Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 24, 1911, Page 1

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‘General Navarro for PRECEDED BY PEACE The Terms Provide Cessation of all Military Operations by Both Armies in District Between Juarez and Chihuahua—Supplies May be Brought From United States Free of Duty—Reyes Called From Paris. Madero Signs Armistice for Insurrectos and Mexican Government 'NEGOTIATIONS El Paso, Texas, April 23.—An armis- tice of five day beginning at noon today, and affecting the district be- tween Juarez and Chihuahua, and west of the latter city, was made effective today in an exchange of identical let- ters signed by Gen. Francisco I Ma- dero, for the rebels, and Gen. Juan Na- varro for the ernment. Supplies from /United States Free of : Tuty, - The truce provides there shall be no movemént of troops of either side dur- ing the next .five' .days and that pro- visions and medicines may be brought to either camp from the American side without payment of duty, Ojinga Not Covered in Armistice. It is noted that Ojinga, where a small federal force is besieged, Is not covered in sthe armistice, the insur- rects activities in that district being largely independent. It is expected that in the event of the settlement of the reballion in Chihuahua the situation at Ojinga and other scattered places throughout the republic will receive mattention. The moral effect of the cessation cf hostilities in Chihuahua is regarded as certain to make settle- ments in other parts of the country simple. Actual Peace Negotiations. Those present today Franeisco Madero, Sr., father of the rebel Jeader: the latter's broth ers, Alfonso, Gustavo and Raoul Ma- dero, Pasquale Orozco, the original field leader of the revolutionists; Pan- cho Vilia, former bandit and present etaunch supporter of Madero; Gius ®eppe Garibaldi and General and Se- nora Madero . The last named is ac- counted a warm supporter of taking Juarez and then talking peac Associated Press Represented. Somewhere in her Intuitions she fears that her husband would be in a better position to talk peace from | Juarez than from the hjils around it. A representative of the Associated Press was present by invitation, hav- ing been with the insurrecto forces much of the time since the revolt broke eut. Long Telegrams to Mexico City, All telegral which have. been changed in fi'. pourparlers, and fl{ documents in the case were handed | from one to another and carefully read | By all, including Senora Madero. The | Jeaders under Mi.dero assured the lat- | ter. as they have done before, that any terms arranged by Bim would be | faithfully kept by then|. When the eonference adjourned for luncheon, a long telegram was despatched to the City of Mexico. Presumably, it su gests detailed changes or additions in the outline plan which serves as a basis for discussion. The terms of the | armistice are as follow: Terms of the Armistice. 1--Both forces which operate in the | rectangle formed by principal points | of Chihuahua, Juarez, Caras Grand and Minaca, shall remain at the points they actually occupy on this day (April | 22), with neither side advancing, nor | forwarding of reinforcements, | All Work to Ceass. All work on fortifications, trench- | battlements or any and all deserip- ns. on tha repairment of railroads or ldt'" military works shall be suspend- the Dolivery of Supplies. It shall be permitted to bring in bi way of Juarez all provisions, for- age, clothing, medicine, and other ne- | cessitles of life witheut payment of | duty. Intoxicating liquers are exclud- | ed from this provision, i Remain in Effect Five Da: | —This armistice shall remain in ef- fect flve days beginning today at 12 oclock noon. The lssuing of Passes. 5—Passes to and from camp shall be granted to members of the Madero family, peace commissioners, those hauMng supplies and others whose le- gitimate duties require their passage to and from camp. The form of tne pass =hall be agreed upom. Madero First to Sign. General Madero was the first to sign | ihe =mmistice. -~ He placed #t in the hands of Oscar Braniff and Torrible Enaquivel Obregon, who rode on their mission Lo Juarez. General Navarro then signed an identical letter with | my. | house at Neuilly-sur-Seine, | borders of the Bols de Boulogne | cannot he is either ignorant or waste- | the bandit, but Col. Don ¥Francisco Villa, on service in the cause of lib- erty. Don Pancho’s Spesch. At Bustillos he made a speech one night, with the stars looking down on the limitless brown mesa and the dim mountains in the background. “In | Chihuahua they call me a bandit. They | are wrong, The chiefs in Chihuahua are the real robbers. 