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HOME EDITION TODAY'S PRICES MEMEJ O ilA not "tate bil 124ft 1 Sr Mtiian gold 4Sc o har Ftlcr HAH i ropier I Tp!8 2a Iltock, stad to W v I WE.WBEK FORECAST. KI Pao and Wet Texas, fair. New Mexlro. fair, warmer. Arizona, fair. FOURTEEN PAGES TODAY. LATEST NEWS BY ASSOCIATED PRESS. EL PASO. TEXAS. MONDAY EVENING. SEPTEMBER 18. 1916. DELIVERED ANYWHERE c A MONTH StNGLE COPT FIVE CENTS TM COMING BACK"-VILLA EATEN, emier m S&mmmWFm ME"B5 B A wg Mnpv W A li jt nni JDAtci m nil IUT rLlLf Ui V ritiso Son Battle nrnnorp French Encircle Denicorl and Push on Toward Chaulnes, The Objective Point. OTHER VILLAGES I ARE SURROUNDED British Are Mooing Slowly, Their Forces Pushing on Toward Le Sars. Y ONDON. Eng Sept IS Lieut. I Raymond Asquith. son of premi r " Asquith. -Bras killed in action on September 15. It was announced today. l-symond Asquith, -who was in h.3 rth ear. was a graduate of Oxford. Ident of the Oxford union and prominent as a member of the bar. to v hich he was admitted In 1904 He acted as Junior counsel for Great , : 1 itain ir the North Atlantic fisheries -titration at The Hague in 1907 He v as mad'- a second lieutenant in a rouiit of London regiment In 1914 and 1'euienant of the Grenadier guards in m 1") R a froon d Asquith was the eldest cr the primier. Two brothers, rthur Asquith. of the Royal V.i serve, and Lieut. Herbert Asouith, wtre wounded in action at the Darda nelles In Jane, 1915. Denlcourt Is Snrrounded. . The new thrust urthe French-outa L of the river Somme In northern France. f vhere the important railway town of Chaulnes Is their objective, has re- '' suited In the complete encircling of the village of Denlcourt. the Pari- war office announced today. Denlcourt formed the center of the , -edge the French are driving into the German lines north of Chaulnes. its resistance holding up their advance between. Bery and Vermandolvlllers complete occupation of which villages bv the French was announced Sunday night. German Mtacki Repulsed. Further progress has been made by the French in thiB region and heavy . ounter attacks by the Germans on k. .. tipw French nositions both north " sno. south of the Somme have been repulsed, accoraing to loaaj o -eitui. which announces that the Germans sustained enormouB losses, two bat tilions being nearly wiped out. The r-ench have taken 1SO0 prisoners and Fen machine guns. British Maintain Advance. The British are keeping up their forward push north of the Somme, scoring advances, however, at Isolated roints. apparency in operations to 'traighten their line and secure their hold on captured ground. London Uday reports an appreciable advance on the left bank where the British line has been driven further reward Le Sars along the Pozieres Bapamne road north of Martinpulsh id east of Courceiette. GERMANY ANd1$RITAIN TALK OF EXCHANGING CIVILIANS Berlin German. Sept 18 Germany d Great Britain are holding a series c r negotiations for the exchange of vil prisoners interned on account of me war according to the semi official v .. nATitfiohe Zeitung I fter a series of proposals and re wi m.m . on eatn side, the German gov- er- merit ha now made the suggestion that all civil prisoners in both coun ti les be released under a pledge that after their return they would not take up military service. It added that. In rase of a declination, it made the pro posal that all German civil prisoners interned in the British empire, inclu sive of colonies, and all British sub jects interned in Germans, who were J.ljove 4a vears oi ,-. us- iciw- The British answer to these pro nnsals is still lacking rnrNcn albert of briti SFAT IIOMB MITII ABCESS London Eng Sept 18 Because of I v sn abdom.nal access, resulting from an , ' operation for appendicitis, prince Al bert, Seconu run ui muH wifc, uo been invalided home according to an official communication issued here The communication adds that the prince is doing well, but it may be some time before he is able to return to duty The prince was serving as midship man on board the battleship Colling