The evening world. Newspaper, May 14, 1914, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

eome? A. Ves. a Recker A. No. ever raid fwenty-fourth street venue. to the Harlem conference. Q. What did Becker Becker took me aside and “Will you eee the boys and tee that that —— ——ie croaked. | before he gete te the witness stand. Me's got to be creal He's making trouble.” Webber continued:—"! said you want him murdered, Cherlie? That's @ pretty serious thing. It’e going te get a whole let of trouble, He said: N look after everybody. I'll ese that ne- Then he people “That's inte I right, Bridgle. body gete in trouble.” t you have an opium place ? tr. A. Yes, Yes, ws 6A. Four or five years. mt you live with pe Dida't you a _Meceed avenue, and didn't a around to the station house. here and has the nuinber “They've pumbers—all wrong. Rose said he had nv AY "t tale ed Manton. gm you? A. Only once. Who else went to see you? the last trial? | he had purposely left out tu the had sad and take & sho put on full at h but dent the District-Attorney thought it best omitted this time. Rose testitied that you talked ith Hecker about Hosenthal before jariem meeting he is mistaken? ‘4 "a, Wee woot up with you— os. I tell y ha | it refresb your memory? - THOSE ROSE GAVE. @- Do you remember testifying at ie tat trial about the time of nignt econd Qnd Sixth avenue to go to One street You maid A. if ivs in as that you left Forty t fred and Twenty-fourth e SOABA Deventh avenue’? Out 11 o'clock? 4 d 1 said it aro usin, weed by bing the same inciden w anything about that. . swore at the last trial that sine Hand where? A. At my pleco, Vallon? A. No. | @jHo frequented your poker your @ What conversatios did you ever fave with Beoker regarding Herman Hopenthal?, A. In the latter part of _ tube { m¢t Becker and went with Wie fn a taxicab to One Hundred and and Seventh Mr. Whitman was lending straight How long have you known Val- “d bo was known as your “lobby- irl in fellow Hyman Cooey take her away you, and didn't you have Cooey for doing it? A. No, never. -He sald something about cut-| Wag Rosenthal’s tongue wit for ing. Mr, Whitman in) oa. | about the case | to) ‘ane, jw many times did Mr. Whit-| ~ @ Any one else? A. Yes; Al Thomas me. @ But no one talked with you about | ¢, ? testimony at ae Mr. Manton asked Webber | (744 of his) which is the truth? pent examination | that epent examination ‘that I saw them. told his chauffeur Otto |» Hi 01 o1 ane tod é. Mee te he police in his examination by them Webber de- that he ‘purposely omitted | yHe admitted testifying to it at the trial, led leaving ft out opps? Did Moe Cohen drive you up? fo. ou Bchepps swore at the t Cohen drove you up, ORTS TO ANSWERS LIKE’ ia Webber, don't you know that the ye Sore now are identical Rose yesterday Al A. | was trying to look at you. Q. Are you? Or are yeu looking at the Distr Q. You went up with Vallon and head? Schepps, didn't you? A, With Schepps, WHITMAN AND COURT RI only, ; a LAWYER MANTON. Q. Why didn't ne Whitman—) Your in the sume car? A | .@. Did You wee Itxky that night? A. No BUKE Mr Ho “Being the captain. y This is Koing too . 4 murderera"—— Mr. Manton began he Court—1 agree with you, ‘The Mr. Whitman objected and was “Weston improper Mr. Whitman—He sustained Q. Being the captain of the under. toking, do you think anything took Place at the mecting that you didn’t penn't dare muy 1 did @ thing like that! He, doesnt dare! ‘The question was im- fed. hear? A. No, sir, we were all within R & few feet of euch other Feely MF Aa MA Bhd | Q. When you met Fallon that night y ability, and 1 must to do. Bo The Court—You were not justified Mr. Manton—t wn sorry’ to say at I de not agree with you, and T | think T was justified. The Court—et on with the case, dit he tell vou or did Seb you what you were going u Hundred and ‘Twenty-fourth for? A. No, sir Q. On the Jaat trial you said Becker jaaid: “Get on the job,” and you sald | you answered “all right.” Why hay you changed your story? A. I can't remember everything, can 1? @. You sayy an't remember wome of the detalix, Hut you were | planning a murder and you think [some of the details are so trivial | You have forgotten them? A. 1 have pps tell to One street uw quarrel with Vallon in the West Side prison over the $1,600 put up for Zelig’s bali? A. Yer, Q. Didn't you charge Vation that Val lon