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The Wichita Eagle from Wichita, Kansas • Page 1

Publication:
The Wichita Eaglei
Location:
Wichita, Kansas
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Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VOLUME LX WICHITA, KANSAS, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 23, 1915 NTJMBEH 107. NEGRO'S FEET HIS KORTVXE Stuttgart Bombarded By French Aeroplanes Drop Shells On Royal Palace, Station and Different Points OnJWay. Paris. Sept. 22.

French aviators have bombarded Stuttgart, capital of fl FV si jmm MEXICANS OIOTMEMT Ivi PLANS Ranchman Protests Action of Authorities Says Inoffensive Mexicans Were Shot, One of Then, a Mere Boy. Brownsville, Texas, Sept. 22. The army dragnet for Mexican-American bandits worked steadily today, giving rise to sensational reports of man hunts. Officers denied emphatically that any bandits had been caught, but refused to adopt the suggestion of some ranchers in the Interior to reduce the size of the army rural patrols.

Evidence Is accumulating that the activity of the United States soldiers is keeping the bandits scattered In groups cf two or three men each. Josiah Tamer, an American, aged S9. owner of the ranch where American soldiers were ambushed and two killed last week, has Issued to the newspa tennra Fretty Tight Clad Dancer Cavorts Before Pious Leaguers Who, Though Scandalized, Take a Little Peek. SHE WAS A VERY KICKER. HIGH Some, However Admit Thy Got Their Money's Worth, and It Really Did Draw Splendidly.

Lincoln. Neb, Sept. 22. Methoditt church circles in Nebraska are scandalized. A lady in -tUhta- and r.4 tights, at that actually had the temerity to set up on the jdtfrm at the recent state assembly of the Nebraska Kpworth League, and dance right up tbfor nior than a thousand Meino- diat men and women.

Muahed to the the staid Methodlat girls roots of their hair. mud. nee LY ABASHED I the kingdom of Wurttemberg, accor-! ing to the French official communica-j tion issued tonight. They dropped atut a hundred shells on the royal MalacA and the station. Thur also 1 1 ti hnmha at rli prpnt points aiong the way.

Military Camp is No Place for Roughnecks Student Soldier Gets In Bad Told to Take Kit and Go. Chicago, Sept. 22. The number of soldier-students at the Fort Sheridan training camp was reduced by one today, when one of the volunteers was ordered to take his kit and go. No reason was assisrned for the order to iTf vio.

nffin.i. i.r.o asserted "this is a military camp, and military camp is a gentleman's camp, and the rules of good order and de cency observed among gentlemen In every-day life are also required In military life and training." The name of the offender was not divulged by the officers and the incident did not interfere with the reg- uar camp routine. The recruits were given their first lesson in skirmish formation today and! pers a protest against the treatment of three Mexicans captured, as witnesses on his ranch and turned over to the civil authorities who shortly afterward announced the Mexicans had been killed while trying to escape. One of these Mexicans Turner said, was T. Rincones.

a boy of It, whose mother was a widow living on his ranch. New York. Sent. Victor Hurrt.tflt national chairman of the Progressive seamnic nere lonisr.i ai a am- preparedness was foremost in th. rle Murdock Haiti it m.aa lh rt Ihnw in charge of the affairs of the country to keep It out of war.

"In addition to laat" he added. Mt if'10 do Jt ln guch a position that it will be able, not to sue for peace, but to com- i ne uui i very man in tne coun. 1 Jn gucn a position that it will be- pel it. it- should bbegut'once. Ve have te battieshiDs." he said, "when we PREPARED NES i of the deacons and good brolheri the sjtudent corporals for the first timeers' or merely another overnight turn were permitted to give orders to their jof he Greco-Serbian-Bulgarian nego- Next to Butch Huerta Is Most Unpopular Man In Says Roque Gonzales Garza.

AFRAID TO GO BACK MEXICO CITY TO Implores U. S. Not to Recognize Factional Leader and Bring About Dissention In Revolutionized Republic. Washington, Sept. 22.

