The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 11, 1916, Page SEVEN, Image 7
GAUGHT FUGITIVE .1
m ?s train
? I
Anderson.?St we Leslie* the cscap- '
ed convict war.ted fo*- attempting a <
criminal us >aalt upt n a young waive
woman oi"tho county three days ago,
has been avrssve.i in Salisbury, N .C.
Andcrsrn county oi.ivors pit ? tor-1
IU5lti')U thi i1 "i ;? : >"? .umo rt * K.vaVf-ti t
train No. 1J. bcu.at Jf : \L\>i.i.u with
a carnival company. Police olflccrs
at Salisbu t -a rj ,i?t: j..-u .u ? v.. i '
, j
train was starched there, Lc&iie being
arrested.
Le.mo ''e* :? hi hs the ma*
wanted, but otUvcra i re reasonably ! 1
sure he is ..1. i. ; t nv.m. oirei ft' Ash- J*
ley has gone to [y ing the negro back. | ?
tor se\e.a;. ?.ays largo posses have;
. . I
bee.i scouting tnc upper portion ol.
this county for Lesley. | ,
Sheriff Ashley anu the supervisor, j (
J. Mack King, had offered rewards I j
grc*,.ui. .;.i,ojJ. Ai'.i. then negro has j i
in the escape.
been arrested on the charge of aiding i ?
o j ,
G0Lij.> j?PE | or
G doses GOG will break J
any cases of Chilis 8c Fever, Colds i .
8c La Grippe: it acts on the liver j ]
better than Calomel and does not!
iiriDe or sicken. Price 25c. [
A leap wiidou* loohiv.ji is a leap i! '
the dark.
she throw I mm* arms around I tin i r and
kissed Liitil passionately. Durand and
I)c? Vaux slipped I mm the mom. nuu 1
Vivian liehl I * I ;t i r in her einhrace and
worked him to her will ,
But Ills heart never was in the das
tnrd work the drug thugs planned and
earned through.
? * * m
In the wilderness, twenty miles from i
tli? mining town of Mammoth, two'
men slept in blankets beneath a dead
tree, burning at its base. Not far away
the ICnglish lawyer, footsore from Ids
wanderings, had eVouebed in slumber
beneath the shelter of a bush. In the
tilirlil liitol o ii<1
t'biti i'iiii <iimi in-d.-*! I'lf.V ??IK* lipoil
another. even as does man. An owl
flew from the hush. Some furry mil
lander of the night pursued It. The
worn Englishman awoke mid fled in
panic.
Beneath the dead tree .lack Williams
woke from his tltful dreams of the
diamond and the desire that obsessed
him for it. He saw the great dead
tree was burned altruist through at the
iKittoin and wavered. It svas on his
lips to screatu a warning to his sleepintr
comrade?but the diamond!
There was a crackle, a tearing sound
? and then the great dead tree bent
over and crashed down, crushing rite
sleeping man beneath it. A shower of
sparks rose in the air from the ruptured
base where the tire had eaten until
the tree had fallen.
Ere yet his writhing eomrade died.
Williams had despoiled him of the dia
mond from the sky. crushed against
his breast by the fallen tree. Then
with trembling hands the murderer
for such he was. hitched the horse to
the wagon and drove otT in the night
holding the baleful diamond ever and
anon in thought of the lantern on the
stunchinn by the wagon seat.
Marmaduke Suiythe of London, legal i
representative of the Earls of Stanley, I
ran in panic through the woods. FIls
flight was arrested by a dead tree
across his path. The base of this fnII-1
en tree burned and smoldered. Smythe
looked down over it in the moonlight
to see the upturned, contorted face of
a dead man?another who had gained
in life and lost in death the diamond
from the sky. i
I TO HE CONTINUED.]
I
?Feel bad, do you? V\
What you nee<
Rose's Med
Malt Whi
Absolutely Pur#* for M?
4 I.arge {IT* j
Bottles %pO?U
Bmlds nujcle and flesh. Sends the joy of
you ?oediciiul but palatable Uke
Here's My Big Free Offer J
Send $3 for 4 large bottles of Rone's Mcdich
will senil you fres one extra large bottle, maki
Malt in all, expreas prepaid, provided you ut
r. m, Rose
Company T:
H?e Old Reliable Distillers and inc ude
A ties in all.