wood at the outbreak of the war. He Is 1 years old GER3fl" REIG OF TERROR T Copenhagen. Denmark, Sept 18. The existence or a reign oi terror in urunv wlek. German v, last Ma. in which martial law was? proclaimed and troops suppressed tne disorders, is revealed by German newspapers which report the trials of 1 men and women They were sentenced variously from five months to a sear in prison The origin of the disturbance seems to have been a proclamation enjoining h nimnit frugality, and a consequent tumor that potato peeling would be U?ed fo' food This Idea Aroused the j people to the highest fury 78 AI.LIED AJRI'LAMSS tRE " "... . ueriin v,. .... j. r. ... '""" . showing the entente allies lost 78 air- j planes on the western front during j August front during I mpulsory School Attendance WILL EXCHANGE GUARD REGIMENT Commands Regiment Of U. S. Regulars States 1 f-- r irr .id i -isj ie (ol Wright I at Camp Stewa t T P Is a grai u e o ive I n pd States mil: 7 ac afm tr u " rU,ss ?' lhii dnd jias Btneu in a.il upi Lies I rom seeona. lieutenant up to h s present grade He is considered one of the most capable regimental officer m the armi OFFICES HIS DEBTOFBOfi! British Lieutenant Colonel, Cashiered, Fights as Pri vate; Reinstated. London. En?. Sept. 18. A story of how a man ' came back" is revealed to all England in an official announcement that Lieut. Col. John Ford Elkington lias been reinstated to his rank and his command. It is one of the strangest romances of the world war. Dismissed by court martial from the army he had served for nearly 30 years. just as his regiment was going into ac twn in France in the clo-ing months of 1914, this English officer, disgraced at a tune of life when the chances of fate weighed heavilv against a man fighting for suddenly lost honor, found refuge in that queerest of all military organiza tions, the foreign legion of France. Friends Lost Track of Him. Lost in the mazes of battlefields, a mere legionnaire in the ranks, Lieut Col. Elkington, late of the Royal Uarwick shires, was all but forgotten. None of his oM friends, bis old fellow officers, none of the men who had seen him win the queens medal lor ialor in Sooth Africa; none of thoe knew that Elking ton was out there "i-omewhere in France," recklessly winning lu way back. King Approves Reinstatement But now Ldkington is back in Eng land. Pumed on his breast are two of the coveted honors of France the military medal and the military cross; but most valued possession of all is a bit of paper which wipes out the errors of the pa-t a proclamation from the of ficial London Gazette, announcing that the king has gracHilv approved the re instatement of John Ford Elkington in the rank of lieutenant colonel, with his previous seniority, in consequence of his gallant conduct while serving in the ranks of the foreign legion. Xot only lias CoL Elkington been restored to the army, but has been appointed in his old regiment, the Royal Warwiekghires, ui which his father fought before him. His Error Not Disclosed. In this same London Gazette, at the end of October, 1914, bad appeared the " wtouer, lan, naa appeareu me crushing announcement that Elkington eral court martial. What his error was ' did not appear at the time and has not been alluded to in his returned hour of honor It Mas a courtmartial at the front at a tune when little time could be wasted upon an incident of this sort The charge, it now is stated, did not re flect in an way upon the officer's cour age. But with fallen fortunes he passed quietlv out of the arm)- and enlisted in the legion that corps where thousands of brave but broken men have found a shelter and now and then an opportunity to make themselves whole again. Fighting Days Are Over. CoL Elkington did not pass un scathed through fire. His fighting days are ended His knnes an shattered and be walks beawlv upon his sticks. "Thev are iust fragments from F'rance. ' he said of those wounded knee and smiled in happv reminiscence of all tnev meant j ""It is wonderful to feel, said Col I Elkington, "that once again I liae the II am