THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAN, SATTJKDAY, DECE3IBEK 25. 1909. ZELAYA IH FLIGHT FROM HIS CAPITAL Trusted Bodyguard With Max im Gun Accompanies Ex Ruler to Corinto. START IS MADE AT 3 A. M. . American Partner in Gold Mines Accompanies Him in Retreat. Gunboat Princeton Goes to Gnlf of Fonseca. CORINTO. Nicaragua. Dec. 24. Jose Santos Zelaya, who three days ago re linquished the presidency of Nicaragua to Dr. Jose Madriz the same day his army met defeat by the revolution ists at Kama has fled the capital and tonight is in Corinto, surrounded by his bodyguard and a few faithful friends. Zelaya left Managua under cover of darkness, escorted by 50 of his guard of honor and a squad of artillerymen with a Maxim gun. At 3. o'clock this morning the party quietly went from the .ex-President's home and half an hour later boarded a small steamer which sailed Immediately for Momo tombo, .on Lake Managua. Press Representative Along Siroultaneously with the departure- of the boat, a special train with a small number of friends and a press repre sentative aboard, drew out of Managua, also bound for Momotombo. At 5 o'clock this morning the teamer met the train at Momotombo, and Zelaya, with his guard and their Maxim gun, promptly boarded a special car attached to the train at Managua. Train departed Immediately for Ze laya's plantation at Diamante, where the party took breakfast. The entire party comprised 100 of Zelaya's most intimate friends, among them Joaquin Pasos. Louis Coasin, his two sons; Horatio and Alfonso, his private secre tary and James Hall, American part ner of Zelaya in Nicaraguan gold mines. Identity Not Known. After breakfasting, Zelaya and his party again boarded the train and went to Corinto, where they arrived this afternoon. The trip was made without special incident. There were no demonstra tions along the line, the population generally being unaware of the iden tity of the passengers on the special train. All the members of the party; Including Zelaya, was heavily armed. Zelaya appeared calm and cheerful. At Chinandega, news was brought to Zelaya that the United States gunboat Princeton had left Corinto to take up her position in the Gulf of Fonseca. IIOTH SIDES FIGHT BRAVELY Two nays' Battle Marked by Iesper- ate Courage Women in Trenches. BLUEFTELD8. Nicaragua. Dec. 24. No longer can the soldiers of Nicaragua, either of the revolutionary or the govern ment party, justly be called "comic opera" fighters. Details of the battle of Kama, now known here, are filled with stories of the bravery of both sides. The government troops, entrenched behind earthworks. strenthened by repeated lines of barbed wire, such as were used by the Spaniards before Santiago, were well fortified, but they did not spend all their time in defense of their positions. They made repeated sallies, fighting with Xrensled vigor against equally frenzied opponents, and etirlng at length upon their redoubts. There they were pur sued by the revolutionists, who hacked the wire with their machetes and died In heaps under withering fire. Men some times wavered, but it was because of physical exhaustion and not lack of bravery. Fighting continued two days, and ended when the government army virtually was wiped out. Zelaya's forces began with 300U men. Barely 500 escaped. Latest reports confirm the early estimates of the killed and wounded as 600. and 1900 of the government troops surrendered when they had been forced into a cul de sac and it was apparent that a contin uance of even their desperate resistance would bo useless. . The Zelava trenches were shelled first and then taken by assault. In the trenches were found several women, who had preferred the dangers of fight ing to starvation at home. Thev were courageous in action, fighting side by sldo with the men and using their rifles with spirit. One was wounded and brought to the hospital here. Many of tha oldlers were boys under 16 years old. These acquitted themselves with credit. From the beginning it was a valorous and a desperate encounter. THREE HOLD UP TEAMSTER Pockets Rifled and $3 Cash Taken Xcar Springfield. SP.RINGF1BLD. Or.. Dec. 24. (Special.) William Oott. a resident of this city, who is? employed as a teamster by tlie 'Booth-Ketly Lumber Company here, was held-up by three masked men who, point ing a gun at him. rifled his pockets while he was on hln way home from Eugene, Just outsld-a the city limits, shortly before 6 o'clock last evening. He only had J3 with him which they took. The men stepped out from the road Hide, one holiiing the horses while the others' pointed a gun and ordered him to throw up his hands. They worked quickly and disappeared in the brush. WOMAN HAS HOOKWORM Strange Case Is Diagnosed at Cali fornia Hospital. OAKLAND. Cal., Dec 24 Dr. 