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Carranza Agents in Washington Declare Huerta Will be Driv- en Out in a Few Weeks—United Forces are 50,000 Strong—General Villa’s Constitutionalist Leaders Said to be Unanimous | Against any Sort of Parleys ; ARMIES CLEARING PATH TO MEXICO CITY —_— From the War Zone to the South. Favors Advance on Capitol. Obregon, who has just cap- federal stronghold at Guada- is the only one of tbe lmpo.x;ta SENATORS PREPARE 5 TO SUPPORT PRESIDENT. in His Fight for Confirmation of T. D. dones on Federal - Reserve Board. to questioning, there 2! ents today. At the White House it was still evident that the resident had determined to champion &r. ‘Warburg’s nomination to the end, the New York banker having agreed to let his name stand should the commit- tee not insist upon his appearance.’| Yesterday’s action, however, is taken as an indication that the commitree proposes to insist upon his appearance and to do nothing further with regard to his nomination until he is heard from. What to Ask Mr. Warburg. A suggestion was current about the capitol that an unds ing might be reached as to just what the commit- - tee wants to know from Mr. Warburg and the banker be informed that there was no desire to pry into personal af- fairs to an extent that might be em- barrassing to his clients, but the com- mittee merely wished to satisfy itself that there were no present obstructions to his qualification. Upon such a basis, some senators thought, Mr. Warburg might consent to appear. The committee will meet on Mon- day, after which Senator Hitchcock, the acting chairman, expects to submit to the senate the adverse report on the nomination of Mr. Jones. A favorable minority report will be made by Sena- tors Lee of Maryland, Hollis, Pomerene ana Shafroth. $200.000 FOR SALEM. Appropriated by Congress—Not With- out Vigorous Opposition by Commit- tee Chairman, ‘Washington, July 10—Congress to- day appropriated $200,000 for the re- lief of sufferers from the fire at Sa- lem,* The house, in spite of vigorous opposition, led by Chairman Fitzgerald of the appropriations com- mittee, accepted by a vote of 161 to 66 a senate amendment to the sun- dry civil bill to provide the money. The president had urged the ap- ropriation in a special message and phe Massachusetts delegation had been pressing for action for a week. MINIMUM WAGE SCALE. Washington State Commission Fixes Pay for Telephone Girls. Olympia, Wash., July 10.—The state nz’:ufin" wage commission adopted iast night a rate of $9 a week as the minimum for telephone girls through- out the state, except In ex- thanges, This is the fourth minimum wage edopted by the commission, the others being $10 a week for mereantile work- ers, $8.90 for factory workers, and $9 for laundry and dye-workers. ol M B isito sk s Calvary Church Disturber Loses in Court., New York, July 10,—8\:3";?(!«1!! ‘Justice: Weeks today denied a’motion ' for a certificate of reasonable doubt for the Rev. jBouck White, socialist wrirer and Harvard graduate, who was sen- tenced to serve six months in the pen- for creating a % at attend the -chureh and to Mm the Colo- ¥., July 10.—The = ‘of the Bold-nawm- npany is ashore near on, the | L( by the federals. Admiral Howard also advised that he had received Te- ports of the evacuation of Acapulco sters | port in the southern part of the state of Guerrero. Villa’s Army_Remains Quist. it Blks and the goldea rand lodge of the J M. Mri Conn., is in the ldgeport, Conn., is candidate to st MEMORIAL FOR HER HUSBAND. $200,000 for Three Buildings for Green- with Y. M. C. A. Provided by Gift of Mrs, Nathaniel Witherell. Greenwich, Conn, July 10.