The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, September 19, 1912, Image 4

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HERALD'S FIGURES A ''' filVES WILSON BIG MAJORITY FOR PRESIDENT +. IN ELECTORAL COLLEGE + Tlio Now York Paper Shows That If Taft's Ijosn in Vermont Holds Good a yvi oi..i rri * in tiio iiiiit'i' nuiws j iiiii/ ??mini AVU1 Swoq? (Iio Country in the November Election. Commenting on the effect the Vermont election had thirty-seven per identlal election the New York Herald, /which is said to l>o a good prophet r/)n such events, gives Wilson 3S7 ^^>"<v6tes in the electoral college and Taft 144. The llerald figures out that the Itoosevelt party in the Ver_ 'jniint election had thirty-seven per cent of the toftal republican vote. Granting that some of this total was drawn from the democratic, socialit and prohibition parties, it is a con.servative estimate to conclude that at least one-third of the old republican vote went to the new party. What will he its hearing 011 the national election? Applying the above test to the figures of 1 908, the following result is indicated, according to the Herald. The following States would be in the Wilson column wun me pluralities given in the table: Elec. Vote. Plurality. Alabama 12 57,504 Arizona 3 3,4 3 7 Arkansas 9 49,175 Colorado 6 4 4,1 77 Delaware 3 5,3 95 Florida G 24,001 Georgia 14 44,G18 Idaho , . . . . 4 1,081 Illinois 29 4 0, S 4 2 Indiana 15 1 05,600 Iowa 13 17,297 Kansas 10 2 9,7:'. 1 Kentucky 13 86,951 Louisiana 10 57,596 Maryland 8 3 8,2 3 3 Mississippi 1 0 57,378 (Missouri 18 115,105 Montana 4 7,7 71 N e b r as k a 8 4 6,134 Nevada 3 4,029 New Jersey 14 5, G 8 3 New Mex ico 3, 8,814 New York 45 87,421 North Carolina 12 (50,3 70 Ohio 24 121,181 Oklahoma. . . .10 4 8,714 South Carolina 0 59,64 6 Tennessee 1 2 56,725. Texas 2 0 1 7 3,525 Utah 4 1,924 Virginia 12 47,897 West Virginia 3 19,595 Wisconsin 13 1,4 67 yyoming . . 3 1,021 Total for Wilson. . 3 87 Btates for Taft. Elec. Vote. Plurality. California 13 15,440 Connecticut 7 7,022 Maine 6 9,255 Massachusetts 1 8 3 8,233 Michigan 15 4 7,9 4 9 Minnesota 12 21,161 .New Hampshire .... 4 1,778 North Dakota . . . . 5 5,568 Oregon 5 3,63 8 Pennisylania 38 48,408 "Rhode Island 5 4,589 South Dakota 5 4,758 "Vermont 4 14,872 Washington 7 12,017 Total for Taft. . . 144 The Herald says in the above tablo ..... it is assumed that Mr. Wilson will .crary all the States carried by Mr. fBryan in 1 908?Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, CleorgJa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia, also six votes in Maryland, where the electoral vote was split?seventeen States, then having a total of 162 electoral votes, now increased I'to 17 4. Mr. Taft can afford to lose one? third of his vote in 1908 and still carry the following States, provided there is no increase in the democratic vote: California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont and Washington?fourteen States, then having 137 electoral votes, now increased to 14 4. , If Mr. Taft loses one-third of his vote in 1 908 through the defection of the Hull (Mooso party, even if there is no increase in the democratic vote, lie will lose to the democrats the following States that ho carried in 1 908: iDeViware, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Kansas, two votes in Maryland, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming-?fifteen States, then having 194 electoral irrOnc now Increased to 207: also Arizona and Now Mexico, which elected republican delegates to Con_ gross in 11)08 and had no electoral! votes; Arizona now having three and New Mexico four. The Herald gives Maine to Taft by a majority of 9,255 votes, but the recent election in that State will hardly indicate such a result. In j 190S, the year the Herald uses for comparison, the Republicans carried i Maine by a majority of 31,583, but! in the election held Monday they had a very small majority. The chances Are that Wilson will carry Maine. i Young Union Farmer Killed. Bird Ivy, a young white farmer of about 31 years of age, was found 1 dead and badly mangled on the Sou- 1 thern railway track jaist beyond the limits of Union Wednesday morning. 