions, bu' in seeking to protect her citizezs from the corrupting influences incident to ex?iting general elections. In tliis State the Constitution provides otherwise, but every consideration of policy as well as principle points out the necessity of amendments to that instrument, and tho quicker those be made, the better for the honor of the State, the purity of her citizens and the prosperity of both. ?- a> Governor Hampton. A special dispatch to the News & Courier from Columbia, under date of January 22nd, says: "Governor Hampton to-day revisited tho State House for the first time since his ac cident. Ho sat for some tirao in his office, together with Governor Simp son, and was then called upon by the heads of departments and many othor gentlemen, who hastened to pay their respects upon hearing of his presence in town. He has not yet fully recov ered his strength, but is looking well, and is surely, if slowly, improving." Reduction. Owing to the general decline in the price of cotton and other produce, we have concluded Id put the price of aur paper down to ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS per annum, Llitis placing it within tho reach of all. Scud in your uatnea at once. Hampton* Cdtrrihouso. I The new Courthouse of Hnmpton 1 county is completed, and is said to , be a*'handsome, durable aud comforta- j lilo building, admirably n-dapted for i the purposes for widen* it is intended. Here is the beginning of what may bo an important town in that section of the State. In the wild woods and with all the rubbish of a low country forest about it there will be need of J all the energy and enterprise of years to build up a town with public build ings, streets, stores and dwellings commensurate with the respectability of the county and the honor of him whose services furnish the name. The Teller Committee. Washngton,'January 10.?Senators McDonald and Randolph left Wash ington to-night for Cbarlestan, S. C, weere they will replace Senators Gar land and Bailey upon the Teller Com mittee, which has been investigating alledgcd election frauds in Louisiana for ten days past. The two Senators first mentioned expect to meet the msjority of tbo sub-committee in Charleston on Tuesday. The South Carolina inquiry will probably not occupy more than two week's time at the most. The Democratic State Committee of South Carolina, in an ticipation of a visit from the Teller Committee, has paved the way for the fullest investigation of the recent elections. The names and addresses of persons of both po litical parties in charge of the poll ing places where disturbances are alleged to have occurrod and names of citizens of the highest respecta bility who witnessed the scenes at ! the polls will be given tbo committee and all that will be necessary to as certain the truth of the general char ges made by the Presidentjnnd Blainc will be to issue subpoenas. Senator MhDcnnld has in his possession the the names of some witnesses furnish ed by Senators Thurman aud Butler, who will bo subpoenaed to testify.? New York World. Reply to Farmer. Editors Orangeburg Democrat: The writer, a farmc, whose arti cle appeared iu the Democrat of January 3d, is mistaken as to the conclusions arrived at by the Agii cultural Society at their meeting on December 23d, 1878. I claim *to be a member of that body, and will say that we did not counsel, as your cor respondent Raid, to raise stock and provisions to pay debts and to plan t a side crop of cotton, but wc did advise the farmer (if mistaken I wish to by corrected by some biother mem ber) to raise plentifully everything needed for the real comfort and sub sistance of their families and benefit of their places, and then to make all the cotton possible to pay debts. Now, Mr. Farmer, you have the conclusion of the Society, as I un derstood it, in a nut-shell. I find it not so difficult to know what, to do to run a place success fully, as to know how to do it with the proper will, energy and tact to cnrry.it out. This last is the most important as well as most difficult part. Now, Mr. Editor, I will give you my views?why the advice of the Srciety is good and the manner