Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 16, 1912, Image 1

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Omaha
Daily
Bee
THE WEATHER.
Fair
VOL. XLII-NO. 77:
OMAHA, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 1C, 1912-TEN PAGES.
SINGIJ COPY TWO CENTS.
OROZCO'S FATHER
NHflRVIIQ
IILLU Ul U
TROOPS
LEADER IN FLIGHT
i Colonel Pascual Orozco, Sr., Captured
and Held by Government Troops
at Presidio, Tex.
'NOT KNOWN WHERE SON IS
Possibility Rebel Commander Hay
Be in United States.
.CITY OF OJINAGA IS TAKEN
Federals Drive Rebels From Place
i After Severe Fighting.
(REPORT TO GENERAL STEENER
j Major ' Gaeral Wood Orders Army
Officers to Hold Younger Orosco
if Captured In American
Territory.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 15,-Major Gen
eral Leonard Wood, chief of staff of the
army, tonight ordered Brigadier General
Bteever of the Mexican frontier to hold
Pascual Orozco, Jr., the rebel leader, for
the United States Department of Justice
If he was captured In American territory.
General Steevef' advised Gentlal Wood,
ha had unofficial reports of the capture
of Orozoo and his father by Captain
Thomas F. Mitchell of the border patrol
near Marfa, Tex.
EL PASO, Sept 15-OJlnaga, the Mexi
can border town opposite Presidio, Tex.,
was taken away by federal troops after
brisk fighting at daybreak, according to
advices received at Fort Bliss by General
E. Z. Steever, commanding the Depart
ment of Texas.
' General Steever also received a report
torn army officers at . Presidio, Tex.,
Opposite . Ojlnaga. Mexico,-that Colonel
Pascual Orozco, .sr., tfater of the rebel
leader,, was captured yesterday and Is
held by United States troops at Presidio,
together with Colonel P. G. Orozco.
Whether General Pascual Orozco, Jr.,
the rebel commander-in-chief, was fight
ing at Ojlnaga or escaped over the inter
national line Into the United State is
not known.
Federal forces numbering 350, under
command of Colonel Manuel Landa, po
ttered Ojlnaga proper, driving the rebels
before them.
Mexican Capltan in Fear.
MEXICO CITY, Sept 15.-Despite the
precautions taken by the ' police, the
' situation here tonight is tense In view
of the anniversary celebration tomorrow
night of Mexican Independence. Though
the Zapatistas, who threatened: to enter
the capital tomorrow, are far away, it is
feared that partisans will start riots.
That the plot Trffcfcciipy- and sack fhe
capital on September 15, the anniversary
of Mexico's independence, has been more
widespread than' at first imagined is be
lieved to be indicated by reports received
here by the government that similar plans
were on foot against Fuebla, Monterey
and Saltlllo,
Barred from the Chamber of Deputies
by order of President Madero because
of the noisy demonstration in which he
and his political adherents were hissed
and derided and the name of Diaz was
frantically cheered, hundreds of residents
marched through the streets tonight
shouting disapproval of the new executive
and vivas for their exiled ruler.
Mounted police were ready to disperse
the mob and the entrances to the cham
ber where the deputies were in executive
session were heavily guarded.
The situation is almost identical with
that Immediately preceding the fall' of
Was, with the exception that ehtfts have
been mads in the cast of characters.
American Killed.
WASHINGTON. Sept 15. Edward Hay
moor, an American, is believed to have
been killed yesterday by Mexican rebels
near Morelos. He was a member of a
Mormon colony. The finding pt remnants
of his property and his clothing was re
ported toda. by Mormons arriving at
KogaJes. , ' ,..';'
Mobilisation Foreeasted.
EL PASO, Tex., Sept J5.-The estab
lishment of a general army post in .El
F&so, as announced today by the War
department is consider by army men
here as significant of a general mobiliza
tion on the border. :v,
Army officers here fear a scarcity of pro
visions for men -and horses in the event
of duty in Mexico, for since the Madero
revolution agriculture has been stagnant
In northern Mexico. v ; ;
Many Horses Dead in York County.
TOIUC, Neb., Sept 15.-(Special.) Re
ports from all jwuts of the county are to
the effeot that there is no abatement of
the mysterious malady affecting horses.
At the present date the loss in the county
has been 3a& Veterinary surgeons are
kept busy. Thirty-five calls were sent in
. for their assistance Saturday.
the Weather
For Nebraska-Fair.
