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ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891. A. W. KNIGHT. Editor. in n< Published every Thursday in The w Herald building, on Main street, in to the live and growing City of Bam- tfc berg, being issued from a printing w office which is equipped with Mer- to gen thaler linotype machine, Babcock ri cylinder press, folder, ode jobber, a a fine Miehle cylinder press, all run by J< electric power, with other material c and machinery in keeping, the whole Si equipment representing an investment of $10,000 and upwards. u Subscriptions?By the year $150; p( six months, 75 cents; three months, cc 50 cents. All ^subscriptions payable strictly in advance. Advertisements?$1.00 per inch ai for first insertion, subsequent inser- r tions 50 cents per inch. Legal ad- S vertisements at the rates allowed by law. Local reading notices 10 cents ' a line each insertion. Wants and other advertisements under special head, 1 cent a word each insertion. Liberal contracts made for three, six, ^ / " and twelve months. Write for rates. T Obituaries, tributes of respect, reso- . lutions, cards of thanks, and all notices of a personal or political char- sl . acter are charged for as regular ad- JX vertising. Contracts for advertising not subject to cancellation after first' a( , - insertion. Communications?We are always glad to publish news letters or those hi pertaining to matters of public inter- in v est. We require the name and ad- hi dress of the writer in every case. g| No article which is defamatory or yj ' offensively personal can find place in our columns at any price, and we are st not responsible for the opinions ex- r pressed in any communication. th . ? bi Thursday, Dec. 7, 1911 ^ * ^ w The first Presbyterian church of ai Greenville has been forced to buy a " i vacant lot and pay $6,000 for it. c* This lot ^belonged to a negro and was th next <to the church, and the negro 01 was preparing to erect on it a hotel w' for negroes. This is one of the re- ^ I ? suits of allowing negroes to own property in desirable sections of a ^ town or city. m ^ % i The business men of Bamberg . f\ ' shouid form, a credit association, be These associations Ae being formed hi all over the Sfate and are doing a lot x to improve the system of credit. The y credit business in Bamberg has got- ie, ten to be very unsatisfactory, and wj suclf an association would be a pro- t0 tection to the buyer as well as the seller. th - \ 4 Mr. Walter E. Duncan is now edi- ^ tor of the Aiken Sentinel, he sue- he ceeding Mr. Robert M. Hitt. The ex paper was recentlY sold under chattel ^ mortgage and was bought in by Mr. Duncan. The established newspapers are having a hard enough time ca to* live, and yet new papers are con> Ml tinually being started at points jg where they cannot possibly succed. m, f be \ wj Easy Mark at Wagener. aD eff Springfield, Dec. 2.?An old and m( kighly respected citizen of the Wagener section was here to-day, and re- w( ported a "swindle" that an exposure at of may perhaps save someone else from a like experience. ne This old farmer, whose check is w good for almost any amount, relates ta that a few days ago a small show he was exhibiting in the town of Wag- re ener, when he, the wealthy farmer, was approached by a well dressed s0 young man who represented himself jlc as a citizen from North Carolina, nc - hunting for land; offering to give the ^Wagener citizen a large commission mj , on all lands that he would assist him in buying. Gaining the attention of the old man, he invited him to meet his 'father, and in hunting nc * around for the * supposed "father," << na they accidentally ran across a prom- ? - nent" traveling physician, who desired to demonstrate a sure cure for J.1C all kidney troubles. The young real ' .? . estate hunter immediately became interested, as he had Bright's disease, and his earnestness brought the old man from Wagener to a full irealiza- al tion of his trouble with his kidneys. The socalled "physician" requiring J*1 each party to exhibit five hundred C? dollars, that he might know that they aE 'v were responsible, before he would * cohsent to give his very valuable B? f . .. remedy away. After much dickering each party secured the necessary money and handed it to the "physician" to count. \ The result was that the "physi- yc cian" left the