THE MESSENGER AND INTE.LLIGE NC.ER MESSENGER - INTELLIGENCER. 4JBPSBORO, K. C, JAN. 10th, 1889. Local ZEsTe,ws- .' Wadesboro Cotton Market. Good Middling. 9 Middling....... .. 9 Strict Low Middling.. S Low Middling. ... . 84 If you want to see your home in stitutions flourish show your consist aacy by patronizing them. ; Jackson Kiker made thh year on 3 4 acre of land 2, 200 pounds of seed cotton. Polkton News. The next Quarterly Conference of AnsoBville circuit will ba held at CfTjwd church next Saturday and Sihaay. , The County Board of Education mot last Monday in regular session, but adjourned to the 19th inst., with out transacting any business of gen eral interest. The Anson County Farmers' Alli ance met in regular quarterly session in Wadesboro last Friday, and ad journed to the 18th inst. Attention is called to the advertise ment of Mr! R. E. Gray in today's paper. Mr. Gray has a large lot of fine horses and mules and is selling them very reasonably. Messrs. A. J. Brooks and Frank Myers, two of the best citizens of Gulledge's township, together with their families, left yesterday even ing for Honey Grove, Texas, which plaee will be their future homo. JrrDavis, one of the negro.es who bnsjail sometime ago in this place was captured last Friday in Char lotte, and brought to Wadesboro and convicted of the crime of which he was charged, at this term of court. .Mr, L. J. Huntley has an attract tive adveatisement in this issue of the Messenger and intelligence r. He is head quarters for the articles he oilers for sale, and will sell as cheap as anyone. A Western editor says if his sub scribers do not pay up, he will be forced to run, not only a 4 "patent outside" for his paper, but he will have to furnish Lis wife aad children with "patent inrfid-js."' .. The prosperity of cur town should be" tine chief COilCt-'l'Ii OL lit 1. As a mWnto that end never send away from home for that which you can get just as well here. A New Year hop is tc be given at the Stewart House, iu Monroe, on the J5th inst., and music will be furnish ed by tbe Charlotte Italians. Messrs. H. O. Biair, S. S. Wolfe, and M. liichleabteiil are floor managers. Mr. R. E. Little, Senator elect for Anson and Union counties, left for Raleigh Monday night, and Mr. J. J: Dunlap, who wiil represent Anson in the lower House, left for the same place Tuesday night. It was announced last week in these columns that Mr. VV. T. Moss had been elected town Marshall, vice Mr. C. T. Coppedge resigned, but Mr. Moss refused to qualify and .Mr. E. M. Staton was sworn in and ii$& f acting Marshall. Mf". C. M. Burns has purchased Mr. T. R. Tomlinson's stock of gotds, And has moved into the building oc cupied by Mr. Tomlinson. Messrs. Rowland Ashcraft tnd J. M. Graham are now with him and will be glad to .wait on their friends and the public. Those of our subscribers who get their paper at the Lilesville postoffice, and are still in errears for the same, can pay their subscription to B F Oar k, Esq., who has their account. Any receipt given by Mr. Clark will be honored at this ofica. We are requested by Esq. Webb, ..our efficient Register of Deeds to say to all who are matrimonially inclin ed, that he has just received another Jot of. marriage licenses, and will tWa.pleasure in supplying them to towil who need them at the same old price. After a severe sickness of about 6ix weeks,Mr. W. H. Funk.the artist is again able to be up and attend to the duties of his. profession. Mr. Funk's reputation as a skilled artist is too well established in this commu jiity to need any word of commenda tioa from us. The County .Commissioners met in .regular session last Monday and transacted the usual routine busi ness. Mr. Jas. M. BilUng8by was given to the 14th in6t. to complete bis .bond as county treasurer, to which .day the Board adjourned. Mr. D. A Liles, late of Monroe, has accepted a position in the Racket l"5 bre of M. J. Baucom, &Co.,at Mor- n, and can hereafter be found at that place. This firm, we