Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, September 01, 1910, Image 6
f
FLEE IN A PMC
Former Presidect of Nicaragua Leaves
His Capital io Haste
THE REBELS ARE ON TOP
Advance Guard of Revolutionists
Within One Mile of Capital City.
Presidency, Held by Jose F*tnuln,
Will Be Turned Over to ltevolutionary
leader.
The provincial government of Nicaragua
is totering to its fall, the
Madriz army is demoralized, consternation
reigns in (Managua and
Or. Madriz, his general-in-chlef, Toledo,
are preparing to flee the country.
This in effect is the advices by
the state department Monday from
(foiled States Consul Olivareo at
Managua, which advices are confirmed
in a ?i*"11 ..* 'ein froir Mr.
J-dinson, United States consul at
Co? into.
The panic in the capital also is
threatening? the lives and property of
Americans Crows are reported i
traversing the streets crying "Death
to the Yankees," while the cruisers
Yiclcshurg and Yorktown <tr? a? i
Corinto and in close touch with the <
situation, the legation and consulate-* i
to Managua are under heavy police 1
guard and preperations have been . made
to meet attacks on American 5
lives or property. c
The situation grew out the vie- s
tory of the Hstrada troops on Thurs- j
day when the revolutionists defeated
a strong column of government <
troops and effected the crossing of
the river. i
The rout of the government army I
seems to have heen complete. Mr. !
Oiivares reports that CJen. Toledo. 1
who was in command of the MaJnz 1
troops, arrived in Mamagua the day I
following hi.-* defeat and announced
1het his force had been seized with
panic and fled when attacked. Some
of the soldiers made their way lo
Granada while others continued
ihelr flight to the capital.
Granada also appears to he at the
taorcy of an undisciplined mob of
ooIdicrH who are reported to be pil aging
the houses there.
It is added that the Kstrada force
fci already at the gates of the city
mud is preparing to take the place
by assault.
I t seeuis ?.?> be the unanimous
opinion in Managua that the power
of Madriz is steadily weakening and
that his overthrow may be momentarily
expected. The revolutionary
army is only 20 miles from the capiOii,
end the capture of Managua is
looked upon as inevitable.
It was also announced that I>r.
Madriz has pubicly declared his intention
to turu over to Jose Kstrada,
? brother of Gen. June Kstrada, the
de facto authority Actually In his
hands. In turn. Jose Kstrada has
announced his purpose of making
way for the leaders of the Kstradian
revolution
The family of Dr. Madriz already
has left the capital for CorLnto. and
the dispatch states that Madriz was
preparing to follow thef.
Gen. Iras and his family and Gen.
Toledo, it also was declared, were
making hasty preparation to leave
iuo country. In support of Mr. Olivares
advices Consul Johnson reports
(hat the Madriz family arrived in
Oorinto Friday and that with (Jen.
Iras and his household, they are existed
to leave for Mexico or the
United States o? (Monday, aboard
either the gunboat Angela or the
orthhound Pacific Mail steamer.
After almost a year of severe
lighting the revolution, which was
begun by several hundred Nlcaragu.tn
insurgents at Fllueficlds, October,
10, 1909, practically ended on
Monday with the advance of the revolutionists
on the Capital city and
the resignation of President Madriz
in favor of (Jen. Jose Dolores Ks<trada,
brother of the insurgent leader.
Cable dispatches rereived in New
OHfans Monday announced that
Manngua had fallen. No resistance
was orered to (Jen. Ijouis Mena. who,
at the head of an army augmented
largely by the campaign in the interior,
marched into the city.
Dr. Jose l>. Madriz, who had been
President since Zelaya was deposed
la.st November, abdicated before the
insurgent army arrived. Jose Kstr.ada,
in turn, issued a proclamation
ft/VI J* l'in cr hlu Urnt *
? -n .r. winir-1 # Vim. .) U<III TiS"
irada. "President of the reunited
ttcpublic of Nicaragua."
i NOTKl)
I'Kt'DIST AMltl'SHKl).