old man from Wagener, hi with his young real estate' friend, he minus five hundred dollars. h( The supposed real estate man buy- th ing the silence of the old man by hi promising^ to make good the amount di lost next morning, but when the old he man from Wagener awoke the next fo v morning, his real estate man with th the "prominent physician" had left th town; leaving the prominent old man w of Wagener alone in his agony of er mind. th Under the recent laws passed by ar the State of Kansas, these swindlers Is would be caught at the expense of tb the State, but under the laws of fc South Carolina, unless the old man Y< _ from Wagener will bear the expense, of there seems nothing to do but to pub- er lish to the world that this section h? has its full share of suckers that will p( bite. ; ? Thousand l>ollar Cat. An Angora cat, valued at ?1,000, which came to its end in a street Li dog's jaws, was buried at Logans- Cj port, Ind., on Friday in a ?50 cof- at fin in the garden of Mrs. J. F. Get- o' tys's home. The coffin was lined with silk, had silver handles and ty bore a silver plate engraved with the fu cat's name. m VS. , ^ TERRIBLE SUFFERING. , CAI ~ J oivaway Spent Twelve Days of Ton Bull ture in Ship's Hold. V To have lived 12 days in the icy, T ky blackness of a ship's hold with the )thing to eat save raw potatoes, ing ith only rats for companions, and hall i have been rescued only becailse of le foremost light of the ship on mer hich he was a stowaway, refused broi i work, was the soul-racking expe- son, ence of Walter Purding, an Ameri- whc in, who reached Baltimore on the the Dhnston* Line steamer Ulstermore, A apt. Gowan, says the Baltimore gol< an. of t According to his story, when the in ' Istermore was about to leave Liver- Ne\ aol on November 4 he gained the sna >nsent of a stevedore to stow away fort i hatch No. 3. He said he chose the for atch because it contained potatoes, ed 1 id he believed the ship's cook would of ilease him the first day or two at clai ;a. But Capt. Gowan procured his star spuds" somewhere else, and the and >ok came not. Hour by hour, Purd- arm Lg said, his hunger and thirst be- A ime greater. He began to eat po- stri ttoes, but in two days these palled Uni i him and he could eat no more, ope hirst then attacked him. Seeking mei > relieve his agony he sucked the tim eel sides of the ship, which reeked like ith moisture, but with the drops of the [thy water came the lead paint and Bef ided to his sufferings. ory Rats Nestled on His Breast. and When hunger began to weaken im the weater became rough. Purd- 1 Lg says he was tossed about the aid like thq potatoes until every aer ached. The ship ran into the .T cinity of icebergs. Hail fell on the , des of the ship and converted the owaway's quarters into a veritable ifrigerator. The prisoner said that . ie rats in the hold nestled on his east and he did not fight them be- ? Luse they kept him warm. They ^rv lught no blood or bone, but only the , . armth of his body. The stricken f nn said he petted them and beg- . _ ;d them to put an end to his misery, it they sought only their own ipifort and semed to know that if R e purnace went out in the object r . l which they were perched they ould have to seek comfort else- . here line nere* blo< Tried to Jump Into Ocean. It was on November 6, the ship cut< ;ing 12 days out, when the fore- a si ost light refused to work and it wou as necessary to open hatch No. 3 A follow the wiring. Third Engin- was ;r Potter entered the hatchway to som > surprised by a figure's hurling by cans m toward the side of the ship, to s ropping his lantern he wrapped mai >th arms around the man and the ought hipi up. After he was re- fori ased it was with difficulty that he as kept from jumping into the sea slake his fiery thirst. Purding as given a bath and food. .. He related that he had gone on e Vedamore from Baltimore as a ttleman to Liverpool. After knockg around that city, he was left A ithout food or friends. It was then w^? s sought the'Ulstermore and found ^e0E periences that have only a parallel an(* the noter maritiem tale "The mar ayage in the Dark." bre3 ?calls Case of Eighteen Years Ago. ^0E Purding's experiences recall the day ~ only be ui <x rnau. nuu gui muu uv/iu the British steamer William C. "*ei itchell, which left Baltimore about berD years ago for a French port. The for an was found the 17th day out, " cause the crew had said the ship nev< is haunted. The hatch was opened anC( id he made an almost superhuman was 'ort to reach the air. He received He edical treatment and recovered. that Like Purding, he thought that he Heb )uld be rescued, when several days c sea. His reason for the trip was e same as Purding's?homesick- stre iss. His home was in Denmark. 