learn. did a very extensiveu business last year, and is making arrangements to ' greatly increase it .this year. - Considerable excitement was caus ed by .the alarm of fire about 1 1 o'clock last Tuesday morning. The alarm wasaused by a dense cloud of smoke issuing from the chimney of Mesrs. Henry- & Huntley's store. Upon examination it wa3 found that the soot iu the chimney was on -fire ,and ad soon as it was extinguished jjae danger was over, i Superior Court. January Term of Anson Superior Court, tor the trial of criminal cases convened last Monday, Judge Jas. H. Merrimon presiding, and Solicitor McNeal representing the State. The following grandjury was drawn: L. L. Little, foreman ; C. D. Little, J. A. Dunlap, Joel T. Gaddy, Adam Clark, J. A' Lindsey, Peter G. Steen, D. W. Carpenter, H. M. Parker, John R. Beachum, M. W. Mowery, W. A. Rose, A. D. Tarlton, Gideon Sinclair, T. A. Clarke, Albert Sinclair, W. W. Chambeas S. W Odom. The following are some of the cases disposed of: State vs. Math. Rushing, a. b. d. w. ; guilty; three months in jail. State vs. John Davis; breaking jail; guilty; one year in county jail. State V3. John Davis; attempted burglarly; guilty; judgment sus pended. State vs. Ed Timmons; assault with intent to commit rape; not guilty. State vs. Henry Dunlap; maiming; guilty; ten years in State prison. State vs. Henry Dunlap; breaking jail ; guilty ; judgment suspended. State vs. Wm. Townsend; larceny; guilty ; one year in penitentiary. Court adjourned Wenesday afternoon. More Money in the Country. Mr. tt. E. Gray, of Virginia, has been selling stock in Wadesboro for several years, and has had abundant opportunity to judge the financial condition of our people. While con versing with us a few days ago, he remarked tnat there was much more money in the hands of the people of the county than he had ever known. He stated that in previous years nearly every horse sold to a farmer, would be paid for and mortgaged to some gentleman in town, but this year the farmers were paying the money out of their own pockets and taking their stock home unincum bered . Ihis is one of the surest evidences that our people are gradually getting into a more healthy financial condi tion. . Economy, hard work, and one or two good crops, will bring our peo pie from under the tyrany of debt, and then we will have as good a country to live in as the sun shines upon. Election of Officers. At a recent meeting of the Knights of Honor of Wadesboro, the follow ing offiears were elected : Dictator J. A. Lockhart. Vice Dictator -W. D. Webb, Assistant Dictator J. C. Marshall. Reporter J. C. McLauchlin. Financial Reporter T. S. Crowson. Guide S. H. Threadgill. Guardian W. L. Steele, Sentinel H. D. Pinks ton. Chaplain E. D. Gaddy. Treasurer I. H. Horton. Trustees T. B. Wyatt, Dr. J. W. Bennett and J. M. Little. New Drnj; Firm. Elsewhere in this paper is the ad vertisement of Dr. A. B. Huntley, who announces to the public that he has opened a new and complete stock of drugs on Rutherford street, near the Central Hotel. Dr. xiuntley is well and favorably known through out this section, and will doubtless receive a fair share of the drug trade of Wadesboro. In his absence, Mr. Clayton Brasington, who has consid erable experience in drugs, will bo in charge of the business. An Excellent Selection. At a meeting of the Magtstratets of the county, held in Wadesboro last Saturday for the purpose of electing a County Commissioner to fill the va cancy caused by the failure of Hen ry Haynie to qualify, Mr. Edmund D. Gaddy was elected, receiving fif teen votes out of twenty. MrGaddy, by reason of his business capacity and intimate knowledge of the affairs of the county, will no doubt make an excellent official. Rev. T. A. Boone, The above named gentleman is the new pastor of the Methodist church in this place. He arrived here with his family last Thursday night, and preached bis first sermons last Sunday morning and night. Large andp preciative congregations .listened to