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PURELY PERSONAL. The Movements of Many People, Xewberrinns, and Those Who Jisit dewberry. Mr. G. Frank Wearn is in the city; Mr. O'Xeall Jacobs has returned from Savannah. Mr. A.K. Epting, of Kinards, No. 2, was in the city Saturday. Mrs A. T. Brown has gone from Chester to Williamston. Mr. B. ET Waita has changed from Prosperity to Newberry. Rev. J. A. Sligh, of Columbia, is in the city. Miss Eunice Abrams, of Newberry, visited friends here recently.?Edgefield Advertiser, 20th. Mrs. Addie Hodges, of Prosperity, is visiting friends in the city.?Spartanburg Heraid, 20th. Miss Cava Shuler, of Orangeburg, is visiting at the home of Master H. H. Rikard. Mr. W. A. Rikard, of Columbia, is on -a visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W W Rikard i Mr. L. A. Collins, of the firm of Collins & Smith, paid a business visit to Saluda last week. Mr. B. E. Julien returned last -week from Augusta and Mrs. Julien from a visit to Columbia. Prof. J. A. Dennis, principal of the Bethune graded school, spent a few hours in town Saturday morning.? McBee Courier, 21st. Mrs. Charlotte Spearman, of Newberry', is expected soon to visit at the home of her brother, Mr. John W. Payne.?Edgefield Advertiser, 20th. Mr. J no. I. H. Aull, who is at Knowlton's hospital recovering from an operation, will be able to return home in a few days. f ' i Mr. John K. Aull, of Xewberrv coun> ty, has been appointed private secretary to*Onv. Rlease. Judging: from the newspaper accounts he is all right.? ; Pickens Sentinel. Col. J. Marion Davis, of the governor's staff* was unable on account of his duties as superintendent of the Newberry cotton mill*to attend the parade in Charleston last week. When the Methodist conference takss ReV. J. W.Speak from tfie Bethel Methodist church appointment, Sp~ ianburg will be the loser.?Spartanburg Journal. He is one of Newberry's boys. Mrs. W. H. Hunt was chosen as chairman of the committee on literax rvf fna P^ontiot ture at ue wu?cuuuu v*. ^^>1^1.1 Missionary union in Columbia last! w-c-ek, and Mes<iames E. Pendleton Jones, R. Y. LeaveU and J. A. Pant as delegates to the Southern union. While visiting her sister. Miss Corrie .Lee Havird, who teaches at Barksville, - - - I .Miss Minnie Havird of Newberry received the shocking news Wednesday morning of the death of the young ladies' mother at their home in Newberry. Accompanied by Miss Bessie ^ -LI? if: TT : and Aline trews, uie ivusstis naviiu i left early Wednesday morning for their stricken home. Mrs. Havird was a sister of Gov. Blease.?Laurens ville Herald,22nd. YABIOES A>D ALL ABOUT. Next Thursday ?ill be tne saa enu | of turkey. * Prepare your ballots for the candidate*. b * * -A | ~ ) The Bachelor Maids will meet with Mrs. T. K. Johnstone Tuesday aUer . * :?oon at 4.30 p. m. Christmas is speeding upon us and the children are counting the days. Make the children happy. By oversight Eldridge McSwain, of the eighth grade, high school, was left off the honor roll last published. It is well that railroad trains don't have to stop as the trolley cars do for passengers, else there would be no quick trips to Charleston. The town of Wilsonville on the Atlantic Coast Line between Columbia and Charleston should drop the ville now that Wilson has been elected. I Only a touch of it?just a little! events in Charleston can appear in the j glance at the grand sights and great I ilocal columns. If subscribers have missed their pa- j pers it is because ,The Herald and News "mail man" spent Fleet and Fair week in Charleston. By changing a P to a B, somebody has made a sign in the depot at Kolloek read: "DO NOT SPIT ON THE FLOOR, BLEASE"?Pee Dee Advocate. A union Thanksgiving service will be held in the A. R. P. church. Pros- i perity, at 11 o'clock a. m. Thanksgiving ! day, November 28. Everybody is invited. Will Langt'ord beat Wright or will j Wright beat Langford is the interest- , ins: question. Some voters think it is right for Wright to beat Langford, while others think it is not. Columbia sings Prosperity's songs.? ; Headline in The State. Columbia had i better be careful how she sings Pros- ! 