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May Take the MEMBERS OF THE CABINET ARE OPTIMISTIC President Wilson and Cabinet Deliberate on Developments at Niagara—Message to Washington from Peace Confer- @M»%“Hflefll’s Envoys as Saying the Agrarian Question Would Not be Permitted to Disrupt Discuss Actual Tefms and Details of a Pacification Plan. the cabinet were unanimo: all communications that befween President Wilson and the American commissioners Falls. ¥ 1t was deciared ‘ffom an official source that negotiations had so far progressed that a preliminary basis for peace so- lution of the international difficulties had been reached. This, » would soon take the form ‘Washington, May- 26.—Members of tie today after, an exhaustive review of ean gmediation conference at Niagara Form of a Protocol te be Signed by Agents of Huerta and the United States usly optimis- have passed to the Mexi- it was said, of a protocol which probably would be signed by agsnts of-General Huerta's governmens and the United States. What would be the terms of such a protocol no-one would. disclose, When the cabinet met the president | Jaid before. it the developments that have come day By day in the exchanges between the American c ‘ommissioners and the mediators and the stipulations thus far proposed to the South Amer- ican envoys by the representatives of ‘Gen received erta.. Among the messages peace conference was one confirmative of press despatches that one of Huerta's own envoys had dec] agrarian question wonld n that the ot be permit- ted to disrupt;the international effort tu avert war between the United States n the ‘was in members were in a he Meeting - ad- an unusually W?&kmallfln but all he :M' to say d_*‘.l-tiold'wlz that l: ly. But he twinkied when he £ of indicate’ ,umns: as States, were conce: me.: . ‘There were, no developments in-the {’““&:‘7 situation teday so far as the i the Mexican ' a willing- to the cout- rned. Secre- 7 DISCUSS ACTUAL TERMS OF PACIFICATION Agresment on Many of Main Points Have Been Reached at Niagara. Niagara Falls, Ont, May 26.—Sub- stantial agreement on many of the main points involved in the mediation conference has been reached by the American and Mexican delegates, The discussion today covered the actual terms and details of many of the things deemed necessary to the pacification of Mexico. The mediators and the opposing delegates were de- cidedly optimistic. An early agree- ment is now looked for. The situation was summed up in the following announcement by Jus- tice Lamar, upon the authority of the mediators: ks “We have begun to disguss the act- ual terms and details of a plan of pa- cification. On a number of them we find ourselves in substantial agree- ment. Others are still under discus- sion and to them there has been no disagreement.” That General Hferta had given his consent to the programme thus far outlined here was one of the reports. The Mexican delegates as well as the Americans are anxious that the transition in Mexico City shall be smooth and unattended by any dis- turbances. > Desiring to avoid the appearance of having had their pi ional president chosgn at an international conference, the Mexican delegates have evolved the plan of suggesting to the media- tors a list of names of representative citizens. The actual choice of an in- dividual from the list would be sanc- tioned, it is suggested, by the Mexican congress, It is assumed here that the ‘Washington government ' would be willing to assume the responsibility of trying “to bring the constitutionalists ipto harmony with a provisional gov- ernment thus created. ¥ After much discussion a satisfactory: method of considering the land ques- tion virtually has-been reached. Mex- icans have not yielded their original convictions that the land problem is tary Bryan had a call from an Ameri- ' Purely internal, they say all political - from Morelos who is a friend of | parties in Mexico have pledged them- can Revolutionay ta. sought’ to assure the secretary of state He that Zapata is not the guerilla warrior and bandit that he has been pictured to be, but an earnest advocate of gov- ernmental reform for the welfare of The nd filed it received for reference tp the president and cabinet. DEATH OF JACOB A. selves to land reform and a proclama- tion cannot embarrass the actsof any future congress. They stated empha- tically that whatever may be their own views even on the propriety of drawing up a set of principles on land reform they would not permit the vex- ed agrarian question to disrupt the mediation proceedings. RITS, AUTHOR AND SOCIAL WORKER —_— Suffered a Breakdown About Two Months Ago, Frbm Which He Never Rallied, Barre, Mass,, May 26.