1 am a gentle- | man compared with them. Compared ! with the outfit [ never knew the rudi- ments of robbery, With honest men in office there will be no bandits in Mexico.” % A Big Man Physically. So Don Pancho—Pancho being short for Francisco—was highly pleased to- day and as an evidence of his new- found respectability submitted for the | first time in his life to having his photograph taken. He is a big man physically, and the fiercest eyes in the world. It is not heaithful for a ban- dit to have his photograph scattered about, but for a colonel in a righteous cause—that is .very different. Reyes Called to Mexico. Paris, April 23.—Gen. Bernardo Reyes, the Mexican ex-minister of war, has received a call from Presi- dent Diaz to return at once to Mexico. Diaz asks his aid in the attempt to settle the revolution. General Reyes expects to sail for New York within a fortnight, perhaps within a week. Has n Living a2 Quiet L This, in brief, is the distinguished =oldler’s declaration to the Associated Press. For many months General Reyes has been living the life of a retired officer, quietly engaged in re- search work on the important prob- lem of reconstructing the Mexican ar- Now all is changed. The Reyes on the s the center of intense activity. Men are coming and going and whispered conferences are continually under way. As thousands of Sunday strollers were u’n&n; beverages in the cafes nearby, neral Reyes, eager and young is study sur- rounded by a heap of documents, bent over his desk, arranging and discuss- bl plans for his mew and what he L % g €8 -Help His Country, ng “I-am going Home to help my coun- t he said-‘this afternoon. After all. my military mission in Eurcpe is terminated. I am only too happy to urn to try to end the present cri- T am going back to help President and the Mexican peopl $12 A WEEK ENOUGH FOR FAMILY OF FIVE Magnus Alexander Believes It Suffi- cient if Not Wasteful. Diaz Boston, April 23.—An adult male can | cently support a family of five on | a year or $12 a week, and If he| des 3 00 ful, declared Magnus Alexander, mem- ber of the Massachusetts commilssfon on workmen's compensztion, In an ad- drese last night before the Tiwentieth Century club. “If we should advance the worlter today a dollar or two weekly,” he said, “It is_doubtful if we should ma- terially reduce his poverty and it is more ihan likelr he would but add te his_economic wastefulness.” Mr. Alexander said he found 10,000 employes of a certzin large Massachu- setts manufacturing company Nving | comfortably on from $10.96 to $12.15 paid to the head of the house as an| average weekly wage. Of this income, from $3 to $5 went for rent, sixty- | five cents for heat and light and from $4.25 to $5 for food. SUPERINTENDENT BOWYER MUST MAKE APOLOGY | Meyer Orders Reparation for Slight te Miss Beers at Naval Academy Hop. | Washington,” April 23.—An apology from Capt. John M. Bowyer, superin- tendent of the naval academy, to Miss Mary H. Beers and her father, Pro- fessor Beers of Yale, has been ordered by the secrelary of the navy for a slighting remark about Miss Reers made by some one at the academy as a result of her attendance at a reeent hop there. Miss Beers was govern- | tack by the .democratic house of rep- whieh the messengers returned to the | ©®s in the family of Lieutenant Tar- yebel camp, Braniff is a wealthy cit- | Tant, and her escort was later inform- $sen of the City of Mexico and an am. | €d that he should not have invited #teur sportsman and aviator. Obregon | the Young woman because of her posi- | §¢ a prominent lawyer of the same eit, The Peace Meeting. | /s peace meeting began in the rear | of nn adobe house on the banks of the Ria Grande across from the smeiter on the American side, Crowds of sighteeers had crossed from the Amer- fean side. and a gnard was thrown #reund the house and its meagre, dus- ty grounds to protect ihe con Luxuries Tessed to Soldiers. For the most part, the soldiers were eooling their hands and feet in the Weter, or giving much needed atten- tien to their linen. Their wiry, stunt- ed ponies, the very backbone of guer- {lla warfare, searched the hillside vain- knee Geep in Many . or waded 4. ] of the ners had breught huin portions of which, with peanu anges. and the like. they tossed across to the iusurrectos, who laughingly scrambled for the #dbits to which they had been so long strangers. Discussion Becomes Businesslike. Meanwhile, the sun growing too Het, entered . which had inesslike and 7. A, Sciiw Ly pleas- £ bge Dbids.jis 70 years old; his wife is 69. 1 it~ | < _into the fleld | and olacated Don ‘ho. Fle put ambition info the soul of the robber | nel the lafter hegan a recrufting cam hich presently gave him fiv men. He was no lol 1 nger Villa, with the Ca tion, OBITUARY. Mrs, Gertrudo Knapp Payne. Washington. April 33.