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I im TILL 1AT1 SOME FAT JOBS I CIVIL SERVICE Joseph T. Johnson, of Tkkt State, Expresses Himself Very PUlnly on the Metier, Saying The! > the Present System Is a Mere Re* BODY HAS BEEN FOUND DISCOVERED IN ASHLEY RIVER NEAR A RICE MILL. t A LEAF FROM PAST -S—— SENATOR Nt’LAIIRIN TO STAND' ARD OIL MAGNATE The WMhlngton correspondent of and Courier says since the party began its sixteen years of uninterrupted control of the ndidaistratlon la 1S97 it has set up a system of examination for appll cants for positions In the consular sefvtee. The impression has been geneyally mada. therefore, that the consuls are un&er civil service regu lattons, like the clerical forces of the various Government departments. The fact Is that the consular pldces are in the Presidential class, and no offlce that is filled uhder the Constitu tion by Executive nomination can t>e brought within the compulsory oper ation of the civil service without an amendment of the Constitution Itself. Examinations may be required to fix Ml list of ellgiblee if the President Is willing, and such a system affect ing appointments and promotions of consuls was created by an order uf President Roosevelt in 1908. Hut aay succeeding President can disre gard or abrogate this system at will. Representative Joseph T. Johnson, of South Carolina, one of the present Democratic leaders in Congress, had this to say when the matter was men tioned to him: “The Republican papers and a good many of the Democratic papers are urging that the consular service should uot be disturbed by tho In coming Wilson administration, stress ing ths alleged fact that this servlcs has been taken out of politics and la under the classified or civil service regulations and should there remain. ‘‘Such statements are amusing i can understand why the Republican papers are so anxious to maintain ths status quo; but 1 am surprlsei! that any Democratic paper should fall into the trap I believe strongly I'1 the .- \ ' h"t ! \ . pi,Cl 1j* ■ .U.il Ji - . i i' ’ • ri >•.• anon i Im f' -ii a.an. . suit and consular agents of the I'nit- •d States. The compensation ranges from $2,000 to 01 2,000 a year. At a time when every consular of flce probably was filled by a Republi can ths Republican Administration mads a pretense of taking the con sular service out of politics and put ting It on the merit system Kince that time a few Democrats from the Southern Stales have been permitted to stand very rigid examinations as to tbsir scholarship, and where the* passed successfully have been ap pointed to some of the consulates of ths lowest grade For Instance, from South Carolina. Dreher, Haskell. Cook and Jenkins have been appointed to $2,000 poets, which is the minimum salary. After a year or two in these undesirable plaoee, two or three of these men have been promoted. Dreher, Has kell and Jenkins have been advanced to $2,500; Cook remains at |2,ooo. It would be many, many years before any of these Democrats of the low grade could ever reach any one of the high and desirable places. If the Re publicans who now flu them are per mitted to remain until they die out. *’I think President Wllsen would be perfectly Justified in upsetting such a partisan, unfair and sectional arrangement. If the places had not all been filled in the most partisan and sectional manner it would be all right to take the consular service out of politics aad place it upon merit. But one serious objection to the form of examinations that have been con ducted hero in Washington is that the examinations require men of very high literary attainment, and would bar some of the very best business men in South Carolina. How many of the very best business men In South Carolina, who could bo instru mental in extending our foreign trade, can apeak fluently two lan guages? And yet that is one of the prerequisites to appointment as con sul. “It may be of Interest to you to know who fill the most important consular offices. Let me give you the posts, their respective salaries, the persons who fill them and the States they hail from