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FOUND THE MONEY PACKAGE WAS PLACED ON BANK STEPS BY SOME ONE EVERY DOLLAR FOUND i Money From the Pensacola National Hank tliat Was Stolen in Transit to Floinaton Several Days Ago, Turns Up Just as Mysteriously as it Disappeared. A dispatch from Pensacola, Fla., as ? Mcnit r?r thn mysterious return to WX I VDUIV V ft. w the First National Bank, some time Sunday night, of the $55,000 stolen while boing delivered to the Louisville and Nashville pay car at Floxnaton, several days ago, a conference was held Monday night between officials of the bank and private detectives and special agents investigating the robbery. The package containing the money was in the original wrapping as made up by the bank employees, it is said, and was enclosed in a newspaper. It was found (Monday morning lying against the grating of the back door of the bank by the negro janitor, who first thought it a pair of old shoes. This indicates, according to the officials, that some one with previous knowledge, had prepared in advance, the dummy package containing mag azine pages which was found in place of the money when the shipment was opened in the Louisville and Nashvillo pay car. .Ruins and Pinkorton detectives and special agents of the Southern Express Company are hot on the trail of the man. They claim the package of currency, in its original package, was found wrapped Monday morning ir a morning Journal published on Thursday morning. It had been placed at tlio back door of the bank some time during the night and had rested there unnoticed. The janitor had occasion to go to the door, and opening the inside door saw a package resting against the iron grating. Ho thought it was a ( pair of old shoes, but when he picked , it. up the paper dropped off and he ( saw plainly labelled "this package ( contains $55,000". He took it to the , bank officials and the latter identified , it as the original package intended ( for the paymaster of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company. , Every dollar was there, and the j package had not been broken by the ( nan who stole it, and sent along a ummy to the paymaster of the Louisville and Nashville. This dummy was ( made up of the size of a silver certificate or bank note. The money had evidently been resting against the bank door for several hours, for it had been out In the rain which came down in a downpour during the nis.ht, and the newspaper in which it was wrapped dropped off when the janitor picked it up. The rear of the bank is enclosed by a brick wall about five feet high and the door at which the money was j placed was only about five feet from this wall. The party returning It either threw It over the wall against the dooi or else scaled the wall and dencsfted the package where it was ( found. i A peculiar thing connected with j ~ B 11 ~ ~ * K ~ 4- c?f 1 tno reruni ui ixie iuuiiuy was uiai oai- j urday night Assistant Cashier W. N. , Roberts received a telephone message , at. his house from a party giving no j name and leaving the phone as soon j as ho had spoken a few words. This party said: "You will find what you , lost at the bank's back door." I The party doing the telephoning t first made a mistake and got the wrong Roberta. He telephoned to the home of Cashier Clyde W. Roberts, of the Pensacola State Bank, and delivered such a message, but was told that the cashier had not lost anything. Ho then telephoned to W. N. Roberts, but that official thought Borne one was attempting a practical joke on him and refused to go out in the rain to the bank to take a look. The various Bums and Pinkerton xv.07j. who have been securing evidence. called the express and bank oTicials into conference Monday flight and it is expected that there will bo arrests in the case within a lew hours. ? ? Wilons's Pure Record. The Augusta Chronicle calls attention to the fact that "in the midst of all the charges and countercharges flying hack and forth between tho two factions of the Republican party, Wood low Wilson stands serene and tjnascailod. He