—Mrs. Ger- | trude Knapp Payna, wife of Represen- | tative Serano T. Payne of Auburn, N. | Y., for years republican leader of the house and chairman of the wavs and | means commiittee, dled here today. Mrs. Payne had been ill of liver trou- ble for three months and her life snd ed on tha g8th anniversary of her | marriage to Mr, Payne. i At her-bedside in her last moments were Representative Payne amd their | son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. | William K. Payne of New York city Mrs. Payne was 66 :ears old and a! native of Amburn. i Alexander McCabe. Provid; Alexander 3 X years of Si. 8t. Paul's cathedral and a‘ well known muesician, dled at his Rome in this city yesterday. He was a composer of music for or- gan and band and had traveled all over the country as coneert master and acting leader of the American band of | Providence. He was 51 vears old. organist | [ Golden Waedding of Mr. and ‘Mrs. Schwab. April 28—Mr. and Mrs. 5 , parents of (‘harles M. {Schwab, the steel megnate, celebrated.) itheir golden wedding anniversary at their home here today. Mr. wab Carnegie to Ne a Witness. ; ew York, April 23.—Andrew Car- negie and his fiscal agent, R. A. rauks, are to h» called before the grand jury 0 testify concerning tneir relations |- Megie Trust comaany Amoy, China, April ;I.—Dnnng. the last two weeks there were 29 deaths from the bubonic plague and seven deaths from city. Berlin, April 23.—Defalcations ag- gregating $50,000 have been discoverea in the accounts of the Womai's Red Cross for the ° Colonies, a prominent social and philanthropic n. London, April 23.—A return - ‘ed by the finance committee of the London: county council shows that the net debt of London—inclading that of the corporation—was on, arch = 31, 1910, 111,043,088 ‘pounds, an increase of 421,553 pounds on the previous year. TLondon, April 23.—An ‘invention for covering ships’ bottoms with glass, with a view to securing greater spee: and a saving in coal consumption, has been patented in this country. Ar- rangements have already been made for testing the practicability of the process on an ocean going steamer. VERMONT WOMAN TO & . BE TRIED FOR MURDER Accused of Shooting a- House Painter at Her Home. Guildhall, Vt.,, April 23.—The atten- tion of this mnorthern New England community and all Vermont, as well, is centered on tae antiquated wooden courthouse where, forsaking their su- gar making and spring farming; the Essex county talesmen will-assemble . i ‘this week and next for the trial of Mrs, J. Marshall Dodge of Lunenberg, -who is charged .with inurdering William Heath, a house painter. ‘Although the court convenes next Tuesday, attorneys concerned say that the Dodge case may not be called be- fore Monday, May 1. Not since the conviction and execution of Mrs. Mary Rogers for the murder of her husband, six years ago, has a woman been placed on trial for her life in Vermont, The social prominence of Mrs. Dodge, who is a well to do widow, and the absence, so far as popular knowiedge is concerned, of any apparent motive for the murder, lend added interest to the present cas: Much mystery surrounds the death of Heath. The man was painting the interior of a bedroom of Mrs. Dodge’s home in Lunenberg on September 17 last when neighbors heard three shots fired. They rushed to the house, as Mrs. Dodge appeared crying for help, and found Heath's body on the .floor of the bedrdom. Mrs. Dodge, who is the only other person known .to have beéen in the house, said she was in the kitchen when she heard the shots fired. The ‘medical examiner decided .from the autopsy that Heath could not have committed “suicide. Only one of the bullets took effect and it seemed ap- parent that the painter had been shot ‘while ‘his back ‘was towerd the door of the bedroom. € A revolver discovered in the bed- room was found to have been formerly the property of Mrs. Dodge’s husband, who was high sheriff of Essex county previous to his death. Mrs,. Dodge was arrested, but was soon allowed her liberty in $12,000 bail and since then has resumed her active part in the social affairs of the town WAR ON. THIS WEEK Republican Leaders Preparing to Make Vigorous Battle Against. Bill, Washington, April 28,—The first, at- resentatives upon the schedules in the Payne-Aldrich tariff W will bégin tomorrow. With the Canadian reci- procity bill disposed of ‘as far as -the house is concerned, the lines of bat- tle are being drawn over the bill in- troduced by Chairman Underwood of'| the ways and means committee, and approved by the democratic caucus, placing on the free’list many manuafsc- tured articles calculated to benefit the farmers of the country. That the bill will pass the house is unguestitoned, but there will be a tur- bulent and prolonged debate, and the division of the final. vote will be far different from the vote on the reci- ‘procity bill.” Republican leaders de- clare that at. least three-fourths of the sixty-seven republicins who voted with the democratic majority for the { reciprocity ‘bill will be found this time standing vaiiantly by the minority and ‘the republitan protective policy. tive pelicy. HEROIC WORK BY A BOSTON POLICEMAN Rescued an Invalid and Maid During Fire at “The Arlington.” Boston, April 23.