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THE TEATHER mTTIL T SSOULIAN NGETfEA=j= Toray.-x.aIn or sIow. kuI. LiuJsom. L ,,AP E IV E . V. xTorhorro.TNFai-. 'A 9,a e.P R ..R E i 0r,L.. XXVII.. SO. .IIS.OI IA, JTOiT.i , A, I PI&Y oifsrsc:, MN A ,11 ) 11;.ll 19, 1010. PRICI FIVE CENTB .:; BOOSEJELT IN WASUINGTON BEFORE GEOGRAPHICAL MEN ,~ · . rA .... SAYS HE, "EVERY DOG HAS HIS DAY, BUT THE NIGHTS BE LONG TO THE CATS." NP POLITIAL COMMENT Former President Returns to the Na tional Capital for the First Time Since His Official Departure From the White House-Is Warmly Greet ed and Gives Talk to the Press Club. Washington, Nov. 18.-Colonel Theo dore lioosevelt returned to the nation al capital for the first time since his official departure from the White ItHouse in Mlarch, 1909. In the role of slirislnan and scientist, he came to relate before the National Geographic society tonight his adventures in the African jungle. Much interest was manifested as to whqther he would make any reference to the,' recent po litical upheaval, or politics in general, but 'beyond the remark that "every dog has his day, but the nights belong to the cats," which he made in jest before the National Press club, where he was informally received this after noon, the colonel avoided politics. From the moment of his arrival at 4:20 o'clock this afternoon, however, when he was met at the station'by his dadghter, Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, and delegations from the National Geographic society and the National h Press club the colonel kept up. a rapid fire of superlatives that evinced the hearty enjoyment he felt at returning to scenes that recalled the. strenuous days of executive action. At .the Na tional Press club there was a great gathering of newspaper men and their friends. Welcomed by Many. r Many of those who welcomed the r former president were present in March, 1909, when he bade farewell to the correspopdents and writers with I whom he had been associated during 1 the seven years of his administration. '"My friends." he began, "I am very deeply touched by your kind way of t greeting me, and I do hope you under- I stand how genuinely I feel it. I do not want to make comments." ' Mr. Roosevelt joined in the laugh 1 that followed and added: "I was think- I ing of one, however, that would he sufficiently inclusive. I wish to sayi that every dog has his day, but the I nights belong to the cats." The colonel closed with a bit of hutmor that occasioned laughter,. when he said: "And now I am going to have a chance to shake hands with every .lessed one who does not think his cha'racter will be hurt thereby." in his lecture at Convention hall to night he confined his remarks entirely to a discussion of incidents of his African trip and evoked mingled laughter and applause as he told of the habits of the natives, the encoun- I terne with wild beasts and the re markable collection " of specimens which, he declared, he was glad the , expedition was able to obtain. J*IASKELL CASES DISMISSED. Chickasha, Okl.,. Nov. 18.-All cases against Governor C. N. Haskell were nolle prossed here In the fed era. court late today. 'his action ends the legal fight against Haskell and others in connection with the Mupkogee land cases which has been waged in the federal courts for sev er.l years. The case.a dismissed wore the United States against C. N, Haskell, C. W. Turper, Walter Eaton and Frederick Seveir. The cases recently came to trial befre ! pdlwr lrshall p 0t Utlh district faldrl cat, sit*_ at M; Alester. ,Juc M sha slaed a Sdlemurrer tphs1 t of limitations / barred , pr tt~i Fea4r4 a'attorneys then gdvTied thdk the g4aee tb dig missed anm. formal aegtfon clearing the docket was ordered by,.Ji.dge Camphell today. ;.NO NSW TYPHOID. Anil s, l: Nayv: ,-It was stated at tlh i aval acaeespy today that no new E0off, typhelt fever had de velop ;,,a4 that ..te was but one midshlpman on -the suspected list. HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS . OFFERED SENATOR FOR VOTE ______________________ 11 New York, _Nov. 18.