has no pass that is Bet codltable to him. Every year of bis life has been lived In such a way that now when ho stands on the licigMs no man can say a word against him or cast aspersions upon hi j record or Impugn his motives. There is iu> question in the minds of the American people as to Wilson's honor and truthfulness. No taint of Stool Trust or Standard Oil corruption iVnds has tarnished his name or twolrud Inni In h#?nfi?d ji n ?? with members of his party of the Chert and ugly word. No man has called him o liar and he has not had cccavdon to give tho lie to any one. Wilson stsnds out In this campaign f.v tit ? one man whose record Is unjRftanilr.hle and whose program meets tho approval of tho entire body of his own party." Tho more we seo and "hear of our candidate, the prouder we tfet that, we were among the first to fid roc ate his nomination by the Democrats, ? Like old Dog Troy, Champ Clark was punished for tho company he w&* found keeping. TOOK H13 OWN LIFE HEX J AM IN SAULS KILLS HIMSELF ON WEDNESDAY. Assigned No Cause for the Hash Act, - "" Tr^v^p Hut it is Supposed He Was Despondent. Mr. Benjamin Sauls, thirty years of age, committed suicide by shooting himself through the head with a shotgun at his home in Sinoahs, 12 miles from Branchville, Wednesday |? morning anout noon. i>u uauoo id given for the deed, except that ho is said to have been drinking, and Is supposed to have killed himself In a fir of despondency. He leaves a wife ard three children, his step-mother and several brothers and sisters. lie was buried 10 o'clock Thursday morning from the Smoaks Baptist Church. Mr. Sauls was a member of one of the most prominent families in the Smoaks section of Colleton County. He had served for several years as a mail carrier on one of the rural routes from Smoaks, and his work was believed to be very satisfactory. Ho was well liked by a large circle or friends for his gonial disposition. Wednesday morning he was on the streets up to about an half hour before the lttle town was shocked wltn the announcement that he had killed himself. He talked and laughed with his friends as usual, and nothing in his manner indicated that he contemplated the deed. It is said, however, that he had threatened to kill himself several times before. He went to his hnmo shortly before 12 o'clock, en tried his bed room and a few moments later a gunshot was heard and members of his family rustylng Into his room found his lifeless body lying on the floor with the shotgun beside it. ? NEED OF WIT,SOX FUND. ? Democratic Committee Must Have the Sinews of War. A dispatch from New York says the total contributions to date to Lhe Democratic campaign fund amount to $298 750, it was announced Thursday night by Henry Morgenfhau, chairman of the Democratic national finance committee. Of this sum, he added, $206,0.86 had been expended and while the national com Rift tee feels encouraged over tne contributions received, there is urgent tued of not less than $750,000 additional to pay legitimate expenses fo the close of the campaign. "The feeling of confidence thro Dut the country in the success of the Wilson and Marshall ticket is hurting u3 in a financial way," 3aid Mr. Morgenthau. "We have received contributions from 17,116 persons, and every State in the union has been heard from." The States credited with the largest amounts are: New York, $105,385; Pennsylvania $19,5*6; Illinois, $1 5,453; Missouri, $9,4 90; New Jersey, $7,012; Wisconsin, $0,125; Louisiana, $5,565; Alabama, 5,03 6; Texas, $3,3 82; Massacnusetts, $3,039. Including the $100 given by the Democratic Executive Committee ornngeburg County has given a little e\ei 150 to this fund. Some of this kor. ?