4 hen he reached France, the cap- e(i * in of the Mitchell asked him how Mor ! expected to get there. The man horn plied that he was going to walk. 68 "Well," replied the master, "any Per* n-of-a-seacock that can live in the Sav* Id of a ship for 17 days and does . Y ?t die can do anything." in ^ The man started to walk to Den- wer( irk. * ??? frie] " tend The New York Times says that the e(j ^ >lders of the repudiated bonds of ( e Southern States issued during Qen rpet bag times have made arrange- ^ap ants with a South American Repub- ^ow ; to sue the separate States for the afte ce values of and accrued interest on roTT1 ese fraudulent securities. It is not bom ated in wkat court the suits will be ci(je ought. The plan is said to have reized payment somewhere and at jjve( me time not specified. The repu- -p ated reconstruction bonds of South jast Lrolina amounted to $5,000,000, vivj. Ld with interest added the claim 3 ( Duld be for ten million dollars.? gre? irnwell Sentinel. graj gres Your School Teacher. Ami What^have you done and what are j >u going to do for the comfort and ippiness of the "new teacher" who Tjin is come or is to come to make her )me in your neighborhood during e coming months? These teachers ive under, their immediate care and N rection the children from your Edv )me for a large part of every day, Nor< r several months in the year. If Cas< ey are in earnest about their work and eir lives go out to these children 17, ith a forceful impression and influ- ?f t ice. The children in turn receive ese impressions and this influence id reflect them back into the home. T n't it clear then that the school and er s ie home must ever work together was >r the best good of the children? drer 3u can't afford not to be on the best an(* terms with your children's teach- ^ani . You can't afford not-to extend a ^ *nd of welcome and cordial sup- stat )rt in every school's undertaking. * -Progressive Farmer. an(* b thre Col. Lumpkin Dead. Columbia, S. C.. Dec. 5.?T. B. A impkin, secretary of the South call irolina railroad commission, died onei his home here to-night at 11 scoi clock of pneumonia. v cult He was a native of Chester coun- "tal and was 47 years of age. The clos neral will be held in Anderson toorrow. S; i i jIFORNIA treasure story. let Made Old Soldier Forget ] Where He Buried His Gold. he story of a wound received in civil war which sealed the hid- : place of a fortune for more than : a century and a strange trick ; fate which ^cleared the hider's, nory in the evening of life was' Light to Los Angeles by the hider's , J. K. Anderson, of New Orleans, > is at the Van Nuys en route to old placer fields of California, inderson's father joined in the 1 rush, and was one of the miners he '49 days. He located a claim Placer county, near Auburn and rcastle. Within a year he had tched from the river bottoms a ;une. Then the call of the South volunteers reached him. He buri;he gold beneath the adobe blocks a tavern in the vicinity of his m, strapped all the precious subice he could carry about his body hurried to join the Confederate iy. Lnderson says that his father was Lck in an engagement with the on troops by a bullet which tore n his scalp and robbed him of his nory for fifty years. During that e, the son says, the parent was a child, with all knowledge of hiding place of the gold gone, ore he died, a year ago, his mem * -l\- - ?l- u j OI Uie guiu I'UHU ICIUIUCU tU 11X1X1 he was living again in the past t preceded his part in the cont was during these last moments t the old man told his son and the ;her where he had buried what he med was a fortune. The son is, rying to unearth, if possible, the ien treasure. Anderson said: My father said he buried the gold er a corner of an old adobe tavpatronized by the miners in the y days. This tavern was in Long ley at a point half way, I have med, between the present towns Newcastle and Auburn. I have ned through correspondence that imily by the name of Scott occu\ the tavern as