afraid inv career in the field is , nded. but I must not complain He Served as a Private. toi. LIKington made no attempt to cloak, his name or nis iormer armv serv- iCOOSS STRUMA Bulgarians Manifest Great er Strength in Resisting Macedonian Eush. London Eng. Sept 18 On the acedonian front, an entente attack a the Struma valley northeast or Sj.lon.vi was repulsed by the Bulga j.ans, the Sofia wai of fee announces. j. courter attack forcing the entente t o p- back to. the we't bank of the r ver The forces under field marshal von ilartten"en are continuing to progress n their campaign in the Rumanian r omce of Dobrudja, Sofia reports. - e ind cation of stronger resistance hi the Rumanians and Russians, how c er is furnished by the official state-t- nt which reports heavy counter at- The presence of a division of Servian, -.ps in Rumania, alluded to in re- e-1 press dispatches, has not been off ciallv accounted for. The proba- litles are that some Servian troops were forced into Rumanian territory uring the Teutonic drive through Servia last fall, being interned there aid liberated for service with the en ter -e rorces, jvnen Kumanm eni t, war np lse that the division is rnn,nni nf Servian residents of Ru- I mania. ice when he entered the ranks of the le; gion. '-Why shouldn't I be a private' he said "It is an honor for anv man to serve in the ranks of that famous corps. Like man oi the other bov I had a debt to wipe off Now it is paid. EEIIILESIE TIMES Berlin. Germany. Sept 18 Abandon ment by the Germans of the villages of Berny and Denicourt together with positions between Barleaux and Ver raandevillers south of the river Somme, Is reported in today's official state ment North of the river, the state ment sajs, the fighting developed fa vorably to the Germans The allied (entente) forces In east ern Rumania hae received reinforce ments, the wr office announced to day They have taken up a line across Dobrudja. a few miles south of the railroad running from Constanza to the Danube 31 BK THMPTI Berlin Germany Sept IS A German attack against the Ruians who are attempting to capture the Galician town of Halicz resulted in the defeat of the Russians, who lost the greater portion of the territor gained on Saturday the war office announced todav In addition to inflicting heavy casualties on the Russians, the Germans took 3500 prisoners and IS machine guns. GERMAN EAST AFRICANS DISLODGED BY BRITISH London. Kng. Sept 18 An official statement Issued by the British war department todav regarding military operations in German East Africa sa s "The enemy has been dislodged from the Uluguru hills with the loss of manv men, quantities of stores and most if not all, of his artillery and gun ammunition depots which con stantl are being discovered and destro) ed "On Friday British forces which through and to the east and west of I th. rantral mountainous area affected ! a Junction near Kissaki, the remnants of the enemy's troops having retired to the southeast "Lindl and Mikindani. the last re maining ports in the German colon. have been occupied by naval forces, royal marines and African troops Small German forces retired inland in each case." TWO '.RITISH OFFICERS INVENTED THE "LAND FORTS" London. Eng , Sept 18 Lieut. Col Ed Swinton of the intelligence department cf the general staff, and MaJ. Stern are given credit for the new traveling "land forts" which have been used for the past few days on the British front The Daily Mail describes the new monsters as follows "These long low. dust colored tor toises hae no resemblance to motor cars. They are. in fact steel land ships of immenseypower and wonderful ca racity In practice the can climb nails push through dense woods cross trenches and maneuver in and out of craters One of the most remarkable facts about them is the secre. nnh which the making of their thousands ot parts was . eiled In the midland town of their birth The army likes them, but It is not placing too much reltmie on them for the present as they are only an experiment" 1 SHE TUPS TO GO 1H HOI soon Send Regiment Home For Each