Lancaster enterprise. [volume] (Lancaster, S.C.) 1891-1905, April 21, 1897, Page 6, Image 6
FIGHTING IN MACEDONIA.
Greek Irregulars and Turkish
Forces Engage?Many Killed
and Wounded.
Larissn. Headquarters of the
Greek Army in Thessaly, April
1(>.?Severe fighting has occured
in Macedonia between the Greek
irregulars and t lie Turkish forces.
The column of irregulars sent
to the right from Cigavibea, after
having invested and captured Sitovon,
continued its advance towards
K?'\ tudes, Hlisia and Koor
duz, wite orders to hold Kourduz
at all costs, as it commands the
riirht annroach to Grevena. the
objective point. This column,
commanded by Chiefs Zermos and
Luzzo, attacked Kritndes Tuesday.
The place was defended by
two companies of Turks.
After a severe fight, during
which eighty Turks were killed
and twenty-five were taken pris- ^
oners, tin- position was captured
by the Greeks, who also obtained '
possession of 150 r i ties and a<
quantity of cartridges.
The insurgents, however, havej
suffered a severe check in another
directions. A strong force of Turkish
troops, from Mucevon, with a
number of mountain guns, advanced
on Krania, which had
previously been captured by the
ureeivs, and aitacKea tlio lour
hundred irregulars of Greece who
occupied au entrenched position.
It is reported that, the fighting
was ferocious on both sides.
The insurgents eventually were
compelled to retreat. Nnrth to the
mountains. Some of them, how-j
ever, succeeded in breaking j
through the Turkish lines ntid escaped
to Baltino, the town just ^
across the frontier in Macedonia,
first captured by the Greek irregulars
and used by them as a depot
for provisions and ammuni-j
tion.
The accounts given by the refugees
of the Turkish losses are
believed to he exaggerated. They
say that 265 Turks were killed
while irregulars only had eight
men killed, seventeen wounded.
The leader of the (lre^.1;^ nTior.
ating in that section, Chief Milenas,
was among the wouiined,an<i
returned later into Greek teriitory
with a number of the rofu-j
gees. One of the latter says that
a portion of the Turkish force
was composed of irregulars,whose
dress resembles that of the Creek
insu rgents.
This it appears. enabled the
Turkish force to execute a Hank
movement, unheeded by the leaders
of the Greeks. The refugees
" i
referred to blames the Greek
leaders for badly handling their
Mrs. A. Invoen, residing at 7:20 Hpnry St.'
Alton, til .suffered with selatie rheumatism for
over night months. She doctored for It tie arly
the whole of this time, using various remedies
recommended by friends, uiid was treated i>y
the physicians, but recep <-d no relief. She tht n
used one and a half bottles of Chamberlain's
Pain Malm, which effected it complete care
This >s published at her request, as she wants
others similarly afflicted to know what cured
her The 25 and BO cent sizes for sale by .1 P.
Mackey & Co. and it C". Iloutrh & Co . Caucasus-,
S C.
An Object Lesson in Trust' j
Methods.
The threat of the Carnegie Ar
mour Plate Trust to shut down
its works unless the Government
niKin l imit; u? iis icrins promises I
to be productive of pood iu seval
ways. The trust refuses to j
make armour plate at the maximum
price lixedM>y Congress,
$300 a ton, at which a large profit
can he earned. Its demand tor
armouring the Illinois, Alabama
and Wisconsin, now under con
struct ion, if granted, would put
about $2,000,000 more into trust'*:
pocket than the Congressional
maximum would yield. The Car !
negie combine has, it is atlirmed,
supplied foreign governments
with armour at $150 a ton. It
has., drawn immense sums from
the United States Treasury for its
products, including plates honeycombed
with blowholes, the location
of which is known to the European
powers with whose navies
it is always possible we may have
lighting to do.
The trust is standing oil", and
by its threat of closing the mills
in effect asks the Government,
What are you going to do about
it '!
The answer of Secretary of the
Navy Long is the recommendation
to Congress that it raise the max
iinum to $400 a ton. lie argues
that the cosi of keeping the tin finished
war ships in the stocks
would amount to more than the
cost, of surrendering to the trust.
Senator Chandler, of New Hampshire,
former Secretary of Navy,
displays a different, spirit. It. is
\\T.. - .1
iiiiiivii mm 11 mil ?? asillllgiou I lllll
he will introduce a hill providing
that the Government shall immediately
take possession ot the
Carnegie and Hethlehem steel
plants, run them until enough!
armour lor the three incomplete'
battle ships is supplied, and then |
turn the works back to their rapacious
owners, leaving the trust
to go into the Court of (Maims
for its damages.
