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THE WEATHEB&ORECAST Fair, continued coldtdrdty; tM? not s tin. cold, "jr. Detailed weather repiifts win be foun'on page II. V VOL LXXXI.-N- O. 135. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1914. Copyright, 1814, bp the Bun Printing and PubliiMng Allocation. PRICE TWO CENTS. O'SHAUGHNESSY BACK GOES TO SEE HUERTA Wijrct of Conference Following: liiplonmi's Visit to Llnd Kept Secret. in;m:i.s xkar capital Dili- - Force of Ziiputisifls Loots Town on Knilrond Linn in Mexico State. 5 ., ml Cable liefpateh to Tnu Srs. .M. .Hf Citt. .Inn. 12. Nelson O'Shatigh- -' n'ny. the American Charge d'Affalres, had n innferoncc y with (Ion. Huerta shortly after hi return to tho capital from Vera Cruz. llhougli h refused to discuss the ob-le- ft of this conference It Is reported on coiiit mithoilty that the provisional rreal-il'i- it nnd his Ministers are facing an nlmnst desperate financial crisis nnd It Is relieved that this matter wns discussed it meeting. Ozumbn, n little town of the State, of Mexico, situated about thirty mllen south of Mexico city on the Intcroceanlo line, was the scene of one of the blood-t- ?t attacks of the present revolt yester-da- v morning. A force of 1,800 Zapatistas under Fell Nerl and Amkdor Salasar, nlm h. th reputation of being the hIondiet of all tho followers of Zapata, mv.idnl the town at daybreak. The army na composed of less than 300 armed nldlcrs, tho rest being mero rabble lured hv the possibility of looting. The Zapatistas set tiro to the railroad station nnd destroyed every car In the railroad yard, Including a train which had urn arrived from Mexico city. The station and nil the surrounding houses , w re sacked and the rebels thereupon i nlong the line, carrying off with them all the railroad employees. At A'llvn they renewed the same operations. M'klnn anil burning the station nnd a eieat number of houses. Hero they also 'wyresfcd Into service nil the railroad cm-pl- o ets. Ill ir Untile HsDcelrd. The sarrlson of the Federal district bid in the meantime ben Informed of t'.ie advance of tho Zapatistas ami 100 regulars iiiw Kent out against the Insur-r- - to. After two hours pursuit they c night up with the rebel hand and trained t ! machine guns on .Ncrl's and Sala-i..i'- n followers, killing at least 200. Federal rrcnforccuients are now being r Vd to the place nnd will be eoncen- -' 'I .it Atllxeo. The Zapatistas are en- -i ' "il near b nnd a big battle. Is ex-- ; ' there Meanwhile, th of the town aie paulcstrlcken. Federal soldiers will not allow 1. lice, fearing that thoy will be r. d by the Zapatistas. ' vanguard of the rebel force had " ' nt Atluutn, about thirty r 1. southeast of Mexico city, which t" fi'-- looted and partly destroyed. ' I'hei Zapat!ta force attacked, the int. .if Jememeca Inst night, hut the IVle il garrison successfully resisted the stt t ' until reetiforcements sent from noH"i' towns arrived and drove away the -- 'b-i Tho National Railroad line Is o'. ritns trains only between this city and Jetuenieat the remainder of ihr south having been destroyed. Vllln llxpcclcd nt Torreon. Refuge. who arrived hero 'i Torreon sa:. that the. rebels are run-n'M- g traini between Chihuahua and o, whlrh Is thirty miles north of Thie refugees say they would not l.e tiurprlfed If tien. Villa's army from "Jlnaca reached Torreon ill a few days, ilie have a clear rnllway line from ho frontier. National Railways otflclals stato that ie will be ablu to run trains north-vir- il out of San Luis I'otosl If Uto Fcd-e- r I troops continue to protect the r-- work which is being carried on. s are running between Tamplco nnd S.i i Luis I'otosl, but the line Is stilt inning with rebels. T w Uovernmcnt ordered y the Tdlato discharge, of women post of-1,- 1 r employees. This will mean hardship a- - J n Isery to several hundred women. ' evidently an iinipllllcatlon of tho I"J'' of i:ze(ulel Ohregon, the tlrst Mln-Ist- i' ,f Flnatiro under Huerta, who dls-""- - 'I all women employees from his 'K'l ir .lent Immediately after assuming 'i 'He T ommlsrton which waji to nrranca tn.iiaiitee under which the banks will i e wed to lss.uo notes to the oxtent r in. tltnest their metallic reserve has ' ' 1 on formed, and Its formation Is ' li lllllte. ItnnUlim Munition ImprmliiB. iiuivir. the banks of Aguasciillentes, . iliMliaJuuto, Ouprrcrn, Hidalgo, It.in i Meii-antl- l lie Vera Cruz, the iir.diot.il du Mexico, the Ilanco ' ' il du Mexico ami the national In- -' jiih of Yucatan. Qucretaro, Tabaac-o- , '' i illpus a..d Zacatecus havo deposited tin' llanvo National a ulllclcnt tin' of metallic reserve to guarantee lirnhcnt which all batiks and .luiclal houes are accejitlng. ' tier Imitltutlnns are expected to Join Ktoup. The llrst will probably be the 'ii ih of Morelos, which has a (treat gold ""rve, having converted all Its reserves - ild. Large quantities of gold are now '"' ng offered for tulo In Mexico city and 'i" find many buyers. This gold Is Uhu.illy In tho form of five or ten peso I'tecea and the owners believe that It Is n xoo-- l speculation o convert tho gold Into 1'iiik notes, thus uhowlng that they have full confidence, that tho value of th bills IWed by the banks will not be Impaired when the final settlement arrive. Tho Government Is straining every "rvu to stop the' exportation of ffold. whleh is bought here at a premium of 13 ler cent In Mexican bank notes nnd pemutis to make it good profit In the, "tilted .States. Tho Administration ha Continued on Second I'ago, CARDEN PAYS VISIT TO MOHENO. Coniul-Urner- al at Mexico city Ambassador. Special Cable betpateh to The Ur.x. Mi:x!co Citt, Jnti. 12. H!r Llgnel Car-ile- n, tho Hritlsh Mlnlstcf to Mexico, pulil n, visit to Foreign Minister Molicno to- day. The Minister won accompanied by Jlrltl.ih Consul-Oener- C. R. W. Stringer. Hoth were In gala uniform. Tho conference nt Uie foreign office lasted n long time. It In generally be- lieved hero that Mr. Btrlnger will net ob chatge d'affaires when Sir Lionel Car-de- n leaves tils post here. Members of tho diplomatic corps said, when they learned tho facts, that tho visit to Henor Mnheno could menu noth- ing cine. BALFOUR LECTURES ON THEISM. to Dent With Inevitable Reliefs of Mankind. ieriiif Cahle betpatih to tan Siw fii.Asoow, Jan. 12. Aithur J. Ilatfour delivered the first of a series of twenty lectures at the Glasgow Fnlverstty this eenlng on the subject of "Theism." The course will extend over a pejlod of two years. Mr. Ilalfour Is a lecturer under the Glfford trust. In the Initial lcctuie, which was mainly an Introductory expository of the sub- ject, Mr. Ilalfour said : "When I speak of God It Is not the absolute of which I nm speaking, but the God whom man may adore and love, not merely the conclusion of a logical proc- ess." Although this may raise the cry of anthropomorphism, Mr. Ilalfour said he hoped to commit worse crimes than that In tho oourse of his lectin oh. He went on to say that h Intends to deal with Inevi- table beliefs of mankind on all subjects ex- cept theology. He would speak of n God of whom It would be Inadequate but not untrue to say that He took side, that He worked for great ends, that He Is a spirit engnxlnr with other spirits and that h was In that sense what the lecturer did not think profane to call a social God, a God who asks us to work with Him, a God, therefore, who wns to be distinguished from a sort of nbfolute to which every- thing Included In Its boundless limits was equally Indifferent, to whom the good and tho bad, all that we admired, all that we detested, were equally necessary to form elements In a perfect whole. MADDENED DEER KILL AGED KEEPER IN PARK Attack Him on Hawley Estate Pitchfork Is Ilroken in Struffprle for Life. IUhvlo.v. I.. I.. Jan. 12. In a despoiate flight with a herd of maddened deer, led by a big buck, l'atrlck Horan, a keeper In the deer park oil the late Hawley's estate at Vest Ifllp. was gored to death No one saw tho battle, but a bloodstained pitchfork, a broken club, ground torn up for many rods and wounds on the deer themselves were evidences of the terrific struggln of the ngrd man for his life. Horan left his home, a llttlo cottage on tho estato owned by Miss Margaret Ham- mond, a ward of Mr. Hawley. early this murnlng to attend to his duties In the deer pork. When he did not return for lunch ut noon, as he had dono for yenrs, bts daughter decani" alarmed and notified tho superintendent. After u long Horan's body was found. Ily tho sldo of tho body was the pitch- fork, with which tho old man evidently had done good service. Near that was a cano he usually carried, broken In two. Horan's body was so cut up by hoofs nnd antlers that ho hardly could be recog- nised. It was plain that the deer had Jumped on the old man after they had knocked him down. Kvldenees of tho fight wero found half way nctoss the pen, showing that the kepeer had gono In, seen that tho deer were vicious and turned to get out, fighting off the animals with tho pitchfork, but failed to reach the gate. Horan had ben warned repeatedly not to go Into the deer park ulone. Hut h had seen most of the herd grow up nnd said none of tho deer would ever hurt an old man who had petted