Sent To Border, Is New Order to Funston. SECOND NEW YORK FIRST TO RETURN Other Regiments Will Be Selected By Funston At His Own Discretion. WASHINGTON. D. 0. Sept. IS Gen. Funston was directed oy the war department today to return one national guard regiment to lts nome statlon for new. reglment 1 . .. I " tne guard sent to the border. I The Second New York infantry will be one of the first to return. Other regiments will be selected by Gen. Funston. Train equipment used to transport troops recently ordered south will be employed In sending home the returning regibmenta. Order In Line With Policy. The order was issued in line with secretary of war Baker's policy of sending all organizations In state mo bilization camps to the border before they are mustered out of the federal service. The three North Carolina reg iments ordered south Saturday, to gether with those from Tennessee al ready on the way. will be the first to reach Gen. Funstons command to re lieve troops now there. Mill Send 1S.00O South. There are 18,000 guardsmen still in the state camps These will move as rapidly as the necessary arrangements can be made. It was indicated at the war depart ment that no general movement of guardsmen homeward would be ordered until a decision affecting the border situation had been reached by the American-Mexican commission, non meeting at New London. Conn. The department has submitted the final dis position of all border troops, the na tional guard and the regulars to the commission. May Be Dlseharsed at Border. TVhen national guard organizations are ordered to home stations for mus tering out these members who apply now may be discharged at border sta tions when applications are made in good faith and are approved by the commanding officers Two Militia Aero Corps Disband; Men Are Weary Of A wailing Equipment New York. Sept 18 The 100 num bers of the first and second aero corps of the New York national guard which were organized soon after the fight with the Mexicans at Carrizal. was disbanded today because these volun teer aviators are tired of waiting for government airplanes with which to practice. Man) of the members have been in camp at the aviation field at Hemp stead, L 1- for three months or more. They assert that the government sup plied them with only two airplanes, these with others from the aero chib of menca and two machines privately owned, making a total of eight It is stated also that the men lacked or dinary military equipment such as shoes, uniforms and guns and that comparatively few of them bad any thing to do except dig trenches. CtllKAMt MW RCGULATE I1VMJS AM) ii:koten Mexico City, Mex. Sept 18. Gen. Carranza has issued a decree regulat ing banks and the issuance of bank notes, disclosing that the government ' preparing to open a bank issuance of bank bills, thus for the thus taking away the monopoly from private banks The decree provides that banks shall increase their reserves until they are sufficient to cover all paper money al ready Issued Gen. Carranza will ap- nAlnt Itinl .Tiimin&r. ami if hint. An not comply with the decree the must I liquidate ana dissolve. OMl PERMIIXV WITHDRAWAL mCUSSKI). A1 1IEAICO CIT Mexico City. Mex, Sept IS. Mexico City new spatters are printing renewed assurances to the people that the Mex ican commissioners at New London Conn . are discussing nothing but the mthdnwal of Gen Pershing's troops (Continued on lnge 4, Column 2.) 1 IKTEfiHATIOHAL SDIL n fi DAqn Jlt5 TEXAS 55 --mopn ? 