stole it? He didn't way of express ae fle kept it. | tried to forget them, I wae trying) Q. After the trial went to Ber- | to help Becker. muda or Havana javana, Cubs? | Mr. Manton asked that thin last be stricken out ) @ On the Sam Pat A Q. Weren't you interviewed by re- outing how) porters when you came back? A. i id you talk about Hosenthal's | » 1 waac never interviewed. | fquealing? A. We talked all day | Bee, any newspaper men | at it. A. There were four or five around. ! ) You put up $260 to get Zelin; out after his first arrest for carrying @ revolver? A. Yes, I did. Q. How long had you known Zelix? A. T'4 only aeen him once Jack Rose asked me at the Beaux Arts to bail Zelig out. That's why 1 did it. Q. You gave the $250 to ball out o otranger? A. Yes, | bailed out peo- le every day. xe ‘and you never got It back? A. jo. Webber's testimony about the $260 was calculated to show him up as a Looe sport, ready to put up money anything calculated to ald the id of a friend. Q. Do you dehy that you said to! Roas Whytock a reporter for The} Svening World don't know of any Apecific Instance of ‘police graft? The only man I ever paid gratt tu in dead, so the matter ta closed so far as I am concerned?” Did you say that? A. No | Q. Did you say to Whytdek: “Rose | kept conning the gunmen along as to! how strong Rose was. The only plan was to acare Hosenthal so he'd not go to the Diatrict-Attorney"—dld you way that to Whytock? A. I did not. . Did you tell Whytock that the gunmen got drunk and went too far? | ry } Do you remember Sullivan ask- | *| ing you who the two strangers (Lefty | 2, s/c? ,he gunmen drunk that Loule and Whitey Lewis) were? And ‘ Q. Don't know whether they were drunk or not when you gave them the murder algnal? A. No, air. | DENIES TALKING WITH TRIBUNE REPORTER. | Q. Didn't you tell D. T. Lynch of | the Tribune they were drunk? A. | No. Q. You made an aMdavit and awore | that Lynch's affidavit regarding what you sald contained all you said? A. I signed an affidavit. | Q. You stated to this Jury that you did not see any newspaper men, yet, here is an aMdavit signed by you that what you had aaid to Lynch was @id you say: A pair of Jack Zelig's gorillas?” A. Yes, I said that. Q. How were you these gunmen? A. Why, Ri duced us. Q. How? A. He id: “This Lefty Louls and this is Whitey Lewis 4 this ie Mr, Webber.” bail Zollg, Aidn't $2,500 to Vallon Rosen: fallen out? A. I'd heard it talked about uptown. You know Rose accused Rosen- thal of circulating the report that framed up the Zellg arrest? A. I don't know about that. the truth? A. I didn’t talk to any re- ters, WEBBER TELLS WHAT HAP-| Mr. Whitman was prompt with a PENED BEFORE KILLING. | Protest. ” O. On the night of the shooting Pies SERA: Betas Tee Nes Be what time you get to your poker) Q"no you know Charley Reich? room? About 6 o'clock. there?|4. 1 know a Charles Reich. ume aid nee wet there?/""Q, Do you know any other Charles ot Sea yen avertanns to bargain | Reichs: AS Lots of them. ‘Cie? aw with the gunmen? A. No, everything |2Wno. 18 just ane of them? A. of ere ee done by Hose. @. Where? Where? A. I can’t say, Fldnieht that igh wnt Pisce) Q. He ian't another Iteky, is het first? A. They all came together and|4-! don’t know what you mean. ie Rose @Q. Did you say Relch? "T haven't Mog tlarg and Schepps were | sept a night since Hecker was found guitty, “hecaune he's innocent. But I Mrinal vero kre, don't. want to jeopardize .my own @..When you saw Rosenthal lifer". A. No—T didn't say that, ou ge up te him and epeak to | @ Did you“say: “The best that hima? A. Yeo. Q. Did can happen to me is ten years for jury?” . A. No. +4 put res? ann pee plant, you say you. couldn't change a word of your teatimony because if you did Whitman would wend you to the chair? A, No, sir. —_—_—— ROSE ENDS STORY, QUITS THE STAND AND LEAVES COURT. jetropere. Q. Was that all you said? A. ¥ Q. Were you surprised when you heard later on Broadway that Rosen- thal had been shot? A. No. Q. Didn't you feel a shock when yon realized what had been done? A. 1 don't remember, Q. lan’t it a fact that that murder was not thought of until after those gunmen were in your poker room that night? A, No, Q. Did you meet Hmmle Thompson the morning of the shooting? A. Yea; Childa’s restaurant. leave your poke killing and go out the street alone? A. He did. He ‘on the stoop. Q. You