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gplpp^ p~ THE FORT MILL TIMES Published Every Thursday. PORT MILL. SOUTH CAROLINA. Cleveland, O.. claims a population of 7Dl),000. Nlco people, too. What is determination on your pari becomes stubbornness in other peo plo. Perhaps tho roost fatal habit ol modern times is Tallin}; with an aeroplane. It is even better to stay at home than to bo killed while riding lu ac automobile. The man who goes around th? world In SO days In these rapid times Is simply loafing. The pen may bo mightier than th< sword, but la the coal shovel mlghtiei than the Ice pick? Another New York lobster palac* has failed. Tho annual sucker croj must be poor this year. If you look before you leap th? chances nre that you won't leap, bul will walk around instead. Headline says "Dramatist Cuti "Wldo Swath." Yes, often they do and not always on the stage. It Is said that misery loves com pany, and we have hud some com pany that seemed to love misery. There 1b good ground for the bub plcion that thoso who wear greet hose uru lucking in gray matter. The most unpopular women art those who gossip and thoso who nevei do anything for people to gossip about That Judge who ruled a man In boss In his own house decided what every body knows but which few wives heed. A dancer is making a hit by wearing a ring In her nose. Rather scantv cos tamo. Still, the public knows what It wants. A chorus girl may be regarded at one who seeks tho road to quid wealth by tho marrlage-to-a-mllllon aire route. Tourists are returning from Europf by tho thousands. When tho letter ol credit is exhausted' there Is no plact like home. Czar Nicholas has found a new tor ture for anarchists. He makoB then play football instead of sending their to Siberia. Now thnt baseball results are re ported 2,000 or 3,000 miles out at sen by wireless, why delay longer thai trip to Europo? There was a time when the fnmilj that had a porch swing stood as higl socially as the fumily that lins ar automobile now. This argument about Adam and Eve has its good points. Some pro feasors and biologists have been un know'n until now. Objection is made to the name "policewoman" for the new women members of tho Chicago polico force Will "copettea" do? A man in Paris predicts an inter planetary congress in the next feu centuries. Voting on tho place foi heading it Impends. A New York Judge has ruled thnt t man Is privileged to lie when in love levers mny Mo whothor they art privileged to or not. If the now currency measure meant that it will be easier for the averagr man to get u larger measure of cur rency, why, we are for It. The president of China has sever wives, which mny explain why h< had such little trouble In putting down that recent rebellion. Professor Taft has ofllclally giver up his citizenship in Cincinnati. Nt really great man is going to live It a town with such a hall team. I>espito the fact that he talk; twelve different languages, Hmperoi Francis Joseph of Austria has liver1 to be eighty-two years of age. Every now and then a "wild man" It captured In some part of the conn try. Some of them, however, tnaj bo working for moving picture com panics. A French writer declares that the way ono enta Is an Index to character Rho might have added that the amount ono drinks might aide) be .1 criterion. The seventy-elght-yenr-old t'hlcage widow who Is charged with turkej trotting in New York seems to thinV that no ono Is too old to le?arn. lavish American tourists spend $100,000,000 abroad every year Wouldn't some of that money do a little good In the I'nlteel States? The French government Is prepnr Ing to withdraw all bronze coins frorr circulation. Then the "pewr dc-vi without a sou" will be more ntuncrout than ever. * 4' 1. it BODY OF HAYHQR BODY OF MAYOR GAYNOR LIES ! i IN STATE IN NEW YORK CITY. : GREAT TRIBUTE PAID HIM Despite Ra n 75,000 Persons Pass the Bier in the City Hall. New York.?In a double line that never seemed to diminish as the day j wore on, thousands of persons filed i through the flower-filled rotunda ol' the city hall and past the body of William J. (iaynor lying in state. ! Unmindful of a heavy downpour of rain and threatening skies, the people came in a continuous stream silently to 'lincl places in the long, slow ' moving procession that extended for half a mile along Lower Broadway and through City Hall park to the < ity j hall. It was New York's spontaneous I tribute to its dead mayor. In the long line were street cleanJ ers iii their white uniforms, policemen, firemen and men high in the official life of the city and state, hut for the most part the procession was made up from the groat so-called middle I class. About a fifth of the crowd was ' made up of women and children and ! many of the leaders carried small wreaths or bouquets of flowers which