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MM ?U? HOLTHioiN SONG. ?* 4#n?b Ilaanmpou Dress" Dim la Obscurity. jfc. ? (From the Houston Post.) A One of the most beautiful songs of Ihn Southern Confederacy never found Hi way into print, although It was ?* the moat popular aonga of the Clall War. Thla song waa written by am Ambamtan. Lieutenant Harrington. Although quite popular In the during the day* of the war (hi la axnr almost forgotten, save by a very few of tho Confed atata eoIdler*. Daring tnoae days of Um war. the aoag was sung by the of ths Confederacy about tin and on the march through Aftt Um South and soon became a pop ^*-dun\ aoag of those days. This song vrg# nailed "Ths Homespun Dress." II to said that some ysarr ago the nete? author, Dr. John Urt Lloyd, of fefti |tt for a copy of the song. He vtmted to reproduce it in ona of hi* teener* bat hs never secured the copy. ^A the song, so far as known, has i seat hsea printed. 1st connection with the song is a atejgw of romance of unusual interest m?S haauty. which was related lo me r 4 leaag a#t> by an old cittaen of Ken ^Ctsiy while I was In the little city of ^stsuitan. alt anted at ths mouth of i it ptttai is iiiii Kentucky river. While l WS* ha Carrolton 1 was also fortu il#jpfh?iigfl le secure from a friend % mjkf off the aong written on a type ? t that informed the words of the " 'wgtt*. Stst hewn found In an cid manu - Tl'tall Written hy George Da Ilia Mus gtsjaay g of Carrollton. Ky.. whloh ?asparl|l he had ceiled "Kentucky ( aaaatata m Dixie." A number of tvpewfltlea copies ef ths aong had ilgsj Baaste stem thla manuscript und ?gaj one ef, those copies) which I was r If pan enough to encore, and wsgejtt at reproduced here: mm y i 1HI HOMB8PUN DRK8S. Otw yea, t am a Southern girl. im) Ami fiery hi the name; I eoauat ef II with greater pride Than glittering wealth or fame, f tarry aet the Northern girl Wmr rohee ef bsaaty tarn, d tarnen de deck her snowy Anal pearls bsatud her hair. Chorue: hurrah! For the sunny South, so dear! Three cheers for the inimaapun dress a Ths Southern ladles wear. Mem Northern goons are oat of abacs Old Aba'a blockade ?earn girls can he content WRh see da that's Southern made. We aand oar awaethsarts to the war, I But glrla, aa'er you mind? , Teatr soldler lere will not forget The girl he left behind. The Seuthsm band's a glorious Und. AM has a glorious cause; Then oheer. there obeers for South k arm rights. And for the Southern boys We atom to wear a bit of silk. A hit of Northern lace. But ranks our homespun dresses up And wear them with a grace. Aad m?W, young man, a word to yon. If you would win the fair, Oo to the neld where honor calls, Aad win your lady thtre. Remember that our brightest smiles Ars ior the true and brave. Ant that oar tsars are all for thost Who fill ths soldier's grave. ? Aa the story was related to me. It on a beautiful morning In the early fall of the year HC2 that a small group of men were atandlng In feront of a country store In the village Bf Carrollton. Ky.. watching a detach? ment of Confederate C?n. Morgan's eevairy coming down tie pike In the la that little group about the coun? try store was Dr.. John Url Lloyd, the .author As ths soldiers fib d by the ipbre they were singing "The Homo apua Dress." Dr. Lloyd Uksd the aoag. and la after years he wanted to print It in ons of his books. He could pot rememoer the words and he was enable to find the song anywhere so offered a reward for it It might be well to say Just here that the town of Florence, hy.. where Dr. Lloyd first heard the song, has glace b*?cofne familiarly known as ?ftrlngtown,'' being tho village refer? red to In "rftrlngtown on the Pike." While Morgan's army wns In Lex tgton, Ky.. the women of that city ire a ball one night In honor of Sgergan's men. On this occasion. It is gsdd .the women app' ar?M In hone Spun dr?-s*es Lb-ut? -mint Harrington, ^ Alabama, who wns a member of Morgan'? army, and who attended the tBBfclb wmS so deeply affected by the Bgsjrer of Ksntucky's young woman? hood appwa'int ?* * 011,1 ?n ejasji-spun dresses that he arete th" words t ' the song. The Homespun." Purine ths evening th > >oung Heute? ? mW si ?He hsll a Miss Karle, and ?g tfioss tew ho??? ? th?-r? gr< ,v ??:. 