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BRUTAL MURDER1 I Of a Prominent Citizen of Union County by a Negro. GREAT EXCITEMENT. Mr. Clarence C. fcUst Waylaid by a Negro Pullman Porter at the Seaboard Airline l)c|H>t and Assassinated.?A Posse is limiting the Murderer Down With Several IMood Hounds. A dispatch from Carlisle in Union County to The State says Mr. Clarence C. Gist was killed there Thursday night near the Seaboard Air Line depot by Arthur Davis, a negro, whom Mr. Gist had arrested at the base ball grounds Thursday afternoon for boisterous conduct. While being taken to the guard house Davis made threats, saying that lie would have further trouble with him. After being released on bond it seemed lie hid himself near the depot and attacked Mr. Gist wliile the latter was on his way to . liis home. After the shooting the negro made his escape hut the citizens are determined to effect his capture. A special to The State from Union Thursday night about ten o'clock stated that there was considerable excitement there over the dastardly assassination of Mr. Gist at Carlisle. Parties left Union for Carlisle as soon as they heard of the crime to assist in hunting the negro down. Bloodhounds were asked to be sent from the State penitentiary, but as the first train leaving for Carlisle was over the Southern at 7:10 Friday morning it was thought that the dogs would not get there in time to be of service. Capt. Griffith would have sent the dogs Thursday night if there had been any possible way. Hounds were secured from Monroe, N. C. The Monroe dogs are as ? I fine as can be secured in the South, having been in several very successful chases, It. will be remembered that these dogs were used in the capture! nf lhf> fnnr ksi f o ('.riiflffirs near Monroe in 190 2. A message from Carlisle at halfpast twelve Thursday night stated that no trace had been found of the negro Davis. Conditions there are reported easier. No violence has been done and it is not expected that the citizens of that town will commit and rash act in their excitement. Davis is a Pullman porter and has a Pullman pass on his person, ltailroad and Pullman officials and conductors all over the State h.'ive been asked to look for him and it is believed that he will be caught in a few days, if not sooner. Mr. Gist was a brother of President William II. Gist of the Hank of Carlisle and a nephew of the late Gov. Gist. ne was an industrious farmer and was serving as constable for the magistrate at Carlisle when he arrested the negro Davis at the baseball grounds. Mr. Gist was about 25 years of age. Tie married two years ago Miss Wilbom, daughter of Mr. Stanford Wilbom.. n prominent planter of Union county, and who was at one time county commissioner. The negro Davis is about 22 to 25 years of age; between 5 feet G inches and 5 feet 9 inches in height, weight about 1G0 pounds. He is very black and has bulging eyes, rather red. Five hundred dollars reward Is offered for his arrest. Davis was arresiea on i? nuay ana is in jail to await trial. Ho was found at the house of another negro, Chalmers Dawk Ins, who said he had come to his house the night hefore and asked to he allowed to spend the night. As soon as the oftleers reached Dawk ins, house he told them that Davis was in an up-stairs room, where he was found anjl arrested. Wade Davis, father of the murderer, George Davis, his brother, and George Lyles, his brother-in-law, have also been arrested as accessor ies and locked up. The elder Davis is a had fellow, and has heen before the courts several times for selling whiskey. One or?two of the last named had pistols on their persons when arrested. Davis claimed that the shooting was accidental, winch, of course, is all a yarn. Not a word was heard about lynching the prisoners, every body seeming disposed to let the law take its course. Mr. 'Gist was assassinated for arresting Davis at the hall ground by order of the Intendant of Carlisle. Davis was disorderly at the grounds, ^ and the Intendant told him to hehave or leave. This made the fellow mad and he became more disorderly than ever. Then Mr. Gist was order! ed to arrest him, which he did and locked him up. In a short time Davis was turned out on bond, his father and a white man signing it. Davis then wont to his father's restaurant and got a pistol. lie way laid Mr. Gist on his way home and shot him. There is no doubt about the guilt of Davis, and he will be executed accordingly after a fair trial. The man at whose'house Davis was arrested Is a well-to-do respectable negro, and he had no desire to conceal Davis. As soon as the officers asked him if he had seen Davis he told them where they could find him. ' "Good for everything a salve Is used for and especially recommended for Piles." That Is what wo say about DeWitt's Carbollied Witch Hazel -- Salve. That is what twenty years' of usage has proven. Sold by Conway Drug Oe. ; , t?S|.. 