—A life of va- ried activity came to a oclose today when Jacob A. Riis, authof, reformer and sociay worker, once characterized by Theodore Roosevelt as New York's most useful citizen, died mer home here. at his sum- FIFTEEN THOUSAND AT BELMONT PARK. Metropolitan Handicap Won by Bus- ,kin, Four Year Old Gelding—Covers 7 Mile in 137 4-5. [ New York, May 26.—Fifteen thou- sand persons attended the opening of the running horse racing season at Belmont park, Long Island, today, Where the feature of the card, the Metropolitan handicap, at one mile, Another of Muerta’s Cabinet Resigns. ¥2 i Mexico City, May 26—The minister { \ of sericulturs and _colomisation 1n[ACCUSED PALE, WORN Huerta's cabinet Eduardo o Z ¥ member of the atholic party, his_post t 1 onference " Witk the-president. The reslgantion of | A® She Listened ta Narration. of De- the minister was caused by failure to, - Cri < agree on the aifairs of sdministration. | ‘4% Pertinent te-Crime for Which No successor has béen named. Bhe is Now Being Tried on Man- WAITING FOR EXAMINATION slaughter Charge—Taking of Testi- Commission Telegraphed Asking When ey e | 1 " | ‘which h’l'h 9 e at a meeting of militant sufiragettes | STATE’S ATTORNEY SEARLS OUT- last night success to the plot was drunk, in champagne. Express adds. ‘LINES PLANS OF PROSECUTION Tamariz, a resigned OF MORGAN’S BOOKS. mony Progressing Rapidy. Inspection Would Be Convenient— -Putnam, May 26.— No Reply. Before-Judge Howard J. Curtis and AD)RESSED NATIONAL GEO- GRAPHICAL SOCIETY ’ oreign Course and Upper Course Unknown Even to “Rubber” Iuln. Wi Ington, ‘May 26.—Proclaimed Dbefore to, Brailian Minister of Affairs — Declares Entire Unknown to Gartographers, a great audience of sci- a jury in the su; entists from many cities as “the dis- Coverer of a river in South America nesday when the interstate commerce resumes its- intes miles long,” Colonel Roosevelt assured the Na- leographic Society that he had put this river on the map and chal- s, B8 the P TS T ot o g e neighboring town, on the night of |leged all the cartographers in the y anrounced late today b: n | - officials, who at the same time made oush it ‘was extremely uncom- public the names of five additional di- | Jortable in the court room on account ug. 14 of last year. world to disprove his achievement. The colonel- had appeared before a Washington audience on a previous reclors subpoenaed for the inquiry— |Of the uNusual heat of the day, every | 0ccasion as an explorer, but mever as larg, William Skinner, Henry M = Edward Milligan, Alexander Cochrane | £ aA® thé assemblage did not dimin- and D. Newion'Barney. ~Present at ish during the day.. Many of those the brief sessio Place was taken when the trial open- |an discoverer and he was cheered to of all na- today, ready to go on | Present were residents -of Woodstock. |tions were wrong in their maps of the stand, were Lewis Cass Ledyard Mrs. Lawson, pale and worn look- | the wilds of Brazil wherein he found su4 Taarence atinot, formet. divectors, | i, SRESCPomPRIId by & irge e | And traced' the "Duvids Siiver or, as and J. S. & ¢ ly < known, e ton, now & member of the | toce ‘coverad by a heavy. vefl, which | River of Doubt: % The hearing was adjourned over in |She did not raise until the trial had order that special examiners of the Scientists, the colonel declared, had for some time. She eat |attempted to dispute his discovery, gressed commission may inspect the.books of "‘;": ez:“_flo-td and head hung, a pit- | tracing on a blackboard with a piece J. Pierport Morgan & company and papers of the late J. Pierpont | Of the day's ~proceedings, seemingly personal