they placed near the coffin. Fully one hundred thousand persons | viewed the body before the doors ' closed, it is believed. ! "It is a remarkable tribute," Mayor Kline said, as he viewed the great slj lent crowd. "No king, no emperor ever had a tribute paid to him like this ; great outpourng of citizens. it is | tribute from the hearts of the people." - i |iuui;uiiifii aim iiui'i; iiii-iui'ii L in reliefs ?f u lmlf hour stood rigidly at attention during the night beside tin- coffin, which was draped in tlie 4 stars and stripes and the mayor's flag, i while beneatli could he seen the colors . ! of the union jack placed there at the l request of the tJaynor family in recog| nition of tlie courtesy extended by the , ; city of Liverpool upon the arrival of f the mayor's body in that city after his ^ death' at sea. Crossed branches of [ palms of victory were the only lloral i decorations on the cover of the cof. An. 4 > ASSASSIN OF MADERO KILLED Colonel Cardenas Killed to Keep Him From Revealing Orders. I { Washington. ? Lieutenant Colonel Francisco Cardenas, alleged by the Constitutionalists of Mexico to have t been the assassin of Francisco I. Ma( dero, former president of Mexico, has himself been assassinated, according to a dispatch received at the headquarters of the Constitutionalists here. I i The advices state that Cardenas was killed at Michoalan, where he had ; been sent by Provisional President lluerta to take command of federal j troops. He was assassinated, it was , | said, for fear he might reveal the or! | ders he received on the night of Feb! ruary 22 when Madero was killed and when Cardenas was in command of I the soldiers conveying Madero from I the national palace to prison in Mex, j ieo City. Negro Is Lynched for Double Killing. Franklin. Texas. -Will Davis, negro, was lynched here after he had shot | and killed Tom Hodges, aged 20, and Tern Rsuhtng, 127. and badly wounded Will Maxwell, on the Hushing l'arm. ten miles north of Franklin. Hodges was killed llrst. following a dispute, and Hushing and Maxwell were shot when they attempted to arrest Davis. The negro was captured by a posse an?l hanged to a tree. 4 Girls Killed Preparing for Wedding. Dudnpest. -Four girls who were to become brides were killed by lightning near the village of Xagy-Vnrad. The girls were picking flowers to decorate the church for the weddings. They were overtaken by a storm and took refuge in a grotto, which lightning struck. The bodies were found in i he wreckage. I ! Grent Cavalry Review for President. Washington. President Wilson will be given an opportunity during the , first week of October to review the . largest aggregation of mounted troops r of the regular army that bus assent* . bled in Washington since the grand review in the late sixties of the seasoned veterans led by Generals Grant . and Sheridan. This aggregation, composed the Tenth. Kleventh and Flf, ; teenth regiments of cavalry, has been k encamped at Winchester, Va., since the middle of July and will break camp i October 1. r Robbed of Cash and Jewels. i Rome, Ga. .John L. Seny was robbed of $:h>0 in rash and valuable Jewelry while the family were at dinner. I The thief, evidently familiar with the premises, entered the house and broke i open a trunk Seay kept his surplus cash in. The loss was quickly discovered and officers found ullQof the . jewelry and all but $00 of the money i hidden nearby. Kvidently the (hief 1 had been interrupted in his work and i bad been unable to make a clean getaway. Seay took the money recovered and deposited it in a bank. V "NEW YORK PRIEST A Hans 11. Schmidt, assistant pries confessed to the horrible slaying; of story to the police, told of how he 1 membered the body, packed the pi the Fort Lee ferry boat. Last Fel formed his own marriage ceremony where he murdered the woman Set U. 8. FLEtT WILL STAY WILSON ADMINISTRATION WILL NOT TAKE DICTATION FROM PRESIDENT HUERTA. Vessels Will Be Kept in Mexican Waters Just as Long as It Is Necessary. Washington.?So far as the Washington administration is concerned, it became known that no move is contemplated in the Mexican situation at present. The elections of October L'G aire awaited here with keen interest, and the next step in the policy of the United States is likely to make its appearance thereafter. Administration officials read long excerpts of General Huerta's message to the Mexican congress published in Washington, but no formal comment was made. It is understood that the administration does not attach much importance to the document, though there are passage in it which did ant. pass without careful notice. The references to the expiration of the period during which American warships were authorized to remain in Mexican waters caused some discussion. Inasmuch as the ships are permitted to remain another month, or