0* VERY BAD MAN k He Is Wanted in Two States for His Many Crimes. An Officer Front Greensboro, Ga., Canto For Hint, Hut Papers Were Not Hlght. The State says William P. Lovett, who is now in jail in Hamberg, is in a had way. Two States are after hint, and between tlie two he may serve a long long time, in prison. The crimes of which he is accused are the dastardly kind that make men rejoice to see punishment meted in return. Those whom he offended were women. or, in the eyes of tin* law, children. One of these he misled, the (tther two he married. it. K. llcthea, chief of police of Greensboro, Ga., arrived in Columbia Sunday with requisition papers issued by the State of Georgia. Gov. Ansel turned the documents over t<i the ji 1t nrnov iiT?i??rn 1 Imi VI Lyon reported that the papers had been made out improperly. Gov. Ansel therefore declined to issue extradition papers. The warrant upon which Lovett was arrested and is being held for the Georgia authorities charges him with seduction. There is a graver charge against him now, that of bigamy. Into the lives of three women this man has come and brought sorrow. It is probable that before the Georgia authorities can file additional requisition papers, Lovett will have been arrested under a warrant sworn out in South Carolina, charging him with bigamy. Mr. Hothea stated that the case is indeed a sad one. Lovett was a mill hand and was attentalive to the older of two daughters of Mr. Di.lard, supcrintendant of the mill at Greensboro. Ga. His attentions were resented by the parents. To the surprise of all. Lovett qnd a younger daughter, aged 13, were married one night. It was then that the older daughter, herself not 16, declared Lovett to be a seducer. Lovett left the night he was married, some time in November last. That the marriage was legal there is no doubt; it was performed by a minister who signed the legal certificate. It is the custom of the officers when they catch A fugitive to look wise and say nothing of their methods of capture, but 'Mr. Hethea talked very sensibly about the matter and said that it was quite easy, only that it had required a little time,. The colon mills, for t..eir own protection and for the sake of law and order, issue monthly circulars in which they describe the new hands employed. In tins way i.ovett was located. Mr. Hethea sent the warrant to the cheif of police at Orangeburg and by the latter it was turned over to Sheriff John H. Dukes, who investigated at once and found that this same Lovett had lieen a resident of Orangebur, but after havng married in that city had gone to Bamberg. The warrant was returned to Chief Hethea, who forwarded it to Sheriff Hunter of Bamberg, and the man was arrested under tlie Georgia warrant so served. Mr. Bethea was unable to get liis prisoner, as the solicitor of the circuit n which the crime was committed had not submitted an aiiuiavlt to the effect that the accused is wanted for the crime specified. Not only can he he arrested for seuuetion as charged, hut he is also guilty of abduction, for any one marrying a child under 10 ahainst the wishes of her parents is guilty of abduction under the statutes. WAR IX Til 10 CAM I*. Head of Georgia Republican League Issues Address to Kollowers. A dispatch from Atlanta, Ga., says Chairman Blodgett of the State Republican League, which was formed to fight the present national administration, issued an address to republicans of the South, in which he takes the administration severely to task for the appointment to office of "Democrats and lukewarm republicans," and urges that no federal office-holder be appointed to the next Republican National Convention. THE BROWNSVILLE INQUIRY i Wit lie.ss Saw Negro Soldier Fire Into The Cowan House. Herbert IClkins, of Brownsville, testifying at the Hrownsville Investigation at Washington said that he saw two negro soldiers come up an alley from the barrlson and fire into the Cowan house. v He said that others followed and also that he saw the shooting fron) the garrison which appeared to come from the balcony of Co. B. barracks. Later he said that, he heard a negro soldier say that they would come out the next night and f 1 il 1 sh the town. NOTED INDIAN BANDIT DEAD Apache Kid's Skull Hosts in Physl(inn's Laboratory. "Apache Kid," the notorious In-1 dlan bandit, has