4 attachment between the I WO that was more than friendship. Miss Earle was an accomplished musician, and improvised an air for the young lieutenant's song-poem and played and sang it on the piano dur? ing the evening. It is amid that all the men of Morgan's command soon learned the words and tlu air and of? ten sang "The Homespun Dress." Lieutenant Harrington gave Miss Earle the orirlnal manuscript copy of the words of the song, and it la said that It was from her that Mr. Mus grove, of Carrollton, Ky., secured the words of the song, as found In the manuscripts written by himself. Lieutenant Harrington Iwas killed In the battle of Perryvllle, October 8, 1861. only a few days after the ball In Lexington, Ky., where he wrote the words to the song and where he met Miss Barle. Miss Earle died only a few years ago. She never married. She kept tho manuscript copy of the song. Just as It was written by Lelut ?nnnt Harrington, all her lifetime, and It Is said that she prized It most highly. \ Lieutenant Harrington's grave Is unknown, but the song words which he composed lived In the heart of a fair Kentucky girl until death called her away to join her soldier lover In i better and brighter world. The song, although never printed, so far as f have been able to leirn, has lived for almost a half century in the hearts of thd few remaining soldiers of the South and in the hearts of the few women of those trying days who still live. "The Homespun Dross" should fill a plsce In the nation's archives as a popular song and as a historical mem? ento of that great conflict between the States of the Union. It would be fitting for Alabama to erect a monument to the memory of that brave soldier-poet son of hers who gave his life for the cause he be? lieved to be right?Lieutenant Har? rington, who sleeps today, perhaps, in another Stats. In a grave unknown and doubtless unmarked, even by a plain slab bearing the inscription "un? known." Morel Effects of AotomobUlsm. <Prom the Christian Advocate.) "Ethics requires persons who can not afford to buy automobiles to re? sist' the mania. In one city ct mod? erate else within two months fifty men mortgaged their homes to get mosey to buy an automobile. These were probably not all, but that could be ascertained. Since that time, in th. sums Stats, but m a smaller place, I SI did the same thins;. Ordinary drunkards do not go much farther than that. Every person who Is a Christian should resist' with all his moral power the growing; tendency to spent Sunday In automobillng. It is as right for s Christian who lives at a distance from church to ride there In an automobile as It Is to do so In i carriage, but thousands who never thought of spending Sunday on ex? cursions, beginning gradually, now spend the whole day In such pleasure. Temptations to spend the night come under the classification of hygiene. To allow young people to make night oxcurslons to morally or otherwise ?incanny regions is a violation of pa? rental ehtics. The old 'road houses' are coming hack., with some added evils. Fearful domestic scandals, re? vealed by accidents, ending In the brealslr.g up of families, are becom? ing numerous. "A'e should say that at least 25 per cent of all uutomoblllsts that we have seen have been guilty of one or more of the following infractions of public rights: Illegal speed, dangerous prox? imity to other vehicles too great risks in passing, failure to toot their horns, or tooting them so loud as to frlglit n horses, Indifference to the actions ?f horses, ind disregard of common decencies, such as going at great *peed through towns when church services are breaking up ind tho horses of attendants are druwn up In a row along the sidewalks, also, in addition to great speed, making all ?sorts of noises as they BUSi through the towns and laughing at the dismay of persons In carriages, or racing on the highways, also Indifference to ac? cidents which they have caused. Be? sides, we have s^en in automobiles numbers of j ersons Intoxicated, and in the aggregate a larg?- number of automobiles under the .nanatfement Of small boy* and sometimes of girls. "Thd automobil?? 'has SOBJM to stay.' Hut that Is no reason why decency, humanity and law- should go." ?A tickling cough, from any cause, Is quickly stopped by Dr. BhOop'S Cough Cure. And It Is so thoroughly hafsales! and safe, that Dr. BhoOp tells mothers everywhere to irivo It srtt heul hesttattosj, seen to very young bobSS. The wholesome green h u t -* ;t nil tender stems of | UWg heallng mountainous shrub, furnish the t?srnties propsrtlet to i>r. Rhoop'i Cough cur?-, it calms the cough, snd hoes] His sere and sensitive bronchial membranes. No opium, no ohloro form, nothing harsh usi ?1 to Injure or suppress. Simply a restfjOUS plant ex tract, that helpn to h?'nl netting lUPga The Spaniards call this shrub v hjoh the Doctor uses, "The Sacred Herb." iss oerneod Jfho ???