'On? of his friends last saw him about ' 11 o'clock Tuesday night, on the csftreeta of Union, and his death seems 1 to be somewhat mysterious. I3 RLEASE'S ATTITUDE ? THE COTjUMIIIA HKOOKI) GIVES ITS reasons IX) It ? Saying the llrothor of the Governor Opposed the Investigation of the Primary. The following editorial from the Columbia Record is published in conAt t. i i? i ? r .. 1.1.. unci lo11 wiiii i ne em u ui mi. rjusunc S. Blease in justice to that paper: "Elsewhere on this page we publish a communication from Mr. Eugene Blease, relative to his attitude in connection with the recent sessions of tlie State Democratic executive committee. The position of Mr. Blease may have been misrepresent<1 in the Record, but there was 110 intentional misrepresentation. And with all the facts before us we can not see where Mr. Blease has been placed in an unfavorable light by The Record. In the editorial which Mr. Blease refers to, were these words: " 'Instead of opposing the investigation, Mr. Blease should have demanded it.' It was based 011 the reporter's accounts that came into this office and accounts of the meetings published in other papers. Mr. Blease may not have opposed the investigation, but his line of attack against it certainly yielded that impression. "1-T.rk 1 /I \-r\n n I o/l f lin t r> 1*111 n f t r?n r?f Ilio ersults so that it could be seen whether IMease or Jones had been nominated. We,of course, could not be expected to know just why lie wanted the results tabulated before the investigation had shown that when tabulated they would be correct. That was the object of the investigation; to remove all suspicion of fraud, or definitely establish that there had been fraud. "A tabulation of the results would have been useless and the result of tabulation worthless. Mr. Illeasc in one of his speeches before the committee gave this impression: My brother doesn't want this oflice if he is not rightfully entitled to it, but he has been nominated, and he will serve as governor. "That is not a literal quotation, but his words gave that impresson. If lie felt that way about it, if he believed that his brother had been fairly nominated and that his brother would be the next governor, he doubtless thought that there was no necessity for an investigation. Mr. Hleaso doubtless believed his brother had been fairly and honestly nominated and that belief may have caused his apparent antagonism to the investigation. If he did not intend to oppose It, lie pursued a course that led the hearers of his speeches to misconstrue his intentions, for certainly there are many who gained the impression that he opposed the investigation. LYNCH A BLACK FIEND. Crowd Batters Down Doors and Shoots Prisoner. At Gumming, Ga., mob spirit, which lias been at fever heat there since the threatened race; trouble Saturday, boiled over Tuesday when esveral hunderd white men stormed the local jail and riddled Ed Collins, a negro with bullets. The body of the negro was mutilated with a crowbar and then dragged to the public square. In the presence of a crowd - ^ O AAA ?li 1 A. K .x J A ? ,1 _ oi over <s,uuu ciuzena i no uouu was strung up to a telephone pole. Collins was arrested Tuesday along with three other negroes in connection with the * assault on a young white girl ifunday. It i? alleged that he assisted Ernest Cox, alias Daniels, the negro who confessed to the crime, in hiding the body. Cox was taken to Atlanta for safe keep-, ing. Sheriff Reid had difficulty in getting the prisoners into the jail on account of the mob which assembled when the arrests were made public. Shortly after the negroes were incarcerated the mob attacked the jail with crowbars and effected an entrance. None of the other prisoners were molested. > ? M I K DEREK COX EESSES. .After Dodging the Officers for About Seventeen A ears. Remorse over having killed a man in St. Louis 17 years ago caused Patrick llaely, 57, to surrender to tho Chicago police Tuesday. "I