them and fed them. In weather as cold as yesterday's penned deer become more dangerous than at any other time, and bigger, stronger and more experienced keepers than Horan hail been careful to avoid thi herd when the thermometer dropped. Horan's youngest daughter wn.s with tho men who found tho body. At home was another daughter, who Is sitld to bo dying of consumption. Their mother Is dead. The buck and his mutes wero tractable enough when a dozen men entered tho pen. The keepers said It was only when a single person went In that they became vicious. COHALAN LOSES HIS FIGHT. Laborers He Wanted Dropped From Payroll Are llrtalnrd, Alsant, Juii. 12. Surtogate John F Cohalun protested In tho Mtate Clifl Service, Commission recently agulnst cer-tlfyl- tho payroll of the New York city Hurrogate's office If It contained the names of Charle W. Culkln, William V. Duffy and several laborers. While Surrogate Cohalaai ordered these men dropped by Comissloner of Itecords John V. Curry, who originally appointed them nubject to the approval of the Hurrogates, Surrogate Fowler was of the 'opinion that while the appoin- tment should only bo made with the ap- proval of the Surrogates tho lat- ter hod no power to order the abolition of the positions held by those threo men. Commissioner Curry took this view of the controvery nnd retained thorn In the service and the position taken by him and Surrogate Fowlor was upheld by the Htate Clvlt Service Commission HOTKL INIIIAN RIVJCB, KOTKLKIM E, FLA. ow orcN. aovjan on mmnvKHx'-uit- v. STRIKE SPREADING IN SOUTH AFRICA MnHinl Law To-da- y While Men Vote on h General Walkout. DYNAMITERS TO UK SHOT Miner Likely to Join Railroad 3Icn in the War on Capital. wui Cable HeiaM to Tin. Si JollAKXEsuur.a, Jan. 12. The grave sit- uation resulting from the threatened gen- eral railroadmen's Mrtkc throughout South Africa ban made littl material change In tho lost twenty-fou- r hours. Although' announcement was made that martial law will be proclaimed In tho Transvaal and the Orange Freo State It Is helleied that there Is romo sort of truce between tho cmployeis and the men pending the declaration of tho result of tho balloting of tho Federatloif of Trades regarding the proposal for a general strike. The proclamation is to be of a drastic nature, one of the chief features being the order that persons using dynamite to destroy ralltoad property nro to bo shot on sight. Tho strike has spread to t'npe Colony, where up to the present the men had re- fused to Join with the workers of tho north. Natal loo Is now affected. Half of the men In the rallro.ul workshops at Halt Hlver, Just out of Cape Town, went on strike They marched In to tho city Hall nnd held a meet- ing, nt which resolutions in f.ior of a gem ml strike were adopted. As tho Cape Colony workers are believed to hold the key to the sltuntlon this Is regarded as a grave move, and tho Gov- ernment ordered the Immediate mobiliza- tion of the citizens as a defence fore. Huglne drivers nt Durban held a meet- ing and approved the plan for a general strike. A Socialist agitator named Harrison waa nrrcsted for seditious utterances In a speech nt Capo Town. He said : "Wow up everything. Never mind whether hundreds are killed or not. Wow up all property." Shots wero tired at a train near Cape Town Nobody was hurt and there Is rio clue to the criminals. An nttempt was made to destroy by dynn-mit- e the big railroad bridge at Fourteen Strcnms, fifty miles north of Klmberley, the principal link In the main Itne of communication between Cape Town and the northern cities. Including Johannes- burg. I'retorla nnd Mafeklng. The bridge resisted the charge, but some portions of the structure were nauiy damaged. The strikers In the Orange Fre State are bitter against the Cape railroad men who an- - still working n the Hand roads. Anxiety regarding the effect of the gen- eral ballot Is growing, as It Is feared that It will bo ovei whelmlngly In favor of u general Mrlke and the miners may Join. llustneiis In Johannesburg Is at a stand- still. The strikers' headquarters In Trades Hall are guarded by armed strikers, who are resolved to prevent the arret df the leaders. If any of the latter go Into the street they nro accompanied by an armed bodyguard. The Government Is keeping a firm grip on the situation. Military precaution have lieen taken throughout the entire Knlan. The mobilization of tho burghers Is continuing. Twenty thousand of them uro dlnrlhuted through the Hand. Gen, Dp Wet Is In command of the troops In the Hast Hand. lni'rlal troops are not bring used In any district. Tho miners are Joining In the strike, the representatives of many other trades. Including printers, clerks nnd bakers, adopted resolution" y favor-lu- g a general stilke, Capetown. Jan. 12. The harbor work- ers here, who belong to the railroad men's union, lime been ordertd to strike to- morrow. It Is not known whether or not they will comply. A big meeting of harbor workers here favored a strike. PRESIDENT WILSON 'A NEW MAN.' Ill lintniiK Companion, Dr. Charles A. White, So Hectares. Moiiilu, Ala., Jan. 12. Dr. Charles A. Whltu of Danville, Ind., Is hero from I'uaa Christian, where he silent much time golfing with President Wilson. Dr. White said "President Wilson Is going back to Washington u new man. He Is the picture of health and greatly Improved." MISS LADENBURO VERY ILL. Leader In Vonnirer Set .May n tlm nt Tuberculosis, WKsTnfiiv, L. I., Jan. 12. It is hero that Miss Kugenla May 20 years old, the only daughter of Mrs. Adolph Iadenhurg, Is 111 in St, Lukc'ri Hospital, Manhattan, with tuber- culosis. Miss Laitenburg, who has been prominent In the Meadow llruok oniony, riding to hounds nnd competing In Imrte. shows, contracted a severe cold during the summer at Newport, nnd It was nec- essary to send her to Rtrannc. She came to St. Luke's for examination of specialists, The Ladenburg home at Wcstbury la closed. It win said at St. Luke's, Hospital last night that Miss Ladenberg had been there since January 6. The hospital peo-pl- o tefused to tell the nature of her Ill- ness, but said that she wns getting on nicely. s Miss Ladenburg Is one of the leaders of tho youiiHor set in exclusive Man- hattan clrclua. Her father, who was senior members of the firm of Ladenburg. Thai-mai- m ft Co., hankers, disappeared from a steamship off the Florida coast about eighteen years ago. Jt wan generally believed that he wm washed overboard.; PUKKMINKNTI.V TUK VI.OK1I1A ROUTE. ATLANTIC COAMT LINK. S7th Haou ol Florida's finest Train, "N. T. A ltoriila Hpeelsl," 1 2 38 noon dully., I other UtA- Trains DiOly, utiles IU U vty.AtCv. RYAN PRAISES PRESIDENT. Nays lie Plays So Favorites and Vrges All to Mnpnort Hint. Thomus. F, Ityan appeared downtown yesterday for the first time In several months. A reporter caught him as ho was coming out of the Bank of Com- merce, obviously. In the beat of humor. - "I come, down once In a while," ho said, "to look at tho new buildings and say 'how do you do' to somo of the old timet s. Hut that Is about all. I am down and out of active business. Hut I still havo bonio stock In tho Hank of Commerce ami dropped In to talk ovor the new conditions. It Is a good deal of a change for a big Institution to make, but there Is no question as to what ought to be done. Tho Hank of Commerce Is going In and I hope all the other national banks will do the some and cooperate to make the new system a success." "Vou think It Is a good one, then"" "I do, yes. It Is a great Improvement over tho old one, anyway, and any minor defects which may develop In practice can easily bo remedied. Tho great thing Is that there can never be another money panic like that of 1907, The Domocratlu party has accomplished In lew than a year what the Hepubllcans could not do nt all. TImi whole country Is proud of President Wilson for the masterly way III which he handled the most difficult situation nnd got results. I consider It the greatest achievement of any Presi- dent since Lincoln. It would be unfair to him and unpatriotic generally to with- hold tho most hearty support of the great measure he has evolved and made a fact" "How about business generally?" "Underlying conditions are good. After n brief ierlod of adjustment tho coun- try ought to enter upon a new era of prosperity nnd I believe It will." "What nbout anti-tru- legislation?" "The only trust I know Is trust the President. I am willing and glad to do that and so ought everybody to be, after what he has done. He Is a great man and a great President, nnd tho greatest thing about hlm Is that he plays no favorites. He Is President of the whole people " WILSON DETERMINED TO NOMINATE WILLIAMS Hot Fight Expected in Senate Over President's Choice for Comptroller. AHHlMiiTOV. Jan. 12. That the Presi- dent will send to the Senate the name of John Skelton Williams to bo Comp- troller of the Currency and ex officio member of the Federal Itcserve Hoard was the opinion of both Democratic and Senators familiar with the situ- ation. The opposition to Mr. Wllilum In the, Senate Is not confined to the KepublUnn side. A number of the Democrats are hostile to his nomination nnd one Demo- cratic Senator Ftnted y that Presi- dent Wilson