For Iowa Fair.
Temperature at Omaha Yesterday.
r-ra Hours. Deg.
Lu 6 a. m 51
t 6 a. m 52
U 7 a. m 53
S a. m 53
a. m 55
10 a m 53
11 . . SLA
nr 4 n. lu ,,,.I1
12 m 55
' 1 P. m 54
I d. m 53
4Tf! . P- m.... 52
I 0 J P- m 52
- iii I P: m 51
v I', in
7 p. m 50
Comparative Local Record.
' 1912. 191t 1910. 1909.
Highest yesterday 55 78 70 7K
Lowest yesterday 50 , 63 58 50
Mean temperature 62 70 63 60
Precipitation 40 T .27 .00
Temperature and precipitation depart
ures from the normal: ...
Normal temperature 65
(Deficiency for the day u
Total excess since March 1 12
Normal precipitation- , .12 Inch
Excess for the day..., 2Hinch
Total rainfall sine Mf rch 1.....21.12 Inches
Deficiency since March 1 2.48 Inches
Deficiency for cor. period. Wtl.14.17 Inches
Deficiency for cor. period. 1910.13.20 inches
V indicates trace of precipitation. r
INSPIRATION F0UND IN MAINE jlflC"5 RECEIVE
Republican Turn Gives Encour
ment to Taft Followers
COLORADO STAYS BY
ljioQUIETING NEWS
History of Third Party Movements is
Told in the Personnel of Dls
grutled end Disappointed
Politicians.
By CHARLES F. SCOTT.
Director of the Western Literary Bureau
Republican National Committee.
CHICAGO, Sept. 14--(Special.) "As
Maine goes, so goes the Union."
If the old adage holds good this year,
the election in November will be a
sweeping republican victory.
For there is no doubt that Maine has
gone republican. The state which gave
James G. Blaine, Thomas B. Reed, Nel
son Dlngley and other great republican
leaders to the nation has returned to the
republican column. The victory - was
both decisive and significant Two years
ago Maine elected a democratic gover
nor by a plurality of nearly 9,000. This
year, with the governor seeking re-election,
Maine elected a republican gover
nor by a plurality of between 8,000 "and
4,000. This, too, despite of the fact that
the third termers obeyed instructions
and voted for the democratic ticket in
order to defeat the republican candidate,
if possible, and thus give Mr. Roose
velt an opportunity to do some more
shouting.
Turning- from Democrats.
The result of the Maine election has
given inspiration and courage to the Taft
organisation throughout the middle west,
it is evident that the trend toward democ
racy has been checked. . Two years
ago the democrats swept the -country,
but since that time two important facts
have developed. The first is that the
democrats are determined to force their
free trade policy upon the country. The
tariff bills which they favored in the
house indicated what the country might
expect and the outlook does not -please
the people. In the second place, the
long, fruitless and expensive session of
congress has iriven the country an ob
ject lesson of democratic . incompetency
and incapacity in government.' Above
all, as election day approaches, farm
ers, worklngmen, business men and peo
ple in all walks of life are coming more
and more to realize that a democratlo
administration will certainly plunge the
country Into the depths of despair ex
perienced between 1892 and 1S98. Nobody
wants a blight to fall upon the pros
perity which now spreads Its happiness
over the land, and that such a blight
would come wTth democratic victory Is
only to say that history repeats itself.
Colorado's Answer.
Second only to the significance of the
Maine returns is the result of the Colo
rado primary, where the regular re
publicans show' a long lead over the
followers of the "Bull Moose." It may
be remembered that when "Colorado sent
a solid delegation for Taft to the'na
tionat 'convention last, jsping, Colonel
Roosevelt cried out with - a Uoud ' Voice'
that the state had been stolen from him
by machine methods and that a state
wide primary would have shown an en
tirely different result.'. The state-wide
primary has now been held and the re
sult is the same It Is perfectly ap
parent that the Centennial state is not
yet ready to throw the republican party
into the discard. '..'
, Third Party Bosses.
Those who are familiar, with the poli
tical history of the past half century will
remember that it has been the evil fate
of every third party movement to at
tract to itself, .on the one hand, the
broken-down bosses and disappointed
outcasts from other parties, and on the
other hand, the sky-scraping "reform
ers" of so radical and extreme a type
as to be wholly ' impracticable. That
the new third party Is not to escape the
bane of its predecessors Is already be
coming apparent. Not only 'Lb It suf
fering from the attachment of the BUI
Flynn type of ex-bosses, but in Illinois
at least the organization has fallen into
the hands of extremists who are driving
away . from it the sincere, but level
headed advocates of reform.
