only newspaper in TRANSYLVANIA county VOLUME^‘XIV PAPER FOR HOME PEOPLE—AUL. HOME PRINT J. J. MINER, OWNER AND MANAGER BREVARD. NORTH CAROlAa, DEOEMBER 31.1909. NTJ1BBR*55^ ZELAYA FUGITIVE I National League’s New Head. Under Cover of Night flees“ the Mry. he goes to MEXICO Former President of the Republic of Nicaragua Boards Warship and Seeks Refuge In Santa Cruz.—Ma- driz Proclaimed President. Managua.—Jose Santos Zelaya, the ex-president of Nicaragua, has taken himself out of the country, and, it is said, is hound for Santa Cruz. Under the ccrver of darkness Zelaya, it is reported, accompanied by a heavily armed guard, pro-, ceoded to Corinto, in which port a Mexican warship had been lying for several days, close to the Tnited States protected cruiser Al bany. Other American v?arships swung at anchor in the harbor, with marines aboard, lazily awaiting In structions. Soon Safe Under Mexican Flag. Zelaya’s coming was unheralded, but a guard from the Guerrero received him and soon he was safe under the protection of the Mexican flag. At five o’clock in the afternoon the war ships weighed anchor and pointed out to sea. A salute of thirteen guns was fired from the shore and huiMrodfr-ot soldiers and citizens waved the fcfrmer dictator a farewell from the beach. Zelaya stood alone and waved back ia answer. He uncovered when a*breast of the Albany, but the American cruis er made no response. Then he- turned again toward the shore, gazing nntll out of sight. Shortly before the arrlyiil of Zelaya at Corinto, tlie Unrieuf States ^nbdat Princeton got up steam and proceeded for San Juan del Sur. The rumor spread that the Princeton intended to watch the movement of the Mexican gunboat, but she proceeded ’ directly down the coast and her arrival at her destination was later reported, greatly relieving the anxiety of the Zelaya adherents. Madriz -Won*t Resign. Managuans in general were greatly relieved when they learned that Ze laya had gone, and President Madriz has alredy beguT». his promised work of reform. All reports that Madriz intends to resign the presidency are without a fihred of truth. He himself announces that he accepted the ofllce only after mature consideration of the opportuni ty the position gave him ter bring about harmony and peace in Nicaragua and also of the dangers which attend ed his acceptance. He is willing to face the -dangers, he says, in order to save the country. JUDGE VAN EPPS DEAD. Able Georgia Jurist Meets Death on a Florida Railroad Train. Atlanta.—Judge H(5ward Van I5?>ps, ex-judge of the city court of Atlanta, and one of the best known lawyers In Gecrrgla, dropped dead on a raUroad train at Lake City, Fla. Judge Van EppB left Atlanta only a few days ago to sojourn In Florida during the extreme cold weather, as he had not been In the best of health for several tj^onths. The deceased was about 62 years of age, and was one of the ablest Jurists connected with the Atlanta bar. For ®ight years he was judge of the city ccrurt that is now presided over by Judge Harry Reid. m m The new president of the National league, Thomas J. Lynch, wua former ly au umpire and one of the t>est known in the business. In recent years be bas been a theatrical man* COTTON LEAPS TO 16 CENTS. For First Time In F V^'-rs on New York Excb'^o*^-. New Yorl^.r;-,'I^e bullish, entliu s’asm which, has attended cotton market in its recent advances-has seCnired' fOr the first time 2i» fire years 16 cents a pound the^sta^e tlfe" New York exchange. TJThlle tie May op tion ot 16.01 waft the only cotton on the list to reach 16-cent quotation, the entire list advanced slightly, and still holds higher than at any time since the Sully boom in 1904. The bull campaign now on is said to be headed by Colonel W. P. Brown and Frank B. Hgyne, of New Orleans, who were associated with Sully five years ago, and by E. G. Scales and James A. Patten, the Chicago grain operator. The aggregate profits of this “big four” are rumored to amount