have been dodging the police and suffering the tortures of an evil conscience and I can stand it no longer," said Haley. "I want to he'sent back to St. Louis and stand trial." Haley said he quarreled with the man a few moments after meeting him and struck him on the head, the blows proving fatal a few hours later. Haley never learned the name of his victim. Returns Money He Stole, Two years ago a burglar entered the home of .1. \V. Hancox, at Spokane, Wash., and secured $20.81. The' coupm was uwaiuMic'd ana in n rimvernation with the burglar suggested that, lie reform and strive to make a living by honest means. A few evenings ago the man reappeared and handed the Mr. llancox an envelope containing the exact amount he had stolen and a letter telling of his reformat ion. ? + ? Found Hurglar in Home. Aroused Wednesday night by a terrier, while sleeping mono in the family residence in a fashionable suburb of Savannah, Jeffries Stakley, aged 15, grabbed his pistol. Finding John Duffey, a burglar, under the bed in another room ho fractured his skull with a bullet and inflicted two other wounds forcing him to flee. Stakley's parents are in Europe. BACK MAINE GOES +. REPUBLICANS WIN STATE BY A SMALL MAJORITY. + THE PARTY WAS UNITED Democrats Lose (lie (Governor and Other State Ollicers. Both Brandies of the Legislature, Which is to Fleet a United Stales Senator and Three Congressman out of Four. The Republicans barely succeed. ovl in carrying Maine by the skin of their teeth in the election 011 Monday, when they won back the goverorship, secured three of the four congressmen and a sufllcient majority 011 a joint ballot in- the legislature to assume the election of a Republican United States Senator. Revised returns for governor, with only five small plantations missing, which in 3 010 cast 50 Republican votes and 4 4 Democratic give: Haines (Republican), 7 0,880; Plaisted (Democrat), 67,848. Ilaines plurality 8,032. Ulaisted's plurality in 1910 was 8,660. Complete unotlicial returns show that there will he 23 "Republicans to eight Democrats in the Senate and 7 9 Republicans and 7 2 Democrats in *% 1 a 1? t > 1: ~ ^ ^ I lie UOUSe, giving JvepuLMiuu.ua 102 on a joint ballot and the Democrats SO . Maine is a Republican State, the Democratic victory there two years urh being one of the political surprises of that year. In the State lection of 1003 Maine gave the Republicans a majority of 31,000 and In the presidential election of the same year the State ^gave Taft over 1 4,000. This shows what a falling off there has been in the Republican vote this year over the Presidential year of 100S. Governor Wilson expressed himself as pleased with the result in Maine ad said that the essential thing to consider was that while the Republicans in Maine had gotten together the Democrats had more than held their own, reducing Republican pluralities extensively. He thought also that the vote in Maine showed "the same drift" as it did in Vermont, namely that Democrats were not losing but gaining votes in States ordinarily Republican. Real Fight Regius. A dispatch from Portland, Me., says Maine emerged from the State election of Monday In which the Republicans were victorious to find herself facing another political contest with five parties instead of four in the race for six presidential elertoral votes. The Progressive party, whose leaders had joined with the Republicans in Monday's election came into being Tuesday after the announcement of the Republican victory. Interest Tuesday centered in the action of Progressive leaders. The Republicans and Democrats have al_ ready nominated their presidential electors. The Progressives, Prohibitionists and Socialists not being recognized officially will inaike their nomination electors by petition. These papers hegan to be circulated Tuesday. Jlalbert P. Gardner, in announcing the position of the Progressives said: "The Progressive party, as a party does not take credit for the result of ^Monday's election although the Progressive element in the Republinart.v won the fight for Mr. Haines. It did this in