in the consular ser vice in the grades from $5,000 a year up to $12,000 & year: Londan, $12,000, Griffiths, New York State. Liverpool, $8,00o, Washington, District of Columbia. Paris, $12,000, Mason, Ohio. Rio de Janerio, $8,000, Lay, Dis trict of Columbia. Shanghai, $8,000, Wilder, Maine. Havana, $8,000, Rodgers, Ohio. Hong Kong, )|8,0OO, Anderson, Dis trict of Columbia. Berlin, $8,000/ Thackers, Penq- sylvanla. $6,000, Howe, 'Mas- Long Search for Former Charleston Jeweler, Who Disappeared on Sat urday, at Last Rewarded. • The News and Courier says the mystery of the disappearance of Mr. Joseph M. Thomas was solved at midnight Monday night by the find ing of his body in the Ashley River, Just off the wharf of Chisolm’s Mill. The body was in a neml-decomposed condition, but was identified by a rel ative of 'Mr. Thomas* without any trouble. Mr. Thomas was last seen in life at about 11.20 o’clock Saturday morning. His hat and overcoat were found on the edge of the Boulevard Saturday afternoon, giving rise to the theory of suicide. Searching parties had dragged the Ashley River con tinuously in vain until midnight Mon day night, when two men from the Navy Yard, venturing out from Chis olm’s Mill in the bare chance of find ing the body, hooked it while taking soundings at the last moment before coming in. The two men who round the body stated that they had gone out with little hope of finding it, not even knowing of the reward of $:!0'l that was offered for it. They were talk ing soundings in thirty feet of water a short distance from the head of the wharf. A large hook had been fas tened on either side of the sounding lead. Suddenly the hooks stnnk something and when haul'd m it was found to be the body If was taken Into the boat and giv en attention, notice being sent mean while to tiie family of the dead man, to the coroner and to the J. M Con- nelley undertaking establishment. A relative of Mr. Thomas hastened to the spot and quickly identified the body. Mr. A Chambliss Connelley arrived soon after to take charge of the body under permission from Cor oner O'Donnell. While there Is nothing to prove definitely that the death of Mr Thomas waa a case or suicide, . xery- thing points strongly to this fact th» hat and overcoat, when found on the Boulevard, were rarcfully laid aside In addition to this, it is understood ■on reliable atiihorltv that before leriv- I Ing home on Saturday. Mr Thomas had laid aside his watch and per ' nn| jewelry that he hud worn reg- uarly Mr Thomas was ^nouf '.7 years o' i age and waa until recently i member of the firm of Hyphen Thomas a. Bro., Jewelers A reward of $ ,"" had been offered hv Mr .1 C Thomas a son of the missing man. for the d.- livery of the body <Jt U K \\ IT s \\ I s l.l \ I S («ela Help in Time to Rom uo Hi* IM»j mates. The quick thinking of '. \. , t r -d I Zai k Cooper probably sa\id the | of Richard Walton voars old an , krnest Cooper, s >< ars old a er of the other Cooper rh Id a’ \■ w- ton. Misa. Tuesday, when the n dren were buried un i. r a latg.' 1 r..’ bank in which tie \ had been pl.t - Ing A c«ve had I ecu dug in 'In hank and without warning the .. ' crashed down upon the idrldr.-n, bur\lng one of tle-m complet.H and the otter near! v s" die. Cuope- clilld who escaped, ran immcdlatelx to the home of f 1. I'ringb a nigh' watchman who lived near the scene of the accident, and tnld his stun Mr Pringle in bis night . 'other rush ed to the rescue and afr. r several minutes of frantic digging i.d.Ms.d the children, emtlur uf whom was hurt. WRITES A LONG LETTER LOST BROTHER FOUND TWO BROTHERS TO MEET AFTER LONG SEPARATION. He Warns John D. Aridilt dd T hat Roosevelt Haiti Some Day lie Mop ed to Take a Fall Out of the Sinn- dard Oil (iaiiK. Standard OH letters being pub lished by William Randolph Hearat in Hearst.’fl Magazine are getting more interesting to South Carolinians because they are coming closer home. After disposing of Joseph Sibley, of Pennsylvania, a member of the House of Representatives, and Boise Pen rose, a former senator from the same state, and after showing their rela tions with