1 wv. wacr S I 14 TO 26 ; S5 1916 5?. o OPENING CF THE plPHANT BUTTE DAhF Dn? Not ii iz Hz - fir OSEBEITfTO BEADILU! Eight of Alleged Gang of 60 Arrested By Government Agents in Raid. Chicago, I1L, Sept. IS Eight members of an alleged blackmail gang caught here are to be taken to Philadelphia. Pa., for trial on charges of having fleeced wealthy men and women out of more than $250, 000. using the beauty of their women members and the fascinating appearance and manners of their men as the lure. The band, including five men and three women, wa3 arrested shortly before mid night Saturday night in a raid by de partment of justice officials in a fash ionable south side apartment house. The women, accoraing to the authori ties, are young and beautifuL The men are well groomed and of a type calcu lated to impress society women. Compromised Their Victims. Thev are accused of fleecing men and women of social prominence in Chicago, Baltimore, Xew York and Philadelphia, through organized efforts. Their schemes, according to Hmton G. Clabaugh, of the department of justice, was to compromise their victims and then blackmail them. Thev are said to have used the charms nf flioir womn VMlfp!rflte4 in win nt- I tcntion from rich men and then to have threatened their victims with prosecu tion under the Mann act. Alleged Head of Gang Missing. Those arrested gave the. names of Henrv Russell. Edward Donahue, Helen Evers, Mrs. Frances Allen. Mrs. Ed. Don ahue. James Christian. Frank Crocker and George Bland. George Irwin, al leged director of the group, is still at large. The principal eharire against the band is the alleged kidnaping of Mrs. Regina H. Clifford, of riladelphii one of ihelr alleged victims and wanted as a govern ment witness. She was spirited away to Canada, it is charged, at the time she was wanted to testify against the band. Dictographs Gather Evidence. Federal authorities said that one of the gang. Henrv Rusell. had posed as a brother of mayor William Hale Thomp son of Chicago and had used this alias in a plot The raid was made onlv after the apartment building had been literally sown with dictographs. Thee were con nected with an adjoining building, where the detectives hid. At Least 60 in Gang. There are at leat 60 members of the "syndicate, according to the federal of- licials. one-third o t whom are mmen. Others than the eight now under arrest are expected to be caught soon. Only three victims of the swindlers in the United States. Clabaugh said, had de clared themselves willing to face pub Iicitv and testifv against the criminals. One of these, he said, is a Mrs. Clifford, of Philadelphia. Another is Mrs. J. Bol ton Winpennv. of Philadelphia, whose son i said to have been threatened with blackmail They Had the Clothes. Detectives who made the raid said the wardrobes of th eeisht arrested were re plete with partv gowns, sealskin cloaks and jewels for the women and that each of the men apparently had a dozen pairs of shoes, as manv pairs of qhjves and other elothine in like nronortion Operations Netted $1,000,000. Confe-sion has been made bv two members of the alleged syndicate that operations of the swindlers have netted them J 1. 000 000 within the last vear. federal official announced today. cnred Cash l'rnm Victims. According to the federal officials to day, here are some of the things done by the svndicate Thev neeced t multi millionaire of New York out of HO 000 b threatening him with arrest for alleged violations of the Mann act two of the members of the syndicate impersonating secret service agents for that purpose They frightened a wcalthv Philadel phia woman who had been too friend lv with a stranger in a cafe into giving them J15 000 The took Jin 000 from each of fue Cnicigo ms 'wo of whom are women IJ. GEi. MILLS IS: HOI Washington DC Sep, IS ; -MaJ (!.n Alnrt T. Alms rhiAf of th ril- ! vision of militia affairs died at his home todav after 1". hours illness from pneumonia. ARRANGEMENTS ARE MADE FOR FUNERAL OF SETH LOW New Aork. Sept IS Arrangements were being completed todarv for the fu neral of former maor Seth Low. who died Sunda aged 6. after a protract ed illness. He was twice major of Brooklyn once mavor of New York and ...-. . ..... --..