been slain and his skull now rests in a laboratory of a Chicago physician. It is said that the mounted skull of the outlaw will be presented to ,Yale University .with the suggestion that ancranium and submit a report. Eugene V. Debs compares Haywood and Mayer to the murderer, John Brown, ail of whom he says are martyrs. Our sympathies have been altogether with Haywood and Mayer, j but if they are like John Brown, as |Debs claim they are, they should be hung the same as Brown was. SOME HOT WORK An Attempted Outrage Calls Together an Angry Mob. FIVE PEOPLE DEAD Xwo Negroes Lynched, One White Man and Two Negroes Killed and Seven Other Persons Injured as a ltesult of an Attempt to Capture Would-be Assailant of a Widow, Near Manassas, C*a. '1 wo negroes lynched, one white man and two negroes dcrtd, and seven other persons Injured is the result of an attempt to capture a negro who Monday night, attempted a criminal assault upon Mrs. Laura Moore, a widow living near Manassas, Tattnall County. The dead: .John Hare, while, farmer. Sim Padgett, negro, and daughter, aged seven years. Lynched: Padgett's wife and son. Injured: VV. H. Pearson, shot in stomach and amr, prolmhlp fatally. James U. Daniel, shot in eye and may die. Dr. D. Ii. Kennedy, seriously. Son of Padgett, seriously. Flem Padgett, slightly. Two daughters of Pagett. Fifteen persons early Tuecday surrounded the house of Sim Padgett, a negro whom they suspected of harboring another negro '\\ho had criminally assaulted Mrs. Moore, and demanded to he allowed lo search the House. Permission was given, hut when within thirty feel of the house those inside the building opened lire on the posse, instantly killing John Hare and seriously wounding Harlow Pearson. Jarties Daniel and Dr. J. ij. Kennedy. The posse then returned the lire, killing Padgett and one of his daughters, aged ten, and wounding two other girls, aged six and thirteen especttivelv. and two of Padgett's sons, aged twenty and twenty-two. The nosse then retired, for reinforcements. The news spread rapid l\ and hv ten o'clock live hundred armed men were on the scene and started in nnrsnit of the negroes, who had escaped. One of them was captured and taken bBToro Mrs. Moore, hut she failed to identify him. The negro, however was identified as the man who shot Hare, and he was started for Keidsville jail, together with Padgett's wife and son. On the way the oflieers were overf *i1r mi 11tr nKnnf ooonn * %??!>#-? v>?* w,? (li/V# III. n*3 V VI1 t%T - 11 ?C| W 11U took the prisoners from them. The woman was fold to run, and as she did so she was riddled with bullets, her son being shot to pieces where be stood. The negro who assaulted Mrs. Moore has not been captured, but it is reported.that he is surrounded in a negro house, and that in all probability ho lias been killed. Sheriff Edwards, with deputies, took nil the prisoners from the jail at Reidsville and loft with them to elude the mob, who, it is reported, will attack the jail Great excitement prevails an.d it s feared that other trouble will occur. Hare was a native of Monroe, N. C., and leaves a widow and several small children. HAIIY 1UKNEI) IN CHADhK. .Mother Charges an I'likuown Enemy With Sotting It On Fire. Frantic with grief over the burning to death of her 18-inonths-old son while she was absent, at a grocery store, Mrs. John Pavett, of Chicago, accuses an unknown enemy of the crime. When she returned from the store she found the baby, which ghf) hiitl l#*Pt nuloon in i t cj an\rnL oped in flames. Mrs. Paavett declared that, a strange man had been watching her home for more than a month. The police think that a burglar dropped a match or the lighted end of a cigarette into the cradle. ONK INKIDK THK OTHKR. Car Starter Yoiiguc of Columbia Has Curioim lOgg. The Columbia Record says Mr. Jefferson S. Yongue, car starter at the street railway transfer station, was surprised, on breaking the egg beside his breakfast plate, to find that, it consisted of two eggs, ono inside tne other. Roth were perfectly formed. This is a curiosity seldom seen. The egg came from a hen on Mr. Yongue's promises at 1017 Green street. GREAT STORM IN CAROLINES Pacific Island Said fo Have Been Swept I?y Hurricane A dispatch from Sydney, N. S. W. says report has reached there that a hurricane and tidal wave swept over the Caroline Islands on April 3 0. immense damage was done to property and 2 00 persons are reported killed. Mrs. McDuff?This paper says thai mice are attracted by music, but 1 don't believe it. Mr. McDuff?Whj not? Mrs. McDuff?Because I nevei fcee any mice around when I play th< piano. Mr. McDuff?Well, that's