-One hundred thousand dollars to vote against the anti-race track betting bills in 1908 was offered t. .t:e(t Senator Eugene M. Travis of g~Moklyni so- he swore on the stand today. testifying befqre the legislative committee. A mysterious Ilttl ;m k wosn e s amQ he. does zqt re callnmade Sthe afteN in the lobby .o the s.ap#t, be sid. in behalf of frmner Senatqr Fransi J. Gardner. Gardner, he. adled. confirmed It in g subesequent te~baphl~ pgnversation. Gardner is now under indictment, charged With with a smaller amount, to. nfluende Alto G. 4l)'F o Houw a ossges iran but. tN a Mt .z ator. Trmis .and it was R1WtW) MEXICAN INSANE PERHAPS San Antonlo, Texas, Nov. 18. Mexican Consul Villisana returned to Eagle Pass late last night from Rock Springs, where he was sent by the Mexican authorities to In vestigate the killing of Antonio Rodriguez. The consul stated that he had reached the conclusion that Rod riguez was either Insane or, under an assuined name, was a fugitive from justiee. Nothing was known of the man except that he said le came from Las Vacas, a smallt own on the Mexican side, opposite Del Rio. No one in Rock Springs had ever seen him before. Consuil Villisana said he found the most perfect friendship and good-feeling existing between the Americans and their Mexican em ployas at Rock Springs. 0ISGRACEFUL SCENE IN ENLAND BY WOMEN MILITANT SUFFRAGETTES IN ENGLAND STORM THE PAR LIAMENT BUILDINGS. London, Nov. 1.--The militant suf fragettes reopened hostilities against the government again today, and, marching 1,000 strong on the parlia me'.t buildings, gave the police a lively fight. The women, many of whom were' placed under arrest, were led by Mrs. Emiline Pankhurst. The suffragettes had determined if poss}ble to force the police cordon about the house of conm mones and, reaching Premier Asquith, to insist on tlute introduction of a woman's suffrage bill. The police, how ever, were too strongly entrenched, and the women, who tried every means in 3 o'clock 21 women and three men were thrown back. Repeatedly they retired breathless and disheveled, only to have their places on the fighting line taken by reserves. The police were ordered to make as few arrests as possible, but Ly 3 o'clock 21 women and 3 men were In police cells. A large contingent of American bluejackets from the visit ing fleet were amused spectators of the struggle and, lustily cheering the combatants, incited them to fresh ef forts. Wholesale Arrests. The fight continued, and the police were compelled to make wholesale ar rests. Before the house of commons had ad journed over a hundred suffragettes and their supporters had been jailed. After the women had exhausted themselves the arrests were made with monotonous regularity. The women wpre a sorrowful spectacle when the battle was over. The dressqs of many were torn. Hats, handbags and bits of feminine apparel and torn banners lit tered the ground. It appears that Mr. Asquith had a narrow escape from the irate deputa tion which was admitted to the lobby. Mrs. Pankhurst and two otl:h.s vwore conversing with his secretary when the premier ppssed through the room. The 'women failed to recognize the minister, who, at sight of the suffragettes, im mediately sought safety in the house Sof commons. This eyeping all of the 116 suffra gettes, including Grace Johnson of Buffalo, N. Y., were released on ball. They Yvlll be arraigned in the Bow street police court tomorrow iporning. PASSENGERS RESCUED. Seward, Alaska, Nov. 18.-After hav ing been marooned six days, the stranded ipassengers and' crew of the -wrecked steamship Portland were taken aboard the steamEhip Alameda and brought to Seward today. The Portland is a total loss. I standing the efforts of the race track interests and the alleged use of a fund s which previous testimony has placed at S.O0.000. S Travis' testimony and the committee's e efforts to subpoena James R. Keene s and Harry !ayne Whitney, two mil ponsaires whose hobby is horse racing, Sere .be most interesting developments r of today's hearing, resumed after an . aljourpPlept on, etober 2. =jfQrts to t fin4 Mears.,Kesne and Whitiey have a sn been withoQe t succeas and. Linn h Brimo phair n it' t( e committtee, is I growlng impatienit. Both men have b been· mentoned in previous testimony a ap baving beon prbgent at a cogperente r. at Delnonloo'a Pt *b*eh the alleged 4 c9rrnupt.in itupd: was raised, and the i-~ ,' is; aasipu "is u ttiA t . . LAURA FARNSWORTH SCHENCK IS INDICTED BY GRAND JURYI Inquisitorial Body Has Corri dors of Jail Closed, Even to Newspaper Men, and Only Nurses and a Doctor Testify--Woman Is Accused of Giving Arsenic to Her' Spouse, Who Is Recovering; in a Hospital. Wheeling, W. Va., Nov. 18.