1 perity's songs. Prosperity eight to i be allowed to sing her own songs. On Monday Recorder Earhardt fined Henry Mathis and^ Arthur Wiggins $10 each, the former t for disorderly conduct. and the latter for creating dis tubance. Both paid. At .Johnson's hardware store there is on exhibition from the farm of Mr. CorneliU6 Buzhardt an ear of corn that is a freak to look at. Attached tc and growing around the well developed ear are six smaller ears. A man in Charleston last week was ! overheard to say that a certain crimin al was to be examined as to his sanitary condition, and he didn't say it as a joke.. It was a big blunder. He was not from Newberry or Missouri. There will be a call meeting of the Home Mission society and the Calendar of Central Methodist church Tues- j day afternoon at 3.30 o'clock at tne church. This is very important and every member is urged to be present. There will be a festival at Mrs. Reeder Brooke's at Jalapa, S. C., November 28, from 4 to 10 p. m., to raise funds to buy an organ for the new Methodist church. The public is cordially invit- 1 i ed to assist in this laudable undertaking. There- will be preaching at Smyrna church on Thanksgiving day at 3 o clock. The ladies of the church will give a hot supper the same day Mr. G. P. Boozer's, beginning at 4 o'clock. jlne public is coraiauy invitee to at[ tend. At Friday's court by Recorder Ear-j hardt, Dave Douglas, a colored youth, was fined $10 for stealing buggy whip from Mr. 0. B. Cannon. The case was compromised by the payment of $5 and a whipping by the moth-er of the boy in the presence of Chief'Lominack. The chief says it was a good one. Thf* T.aHioc' A orw^iptv nf tho Baptist church will display in the windows of Johnson & McCrackin their fancy work for Christmas buyers oil December 10, 1912. Everybody will be welcomed. All who have promised extra money will please pay by that time . to the committee. On Thanksgiving day. at 9.30 a. m., i at the high school building, there will i hp n mntfh camp nf hnskpthn 11 hptwpdn the pupils of the ninth and tenth j grades. The public is cordially invited to witness the game, as it is the desire to arouse interest in basketball, which is universally recognized as a game calculated to develop the muscles without overexertion. ELK'S MEMORIAL SERVICE. Will be Held in Opera Mouse on Sunday Afternoon at 3 O clock? Public hivihd. Tie annual memorial services of Newberry lodge, No. 1103, B. P. 0. Elks, vill be held in iu? c^cra r-ji.be on Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. This hour has been fixed so as not to interfere with the Sunday schools of the city, and the public is invited to attend. The general memorial address will be delivered by Mr. J. B. A. Mulally, of Pendleton. There will also be a short address by a member of the lodge. There will be appropriate music, and, of course, the beautiful ritual memorial j services of the Elks will be carried \ out. The full program will be announced' in The Herald and News of Friday. Death of Mrs. Margaret Epting. Mrs. Margaret Epting died at 10.4G o'clock Saturday night at the home of i her daughter, Mrs. H. F. Addy, and was buried on Monday afternoon at 1 o'clock, at Capers Chapel in Lexing- < ton county, near Little Mountain, by i the side of her husband. The service was conducted by the Rev. J. D. Shealy. Mrs. Epting was in her 96th year. She was widely and affectionately known as "Aunt Peggy," alike by young and < ; old, and was probably the oldest perjson in the county. Unlike many very jold people she was in possession of her mental faculties, and was in very good physical condition up to the time of her death. Mrs. Epting was a loyal land devoted Methodist, "anxious to go home," as she expressed it to her paster, who visited hei a short while before her death, w ieii eh*1 was not ex-; pect.ing to be called soon She leaves three surviving children: Mr. G. M. B. 1 Epting and Mrs. H. F. Add}, oftiio city, .trd Mrs. George Dickert, of the coTTttty.; k. THE CRIMINAL COURT | GRINDING OUT WORK ONE OF THE HEAVIEST DOC KETS I> NUMBER OF YEARS. Havird Case Fixed for Wednesday