The most notable defection here In
Chicago is that of Mr. Ralph C. Otis,
a representative business man of the city,
who was the head and front of the
Roosevelt movement in its earlier stages.
He was president of the original Roose
velt league, chairman of the third term
party's national convention committee,
and one of the most liberal contributors
to the campaign fund. There was con
sternation in the new party camp there
fore when he announced the other day
that he wotfid no longer be identified
with the movement "I am through,"
declared Mr. Otis. ' "We started out on
conservative lines and were accomplish
ing a lot of good. But now the radi
cals and impracticals have taken over
the organization."
Another Murder is
Committed by Sneed,
Whose Wife Eloped
AMARILLO, Tex., Sept. 1S.-A1 G.
Boyce, jr., was shot to death here tV.i
afternoon by J. B. Sneed, with whose
wife Boyce eloped to Canada last fall.
Sneed soon Is to stand trial a Second
tlm for the murder of Boyce's father,
whom he shot at Fort Worth January 13.
The presence of Sneed in this city was
not known until after the shooting. Boyce
returned only recently. ' -
The shooting occurred within a block
of the business district on the principal
street and shortly afterward Sneed sur
rendered to the local authorities, giving
up an automatic shotgun and two auto
matic revolvers. . .
Bystanders hearing the first shot turned
to see a man, apparently a tramp, with
a heavy growth of beard and wearing
overalls, advancing to the center of the
street, firing on his victim with a shot
gun. ' Approximately a score of buckshot
took effect In Boyce's side.
The disappearance of Mrs. Sneed from
'a Fort Worth sanitarium last fall wa
followed a month later by her detention
With Boyce in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Mu
tual friends brought about a reconcllla
t)on between the banker and his wife and
Boyce was released from custody after
the couple had returned to Fort Worth.
Telegram to Manager Corrick Halt
ing. Roosevelt's Strenuous Pro
gram Jan Committee.
DIFFERENT VERSIONS OF CAUSE
Believe Colonel is Not Meeting with
Reception Desires.
ONLY ONE SPEECH IN STATE
Nbraska Moosers Fear Boom is Near
ing Collapse.
DIFFICULT TO FIND SECRETARY
Chairman Epperson Haa Them Re
sign on His Hands as Fast as
He Finds One Who Might Serve
Until Campaign Is Over.
(From a Staff Correspondent.)
LINCOLN, Sept 15.-(Special.)-The lat
est move on the political chess board Is
the announced, determination of Mr. Mor
rlsey, democratic candidate for attorney
general, to contest the right of the bull
moose party to a place on the official bal
lot. This in the minds of some will divert
attention from the family quarrel In the
republican party for a while.
Another little straw which might be
taken to indicste whloh way the political
breeze Is blowing In the new progressive
party is a telegram received by Frank P.
Corrick Saturday from the secretary of
the national progressive organization call
ing' for a halt in the strenuous rrosram
laid out for their candidate for the presi
dency, Mr. Roosevelt.
In the minds of some it looks like the
beginning of the end, or at least a sag
ging of-the meteoric boom of Colonel
Roosevelt for the presidency. "His cam
paign for the presidency for a third
term," said a man today.' "reminds me
very much of a skyrocket. We first saw
the preparation made for sending off the
rocket There was considerable rustling
around to fix things so that the thlnar
would be sure to go up all right. Then
came the lighting of the fuse and the
snooting of the rocket with its brilliant
path behind it Durlncr the last few Avm
it has burst In the political flrmanen't and
has cast Its most inspiring rays over the
political sky. There Is only one thng
left-that is to go out in darkness and
rail. ,
Let Colonel Alone.
"It looks to me that we could see In
that telegram to Manager Corlck what
Is destined eventually , collapse of the
Roosevelt campaign. Certainly there must
be something wrong when word Is sent
out mat. speeches must be confined, to
one In each state, that followers of Mr.
Roosevelt "must be kept away from him
ana imu were I only one thing to do
and that-Is to Jet hhn mime!'---?
indication to me that Roosevelt himself
is not satisfied with his campaign or
prospects."
, Tiring- of Roosevelt.