* ngn Cure Mb rtfg Drug ? ? ? THE (JREAT COCOAXVT TREE. One of the Wonders of Nature?Food, Drink ami Shelter Provided for Tropical Dwellers. "A wonder for sure is the cocoanut tree," said a man familiar with the tree, its fruit as ma.nufact ired pro? ducts. Ita native home is India, from which originally its seed wa* carried by ocean currents to islands of the sea and to more or lesa distant mainlands, whence by yet other cur? rents or perhaps by the hands of man it was carried on still further until the cocoanut tree had come to be found, as It is now, In tropical and sub-tropical climes all around the globe. "The cocoanut thrives best In lands along the margin of the sea; it likes tho &alt water. Plant a cocoanut back of a fence or a stone wall and it will grow up straight until it has come to the height of tho fence, but above that It will incline toward the water. If It Is planted further Inland they put a block of salt under it. "The ueed is the cocoanut itself, which, as you know, Is encased as It grows on the tree In an elongated fibre filled husk with a hard, smooth outer surface. Cocoanuts dropping from the tree Into the sea and them floating away first spread the tree over the earth. "Having fcund suitable lodgment the nut tends up out of one of the three eyes to be found In one end of It?the eyes familiar to us as we com? monly see the cocoanut In Its spheri? cal form divested of its outer husk? through one of these eyes it sends up a sprout which works its way through and out of the husk, this being the start of the young cocoanut tree. As the young tree grows the husk disin? tegrates and rots away. "Cocoanut trees attain a height of from twenty to eighty feet, according to attuation and circumstances. The tree begins to bear fruit at about eight years of age, its life Is about 120 years; Its yield In bearing about a hundred nuts annually, and an In? teresting fact is that the nuts drop from the tree at night. Tn many places in which the fruit Is found the tree, with Its fruit, Is In? dispensable to the well being and It may be to the existence of the native human dwellers. The outer bark of the tree supplies a material which may be used for the purpose of cloth? ing; the solider part of the trunk may be used for the framing and the tree's leaves for the covering of shelters, while the tree's fruit supplies food and the fibres of the husk a material for fishing lines. "In many places where the cocoa nut tree thrives fish and cocoanuts from the only food supplies of the natives, and In distant isolated salt waves, surrounded islands or cays, the cocoanut may be their only source of supply of fresh water. The cocoanut tree is practically hollow Inside, and through this porous Interior, almost as freely as It could be pumped up through a pump log, It draws up wa? ter for its own substenance and growth and from which It fills with distilled water the fruit on the tree, for the milk so-called In the cocoanut Is practically drinking water, with very little1 other matter. And so in some places the cocoanut supplies .all the fresh water obtainable as it may as well the food?surely a wonderful and a beneficent tree. "Coming back now to the general subject, we find tha't the manufactur? ed products of this wonderful tree are now In common use throughout the civilized world. To bring it right close It may be that when you go home to? night you will wipe the mud off your shoes on a door-mat made of cocoa fibre, and if you should take a nap before dinner you will lie down, it may be, on a lounge whose stufhlng con? tains more of less of the same ma? terial. "The oil with which you dress your falod may be cocoanut oil, and for dessert you may have cocoanut pie. In the kitchen you might find scrub? bing brushes made of OOvnftUUt fibre, and likewise brooms. The uses of the cocoanut are various. "For many years, in fact since way back; cocoanuts have been imported In some numbers and they were to be found for sale In grocery stores and elsewhere, as they still are, and child? ren used to buy them and take home and bore a hole through the eyes and pour the milk out Into a tea cup and drink that, and then get .father to break the eoeoaroit with a hatchet, and then they'd eat the meat, as chil? dren still do. "The number of the cocoanuts lm ported for such and other retail de? mands is considerable, but still it isn't a drop In ihe bucket to the num? ber now Imported for manufacturing uses. .Millions or cocoanuts are imported to ibis countrj annually, some <>f tin- ' from wild or natural growth trei y. nnd some from planted and cul? tivated trees; for the cocoanut Is now cultivated; and it might be mentioned In pamlng that ? cocoanut plantation is called a cocoanut walk. "Of this enormous Importation of ooeoannt? *?