/-vf tinnn a/mt in vf?t hilt will Of* LI no I1UU l / V. v_ I a uvuv * *? J ^ V, W v. w in a few days. W? should raTse at least $15 0 more, making the comtribi.tion of the people $250, wnich, added to the $100 given by the Trx=>cu-tive Committee, would make $350 in all from this county. Her us go to work and raise the additional $100. The committee needs the money. so let'b get to work at once. WAS THIS FRAUD OR NOT? Associated Press Account of the Greenville Meeting. The Associated Prass account of the fraud investigated at Greenville sayv evidence tending to indicate that fraud was practiced in Greenville County in the Democratic primary of August 2 7, was planed before the sub-committee of the south Carolina Democratic State committee at a hi ief session held Wednesday afternoon in the Court House. A local committee wnich had been conducting an investigation in Greenville County reported that repetitions of names on polling lists had been found In 340 instances and that flu' names were rencated anywhere from one to five times each. This the committee saya indicates that 3-10 men voted anywhere from two or five times each in tno primary. The committee furrner reported that it had been unablo to Identify 128 names on tho polling list of one box in the city. Votes to the number of 7f>2 were casr in this box. Their testimony will no offered later if tlio committee desires it. Ilrido Cuts Her Throat. Mrs. Arsene Ouellette, a bride of a few months, cut her throat with a table knife yesterday and lived but a few minutes after the mangled body of her husband was brought home. Ouellette and a companion, Alfred Oagnon, were killed when their carriage was struct by an inter-colonial railway train at a grade crossing, near Quebec. ? ? liOdy Killwl in Ituaway. f At Greenville, Mrs. Alice Picklesimer, widow of the late Newell Pickleslmer, was killed Friday in a runaway near the city. She was throwr from the buggy, striking a treo, be ing killed instantly. ? ? Joy Kills llusclmll Fan. Wben bis home team rallied lat< In tbe game and scored enough rum to take tbe lead, Timothy Flanagan of Ashley, Pa., was stricken witl heart failure and died. ADMITS HIS GUILT ' VAUGHN CONFESSES niS AWFUL CHIME FREKLT. He Breaks Down and Tells How lis Ruined, Innocent Young Girls in the Home. "1 am guilty of the charges against me. 1 must have been tempted by tho devil. If ever a man has repented for his sins that man Is me. Every night sinco I resigned as superintendent of the orphan asylum I have prayed to my (Maker to forgive me. My wife and child are living near Greenvill/3 and it is breaking my heart to think what my child will have to face when she grows older." Such was tho confession of Thurston U. Vaughn, former superintendent of tho Odd Fellows Orphan Home near Greenville S. C., made just before departing /or South Carolina from Baltimore with Sheriff Poole. Pathos marked every faltering utterance of the broken man. Tears coursed down his cheeks and his frame shook with emotion. Supported by the strong arm of the kind ofiicer the prisoner talked to a group of newspaper men for some time before leaving the city prison. "I regret it all, regret it all," repeated Vaughn in depths of despair. "If it could only be undone," be wailed. Vaughn seemed to think more of the sorrow that has come to his wife and daughter than of h4s own awful plight. !Si?nco early Wednesday be has been a changed man. He broke dOvvn completely and has beon in a high state of nervousness since. Wednesday afternoon he voluntarily confessed to his guilt and appeared mere composed when he had unburdened bis soul. Sheriff J. Perry Poole, of Green villt, loft Wednesday artornoon wun Vaughn and will proceed direct to the State penitentiary at Columbia. REFUSED PAYMENT ? Oi Account Rendered by the Columbia Record. The Columbia correspondent of The News and Courier says Governor Cole L?. Blease inser?ea in the Columbia Record before the primary a political advertisement, for which ho was rendered a bill by the Record for $8.4 0. He drew a warrant on his contingent fund, sent it to the Comptroller General ,with the bill approved, and ordered paid. The Comptroller General declined to pay the item in the following letter, which he sent to the Record: "The Record Publishing Company, Columbia, S. C.?Gentlemen: I have on file your bill for advertisement inserted in your paper by the Hon. Cole L. Blease, which has been approved by him for payment out of his