a farmhouse and i t the country around it is devoted he raising of citrus fruits. No one has disturbed the orginal s of the building. The adobe jks are heavy. I have obtained mission from the owners to prose} my search, and will give them lare of my findings. Otherwise I ild have to buy the property." .nderson is a civil engineer. He engaged by the government for e time in work on the Panama al, but has left his employment search for the treasure which he ntains his father has hidden in nld nlnppr minine- fiplds of Oali lia.?Los Angeles Herald. WAS 117 YEARS OLD. . I aham Kalinsky Helped to Burn Moscow in 1814. .braham Kalinsky, 117 years old, i helped burn Moscow when Napoi marched upon that city in 1814, who was believed to be the oldest l in the world, died in the He- . v Friendly Inn and Aged People's be, on Aisquith street, late Thurs* . night. He had been in the home r eight days, having been taken e from a squalid room on Al^arle street, where he had lived years. < lfirm and feeble from age, he < irtheless put up a vigorous resist- , } against his rescuers before he j carried from his place by force. , had lived in the room so long j , he did not want to leave, but the , rew Friendly Inn society decided \ are for him, and he was accord- j y taken to the home on Aisquith , et. : , fter being taken there he remain- , n a semisttfpor until he died. Dr. 1 ris Savage, the physician of the? < e, attended him. His son, who is : years old; Morris Waxman, su- , ntendent of the home, and Dr. 3 ige were at his side when he died. . esterday afternoon he was buried \ lount Carmel cemetery. Services . 5 conducted by Rabbi Rosenthal, J /)w Street synagogue. Over 250 j ids and relatives or' Kalinsky atled. Born in Kiev, Kalinsky liv- ( vith his parents on a farm until ] entered trie lierman army unaer . eral Blucher and fought against J oleon. After the war he settled n on a farm for a while, but r several of his children had e to this country and written ie of their prosperity here he de- l d to come to America and came hrice had he been married, his wife, who was 84 years old, &ur- < Qg him. Also surviving him are shildren, 20 grandchildren, 28 it-grandchildren, 5 great-great- ; ldchildren and 6 great-greatit-grandchildren. ? Baltimore ' irican. ? i KEROSENE CAN EXPLODES. ] ie Fatally, One Severely Burned in Attempt to Start Fire. ew Albany, Ind., Dec. 3.?Mrs. rard Case, her daughter, Mrs. i i Lynch, and her son, Raymond 5, aged 10, are said to' be dying, j a second son, John Case, aged is severely burned, as a result ( he mother attempting to start a with coal oil at her home, four ] is north of here, late last nights , he oil can exploded in the mothhands and in an instant she wrapped in flames. The chil- 1 l rushed to her aid. Mrs. Lynch < the younger son inhaled the les. fill Tracey, a railroad watchman, 1 ioned near the house, attracted ' he screams, smothered the flames extinguished the fire which latened to destroy the house. i Spaced Out Too Much. judge in remanding a criminal ( ed him a scoundrel. The pris- . r replied, "Sir,v I am not as big a mdrel as your honor"?here the >rit stopped, but finally added? ces me to be." "Put your words ( er together," said the judge. mile?get the habit. 1 SHE WORE PANTS FOR LOVE. Bride Clad as Man Beats Way Across Continent with Husband. "Beating" her way in men's clothing ayross the continent for love of the man she married four months ago, and barred from any friendship with her own sex, Mrs. Christine Williams, 20 years old, rode into Buffalo on the "blind baggage" of a Lake Shore express from Cleveland with her husband. Then she was hauled from the bumper of the first car where she had been sleeping in the arms of "Cass" McWilliams, who tried to keep his girl-wife and himself out of sight when the railroad detectives came on them. Coated with ice and exhausted, they were taken from their precari ous position by the trainmen and carried to a flag shanty. After the pair h^d been thawed out the train men began to ask questions. Then it was that the identity of the smaller of the two tramps was revealed to the amazed railroaders. The husband, anxious as to the condition of his wife, asked that they be put in charge of the police to get proper care. McWilliams and his girl-wife were well cared for and then taken before Judge Judge and charged with vagrancy. v Married