"I saw something one evening last
week," said a. man at ' the tn.t
Saturday,; "which, convinced .me that
colonel Hosevelt is not as strong as he
used to be with the people. I make it a
practice to take In one of the movinj
Picture shows lh the city one night each
week., The theater I go to makes it a
praoeice of showing on the curtain mo
tion pictures of current events. When
me national conventions were on, very
frequently these pictures would show Mr.
Roosevelt
The moment his picture appeared on
the curtain a great burst of aoDlaux
from the audience would go up. Last
wek his picture wss thrown on the cur
tain, but the applause was very feebin.
This to me Is an indication that pit peo
ple are nnng or Mr, RoosevelU'
Wanted A Secretary.
The Eppersonlan state commute la
still on the look for a secretary. About
as fast as Chairman Epperson names a
man, he takes refuge tn the liar of th
real bull moose party and the search has
to go on. Mr. Epperson went down to
Clay Center to spend the Sabbath and
while there may devise ways and means
to draft a secretary. Clay Center la th.
town where the biggest Incubator factory
in the country Is located and perhaps
Mr. Epperson will contract with the fac
tory to hatch him out a secretary thni
will stick.
Denial of Signature.
B. F. Williams, superintendent of, the
insane asylum at Lincoln, whose name
appears on the petition for the formation
of the bull moose party.' denies that he
signed the petition and says that he has
no idea who did sign it for him.- H
says that he Is a democrat and has no
intention of being anything else. The
petition shows the names of thirty-eight
officers and employees of the insans
asylnm and the penitentiary. Warden
Melick of the penitentiary did not sign.
Tacker Denied Clemency. '"
Andrew Tucker, serving sentences for
killing a man in Omaha over a rfrl. and
sent up for fourteen years, was denied
clemency by the pardon board at their
meeting last week. Tucker has been In
the institution since' 19C3. Deducting for
good time allowance, he has yet about
a year to serve.
John P. Ernsdorff was sent to the peni
tentiary for the theft of an automobile
January 22, 1912. He was given a In
determinate sentence of from one to seven
years. He came from Adams count.
and while denid a pardon by the board
was given to understand that he might
get a parole after he had served one veu
if he kept up his good behalvor to thai
time. " '
Back to Prison Again.
Thomas Mclntyre. a -convict who es
caped from the Nebraska penitentiary In
1906,. will take up his residence aeuln in
the institution today. Mclntyre was con
victed of killing a man at Sidney, and
was brought to the penitentiary. After
his escape he was caught In California
on a charge of burglary and spent five
years in the penitentiary there On his
release he was met by a deputy sent by
Warden Melick and brought back.
Tferr Taft Clnb.
A Toung Men's Taft club will be orga
nized in Lincoln Tuesday evening. Al-
Melancholy Days
Prom thd Ii dlanapolls Newi. . . 4 ' '
-.'(" .....
WOODMEN OFFICERS ANSWER
(Continued on Second Page.)
File Reasons for Upholding Raise in
Society's Rates.
LONG INJUNCTION INJURIOUS
Allegation Made Billion that Dollars
Dollars Would . Be Taken From
' Members If Courts Shonld Hold .
Up New Schedule.
; DES ' MOINES, Sept 16,-That the
Modern Woodmen of America would ul
timately achieve a defalcation of StOOO,-
009,000 if long restrained by ; the ; courts
from jmjttihj into effect the readjust
ment of rates adoptedln JarajajaU,
at Chicago by the Head Camp, is alleged
in the Society's answer to the injunction
proceedings at Des Moines to restrain
putting the. new. rates Into effect
, The case Is set for bearing In district
court at. Des Moines September 17. In
a similar proceeding at Springfield, 111.,
the hearing before Judge Robert B. Shir
ley began September Z, the case was
taken under advisement
The plaintiffs allege that the new by
laws making the new rates effective as
to new members on May L 1912, and as
to old members on January 1, 1912, are
null and void because the record, does
not show their adoption by two-thirds
of the members of the head e&mp-and
because the society was without au
thority to adopt such amendments to
Its by-laws, the same being in conflict
with the Illinois statute of 1883, under
which the society was chartered in 1884,
and with the articles of association and
original by-laws, providing that all
death losses should be met by assess
ments on surviving members.