contingent fund as Governor. "This appropriation is for 'contingent fund for rewards and other purposes'. This was intended to cover disbursements incidental to the administration of the Governor's oilice which could not well be foreseen. "The bill handed me does not appear to be for any expense Incidental to the administration of the Governor's office, but to bo a personal charere aaainst the Hon. Colo L. Blease. The matter of publication was purely personal, its publication is not authorizeu at the public expense. Your respeutrully, "A. W. Jones, "Comptroller General." i MANY LIVES ARE LOST. Great Damage Wrought in Japan by Terrific Storm. A typhoon swept over Japan the night of September 22. There was los< of life and heavy damage to property and shipping. A torpedo boat and the destroyers Tachibana nrwl TCnhnkl wnro Hiinfc in Ise ItaY. Tokio has been completely Isolated since September 22. The typhoon can led down all the telegraph lines. Even yet details are meager. The most disastrous effects of the storm were felt along the south coast. At Yokohama the French armored cruiser Duplex dragged her anchors and went ashore. She was pulled off, however, the following rray" At Shimonasekl a ftussion mail boat foundered. The casualties are unoknown. The losses to shipping have been very serious. The Japanese battleship Satsuma and the tender Manshu wero dismasted. Four destroyers and five torpedo boats were driven ashore. There was a heavy loss of life at Nagoya, capital of the prefecture of *iclii, Island of Hondo, where a school and other buildings collapsed. Negroes Support Wilson. The National Colored Democratic League has opened headquarters In New York and is making preparations for a big demonstration for Gov. Wilson when he comes to that city to speak at Cooper Union. The President of the League Is Bishop Alexander Walters, D. D., who is the head of the African Methodist Eplseoj pal Zion Church. ] I Derelict Schooner Picked Trp. The British schooner Bartholdl.cn route from San Juan, Porto Rico, to . Mobile, which was stripped clean of . all spars, sail and rigging in tho re. cent storm, was picked up in tho I ?upsjni|j. 'Pionv.suoj 01 po.uoi . Gulf by the Pensacoln pilot boat and Forced to Swallow Poison. Miss Lottie Ward, 15 years old. > I who lives at the home of Samuel 3' Farmer, of Wheeling Junction, W. ,jVa. was seized by unidentified men i near her home Wednesday and held ' while poison was udmintat red. TEDDY AND BLEASEl ROOSEVELT TELEGRAMS START MUCH IDLE TALK ABOUT A UNION PARTY Governor 1)1 ease's Dislike for Woodrow Wilson and Present Political Kupture Said to lie the Open Opportunity Accepted by the "Pull Moose" to Break into Carolina. Some very sensational political dope is being sent out from Aiken. One is that Col. Theodore Roosevelt, "Bill 11 Moose" nominee for the presidency, is very anxious to gain a foothold in South Carolina politics and that ho intends, with the bold effrontery characteristic of him at least to make the effort is reasonably evident from the fact that a former member of tho colonel's circle of acquaintances in New Yorl*, but now in Aiken, is in receipt of a telegram from Colonel Roosevelt wherein the latter inquires if there is any statute of limitation in this state regulating tho placing of an electoral ticket in the field. The significance of this fact is rendered even more significant and colored by tho fact that this is by no means the first telegram which Dr. Dunn has received in connection with tho matter. It appears, in fact, that for the past several weeks there has been no little correspondence carried on, in a telegraphic way, between Col. Roosevelt and his Aiken friend in an effort to get a lino on the out* look. This inquiry of the colonel's is very significant in view of the present chaotic condition of state politics, the rupture growing out of the failure so tar of the state executive committee to declare Cole L. Blease the gubernatorial nominee of the democratic party. Immediately after the first primary election, Tuesday, Augfust 27, the attitude of the