Thought t?? Have iUrn < 'onfederate
v
ol Juilne Harris.
John Abner, a noted feudist, wag
tibot and Killed by uuknown parties
?t Jackson, Ky., Tuesday night. Abner
had been accused of being one
of the men employed by Judge llurgia
and others to assassinate Dr. B.
f>. Cox, James Cockrell and Jame*
H. Marcum during the feud tights
eight years ago, but on each trial the
jnry disagreed and the charges were
TALE OF PIRACY
CONFESSES MURDER OF CREW
WAS PLANNED.
Mutineers Planned to Murder Ofticert?
and Crew and Then to Reach
Steamship.
With her captain dead in her cabin
nn/i hcltinrinnr n tola nf ni TOPV llTI.
ill ciitvi UI 1U51115 ?& 101c ui J um
paralleled In modern seafearing annals.
the steamship Buckman, arrived
at San Francisco Tuesday. Geo.
Washington Wise, one of the two
buccaneers, who had been In irons
since he was captured early yesterday
morning, confessed that he and
French West planned to murder the
officers and crew of the steamship
before beaching her on the coast near
Point Blanco.
leaving the second officer and
quartermaster in charge of Wise af?
ter binding Plath and Instructing
Kob'.meister to hold the vessel's nose
toward shore, West demanded entrance
to the captain's cabin. He
was refused and fired through the
door. Capt. Wood was riddled with
buckshct.
Desperate at the plight of the
Captain, Plath strained at his bonds
until he could reach the signal cord
and gave the signal to the engine
room that there was a fire ou board.
That this plan would have been
carried out had it not been for the
cowardice of Wise, is the belief of
utllcers. After holding a shotgun
levelled at the quartermaster and
>eeond mate three hours. Wise delerted
his post. Seeing the futility
>f trying to overcome the crew single
handed West is believed to have
lumped overboard.
Heavily armed and equipped with
'ords to bo used in tying up the
'Owl watch." the two modern pirates
invaded the bridge at midnight entered
the wheel house and compelled
Second Officer Piatt, and Quartermaster
Otto Kohlmeister, who was
?t ....
iii i iic rr iiccj , iv# iu i vj v> UP vilfll
bands.
Chief Engineer Callfas ran to the
bridge, where he was met with a
command to hold up his hands. He
obeyed and joined the line-up, which
now included two-thirds of the crew.
West instructed them to hold to the
bridge rope which was above their
heads. Callfas jumped over the
bridge through the skylight into the
gallery. West went in pursuit and
the men whom he had guarded fled
in all directions. At this juncture
Watchman Wilson appeared on the
scene with a revolver, lie snapped
the weapon at Wise, but it failed to
explode. This was enough, however,
for ?the weaker of the two pirates,
who, at the point of his shotgun ordered
him to cut the wireless connections.
West began to shoot whereever a
head appeared. Finally a splash was
heard, and It la believed that West
jumped overboard. Wise was afterwards
discovered in hiding. According
to Wise he met French West on
board the training ship Pensacola.
They deserted the navy early this
month and went to Seattle. When
they hoarded the Huchman they were
well equipped with guns and ropes.
BAB1KK AM) THK DIUCi HA HIT.
Tfw, Ikii.'L in I1 >.. 1- ? " L
- x.... n iw a j^lti il U1111 */I IIer
Such Diiirs.
That babies in their cradles contract
drug habits through being doped
promiscuously with paregoric,
laudanum and other household remedies.
is the ascertion of President
I.ederie, of the New York board of
health. An effort will be made by
the board to procure local legislation
prohibiting the sale of the objectionaole
drugs, except upon prescription.