—Details of the plans for a ¥. M. C. A. building as a memorial to her late husband, to be erected here by Mrs. Nathaniel Witherell of New York, and which is to, cost_$200,000, were made known to- day. There will be three buildings, each three stories high, one for & busi- ness men’s club, another a dormitory and the other for general association purposes. WOMEN LABOR LAW | IS CONSTITUTIONAL. Sustained by Appellate Divislon of Supreme Court in New York. . New York, July 10.—The appellate division of the supreme court today sustained the constitutionality of that part of the state labor law which pro- hibits the employment of women and girls between the hours of 10 p. m. and 6 a. m. The court decided this point in the case of | Schweinler Press., Inc., a printing con- cern, found in the lower courts to have violated the law. STATE-WIDE WANDERER. Johnnie o the Woods in Serious Con- dition in Danbury Hospital. Danbury, Conn, July 10—John Brennan, known all over the state as “Pick Penny” and “Johnnie o' the ‘Woods,” is in the local hospital and is said to be in a eerious condition as the result of exposure and exhaustion caused by lack of proper food and care. ‘Brennan gave his age as “80 odd years” and his occupation as “wanderer.” He ‘was found lying in a vacant lot in this fi!ty, whence he had come Wednes- lay. AERIAL TRAIN TO RUN OVER WHIRLPOOL RAPIDS. Spanish Company Secures Concession at Niagara—Span of 1180 Feet. Toronto, Can., July 10—A Spanish company = incorporated at ~ Bfiboa, Spain, with Canadian headquarters in Toronto, has obtained concessions from the Niagara Falls Power Com- mission to construct and operate an taerial tramway across the whirlpool rapids at Niagara Falls. The span across the gorge will be 1180- feet, the longest of its kind in the worid, and will be utilized for passenger traffio. The car will be suspended by six huge cables. The company already operates gp .!i’mfln!' tramway at San Sebastian, ain. Steamers Reported by Wireless, Cape Race, N. F., July 10—Steamer land, Antwerp for New York, 908 miles east of Sandy Hook. ok S Bl hy e, sikmi: Okasin y 1 er New York for Plymouth and South- ampton, 485 mltll?s west - gt 1:30 a. m. Due Plymon! a. m, Saturday. —Pasged, Caserta, ;‘: \‘;l;k for Naples. Fayal y .—Passed, steamer Koenig Albert, New York for Naples. gty ey * Steamship Arrivals the Charles | oo DETlc'flvli, LOOK FOR WEAPON AT DR. CARMAN’S HOME. BALLOONISTS WILL ASCEND AT ST. LOUIS TODAY Stesl Negotiations Adjourned. Bcrfi July opes that today” NINE ARE TO START|IN OWNER'S ABSENCE | Waather Conditions Leok Bad to Pilots for Record FH:M.—N. lew York and Philadelphla’ are Eastern Entriea. e negotiations were adjourned um- Y til September 1 St. Louls, July 10.—Pilots entered in Mineola, N, Y. July 10.—It will be 3 the national elimination balloon race days at least before Mrs. Flor- Berlin Students Not Conspirators. | 2S79 tomorrow were dubious tonight Carman, act July 10.—An order for the | heite o eoinuces for custody of the president record flights. _Weather mmuu that and members of the Servian Students’ & slow wind will prevail when the race club In Berlin, who were arrested on | mes ‘ednesday on suspicion of being en- gaged In a Pan-Servian conspiracy issued, Examination of Mrs. Carman Put Off to July 21—Her Attorney to Ex- amine Witness Bardes. of the ), ley, can hope to leave the Nassau caunty here, according to an agreement reach- ed late counsel, Georg: Levy, and District Attorney KEEP OPEN COMMUNICATION CHANNELS Much of the business of the world today is dome through adver- tising. It permits of business aggressiveness which can be obtatned in no other way. It is a vital force for the stimulation of trade and when selling energy, thus obtained, is reduced business slumps. The slump in summer business which many firme ence is @ue to a large extent to a collapse of their own efforts. ' In the sum- mer the public eats though it changes its diet. The summer apparel ‘worn by the average man and woman differs from sutumn and winter clothes only in