JACKSON- /
VILLE, Fla. f N*~
22 Express Office
Usriul and MasUful 5
PREMIUMS FREE Paat Office
With ROSE Goods. 2
, WrUT tor book . K. jr. D. ?r St
riLLMAN FILES
FiSKE'S LETTEB
Jays Daniels Has Nothing to]
Conceal?Scores '"Sniping"
Mehtods.
Washington.?Rear Admiral Brad- '
cy i'iske's letter to the Senate taking*
ssue with Secretary Daniels for the
atter's statement that he never had
Doen furnished a copy of Admiral
b'iske's letter warning the department
ot the unprepared state 01 the navy in
L&H was made public by Chairman
Fillman of the naval committee.
"The secretary of the na/y lias
lothing to conceal and courts an investigation,
if one be demanued," said
J! airman Tillman, in submitting the
otter. "Neither he nor his friends
lore like this kind of sniping* or guerlla
warfare. Therefore, I content my
self with asking that Fiske's letter to j
.he vice president be published in the |
record that all may judge how iittle
die re really is to his utterances ox:<
pt malice and wounded vanity. Disappointed
ambition, too, has much to ;
lo with his conduct. He has brooded
aver what he supposes to be hisj
wrongs until he seems to be obsessed,;
and I really feel sorry for him." I
Senator Lodge, defending Admiral
Fiske, said he thought an injustice
had Jpeen done the naval officer. "The!
Secretary of the Navy has seen fit on
several occasions," he said, "to attack
Admiral Fiske. Admiral Fiske is an
officer of the highest rank. He has had
in unblemished career in the navy.
He has engaged in no guerilla warfare
nit has only the desire that is the
"ight of every honest man Lo protect
his own reputation."
In his letter Admiral Fiske referred
t.j Secretary Daniels' statement saying
ho had never been furnished a
copy of the Fiske unpreparedness letter
and expressing great surprise tr
I ivirn thnf cinr'Vi .. Prtmrnnninofinn U..C
... .. v..c*w (X vviiiiuuiuvutivii na*i
been filed. Admiral Fiske wrote:
"This statement constituted an accusation
against me of a grave breach
of official propriety?in fact of actual
underhandedness; of an attempt to
conceal an important letter from the
Secretary; while as a matter of fact I
was always scrupulously careful never
to permit him to receive or to remain
under any mistaken impression or to
be in ignorance of any important matter,
if I could prevent it."
o?
RHEUMATIC PAIN STOPPED
The drawing of muscles, the sore
ness, stiffness and agonizing pain o1
Rheumatism quickly yield to Sloan':
Liniment. It stimulates circulation if
the painful part. Just apply as direct
od to the sore spots. In a short time
the pain gives way to a ting!in"* sensation
of comfort and warmth. Here's
proof?"I have had wonderful relief
dr.ee I used vour Liniment on my
':noo. To think one application gave
me relief. Sorry I havn't snace t<
:ell you the history. Thankir~ you
for what your remedy has d^v^ f^?
me. James S. Ferguson, Philada,
Pa. Sloan's Liniment kills pain. 25c.
it Druggists.?adv.
o
But They Will.
County politics won't be much hotter
than the weather this year, WC|
hope.?Georgetown Times.
No. 666
This it a prescription prepared especially
for MALARIA or CHILLS 6, FEVER.
Five or six doses will break any case, and
if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not
return. It acts on the liver better than
Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c
0 Prepaid 1 " ?-?V~"~ |
footli botmdin* throogh TTA 1 x I I
u?y good wlusluy. j XjvJ [ :
i'jU N?K di $l! I I
ihI Malt and t || til U|
Ing 5 bottles of 3 a- j* . M
te this coupon. J I N/l A I U
er positively expires June 15, 1916
SE, Jacksonville: J-4.