four months ago in Los Angeles to Christine Jamison, a pretty school teacher, McWilliams had a good job as structural steel worker. Then came the laying off of workmen, among them McWilliams-. He decided to strike for New York. But the small amount of money that stood between Mr. and Mrs. McWilliams and starvation was out of the question for transporta nun. It was the girl who suggested a method of travel of which she had read, and she finally persuaded the reluctant husband to fit her out in some of his clothes, and together they started on the journey across the continent. From Los Angeles they went to Kansas City; from Kansas City to St. Louis; then, striking north for Chicago, where they stayed for several days. Starting again they reached Cleveland. They left the Ohio city and jumped on the "blind baggage" of an express train from Cleveland to Buffalo on the Lake Shore. They endured more on the last jump than on all the rest. The cold was biting, the snow, through which the train was tearing at a 60-mile gait, cut their faces, and their hands were frozen to the iron rods to which they clung for life. The suffering man and woman were soaked to the skin by water from the tender, and their clothes froze. Judge Judge turned the girl over to the Salvation Army, and suspended sentence on McWilliams, who took the advice of the court and started out to look for employment.?Buffalo dispatch to New York Tribune. f * "Buying and Selling Niggers." Now comes the time of year, along towards the Christmas holidays, when the negro farm laborer and wage-earner is chasing the white farmer and landowner and "signing up" for the coming year with the party fnrnishine the * most "advance money." Thus it has been pretty nearly ever since the negro became a "free man" nearly 50 years ago.. The ex-slave in order to get the cash fo'r a holiday frolic sells himself into bondage, and in many instances skips out, leaving the landowner in the lurch. Bye and bye the runaway negro is caught and brought back, put on the chain gang or in jail only to be bought out by some one else, and 30 the average negro man is to-day pretty nearly as much a slave as he was a half century ago. And both the white man and the negro are responsible for this condition of things. Until the white man ceases to advance the money asked for by the negro laborer the latter can never be a. free man, and so long as the evil of advancing the cash continues the average negro laborer will continue to grow from bad to worse until within a few short seasons hence the nejjro as a farm laborer is bound to become the sorriest type of the human being. The thing grows worse year after year, and the end is not yet in sight.?Clinton Gazette. Pointed Paragraphs. The football hero will soon climb back on his pedestal. It's a surprise party if everybody there has a good time. Occasionally a man proves his wjsiom by acting foolish. An ounce of flattery is better than i ton of tombstone obituary. He is a wise man who never argues with people he is fond of. It is sometimes better to have loved and lost than to be the other fellow. There may have been a time when the good died young?but now die poor. And many a man gets what he deserves when he gets it in his necto. The proof of a good bluffer lies in his ability to make good when he is sailed. Lying comes as natural to some people as getting married does to an actress. A man seldom makes good when he attempts to show off before his children or his enemies. And many a man doesn't owe a dollar in the world because his acquaintances know him too well. A m m J /\*i? 1 rvrvlm nr\An L QT* A \ U U11 g, wiuuw 11/uno ujjuii. uvi first kiss from a bachelor as the beginning,'but it usually indicates his finish. If things were reversed so that we Dould start at the top, it would only be a matter of time until there would be just as big a crowd at the bottom. A young man may be able to pad31e his own canoe on the sea of matrimony if he isn't accompanied by a female boat rocker. THE METHODIST MINISTERS. (Continued from Page 1.) McColl?J. T. Fowler. Middendorf?W. C. Bowden. Pageland?J. A. McGraw. Timmonsville and Pisgah?W. E. Wiggins. Timmonsville circuit?W. B. Baker. Assistant Sunday-school editor? L. F. Beatty. Greenville District. P. F. Kilgo, presiding elder. Clinton?J. E. Mahaffy. /Tfeasley?P. B. Ingram. Fountain Inn?S. T. Blackman. Gray