in which it may be carried out, more or less successfully on a large, as well as a small scale. It is good because every article produced whether for profit or con sumption is low down and on a firm er foundation. Money and specula tion ure lower, and all we have to do in debt or out of debt, is to narrow down our habits and frugal wants to the times, and always make before wc spend or speculate. It can be carried out because I know instances, both on a small and a large scale, where it has been done with success evon with all the past extravuganco hanging around them ; yet, at the same time, I admit there are more failures than successes but the fault lies in the management. Your correspondent dees not seem to trust the Society in carrying out its counsels. We do not pretend to hold up to the country that we al ways work to the best advantage; I can cite the writer, however, to many men both out and in this so ciety, known to him, who have suc ceeded, but because one succeeds and two fails he condemns all as failures. Tho point, Mr. Editor, is not so much to make, but to use what is inado to advantage. Allow me to go back to 'GO when wo were left bankrupt by the war with every thing in confusion. From tha' period to'77 wo struggled un der the most infamous and destruc tive government on earth, yet we 8eo thousands of money and other values have passed through our peo ple's hands nud to-day, in 1879, the whole cry is poverty, want and ina bility to pay debts.* What is the cause of this st itc of things except, fjfroplyvo* Walto of our Urne,-?* waste oflabor and indulgences in social extravagance that blinded our senses and prevented us flroin laying* op for a rainy day. Wo cannot bring baok tbo past, 1 will bluntly say, tbereforo ic was our own fault?our want of a proper management* Debts were contracted when cotton was high and tbo money wasted. Some, yes many up to this time have not paid up and now cry out because cotton is down to 7 or 8 cents per pound : "We cannot pay debts." What strange inconsistency, I can take a balo of cotton at 8 cents per pound and buy more than when it soidl at IG cents. If one has the will, the energy and manages properly, I suy a moderate debt can be paid. I will suppose, or suggest, as an instance, a family of a working man with wife and three or four children paying a tax on real estate and personal property, and plantation necessaries worth $1,000 or $1,500, who has a debt of 8500 hanging over him. He wants to pay the interest, $100 on the principal, his laxes and support the family in a healthy, not extravagant, condition. Extravagance heretofore has swal lowed up the earning that should have gone to the payment of debts. To do this, he should immediately do away with ail luxuries, cut loose from all time killing and extravagant company outside of socicl neighborly business, si in id v because the interest of his family is dearer to him than anything else. He should hirejthrce hands beside himself at 860 each and ulUize.his and their time to advan tage, because time lost is money thrown away. Like the slow drip ping of water, it wears that away which can never be n placed. Tbel proper employment of time is the more necessary because careless and I speculative management brings on accidents that generally cause ex pense and often destroy the profits, Wiih this precaution, judicious man agement, hard work and ordinary lands.ami seasons, he should make twenty bales of cotton, four hundred pounds each, 250 bushels of corn, 601 of oats, peas, rice, chutfas, potatoes, fodder nnd turnips in proportion. This, I say would be an average crop. Now, Mr. Editor, let us see if he can clear expenses and meet his pay ments. On the debit side he has. Labori..,.8180 001 Manure..... 100 001 Family Expenses.,. 125 00 Wagon and Tools. 30 00 Picking Cotton. 25 00 Total.8460 00. On the credit side. Twenty Bales Cotton.8 640 00 Turnips, potatoes and butter... 20 00 Total made.8660 00 Expenses.8460 00 Clear Profits.