bad beetf reluctant to name Mr. Williams for tho office and had only yielded because Secretary McAdoo had ben so Insistent on having his as- sistant secretary named as Comptroller. Itepubllcnu Senators said that tho nomination would be confirmed only after much delay nnd a thorough Investi- gation not only of the affairs of the Munsey Trust Company merger with the United States Trust Company of this city but hs to other bu'lness activities of Mr. Williams that should have n bear- ing on his qualifications for w Important an office ns Comptroller of the Currency. Senator James of Kentucky has agreed to take up tho fight In the Senate for the confirmation of Williams. Some Demo- crats claim to have made the discovery that Mr. Williams has been acting with the Itepubllrons In recent years, that he was president of a Taft club In tho campaign of 1301 and that he prohnbly votisi for Mr. Taft In the last campaign. The Republicans are not distill bcil over Mr. WIUIamB's politics but are opposing him for other reaoon which go to tho qustlon of Ids capacity for the office, BORES SKULL IN PARESIS CASE. .Serum Applied Directly tn lira In for First Time In America. Pitilvnci.i'itiA, Jan. 12. A remarkable operation, the llrst of its kind In this country, was performed this morning at St. Mar's Hospital. It consisted of the direct application of serum to a dlseasi-- brain through holes Itored In the skull. The alient, a man ul yenrs old, was suf- fering from paresis. The operation was performed by Dr. Mlwood It. Klrhy, assisted by Drs. 1.00 Wejcznskl. George Kleffer, Hdward Murphy and Hobley D. Srilvely, Dr. Klrhy tn explaining the operation said : "The operation was performed ns the only method of dealing with paretK a compound of arsenic, has achieved a wonderful teputatlon for com- bating In the body those genus which are tho caue of this disease. Hut In- travenous injections do I.t-- seem to reach tho germs In tho brain. Thu remedy seems, to put It crudely, to filter out of the blood before It reaches the diseased cerebral tissues. This arsenical compound cannot be used directly on the brain or nervous tissue, ultluiugh It can bo Injected Into the blood. Therefore a serum was used In the present cake." PRISONERS OF STORM STARVE, Two Days Without Food When Jles-oue- ra Iteach Antlrra on Island. Atlantic Citt, N. J.. Jan. IS, Wi'lllam C.sbler and. Otto (lordon were two days without food or sholter'-n- a lone Island nfter they drew the short straws to see which two of it party of fishermen would remain behind whllo the others put for this city In a small motor boat, another boat In which the fishing parly started out having broken down. The men were exhausted when a rescu- ing party found them. Their companions had readied land in safety, but could not get help to them bcrauso of hKli winds and rough seas. Hophln Green went out for them In a storm trimmed boat and brought them buck The Island Is sixteen miles from land. BOWERY "OUTCAST" LEAVES $203,963 Will of Dudley Jnrdine. Sou of Organ fttiildcr, Hevcnls Strange Life. LEFT HOME AND FfilKNDS Man Who Narrowly Escaped Potter'H Field Burial Kept Girl's Locket. Dudley .Inrdtne, son nnd business of fleorgo Jnrdlroe, founder of the organ building firm of C.eorge Jnrdine & Sons, who droppt-- d out of sight of hi relatives thirty years ago and lived under the nnme of William Smith In l!owery lodging houses, paying about $1.2.' n week, left an estate of S23.!iGS when he died at Oouverneur Hospital on February ! last He was about to bo burled In potter's field when his Identity was discovered. This fact became known yesterday when tho appraisal of Jardlne's estate wns tiled, and with It wan an affidavit by the men who saved the man's body from letter's field and saw It Interred In the family vault In Trinity Cemetery, at lGSth street and Amsterdam nverftie. Tho appraisal shown that Mr. Jardlne was speculating In stocks all the time he lived on the Howery, and many of the gilt fdged securities he owned were hold by the Stock Kxchango firm of Thomas Denny & Co. of 30 Pine street for an In- debtedness of J?!,r,22. The appraisal discloses also that dur- ing th" tlmo Mr Jardlne was telling his Howery acquaintances that hi Income wis only $3 to H a week he had J2.515 In cash deposited with the United States Mortgage and Trust Company. Th.' total value of his securities was 1201,111, and all were of tho highest class. Tried to Make rw Will. A short time before Mr. Jardlne died, according to the appraisal, he got one of his Howery acquaintances to bring him, n form for a will in order that he might save the money he would Im compelled to give to a lawyer for drawing the In- strument. The new will was never made, and the r state will be distributed under n will made In 1S!9, under which Richard Hamilton, cashier of the Howery Hank, and Cornelius P.. (iolil were n.imJ us executors. Mr. Cold alone survived tho decedent and took charge of the estate. Tho will left tho residuary estate In equul shares to the Prison Association of New York, the Hoard of Home Missions of the Preshte.rlun Church and tho Hoard of Foreign Missions of the sumo church, the women's brunch of the New York City Mission and Tract Society and the New York Protestant episcopal City Mission Society. Kach gut lit. 276. Other large bequests were 117,013 each to Anna J. Devoe. niece, and George H. Hogg, nephew, and 110,571 each to Fred- erick L. Jardlne, nephew, nnd Robert McJohnstmi Jardlne, grandnephew. Mr. Hold got Jl.nOO and a numl-o- r of cousins received 112.'. each. The will was made before Mr. Jardlnii's Howery days, and accordingly nothing went to the persons who had befriended the supposed poor man. A payment of J l.tOO, however, was made by the executor to Peter Chouinard. describing himself as of the Squirrel Inn library and reading room of the Church Temperance Sockty, ut 2S1 Fourth avenue, whose .fforts to raise a subscription among "William Smith's" Howery friends to keep his body from letter's field resulted in the discovery of Dudley Jardlne's Identity. Friend Tells llovrrr Life. Chouinard swore odt an iitlldavlt n December IS last before the. undertaker who aided him to find Jardlne's relatives. He says that the "attendance, services nnd care rendered and bestowed" to the decedent were nt "divers Intervals and lilaceh," at the lodging house, SI Howery, nt Squlrni Inn fixe reading room at 131 Howery and at Oouverneur Hospital. Tim attendance continued after his death and until tho funeral. 'During that period," said Chouinard, "I was his riHiiguUed friend, the only one he mentioned and named, with address at the hospital nnd the sole and only friend who went to visit him at his lodging houi-- when he was Indisposed prior to going to the hospital, and the only one who viplted him tlnVo and brought delicacies to hUn." Chouinard says that Jaidlne's Identity was established by bis examination of documents at the lodging house, and he advised the undertaker to hold the laidy until ho could lulse u fund to bury his friend. He started to find out what piano companies were paying hlm a pension uud to get u contribution from them. This resulted In finding Frederick Jardlne, a nephew, of Moritclalr. A romance of Jardlne's younger days, which inn)' have i.ent hlm to the Howery to llvn ns an outcast, Is disclosed In the uppralsul of tho only pieces or Jewelry he owned, which wereivotth 3S. Thenrtlcles weie k locket containing tho plctuie and lock of hair of n woman and an old fashioned lirenstplu with lose diamond and Mii.ill biilllai)t, John M. Shedd, attorney for the ex- ecutor, made atlidavlt that a woman claiming to, be tho dnuKhter of the de- cedent had usked to shuro tin the estato. "While sho may be u daughter, the will be unable to succeed In setting aside the will," said Mr. Snedd. BURGLARS SHUN CRUCIFIX. Three Times It Protects .rcklacr to Which It la Attached. Yonk kills', Jart. 12. James H. Fltch.rral estate broker, whose hnmu at IDS Oliie-woo- d avenue wan robbed of 1600 worth of Jewelry, silverware and clothing last night, said y that tho thieves again failed to take a valuable necklace with n crucifix attached. "Threo times In thirty years my home has been robbed nnd ever' tlmo the burglars have left the crucifix." suid Mr, Fitch. "Every time, too, It has been lit plain sight, land It is much more valuable than uuvoyjyl the articles taken," RUSSIAN STOLE "M0NA LISA.' Swindler Admlta He Intended In Sell II In American. Special Cable Deipatch to Tns Hks. I Lonpov, Jnn. 13. According to the St, Petersburg correspondent of the Times a notorlou swindler, Hlblkoff, who has Just been arrested In the Russian capital, con- fessed that he and two other Russians, Meyenlorff nnd Kngelhnrd, devised the theft of tho "Mona Lisa" from the nnd employed Perugia nnd Latxkevltch as instruments. The Intention wna to sell the painting to an American collector for JIOO.OOO. Perugia and the Russians went to Moutu Carlo, but Perugia vanished with the pic- ture en route. MARSHALL HIS ONLY AUDITOR. Senator Thomas Makes Speech lie. fore llntnt)- - Seats In Senate. Washington, Jan. 12. Senator Thomas rtf l,tlnrn1i II. tlm M.in.ln ,,.r4f mn.ln n ' " I free sliver speech in which he recalled the i "crlmo of '73." "Wan Senator Thomas Interrupted very j often 7 a newspaper man asked a Capitol j Zvtl?l?T: "d,ourrl- - nsks ques- - tlons," wn the reply. "What do you mean?" returned the newspaper man. "The was the only auditor," replied the Capitol employee. I A BULL IN A CHINA SHOP. Animal nt I.evrrs Puts Ancient Tra- dition to Hunt. bperiat Cable leiatch to Tin: Si . Lo.vdon. Jan. 12. At the cattle market at Lewes y u big bullock strayed Into a china shop and sauntered through lines of china, glass and enrthwaro tho length of n whole block. The drover and the salesmun finally Induced the bullock to depart from the shop nnd the big animal walked calmly Into the street. Not a piece of china was broktn. TANOO BAN HURTS CHARITY. ' Catholic Institutions Snld In Mr lint yiift.OIMI Krniu llnlls. ' Official of the Huiernld Society, of which Judge ileiirge J. O'Kecfe nf special Sessions Is tlie head, are consulting with HMiop McDonnell of Hrooklyn to find a plan for raising the l.",oo lost to the Catholic orphans of th city through the calling ofT of the Hmernld ball. It esti- mated that the unwillingness of the Church to assume sponsorship fur modern dance nt Its charitable affairs already has cost Catholic charities over $2R,'mo In the city alone. 