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VILA, A FIGHTING HERO, NSPRED ARHY ANDLEDITTOVICTORY AT TOREON of fire leaped from the rebel rifles on all sides of the besieged city and the big guns of the attackers began to boom, hurling shell after ‘he. against the doomed garrison, The Federal artillery was not idle, nor Were the Federal riflemen inactive. Villa's men advanced steadily. Al- though great gaps were torn thr ugh | thelr ranks by the bursting Federal shrapnel, they never faltered. | Rebel officers everywhere fell from their saddles and riderless horses | began to plunge through the ranks | of the advancing hosts. Before the | Attack was an hour old, wounded | rebels began the attempt to get to| the rear, some weeping, others curs- ing, all deploring the fate which pre- {vented them from participating in| tho final triumph of the Constitution- alist forces, A correspondent came upon one young rebel officer whose left arm was torn to shreds by shrapnel, Ho was attempting with his other hand to atanch the flow of blocd, He was wild with disappointment, don't mind my arm so much,” he said, “but I am sorry to miss ail the fun. Step by step, street by street, Villa's army entered the town from [an sides, They fought from house to house through barricaded street after barricaded street until the forces got no close to each other that Villa had ‘us tell you that Vinol, our deli-|to order his artillery to cease firing cod liver and iron tonic, is just|in order to prevent Killing his own the remedy you need to rebuild wasting | men. tissues and replace weakress witl (Continued from First lage.) Gight and Sunday in the open, yelling Mike mad and encouraged to advance the Federal entrenchmonts under & fire by the presence on the firing line of Villa himesif, Armed with a rifle and carrying no insignia of hic high office, the commander fought like @ay common soldier. Before the final assault on Torreon began at 6 o'clock Saturday night, Villa rode along the rebel line pointing at Torreon. {se Torreon, We must take {t to-night, Will you follow me into ft, comrades?” he cried. “Yes, yes,” came the answer in a thr ‘er of cheers, “We will die for you, General.” “Bata bueno,” said Villa simply. “Lat us go.” Instantly thousands of tiny darts STRENGTH FOR OLD PEOPLE A Simple Remedy Which Favors | Longevity. You act as though you just won-| dered how you are Boing to get through this trying season and do your work. You may be overworked or have had a bed which has left you without strength, ambition or much interest in life; im fact you are all run-down. a . (A. Prominent Boston lawyer says. [everywhere ho was greoted with “My Fecgpeel Ie oe yaats of age, “vivas, — above the din of owes th to Vinol, as since | 20,000 rifles. taking it she can walk further and do} The Federal artillery’ meantime =e Seid ie RA vob ai continued {ts steady fire, but many sider od making and! o¢ their shells overshot the mark, We jhageestn eae Vinol that if] P'!nclpally because of the rapid ad- vance of the rebels toward the cen- it does not quickly build you up,restcre and make you feel well|tre of the city. Hand gre des hurled we will return your money. Try|by both sides wrought havoc in the on our guarantee. ranks of both armies. 8 ali ro8 have Eczema try our|” go close had the fighting become uh that Fede stationed on ho: All Riker and Hegeman tops in several places actually caught Stores in New York and [gp g°Wii|in midair bombs thrown at them by Brooklyn and at all drug emy and hurled them back on stores where this blue uv the rebels’ heads. and waite : This sort ot ughting continued until The eral garrison, fighting des- perately, was gradually driven back toward the centre of the city, de- serting the barricades and taking refuge in the cuartels of the town. ‘There they remained and fought with great savagery and in nearly every case it was necessary for the rebels to exterminate each separate party before a cuartel could be taken. Sunday night Villa took the bull | rink, melter and @ large cuartel in) gople afflicted with bed Hrenth find! the southern portion of the city, as . well as a number of eral strong Phe pleawant, ed tab | lets ure taken for bad breath by all who) noisy which had been fortified by the know them. BAD BREATH Dr. Eafe’ Olive Tablets Get at Cause and Remove It. Taviets, the substi- | yy on the bowels work. 0 wn Tintamarde, Olive Tablets nct rently | piling of cotton bales ubout them. | miy on the how u Wrtae thea to kt Tinl™8 | Since these successes the efty has been | Mood and gently pul entire sy4-| practically in the possession of the tem, slittiig " They do that which dangerous calomer|Febels, although fighting continued in ithroughout the week. Gen Velasco \ remained in one of the principal euar- na withs tels until Tuesday, when he retreated cts of An Dr. ajecoversa Sa tan }to Canon del Guarache, defending it mule after seventeen years