-Mrs. Laura Farnsworth Schenk, charged with administering arsenic to her mil lionaire husband, Doh:l O. Schenk, was Indjcted by the grand jury of Ohio county today. Only nurses who have been employed 'by the Schenk family and Dr. Frank L. Hupp-were present to testify. For the first time in the history of the county the corridors of the county building were clared while the grand jury was in session. Newspaper men were not exempt, and threats of imprisonment for contempt of court were made if they ventured within the portals of the buildings. 'The names of the witnesses had not been disclosed and when two strange women, heavily veiled, rode up to the courthouse in an automobile, they were taken at once to the jury room. It subsequently was learned they were nurses from the Haskins hospital. Dr. Haskins is a brother-in-law of Schenk. Before the grand jury was sent out to consider the case attorneys for Mrs. Schenk urged that a continuance be granted because no preliminary hear ing had been held. The court over ruled the motion. Mr. Schenk, who is at the North Wheoling hospital, recov ering from the effects of arsenic .N poisoning, was most anxious to learn the result of the Jury's findings. As UNFAVORABLE IURNI IS TAKN BY TOLSTI GREAT RUSSIAN JOURNALIST IS C IN BAD SHAPE, ALTHOUGH CASE IS NOT HOPELESS. Astapova, Russia, Nov. 18.-After having remained practically unchanged throughout the day, the condition of Count Leo Tolstol took an unfavor able turn late this afternoon. Oxygen was administered to the patient, who fruquently lost consciousness. Great anxiety was expressed by those at the bedside, but hopes have not been abandoned for his ultimate recovery. Dr. Usoff, professor of internal disease at # Moscow university, and Dr. Tchlurovsky, who treated Tolstoi for bronchitis in the Crimea, in 1901, have been summoned- to Astapova. At 7 o'clock this evening Tolstoi's tempera ture was 97.88; pulse, 110, and respira tion, 386. He was consdious, but sleepy and very weak.. Still later in the even ing, after his temperature had been taken, which registered 98.2 degrees, the general feeling of the patient was better. Case Not Hopeless. Dr. Berkenheim says the case is not hopeless, though no means will avail to relieve the overtaxed heart through periods of unconsciousness. No detail of the bedchamber escapes Tolstoi. Today he rebuked Dr. Berkenheim for entering and not greeting him. Again, overhearing a hushed coenn'tation re garding his hiccough, Tolstoi said: "It is not painful." This morning he demanded that someone read to him disconnected sgen tences he bad dictated while ip a semi-delirious state last night. TI0 holy synod Is trying by all avenues t9 approach Tolstol. Today it ordered an aged monk named Joseph, a friend with whom Tolstol conversed at ;the Optina monastery last week, to 'Lme to Astapova. Joseph's health, how ever, did not. permit the journey, and the abbot of Optina, accou.lpnip1d ~ monk, came in his stead. T. ~ty w.re not permitted to enter the ,iyc1h p m. This morning T0lstoPr eldest da(lgh ter Tatina was permitjd to # .$r father for a few minutes.. . : BURNED WIFE TO 'DEATH. Benton Harbor, MIch., Nov. 18.-Eli Smith, 60 years of age, husband of the ~roman who two days ago recedved burns; wheft her clothing caught fire, from which she died, now resdo in a cell in the county Jall, charged with the murder of his wife. f.l.is arrest came after developments Which led Prosecutor Andrews to believe that, in stead of Mrs. Smith being the victim of an accident, she died from Lurns caused by flames whien her own hus band bad started. Smith recently served a 90.day sentence at the county Jail for wife beating, FINAL SESSION. ! Chicago, Nov. 18.-A final session, lihpehpromlses -to lest well into to Xo; W ti{, upt6Itd4 ea on{ght by tie. ra to aýUlIt t. u r4 li the Na Stio al ok n t roffesotnal i rasrehE Leagua, aoti of the mag nýtes, wbo iave been here for the week, departed t9dar. n?,¸ 2- ; I iA John Schenck, a w lthy meat packer of Wheeling, W. V., whom his wife, Laura Farnsworth Schenck, is accused of poisoning. Mr. Schenck married his wife while she was working as a domestic. The couple has two children. he was wheeled about the corridors of. cation with tho prosecuting attorney's the hospital he made freqclent in- office. 