the great trust, Mr. Hearst pointed out how the Standard Oil people were endeavoring to control legislation and how large donations were made to campaign funds. Collier's Weekly branded these Hearts letters as forgeries, but on the Article by the Hon of One of Them In the Newspapers Brought the Two Together, The State says in a month or so Rev. C. E. Weltner, pastor of St Luke's Lutheran church, Olympia vil lage, will have as a visitor his broth er, Henry Weltner, whom he has not until recently heard of since 1 870. A romance arises out of the coming meeting of the two brothers, brought about by a newspaper article written by a son of one and read by a son of tiie other Henry Weltner, aged, then, about 16 years, left Germany in 1 868 and came to America. In 1870, longing for his native land and his loved ones, he paid them a flying visit. A week or so later he left Germany again for this country and up to six months ago had never been seen or heard from. In the meantime Rev. C. E. Welt ner had come to this country, locat ing in New York, thence moving to Augusta in 1 893 and to Columbia in 1 906. He married in New York. His TEilS AWFUL TALE AN AMERICAN TALES OF MEXICAN JAIL FOUR COMPANIONS DIED CLASSIFIED COLUMN Truck Farms for Sail Mt. Olive, N. C. -L. B. Dial, Sweet Orange?*—$1 87. per box, 140 to I nn in box. J. W. Ameraon, Wel- born. Fla. witness stand, before the Clapp inves- on , y Bon one of five children> has tiga.it,g committee, Mr. Archbold a‘l-j gince ]QC ^ d )n Atlanta an(1 throuph mitt.'ii their genuineness. .lohnj low mbs M. l.aurm, of llennettsville, South Carolina, was a I'nited States senator up until 19" 1 and In tiie De ri tuber issue of Hearst s Magazine appears a photograph of a letter, written by band by this ex-senator to John !> Arehbold am.’ marked on the upper left hand corner '•confiden tial”, wliieh word Is underscored. The letter follows: Con tiden t i a 1 lien net t s\ 11 le, S O. September 3", 1 h" 1. Dear Mr Archbold:- In tlie same mail by which your letter came, was one that I wish to quote a few sentences from apro pos your remarks about Mr R— Tiie writer of the letter was em ployed In a confidential way bv Senator Hanna in matters of Im porttime He Is a shrewd, close observ. r. not overscrupnlous, but a very Intelligent man, whose pub lic experience and acquaintance is wide I knew h'ni well tn Wash ington aul when be ...iw my ar ticle in the ••Sun", he wrote me a long letter indulging In some une\ pec'ed criticisms of th>' pre-id.-nt, to which I repp. 1 combn'ing hi* position He s,i\ s in p.irt. \./ . I know ' be u :i n P s .|.si res atid ambitions and I ran say to >nu wltli a f'.ling ..f absolute confi dence, that If he succeeds himself, there w.'l be wrltliltl eighteen months a' ’ »• r the fh of March, such an n''aik of corporate inter ests us will produce n condition of unparalleled dlst urname among our people Reading on Sunday I .a w son* ’ frenzied finance" recall ed to my mind a r. mark that I heard turn ( Roosevelt i tyakc fha' he lloped some .lav 'to f.e alee to fall out of that S' .Hi.I it! d O I gang t. Crowded TVitli Thirty-four Other Prisoners Into a Sunless Dungeon, He Lost Seventy Pounds, and Would Have Died Had Not He Been Released After a Year’s Tor ture. Reduced from 170 pounds to a niereshadow by a Ion# confinement in a Mexican dungeon, C. W. Macatee once a resident of Chickasha, Okla., is now under the care of Dr. L. E. Man uel, the city physician. Stooped, thin and sallow almost beyond recognition, it was hard for men who knew him to believe that the thin, wasted figure is the same man of sturdy physique who left there some years ago. Macatee says he went from there to Wichita, Kan., where ho joined a Mexican colony, went to Mexico and purchased forty acres of land from the Mexican Gov ernment, receiving from that govern ment a deed. Having stocked hts holdings with necessary hors*.', cattle and mules he began preparation of tiie soil for fu- teri' crops and had five acres in shape, . , , , for pineapples and seven acres read} dilation. It happened that a copy] fur baIluna cultur( . when