Morgan as they relate to transactions ing close to the border of collapse of the New Haven railroad. This de- |3t times. during the greater part gf chalk the river of his finding, he lared emphatically: I say _‘We put it on the map' and I mean what I say. No map has ever velopment came as the resuit of a Showed Evidence of Anguish. :’:}d!ho‘m this river. Scientists have Non s, made by Ik Morgan in| Only ocpasionally ‘were her eves | fnh, ", MiENt have {raverséd = the Rl ey coerday that the records | opened to” glance briefly about her. | put iha toeiose s o e of his frm and his father's personal | At times, as witnesses testified to cir- | o' i, (et 18 that some of our par- ey ot infact and avaflable | cumstances and incidents that were of | ont “Howos T Caner Sy td, Some proper tribunal. The commission tele. | band's Aesih. down a river in beiween them which graphed Mr. Morgan asking when it | her h,nd:‘.b,,u'{"u::";t;e‘;“m'm"”‘f no map maker ever saw. I can direct and ready for production before any |special note on the night of her hus- would he convenient for its examiners ta see the Tecords. No reply had been | . “rEuEb. réceived tonight, but the commission- ers have arranged to send four exam- | The drawing of the jury was expe- Rockefeller, notified Chief Counsel Jo- | them had of the case and knew feller’s physician said his patient had | be alreadyformed. He offered an op- brief séssicn today Mr. Ledyard de- |improved Charles H. Kenyon of clared that he wanted to go on the | Bcotland J. Octave Blanchetté of | onel. stand and refute some of the testi- | Willimantle, The jurv as ‘Haven. e He was handed a letter ad to him by Mr. McChord in which he was oh Garley, informed that the subpoena served on ‘Hampton him had been withdrawn, but that, if | (if: Fampton: Henrs he desired, he could appear voluntarily, gk 78 - 5 “waiving all immunity” by the testi- ., Killingly mony that he might give. Mr. Led- s yard, although demurring at the words “waiving immunity,” on the ground that they contained an implication, ‘wanted to “tell the whole truth.” STATE CONVENTION 2 gt expects to prove . to the s Chairman Hohenthal's Call for June 23| hat, as he cxplained: they might Lry” and 24 at New Britain, ter appreciate and understand the 5 dence to be introduced. South Manchester, Conn., May 26.— meta oviewed. The call for the prohibition state con- | . :::','_, oty B Vention at New Britain June 23 and | o yp. gioir S Stal T e . Dikts Chsfrman . | gead in the stable at 3 ient] lay. e conven- tion will nominate state officers, and | 1 oodStock during the for the first time select a candidate for United States senator. The conven- tion’s first session will be held in the Swedish Congregational church on the evening of the 23d. The next day's session will be in the hall of the Junior Order United American Mechanics. | getnhord A state platform will be adopted. | VyNing of The basis of representation will be the electoral vote of 1912, each town to :‘ny m‘l’t‘ where to fl:d this river and vers stay put, so that tI 4 Two Jurers Excused. we have made may be ':re‘fl(::llcnver} The colonel described in detail the iners to New York immediately upon | ditiously dis of, only ten min- |hardships of his trip into the Brazil- receipt of a favorable reply. utes being required. State Attorney |ian wildé and particularly the hard- Examiner Francis H. McAdam of the | Charies B. Searjs, who is being assist- | ships endured in navigating the rap- commission, who has been in New York {€d_by Attorney Howard C. Bradford, | ids of “The River of Doubt.” In the for several days in an effort to ascer- | addressed the jgurors relative to the |UDPer part of the river, he said. the tain the physical condition of William | offence charged and inquired if any of | rapids were so severe that it required 18d_heard 42 days for the party to traverse one seph 'W. Folk today that Mr. Rocke- {about it so_that their opinions might | degree from 11.45 south to 10.45 south. During that hazardous trip they lost had another throat attack and could | Portunity for those who wished to be | néarly all their food and belongings. not be geen for a few days. At the | excused Jury service: This was |.