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lit The Evening Standard has the & dw ftj fe' tlSln' f"" "fc V- MUCH CHANCE IN TEMPERA H T U R E ff 1 SJj j FEARLESS, INDEPENDENT, PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER. I Sfc Forty-third Year-No. 68-Price Five Cents. CGDEN CITY UTAH, FRIDAY EVENING MARCrT2l I9?5 7" lV I viilXVJ, mrnvn Zl, lytj Entered as Second -ias Matter at tH. Poitotflce. Ogden. Utah r r CHICAGO IN I STORM ZONE Windy City Nearly Cut Off From Outside World Today Dam- agre $150,000 c;.( Chicago, Mar. 21 Only two tele- Ifraph wires connected Chicago with ) tho outside world for several hours I Ituday, Tho onl practical relief from 1 3 i thi situation was by way or an under Dt around telephone cablp to Milwaukee Sleet, wot snow and occassional dhes of raJn. drlvPn by a fortv mile k tl" from the west struck the city ' at, land environs before dnvllght and Ij,, Iwlthln four hours had " prostrated r3 telegraph wire in all directions. All j transportation HneB were crippled One young wnrann waa blown un- ' sq dcr the feet of a team of homes and tvoroly hurt. The first effects of : ;ks ; ;tbe storm woro foil smith and oii or al .Chicago. Wires routed around the ifouth ond of Lako Michigan went I i. down within an hour of the time the ig litorm struck Then tho territory I iij west of the city was cut off nnd two j,I Ihoure later the lst of the above is! ground ulroH nlon tho north shore im Isuocumbnd '.n ihe combined forces of til lice and wind. The only lines which survived were q wo wires to St Louis. Over theeo a kaj carried a verv small part of tho H Imass of intelligence which normally Is 1 & (received and sent out from Chicago li i The only crumb of comfort to thoBo i charged with the transmitting of press S land commercial telegrams was that 1 ihe Good Friday holiday relieved them of th usual burden of brokor a iag and market reports 8ix hour oftor tho ?torm hroke the t 'fin forced lis way through the clouds 1 and tho disturbances ceased almost 1 h las suddenly as It had begun Tho j ft idamape. however, had been done and early estimates of the loss to wire snd transportation companies placed z fnc figures as high ns $16"".0on Memphis. Tenn.. Mnr ?1 Reports ' i (from North Mississippi, Ye3t Tennes I Isee and southeast Kcr.t icl jr nnd Fjnortb and eest Arkanaf, which were If iirwept by a severe rain and windl I List night and early today aro delav Bed by the almost complete proatia- j l i:cn of telegraph and telephone Wlrefl ' Xo definite advices hare been re H eeiveri htro from Hox e. Ark., where f the wind lr eald to have Wpvrn down1 a large number of houses and in i j'ired a score of person?. At Fulton. Ky.. considerable dara I age was done to property. Tn llBlealpp the storm WEfi severe' SC f.o m Grenada to Water Talle-, a. 'Scnatobla the wind was unusurilly I biph rnd housea are gild to have been to?sel about as If they were play things. Vo loss of life occurred there. Locally only minor damage was don, a heavy downpour of rain tvUh w cor.tinnoti? flr.shes of lightning ac I compnnkd the blow. I j MANY INJURED IN MISSOURI. ' Springfield. Mo . ar 21 A score 'Or more persons were injured, some 1 I of them seriously, buildings In the I business dietrict were wrecked and - : residence." unroofed late last night at I IHoxle, Ark . about ninety-five miles II south o hero by a wind of unusual Tfelocity The loss to property, It le J H sajJ. will total thousands of dollars No death? had been reported early : 1 toda, when communication with the 1 town was cut off. out it is feared l- m ter reports will show fatalities Special trains were sent from this if city and Thayer, Mo to aid the suf- ! 2 ferers at Hoxle and other towns In B the vicinity . which t is reported. B were also affected by the wind ! STORM GENERAL OVER MISSOURI VALLEY If Kansas City. Mar 21. Snow and j sleet and a drop in temperature were' ' general over the Missouri valley and the southwest last niRht and earlv I today. in fome pertions the storm A tag accompanied b n strong wind. I I Heavy rains preceded snow In II sont hand east Missouri At Okla- ' M hotna City and wind rcse to forty-six II miles an hour The mereury this 1 morning dropped to thirteen here, eipht in Omaha. 