Morning?Sam Boozer to he Resentenced?Other Cases. ??? . The court of general sessions convened on Monday morning, with Judge; R. Withers Memminger, of Charleston,' presiding. Solicitor R. A. Cooper, J Court Stenographer Jno. K. Aull, and the other officers of the court were all in their places. WihAn rnnrt oonv,e-ned it was con- ! I fronted by one of the heaviest dockets in a number of years. Following the handing out of bills of indictment by Solicitor Cooper, Judge Memminger delivered a short, clear | and concise charge to the grand jury, j He spoke of the' heavy docket and of j the necessity for dispatch in the con-, duct of the work of the term. ? . - - w* Ua?ira case Heanegaay. The case of the State vs. B. Mayer Havird, charged with murder in the l killing of Luther'Bledsoe, at Silver- i street during the Christmas holidays j of 1911, was fixed for trial on Wednes-! day morning. To be Re-Sentenced to Death. It will be necessary during this term to re-sentence to death Sam Boozer, \ colored, convicted of murder in the killing of James S. Gilliam, overseer on Jno. C. Hipp's Old Town plantation. Boozer was sentenced by Judge Ernest' Gary to be hanged. An appeal was tak+V.O ciinromo r>nnrf and fhp Sll Cll iu Lll^ out/* Viixv v, preme court affirmed the judgment of; the circuit court. While the appeal i was pending the legislature changed j the manner of execution from hanging to electrocution. Sam Boozer has been ! confined in the State penitentiary since j *1 -3 4-"U rv? A ilflll 11 ?0(] 11T1- i lilt: UtJclLLl JSCUlCIHiC noa yi unuun^i.u UJ>- I on him. He will bebrought to New-I berry some time this week, a new date \ fixed for his execution, and will then b* ! taken back to the penitentiary to await! in the death chamber the date fixed for i his death by electrocution. Plea of Guilty. Jim Sims, colored, pleaded guilty on | Monday morning to violation of the j dispensary law, and was sentenced to; pay a fine of $100 or to serve three months. Sentence of 15 Years. In the case of the State vs. L*ge Dansby, colored, charged with murder,! a plea of manslaughter was agreed up- i on, and Dansby was sentenced to serve 15 years. Messrs. B. V. Chapman and j Fred. H. Dominick represented the dePendant, by appointment of the court Five Years for TVasli Halty. Wash Halty, colored, charged with murder, pleaded guilty to manslaugh- j ter, by agreement, and was sentenced ' to serve five years. The defendant j was represented by Mr. Eugene S. j Blease. Five Years for Jim Washington. Jim Washington, colored, who shot' ? ? ... ... ! off Ed Wortny's ngnt arm, on sue, streets of Newberry one night some: time ago, pleaded guilty to a charge of j assault and battery with intent to kill, j and was sentenced to serv^ five years. Two Years for Manns Gray. A plea of manslaughter was accepted in the case against Manus Gray, charged with murder, and Gray was eentenced to serve two years. By appointment o? the court, Messrs. tf. V. Chapman and Fred. H. represented the defendant. POISONED BY JIMPSOX WEED. Little Girl Almost at Death's Door from Eating Poisonous Weed. I Gatfney, November 22.? Madge Lav- j ender, the little three-year-old daugh-! i-er .of Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Lavender, has j been at the point of death for two days i as a result of eating jimpson weed. Wednesday morning the little girl was out in the yard with several companions when she was suddenly seized with the illness. At 3 o'clock she became unconscious. Dr. J. X. Xesbitt j was hurriedly summoned and worked | all night over tlie little girl. Yester-1 day afternoon she partially regained j consciousness, and the physician states > that in all probablity she will recover, j unless some complications set in. Mr. Lavender, who makes his home j in Newberry, was telegraphed of the j serious nature of the little girl's illness J and arrived in the city yesterday morn- ! ing. loiter news received in Newberry! giv.es the gratifying information that the little girl is out of danger and improving. Thanksgiving: Service at St. Paul's. T1 K /-\ i Thijnlrocrn'inor CDfViOD ! 