- -- lor 11 years was president oi Columbia , no seexing wore in local properties mK a heavy rainfall and while the mo. universit) He was known as one of I , ple were hard asleeD after th r.sriVi the leading figures of New York life AL-tCB COMMVNDKR DKAD. Ties of' twcnlghts 'taPhonoVof theMexU and his official career was marked by Berlin. German sept is B wire- 1 can Independence dav. the Villistas en seir reliance and insistance upon the less to Sa ville. L I ) Gen. Gaede. tered the town In two columns One application of business methods to pub- , commander in chief of the German made straight for the penitentiarv He affairs. He came of a long line of . troops In Alsace. Is dead. The general where Jose Inez Salazar. the amnestied merchant princes and men of culture. I recently underwent an abdominal oper- I rebel on trial for plots against the He was a Republican In politics. atlon. I (Continued on Page 4. Column 4. Mean Compulsory IlLSOi ATTENDS SISTER'S BURIAL South Carolinans Silently Line Streets and Flags Are at Half Mast. Columbia. S. C Sept. 18. President Wilson came here today to bury his only sister, Mrs. Annie E. Howe, of Phila delphia, who died Saturday at Xew Lon don, Conn. He attended simple funeral services held at the church and then walked with relatives to the adjoining cemetery and stood with bowed head and tear stained face during the simple rite. The people of Colombia gathered along the streets and outside the church to see the president. During the ride south this morning, the platform of every station was crowded, but there was no cheering. At several stops flowers were put aboard the train by school children. All flags" in Columbia were at half mast during the funeraL The president planned to remain here until tonight and then leave for Long Branch. X. J where he is due tomorrow afternoon. FLAG AT HALF MAST ON" CAPITOL FOR MRS. HOWE Austin. Tex, Sept 13- The flag on the state house was at half mast today out of respect to the memory of Mrs. Anne E. Howe, sister of president Wil son, whose death occurred at New Lon don, Conn. Invitation From the Sky To Beet Sugar Barbecue An Invitation from the sky was re ceived by EI Paso Monday when great kite was seat up frets the roof of the MlllK -building bearing; banner which reads: "Free Barbecue Las Cruces Wednesday Beet Sugar Day El Paso Is Invited. The kite wan run ud by the men who are boosting the beet sugar day at Las Cruces Wednesday ana is a parx of the advertising campaign for the excursion from here 19,000 STATE PENSION WARRANTS MAILED OUT Austin. Texas. Sept 18. The con troller's department has completed the task of mailing out approximately 19. G0 Confederate pension warrants to that number of pensioners for the quarter Due to a new system put I ii,h...rn.inn nmni. ih.r.iuv j been comparatively few which were not mailed because of Insufficient address or for other causes. In the past as many as 500 warrants remained unde livered each quarter, while for the last quarter this number has decreased to 73. The average number of deaths each quarter among the pensioners is placed at 250 bv controler Terrell. These deaths hate not thus far materially dcreased the number of pensioners, as their widows usually make application for the pensions. ITALIANS LAUNCH VIOLENT ATTACKS UPON AUSTRIANS Amsterdam. Holland. Sept IS A telegram printed bv the Cologne Ga zette today says the Italian attacks against the Austro-Hungarian pos' Uons near Gorizia on the plateau of Koman which hav e been proceeding for two days, are not to be compared witn I,J'.Ivla,lJr up.to.fhi: P,'se.nt.b.',, aaSK with the great fighting in the west .III U.L11D I1VV, C rr U1.MJU W . UL L(U ... 1.....1.. WAn. .. W1.....da. . .1.A or the last Russian offensive. The correspondent says the Italians are subjecting the short front be tween W'ippach and the sea to con tinuous assaults b thick infantry masses. TRAl IIIT MOTOR CVH: WOMB'S VD nilUKR KILLED Erie. Pa.. Sept 18 Four persons were killed at North Springfield. IS miles west of here, todav -n the automobile in which the wcrt riding was struck by a Ww Tocft Central train. The dead are Mrs Percr Seager. Mrs. K. Shipman. Miss Shipman. and a negro chauffeur, all f Pittsburg. sv -ii iTiiirrif tiTiiiKR i-v i IM-:w loilli M 1 ni: v VOIDED i New York. Sept 8 -There will be S!T"rt',of Tf01" M'.tch.el to J?"1 th' . present s.reet car strike in the mean- um'- are successful. TllACT.T Wire TO . ...... . -. .....