$3 enclosed ship me by prepaid express,
> bottles Rose's Medicinal Malt Whiskey
the one large bottle free, making & bot
-? i
A
? State
THE HORRY HERA I
SINCE TAKIN
I can say my |
bowels are much g
more regular. I
My heart is |
stronger. |
My appetite is |
much better. |
H
My throat is I
m
m
much better. |
Mrs. William H. HinclilifFe, <
writes: "I have taken four bottles
it has done me a great deal of goc
throat. I recommend Peruna to a
not think I ever felt much better,
work I can do. I do not think to
Peruna."
Those who object to fluid med
Tablets.
AMERICAN BANK S
WILWIINGY
COMMERCIAL & SA
RESOURCES
?DIREC
J. G. L. GIESCHEN?German Coui
.T t r p g e n tua R?Grocer
CU'i'HBERT MARTIN?Grocer
GEO. O. GAYLORD?Merchant
V. SIDBURY?Real Estate and Capi
B. G. COLLINS?Former President J
South Carolina
P. S. COOPER?President First Nati
CHAS. E. BETHEA?Cashier of the
JOS. T. KING?General Supt., Trani
W. B. COOPER?Importer and Exp<
MILTON CALDER?Vice-Preside r
EDWARD AHRENS?Wholesale D
I J NO. J. KUCK?Manufacturer
A G. WARREN?Owner A. G. Wan
W. B. DRAKE, JR.?Vice-President
Bank, Raleigh, ]
THOS. E. COOPER?President of tl
?OFFK
Thos E. Cooper
I Milton Calder
Chas E. Bethea
f Vwn/1 T) n *? /?V
jj. i icu uauua,
Robt L. Henley .........
ZEPPELIN L-20 LOST ;
ON NORWAY'S COAST'
London.?The Zeppelin L-20, which (
was driven ashore and destroyed at J
Hafso Firth, Norway, was one of an;
aii fleet which raided the northeast j
coast of England on Tuesday night, i
causing thirty-six casualties.
Five airships were in the squadron,!
according to a member of the crew of!
the L-20, says a Copenhagen dispatch j
to the Exchange Telegraph company.
Of the sixteen men on board the Zep-j
pelin, all were rescued and interned by
the Norwegian authorities.
?> ?
I
The mill village demonstration
work is to be resumed in South Caro- j
l;na under the leadership of James L.j
Carbery, the originator of the plan to
improve conditions in mill villages.
o
-$6.50- i
I
Best Flour Made at $6.50
per barrel, cash. Only 410
barrels in stock.
Special prices on rice, sugar,
coffee, etc., for 30 days to
Horry customers.
I
_
I
Pa^lmctto
Grocery Co.
COOPER - - - MULLINS
Capital and Surplus $80,000
*D, COHWAY, s. c
iG PERUNA 15
JO Myrtle St., Beverly, Mass.,
of Peruna, and I can say that
>d for catarrh of the head and
11 sufferers with catarrh. I do
I am really surprised at the
o much praise can be said for
icines can now procure Peruna
- ..
1
TRUST COMPANY
I
ON. N. C.
VINGS BUSINESS
$2,500,000.00
TORS?
YSCI
italist
burroughs & Collins Co., Conway,
onal Bank, Dunn, N. C.
Bank
sportation of the A. C. L. System
orter
it of the Bank
ruggist
en Ice Cream Co.
and Cashier of Merchants National
North Carolina
le Bank
3ERS?
President
Vice-President
Cashier
Asst. Cashier
Asst. Cashier
RANCHER KILLED RY
MEXICAN OUTLAWS
El Paso, Texas.?P. H. Holly, a
rancher, 15 miies northeast of El
Rusio, near San Anionic, Mexico, was
murdered with his Mexican foreman
on the night oi" April 29 because he
had acted as a scout for American
troops who \ 1 t to the Holly ranch
to rid it of Villa bandits under Cardenas.
n
There is always room at the top,
and some times even at the sides. You
can find a way if you want to get in.
tcoldsl
I J should be "nipped in thejQTU
j bud", for if allowed to run Vwj
nunchecked, serious resultsffTJ
A may follow. Numerous k\ Li
I cases of consumption, pneu- '
Imonia, and other fatal disI
eases, can be traced back to
I a cold. At the first sign of a
J cold, protect yourself by
I thoroughly cleansing your
I system with a few doses of
THEDFORD'S
BLACKDRAUGHT
i|the old reliable, vegetable gij
II 'iver nowder. 8s!
