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MI RIGAN 1IELD BY | Ray Caldwell’s Ren Welcomed By Yankees| ~IJMNE8E POLICE; 'l‘mnused on Forbidden Wire- -leflone-llur Naval Station n!lo. March 7.—Ralph Hoyt Thay- ok, fotmerly of Utica, N. Y., who was arrested recently on the (-harge of 5 violating the law for “secrets, ‘has been remanded Drotection: of-{ | b { i “trial and released under bond of | ' 800 yen ($300). He is charged with having’ éntered without authority the wireless station zone of Yokosuka, an important naval station - three miles -?uu:wut ot Yokohnma. . Associated Press.)—The case of h-Hoyt Thayer is attracting con- ble attention im Japun. He has imprisoned in -the Yokohama daily undergoing a secret .exam- on at the hands of 2 preliminary te. ; e judicial authorities refuse to fl‘po ‘any statement except that Thay- er was arrested as Yokosuka three ts after the explosion of the bat- cruiser Tsukuba at that port, B8 was at once taken, into cus- entering a fortified zone with- athority. Thayer -w2s a teacher 'Q;ngunn in’ St. Paul's Episcopal col- 1éke 8¢ Tokio, ani institution conducted the Anaflun Episcopal Mission. ’ e Episcopal Mission appointed a mittee. to look" after the interests. Thayer, “ho informed the Ameri- “vice consul-at Yokohama. that he treatment from ‘Japanese po- Hh friends express the opinion . he was interested in the educa- and eonvenlen of Japanese sail- "ang thlt he visited Yokosuka rely to iiiqiiire whether'any of his Udintances had been knled n the/| loston. S val officers’ hn-e been quotetl as AYiig" that. Thayer was not arrested ‘connection with the Tsukuba ex- p‘pflon as alleged by Japanese news- . R. Schofield and C. Dresser of Kobe, iployes there of the American Trad- .a ‘company, who were arrested for 0 wireless ‘telegraphy instal- lations, have been released. The au- | thorities’' found that they were mere- 1y ~men4at TR inndeent experiments. s HAVING max-mom wwwmmvm- mmflalhm Proublés a la congress have beén onting the New Eritain Gas it.company for the past two days. e has been a jeal mewhere and a leak mfln somew: -of the. e’lt!und *#""’“ mudc on jurch street andT'this mworning - on o street.. The onl, 'ny melo p find such a lesk is rough the pavemmv. to the Where the odor arises the is near where the leak is be- .,' v;d to be. ¢ The gas company slways locates §asd. repairs such leaks {mmediately, ' since any large accumulation of gas makes-possible a bad explosion. .Mmgmenry Policethan Horace has ed in his resigna- ui o’ Chief" Wmhm 5 4 Key: Rawlings would not discuss the tion excepting to intimate that _Meércure ‘has' got in line emln; that' would prevent w %dbln' duty,”as’'1s desired. It R ‘that three otler mémbers ergry force are con- ph ing 7] “like action, pamum rary J. J. O'Leary was ded the morning afier the in- ot fires on charges of u intoxicated on duty, another su- numerary is said to have received & offer of an excellent. fon in Vaterbury and the: third is over the e imit and says he does not care do special duty, if not eligible for $pointment to the regular. force. R T GRS WANT SIDEWALKS CLEARED. f'A Womun, who refused to give her jame, telephoned to police headquar- last night with a complaint that ks on Barnett street were not | of snow. | Supernumerary Po- jan Patrick WcAvay was noti- to investigate.| Charles Whaples .complained last night that the 1k at 473 Park street did not t with his idea of what a snow- place should be. The gleged le had been remedied by the | a policeman arrived. on the ‘QucH! ' LAME BACK. o RUB LUMBAGO OR - i3 BACKACHE . AWAY v Macon, Bill Donovan is happy. reason. Ray Caldwell, his star pitch- .er, is now at the training camp getting into shape.and ready to deliver t goods. Last year Caldwell quit team and was not expected to join ; thé . Yankee squad again: outward appearances Caldwell is better physicl condition than he las been upon arrival ‘at <amp in years. / It would be hazardous to make any, | KENTUCKY OFFERS FLOWER OF MANHOOD d/Denoms “Little Group of Villul Mea” as Traitors . Frankfort, Ky., March 7.