weight and kind, not in extent and variety. The com- mon needs of man remain fairly uniform the year round, The way to keep business up In summer is to maintain the selling pressure then as faithfully as at other seasons, and to keep open the channels of communication bstween seller and buyer—the channel of newspaper advertising. In this direction no paper offers the oppor- tunities to merchants that can be obtained through The Buletin. In no other way can the channels of communication be 50 effectively kept open. Keep business up by using The Bulletin advertising columns. In the past week the following reading mstter has appesred in the columns of the home paper: Because of the intense heat, the ‘was after a search of the headquarters of the club and the rooms occupied by the students proved the suspicious groundless. [ INQUEST AGAIN CONTINU iIN STAMFORD MURDER CASE. For Further Analysis of Suppesed Bloodstains and “Other Public Rea- sons.” Conn., July 10—The in- quest into death of Waido R. Bal- lou, which was expected to be resum- ed today, was agaln continued this Balletin Telegraph Local General = Total Saturday, Uuly 4.. 180 164 401 745 Monday, July 6.. 173 429 290 592 Tuesday, July 7., 170 182 265 617, Wednesday, July 8..; 169 119 232 520 Thursday, July 9.. 182 137 260 579 . Friday, July 10.. 202 127 158 487 asked for by the prosecutor with The order in which the ends In view—that h baloons will w and their pilots and aldes fol- 1—Balloon Hoosier; 3 Rasor, Brookville, O. Ballog's straw’ haf might fumieh a|Rasor, his son. clue to the whole mystery. This was there is an elliptical stain on the un- derside of the cover of the clothes chest which rested on the hat there is no stain on the outside of the hat. J. McCullough, St. Louls; aide, William Trefts, St. Louls. 5—Balloon Miss Sofia; pilot, Willlam Assmann, St. Louls; no aide. 6—Balloon Aero Club of &t. Louls; pilot, John B. Berry, St. Louis; aide, Albert Von Hoffman, Jr., St. Louis, 7—Balloon Kansas City III; Dpilot, John Watts, Kansas City; aide, W. F. Comstock, Kansas City. $—Balloon Pennsylvania; pllot, Ar- thur T. Athertholt, Philadelphia; alde, Phillp Sharples, Philadelphia. $—Balloon Go = T on odyear; pilot, Preston, Akron, O.; aide, M, D, Trem- 1in, Akvon. CHARGED WITH DISCLOSURE OF MILITARY SECRETS. California Magazine in Trouble W.th the War Department Over Aeroplane Photographs, San Francisco, July 10.—Warrants for the arrest of Charies K. Field, ed- itor of a magazine and former presi- dent of the Bohemian club; Robert J. Fowler, an aviator; Ray 8. Duhem, photographer, and BScott Riley, a ter, were issued today at the re- juest of John . Preston, United tates attorney here, The charge against all of them s the disclosure of military gecrets, and the penalty ls ten years’ imprisonment or a $10,000 finé for such disclosure if made abroad and one year or a $1,000 fine if made in the United States. / In April the magezine published an article entitleq “Can the Panama Canal go Dfi(’gfve;lhm tr:xo tA'l;T' Repr- uctions oa:gu. s taken from an aeroplane and owing some of the fortifications of the canal zone and of the Ban Francisco Presidio accompa- nied the text. As soon as of the number wae called to th of the war department Preston to investigate. ‘was thrust through dow of the physician's office, tifled, and he saw a woman ‘walking away from ths window after the shot sounded that ;fll.d Mrs. Bailey, a pa- tient in the office. Dr._Carman Stopped Examination of Records. An examinatfon ¢f Dr. Carmean’s rec- ords to show what patients visited him on June 80, the night of the mur- der, was begun y 'y At- ::noy !n;mn D:“‘c but :: was . ‘arman Br Care o "trom home PRISONERS GAVE REASONS FOR THEIR REVOLTS Committes in Striped Suits Met New Yeork’s Woman Commissioner. New York, July 10—Bight men of education and good breeding wearing the