12 in St Joseph, in : at Wichita and Tonrordia Kansas, 22 Z at Sprinrfleld. io , 1 at Oklahoma S fitv two at Denver and ten at Amarll 9 lo, Texas. J KENTUCKY SWEPT BY WIND. Louisville. Ky., Mar 21 First re W ports from points In the oentral outh was swept by aterrific wind storm last night and early today tell or a considerable property damage t ii loss of life Is not mentioned. 'res are down throughout Kentucky, and much of Tennessee A sixty mile H wind blew at Nashville. NEGRO WOULD BE DIPLOMAT Washington. Mar 21 When Secro 1ary Daniels of the navy department returns today from a visit to his home in Ruicicrh. N C, he will pas along to the state department the appUca- t.icn of a colored man who has sblned his shoes and otherwise made him presenUble, or a position In the di plomatic service. When the secretary first came to Washington ho was the guost of an ola friend, Dr Sterling Ruffin The ph-slclans valet, J Richard Davis, took eajMJcial care of the cabinet of ficer and when the secretary left for Raleigh Davis dispatched a letter to him telling of his aspirations for the position of secretary to tho Ameri can legation in Liberia. Davis, who has been in the employ of Dr. Ruffin for some time, BpealtS and writes Spanish perfect y, having spent four years (n Cuba. He is hii expert stenographer and In his le'6 urc moment studied for the exam ination for the diplomatic service He ha? the Indorsement of the Colorado Democratic league M. D. LICENSE IS REFUSED Pennsylvania Board Will Not Grant Tem porary Permit to Tu berculosis Specialist Philadelphia. March 21 -No tempo rary medical license will be granted by the Pennsylvania state board of; medical examiners to Dr Fredcrlch P. i Frledmann of Rerlln. who asserts he has discovered a cure for tuberculo sis. This statement was made yester day by Dr. J M. Baldy. president of the board Dr Frledmann tedd four local physicians that he would not come to this city to perform experi mental work unless he should receive a temporary license giving him per- miftaion to nrrirfir lipro "We will never grant Dr. Frledmann a temporary license." declared Dr. Baldy last night "In the first place, the laws of the state do uot permit such action, and secondly, the mem bers of the state board of medical examiners do not Intend to make themselves responsible for Dr. Frled mann and his 'cure." If he wishes to come here and treat patients and col lect fees for treatment, he will be compelled to take the state board examinations simib.r to those taken by any one wishing to practice in the state We do not object, how ever, lo his coming here as a con itjltir physician and demonstrating his vaccine, and I think every phy sician in the city will welcome him if be should come under these condi tions Wo feel, however, that some hospital should take the responsibil ity whether he is successful or not." -MJ ' FARMERS SKEPTICAL Large Percentage De clare That Experience Is the Only Agricul tural College Washington. Mar. 21. More than 4u per cent of all the farmers inter viewed bv government representat i ve believe that experience is the only way to learn how to farm. This per centage told agents recently sent out by the department of agriculture that they took no stock in farmers' Insti tutes, demonstration agents, farm pa pers or department of agriculture publications as aides In helping to moke the soil more productive Starting on motorcycles or on foot, four department agents traveled through thirteen states, visiting e -er farmer alone the wav and asklnc question? This inquiry revealed the fact that of the farmers who not de partment of agriculture bulletins. S4 per cent read them and per cent followed the suggestions contain ed therein. Of those who attended farmers' institutes, it was learned that 54 per cent practiced the meth f, ! . ad ocati d there nn - MRS. WILSON TO BE PRESENTED Washington, Man b 21 Arrange ments were completed today for a breakfast on April F. at which the lo cal society women formally will be come acquainted with Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife of the president, and Mrs Thomas Marshall, wife of thn vice president of the United States The breakfast will be given by a committee of Washington women and winii be semi-formal The guests will include Mrs. Champ Clark, wif- "i the speaker of the house, and the ' women of the cablnot circle. Mrs John W Kern, wife of Be&4 tor Kern of Indiana, will act as toast -mistr. - and an Illustrated lecture on "The Historic