executive committee gave rise to much speculative conjecture as to whether the condition would not afford Col. Itoosevelt the very opportunity for which he sought to project his "Bull Moose" party into this State. And now Governor Blease and his followers have not only issued the statement that, if the executive committee does not doclare him the nominee the entire force will "bolt" the democratic party and run independently in the general election, but have gone even further and formulated and advertised a ticket for every state office, which Governor Blease heads, of course, and they declare that thl3 ticket will bo placed in the field for the general election, if the committee persists in pursuing its dilatory course. Col. Roosevelt has been awaiting such an opportunity as this. It has arisen, and, with keen nnlUlrnd nerr.ention. ho has made quick to grasp the opportunity by Us Cort-IockJ. This gives rise to the question as to whether the Bleaso and Roosevelt ftmces will lino up together. It is a matter of common knowledge that i'or no very clear reason Governor Blease c:: per ie 1400s considerable dislike for the democratic presidential nominee, Woodrow Wilson, while, on the other hand, a man of Colonel Roosevelt's typo appeals strongly to the governor. During the past few weeks the opinion has been frequently ventured that Governor Blease is such a personality an the colonel would like to lino up with, in the event that he is afforded an opening in South Carolina. Reducing the scale to a very large degree, Govornor Blease might in a s?uso bo compared with Col. R003Ci/.-.lf Ttr?l >1 Yiifln urn nviatlnc iinil*.** conditions very contemporary; both aie open and brazen in their utterances and radical in their policies* both aufler the unending ridculo and exposition of tlio nation's newapapers, yet bolh are, it must ba admitted the idols of irasses and aie accorded the "hero worship" of a large class of people who woo id lionize and place them upon a pedestal of martyrdom and shout: "Protector of the working man!" /?II of this bar. led many people to look for an alfiliatiori of the Please and Roosevelt forces. The quortiou Is will Plea.se give Ills consn t to such a coalition? Roosevelt deslrc.3 it; will ho be able to secure his col? if rot, will tho present rupture in politics in this state lead him to place an electoral ticket in the fold anyway? Theso are tho questions that aro ashed at Aiken now, as ai .result of know Ledge of the "Pull j Mooso" telegrams received, and ouln-j it n Is about evenly divided on the matter. However, it Is generally concede 1 ! fhni under no conditions, could KooBcvo.lt do much in the State at this time. It might, though, foreshadow tho dawning of a new poKi.tgal era for the State, end tuigilt eventually lead to the establishment of another party in South Carolina after existing an it has under one par* ty for more than half a century. B U somo of the lined intellect of the State Is known lieve to he of the opinion that the oatahllehmont of another party in this state would relieve it Iol* the political condition unuor which it at present struggles. THE BAILEY-LEBBY CO (M& RUBBER h<OQF(N ? CHAKlE^rOM, 3 .C, CLASSIFIED COLUMN Truck FurniH for Salo?L. B. Dial, Mt. Olive, N. C. Indian Runner Ducks?$i each. Munuinmker Poultry Farm, Normandy, Tonn. Mm. Polling will open Breeze Inn, Station 26, Atlanticvillo, Sullivan's Island, for boarders June 1. Students can get comfortable board at No. 90 Church street, Charleston, S. C. Write Us for Special Bummer proposition. Our place will please you. White Sulphur Springs, Mount Airy, N. C. Wanted?Persons to earn good commissions getting members for Nests and Auxiliary N*sts. Order of Owls South Bend. Ttid. Pigs and Shunts of Registered Poland China Hogs for sale. Selma Poultry and Stock Yards, Selma, N. C. Girls?No one can read your leneris if you uso our secret writing system. Send 25c to Box 264, N. S., Pittsburg, Pa. Several S. C. It. I. Itecl Corks for Halo ? $3 each. Or will exchange for pullets of same breed. L. . Eldson, Trenton, S. C. Wanted ? Bookkeepers, Stenographers. Position secured or money refunded. Southern Exchange, Georgetown, S. C. For Kale?Splendid farms in middle Georgia, the ideal section of the state. Reference, Bank of Sparta, W. \V. Driskell, Sparta, Ga. 2 to 3 thousand bushels Keiffer Pears on sale. Send $2 for barrel delivered near station. 