striped suits which the city fur- nishes its prisoners, sat in ocouncil ey around a table in the warden's office na on Blackwell's Island todey and told Located Telephene Ear Plece. Mayor Mitchel's woman cemmission- | The er of corrections, Dr. Catherine E, Da- vis, the grievances of themselves and their fellows. There have been four outbreaks within & week ameng many of the 1400 inmates on Blackwell's Island and Commissioner Davis set out today to scquire first hand in- formation as to why the men have not obeyed the regulations. One of the mutinies took place this morning, men attacking the warden and guards with iron buckets as weapons. Several prisoners were hurt. Asserting that order must be main- tained if it should be necessary to summon state militia, Dr. Davis en- tered the prison, called ouf to the men in their cells to select a committee to represent them and retired to the war- ‘arman came here from his in his wife in Jab bringtng b was held pfl.ru:‘; t of the agreemert copy to find the revelver attention losking fer, it requested ings. They did fad"in this way the ear T lephonic de g R o iy - e PENNSYLVANIA V‘IUITED. BY ELECTRICAL STORMS. Accompanied by Cloudbursts—Death and Property Damage in Anthracite Region, Philadelphia, July 10.—RKix persons property killed and estimated at hundreds of thousands of dollars REVIEWED éVENT. OF PANAMA REVOLUTION. den’s office and there met this com- mittee after barring out all prison at- taches, including the warden, but per- mitting a group of newsj men to hear for the first -time m inmates’ lpe the story of the recent disturbd- ances and the reasons for them. Antipathy toward the warden be- cause of what was described as his lack of for ll:; o for the recent attitude of the prisoners, according to the statements of the commiitee. It is believed, how- ever, that official Interruption of the system of smt ng letters out of prison to fri ‘had something to do with the insurrections, Long Resident of Bridgeport. Bg::-mg. Conn., .mx 10— Waltiam * dled at his hime : es, agod 69, pioof ‘ha oldest buekhsds. mon of tnis ity, having started ‘business ea- At g B r{jnt at the time of daE e‘mv.v‘"hunh Havber, 1. I, Roosevelt Preparing Cam rial—Confers With Can. sion Secretary, Oyster Bay, N. Y. July 10.—J¢ h B. Bishop, who jvas secretary of the Pl.nnml‘ Canal lwm under Prosidgnt Roosevelt, went to Sagamore EATL with Mys, Diskop tonight for din- ner, Colenel Roosevelt and Mr. 0P reviewed the events in connection with the Panamsa revelutién which the Shia part 1a ‘the corabne’ campeten un o n ng on acceunt a'f his &”.lltlan to the Wil- son administration’s propesed treaty with Celembia. was_the toll today of cloudbursts and electrical storms in the Lebanon val- Jey and the anthracite coal regions of Pennsylvania. Three persons were drowned In Scranton and vicinity in a flood that followed the cloudburst; one man was killed by lightning at Wilkes- ‘barre and two met death at Lebanon, one when he stepped on a live wire broken during the storm and another by tning. 2d and trolley traffic was com- pletely tied up. WILL DECLARE ELECTION NULL AND VOID Expsctation When Mexican Ghamber of Deputies Mests. Maxjco ly 10-~Francisce &v&.‘lmc‘l’:%‘iuiino of the supzeme SALEM INSURANCE LOSS WAS §11,744,000. Returns Fled by 248 Companies—Ex- forelgn ceeded First Estimate by $1,508,000. The chamber of deputies will meet Monday to the peesidential mm. It is w be declared Senator La Follette is suffering from Formar Mayor Fred A. Buses dled at_his home Chicago. i A massacre of Servians on the Her- Smoking opium, valued at $5,000 was taken in a raid on a Chinese laundry in Brooklyn. M -General Giiuchi Tanaka, of the Japaness Army, was received by President Wilson. Mrs. Martha Crise, a life-long in- valid, died at Trent, Somerset Coun- ty, Pa., aged 101 3 The Alton Steel Co., of