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1TKKLY PERSONAL. i he Movcnu-nts <>i Jlany i'e-.'pie, TewWerrians and Thosr Vi'lio Visit i Newberry. Cap:. C. W. Bishop, of Columbia, is >isiting in the city. Mi?s Banna Green spent Sunday vith Miss Kva Oxner at Kinards. I \?v s vjoirovsi has returned froai; Panama. j i Mr. .J. \V. Hendrix has changed from! Silvertstreet to Newberry No. 1. 1 Mr. B. R. Guin has changed from Newberry No. 6 to Newberry No. 1. i I Mr. M. Ward has moved his fam-i )}y from the city to Route No. 7. | Miss Carrie Buford has returned to her school work at Timers. Miss Lois Gregory has returned from a visit to friends in Newberry.?Ma."lon Times. j Mr. H. H. Sloves. who recently came hi re to clerk lor the firm or .J Mann,, iias returned to Charleston. I Mrs. T. A. Shealy, of- Pomaria, Xo. 2, j 9 and Mrs. G. E. Bowers, of Little Moun- j I . tain, were in the city Monday. Dr. D. D. Wallace spent part of | this week in Newberry.?Spartanburg! Journal. Miss Louisa Duncan and Miss Jordan, of I'nion,' are visiting Miss Pau-j line Gilder. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Livingstone have! moved to the home of his nephew, Mr. I ^ n T? ! i 1). G. Livingstone, ai Silverstreei n. r. D. 1. I Mr. and Mrs.'Charles Epting and; 5on, Harold, returned Tuesday from j II a visit to relatives in Little Mountain! ^ and Prosperity.?Leesville Xews-Advocate. j \ Mrs. Win. Johnson went to Sumter j. on Saturday in response to the tele-j( cram announcing the death of her'] brother-in-law, Mr. Win. A. Kinard,! i accompanying the remains to Xewber- j I ry on Sunday. Mr. wiiiinm Oreen has accepted a j1 very fine position with the Coast Line ' 1 Railijoad company, at a good salary.; 1 He will have charge of the steno-j } graphic department of the Florence office, and will also be private secretary to the-superintendent of thflt division.; Mr. Green was offered a good position j by another company. This speaks: well for him and The Herald and News I ^ congratulates him upon these calls To i responsible and honorable positions, j ' ! s I j VARIOUS AND ALL ABOUT. |s V The holidav:- are over and the boys j ! e unci girls have returned to their re-1 snective schools ami colleges. ' .1! i i Rev. E. (\ Witt, of Newberry, will | preach at the Lutheran church at Sil- j \verstreet next Sunday afternoon at 3; c o'clock. j j According to a statement from the; HoTiiirtniPiu of agriculture therej* UVJ.'U* V4??v,... w are 9,122 automobiles in South Caro- j 5 Una, 14.~> being in Newberry. The Ladies' Aid society of the Lu- j theran Church of the Redeemer will j j meet with Mr-. Edward Fulenwider cm j Tuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock The County Farmers' union met Sat- j .urdav and elected Senator Alan John-1 * * t gtone delegate to the State union which j r libels in Columbia on the 16th. j r Policeman Samuel Johnson remains j t on the force filling the vacancy cans- v ed by the .withdrawal of Mr. W. L. a ^Griffin. # g i first Sunday of the Xew Yeara i f was a bright and beautiful day and i pleasant as spring. The first Sunday i a in 1912 was like a Xew Year's card?i 11 snow sparkling in the sunlight. rtfie Bachelor Maids will meet Tues-j t 0-iy evening at 4 o'clock in the chainb t of commerce rooms. All mem-j bcrs are urged to bp present, as busi-j ^ uess of importance is to be transact-in d. ! i ! f 1 - rtf tiipi In speaking 01 ine eiciuuu ( new chief of police the Laurens Ad- ( vertiser says: "Mr. Jernigen has ai-i Avays been known as a fearless officer t and he will doubtless mak*- a very of-! ^ ficient chief of police." j ] Mr. Ben A. Havird left on Monday j 1 ror St. Louis, Mo., and will return on! ' next Monday with the second carload' 1 of mules and horses. Mr. Havird is .a successful trader anfd knows how to please the farmers. ' i J Tht, v^Hv of v .1. Moon's son reach-.. h! Xewberrv on Sunday afternoon, . shipped from Washington, where the! boy was murdered. Particulars of the murder are not known. The body was I, found with but one garment on. The Y)oy's skull was crushed and his ear ( - as sticking to a brick. was tak-*r L -I the hospita'l. but died without re ^raining erM:>."ionP!vs.