** ' ? " eater share of this to the manufac rers of prepared cocoanut for do? mestic and other cooking uses. Form rly the house wife who wanted to Be cocoanut for pies or cakes or pud iings used to grate it herself. Now e vast majority of all users of co? coanut buy the manufactured product ill ready prepared for use, and the manufacture of this is a trade in hich people find employment. "Cocoanuts to be used in making prepared cocoanut. are put, a lot of em together, into iron crates in hich they are subjected to a steam bath. This swells the outside shell a litt|e anu at the Fame time contracts the meat within and tends to separate cr to make it easier to separte from, the shell. "From the steam bath the nuts go the man, who opens the nuts ometimes In the steam bath the hells of the nuts, or some of them, may crack, which facilitates by so much the work of the opener. "Father used to crack the cocoanut .vith a hatchet. The professional co? coanut opener U3es an implement that is much like a solid steel oyster knife, having at one end the heavy ron handle and at the other end the )lade. With the heavy end of this the pene?* taps the cocoanut and cracks he shell and cracks it off, or if any r all of it still adheres to the meat he pries it off with the knife end of the Implement, leaving the round 5lobe of cocoanut meat unbroken, but till covered with its familiar brown outer skin. "In these days there are men who work regularly at cocoanut opening just as they might at any other em? ployment, though one somewhat un? usual feature of the cocoanut open? er's work Is that they begin it at 2 a, m., this so that sufficient stock may be prepared daily in advance for the other workers to begin on. An ex? pert cocoanut opener can open 2,00u nmts a day. "The shells removed, other workers take the whole nut meats and spoke shave off that brown outer skin, and then the white round globe of cocoa nut meat Is put Into a machine and quartered. In theee quarter sections the meat is inspected for the rejection of nuts* not sound and sweet, and then It is sterilized, after which it is ready for the various further processes In? volved in shredding and drying and otherwise preparing It for the mar? ket." $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has *>een able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the qnly positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con? stitutional treatment. Hall's Catar|b Cure Is taken Internally, acting di? rectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de? stroying the foundation of the disease and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and as? sisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollors for any case that it falls to cure. Send for testimonials Address: F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 7Be. Take Hall's Family Pills for con dlpatlon. 9-18-lm When the United States came into possession of the Philippine Islands the Spanish charts indicated that there were but 1,200 of them. The United EftetOl Geodetic Survey, which has been in progress tor some years, al? ready shows that there are 2,600 isl? ands in the archipelago, and that there ;ire many more to be enu? merate 5. 'When the stomach, heart or kid iey nerves get weak, then these or ;ans always fail. Don't drug the 'tomach, nor stimulate the Heart or Kidneys. That is simply a makeshift, let a prescrlotlon known to Drug? gists everywhere as Dr. Shoop's Re? storative. The Restorative Is pre? pared expressly for these weak Inside nerves. Strengthen these nerves, build them up with Dr. Shoop's Re? storative?tablets or liquid?and see how quickly help will come. Free sample test sent on request by Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Your health Is surely worth this simple test. Sibert's Drug Store. Let a man pet the idea ?.hat he |J being wronged, or that everything is against him, and you cut his earning capacity In two. ?The finest Coffee Substitute ever made, has recently been produced by ;>r. .'