$200 00 This amount of clear profits will more than meet his payments. Now, Mr. Editor, another great advantage such a man would have, is the sympathy of the who's commu nity, because every etTort of his shows a w llingness and promptness to pay up. But how, some will say, if he has uo horse or real estate of his own. Why, then he must rent and manage the same way. He must exercise greater patience and perse verance, economize more closely and time will work him right 4 times out of 6. "A Farmer" does not seem to have much faith in our Society carrying out its advice. He imagines every one is in the same fix, and that may be, but he knows that docs not justify him in his inconsistency. He writes as a member but I dont trink, if a paying member, he attends often enough to reap the benefits, and therefore hns go'ten himself into trouble with cotton down. If I know "A Farmer" and I think I do, ho should not to-day complain of one dollar's debt. He got in and stayed in by not managing as I have direc ted after it was made. He finds now there is no other chance but to mcke save and pay out, and will plant a both-side crop?right and left?to mako sure work. I trust he will succeed and be able soon to enjoy the pleasures of cash trade. Our people have become accus tomed to liens and advances, and have lost sight of the pleasure of a cash trade. A Memiikr of tub Agricultural Society. 1 like a good rainy day," said an idle boy, "too rainy to go to school, and just rainy enough logo afishing." A Justice of thu Peace at Red Wing Minnesota, had to knock a cul prit down with a chair to get him quiet to try him. Mr. Flogg says he was kuocked al most fiat the oilier day by suddenly reflecting that nearly all the pretty girls arc but incipient mothors-ia-law. SpeeaU Notice. Any person v ho will get ns up a Club* of Ten tJash Subscribers at 1.50 per annum will receive Tun Demo crat one year free. Go to work at once, and secure your Club. We know you can do it if you but half try. Send to this office for specimen co pies, whic!? will be furikksd on ap plication r Ifcl cirri? tl. At tho residence of the bride's father, on the 2d of Jannrny, 1879, by tho ltev. W. Q. Mack, Mr. John ltobinson to Mies Arabella North1, all of Orangeburg Coun ty, S. C On the 12th of January, 1%7B?, at tho residence of the bride's fattier, by the ltev. W. G. Mack, Mr. Joseph Hurley to Miss Anne lteed, all of Orangeburg County, !S. C. On the 16th of Jnnuory, 1879, at the residence of W . T. Fogle, by Kev. J. S. Hay den, Mr. D. 8. Fojflo, of ?ranjjcburg County, to Miss Hattie Collins, ol Barn well County. Ol>itw?ry. Diet! In Orangeburg Comity, S. C. January 10.1879, Vara G.f second daugh ter or b. C. and A. 0. ?toudentnlre, in her ninth year. Only three day* before her death Vara met and mingled In ehlldish glee with her young friends and companions at school, and shared in the happy days and joys, which are peculiar to ihr young, but suddenly she censed to come among us, "turned and sought her couch to lie down and die." Taught by pious parents from her in fancy to "do good and eschew evil," she exhibited, in u marked degree, many no ble trails, which go to make up true character; prominent among which were integrity of purpose, gentleness of dis position, and kindness toward those with whom she associated. Truly the ways of Providence are mysterious, in calling one to die, who promised so much. Yet wo bow in submission, and remember that "it is sweet in childhood to give back the spirit to its maker, ere the heart has growu familiar with the paths of sin, and sown to garner up its bitter fruit." To the afllicted parents there comes the consoling recollection that "She is not dead, but sieepeth." "Asleep in Jesus ! peaceful rest! Whose waking is supremely blest ; No fear?no woe shall dim that hour That manifest the Savior's power." rint Grove, Jan. 14, 1879. IRA. MULES! MULES! ARRIVED WEDNESDAY MORNING, January 22, ' FORTY HEAD OF MULES. The best ever brought to this market. Jan 24-2 B. FRANK SLATER. Notice. THE ANNUAL MEETING OP TnE Shareholders of the Orangeburg Ag ricultural and Mechanical Association will bo held on Clio Sth day of Fcbtuarr,' 1879, at ten o'clock, (being the second Saturday.) for the purpose of electing seven Directors to serve as such for the year commencing on the second Satur day in February. 