Alton, I, capitalized at $1,000,000 was placed in the hands of recetvers. New York will spend $250,000 in equipping a model street cleaning” dis- trict on the East Side. Burglars broke into the railroad sta- tion at Carlstadt, N. J, and with a 200-pound safe. The authorities at Colon, Panama, have imposed a quarantine on all ar- rivals from New Orleans. Alone bandit, who tried to hold up pessengers on an Illinois Central train, ‘was overpowered by a porter. The British team again defeated the Belgians in the first preliminary round for the Davis tennis cup. Alexander Blum, four years old, was uninjured after failing six stories from the roof of his home in New York. The Senate Committee reported fav- orably on the nomination of Ira Nel- son Morries to be Minister to Swed- en. A price of $400,000 is have been paid in Paris by n._'"‘*, orted to ir Fred- Cook for Titlan's “La Schiavo- The Rutherford Manufacturing Co., of Rutherford, N. J., was destroyed by fire, the loss being estimated at $85,- 000, Joseph Tannen, 70 years old, of Ca- naidaqua, N. Y., was held in $2,500 bail on a of putting poison in a well. The new Holland-American liner Statendam was launched at Belfast. The vessel has a displacement of 35,- 000 tons. The inventory of Henry Elmer Gibb, former president of Frederick Loeser & Co., of Brooklyn, shows that he left $710,849. Burglars broke into the salesroom of the Alfred Peats Co. wall paper dealers at Newark, N. J, and escaped ‘with §700. " The German cruiser Nuernberg left Mazatlan to join the German Asiatic fleet. Slte was relieved by the cruiss o 4 + — The wife of Filippo Cifariello, the Italian sculptor, was burned to death through the explosion of a lamp in her home at Rome. Osse Schreckengost, famous as the batte: mate of “Rube” Waddell on the ghl!lflelphla American baseball team, died in Philadelphia. John Krafcheko was hanged in Win- nipeg, for the murder of H. M. Arnold, maneger of the Bank of Montreal, whom he shot, in a hold-up. Henry R. Emerson member of the Canadian Parliament and former Min- ister for railways, died in Dorchester, New Brunswick, aged 61 years. A mob tried to storm the jail at Bay Springs, Miss., to lynch Mose Joh son, negro, accused of robbing a train and shooting three persons. After pluriging down a 300-foot em- bankment in his automobile at Wash- ington, Willlam Jetter crawled from the wreckage with a skinned knee. Hugh Leonard, wrestling instructor of the New York Athletic Club, was struck by lightning at his farm near Belfast, N. Y., and instantly killed. President Wilison received an | vitation to attend the annual conve: tion of the American Bankers' Asso: ation on October 14 at Richmond, Va. The discussion of slit skirts, tango, fall hats and other things of that sort will be barred at the camp meeting of SIL. Methodist Church at Desplaines, \ Bryan Chandler, “the million dllar id” ‘must pay his wife $50 a week al- my and also pay her $500 as counsel fees to prosscuts her suit for separa- tien. Dr. Charles F. Baxter, former phy- sician at Blackwell's Isiand, was fined $506 and sentenced to one year's im- prisonment for selling morphine to prisoners. Altoona, Pa., doctors by the use of thyroid glands of sheep, are develop- ing Jules Schroeder, a dwarf, of Holi- , four years old, into natural ns, J of Charleori, Pa., was dll.cv".yww"&om a hospital in Pitts- burgh with 80 square inches of new skin, Jacobs was burned while em- ployed in a mill. President Wilson nominated James L. Travers, of Wahkon, to be receiv- eor of public moneys at Duluth, Minn., and James A. Ryan to be postmaster at Bandusky, Ohlo. Emanuel Tessaud, of Hartsdals, N. Y., chauffeur for Andrew Miller, In- spector for the State Automobile bu- reau, was fined $25 for speeding his automobile in New York, Thomas P. B president. of the Second National Bank and Charles A. Morse of the Simplex Wire and Cable Co, are to be chosen directors of the Federal Reserfe Bank of Boston. In-an effort to ’.;: 18- mer Carpenter from ‘Westpert Harbor, old Ei- in Ten, 30 years old men" Bt nadn:.; s 3 of {echnical high was also- drowned. — Rev, Dr. William B. Palmer, of 8t. Louis, and editor of the §St. Christian Advoecate, before his waived his property rights to a $10,- 000,000 estate and gave I!