A gloomy picture of what would happen in Mexico in the event of the recognition of Carranza by the United States and other American republics is drawn In a statement issued tonight by Roque Gonzales Garza, one time president of the convention government and now in Washington to forward the peace con vention plan which the ilia and a Pf.ta vitation of the Tan-American con- ferees. Garza urged that the convention be held to set up a provisional government in Mexico in spite of Carranza's refusal to participate and declares ecognmon length the anarchy soon would ioiiow recognmun of Carrania. Describing at nr.nt militarv situation he denies he denies Carranza's claim to control the part of Mexican territory and expreses the belief that Carranza continues to delay his removal to Mexico City be- cause of fear that such a move wouio be followed by occupation Cruz by his enemies. HONORS EVEX "People can be assured," era. statement, "that Judging from a military standpoint the two contending factions are well balanced.

Villa has as many men as Carranza and if the war should continue the only result will be the weakness of both parties, for neither can conquer the other entirely. "I cannot be much mistaken in saying that Mexico has now not less than 250.000 men fairly well supplied with ammunition. There are regions that have been completely devastated by the war, but on the other hand there are others very large and rich that have sufficient supplies to maintain the struggle. "At present occupation of cities in Mexico- Is a heavy burden to any government, due to lack of communications. The decrease of trade in all its forms has caused a- great scarcity of Indispensable supplies and, in consequence, has "forced the armies of aeh party to seek the territory in which they can most easily obtain that which they need.

The best proof of says should have twenty. We have forty their money's worth, "tW" w. hnjah.jr, one tn aeropiane anil Jt na fifteen whsle.ever waa seen at the Kp comrades in the rank. Mexicans Compelled to Leave Wrangell Given 24 Hours to Leave Camp They Pulled Up and Quit. Seattle, Sept.

22. The ttearaer Alki brought news today that fifty Mexicans, cannery hands, were driven out of Wrangell, southeastern Alaska, last week by a vigilance com- mittee. They had been drinkina- and disorderly ever since being paid off. i Uermany submarir jof which I recent tr Germany nut iMi. we invented the went out Of commission in the rlaL We have an army of thelOOQ.

half abroad and half in his The feeling against them was brought Subsequently came the news of ex-to a focus when one of them stabbed citement at Athens and of the confer- Rumors, While Not Authentic, Bespeak Rough Going Before Loan Completed May Get I Cold Feet. SOME SAY LOAN MUCH TOO LARGE. While Some Underwriters Show Disposition to Get Better of Irestors In Matter of Rakeoff. New York, Sept. 22.

The Anglo-French financial commission who are here to establish a huge credit for Great Britain and France, were in continuous session today from 10 a. m. 8 p. m. After a recess for dinner, the commission re-assembled with every indication that the meeting would last till after midnight.

The absorbing matters discussed in the all-day and all-night conference i were not disclosed. Apparently their I Mturo was unknown in the American 1 bankers vho have been conferring with the commission during the past ten days or so. Early in the day it became established that the anticipated announcement of the success of the commission's work here in raising a credit loan of from 1600,000,000 to $800,000,000 would not be forthcoming today, was not expected tomorrow, would be received with surprise if issued as early as Friday and might not be made till next week. American bankers also went to bed last night professing conviction that the commission's success would be announced today were not so confident of a speedy announcement when they reached the financial section this morning. MAX RIMORS A dozen rumors, none bearing the tag of authenticity, sought to tell why the expected announcement should have been deferred.

One report was i that the commission was markine- time till the cables Should bring word from Pierre I Bark, the Russian minister of finance, a8 to whether Russia want- ed a slice of the proposed loan and upon what terms she would share in It. Another report was that the com of mission was rounding off a mass minor details, tedious and somewhat vexatious, but not of great importance. Several American bankers ventured the opinion that there might be aa eleventh hour change in the" terms. One banker thought that the commis- Sll An Vk I Km Al oslrA1 frit Wl 1 1 a ha fn terest rate i per cent. Another thought that the commission should offer the five-year joint notes at 97J to the underwriters and 981 or there- abouts to investor, instead of I offering them to the investor at pa, worn tnese mised.

might have contributed toward. the protracted meetings of today and SI TOO LARGE Still another report was that the commission had been advised that an even half billion dollars was the maximum amount which American bankers 1 I 1 1 I 1 .1 M. Vi ihiui ue wining icnu i. cut: i tt i 1 1. I The opinion prevailed in Wall street I that the recent finding of the British Prize court in the case of American! meat cargoes valued at about had not helped the commission's in the middle west.