—One invalld guest was rescued by a police officer and a maid was taken out uncomscious from loss of blood, in-'the course of a fire in the fashionable apartment hotel, { “The Arlington,” in the Back Bay dis- trict, early today. The blaze, which was confined to the basement, filled the upper apartments with, smoke, driving the occupants to the roof and fire balconies in their night glothes. Mrs. Catherine Tisdale, an Invalid, was carried from the fourth floor by police officer Michael Boyle, who also rescued Gertrude Davey, = metd, whom he found unconscious at the door of her room as a result of the loss of blood Trom cuts in her grms where she had broken a window ih her efforts to The property loss was small zet out, CHECK IN BOTTLE FOUND BY GIRL. Thrown Off a Vessel to See if It Would Reach Shore. Pittsburg. April 2 -A check incles- ed in a bottle and thrown into the sea from a vessel off the coast of the Car- olinas by a Pittsburg ker,on March 18, to .mee if it would rn up was received by the Lincein National bank last week. The check was for $1 and was made out to “bearer.” Pearl Ethridge, an 11 year old girl, of Kitty Hawk, N. found the bottle near Kill Devil's Hill on the sea coast on April 12, and sent the check to the The pioney was forwarded to ex-Governor HI. April —Abiram erly governor of the is seriously i1l i his home in this city. A carbuncle developed two wecks ago, and his condition has be- come aggravated by complieations. Mr- Chamberlain is 70 years old. He is 2 leading Connecticut. banker and busi- ness man ’ $15,000 Fire at Thompson Thompsonville, Conn., April 23.—A tebacco warehouse owned by Waldo S. Balimar and. jts contents were de stroyed by fire today. with a loss of { $5,000 on the building and $10,060 on| cased tobacco, tol . The fire is thought. to- have been of incendiary origin. — e Knitting Mills in Bankruptcy. Ttiea, N. Y., Apfil 22.—The Victor Mills Knitting company of Cohees has filad. 4 petition in bankruptey. - claims are something ever half a mil- lion ‘dollara smallpox reported in this) oy THIRTY-TWO KILLED BY COL- DETECTIVE BURNS LOCATES Al \ LAPSE OF A BRIDGE, “PLANT?. IN. AN OHIO TOWN: CON THE KOWIE RAILWAY “WAS Hi E’fflfl'&"flo’l{flid. to Connect Inter- national Association of Bridge and Structural Men ‘With 80 Explosions. DDEN IN A SHED —— Moct Appalling Wreck n South Afri oa’s Railway Histor/—Gi-l Hung Over Ravine by 9ne F13%, Saved. Indianapolis; Ind., April 23.—Investi- gation,that was expected to show, ac- cording to the police'and Walter Drew, attorney for the National Erectors’ as- sociation,, that Indianapolis for two yvears has been the headquariers of a conspiracy which has resulted in-eighty destructive ,explosions of dys-‘amlte. causing a property loss of $2,000,000 or ‘more, continued today and tonight, af- ter the ‘sensatiorial’ adrest of JOhn J. McNainara, secrefary-treasurer of the Intern: Association of Bridgeand Strudtural-Tron Workers, late yest day. . _ . 5 7 Large "Force of Datectives. Ten assistanty-of 'Detective William J. Burns, employed. by the National Frectors’ .assoeiation, worked with the local police- and detective department. Members Ran “Open Shops.” The Erectors’ assoclation, it is said, represents In its ‘membership eighty per cent. ‘of the structural steel and iron ‘contractors. in the United States. ‘Against them In their effort to oparate ‘open shops,” its. officials assert, ex- plesions “of dynamite under bridges, viaducts and buildings - from Spring- fleld, Mass., to-the Pacific coast have been.dlrected. 21-Lives Lost at Los Angeles. It was after the most serious of the explosions, that which wrecked the Los “Angeles Pimes building, costing the lives of 21 persons, that the indict- mients ‘were returned by a grand . jury upon. which were arrested hera John J. Mc¢Namara, and in Detroit alleged to be Jam er of John J. Mc] McManigle. ‘More Arrests May Follow. Rumors were many _tonight that more arrests here were impending, but the police refused to discuss them. President Ryan -and-other . officials of tho bridge and struetural iron workers 3wlted,‘]n their ' ‘headquarters . all y. Grahamstown, Cape Colony, Union of South Africa, April 23.