; It Is further alleged that a seerve fund
Is foreign; to the purposes of a fraternal
society doing business' on . the post
mortem assessment plan, that the surplus
of $8,854,453.10 In the benefit fund at the
beginning of the year represents exces
slve and unlawful assessments, and that
the new rates are unnecessary, oppres
sive, unreasonable, unjustly discriminat
ing and in violation of the contract
rights of the plaintiffs.
The society answers that the new by
laws were adopted by the required two
thirds majority under the amended stat
utes and articles . of Incorporation, and
have been approved by the proper state
officers; that the delegates to the head
camp were duly chosen; that the so
ciety has never been, in practice a post
mortem assessment society, but has re
quired of all members the payment of
one assessment in advance, and that- the
new by-laws violate no contract rights
as every contract has been Issued sub
ject to any chonge In the by-laws the
head camp might adopt
New Rates Reasonable.
It Is further answered that the new
rates are reasonable, necessary and not
discriminatory, except that rates for
younger members are "loaded" to enable
the society to carry its older members
for 222,500,000 less than It will cost the
society to pay their certificates If the
same mature according to the society's
mortality table. It Is alleged that if the
society were prevented from putting these
rates into effect great and ' irreparable
Injury would result and the society ulti
mately would be thrown into insolvency
and be obliged to default on no less than
$1,000,000,000 ' of obligations assumed,
amounting on December 31, 1910, to $1,786,
086,000. It is further stated that a valuation of
the society made as of December 21, 1910,
disclosed the following condition:
Present value of liabilities $584,178,221.72
Present value of assets 313,332,959.01
Deficiency $210,945,262.71
Computations Given. .
It is alleged that the deficiency would
have been $61,004,184.63 greater if the com
putation had been based on the National
Fraternal congress table.
It 1s further alleged that no member
under the new plans Is required to con
tribute to a reserve fund, but has the
option of taking the step-rate. oHwever,
the cost under this plan is prohibitive in
the latter period of life, when earning
(Continued on Second Page.)
Haywood Arrested
Upon an Indictment
Charging Conspiracy
BOSTON, Sept. 15.-Wllllam D. Hay
wod of Denver, general organiser of the
Industrial Workers of the World, was ar
rested here today on a capias warrant
Issued as the result of an indictment by
the Essex county grand jury, charging
him with conspiracy In connection with
the strike of textile workers In Lawrence
last winter. He was released on $1,000
bond.
GIVES HIS WIFE TO ANOTHER
HORSE DISEASE IS EXPLAINED
Bureau of Animal Industry Gives
Some Valuable Suggestions. -
POISONOUS FORAGE IS CAUSE
First Principle Given for the Treat
ment of Meningitis Lies in Com
plete Change of Feed .
and Water.
Husband mm to. Prosecute. Pair,. jgger?
for Bisramy.
. v ..;
PREFERS TO SEE . HER HAPPY
James E. Carabine Loves' H(s, Spoase
and Intercedes . with .Judge to
" Prevent Her from Going
to Jail.
CHICAGO. Sept. 15.-The story of a
strong man's love for his wife, and his
willingness to sacrifice himself that she
might have the mate she loved, was told
In the court room of Municipal Judge Fry
today.'
James M. Carabine, his wife, Stella
Ruth, and Oscar Galley, the other man,
were the principals in the 'drama. ; . '
Mrs. Carabine had married Galley with
out first obtaining a divorce. She was
charged with bigamy, and he with living
with her.
"Judge," said the lawful nsband, "I
don't want to prosecute mem. I love the
woman and I don't want to see her go to
Jail. I am 42 years old, she Hut 24, Galley
Is 36, and they love each other madly.
I wasn't good enough for her, Judge. I
never made her happy,
"I want her to have her chance for
happiness, your honor," Carabine added,
"so I ask that you let them go. I am
willing she should get a divorce , and
marry this man. I give her to him wil
lingly for I know she will be happier
than if she was with me."
While the speech came from his lips the
woman slowly rose to her feet and clung
to the man she had chosen. Galley, too,
was crying, and spectators in the court
room, viewed the scene In sympathetic
astonishment
Judge Fry said he would take the plea
of Carabine under advisement and con
tinued the case until Monday.
While the two prisoners were being
taken back to their cells, Carabine pleaded
with the Judge to reduce their
bonds from $1,000 to $500, and was suc
cessful Then he engaged the services of
a professional bondsman, and had the
couple released.