Less opti-rnistif reports from Chicago were cited In support of this theory. In Germans Have Taken Hug AmOUnt Of Bonds gossip of the street, certain big Chi- cago banks were now reported as be- Ing less inclined than heretofore to participate In the loan. Such were the reasons assigned by Wall street for the long meeting and! the lack of more optimistic reports, The leading financiers, however, and the commission alike, refrained from comment except in the case of one big; banker who limited hls remarks to the issertlon that today had been "an off. A a I Oscar Carlson, chief of the fire de- partment. A citizens committee posted notice that all Mexicans must leave within twenty-four hours The Mexi- can3 fle in hoats.

XKROES ARRESTED Suspects io Douhle Memphis Murder My stery. Memphis, Sept. 22. Two ar- rests In connection with the mysteri- ous murder of Marguerite Favar, an 1 ued Russian retreat from Vllna, but. actress, and J.

C. Crowell, In a fashion- with the exception of the northern tip able apartment house here, were made of the Polish front, where the Russians today when Thomas Porter and Gay i are on the offensive near negroes. wfece taken into. cuaj gtadt, -Germxns; claim ess tody by detectives. No formal charge throughout mid-Poland as far south as thlsstates to be undesirable.

Amite City, Sept. 22. "Soda," amite City's heavy-pedalled pickaninny, has left the side show circuit, where his big feet, were marvelled at by the crowds, and Is now engaged in Inter-state highway laying. He has many, contracts in view. -v.

"Soda" is considered one of the most valuable adjuncts to the art of constructing modern highways. It Is said that owing to the boy's large feet he demands the same salary as would be paid for a steam roller. A shoe factory has. made him a pair of No. IS shoes, with thick soles, and Soda" is employed in packing dirt and graveL Hworks by merely walking.

The boy has a fortune ahead of him. His feet are growing all the time. Six Are Killed When Subway Roof Falls In Surface Car Loaded With Women and Children Falls 30 Feet, Is' Buried Under Debris. New York, Sept. 22 Six persons were i killed and between 85 and 100 others i injured today when a dynamite in a partly constructed section of the Seventh avenue subway caused an en tire block of pavement to cave in, engulfing a crowded trolley car, a heavy truck and many pedestrians.

A number of laborers at work In the excavation were buried under tons of i debris. Seventy-eight persons, aeon siderable portion of them being womea and girls on their way to business, were on the surface car which dropped thirty feet into the excavation and was partly burled under concrete, rails, heavy timbers, dirt and rocks. The dead: Louis Krugman, 22 years old, a passenger on the car. An unidentified woman, about 60 years old, a passenger who was apparently on her way to wrk. Four laborers.

Mayo Mitchell, Fire Commissioner Adamson, Police Commissioner Woods. District Attorney Perkins, other city officials, members of the grand Jury and Edward E. McCall. chairman of the Public Service commission, reached the scene early and made inspections. Several Investigations were begun.

Serbians Are Bombarded By Austro-Hungarians Austro-Hungarlan Headquarters, Yla London, Sept. 22. German' a ad Austrian artillery is now hombarding the Serbian positions along ihe Macva frontier which lies in northwest corner Serbia ana which was the scene of heavy fighting last autumn. The Austro-German bombardment, therefore, extends virtually along the entire northern frontier of Serbia. London.

Sept. 22. A dispatch to Reu-ter's Telegram company from Nish says: "The Serbian government denies ru mors that Germany advised Serbia not to opose the attack the central powers are planning to launch with the stipu lation that such an attack will not be aimed primarily at Serbia, but will be made for "higher reasons. "A statement on behalf of the gov- rhar srhiA nnt rvnlv hdil not oeen aov.sea or sucn an aac but that she wou uld Indignantly refuse any such compact, being ready to meet any attack from any quarter." COr.NT BOBRIXSKI INSANE. Berlin, Sept.