—According to the latest estimates, 32 persons were killed . in the wreck of a passeénger train on the Kowie railway, when it plunged. to destruction into a gorge 250 feet deep through the collzpse of the Blaauwkrantz bridge yesterday. Most Appalling Wretk in South Africa In addition many were injured, some of them fatally. It was the most ap- palling wreck in the history of South African railway: g Scenes. o ‘The rescue work involved heartrend- ing experiences -and _the’extrication of - the vinjured and dyving from the debris wus accompanied by terrible ‘groans and cries. in Wreckage Many Hours. A large mass of wreckage lodged on a ledge 120 feet down, and it was many hours before all were removed from the difficult crags and hoisted in sacking to the lip of the gorge. One litile girl had a miraculous es- cape. She was caught in a fork of ths bridge and held by one foot over the ravine. The rescuers had to scale gir- ders to the height of two hundred feet to bring her down. NO WARM WEATHER FOR SEVERAL DAYS Storm on Pacific Coast Today to Reach Here Thursday or Friday. ‘Washington, April 23.—No warm weather may be expected over North America for several days, at least, if the weather bureauw's deductions tonight from the distribution of high pressure are borne out. The principal storm is expected to reach the Pacific coast during Monday or Monday night, heading east with ‘accompanying rains and reaching the Atlantic states Thursday or Friday. SMALLPOX RAGING IN NEW BRUNSWICK. Forty Cases at Fox Creek and Two Schoolhouses Have Been Closed. { ara, and Ortie E. Books' of Organization Taken. Daybreak this morning found the offic! of tha association and their counsel in vielept controversy with the private detéctives, the lozal police and Attorney Drew as to whether or not a search ‘warrant held by Burns vested. in him power to seize the books Moncton, April Nearly forty cases of smailpox have ceveloped at ¥ox Cresk and al)ag the Painsec road, just outside of this city, and in an gitempt to prevent further spread of the disease twd schwihcuses have CYesEd el > qcasés arz of a mild type. Thevs are cases . of smalip>: in -this city Hyland- finally removed books to police quarters, swhere it was, safd - a -transcript: would' he made of receipts and” expenditures:made by au- rity: of etery “Mch = | o~ Expert Cuts Safe Locks. Mr. Drew said these entries would be Offered as evidence when tiie case was ‘brought . to ‘frial at Los Angéles. The books were taken from a safe in the offices of the associatlon after an expert had cut th2 locks. Four Bundles of Dynamite Hidden. The custodian of- .the building in which the offices of-the Iron Workers’ asgociation are told the Indianapolis police. today. they say, that McNumara asked.him for permission to huild the compartment in the basement in which they allege explosives were discovered iast night -EHere, the police say, old ‘books and ‘lefterfiles of tho associa- tion ware piled indiscriminately aboéut four es of dynamite. Dynetits Supply at Tiffin, O. received here tonight thre which havs orginatcl from the T Creek ‘and: Pzinsec read district. BiLL MAKES IT ILLEGAL TO CARRY CIGARETTES. ok of | Colorado Women's Clubs Anti-Cigarotte Measure. Denver, “April 28.—The lower house of the legieslature has passed a dras- tic anti-cigarette hill, which at the time it was introduced was consider ed a joke. The bill makes it a mis- demeanor to buy, sell, give away or| have in one's possession cigarettes or cigarette papers. Credit for the passage of the meas- n to the Federted Women's have conducted a lobby several weeks at the state house. Friends of the bill declare that it will pass the senate. on the offices 1 Association of | nere & night, went today; asserted | that 7 N Betieen thres hom | known. ¢ The statement praises Me- Namara. Gompers Says “It's Outrageous, ‘Washington, April 23.-—President Gompers of the American Federation said today that the arrest of Imter- national Secretary John J. McNamara of the bridge and structural iron work- ers of America, at Indianapolis, last night, was a grossly outrageous| kid- napping and attributed the arrest to enemies of organized labor and a plot of money interests to destroy labor unions, Alleged Confession Cas: Chicago. April° 23—Capt. Stephen | Woods, chief of the Chicago detective bureau, said tonight that a full con- fession had been obtained from one of the men arrested in Detroit, in con- nection with the dynamiting of the Los Angeles Times building, Covers Ninety Pages. The alleged confession is said to cover ninety typewritten pages and to relate to the movements of the men now under arrest, and others sought by detectives. Describes Whole Dynamite Programme According to Captain Wood it de- scribes in detail the dynamiting of