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GOVERNMENT IS 1 LOOKING AFTER I THE REFUGEES Transport Buford Ordered to W est ( Joasl Of Mexico to Take on Board Americans e Lving Mexico. GREAT BRITAIN IS SENDING WARSHIP R. . Glendinning, Formerly of Salt Lake and Manager of Sinaloa Land Company, Coming North. WASHINGTON, April 86, The army transport Buford will leave San Franci Sunday for 1 1)0 ivohI roast of Mex ico to pick up ny American refu gees who nay wish to leave, the coun try. The Buford will viall Topqloban I . Altata, tfaaatlah, In tie state 61 Sinaloa; Baa Bias, Topic, MautaaiBo in Collma and Acapaieo In Ouarroro. The vessel i-- seal at the raquesl i the state department aftof urgent re quests ftroni man; Americana stranded in the statoa boraoriac the Pacific. Communication Cut. Bines the rebels began to make head- wav in their operations along the I'n eidc coaal coninianication has been put witii uiany interior town where Ameri cana reside Tin- has left the state departoienl witbduj Information ae to their safety, and thia in aba Baca of report- oi' v:iii1on at. of handle an-' organized rebels. Constant, appeals cams to the Mate department tn n-v method of ascertain ing Hie welfare of these people, but the officials tried other means lo ward off the ace entity of sanding a United States rosea to the const. Situation Worse Today'- reports declare the situation throughout Mexico as generally bocom ing ardrae. Marauders are causing much uneasiness by their activity. The transport Crook first was selected for the relief expedition, but official lav-r decided that vessel had insufficient accommodation for Americana arho might wish to leave Mexico, The Buford. therefore, was designated. While the Buford is a government vessel, stress is laid on the tad that there "ill ha no soldiers a hoard and the only persons bearing United States commissions will he the doctors and some members of the hos i "t:ti corps !ate department advices indicate there are perhaps oi". Americans likely lo vail thsmaelyea of this opportunity i o leave Mexico. About 200 are at Los Moehis and vicinity and probably 300 re scattared down the coast as far as I i :.- :.. TRANSPORT BEING COALED IN HASTE v- International NoWa Service. SAN KRANC18C0, pril 36. A few nutos after the receipt of orders "' ashingtoii directing that the spori Buford) he dispatched imme iliatcly to Mexico to bring refugees to thij port, the reesel had shifted out the barbDr and the work of 'lis KargJ i coal into her bunkers begun This work will lie Completed tomor roar ni'tirnoon. alter which the Buford will no into dr dork at Hunter's Point to bt deansdL Tuesday has In i ii fixed :.- tin- probable sailing iate. C lonel .Mm T. Knight, who. in the absence ol Ma jor Young depot quarter master. i in charge, declares he had no information to give out regarding a relief expedition. Captain Arthur Cranston of the .-.amc department. sni, that there whh no intention to alter the plan of sanding the ' rook to Alaska. That the Oook may be used Immediately, however, was shown when the signal corps pro ceeded to put the wireless apparatus of the vessel into commission. The rook left Mare Island tonight for the Hunter's F'oint dry doeko, where rush repairs were immediately begun. The (rook has been out of commission for loms time, hut enn be made ready for sea at short noti'-e. FORMER UTAH MAN IS AMONG REFUGEES MAZATI.AV, April 20. via F.I Paso. Tex . April g& This city, the onlv one in the state of Sinaloa ii'eld bv the fed eral, is now tlie rendezvous for Am.ri MB r.- tY gee. Of these there are about 150 "ho have coma from as far north a the Cullaaan valley. Two hundred Mexican families of "the hotter class' also nre here from Coliacao. In addi tion one large mercantile establish ment of Cullaoan moved its stock bod ily to this rity and opened up for husi T,e groat fear of the Americans' and other foreigners who fled to this rity fmm Culiaeaa was the constantly I r. :,.nL- anti-Americai feeling UInnn'g I the lawless rebels. Tho latter made -ar.