—The Ken- tucky state senate yesterday passed a resolution condemning in unmeasured terms the actjon of United States Sen- ators who prevented a vote last week on the armed neutrality bill. The prémable recites that “certain un-American, = disloyal, unpatriotic, traitorous and cowardly senators, namely, Clapp,” Cummins, Gronn: Kenyon, La Follette, Norris, Works, Kirby ‘Lane O'Gormun Stone and Vardaman”, took “advahtage of sen- atorial courtesy and senate rules;’” and refused to allow safd armed neutrality bill to he voted on in the senate Rnow- jng full well that upon the passage of sald measure depended the lives of hundreds of brave American seamen.” It ‘asserts the senators knew . ‘Ger- many repeatedly had insulted the American flag, torpedoed ships in de- fiance of international law and was making earnest efforts to' bring the United States into war with Japan; that they knew the United States was swanning rman spjes and that bridges and. nition plants were be- i ing ruthlessly destroyed, “not know- ing\ how soon plots: would be uncov- | ered to ‘assaesinate our president, de- stroy our navy yards and naval and military stores; sink our ships and otherwise humiliate and discredit us among the nations of the earth.” The resolution condemns the “out- rageous action” of the senators named ! as *“‘unmanly, unpatriotic, un-Ameri- { can unparalled and unwarranted.” It ! commends “the patriotic members of 4 i with the president in both branches of congress” who stood showing that while we may have “isolated cases Right Out With Small cause backache? No! Jave no nerves, therefore can- Listen!, Your back- is caused by ‘lumbago, sciatica strain, and thé quickest relief is “St. Jacod’s OfL.” ht on your ‘painful back, a ly: the - soreness; stiftness hd lameness disappears. Don't stay d! Get a small trial bottle of ob’s ‘011" from your druggist up, A moment after it is you’ll wonder what became of Dackhche or lumbago pun. AFTER THE GRIPPE Mrs. Findley Made Strong by Vinol. 8every, Kans.—*The Grippe left me in a weak, nervoys, run-down condi- tion.: T was too weak to do my house- work and-‘could not sleep. After trying different medicines without benefit Vinol restored . my healith, strength and appetite.' Vinol is a grand medicinie and every weak, nerv. ous, run-down woman should take it.” —MRS. GEORGE FINDLEY. Vinol, which contains beef and cod liver peptones, iron and manganese Peptonates and. glycerophosphates, sharpens the appetite, aids digestion, enriches the blood, and builds up natural strength and energy. | prediction on a {ampenmenul young:: e | year’s salary, amounting to il From all | pitching art, have sobered him. \ in | sibly he will behave. A Ga., March 7.—Manager | man of Caldwell's type, who follows ‘There's a :the dictates of his whims and fancies rather than those of good judgment. But apparently the loss of half a $3,500, and the experiences he had in making a living where he .could not use his Pos- He knows he has to behave to get his salary from the training | the . Yankees, and he has found that he makes his méney easiest by 'pltcn.. ing. baseball. —_— lof Toryism, as in revolutionary days, we are true to our country as were the herdes of the American: colonies.” It concludes with a mesdage that “while Kentucky is for ‘peace with honor’, she pledges the flower of her manhood as her guarantee that she ill help defend the flag and liberty our great country.” BORDER SOLDIER AS | SPY FOR GERMANY Member of Minnesota National Guard .Wrote “That Pn!dcnt ‘Would 'Soon Be Out of ‘the W.y. : : | 1, Minn,/Match 7.—Convict- ed'of fyrnishing military information to Germany, Paul L. ‘Scharfenberg, St. Paul, private~in Company L, First Infantry regiment, Minnesota Nation- al Guard, is now a prisoner in, the United' States nilitary prison at’ Fort Leavenworth, Kan., sentenced to a of five years. X e sentence was infuctod by a court martial of regular army officers at San Antonlo, Texas, on Feb. 15. The court martial also ruled that Scharfenberg, a native of (Fermany, but a naturalized American citizen, should be dishonerably discharged from the guard. News of Scharfenberg’s _treachery. and its detection and punishment'was brought to St. Paul today by the officers of ‘the returning First Infan- try. Apparently the whole matter | had been hushed up carefully at San Antonio. A letter addressed to relatives in Germany, asserting that 10,000,000 ! Germans in.this country were ready to rise up against the government in the event of war with Gérmany, was intercepted by the British authori- ties and turned over to Washington officials, according to statements by the>officers. According to the officers the letter referred to officers of the United States army as ‘“‘cobblers,” predicted | that President Wilson would *“soon St. ,be outof the way,” and said that the government had 100,000 men on the border, but that they wouldn't stand” up if put against an efficient force. ZIMMERMANN ENDORSED. Reichstag Committee Approves of Plot z With Mexico. Berlin, March 7, (By wireless to Tuckerton).