buildings, railroad trains and facto- ries, where conflicts between union and non-urion labor existed. The loss of many lives and the destruction of property valued at almost 82, o.ooo] is said to be detailed, To Be Used in Los Angeles Triali The chief of the Chicago detective department said the confession was placed in the possession of attorneys representing the National Erectors’ as- sociation and has been sent to Los An- geles to be used in the trial of the cases against the men under arrest. More Arrests Expected. “The confession was made at the home of Detective Reed of the Chicago police depariment, in South Chicago,” said Captain Wood. More arrests in the case are expected and any disclos- | ed 3 four hundred pounds of dy- namite was found . there. Explosive Hidden in a Shed. The detectives said the dynamite was contained in & rough wooden box and hidden in:a- shed in the rear of the home of -James McManigle, father of Oritie E. McManigle, one of the men indicted relative -to ithe Los Angeles Times building explosion. who was ar- rested at Detroit and is now being taken to Los Angeles. Betweén 300 and 400 Ponnds Found. Detective Burns was accompanied to Tifin from this eity by J. A. G. Ba- dorf, mssistant to Waltar Drew, coun- sel for the National Erectors’ associa- tion. Emtering the shed at lcMani- gle’s home, where they arrived just after- nightfaill, thev asert they found a wooden partition with a locked door in ‘which was the box. Detective Burns was prepared with a key which fitted the lock of the box: The dynamite was tightly packed and it w, estimated the total number of sticks weighed ‘between 300 and 400 pounds. Looking for More Dynamite. Chief of Police Myers of Tiffin was with Burne -and Badorf when the dy- namite was found.- He set a guard of two policemen over the shed for the night. After having uncovered the dynamite -at Tifin. Burns and Badorf engaged an automobil> and went to Bicomville. ‘O., where they said they expected to find. another cache of ex- plosives. Alse Did the Springfield Job. Springfield. Mass., April 23.—A pri- vate:detective who ‘said hs was sent ‘here from. Boston, to inquire about the reward offered . for the arrest of the person .who set off a charge of dyna- | mite under the tower of the municipal | building several weeks ago told the i Springfield nolice today that the man | who-commiited the deed is under ar- irest in Chicage. o detectiva mald i that his” information in regard to the arrest in Chicago came from Willlam { 3. Burns, who has . been investigating | the Los Angeles Times explosion. The local police have. wired Chicago for According to the dastec- ¢ the man, under ar- ” in Los Angeles { this time would make them almost imposstible. Confession Followed Third Degr “While here the men under arrest | were never in ~communication with Declaring. that the police had “kid- napoed” . 3. Kc}\‘(an‘:m ind that the ‘finding of dynamit | & storage com- ‘partment ,boTon;_l&c'&v the officers of taral sron workeus was ot broot of | Extradition Papers Al Ready. MeNamara's, gullt, becauss detectives |- .“g:e; the.Cailgnale siihoriUes mere ‘had often ‘e " evidence against|notiféd at once.aud wfter indictments Diag ¥ wk St 2ie | had been returned there the extradi- TOH . Worke tion papers were hurried-here. -Not un- | Z{ 1il these papers were received was |.any move made to others, want- ed in the case, under arreat. Confessor Told of Dynamite Plants. “The ‘plants’ of dynamite, found since the . (ndianapolis arresis, -were told- of in the confession and the names. and whereabouis of other men. now heing sought, are known to ihe . detevtives.” panion was a prisoner in the same house. ' They were questioned Inces- santly and finally a confession was ob- tained from one of them._ organization is _to the use of the doastruction of v 1in_labor disputes.” “to withhold juds- until the facts are { Matthows, was shot through the head | all at the same time, each other and neither knew that his ! bt s - ‘Rear Admiral Richard incl “died at the naval hospital. Ernest Schenning of was hurled from an au Cal. Francis. T. Walton, who wis known as Plunger Walton, is dead. The Aged Emperor of Austria is again having trouble with his throat. 