1879. and ending on the second Saturday in February. 1880, and for such other mid further business as may bo brought before the meeting. N. B ?All Shareholders are i ; quested to be present. By order. J L. IIEIDTMAN, Sec. and Treas. O. A. anu M. A. Januray 24?3 Notice of Dismission. rpiIE UNDERSIGNED GIVES NO 1. T1CE that he will tile bis final ac count a- Committee of Rachael Casltn, deceased, witli the Hon. Judge ot Pro bate for Orp.ngeburg County, on the 21;!; day of February next, and ask for letters dismissory. J. W. CASTIN, Jan 24?It_Committee. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Office Countt Commissioners, ') Orangf.ruro Countt. > Orangkuurg. S. C. Jan. 16, 1870. ) tHE LAKE OR HOLLOW BRIDGES (about sixteen in number) at the Bamberg Crossing on South Edisto Riv er, will be let out, to be built, to the lowest bidder, on the 18th day of Febru ary next, at 12 o'clock U., at the bridge by the County Commissioners. By order of the Board. Jan 24?4t T. R. MA LONE, Clerk. Notice ofDlsmlsHion. r"fMIE undersigned hereby gives notice JL that he will file his final account as Guardian of 1?. D. Tllley, D. E. Tilley and M. S. Tilley, with the Honorable Judge of Probato for Orangeburg county on l be 17th day of February, 1S79, and ask for Letters Dismission. J. B. LIVINGSTON. Jan 17-td Guardian? TOWN LOTS FOR SAXiES. TOWN LOTS, on Sunny Side, will be sold at Private or Public Sale on or beforo next Salesday, first Monday in February. Plot of the lots can be seen at Merouey's Hotel, and any Infor mation furnished to parties, wishing to purchase. Terms reasonable. W. A. MEKONEY, Jan 17?2 Auctioneer. TV otloo. Sciioor. Commissioner's Office, } Orangkduro County. S Orangkuurg, S. C, Jan. 17, 1879. ) THE Trustees of the Public Schools of this County are hereby ordered to close the School's hi their several Districts on the 1st of February, 1879, unless nth wise specially instructed from this office. D. L. CONNOR School Commissioner O. C. Jan 17-2 A. R. Knowlton. A. Laturof. KNOWLTON & LATHROP, Attorneys and Counsellors, ORANGEBURG, S. C. Dec-13-tf Notice to Delegates to the State Grange* THE next annual meeting of the State Grange will bo hold in Charleston, S. C, commencing on Tuesday the 4th of February, 1879, at 10 o'clock A. M. A full delegation is desired. D. W. CROOK, Seo'ty Pomona GrangeJNo. 17. Jan 17,1870. EIXTH.A. ATTRACTIONS AT Henry Kohn^s. Henry Kohi/s. DK Y GOODS, STOCK LARGER THAN EVER!| AN Assortiment to suit the most fastidious] WITH B^-PRICES TO SUIT TMB TIMES. DRESS GOO?S DRESS ?OODS DRBSS GOODS Wo have marked down tie entire stoek. j CLOSE INSPECTION will convice jou this is the time to boy. LARGEST Assortment of HOSIERY, from 10 cents per pair up. CASSIMERS, JEANS, CAS81MERS, CASSIMERS, JEANS, JEANS, CASSIMERS. JEANS, RIBBONS, LACES, KID GLOVES, The largest and Cheapest line FLANNELS FLANNELS FLANNELS FLANNELS FLANNELS FLAN NELS FLANNELS, FLANNELS. BLANKETS BLANKETS BLAN KETSgBLANKETS BLAN BLANKETS BLANKETS BLAN? BLANKETS BLANKETS BLANKETS. Everybody says our ONE DOLLAR .Sil I KT ONE DOLLAR SHIRT ONE DOLLAR SHIRT ONE DOLLAR SHIRT ONE DOLLAR SHIRT ONE DOLLAR SHIRT Is the best in the State! OUR CLOTHING, BOOT and SHOE CLOTHING. BOOT and 8HOE CLOTHING, BOOT and SHOE CLOTHING, BOOT and SHOE CLOTHING, BOOT and SHOE Stocks nre replete with bargains. MOTTO! s? ????s. FOR Least Money. JHenry Kohu. D. E. SMOA& & 00. II AVK MADE Great Reductions ro the price of fiOM AHV 8E? OUR LARGE AND* V/ well assorted Mock of Clothing, Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, lints anu Caps, Groceries* Tinware, Hardware, Tobacco, Cigars, Whiskies, Brandies, and Wines* MUCH LOWER than tliey hare yd oben sola in this plnCC TOBACCO and CJOAB&f, of the best brands, we ore selling by the box, at factory prices. Call and examine oar goods, vre bat/e attentive salesmen who will be pleased to wait on you. Thanking you for past favor's, tfe solicit the same in the future. Very respectfully, D. ?. SMOAE & CO., Oratigebarg, S. C. Jan. 17, 1679. |&D AMERICAN HOTEL ! V Established about 1899 Reaucltated on the European Plan far Gentlemen only. tebms: Rooms each person per dar.?.?