11. L. B. Wells, attorney, Sumter C. C., S C. Marry?Hundreds wealthy members will marry soon; all ages, nationalities; descriptions free. Mrs. Wrub< !, Box 26. Oakland, Cal. Come, all lonely bachelor-maids and men join our friendship circle Send stamp for particulars. Friendship Circle, Oneida, N. Y, (/lean Springs?The "Garner House", nearest to spring. Write, phone, or wire us for rates and full particulars. Will meet guests at White Stone. "W'imlover"?New house, large newly furnished rooms, modern conveniences. Rales reasonable. Address Mrs. J. H. Howell, Waynesvllle, N. C. Agents?$10 a day, sell slip-on rainproof coats. All ths rage. Factory tc wearer. Tan or gray. Ask for prices. J. C. Moorhead, Mt. Jewett, Pa. Ked Cuban Games?Most beautiful, purest game, and best layers. Send 3c for illustrated catalog. Young trio, $. Geo. W. Mea,us, Concord, N. C. S? k t Ii Georgia?A home for all farmers who seek a good place to live and make money. Let ua tell you abort it. Freeman Toole & Chip's. Sycamore, Ga. Age/its?Canvassers, want more long green? Doubtless you deserve it; here is your opportunity; send postal for particulars. Burton Co., DevUs Slide, Utah. li'Vr Sale?Several hundred thousand juniper shingle, any size and grade. Can mako prompt delivery. Write Southern Exchange Co., Box 5 73, Wilmington, N. C. For SrJe?Two new and attractive surburban cottages. Five rooms and buth. All modern conveniences. Superb location. Apply Davis Powell, Columbia, S. C. lioys and Girls!?Sell 24 fortune tolling charts at 10c each and ro coivo a beautiful clc?ck f?r your roor.i free. Address Ch;i9. Smith, 29 Tenth St., Toledo, Ohio. New Beautiful Hugs, woven from year old worn carpets, superior to any In semicc; plain or designed; any slzo. Catalogue free. Oriental It uk Co., ttalto, Md. i-intioMOine, Pure Bred S. C. Brown Deghovna and Cornish Indian Games. Indian Game is the fowl for thi> family. Good ln.yers. Isaac j A nit, Mt. Pleasant, S. C. While Wyandotte Cockerels, well ! gro*'?, bred from Fishel and Dust?n Klraina. Some breeders would got $5 to $10. My price $2.50 J. W, Blackwell, Po.rlington, S. C. For Sulo?3 34 acres of land, foui miles from Jackson Springs, 35 ac> roe In cultivation; good building; good water. Terms ear.h. Apply tc W. L, Holiday, Jacknou Springs, N O. For Sale?215 ere Dairy form com' nlrto close in Monroe, N\ C. A com' plef.e wood working plant. 33 8 ncrt farm cn railroad and two pub Ho roads close to city. G. B. Cald well, Monroe, N. C. I i i,r Solo?Bond $2.00 for one barre tlm.'o l:i:n!?o!s, Kieffor prars. KrelpJv paid; f inert for cooking, preserving and oa.iiniagr. Prorapt sMnment anv y.vhrro in Son Mi Carolina. IT. L. B Wolls, Attorney, Sumter, S. C. For S?To?TUytbe, (In., complete pin mvy a ad press 2 fea rs o'M, planet 1 }>,j.t year 3,000 bfdee, bonr,ht 4 Cm fori3 nood, coat, f0,000, prlco 30, bOO terms. J-ook Info this. Run clvinoo to etop in*o money maMnj business. (yOO. Neen. Augusta, 0% Stop That Whooping CYmgh?Onre It Bond 91 for prceci lotion, D. C THIEF HAD NERVE I BUT IT LEAD TO HIS RECAPTURE I BY THE OFFICERS I ROBBED A YOUNG MAN 11 W'uh Eating I'rp?kf?8t at Same T*M^le \ I With the Woman lie Robbed the >1 ight Before When the Officers ' H Made Their Appearance and Took 1:1 Him in Charge. II The New York World says George |H Witson, who escaped from the Tombs vH Prison July 7, was arrested In Phil- H adelphla Monday afternoon us lie fR stepped off a train from Atlantic City \fifl nt the West Philadelphia station of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Since his H daring escape from prison Witson H had been enjoying himself immense- il ly in Atlantic City, but the New York police never got so much us a clue to him. ! Raymond Forsbrey, who escaped ~'R from the