22 Wireless to Tuck The Overseas News agency gave out the following dispatch from Brody, Galicia. today: Qutch Steamer HitS Mine; is Still Afloat London. Sept. 22. The Datch steamer Konisren Emma, which struck a mine as she was proceeding to Amsterdam! from Batavia, Java, was kept afloat up the Tbamea under tow.

Her 250 pas- senders were transferred to the Dutch steamer Batavion which is pro- iceeding to Tilbury, a bifa hauled t'-e American Iefese rVxiety csad defenses of ihe tVJted tatr. It a caliper of steel mnd fi" iif s.nk tie largeat afloat. i i i 1 i as was lodged against the men. 's iiuueui iivui-c, i WAK Vl i a tr orr in a Ki I fJ Htlr mofrnlnS and light fWf.ter hea JUf the mor' a boy workin near Porter tne chauffeur who drove the automo. me took Mra Favar aRd CrQw where she gave a dancing exhibition the night before she was killed.

He told the police that after the perform- Warring Factions Cannot Under- stand Position, Armed Neutral- ity Further Perplexes Astute Diplomats. JUST NOW OF VERY MUCH! IMPORTANCE. And Nothing Will Be Left Undone to Win Her Over By Warring European Powers. London, Sept. 22.

A war move that mav solve the riddle of the Balkan. Bulgaria's mobilization has struck Lon don with dramatic suddenness. The afternoon newspapers, however, refrained from editorial comment, and neutral readers of these except for drawing their own conclusions from large type heads and such captions as "Balkan Sensation" would be none the wiser as to whether England regarded the developments as a preliminary victory for the central pow- tiations. The concensus of the opinion was that although the Bulgarian army is now on the move. Bulgaria has not yet cast her lot with one side or the other, but is, as her minister here expressed it, still neutral, still, waiting, but armed.

TMI.1V U'nRRV The first bulletin announcing Bulgaria's mobilization reached London by way of New York. It was quickly followed by a stream of telegrams from the European capitals to the effect that mobilization, partial or general. has been ordered at Sofia, that Bulgar cavalry had taken the field and that Pnic-3 pa rt crhH no- ao-a ar. hnprvimr Lome. ence of the king with political leaders.

But from Sofia itself the British press received no details. There is general activity of the Aus- tro-German forces along the Serbian frontier. A semi-official dispatch from Nish repudiates reports that Serbia has been asked in effect to remain quies- cent while the Austro-Germans canduct their campaign southward. The developments in Bulgaria threw into comparative obscuritv the eontin- Ostrow, which they have completed. rine greatest numDer or.

prisoners taK- en ai any. poiai, nowever, aia not ex- a i men wouia seem 10 mai- cate that the attempt, to complete the coils around the retreating Russians BULGARIA TIED IP Sept. 23. M. Radoslavoff, the Bulgarian premier, has announced to his supporters the signing of a convention with Turkey for the future maintenance of armed neutrality on the part of Bulgaria, says the Times Printed this morning.

I BERLIN'S BELIEF Berlin, Sept. 22. Via London. As far as can be learned in authoritative quarters here, no word has been re- ived in Berlin of a mobilization by either Greece or Roumania, nor are there any indications that Bulgaria's action will necessarily lead to a gen- eral reapproachment between the Bal kan states is under way and guvd projpetis 01 success No word has yet reached Berlin of an Austro-German crossing into Ser- I "bia. but bombardment by the Teutonic i allies continues along the Serbian front from Macva to Semndria, i i I.

i ii OVERCOME fit rOI0 iyrd today To KdNoa'a aew tor.are Battery for aannaartae. pnttrd araaij rroraia This modern- Wr.Jtefca4 torixed Secretary of the Navy DaiI to tie weighing 1.763 pon It lm cf It "ri-pcllors in three scti-ns. It tan I Hauling aTorpedo r. --fee- i is that I traveled on horseback from Mexico City to Torreon and did not meet any hostile troops at any point I touched. "Summing up in a military sense neither Carranza controls Villa nor Villa Carranza.