-hoop of Racine, Wls. You don't 'vive to boll it twenty or thirty mln ites. "Made In a minute," says the loctor. "Health Coffee" is really th< dosest Coffee Imitation ever yet pro luced. Not a grain of real coffee in t either. Health Coffee Imitation li h i le from pure roast< d cereals or grain*, with malt, nuts, etc. Really t would f,,(,l an expert were he to unknowingly drink it for Coffee, Lev) <t Moses. Oscar W. Reld, a soldier concerned in the nrownsville riot, sued the gOV MKS. EDDY TO DO GOOD. Head of Christian Scientists Prepares to Endow Great Hospital. Boston, Dec. 24.?A Christian Sci? ence institution to cost at least $1, 000,000, and to be devoted especially to helping the poor, is the latest pro? ject of the Christian Science move? ment. The first news of the project came today through the columns of the Christian Science Sentinel, the weekly organ of the denomination, and gives a part of the correspond? ence between Mrs. Mary Raker G. Eddy, the leader of the faith, and Archibald McLellan, the editor of the denominational publications. w* December 14, Mrs. Eddy wrote to Mr. McLellan: "I desire to commence immediately to found a Christian Science institu? tion for the special benefit of the poor and the general good of all mankind. The founding and endowment of this institution will cost at least, $1,000, 000. Pleass come to me at your ear? liest opportunity, and I will give you further details." In cbedience to the summons, Mr. McLellan went fco Concord. X. H., Mrs. Eddy's home, yesterday. ?Trial Cat..nh treatments are be? ing mailed out free, on request, by Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. These tests vre proving to the people?without a penny's cost?the great value of this scientific prescription known to drug? gists everywhere as Dr. Shoop's Ca? tarrh Remedy. Sold by Slbcrfs Drug -itore. The fellow who Is making the most of a small job Is really ahead of the fellow who Is making a botch of a better one. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. Tin Kind You Hate Always Bought Bear* the Signature of Master's Sale. By virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Sumter County. In the State of South Carolina, in the case of Mary J. DeLeon, against Ar? chie China, H. D. Molse and W. B. Burns I will sell to the highest bidder, it public auction at the Court House, In the City of Sumter in the County of Sumter and State of South Caroli? na, on aaleaday in January, 1908, .be? ing the sixth day of said month, dur? ing the usual hours of sale, the fol? lowing described real estate, to wit: "All that lot of land in the City and County of Sumter, In said State, bounded on the north by lot of R. D. Lee and Marlon Molse, and measuring on that line one hundred and twelve feet; on the east by Main street of said City and measuring thereon twenty-three feet; on the south by lands- of Sumter Commercial and Real Estate Company, and measuring thereon one hundred and twelve feet, and on the west by lot of Sumter Commercial and Real Estate Com? pany, and measuring thereon 23 feet, be the said dimensions a little more or less; said lot being designat? ed by the letter "A" on a General ?lat made, and certified by John R. llaynsworth. Surveyor, on January 4th, 1906. Terms of sale, cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. H. FRANK WILSON, 12-ll-4t. 4 Master. Master's Sale. By virtue of a decree of the Coun )f Common Pleas for Sumter County, in the State of South Carolina, in the case of Marion Molse against Sarah Fannie Jenkins, A. J. China, T. C. Hall, A. A. Strauss doing business under the \. Strauss, doing business under the lame and style of A. A. Strauss & Co., ;>e*ck Bros. Company, Carolina Hail insurance Co. and T. J. Boyktn, doing lusiness under the name and style of Home Fertilizer Chemical Works, I vill sell to the highest bidder at pub? lic auction at the Court House in the City of Sumter in the County of Sum? ter and State of South Carolina, on ?aleday in January, l'JOS, being the sixth day of said month, during the usual hours of sale, the following de? scribed real estate, to wit: "All of that parcel or tract of land dtuate, lying and being in Privateer Township, Sumter County, In said State, containing eleven acre's, being lot No. 8 of the tract of land known as the Redding tract, and bounded on the north by lot No. 2 of said Red? ding tract, conveyed to Cuffy Glisson, on the east by a tract of eighteen acres of land added to lot No. l of siid Uedding tract conveyed to Cuffy Hi son. on the south by lot No. 6 of -aid tract conveyed to Glisson, and ?n the west by lot No. 3 and by land of Legare; said tract of land being nore fully represented by i plat made by J. D. MrTlwaine Surve - >r, and recorded in office of c. C. C. P. for -aid county in pook 9SZ at !