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ACCUSED M.\X DIES. Furmaii Bright, Alleged Slayer c Vaughn, Dies at Own Hands. Greenville. Nov. 2t>.?Twenty mile above Greenville in a small niountai cottage near the scene, where Lint say Vaughn, farmer of Henderso county. North Carolina, was shot an killed Tuesday, Fur man Bright, tli man whom the coroner's jury hel responsible for the killing, died earl this morning. Bright shot himse! over the heart Wednesday mornm when officers approached his hous to arrest him for alleged- connectio with the killing. News of the deat was hrnuarht to Greenville by the uc dertakers, who went with an ambu lance to the home of Bright's siste to bring the wounded man to the hos pital. The inquest has not been helc Claude Phillips, who was held b the coroner's jury as an accessor) in the killing, denies his guilt, claim ing that Bright shot Vaughn after th farmer had stopped to eat suppe: with them at a camp on the Green ville-Asheville highway over whicl Vaughn was returning home fron Greenville, where he had realized < considerable sum of money from th< sale of mountain produce Tuesday ? ?i BLIND MAX ACQUITTED. Was Charge<J With Murder of Wife, Unintentional, He Says. -Macon, Ga., Nov. 25.?Claude G. Creason, bling organ grinder who shot; and killed his wife jhere in June, w^s acquitted late today. The jury was out an hour and a half. When the verdict was read, Creason arose and shouted "praise Cod from Whom all blessings flow," and then thanked each juryman. After being freed Creason said he would return with his brothers to their home in South Carolina. Shot at Man, He Says. Macon, Nov. 24.?Before a jury in superior court tonight, C. G. Creason told the story of the shooting on June 27, in which his wife, Essie, whom he married in 1913, met death. "I am as innocent of the charge of murder as any of you," said the blind man. He then recited the incidents in his married life where others had sought to upset his home. He claimed to nave appealed to the police to protect his home. Then he brought *their four year old girl, Evaline, into the case. "I had been selling newspapers on trie street,'' he said, "'ana Evaline came running to me on that Sunday afternoon and said, "Old Dan and Charlie have forced their way into mama's room arid are trying to kiss her," , V Creason told of rushing back to his apartment and of ordering the men away. He said they stood on the street below, cursing him, and it was then, he said, that he drew his pistol and started to shoot through the window. "I wanted to run them away," he said. "When I had finished firing, my little girl said: 'Mama has fallen out of the window.' Other witnesses said that Creason's wife was sitting in the second story window and that she fell to the pavement with the first shot. JOINED IN CHASE. Alleged Slayer Gets Behind Bars Af ter Following Bloodhounds. ^Meridian, .Miss.. Nov. 25.?.Roy .Miner, 22-year-old son of a wealthy manufacturer of this city, and living' on a farm eight miles southeast, was! a member of the posse that followed a bloodhound that trailed'the alleged slayer of .Mrs. Lewis Morris, 56, to his home today. Miner was immediately placed under arrest by Sheriff Martin, and with his father9 in-law, J. E. Johnston, 55, are in in jail pending further investigation. Airs. Morris was found dead in a con field on the Johnston farm with virtually her entire head blown away by a load of shot fired at close range. The body was found bv Johnson, who reportec. to the officers and explained that he had heard Mrs. Morris "order an unknown man from her premises yesterday," after which, he stated, he had heard the report of a shot gun. Johnson's arrest followed shortly after young Miner's, when the sherif received information that the families had been quarreling the previous day. Miner's conduct in joining the posse and following the bloodhound has taken precedence over the killing in the excitement that prevails here. It is stated by the sheriff that the dogs were iaken t( the spot where the body was found and immediately took ur the fail. After following a circuitoi 3 4ouLe for some distance, the dogs went direct to the Miner home and to the bed occupied by Miner las! night. Miner and Johnson have made no statin ents. The young man was married lest May. His wife is bul 18 years old. --'** -" "-f > .. s. . . No Worms in a Healthy Child All children troubled with worms have an un- ; healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and as a x- rale, there is more or less stomach disturbance. GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly ! for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, im- 1 prove the digestion, and act as a General Strength- \ ^ ening Tonic to the whole system. Nature will then ! ' throw off or dispel