1 ur- annual 1 uauaogiuug ov. * * iv^v> will be held at St. Paul's Lutheran church, beginning at 11a. m. Let all the people in reach come. Y. vcn A. Riser. Pastor. nanHHmHHHHHBl ( <?DIO\ PLEAS COURT. Adjournment Reached on Saturday Afternoon After Disposing of Much Work. The common pleas court adjourned on Saturday afternoon, after disposing of a large amount of business. In the case of Thos. J. Davenport vs. the C., X. & L. Railroad company, the facts in connection with which _ i .l : were given 111 me leisi, issue ui i nc Herald and News; the jury returned a, verdct for the defendant road. The four cases of J. Guy Miller, J. Clarence Miller, J. Edward .\abors and Malcolm P. Johnson, all against the C., N. & L., were tried together, the facts being the same in each. The plaintiffs alleged that they flagged the afternoon passenger at Garys, but that the Wr. i 1 4-Vi /\n orVl 1 f T*A/%AOrni7a/1 tVi?* fiocr cidJUl, anuuugii iL i touguiu^u 111^, ua-i and slowed down, failed to stop. They wanted to come to Newberry to attend a meeting of Woodmen of the World and to attend to some other business, they said, and after the train failed to stop for them they walked on to Newberry. The engineer testified that he saw no signal given by the young men in the nature of a flag. The jury returned verdicts for t;he defendant. The plaintiffs were represnted By Messrs. Hunt, Hunt & Hunter, and the defendant by Messrs. W. H. Lyles, Fred.'H. Dominick and Eugene S. Bltase. A verdict for $200 was returned by the jury for the plaintiff in the case of Fred. H. Dominick vs. W. Frank Hipp. Mr. Dominick's contention was that Mr. Hipp had employed him to represent Alex Rook and Amos Boozer, who were indicted as accessories to the murder of James S. Gilliam, on Mr. Jno. C. Hipp's Old Town plantation, and that Mr. W. Frank Hipp had agreed to pay hijn $200 for his services in conn-ecn-ifH t-Vio <-aco Mr Winn nrtn tlUil H Itli VIAWVy. AM* . f Jr VViA tended that he saw Mr. Dominick, at the request of the negroes, and that the negroes and their relatives were to make the arrangements with Mr. Dominick. The jury sustain 2d Mr. Dominick's contention and gave him a verdict for the full amount asked. The plaintiff was represented by Mr. Eu-. gene S. Blease and the defendant by. Messrs. Johnstone & Cromer. The case of Mrs. Julia ,0. F. Parry vs. Southeastern Life Insurance Co., suit for the face Value of a life insurance policy taken out by her husband for $1,000, and interest thereon, amounting to something to something over $300, was, by consent, submitted to Judge Memminger without a jury. The question of waiver by the company of a certain forfeiture following the non-payment of a note given for the first premium on the policy, was the main question involved. Judge Memminger gave judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount. The plaintiff was represented by Mr. Fred. H. Dominick and the defendant was represented by Messrs Haynesworth & Haynesworth, of Greenville, and Messrs. Hunt, Hunt, & Hunter. On motion of the plaintiffs' attorneys, Judge Memminger granted a new tried in. the case of Mrs. Cornelia T. Wells and others vs. the C., N. & L. The motion was opposed by the counsel for the railway. Card of Thanks. We desire to express our sincere thanks to our neighbors and friends for their kindness and assistance to. us; during the illness and at the death of our dear father and grandfather, Mr. W. H. Setzler. Words are inadequate to express the gratitude of our hearts. May God add his richest blessings upon each of them. Mrs. B. B. Richardson and children. At the Theato. At the Theato Tuesday, November I'G, will be shown "Rip Van Winkle." This is a feature reel, and should be seen by all picture loving people. On Thanksgiving will be shewn the "Nation's Peril." This is also a feature reel. Pathe's Weekly, No. 34, for Friday, j Visit the Theato and see the finest I pictures by the best companies. Personals. Mr. Tom Mayes, Jr.. of Birmingham, Ala., is on a visit to his parents. Mr. I and Mrs. J. T. Mayes. Mrs. R. I). Wright and her little daughter, Troxelle, have returned home, the former from Washington, D. i C.. and the latter from