'Well man, professor of surgery of the Col lege of Physician? and Surgeons in Oakland, confirmed a diagnosis of. hookworm In tha case of Mrs. Marie Franceaca at the Alameda County In firmary today. Mrs. Fran'cesca is a native of the Asores. ONE HAPPY WEEK IS ALL Canllnud From First Panel name of "Bunnie" Walls, whose rres ence In a house party at Great Neck L. I., precipitated the final estrange ment. He oxriy knew that f man had alept In his private room what man he could not find out, "I wu deeply grieved," testified Bro- kaw, "to learn that a man occupied my room when there were bachelor quarters upstairs. Nobody except my self had ever slept In my bed before. I had given orders that nobody should sleep in my private room, and Mrs. Brokaw knew of it." Why Brokaw Broke Down Door. Brokaw described how close his room was to his wife's, and how he demand ed the name of the man who occu pied it. Brokaw then explained why twice he broke down the door of his wife's pri vate room. Every time he tried to talk confidentially with her, he said, either he found the door locked or there was a maid in "the room. Once, he admit ted, these tactics drove him to exas peration, and the other time he feared his wife had attempted suicide. He denied that he ever spent $30,000 in one year on his wife. A better esti mate, he said, would be 98000. During their separation he directed his lawyers to pay her $150 a week. Wife Called Jewels Paste. He denied that he ever spent $5,000 on jewels for her. "The most I ever paid," he testified, "was $1000 for her engagement ring." "Did you ever buy her any other jew elry?" "Yes, a necklace of pearls and emer alds to replace one of my mother's that she had been wearing. When I gave it to her, she said it was paste, and threw it in my face." As proof that Mrs. Brokaw was mis taken about the gems being paste, her husband said, Mrs. "Jimmy" Martin aft erwards offered to buy the necklace? AGREEMENT HALTS BY JUST ONE HITCH Striking Switchmen Want to Return to Work With No Delay. AWAIT TURNS, SAY ROADS Governor Eberhart Trying to Get Concession on This Point Chi cago Board's Decision Will Bind All Strikers. ST. PAUL, Dec. 24. Only one obstacle remains in the way of a settlement of the switchmen's strike in the Northwest as the result of the conference between COURT SKETCH OF MILLIONAIRE'S WIFE WHO IS SUING FOR DIVORCE. rt K & sT' MRS. W. GOULD BROKAW. "Mrs. Martin," he commented, with an air of finality, "does not wear paste." Both Send for liawyers. A . . . I I 4. I , . muoiici LuuL uiiio near i: u iiuiiiai- , I .11 i . . I ii uKwito luvjircuiiiKa was ue scrlbed by the witness. It occurred when he returned from an automobil ing trip. Mrs. Brokaw, he said, ac cused him of having been in another woman's company, and when he de nied it she called him a liar. The up shot of the matter was that they both telephoned for their lawyers. Brokaw acknowledged he had In structed his chauffeur not to take Mrs. Brokaw to the home of a certain wom an he did not like. He denied he tried to have servants spy upon his wife. "LITTLE TIM" IS MOURNED East Side Uncovers as Politician's Funeral Passes By. NEW YORK, Dec. 24. The funeral of "Little Tim" Sullivan attracted a large crowd to the vicinity of his home. The Bowery and the Bust Side were particularly affected by the death of "Little Tim." Of his followers, he had more than 1000 men on the city pay rolls, and he and his cousin, "Big Tim" Sullivan, were known as the most lib eral dispensers of charity to the poor of the Bowery district. A feature of the funeral was the stop made by the cortege, after leaving the house and the church, at the clubrooms of the T. D. Sullivan Association on the Bowery, which was "Little Tim's" present headquarters, and where many thousands In the street uncovered their hends while the band played a dirge. "Little Tim" Is said to have left a fortune of about $1,000,000 In his own name, besides $500,000 which he had previously divided between his wife and sister. ALFONSO WORRIES COURT Serious Affection of Ear Necessitates Operation on KJng. PARIS. Dec. 24. Gil Bias today prints a private communication from Madrid, stating that the condition of King Al fonso has created the gravest anxiety in court circles. Another operation is Im perative. Under the guise of his departure on a hunting trip in Andalusia, the King will go to the palace of the Countess of Paris, at San Lucar, where the opera tion will be performed. For some time disturbing rumors re garding the health of the King of Spain have been circulated, but the exact na ture of his ailment has been concealed from tlie public. It Is tinderstood. how ever, that the Inner ear is affected. Twice recently King Alfonso is said to have been operated upon for the re moval of a growth in the nose. OIL LAMP FATAL TO NINE Explosion in Boarding-Konse Causes Death of Whole Family. HILLSVILLE. Pa., Dec. 24. In a fire here early today, caused by the explo sion of an oil lamp in a boarding house, nine persons were burned to death. The victims, all foreigners, were a man, his wife, five children and two boarders. Cruiser to Make Fast Voyage. VALLEGO. Cal.. Dec. 24. The cruiser New Orleans, under command of Com mander Rodger Welles, is expected to sail for San. Diego