\ to the peoor. James C. Gny(;- of New. York o to Beman 1 the sato of mhore. thas 1060 to eight RESOLUTE FINISHED MILES AHEAD OF HER COMPETITORS SAILED IN FAINT AIRS Herreshoff Yacht 8fid Over the Seas Like Oil—Defiance Gave Up the Contest. long, greasy roll and Resolute so completely outsailed her rivals today that she led the Vaaitie three miles and the ice four and a half miles at the finish' of the 3u- mlle contest. The Deflance was so far bebind that she quit racing as the Vanitie crossed the line, although the commission waited a few minutes for her to reconsider. Margin of 33 Min. 7 Seo. The Resolute's margin in elapsed time over the Vanitie was 31 minutes and 21 seconds, which her time aliow- apce increased to t airs, the New York Yacht club, The course gave the boats a 10-mfile beat to windward and two reaches of the same distance. The breeze was never stronger than four knots, and the Resolute after a start went to the front in the first mile and steadily increased her lead to the finish. The yachts will race again iomor- row, when it is hoped that strong winds will prevail, Excellent Test in Light Airs. The contest was an excellent test of the yachts in the very lightest weather possible for a finish inside the six hours’ time limit. At one time it be- came a question whether the Resolute would be able to cover the course, but th‘ breeze puffed up a trifle on the sec- nd leg, and this gave her a lift out. Resolute Crawis to Windward, Captain Haft of the Vanitie won the honors at the s o \T(m“&m F\)r.tdh.‘nh few min- es the race seems teresting, but after half a mile had been sailed the Resolute had gatned the weather berth on the Deflance and was on even terms with the Vanitle. At the end of the first mile the Resolute was well out ahead and sliding over the big seas as :!h:h" ‘were °|%,,'ml°¢'t the same time Was craw! up to windward - 5 The & ‘l;“‘hldd R e onl lent of the Deat to windward was a u:dm-m“. the turn, and for a few minutes éem- €@ to gain on the Resolute. utes later the Owen yacht third place again. Became a Procession. From that time the race developed Etretciiod "ot “tarther Bos s oul er and farther as the yachts eailed until when the seo- ond mark off Point Judith was reached :{ the Resolute the Deflance was out sight.in the haze astern. All three yachts swung their luYfiz club topsalls today and the Resolute uncovered a new wrinkle by sending aloft an aluminum club to her scraper. Vanitie Seemed to Wallow. The Herreshoff yacht seemed to takxe the seas better today than on Wed-~ nesday. There was less fuss under ber lee bow and she rolled or slid over the waves instead of plunging through them. On the other hand, the iong fore body of the Vanitie would heave out of ‘water like the nose of a swordfish and ::r:l; "!eu ‘bomt.h t.:; next wave the on es and she peared to wallow. e Defiance Showed Windward Qualitiss. It was the first race of the Deflance in a jump of a sea and under offshore conditions, not counting her hour’ experience off Sandy Hook a month ago. The tri-city yacht seemed to take ui:e seas easler ;h.ln either rivals, but with her smallar head ri she appeared to have but little life u‘: windward. She pointed fully as high as the Resoiute, but could not foot with her, nor could she make much headway with the Vanitie, her tempo- rary advantage being of the breeze. iwrence’s throat, and at the same time going through his poclksts, curing 360. The horse was given a