tll( , Mexican t . volution broke out. His place w ax i,ear Chihuahua, whim city the in spirited Prize Winners—Guernsey cattle and Berkshire pigs. Wyldwood, Corn- well. s. e. Hartford's Roupe Cure—Guaranteed r.tic delivered. Poultry Remedy Co., Sneads, Fla. Dnroc-Jerseys—Rich breeding, high quality. Moderate prices. C. G. Oakes, Assumption, 111. Cabbage and IjOttuce Plants—$1 per thousand. Leading varieties. Oak- iin Farm, Salisbury, N. C. For Sale—Fresh Carolina Rice, meal, the best stock food. West Point Mill t’ompanv, Charleston, S. 0. ———fA Cornish Indians, white and dark stock for sale. Egg orders booked now. C. T. Miller, Hartsville, S. C. WAIL! MID SOUTH CAROUNA BAPTIST CON TENTION NOW IN SESSION AT AOBEVILLE Tuole - I'm. Colton Seeds—Yields more lint than any other variety. Write for prices. G. L. Toole, Aiken, S. C. For Sale—Standard bred horses. Thoroughbred Jersey cattle and Du- rock Jersey hogs. P A. Coleman, Fountayi Inn. S. C work there in connection with the f prisons of the State of Georgia has - won much public commendation and space in the public press. A special newspaper article on the views of Phillip Weltner In regard to the prisoners in the Georgia prisons was recently given widespread rir-j Marry—Large list wealthy members wishing early marriage Confiden tial description free Reliable club Mrs Wrub. | Itox 26. Oakland, Cal. For Sale—I’,lack Minocra . veiing ami old stock. 7 7c to $ 1 7." White Ot - p: tig ton I’a lie's. $1 7.o t) .* 2. (o'k- .•II is $1 7" IO Cocks. J 2 t i f ' Kob. rt I. Shirley, l.anotiia. Ga fell into the hands of one Otto Welt ner of Carr county, Texas, who be came Interested in it because he I agreed with the opinions advanced therein and because the name Welt ner menat much to him. j This Otto WelFnFT. as it turned out proved to be Hie only son of Henry; Weltner. long lost, and brother of Rev C E Weltner of that city. Com-, municatlon had been the means es- i tablishlng the Identities ,And when Rev C E Weltner recelv-* his , ’ rot her In a few the occasion twill be a happy one PEACE ALMOST IN SIGHT. Wi P and if he s' my words h» his statement, as h Is : im-e|f mark trv to make good ves that It vv 111 app.-al t, 1 1 !l»‘ ’ ui.t^ -i * and k* rp 1 v. m m t ll< . , • •• r "f th" Mage " I tin > 'i K h t l* ii.; ! * • n ,1 h a f to tup. th. a dU i ... it tu ' mi l ii si r,*•’ '".fi .!»•:, • • : "Jn r i /Lit, i 1 ti I . I ! ’ -1 \ w biM: - i f it i> w "r’ h til- i n k nr n t It w : 1 1 i- 1 , w a 11 v ' a a . i l ’ i 1 f I ,i IM M"’ u urn ;ii Ifil uf : * j ir \.»i 11 i t' 1* k.'.d a- t:mi.* t " vv a ! J * i i M i:. v H )!.-.- fur V" nr hi);i c ,, < ;t* - it.-’ ■ ’:* f" r the III' ’ur", an 1 ! I t ! i j S * t *, » V 11 .1 V I," t rit " I i “« /: 1 . f . T , • \ r, *s lev that I i a i ii"t i n W.I^ li h i: ton 1m' tin ■ ri"Xt f ( \S' > ♦ M f \ Mt f 1'" has de, t ""d. if 1 '..1 f 1 shall tiKTi'ly : tuff t Ii *' l> • lor n if It. i'tl" in- ?'• ad ' if 1 lljov lllg thr : 1 ‘t :i a 1 i jjish Turkey and (be Balkan stall's ( inn ing In Peace Terms. The protocol arrranging an arm ist 're was signed late Tue-dav ev. rut by th‘ Turkish and I’ulcarl.m i-'. rva and Monteiieuro Prior tn thi- ' here had teen a l"!lg Rltl'lg of 'he Turkish council of ministers to con- ruler fresh proposals sibml'led bv ihe allies Apparentlr the Ct'e.-k l"i- i gates did pot sign tile protocol Terms of tin* armistice as n< • ; ' ml by Bulgaria, provides that the 'Mice shall continue dating the • i. tire period ot the peace ni go'.at on- Turkey is to have the r glit of :• victualling all her beaieg. d forces .'■nil all the detached bod ;• s of t »" , man troops remaining m Mac. I i and elsewhere as well as the Tuts -h ; opulationj In various parts of th> t heat re of war Tie' allied Balkan nat.oi.s ar.