A statement by President I.ederie
says: "Notwithstanding their
dangerous nature, the sale of these
drugs for the relief of minor troubles
is enormous. .Mother* keep the
paregoric on tap and are more careful
to have it in their homes than
they are to see that their sugar bowls
are filled. At the first sign of an
ache or pain, often the moment the
baby cries, the mother dashes for
the paregoric bottle. As a result,
the baby is drugged unnecessarily.
TAKKS milltOI.lt' \<11>.
I .mi runs Murder SusjHTt's Attempted
Suicide Probably Successful.
Jim Davis, colored, who Ji is beet,
in jail at Danrens since April, charged
with complicity in the murder ol
three members of his race on Saturday
night. March 26, attempted suicide
early .Monday by swallowing
one ounce and a half of carbolic
acid. He is still alive and may linger
for a day or two. A fellow prisoner
had a bottle of acid in his* cell
treating himself under the direction
of a doctor, and Davis managed to
get posession of it and drank ,i.l that
was in the bottle.
Town Wiped Out.
The town of Wendlin, Oregon, was
entirely destroyed by a forest tire
early Thursday evening. The big
Booth-Kelly I,umber Mills and considerable
railroad property were destroyed.
It is feared, several lives
were lost.
* ififev..
\ L
1 j* , ' ' '/ *N j
HUW 1U KllV flllLR
BOARD OF HKALTH 1SSI KS IXSTKt'CTIVK
BULLETIN.
Would Prevent Many Diseases That
Are Now Couiunlcated by the I >e
Of Milk.
Under the caption "How to Keep
Milk Wholesome" the State Board
of health, in its bulletin recently published
on "Clean Milk in the Home,
says that "Immediately before milking
the cow should be curied and the
uder and teats washed with sou;and
water, rinsed and wiped dry
with a clean, dry, fresh-laundere '
towel; a chain should be fastened
across the stall under the cow's belly
to prevent her from lying down urt.l
milked.
"The stable should be airy, should
be of one story only, white war hod
inside as often as soiled, and should
have a watertight floor, preferably
of cement, in the room used for milking.
Previous to milkiug. the floor
and walls should be made wet to
keep down dust. There should be no
loft or anything else above the nvlking
room, but the roof. During milking
hours the doors and windows
should be closed.
"The milker should be free from
disease, particularly of the hands,
nose, throat and lungs -he should
not handle the milk if he lias Sickneis
of any infecti us nature at his
ho.lie.
"After cleaning the cow and
sprinkling the stable he should wash
and dry his hands, using clean water
and soap and a fresh laundered
towel?not the same one he wip?d
the cow with.
"Milking should he done with dry
hands and teats, nothing whatever,
particularly milk, being used as a
lubricant.
"rtensils should be the same as
those used by the best dairies. They
can be easily obtained. Seemless.
narrow top milking pails are the
best.
"All vesels should be washed in
warm water and soda, rinsed in boiling
water and set upside down under
mosquito netting in the sunlight
or fresh air. Immediately before
use they should be rinsed with h iiing
(not warm I water.
"The milk should be imediately
removed from the stable to a closed |
screenedroom and strained through
cloths kept for that purpose. The
cloths should be washed and boiled
imediately before using. Even the
family milk had best be kept in regular
dairy bottles or sealed fruit jars.
Put the milk imediately into ice water
after straining?get it as cold
as posible, then keep on ice continuously
and uninteruptedly until ready
for use. It is best to have several
small jars than to have the milk all
in one?in this way a jar once opened
may be entirely emptied and the
remaining quantity of milk is not
contaminated. Bottles and jnrs^ should
be kept prepared as explained
for utensils. If they are put in
cold water and then carefully
nrougnt to a boil. keeping them on
the aide, they may be sterilized without
cracking.
Four hilled in Snuishup.
Four men were killed and two
badly hurt when two heavy freight
trains on the river route division of
the Missouri Pacific collided head-on
near Blackwater, about U5 miles
west of JeffenBon City, Mo., Tuesday.
FARM FOR S.\ I.F..