<. i:\rm >n:vr in cold villi-:. Alh'triMl Pistil to Kill Col. L. >V. (. Klalock FaiK Clinton, Jan. 4.?Friday a man named I). L. Boozer, infuriated, it is said because Col. L. W. ('. Blaloek had taken some negroes off his place, came up to Goldville with the intention ol killing the colonel. Several shots, it is alleged, were fired into thee Blalock home by Boozer and some negroes who were with him. Then Boozer proceeded to the Blalock atore where, it is said, he shot and kicked out all the giasses in the store. Meet of the citizens of Goldville left town as soon as the affair started Boozer was taken to the Laurens jail at 2.30 p. m. He wag later released on a $1,000 bond. ROOF PROPERTY SOLD TODAY. ?o? lands of Bankrupt Estate Worth About .$".>,000?Other Sales. Lexington, .Jan. 5.?The largest land :>al^ ever made in the nistorv of Lexington county will be ^ulied off at the court house Mo?*liy. when thp h.rge real estate holdings ol' the bank1 upt estate of W. I>. ricoi will be sold at public auction by the trustees Di the estatee*. The propel ty is esti ?-v^ ot ..Krwut <i7~ noil ii is ex liCllt'U U.L auvut y Vjvvv, - ? pvted that many buyers- v.ill be attracted. The propertv coas.sts of all kinds of lands?timeberd lands, farming lands, woodlands, etc. The Roof t ai hi re was one of the largest in this section of the State an there ar? hundreds of creditors. The failure occurred . last March and no part of the losses has been paid off by the trustee?. Following the sale Monday it is txpec-ted that the trustees will make i payment to the creditors as soon as .he several matters can be adjusted. 1 " , iitill ho rpali7Pd JiitfT. wnat peixtnwgc ?ui wx, iiii not be learned. The trustees have been collecting accounts wherever possible, and considerable money has Deen turned in to the trustees. Besides the sale of the Roof proper;y the clerk of court has a number of mportant ?ales to make and there will )e some sales by private individuals. IV ANTED TO SEE THE PRESIDENT listed. Demented Chicago Lawyer Lands in Asylum. Washington. .Jan. 1.?Peculiar anion of Anthony Hunt, of Chicago, an tttorney and a member of thn l"niverity club of that city, whilj at tin1 vhite house late today in an effort to ee President Taft. caused his arrest. ;y the police. He is being helu lor examination as to his mental condition it the government hospital for th.? nsane. When he appeared at the white lou-e executive offices. Hunt told the fficers persons were persecuting him md that he wante* dthe president's iid. He said also he wanted to ask Resident Taft to appoint him ambas ador to France. FOrOr SASTROXOMER DEAD )r. Lewis Swift Expires at Home in >"ew York Stale. Binghampton, X. Y.,' Jan. ">.?Dr. .ewis Swift, America's great astrononer. di?d today at his home in Maathon. never ecovering consciousness ollowing a stroke of paralysis susained Xew Year's Day. The funeral rill be held Tuesday. Dr. Swift was foiinw nf the Royal Astronomical c.c?oty of England, and also of Ca.sd?; received three gold medals fro v. ron: the Austrian academy of science t Vienna for iscoveries, the greatest, mmber ever given to any one man, .nd also received the Laland silver edal and .">40 francs from France for he most rapid discovery 01 i-uu.iio ver made. Dr. Swift was born in Clarkston, X. February 29, 1820. He was the knowledge discoverer of more than .300 nabulae, pr "little worlds." and ifteen comets. ( Dies From Hums. Spartanburg. Jan. 3.?Ora .lack-on, lie little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A'alter .Jackson, of Campobello, was jurned to death at the home of the >arents in that town this afternoon. ^Irs. Jackson left lier children at the lomp alone for a few minutes to stop The love-sick Ohioan who killed nims^lf by eating dynamite had probibly learned how destructive explosions in tlidepartment of the interior iro. Mayor Gaynor thinks that Washington and Lincoln were overatod, but nobody has suggested that Mayor Gaynor is underrated. If inoiifv did not talk ta;> l"nn <! States would no! be