Ex-Furnas Sheriff V
Commits Suicide
1 BEAVER CITY, Neb., Sept. l5.-(Spe-clal
TeIegram.)-GeorKe W. Lewie was
found dead In the office of a local im
plement dealer at 4 o'clock today. He
had blown his brains out with a large
rifle Mr. Lewis was e-xsheriff of this
county and for the last seven years had
been I a carrier on a rural mail route.
He leaves a widow and five children. Mr.
Lewis had gone to the Implement office
at noon complaining of being ill and the
proprlet6r had made him comfortable on
a cot When he returned to the house
later he- found the body In a pool of
blood. Aside from poor health there Is
no known reason for the act
Boy Shot Through Heart.
, SIOUX FALLS, 8. D.. Sept 15.-(Spe
claL) Chr's' Thletje, aged 17, son of a
Tripp count, homesteader and rancher,
was killed by the accidental discharge of
a 23-callber rifle. Himself and anothet
boy were shooting at a mark with the
rifle and a shotgun. Thletje had tht
muzzle of the rifle turned toward him
self when In some manner the weapon
was discharged. The bullet entered ths
breast near the heart. He ran several
steps and then fell dead v
Dr. D. 8. Palmer of Holdrege, concern
ing whose treatment of ths meningitis tn
the horse a dispatch was published , In
The Bee last week,, writes that he IS
overwhelmed with letters of Inquiry,
which he haa not time to answer, and
asks Ths Bee to publish this as bis treat-
ROSE
NTHAL GUNMEN
CAPTURED BY POLICE
IN NEWJTORK FLAT
Two Hissing Assassins Found in
Company with Wive by Deputy
Commissioner.
"Lobelia was formerly used for ' treat
ment v-et " syphilis before mercury came
Into common use ; Many physicians in
the last year or so are using ths hypo
dermic lobelia in diphtheria .and tetanus
Instead of the ' serums, as If has proven
to be a vegetable antitoxin.- ;
I "The treatment (for the horse menin
gitis) Is to inject hypodermleally an
Ounce of SLovd's hypodermic lobelia every
four hours, using a gallon of salt water
In the bowels every two hours. The hypo
dermic lobelia is the same strength as
the fluid extract The fluid extract has
been used y with the same results, but
there Is more danger of forming an
abscess at the point of injection."
Bulletin from Washington. -During
the last five months numerous
reports have been received by the bureau
of animal Industry at Washington rela
tive to the existence of forage poisoning
In various sections of ths United States,
particularly tn Louisiana, West Virginia,
Kansas and Nebraska. , It has usually oc
curred when a hot, dry period hsS been
followed by rains, or during wet seasons,
especially those which are characterised
by frequent rains alternating with hot
sunshine, producing a damp, sultry at
mosphere. Such conditions are most fa
vorable to the production; of molds,, and
all outbreaks that have been investigated
by the bureau have been traced to the
eating of unsound or moldy forags or
feed, or to the drinking of water from
wells or pools containing surface water
drained through decomposed or moldy
vegetation. The disease has been shown
to be also due to eating damaged erisllags,
hay, corn, brewers' grains, oats, etc.
Horses and mules at pasture may con
tract the disease when the growth of
grass la so profuse that it mats together
anil the lower part dies and "ferments or
becomes moldy. No specific organism or
virus has yet been found which can be
considered as the cause of this disease.
Symptoms of the Disease.
The so-called cerebro spinal meningitis
of horses being in entirely different dis
ease from that which occurs in man, the
symptoms as weU as the cause are dis
tinctly different In ths most rapid fatal
attacks death takes piece In from five to
forty-eight hours. Such cases begin with
violent trembling or stupor and extreme
weakness, or with staggering gait, par
tial or total Inability to swallow, impair
ment of eyesight followed by partial or
complete paralysis, Inability to stand,
with marked delirium, during which the
animal lying flat on its side becomes
violent and knocks and bruises Its head.
In the second form of the disease the
same line of symptoms may be noticed tn
a milder degree. Difficulty In swallowing,
slowness In chewing the food and inability
to switch the tall are observed. Breath
ing becomes heavy and noisy, and delir
ium may develop with stiffening of the
spinal muscles or partial cramp of the
neck and jaws. Death occurs In from six
to ten days. In ths last or mildest form
the lack of voluntary control of the limbs
becomes but slightly marked, the power
of swallowing Is never entirely lost, and
the animal has no fever, pain or uncon
scious movements. In those cases wh'ch
get well the animal generally begins to
Improve about the fourth day and goes
on to recovery. One attack does not pro
tect against a second attack, as horses
and mules have been known to have the
disease two Or three times.