'The Harmon Boom has Dbeen launch- ed by the: Ohio congressional delega- tion, : : Quaritities of Arms and Ammunition for the rebels were seized at Carrizo Springs, Tex. Twelve Election Officials who stuffed bailot boxes in New Orleans yere sent up for 13 months. Professor Aitken of Lick observa- tory does not believe there is any life in the planet Mars. All Officers of the Confersnce for| Education in the south were re-elected at Jacksonville, Fla. Revenue Receipts Are More than holding their own, while customs re- ceipts show a decrease. Henry M. Tracey was appointed re- ceiver for the Enferprise Casualty company of Philadelphia. -A, E. Arnett, town marshal of Mc- Cloud, Ok, was shot to death by twe burglars. ~The latter escaped. Charles Consargo, an alleged Black Hander, was acquitted in Wilkes-Bar- re of the murder of Joe Castittin. The British Government’s long- standing copyright bill passed second reading in the h of commons. A Resolution Was Introguiced in the house, ‘asking the president to explain the resignation: of ‘Ambassador Hill. D. O. K. DeHartier, who shot Sheriff, and killed by a posse on Lake St. Clair. Stockholders of the Philadelphia & Reading Railwvay Co. voted an in- crease in capital stock from twenty to forty-five, millions. Qiona Alongi, Charged with being a member of the Black Hand society, was sentenced to five years in_ Fort Leavenworth penitentiary by Judge Landis. Discoveries in the Development of the new sclence of cosmogny were announced by Professor See at the meeting of the Philosophical society of Pennsylvania. Gaetano Esposito, a Camorrist, in the trial at Viterbo, after a mad har- angue, tore out hig glass eye and hurl- ed it at the presiding judge, causing & tremendous sensation. Eleven Commercial Organizations of Baitimore have flled complaint with the . interstate commerce commission against the switching charges of the afs- centering T Mthe eity. Mayor Hayes of Altoona, Pa., 2 'bill’ in equity agdinst officers and rectors of the Keystone State Build. ing_and Toan association, charging them with “having wrecked the- in- stitution by improvident management.” FIRE CHIEF CROKER LANDS A NEW JOB Will Head the American Museum of Safety’s Section of Fi New York, April 23.—Chief Croker, who is to quit the fire department on May 1, has accepted the chairmanship of the section of fire of the American Museum of Safety of No. 29 West 39th sireet. Arrangements have been com- pleted for the installation of an exhibit hall. This will be completely eguipped with actual devices for the prevention of fire. Jle will also prepare manuals of safety to be printed in different lan- guages for use in mills, factories and shops, From his practical experience with fire, Chief Croker will advise on fire drills and other safety appliances for fire prevention. MADERO A VEGETARIAN. Neither Drinks, Smokes, Nor Eats Meat, Says Proud Father. El Paso, Texas, April 23.—Francisco Madero, Sr., and the other imembers of the peace mission went to the in- surgent camp yesterday. The elder Madero, who is exceedingly proud of his son, told of the remarkable change in the insurgent leader's way of liv- ing about a year ago. “It was remarkable,” said the fa- ther. “My. son, he liked good wine and good beer, you know, and good food of all kinds. He was what you call a good fellow. One day he just quit everything, almost. He stopped drinking and smoking and eating meat, He won't even vegetarian.” eat eggs. He's a CHILD DJED AFTER EATING JELLY BEANS. Hiness Due to Arsenic Poisoning. < Warwick, R. L. April 23.—After eat- ing some jelly beans last might, Barl Johnson, aged seven vears. was taken ill and died e v today in onvulsions. Dr. J. Edward Duffy. whe attended him, thought that the iliness was due to arsemic poisoning, and re- ported the matter to the. faderal au- thoritiex who will make an analysis of the confection. r A few daye ago United States Tood Inspector Reynor of Boston seized a gquantity of jelly beans in Providence, | claiming that thay did not meet the requirements o? the pure food law. beth; N. 4y | - to and killed. " | CHARLEL K. HAMILTON HAS A | {"CLOSE CALL AT MERIDEN. 'MACHINE BADLY SMASHED Tilting Machine Failed to Come Back After He Had Dodged a Tree—Fall - Witnessed by 5,000 Persons. New Britain, Conn., April 23— Charles K. Hamilton, the aviator, nar- rowly escaped serious infury here to-. day befcre 5,000 spectators when three-passenger Burgess-Wright bi plane which he was. trying out for the flrst “time: fell to the ground from a helght-of 80 feet. * Escaped With a Shaking Up- Hamilton escaped with a shaking up, but the machine was wrecked and will have to be practically rebufit. 5,000 People Witnessed the Fall ‘Since’ Hamilton's flight here - last summer there- been a great inter-' t taken in aviation and fully 5,000 gald assembled at what is known as week. A tent had bzen built on the grounds, where flights are to be held this summer, and around this the pen- Dle had gathered. Tilting Machine Didn't Werk. Hamilton arosa easily from the ground and started to fly over a hill on the top of which stands a tres, to aveid which he turned to the Jeft, tili- ing the machine, which he easily right- ed. .Immediately after making the fire: turn he was obliged to make another, but the tilting machine failed to come ‘back this time and the plane dropped nose-first into a hollow. Machine Badly Smashed. - When the machine landed the for- ward part stuck into the ground amd Hamilton was thrown into the wirss, escaping with a shaking up. The ms- chine was so badly smashed that ft will have to be practically rebuilt. An- other machine I8 expacted to arrive in a few daya and the flights will-be een- tinued. “FALSE SUICIDES” TO DECEIVE HER HUSBAND Woman Made Two Attempts to Create Impression She Was Drowned. ‘New York, April 23.