both efforts. Mr. Boone is a cultur- d gentleman, and an ornate and powerful preacher. Two Failures in Monroe. The firms of M. L. Stevens & Bro., and J. D. Futch, Stealers in general merchandise, in Monroe, made as signments last week. The liabilities of M. L. Stevens & Bro. are placed at 120,000. We have not learned what Mr. Futch's liabilities are. Henry Dunlap. As will be seen by reference to the Court proceedings elsewhere in this paper, Henry Dunlap, the negro w.ho shot and so seriously wounded Mr. Jas. O. A. Craig in an attempt to break jail at this place last August, was tried and convicted on the charge of maiming, and sentenced to ten years hard labor in the peniten tiary. Judge Merimon.in passiDg sentence upon him said, that his only regret was that he had not the power to place him where he would never again have the power to show his reckless disregard of human life, but as it was would give him the full ex tent of the law in such cases. Sheriff McGregor and Mr. W. G. Huntley left with Dunlap yesterday evening on the 8:35 train, via. Char lotte, for Raleigh. Married. By Esq. R. J. Baucom, in Morven, on the 25th ult., Mr. Walter Moore to Miss Wilmer Knotts, both of Lilesville township. On the Gth inst., by Rev. R. T. N. Stevenson.Mr. Martin Lowery to Miss Gid Ratliff, all of Morven township. At Mt. Croghen, S. C, on the 7th inst., by F. J. Taylor, Esq , Rev. T. W. Kendall, of Anson, to Mrs. J. S. Marsh, of Union county. Polkton News. From our regular Correspondent. Christmas passed very pleasantly no drunks, no fights nor quarrels. Nearly everybody in town and a large number from the country met in the hall Christmas night and did ample justice to as fine a supper as you ever stuck a tooth in. I stuck my tooth in some mighty good syla bub .that Aunt Roxy was churning while Capt. G., Mayor T.,"and Col. O'N. were knocking 7 X with the children, and some that were not children. The night after Christmas the old folks and children had a big candy pulling, and such pulling you never saw. The children couldn't pull for knocking 7 X, and the old folks couldn't pull for looking at the child ren and holding their own feet still. It was a fattening time. I laughed until I fattened three pounds in two hours and thirteen minutes. In fact, we had the best Christmas we ever had in Polkton.- Many thanks to Mrs. Jowers, Mrs. Bowman, Mrs. Pope and Mrs. Simmons for back bone, spare ribs, sausage and souce meat, and Mrs. Jowers for a quart of fresh oysters, and to Capt. Joe for a pull at his little brown jug, which commodity he only has on Christ mas, Dr. McBryde and Miss Hattie, of Maxton, Mr. aud Mrs, W. P. Gale, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Simmons, of Shelby, Mr. Robert Pope, of Char lotte, and Miss Emma Bennett, of Lilesville, were visiting friends and relatives during Christmas. Miss Mamie Bivins, of White's Store, is visiting Miss Addie Bowman; Miss Carrie Benton, of Beaver Dam, and Miss Cora Caraway, of Wadesboro, and Mrs. Thomas Jowers, of Liles ville, are visiting friends in towu; Miss Fannie McBryde is visiting her father at Maxton ; Miss Ella Caudle has quit the Racket and gone to her home near Peachland; Miss Lorina Boyd, the accomplished and loved assistant teacher in the Polkton High School, has accepted a position in the school at Norwood, and left for her work last Friday. Norwood has gained and Polkton has lost one of the best teachers it ever had. Polkton commences the New Year with about fifty cases of measels. All children except Mr. Jessie Caudle, and he is hardly large enough to be grown. Capt. J. J. Jowers is suffering with a very sore hand. Dr. Hawley cut his finger at the candy pulling, which is giving him some trouble. Mr. David Hawley is in the Racket with Mr. Austin. Major Thomas is going alone, and Mr. J. B. Caudle is on the wing for a few days. Pat. The Wilmington Messenger states a fact clearly when it says: "When the business men of a town fail to ad vertise, they diminish the importance and