so no? r f;i:\. <.r:<;:,Auj> takes chain;*:. . Kntfred Cpon is Nov on First Su?U;i} in tin* Vcjir. The Rev. Sanders R. Guignard en. torctl upon his work as rector oi' St. . ill. '^rnoal diarch on Sunday i ' |-afternoon, .January tilt first in the f j New Year, and preached a strong sert j moil, peculiarly appropriate to the eea-json from Phil. 3:13-14: "Forgetting 'those things which are behind and reaching forth unto those things which . are before, 1 press toward the mark for I the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus." Beginning his ser..nOii by alluding to the relationship of pastor and parich1 loners, priest and people, minister to 1 j those to be ministered unto, Mr. Guini nmiirn. v> i r. hoarofc t h a mpssae'p of gtliU ?Cl?C 11IO UV/U. vw 0_ the Christmas-tide and set before them the vision, and the ideal which it brings to the new year; the vision of 1 the perfect life, with the possibilities for each of us for greater service as the days unfold. The greatest need today is for a clearer spiritual vision, that men might seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness and reaI lize that "the things unseen are | stronger, greater and of more importance than the things that are seen"? that men might be valued for their true worth rather than their possessions? that "a man's life consisteth not in the things which he posse-sseth." "W'e need to measure by spiritual values for real progress, for real life of greatfst value and to set before us the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus." These are but a fewpoints from Mr. Guignard's sermon, which rang throughout with the call to "reach forth to the things which are before." | Monday, the 6th of January, being I "thp Kninhanv. or the manifestation of Christ to the Gentile," Mr. Guignard held a short service, appropriate to the day at St. Luke's at 11 a. m. Rev. A. E. Cornish Resigns. Bishop Guerry in The Diocese for January writes as follows: Was oatly distressed to hear that the Rev. A. E. Cornish, for so many years a priest of this diocese, had resigned his cure and accepted a call to Tampa Fla. Mr. Cornish's resignation following so soon after that of Mr. Covington, at Sumter, makes it doubly hard to lose him. j The diocese has been sorely crippled | by these losses, but we must reraemj ber that the church is larger than the ! diocese and where the opportunities | tor service in the Master's Vineyard ! are greater there good men will go. Our prayers and best wishes- go with I Mr. C ornish into his new field of labor. The Old and the xi^v. i ]0uu B. C.?For the building of Sol-; * i- i - r ~ C onion's Temple.?"Then tne cmei ui i the fathers and princes of the tribes j of Israel, and the captain of thoa-: sands, and of hundreds' with rulers of the King's work, offered willingly, and: gave for the service of the house, etc., j j $ * * Then the people rejoiced for J I that they offered willingly, because; i with perfect heart they offered willing- j ly to the Lord: and David the King,1 also rejoiced with great joy."?I Chron.; 29:6-0. j 1909 A. D.?Then the parishioners J came together to plot for money to, ? i _ 1 ,1 I build tin church. Few peopie wuum offer willingly, so they determined to have bazaars and sales of work, with all kinds of amusements, such as con-! j certs, tableaux, raffles (which are il-1 (legal), fortune-telling lucky tubs, pink' j teas, necktie socials and other such J like things; also whist drives, dancing,: etc. Then the people rejoiced that they! had made some money by these means, j land offered it to the Lord for building; i His church.?Ontario Churchman. I A Card of Thanks. ! During the long ilinsss and death J of our dear father, the neighbors, I * , friends and physician were very kind, ! which was highly appreciated. We i I wish to express to them our si.icorest i thanks for their thoughtfuluess, and i ! pray God to bless them. Mrs. .1. S. Bowers and children. Prosperity, S (\, Jan. 3, 101/5. Yeniii: Women's Wesley Hiiile Class. i The class met and elected the follnn-ino' nffif.ors fnr comins: vear: Teacher?Mrs. .1. W. White. I President?Salife nolle Bnford. * i 1st Vice President?Marie Dominick. I 2nd Vice President?Mrs. Minnie ! Blease. t ! 