stopped and him? A. Yes. | Webber then sald he went to.a {Turkish bath with Jack Sullivan | after the murder, ‘They went in a taxicab driven by Moe Levy Cohen. Webber floun: erably in telling about hi nea the men for whoin sul been Iasued in conn thal's graft revelations. Q. On the last trial you stated that you had roen Rose at 4.30 o'clock in the afternoon on the before the murder in y own place. He t you Becker wanted the men jabout not j and you testitied that lown and saw them all, id. Jack Rone waa the first witness of the day. He was put on the stand for the purpose of filling holes made In his testimony on crosa-cxamination yesterday, but was not subjected to very searching questions, Mr, Whit- man first questioned him. Q. State the circumstance of your kiving money to Becker the day of| the Harlem conference. A. I met Becker at One Hundred and Twenty- fourth street and Seventh avenue and gave him $900—the collections for that da He gave me back $500 to get “Jack” Zelig out on bail. Mr. Whitman then read from the record of the firat trial the alleged statement by Becker to Rose in which the police Heutenant was quoted as saying: “You must go to Rosenthal and get him to stand for @ friendly raid Q. You were asked on cross-exam- | ination If you had testified to that | on the firat trial and you replied that | you did not remember. bid you not testify on the, first trial that Becker | told you that he wus going to raid 4 crap game in Harlem? A, Yes. “Why did you He to Mr, Dougherty when you went to Police Headquar- ters?” asked Mr, Whitman, (Objection by Mr, Manton.) | The Court—He has ulready teatifed that at that time he had no inten- talked with ot} A. alg Yet you have testified at this that did not ws them all; A. The truth ts Webber frankly admitted lying to | after the killing. ADMITS MANY LIES TO THE POLICE. rty about not | on of telling the truth, orning of the} @ Since the last trial you have murder and about suying that Rose| *titten for newspapers and maga- had gone to your club looking for |#nes? A. ¥ you while you were out? A. Yeu, 1| & Were t written from your aid. own, knowledge or trom ay? You were asked if you had and} A: From memory, rumor, hearsay, dice of the Killing of Rosenthal | 0ssipy police records and bewspuper pu said you had not, Wasn't] “ppings. list h. Yom: @. They were written from the Sun- @. You sald Jack Hore was not in| day supplement of the New York your y Manaay ni ran that | American? A. Ye eT day might, Was that) Ate Aunton then questioned the witness. as follows: Dougherty x the | .& Where did you .go last night AP sip leh as e aficr you left the stand? A, ‘To Mr. | PAROS AE ‘vehi oltc (Groehl is an assist. pecbuee after that ant disirict-attarney,) ‘i ’ » You < ms Q, You stated, when asked whether | Gite ninvomeet Ree | ace ie you had any differences with Rosen-|Q. -You' then. went where? A, ‘To thal, that you “never pald any atten-| my notes and to bed, | tlon to hin." Doran't that mean youl '@, You talked with mo one? a.| had had any differences. A, never} No had any differences with hint “But you are prepa to answer} it Q.On the last trial you stated that all Mr. Whitman's questions ae to after your Jaw was broken Rosenthal | what you toxtified to at the last shook bands with yo trial? asked the Lawyer. Was sorry it happened Whitman objected and was} true? A Yes | aurtained. | Q. You had Mr. Marshall as your| "That's an tinproper question,” he lawyer for two weeks? Q. Will you waive A he right of Mr.t 1 waid with some heat. During the } Attorney @huking ad | man of the Louisiana, Buteros, a eighteen yea: |across his back and came out his left | presently 1 saw that he was dropping Marehall (now of Hecker'’s coun) “) Rose listened apathetic to keep his Hips closed so that he 4 en was suddenly aroused t tity? A. N by Mr. Whitman's abrupt "Do you do that because you are all.’ frald “the truth will como out Swinging himself up the arms o: asked Manton. ‘the chair, Rose gut up from the wit- Mr, Whitman instantly objected | ncas apat and passed behind the jury * and was sus by Justice box and eR ‘t-room, hu t eye jow im, TNE why aeare-pou ton at the-gurg?