—A middie aged, well dressed woman who gives the name of Mre. Olivia F. Maxwell of Springfield, Mass., and ims twice made it appear recently that she committed suicide by jumping from a Fall River ling. boat, ‘was arrésted tonight aund placed in Bellevue hospital for exam- ination as to her sanity. On April 3, when the Fall River limer arrived here from Providence, R. L, it was_ {irst _reported that Mrs. M: had Aisappe number of graphs, a si waist, an umbrella, a #atchel and a memorandum book found in a stateroom she had o and a note said that she had asked a Irm of ‘dttorneys to withdraw a. suit against Gilbert Maxwell of North Adams, Mass. On April fth the police say that Mrs. Maxwell went through similar actio=s, but this time in addition to clothes found in her stateroom there was an unaddressed note in which she sald she was going to jump “Into o6 broad.expanse,” and adding: “I forgive all who have wronged me.” The arrest of the woman tonight waw made at the Fall River pler, just - she was about to board & boat fur Providence. In the night court she sob- ‘bingly admitted that she had tried ta decdive her husband by false cides. PRESIDENT TAFT TALKS ON UNITARIANISM ary to Show That It Christianity. April ‘Washington, Unitarians to stand forth and aid the ~A plea to creed and to provide in Washington “a principal church” to correspond with the cathedrals of other denomi- natigns. was made by President Taft today at the regular service in All Souls’ Unitarian church, of which he is a regular attendant. In his speech mada from the platform of the chureh, in the interest of a movement for a large Unitarian edifiice, he referred to the discussion ef his religious faith during his presidential campaign. The president said that to some pee- pleit may not seem a necessary task to have a church which should show to the country what Unitarianism is. “ one who has run for office.” said he, “and has received telegrams from Va- rious parts of the country sayi ‘It is reported here that you are a |- tarign; telegraph at once to this outrageous report, will undes- stand .the necessity for showing what Unitarlaniem is and that it is pro- gressive Christianity, illustrating and ®yrrying forward as the supreme iGeal the fatherhood of God and the broti erhood of man.” TORRINGTON WOMAN RUN DOWN BY AUTO Mrs. John Cahill Dragged by the Ma- chine Several Fi Terrington, Conn., April 23.—Mri John Cahlll, while walking along the Litehfleld read today, was struck and seriously injured an automobile driven by Edwin Hitthcock of Win- sted. The womau, who ix apout farty yeays old, was knocked down and dragged underneath the machine for several feet before it was stopped. She was taken ie her home and “Boy Broker” in Boston Jail. Boston, April 23.— Reb the “boy broker,” who from Boston six months ago after a meteoric career on State street and landed In New York yesterday from Rio de Janeiro in custody of detectives, is locked up in the Charles street jail tonight. - Tomerrow . morni appear In the.superior criminal court to answer to the charge of embezzle- ‘ment. 3 Fifteen Day Fast Fatal, Toronto, Ont. April 23.—Herbert Deverell of No, 128 Chester strest is dead here os the resuli of & fifteen day fast, which he underivok iu the hepe of curing a slight illness. Two yi age he successfully fusted fyr. wesls, and fifieen day me anether, which he intende eighteen days. he will§. - |ot; aside from cuts and bruises it is fear- ed t she is injured internally. Hitcheock was arrested and later re- leased to appear in court tomorrow morning to answer to a charge of reck- less driving. MI88 CROWLEY'S BODY RAISED BY DYNAMITE. Young Woman Cemmitted e in Fit of Melanchelia. Eranford, Cenn., April 23.—The bedy of Miss Mollie Crowley, who commit- ted de. Saturday by drowning in the ord river, was recoversd o after the rivar had been dynamit Miss Crowley was sbout 20 years il for threa years had besn em- at the home of Dr, T. B. Dou- . which sbe left suffering cholia following the %Droum to an institution. ‘The Body. was recovered within a few fest of a spet on the bank where one f her shoes Was found vesterdey. B

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