until after the general elections are held, no statement of policy in this connection is likely to he made until that time. Informally officials let it be known that the vessels would be kept in Mexican waters indefinitely if the United States deemed it necessa .? mi i lie IHOU-IIIUII Ol IIS IlUllOnUIS. ROLL OF CRIME FOR PRIEST Was Not Only a Murderer, But Countetfeiter and Thief. New York. That lluns Schmidt, the Jekyle-llyde priest, whose double life was exposed when he was arrested and confessd the murder of Anna Aunmller after killing the girl and dismembering lier body in a 1 trad hurst avenue flat, hired another apartment in which he presumably planned to conceal himself, was developed from police discoveries. In ransacking Schmidt's rooms detectives found evidence that Schmidt had stolen $400 from the Kaster col lection at St. Joseph's church and that he had robbed a visiting priest who spent a night at St. Joseph's rectory. Girl Killed; Body Thrown in River. Nc*vark, N. J.--The body of Alice Hopper. HI years old. who hail been missing from her home in Kearny, N. J., was found in the l'assaic river at Harrison, her skirts weighted with stones. William Toleti, chief of police of Kearny, and the girl's relatives declared that she had been murdered a 11(1 li#<r limtv t>n*i ! >?" II... ?i..? TM ? *? ? ?M?w ill* 11*11. 1111! stones. weighing 1- or 14 pounds, hud been placed in the lap of her outer skirt and her skirt drawn up to fon.i a basket, and the hem was knotted at the rear of the waist. Guarded by Sheriff, Conducts Revival, Mexico. Mo. Guarded by a sheriff who sat in the front row of the large church gathering. Rev. Roy Hudson, evangelist and former pugilist, held a farewell revival here. He hud been arrested during the day on a charge of wife abandonment at the request of the authorities at Terro Haute, Ind. The presence of the sheriff did not in the least dampen the ardor of the evangelist. Hudson waived extradition and will return to Indiana with tho of flclals. now on tho way from Torre Ilaute. % - - . . ag^HBOPKCW6J ND WOMAN HE SLEW | >t In St. Joseph's church, New York, ! ' Miss Ann Aumueller. Schmidt, in his I nurdered his victim while she slept, disleces in bundles and dropped them from truairy Schmidt obtained a license, perand set up housekeeping in the Bronx, >t ember 2. ItUERTA'S MESSAGE PACIFIC VERBAL BOMBS WERE LACKING WHEN PRESIDENT ADDRESS ED MEXICAN CONGRESS. Hucrta Admits Relations Are Strained, But Says He Expects an Adjustment. Mexico City.?Provisional President Victoriana Hucrta delivered his semiannual message at the opening of the j second session of the Twenty-seventh Mexican congress. In it. he promised to spare no efforts to bring about the unrestricted election of the president and vice president of tlte Mexican republic next month, declaring that it would constitute the greatest. triumph of his career to turn over the office to his successor with the country at peace as he hoped to do. i General lluerta said the strained diplomatic relations between Mexico and the United States had caused the Mexican nation to suffer unmerited afI diction, and had retarded the pacification of the country. Nevertheless he hoped for an early solution of the i differences between the two nations and to see Mexico and the United States once more united in bonds of friendship. The message was disappointing to I many who had expected that Provisi ionnl President liuerta would deal at ' changes. This subject, however, he said, "being so delicate and the permanent commission of congress being already informed," he passed with a bare mention. r ?????????? VICTORY FOR THAW IN COURT U. S. Judge Aldrich Indefinitely Suspends Habeas Corpus Hearing. Littleton, N. H.?Counsel for Harry Kendall Thaw laid the foundation for plans to carry his case to the Supreme court of the United States?if such a step is found necessary. When the governor of New Hampshire passes on tho matter of the oxtradition of Thaw to New York, at the hearing to be held at Concord, the findings, if adverse to Thaw, will be reviewed by the United States district court, and. should a decision against him then be rendered, successive appeals will he taken until the case reached the highest court in the land. Immigrants Wanted for the South. Washington.?A delegation representative of Louisiana and particularly New Orleans business men, headed by Senator Uansdell of Louisiana and M. K. Trezevant, general manager of the New Orleans chamber of commerce, conferred with Acting Secretary Post of the department of labor. it in ? unt-llillf, ('III I Ul IIIK tide ot' immigration through tlie port of Now Orleans. It was pointed out that the South needed immigrants, and thnt tlie facilities for handling them in New Orleans were superior. France Ravaged by Thunderstorms. I'aris. France.?Thunderstorms