to about $13,000,000. The bulls now predict 17-cent cot ton biBfore the end of January. The record during the Sully boom was 17.54. Shot His Daughter’s Escort. Columbus, Oa —^Will Roddy, a young man of North Highlands, Is ly ing *t the Columbus hospital very se riously, and, perhaps, fatally wound ed, and J. O. Osborne Is being sought by the police for having shot him with a revolver. Osborne, who is a middle-aged man, forbade Roddy go ing with his daughter, but it seems that his orders were disobeyed. Meeting the couple returning from some social gathering, Osborne open ed fire on the young man, the bullet taklnjg effect. Bryan to Move to Texas. Bellefontalne, Ohio.—^William Jen nings Bryan is to move to Texas. He has said so In the course of an Inter view preceding the deUV^y of fils lecture. He declared that he Intend ed to move to Texas following a So\ith American tour on which lie will 8Urt this fall. Prince to Visit South America. Rome—The king has Informed the ministry that he Intends to send Prince Udine, son of the Duke of Genoa, to visit the Italian colonists in South America. Another prince, probably the duke of the Abruzzi, will go later on a similar mission to North America. Undertaker Was Startled. Terre Haute, Ind.—As an under taker started to prepare the body of Edward Murphy for burial, the sup posed dead man arose In the bed and yawned. *T feel better after that long sleep/' he said. Murphy had been la a state of coma for ten hours. He had Ijeen an invalid for a long time. ' But the undertaker soon was recalled, for Murphy really died, after joking lJ)out his ‘^first death" to the fright ened embalmer. BANKER FLETCHER DEAD. vSiB Father of Mrs. Booth Tark- ington. Nashville, Tenn.—Stoughton J. Fletcher, several times a millionaire t)md owner of the Fletcher National Bank of Indianapolis, died at his coun- trjr seat, near Gallatin, 26 miles north east of here. Mr. Fletcher was 58 years old. He for several years, been in very bad’health, and retired from active buslnesB. He leaves a son and three daughters, one of the latter being Mrs. Booth Tarklngton, wife of the author and playwrlghL ' EIGHT MEN KIllED Mine Horror Occii^ In Carter* ville Coal Co/l Mine. DUE TO AN EXPLOSION Their Path Was Blocked at Once by the Bodies of the Deisd—Fire Follow ing Explosion Cause^i Rescuers to Retreat—Efforts Directed to Flames. St. Louis.—Ei?ht men were killed and the lives of 400 others were im periled by an explosioi\ of gas In mine “A”, of the Chicago «,nd Cartervllie Coal Company, at Herrin, 111. Open lamps, carried by the mine en gineer and his assistants, caused the disaster, according to_ a telephone message from th^> mine office. There were three men and a boy in the en gineer’s party and all lovst their lives. Hundreds of Men Escaped. Prompt action by the management of the mine resulted In the safe exit of the hundreds of men who were at work below ground. Within five minutes of the first reports of the ex plosion, the miners in the immediate vicinity of the accident were started towards the surface, and on the return trips of the cages rescm*ers were low ered into entricR No. ? and 8, w&st; where the catastrophe took place, James Gulnney, superintendent of the mine, and Robert Hueston, man ager, headed the first relay of res cuers. Despite the Black Damp. . Despite the black damp which flow ed Into .the. chambers adjoining thos^ in which,.Pierce and Lis’ party w^i*e killed, these men pluu ,ed Into the workings. Three bodies blpcljecf flielr path. Hasty examination showed that the men were alive, and they were rushed to the surface. One of them was A. J. Hueston, a brother of the manager. All are expected to recover. The rescuers next found the bodies of Snyder, Greeco and Romeo. None of these men had been burned, the conditions of the corpses testifying mutely to the force of the concussion. Harber’s body wap badly burned. The valiant efforts of the rescuers to penetrate more deeply into the workings were repulsed by increasing banks of after-damp. The ventilating apparatus of the mine had not been damaged, but it could not cope with the gases, and Guinney and Hueston and their helper.? were forced to re treat, leaving the bodies of Pierce and h4s companions. Fire also began to gain headway, and it is not expected that the bodies can be recovered for some time. All efforts are betng directed towards fighting the fiames. Condi tions are such that It is hoped that they will be confined to the two en tries affected by the explosIoB. $250,000 In Stamps Blown from Pouch, Pittsburg.