>ag*> 7<>0. Those lots of lend in the village of Privateer, In said County and State, numbered from 10 to it of Block F inclusive, as shown on map of said, village. Terms ( f sale cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. n. rrs vx k, w ilhox, 12 i! tt Master master's Sale* By virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Sumter County, in the State of South Carolina, in the case of David W. Cuttino, as Execu? tor of the Last Will and Testament of R. D. Cuttino, deceased, against Frr.nk Riley. I will sell to the highest bidder, at public auction at the Court House in the City of Sumter in the County of Sumter and State of South Carolina, on saleday in Janu? ary, 1908, being the sixth day of said month, during the usual hours of sale* the following- described real estate* to wit: All of that tract of land In said County and State, containing one hun? dred acres, more or less, and bounded as follows: On the north by lands of the estate of Thomas Poole; on the east by land of E. W. A. Bultman, on i:he south by land claimed by William R?dgen, and on the west by land of estate of Henry Burgess." Terms of sale cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. H. FRANK WILSON, 12-ll-4t. Master. Master's Sale. By virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas for Sumter County, in the State of South Carolina, in the case of Rosalie D. Moses against Sarah Fannie Jenkins, J. Douglas Jenkins, Charles Jenkins, Marie Jenkins, Archie China and J. Douglae Jenkins as Executors of the Last Will and Testament of L. Burgess Jenkins* Sarah Fannie Jenkins as Executrix of ani Trustee under the Last Will and Testament of L. Burgess Jenkins; Archie China, as Trustee under tha Last Will and Testament of L. B. Jenkins; The Sumter Savings Bang. A. A- Strauss, The First Nation At Bank of Sumter, S. C, Alfred J. Chi? na, T. C. Hall, Thomas J. Boykin, do? ing business as the Home Fertilizer Chemical Works; Carolina Hail In? surance Co., Beck Bros., Perry Moeesv Jr., D. L. Hart, Marion Moise, Mar? shall, Westcoat Hardware Co. and Beggs Mfg. Co., I will sell to the highest bidder, at public auction at the Court House in tha City of Sum ler, in the County of Sumter, snc? State of South Carolina, on pale day in January, 1908, bein? the rixth day of said month, during the usual nova of sale tho follow >ns described estate, to wit: 1. "All that lot of land, containing ive acres, more or less, situate near Privateer Station, on the M. & A* Railroad, bounded on the north by lands now or formerly of J. B. Osteen. xnd of others; on the east by said railroad, on the south and west by 'ands now or formerly of Osteen. and* if Geddings. 2. All that tract of land, containing; nine hundred acres more or less, com? monly, known as the "Pugh Place/* oounded on the north by lands novr or formerly of John H. Furman, m the east by lands now or formerly of I. N. Ingram, and <*>f the estate of Gabriel Osteen, on the south by lands >f W. L. Reynolds and of S. Harvin. and on the west by lands now cr for? merly of the estate of P. H. Osteen. 3. That tract of land containing thirty acres, more or less, conveyed to L. B. Jenkins, by the Pee Dee Land Company adjoining lands of Glisson? McGainey, Jenkins Mill Co., D. H. Hastie, Lisbon DuPree, and of others; and being the remainder of the lands which were conveyed by the M. & A. Railroad to the Pee Deo. Land Company, by Deed dated August 7th. 1S94, less those parcels hereof which were sold by sa?d Peo Dee Land Co. to C. C. Conyers, et al. Trustees, by Deed recorded in office of C. C. C. P. for Sumter County, In Book N. X. X.. at Page 343. 4. That tract of land In said Coun? ty and State, containing: two hundred and sixty-five acres, more or less, bounded by the Cain Savannah and Bethel Church Roads, by lands of Geddings, of Harvin, and of others* and being the remainder of a tract of live hundred and twenty-five acres, more or less, as shown on a plat made by John R. Haynsworth, Sur? veyor, and filed with the Record In the case of Jjlia A. Bracey, et al,. Plaintiffs, against Emily S. McCall, et al. Defendants, after deducting the part thereof which was conveyed to S. A. Harvin. 5. That lot of land in Privateer Township, in said County and State, containing eleven acres, being lot Now S of the tract of land known as the "Redding Tract." and bounded on the north by lot No. 2 of said Red ling Tract, conveyed to Cuffy Glisson. i>t by tract of eighteen acres con? veyed to Cuflfy Glisson, south by lot \o t> of said tract conveyed to Elis? ion, and on the west by lot No. 3. and >lso by land of Legare, and being more fully represented by a plat made >y .1. D. Mcllwalne, Surveyor, and re? corded in office c. c. C. I\ for Sumter County in Book EZ at page ti. Those lots of 'and numbered from 1 to y nr. Block F. inclusive, as shown on a map of the village of Plncwood, made for the Pso Dee Land Company. Terms of sale. cash. The property lo be sold in parcels in the order above s< t forth. Purchaser t i pay for I