early in January for the purpose of testing her before her voyage to the Orient to Join the Asiatic BQuadron of the Pacifio fleet. railroad officials and representatives of the Railway Council of the American Federation of Labor in Governor Eiber hart's office. Qoth sides are agreed on all questions except the time when all striking switchmen shall be taken back to work. The railroads offered to" take back as many of the strikers immediately as they have places for and then re-employ the others as soon as places" are made va cant. It was suggested that it may take 30 days before all of the men could be put back to work, but President Hawley, of the Switchmen's Union, said he would agree to nothing short of simultaneous re-employment of all the men. Governor Eberhart is trying to ob tain a concession from the railroads on this point and he announced this evening that the officials have already taken steps to reach some agreement. Today the striking switchmen agreed to submit the controversy to arbitration and abide by the decision of the board now being organized in Chicago to settle the dispute between the Chicago lines and their switchmen. The concessions demanded by the Twin City and Chicago switchmen are Identical. The rate of pay pending the outcome of the Chicago proceedings will be that in effect No vember 1. If the Chicago conference re sults In an increase in wages, the lines here will put it into effect. THAW NEPHEW IS DEAD Young Scotchman of Family Sought Health in Canada. NELSON, B. C, Dec. 24. John Thaw Kirkland, of Glasgow, fourth son of the late John Kirkland, Chief Justice of Scotland, died at Revelstoke Wednes day night, aged 24 years. The body is being shipped from Revelstoke to New York, to the care of his aunt, Mrs. Thaw, mother of Marry Thaw, now in Matteawan. The news, telegraphed to Nelson, caused postponement of the wedding of young Kirkland's sister. Miss Nellie Kirkland, of Calgary, and Dr. William Leslie Mar tin, of Revelstoke. John Thaw Kirkland left Scotland November 11 to travel for his health, being accompanied by his grandmother. Lady Todd Osbourn, of Newton Mearns, Scotland, and was on his way back from the coast, when he suddenly succumbed to heart failure. PINCH0T MEN PULL BACK Efrort on Foot lo Sidetrack Proposed Ballinger Investigation. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash, ington. Dec. 24. Several Senators wji'b are strong partisans 'of Pinchotare quietly exerting what Influence Tttey can to Induce Republican leaders of the Senate to sidetrack Senator Jones' resolu tion proposing an investigation of , the Forest Service and the Interior Depart ment. The Forest Service does not court the investigation at this time and has lost all interest in the probe of the Interior Department, since it has been determined to investigate their own bureau as well. Inasmuch as the President and Cabinet and many influential Senators believe that an investigation ls the only thing that will put an end to this controversy, there Is no chance that Pinchofs friends will be successful. his two helpers, Eugene Barrett and J Gordon Schaffer, and Thomas W'illiams. one of the assistant managers of the mine. Pierce, it was said today, ventured into Mine A of the Chicago & Carterville Coal Company, without a guide, with unprotected lamps and against the or ders of the mine managers and the ad vice of the miners. It is thought that ht reached the gaseous entry and was wait ing for a "straw boss" to come and pilot him out when the gas ignited. Schaffer was a stranger to the mine officials. He had been taken into the mine by Pierce as an emergency helper and his identity was not known until his body was recovered. Pierce had charge of SO mines in the Herrin district. He was making a sur vey of an abandoned section, where there had been a "squeeze," to determine the feasibility of re-timbering. SIX BODIES RECOVERED Manager, Acting Against Advice, Caused Fatal Explosion. ST. LOUIS. Dec. 24. Messages from Herrin, III., tell of the recovery early to day of the bodies of the six men whose open lamps caused a gas explosion in & colliery last night, eight deaths resulting. The bodiea are those of W. T. Pierce, BISHOP, LOST, NOW IS SAFE Church of England Prelate Suffers In Canadian Wilds. - DAWSON. Y. T.. Dec. 24. Bishop I. O. Stringer, of the Church of England Yukon diocese, for whose safety fears were felt a short time ago, arrived here yesterday after suffering many hardships, 47 days from Fort MacPherson, at the mouth of the Mackenzie River, bringing the first advices since Summer from that region. Tha bishop and Missionary Charles F. Johnson started from Fort MacPherson September 1, hoping to cross to, the head of the Porcupine River in time to reach the Yukon River last Fall with a canoe. The head of Bell River, emptying into Porcupine River, was partly frozen, so they had to walk back to Fort MacPher son. For 25 days they mushed in the blinding foga of Arctic storms,' with little food. Each man lost SO pounds in