12 Since tho Kmerald Society acted St Frauds Navler Academy, St. Francis Xavier College and the Cathedral Club have also decided to go dnneeless rather ' than countenance the tango and the turkey trot. The Alumnie Association of Visitation Convent wns the first to cancel Its annual dance. SAMARITAN HELD AS GUNMAN. fiets Lucked I After Carrying Demi Woman From street. Tony Henemlo, who live behind his barber shop at 411 Fifth strict, and some friends saw a womai "ii the sidewalk last night. They went out and carried her into Tony's room uud laid her on a sofa. Henemlo called Fnrian, who summoned an ambu- lance. , Dr. Hayes of Hellcvue said tlm j woman wan dead. Mm proved to b. Mrs. Mary Sickler of 324 IJ.it Thirteenth j st ree.t. I While Farrnn was waiting for the am- bulance he saw a levolver mi Toiiy'" mantelpiece, so he sent out word to De- tectives Wuehner and Ransbuig. wni found the gun, nriested Tony nnd looked hlm up on a charge of violating tho Suit h nn law. J COST OF ILLNESS GOES UP. j lint-to- r III Part of Mtnten Island t'omliliie to llalMc Fees. Residents of Pleasant Plains, Totten-vllle- , Atlantic, Prince's Hay and Huguenot Park, villnRes III the Westflohl section of Staten Island, who get sick will be ohllgisl to pay e0 to 100 per cent, more In order to get well, according to a new set of fee decided upon by four of the leading and the of their new fees. , Tho pi ice $1 Tho new scalo Is from ."0 to accord- - lug tn distance, for day visit, from 2 to tt for night calls, TO HOLD EARLE'S ACCOMPLICE. . of extradltlun for at, was Jovial humoi FIRE ON STEAMER ESPERANZA. I Hold of Liner j Hour Fight, . Havana. Jan. 12. liner I hero from New York It learned tire In her cargo this uftenioon, which only after an light. p.isseiirfcis weic when M..al....l ..... I i m. m-- h ? . . , ,...'."", shot Tho calmed passengers led in the communication with the steamer of aid II that were ' N. Hroivn, of National ' j j CITY SHIVERS IN 75 MILE GALE J a. Wtiuicii (Tpsct (ind Hurt in Street One Hit by Fulling Sign. PK1UL TO SHITS BAY i Some Drag Anchor Vessel Narrowly Misses Smash- ing Others. V v nri'Mi Jj.m tj I ZEHO WEATHER DoWII to 10 AllOVO LltSt Niglltl iniiod Cold To-da- v , i Predicted. f WaslilnKtnn Forecast I I'nlr mill Continued Cold Tuesday (T-d- n ). With fresh to .Vortlnvesterly Wednesday , Fair, il lid . it So Cold. Yesterilnj's Temperature Record t Den. Dear. PHIO A. M....Ut IIHIII I', 12 M no !llM M a ItlOO P. MldulKht..l Highest wind velocity, 74 miles, from northwest. real winter year came galloping in yeMenkiy on a northwesterly roisterer that attained almost hurricane force (eighty miles) lit evening. In open sea off the Hook It ninety miles or more, but being an otLshore gale It did not imperil shipping III nearby waters. during the afternoon the savage northeai-tei- ' periods Of live minutes duration, nt a rate of seven! four niaj neatly nil afternoon .and .veiling 11 blew not than sixty tulles. The temperature, which was 25 at o'clock In the afternoon, droppd to 12 at ! o'clock. local prophets were confident then that mercury would ...tin., tiri.llt i.li.u.. tn 9. .in ItofiirM ntinrtflf. ,,. 1r1 i, ,.nht mayb" It would bit the thermometries! win'" mn. There was piactlcally tin Utup In the at midnight, occasionally It mode-ra- t, to fiuty miles, only to line again above sixty, blow like It. ottlclul mercury mi tin Whitehall Huildlng was then 10 degrees loe.il forecasters sil.l thev had not their belief that u would drop several tbgrees more might come clos. ......... ..... . I lie COlUe- -l place III III" I Malts tilclit was Dilluth, where It was t bc- - low zcio, the winds of Dilluth whining this luiy, Tlie national sooth-'save- predicted sunny skiee with "con- - cold" y "fre(h to hlch northwesterly winds." prospect looked that way to a cloud read) r. It was natuial that in blow of Midi fierceness, punctuated with squalls who-- e force cannot be in. ixu.ed .menionie-iters- , there should many accidents. SlKti wen. toi n from tar tenlliKs all over !th" city, roofs unfinished buildings were, 'tipped off many wue hurt by being blown from their feet. lee.ird of casualties but no one 'killed. The elided peak was tlm centre of mote than the usual .'urktcmv bluster. Tim smote Federal Huddlns uud, t'urllnK, billow ul In front of lofty Wnohuirth wall, forming acilal breakets. sometimes lifting women with much sail dear their feet. A loi.en of inoie men nnd women the wide entrain of the wuih Well" never mole ertlltli. Hats sailed aeilal spirals almost to tlm of the peak some of them never came down j to laud homo seau.ud on tU j upper huiilcane curtcnts. the spcctiitor Siivt. Ill shelteied grand stiilid of the on winter hosrr and enjoying tlie vision of It. st up tlm windy Hume the illfconitltuie ot nwiurs. li'nlty nearly the same gjra. tlons that made Wonlwoith a stormy rape to imind made Uf.i momentarily uiv hupps fur folks, passing Munlclpil Huildlng. Tlm gale, mushrooming tlm iii villi; facade, rebounded tn,. .stiiet uud lulu Cll Hall Paik, biul.n Into vail etlcs whli baby torii.'idoi, wheels and that only g'lls with most sKlrts able to uavi u without laiiylng away sail. Tho best piouf the ariival ot winter - "' Van tt.ril.mtlt Park to hUuI ii. Central P.uU lain was tiiuen .over but rather ragged hii tin jm i,ult.. thick enough in b...r a no.! I ,H probable that' 'sli u ' n ,. ' b. nll,,'''1 ,,l"rt' """" Tho hUdiUiilii-m.of- , v Ulr oi, an) r discouraged folks wh had bcuti tiu physicians of that section. jsivept Into them iuhI came to am hoc with Drs. Coleman, Washington and Meyers ' eves tilled w Ith dust. (!niy coated cops on of Tottenvllle Dr. Iteuwlck of Prince's duty at the building tin slot m Hay, who u practical monopoly of , bound on their way in inti of com-th- e medical practice of that part of Staten punitive calm. Island, notified public lasr nlKht Tho tlsts of the winds ruling has been a visit II. 12. and Mis llrrninn'a .Mother (ioluH to j ''cb ial Ituilding there specfito-- ,n """''' ' the squalls. Cl.rl.tlnuln to Her. which blew ftoiii nil points of tin com- Vsc,! W(f I. T K.v lni ,, cMnv(. ,, Paris, Jan. 13.- -A Christlanla despatch I lm.rwH,,, ,tr.,llKl.P ,, ,, whl that the Norwegian authotltleH says have, ,...,, IUM.m,l m ,,e decided to detain Miss Herman. For- - j ,,dlug ivatorv and on the e,. dlnand Plnney Marie's aliened accomplice ,,lir.,tlVfly quiet southwest comer of Hat. In the kidnapping of his foil, until herl(1.,v stri.,.t , iirondway. opposite the mother arrives at Chtlstlanla, Tlie latter! la building, expressed Kinpilse when he Is anxious to take charge of her daughter learned that the crowd was watching th-- : In the meantime, says a despatch tn '. building sw.ij. He Jolnul the timing Jfiititi, the oung woman I In delicate nnd deilaied that the structure appeared health. j to ! plumb soliei. Later ho leat ned thai Hurle Is said to be an.iou to pineeed the only vibrations weio in the minds at once to France trial. When the tlm onlookeis, who woie getting n line papers hlm arrived Christlanla he In Flames In Ward Pill Out Aftrr One When thu Wind Hspcranza arrived this evening was that a broke out uf cotton nnd was e.xtlnKUlsJied j hour's hard The 30 llrst cabin at luncheon the Ilru was illtcovered, AU .1,.... rlutf N, o llames up. captain the and the fight on fire. Wilt-len- s Tugus btought the promise quick needed. Among the pitsscngern was IJ. I president the Rallvvuv of Mexico, IX Conl High Winds. M...IH p. M..,UIIU The first of tho the afternoon and the achieved perhaps Six times late spurted. Ill miles, the lens The th .....i ,i,n, aie d anil The and the changed and pretty tn niloil last and weio tlnued and Tin- - plain a by be of and The was lingo, was W.iolwottii blast the the spread on pnnln.? building up the to,i and analn, Wluil the it going ami the son of the the on Into of liglgs, ;iii). curlicues the clinging weie gut nt l''"Hw not " .. the enjoy Woolwoitn were Sec CIU A M obs. for u..ll..... r St V 7