order to carry out the agreement made with the Republican leaders and also because the Progressives had taken part in the Republican primary and felt bound by the verdict then rendered. "The Progressive party of Maine came into existence for the first time Tuesday morning. From now it will seek election for Roosevelt presidential electors in iMaine." John P. S. Wilson, chairman of the Democratic state committee, declared that the results Tuesday were encouraging. He said mat tne spin in the Republican party meant the election in November of the Democratic presidential electors. The Republican leaders were reticent about the future. Warren C. Phelbrook, chairman of the State committee, while expressing satisfaction oer the result of the election, refused to say what his plans were for the presidential campaign. Little Things Count. It is not given to many people to "think in millions," but that is no excuse for anyone to refuse to do his best in life. No one has a right to despise himself or his work, if it is honest work, because Vie Is not fitted to do colossal things. The little things of life faithfully performed have a value that cannot ho measured and no one is prepared to do the large things of life until ho has faithfulh done these little things. It may also ho some comfort to know that not all gigantic undertakings are success ful. The most colossal on record was the building of tho Tower of Babel and that was a stupendous failure. And since that time many great enterprises have also ended in ruin, livery man who does bis work well, whether the work bo largo or small, is making a success of bis life because bo is contributing to tho sum total of human happiness and to the [common good . ? Kitten Saved Child's Life. The actions of a kitten led the mother of 12-year old Alice Henderson to tho end of an amusement pier at Venice, Cal., whore the child was found hanging downward from a large spike. Lifeguards rescued the girl. >^|^^^/# SB^^BRMSSSIB BE^ ^H S0 Read this plain-worded advertisement. If you are a sufferer of rheumatism, or have a relative or friend suffering the tortures of this terrible disease, we are sure you will be interested. Read advertisements of so-called rheumatic rcures" in the papers. They make a sufferer feel ten times worse off than he is. Read what therr claim is tha cause of rheums tbm?uric add (no one know* what that Is?ask your physician), kidney trouble, liver complaint, ^H| Indigestion, eta Every manufacturer of these "cures" Halm something different. Noah's ] ^BIH which is an external treatment. Not one case in ten requires internal remedies. Beware of these Internal "cures." They often do more to upset the entire system than the temporary relief they give. Rheumatism b one of tha most distressing and discouraging of all troubles. If not checked in time It often doubles one up, brings on all sorts of ^^^BB& suffering, makes life miserable?almost unbearable. # Where there Is no swelling or fever Noah's BBS Liniment will no doubt help you. One 25c size JBB9B bottle will be enough for a trial. Noah's Liniment MMimH has helped others, and we trust you will read what some of them write, which follows: jBBHB "I have used Noah's Liniment for rheumatism, gBHB?| stiff Joints and backache, and will say it did me IpjlBflfrafB more good than any remedy I ever used."?Geo. HB|B| W. Smith, Abbeville, S. C. BBH "I suffered with a dreadfully sore pain In my D|^^^B bade, and tried different remedies. Less than half ^^^ B a bottle of Noah's Liniment made a perfect cure."? J. D. Billlngsley. Point Eastern. Va. I^B^H *>*ror three years I suffered with bone rheumatkm. Two bottles of Noah's Liniment completely ^^^^B cared naVA B. Cyrus* Donald, Su C. 0 CLASSIFIED COLUMN ">>>?'>?"? , *iUE/ grown, bred from J i- ?> , . ?~~ ~Z ton st rains. Some Indian Kuiiner Ducks?