weight. STEEL PLANTS TO EXTEND Expenditure of $100,000,000 on Lake Michigan Plant Planned. CHICAGO, Dec. 24. About $100,000, 000 is to be spent hy the United States Steel Corporation and its subsidiary companies in improvements to the steel making territory from South Chicago to Gary, Ind. B. J. Buffington, president of the Illi nois Steel Company, confirmed the rumors. The extensions mean the em ployment of 5000 additional men. The Illinois Steel Company is to erect eight new blast furnaces at South Chi cago, and the Iroquois Steel Company has planned at least one new blast furnace. TEN MURDERS, ONE ARREST James Donnelly, Halfbreed, Charged AVith Two Killings. SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 24. The Federal grand jury today brought in an indict ment against James Donnelly, a half- breed Indian of Hoopa "Valley reserva tion, charging him with the murder of oscar jnapman, the reservation store keeper, December IS. 1908. This is. the second murder indictment against Donnelly, for he pleaded not guilty several days ago to the charge of murdering "Chickasaw" Harkanep, another Indian, six years ago. Ten murders have occurred in the dis trict where Chapman was killed and Don nelly is the fjrst man to be arrested for any of them. ' TAFT AIDS "WHITE SLAVER" Executive Cuts Year From Sentence of Convicted New Yorker. WASHINGTON, Dec. 24. President Taft commuted the sentence today of a New York "white-slaver" by cutting off one year from a three-year sentence. The case was that of Auguste Rous sett, a Frenchman convicted in New York of "Importing women for the purpose of prostitution and of harboring an alien woman for immoral purposes." The law making the harboring of an alien woman for immoral purposes a crime has since been declared unconstitutional. PH0SA M'ALLISTER DEAD Leading Woman for Edwin Booth, Well Known in Portland. LOS ANGELES, Cal , Dec. 24. Mrs. Harry Duffield, known on the stage for many years as Phosa McAllister, is dead at her home in Glendaie. P or several seasons she was Edwin Booth's leading woman and played with him in New York and on the road. Mrs. Duffield was born 58 years ago at Stoneham, Maine. Stockmen Must Haze Fences. FORT BIDWELL, Cal., Dec. 24. The Government has issued demands on many large landholders of this section to tear down fences they had built around large tracts of Government land, thereby holding the land against settle ment. Many thousands of acres have been held in this manner, depriving small stockmen, sheepmen and home steaders of their rights. Some are tear ing down the fences, while others will fight the demand. , Taft Pie Sent tJnder Guard. NEWARK. N. J., Dec 24. A 92 pound mince pie, a creation of the Pie Bakers Association of this city, is today on its way to Washington, where the bakers hope It will decorate the Christ mas table of President Taft. The pie makers are determined that no such fate shall befall their production on this oc casion as the case of their Thanksgiving pie, which mysteriously disappeared be fore reaching the White House. They UT JCStr " 7 .cv&f 2 IS 1 t4. OLDS, WOR TMAN & KING have sent with It a trusted " messenger, who will watch over the iron-bound oak case until it is handed to the chef at the White House. ing had disappeared. The looking for her last night. police were Mrs. Austin was down town shopping when the theft occurred. New Maid and Jewels Disappear. CHICAGO, Dec. 24. Diamonds valued at almost $4000, some in settings and more of them unset, were stolen yester day 'from a jewel casket in a dresser drawer In Mrs. William Austin's bedroom at her home. A maid who went to work in the Austin home only yesterday morn- TO MY FRIENDS AND PATRONS ' , - . -X , v s, t - - - ; - - f -: ; f f ' mill si tmn ) To you and yours I extend the greet ings of the season. May your Christ mas he one of joy and real Christmas 'cheer; your New Year one of pros perity and happiness. ' THOMPSON Second Floor Corhett Building, Fifth and Morrison. A Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year TO ALL OF OUR Friends and. Patrons OUR STORE WILL BE OPEN ALL DAY CHRISTMAS NATIONAL WINE CO. THE QUALITY STORE N. E. Corner Fifth and Stark TELEPHOXfes Mala 649j A 4499. D'Envdie SO gratifying is the volume of business with which we have been favored, that we take this means of expressing our appreciation thereof. We thank our patrons one and all; we hold ourselves in readiness to serve them whenever the occasion presents itself, and with that spirit of good will to all, we bid you. MERRY XMASf For Exacting Smokers Optimos Men who delight in a good cigar will appreciate the rare, exquisite fragrance of the Optimo. The finest all-Havana cigar made. Experts in Cuba select the choicest leaf grow u in Vuelta Abajo. Exclusive methods of ageing the leaf and the most skilful cigarmakers we can hire, make the Optimo the richest, most delicious cigar obtainable. Enjoy its rare Savor today. , Opfil'moCigars kt any good store From 3 for 25o up The Hart Cigar Co Distributors. Portland. Or. 33