-Hv pretense of being animated! bv lefty sentiments of patriotism " as 1 do the rebels of Chihuahua. Thev have no candidate for president nor are thev -nterested in the "fulfillment of eonatitutional guarantee.' 1 the plan of Han Luis l'otosi, or other slogans Of the revolt They are out for loo, frt. last and nil the time. Thev have n.. -Iire to j..in fro7e0 i p.iuthern "In !i;:iliua while bootv is to be had in 'Mfialoa. Despite the faaeJcd security hero D 1 of the foreignoSB desire to leave a I v.i!! do s.. .it the tirst opportunity. Twenty -Oae Americans and one Bag-l'-h iimii airi.e l veterdav bv the scbooaer Carmen, They embarked at AHatS on the 17th. which dav the rob . !- entered Cnliacan. Among them were I., f). Tnvjr.r. w lio for eight vears was editor of the chihuahua (Mexico) En ter priao, ard Mrs. Taylor, and L E. Thompson and V. C. Hunt. repreen tatives of large Bos Angeles interesti). Hood's Sarsaparilla L.eads all ether medicines ir the cure of all spring ailments humors, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, paleness and nervousness. Take it Qel !t today In usual liquid form or tab! ts .-ailed Sarsatabs. 100 Dosea SI Thev left behind them fifty more Americans at Caliaaan, Navolato and Yerbavito, among UthOffl were R. W. Gloadinaing, assiatant general man ager of the Sinaloa Band company, and sterling Bine, superintendent or the big Rhoades jocnr factory. 'heu the Carman left they were waiting for another boar to remove them to a plaCO Of safety. The great majority of the people of j Sinaloa are " pacJfic.OS,' ' hut the ban f ditti have thinngs their own way ex , cept in liazatlan, nm! chaos OXtstB every w here. P. J. Hngenbarth and W. s. McCor- j Aibs 1 1 this ity ar, Interested ihrough! another company in the sinaloa Band company, although tbav have po direct iirtorest tn the Shtkloa Corporation. Parr of the holdings of the Sin.iloa eompanv were I'ornierB- owned by the Wood ttagenbarth Cattle eompanv. of which the late J- D. Wood and Prank J. Bagenbafth were the principal owners. R W. Qlandinning, aho la mentioned in the dispatch, is the son ; of the late Mayor Glenaitjnino, of thisj citv, an.l was first sent to Mexico by i the Wood'Hogenbarth interests. GREAT BRITAIN TO SENT) WAR VESSEL IfJEXIOO 'MTV. April 2tV A I'.iliish war veaael la on the wav to Mexico's aeat coast to afford refuge aub-jei-ty of ;r-ui Britain, This Information waa aecurad fnm an unauthoritative aedirce today. No In formation could be had at the British legation but the minister has iir-oi .-ni-vlsed ii is Said, that another warship w( i i-.e ft.-nt to the suif ooaal for a like purpose In both cariM the notion Is the re.ult of an Understanding between Buropean powers with ;i nrobaollity Ihnt other na tions having Intereats In Mexico In con siderable amount will follow suit. persons arriving here from the isthmus or Tehuantepa today brought Informa tion of various bands of inaurrectos whose depredations along th. line of the Pan-American raJlwa) have put that line practically mil of commission. Pcd aral troops are m control of the larger towns but their efforti to rebuild bridges and repair tho railway are balked hy rebels who undo the work. Ten day a asra at Union Hidalgo, one of t1i principal towns on the Pan-Amerit;an railway, troop train was fired upon iiv rebels. The federals were forced to retire and lost one Officer killed. State Volunteers are rendering valuable service in CO-onsratlon with the federals FIERCE BATTLE IS RAGING AT TEPIC CULIACAN, Slnaola, April m via SI Paso Texas. April 26. The fiercest bat tle of the revolution on the