| tne olde ‘door shus’ Wiad toes ebm 34 x ke ‘ tae) oy en ran Pea ! Sick andWounded U.S. Marinesand Sailors From Mexico Being Taken Off the Solace (Specially Photographed by an Evening World Staff Photographer.) WOUNDED TELL OF RED CROSS ABUSES potaee aan Flag of Mercy Used to Cover Snipers Shooting Down Sea- men in Vera Cruz. Stories of the treacherous use of the Red Cross flag to cover sniping parties of Mexicans, of fear of poison which does not kill but drives men crasy, of felons armed with rifles and given the choice of fighting the! American sailors or of being thrown to the sharks were brought in to-day by the convalescents aboard the naval hospital ship Solace, bearing} 101 patients from Vera Cruz, which docked at 7.80 A. M. at berth 8 the Clinton avenue aide of the Brooklyn Navy Yard: ‘The,Solace was in charge of Medical Inspector Luther 1. yon Wedekind, who said that an otherwise dened by the | death at wea of two men, pleasant voyage wai Of the 101 patients aboard, thirty- ‘one had been wounded. Others were) {ll or already on the road to recovery. | Thirty-nine are practically well; Medical Inspector Leach received) the sixty-two men, who were taken to the naval hospital, room having been made there by the transfer on Tuends pital in Boston. ‘were #o badly wounded that they had to be carried on stretchers and four ambulances were occupied an hour of forty patients to the hos- Twenty-eight men in making the transfers. ONE OF THE DEAD WAS A NON- COMBATANT, The men who died on the voyage North were Hunter Dobson, a sea- and Manuel . Buteros was buried at sea, tobert Emmet Lee, who won't be old until Saturday, is one of the youthful fighters who wants to get back to the war, He ‘was shot in the calf of the leg and didn't see who shot him or get a chance to fire a shot in return. The youngster, whose home is with his widowed mother, Mra, Rose Lee, at No, 792 Elghth avenue, joined the navy on June 4 of last year and was assigned to the Vermont. fe had started up a street—t don't know the name of it—on our way to the Naval Academy when all of a sudden there were a bunch of shots. I felt a pain in my leg and juet then George Kinsman—George Putnam Kinsman is his whole name: ho's eighteen and llves at No. 380 K street, Boston—pitched over on tup of me and knocked me down. A bullet had gone through his thigh and then atuck in ry leg. COULDN'T SEE ANY ONE TO SHOOT AT. “L wanted (o fire back but Eeouldn't son a Rol to shoot at, That was the worst part of it, Well, they took us back’ on the Chester and after- ward to the Solace, Poor George lost his leg. Blood potsoning set in and Dr. H. 8, Strine amputated it just above the knee, I'm getting along all right now and all | want is @ chance to get back.” Basil Burnett of New Orleans, a sea- man dn the South Carolina, got a bul- let in the right shoulder which passed shoulder, He was in charge of @ ma: hine gun on the water front, SAW SNIPERS USING THE RED CROSS FLAG, “I saw Mexlcans shooting under the protection of Red Crosa tagn, man partioularl T neticed, walkin along the water front carrying a Red Cross fag. Every once and a while he would disappear in @ doorway and his fag there sniping at us. got him, and what do yeu suppose we oie wes en es-sokdier with a ark. SOLACE ARRIVES; pung Spaniard and non- |* combatant, who was wounded in Vera Cru | | | | | it, Mexicans half of the Ralph Nesota, sald eat any food women, them, He Florida, wh right shoulde val Acade Schwartz, to be in o our way to t his chest. F int against the eye. scious. He k he would Jok “Those C their bullets,’ ing so fi THE ‘The wound wound in leg. ‘Theopuile Hugh A. gunshot wou F ‘Thomas George HM. though much said forth that the Mexicans had poison which made men crazy and, that they hoped to feed it to a lot of] 6f the sailors and marines. HERO JOKED IN THE FACE OF DEATH. the firing whon a bull He dropped, but 8ICK leg, and that teg was partly hollow, He had more than 200 cart “Lots of buildings flew Reg Gross flags and under cover of them oc- cupanta kept sniping at don't idea of civilised seem to bh warfare. town, Many eaman on that no Americ: 1 prepared the tip Nathan Schwartz, a seaman on the! jieutenants » Was wound ee in the at emy, saw Jol macher killed. “He was in charge of a gu nd he seemed tight, he fe laughed tou ever and declared it would take more | Ut than that to put him out of business, | than 10,000 fighting men, while Villa's “Then he gut orders to get his gun action and he wheeled it arvund academy and toh he how it was all 0 about it, easers must be he said. Then he