the worms, and the Child will be j n in perfect health. Pleasant to take. 60c per bottle, j n V ? f Am Closing * X EVERYTHING . i Now is the time li X Holiday i- X\ Reid's Jewelry Stoi A AAi 1 kyll M DES 1 MA] i ERI 1 vxV.vvi;^ mon Telephone Y i ? satisfaction and time saving t Try the STATION TO S' duced rates. SOUTHERN BELL TE1 AND TELEGRAPH ( 11 ? Alabama Mini L Stomach Troubles Made Him But Now Always Et DO YOU enjoy your meals? Eat A: without the dread* of the after effects? Lack of appetite, and a disgreeable, f0 elck-at-the-stomach feeling after meals, it usually indicate that your digestive organs are not working properly. As * A result, you will feel weak, lose weight th and lack the energy that is to be de- tr; rived from well-digested food. ac A valuable help in correcting such eonditions is mentioned by the Rev. ba S. K. McKenzie, of Route 1, Section, | (%qkJorJi inn wm]sm= The Paper with tl f I tliE exquisite texture of Syr Jf vides a splendid writing surf choiee of so man}' smfcrt women Symphony Writing Papers arc ar.d a variety of fashionable tin' . and shapes, to meet every clems I purchased by the quire or the p : w~ ?* ' I f Mack's Di BAMBERG, SOU / SBfc3M?53aSE>' '-V -> V DR. THOMAS BLACK DENTAL SURGBON. Graduate Dental Department University of Maryland. Member S. C. State Dental Association. Office opposite postoffice. Office hourse, 9:00 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. 1 Out I* My Business \T CUT PKK^S. to purchase your Gifts. ^ ^ x e, Bamberg, S. C. y V" "a" "A" "a" A <i> A HEN RPfK MAPRI I? r Li 11 UltVU* lfinilVJpLi IND GRANITE CO. SIGNERS tfUFACTURERS JCTORS * i he largest and best equipped omental mills in the Oaroliniu. GREENWOOD, S. 0. / - _ our Letters Many letters can be : betteranswered by long distance telephone. You give a personal and complete answer; you find out the writer's views and establish better business relations. I he ; ;urns the cost into protit. Fi^TION service at re- vf \ r;i LEPHONE fiJgTI ; | COMPANY % V i ster Relieved Feel Sick at Meal Times, 1" njoys His Meals. la., who writes: "I had stomach troue. When I would go to eat, I would xn sick. I took one bottle of Ziren, id it cured me. Am always ready r my meals and enjoy them. I think is a fine medicine/' 1 If your food hurts you, if your appete is poor, if you are pale, weak and m-down, and have other symptoms at indicate your system needs help, y Ziron. It will put iron into your ood and help build you up. Take it H icording to directions, and if not ; nefited by the first bottle, the money- I ,ck guarantee will protect you. Ask your druggist. , ? s; /? k II I t I ?=! n Svmphosrl^ l| ^ \ i|r^J ie Lovely Finish nphony Writing Paper proace. That is why it is the for their correspondence. ; to be had in three finishes ts. Made up in many size3 md of good taste. May be found. Also correspondence J' Tig Store TH CAROLINA. poi aoesaog A mxrin-DTiJC? Tk A \Tn rD A XTT A Tk T1 UiaiiAiii o L/nj.i VTiiiv xixxxiAiy xj LOSING MANY DO! KIRSCH'J IS THE PLi D Saturday., n THE TIME YOUR GOLDEN Think of what jt will mean t nv, w?^wn? avi nc? onri fIiq V\1 a Uviiiioumao iigiii un uoj aiiu uixg uiu portunity to select from, at rock b< D more than TEN THOUSAND D( Dry Goods, and Clothing, Hats, el positively our entire stock will be ; goods must be moved from the sh< _ until they are gone. THIS WILL BE T 1 And there will be no goods on t teract our losses, but absolutely < CLOTHING, MEN'S AND BO'S i | SHOES will be offered to the pub! cheapest goods for the quality th * since 1916, and guaranteed to be al I So, if you like real sure-enoug '' come in, the water's fine.'' Rem regardless of the losq, we've got to ? - ? ^ a ?? ? n ft v\ /s ' i u % BARGAINS! BAKU/ IkIRSCH'5 L BAMBERG, SOIH or~~for~~TQ= COMI Vierra's Singer -IN ri iu^iu ii vP > C ^b2K^M||M 9 MATINEE 4:00 P. M. ADMISSION: 25c and 5 3AMSER . ? ^ .,._ .. ^ , V. . J =OC=30EZ=30 F YOU DON'T?DANGER OF LLARS FOR YOU. > STORE [ AJND f H i Dec. 4th I OPPORTUNITY BEGINS. t o you in these hard times withj ak winter ahead, to have an opDttom prices, a splendid stock of I 3LLARS worth of fine Shoes, H tc. Not just a few articles, butII sacrificed at and below cost. The 11 alvpc and flip sale will rnnt.iniip II u MO FAKE SALE | which to make a profit to counevery article of DRY GOODS, fS HATS, and every pair of , lie at prices startlingly low, the U ? ; at have been spld in Bambergj! t or below cost.* i' . h, honest-to-goodness bargains, v ember we must get rid of them, > Tijivp sftTDfi monev. UNS! BARGAINS! ' ) STORE I PH CAROLINA M 1 BQC=30C=3E , NGr 1 s and Plavers ? w :$w M ppP^ ^ :<f' 5m^^^hfcav,^^^f^hbi > ?& ;,'\%5-!'j v^'. v'-. - &j^hn?tt|^''^. 3pmi^^abtffihmb| x/< ?br^a< */* ,p-itY$ hpir 4.1* h 11 JL "T %?JL JL ! ,,-. --'I NIGHT 7:30 P. M. < f 0c, PLUS WAR TAX , 4 * I nP^flTP JL