of > exceptional violence have swept over France, doing great damage. At Mari seilles the streets were transformed into torrents; hundreds of cellars were ? flooded and quantities of merchandise 011 the quays were ruined or washed into the sea. All traffic in the city was suspended for a time. A boat containing a fishing party of six was i capsized in the harbor and five persons were drowned; at St. Agrieve, in tbo department of Ardeche, houses were struck by lightning. II ENTITLED ONLY | 10 WHAT HE EARNS WORE INTELLIGENT DISTRIBUTIOM OF WEALTH WILL INSET::: MORE PROSPERITY. SO ASSERTS A. J. OREMj mico ?t..ici g t>aic or watered viocks. Wrigbi Makes Plea for Correction of the Election Laws. Atlanta. Ga. The Southern Christian Citinenship Congress, under the auspices of the Civic League of America, opened at the auditorium to the accompaniment o: near sensationalism revealed in the address of A. J. Orem of liostoti, who. in his treatise, styled "From Theocracy to Theocracy," all but put outright Socialism into the hook of good citizenship. Owing to ltis presence at the capitol, where he sat late in the matter of the McN'aughton pardon arguments. Gov. John M. Slaton was unable to preside at the gathering in Taft hall. Seaborn Wright of Rome, Ga., closed the evening session with an impassioned appeal for a correction of the election laws. In introducing Mr. Orem us the principal speaker of the evening, William 1) .1'pshaw declared that he had given the principal orator carte blanche in the matter of subject and text. Mr. Orem lived up to his rights. In part, he said: "Greater problems confront the present generation than have confronted any previous generation in the history of the world. Present day questions are broader and more worldwide than former ones. Their consideration must, be of broader scope. I believe that modern intelligence Ts being directed, however, to their successful solution. "All forms of government have been tried witli more or less success. If i government administration is in the ! interest of a few, disregarding the rights of the many, government will he bad. no matter what the form. Modern civilization is tending towards democracy. Nations are more and more being educated to recognize the I rights of the individuals. Kconomic j problems and social problems will nev- 1 er he solved until governments arc administered with due regard to hu- | man rights. Human rights should ho I more sacred than property rights. "A more intelligent distribution of wealth will insure more prosperity ; and happiness. To this end each man ( should have what he earns and no more. He is not entitled to any portion of what other men produce except that obtained through honest bar I ter or other equitable means." MADERO SLAYING NOT CRIME | Such Is Decision of Mexican Military Court After Investigation. Mexico City. The deaths of the late President Francisco I. Mndero and Vice President Jose Maria Pino Sua- ! rez were not brought about by a punishable crime, according to a decision j pronounced by the military court here. The investigation lasted six months. | It was started by the military com- 1 mandant of the federal district immediately on the conclusion of the tendays' battle in the streets of Mexico last February, which resulted in Provisional President Hucrta coming into power. Among the witnesses was Major Francisco Cardenas, who commanded tlw. coc/vrt ifl. i/il. nit- caui/i t vtniv.ii vuuvrjrru I I t'MUfll t Madero and Vice President Pino Sua- ] re/, from the national palace to the I penitentiary. Two subordinate officers of rural guards and residents in the ( vicinity of the jail also were exam- ' ined. Father and Baby Killed. Clayton. Oa.?Emanuel Nichols. | aged 35, a farmer living ten miles ] northwest of here in Rabun county. I and his two-year-old baby girl, are ' dead, while his son and daughter, j Conrad and Myrtle Nichols, have been bound over to the grand jury for vol- ' untary manslaughter, as a result of a general shooting melee in the farmer's home. It is said the farmer's I wife killed her own baby as she sought to kill her husband, Recall of Diaz Not Encouraging. Washington. News that Gen. Felix I Diaz, nephew of Porllrio Diaz, had been recalled to Mexico to become the ! candidate of the Huerta faction in the coming presidential election arous- I ed much interest here in official circles. The general feeling was that the return of Diaz meant a compliance with President Wilson's nrinci pal demand, that General Hnerta should not be a candidate. So far as arguing an era of peace, however, the outlook was described as discouraging. Southern Labor Congress Closes. Xashivlle, Tenn.?The second an-I mini convention of the Southern Labor Congress closed here. President Jerome Jones of Atlanta and Secrete Treasurer W. 