—After an executive ' sit- ting of six hours the Reichstag budget committee uhequivocally and by unan- imous vote indorsed the action of the Foreign Office in the‘{ll-starred Ger- man-Mexican project. The govern- ment’si effort to negotiate an alliance | in the eventuality of war with the United States was approved as being within the legitimate scope of mil- itary precautions. The committee expressed regrets at the miisfortune which resulted in the interception of Foreign Secretary Zim- mermann’s note. Responsibility for _loss cannot' be fixed until former Nat Even a, Rawboat Could Get T hrough | . Mine Fields Protecting American Harbors 7 Two of the most elaborate and in- tricate mine flelds that a nation ‘has ever devised for the safeguarding of a city’s water gate have been planned by-the coast artiljery and the corps of’} engineers to protect the entrance to the waters .immediately about New York. “While these fhine fields have been planned. ‘experts say, so that not even a hostile rowboat gould pass through ! | i I them unharmed, ways have been de- l vised to' permit ( ths-\m ot friendly vessels. Mines such as those shown in the picture aré le to de- stroy even the greatest vessels afloat. The destructiveness of such mines has ' been demionstrated many times in 4 Européan war. It rests with the coast artillery to supplement the defense, begun by the | navy, when the ships of an enemy\ come within. the long range 'of the great disappearing guns and mofl.s,rg, ‘with which_the forts abput New York | bristle. J Alss it.lies with the coast artillery to see.that no hostile craft may live once it has entered a mine field. ' No. 1, ready to lower mine; N, i V! 2, carrier used to cariy mines from patrol boats to place of laying; No. 8, laying mines off Fort Wadsworth, 5 s_efbidn Waif is Broyghz .- : to America For Rearing|wo - 1 . N.' Y.; No, 4, scene -aboard United States mine layer, - ‘showing mine layers ready for laying. - LABOR STRIKE BILL _ . LOSES IN SENATE Against Advertising Troubles is 17 to 14. . Hartford, March 7..—Fxgctically the first ‘test ot laber’ aentlmont in the senate was made Vesterday in the vote | upon ‘the unfavorable report of the judiciary commniittee upon the Neebe bill compelling = manufacturers - to sighify when advertising for help the presence of a strike, if existing. The vote was close: 17 to 14, in favor of accepting the report of committee rejecting ‘the ’bill. vote was at one time ‘e closer un- til Senator Bartlett of B¥idgeport, a /| member of the committee quickly MISS ELIZABETH SHELLY AND BOGOL CHBPTCHH_NIE . \ tured by the Bulgarian troops. the fighting the soldiers went around the streets burning up débris. In one partly demolished house they found a boy two years old clasped in his dead Among ‘the passengers on the Fin- land, arriving in America, was Miss Elizabeth Shelly of Shelma, Ala., whe was met at quarantine by her brother, Captain James E. Shelly of the Six- teenth cavalry. He is on duty at the border and obtained leave to o to New York. Miss Shelly was accom- panied by a Serbian boy four years old, whom she adopted after his par- ents were killed in their house at Nish.. To conform with the immigra- tion laws Miss Shelly had to g0 to Ellis Island with her protege and pro- duce the legal papers given to her at Cortu. Miss Shelly said that she left New Xork two years:ago' Yo bet' h After mother’s arms. “Bogol” was his only answer to the -soldiers when they asked his name. “Bogol” later was found wandering about the streets by a surgeon‘in the Bulgarian army, who took him to the Serbian relief unit. When she arrived at the Serbian headquarters in Corfu Miss Shelly was allowed to adopt the boy, and papers were made out in the name of Bogol: Jub Chaptchanine, the last being the name of the province of Serbia in which he was born. ‘Bogol,” was called by the \when the vote was taken. changed from: no to yes, endorsing thereby ‘his own report. " Those republicans voting with the democrats = were Senators Barnes, Salmon, Willlamson and - Hall, who though a Jlarge employer of labor, voted with the labor sympathisers. The full vote against the committee report .comprised Senators : Broder, Hemenway, Koppelman, - Whitney, Grady, Doughan, Neebe, Hurley, O'Sullivan, ' May, Barnes, 'Salmon, Williamson and Hall. ~ Those voting in. favor of the com- mittee’s report were Senators Hunt, Rogers, Klatt, Spencer, Leonard, Rolf, Hinckley, Bartlett, Quigs, .Lyman, Bdyd, Stdeckel, Brooks, Adams, Mead, Caldwell and Bissell. Senator O'Connell, an employé of the labor bureau, was not in his seat Senator MacDonald was dbsent and Senator Larkin was in the chair. NATIONAL FORESTS IN EAST. White Mountain and Appalachian Tracts Approved. Washington, March 7.