White House" will follow the breakfast. I The Evening Paper Keeps Its Readers in fnntad With the World at Close Range The afternoon pain r 1b mad high pressure." The facts showing , you the kind of world you llv In H day by day of presenting again and again history that is less than t au hour old keeps the afternoon oo Civ o a pretty girl a mirror lest she get loneaome paper aqulver with life and llto's moodB. The advertising In an sf ternoon paper Is a PART OF IT appealing to minds quickened and made respective and appreciative by contaci with the world at close range. IMANYDEATHS DUETOSTORM; disturbance Over Central West ern States Is Moving in This Direction Twenty-nine known dead and 108 more or less seriously injured, com munlcatlon by wire almost completely prostrated. tranSortat ion facilities badly damaged, and property loss that will reach into the millions are the known results of a series of storms that swept the middle western states last night and early today Through this entire region extend ing from the northern section of the southern states across the Ohio val ley to the Great Lakes, the rain, snow or sleet was accompanied by a wind that varied from 40 to 70 miles an hour The greatest loss of life accord ing to reports received up to 2 o'clock this afternoon, occurred at Lower Peach Tree, A In . where fifteen were reported killed Five are reported dead at Poplar Bluff. Mo., with more than fifty Injured, while one was kill ed at Hoxle, Ark., and 2r injured According to meacer reports the renter of the storm was felt in the vi clnlty of Poplar Bluff Mo., and Hoxie, rk and in western Tennessee and Kentucky The town of Poplar BluO was practically demolished. Through the storm-swept district business houses and residences were wrecked, telephone and telegraph wires pros trated and railroad and street car trif flc seriously delayed where not com pletely interrupted Reports up to 2 p. m show the fol lowing casualties: Killed Injureo. 1 Peach Tree, Ala 15 0 Saline. La 1 (i . Tiffin, 0 1 3 Poplar Bluff. Mo 5 50 Hoxie. Ark 1 -.'5 1 Walnut Ridge, Tenn. . . 2 10 Frankfort. Ind 1 0 Lafayette. Ind 1 0 Ifurfreesboro, Tenn l 0 Central Ohio 1 20 Washington. March 21. A terrific storm that raged over the central ireetern states throughout the night was today moving northwestward, j Paving a wake of destruction. Telegraph and telephone eommunl- i cation wa6 crippled throughout the' district south of the Ohio river. The Storm, moving northward and east ward over Ohio and Indiana, threat ened further destruction. The weather bureau from the mea- j ger reports compiled over the crip pled wires predicted a severe cold wave to follow. Storm warnings were ordered dls ! played all along the Atlantic coast j from Hatteras to Eastport. Me. Last nlghtV storm swept Arkansas, ; Mississippi and north across the Ohio diver and today was centered1 I over the "great lakes. The weather .!.. t'rs after examining their re-j ports said : "The storm is accompanied by se-, vere and shifting gales and wide spread precipitation, followed by a i cold wave of unusual severity for this season of the year. Heavy snow - 1 falls are reported at many points lu the north central states and great damage has been done to electric wires, the storm cutting off commu- nlcation throughout the middle west. FIVE KILLED Memphis. Tenn. March 21 Five persons were killed and more than 5t injured by the storm last night at Poplar Bluff, Mo, according to mem bers of the crew of St. Louis & San Francisco railroad passenger train ! .which arrived here today three hours 1 late. They also reported one dead and 26 Injured at Hoxle, Ark., and the town practically blown away. (Jreat damage was done at Poplar Bluff, and In the country between i that point and Hoxie. As a result of the heavy wave wash j raided by the storm, Ihe Bteamer : Vulcan, used by the government dredee fleet in work opposite this city, and valued at 110,000, wa6 sunk In 40' ; feet of water. ONE DEATH REPORTED Shreveport. La.. March 21. One man was killed, several persons were' injured and hoay property damage was done at Saline, La., a town ol I about 300 Inhabitants. In Bienville I parish, by last night's severe wiud storm, according lo a report received here today. Several houses were blown down in lib bsland, 8 town in Bienville par-I Ish. and several thousand dollars of