of practice, valiantly until last night. Among patients afflicted with and} “complaint with. the attendant bra | Throughout the whole fighting Olive Tableta are purety | Which ended last night Villa's troops compound mixed with ollve| had shown reckless bravery | Rew Shem. by; taste While hundreds of prisoners of war fora week | were being employed to-day burying 28e PF the dead, digging trenches and re- [butiding the railroad from Bermijillo | = | | S| Worth and | Lasting Value H These you get when the name “KAYSER” is in tho i| hem of your silk glovcs. | Toby Kayes Silk Gloves | i3 true economy—because | “KAYSER'S” wear better, fi: better and hold their shape better than any other silk gloves made, yet cost no i more than the ordinary kind. Look \) for “KAYSER” inthehem. You will | j find it in the genuine. 4e tips outwear the Short “KAYSER” Silk Gloves 50c to $1.25 Long “KAYSER” Silk Gloves 75c to $2.00 AT ALL STORES intee ticket with every pair that gloves. | Villa himself was everywhere, and | , leo Gomez Palacio and Torreon, it was noticed all were “regular Huer- tista troops. ras Colorados” (Uted Flaggers) Hern all he captured before a firing! ¢, facilitate the movement of troops. quad. cuted, it Is significant that none have | Preliminary work for ti lacio, when the Conatitutionaliats were as between 200 and 300 rebels taken precautions to prevent surprise by de- stroying the railroads in all direc- tons and maintaining scouting parties ‘The next great battle between the HELD BACK NEWS have been In possession of the gr er portion « afternoon, Gen. mit the announcen ing had ceased and the resistan: the garrison had brought to an end. eral troops would have surrendered | long ago, but their THE EVENING WORLD, and has cleaned Torreon itself and procured supplies of ammunition. Villa does not believe the present gar- risons of these two cities will be greatly strengthened in view of the practical extermination of the Tor- reon garrison and the loss by the Huertalstas of the greitest number of big guns and the largest amount of military stores maintained at any point throughout the republic, In the meantime thée"raliroad from Torreon to the east is being repaired tion where thoy fell. Automobiles were used in rescue work, but they could not ascend hillsides, Some of the flerces: fxoting oc- curred in the hills svuth of Gomez Palacio and weat of raged with great fury Huarache, where the Federals made their last desperate staud and from There were no “Bande- mong them, The “Handeras Colorados” were the Federal volunteers, former fol- lowers of Pascual Orosco tn his re- bellion against Madero in 1912, They are looked upon by Villa as traitors and he has frequently said he would column of Villa's horse. Although It 1s not known! ‘The brigades of Gens. Tomas Urbina that they have been summarily exe-|and Maclovios Herrera are doing the jw move- ment, making up the advance guar age og tgp mevillee mun’ army, The, Sides In the first attack on Gomez Pa-jover the Nazas River, which runs through Torreon and which was de- stroyed by the Federals during the eleven days’ fighting, has been rebullt and trains are now running over it direct into Torreon. —_———— DEAD HEAP STREETS OF TORREON, CAPTURED IN SIX DAYS’ BATTLE. iy Anwwinted Irene.) TORREON, via Gomer Palacto, fifty miles out to watch for approach-| April 3.-—Torreon, strewn with the ing bodies of the enemy. jdead and wounded of a six-day Already the rebel movement toward | battle, was occupied by the rebels Monterey and Saltillo has begun. !jast night on the heels of the fleeing Federals. In al the fighting no for- elgner was killed or injured. The} taking of Torreon marks the climax of the first campaign of the revolu- | to oust Victoriano Huerta from Mex- s {ico City. It gives the Constitution: | ‘Tuesday |allsts virtual control over the whole northern tier of Mexican States. ‘The fighting began last Friday and was almost continuous. At first Villa attempted assaults on the strong Federat positions in daylight, but these proved to be costly, so the days were spent in cannonading and the 6 the eircie house, drew the enemy. A hundred small encounters oc- curred intermittently in the streets or over the possession of some favored roof, but the roar of cannon was al- most continuous. Both sides used armored trains. These, with big guns mounted, would suddenly appear around an elbow of one of the hills, discharge @ broad. aide, and then retire. Barly in the tack on Gomes Pala ventured out at the sa inge of shots ensued, like led into a trap, they retreated, leav- ing many wounded on the field. The Federals killed all of these, as en prisoner at the time, Villa denied to-day reports that Federal reinforcementa are on the way here. Early in the fight he took intense suitering from heat and thirst was relieved by @ rain thought to have been brought on by the heavy fring During the battle scouts brought word