Greensboro. X. C., Mrs. Wright having gone via; ni _ _ t_ x i * - - 1 ureensooro 10 attend tne convention ol the United Daughters of the Confederacy and to visit her brother. Mr. "VVil-' liams Welch, after visiting in Greensboro. , ?. i So Sudden. Mrs. Wayup?So they have just had heir first quarrel? Mrs. Bla?e?Yes. After 15 years of married life they have just discovered lint they belong to opposite churches. -Life. | "NOTHING DOING." "Nobody at Home" and the Reporter Knocked "Out of Commission" in One of His Lines. I It is like bringing "order out of j chaos" to get out this issue of The Her] aid and News. Coming from the pleas1 ures of the great fleet and fair week in Charleston, the reporter finds the office topsy-turvy from the change going on in the new arrangement of the me chanical department. The tearing down of the partitions on tiic first floor of the building in a cloini of dust that ' covers -everything and everybody, the piles and heaps of disarranged siuff to be jumped o\%r or walked around, all in the way and causing confusion, is the picture presented at the jump. The mailing list has been misplaced, and it j must be found, or the confusion will be I t*oo /^nfminHprl " There is a lot tf)1 ! be done in "no time." The reporter j wanted to say something of the successful fair, and of the great navy yard, j and of the grand parade, and of the j magnificent ships, but the facts and i fancies are crowded out of his mind by j the rush. Some things have to be dropi ped and he must drop these for those* which are more important locally. But it is hard to be kept from dwelling and : enlarging upon the beautiful and in! tpiring sights. Xo one man can handle j a mass of accumulated business and do ! justice in a half of a day to what was J seen in Char'eston last week, and there! is no use in trying, so just let it drop, under the condition* described. It is ! a job to pick up threads. Elsewhere in this issue will be fouad i ! clippings from the News and Courier.' j To form some idea of one of the fea| tures. read the following paragraph j from the paper: j "The eleven, battleships of the Ati lantic fleet won their really big victory i last night and the night before when I they showed the people of this city and the thousands of visitors who have come here from elsewhere the most beautiful electrical display ever witnessed in these parts. It had been an-; ticipated that the illumination of the ships would be a beautiful sight, but the event itself surpassed all expecta ? tions. The long line of battleships illumined in fire against the night transformed the harbor into a fairyland.'' The only ladies from Newberry seen by the reporter were Misses Lois Fant and Genevieve Evans. There may have ! been others, ^ut among 25,00$ visitors swelling the population of a city, faces from one's home town are not easily | seen. Miss Amelia Klettner and her | brother Silks J. Klettner, were known j to have been there. The Newberry I men who saw some of the things ai j seen by The Herald and News man j j were Messrs. H. H. Evans, M. L. Spearman, j. R. Eison, and Mr. job Hentz. of i the county. I . . . On the same train going irom <\ewj berry were the Misses Gilder and Miss I Blanche Davidson, Messrs. Jno. M. Kin|ard, W. S. Lajigford, R. ML Caldwell | and White Fant. They stopped in Co| lumbia, or else were lost in the crowds i in Charleston, to the eyes of the rej porter. Mr. J. E. Summer changed I /-.-I u;? ? i cars hi v^uiu'iuuift tu gu auuui uis uuoiness, and Mr. E. H. Longshore took the train from Columbia for Aiken. One man from another town wae overheard to say chat the Charleston fair beat the State fair. The reportei didn't see the State fair and if anyone VauiKsxpu oour Vinth fairc ho or ! IIULU i/cru jr oca ? ~ ~?B ? >^ ? ? ?he can say whether or not the man I from another town was correct. But j j they all will say that the sights they j saw in Charleston were worth seeing. ; I BABY SHOES, moccasins and mittens. for children, for 10c. a pair and 10c. j a shoe. Robinson's 10c. Store. FOIXD?One black mare male, medium size. Owner caft have same by paying cost. J. W. White. HERREX A; BRADBURY, of Atlanta, Ga., will be at Summer Wise Stock company November 30, to buy niuks. Briug your mules. 