- 'o furnish safe conduct far tiie rev;c Dialling parties, and the (Mtomati convoys are to o permitted to pass n necessary. through forces of tie rt I ties The blockade of the Xe^ertll and Adriatic coasts of L iro’peun Tu: K* > is to tie raised liTese terms ate . onsid'Ti d geto raous. surrectos captured *rfer a tight early in the rebellion and made] It the rebel capital. The story of his Imprisonment cov ers sixteen months of privation and hardship, wherein h>- was for. ed to live on practically nothing and sub- nut to conditions almost hevond Un man endurance, when (bath stalked into the cell and clatinedrone by one. four of hrs i om,,anions, whole odu-s were allowed to lav m the i*•:] r.earlv tw n weeks before they were removed by the prison au'hnrl'i-s The following :* M.n a** • s own s'ory . I had about J 2 • ' m t • and sev i ral hundred .bi t • s w r of horses, cattle and mules w !.■ n 11." present Mexican revolution br.-k. ■■ • When the rebels ( a; : 11ed C', hu.n. . i they s>"./*ul all the g\m> r: an < n Is'* and demanded that 'h. \ ' r ■ over all that they po--e--. | o. t'..- r« b> I lea lei s it, . a«se. tv -a I w ■ belonged to tiie American and ".o' the M>x an Government Tb' ' d* s'roved all we had. took our I;• st". k and monev and mat. In I -• i. a hollow square of -(/idler* to ;u .*oti lime millions of frost proof cab ge plant- Grown under Id ue Ridge too'i.iil* th*'> are tiardy tough t '".a' on suggestions and price I is- Wak'in.d Fat tns, (hat lot'e N ' L'.ir sale—Res' plantation i Middle ait irant. 'or *abd:vi-;on Right ad u. !, u g twi> good banking towns. S.-ab >a ml \ , r I ..ne R » "fit le- per fect , i«v feM-ns W II '! nom -son T!nd ' .a \\ aii'eil- w om i u ail or • : i 'orm a' on for e or tra’el Ex -ai \ Nothing 'o imp fot \ i Oyfned on Tuesday anrt Is Nov? Hard at Work.—Col. W. H. Hunt is Reelected President for Another Year.—Other Officers Are Named and Reports Submitted. The ninety-second session of the South Carolina Baptist State Conven tion was called to order at three o'clock Sunday afternoon at Abbeville by the president, WaWlter H. Hunt of Newberry. After joining in a song the congregation was led in prayer by Prof. B. E. Geer of Greenville. The toll of delegates was reported as com plete by the secretary, Rev. Chas. A. Jones, and the convention went into election of officers. Col. Walter H. Hunt was re-elected president, and Rev. W. E. Thayer of Laurens, first vice president; Rev. Rufus Ford, D. D., Marion, second vice president; Rev. Chas. A. Jones, Bennettsville, and Rev. A. B. Ken nedy, Columbia, were elected secre- , tary and assistant secretary. Prof. | B. E. Geer was reelected auditor. Rev. i J. S. Corpening submitted the report |HP order of business, which was adopted. The address of welcome was made by Rev. Louis Bristow, pastor of the Abbeville church, and Hie response was made by Rev. J F Vines, D. D., of Anderson. T< n pastors, who have come into the State since the conventton a year ago, were recogniz'd and welcomed. These were Rev In- th Crud ip. Tim- 1 n nnxville. Rev E p J"T1 "s, New- Iit cry Rev Z G T»nd' t's.>n N'evvry. Rev tii o A Nit hols. Fieri nr.' coun tv, Rev E V Rabb. Easlev Rev. James McK'.ttrick, Edcofb J.J » minty. Rev D I. Hayes, Barnwell. Rev, I. I> Bowen, Newberry count' , Rev. J R Whitesides, Spartanburg. Rev R. I' .1 oht.sun. 1 f.a pp. ! ' - \':si( or* 'i - w 1 In Chihuahua til two prIS"! - Y(H \G (.IBLN \RE STOI.MV Daughters of a Millionaire Now l.lt- ing in Texas. I’. O. Saunders, a millionaire own er of mining and rtineli properties in Chihuahua and other state of Mex ico, wdio lately lias made h s home in Galveston, has begun a country wide search for his two daughters. Consuelo, aged 13. and Esperanz, ag ed 1 1 .who were kidnapped Monday. Warrants have been issued for Sophia Martmex, a relative of the children, and officers of I,os Angeles and many other cities of tiie West have been furnished with descriptions of tl children aud woman. Republican politicians." York. Montreal, $6,000, Bradley, Illinois. Ottawa, $6,000, Foster, Vermont. Mexico, $6,000, Shankin, Missouri. Constantinople, $6,0t)0, Randall, South Dakota. Antwerp, $7>,.700, Diedrich, Penn sylvania. Brussells, $7>,7iOO, Watts, Pennsyl vania. T^ntsin, $7>,r>00, Knabenshue, Ohio. Marseilles, $3,500, Gaulin, Rhode Island. Frankfort, $5,500, Hill, Mirine- sota. Seoul, $5,500, Scidmore, Iowa- Panama, $5,500, Snyder, \Vest ; Virginia. Moscow, $5,500, Snodgrass, West Virginia. Barcelona. $5,500, Morgan, Louis- inana. Rotterdam, $5,500, Listoe, Minne sota. Havre, $5,000, Dunning. Maine. Lyons, $5,000, Hurst, District of Columbia. Bremen, 95,000, Fee, Ohio. Co agrees convened Monday, but it is Mi likely that much boslnees win Ike routine and uf arms. A man who gits into politics at t Wt nty-one as I did, is never fit for anything else, lierauso lie can never put Ms soul into tamer pur suits. and Im is Lab!" t,, find him self at forty stranded Pke ? u Old hulk on Hie shores of the political sea, s' 1 fieri u g finiu tllilt worst of ills, 'M \V l.