The Sun. (New York, NY) 1914-01-13 [p ]. - Library of …chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1914-01-13/ed...elements In a perfect whole. MADDENED DEER KILL AGED KEEPER IN PARK

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THE WEATHEB&ORECAST

Fair, continued coldtdrdty; tM? not stin. cold, "jr.Detailed weather repiifts win be foun'on page II.

V

VOL LXXXI.-N- O. 135. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1914. Copyright, 1814, bp the Bun Printing and PubliiMng Allocation. PRICE TWO CENTS.

O'SHAUGHNESSY BACK

GOES TO SEE HUERTA

Wijrct of Conference Following:

liiplonmi's Visit to LlndKept Secret.

in;m:i.s xkar capital

Dili- - Force of Ziiputisifls LootsTown on Knilrond Linn in

Mexico State.

5 ., ml Cable liefpateh to Tnu Srs..M. .Hf Citt. .Inn. 12. Nelson O'Shatigh- -'

n'ny. the American Charge d'Affalres, hadn innferoncc y with (Ion. Huertashortly after hi return to tho capital fromVera Cruz.

llhougli h refused to discuss the ob-le- ft

of this conference It Is reported oncoiiit mithoilty that the provisional rreal-il'i- it

nnd his Ministers are facing annlmnst desperate financial crisis nnd It Isrelieved that this matter wns discussedit meeting.

Ozumbn, n little town of the State, ofMexico, situated about thirty mllen southof Mexico city on the Intcroceanloline, was the scene of one of the blood-t- ?t

attacks of the present revolt yester-da- v

morning. A force of 1,800 Zapatistasunder Fell Nerl and Amkdor Salasar,nlm h. th reputation of being thehIondiet of all tho followers of Zapata,mv.idnl the town at daybreak. The armyna composed of less than 300 armednldlcrs, tho rest being mero rabble lured

hv the possibility of looting.The Zapatistas set tiro to the railroad

station nnd destroyed every car In therailroad yard, Including a train which hadurn arrived from Mexico city. Thestation and nil the surrounding houses ,

w re sacked and the rebels thereuponi nlong the line, carrying off withthem all the railroad employees. AtA'llvn they renewed the same operations.M'klnn anil burning the station nnd aeieat number of houses. Hero they also'wyresfcd Into service nil the railroad cm-pl- o

ets.

Ill ir Untile HsDcelrd.The sarrlson of the Federal district

bid in the meantime ben Informed oft'.ie advance of tho Zapatistas ami 100regulars iiiw Kent out against the Insur-r- -

to. After two hours pursuit theyc night up with the rebel hand and trainedt ! machine guns on .Ncrl's and Sala-i..i'- n

followers, killing at least 200.Federal rrcnforccuients are now being

r Vd to the place nnd will be eoncen- -'

'I .it Atllxeo. The Zapatistas are en- -i

' "il near b nnd a big battle. Is ex-- ;' there Meanwhile, th

of the town aie paulcstrlcken.Federal soldiers will not allow

1. lice, fearing that thoy will ber. d by the Zapatistas.

' vanguard of the rebel force had" ' nt Atluutn, about thirty

r 1. southeast of Mexico city, whicht" fi'-- looted and partly destroyed.

' I'hei Zapat!ta force attacked, theint. .if Jememeca Inst night, hut theIVle il garrison successfully resisted thestt t ' until reetiforcements sent fromnoH"i' towns arrived and drove away the-- 'b-i Tho National Railroad line Iso'. ritns trains only between this cityand Jetuenieat the remainder ofihr south having been destroyed.

Vllln llxpcclcd nt Torreon.Refuge. who arrived hero

'i Torreon sa:. that the. rebels are run-n'M- g

traini between Chihuahua and o,

whlrh Is thirty miles north ofThie refugees say they would

not l.e tiurprlfed If tien. Villa's army from"Jlnaca reached Torreon ill a few days,

ilie have a clear rnllway line fromho frontier.

National Railways otflclals stato thatie will be ablu to run trains north-vir- il

out of San Luis I'otosl If Uto Fcd-e- rI troops continue to protect the r--

work which is being carried on.s are running between Tamplco nnd

S.i i Luis I'otosl, but the line Is stiltinning with rebels.

T w Uovernmcnt ordered y theTdlato discharge, of women post of-1,- 1

r employees. This will mean hardshipa- - J n Isery to several hundred women.' evidently an iinipllllcatlon of thoI"J'' of i:ze(ulel Ohregon, the tlrst Mln-Ist- i'

,f Flnatiro under Huerta, who dls-""- -

'I all women employees from his'K'l ir .lent Immediately after assuming

'i 'HeT ommlsrton which waji to nrranca

tn.iiaiitee under which the banks willi e wed to lss.uo notes to the oxtent

r in. tltnest their metallic reserve has' ' 1 on formed, and Its formation Is

' li lllllte.

ItnnUlim Munition ImprmliiB.iiuivir. the banks of Aguasciillentes,

. iliMliaJuuto, Ouprrcrn, Hidalgo,It.in i Meii-antl- l lie Vera Cruz, the

iir.diot.il du Mexico, the Ilanco' ' il du Mexico ami the national In- -'

jiih of Yucatan. Qucretaro, Tabaac-o-,'' i illpus a..d Zacatecus havo deposited

tin' llanvo National a ulllclcnttin' of metallic reserve to guarantee

lirnhcnt which all batiks and.luiclal houes are accejitlng.' tier Imitltutlnns are expected to Join

Ktoup. The llrst will probably be the'ii ih of Morelos, which has a (treat gold""rve, having converted all Its reserves

- ild. Large quantities of gold are now'"' ng offered for tulo In Mexico city and'i" find many buyers. This gold IsUhu.illy In tho form of five or ten pesoI'tecea and the owners believe that It Is nxoo-- l speculation o convert tho gold Into1'iiik notes, thus uhowlng that they havefull confidence, that tho value of th billsIWed by the banks will not be Impairedwhen the final settlement arrive.

Tho Government Is straining every"rvu to stop the' exportation of ffold.whleh is bought here at a premium of 13ler cent In Mexican bank notes nnd

pemutis to make it good profit In the,"tilted .States. Tho Administration ha

Continued on Second I'ago,

CARDEN PAYS VISIT TO MOHENO.

Coniul-Urner- al at Mexico cityAmbassador.

Special Cable betpateh to The Ur.x.Mi:x!co Citt, Jnti. 12. H!r Llgnel Car-ile- n,

tho Hritlsh Mlnlstcf to Mexico, puliln, visit to Foreign Minister Molicno to-day. The Minister won accompanied byJlrltl.ih Consul-Oener- C. R. W. Stringer.Hoth were In gala uniform.

Tho conference nt Uie foreign officelasted n long time. It In generally be-lieved hero that Mr. Btrlnger will netob chatge d'affaires when Sir Lionel Car-de- n

leaves tils post here.Members of tho diplomatic corps said,

when they learned tho facts, that thovisit to Henor Mnheno could menu noth-ing cine.

BALFOUR LECTURES ON THEISM.

to Dent With InevitableReliefs of Mankind.

ieriiif Cahle betpatih to tan Siwfii.Asoow, Jan. 12. Aithur J. Ilatfour

delivered the first of a series of twentylectures at the Glasgow Fnlverstty thiseenlng on the subject of "Theism." Thecourse will extend over a pejlod of twoyears. Mr. Ilalfour Is a lecturer underthe Glfford trust.

In the Initial lcctuie, which was mainlyan Introductory expository of the sub-ject, Mr. Ilalfour said :

"When I speak of God It Is not theabsolute of which I nm speaking, but theGod whom man may adore and love, notmerely the conclusion of a logical proc-ess."

Although this may raise the cry ofanthropomorphism, Mr. Ilalfour said hehoped to commit worse crimes than thatIn tho oourse of his lectin oh. He went onto say that h Intends to deal with Inevi-

table beliefs of mankind on all subjects ex-

cept theology. He would speak of n Godof whom It would be Inadequate but notuntrue to say that He took side, that Heworked for great ends, that He Is a spiritengnxlnr with other spirits and that hwas In that sense what the lecturer didnot think profane to call a social God, aGod who asks us to work with Him, a God,therefore, who wns to be distinguishedfrom a sort of nbfolute to which every-thing Included In Its boundless limits wasequally Indifferent, to whom the good andtho bad, all that we admired, all that wedetested, were equally necessary to formelements In a perfect whole.

MADDENED DEER KILL

AGED KEEPER IN PARK

Attack Him on Hawley EstatePitchfork Is Ilroken in

Struffprle for Life.

IUhvlo.v. I.. I.. Jan. 12. In a despoiateflight with a herd of maddened deer, led

by a big buck, l'atrlck Horan, a keeper In

the deer park oil the late Hawley'sestate at Vest Ifllp. was gored to death

No one saw tho battle, but abloodstained pitchfork, a broken club,ground torn up for many rods and woundson the deer themselves were evidences ofthe terrific struggln of the ngrd man forhis life.

Horan left his home, a llttlo cottage on

tho estato owned by Miss Margaret Ham-

mond, a ward of Mr. Hawley. early thismurnlng to attend to his duties In thedeer pork. When he did not return forlunch ut noon, as he had dono for yenrs,bts daughter decani" alarmed and notifiedtho superintendent. After u longHoran's body was found.

Ily tho sldo of tho body was the pitch-

fork, with which tho old man evidentlyhad done good service. Near that was acano he usually carried, broken In two.

Horan's body was so cut up by hoofsnnd antlers that ho hardly could be recog-

nised. It was plain that the deer hadJumped on the old man after they hadknocked him down. Kvldenees of tho fightwero found half way nctoss the pen,showing that the kepeer had gono In, seenthat tho deer were vicious and turned toget out, fighting off the animals with thopitchfork, but failed to reach the gate.

Horan had ben warned repeatedly notto go Into the deer park ulone. Hut hhad seen most of the herd grow up nndsaid none of tho deer would ever hurt anold man who had petted them and fedthem.

In weather as cold as yesterday's penneddeer become more dangerous than at anyother time, and bigger, stronger andmore experienced keepers than Horan hailbeen careful to avoid thi herd when thethermometer dropped.

Horan's youngest daughter wn.s withtho men who found tho body. At homewas another daughter, who Is sitld to bodying of consumption. Their mother Is

dead.The buck and his mutes wero tractable

enough when a dozen men entered thopen. The keepers said It was only whena single person went In that they becamevicious.

COHALAN LOSES HIS FIGHT.