$i earn. Muu- 9 n ninvaker Poultry Farm, Normandy, ^<;t *;> ?, * * * ,, y 15 Term. Blackwell, Darlingt< . I Mrs. FoJJine will open Breeze Inn. Wanted Farms?Nori Station 26, Atlantlcville, Sullivan 6 Southern farms; clir Isiand, for boarders June 1. , ' owners; no commisi Students can get comfortable board ^ou *? Write . at Xo. 9 0 Church street, Charleston, jokers Huroau, Ho S. C. , (,a. f Pure-bred Essex Pigs?Southdown or owner, sheep and Angora goats lor sale. II. ??n(' farm land, C. Hargrove, Canton, N. C. convenient to railrc | ^ and health. Price f Write 1'n for Special Summer propo- P0!* acre. Address sitiou. Our place will please you. Hilton, Early Count White Sulphur Springs, Mount Airy, X. C. For Sale?Send $2.0i three bushels. Kieffr Wanted?Persons to earn good com- paid- finest for coo1 missions getting members for Nests nTul canning. Promp and Auxiliary N^sts. Order of Owls .vhoro ?n cnnth r' South Bend, Iud. ~ ,f *n ' outn *a' Molls, Attorney, Sin For Sale?Splendid farms in middle Georgia, the ideal section of the For Sale?Blythe, Ga state. Reference, Hank of Sparta, W. nery and press 2 y< W. Driskell, Sparta, Ga. last year 3,000 bal tons seed, cost $9, > 4. * > flinnonnrl hnalinla PnJlS 900 tCrillS. L/OOk i 4U I*.# ?f IUV/UOU11U M UDIlV/l^ i ? v/#? vi - on sale. Send $2 Banoll delivered chance to step into near station. H. L. n. Wells, attor- business. Geo. Neet ney, Sumter C. II. S, 0. TT! ' 7~Z .. ,, J W anted Toadies or Mi introduce and sell Marry?Hundreds wealthy members willow Plumes Prl will marry soon: ail age3, national!- to $5 profit on e; ties: descriptions froc^. Mrs. Wrub- itG(1 demand, quick : el, Box *.G, Oakland, Cal. Circular with detai plume worth $6, exp Come, all lonely bachelor-maids and $4, Andrews & Co. men join our friendship circle. Peters St., Atlanta, Send stamp for particulars. Friend- Z L_ ship Circle, Oneida, X. Y. Roosevelt, Wilson and agents to sell our Glenn Springs?The "Garner House , imru- or a nn< a nearest to spring. Write, phone, or ?',k' ?'V . wire us for rat.es and lull purlieu- turos and portraits < lars. Will meet guests at White dates and leaders; Stone. presidents and hintc ministrations. The "Windover"?Vow house, largo new- principles of the Pro ly furnished rooms, modern con- cratic and Republic venloncps. ftntj# reasnnaMc. Ad- fllI)y am, falrIy cx dress Mrs. J. 11. llowell, Waynes- , . , . vilie. N. C. partial and superior $1. The complete hoc Ago at ?Canvassers, want more long rd chess on receipt ol green? Doubtless von deserve it : fit. sent free on recc hoiv if? your opportunity; sand post- for postnjre. Phillipf al for particulars. hurton Co., Dov- i-'?; Co., Atlanta, Ca its Slide, Utah. >'of Sato?Southeast Goorria. Amori- {*>? IP* ca's host and cheapest lands, 'fit to acre, l'iuo climate, lont? {;row- Wil li C'UItK \OlR imr season, fhnt tree, K. J. You- Wlietbnr sick or not mans, 13a\loy, Ca. or rrorri depression, w Nov/ Honuth'uI ttutss woven from KAP-AL your old v.oin carpels, superior to * _ * 4 . 1 J 1 J .i >1 ..i. any in se' vieo; 01 designed; | ls *?h|cji?i turn /tcis any size. Ca(alogue fro8. Oriental I ^,\FR A\T> PL15A8A Uug Co., l^alto, Md. Two SizoB?10c Handsome, Pure Bred S. C. Brown f)rU| Leghorns and Cornish Indian (lames. Indian (lamo is tlio fowl for the family, flood layers. Isaac Hangs to W Ault, Mt. Pleasant, S. C. Losing her balance , a sixty-foot well, Miss For Sale?334 acres of land, four years of ago, of Soi miles from Jackson Springs, 3 5 ac- gripped tho well chaii res in cultivation; good building; bracing heiself by di| good water. Terms cash. Apply to into the rock crevices W. L. Holiday, Jackson SprJngn, N. help wcro not locatx C. (hour. 9 <|^?I n^fTTr t&SENH ^I |a Read what they wish you to do?take inter- ^B nally three or four times a day their particular ^B "cure" (a few large bottles). 9 ^B Beware of taking internal remedies. Consult '^B your family physician first and ask him. ^B You would give $5.00?yes, $25.00?foe some. thing?-anything?that would cure you, or your ^B relative or friend, of rheumatism, which, by the ^B way, Is a serious disease, with more serious result* ^B following if not relieved. ^B All we oak you to do is to try one 25c size bottle ^B Liniment I "I had an attack of rheumatism in my right leg, and it was hard for me to get about. Noah't ^B Liniment took all the pain and soreness away."