—Over $250,000 worth of internal 'revenue tax-paid whisky stamps, the property of the govern ment, were mutilated or blown away when the iron arm attached to a mall car of a fast train failed properly to connect with a registered mail bag and threw it under the wheelb. The accident occurred at Glbsonton, near here, and only/a few of the stamps have been recovered by the govern ment agents. Fire In An Insane Asylum. Jacksonville, 111.—Fire In the Cen tral Hospital for the insane here de stroyed the north wing of the,Institu tion^ for hours threatened destruction to other portions, and for a time caused much anxiety to ofiicials of the Institution, in preventing panic among the patients. It is believed that a few patients escaped and are roaming the streets. There were about 2,000 persons in the asylum. Utah Bars Big Fight New York.—Governor Spry, of TJtaK has arrived here from Philadelphia. In discussing the JefPrles-Johnson fight, the governor expressed his be lief that there'was-not one chance In a thousand of the big fight being held in Utah. .“The laws of the state must be obeyed, and I shall follow them to the letter,” he said. RIOT IN CHURCH. Three People Seriously hijured In Indiana. Washington, Ind.—In a riot at the General Baptist church, one mile west of this city, Willis Ellis and Ed Her ron were cut on the head by thrown bricks and the Toliver chapel was badly cut up, while many men and women, who used the windows to es cape, were injured. The trouble began when Claude Hol ton, Arnold Holton, Chester Turner, Robert Holton and four others entered the church and began a disturbance. Four policemen were sent to quiet the rioters, but the officers, it Is said, were disarmed. While they were com ing back to town for reinforcements the men began fighting among them selves. The women, in order to protect their children, threw them through the win dows. The three Holtons and Turner were arrested. Another small riot took place at a dance near here. About forty-five peo ple received minor bruises. Twenty- three arrests were made. ACCIDENTALLY KILLED. The Death of Young Hamp Weath* ers, Only Son of Tift Farmer, Tifton, Ga.—Hamp Weathers, the only son of Mrs. Isaac Weathers, who lives about 9 miles northeast of Tif ton, in Tift county, shot and killed himself with a slngle-bdrreled shot gun. The lad had returned from hunt ing and was playing with some chil dren, at one time playfully threaten ing to shoot them, and then saying he ^s j^In’g shoot himself, pu> the muzzre of the gun against his left side. By some means 4t was discharged, the load pacing almost tl>rough his body, making a fearful wbimd' and * tearing away a part of the' sttoulder blade.* The lad was between fourteen and fitfeen years of age, and a singular co incidence is that two of his brothers died at almost the same age. McDonough4i^an Suicides, / McDonough, Ga.—Mr. Cliff C. Tye, one of the most prominent young men of McDonough, shot himself In the right temple in the store of Messrs. T. A. Sloan & Co., with a pistol, in the presence^ of all the employees of the store and many customers. No motive is known for the deed. He walked Into the store and handed Mr. T.^ A. Sloan, his brother-in-law, some money, and asked him to give him credit for it, and as Mr. Slaon turned to go back to his office to give credit for the money, Mr. Tye pulled his pis tol and fired into his right temple and fell dead. Fatal Pistol Duel. Opelousas, La.