Laborers He Wanted Dropped FromPayroll Are llrtalnrd,

Alsant, Juii. 12. Surtogate John FCohalun protested In tho Mtate CliflService, Commission recently agulnst cer-tlfyl-

tho payroll of the New York cityHurrogate's office If It contained the namesof Charle W. Culkln, William V. Duffyand several laborers.

While Surrogate Cohalaai orderedthese men dropped by Comissloner ofItecords John V. Curry, who originallyappointed them nubject to the approvalof the Hurrogates, Surrogate Fowler wasof the 'opinion that while the appoin-tment should only bo made with the ap-

proval of the Surrogates tho lat-ter hod no power to order the abolitionof the positions held by those threo men.

Commissioner Curry took this view ofthe controvery nnd retained thorn In theservice and the position taken by him andSurrogate Fowlor was upheld by the HtateClvlt Service Commission

HOTKL INIIIAN RIVJCB, KOTKLKIM E, FLA.ow orcN. aovjan on mmnvKHx'-uit-v.

STRIKE SPREADING

IN SOUTH AFRICA

MnHinl Law To-da- y While Men

Vote on h GeneralWalkout.

DYNAMITERS TO UK SHOT

Miner Likely to Join Railroad3Icn in the War on

Capital.

wui Cable HeiaM to Tin. Si

JollAKXEsuur.a, Jan. 12. The grave sit-

uation resulting from the threatened gen-

eral railroadmen's Mrtkc throughout SouthAfrica ban made littl material change Intho lost twenty-fou-r hours.

Although' announcement was made thatmartial law will be proclaimed In thoTransvaal and the Orange Freo State ItIs helleied that there Is romo sort oftruce between tho cmployeis and the menpending the declaration of tho result oftho balloting of tho Federatloif of Tradesregarding the proposal for a generalstrike.

The proclamation is to be of a drasticnature, one of the chief features beingthe order that persons using dynamite todestroy ralltoad property nro to bo shoton sight.

Tho strike has spread to t'npe Colony,where up to the present the men had re-

fused to Join with the workers of thonorth. Natal loo Is now affected. Halfof the men In the rallro.ul workshops atHalt Hlver, Just out of Cape Town, wenton strike They marched In

to tho city Hall nnd held a meet-ing, nt which resolutions in f.ior of agem ml strike were adopted.

As tho Cape Colony workers are believedto hold the key to the sltuntlon this Is

regarded as a grave move, and tho Gov-

ernment ordered the Immediate mobiliza-tion of the citizens as a defence fore.

Huglne drivers nt Durban held a meet-ing and approved the plan for a generalstrike.

A Socialist agitator named Harrisonwaa nrrcsted for seditious utterances Ina speech nt Capo Town. He said :

"Wow up everything. Never mindwhether hundreds are killed or not. Wowup all property."

Shots wero tired at a train near CapeTown Nobody was hurt andthere Is rio clue to the criminals. Annttempt was made to destroy by dynn-mit- e

the big railroad bridge at FourteenStrcnms, fifty miles north of Klmberley,the principal link In the main Itne ofcommunication between Cape Town andthe northern cities. Including Johannes-burg. I'retorla nnd Mafeklng. The bridgeresisted the charge, but some portions ofthe structure were nauiy damaged.

The strikers In the Orange Fre Stateare bitter against the Cape railroad menwho an- - still working n the Hand roads.

Anxiety regarding the effect of the gen-

eral ballot Is growing, as It Is feared thatIt will bo ovei whelmlngly In favor of ugeneral Mrlke and the miners may Join.

llustneiis In Johannesburg Is at a stand-still. The strikers' headquarters In TradesHall are guarded by armed strikers, whoare resolved to prevent the arret df theleaders. If any of the latter go Into thestreet they nro accompanied by an armedbodyguard.

The Government Is keeping a firm gripon the situation. Military precautionhave lieen taken throughout the entireKnlan. The mobilization of tho burghersIs continuing. Twenty thousand of themuro dlnrlhuted through the Hand. Gen,Dp Wet Is In command of the troops Inthe Hast Hand. lni'rlal troops are notbring used In any district.

Tho miners are Joining In the strike,the representatives of many othertrades. Including printers, clerks nndbakers, adopted resolution" y favor-lu- g

a general stilke,Capetown. Jan. 12. The harbor work-

ers here, who belong to the railroad men'sunion, lime been ordertd to strike to-

morrow. It Is not known whether ornot they will comply. A big meeting ofharbor workers here favored astrike.

PRESIDENT WILSON 'A NEW MAN.'

Ill lintniiK Companion, Dr. CharlesA. White, So Hectares.

Moiiilu, Ala., Jan. 12. Dr. Charles A.Whltu of Danville, Ind., Is hero fromI'uaa Christian, where he silent much timegolfing with President Wilson.

Dr. White said "PresidentWilson Is going back to Washington unew man. He Is the picture of healthand greatly Improved."

MISS LADENBURO VERY ILL.

Leader In Vonnirer Set .May ntlm nt Tuberculosis,

WKsTnfiiv, L. I., Jan. 12. It ishero that Miss Kugenla May

20 years old, the only daughterof Mrs. Adolph Iadenhurg, Is 111 in St,Lukc'ri Hospital, Manhattan, with tuber-culosis. Miss Laitenburg, who has beenprominent In the Meadow llruok oniony,riding to hounds nnd competing In Imrte.shows, contracted a severe cold duringthe summer at Newport, nnd It was nec-essary to send her to Rtrannc.

She came to St. Luke's for examinationof specialists, The Ladenburg home atWcstbury la closed.

It win said at St. Luke's, Hospital lastnight that Miss Ladenberg had beenthere since January 6. The hospital peo-pl- o

tefused to tell the nature of her Ill-ness, but said that she wns getting onnicely. s

Miss Ladenburg Is one of the leadersof tho youiiHor set in exclusive Man-hattan clrclua. Her father, who was seniormembers of the firm of Ladenburg. Thai-mai- m

ft Co., hankers, disappeared froma steamship off the Florida coast abouteighteen years ago. Jt wan generallybelieved that he wm washed overboard.;

PUKKMINKNTI.V TUK VI.OK1I1A ROUTE.ATLANTIC COAMT LINK.

S7th Haou ol Florida's finest Train, "N. T.A ltoriila Hpeelsl," 1 2 38 noon dully., I otherUtA- Trains DiOly, utiles IU U vty.AtCv.

RYAN PRAISES PRESIDENT.

Nays lie Plays So Favorites andVrges All to Mnpnort Hint.

Thomus. F, Ityan appeared downtownyesterday for the first time In severalmonths. A reporter caught him as howas coming out of the Bank of Com-

merce, obviously. In the beat of humor. -"I come, down once In a while," ho

said, "to look at tho new buildings andsay 'how do you do' to somo of the oldtimet s. Hut that Is about all. I amdown and out of active business. Hut Istill havo bonio stock In tho Hank ofCommerce ami dropped In to talk ovor thenew conditions. It Is a good deal of achange for a big Institution to make, butthere Is no question as to what ought to bedone. Tho Hank of Commerce Is goingIn and I hope all the other national bankswill do the some and cooperate to makethe new system a success."

"Vou think It Is a good one, then"""I do, yes. It Is a great Improvement

over tho old one, anyway, and any minordefects which may develop In practicecan easily bo remedied. Tho great thingIs that there can never be another moneypanic like that of 1907, The Domocratluparty has accomplished In lew than ayear what the Hepubllcans could not dont all. TImi whole country Is proud ofPresident Wilson for the masterly wayIII which he handled the most difficultsituation nnd got results. I consider Itthe greatest achievement of any Presi-dent since Lincoln. It would be unfairto him and unpatriotic generally to with-

hold tho most hearty support of the greatmeasure he has evolved and made a fact"

"How about business generally?""Underlying conditions are good. After

n brief ierlod of adjustment tho coun-

try ought to enter upon a new era ofprosperity nnd I believe It will."

"What nbout anti-tru- legislation?""The only trust I know Is trust the

President. I am willing and glad to dothat and so ought everybody to be, afterwhat he has done. He Is a great manand a great President, nnd tho greatestthing about hlm Is that he plays nofavorites. He Is President of the wholepeople "

WILSON DETERMINED TO

NOMINATE WILLIAMS

Hot Fight Expected in SenateOver President's Choice

for Comptroller.

AHHlMiiTOV. Jan. 12. That the Presi-

dent will send to the Senate the nameof John Skelton Williams to bo Comp-

troller of the Currency and ex officiomember of the Federal Itcserve Hoard wasthe opinion of both Democratic and

Senators familiar with the situ-

ation.The opposition to Mr. Wllilum In the,

Senate Is not confined to the KepublUnnside. A number of the Democrats arehostile to his nomination nnd one Demo-

cratic Senator Ftnted y that Presi-dent Wilson bad beetf reluctant to nameMr. Williams for tho office and hadonly yielded because Secretary McAdoohad ben so Insistent on having his as-

sistant secretary named as Comptroller.Itepubllcnu Senators said that

tho nomination would be confirmed onlyafter much delay nnd a thorough Investi-gation not only of the affairs of theMunsey Trust Company merger with theUnited States Trust Company of this citybut hs to other bu'lness activities ofMr. Williams that should have n bear-ing on his qualifications for w Importantan office ns Comptroller of the Currency.

Senator James of Kentucky has agreedto take up tho fight In the Senate for theconfirmation of Williams. Some Demo-crats claim to have made the discoverythat Mr. Williams has been acting withthe Itepubllrons In recent years, that hewas president of a Taft club In thocampaign of 1301 and that he prohnblyvotisi for Mr. Taft In the last campaign.The Republicans are not distill bcil overMr. WIUIamB's politics but are opposinghim for other reaoon which go to thoqustlon of Ids capacity for the office,

BORES SKULL IN PARESIS CASE.

.Serum Applied Directly tn lira In forFirst Time In America.

Pitilvnci.i'itiA, Jan. 12. A remarkableoperation, the llrst of its kind In thiscountry, was performed this morning atSt. Mar's Hospital. It consisted of thedirect application of serum to a dlseasi--

brain through holes Itored In the skull.The alient, a man ul yenrs old, was suf-fering from paresis.

The operation was performed by Dr.Mlwood It. Klrhy, assisted by Drs. 1.00Wejcznskl. George Kleffer, HdwardMurphy and Hobley D. Srilvely, Dr.Klrhy tn explaining the operation said :

"The operation was performed ns theonly method of dealing with paretK

a compound of arsenic, hasachieved a wonderful teputatlon for com-bating In the body those genus whichare tho caue of this disease. Hut In-

travenous injections do I.t-- seem to reachtho germs In tho brain. Thu remedyseems, to put It crudely, to filter out ofthe blood before It reaches the diseasedcerebral tissues. This arsenical compoundcannot be used directly on the brain ornervous tissue, ultluiugh It can bo InjectedInto the blood. Therefore a serum wasused In the present cake."

PRISONERS OF STORM STARVE,

Two Days Without Food When Jles-oue- ra

Iteach Antlrra on Island.Atlantic Citt, N. J.. Jan. IS, Wi'lllam

C.sbler and. Otto (lordon were two dayswithout food or sholter'-n- a lone Islandnfter they drew the short straws to seewhich two of it party of fishermen wouldremain behind whllo the others put forthis city In a small motor boat, anotherboat In which the fishing parly startedout having broken down.

The men were exhausted when a rescu-ing party found them. Their companionshad readied land in safety, but couldnot get help to them bcrauso of hKliwinds and rough seas.

Hophln Green went out for them In astorm trimmed boat and brought thembuck The Island Is sixteen milesfrom land.

BOWERY "OUTCAST"

LEAVES $203,963

Will of Dudley Jnrdine. Sou ofOrgan fttiildcr, Hevcnls

Strange Life.

LEFT HOME AND FfilKNDS

Man Who Narrowly EscapedPotter'H Field Burial Kept

Girl's Locket.

Dudley .Inrdtne, son nnd businessof fleorgo Jnrdlroe, founder of the

organ building firm of C.eorge Jnrdine &Sons, who droppt-- d out of sight of hirelatives thirty years ago and lived

under the nnme of WilliamSmith In l!owery lodging houses, payingabout $1.2.' n week, left an estate ofS23.!iGS when he died at OouverneurHospital on February ! last He wasabout to bo burled In potter's field whenhis Identity was discovered.

This fact became known yesterdaywhen tho appraisal of Jardlne's estatewns tiled, and with It wan an affidavitby the men who saved the man's bodyfrom letter's field and saw It InterredIn the family vault In Trinity Cemetery,at lGSth street and Amsterdam nverftie.

Tho appraisal shown that Mr. Jardlnewas speculating In stocks all the time helived on the Howery, and many of thegilt fdged securities he owned were holdby the Stock Kxchango firm of ThomasDenny & Co. of 30 Pine street for an In-

debtedness of J?!,r,22.The appraisal discloses also that dur-

ing th" tlmo Mr Jardlne was telling hisHowery acquaintances that hi Incomewis only $3 to H a week he had J2.515In cash deposited with the United StatesMortgage and Trust Company. Th.' totalvalue of his securities was 1201,111, andall were of tho highest class.

Tried to Make rw Will.A short time before Mr. Jardlne died,

according to the appraisal, he got one ofhis Howery acquaintances to bring him,n form for a will in order that he mightsave the money he would Im compelled togive to a lawyer for drawing the In-

strument. The new will was never made,and the r state will be distributed under nwill made In 1S!9, under which RichardHamilton, cashier of the Howery Hank,and Cornelius P.. (iolil were n.imJ usexecutors. Mr. Cold alone survived thodecedent and took charge of the estate.

Tho will left tho residuary estate Inequul shares to the Prison Association ofNew York, the Hoard of Home Missionsof the Preshte.rlun Church and thoHoard of Foreign Missions of the sumochurch, the women's brunch of the NewYork City Mission and Tract Society andthe New York Protestant episcopal CityMission Society. Kach gut lit. 276.

Other large bequests were 117,013 eachto Anna J. Devoe. niece, and George H.Hogg, nephew, and 110,571 each to Fred-erick L. Jardlne, nephew, nnd RobertMcJohnstmi Jardlne, grandnephew. Mr.Hold got Jl.nOO and a numl-o- r of cousinsreceived 112.'. each. The will was madebefore Mr. Jardlnii's Howery days, andaccordingly nothing went to the personswho had befriended the supposed poorman.

A payment of J l.tOO, however, wasmade by the executor to Peter Chouinard.describing himself as of theSquirrel Inn library and reading room ofthe Church Temperance Sockty, ut 2S1

Fourth avenue, whose .fforts to raise asubscription among "William Smith's"Howery friends to keep his body fromletter's field resulted in the discovery ofDudley Jardlne's Identity.

Friend Tells llovrrr Life.Chouinard swore odt an iitlldavlt n

December IS last before the. undertakerwho aided him to find Jardlne's relatives.He says that the "attendance, servicesnnd care rendered and bestowed" to thedecedent were nt "divers Intervals andlilaceh," at the lodging house, SI Howery,nt Squlrni Inn fixe reading room at 131Howery and at Oouverneur Hospital. Timattendance continued after his death anduntil tho funeral.

'During that period," said Chouinard,"I was his riHiiguUed friend, the only onehe mentioned and named, with address atthe hospital nnd the sole and only friendwho went to visit him at his lodging houi--

when he was Indisposed prior to going tothe hospital, and the only one who vipltedhim tlnVo and brought delicacies to hUn."

Chouinard says that Jaidlne's Identitywas established by bis examination ofdocuments at the lodging house, and headvised the undertaker to hold the laidyuntil ho could lulse u fund to bury hisfriend. He started to find out what pianocompanies were paying hlm a pension uudto get u contribution from them. Thisresulted In finding Frederick Jardlne, anephew, of Moritclalr.

A romance of Jardlne's younger days,which inn)' have i.ent hlm to the Howeryto llvn ns an outcast, Is disclosed In theuppralsul of tho only pieces or Jewelry heowned, which wereivotth 3S. Thenrtlclesweie k locket containing tho plctuie andlock of hair of n woman and an oldfashioned lirenstplu with lose diamondand Mii.ill biilllai)t,

John M. Shedd, attorney for the ex-

ecutor, made atlidavlt that a womanclaiming to, be tho dnuKhter of the de-cedent had usked to shuro tin the estato.

"While sho may be u daughter, thewill be unable to succeed In setting asidethe will," said Mr. Snedd.

BURGLARS SHUN CRUCIFIX.

Three Times It Protects .rcklacr toWhich It la Attached.

Yonk kills', Jart. 12. James H. Fltch.rralestate broker, whose hnmu at IDS Oliie-woo- d

avenue wan robbed of 1600 worthof Jewelry, silverware and clothing lastnight, said y that tho thieves againfailed to take a valuable necklace withn crucifix attached.

"Threo times In thirty years my homehas been robbed nnd ever' tlmo theburglars have left the crucifix." suid Mr,Fitch. "Every time, too, It has been litplain sight, land It is much more valuablethan uuvoyjyl the articles taken,"

RUSSIAN STOLE "M0NA LISA.'

Swindler Admlta He Intended In SellII In American.

Special Cable Deipatch to Tns Hks.ILonpov, Jnn. 13. According to the St,

Petersburg correspondent of the Times anotorlou swindler, Hlblkoff, who has Justbeen arrested In the Russian capital, con-

fessed that he and two other Russians,Meyenlorff nnd Kngelhnrd, devised thetheft of tho "Mona Lisa" from thennd employed Perugia nnd Latxkevltch asinstruments.

The Intention wna to sell the paintingto an American collector for JIOO.OOO.Perugia and the Russians went to MoutuCarlo, but Perugia vanished with the pic-

ture en route.

MARSHALL HIS ONLY AUDITOR.

Senator Thomas Makes Speech lie.fore llntnt)- - Seats In Senate.

Washington, Jan. 12. Senator Thomasrtf l,tlnrn1i II. tlm M.in.ln ,,.r4f mn.ln n' " I

free sliver speech in which he recalled the i

"crlmo of '73.""Wan Senator Thomas Interrupted very j

often 7 a newspaper man asked a Capitol j

Zvtl?l?T: "d,ourrl- -

nsks ques- -

tlons," wn the reply."What do you mean?" returned the

newspaper man."The was the only

auditor," replied the Capitol employee. I

A BULL IN A CHINA SHOP.

Animal nt I.evrrs Puts Ancient Tra-dition to Hunt.

bperiat Cable leiatch to Tin: Si .

Lo.vdon. Jan. 12. At the cattle marketat Lewes y u big bullock strayedInto a china shop and sauntered throughlines of china, glass and enrthwaro tholength of n whole block. The drover andthe salesmun finally Induced the bullockto depart from the shop nnd the biganimal walked calmly Into the street.

Not a piece of china was broktn.

TANOO BAN HURTS CHARITY.'

Catholic Institutions Snld In Mr lintyiift.OIMI Krniu llnlls. '

Official of the Huiernld Society, ofwhich Judge ileiirge J. O'Kecfe nf specialSessions Is tlie head, are consulting withHMiop McDonnell of Hrooklyn to find aplan for raising the l.",oo lost to theCatholic orphans of th city through thecalling ofT of the Hmernld ball. It esti-mated that the unwillingness of theChurch to assume sponsorship fur moderndance nt Its charitable affairs alreadyhas cost Catholic charities over $2R,'moIn the city alone.

12Since tho Kmerald Society acted StFrauds Navler Academy, St. FrancisXavier College and the Cathedral Clubhave also decided to go dnneeless rather '

than countenance the tango and theturkey trot. The Alumnie Association ofVisitation Convent wns the first to cancelIts annual dance.

SAMARITAN HELD AS GUNMAN.

fiets Lucked I After Carrying DemiWoman From street.

Tony Henemlo, who live behind hisbarber shop at 411 Fifth strict,and some friends saw a womai "iithe sidewalk last night. They went outand carried her into Tony's room uudlaid her on a sofa. Henemlo called

Fnrian, who summoned an ambu-lance.

,

Dr. Hayes of Hellcvue said tlmj

woman wan dead. Mm proved to b.Mrs. Mary Sickler of 324 IJ.it Thirteenth

jst ree.t.

I

While Farrnn was waiting for the am-

bulance he saw a levolver mi Toiiy'"mantelpiece, so he sent out word to De-

tectives Wuehner and Ransbuig. wnifound the gun, nriested Tony nnd lookedhlm up on a charge of violating thoSuit h nn law.

J

COST OF ILLNESS GOES UP.j

lint-to- r III Part of Mtnten Islandt'omliliie to llalMc Fees.

Residents of Pleasant Plains, Totten-vllle- ,

Atlantic, Prince's Hay and HuguenotPark, villnRes III the Westflohl section ofStaten Island, who get sick will be ohllgislto pay e0 to 100 per cent, more In orderto get well, according to a new set offee decided upon by four of the leading

and

the oftheir new fees. ,

Tho pi ice $1

Tho new scalo Is from ."0 to accord- -

lug tn distance, for day visit, from2 to tt for night calls,

TO HOLD EARLE'S ACCOMPLICE.

.

of

extradltlun for at,was Jovial humoi

FIRE ON STEAMER ESPERANZA. I

Hold of Liner j

Hour Fight, .

Havana. Jan. 12. liner I

hero fromNew York It learned tire

In her cargothis uftenioon, whichonly after an light.

p.isseiirfcis weicwhenM..al....l ..... I i

m. m-- h ? . . ,,...'."",shot Tho calmed

passengers led in thecommunication with the

steamer ofaid II that were '

N. Hroivn,of National '

j

j

CITY SHIVERS IN

75 MILE GALEJ a.

Wtiuicii (Tpsct (ind Hurt inStreet One Hit by

Fulling Sign.

PK1UL TO SHITS BAYi

Some Drag Anchor VesselNarrowly Misses Smash-

ing Others.

V v nri'MiJj.m tj I ZEHO WEATHER

DoWII to 10 AllOVO LltSt Niglltliniiod Cold To-da- v

,

i Predicted.

fWaslilnKtnn Forecast I

I'nlr mill Continued Cold Tuesday(T-d- n ). With fresh to

.VortlnvesterlyWednesday , Fair,

il lid . it So Cold.Yesterilnj's Temperature Record t

Den. Dear.PHIO A. M....Ut IIHIII I',

12 M no !llM M aItlOO P. MldulKht..l

Highest wind velocity, 74miles, from northwest.

real winter year camegalloping in yeMenkiy on a northwesterlyroisterer that attained almost hurricaneforce (eighty miles) litevening. In open sea off the HookIt ninety miles or more,but being an otLshore gale It did notimperil shipping III nearby waters.

during the afternoon thesavage northeai-tei- ' periods Of

live minutes duration, nt a rate of seven!four niaj neatly nil afternoon

.and .veiling 11 blew not than sixtytulles. The temperature, which was 25 at

o'clock In the afternoon, droppd to 12at ! o'clock. local prophets wereconfident then that mercury would...tin., tiri.llt i.li.u.. tn 9..in ItofiirM ntinrtflf.

,,. 1r1 i, ,.nhtmayb" It would bit the thermometries!win'" mn.

There was piactlcally tin Utup In theat midnight, occasionally It mode-ra- t,

to fiuty miles, only to line againabove sixty, blow like It. ottlclulmercury mi tin Whitehall Huildlng wasthen 10 degrees loe.il forecasterssil.l thev had not their belief thatu would drop several tbgrees moremight come clos.

......... ......

I lie COlUe- -l place III III" I Maltstilclit was Dilluth, where It was t bc- -

low zcio, the winds of Dilluthwhining this luiy, Tlie national sooth-'save-

predicted sunny skiee with "con- -

cold" y "fre(h to hlchnorthwesterly winds." prospect lookedthat way to a cloud read) r.

It was natuial that in blow of Midifierceness, punctuated with squalls who-- e

force cannot be in. ixu.ed .menionie-iters- ,

there should many accidents.SlKti wen. toi n from tar tenlliKs all over

!th" city, roofs unfinished buildings were,'tipped off many wue hurt by beingblown from their feet. lee.ird ofcasualties but no one

'killed.The elided peak was tlm

centre of mote than the usual .'urktcmvbluster. Tim smote FederalHuddlns uud, t'urllnK, billow ul In front of

lofty Wnohuirth wall, forming acilalbreakets. sometimes lifting women withmuch sail dear their feet. A

loi.en of inoie men nnd womenthe wide entrain of the wuih

Well" never mole ertlltli. Hats sailedaeilal spirals almost to tlm of the

peak some of them never came downj to laud homo seau.ud on tUj upper huiilcane curtcnts.

the spcctiitor Siivt.Ill shelteied grand stiilid of the

on winter hosrr and enjoying tlie visionof It. st up tlm windy Hume theillfconitltuie ot nwiurs.

li'nlty nearly the same gjra.tlons that made Wonlwoith a stormyrape to imind made Uf.i momentarily uivhupps fur folks, passing MunlclpilHuildlng. Tlm gale, mushrooming tlm

iii villi; facade, rebounded tn,. .stiietuud lulu Cll Hall Paik, biul.n Into vailetlcs whli baby torii.'idoi,wheels and that only g'lls with

most sKlrts able to uaviu without laiiylng away sail.

Tho best piouf the ariival ot winter- "' Van tt.ril.mtlt Park

to hUuI ii. Central P.uU lain was tiiuen.over but rather ragged hii tin jm

i,ult.. thick enough in b...r a no.! I

,H probable that' 'sli u 'n ,.

' b.nll,,'''1 ,,l"rt' """"Tho hUdiUiilii-m.of- , v Ulr oi, an) r

discouraged folks wh had bcuti tiu

physicians of that section. jsivept Into them iuhI came to am hoc withDrs. Coleman, Washington and Meyers ' eves tilled w Ith dust. (!niy coated cops on

of Tottenvllle Dr. Iteuwlck of Prince's duty at the building tin slot mHay, who u practical monopoly of , bound on their way in inti of com-th- e

medical practice of that part of Staten punitive calm.Island, notified public lasr nlKht Tho tlsts of the winds

ruling has been a visitII. 12.

and

Mis llrrninn'a .Mother (ioluH to j ''cb ial Ituilding there specfito--,n """''' ' the squalls.Cl.rl.tlnuln to Her. which blew ftoiii nil points of tin com-Vsc,! W(f I. T K.v

lni ,, cMnv(. ,,Paris, Jan. 13.- -A Christlanla despatch I

lm.rwH,,, ,tr.,llKl.P ,, ,, whlthat the Norwegian authotltleHsays have, ,...,, IUM.m,l m ,,e

decided to detain Miss Herman. For- - j ,,dlug ivatorv and on the e,.dlnand Plnney Marie's aliened accomplice ,,lir.,tlVfly quiet southwest comer of Hat.In the kidnapping of his foil, until herl(1.,v stri.,.t , iirondway. opposite themother arrives at Chtlstlanla, Tlie latter! la building, expressed Kinpilse when heIs anxious to take charge of her daughter learned that the crowd was watching th-- :

In the meantime, says a despatch tn '. building sw.ij. He Jolnul the timingJfiititi, the oung woman I In delicate nnd deilaied that the structure appearedhealth. j to ! plumb soliei. Later ho leat ned thai

Hurle Is said to be an.iou to pineeed the only vibrations weio in the mindsat once to France trial. When the tlm onlookeis, who woie getting n line

papers hlm arrivedChristlanla he In

Flames In Ward PillOut Aftrr One

When thu WindHspcranza arrived this evening

was that abroke out uf cotton nnd

was e.xtlnKUlsJied j

hour's hardThe 30 llrst cabin at

luncheon the Ilru was illtcovered,AU .1,.... rlutf

N, o

llames up. captain theand the fight on

fire. Wilt-len- s

Tugus btought the promisequick needed.

Among the pitsscngern was IJ. I

president the Rallvvuv ofMexico,

IX

Conl

HighWinds.

M...IHp.

M..,UIIU

The first of tho

the afternoon andthe

achieved perhaps

Six times latespurted. Ill

miles, thelens

Theth

.....i ,i,n,

aied

anil The

and thechanged

andpretty tn

niloillast

and weio

tlnued andTin- -

plaina

bybe

ofand

Thewas lingo, was

W.iolwottii

blast the

the

spread onpnnln.?

building

upthe to,i

andanaln,

Wluilthe

it going amithe

son ofthe

theon

Into

of liglgs, ;iii).curlicues

the clinging weiegut

ntl''"Hw

not

" ..

the

enjoy

Woolwoitn

were

SecCIU

A

M

obs.

for

u..ll.....

rSt

V 7