property damane whs done. The hoilSe of Joe Randall In Gibbs- ; I land was blown from its foundation, carried through the ur several nun - j dred yards and deposited outside the town WIRES DESTROYED; REPORTS MEAGER Meridian, Miss . March 21 Several negroes are reported killed and a uumber of cabins demolished as the I result of heavy wind storms which Struck a small settlement last night five miles north of Macon, Miss. u is feared thai levere damage was wrought by the storm In the north ern part of the state, but communica tion with this section l Impossible because of the demoralized condition of telegraph and telephone wires. SEVENTY-MILE GALE SWEEPS SANDUSKY BAY Sandusky. O.. March 21. Two boats are missing, one Is on the rocks and another Is In distress In tho 70 mile ! gale that Is sweeping Sanduskv bay today. It Is feared that six or" more men have lieen drowned Life savers haw tone to the res-' t cue of six others who are in extreme i peril. FIFTEEN DEAD IN ALABAMA Mobile, Mar 21 The town of low er Peach Tree. Ala, was practically viiped out by a tornado last night ard at leant fifteen persons were killed according to word received from Pine Hill 'his afternoon The tcinado parsed dlrertlv through the town ami only a few bouses escaped destruction News of the disaster was confirmed when an appeal reach ed the mayor ! Pine Hill asking for doctors and nurses. A message ask Ing assistance w;,s also sent to Gov oraor O N'eal PROPERT DAMAGED THROUGHOUT INDIANA Indianapolis, Mar 21 Two persons were killed and several probably fa tally injured today bv the windstorm, which wrought havoc throughout the state causing thousands of dollars' damage to property. Omer A Kite, a cab drUer at Frankfort was Killed when the roof. I of a building struck him. Henry Wallers, a worklngman of Lafayette, was crushed to death un derneath a falling sign. Several hurches and school ' houses were wrecked over the atate and one of the buildings of Indiana university at Hloomington was dam-! aged. Wire service all over the state was demoralised The wind, It was sid. reached a I velocity of sixty miles an hour at f o'clock. The streets here are littered with wrecked slpns. parts of roofs, broken windows, bricks from ehim nevs, and branches from trees The railway service throughout the state 1 was demoralized. CENTRAL OHIO STORMSWEPT Columbus, Ohio. Mar 21 A terri fic wind storm swept over central Ohio today loss causing one death, probably a score of persons Injured, numerous small fires and thousands of dollars damage to property. The gale reached a velocity of fifty miles, an hour. Richard Plimmer. a contractor was killed and three other men seriously Injured when a brick building collapsed. COUNTY INFIRMARY AT TIFFIN. O.. DESTROYED Columbus. O. March 21 At Tiffin, O . William i k. 75 years of age. was instantly killed and six or eight others are believinl to have been bur ied In the debris of a smoke stack j of a county infirmary which was wrecked by the high wind. Thr e others are known to be Injured. FOURTEEN MAY BE DEAD NEAR MOBILE Mobile. Ala.. March 21. An uncon firmed rumor from Lower Peach Tree on the Alabama river is to the effect that 14 people were killed and an immense amount of damage done by a tornado which swept through that place early last evening. THIRTY-FIVE BUILDINGS ARE DESTROYED Louisville, Ky., Mar 21. At Som- j erset. Ky.. thirty-five frame buildings were blown down. None of the occu pants was badl Injured. Other points in the same section are re ported damaged. oo HAIR FOUND IN CELLAR Musical Had Cached 217 Bags of the Hu man Product Valued at $100,000 New York. Mar 21. Creditors of Antonio Muslca and his son Phillip, the hair Importers who are under ar rest in New Orleans charged here with obtaining over a million dollars fr im twenty-two banks through fraudulent invoices. learned today that human hair valued at $100,000 b id been found In a secret sub-cellar of a stable owned by the Musicas In the Ravrldge section of Rrookhn Deputy sheriff made the discover while colnducMng a search on a vrlt of attachment yesterdaj They found 217 bags of fine quality hair stored In the cellar. An expert appraised It as worth as much as $100,000. A j search also was made of the Muslca residence and the house was found to have been shorn of many of Its more valuable furnishings. HEAVY FINE FOR "MASHER" Buffalo. N