3rd Vice Presid nt?lionise Taylor. 1 4th Vice President?Kate Adams. ' Treasurer and Corresponding SecI Iiili.i Wiflfpr I n lttl.? "imu ?? Assistant Treasurer?Carrie Belle: ! West. ; Recording Seeretary ? Beatrice Cojdwin. The hiway to siijirrivs f-Isark? 5 !:c-' 'j ' o ,**o\v t'10:11. r n: \< i:i:s* assoi ! v )Ii>> < ;i??:<?rilie ( liappell (u Tail-: Vbont DomcMic Science in 1 on;:ik>ii School*. The regular monthly meeting of the County IVaclicrs' association will be \ l * Kw^K r^.lwwxl I i fill a I lilt: 111^,11 si IIUIII UI1 oniiiiun.', i beginning promptly at 11 o'clock. The comity superintendent urgently request- 'that all teachers attend this ; meeting. The trustees are also cordially invited to be present, and they ! v. ill hear much'of a helpful nature to ; them. The meeting is also open to all | cifizc-ns. The ladies are especially invited to be present. Miss Catherine Chappell, teacher at Whitmire, will be present at the meeting and make a talk on domestic science in the common schools. Miss ! Chappell is an enthusiastic advocate of : this branch of education, and is eminently qualified to talk upon it. The : Whitmire school is the only one in ; the county thac has established a doj mestic science department, and it is bcing conducted most successfully. Miss Chappell, who is a graduate of "Winthrop, will make a plain and practical talk on this subject, and will be sure to entertain as well as instruct | her hearers, and it is trusted that : there will be a large audience to near her. Dcntli of a Former Newlierrinii. Mr. William Alonzo Kinard died sudI denly on Saturday morning at bis home in SiiMKcr. Me bad not be 11 very well all the week and had suffered what seemed to be au attack of acute i.:dij geslion. He was bett r on Friday, but cu Saturday morning he had another attack, and before the doctor could , reach liini he rnrd Dreatuea nis last. I Mr. Kinard was the son of Mr. Solomon Kinard, -of Newberry, and was : born November J, l$r>4. He was mar! ried 011 November 1, 1S87, to Miss Lizi zie Kib'er, daughter of the late Drayton ! Kibler, who survives him. He is also I ' survived by two sons Clarence A., an I electrical engineer in Pittsburg, Penn., ' and William, who has a position in a i ! bank at Su.nter. i I Of Mr. Kinard's immediate family, j his sister, Mrs. B. H. Lovelace, of Newberry, alone, survives him. j He has a large connection and many 1 friends in Newberry, who sympathize j with his family in their bereavement. The body was brought to Newberry |on Sunday on the C., N. & L. at* 1.30! j p. m., and was carried to the residence i I of Mr. William Johnson. He was bu-j ried at 4 o'clock on Monday afternoon! at Rosemont, the funeral services con-' ducted by Rev. Edward Fulenwider,' being held at the grave in the presence of a large number of friends. ; Mr. Kinard was a merchant, and began his mercantile career while quite young by clerking for the late Mr. Andrew Wicker. He re:nov(d to Sumter a number of j years ago, hi- last visit to the home of his boyhood occurring a few years: ago upon the occasion of the gradua-j tion of one of his sons from Newberry j college. The pa!lbearer? were- Messrs. Geo.: FOUR?H&X . ... ? ! B. Cromer, .ino. ^1. Kinard , W. H. j Hunt, .Jno. A. bummer, \an onimi imu W. F. Ewart. The Sumter Item of the 4th instant contained the following: The many friends of Mr. William A. Kinard were shocked Saturday morning to hear of ihs very sudden: I death, which occurred at his home on' West Liberty street about 9.30 o'clock.; Mr. Kinard was taken with an attack of acute indigestion Friday morning, but had apparently recovered from it Saturday. About 9 o'clock he was <suddenly taken ill and died before a physician could arrive at Iiis home. Mr. Kinard came to Sumter six or vsarc :ist> from Xevvberry and; " I lias been in the employ of Schwartz Bros, and of the Jenkins Specialrv company since that time. He is snr-' vived by his wife, who was Miss K'izabeth Kibler before her marriage, and two .