- EI. tNO VD TIIK-x LOVT HER, Santa Fe. N. M , Sept 18 Robert R. f Lury, of Socorro, has filed suit for dt- I vorce in the district court for Santa Fe county, against his wife. Margaret h?u7a yHeLCatofthattha.:eM.race,dU,hVer,'tfo El Paso, but there lost track of her f IRON vrillKB END I the Industrial Workers of the World e Industrial Workers of the World organization, striking Iron ore miners SL stViv"'9? L tK. XrSH". d.!.r - ----- --" -- .-...... -.. . 111 Bli s s 1 If ! BB.T SsBI Wr QB IBS n vV V ni ttj r J ; H I! I S I Si "ni. .L Border Arrivals Say Villa Discussed Purposes In Making the Attack. DEMONSTRATION FOR THE ENVOYS 250 Villislas Killed, Many Captured; Salazar Is Reported Killed. UXDAUNTED by his repulse Satur day at Chihuahua City, Francisco Villa has promised another attack on the Chihuahua capital "when he gets ready." Such was the report brought to El Paso Monday by arrivals from Chi huahua Citv, oa a train reaching the border early in the day. He was quoted by one man, a foreigner both to the United States and Mexico, that he was merely making a demonstration to the American-Mexican mnftf.a t v.- t don, Conn of the ease with which the Carraneista stronghold could be pene trated, but realized his forces were in sufficient at present to garrison the city even u he were able to take it. "Villa did all he promised to do," said another informant. "He said he never intended to stay in Chihuahua, but mere ly wished to Uberate the political pris ones and draw the disaffected Carrancis tas to him. He sent a force of 1300 vaH "$ tke at?' aad waited outside with about 590 men. The penitentiarv was captured without a struggle, it was said. Gen. Trevino's home was damaged by his own artillery fire," according to thenarratoj- ViUa is said to have been receiving re inforcements from Durango while the Constitutionalists are also getting men from the sooth About 30 VlUIstas Killed. Additional details of the attack CI Villa with upward of 1000 mm and his repulse after six hours fighting, were received today Villista casualties are placed at about :w dead and prisoners taken at S9. The prisoners were exe cuted Sunday No definite figures of casualties among de facto government troops have been given. It is admitted. however, that Gen. Jacinto B. Trevmo. commander of the division of the north east was slightly wounded while di recting artillery fire to dislodge Vmis tas from government buildings they had seized. Villa was last reported In fflight northwest from Chihuahua City Guerrero is Also Attacked. In addition to the attack an Chlhna- hua City, a small band of Vllllstas made a maaigo aay attack upon Guerrero, 80 miles west Of rklhnahm. nlmnmt simultaneously with the attack upon the state capital, according to reports here. The garrison, however, repulsed the rAhl nnd fAMl hn.1. .....- 1 . .. - .. - ! "" w -m T IK, (in.. A. .. ....v... - ...W , I . i railroad and toward the foothills of 'the continental divide This Info,- tion was received in EI Paso today In a private message, but no reports had been received at the Juarez coman dancla. Recent reports have said that Amer ican cavalrt patrols bad been sent south from El Valle the southernmost Americai base, to N'amlqulpa and were, operating in search of bandits between that town and Guerrero. Salazar Is Killed. The consular dispatches added that Jose Ines Salazar. one of t e most no torious of the Mexican leaders who have operated along the American frontier in Mexico s five years of civil strife was killed following his libera tion from the pen.l-s-tlary when the villistas took that bu!'tng. S-il-zar contrary to earlier rearts luvnMin . to Mr Garcia, was killed flghtlns with AonTlhUen.nrl0 3aii Jn Beltran commanded the bandits in the attack. accordinB to the message. while Villa, himself, remained outside me cny .HmiTlm-i rrv ii c. .. f t-. gt,,. .,, ., ,,., c V4 capital was quiet Sun- dy night following Francisco Villa's attack on the city Saturday " cleared of the dd and order was being restored SO"" f "' '""d"8 "'red from " iU,stas are constantly being taken prisoner and brought into the city "- - """ Storm. .it i ociock saiuroay nornlnr rtnr. Education