Court?J. P. Attaway. Greenville ? Buncombe Street ? M. L. Carlisle. St. Paul's?E. S. Jones. Hampton avenue?J. M. Rogers. West Greenville?L. L. Inabinet. South Greenville?J. T. McFarlane. Bethel and Poe?D. W. Keller. Greenville circuit?J. G. Huggins. Greer's?E. T. Hodges. Laurens?First Church?L. P. McGhee. Laurens circuit?J. C. Davis. Liberty?D. R. Ruff. North Pickens?E. L. Thomason. Pickens?G. F. Kirby. Piedmont?W. L. Wait. South Greer's?W. M. Owinsrs. Traveller's Rest?Joe D. Bell. West Easley?A. A. Merritt. ! Kingstree District. R\ L. Holroyd, presiding elder. Andrews?W. O. Henderson. Cades?J. L. Mullinix. Cordesville?J. B. Prosser. Georgetown ? Duncan ? Henry Stokes. West End?L. E. Peeler. Greeleyville?W. H. Murray. Honey Hill?J. C. Taylor. Johnsonville and Prospect?E. P. Hutson. Jordan?W. T. Patrick. Kingstree?W. A. Fairey. Lake City?C. C. Derrick and W. S. Stokes, supernumerary. McClellanville?W. P. Way. " New Zion?J. R. Sojourner. Pee-Dee?J. 0. Carraway. Pinopolis?W. C. Gleaton. Rome?T. J. Clyde. Salters?W. T. Bedebaugh. Sampit?W. H. Perry. Scranton?J. W. Bailey. South Florence?J. M. Gasque. Summerton and St. Paul?J. R. T. Major. Marion District. R. H. Jones, presiding elder. Blenheim?S. J. Bethea. Britten's Neck?W. A. Youngblood. ; Brownsville?J. I. Spinks. r\ i_ ' *11 ^ ttt *n uucKSViae?w. -rv. namea. Centenary?R. R. Doyle. Conway?A. D. Betts. Conway circuit?E. F. Scoggins. Clio?C. C. Herbert. Dillon?A. N. Brunson. Gallivants?D. H. Everett. Latta?A. T. Dunlap. Latta circuit?J. H. Graves. Little River?R. F. Bryant. > Little Rock?M. Dargan. . Loris?S. T. Creech, and H. L. Singleton, supernumerary. Marion?S. B. Harper. Marion circuit?J. M. Meetzfc.. Mullins?W. C. Kirkland. Mullins circuit?W: A. Beckman. North Mullins?W. C. Owens. Waccamaw?W. M. Hardin. Orangeburg District. M. L. Banks, presiding eider. Bamberg and Bamberg Mills?W. H. Hodges. Barnwell?W. J. Snyder. Branchville?W. S. Martin. Cameron?J. P. Simpson. Denmark?T. E. Morris. Edisto?T. W. Godbold. Eutawville-^-S. D. Vaughan. Grover?S. W. Danner. Harleyville-^A. S. Lesley. Norway?W. S. Goodwin. Olar?to be supplied. Orangeburg?St. Paul's?H. W. Bays. Orangeburg circuit?S. W. Henry, z Orange?T. L. Belvin. Providence?J. J. Stevenson, and J. F. Way, supernumerary. Rowesville?J. K. Holman, and G. W. Dukes, supernumerary. Smoaks?J. C. Counts. *St. George?J. W. Ariail. Student of Vanderbilt University ?L. E. Wiggins. ? " Rock Hill District. T. C. Odell, presiding elder. Blacksburg?J. P. Patton. Blackstock?H. B. Hardy. Chester?J. C. Roper. Chester circuit?J. H. Montgomery. Clover circuit?H. G. Hardin. East Chester?R. A. Yongue. East Lancaster?G. T. Rhoad. Fort Mill?J. T. White. Hickory Grove?W. B. Justus. Lancaster?M. M. Brabham. Lancaster circuit?C. P. Carter. North Rock Hill?J. A. White. Richburg?D. A. Phillips. Rock Hill?St. John's?E. K. Hardin. Rock Hill circuit?L. T. Phillips. Van Wyck?F. L. Glennan. Winnsboro?G. C. Hutchinson. Yorkville?J. F. Anderson, v Spartanburg District. A. J. Cauthen, presiding elder. Belmont?L. W. Johnson. Campobello?R. L. Keaton. Carlisle?O. N. Rountree. Cherokee?R. A. Brock. Clifton and Cowpens?J. N. Ivins. Enoree?Elzie Myers. Gaffney?Buford street?G. P. Watson. Limestone street?B. G. Vaughan. Gaffney circuit?J. A. Bledsoe. Inman?J. A. Cook. Jonesville?W. H. Ariail. Kelton?J. H. Manley. Pacolet?A. H. Best and R. O. Lawton. _ Pacolet Mills?C. B. Dawsey. Reidville?E. L. McCoy. Spartanburg ? Bethel ? J. W. Speake. Central?R. E. Stackhouse. Duncan and Glendale?B. J. Guess. North Spartanburg?W. H. Polk. West Spartanburg?J. W. Shell. Union-Buffalo , and Green street? B. D. Jones. ^ T T U-race J. lu. uauicis. South Union?J. H. Danner. Woodruff?J. H. Brown. Conference secretary of missions ?M. B. Kelley. Southern Christian Advocate?S. A. Nettles, editor. I 1 . J. L. Ray?assistant publisher. Superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League?J. L. Harley. Missionary in Cuba?H. L. Powell. t Industrial institute?D. E. Camak. Sumter District. W. I. Herbert, presiding elder. Bethany?T. F. Gibson. Bishopville?G. E. Edwards. Camden?H. B. Browne. Elloree?J. E. Strickland. - ^ Fort Motte?J. V. Davis. Heath Springs?K. C. Mouzon. * Kershaw?s. o. Baiiey. Lynchburg?J. S. Beasley. Manning?F. N. Shuler. Oswego?T. W. Munaerlyn. Pinewood?J. B. Wilson. Providence?J. N. Wright. Richland?George Lee. St. John's and Rembert's?R. B. Sharpe. St. Matthew's?J. M. Steadman. ' Sumter?First Church?D. M. MoLeod. Broad street?R. W. Humphreys. Wateree?Oscar Spires.