trade of the place and permit more enterpsismg localities to take it from tfiero. Although done tor their individual interests, advertisers should be looked upon by the citizens of the town where they reside as public benefactors, and they should be encouraged accordingly. The convention of Confederate pensioners will meet iu Raleigh on the 22id iust. The kind hearted and patriotic citizens of that city will make every arrangement for the generous cutertauimwifc o the vila- raan. Died in Pollttou. On December 26th, while all was merry and happy, the angel of Death entered the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Pope, and took from their bosom their little boy, three months old. The Lord comfort the parents in their affliction. Their baby is at rest. J. W. G. Case Ar nold, a laborer, at sixty two raw eggs on a wager at the Peo ple's Theatre.in Crawfordsville, Ind., last week. His backers offered to bet that he could eat five dozen more but there were no takers, several hundred dollars having already changed hands on the result. After the exhibition Arnold went to a res taurant and ate a hearty meal. Resolutions of Respect. Whereas, it has pleased Almighty God, our Heavenly Father, by the dark wing of the angel of death to remove from our midst on the 17th of Dec., 1888, Miss Jennie Wall, one of Forestville's most efficient Sunday SchooL members, whose life was ex emplified by the traits of character of a true, consistent and devoted christian, and was made beautiful by good works, and while we deeply and sincerely regret her loss, we bow in humble submission to the will of Him who doeth all things well. Resolved, 1st. That as members of the Bame Church and of our Sunday School, in which "she worked bo earn estly, we feel sincerely and regret fully her loss, and will ever cherish in our memory kind recollections of her pleasant associations and good deeds. Truly we shall miss her. 2nd. That while we regret so much her loss, we also realize that our great loss is her eternal gain. - 3rd. That we tender our heartfelt sympathy to her bereaved parents, brothers and sisters, and trust that the mantle fallen from her may be as gracefully worn by them in their future lives. 4th. That a copy of these resolu tions be placed upon the records of our Sunday School, a copy 6ent to the Wadesboro Messenger and In telligencer and the Raleigh Christian-Advocate with requstto publish. Respectfully submitted. Miss Mary Wall, Miss Lydia Clark, Miss Eliza Clark, Miss Effik Wall. DRUGS! DRUGS! Three times in the Drug business ! This time I am on Rutherford Street, near the Central Hotel, wnereloffer a fresh line of pure Drugs, Snuff. To bacco, and toilet articles of various kinds. It will pay you in DOLLARS and CENTS to examine my goods. Try my lamp oil, it will not smoke your chimneys. A. B. HUNTLEY. Jan. 9th, 1889. RACKET STORE! to Year's Greeting! To our customers and friends, we wish a happy and prosperous New Year, and beg to inform them that we have moved to a more roomy building the one formally occupied by Bruner & Allen, besides having more room, we have more goods, better goods, and cheaper goods. We have had a large trade during the Fall and Winter and intend to have a much better trade this Spring, and propose to keep a splendid line of Milinery goods as a specialty, Dry Goods, Notions, Hardware, Glass ware, Crockery, Tinware, &c. Be fore going elsewhere, be sure to see us, as we are headquarters for such things. We are respectfully yours, A C.T Nichols Sc Co. L. J. PINKSTON IN CENTRAL HOTEL BUILDING. Dealer jcl -CONFECTIONERIES, FANCY, FAMILY AND HEAVY GRO CERIES JEJ A Nice Stock of these goods always on hand and will be sold at Lowest Prices For Cash. Se& me before buying I will eaye you money. THE BEST TOBACCO in town for the money. Don't fail to examine it. Respect., L. J.P'mkston. Horses and Mules. I have the best lot of Homes and Mules ever brought to Wadesboro, and am selling them at prices never before heard of. Every body call and see them. Respectfully, R. E. GRAY. For Rent. . The corner store room recently oc cupied by J. T. Pinkston. W. A. ROSE. Scribner's Magazine For 1889. The publishers of SCRIBNER'S MAGA ZINE aim to make it the most popular and enterprising of periodicals while at all times preserving its high literary character. 