1e made no comment when he quiries and had a friend in commtini- larncd of the indictment. wife,~ ~ ~ _ar lro~h~hnk sacue fpioig r ce DEATH OF I01I IYR I REMOVES YTERAN SETTLir OLD-TIMER IN WE. TERN MON TANA SINKS I "O LAST SLEEP-HIS CA EER. Elol Cyr, one, of the veterans of the early days in western Montana, died peacefully yesterday at St. Patrick's hospital, juist at noon. The end came quietly; his long life c'ime to its close and the long sleep without the usual agony of death. Eloi Cyr, miner and rancher, spent the best years of his life In western Montana. Illis simple, straightforward umanner, and his hon est life made him hundreds of friends. There is not one of the older people who does not grieve'. le had, really, no last illness; the call of age came quietly today. ., Elot Cyr was horn at St. Bastil., New Brunswick, in 1833. In 1870 he made the loitg and dangerous trip to Montang to engage in mining on Cedar creek. There he worked for three years; then he made the Wearyj jour ney back to New 13runswicl for his family, returning in a year. Then he settled on a ranch in Grass valley, adjoining the Deschamlps acres. Thls was his home until he retired from active life and turned the ranch over to lia son, John ('yr, in whose hands it now is. For the last 14 years he has mape his home at St. Patrick's hospi tal. He 'as a devoit member of St. Francis Xavier church. Is wife died nine years ago. MIr. SCr is survived by three children, all of whom are prominent residents: Mrs. William C. Murphy, Mrs. Gaspard Deschamps and John Cyr, whose Mis soula residence is at 502 West Spruce street. There the body was taken yesterday afternoon. No definite fuperal arrangements have been made, but the services will p)roybably be held next Monday. It is the request of the children that no flowers he sent. FOUR LOSE LIVES BY DROWNING TUG SEA PRINCE,. OFF ANGEL I ISLAND, RAMMED BY VESSEL SHE WAS TOWING. San Francisco, Nov. 18.-Four men comprising the crew of the seagoing 1 tug Sea Prince were drowned tonight B in the bay off Angel island, when the British steamer Oreystoke Castle Srammed and sank the tug. Captain IL. L. Langren, master of thl. tug, was the only man on tse Sea Prince, who was saved. The- dad: 4UGU.ST EICHI~ engineer. E,'NRY SCH.MIDT, fireman. AUGUST HAAS, cook. ED LANGHIEN, deck hand. The Sea Prince had a line on the - Greystoke C4gsle ald was towing the I steamer. The latter `uddenly gained a strong headway alqd before the tug e copld get out .of the way the steamer Almost cut the Sea Prince in two. AVIATORS CAUTIOUS IN YESTERDAY'S FLIGHTS LITTLE FANCY ,WORK MARKS AEROPLANE EXHIBITIONS AFTER THE ACCIDENT. Denver. Nov. 18.-A lone aviator, soaring eaglowise against the dazrHlng background of snowclad Rocky moud tains today, grimly reminded 10,000 spectators at Overland park of yester day's reckless rivalry which culmi nated in the tragic death of Ralph Johnstone, h.lder of the world's alti tude record. Whilo Walter' Brookins of the WVright team was speeding toward Kansas City, guarding the body of the man whi, in llrook'ins' words, "flew as he pleased," Arch .noxsey, whose feats Johnstone sought ever to excel, gave the two flights called for in his contract and threw in another one to please the management and the crowd. "Jlud" Mars arrived last night with his Curtiss biplane, but could not get his machine in order in time to fly today. He probatbly will fly tomorrow. Fast Flying. What Hoxsey failed to do in fancy work today he made up in speed. 15ls ing at 3:31 p. m. he circled to a height of about z,0ud feet, taking nine min utes to do It, and then headed north west toward the foothills. The great wings of the biplane dwindled in the air until only the keen-eyed could see the machine at all before Hoxsey started back. IHe reached the field again at 4 o'clock, and it was learned, from his description of a lake over which he passed, that he had covered an estimated distance of 20 miles in 20 minutes. IHoxsey estimated his great est altitude at 3,500 feet from the ground, or 8,700 feet above sea level. A 14-minute flight as the beginning of today%: program was without inci dent, but in his final flight Hoxsey warmed up and rose, and dipped and skidded on the turns, until the crowd voiced the seemingly unanimous desire that he would come down. Even this flight, however, was tame in compari son with the most cautious flights of yesterday. Hoxsey and Mars will have the field to themselves tomorrow. It is expect ed that Brookins will be back in time to fly Monday, when the meet is sched uled '. entl. Mars is under contract to flh 'mnday. LIFE SAVED BY POOR SHOOTING. Kalispell. Nov. 18.-(Special.)