V., Mar 21 Leo D. Varien, a waiter, must today pay a fine of (,( or begin to serve 180 days In the penitentiary, the heaviest j sentence ever imposed here on a "masher' Varien was convicted of pressing unwelcome attentions on a sixteen -year-old girl COL CABRAL DEMANDS SURRENDER OF CANANEA Cananea. Mex.. -Mar. 21. A demand for the surrender of tin place was received todaj bv Colonel Moreno of the federal garrison here. It came inmi Colonel i'.iI'I.l' commanding th state forces now mobilizing at Del Kin. rniii way between Cananea and Naco, on the border Cabral said be would attack in the morning and recommi nded thai all women and children be removed from (I,,. nece Automobiles contlnn,. to hurr the n"ii-coinbalanlB to the bor ,i, , ;,t Hi bee and Douglas, and be fore the time ol the threatened at tack all women and children will have leec rcnio cd SCHINAS NOT IN POLITICS (x r e e k Newspaper Publishes Letter Re garding fxing George's Assassin New York, March 21. The Greek I newspaper Atlantis will publish today a letter from a Greek In this city, which the editors of the paper say Contains reliable Information con-j cernlng Aleco Bchlnaa, the assassin of ' King George. The letter is written by Rasll Batz-1 noulis, who claims personal acquaint ance with Schinas and who says the; man was an anarchist but never en tered politic! and was not a candidate for election lo the boule. or Greek chamber of deputies. ;t reported "Aleco Schinas comes from the vil lage of Kanalla.' Ihe statement reads. "He has a brother In Volo named Hercules Schinas, who has a chem ist's shop there The assassin work- j ed as an assistant As It often hap pens with brotbers, they had a quar- ' rel and Aleco camo to America Here! he could not stand the heavy work and returned to Greece. The statement that he was the founder of a school of anarchism or; was a candidate for the boule Is en tirely untrue, because he was en tlrely reticent and all he did was to go from the chemist's shop to a cof-' fee house and back. He had no friends j in Volo I was George Schinas who was a candidate for the boule. "Aleco Schinas had nothing to do j with any school and had no Idea of entering politics. He was known as a man who loved isolation and his! backgammon. He wore a beard and) was an anarchist. He was more than : ". y old, -.fmri in stal ure and slightly humpbacked" Solon S. J Vlasto. editor of Atlan-I tls. said the many conflicting sto-j ries that had arisen in this country concerning the assassin's identity a rose from the fact that Schinas is I a common surname in Greece and it is quite likely that there is more than one Aleco Schinas. "Information that I have received from other Greeks who have lived In Yolo and from our cable dispatches lead me to believe that the informa tion given by Batznoulia is correct,"; I aid Mr. Ylnsto. SECURITIES ARE STOLEN Subway Robbery Re sults in Loss of Nego tiable Papers Valued at $45,000 New York. Mar. 21 W. A. Hall, president of a magazine company was robbed In the subway yesterday of $45,000 worth of negotiable securities. The theft became known early today through an advertisement In which Mr Hall offered a larpe reward for; the return of the papers "with no questions asked." Mr Hall was on his way from YYall Street to the Grand Central station to delier the securities, which he i Lad just Indorsed to another. He had placed them in an Inside pocket of his coat which he had buttoned Rut when he stepped off the train at the Station he found that one of the ( buttons had been clipped off and the securities were missinc. He remem bered three men who had jostled him in the train but he declares he will not prosecute the thieves If they re. turn the securities MURDERER IS HANGED Execution of Negro Today May Be Last Legal Hanging in Ne braska Lincoln. March 21 Albert Prince. nero. was hanged at 1:35 o'clock this afternoon for the murder of Warden Davis, He was convicted of ihe murder l Deputy Warden K. D. Davis at the ,uie . mtentlp ry a year ago. heard the warrant for his execution read this morning. "All right, gentlemen '" he said, ' go ahead with the execution. Priuce atabbed tho deputy warden at the. close of chapel exercises at the state prison on February 11. 