25,000 new readers have been drawn to it during the past six months by the inert ased excel lence of its contents (notably the Railway articles), and it closes its second year with a new impetus and an assured success. The i illustrations will show nome new effects, and nothing to make SCKIBNER'S . MAGA ZINE attractive and interesting will be neglected. THE RL4LROAD ARTICLES will be continued by several very striking papers: one especially interesting by Ex-Postmaster-General Thomas L. Janus on "The Railway Postal Service." Illustrated. MR. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S serial novel ' The Master of Ballantrae," will run through the greater part of the year. Begun in November. A CORRESPONDENCE and collection of manuscript memoirs relating to J F Millet and a famous group of modern FRENCH PAINTERS will furnish the substance of several articles. Illustrated. The brief etod papers written last year by Robert Louis Stevenson, will be replaced by equally interesting contributions by different famous authors. Mr. Thomas Bailey Aid rich will write the first of them for the January number. Jany valuable LITERARY ARTICLES will appear: a paper on Walter Scott's Methods of Work, illustrated fgpm original MSS., a second "Shelf of Old Books," by Mrs James T Field, and many other articles equally noteworthy. Illustrated, Articles on ART SUBJECTS will be a feature. Papers are arranged to aj pear by Clarence Cook, E. H. Blashfield, Austin Dobson, and many others. Illustrated. . FISHING ARTICLES describing sport in the best fishing grounds will appear. Salmon, Winninish, Bass, and Tarpon are the sub- i'ect now arranged. The authors are well ;nown sportsmen. Illustrated. ILLUSTRATED ARTICLES of great variety, touching upon all manner of sub jects, travel, biography, description, etc., will appear, but not of the conventional com monplace sort. Ill ustrated. Among the most interesting in the list of scientific papers for the year will be a re markable article by Professor John Trow bridge, upon the most recent developments and uses of PHOTOGRAPHY. Illustrated. A class of articles which has proved of special interest will be continued by a group. of papers upon h. LiiiiU 1 Kl L i 1 Y in its most recent applications, by eminent authorities; a remarkable paper on DEEP MINING, and other interesting papers. Unique Illustrations, A SPECIAL OFFER to cover last year's numbers, which include all the RAIL W AY ARTICLES, as follows: A year's subscription (1S89) and the numbers for . . . M 50 A year's subscription (18S9) and the numbers for 1 8Sa, bound in cloth $ G 00 $3.00 a Year; 25c. a number. Charles Scribner's Son, 743-745 Broadway, N. Y. for 1889 AKD FOR THE. DEMOCRACY. The Sun believes that the campaign for the election of a Democratic Congress in 18'JO and a Democratic President in lS'.i'J should begin on or about tha fourth of next March. The Sun will be on hand at the beginning aud until the end of the most interesting and important political conflict since tha war, doing its honest uUuost, as ever, to secure the triumph of the Democratic party and the permanent supremacy of the principles held by Jefferson, Jackson, and Tilaen. The zreat fact of the year is the return to absolute power of the common enemy of all good Democrats the political organization ror whose overthrow inn bl'S lought at the front for fifteen years, the memorable years of Grant and the Fraud Hayes, and Garfield and Arthur. It is the same old enemy that Democrats now confront, and he will le intrenched in the same strong position. It has been car ried once by brave and hopeful fighting. Do you not believe with Thk Sun that the thing can be done again i Wait