Prevention nnil i refitment.
The first principle In the treatment of
WHITMAN HAS HIS SUSPICIONS
District Attorney Remarks on Cap-
tare in His Absence. '
INTERRUPT LITTLE TEA PARTY
Gyp the Blood and Lefty Louie Not
Excited Over Arrest
DEPARTMENT PROUD OF WORK
Sixty Detectives Kept Busy in Re
lays Find Clues and Dougherty
Puts These Together, Is
the Story.
(Continued on Second Page.)
NE WTORK, Sept 16.-"Gyp the Blood
and "Lefty Louie," the missing gunmen
Indicted as two of the actual slayers of
Herman . Rosenthal, the gambler, were
found by the police last night living with
their wives in a flat in the Brownsville -section
of Brooklyn. ' They were arrested
by Deputy Police Commissioner Dough-
erty and a squad of detectives, who
brought them to police headquarters and
locked them up. They will be arraigned .
on Monday. . . ,
The two men had been occupying ths
flat sines August 15 and were alone until
last Tuesday, when they were joined by .
their wives, through whom clues to their .
whereabouts were obtained by the poli.ee.
The four wars seated at tea when Deputy
Commissioner Dougherty , and his men
burst open the door of their apartment
and with revolvers drawn ordered them '
to hold up their hands. ' Neither of the
men made any show of resistance.
"Drop your guns; you'vo got us," said
"Gyp the Blood" calmly.
"Give us a little time to get dressed,
will you?" said "Lefty" with equal com
posure. Few Remarks Made.
Scarcely another remark was made to
the police by either man until they wer
examined at the police station later by
Assistant District Attorney Moss, acting '
for District Attorney Whitman, who has
gone to Hot Springs to taks testimony of
persons who talked to Sam Schepps, a
witness in the Cass, v
Ths women, however, made a scene,
throwing their arms around their hus- '
bands' necks and shedding copious tears.
They had to be torn away from ths men
before the police could get their prison- '
ers out of the apartment and were later '
brought to headquarters. ' ' '
With ths arrest of "Gyp" and "Lefty,"
whose real names arc Harry Horowitz
and Louis Rosenswelg, all of the seven
men accused of ths murder brosEtSir;r
alleged instigator, are now In custody.
j The 'capture of the two men oame'as '
g-result of what is " regarded In' police
circles as the best detective work done"
In the history of the department It was '
the fruit of unbroken surveillance of the
wives and relatives of ths men since their
disappearance on the day oi ths murder, 1
July a , ' ' . : . :
Many Detectives at Work.
This surveillance was maintained by
sixty detectives, working In relays, who
kept Deputy Commissioner Dougherty in ,
touch with what they did and where they
went The final clue came as the result
of piecing together a number of conver- '
sattons overheard by detectives and re
ported to the commissioner at different
times. .The first conversation was that '
"They are . not .lonesome, because they
can see a moving picture show from their
back windows."
Another conversation gave the informa
tion that there was a laundry In ths
house where ths missing men lived, which ' .
was named either "Ths New Brighton,"
The Bright" . or "Ths Brighton Hand ;
laundry." - ' :
A third conversation supplied the fact '
that the' neighborhood was "full of t'
Swedes and -Germans." '
; It then became Commissioner ' Doug- ;
erty's'task to discover somewhere a hand ' :
laundry in close proximity to a moving
picture show in a Vicinity Inhabited , by ;
foreigners of the nationalities named. Tho .
possible name of ths laundry-was ob-
talned less than two days ago, and the ;
commissioner discovered that there wero
half a dozen laundries of similar natura '
in New Tork ' City and many mors in
other cities, for the commissioner, did not ;
assume that the gun men were necessarily
located in New York. ,
"When we found the laundry with a
moving picture show close by, there were
no Swedes or Germans in the neighbor
hood," said. Mr. Dougherty tonight
"When we found a laundry with the,
foreigners in the neighborhood, thero ,
was no moving picture show. One of our
laundry clues took us to New Havsn, and
we were Just about to investigate another
in Pittsburgh." - . :
Final Trap la Laid.
Early today Detectives Meyer anl
Cassasso discovered In Brooklyn ' .the
"New Brighton Hand laundry;; which
perfectly fitted all requirements. They
(Continued on Second Page.)
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Tyler 1000