1912 Prince will probably bo the last mau to bo legally banged In Nebraska. Tho state house of representatives has passed a law making electrocu tion the legal mode of capital pun ishment and another abolishing capi tal punishment In this state BARTHOU HEADS NEW CABINET Parly. Mar. 21. Kan Rartbou, min ister ol public it in the retiring French cabinet, today accepted the president's invitation to head tho uew cabinet He called on President Poin.j i . i r and informed him that as the t result of Inquiries he was sure of an 1 ample majority to support hlni in the chamber ol deputies and also in the senate at least until the electoral re form bill comes up again for dispus sion. It was the lack of support for tills measure which brought about the fall of the Bri:ind Cabinet OFFICIAL SPRING HAS ARRIVED New York. Mar 21. Winter ended at 12 01 this morning Recording to the vernal equinox with New York I itv having had less snow and cold weather than for man) '.ears I'm tK&llr all of the $500,000 blch the citv annually spends for removing snow was saved. oo NEAR DEATH IN ARCTICS Schooner Crew Spent Winter Reaching Alaska From Siberian Coast Se;ittl, Wash.. Mar 21 The fol lowing special cable from Nome, Alas ka, was received here today: Sam Gottschalk of the whaling schooner Moras reached Nome last rnuht after a trip of 100 miles ovei the tweaking Ice in Bering Strait with news of the loss of the schooners were caught in the Ice near the Siberian shore last fall at the time of the freeze up and landed boats to prepare winter quarters. Before the men were able to land all their provisions or make extensive preparations for the wniter a great storm arose and thev were unable to return to their schooners During the storm the ice coming down from the Arctic caught the schooners and crushed them Into B shapeless mass. The crews, consisting of Gotts cholk, Koren, a naturalist, the owner of the Klttiwack Albert Gunderson and Gus Schrceder. started out in the lone remaining whale boat in a des perate attempt to cross tflie strait through the open leads in the great floes to the Seward peninsula. Captain Whittlng of the Moras, re fused to accompany them and started south aloug the Siberian coast in an attempt to reach Plover bay. where there Is an Eskimo settlement Whether he arrived there is not known The party In the whaleboai en countered a terrific storm near Big Diomedes Island, and their beat was smashed to splinters In the surf and Ice floes when they landed. For three months the men subsist ed on falrus, living lu huts con-:-tructed of stones and Ice. before they were able to attempt the pass age over the broken Ice to the Se v ard peninsula and oine. The Klttiwack was a small auxiliary pas schooner of fifteen gross tons Sbc was purchased two years ao by Koren. who went north In her to make a study of arctic wild flowers. ELOPING SISTERS MARRY BROTHERS Washington. March 21 Two tele grams were all that were necessary today to apprise two families of ahe marriage of four of their members, when Lee F. and Townsend B Titus, brothers, of Lucketts. Va.. and Mary G and Lucy E Stonebruner of Kov etsville. sisters, from the state state, broke the news of their elopement and marriage here. They were married by the Rev Samuel Smith of Pennsylvania, uncle of the brides, who romantlcallv aid ed in the double elopement. "Very interesting." said the mar riage license clerk as he made out the necessary papers. "In case of children what relation would " "For goodness sake. spare me that, ' interrupted Dr Smith, holding up an appealing hand I have been asked that before." The elopers. fearing parental -tonus, disappeared on a honeymoon and will return later when the sit uation Is calmer. OO" NO REPORT BY GOVERNMENT Wellington. March 21 Contrary to rnanv published reports, the public health service did not make public anv official report today upon tu berculosis patients inoculated with Dr. Frledmann'S vaccine at Mount Sinai hospital In New York The service does not expect to make a report on their condition for some t Imp. MANY CANDIDATES FOR PENSION COMMISSIONERS Washington March 21. Former Senator Obadiab Gardner of Maine, having refused the offer of commls Bloner of pensions. It was learned lodnv. friends of Dr. D C Gentsch of New Philadelphia, O. have renew ed their efforts on his behalf for the plnce There are a number ol other aspi rantS for the place, however, and Sec retary Lane is understood to be can t b ing the Held i arefully. Mr Gardner is credited