and see I The hope of the Democracy, is in the loyal efforts of a united press, cherishing no mem ories or past aifterences in non-essentials. forgetting everything but the lessons of ex perience, and that victory is a duty. Probably you know 1 he sun already as a newspaper which gets all the news and prints it in incomparably interestintr shape: which chronicles facts as they occurr and tells the truth about men and events with absolute fearlessness, makiner the comuletest and most entertaiiung journal published any where on earth; ana which sells its opinions only to its subscribers and purchasers at two cents a copy on Sundays four cents, II vou do not know The Sun, send for it and learn what a wonderful thing it is to be in the sunshine. Daily, per month $0 50 Daily, per year.' , COO Sunday, per year , 2 00 Daily and Sunday, per year 8 00 Daily and Sunday, per month 0 70 Keekly Sun, one year 100 Address THE SUN, New York. Parents cannot be too careful in guarding tbe health of their babies. Only a good and reliable medicine should be given to them ; Dr. Bull's Baby syrup is known not to contain anything injurious. If your skin is yellow, or if you are troubled with pimples and boils, cleanse your blood with Laxador, the golden specific. Price only 25 cents. Salvatiou Oil should be the corn pan ion of every Iraveliug man. It ex liuguished paia, whether resultiug Iai a cui.u vurn.a bmise.or a sprain. W. F. GRAY, D. D. S., (Ofnoe Over L. Huntley's Store,) Wadesboro, North Carolina. ALL OPERATIONS WARRANTED. Jft-tf FOE BENT. The house recently occupied by me as an office. Suitable for a small business or any kind of office. A. B. HUNTLEY, M. D. The undersigned has just received a car load of best heart pine shingles. Call and see them. W. T. ilUTCIILNSON, Toledo Weekly Blade. 1889. ONLY ONE DOLLAR. - Headquarters FOR A GEEAT MANY THINGS. Sevcii'Jiunclrecl bushels Texas Red Rust Proof Oats; Four hundred bushels Stanly County oats; a great quantity of mixed oats for feeding purposes, cheap, and a fine lot of Kentucky com always on hand. Come in to see me. I have four of the finest brands of Fertilizers sold in tJic State, and will ship in to Polkton, Morven and Lilesville Yours Truly, L. J. Huntley. January 9th, 1SS9. Sale of Land for Taxes. The leadine 'Weeklv Newsnaner of countrv. and the oruy paper edited with reference to circulating in every state and territory of the Lnion. 1 he xSLaDK is tbe most popular Family Weekly, with the largest and widest circulation. It has to-day over 150,000 sub scribers, ana may at any time be lound m every nook and corner ol the United States. At the low price or ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR The Blade gives more reading, better de partments and later news than any ol its competitors. It is the largest dollar paper published, and its departments so carefully edited that it cannot help but interest each member of every family. In fact the Blade HAS NOT AN EQUAL. A specimen copy will tell more than we can give in this advertisement. We there- 1U1 C UlllW A , 1 DJkJ I bU LUC II HUUTtUa on a postal card for a specimen copy tSend the address of all your friends at the same time. THE BLADE SEWING MACHINE With the Blade one year only 18.00. This machine is made in the Blade's own fac tory, especially for Blade subscribers. It is guaranteed as good, as handsome, as light running, as durable and as valuable in every way as any f io.uu or iw.w sewing machine inaue. oenu tor circular. CONFIDENTLAL TO AGENTS. For clubs we this year pay the largest cash commission for new subscribers that we have ever paid, or ever paid by any paper. Write us for our confidential terms to agents. It is easier to raise a club for the Blade than for any other publication, and an aotive worker can earn $ 2.00 to $5.00 per day on the terms we offer. Single subscribers will remit one dollar tor one year. Everybody invited to Bend for free specimen or terms to agents. .aaress, THE BLADE, Toledo, 0. FOB BENT. The house