“We were forced to eat monkeys to it our rations,” declared the col- ‘There u reaches of - ””d-' the Duvida, the col N I ; & g i i § § *ik pounded, my making any “Were many £l . “Don’t shudder for I assure you/ that r this ex fi: Xperience you might mony given it week by Charles S. Completed List. i’ Ay M, ol ey s B X ey out in the monkey house with- mistake.” - Indians in the very* timid €ases hostile,” he added. ‘were hostile only be- were timid, but it is al- pleasant. to be shot by a is_afraid of you a se he disliked you.” el ©of his statement, Col- offered to answer Roosevelt any anyone in the audi it ask. After a pause, dur. ch no wquestions were pro- he sai “No questions are asked me to my Colonel Roosevelt also read the fol- Scientifica Roosevelt-Ron- don. I wish also to express my hi igh and regard| for Colonel Rondon his ‘who have un-“‘ leagues in this work of e Commission in Mr. Riis’ end was peaceful. For a @ay or more he had been only half eonscious most of the time. Although ablividus to what was going on about him, he occasionally rallied sufficiently te recognize his wife and “who were at his his son, Ed- bedside. His 2;: ended while he appeared to be ic myocarditis, or degenera- of the heart walls, was the cause death. - For, more than 15 years Mr. had been subject to heart trou- Imt it was mat until a year his caused - any consternation. two months ago he suffered a . on a lecture tour in removed to g sani- higan, a Sends ?fl'nmn of Condo: s ‘Washington, = May. 26.—Theodore was won by John D. Whalen's four year old gelding Buskin, ridden by Jockey Fairbrother. Buskin’s time; 1.37 4-5, equalled the track record for this event established by Fashion Plate four years ago, After Ten Point had been scratched August Belmont added Stromboli as a running mate with Rock -View, the public favorite, and interest .in the event was increased when H. P. Whitney's Borrow, which had run last season in England, was posted as an additional candidate for the race, which was worth $4,100 to the ‘winner. Eleven horses bore silk, and they were sent a well together, running heads apartfor a sixteenth of a mile. The lightweighted Figinny then cut out the pace and-held the lead into the stretch. Fairbrother then made his move on Buskin as the turn was rounded and from the last eighth of a mile post the horse just breezed, win- ning by five lengths from Figinny, which was out to the it ounce to save the place from Rock/ View. The latter had no excuse. He was away well and followed the pace all the way. The weight, 127 pounds, told on him, however, and he hung when called on by Jockey Butwell. Borrow, which finished fourth, balf a length away, was badly pocketed at the head of the stretch and was crowd- ed on the fgnce at the eighth pole, where Jockey Notter had to pull him up. Flying Fairy was forced turning into the stretch and finished fifth. Re- publican, Buckhorn, Stromboli,. Am- ‘brose, Gainor and Punch Bowl finished in the order named. The Belmont pair | were favorites, with Flylng Fairy and | Buskin well played second choices and W next {n demand. Steamship Arrivals, Havre, May 26.—Steamer Scotian, Montreal for London, London, May 26.—Steamer Andania, Montreal. Trieste, May 26.—Steamer Ivernia, York. low New York, May 26—Steamer Kai- ser. Wilhelm ' II., Bremen: Berlin, Na- en, May 26.—Steamer Kron- prinessin Cecilie, New York. | { have one delesate and =n extra dele- gate for eacl votes or fraction thereof. There will be 375 delegates | Previous to the latter’s death and that entitled to seats in the gonvention, | 1 2% . ‘;l.fex::'%f;:m Sioe o Hartford nty to ‘was sole Hisves Goagty S+ bave 76 $1d Mew | omber: of the: fuvi. Wheee they lived Milk Wagon Struck by Train. T v Aosunia Coeg, May 26—A milk | that sh wagon driven by Daniel Durkin was |that she is a wom: struck by the noon train in Orange | that at cne time ln.: ;::t-m:‘i: today. The wagon was smashed and | threw a fork at her husband, inflict- Durkin received a gash in the back of{ing a wound on his head: also that at the head, besides cuts and bruises. He | times she used expressions that were 3“ brought to Ansonia, where he was | indicative of her intention to do her tended by Dr. W. H. Conklin. . His | husband serfous harm and had et injuries while severe are not consid- | times been jealous of him.