11-26-2L i SEE J. L. KURD'S for fresh fish. 10-28-lm. ,| [ THE LADIES HA1K can be matched j at our store. New line of switches just in. Robinson's 10c. Store. SEED WHEAT FOR SALE 11-22-2L Purcell & Scott Ol'K THANKSGIVING cards this year are the best yet. Robinson's 10c. ptore. LADIES' solid gold rings, new, at $2 and up at Williamsson's. Fs-tf "VI v _ ... lnft rvf fVio fivtro larp*o 17 ..11J Jl a MI VV JCU V/l <^AV>U Chinese Sacred Lilies to be 6old two for !5c. Robinson's 10c. Store. HIDES?Sell your hides direct to a j dealer and cut out the middle man. i - - I will pay highest prices ever Known : in Xewberry. See me. T. M. San- i tiers. * 9-20-1 taw?tl! HOYS' good felt hats (not toys) at our store, 10c. Robinson's 10c. Store.. COTTON MAKKET. \ewberry, (Corrected by Nat Gist). Cotton 12&, Seed 33 (By Robt. McC. Holmes.) Cotton 12% Little Mountain. (By W. B. Wise). Cotton. . 12% to 12% ? j Seed, ,>er 100 1.00 Wbttmire. Cotton *2% Seed 11 nm ifrospertty. Cotton Seed ... * Chappells. j Cotton ' 22.15 I Seed, per 100 : 1.19V* Pomaria. Cotton 12 2-10 Seed, per 100 1-95 Kinaritw' Cotton 12% Seed 33 Silverstreet. ^ ^ -4 C\ ft t L.ocion Seed 23, -\ 1 ?ssssss?ssm SPECIAL NOTICES, i ; One Cent a Word. No advertisement taken forlesa than 25 cents. ! KEEP OUT the cold. Wear one of our ! 25c mufflers for 10c. Robinson's .10c. j Store. * I FOR SALE?One four-room house and ?^ one acre lot in town of Newberry,* i S. C. J. C. Turner, 1219 Elmwobd Ave., Columbia, S. C. ll-19-2t. 1 THAT WEDDING . prepent, birthday present or Christmas present is here for you. May we l^lp you make the selection. Robinson'?. iOc. Store. BUT a genuine diamon^ ring for $15 at Williamson's. Ete-tf FRESH LOT of 10c. and 20c. canty just received. Robinson's 10c. Stort. BEAUTY PDfS, 25c and up at "Williamson's. Fs-tf. WE SUGGEST to complete * good Thanksgiving dinaer you set -the table with Roger* Extra Heavy Silver Plated Ware. We sell it for 10c. a piece. Robinson's 10c. Store. * KEEP OFF OUB LAJTD?Trespassers are forbidden. This applies to all persons, and especially to hunters, ana we mean ix. u. ?. suDer, iirowa Brothers, 0. R Cannon, Agu, Sims 1 G. Brown. ll-ld-3t W IF YOU need visiting cards, business W cards, wedding invitations, engraved ^ or monogram stationery, see Anne 0. Ruff & Co.'s samples and you will be sure to place an order witli her. Anne 0. Ruff & Co. 11-8-fcf. A CAR of special grain fertilizer hat arrived. For further particular* call on S. J. Kohn, Prosperity. '* 9-27-tf. I BRING your laundry to Ann* O. Rufc"'^ Agent. ' : 1_ FOR CIGARS, tobacco, cigarettes, eta, to sell again, see Anne 0. Ruff & Co.'s stock. We can g've yott the best brands. Phone 84-2. 11-S-tf FOIf SALE?55 acres land, well timbered and plenty of water, in No. 10 ! township. If not sold by private I sale before the first Monday in December I will offer for sale at puilie outcry before the court house at Newberry, S. C., daring the legal hours of sale. Terms: one-thinl casby balance in one and two years, with privilege of paying all in cash if desired. Purchaser to pay for papers. M. C. Moore. 10-22-6t-ltaw DR. J. K. GILDER. J&, Dental Par-. Ions, in postoffice building, corner Caldwell and Friend streets. 10-29-tf . v ^ TRESPASS NOTICE?All persons are hereby notified not to trespass b7 hunting or in any other manner uprin thp f\f thp nniipreipmpH in townships N'os. 10 and 11. F. P. Wicker. FOR SALE?One 3-horse disc plow, one feed cutter, one 2-horse wagon, one disc harrcw. Apply F. R. Hunter, old court house. 10-2i*V. ! 10-23-tf. '"V > MORE INTEBESTING THAN A NOVEL?Woodrow Wilson wroto, the most interesting story of the American people ever written. It is the story of our country's life from earliest times to the point where history and the present meet. Write Harper & Brothers, Franklin Square, New York, for full particulars. 8-23-25 and 11-12-d. MOXEY TO LEXD?Money to lead ofci I real estate. Long time *nd easy payments. Hunt, Hunt & Hunter. 9-19-tf. MO BUSHELS of seed wheat for sale. H. 0. Long, Silverstreet. 11-26-tf.