-te lif powers unetn- plov'd". UtlS Kindest regards. Yours sincerely, Jtio. Low tides McLauriu. To Mr. Jno. 1). Arehbold, N e w York. Comment ing on the McLaurin let ter Mr. I learst aay s: ' '"Senator McLaurin was one of the Hanna, Bailey, Penrose, Quay crowd of associated Standard Oil senators, t •’He is not 'mimimiftti of Mr. Arrh- 1 bold's various kind actions' toward i i Iwn; and ho writes in the strictest j confidence whiih characterizes the communications of all tliese corpor ation attachees. "Mr. Arehbold had evidently writ ten Senator McLaurin, expressing his opinion' of Mr. Roosevelt, and the senator is encouraged by this frank and obviously not flattering opinion of ‘a very intelligent man’ of his ac quaintance. “Thi^ man hqd served Senator Hanna ’in a confidential way,’ and was -'not overscrupulous’—as no one could well be who served Hanna and hjs Standard Oil masters. That the an was, however, a -shrewd, close ^observer’ is borne out by his warn ing which Senator McLaurin forwards to Mr. Arehbold as a’ friendly act’. “The ‘intelligent man’ warns Sen ator McLaurin that he heard Mr. Roosevelt make the remark ‘that he hoped some day to be able to take a fall out of 'that Standard Oil gang and,’ continue* this prophetic person and cloae observer, ‘if he succeeds himself, mark my words, he will try to make good thia statement’. ‘The intelligence of thia ‘confiden tial and not over-acrupuloaa man’ aeetna to be austalaed by the fact that Mr. RooMvalt taraiy.did take a fall Mt of tk* Standard QU gat*> tad tl* X MW HI It NED TO Dl V TH. Real Tragedy Attends the 'Liking of Moving Pii ture*. At Tampa. Fla., Will .lone*, a tie gro, died Saturday from the effect o' burns receiTed in a mob rurw put on by moving picture makers. Henry Makers, another negro, is expeefe 1 tn ilb* from injuries received at the same time. Flimsy clotieng worn by the negroes, who were depicting can nibals in tho wilds of Africa, caught from torches, which they were using iti doing their torch dance. Makers saved himself by jumping into a stream nearby. Some other negroes were more or less burned, but not sc rious. - -nno known a* t h " '" ■ 11 * id» pr;*"'. a:. I t'.o oHi <r a* t! • • 't.*, 1" ; r 111 oo... ... w •: ,. th.: tv fc ,r m . r V ' • - ! 'A - • ! Ml ’ : ■ 1 ' - '' * ! • • ' - a •, • - - 1 J I a • i' ' ' *..i :." to T Ci ' .. t •' a’ 7 "f tn -!, a r , \ . j,- • ha' « : •■ ! ’ .' i •' i . 1 V 1 ' ' < ' 1 i; ; , • fh 1, .. • I " • r-,,,f W ,■ A , )>' ' I ■ - ,, oi \ ;t ' ' • I vv • In ' ,lG A i M *t 1 3 : 7 'V .ti Mad. r-, s , • ti v : i a; * . ml 'T. '. ...h ,.i ' Tk* ' • 11 vv b" tl I s' a-’ I w Tb t’ • !' '"'ir "Hk •r pr«"’ "IS vv . 1 - " - ~ t A "IT V f ' sM'ia:" ail J m ■ uc * t 1 .. 1 Ml" VV " vv . rtt i" rf 1 i 11, " 11 n i - kt 1 b f 1 if- > * .v '" r', all Hk . "II at ^ fin *• t.t r• 'v, • t ’ " In "I ."* i if f.i .r .,' "1- . 11 ’mt a,! • - " h . b r * - m i 'V.ll (M 1 1' I " 1 f A ' 1 VV . • n ' - ■ : 1 : , .• • : • ,! .I: ,• ..,i - i '.i i’r ' i '• 11 1 • rt. * rv. h,i ; • ’ *’ Tb"o!"^' ' ,1 1 s. - *| . :. 1 ' * 1 *■ IP . Itutt • >t |>|Mi;lmi 1 >iu k- a ' ■ :r. . Ky R.-v Y I M l*’. :*. L n "tq-.t- 1 - c. ' > ’ - IT. 1 1 ’ ♦ i ’» T ' r :<ma ! >•” r -’ a i v "! ' f. " h • 1 ’. • MUSslOa ■ ' . • ■ ' • - ’ ,i ’ 1 . .1 ', ’ \ r < > •, (i"at 1 ! v i • a ' . i R • v M ' Ml - / i ’ • M • " T I fit..in. I i* v " • ! 1 T ‘id -4 n ! .' i ’ . 'tf- • 1 1 Tl C " f r > K v i n * * • r s. r v C- v T " 1, 1 ' 1 !