? ^B Edward Ryan, Swansboro, Va. ^B "Received the bottle of Noah's Liniment and j^H think it helped me greatly. I suffered with rheis* ^B mat ism In the neck."?Mrs. Martha A. Lambert, ^B Beaver Dam. Va. H H Noah]? Liniment is the best remedy for Rheumatism, Sciatica, flfl Lame Back, Stiff Joints and Mus- 8Z3GSSS5 |H MB cles, Sore Throat, Colds, Strains, HH IB Sprains, Cuts, Bruises, Colic, BD mm Cramns, Neuralgia, Toothache, H SB and all Nerve, Bone and Muscle TTWWVjj SHI Aches and Pains. i'J|M|b^ joB g?fl The genuine has Noah's Ark on Ir./.UuTl BM H1 every package and looks like this llvllullvl n3 R9 cut, but has RED band on front Bfl MB of package and "Noah's Llnl- rat woTo* mast h| ment" always in RED Ink. HM vg| Beware of imitations. Large ^fl EjB bottle, 25 cents, and sold by all |H ^B dealers In medicine. Guaranteed |H ^fl or money refunded by Noah QQSEDD ^B Remedy Co., Inc^ Richmond, Va. w * ^B nut MANY LIVES LOST breeders would rice $2.f,0 J. W. )n' S- C* OVER TH1RTV THOUSAND I'EOi thorn buyers for I'bl-J DROWNED IN CHINA, oct dealing with don. What have * Southern Home- storm Floods Overwhelmed x 1454 Atlanta, Town of Tsing Tien, 10,000 of In , 1.000 acres of Habitant* Ueing Killed. well Improved, Between .30,000 and 40,000 lives >ad, pood water were jOSj_ }n ^}ie vicinity of Wen Chow T(rrin p \f?D China, in the torrential rains and P j"cRee? high tides August 20th, according to .y, (leorgla. mail advices just received from the T place. D for one barrel * t >r pears Freight Subsequently floods in the up^>er king, preserving VVon cl,ow; river ov?!r'l"w<s(La va8t t shipment any- area and 1,10 town of 1 Hi,)K lien, 4 0 "ollna H L B lniles northwest of Wen Chow, was Titer S C .hsnerged, 10,00 0 of the inhabitants ' losing their lives. Various other towns were washed i., complete gin- aWay at the prefecture at Chu Chow mrs old, ginned an jmj>ortant missionary station, was es, bought 400 deBtroycd. 000, price $6,- .typhoon of August 29 swept nto this. **are over several provinces on the coast money making Gf china, including Cho Kiang and 1, Augusta. f?a. pu previous telegraphic ad~~ * r,.....\ivices rei>orted great loss of life and our beautiful to property around Choo *r tA ti r Foo, the sea at the mouth of the Min aoh sale. Unlim- rIver being 8trewn with hundreds of and easy to sell, h0^.03, . . r,1 . ,,, ... Is free Sample . Tbe Province of Chi Mans. waic|i ress nreDald for has a total P?I)lllation of about n . F 12,000,000, consisting in part of ilat ' *' low lands, and is considered ono of the most fertile provinces in China. t consequence of the floods tho lart, we want inhabitants will be in danger of fainnew campaign j,lG Last year the flood caused by io hundred pic- the overflow of the Yang Tse river, all the candi- which was the most extensive in lives of all tho memory, caused the death by drown>ry of their ad- jng of 100,000 persons and left milplatforins and lions to face starvation, gross! ve, Demo- m ^ ^ ^n parties are lalnod. An Im- Tl""" hook price onlv Further lynching as a result of tlio . '.i,4 recent fatal assault by negroes on ,k mailed to any t|le young (IanR?teP pIO,nincnt L the Price* Out- planter near Cumming, Ga., was nart> t I-, rowly averted Wednesday afternoon. 3-13oya Publish- 'phreo negroes, Oscar Daniels, Delia Daniels and 10d Collins, confessed that they wore implicated in the attack upon the young girl. " ^ JIJ. V Vj nvn.t/kon Robbed by Woman l**i*?fpad . RDAlC I> T-, 1 ' Oscar Van Alstyne, a retired porvonn. tu iiiivi.a ?!_ l.-i.i i . ^ i. , . ..? ' IK'iMliail, WilH 11 v: I < I 11 11 (111(1 lOllOOU ') I orry or fatlgu-; j^jg ^0ld watch by a woman, whilo (^77M1Sr on his way to his home in East Rutlierford, N. Y. The woman when ar? . rested Rave her nam? as Miss Annie immediately. Williams, of Brooklyn, N. Y. XT TO TAKR and 250. BAILEY-LEBBY CO. Wis t?. ell Chain. S7) # k1 s and falling into f ^ g f\ Eliza Hawk, 18 [ fjL rterville, N. J., / FK AF A n and hung on, . , i?' Sging her heels ;a: v O O Fi . Her cries for wt >d for half an CHARLESTON, S.,0.*