-ons, Messrs. William Kinard, o*' this city, and Clarence Kinard, of Pittsburg. Pa. The body will be taken from here to : X- wherry Sunday morning on tlie ! 0.40 train at which place the funeral services and interment will be held. The following gentlemen will act as pallbearers: .Messrs. (\ L. Tisdale, .J. ; I). Shirer, .1. A. Clark. S. F. Stoudeni mire, L. L. Hunter, 10. W. A. Rnltman. Special to The Herald and News. An Alarm That Wus !\<>t An Alarm. : Shortlv before :> o'clock Friday I morning many persons who were en: sconced between warm blankets had .their slumbers rudely disturbed by a ; blast fro.n the power house whistle, to be followed shortly after by a prolonged toot from the whistle at the Mollohon mi l. which continued its <',s: a! ii( i.-;" for at bast minutes. !t .. :.s the >: -suit o:' a ladder having fal' - Ifl tllp v :e. 1.ITTI.F DAMAGE. { I 1 , Storm Friday Morniutr Created Much Frfcht ;i>. it Shook Houses and Smashed Windows. ! The storm which visited Xewberry i county early Friday morning did no , j serious damage, so far as has been i j learned, but for three hours hundreds) | of people sat anxiously awaiting the abating of the furious wind, which at limes, probably blew as- high as 60 or 70 miles an hour. Many windows are reported to have been smashed all over the county, and in this city sev-j (ral telegraph wires were blown down! ' across the roadway. On? citizen had j la narrow escape from injury as he, i was driving into the city before day. j. A live wire had fallen across the street, j l'eing yet dark he could not see the j I wire, but saw it "sputtering" on the j wet earth. j Aside from broken poles, some fal- j j trees and smashed windows no j damage to any extent has been reportl ui. i Tlie First Salesdav in 1913. ! * i Monday brought a large crowd to town. The following sales were made j | by Master H. H. Rikard: ! Case of G'mo. S. Mower, treasurer of i ! Kiskine college, against Hugh T. Ronwick. ?>"> acres, to Geo. S. Mower for ' i j $1,000. Geo S. Mower treasurer of Krskine j j college, against Emma Mahon, one-half' acre, to .1. P. Mahon for $2,6">0. I). W. Alderman & Sons company1 ! ' against Sudie G. Turner, lot 42 in ! Sunset park, to I). W Alderman & Sons! j for ?6">0. j Lyles Whitener and others against;i Lamar Whitener and others, one-;. i ! sixteenth of an acre to .T. B. Hunter,!1 | attorney, for $130. Twenty-nine one-! hundredths of an acre, to J. P>. Hun! ter, attorney, for $510. ? - ' irv rti I | John Stockman ana Keuon chock-; i man against H. T. Renwick and oth-! < | en;. 6S0 3-4 acres, to E. A. Griffin for | $10,700. Two hundred acres to E. A. s Griffin for $2,010. News of Excelsior. Excelsior, Jan. 6.?Sunday was a 1 beautiful day for all church going peo-1 pie. Miss Julia Shealy, of Little Mountain, has been spending a. few days with Mrs. J. W. Hartman. The earthquake was felt in this sec- j tion last week by most all of our J i" people. . i , Miss Nannie May Cook has been vis- j :ring Miss Eunice Alewine in lower' No. 9 township. Mr. and Mrs. H. S. B. Kibler, of: Newberry, are visiting his brother, Mr' J. A. C. Kibler. Mrs. .John Adam Boland, who has! been confined to her room the past few weeks in bad. condition with cancer, died at her home on Wednesday after- j i i noon, and was buried at Mt. Tabor, ' y j church Thursay afternoon. The funeral services were conducted by her pastor, the Rev. E. W. Leslie. Mr.. Willie Singley, of Wellington, Texas, came in last week to see his < sister, Mrs. J. A. Boland, who has been i sick for some time, and who was bu-1 ried on Thursday. Mr. Singley came; in time to be present at his sister's burial. * Mrs. GcO. 13. Dominick and little " daughter, Beatrice, of Greenwood, hate been 011 a few days' visit to her moth-! er, Mrs. .1. C. Cook. Mrs. Samuel HilLer and children, of j Xcwberry, have been on a visit to her | t'.ithuv'c familv "VIi* f R PnnTr Mr. and Mrs. Aumerle Lorick, of! Irmo, have been up on a visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Lorick. Mr. E. M. Cook is making quite an | improvement on his dwelling house on J rhe public road near Prosperity. Happy Xew Year to all. Sigma, j . *""" . ; 1 ^ Kansas minister says that he would rather drink red ink than beer. J There are .