and if the obstinacy or the supporters or tne latter wouin reach the extreme of becoming an ob- structlon to all peace negotiations which, on the present conventionlsts ate sincerely desired, it is not Impro- bable that there may appear a new nartv at whose head mav be placed one CARRANZA HATED i i I i a aispatcn "If I were selfish, I should desire forMerlals luuiurj, wiiere mrne portion are wnere a scattered at useless army posts and from ice way places. States Should Cut Out Insurance Rating Says Iowa's Insurance Commissioner to Convention At Del-monte California. Delmonte, Sept. 22. Fire lnar ar.ee companies wer? blamed today for discrimination in rates atralnst the Insurer and for failure to modify rates where the Insured tried to reduce the fire hazard, by speakers before the forty-sixth' annual session of the National Convention of Insurance Com miesloners.

Emery H. English, state insurance commissioner. n( as id that the executlTe committee rerorta from Wis contln. Missouri, Ohio. New Jersey and Pennsylvania showed rate making by property owners who tried to reduce fre hazards by adopting recommended pafety measures were not rewarded by fire insurance companies In reduced rates.

it was said by Carey J. Wilson. gtate insurance" commissioner of Kas- He said the compania set their 'standards so high that no town or city Jn Kannas could be recognized as in the fi-t ciaa A morimn DnrrtfC ClTkA KT A liUlCd rtfC LCUUI U1CU Confined By GermAn For Hospital WOTK. r'ZZZTZZT doctors and nuraes of the American of Germany who Red Crofa mission came to Berlin after the ctoMnc of the clu tonight. in -0rman i.roii will give ai rard the American ambassador r- wraru wm enxeriain in t'ieip i honor Friday.

i Bt l.flH TO 1 Graailte Off. til. sVt. 2X Hml- co-. tm re.

art eeally Mwlhle tm lk mt lMr rmmmiry lea Tare IMtlMHl mi.iw 'T 7 he 4er11ene mm 14 r.srtti waald It mrm4m tm Bl.arlji tm a1aty. There are mhmmt ml Riley Made 'Em or Ruin lr.4 rpt. 22 To vfa I 'I la i i 5 the complete failure or Carranza, that his government be recognised, certain' as I am that he would prove absolutely I incapable in less than a month, and. knowinz: as I do. the strong dispieas ure that will be felt by the revolu- in Mexico upon recognition covered their faces with their hands, Some of them said afterward they r.er..f thrnnh their fltterra ttoui I TV ,7 flocks at home of the tions that lay In wait vftnted lo hm ta flocks at home of the terrible for Christian men.

even at church assemblies. Others Ully had the nerve to say th.y 1 paid to see the show and peeped to tit I Assembly in Nebraska. commmce nu rrsiKra i eu- gious exercises durln the dy and nomethlng special in the way of n- tertainment at nisht. One evening there was a concert. Another evening widely known reader save selections, And on the other night there wss ft comic opera.

tl)HK KE ATI HEf WERE "Comic Opera" nljtht bromjht out the btKgeat crowd. "Mre automobile passed the entrance where I waa gat keeper than on any other night. aa serted Tyron Shepherd, one of the Tig men of the assembly. The bill was Gilbert nd HuiUvan's "Mikado." It was an "expargated rendition, however, that was dUhed up to the Methodists. The 'msnaKement decided that certain "features- must be eliminated.

And it was alao decided that certain other "featurea" were to be draped. So, when the cr tain went up it was rather a dmur chorua that romped across the stage. The ttkirta worn by the rhraa irirls were somewhat mrre elotiated than those worn by the fashionable ones on the streets nowadays. This caed the chorus ladies tn ob- Jct. They even kicked.