Tombs Sept. 2, whore no \H was being held 011 tho charge of mur- H dor, has been called tho "most des- H perate criminal at largo" by Deputy Commissioner of Police Doughorty. H He has not been heard from. 1^1 Miss Price was awakonod Wodnesday night in her room by a masked H man who stood over her with a revdvor. She was told to make no noise and she obeyod. Then tho robber took her Jewelry, slid down a R waterspout to tho ground and disappeared. Mls?s Price reported the robbery to A. 1 11 .1 J -1 I ^ i I ir.e police, iuiu uoiuciivt'is interviewing hor found her at breakfast with a well-dressed young man who had come to offer sympathy. As the de- ^A tcetives approached the table, one of them said to his companion: AH "That looks like George Wltson, VH wanted in Now York." olH The well-dressed man breakfasting iH with Miss Price dashed to the door |H ar.d was off in an automobile before ^A tlie astonished detectives could make H a move. AjH Philadelphia was notified to keep a ^H watch on incoming trains. Lieut. ^A Haines and Patrolman McDowell H were sent to the West Philadelphia H Station, and were there when Wltson H stepped to the platson. He was ar- v|H rested quickly and, on being quoa- H tiered, laughed as he said: ?H "Sure I'm George Wltson. I'm the H man who escapod from the Tombs |fl and the man who robbed Miss Price. j I had spent so much money on her I M couldn't think of any other way of IH getting even. I went to her room. wm late last night, held her up at the H point of a gun and she hid her head lH under tho cover while I got what I H was after. ? "When I called to breakfast witli JH nor and offer my sympathy this morn ing I could scarcely keep from laugh- H Irg in hor face, but I pretended to be 1H very sorry. H "When those detectives appeared fl and I saw one of them nodge the other I decided Atlantic City was no jfl place was George Wltson." j%J| Asked about his escape from the Tombs, Wltson was amused. He said: "That was easy. Any one with In- fl geiiulty can escape from there." At Police Headquarters Wltson was I taken to the Rogues' Gallery to be photographed. He insisted on hav- I ing perfect front and sldo views tak on, and when the camera had done I its work he rernarked: I "Pretty place you have here. Rome I different from the one In Now York." I Wltson escaped from the Tombs by I squeezing through a manhole which I led from the cellar to the prison S yard. He climbed to the prison wall I and encountered William Haullhan, I n r? Wnnn With ft rhtttel be a l"** V|? I WW " - ? ? - 4 ~ knocked tho keeper insensible, took \ his revolver and escaped to the street. It was Houlihan's revolver he used In .* holding up Miss Price. \ Should old man Larry Gantt come tnck to South Carolina with his squirt gun he will make things warm. Put he will do the people who induce him ( to come back more harm than any f , one else. r |j| ~KAP-AL-GINE I w u.l cn<K vorn hkadachjc Whether sick or nervous beadachi ,'y I or t dopiosaioa, worry or fan*. ;? * KAP-AL-GINE I In Liquid and A<:i? luiiiie'llAi^lr. i ->.vfk a $ 1) pleasant to taksv i Two Size**?10c and UiSe. At All Druggist*. "Wells. Proved Cure. Never falls. Nc. opium. Harmless and perfect. Used for 100 years and guaranteed. H. L. B. Wells, Atty., Sumter C. H., ?,? S. C. i\ Seven Hundred and Fifty Acres good nnrl tnlinr?r?n lnnri On? linn dred twenty-ft vo acres cleared;. || * three good tenant houses. One mllA railroad front, Station. Price ami terms right for quick purchaser. fj Box 7G, Lilllngton, N. C. < J Roosevelt, Wilson and Taft. We want ? agents to sell our new campaign book. 2S0 pages, one hundred pic- i| tures and portraits of all the candidates and leaders; lives of all tho presidents end history of their administrations. The platforms and * principles of the Progressive, Demo^ crntlc and Republican parties are iutly and fairly explained. An Impartial and superior book, price only i $1. The complete book mailed to any address on receipt of the price. Out* Wt sent free on receipt of 10 cent? ! for postage. Phillips-Boyd Publlshi. in* Co., Atlanta, Ga.