~ Durkin, whose home is Faris to the- Jure, in New Haven, was employed by an |- . - Orange farmer whose name could not | It Was sweltering hot in the court ety room and the attendants supplied the members of ‘the Jury with palm leat Conyicts Well Housed. e George W. Perrv, Putnam, civil en- The average ship's forecastle or|gineer and surveyor, was the first wit crew's quarters will appear more like | nagy called. Mr. Perry roduced * the black hole of Calcutta than an meap of the Lawson prq:llel c!m't ::odled tflor tw;vfldnstn:;n—l If a person|ing’ the homestead, stables, etc., and . *{by Mr. Searls and Att I says the Coast Seamen’s Journal. L. Torrey, chier counsel for Mra. Lam: The new cell house,at San Quentin, for example, is & marvel of clean, san- | fon, 2nd ATl fEpeys M. I housing. There are 800 single cells in the building, each containing Daughter of Accused on the Stand. a ‘white' enameled bed, a stationary Florence E.-Lawson, 17, daughter of white enameled wash basin, with hot | the accused and the deceased Mr. and cold water connections, and alLawson was called to the stand. water closet. Then, of course, there|Questioned by Mr. Searls she related is an electric light in each’ cell and |that on the afternoon of Aug. 14 she plenty of ventilation. That cellhouse | went tg a party at the Comstock place must be seen to be appreciated. In{BShe returned to her heme, coming comparison h a typical bunkhouse part way with a girl friend, at short- in a corstruction camp the San Quen- |ly afteér 11 p. m. Entering her home tin cellkouse is 500 years ahead of the |through the kitchen door she went times? into the sitting room, took a lighted e s lamp there and proceeded to her room Learning the Hard Facts. on the second floor. From a chart which was exhibited | her room her mother by the Prudential Insurance co: of America at the recent international exposition of safety and sanitation, it sh repl would follow that there are 35,000 She said that her mother did fatal industrial accidents a vear in|not swing wide the door of her room, the United States, and about 300,000 | OPening it.only a inches, and injuries. This Inspires a writer on|&h not tell the new ‘industriall to say. mere possibility of .being able to in statistics the approximate m our industrial casualties is a i advance, for as late as 1909 Jt was | impossible to estimate with any @c- curacy at all what was the toil paid in_crushed limbs and snuaffed lives. Now, at least, we know how vest is the problem to be solved, how much needless suffering we inflict a how Much we lose in do) and 3 ‘because we have hitherto failed & realize the necessity of guarding men as Well as machines.’ 2 | " W ‘wilderness of during the last seven us but very muc- No less than six weeks ‘were spent in slowly and with peril labor forclng our way down there what seemed a literally ‘endless succession of rapids and cata- racts. For 48 days we saw no human being. In passing these rapids 'we lost five of the seven canoes with which ‘we started and had to build othere. One of our best men lost his life in the rapids. Under ‘went Sergeant Was Murdered. the strain one of. the men tely bad, shirked all his , ®tole hi with cold blood: dered the :g sergeant sergeant and fleq into the . Colonel Rondon's dog, running ahead of him while hunting, ‘was shot he in all by two Indians; by his death probability saved the life of his master. We have put on'the map a river about 1500 kilometers in length running from just south of the 13th degree to north of the 5th degree and the Dbiggest affluent of the Madeira. Until now its upper course has been utterly unknown to every one, and its lower course although K known for years to known the rubber men utterly un- to cartographers. Its source is between the 12th and 13th parallels of latitnde south, and be- iween longitude 59 d and longi- ture 60 degrees west from Greenwich. ‘We embarked on it about at latitude 12 degrees 1 minute south and longi- tude 