> , .t ' • I Ml .T 1, nisi ’a T ' '' » !. '"f ► n ! .. t rt till] ti,iar>l Iti, Ii M. Ml I . N .1 |f W J. I lusi'nliurv . rciircsviiMn^ t M 1 . Ucu 11 kimii lu't '* 1 r, ,*t -1 ’ri.i if ( Hlil.egc , ••ii'’ r;r.la 1 nie'Hiorla 1 ! i , 1 ,T ’ 7" for- I'l 'lit-- ' ■ • h i 1 i l, v • ,k - n niiHSKiti hoard, a'. I 'it* ,", , , M ] mihn Lak", and Ri-v i !' ■*;; Mi;- ». i ’ 1" .i.tn :,i • t - Ml .ssiotiai i**.H in t'iitna d ) I ,a H. • • \ ' • , : \ * 1 * a t . i K •., ic»'r. 1) D . repr**s»':tta' .* cf : («k» r • ♦ ' [1. , R"V ' D W (, ■< , i, \ H i a t a. ' * * ' t | t a * Ha and K" v ‘A D ' ' I * o' th# ! i na assix at ion II \\ .Mi t * <I - i • i. J P a | vo . r a ,i r - " i» M I f "i 11 .it < lo im i . . .1 . . 1 l .*■' Lie kj W \e* ' K"por*» ta ♦•r m k>i KK ' t 1 j v ; h * a"I* of min >•* Ti l'. • d r ag.'l ,,1 *tor» rrli-f. ■ d '■ I.nk» I a x vx o 11 orph.iv i V i C ' : ** on i ard .aiol t h“ f' • port :, f • * . 1 a y ool fi. 1 • 1 s* - i * Hr..! ' M" o - 'I h• r>■ aro now ::i Fat ", ' m i r- | v t h I r f v fi \ ■ f I '!, *• ,di"i « a■ 11 ro r;i:c $3.1 ' ' ' n.i ■ :.••?** ■ ii IT S I'lt- orf liaitK*( • • lia* ■ . • ■ idr-’O, t" ► "* t » 11 • • or, . t ■ ' i ' • .1 r \V » 1 a - i. a d t ile al'' t ir d. :,' "Tho ho) I ho I prison* are find was w :• h"itt (i a. were I'orei th.. o' leser.hnMe T id mi; ( f a n v k . i 1 to -Jeep a * b M- X |.':i’I ■ e. If I and -1 We the so by a further prophetic prediction which also came true except as re gards definite dates. . ^ “ 'I can say with a feeling of absor lute confidence,’ declares this pro-j phet of evil, 'that if he succeeds him self there will be within eighteen months such an attack upon corpo rate interests as will produce a con dition of unparalleled disturbance among our people.’ ‘•It was three years after Mr. Roosevelt’s election, rather than eighteen months after, that tho panic of 1 907 came upon ■ us. ’ Thfre are those who claim that Mr.-Roosevelt’s pursuit of hts revenges, flamboyant utterances and sensational perform ances so disturbed business as to precipitate that panic. “Perhaps that is not wholly true. At any-rate if Mr. noosevelt precipi tated the panic by prosecuting all tho institutions and individuals hos tile to him, think how nobly he re stored prosperity by handing over the whole country to those individuals and institutions friendly to him." Farmer Kills His Neighbor. At Dallas, Ga., Early Ellison, a farmer, was shot and killed by his neighbor, Luke Jarmon, Tuesday, when the two met on the public road /armon, it is said, charged that Elli son, who is a married man, had paid improper attentions to his daughter. Riders Are Killed. At Plqua, O.. Homer Whitlock, aged 18. and Ora Wilhelm, aged 23, were killed Tuesday when their mo torcycles collided on the Piqua-Troy speedway near there. Their necks were broken by the eolUsioa. ^ ci■ iiM "ti (lit' . ."Id *t"ii" fin,ir. :ji Mt li ;it,d g'-i iits <) ir fimd cut 1 "t four •.irti : i- op*' Milf pmt "f w.it • r. titid w.i* dajsifl out to us .it irii n ttlnr intcr'ii 'Jfr- "\Yo Wcretft d wltenevi'f Hu v hnp- ju tu'd to,'piink i>f *is Th" ctiard would coin" ttirougn th" iiittidur bcarinjr a small lighti'd torch and would ptifih out scanty fond tlirimeii .a hoi" ;it th" bottom of tiie solid Mid d""r and gu av.av, proluibly not to return fur scviual (lavs •"We fared deridt'dly worse than a drove of hogs and death came to my four companions ansolutely from starvation. Wo could not get a par ticle of exorcise owing to the crowd cc> condition of our cell and eventual ly put in most of our time sleeping. ; “Our cell was twelve feet "under-[ .ground and we did not even hear thej cannonading of the two armies in the ] six-hour battle when Chihuahua fell again into the hands of M^dero and the Federal governm<*nt. "We did not hear tho Federal.