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DETAILS OF FLIGHT OF CARRANZA et e Mexico City, May 19.—Wiid cenfusion mitended the evacuation of the Mexiean capital by President Carranza and his following. Revolutionists . were ap- proaching and those who were going had to go quickly. Rolling stock had been gathered at to store their impediments on the trains assigned to them. Then came govern- ment officials shepherding porters with great stacks of records, and office fur- niture. In the excitement, the officials bad failed to show disctimination, many of the, cargoes consisted of hat- racks, cusplders and even ' window cur- taln rods. All this heterogenous mass iths Mexicane Railway terminal in prep-| was dumped into passenger coaches and aration for their departure. When the|gondolas and between pieces of artillery word was passed down through the va-|and airplane equipment on flat cars. rlous government departments that the While some of the porters complied exodus was about to begin, thausands|with their duty, others were to be seen lof government employes, h-mhlb- fhe Carranws regime, ‘oot and every kind of vehicle obtaina- hangerson at the rallway station amid babel of cries -and entreaties to por- ers and eXpressmen. Next morning they came in increased pumber. Loaded down with bulging bundles, suit cases l-ahflnul‘lwml.cfl Ving children and cenfused iprocession might have been taken for |3 cigantio plenie party had it not been frightened [for the strained, expression on |the faces. The Natfonal Railways were the first CASTORIA Por'Indants and Children - in Use For Over30 Years Always bzars the Signatmre of leading clvil- | streaking not toward strong supporters of | station, but toward the poorer sections partisan journal-|of the city, carrying what evidently will 'uuudounm(ormomh-on find a the Buenavista [y sale in the capital curio and second-hand shops. © At only . one track was there a sem- blance of order—the siding where "the treasure cars had beén spotted. Here Luig Cabrera was in command and, af- ter ‘the trains had left, not even a cop- per centavo was found by treasure seek- ers. There were 300 cars of all classes and 24 lecomotives in the station ready to leave by~ midnight. Hstimates as-to the soldiers and civilian refugees vary, but the generally accepted figure s placed at about 5,000, a village on ‘wheels. For hours the fugitives waited, but the trains did not start and flvinz ru- mors kept the occupants of the cars peer- ing ankiously into the night for the van- guard of the revalutionary forces. Agents of the liberal constitutionalists had tam- pered with the train crews and it was necessary to send patrols to round thefn up. Next morning locomotive bells began to clang, whistles shrieked and a zreat wave of weeping farewells arose. Burst- ing with soldiers and women camp fol- lowers, officials and civilians, bageage and munitions airplaneés, artillery, boxes of coin, piles of gold and silver bars, government records, cuspidors and hat racks, the trains moved slowly into the for started to move the eapital. suburbs. The Carranza Eovernment-tiad mi\nn GUILTY TO ™ 50,000 m-u ‘oF JEWELRY un w u.mmmm THROUGH umn OF DERBY a,pie&:& not gl Derby, Coan., ¥ ne 10.—Eight Anthony Urbano. company, and beat up Alex Rinkleheim, ong of the owners, shoot John Montefalco. incident that the men started to run and were pursued. Just after Lieut. Ur- bano had got four men Officer Thomas Van. Etten got another, and the re- maining three and an automobile ‘driver were caught. what he knows about' the “affair. He comes from New York. In the machine the police found whis~ kqy, The men were booked under these nameés: Isadore Doynow, 33, of 75 Hast 105th street, Bronx; Jacob Rosen, 23, of 30 Essex street, Manhattan; Herman Grassman, 25, of 194 Fowel streef, Bronx; Herman Sarkin, 36, of 588 Con- suelo avenue, Bronx; Alex Fried 33, of 122 Orchard street, Manhattan; Har- ry Yurman, 27, of 409 East Sixth“street; Harry ‘Kuch, 24, of 84 Essex . street; Louis Briat, 31, of 233.East Third street, “New York, and the chauffeur, Samuél Kaplam, of New York. The number of the car was N. Y. 126,346. STILL PLUGGING FOR SPECIAL SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE Hartford, Conn., June 10.