60 degrees 18 west. After t its emtire course was between the and 6lst degrees of longitude ap- most closely tude 8 degrees 15 min- The first rapids were at - rite in 11 degrees 44 mmutu.ngl-vn}- ter that were continueus and . us until the the murdered ser- he, deliberation mur- l Brénx Progressives Want for governor. wiil adjourn on June 15, was discovered at-Havana. The Will of Mrs. Lionel C. Hattell of Brpoklyn leaves $104,000 to chari- ties. The Estate of Charles W. Past, who \Barbara, Cal., died in Santa at $20, 000. in Hartford yesterday. TR The United States Supreme/ " A New Case of the Bubonic Plague is valued The Federal Grand Jury was in ses- sion in the United States district court Edward Koenig of the Bronx, who becanre blind three years ago, commit- ted suicide by inhaling gas. to Trolleymen AWAITS RATIFICATION N Chairman Ilnlunlm(’ of State Trelley- men’s Board Declines to State Whether Increase in Wages Has Been Granted—Trolleymen to Make The British Government finaliy de- | Announcement. cided not to participate in the Panama- Pacific exposition at San Franciseo. ~ . o0 - Mrs. Pankhurst Became So Weak New Haven, Conn., May 26—Charies from the effects of a hunger strike thai | W. Minnix, chairman of the state trol- leymen’s board, she was released from Holloway jail. Whilliam A. Taylor, Chief of the bu- reau of plant industry, will be appoint- ed assistant secretary of agricultur Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, the British everything in the way of changes in trolleymen’s conditions with the Com- ambassador, adopting the idea of Pres- | ed. General , with ident Wilson, is performing his duties | whom the board conferred yesterday, in a tent. New York. of New York. robbed of $10. two children. Notice of Appeal in the is sentenced. Pauntsville, Ky. the extent of $1,000. line at Rotterdam. The Steamer Highland Witch Arr in New York from Buenos Aires and tons of :a:’znuvldeo. bringing 2,650 frézen Argentine meat Anthony Casale, a Law Student, Newark, N. J, was held on a charge of manslaughter. His automobile struck and killed Rebelli Connellier. Thomas Perius of New York was held in $5,000 bonds on a charge of homicide following the death of his father-in-law, Frank Murphy. Mrs. Margaret Ballard of New York, ars old, was kill- ed when she mistook an open window for a door and fell four stories. a dblind woman, 65 ¥ Mrs.sMary O’Connor, a Policewoman of Chicago, has asked to have a police- man escort her after finishing her de tail. She doesn’t like the dark. more flag centen: day. gas meter. semi-weekly conferences the Mexican situatio: attack the preacher. when a horse struck Grend Banks. The crew rescued and brought to St Mme. Alix M 40 years ago was Ernésto Nathan, Former Mayor of Rome and Italy’'s commissioner to the Panama-Pacific exposition, arrived in Bibles Were Presented to graduating midshipmen of the naval acader the American Seamen’s Friend society While Tryving to Collect Bill in Brooklyn, ,Joseph Orloff of New York was choked into unconsciousness and Earl Gray, Former Governor General of Canada, arrived in New York from Ottawa, accompanied by his wife and % Case of ‘Charles Becker will be given to Jus- tice Seabury next Friday after Becker Twelve Business Houses Were. D stroyed and many others, including th national bank, were damaged by fire at 7 The Third Presbyterian Church in Newark, N. J., was invaded by vandals who damaged carvings and windows to Y The Dutch Dockers’ Union has pro- claimed a general strike of workmen employed by the Holland-American The First Star Spangled Banner is being repaired at the Smithsonian in- stitute. It will be shown in the Balti ial in Baltimore. John T. Windell, President of the Federation of Labor at Yonkers, is the laaest candidate for the wardenship of Sing Sing prison. He is a printer. The Dinner of the Yale Alumni asso- ciation ‘to the varsity crew squad, which was to have been held tonight at New Haven, was given up yester- A Thief Nearly Demolished the home of Martin Smith at Trenton, N. J., when he lighted 2 match in escap- ing gas fumes after breaking open the President Wilson Will Resume his with the Washington _press correspondents on | Thursday. He will refuse to discuss | their own announcement of agree- ment which is about to be ratified. HOME RULE ACTION CAUSED NO FRICTION 'Y | Predicted Conflicts Between Orange-. men and Nationalists Failed to Ma- terialize, London, May 26.