/.v?O1 per wcek......-/.,..<)r?,0{> per month...8 and #10 According to location of Srooms paid n advance. BOA?l> TERMS* Board and lodging.?.........01 50 per day Board and lodging?.?...~*..?50per week meals, . Breakfast.....-:.25c Dinner.i*..50c Supper.25e MRS. M. J. ARCHER. Pproprletress, 2fr George st, corner King? sep27 ly Charleston, 8 C. SAMUEL DIBBLE, Attorney and Connsellor at Law (Cor. Church & St. Paul's Street.) ORAKGEBURG, S. C. Dec 13-tf )i\ week in your own town, 95 ^outfit free. No risk. Reader /if you want a business at which persons of either sex lean rnnke great pay all the time they , work, writs particulars to H. Hallrt j Dissolution of* Co-pnrt NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT the Partnership between JOHN C. PIKE and JOAB W. MOSELEV was lUssuWcVl on turf*jplrab I>??y OVJhaufffr A. D. 1879, by mutual consent. All I debts due to the said Partnernship are to be paid to, and those due from the same, discharged by JOHN C. PIKE, who will I continue the business nt the old stand under hlslown name. J. C. PIKE. J. W. MOSELET. Orangeburg, S. C, Dec 2,1879. Master's Solei?, W. A. MACK AT, Auctioneer. State of South Carolina?County of Or angeburg?In the Common Pleas. By virtue of Judgment Orders of Foreclos ure and Sale and Decretal Orders In the causes below stated respectively. I will sell by public auction, before the Court House, in the town of Q-nngeburg, on the First Monday in February, 1879, during the legal hours for Sheriffs sales, the several Tracts, Lots and Parcels of Land below described, All situate in the County of Orangeburg and State aforesaid, viz: By virtue of a Judgement Order of Foreclosure and Sale, hi the case of An drew F. Smoke, vs. Win. A. Edwins: All that certain tract or parcel of land, situate on the Cannon's Bridge Road in the Fork of the Edisto, and in Edisto Township, containing "seventy-two (72) acres, mare or less, bounded on the north by lands of Warren M. Hughes; on the east by lands of David Smoke; on the south by lands of James Jennings, and on the west by lands of Barney Dempsey. Terms of Sale?One-half cash; the bal ance on a credit of one year; the purchaser to give bond, bearing interest from day of sale and a mortgage of the premises sold, to secure the credit portion of the purchase money. The purchaser also to pay for papers and the recording of both title and mortgage. also, By virtue of a Judgment 0**der of Foreclosure and Sale in the case of Daniel McKenzie vs. W- H. Wise, (at the risk of the former purchaser), all that Tract of Land situate in Amelia Town ship, in the Connty of Orangeburg, and State aforesaid,- containing ? j acres, more or less, and bounded by Preference Plantation, and lands of Daniel McKenzie, T. B. VYhaley and ? Myers. Terms of Sale?Cash; to be paid Im mediately after the close of the Master's sales for the day, and if it be not so paid, the land will be resold on the same day, at the risk of the former purchaser, when hia bid wtll not be taken, but that of the highest bidder, other than such former purchaser, will be considered and treated as the highest. also, By virtue of a Judgment Order of Foreclosure and salo, in the case of Al va Gage agaisnt Elizabeth Browne, all that plantation or tract of land, containing about Twelve Hundred acres, more or less, situate in the Fork of the Edisto, In County of Orangeburg, and State afore said, bounded on the north by Cooper Swamp; on the east by lands formerly of Jacob Wolfe, deceased; on the South by South Edisto River, and on the West by lands now or latelj of John It. Milhoua, John C. Rowe and the late J. E. Qnattlebanm?said tract ol land being the Snake. Swam'i' plantation, of which the late Dr. Row died Belted and possessed. Terms of Sale?Cash enough to p the sum actually due at the date of sal (which will be announced at the sale and the balance on a credit of one a two years 'the purchaser to give boi bearing Interest from, the day of oal*ai a mortgage of the property sold to t cure the credit portion of the purcha money. Purobaapr also to pay fpr,j pers and the recording of both title a mortgage. W. M. HUTSON, Jan W?8. * Hasten