—Purchase of.r 32,266 acres of land in the southern Appalachian and w‘h'lte Mountains for inclusion in the eastern national forests was authorized today by the national forestry station commission. For the (White Mountains national forest 11,116 acres in- Coos, Oxford and Carroll counties, New Hampshire, was approved. In the southern Appa- lachian 14,360 were approved for purchase in Lawrence and Winston counties, with about 1996 in Cold- well, Henderson, Macon, McDowell and Yancey counties, North Carolina; 9,640 acres in Sehandoah; 600 acres in Ocone county, South Carolina; 738 acres in Randolph county, West Vir- ginia, and 3,500 acres in Monroe county, Tennessee. TRANSPORT UNDER OWN STEAM. Seattle, March 7.~The nited States transport = Dix, whic! lett Seattle last Saturday for Manila and ‘which suffered an accident to her steering gear when 360 miles south- west of Capt Flatteryy is returning to Seattle today under hér own steam. CUBAN INSURGE IN SORE STH Must Quit o Be Dfim lm Meiocal- Says > Havana, March 7.—The . movement in Cuba apparently is ing little progress. The latest from Colonel Pujol, in cemm one section of the government. in the fleld, mention minor {enghg ments and defection of somc men officers from the rebel ranks, ¢ President Menocal made a ment last night in which he nounced as greatly exaggerated ‘| ports of the revolt now bheing" out in New York and Washington. revolutionary sympathizers, He clared that the ‘infurgent in O Province . will "either have to der or be driven into the sea. President’ Menocal sald in part:} “I am fully familiar with the paganda being carried on in New ¥ and Washingtoh hy the revolu committee:that has established in the formrer city, and hardly. b it necessary to say that the g jority of the reports published absurdly exaggerated. “The general = situation’ in could not he more satisfactq view of the special circums tending the seditious ment « in. pogress, Com der reigns in. the provinces of del Rio, Havana, and Mata well as in the major porticn @f ta Clara. Nearly all of Can dorhinated by. the loyal forces command of Colonel Pujol ai Oriente the rébels are in po only Santiage and the su territory. s “Every other district there, ing Bayamo, Manzanillo, Puerts dre, Holguin, Mayari, Victoris e Tunas, is in the hands of she | constituted ‘ authorities. ;::Refen to the map will show what; —that the Santiago rebels -‘fl surrender or be driven into:3 The following official report ing operations.in the-field was out at the prmdenml palace night: “Colonel Pujol, nvm n informs us that relative ti qu reigns in the territory under mand, there having been a few § engagements between detac his columns and the rebels. Pujol adds that all the in his district are grinding ‘fl by Thursday he expects to ished the repairs of. all bridges. culverts on_ the Cuba railroad maguey. on senger trains resume tween Ciego’ de Avila and Ci Until now trains . leaving hvobeen-hltwnolllflh . Bayamo toward the the mills are located, and are | 1a, have destroyed the property of eral Gonzalea Flavell of the insu , as well as other propert! dent Menocal, it is undes stood’ here, is, openy opposed &‘ action taken by the American officers at San in arranging agreement wm: the lnmrl!nt EG6S FOR LAFG —_— Oitizens of - Wheeling, W, Va.,; Seanator's Speech May Be “ed/py Shower. ‘Wheeling, W. Va., March 7.5 spite the fact thet chizens 1 & meeting mri‘ last night prot against his appearance here Thus Senator La Folletts 1s anxious ta ¥ his scheduled lecture. In a m reecived by Rabbi A. H. Silver, whose temple he is scheduled to | liver an address on “The Und ing of Democracy,” Senator La lette says he wiil come hera his appearante is. canceled or duties interfer. Fuhp‘ here is running llth a number of eitizéns have inti they will “rotten’égs” the he comest¥ Wheeling. At Mondayl meeting Senstor La Follette was nounced and telegrams stating thg tionp werq sent to him. He has 1 replied t6 them. A canvass ofgthe 300 uulucrlberl the temple lecture course, whom ‘semator is to.address, is being About half 'of the number have b heard from, 'and’ the sentiment P garding cancellation of Senator Follette’s ‘appearanec is about .n- divided. Unless a majority of the meml vote to cancel the e senator will be permitted to m far as the lecture course commit concerned.