~—A telegram urging (% republican national conven- tion in Chicago to bring all possible pres- sure to bear on Governor Holcomb to se- cure from him the calling of a special ratification session of the Connecticut legislature, has béen. sent to Chairman Will' Hays, of the republican national committee by John T. Robinson. sec tary of the men's republican ratifcation committee of this c!ty men | Foye, ‘To were arrested this noon after a chase | hotel, finally. through the business section, four being|day and vle; held up at the point of a gun by Lieut. | 000 “worth of jtwelm It is charged (hat the|V. G. Millhiser whi men went to the plant of the. Derby Fur|at the a3, |t New York, .)m 10‘—.“ »__-!I leh‘m tmdnn J fl hin mlnd late to- guilty” to th)n ‘of $350,- u: claimed t!!w name he = to shlsld. just on the ‘paint of going to thejury when the prisoner declded decided to ad- mzlt his guflt) He will be senténced June The driver is held to ‘see{has been recovered. L e 3 FORMER PRESIDENT unmg lx PRISON AT GUATEMA'AA CITY ‘Wuhmm June 10.—eramr Presi- dent Estrada Cabrera ia now confined in the polies.prisen 2t Guatemala City, the state départment was today advised by he Améfiean legation there i feply to the department’s Inquiry regarding the former president. The legation said. the Guatemala - authorities had explained that the ex-president had been moved {o this. prison as a Drotection agsinst possible mob attack, He is allowed such comfort as he desires and his meals are supplied by his family. ON TRIAL ¥OR CONSPIRACY TO VIOLATE VOLSTEAD ACT Hartford, June 10.—James Waldle, an internal revenue agent of New York wasg arraigned before Judge Thomas in the federal court in this city teday on an indictment charging him with conspir- acy to violate the Volstead aet by tran porting liquor. Waldie pleaded not gu ty and his case was adsigned to the cal- endar for the September term at New Haven, he Dbeing held under a §5,000 bond. -Waldie was arrested about a Wholesale chickens bring 2 shillings | month ago in Torrington where he was 3 pence a pound in England. The re- tail price is 2 shillings § penee, These riding on a truckload of whiskey. Frank Prince, a liquor desler of New prices are nominally 52 and €4 cents. | York, was indicted with Waldie by the mn fepresenting Prince, from Mrs. ‘Regina | dismissed here. a?w Was 2 guest|District Attorney Cohen sajd this was %& t €0 the case ‘Foye: flmumflmmngutthamuumn and threateped to |'jewel) It was after this’ him' i terstate oomuem ‘?ew York -u'{qu umr $10,¢ 500 'b;u There is no. t, however, in as today if a warrant could here so as to have the case in New x‘ork Assistant Unjied States reeable to' the” - “Connecticut. Judge bee!’l Eliven | Thomas said t Uu warrant might issue. The eu case was, 81 PER CENT INCREAST NEEDED BY COASTWISE STEAMBHIP LINES Washingten, Juns 10. vided by the tion act, the in today. the C! . mched $6.089 !ls fast year. g e Simsh S8 Ay PRESIDENT DESCHANEL TO VISIT THE VOSGES MOUNTAINS Paris, June 10.—President Deschanel, according to the Temps today, intends to rent a cottage at Trois-Epls in the Vos- t'l Mountains of U) The president wil a short sojourn aftey mandy has terminated and after ceremonies in conpection with the cele bration of July 14, the Temps says. AN ATLANTA NEGRO MEMBER REP. Chicage, Henry Lincoln Johnson an Atlanta ne gro, as a member of the republican na- tional committee from Georgia, was con- firmed today by a vete of the Georgia delegation, takén on the fleer of the| convention. ~He got 12 vetes with three as against for his oDponent, Roscoe| Pickett, a white man. A guest may be as glad to go as the | host is to haye him. LOT NUMBER ONE uits, regular prices ranging from $16.50 to $58.50 Sale Price $29.50 A SELECTION OF TRICOTINES AND SERGES LOT NUMBER TWO Sults, regular prices $29.50 to $35.00 Sale Price $20.00 ABSOLUTELY NO ALTERATIONS DONE White Star Clothing House Company 147-153 MAIN STREET SPECIAL 10-DAY SALE ON ALL OUR YOUR SELECTION OF SERGES — TRICOTINES — JERSEYS Extraord nary Sale Prices On All Our ' DRESSES and COATS — Coastwise ‘Al but $30,000 worth of the jewelry(steaniship lines must ificrease freight rates thirty-one per cent. in order to ob- tain the six per cent. annual returh pro- jen “was told Raymond, president of h Wty vl ¢ thi he ‘wou! e need- O e as sarel abscte whiah r Alsacs. 'u to Trois-Epis for his visit to Nor- the | NATIONAL COMMITTEE June 10.—The selection. of 1 ; jury about two. wesks ago|BIDS FOR _SALE. OF; LE THAN - hm -.hn both Ay indiotment, in New |sale of the Leviathan, the larzest York -and- Amrney ‘Algstt of that city,|the American nierchant marine, asked S“ie Thom— " LIFT OFF CORNS T DOESN'T HURT" ARE TO BE mmnfim 3¢ wuhlnxum June | “—-ll.dl for the,. ? in} opened June 30 by the shinitig board. The Leviathan, which was taken over from Germany at the outbreak of the war, was built in 1914 at Hamburg by Blohm and Boss, and has a gross ton- nage of §4,282. “The vessel has accom- modations for 985 first class passengers. 