* i i when they battered down the front door of tho prison and the first knowledge we had mat something unusual was taking place was when they battered down the inner doors to the cell room. We naturally thought that our hour of execution had come, but were happily mistak en. Being almost naKed we Were given some clothing and smuggled across tho lines to El Paso, where I stayed two weeks. It was fully that long before I dared to attempt to open my eyes in daylight. Even now I have to wear clouded glasses. ‘Though I weighed 170 pounds wlten I went into prison, my weight was less than 100 pounds ^hen I ar rived in El Paso. I remember three of the men who were in prison with me. Charlie Gardner, of Arkansas City, a man by the name of Woods and another named Atwell, from Kansas. “We were taken from El Paao to Tucumcari, N. <M., frxim which place we walked to Amarillo and were tak en from there to Fort Worth. From Fort Worth I made my way aa beet 1 could to Chlckataa. - tl! •■* i111 v "ti ,■ q bl,' ' " t f m I a "Him: kirc" ' i l' 11 i J11,! 11: - 7 , *i h""1 aii l '*■::!.* t • .isun ■V l " . I v 11 UU1 11 VI .1* • • Ii \ 'll"- t" an.",! t" !wr 11." i i\ i I' t ,, •" I •',v ( Ii l.ad !l. -* 1 l : v "f! I" >.ir IP H, 'ti n ■ i r *' ■iniM I’laiit* fi"iii 11 iith-( ■ i mli' Sc I i»i,l* — fur t! ii<'bt tviit l.-irt'' atid nua • • iIiiii !"i,* w "r. r i - h> I ii.t< urv a tin V " I, I ’ll ’ • .•* 11 ,i 1 ■ is • i it > 'i . p.-t I a r - ' irv Ii iv e . I .■"rt i v v /.ii . . I ' Tl ■ 'll, \ 1 t ud. t *■ • R,.~ \\ u - i d tut' m> i.v..' i•>,'* " ft that can ! " pruiLi, ■ .1 uN Success; in ' i .liih tie ■> Ml ' li'tl III 'Up;!* I "r mi .ii.l •'Ear!v Ei !ip.*" i * * 1 '' ri 'P' 11 ; i, j ; ''.tn j 11, i" 111 fur 1st it* t u' 1 1 Henson. G J J I w .IS ll.lt!' T. t; I'h.i Wli;' "Siiloi* Tl" I.H-t to'A da. ^ uf tl.e v aiu- * I lid a v -'ll ■ 1 ri ort m. >1 t" *b" r,.i:o ■. !. M o " 1U - '* Ho.rp"ti; ny . \\ 1 . i l.T. "S. H Rupi i , t" 11. I 'insinuM 1 ' .1 log IK Fin Win on r' pM't ai'i'.t n, n- F • Jit’"ti. M M. Ashll.i. II C Rt aMi.ini, J 1 E J Clui'> < ommit t"" to ri'pnrt on GoiRm'v Imiinpli Potatoes is, trustees of Cotmie Maxvv ri ad v for pianf ;nu j air other sort qual tv Krfjjis till tiie year around.! I absolute!' Blight I’rorf I grow : '""'"tahle plants of i'vitv descrip- r> porf of ,..,1 orphan- tab:" i,0 ila.vs after ]t j Woodward, T S Wright, Ft,surpassed In I Baik ' i '’ U J ' L. D. At 1:10 o'clock the convention ad* 1 journed witli prajer liv Rev. W. T. Mon .Pm e* riglit t'atalogm II K (lodlii'.v. Waldo, i'la tree, j Hundley. ('al)l)Hge Plants for sale—Plants gi'"»n m tin liiuh Piedmont section of N'orili Carolina Will give tet ter f't'sults than if grown on the low < ■ ta*V section (turs are large stocky plants, vigorons and healthy ami "ill guarantee satisfaction Set early. Early Jersey and Charleston Wakefield Successions or Dutch. single $i 27'i 2,out) or over, J! per I.""" Special prices on large quantifies W. L. Kivott, High Point. X. C. FARM AND PECAN LANDS Dark loam, red clay *uhftotl. Any •ix« farm you with, near rail road. school* aad church**. Prtcea from $15 to $SO per acre. See me. Goode Price, Lee*berg, Ga. Ten years ago, 1 902, contributions to the Stato missions amounted to $10,508; this year, $38,058. This one item of-'increase has characterized other deportments of the wort in which South Carolina Baptists are en gaged. It is very probable, judging from recommendations in reports, that ev ery department will be enlarged, and new features of benevolence begun, this incoming year. t The town of Albbevtile has spared no pains in showing considerate cour tesy to the Baptist ministers’ confer ence and the Baptist State conven tion. Trains are met by tho com mittee and delegates are put into waiting automobiles and whirled to the hospitable homes for entertain ment. Across the street near the new and handsome Baptist church swings a double row of electric lighted let ters spelling "Welcome Baptists,” end in the public square, pointing in to the street on which she Baptist church is located, is suspended the figure of a hand lighted by electricity. Dies SVom Lodge Initiation. The authorities at CumberlaJ Md., are investigating the death Zadock Troxei Offner, 2 2 year* of_. which occurred during initiation int« the Loyal Order of Mooae at Weatera- port. While members of the organi zation are reticent. It is stated death occurred auddenly during “hora* play” In the initiation when aa •!«•- trie battery wa.\ uaod.