- " Transferred?C. A: Norton, to North Georgia Conference. Luckiest Unlucky Boy* r i Hundreds of Battle Creek residents are unanimous in declaring that 12year-old Bruce Kuip, son of a local attorney, is the luckiest unlucky boy in Battle Creek, says a Battle Creek, Mich., special. After surviving at tacks of mumps, tonsolitis, neuritis and infantile pralysis, the lad successfully underwent a thircf operation for appendicitis. When told Thursday that the operation was imperative the lad said: "All right; but don't tell pa, I . want him to win his case in court." Money Wanted. i "Brudren," said a darkey minister down on a plantation, "brudren, I'sr got a five-dollar sermon,. an' a two-dollar sermon, an' a one-dollar sermon, an' I want dis here indeli- * cate audience to take up a collection as to which one ob dem dey can afford to hear." ' v SPECIAL NOTICES. V Advertisements Under This Head 25c. For 25 Words or Less. ______________? For Rent.?Nice office rooms in The Herald building. Have electric ^ lights and water. The most desirable offices in the city. Will rent singly or in suites. A. W. KNIGHT. / For Sale.?Genuine Appier Oats, Orangeburg county raised, at 85 cents the bushel, delivered Bamberg in fifty bushels lots. Ear corn at 90 cents the bushel f. o. b. Cope, S. C. VERNON BRABHAM, Cope, S. C. Farm Wanted.?I desire a good farm of large acreage with good im- \ provements, well located as to town and railroad; must be good value for price asked. Give full particulars in first letter. R. COSBY NEWTON, Lock Box 121, Bennettsviue, s. u. Wanted.?To hire ten or fifteen good share croppers. Good stock, the best tools and l?nd in Bamberg county. Fair >and liberal treatment. Also want to sell selected cotton seed for planting purposes that made a yield of two (2.) bales to the acre this year. Price $1.00 per bushel, / Eggs 'from prize winning Rhode . Is- ? land Reds at $1.50 per setting. W. D. BENNETT, Ehrhardt/ S. C. . " t BIDS INVITED. The Building Committee of Mt. 4 Pleasant and EhFhardt Lutheran Parsonage have received a bid for the old parsonage property and lot of 45 or 50 acres of land, 1% miles from town of Ehrhardt; nice comfortable dwelling, stables, barns, etc., of i ($2,000) two" thousand dollars. (Premises open for inspection.) This is to notify all parties concerned that the property will be sold on December 14th, 1911, for above amount, if ^ no higher bid is received. Send your bids in to Mr. H.' A. Hughes, Ehrhardt, S. C., chairman of the committee. - JACOB EHRHARDT, Secretary. MASTER'S SALE. Pursuant to a decree of the Court of Common Pleas fin the case of / Florrie McMillan et al, plaintiffs, against Clarence E. Hughes et al, defendants, I, H. C. Folk, Master for Bamberg county, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder fo^ cash, on January first, 1912, the same being legal sales day, between J * * 1 ' ? ^ aolA A/Q tr tne legai nours ui saie uu owu vm*j, before the court house door, at Bamberg, S. C., the following described tract of land: All that certain tract of iand situated in Bamberg County, S. C., containing 225 acres, more or less, known as the Henrietta McMillan * tract, having the following boundaries to wit: North by lands formerly ? ' of the estate of W. H. Rice; East by j lands of Miss Llewellyn Cleckley, ; formerly lands of Jim Morris; Southby lands now or formerly of F. M. Zeigler; and West by lands formerly of F. M. Bamberg. Purchaser to pay jt for papers. H. C. FOLK, Master for Bamberg County. Bamberg, S. C., Dec. 4, 1911. CITATION NOTICE. The State of South Carolina? County of Bamberg?By Geo. P. Harmon, Esq., Judge of Probate. Whereas, W. H. Mitchum hath made suit to me to grant him letters of administration of the estate of and effects of W. L. Mitchum, deceased. These are therefore to cite and ? A m rvn ieVi oil Qnrl QinsnilAr the kin~ auuivuioii uu uuu _ dred and creditors of the said W. L. Mitchum, deceased, that they be and appear before me in the Court of Pro- / bate, to be held at Bamberg, on Fri- " V1 day, December 15th, next, after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be granted. Given under my hand and seal this . | 6th day of December, A. D., 1911. GEO. P. HARMON, Judge of Probate. /I GRAHAM & ASKINS, Attorneys.