523 second class, $48 third class and 1,- 600 steerage. Announcing its decision to sell the giant linef the board stated that the in- junction obtained by William Randolph Hearst prohibiting the sale of the former German passenger shins was nullified by the mew merchant marine act which gives the board authority to dispose of its entire fleef. The fleet will be sold “as is and where is,” it was stated. Forty-six vessels with an sggregate of 256,400 deadweight toms were con- structed during May, ‘according fo the board's report today, making a total of 2,039 vessels of 11,387,603 deadweight tons constructed for the board. T i [ i Get rid of every corn and callus for few cents STAMFORD POLICE ARREST MAN WITH BURGLAR'S TOOLS Stamford, Conn.,, June 10.-=A man foynd at the foot of baSement stairs in an Atlantle street store today, with tools such as used by burglars near him, and who gave the name of Harry Davis, an- swered the description in many wars of a’'man wanted in New York city for as- sault upon the twelve-year-old girl of. George B. Ellis, a welfare worker in the Bowery. An officer went to New York with a report on the suspect. WOMAN'S BODY YOUND IN THE CONNECTICUT RIVER | | | | { LONDON PERMANENT SEAT OF ‘ | | { Suffield, Conn., June 10.—A woman's ,.(,B,n',p, I,‘ "‘.“;‘h 5 body was found in the Comneeticut river| ., ' o " here today. It was taken o an under-| -t% SO taker's place in Thompsonville. The wo-| P, B¢ O man, who was about 40 years old, five feet four Inches in height, wore winter clothing with a fur collarette about her neck, when drowned. Death came from drowning. . tiny bot reezofig 13 the nnrh |ed of ethér ‘discoviry: ef ja-Cinc INT'L SUFFRAGE ALLIANCE|S¢nius; : Geneva, June was chosen as the manen # of the In- ternational Woiman Suffra Alliance at The M..P. Suudl actao) will hoid dnn s d I Jim this morning's on of its coigress. Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, president of the alliance, told the delegates that at least $125,000 would be required to attended Ane L the Adams place onithe keep ‘tho organization going until its] ot to Addisod next congress two rs hence. his ‘,”‘ THREE YEAR LABOR U GIVEN STUDENT BURGLAR btber, (1,:‘ Middlebury, Vt, June 10.—Albert A. Houghtop, who, while 2 senfor at Middle- (‘i" is homd bury College, twice broke into a logal! store and each time stole & suit. of clothes, was given a sentence of two to| three years at hard labor in state pris- on today, and then was placed on pro- bation. SUICIDE BY SHOOTING AT THE NEW BRITAIN CLUB New Britain, June 10.—Leonard = B.| - i Mallory, assistant purchasing agent at L get close to nature get the American =~ Hardware corporation | & job as a farmhand. by shoeting last night apartment at the Britain (1uh officials of the cor- poration say there was no irregul s in his accounts. STERLING Liloyd Miller, who has been at his home for the past two weeks, returned to New York Monday. H Sergt. C. W. Byers spent the week end with- friends in town. James Young and his bride have re- turned to Sterling after two weeks spent in Albany. Hattie Miller and son spent Sunday at A. Sherman's on Sterling Hill. Mre. Ralph Barr was in Moosup Wed- nesday. Arthur Chamberland is entertaining his New Cartu R. 1’ I| Genuine B. V. D. Union Suits. . ... $1.65 sister from Holyoke this week. It you live in Sterling. cut this out and mail it to The Plaut-Cadden compan Nerwich, Conn., together with your full e and full address. You will reosive, solutely free, a book containing 100 of Blow the non-poisonous Black Flag powder into air of closed , rooms where flies are trouble- some and in ten minutes . every fly will be dead or fl mess. Askforthang in the sealed glass bottle at drug, department, grocery and hardware stores. Three sises, 15¢c., 40c., 75¢. Black Flag, Balti- more, Md. mn-u«.uvnvu VIEW_ GO, NEWLY| General Jacinto B. Trevino, who was, in command of,the advance i guard which took control of Mexico | | \lb‘lcy ' arranza A{'l r s under General Trevino \ai m controi of the, Mexm*n ca all. foreigners - NOTICE! WHY IT PAYS TO WALK . Men’s StrawHats ............... $2.45 —————————————————— e PO Men’s Athletic Shirts. .. . ... 35c and 65¢ Men’s Balbriggan Union Suits-. . .. §1.19 See Window Display SALOMON’S GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, HATS, SHOES AND BOYS’ ‘WEAR 100 Franklin Smes Open Evenings Norwick, Conn, A Few Steps From Franklin Square . < e