1*. Pickett of Allan a were re-elected. Albert II ' Johnson of Memphis was elected vlfe I president jind Robert K. (Sann of An* I niston. Ala., second vice president. Birmingham was chosen as the next meetj ing place. The congress voted to a!l low negro laboring organizations to , affiliate with the Southern Labor Con! Kress. ^ if- ; HAVE RUN AGAINST ' A SNAG ALREADY TARIFF BILL MAY DISRUPT THE TRADE RELATIONS WITH FOREIGN COUNTRIES. ? WILL REQUIRE A NEW ALT The Situation Now Scem3 to Be Very Serious, But it is Hoped that an Amicable Settlement May Be Reached in Near Future. Washington. ? Apprehension lest tho Democratic tariff bill load foreign Nations to Impose tariff penalties against the Llnited States us soon as the law goes into effect, caused Administration and Senate leaders to plan the introduction of a joint resolution in Congress making specific provision for the continuation of existing relations with all countries until President Wilson has time to negotiate new trade agreements. The seriousness of the situation that will confront the Administration was impressed on Chairman Simmon of the Senate Finance Commttee by State Department officials. It was po'.ntod out that the trade relations established by President Taft's proclamation under the Payne-Aldrich law of 1909 would terminate as sooif as the new law becomes effective and the United. States would then face the posibility of having higher tariff rates applied ' by many countries against its exports. While the tariff law would give the President authority to negotiate trade and reciprocity treaties it alsowould require him to apply special penalty rates against countries discriminating against the United States. To prevent the possibility of trade wars the State Department now is defining a joint resolution which will provide that existing relations shall continue for four months. At tho White House and later at the State Department Senator Simmons pointed out that it would he impossible to insert the provisions desired as an amendment to the tariff bill, because the introduction of any new matter is precluded while the bill is in conference. The provision will be put through Congress as 8. separate act. Greeks Looking For Trouble Sure. Vienna. The Greek authorities at Koritza, in Albania, seized the American mission school there, where instruction is given to nearly 100 Albanian girls. The information reached here in a telegram from Avlona on t^o Adriatll Sea. The Greeks have also - ? arrested and persecuted a large number of Albanians who resently returned to Koritza from Ameriha and other foreign countries, releasing them from detention only when the Albanians promised to join in the agitation for the incorporation of the district in Greece. The British Consul at Monastic has entered a vigorous protest with the Greek Government on behalf of the Americans. Imposing Scene at Gaynofs Funeral,. New York. Historic Greenwood Cemetery, the resting place in Brooklyn of many famous dead, received the body of New York's late mayor, William J. Gavnor. after funeral services in his honor that were without parallel in the history of the city. In the presence of the family, the honorary pall-bearers, including William Howard Taft, and city officials, among them Mavor Kline, the fiatr-draned cof (in wan committed to the grave. Three Killed in Head-on Crash. New York.?Three persons wpre killed and 40 injured in a head-on crash of two Ix>nR Island Railroad electric trains at College Point. L. I Of the injur vi one will die. Most of the injured were mill employees on their way to work. The trains, running 40 miles an hour, rounded a curve from opposite directions almost simultaneously and the crash was in evitahle. The steel cars bucked, hut did not telescope. This fact doubtless saved many lives. Sulzer's Last Hope Dwindling Away. Albany, X. Y.?Clov. William Sulzer must go to trial. This was decided by the High Court of Impeachment when, by a vote of 51 to 1. its members overruled the motion of the Coventor's counsel to dismiss the proceedings on the ground that lie was unconstitutionally impeached by the Assembly, because that body wa- in extra session when the Impeachment was brought. Senator Wcnde of Buffalo. Democrat, an ardent supporter of the tiovernor, cast the solitary negative vote. Currency Debate Dragging Along. Washington. An attempt to hurry along consideration* of the currency bill in the Senate Ranking and Currency failed at the end of a day of desultory questions of Samuel llnter myer. counsel for the Pujo Money Trust. Committee. Senator Shafroth of Colorado unsuccessfully tried to secure an agreement to close the hearings before the committee on October 4. Senators !{ec:l of Missouri. Hristow of Kansas and Weeks of Massachusetts, were against any attempt to lbnit consideration of bill.