died,” ABOARD. on the 5 Mitchell W, Basa, seaman, gunshot V. Viskup, bo: mate, second class, gunshot wound, Boy » ordinary nd, Upper ila, {.N, Cuties, ordinary seaman, | gunsoot wound. Collins, t 2, compound fracture of skull Conrad, ordini man, gunshot Wound lower Limb, 40, BUR. | | Copeland, a upper limb Doyle, ordinary private, ou August ¥, wt wou guns y Mitchell Fitaxerala, sergeant, gun- er limb, shot u Huward = E seaman, gunshi Edward class, gunahe Me gunshot \ound of upper limb, John wo Marry shot wound, J. gunsho' | Wiltlamn 0. jwound upper | cf fe Be. man gE » private, ou Harty Firdth, ordinary seaman, nd lower limb, pe 1. Goucke jr, isbury woun ot lower G nary darvis, seaman, nd, lower limb. 3. Hoslinger, private, gune | lower Timb ppler, ordin t wound Io Keas, ‘1’ limb, Kinsman, ordis gunshot would lower lim| Joseph L. Kwapish, seaman; gun- We |#hot wound upper limb, ordinary gunshot wane. lower limb, John . ‘wound, private; hha ja tae “They're AND WOUNDED | ti jot wound in neck, , engineer, third a ‘FEDERAL IN FLIGHT FROM TAMPICO ARE The} have any | found enough dynamite to blow up| of the prisoners we took were felons who said they hadjbeen armed and forced into the army." (Continued from First Page.) the Min-/Constitutionalists their first open an dared \aeaport, and unless the United States y Mexican | interferes vast supplies of arma and was H had gone ‘ered ammunition may soon be rushed through this port to the rebel forces, «kind of | which need them badly. Unieas, however, the belligerency rebels is recognived by the | United States, this country may not permit arms to go Into Mexico {through ‘Tampico, Carranga and his are sald to be conside: the ‘ing strong: the advisability of ask- on theling for immediate recognition, now nN Schu-|that their forces have been so unl- formly successful in the north, aaid' The capture of ‘Tampico and Vera ehted {Cruz takes away two-thirds of 1 in He joked and|Huerta's income from import duties, Kidded all the time we were making academy and just We got in front of it a bullet ¢ Attaches of the Constitutionalist | Junta here declare the march to Mex- {ico City will begin at once and th | within a month the rene will ha’ ler than) taken the bistori. cit Huerta, y declare, cannot conimand more mbtned forces Would probably total 000 or 40,000, with 100 pieces of artillery and a large number of ma- chine guns, Constitutional agents here declare that as soon a# Mexico City is taken Carranza will s@6%p @ military gov- ernment all over the republic and spend six or eight months in pact ing the country, nplished he will hold a legal for the Presidency, the o1 Mexico has ever had, be claims, with | the exception of the election of Fran- cisco Madero after the overthrow of Diaz. Was just was over, but greasing ac © were: a lewain's ——_— TAMPICO IS TAKEN BY THE REBEL FORCES; FEDERALS RETREATING, seaman, 1914, by The Prem Publishing Co, The New York Warlt . 1¢ Deapatch to The Evening World.) ary Copyright Syectal miral Mayo, commanding the Am ican division off Tampico, has a nounced the capture of the city by scaman, | sunshot gunshot commanding the fleet here. No details were embraced in the wireless message which bore th word. A hard gale is blowing here, making static conditions bad. A wireless despatch frou Admiral Badger to Admiral Mayo seys that the Navy Department desires urgent rgurding an American at Burwell, nephew of Secretary Di well is reported a# having veen killed near Ozlutma, He has been con- structing a dam for a Dutch oll com- pany. despatch dir Admiral mb. Mayo to make immediate Inquiries of gunshot | the United States Consul at Tampico. The retreat now in \wogress along the railroad ii in the direction of San Luis Potosi, which is threatened by the Conastitutionalists. |The only other raiirosd seaman; | city Mi hot | lets, gunshot a : “1 control ordinary limb, seainan, gunshot ry Bea: | As soon as this is, ¥ y ‘one| VERA CRUZ, May 14.