nt reason for doubting the paper's state ment. CROP LAST YEAR. % , ??? Cotton Figures Compiled by the National Census Bureau. I THE BANNER COUNTY In This State In Orangeburg, Which In About the Thlril Cotton Producing County in the Cotton Belt. The Total Crop Is Put Down at 13,305,205 Bales, Which Is a Bumper Crop. The census bureau of the department of commerce and labor has lust issued a bulletin (No. TG) giving the production of cotton by states and territories, with per cent of quality produced in each, forms of the total crop, and rank according to the quantity produced from 1902 to 190G Including linters and counting round as half bales, the crop of 1900 is ^3,3 05,265 bales, compared with 10,725.602 for tun.' mwi i > - . w ? i a \? 10,Ui7 I ,0 I U for 1904. The 1 90d crop for Texas exceeds all previous records 4,281,824 bales, or 31.5 per cent of the country's production. The next largest contributor is Georgia, with 1 ,026,824 bales, or 12 per cent. Mississippi ranks third, Alabama fourth and South Carolina seventh. The states of Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia each produced, less cotton in 1906 than in 1905, the combined loss amounted to 338,702 bales. South Carolina produced in 1 906, in pounds. 447,505,001; in 1 905, 547,999,7 1 0. The sea-island crop of 1 906, consisting of 57.550 hales, or 22,281,889 pounds, is the smallest production since 1 892, when the crop was but 15,4 18 bales. The production of Sea-island cotton in this country, s confined tit present to fourteen counties in Florida, 24 in Georgia and 1 in South Carolina, or a total of 42 counties. South Carolina has 23,902 acres in Sea-island cotton. The failure of this staple in Texas shows that it can only he grown to advantage in certain places in South Carolina, Florida and Georgia. The increased demand for superior staples in recent years Is developing better upland varieties by seed selection and more careful cultivation. The average price per pound for upland cotton this season Is*10.01 cents, while the sea-island varieties sold from 1 1 to 3 0 cents. States showing largest, per cent of water power for cotton mills are Florida, 19 per cent; Alabama, 12; Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina, each ten. South Carolina produced by counties as follows, in bales in 1900: Abbeville 32,925 AlKen 2H,0 18 Anderson 50,79 1 Hamburg 10,180 Mar n well ,11,03 1 Beaufort ; . . 6,041 Berkeley 12,224 Charleston 7,636 Cherokee. 12,4 60 Chester 23,013 {Chesterfield . . . 1 4,994 Clarendon 21,696 Colleton 11,324 Darlington 24,ol 3 Dorchester 8,313 Edgefield.: 2 2,20.1 Fairfield 23,578 Florence 2 2,f>7 4 Georgetown 1,3 34 Greenville 30,881 Greenwood 28,64 1 Hampton 1 1,343 Horry 5,997 Kershaw ? .. 15,04 2 Lancaster 19,880 Laurens 36,87 4 Lee 19,62 8 Lexington 17,144 Maron 33,565 Marlboro 4 0,8 2 1 Newberry 34,793 Oconee 11,876 Orangeburg. . 60,319 Pickens 13,501 Richland 10.549 Saluda 19,218 Spartanburg 48,328 Sumter 22,645 Union 15,436 Williamsburg 15,463 York 3 4,77 8 Every county in South Carolina produces the staple of cotton. Georgetown being the lowest with only 1,344 bales. New Mexico, appears in the list of states and territories, in the production of cotton in 1906. for the first 11 mo. It shows a production of nearly 100,000 pounds. It is ahead of Kansas and is expected to pass Virginia soon. The average crop for the past live years is 11,790,558 bales! Of the total production in 1900, the territory west of the Mississippi contributed 7, 233,2 10 bales, or 53.2 per cent, while the states east contributed 6,362,288 bales or 4 0.8 per cent, showing that the country west of the Mississippi has passed that east of the Mississippi, nowithstanding the ravages of the boll-weavil in parts of Texas. The production of Texas, 3 8.2 per cent of the total for the country, compared with 30.5 per cent in 1905, a train of 7.7 nor cent. The production of 9I8,f>87 bales In Oklahoma and Indian territory gives the new state a respectable rank among the cotton producing states beng larger than North Carolina and Tennessee combined. j" P.?I see you have my novel. I'l f wager you had to look at the lasi r page to see how it all came out. Q 3 ?No; I looked at the name of th< 3 publishers on the title page to set how it came out, and even now can't understand how it was. FELL OFF SOME. Not So Much Fertilizer Sold This Year As Last It In Thought That the Cotton Acreage in the State Hun Been lted need a Little. It Is usually presumed that the amount of commercial fertllllzor used Is an Indication of the size of the cotton crop, or rather of the acreage planted In cotton, and if this is true the acreage this year Is likely to be found much smaller than last year, hut still a great deal larger than in 1905 and 1901. It was In these two years that the efforts to reduce acreage were made through the Southern Cotton Association, but last year the acreage went up again in a kind of reaction from the campaign of the year before, and now it seems to have taken a turn I again. The amount of fertillizer sold Is determined by the amount of tax paid into the State treasury. The tax is 25 cents per ton on all fertillizer sold in South Carolina, tlm money going to CIcmson (College, where under the law the fertillizer is analyzed. To date the amount of tax paid this year is $1212,310.01 and up to the same date in 1906 the amount of tax was $143,889.14, which is $1 1,579.13 more than last. year. The amount of tax paid this year represents over live hundred thousand tons?-529,240 ton to he exact while the amount of tax to this time last year represented 575,556 tons. The total amount of the tax last year was $167,157.89, which Is the largest amount ever paid in on this tax. The tax year ends June 30, according to the books of Clemson College. From the hooks of the State Treasurer the following figures as to the amount of the tax in the last seven years are taken: 1900.. .. ' $75,21434 1901 84,073.43 I 902 . . . 81,744.94 1903 98,909.80 I 904 11 8,974.15 1 905 130,439.08 1 906 167 J 57.89 1 707 to date 132,310.01 From the last report of the Chunson College for 1906, it is stated that "the inspection tax amounted to $164,996.82, and from this was deducted for unused tags redeemed $6,642.79, leaving a net amount received from the inspection tax of $158,350.03, which, added to the balance on hand together with the income from other sources amounts to $224,093.07." From this amount Is deducted the expenses of analysis. The report explains that the apparent discrepancy between the tax tax figures as found in the college report is duo to the difference in the fiscal years. However. most of the fertilizer is sold in the spring, so that the difference is not very great. It MMAlUvAULi; FOUTITl l>M A Man ' Watches A Surgeon (Cutting OfY llotli Ills Legs. Seldom has the nerve of man been put to such a severe test as in the case of Patrick Greely, and rarely has man displayed such remarkable , fortitude on the operating table as did Greely at the Methodist hospital, Thursday at Philadelphia. With eyes wide open and totally indifferent to the terrible pain he must have suffered, Greely stoically watched the surgeon amputate both legs, one at the hip and the other just above the knee. When the operation was over, Greely thanked the surgeon and attendants. lie assured them that he would be all right in a few days, and the went to sleep. He awoke later refreshed and confident of being out of the hospital soon. MA It SMVMItMl) IIY IIA/MltS Student Disfigured Itecnuse lie llad Worn Sideburns. Captured by Freshman of the Northwestern university, Chicago, Charles Sanderson, n student of tin Northwestern Preparatorn school, u/ftu hii'/url fr?r wonrliiff uMnKiii'nu o n #1 " ?v/i ?f vi?? l?lR UIMVUKI HO, C4IIII now ho is minus a portion of his loft oar and h.s faco h disfigured by cuts. Tho professore of both schools are trying to learn tho identity of t?.e hazers, who will be dismissed. Sanderson was dragged from an Entertainment hall to a secluded spot on the campus and there choked and his hands and feet held while freshmen wielded the razor. When they saw that they had cut their victim the tied. FOK NOT HAVING TAX TAOS. Proceedings Against John Wohltmnn Company by Inspector. Tll? P/\al citi.ru . .../ wi.Mi .x wvwii i wot o? r p aiinr-ir ment proceedings were filed Thursday in the ofllee of the clerk of court and placed into the. hands of the sheriff for service against John Wohltidhii Company on 125 sacks of colton seed meal, which P. VV. Mayor inspector of fertilizers at Charleston i alleged were exposed for sale and did not bear the proper inspection ta> , tags. The penalty for this offence Is i $3 a sack, making the sum allegec due tlie State * ii75. 1 Baron Moncheur, the Belgian mir , ister to this country, after returninj to Washington from a visit to th three hundred Belgian immigrants i 2 the cotton mills of Greenville and Cc 3 lumbia, reports that he found th I great majority of them contented comfortable and happy. CORPSE FOUND. A Horrible Crime Discovered In New York City. HIDDEN IN A TRUNK Woman Had 1'olirc to Open Trunk heft try Two Lodgers, Who lln<! la-ft Witliout I'ay i nt; Their Itrnt, ami the Madly Decomposed llody of a (ircok Minis! or is Found Within. Rev. Father Kaspar, of the Armenian Apostolic Church, of Hohoken, N. J., was murdered in the elty of Now Yory some time last week. The hotly was found Sunday in a trunk, whit'll had been left as security for their room rent I?y two Creeks, who three weeks ago engaged a furnlsherl room of Mrs. Henry Slierer, who occupied tlie third Moor of a tenement at West Thirty-seventh street The body was i 11 a kneeling posture with the head hound against the knees hy a heavy strap that passed over the hack of the neck and was hackled under the shins. The murdered man must have been about 60 years of age. lie weighed probably 1 60 pounds, and was about 5 feet 1 inches in height. A flowing beard twelve inches long was streaked with gray, but the long and bushy hair was black. An undershirt of balhriggan and a cuff on the right wrist were all the body wore, but on top of if had been thrown three coats of clerical cut, a white laundered shirt, two pairs of black lace shoes, a soft felt tint, two Itoman cnit^'-u .. *-* - * ...i.i <i iit'imcned cuff. The police think it is possible that tho body was shipped by express from Chicago and the authorities of I that city have been asked to follow one clew, bused on a meal ticket, alI so found in the trunk. This ticket I was issued by a restaurant at 1,222 jllalstead street. West Pullman, ChlcI ago, and writ ten in ink across it was I the firm name "S. lOrmoylan Iirothlers." Through the word "brothers" several red ink lnes were drawn. Itecause of the condition of the body, I tho manner of death was not immediately apparbnt. Following an nuI topsv at the inogue two men were arI reste on susi>ician. Mrs. Sherer told the coroner that I when the two men engaged the room in her home called themselves John land Paul Sarkis, each about 2 5 years I of age. John was dark and smooth I shaven and the woman understood I that he conducted a restaurant in the I tenderloin. Tho other resembled his I brother, but wore a mustache. The Imen ..ad been visited, she said, by a I man wearing a clerical garb, who I looked not unlike the murdered man. I She thought that tills man called at 1 8 o'clock last Wednesday morning. I No one in the tenement that day I heard any unusual noises. I Lust Wednesday afternoon an exI press wagon brought to the house the I trunk which later, was found to conI tain ttie body. One of the lodgers, I with the aid of a young man, who drove the express, carried the trunk I with considerable dlHiculty to the I room. That night Mrs. Sherer asked I her roomers for the rent due. They pointed to the trunk and sahl it would he found to contain ample security for what they owed. Later the men said that the trunk delivered to them was not theirs, but that a mlstnke had been made. The next morning the roomers left before Mrs. Sherer was up. The next f day unpleasant odors were detected ' coining from the room and to-day, Mrs. Sherer appealed to the i>olico and the trunk was forced open. The body was removed to the morgue and the police began a minute examI ination of its hiding place. It was a cheaply built affair and showed marks of hard usage. Inside tho , cover was printed a name that looked like (iiiiseppe Sarkis. On the outside of the chest was the name "Krmovlan." The autopsy developed that the neck and an arm had been broken. Coroner's Physician Lehune declared [ however, that death was due to suf, focation. The nternal organs were congested and Dr. Lehane gave it as i,i0 *i-~* - ...r. </1> iim>11 inui me man wan thrust. Into the trunk while alive, and the cover of the air tight trunk hfld , down until death ensued. The condition of the organs were found to ho similar to those in cases of asphyxiation. A dspatch from Chicago says at the West Pullman address on Halstead street, the Armenians kept a restaurant until five months ago under the name of S. Krmeylan Brothers. Tho Chicago police Sunday night learned that on February 7. a trunk said to answer the description of that found iii( the New York boarding house was shipped from West Pullman by express to Sarkis Brmoy Ian, 4 2 0 West FortieUi street, New York city. It was shipped by a man , who gave ..is name as K. Kenesiam. i Lewis B. McDonald, agent for the I Adams Fx press Company at West t Pullman saidthat Kenesiam told him that tho trunk contained silks valued 1 at $200. Search was begun at onco ? IWI rvt-iit'KlUIII. i- KODOL For Dyspepsia clears the sto? mach and makes the breath as sweet e ii a rose. KODOL is sold by drugn glatt on a guarantee relief plan. It e coaforma strictly to the National I Pure Food and Drugs Law. Sold by Conway Drug Co.