—News has reached here that Wade Higginbotham, a dep uty sheriff of this, St. Landry, parish, and Ozene Roy, a farmer, had killed each other late last night in a pistol duel at Aranaudvllle, several miles south of here. The shooting is said to have been the culmination of bad feel ing that had existed between the, two men for some time. Human Hardy and Isaac Thibodeaux were, arrested for alleged complicity in the tragedy. Comity Govemmoit*. Representative—G. W. Wilson.’ Clerk Superior Comrt—^T. T. Loftis. Sheriff and Tax Collector—C. C. Kilpa^ rick. ^ Treasurer—Z. W. Nicholls. Register of Deeds—A. Gillespie. Coroner—Dr. W. J. Wallis. Surveyor—A. L. Hardla, Commissioners—W. M. Henry, fth'n; G T. Lyday; W. E. GaUoway. Superintendent of Schools—T. C. He^ derson. Physician—Dr. Goode Cheatham. Attorney—Gash & Galloway. Town Gov«mmait». Mayor—W. E. Breese, jr. Board of Aldermen—^T. H. Shipman. J M. Kilpatrick, T. M. Mitchell, A. H. fang, E. W. Carter. Marshal—J. A. Galloway. Clerk and Tax Collector—T. H. Gallo, way. Treasurer-T. H. Shipman. Health Officer—Dr. C W. Hunt ^ Attorney—W, W. Zachary. Regular meetings—First Monday night in each month. ProfesdoAoI Cards. H. G. BAILEY ^ Ci>^ and Ccnsolting Engineer and Surveyor McMinn Block BREVARD. N. Cl Patronize those who Aidvertise w; B. puaivrrodtii, ATTO R NE Y-AT-LA W. ElpQi«U( 1 2*^$^lc!k&lsj GASH <& GALLOWAY LAWYERS. Will practice in all the courts. Rooms 9 and 10, McMinn Block.. Paironizc those who Advertise Annual Statement OF AMOUNTS Paid County Commi^sioosrs During the year 1908 Money Order Clerk Arrested. Albany, Ga.—H. D. Manning, for several years past money order clerk In the Albany postoffice, and one of the best knoWn iroiing men in the city, has been arrested by Postoffice In- sp 3Ctor Williams, of Atlanta, and was bound over under $500 bond by Com missioner R. J. Bacon for intercept ing mail. The bond was arranged and Manning is at liberty. K, of P, Elects Officers. Lawrencevllle, Ga.—^At a recent meeting of tlie Knights of Pythias the following officers were chosen: John C. Houston, C. C.; G. K. Bagwell, V. C.; R. S. Sammon, P.; Willis Holland, M. W.; J. L. Bxum, K. of R. and S.; L. L. Ewing, M. F.; D. M. Byrd, M. A.; G. W. Clower, M. E.; R. L. Robinson, O. G.; T. D. Cain, I. G. Bacon Sails for France. New York.—Robert Bacon, the new ly appointed amba^ador to France, has sailed on the Mauretania, to take up the dutfes of his post. The following amonnts have beerc paid to the members of the Board fo County Commissioners during the official year of 1909, viz.: W M Henry, 31: days regular service at $2.00 $62.00 W M Henry, 82 days e^^tra, service at $2.00... 64.00 G T Lyday, 29 days regular service at $2.00 !^...... 58.00 G T Lyday, 10 days extra ser vice at $2.00 ' 20.00 W E Galloway,''^ 29 days regu lar service at $2.00 58.00 W E Galloway, 12 days extra serv3C3 at $2.00 24.00 No. miles traveled by each 0.00 Unverified accounts audited .. 0.00 ' Ncffth Carolina, ) Transylvania County. ) I, E. A Gillespie, register of deeds anci ex-officio Clerk of the Board of County Commissioners of said county, hereby certify that the foregoing is a correct statement of the amounts audited by the Board of Commissioners to the members thereof and also a correct statement of the number of days service rendered by each, and that said statement isl in compliance with the requirements of Sec. 132ft of the Revisal of 1905. This Dec. 1st, 1909. B. A. GILLESPIE, Register of Deeds. Entry No. 25^. North Carolina—^Transylvania Countyi C.W..Hunt enters and claims 100 acres of land more or less lyine in Dunn's Rock Township, adjoining the lands of Ed Bat son and others. Banning on a black oak on the north side of Wolf Peiu Mountain, in the old Candler line, marked comer,, and runs various comrses and distances, so- as to take all the vacant laixl Entered: Dec. 21st, 1909. B. A. GILLESPIE, * Entry Taker.