A very valuable farm, consisting
of 2,212 acres of fine land and situation
five miles from one of the
nicest little towns in South Carolina.
There are 700 acres in second bottom
and 500 acres of level gray
loamy land with clay subsoil ar d
sandy upland that produces a bale of
cotton to the acre; a good grist mill
and water power sufficient to run
grist mill, saw mill and gin. A beautiful
pond, well stocked with trout
and other fish; an 8-room well built
dwelling, nicely painted; 10 good
tenant houses. Knough rosemary
pine, hard wood and poplar on the
place to pay for it and every stick of
timber available. This is a great
bargain to party aide to purchase.
I lias to be sold to settle up estate.
Situated about 50 miles east of Columbia.
S. C. Price $12.50 per acre.
Address Durham & Nicholson, llethiine.
S C
SIMM Kit KATE SAI.K.
One $300 Piano, $185.
One $400 Piano, $215.
These are new and in beautifu:
maiiogany cases, so write qnick If
you dearie one of these bargains.
Organ Bargains.
Some second hand organs taken
in exchange for pianoa, from $20 tc
$35.
A limited number of S'.lghtly usee
forfeited $90 organs from $45 t(
$65.
Easy terms?to responsible par
ties?will be made on any of th?
above instruments.
Pianos and Organs fully warrant
ed. I
MALONK'S MUSIC HOUSE.
Columbia, S. C. '
v ' v1
v
CLASSIFIED COLUMN
Ship your calves, bogs, sheep, lambs,
etc., to The Parlor Market. Augusta.
Ga., 1018 Broad Street.
Summer Hoarders Wanted?Rates
$7.00 to $8.00 per week. No consumptives
taken. Mrs. Wade HarI
rinon, McAlpiu House. Saluda, N.
C.
Wanted?Men to take fifteen da>e
practical cotton course, accept
good positions duriug the fall.
Charlotte Cotton Company. Charlotte.
N. C.
Ijatest Fiction?Our little booklet.
"Books of the Month" contains a
brief synopsis of all the latest
books. It is free. Write for It.
Sims Hook Store. Orangeburg, S. C.
Wanted?to buy your hides, skins,
tallow, wool, beeswax, etc., at
highest market prices and settlement
sent promptly. Telephone
1 X"J0. Wllse W. Martin. Columbia.
S. C.
For Sale?Fifty Ha it est Ko?'k Pullets,
cross between Thompson's
Kinglets and Vanderbilt ( Bilttnore.
N'. C. > stock, $1.00 apiece.
'K. P. Alston. Jr., P O. Uox 348,
I'nion, S. C.
Ag enta?Hotli sexes. Write today.
Fastest selling cookiiig specialties
ever invented. $l.~>-$4 5 weekly,
easily earned. Prices defy competition.
Norfolk Hardware Company.
Norfolk. Va.
lloy and Girl Agents sell 2 4 packages
of post cards for us at 10c
per package, and receive a camera
and complete outfit free. Write today.
R. H Schlater Supply Co.,
Dept. A., Scnlater. Miss.
Maplchurst, on the Asheville am
Lake Toxaway railroad. Thre?
hundred Net from station. Modern
Convenience*. No coaaump
tives taken. A. L. & L E. Daver
port, HorBe Shoe. N. C.
Wanted?.Men and ladies to take 3
months Practical course. Expert
management. lligJi salaried p??s tions
guaranteed. Write for catalogue
now. Charlotte Telegraph
School. Charlotte. N. C.
For highest prices and quickest returns
send your produce. etc..
fruit, vegetables, eggs, poultry.
etc., 10 .Monr, hon to., wholesale
produce and commission merchants.
1 1 1 Water St., Tampa,
Fla.
Wanted Salesmen?A few more hustlers
on our new Standard Atlas.
New census soon available. Splendid
opportunities for money making.
Excellent line for ex-teachers.
Write The Scarborough Company.
Charlotte, N. C.