—The passing of home rule bill has not yet led to the breaking of a single head in Ire- land. The predictions s0 freely made by certain Unionists that its final adoption by the house of commons would be followed by flerce outbursts in Ulster and sanguinary confliots be- tween the Orangemen and the Nution- alists have proved to be untrue up to '.be'np'lf'e.ent. o “Belfast is as quiet as _a well or- dered sewing m is “the. admis- sion of one of the Unionist newspa- pers. The authorities, civil and miltery, are said to be keeping a carefnl watch and trains are held at stations with steam up in readiness to rush troops or armed police to wherever they mfi:‘: be lnum to suppress riots. w! nearly everybody thought were bound to occur, dut thus far the only conflicts have been verbal fl..’ PAROCHIAL SCHOOL A:r/.mfi , STRUCK BY LIGHTNING ed | Huge' Cross Which mped Ahe Spire Was Split. i 4 Brislol, Conn., ‘May hmfiu a tonight. The was. of urch old building up to social huge crass which spire was split and the ed down through the roof, m-hflulu and out d*th. ding, tearing the pboards. fire did not break out the is believed, will not be heavy. was hurt. ALBANIANS UNWILLING - TO PAY TAXES Halian Foreign Minister Says That i the Cause of Trouble in Thet Country Raome, May 26.—One of the chief rea« sons for the trouble in Albania is unwillingness of the inhabitants of country to pay tax to the mmm dl San Gi for- The fcreign minister emphasized the identity of Ttaly’s views on the subject with those of Austria. Both eouniries, be said, were alming to enforce the decision of the conference of London regarding the independence of DAM OF RESERVOIR GAVE WAY IN UTAH, Residents of Sevier Valley Warned by Telephone and Horsemen—Many Crazed While Listening to “Billy” Persons Made Homeless. Sunday, the evangelist, at Huntington, —_— W. Va., Solomon Proud arose in the Richfleld, Utah, May 26.—The dam of middle of the sermon and attempied tu | the Hatchtowa irrigation reservoir in Twe Children of Mr. and Mrs. Fred | 8 flood which is Tulhing down the Se- Luetger of Burlington, la., were killed | Vier river valley, Settlers were warn- x an automobile | @1 by telephone and by horsemen, and which they were riding was thrown in- to the tonneau of the machine. The French Brigantine Etoile des are Mere of Cancale was sunk in cellision g:rmd“n - !g:’-u Teserveir, fur- with the schooner Briantals . oft the - . * Tho Hatehtown reservoir was part 26 was | 4 state irrigation com: 5] Adelaile Pasca,who | mile and a haif ne of the fo emotional actresses in France, die Paris at the age of 79. Her stage ex- perience lasted from 1864 until 1885. It is Expected That Michael Far- kasdy of Bridgeport, charged with murder in the first dekree, will be tak- | ° SIS en to the insane asylum in letown Within a day or two for observation, | as Tiding t and one hand John D. Bodish, a Blind Ma Xml: 0St | canyon. The break attributed - d in | 1andsHde. - Fell Under Wheels of Freight Train. Stamford, 26, —James Scollard, “&o’fu“ > <4 fell under the wheels of t train th on which he and one arm so will probably lose both. In airbrake that he he . of West | crashed against the Barnstable, Mass., who earned his oWn | tug in such & way as to i operate living - while taking a college course, will be among the graduntes of the | BiHi & mory T OUEAt 0 & stop Boston university law school in June. Erastus H. Cox, from point of service the oldest engineer in the United States, died in Brooklyn, aged 85. He was employed by the Erie and had not missed a trip or had an accident in 61 years. in Manila, on' charges of criminaily li- ‘beling Dean C. Worcester, who was interior in the then secretary of the Philippines. Won't Be Popular. /It rather looks as if the late presi- dent of the New Haven Road was not time h planning to spend much after around a certain well. ‘Wall_street corper. bur NS -known Tri- |