-Word was brought down from the Stillwater lake region yesterday that a man had been shot iq the arm while hunting. Only the poor marksmanship of one of his companions, who had mistaken the victim for a deer, served to save him from a fatal wound. Up to date, this is tho only accident of the kind that hlis taLken Ilace about Here. MORE ARRESTS MADE. Tampa, Fla., Nov. 18.-Eight addi tional arrests were made today of armed men shadowing the aell where leaders of the striking clgarmakers are confined. In possession of t4p arfted men was found.a list of iupt*a Of i|erp , indleating th at 300 suP4t beeWi tailed tO t ,t t tt1 II te teie h;rrbrj j. Ibir : HUNDRED PEOPLE KILLED SiN RIOTS IN MEXICAN CITY SMALLPOX AMONG INDIANS Cheyenlne, Wyni.. Nov. 1S.---Small pox, which was thought to he itn der control ot l the W\ind river, or Shiosioie rieservatlion, has 'broiken uit again with renewed violence, ac.ording toi itspatches received here todisy>. Ninety-three cisesare reported, and it is not iknown how uIlny have not yet been detected. Starting fronit in unnanied Indian villatge near Arapthooue, the epidemnic lihas run iip the Little Wind river valley and ik reported splireading along the strenam's many affluents. A rigid ituarantine against the res ervation is repIrtedl maintained by Ltttnder, iludson, Stephen and other toitins. (Toverniimili aid has been sought. STATE AND NATION SiOLOD ACT IOGETHER SECRETARY NAGEL STATES HIS BELIEF IN FEbERAL AND STATE CO-OPERATION. Kansas City, Nov. 18.--Charles Nagel, secretary of commerce and labor, wai the principal speaker at the sixteenth annual John Jay dinner given by the Commercial club here tonight. "For eign Commertce" was his subject. About 700 guests were present. Other speadcers were John M. Moss of Mil watikee, who spoke on "Business Ethics," and Governor John F. Shaf roth of Colorado, whose subject was "The West." Governor J. Y. Sanders of Louisiana sent his regrets. Active an(t rational co-operatlon be tween national and state authorities is absolutely essential to a successful solution of the conmmon problems with which they both are confronted. This was the opinion expressed tonight by Secretary Nagel. lHe declared himself a believer in both state and national authorities, saying that he read the constitution to mean that integrity of both -was guaranteed. "The old restrictions upon federal authority and federal appropriations have been swept away," he said. "Gen erally in all directions the old barrier has broken down, and it is admitted in practice, if not on the platform, that national authority is absolutely essen tial to meet problems as they now presd6t themselves. So far we have practically no commercial corporations that base their authority on anything but state authority. The Inconvenience of that system, even in our Interstate commerce, has been sufficienty demon strated. I am persuaded that the can fllcts, the inconsistencies and the em Oarrassments with respect to interstate commerce alone are enough to call for the organization of corporations under federal charters." The secretary declared there is pressing necessity for the development of foreign commerce, and that we are proceeding, as it were, oblivious to it. Referring briefly to the past campaign, he said he deplored the fact "that so much of the time and energy of those who participated were wasted upon questions of personal oontroversy, upon the heralding of extravagant ideas that can accomplish little beyond retarding actual progress and upon mere party controversy when we have questions of such gravity immediately confronting us that so far have scarcely been given serious public consideration." Mr. Moss said, in part: "The day is not far distant when industrialism will dedicate not only its money, but its business genius to society; when it will have its honor roll of men who will gladly consecrate their business talent to the promotion of ethical ideals and who, in the hour of moral stress and cunfusion, will utter the il luminating wofd and organize ethical endeavor within the very grime and sweat of business itself." The average merchant, he explained in defending the business man, Is hon est, as is duenmoustrated by the credit business of the day. ENGLISH HOUSE OF LORDS IS VERY MUCH UNSETTLED London, Nov. 18.