.Mississippi I>elta latntLs.?Why toil
youc life away on the poor farms
your grandfather wore out? Come
to Mississippi Delta where one can
grow more than ten can gather.
I have what you want at the right
price and terms. Come or write
W. T. Pitts, Indlanola, Miss.
Rich Alluvial Iatnil for Sale. Rich
Alluvial I,and in Mississippi, outside
overflow section. Why cultivate
poor land and buy fertilizer
when you can get rich land cheaper
than anywhere if taken at once.
Write me. Rapidly advancing in
price. Ira A. Ellis. Rowling Green,
Kentucky.
For sale?Milch cows, jerseys, and
grades of good breeding, registered
jersey male calves. White Collie
dogs, (registered). Also service
from a registered, beautiful
white Collie Ten ($10) dollars
nuixuii.rcu, uiuuw luraeys. ana
Tanimouth hogs. Address M. R
Sams. Jonesville. S. C.
Wanted?Bvery man, woman and
child in Sonth Carolina to know
that the "Alco" brand of Sash.
Doors and Blinds are the best
and are made only by the Augusta
Dumber Company, who manufacture
everything in Dumber and
Millwork and whose watchword is
'"Quality." Write Augusta Dumber
t'onipany, Augusta, <?eorgia,
for prices on any order, large 01
small.
Hooker's New l?isco\eiy has 110 epual
though suffering from any complaint
01 disease, of short or Ion?
standing, especially rheumatism
and what ot do to cure If. and how
to gai" health, wealth, happiness;
to knov. your friends and enemies;
how to speculate; how to be successful
in life. To gain this Information.
you can enter as a clut
member by enclosing one dollai
urlf h vamp KlrfK *4* 1 * j ,1 ? 1
n .f ;?UI UII kU uaic. AUUICH .11
correspondence to 80t? Wylie Ave.
Kooiu 7, Smith Building, Pittsburg.
Pa.
Shoots 11 i in Dead.
Katie Freitach. lit years old. and
employed in a New Orleans department
store, shot and killed Frank
Miehler. aged 2 7. a boiler-maker,
there Thursday night. When the police
reached the scene, the girl was
holding tne man's head in her lap,
und sobbing She said Micher bad
wronged her.
V v ' I .
'
Burduco Li
The Great Sou
=FOR
LIVER TI
Biliousness, Constipation, Dyspep*
Jaundice, Nervous c" ' I ?eada
and all Stomach Diseases.
Teaches the L
Clears the <
Sold Everywhere
fSSw
Hat) 6inco 1804 Riven "Thorough Ini
influences at the lowest possible c
RESULT: It is to-day with its far
Its student l?ody of 400, and its plant
THE LEADING TRAINING SCI
$150 pays all charRea for the year, ir
heat, laundry, medieal attention, phy
except music and elocution. For ca
BLACKSTONE FEMALE IN
J AS. CANNON, Jr.. M
TIIOS. R. REEVES, E
for fwPj
UQUORimd DRUG HflnSj
HAB1TJ [TJTj
OLLLt l LD ? mUU
Ncavou^HllH|
' S
OS TltK Ul
0RAN6EBUR
OKAM.'UKI K*.. Ml
Kxpenaea are tea* her-? than at
services offered are equal to the ve
at actual cost. Let ua convince
for you. Write for catalogue ia
while you think of it! A Jd ress:
PRESIDENT W. !
147 Rronghmn srre*q
:*jfe ' YOUNG M
O LE*RH
O UTHEJ
NO CURE I NO PAY!!
* Be prepared lor an emergency by having
a bottle Of NOAH'S OOLIO REMEDY
on hand. More animals die from colic than
all other iiotv-rontaginuw diseases combined.