-ome anti-prohibitionists who would rather see him do it. 1 Fire \hirm. J Eve's time to the present," but if any - tlc-nce of Dr. 0. B. Mayer Monday afternoon and some one saw a lighted pot used for the asphalt work audi concluded the roof was on fire, sending in the alar 11.* a The Manchester I'nion declares that New Hampshire's politicians are the crookedest politicians in the country. Maybe that's why the people have put them out and the Democrats in. LOST, ST KAY ED OK STOLEN? Ulack and white spotted bitch pointer about three lionths old. Tail . bobbed. Finder rewarded by leaving same, with R. C. Perry. NOTICK i- hereby given that all parlies are forbidden to fish, hunt or trespass in any way uron my land i i Xo. !> townshnn under pr-nnitv o;' lav. .). o. S*:ri'. COTTON MAKKET. (Corrected by Nat Gist). (Bv Robt. McC. Hnlmps 1 Cotton lo j Whitmire. j Cotton 13 I Cotton seed 42 1 Prosperity. Cotton 13 ___'| Seed, per 100 1.35 Cbappells. uoiton 13 Seed, per 100 1.40 Pomaria. Cotton 13 Seed, per 100 1.35 t A SPECIAL NOTICES. J One Cent a Word. No ad- IH vertisement taken for lest J than 25 cents. w LOST?Out of wagon on Monday De- 1 cember 23, 1912, between Newberry and home, on the Belfast road, one breech loading shotgun. Liberal re- I ward to finder for return of same. II. Livingstone, for Sam Renwick. ffl FOR SALE?Pair of farm mules. V. E. Kohn, Prosperity, S. C. 12-31-tt I WANTED?To make several loans of H $l,0o0 to $1,500 each. H. C. Hollo way. 12-21-tf. FOR SALE?One trained pointer bitch, fl two and a half years old, one bull lerrier pup eight weeks, old. Apply to W. E. Elmore, Newberry, S. C., k. ^ i F. D. No. 6. 12-24-tf. 8] TWO NICE rooms wim board can be obtained by applying io Mrs. 0. L. Schumpert, J600 Main street. 16-6-tf. ()>'E or two horse farm to rent. Ap- IH lllv to V AT Rnfnr/1 Von-Wrv <2 f* 12-V7-tf. " 1 WASTED-?A second hand engine c i wheels, 12 or 15 horse power Aja*. or 12 or 16 horse power Tozer. Address G. E. Caughman, Leesville, S. C. 12-6-tf. I A CAR of special grain fertilizer has arrived. For further particulars call on S. J. Kohn, Prosperity. 9-27-tf. FOR CIGARS, tobacco, cigafettes, etc., to sell again, see Anne 0. Ruff ft Co.s stock. We can give you the A best brands. Phone 84-2. 11.8-tf ^ DR. J. K. GILDER. JIlL Dental Par lors, in flostoffice building, corner Caldwell and Friend streets. 10-29-tf . KOK SALE?One 3-ho-rse disc plow, one feed cutter, one 2-horse wa,<ou. i one disc harrow. Apply F. R. Hunter, old court house. 10-25-t!. ^ 1A ?>* 1 IfOXEY TO LEND?Money to lend oa fl real estate. Long time ind ea?7 Vj payments. Hunt, Hunt & Hunter i[4 9-19-tf. , !."?0 BUSHELS of seed wheat for sale. * H. 0. Long, Silverstreet. 11-26-tt J HIDES?Sell your hides direct to a M dealer and cut out the middle man. T will pay highest priced ever known H in Newberry. See me. T. M. San- 9 riers. 9-20-ltaw?tf ;iTIZ?3S wanting servants may be B supplied with same by comrauncating with James S. Daniel, 825 Scott fl street, city. ll-281tf. BIT a genuine diamo^^ ring for $15 at Williamson's. Fs-tf IB \ PEACH?The Gaumont Weekly for Thursday, Arcade. [)ID YOl' see Aurora Floyd Saturday? No? Then get on to our feature > days. The Arcade. IWl Tilrn I'\r m. T.' Uik' fcJV/lt lll^l *& Uiaj O . 1 uv u don't miss "Blood Will Tell," at The 1 Arcade on Wednesday in twc parts. tg FHK ARCADK never has N? suess about features. 1 hey have ^v- fl ery week, and know it one week A ahead. NHK\ WK say feature*we mean more H than one reeel. Arcade. fl SPEAKING of peaches, there never r was one that could touch the pro- B gram at the Arcade for this week. FEATURES on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday in two and three reels. Don't miss them. Arcade. FOR SALE?I will sell my nice pony^B I want larger horses for farm use. D. A. Livingston, Xewberry, S. C., 1136 Summer St. l-7-2t. KOR RENT?A small oik-horse farm, good land. Apply to L. I>. Morris, 5'. r < >. '" . R. F. I>. ' 1-7-lt