-Today's brief ses sions of the two houses of parliament are likely to prove the turning point in the history of the lords, as now con stituted. The older conservatives show anxious concern and are lamenting the disappearance of the hereditary prin ciples as the basis of the upper cham ber. Whatever may result, a second ap peal to the nation arising from the struggle between the two houses seems certain, and henceforth elective and le lective bases will enter into the con stitution of the house of lords, Titerest in the situation bas, been transferred tq the COsatltuenLes. 'The ANTI-RE-ELECTIONISTS BREAK FORTH IN ACTS OF VIOLENCE AND DISORDER. KILL CHIEF OF PO11 Several Policemen, Headed by Their Leader, Start to Break Up a Politi cal Meeting-Door to Hall is Opened and Woman Shoots the Chief Bomb Is Thrown and Kills Many. Mexico City, Nov. It.-One lhundred persons, including the chief of police, were killed in riots at Puebla today, according to statements of passengers arriving here tonight. The stories told are that the trouble began this morn ing when several policemen, headed by the chief, attempted to break up a meeting of anti-re-eleotionists being held In a large hall. As Chief of Po lice Miguel Cabrer and his men ad vanced toward the building, a door was opened by a woman, who shot the chief. A fight then began between the po-. lice and the occupants. A bomb was thrown from one of the windows in the midst of the policemen and rurales, the latter having been catlld to assist the officers. The bomb ex-. ploded, killing man. The Pother cas ualties occurred in the course of fight ing which took place 'in the stret: So far as known, there were no Amer clans killed. Continuous Rioting, The passengers further asserted that from' midnight uitl' they Itft in the afternoon there was continiops , rioting. Fears were entertained that the disorders were by no means at an end. From other sources in Mexico City tonight it was learned the Seventeenth battalion left hero late . today .tor Puebla by special train .and that. other trains were in readinead to transport additional tioops to the scene If necessary. It was otflctily stited here that 18 men had beet killed In Peubla. Details of the anti-DlPiss co.gýpi ra. alleged to have beep' promoted by, Francisco I. Madero, now a fu ltkoe from Mexicoq and which has respitj i within the last two days ,n Lthe arreisl t. of' several co-conipirators in thist a.ey and elsewhere, came to Itlt to.t.ylii dicating that next pI~ e the date fixed for .a genrr&tlV' i ifn~g. 'hee conspirators appeared to have extelid-' ed their operations tto . ibo staoet. Vedr Crus, Hidalgo, Coahunla, tSan Ltlis Potosl, Ppepla, -aiaUco Neuvb'o Leon, Guanajuato, Yucutal. and Za tacetas.. To the apthorities in these disti)cts orders ihave been dent to put dowp any dlsturbances. Madero Ciroula e. Circulars which appear to have beep sent out by Madero'or his agents from . San Antonio to persons in this city. outline his campaign and announce M.fdero as constitutional president of M.eAico. Among other staitpmest~ is thi following: "I,, Francisco I. Madero, will p'ace mys~lf at the head of a revd.at i.g party against the government of Mexico. Between the 20th and S9th of Nnvember I shall lead msy folioW erg against the goverinment of Maex ico." Of the men arrested hore for com plicity in the conspiracy, qse, who gaye his name as' Cosio RohOlo, car ried a commission from Madero n#.nc ing him as governor of the state 'of Hidalgo. Plans of the revolutionists' lnolu4.e an uprising which was to have oc curred in the City of Mexico next Sun day afternoon and to lilbrate `th1 thousands of prisoney' in btlem, the: famous city jail, and In the Pi7 tiary. These plans have beeni 'ffe-' tually frustrated by the fe4eral author ities, who have taken steps, it was said, to preserve order, Madero Talks. San Antonio, Nov. 18.-`"A revolu tion in 'Mexico is inevitable," said Francisco I. Madero, anti-re-electton 1st candidate for president of Mexico, now in exile in San Antonio, when seen tonight regarding the news from Mexico. "It may not break loose today, to (Continued on Page Ten.) belief tonight Is that the house of lords will not attempt to pass the second reading the veto bill on the conditions imposed by Premh r Asquith. Mr. Asquith \ ill oi.cn the liberal campaign with a speech at the WW tional Liberal club tomorrow, and in It is extieted to develop the govern ment's policy at length. All the other leaders are booked for speeches W quicle succession. Much criticism $1a a plallt I heard on the con the government has at sn tIconvyeusalemt however, profess the Ip the outgomae,