Nine out of every ten rases would have been
cured If NOAH'S COL"C REMSDYhad
been given In tune. Its '
Isn't a drench or dope. ^"'7 "^Wt,
but Is a remedy given yj2f
I on the tongue, so sim- Vft ^THpj^-_Dp\
pie that a woman or lil , l
child can give It. If It I M
r fails to cure, your
money refunded. If ^**- Uy*V
your dealer cannot
supply send SOc Inl ' [SI K
stamps and we wllll I If M * S j|
mail a bottle. NoahLAj^N^L^k^^^^^fi
Remedy Co., Inc., [J|WJ|T3ttTuJ
a Richmond, Va IM |l| I . J4y|l|la
?
A High Grade, Nickel
Platfd Shower i
Complete. \\\ lt/'f i
(except hath cock) \\\ ll>|| ?
ONLY $10.00 v\ M?rtl ?
It Juat Ukn four ?ood?frf?i VAilijJ [ 3
V> put It up?no plu.nbernoed- W in I S
Ml anyone can do It. Curtain KM til /
prarrnt. water from .plaoh- nruaif ' M.lW
'ir on floor, confining- It to the ^ 'V'
I tub. A .bower bota dally witu BATH COCK
I clean, running water w tb?- . ! fj r,
but tonic you can take f 'iltrf1fcr*S 'l\ i I
OKDKK ONE TODAY I h11 If* U jl#Z JB
COLUMBIA SUPPLY CO. B r JyAi
Its IT. (irrvai* ST.
Calambla. S. C.
^ . ---"j ? ? \
ver Powder
thern Remedy
ALL=
DOUBLES
" , L oss of Appetite, Indigestion,
?| n ?-J "T" r> i r? . V
tiic, vAiaicu i ouguc, oaa Dreatti,
ivcr to Act and
Complexion
25 cents
itructiun under positively Christian
ost."
ulty of 32, a boarding patronage of 328;
worth $140,000
lOOL FOR GIRLS IN VIRGINIA
irluding table board, room .lights, steam
sical culture, and tuitioni n allsubjects
taloguc and application blank address,
ISTITUTE, Blackatone, Va.
.A. ) ' ?
j A j-Associate Principals.
Hypodermic^
ujed it\r
GCOLLEGE
l TH CAHOL1N A.
an7 other school in the land. Th?
rv heat. Board on the CLUB PLA^f
vou that our school is the school
d full information. Write right ios
S.PETERSON
oranKflmrg, B. C.
?^
CM iun I if)|CC s- s- T- Mtabllahed 22
til MNU LAlllta ye.irs. Hti: demand for
TCI CnDADUYf our Krudu.ues. Students
CLCBII*rIII * qualify lu few months,
yini; S&O 10 9"> a inouih guaranteed. Quick
Write today lor Iron Illustrated catalog.
IN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY.
. Box 272. NEWNAN, GA.
- ... * m >
World's
Greatest
kSaiii^aBMrM Internal end Eiteraal
\jm\n Pain
IIIMIuHtll Remedy
For'RHrumdiim, Sciatica, Lame Back, Still
Jnintaand Muscle*, Sore T hroat^ Cold*. Strain*,
Sprain*, Cot*. Bruiaea, Colic. Crunpa, Toothache
and all Nerve. Bone and MuKle Ache*
and Pain*. The jrenuine ha* Noah'* Ark on
every package. 25c.. 50c . and 91.00 by all dealer*
in medicine everywhere. Sample by tnmll frtt
N#ak R*B*dy Ca.. Rickaaad. Va!*aad B??taa. Mas*.
? I
Farm fraij'n* for Ne<r p? J
CT ? ?? ~ j
Don ' k>< t* the cities. He a acienti- A
ic farmer and you are independent ^
for life. '
NOIJTIf (AltOl.l.N V ACilllCULTCHAI.
AMI MKCHANK AI, COI.LKGK
vmii train you to become a success- ^
fill farme', a skilled mechanic, an
expert dairyman, o?* a aucessfal
teacher. Board, lodging and tuition.
$7.'?G per month. For catalogue
or free tuition address
Jas. B. Dudley - - - - President
Greensboro, N, C.