with refus ing the offer because he and his friends did not believe the "place was hip. enough" and his friends ven tured the opinion that h "deserved something better Mr. Gardner had been prominently mentioned for the position of Secre ting of Agriculture when President WlPon was making up his cabinet. There arc a number of candidates anxious for the place, among them several from Indiana backed by t he i Indiana delegation in congress John Rell of I lllnoin also is said to have strong backing. J GONZALES II EXECUTED I Members of Firing I Squad Declare Chi huahua Governor Was Shot at Torrcon El Taso. Tex., Mar 21. Mexicans tflH arriving at .luare from the south (iLH todaj declared thnt they were part of linl lirinp spiad hieh executed bra- iHiH ham Gonsales, governor of Chihuahua, I'PH under the Madero government a fort- lilil ago Iflll Gonzales was killed under the no- 1 1111 Itorloiia 'fugitive law' these Mexicans iHI The Chihuahua governor, the self tll proclaimed executioners said, was IBtl killed at Torreon. IPII At .liminez, the ex-governor was I htH rparated from six other prisoners. 1! Il and. alone In a single car drawn by uH . ngine. w is hurried south. At a Ivll quiet place in Torreon he was re- ill j moved from the car and shot, say the I fl men who admit being present. Gonzales has been missing since vil his removal from Chihuahua nearly three weeks ago He was one of the most prominent promoters of the Madero resolution. Gonzales uns vel' known among American cattle men lioforo the revolution, being a cattle broker of Chihuahua City. He I was educated at Notre Dame univer- ; sit v. South Bend. Ind. GERMAN CONSULAR AGENT HELD Xogales Mar. 21. Max Muller, gl German consular acent at Hermosil lo, js held by authorities at the state capital, despite activity of German 1 I and American diplomats H While Muller has been released i . from jail, he Is said to be held a 'I prisoner at his home. I DARROW TO DEFEND BOY I McNamara Attorney Accepts First Case Since His Own Prose cution for Bribery Los Angeles, Cal.. March 21. Clar- I il ence Darrow will shortly appear in the defense of another for the first time since he became implicated In j briber charges growing out of the j defense of the McNamara brothers. Mr Darrow has become interested M in the case of Martin Kickert, a lad of 15 years, who Is charged with the i murder of bis father, whom he killed I because of the continued cruelty to j which he and bis mother were sub- t II the boy's defense does not inter fere with Harrow's own third trial. which is set for March 31. he will act as assistant counsel under one of the attorneys who defended him in his own first and second trials on char- ! ges of bribery J MONTENEGRO SENDS REPLY I 'i Demands of Austria Are Refused Ulti matum Is Promised London, March 21 King Nicholas H of Montenegro today replied to per- J emptory demands made by Austria H yesterday in connection with the Mon tenegrln bombardment of Scutari H Although the note is conciliatory in tone, the king refuses most of Aus tria's demands He says he has or- H dered that the bombardment be dl reeled only against the forts and that the rest of the city shall not bo '1 SITUATION REGARDED AS EXTREMELY SERIOUS Vienna, Austria, March 21. The j H Austria-Hungary government is pre- paring an ultimatum to Montenegro. j H according to an unofficial statement j H today. I gl The Montenegrin reply Is consider- H ed here as creating a serious sltua- j H tlon. A Ilvelv exchange of views is i'l proceeding between the Austria-Hun- H gary and the Italian foreign offices j in regard to possible joint action by I the two powers H Austria will insist on enforcing the I'l decision of the European powers thai j 1 Scutari shall remain nn intcgray part i gl of the future autonomous slate of Al- I' H CONTINUANCE IN j LAND FRAUD CASE Cheyenne, Wyo., March 21. Counsel 1 for tho Owl Creek & Northwestern 1 Coal company defendants In the suit H brought bv the government to recover H land In the Big Horn basin appeared in the I'nited States district court H here today and asked a continuance H until next week, promising that at H that time ihe individual defendants H would appear in person. 1 The government charges that orlg- H inal entries to the land in question were fraudulently made. H and platonlc friendship frequently I H makes a noise like a flirtation.