—Rear-Ad: | the rebels to Rear-Admiral Badger, ERMAN SEES DAGGER’: “ERE SHOT ME” SAYSHUERTA WHEN sn eos ASKED TD RESIN Matters, BERLIN, May 14. | " pean powers,” said George Gothein, | a Radical member, in the Reichstag Hands Delegates’ Messenger a| to-day, “nave an interost im secine: that the United States does not make | Revolver and Dares Him | out of Mexico a second Cuba: We | to Fire. ‘All the Kuro must demand the open dour ther, too, for Mexico's resources are very great and promise a big future. The extension of the Monroe Doctrine tu the whole of basiness interests | very dangerous.” Herr Gothein referred to the enor mou ving made by the Unite States through lack of a standing rmy of European dimensions, and added: “In that direction lies the American danger. If we in Europe do not want. to abdicate in businer: [matters we change our poitey TAX ASSESSOR ON TRAIL . . OF EX-OWNER OF CUBS. ‘Bpecte’ Cable Despatch to Fhe Rveaieg World.) VERA CRUZ, May 14.—Uneuccess |ful efforts were put forth by Gen. | Huerta‘ delegates to the mediation | canference to obtain from him @ writ+ jten promise of his resignation prior to thelr departure for the United | States. Inforn of this was given me to-day By Americans arriving | from the capita | On behalf of the delegates, three prominent Mexicans called spon | Huerta and suggested tho advisability of hia placing his reaignation in their hands, although not to be used wi | out hia consent: Hyperta rejected the proposal em- | phatically, | “Yeu and the men who sent you | are like all the raat” he “You want to get rid pf me. Vou would CHICAGO, Moy 14.—Che Murphy, former owner ef the CRlenke National League baseball team will he Invited to explaih an apparent: discrep: kill-me if you dared, but you haven't i Ne ott arene | the courage. If you were ae brave ae criy to thy valie o} new. | men should be wha meditate murder in paver clippings whieh wack) hin (oe their hearts you would assassinate million dollars,” and ax todd thet be me. Here, do it!” hate ’ ries Win the ball ciab for over The Dictator reached to his holster and drew a revolver, which he held fF | out:te hie callers. “Take it,” he enapped. “Take it and | shoot me. Go ahead, there is nothing | to prevent you. You wouldn't be pun- | ished; every around me would | glad to have me out of the way, and you would be hero “No? There, you eee, it is 1 told you. Not one of you has the cour- ‘age to do it. Tell the men that sent | sere KeHY vnce without my resignation, er any- | Company Hatta enn te! 963. 6th Ave. “W, 17th St. Dresser or Chiffonier clippings. Established $2 Years | ' without resigning: Presiden Gen. Angel Garcia Pen: War Mir'ster M: | superseded Gen. , of the Federal fo around Vera, Cruz, being of higher rank than_the ff of the Second Divi- | always and visiting cafe generally acclaimed. ergy EROPLAME DROPS. BOMBS | INTO FORT OF FEDERALS: Rebel Aviators Show Great Skit, | | | | Base 21x40, two li Dresser two small one: mirror 24x80; drawers and | in Placing the Deadly pulls: mabonany Anish. | H Base Wx%t; mirror | Missiles, Chiffonier fxs, "fsu- "itheo drawers; * ON BOARD U. 8. 8. CALIFOR.- |} mahoxany Bi 2 NIA, OFF MAZATLAN, Cal.—May ee Dries 12—vin wireless to San Diego, May 14.—Gen, Obregon's military avi- | ators becume effective again to- in the battle that has been waged | for many days at Mazatlan. An aer- oplane circling about the Federal entrenchments dropped bombs with | considerable accuracy into the forti- fications. The bombs exploded directly within tlie Federal lines, but the extent of the casualties was not reported in the city. Foieral Gen of Terms Prain isand, Liberality Prices Marked in New Bedroom Outfit (===) W SANTE N, Jowe Ynes Salazar, one of Muert many coramandere who ven away from the battle at Oiinags, Mexico, last Jan- | id Was captured on the Ameri- 0 later arrested on a Fed ing bim violatin was acquitted waa at once ar- — S-ineh continuous 8 heavy fillers, U. 8. Utah, wounded in the fighting ff frame. at Vera Cruz, will be given a public! tion by the city of Wheeling when | he Ih. well oa ww come ho} The | oun Aallor will be received Officials and escorted to his hi LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS, ware tat ae ington eq! owe rd the ederate Veterans, Spanish, War Veterans and other civic | | yetumed to organizations, % Mast ROM All Parts of the World Come the“ Makings OF LOFT CANDY-—So tremendous is the continuously growi: It is safe to say that almost every ex; train ‘and some material for our famdus Sweets. ALITY, too. Every uct must meas~ FT Candy Loving |. | ‘Special for Thureday le ORANGE | FLUFFS— sheer RANGE FL “Let Us Tempt You With the Following: RR ica arcaeren POUND TIN x, a ai item goanat and Gat tak Sees rnc st

Other pages from this issue: