Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 07, 1912, Image 1

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    Looking Backward
.This Day in Omaha
Tmis in
Sea Stnotial Fag at wek lata
THE
Omaha
Daily
FairTCold
VOL. XLI-XO. 201.
OMAEA, - WEDNESDAY .MORXlXtl, FEBRUARY 7. 1912 -TWELVE PAGES.
SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS.
If
(JOSS HINDEBED. :
COURT MAY AID
Xajjiiih Docs Not Agree to Appoint
meat of Special Prosecuting
Attorney.
WJESTION OF' THE . METHOD
. . -A
None Bat County Attorney or Dep
uty May Confer with Jury.
GOSS MIGHT BECOME DEPUTY
The National Capital
Taeadar,
aary , 1913.
The Senate.
Xonappeanuioa of manufacturer caused
pcf-tpoittmetu of finance wmmutwn
bartif oe WepT tariff f talon bill.
lrimr rommittc-a hvartj Htnoriiphr
HlumpnbrK8 ra!-oii9 for tlenounciuc as
fukes Stiioraithr Sheridan's atttloa.
iVmocratw rauinie-ed on increasing fin- j
In nee committee debated. Hey burn
bill to l-v-peal Canatllau rtaprocHy. but
tcok no action.
Senator Burton vrsc British and
French arbitration treat!r b ratifies..
;o nave, lit. ay for treaties with otivr
nations.
The Home. .
Utrr.ecrati p-par for fight on "money
invest nation
Yt ......... v.'.'Li TJ a.tJ 4. V... irurt lliVtfStleatinn rMulutinn.
lecuuiy lSuv o acu , A.Bu K?(iIWKm , foo, " ursed Kt inter-
for lllA EmerfirenCT.. 'state commerce committee as rearon for
. " (creation or bureau of market.
I Governor Clark of Alaska, before terrl-
t;r5Y TSSTTTS TT5 ' STTTlPtVFWAT0. ' tori committee, opposes Alaska elective.
dory Bribing; Cases to Takes I'p
. Today Day I Set for Hearing;
' a fthe "t'gly neiaior"
, " Cases. '
The so-callJ conierencc of Presiding !
Judse Abra'il-n i. Sutton cf. t;. district
court. Tiurlc" A. Gum and -County, At
, torney J.intes 1 Englis'.:,, held. In Judzt
Fulton's clicmle:s yesterday afu-moon in
the. hope of removing '-.! obstacle to
Guss'. assisting; the s;a:d'iuT In In
vestigations, was' of 'fit natuie of a
hearltMC. Th matter will be parsed upon
by Judge Sutton, ttd morning perhaps
after further argument but Mr. English
vlll nM be obliged to comply' with the
ruling and may. If h deem It advisable,
Refuse to abide by. II,
Failure of Charles A. Gor. appointed by.
Attorney Uenerar truiflii tn assist the
and Jury In Its Investigations of nu
merous charges of graft and law viola
tion, snd County Attorney James P. Eng
lish to agree on any Plan for Gosa to en
ter the gran Jiiry room and conduct ex
amination "of wit ue aVcs without running
the risk of completely .nullifying si) the
giand fury's work prevented Goat1 begin
alng his labors yesterday. ,
According to the best Informaften ob
tainable Mr. English la refusing to agree
to adoption of the only method so far
known to the public to open the way tor
Cora to take up the' work to which the
attorney .general. haa neslgned him.' This
method would be for Mr. English to
have 'one of his deputies resign and ap
point Ooaa to fill the vacancy, with the
understanding that aa soon as the grand
Jury shall be discharged Mr. Goes will
resign and the regular deputy will be re
appointed. - ' '
A conference of Judge Sutton. Mr. Ooaa
and Mr.- English that laated nearly n
our Tuesday brought no definite
result. By agreement the three refused
tn tell newspapermen the details of the
conference and said that something-definite
will be given aut this, inornliyg. ,
Ooea la A satiated.
CTiaYlea' A Ones' of Omaha, former
Vntted aisles district attorney. ru ap.
polnted la art -far theUomey tanaraj'a
office In assisting the pouglaa county
(land juir lo.lt Invest Igatlons.
1 hava been employed to raprasent tht
attorney general." aald Mr. Ooaa. "Oilier
natters require Ma attention al Lincoln
and he cannot be here himself. .1 hay
talked with County Attorney English and
Deputy County Attorney Magney and
want to say that wa are good frlenda and
will work la accord." ' .
Ever since It became likely that At
torney General Martin In person or by a
representative would aelst the grand
Jury and County Attorney English In
dicated ho would do anything he could
In reason to simplify the matter for the
attorney general there have been grave
doubts aa to whether any parson other
than the county attorney or one of his
deputies legally could assist, the Investi
gating body. 80 read the statutes ef
fecting this matter that they might be
construed to hold aa Irregular. sny grand
jury proceeding at which any person
other than. the county attorney or one
of hi deputies was " present In which
esse .all indictlmenta. If any were re
turned, would have to be quashed.
Deputy County Attorney Magney, as
signed to the work by the county attor
ney, went -to work with the grand .Jury
as usual yesterday morning.
'A reporter found Mr. English In the
criminal court room yesterday and
asked him' If he would appoint Gosa
deputy county attorney and thereby sim
plify the matter. Mr. English said he
could not. being limited to the number
of deputies be now baa. It was rig
grated ha could have om resign fee a
time and appoint Gosa. H's only reply
wa a laugh. Ur. Engtuh has been asked
to do -this.- '
Mr. Ooaa wuJ seen In th district court
clerk's office and asked what would be
done. He raid he wae about to confer with
English aa to "de'.aila." They conferred
and failed to acrea aaa went lata aao
ferenca with Judge Sutton. Another tali
are waa the result.
Judg 8uton would not tell what was
aald In the conferenca because ha bad
promised not to. English and Ooaa re
fused to tell, saying only 'details" had
been discussed and apparently regard
ing the "detail" as unimportant. N
railroads and fuel resource.
Renrvecntatlvc Vreland spoke on en
dowing currency reform plan cf mone
tary commfoMoa.
Frauds in arm:. ehAe contracts renewed
on floor and Investigation recommended.
l.epresentutive Pepper lntro-lu-ed bill
to prevent shutdown and wi-gi reductions
threats by employer to Influence em
ployes' votes at presidential nominations.
House Will Look
Into Alleged Land
. Scandal in Florida
(Convta-icd on 8eco-fJ Pise J
The Weather
-: Vor . Nebraska Fair; .colder extreme
earn portion, ,
For Iowa-rlr; colder extreme north
wot porttoa.
leers-----tare at ssabVewterday.
Hour.. . , Deg.
.... IT
.... 1
.... M
.... U
.... I
a
.... a
it
.... B
21
a. m...
. m...
' a. m...
i a. m...
a. ni...
Ma., m...
11 a. an...
U m.
1 p. m...
1
p. m. ........
p. m ..
p. m
J p- m
t D. in
' Coasnaratlve Local e-pe-rd.
... " Ju th. i
iii-thest yeserday ... s ii H &
Lowest yesterday M IS 14. S
"Mean temperatare X a s .
"rTedpitstlon .09 t
Tempersture sad precipitauon aspsr
fi:res from the normal:
Kormai temperature j.
Total exceos since March J 27t
Xormal precipitation .at Inch
lefllen-y for the day at inch
Total rainfall since March 1....H ti inrhea
refic!ewrv since Msrch I Hie Inches
rteftclenry. for cor, period. ll.14.iS Inches
ajtctss fvr cor. period. IMS... t lixbes
WASHINGTON. Feb. C-A new situ
ation In the Department pt Agrtculture
closely resembling the famoua McCabe
Dr. Wiley episode ' waa partly disclosed
at a hearing before the committee, on ex
penditures In the Department of Agricul
ture when a decision was reached .to be
gin an early Investigation Into the officej
of experiment station, relating princi
pally to Ih-t proposition to drain the
Florida Everglades.
Itepreaentatlve Frank Clark of Florida
charged -that Chief Engineer C. (I. Elli
ott and his assistant. A. D. Morehouse,
who hsd made adverse report on the
drainage of the Everglades, had been dis
missed from the department on techni
calities Involving a transfer of govern
ment funds from one account to another.
The chief accountant of the office, Mr.
Xlnxleton, also haa been dismissed. This
action waa based on the opinion of So
licitor McAbee. ' who f also acted In the
Dr. Wiley case. '-s
" Itepresentatlve Clark asserted that pri
vate Intercuts exploiting Florida lands
had used officials of tho Department of
Agriculture to further their schemes and
that one company alone had sold mil
lions of dollars' worth of land that waa
now under water. ' '
It la said that an engineer formerly
In the employ of the department, who
reported favorably on th drainage prot
ect and afterwards '.retired In Florida,
had made the charges on which the recent
dlrmlssalg t the department had bean
based. I
There, was a Mat. of aapnisid poets to
tht department and tho committee on ex
penditures decided that an early Investi
gation ws demanded. ,i ' ' '
Chief Accountant Singleton, It aaa said
at the department, had been Indefipltel-r
suspended and not' dismissed, aa were
KIHott and Morehouse. Hollcltor McCaba. j ha arrived at Peoria, to blow UP places
DYNAMITE BILLS
ARE BETUBNED
Federal Grand Jutj in Indianapolis.'
Hands in, .Thirty-Two Indict-
menta in Conspiracy Caie. I
WAEBAJTS ABE BEING DRAWN
Names . Will Bo Withheld Until
Arrest Are Made.
MOSTLY " OFFICERS OF UNIONS
Men Who Pointed Ont Jobs to Mc-j
Manigal Included. ' j
OMAHA EXPLOSION MENTIONED !
Several al the Bills harae ( eaeeal.
saeat of Knowrlealap-! al Callt at
Others la (easeetlss
wltk Kaissla. ,'
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind.. Feb. t-Thirty-three
indictments, most of them said to
be against union labor oftrlals. were re
turned by Hie federal grand Jury thia
afternoon as a result of the government's
investigation of the dynamite conspiracy.
The number and tho namea of toe de
fendants were ordered to be held secret
pending arrests. It la understood war
ranta are to be Issued Immediately. Not
only members of McNamara'a "dynamit
ing crew." but also men who are said to
have had knowledge ot what MuNamara
did with money at hla dtsQpeal art be
lieved to be Indicted.
The Indlctmenta were returned at.Mt
o'clock this afternoon, ten minutes after
the. Jury mat.
Ryan la ot "-e--r!sed.
Former associate of J. J. MrKamara
in the office of the tnn-rnatlonsi Asso
ciation of Bridge and Htructural Iron
Workers received the news of the Indlct
menta without surprise.
Both Frank M. Ryan, tho , president, '
and Herbert 8. Hock In, the secretary,
treasurer, aald they knew tho direction
of the Investigation because the aasovta-
tion'a records were, evidence before the
grand Jury. '
"But we have maintained right along.
aald HoCkin. "that nobody In this offlcs
waa concerned with McNamara in kit
dynamiting." .'!.
Part of the Indlctmenta ar known to
be against men who met orUe K. Mc
Manlgal In Detroit in Juno, luff, and In
duced him, because of hla familiarity
with explosives gained whlla working In
a stone, quarry, to become a regular
member of McNamara'a 'dynamiting
crtw. ,
Ossaha dab Meatloaed. -
Other Indictments are bclloved to be
against men who met McMaulgal In Bos
ton and showed' him where-to put the
explosives which blew up part ot an
opera bouse there March S7, IP, snd
who afterwards went with him to Spring
field, Ma., sad showed Mm where to
Not Quite Czed Yet
I-
f',tt
m
f . te- .v .
fin 11 m ri 1 1 y a jot
ti- d' Plan Dealer.
STEEL COMBINE ENJOINED
Court Orders Defendants to Destroy
No More Books.
CHARGES MADE BT GOVERNMENT
Traak Pall at Pas-era that Tended to
Cea.eet Prealdeal Fen-ell
with Pe-ola Was Ue. .
si eared.
SPECIAL PROSECUTOR IN OMAHA
GRAND JURY PROBE
escorted him from New York 10 liutw
ken. N. 4.. and Jersey City, Where ht
did "Jobs" In IMS and 110: men who met
htm In Cleveland In1 July, Ult, and ar
ranged for an explosion at Akron, 0
and'raeo waa took charge .of him 'When
It la. aald. has turned over td the De
partment of' Justice all; of the papers
Involved in the alleged financial Irreeu
larltlea for such action as It might de
sire to take, an'to prosecutions.
Indiana Standard
' Oil Company Ready
to Cut Big Melon
NEW TORK, Feb. a-Preparallons are
said to be making whereby the Htandard
Oil Company of Indiana will next month
slice a melon of tat.000.att n stock. Ths
company Is one of the former thirty-three
subsidiaries of the Standard Oil Company
of New Jersey. The annual meeting of
the Indiana company will be held on
March 7 at Whiting, Ind.. and stockhold
era will be asked. It is said, to vote an
Increase of f3.W0.0ut In tho company's
capital, which la at present tl.000.00u. 'l he
additional KJ.OOO.OOt will then be turned
over to the stockholders. It la generally
reported, as a atock dividend ot IBM per
cent.
Shortly after th dissolution of the
Standard Oil Company of New Jersey
shares of the Indiana company sold as
low aa S1.4M 'and yesterday the shsres
were quoted at S4.0W bid-KM asked.
There la (rowing belief that the In
diana. melon cutting la only the beginning
of a number of capital Increases among
the Standard's subsidiaries whose capital
only nominally represents the1 value of
assets.
It waa the Standard Oil Company of
Indiana which In 187 waa fined r2,:).
by Judge Landl la Illinois.
S
M
- M
. J4
. M
. U
Packers' Test Cost
.' Figures Are Said to
Be Fictitious
' CHICAGO. Feb. .-Every dcUtl of the
method used hi figuring ths test cost
of dressed beef -was explained by wlt-
easea at the packers' trial today.
Tb government charges that the teat
cost la the keystone- of the business sys
tem which made it possible for the pack
ers to maintain the alleged combination
ht restraint of trade described In the in
dictment. That th test cost wss a fle-
ttttoos figure obtained by making an
adequate allowance for by-products, prac
tically uniform among the big packers.
and enabled tbem to conceal large per
centage of the profits made on dressed
beef is one of the principal allegation-!
made by the government.
Noise made by workmen outside Judge
Carpenters court room made It necessary
today to move the trial to another pan
ot the building. By a coincidence the
trial waa shifted to the court room In
which the Standard Oil company was
fined .:J0 by United flstes District
Judge Landia on a charge of rebating.
Eugeao Blows, test cost clerk for the
G. H. Hammond Co. plant of the Na
tional Packing company, and John 7.
ChsppUn. head of the plant acconatlng
department of Swift at Company, do
sciibed methods of obtaining the test post
there. Another Indictment . la f said to
deal with a Chicago, man. after McMani
gal - had partly wrecked by - dy
namite an Iron works plant In South Clil
cago' ln February. 111.. handed him an
envelope containing IMS with the remark:
There's money In that." Men who were
traced ad having helped In causing ex
plosion at Omaha, Neb.: Erie, Pa.; Dav
enport, la.: Penh A in boy, N. i. pel-
ham, N. Y. and ' many points In Ohio,
whero twenty explosions occurred, are
said to ba Involved. -
The charge of concealment of knowlege
of the guilt ot others Is ssld to have
been brought to bear In' connection with
the n.OOO allowed monthly to J. J. Mc.
Namara aa secretary-treasurer of tha In
ternational Association of Bridge and
Structural Iron Workers for which ha was
required to give no accounting.
LIST Or STRICT!' RKS WRECKED
WASHINGTON. Feb. 4 -Judge Gray In
tha United States court of the third cir
cuit, has Issued an Injunction restrain
ing the defendants In lha government's
ami-trust suit against Ihe I'nlted States
Steel corporation from destroying books
and papers desired by the government.
Tha Injunction was issued on a peti
tion of the Department of Justice, which
alleges that several thouranC papcia and
documents, which were used in tha
government's criminal prosecution of the
wins pool" last fall, have been destroyed.
Ons portion of Ihe government's pet I.
tion seems to ba susceptible of the Inter
pretation that criminal indictments and
prosecution of certain officers of the
Steel corporation and Its subsidiaries are
under conalderatlon by the I)epartment
of Justice.
Ahe Injunction, which la a temporary
one. la to forbid the destruction of any
books or papers which the government
may desire In the anti-trust ault. x
Traak of Papers Destroyed.
Tho destroyed papers. It Is charged,
were In a trunk, which, with Its contents,
were dsllvered on June M. I'll, by Cult h!
States District Attorney Wise tn Charles
Mai VissSn gsniial mHilloT of- tb Ajutei
mate Steel corporation, who gave a writ-, ,
ten agreement, it is ma. mat ne wou.a
keep' the papers In hla personal charge,
subject to examlnatlun by Mr. Wise or hia
assistant at any time.
The ovornment, through Uenry t'olton,
special assistant to the attoney general In
the dissolution suit against the steel cor
poration, began negotiations fur these
papers In connection with the pending pro
ceedings en January :.
ft C. Boiling, assl'tanl general sillcltor
of the steel corporation. Informed Mr. t'ol
ton. It Is alleged, thai tha trunk hsd bean
returned to the American Steel and Wire
company about October I. lull, and that
all the papers had been destroyed by
Frank Baias, vice president and general
sales agent of the wire company.
Papors Implicate. Farrell,
iThe papers. It Is charged In the govern
ment's petition, "contained matters tend
ing to show that J. A. Farrell, former
president of the United States Steel Pro
ducts texportl compsny, now president of
the United States Steel corporation, not
only knew of said unlawful pools and
eomblnationa described, but aided and
U reew 11 11 1 i. 1 1. 1 in
? 1 ,
t ' "... '"
r ' lk I :
'f:t':."'i
I''' !
BRUNO TZSCKL'CK IS DEAD
, m mm 1
Pioneer of Nebraska Passes Away at
the Home of His Daughter.
CAME TO NEBRASKA IN 1853
Farmer Secretary of Stat and Pram
laeat 1st German Soctrtloo Ben
era! Tsar-hark Has Beea
Fnlllasj tor Sla Months.
CHAW.kS A. GOSS.
fxploelona lavestlarated by Grand
Jory at wdlaaapolla.
Plllll- lAfl ,,nl. .Inn. rf.n.ml.. .
points srattered over se'enteen states.
and covering a period from tha summer
of IMS to October M, 1(11. when dynamite
was found beneath a bridge near Santa
Barbara, Cel.. Just before President
Taft'a special train passed over it, were
Inquired Into by tha federal grand Jury
which haa Investigated what tha govern
ment has regarded aa a nation-wide dy
namite conspiracy.
It haa been tlie theory of Ihe govern
ment that all of these explosions were
Intended to Intimidate, employers and
nonunion worklngmen with the general
Intent to abolish - tha so-called "open
ahop." and compel submission to tha de-
manda of certain labor organizations,
mora particularly the International Union
of tho Bridge and Structural Iron Work
er. . '
Tho states tn which explosions occurred
aero Ohio, Indiana. Illinois, Pennsyl
vania. New Turk. New Jersey, -Maryland,
Connecticut. Massachusetts, Michigan,
Wisconsin. Missouri, . Iowa, . Nebraska.
Utah, California and Washington. Ohio,
with twenty explosions; had more than
any other one state. Illinois. Indiana
and New Tork follow In order. In respect
of tha number of tha explosions.
There were two explosions In UK, nine
In IMC six tn 1307. twenty-six in ISM,
twenty In 1MB. twenty-five in Ml, and
thirteen In 111. These figures are ex
clusive of the explosion which wrecked
tba Los Angeles Times plsnt. and re
sulted In tb confessions and Imprison
ment of the brothers, John J. and James
B. McNamara. John J. Mc Namara was
secretary-treasurer of the International
Association of Bridge and Structural
Iron Workers.
GEN. JAMES MEAYER DEAD
Famous Populist and Veteran of
Civil War Expires at Des Moines.
TWICE RAN FOR PRESIDENT
faartnatcd Once by (ireeabark Party
and In I mm by PopsU'ls, n lib
Whom He Was Long; '
Wflliatcd. - v ,
I From a Staff Correspondent.)
1KS MOINKH, Feb. l-tSnarlal. Tele-grsm.l-The
death of tleneial James 11.
Weavar occurred this afternoon at tha
home of hla sun-ln-law, Harry C. Kvans,
In this city. He had been III abuut two
months and a few dsya ago he was
brought here from Colfax by his daugh
ter. At noon he was reported as recov
ering from an nine's whir) vcitrd kim
last night, but soon after he died.
Ueneral Wi-aver, twice a condldnte for
president of the I'nlted States, waa a
native of Dayten, O., where he was born.
June If. 1Kb. Ie came lo Iowa with his
parents In 1M1. but Inter returned to Cin
cinnati, where he graduated from ihe
law school of the- Ohio university in
When the civil war began he en
listed In the Second Iowa Infantry and
was rap.'dly promoted, through the bat
tles of Fort Ixmrlson, Hhlloh and
Corinth, in which he participated, until
he reached the iraet of colonel. He was
breveted brigadier-general In March, 1MH
tleneial Bruno Tachurk, aged years,
a pioneer nt Nebraska and Omaha and
formerly secretary of the state ot Ne
braska, died at the home of hla daughter,
Mrs. t. -II. Gerber. lit South Twenty
fifth street, resterdsv afternoon of old
age. He had been grtt'ng weaker and
weaker every dav for the isst six months
and paased away ea:efully In the pres
ence, of his three surviving daughters,.
General Tisrhwk came to Nebraska In
IHX -lie became Interested1 In 'politics
snd for many years waa prominent
therein. i -
He wss barn In the town of Alslehen
In the province of Saxony, Prussia, on
February 17, Ik-'l. Ills fnllier was Frrril.
nsnd von Tserhuck. chief of the Internal
revenue department of Prtteeia. When
Mrunu Txschiirk arrived at the school
uge he and Ms slsieca were placed In
charge of private luto'rs. At Ihe sge of
II years ha' waa prepared tn rnter the
celebrated l.uther college, a rival Insti
tution al Elalrben, where he studied sev
eral more years.
Kdacated far the trier.
111 education was for the army from
the first, his father being ambitious to
! sen hint wearing the uniform and Ihe
guttering epeuleta of tlie German tttfkma.
Accordingly, he .vottlnUercd lit the Prus.
stan sr-ny at Ihe aaa at 1 and waa Im
mrdlitcly rommlsslohM lieutenant. When
ihe trouble between Ixninaik and Schles.
wlg-liolstrin broke out the young man
could not withstand" th excitement snt,
obtaining leave of absence, he betook
hlmell lo Sehlrswig-llalsMin. where h
enlisted to fight agulnet Ihe I 'tines. In a
belli on July 14 and , im. he was
wounded In Ihe hreiat. Immediately
after his recovery he again wint Into
battle and was shot In the shoulder. In
11 Austria and ttrrmany stepped In and
toped the hlatilltle.
tart for the West.
Being of an adventurous sort. Csntsln
Ttschiick with three comrades derided lo
NEW BEBELLION
IN CHIHUAHUA
Whole State is in Revolt and As
sembly is Expected to Deolart
Its Independence.
OROZCO INSTALLED GOVERNOR
Local Agents of Madero Afraid to
Appeal to Capital
MEANS DISORDER ALONG BORDER
United States Prepared to Rush
Troops to Frontier.
SEVERAL THOUSAND UNDER ARMS
ksteswat ta Soethrra Texas Will
Begin aa on a s F.rideat
Americans Are- la Need
Bl I.I.KI.
El PASO. Tex.. Feb. S.-A Chihuahua
special to tha Herald aaya tha guards at
the stats penitentiary have deserted their
poets and have Jailed tha director. Reel
Rembao, after which they took to ths
hllla to Join Rojaa. Government officials
In Chlhuhua say that ths Madero regime
It dead and that tha state roremmeat ta
ready to be turned over to Bmllto Vaa
quet Gomes.
WA8HINOT0.V, Feb. (.-Another up
rising In Mexico Is Impending, according
lo official dispatches received hero, which
cast grave doubts on tha loyalty of Gen
eral Oroaco to President Madero, and In
timate that In withdrawing front J wares
with tha garrison of that place to Chi
huahua Orosro la about to begin a new
rebellion and declare lbs Independence of
tha stata of Chihuahua.
Army circles are again agitated and
preparations frr Immediate action art re
newed. Ths w hole atata of chlhuhua is now re
ported to be in revolt against tha
Madero government.' The lists assembly
la expected lo meet luday and It la ex
pected a declaration uf Independence will
ba Issued.
l reprcarntatlies of lha govern
ment aro said to be without support and
afraid to appeal to the City of Mexico
for help, fearing thai any attempt on tht
part of Ihe nutlcnal government to send
loyal troops Into Chihuahua to enforce
the decrees of the Msdero government
would precipitate bloodshed.
As Ihe stale of fhlhuhua borders on
Texas, Its separation from Mexico would
he a iiiuuvr uf di-e concern to tha
I'nlted Mum. Ofriiiala litre are watch
ing deveJopmrntt with great Interest.
So cuiriWla are Hut military prepara
tion that It la said nothing remains tot
be done but la send one incvug to
evtvy department nrniy- headqiuitera In
tb country to Ihoiro th prompt aa
artnl.lane of a euftlrlem number of
tiouiM on the .Mexhan bot.ui- lu prepare
thu I'nlted Htules for any emergency that
might arise there, S
Ore ra Installed Governor.
KI, PAKu. Tex.. Feb. fl.-Uwieral Pas.
icual Otoscu nas In.lullcd as governor of
lhe state of Ciilhualiua c Hiduy, au-
voiding to passenger arriving here last
inlnht on the fltat tialn lo riach Jtiarea
lellice Wednesday. No demon .tratlon at
tended the lnsuturai:on or( the arrival
in ( hlhuuhua of th mutlnorls garrison.
The train brought sixty American refu
gees f n m Chihuahua and Intervening
towns Wire communication still waa lo-
renli and" T
a starmy voyr. I.lg . ka they M" " ,w rt
Altllfklllfh t lsi.s-.1 IVac. S..M I
abetted in their successful operation. Th' positions, he d!d not rome Int. mttlonal
petition avera that certain much wanted pr(,mlnenra until after his defeat as a re-
documents are in Imminent danger of
publican candidate for governor of Iowa
destruction, 'beeaure there are offlcerai,.. ..u,.,r,. ,,
of th steel corporstlon U nited State.) I ,JovM.nor Samuel KlrkwovJ. Soon after
and lta subsidiaries who have not yet been , ,n the conneils of the republican
Indicted for the practices which said
papers tend to ahow them guilty ot to-'
wit:
tf havelng been Involved of the afore-
party 'and became one uf the traders of
the national j.srly. belter known as the
"greenback", party, which In- l0O nom
inated him for president, in lTS, p4
said unlawful association and also be-1 and IHft he was In congress.
causa none :of the defendant companies In 1KHS General Weaver was again notn
haa yet been indicted In respect thereto." Inated for president, this time by the
The petttlon urges' that numerous other! populists.
papers were produced in tha wire pool
prosecution which contained data "tend
ing to show that FarVell knowingly aided
and abetted said unlawful practices In
violation of tlie Sherman antl-lruat act." .
The rul- Issued by Judge Cray directing
the defendants tn show cause why a per
manent Injunction ?hwul-J not issue la
landed .In New York. They left almost
aa roon as reaching New tork for Chi
cago. In Chicago the joung men bought
two horses and a wagon and set out over
the trackless prairie for Ihe. far west.
They were In search of the wilderness.
I they intended to find It and they did
find It. When reaching Davenport they
separated for tha four points of the
compass. While In Davenport Bruno
Tserhuck met his life companion. She
waa Maria Schmidt and she Is still llxlng.
They were married In Davenport on
September a, IKil. and started Immedi
ately In a wagon for the still fsrther
west. They found the Kden which the
young Ruaslsn officer had dreamed of.
They found H In eight of Nebraska and
only a few miles front, Omaha.
, Chinese Imperials
j Defeated in Fight
j Near Chui Chow
returnable on March.
Psvllsslaary BxblMt of Facta.
The preliminary exhibit of facta and
allegations about the explosions std their
auppoeed origin was gathered and pre
sented to the federal authorities by the
National Erectors' association, an or
ganization of iron and steel manufactur
ers and contractors who bad declared
for the "open ahop-" After the ex
plosions In IMS. the Erectors' association
waa formed, and In May. not, after de
claring aa aa organisation for the "open
ahop. engaged detectives to seek out i violated
ths identity of those responsible for the time.
explosions. ' There were copious extracts from r-.i.
One of the first instance of the finding j eratlon proceedings offered by Mr. Gom-
Gompers Testifies
in . . tt i name at t nm ft
m Contempt Hearing ; j.h;grF"r
WASHINGTON. Feb. (.-President Sam
uel Gompers of the American Federation
of Labor testified In the supreme court
of tha District of Columbia today In the i
ontetnpt of court proceeding growing
out ot the Bucks stove and Range boy
cott case against himself, John Mitchell
and Secretary Frank Morrison.
"Was 'not the restraining order by Jus
tice Gould a surprise to your' aaked At
torney Parker, referring to. the original
restraint In the Bucks boycott rase.
"It certainly waa." replied Mr. Gompers.
"What action did you take?" i
''I took the pages of the American
Federationist Ithe organ of the federa-1
tionl in which tlie name of the Bucks
Stove and Range company appeared under
the head of 'We don't patronise and with j
a pen 1 struck through tba Item of that
company. Then on the margin I wrote
what printers and writers call 'out' or j
'deletion' to eliminate its name from that
SAN" FRANCIdi'U. Feb. (.-Fifteen
hundred Chineie linper.al tro'ip were
killed or wounded and U captured in a
battle at Choi Chow yesterday, aecotd-
m received here today
Free Press.
Brigadier General Uu 'hung of Ihe
Five Killed When
Trolley Car Falls
Two Hundred Feet
PITTSBURGH. Feb. CCve
were killed today In the wreck of an In-1 companies of the ' coast artillery sta
terurban electric car near Coulter.-llle. tloned at Fort Harianras received or-
i-a. vtmie running at a high rate of ; ders toiJsy to leave for 'he Mexican
re peed the ear Jumped the track and vent bolder In Texas. Four other companies
Train tervire south uf Chihuahua City
waa lnleriuiu.-d.
Abraham Uunxales. minister of Praal
dint Msdrro'a cabinet, was reported ta
have left a northbound train at Santa
Ituealla. hia Journey lo Chihuahua being
Interrupted by tha receipts of a tola
gram, which. It is said, threatened as
aaselnatiou. 1'assenr.ers state that Chihuahua Is rife
with retorts tl at Francisco da la Barra
Is to be rivalled from hla present ml est on
to Italy and again become acting prsal
dtnt. The train left Chihuahua at noon
today, at which lima tha city waa quiet.
Order to Troops at Spokane.
SEATTLE. Wash.. Feb, 1 -Orders hava
been received at Fort Lawtoa directing
that the ganfsou of tour companies of
the Twenty-fifth Infantry, "the Browns
ville regiment." be held In readiness to
move to the Mexican frontier on abort
notice. The other eight companies of
Ihe regiment are at Fort George Wright,
Spokane.
Urdere tm Csaet Artillery
PENSACOLA. Fla.. . Feb. (.-For tba
second time wllhln twelve months two
stationed here are being reertilted to th
full war strength In anticipation ot
possible orders to move on short nolle.
8AVANAH. Ct., Feb. .-rtegraphlo
Instructions received tcuay at Fort
Screven. Tybee Island. 43a., from the War
department are for the One Hundred and
Sixteenth. One llundr.d a nd Twenty-
over a LS-foot embankment
Tha dead:
LUKE DONNELLY.
CHARLES SMITH
WILLIAM M'CLEAN
JOHN BOI'THERN.
JOHN DONNELLY. . !
numbering (M. The Imperial forces'i The car contained twenty , persons, !
numuenng w.-ws were commsnaea ny lien- miners .n tneir way lo work fr im Green- j flrM and Bevrnlr-Founh companies of
eral Chung Fung. The revolutionists ock to the mines near Scotthaven. All coast artillery to jet ruin equipment an
captured the city of foo Chow in Airj the paa-rngers were more or le?s In-' field service ready to gu to Texas at
Whel province. Chul Chow, the scene Jured. ,,. ti,c comiraiidms rCher la to ro
of yesterday's battle. Is In Kiang 8ni j The car rolled end over end to the not-i pi n to the adjutant genal s soon aa
province. j torn of the hill and brought up within a j his equipment la canpleta.
: few feet of tlie finzen Youghiognen
OFFICERS ASKED T9 PUSH j rlT,t Th ",)urMl "" tTon rrr 1 ;
; nr. ininiK eoiq, .anno iney were blng I
DLAlK HANU INUUInTjrricd to the home uf John a Romina
, '.near by.
j James Milter, the conductor had a mar
velous escape from death. He ran for
asslstsnce. The dangerously hurt were
taken to th McKtesport hospital by the
less seriously hurt.
IOWA CITY. la.. Feb. .-.Sperla!.-New
phares were added to the black
hand mystery surrounding the outrage;
perpetrated upon the John L. Adams
family of Solon, la., t'tday. alien the
officers or the Northwestern Mutual Fire
Insurance association, toe-ether with John
Adams himself, presented a petition to
the Board of Supervisors of Jphnson
j.--. . . j. . I -" n e om iwc
..ev.eu uui han4 ln irrretmg o:it Ihe mvetery. The
T '""' - "''"" ; insursm e comi any holds risks on the
siger appear. (farm hclnilngs and is appreh-nsive U-sl
The burden of Mr. Gomper s testimony ldditiot.al Incend arv Hamase will be ner.
was Intended to show that he had not pirated p., the prem.w of the family
me rovrainins orarr ai mat , or other farniera ot the nearby
Ridgeway Selected
to Succeed Melcheri
of hidden explosives occurred before the
erectors organised and followed an at
Continued on Kecjond Page. I
pers' eoonsel. Attorney Itarllngton for the
prosecution objected to many of these
extract.
com
munity who hsve Insurance policies in the
company. The company claims that the
government, though working carefully in
the matter, has not rushed matters suf
ficiently lo aid It. The petition I- being
coo tfeiwl
CHICAGO. Feb. .-A. c. Ridgeway was
elected second vk-e president of the "Chi-i
eago. Rock Island a Pacific Railway i
company today at a meeting of the rail-
road's directors in New York City. Mr.
Ridgeway succeeds the late F. O. Mrlehcr.
who was killed In the recent wreck at
Klnm'jndy. III. Some days ago he was
selected to take up the work formerly In '
charse of Mr. Meichtr, !
sr I
-V
Use the tele
phone.
' When you bare .anything
around the house to sell, a
room to rent, a house for sale,
when yon want something,
when In need of competent
help, use The Pee Want Ads.
An ad will cost you only a
few cents lone cent a word If
run two or more times). The
results will be beyond your ex
pectations, i
If yon ccn't come to the Be
office use the telephone.
Tyler 1000.
5
(t