And some- timea there waa a flirt of a skirt that revealed Thore stocking than the Kp- worth people had been need aeelns. Some of the Leaders watched fr ths "flirta," fut the others kept their eyee raised and did not permit thlr jrlne to wander lowr than the chin. The majority of th congregation i not yet prepared to paas JU'tgmefit. The cood alsiera of middle ase wr not sure that they were doina Jit rlnht by looking on at aurh doinaa. Irh.

w. a 't. i some probahly even wlahed they covsl-f emulate the rmr with which tb profeaUn ala before the ft- hiPhts. lJ.it the bn knew pretty well, at lt roost ft them dM4 that ha'! mi.fak. In earning to the entertainment that nlEht.

Thn with hur.t or ie. the lady in the red tiMe ram tbejr facca with It.eir f.afida and pej'l the aeaemSilr until the lat h--l been ay sr. the lat kirk kicked ard tv last wink wlr.sed Then thy rme, if sft" we the saner! rr. rt 2 1 -t i iwi nt r.l I'm mm, mi. 2X1I 1r lhf 4r he fcaaet aMt-tmry aaar4 I r.

tm-k-m mtml m-mmrmm were mimUtmm mt turn tai h-e-rr arr14.ee mm lrt tm I fee Stettena) letrlea. tke elriMr mtmmrr tr-mm1lmm mtmmm MM Iff the rrta mt lr mt re a. frM the RW Come Across Their Business jent Hiley hu tc-l h-w fee eee-e were air a-j tmt mm i'' ya. He aat-J Te rhnr.t.t fif te Tf.a I tfc t.f. S.are rf viei'a tntm tk.

ia a h-afd p3hir rk a lull i 5 a oVvUftt O'se Tenf. ar. vt i th aaJn. laat Mar. ait t--! ia frtatn iy mm.4 eeerS4NS ih itf fim uvmry i ka s-4 rf -ad pmf He i' i4 oatiswl s-t St.

a he araj Ki'ty lsrk fr i tm tf.e tm mimt th "1 hat.t-JI say fce-r I I imU that I i A mti t. at t4.it iViff mm it war. tvS a law t.g al-, evIS tArtm 1 1 say fA'" was killed in an automobile ac- belief is expressed in well informed in v. v' at Gleiwlts an4 Koxel receiy- alun nul on Kn cident on the Gettysburg turnpike near quarters that Roumania at least will "-general of Galicia during the Rus- headed by man who next to Urning the medal, which h.d wlth hr T'" here tonight and Miss Emma Shockey. remain quiet and the possibility of and who welcomed.

has been the hated man in Mexico, on th.m hr th jof Rich Hill, was so badly hurt I Greece. Roumania and Bulgaria reach- impror Umbenr has thf.e Utter time. gWernment Atrerlcan Hed I "tm mR mh hr that she died later. ing an agreement is entertained. ben insane by a medical, 'The in this case would be in f.rat nne 4ire.tHn sod In trying to pass another car, rW A dispatch to the Zeitung Am Mittag commission and taken to Kiev." terrible indeed for the 100.000 men who fh- her.

If a g.P fc4 met the hart ran his machine into a gulley and from Vienna, giving information from A dispatch to the Frankfurter Zei- I lonTadd'd to all tbl cwilllnl men t. ill upset The seven occupants were pin- Bulgarian, sources, tends to confirm lunff on Xoveraber 27 last from Vienna I ucheTto It ho const th. rrea I Nearly all the members of both d-! r'1 ioned beneath the heavy car, but all this. It says the situation in the Bal-; carrid a report that Coant Bobrinski. the popw volunteered for the? escaped serious injury except Rinehart kans is clearing satisfactorily and that who was the Rujan pernor -gen- rLihe advent of better 7imes hich Grman a 7 7, and Miss Shockey.

Bulgaria's attitude is not without ef- ,,1 of Galicia. had died In Lemberg jj allow- th.lr evolution in all pri.onera and feet on the other Balkan states. The of aTor.exv will allow their evolution in an re Ruaai next Hturdy. In Saispatch adds that step, toward a gen-jf 0 SJIm The A.trU.n Z. inlght, saying he' would drive the car hiniSel -o- Ifiljor AIhon 1 M'u JXUICU rr ItCII Afltn jc Ollorhl-rnoA Chambersburg, Sept.