recently occupied bv Mr. D. L. Parker as u Hotel, kuowu as the "Hill IloUbO." Apply to uie at the depot. J. 3d, PAYLOIw I shall sell to the highest bidder, for CASH, at the Court House door in Wadesboro, on Monday, the 4th day of February, 18S9, the following Real Estate to satisfy the unpaid taxes for the years mentioned upposite, to wit: ; WADESBORO TOWNSHIP. J C Birmingham, 30 acres, Moore Dean, 10s acres, Mrs Nancy Fort, 83 acres, N Knight heirs, 2 town lots, 20 acres, Samuel Morris, 26 acres, II M Ingram, 120 acres, Mrs xNancy Ingram, 70 acres, Ed Little, 1 town lot. Mrs V B Threadgill, i town lot, J J Thompson, 1 town lot, rl W Buchanan, 7b acres, Henry Balloy, 83 acres, John Cash, 1 town lot, B D Douglas, 60 acres, Allen Edwards, 1 town lot, Daniel Gatewood, 639 acres. Alfred Hammond, 1 town lot Peter Johnson, 1 4 acre. Allen Kennedy, 1 town lot, T D Moore, 1 town lot, GULLEDGE'S TOWNSHIP. J T Lowery estate, 110 acres, Geo T Boswell. 70 acres, Malconi Campbell, 93 acres, Wm Campbell, 40 acres, Lewis J Griggs, 23 1-2 acres, Jessee C Gaddy. 211 acres. John Robinson, 1 town lot, Benjamin Teal , 239 acres, WHITE STORE TOWNSHIP. John W Redfearn, 228 acres, Mrs Eugenia Slappy 224 acres, Mrs Sarah A Broadaway, 158 acres, J T Lowery estate, Mrs Elizabeth Green, 17 acres, Isham Davis, 55 acres, Isham Davis, agent, 110 acres, LANESBORO TOWNSHIP. E H Blackwell, 2 town lots, Mrs Lucy Moore, 247 acres John B Moore, 287 acres. D K Moore, guardian, ill acres, Jno S Preslar, 20 acres, Robert Allen. 140 acres, Mrs Louisa Baucom, 14 acres, Wilson Baucom. 102 acres. Tucker & Co., 20 acres, BURNSVILLE TOWNSHIP. J M Davis estate, 631 acree, Charles P Griffin heirs, 303 acres, CharlesjP Griffin, 50 acres. W A Dees, (Tray wick land) 56 acre D S Hornback estate, 250 acres, T B Phillips, 68 acres, Berry Tray wick, 96 acres, J T Tray wick, 50 acres, Eliza Turner, 70 acres, ANSONVILLE TOWNSHIP. J J Colson. Jr., 227 acres, Samuel H McLendon, 2 town lots, 355 acres, Allen J Tyson, 120 acres, Ralph Gould, 40 acres. Mrs Lt a MCijenaon. 4as acres, - J W Green. 40 acres, J J Pickett, 357 acres, J J Porter, 289 acres, LILESVILLE TOWNSHIP. W II Byrd,20 acres, Allan Carpenter, 25 acres, Reuben Henry devises, 250 acres, J M Henry, 320 acres. Ransom Hall. 18 acres, John Jones, 25 acres, E M Henry, 93 acres, E F Henry, 75 acres. Hamp P Henry estate, 25 acres, Mrs E II Wall, 187 acres, Mrs C N Smith, 346 acres, Mrs Julia Jackson, 1 town lot, Mrs Mary Adams. 1 town lot, Sidney Luther, 132 acres, MORVEN TOWNSHIP. Arch McLaurin, 50 acres, C C White, one towu lot, Mrs Mary J Davis estate, 23 acres, Harry Flowers, 133 acres Dani 1 Gatewood, 500 acres, W M Harris, 1 town lot. Isaac Johnson estate, 26 acres, Elijah Streater, 450 acres, Alex Lindsey, 100 acres, H D Malloy, 1 town lot, Mrs Jeanett May, 184 acres, CharIesH May, W J Purvis, 30 acres, All taxes not settled by Ftbruary the le will be put out for collection without fail. 1885. 18S6. 1887. 1SSS. 90 $ 72 ' $ 60 $ 45 6 13 3 93 80 2 Co 1 66 1 34 5 27 1 20 1 00 73 4 00 3 70 5 04 3 51 84 1 90 2 35 1 75 80 67 6 40 3 9 I 2 95 5 50 5 15 2 34 1 75 4 00 3 33 2 70 2 16 1162 24 57. .16 6a 2 33 1 75 2 45 1 9 ' 2 67 2 00 1 68 01 3 41 2 72 80 2 50 80 27 T5 2 90 3 10 3,3S I 66 86 67 9 bd 3 M 6 76 7 50 4 17 2 IS 600 4 80 400 2 00 6 06 1 60 34 25 1 00 7S 1 67 1 35 6 00 4 80 4 54 1 53 8 46 6 89 2 50 2 00 6 80 1 93 1 60 1 30 5 70 2 30 1 SS 3 00 00 37 1 35 4 00 9 32 15 44 4 50 8 59 S 00 2 25 75 1 27 5 01 S 34 2 50 2 00 1 60 1 54 69 4 44 4 24 2 07 1 80 1 50 I 13 9 50 29 30 4 10 3 14 1 95 3 40 2 01 3 30 2 67 2 00 S7 61 21 ?7 5 57 3 86 2 72 15 43 8 00 7 13 4 TO 4 55 3 31 2 95 1 27 1 00 83 C3 12 00 9 60 801 6 00 12 80 1 04 1 25 1 00 83 62 4 14 3 10 44 bal 4 50 8 57 1 00 83 63 6 40 5 34 4 00 7 43 10 00 7 00 2 67 2 00 1 63 2 50 1 91 deliu 3 50 3 30 67 59 3 04 3 22 2 66 1 93 75 63 48 4 23 4 14 3 96 2 33 7 45 10 01 7 50 12 95 7 73 6 40 4 65 4 87 2 14 3 34 3 70 2 7 3 45 2 S3 5'J Wadesboro, Jan. 1, 1SS3. J. A. CEOWDEE, Ex Sheriil Anson Ccuuty, N C.