that Federal reinforcements from Monterey were approaching on the east, Gen. Herrera was sent against them and later re he had sent them scurrying into the hills, The battle surged first into T reon, then back t. the rm and ravines in the subu oy three daye. The iderals grew vi r each day in t fehting. y the Federals evacuated to the h and the rebels took possession of Torreon, supplios of food, ammunition iilery and stores of cotton fell forces of Carranza and Huerta will he fought in these two places, UNTIL HIS VICTORY WAS COMPLETE. Although =the — Constitutional been absolutely It was learned to-day that the Fed- Micers had told en cond 4 eetuen ig Nee ‘lt: | nights in assaults, Positions were! into the rebel hands by the capture. iT a Ove JU. > jpn’ trugi “inanner’ before being ‘put to | ‘ken and lost time and again. Sov.) JUAREZ, April $—With the tking fierce defense. army in and about Torreon is getting | Ya much needed rest, several thousand ) death, This nerved them to the point) nf desperation and accounted for their eral night attacks sent the Federals)? stiuconalists now control ah im- scurrying from strong positions, but: nense wedge-shaped portion of Mex- at daybreak the captors would be!ico, with the point resting on Torre compelled to abandon them by the} on, 600 miles south of here, and ths strength and accuracy of the enemy's | oP extending along the American While that portion of Gen. Villa's border from Nogales, Ariz, to a polnt | fresh Koldiors were put to work early | artillery fire, much of which Is sald! jugt west of Siete’ Daan’ hex At tovday cleaning up the city, buryln& to havo been directed by French and| Piedras Nexras, known also ax Ciudad | hag REE atin Me 4 Porfirio Di ons the itio Grande thom and making the city generaily | German gunners from Regie Pass, there tsa. Federal | habitable. The damage done by| Losses have not been compiled, but shells and bombs and firo during the | Gen. Villa eee H aKa to tHe, care Gleven ayn Hattie) enor ciam: |at 500 kill |The States now subject to the rebel FEEDING PEOPLE OF THE CITY |the Federal losses at 1,000 killed and|arms are Chihuahua, Sonora (except ped lalvtel 12.600 wounded, with an unknown !tune Durance amd Sinaloa, The greatest problem which con- | number of prisoners. \ y¥ * victory is sald to make fronts Gen, Villa, however, is that of ing tho citizens of Torreon, | % Palacio and Lerdo, many of | m are on the point of starvation. oodstuffs are being distributed as tably as possible among the suf- fering people, Soldiers have been sont to surrounding ranches to drive in herds of cattle, Some of these returned carly to-day and fresh beef | was plentiful in many sections of the apture of Saltillo and Monclova, rhuila, and Monterey, the key to of Nuevo Leon, assured. The Villa believes the Federals whom | th his cavalry is pursuing to the south | Peet form but a remnant of the Federal force, whose loss, he says, is prob-| ably close to being total. subordinate generals have not yet| reported, however, and until they do just how many were captured cannot be accurately stated. 1 Indigestion which unfits you for work, robs you of your sieep city. A system of soup kitchens, in | and makes life a burden to you— Charge of the. commissary. depart. | The battle line was four miles tong CAN BE CURED. ” ment, har been established through. | and the fleld was determined by three | aaah YOU Mh, Liniiiisiitttly out the city where bread and meat are being dispensed to the Mexicans great hilly formed like a carpenter's square, at either end of which lay of the chuses. another places | the towns of Gomez Palacio and) Y aff food ing igs) to natives who | Torreon, i ‘ A own their own | S.es, but neverthe- | There were about 10,000 men tn each Coyposyety burly ll less are in want army. The Federals had fortitied the | When the rebel army wiil move en | hills with rifle pits, trenches and barb- Helps your stomeech to masao against Monterey and Saltillo| wire entanglements, ‘The nature of erererty coe eee >: is not known, but it is believed to be | the ground made it difficult to recover Villo's idea to start a quickly as the wounded and many of them died ann ter he has ught up foo A hiner ar In a ONEILL-ADAMSCo. Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City Every Night Is Dance Night With a Victrola in the Home VERYBODY knows the real pleasure of these informal little home dance parties makes them preferable to a dignified “affair.” Ask the young folks what they want, and every time the answer comes back in a happy chorus: “Let’s have a dance at home!” The home is the right place for dancing. Everybody feels at home and at ease, and that is what 4 A Victrola—a ‘Cabinet and Records for $5. These Records: RECORD } makes everybody have a good time. Think It Over! ou 1 OWalte. with Hendy. Freddy" writing iele” Waltaee, Some Kmoke—Cne Two Btep Ts $15 Cabinet For Records $40 Victrola Complete for 57.50: $5 DOWN. $1 A WEEK. In no other way can you buy so much pleasure on such liberal terms. With the first small payment the machine, cabinet and the eight up-to-date dance Record selections are brought to your home, and you and your family may immediately enjoy its sweet companionship, It puts the whole world of music within your reach—operas, popular hits und the new dance music, This combination offer is a money saver. Better make your selection NOW, Waiting may mean disappointment. The demand for Victor dance records is tremendous, Other Vietrolas from &15 to #200, Come in for demonstrationa and listen to your favorite In New York's Bhopping Centre, ONEmL-ADAMS Co. Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York music, All the | SUGUeeencuervereneatenauraasenesanrsceneuegtecs | YOU CAN ONCE MORE | ENJOY EATING! FRIDAY, APRIL 38, 1914, which they finally fled, tullowed by @) th ‘awice the to po! wiped out by death, wounds, or flight at Gomez~Palacio and Tor. tlan, the Federal port in of Sinaloa, by the release of the veteran rebel army at Torreon, also is in a precarious state, ‘Thus, by his successful campaign of last month, Gen, Francisco Vill has practically assured rebel control of the vast territory of the Northern States of Mexico and gained for him- self the reputation of being the fore- moat soldier of the country, It was but a little over & year ago that he started out from a viliage neat here with two companions, six horses, sevon dollars in money and a meagre supply of beans, coffee and aura: e horses at the time were not pald for, and Villa’s first act upon capturing this city three months ago was to re- the liveryman from whom the Gen. Pablo Gonzales for months has harassed the Federal forces at Mon- clova and Monterey, and now that the Torreon army is loosed, strategists here assume that the Federals will evacuate these pointa and attempt to retreat to Tampico, the seaport of the State of Tamaulipas, Thin State tn sprinkled with rebel troops all along the line of retreat, which makes it evident that the Federal garrisons al- | ready are threatened with capture by immensely superior numbers, A rallros #9 from Torreon to the city of Durango, which is held by the rebels, and the overland jour from that point to jazatl jen through a country which agricul- turally rich and well watered, It would be a pleasant march for an army fresh from the horrors of hun- er and thirst in the desert. The rail- road, however, ts cut at Picardin, where the big ateel bridge over the river of that name was wrecked six months ago. Troops could be moved over it, however, by the use of shuttle trains. Interest here to-day was divided in speculation as to Villa’s future’ movements and the offect, if BONWIT TELLE The Specially Shop of Or that the rebel triumph would have inced the one-step with in| Washington, partners in the middie of the Never in all its dramatic history | room. since the Madero revolution of 19) has Juarex Kone #o nearly mad with exthusiasm as it did when a foot mensen from military headquarters ran through the streets shrieking that Torreon had fallen. Drunk with tion, men embraced each ol wherever they met. Bells in the three-hundred-year-old Minsion of Guadalupe were ringing louder and faster than ever they have rung for religious purposes. Khaki clad rebel soldi woke from their sleep In the town's many barracks to cheer. Then, stirred by @ common impuiae, their’ rifles were turned loose into the air. give For a time tnhabitanta of EL Paso | vense ‘supposed Juarez was‘ again suffering one of its periodical attacks, | Finely dressed officiais, high in the Carranza administration, threw their arms around unwashed private sol- diers in the streets and yelled their delight. ‘The municipal band, hastily routed from their beds, paraded through the streets playing the na- tional hymn, and seregaded Carranza until the Constitutionaist First Chief tired of the muate the gambling hall conducted by Villa's agents for the benefit of the rebel treasury all play ceased, while gamblers and em. plovees and spectators alike shouted their joy. Through it all only one name was heard above all others. It vill | “Vive Villa.” Common soldiers min: led freely with the highest officials Rebel Government in a cabaret | resort and were invited to drink to the insurgent army. ly place open in ¢i hil in the corner, whi in from El Pi Here's a chance Freckle-face, to try a remedy for freckles with the ,urrantee of a reliable dealer that it © will net cost you a penny unl it removes the freckles; while if it dows 'FRECKLE-FACE; Sunand Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots. How to Remove Easily. Mies you a clear complexion the ex- trifling. Simply get an ounce of othine— igi oben from any of the t is to rid yourself of the freckles and plexion. ounce needed for the worst case. 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