John Berlin dispatch received here says the German government has announced that a new mine field will be laid 1 eoutn of tne outlet to the sound and I mat Deginnmg next nciay a pnot neutral snipping to traverse the dan- I zone. i The sound is the channel between the n-niH t.i, i. i.w oi i riQ ana ance troweii aism.ssea mm or preaenie-i 'f crown rnnr Estimate of Last Loan Is wm be tabiished to enable an? ine. inei5- a. Ifc.t it aireteMe.

tke 11 Billion Marks All suDscriDea. Berlin, via London. Sept. The subscription to the new war loan terminated today. The total application lor the bonds cannot be announced before Friday, but the view was ex-l ressed at a number of leading banks today that the total would exceed the March loan.

The estimates. cf the sub- svriptlon run as high as 11 billion marks $2,730, 000,000 1. It is understood 'that there even was a greater number of small subscribers to the loan than in March. Small cooperative loan banks having former clients sent in heavy subscriptions. I Through the Streets of New York jj their blood to end up at last with dictatorship mich more hateful than that or i-orusrio uiax.

i rrsnxi) eon- fess that I myself am frightened at the prospect of the anarchy would undoubtedly follow. which THS WEATEEE CK.csizn. Pert. 22. Forecast: Kansas I'artiy cloudy Thursday and prvhabiy showers and warmer in east portion Thursday.

Oklahoma, Partly cloudy and wm er Thurslay; Friday fair. atreT New Tork was an la Its ration wide nr5ra- staiidard frwt p4 war te4 fltt acre Federal Parole Board Has Very Busy Session Before It Leavenworth. Sept. 22. The Elmer E.

Talbott and James Green. It. the police to their p-raa fcf hai- sen. ta kn feat if 4 to-Ur at the trial of K. eharid Tir! cerary.

iat hey eefttrife-ated ai esh the fvfd ia lilt. Two water way tormeriv Deiongea to tne Danish sovereigns who, for many rar, coiiecieu ions trunj loreijtn es- sels using it. In 1837, however, by a tr.atv with the commercial nations of I Murope, the dues were abolished. Da dc fe. aaer.

Iondon, Sept. 22. The DanSs'i steamer Thorvaisden, of 1.217 tons gross, has been sunk. The crew was saved. who were convicted in the Tcrre Haute election conspiracy case, have planned to appear before the board at this session.

They were each sentenced to two year and will be eligible for parole in January. The Sessions of the board will' Con tinue into weelc although F. Duehay. president of the parole board and superintendent of prisons, wan summoned to Washington today for a conference with the attorney general. No decisions will be announced by the board here A1I recommendations her Soofikeeprs teatsne lectio afco! fIX fftm Mlorn irtt and it to IWii Httbrt 8.

I'Sey rmm ray MleM sad aakd 1mm nsiwif fs-id," testified Jmt Fl a Mioa ke5r, in a ri.arrstjy way, li as-5 eacs frora tfc n.ajor taH h'm I tad alwaj. cvstr; Vse-d. mt4 a-ffered I Bias TJiat tcM ai4 I er: ferd h.ft Sl He t. that he stt fear 1 i fc! fcaatfseae vtl lat mf.4 I e'iVl Rot t.f m'i' h. He tmt n- tie pot.

fmm ran that i-cl k't of aty Ta.t i t3ire cr fr f-litt. ae4 I I federal parole board besan one of the busiest sessions in its history at ths U. S. penitentiary here today. Nearly 220 applications for parole have been made and the prisoners will appear be- fore the board during its sessions.

More than forty cases were disposed of today, among them the application. or Herbert a. xiocain. rormer secre- tar" of the International Structural Steel and Iron Workers union. Hoc kin had been hopeful of obtaining a full pardon and several appeals in his behalf were made to the president by Mrs.

Hockln. He has served nearly half of his sentence of six years. VViin.m Crockett. Hilton Redman. i urgSng the increasing cf the sent to Attorney General Gregory for final action..

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