321 Mr. Ctias. A. Ragland, o- 2gII
III Madison Heights. Va., says: ||||
IRI 'I have been using Thcd- 1|||
AM ford's Black-Draught for JUUI
[illstomach troubles, indiges-fili
AW tion and colds, and find ittoMW
be the very best medicine In/^Q
^Avever used. It makes an oldM^|
JJj man feel like a young one.'' YzM
L>| Insist on Thcdford's, thervjtf
Ol original and genuine. E-67 VM
t
?H f WAS STAGED E
AMONG M9U51TA1HS
). S. Cavalrymen With "Knives
in Their Teeth" Went After it'
the Villa Bandits.
There was a man-to-man fighting
iiul some of the Americans went up j
he mountain side with "knives i. p
heir teeth" during Colonel Dotld's
Tattle with Villistu bandits on Ap'il
VI at Temaehie.
It was the "devil's own play ground*
was Colonel Hood's description ?>f their
%
terrain, of this l>attle in southwest |
Chihuahua, among1 towering moua- ;
tair.s, where 150 bandits sought vet* '
uge.
For two hours Dodd's troops of the!
Seventh cavalry, fought from an immense
hollow, with bandits on three
sides, charging deliberately over- .
ground marked with bullet puffs in,
dust all about their feet, where the
Mexicans had their exact range. They
accounted for at least 50 bandits kil'ed
or wounded, against an American loss!
of two dead and three wounded. One!
Mexican woman was wounded by ban-j
dits.
Two nights before this fight the J
Americans overtook the bandits at the
Yoquivo mine where they were lying
'about camp fires, tolling the natives
i stories of how they claimed to have
whipped the Americans at Columbus
nnu at uuerrero. mey snoweii oigj
lumps of gold and silver taken front J
Mexican towns which they asscrte 11
*vere spoils of war,
Put Bandits to Flight.
Shortly before midnight an outpost.
ran in breathless exclaiming:
"The Americans are coming in!"
Scores of dark forms leaped
i through the fire light, bugles blew
and in ten minutes the whole bandit
i command had galloped out of town.
When the cavalrymen came in they
j found two American mining men, a
! Mr. Seyferth and another who had
j paid $2,000 ransom to the bandits, and
] whose lives probably had been saved
j by the Seventh's arrival. These Americans
said the bandits were led by
i Candelero Cervantes, Jesus Del Rios,
| Cruz Dominguez and Manuel Eaca,
, who was killed by a Mexican the fol,
lowing Sunday after the fight.
Among them were followers of Julio
Acosta, and General Beltran. They
were remnants of all the best known
Villa commanders' veterans and at
time at least, the last known band of
Villa's men whose nerve had not been
shaken by defeats at Columbus, Geur!
rr-ro and Agues Calicntes.
Saturday afternoon at 4:.??0 Dodd's
men, arriving at the southern rim of
the hills forming the eup in which the
town of Temoehic lies, saw the rear
guard of bandits' riding out of town.
Ahead of them they saw the main
body waiting behind rocks to give
battle. A machine gun was placed to
sweep this ridge while the Americans
rode down into the cup in pursuit.
They dismounted in town, advancing
on foot with rifles ready, led by troop
1.. and accompanied by the two guides.
Pull Sniper From Chimney.
While still in town a trooper was
hit and mortally wounded. The shot
came from the flank from a cave in
the mountain over looking Tepochic.
Out of a big adobe chimney the troops
pulled a sniper, the only one caught
in the place.
Beyond the town troop L advanced
to within range of the crests above.
They crossed the range in short rushes,
lying down and firing, then advancing
a few yoards.