It is mortifying that the Government
of the I'nited Statesi
should be made wholly dependent
upon a manufacturing monopoly j
for armour for its war ships?a.
monopoly which has derived from
that (iovernment the wealth |
which gives it the courage to he!
insolent. It would serve the
trust right, of course, were Sena I
tor ('handler's I.ill to become* a
law; it would serve the trust
right were its works to be confiscated
without compensation.
Were war threatening and the I
unfinished ships needed for na
tional defence, and the coinp tnies
maintained their present attitude,;
it would serve the managers of
the trust right should they be:
dealt with as t raitors.
Hut business is business after)
all. The (ioverntnenl having
created a monopoly, it is not *ur
prising that the monopoly should
act alter its kind. Were there
extreme need tor the immediate
armoring ot the Illinois, Alabama
and Wisconsin, all other consid
orations would give wav to na
ii ' ?d
tional need, and the seizure of'
the works he politic as well as'
just. I (owever, desirable as it is
to strengthen our navy without
needless delay, there is no urgent
necessity for the hold course
proposed by Senator < 'handler.
The lesson of the situation is
that the (iovernrnent should
cease as soon as practicable to he
dependant upon private persons j
for armor. The < Iovernrnent
should build and armor all its
own ships. It is rich enough to
do it, and there is no good reason
whv it should not. However im
pudent and greedy the Carnegie j
Trust maybe, it appears to us
American* are the most inventive people on I
enrili To l lie in have Is-eu issued nearly tHW, ,
ono patent*, or more than one-third or all the '
patents Issued I'i the world. No discovery of 1
modern years has been of greater la-nullt to j
mankind than Chamberlain* ( olic. Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy, or has dont more to relieve
pain and suffering. J W. Vaughn, of Oakton,
Ky . says: "I have used Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Kennedy in my family
for several years, and llnd It to be "the best
medielno f ever used for eramns in the stotn
ach and bowels. For sale by J. F. M ickey X
Co. and it. c. Hough A Co, Lancaster, ij. C.
that it keeps within its legal
rights when it. agrees to supply
armor or refuses to supply armor
at its pleasure, if it is bound by
no contrary eontiact.
The trusts which control the
necessaries and coin torts of life
continually and on system hold
up the people as the Carnegie
Trust is now holding up the Covernment.
The experience will
do the Government no harm, and
it is gratifying to reflect that in
the end it will do the trusts no
good. Every exposure of their
methods hastens the day of their
suppression.?X. V. Journal,
April 12.
Fire at Greenwood.
Greenwood, S. April 1(5.?
Eire was discovered in the store
house of McKellar Bros, about 1
o'clock, aiul luui already made
such headway that it was impossible
to conquer it.
The entire stock of fancy j*ro
ceries, canned floods, etc., was
destroyed. The loss was small,
however, as no very large stock
was carried. The origin ol the
lire is unknown, hut it is believed
it was accidental.? Register.
A nswcred.
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I >eecmber.)
Rudyard Kipling's tlrst American .serial
in November.)
Robert Louis Stevenson's "St. Ives." ']'
unpublished. (Begins in May.)
i Chas. A. Dana. ''Recollections of Waitii
most critical years of the Civil War |
Cabinet, and is probably better titte
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respondenc.
Portraits of Great Americans. Many o
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Pictures of Palestine. Specially taken i
Stories of Adventure. A serial i>y CON/1
extraordinary talent for nystery and i
lock Holmes,, stories, given hi in a plai
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Ian Maclaren. All the tlction that he w
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the "Brer Babbit" anil "Little Mr. Thit
liudyard Kipling. Besides "C'arptains
hole to McCi.i iik'h all of the short stor
year.
Octave Thanet is preparing for the Mao
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Anthony Hope Kret Harl
Frank R. Stockton Stanley V
will all have stories in MoCi.i hk's for
These are only a small fraction of the grei
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I The now volume begins* with November,
this* number.
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*97
T SERIALS *
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lie." Mr. 1'ana whs fnr Uifuo < '
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<1 l lian any ol her man living to (five
iod from his recollections ami corf
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LEHSOFTME UNION from Wasliiimler
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WRITERS
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it ions to another publication w hich
appear in McCi.i'kk's Maoazink.
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<"ourageous," Kipling will contriies
he will write during the coming '
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tc Hubert Harr
Vcrinan Clark llussell
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