''olonel Dodd, with his staff, rode,
' hrough this zone of fire wlyle bullets
foil within a yard or two of every man
un.il -.hoy reached a small knoll beyond
,the town. From here Dodd directed
the fight. Another machine
gun was brought uo close to play on
nr. .. ? .i-_i
I . nv- ivi !C ilk l/ilIT V.I I'JL in UVKl Ul llll* I
! knoll.
o
AVOID SPUING COLDS.
Sudden chances, hitch winds, shif* |
n seasons cause colds and grippe,!
and these spring colds are annoying!
and dangerous and are likely to turn!
into a chronic summer ough. In such
cases take a treatment of Dr. Ki
\Tow Discovery, a pleasant Laxative j
Tar Syrup. It soothes the coug.
hocks the cold and helps break un nn |
ttack of gripne. Its already prepared.
,0 ? or fussing, .lust ask "or
Iruggist for a bottle of Dr. King's
Tew Discovery. Tested and tried for
ver 40 years. ?adv.
? . .1 ^ i '?
John L. McLaurin will run for lieu- <
I
tenant governor, in order that he may
have the opportunity of addressing
the people, during the countv-toeounty
campaign this summer, on the
subject of the State warehouse system Acting
upon a petition signed by J
8?VK1?
iXPEGT WITHDRAWAL
within TWO MONTHS
kxicans Think Bandit Danger
Will 2: ETninatoc! i.i
Sixty Days
?lan :oc?eratto:j
AGAIN sir OUTLAWS
Jnitod States Forces and de
Facto Government "Will
Work Together.
Mexican military men believe that
the withdrawal of American troops
from Mexico will take place in about
two months.
The Mexicans say that in view of
mo dispositions t.o Pe marie by Gen,
Obrogon in cooperating with American
forces, according to the tentative
a greement made with Gen. Scott, the
hunting down of the bandit groups in
Chihuahua and Durango can scarely
take more than that period vf time.
On assurances from Gen. Carranza
that the bandits are disperse i, the
northward movement of American
troops will attain fui) speed and it
will not be iong until the last trooper
crosses the border.
In the rr.^Ci.iGi.. . it \ as pointed out.
...*r i. .. ... i UiflC
Ul.l UC ttlliM.llll l.iU V Cll't'IllS
northward of American dotaehmeius
i>o that wiien tito final order for withdrawal
corr.es Caere will bo only a
part ef tiio present expeditionary
force on Mcr.ican Soil.
PRINTED LETTERS '
I BEGIN POURING IN
Washington.?Printed form letters
| protesting against any step which
I may load to war with Geramny began
j pouring in by the thousands today
! upon members of the congress as the
sequel to the telegraphic propaganda
which swamped the capitol and the
telegraph companies last week.
Even the names of the congressmen
were printed on the envelopes and
everything gave evidence; . that tiie
letters had been prepared by thousands
and required only written sig1
natures.
VL CREAM
linpnrtB a delicate bloom
I of grease ofany
: smootn, Diana W&
massage cream.
i Delightful to use f ^i*v^8^yl W?
as there is none of / \ w <55:
that mussiness
which rentiers the ^
able. It is completely abaorbcd
by the pores of the akip, o|HBJ
leaving it clean, fresh, sol't.and MHB
smooth. Use it regularly.- and US]
it will entirely remove all truces ISWn
of wrinkles, roughness and sal- fiJBS
lownesR. Money back if you are MgB
For Sale By
NORTON DRUG COMPANY
The San-Tox--Rexall Store
1 o
May Adopt Helmets.
Philadelphia, Pa.? A strong steel
helmet, such as is worn by the armies
of France and Germany as head protection
against shrapnel fire, may be
uriAnt-Ai-1 Ki? A U .. T T .?'i. 11 n 1
mmny liic L iiiu1^ i^mios .viannc
Corps shortly.
Models of several lightweight styles
of steel helmet, claimed by the manufacturers
to be absolute protection
against the shrapnel missiles, have
been submitted to Marine Corps officers
stationed in this city> for their
approval.
At present no branch of the United
States fighting forces is' ^equipped
\\rith this lifd-saving device. ,
? % .
o
Take away that limousine,
Take it away from my sight;
Restore to me my Ford machine,
Wherein I take delight.
?Anderson.