west coast is now raffing- a I Tepic, where 2000 reb els, Styling themselves Zapatistas, are engaged tn a determined effort to talM the town. There was hcavv loss of life whep the big r pl cathedral, crowded with refu gees, v;is razed The stnte bouse was torn down and the residences of a num ber of the wealthiest cltlaens were looted and torn down. The battle began at 10 o'clock vemcr day m.rnin and still was in progress at fi o'clock this morning. Some of i he heaviest flffhtlni; occurred In Mexico street near the Bo a de Ora. where irj a 1 . i-C 1 1 : j l - - (!.. ,,.ci:lcnl lo- -.hup slinperv With blood. B ils who took this place on the seventeenth stll are in posaesalon and an numerously, if not wep led. There s twenty chiefs, hut Vega la su-p'.en-.c. Thev have made a thorough job of looting stores and warehouses and now are attacking, private residences Only two Americans are here There have been no trains on the Southern Pacific for eleven ,ias and although officials of ari doing all in their power to rescue persons p, danger, many of them are suffering for food, ordinarily brought by rail, and In some places the lack of water is felt severely TIFT CHEERED JS HE STIES BACK HARD (Continued from Page One.) an American '-iiizrn and a r.m of the American government that hBS shown It self the finest and bent and most battO !!! 1 iii ihc world." Taking Lip the charge thai he wan not B progressive, Mr. Taft aald he did not think a progressive, could be judged by hl '..d:s ..v ,-, appre.-latb.n of j.oetrv 1 think what la progreesiveneas is determined by what is done and not by what Is aid," cried the president. In replv t.o Roosevelt's accusation that th president bad gone into the White house a progressive." but became re nary b as-sonat ion with former .-rif,aKer . r.nnon. rornier Senator Ald rlch. and others. Mr. Taft explained that it waa at Mi Booaevelt'a suggestion that he consulted these men. "Of all the men in the world wfco ad vocate practical work In politic Thao Etoosevelt U a notable example. Read his works and see how he defends himself for his association with 'hoFses' because he said they were the men who do things." I A Record of Success I'll is company has han dled hundreds of thniT s;inds of dollars in safo First Mortgage Real Estate ittTestmenta for all cUttaet of investors and qoI one lollar has ever been lost. Conservative investors appreciate the service we render and the tmequivOcaJ imarantee whi'-h stands hack nf our 6 per cent Secured Certif icates. Ask for descrip tive hook let. SALT LAKE SECURITY & TRUST COMPANY, 32 Main. BODY OF ASTOR ! IS RECOVERED FROM THE DEEP Name of fsador Straus Also I Found in the List Sent to White Star OflfiCfi From the Cable Ship. j NEW V 1 1 (-; K . April f). The bodies of ''olonel John .1. Astor and aador Straus, tlie millionaire merchant of this city, who lost their lives in the Titanic disaster, have beer: recovered and ntv on board the : eablaship Itaekay-Bannett. News of the recovery of the bodies was con tained in a diapatefa to the White star Line company today. The wireless 'li -patch, which came to the cornpar.- from the cable ship Mnrka -Bennett, ijives the additional ' identifications of forty--nine of the hitherto unknown recovered dead. one the others the body of Colonel John d. Astor and Isador Straus have been embalmed. Of the 206 dead on board rhe Mackav -Bennett the names of ninety. one have been sent ashore by wireless. The dispatch, which enme through the steamer Caledonia and the t ape Race station, reads: "Ismay, care Wflife Star line, NOW 'ork. Purther natues: "William Ale. I'. I "utton , .1. Stone. Philip j. Stokes, Bdwifl H. Petty. Wil liam Daehwood, W. Sanlon, Thomas Anderson, A Laurence. ,t. Adams, A. Boothy Ragoszy, Abel J. Btitterworth, A. Robins, Charles! Louch, Olson E. Penny. Charles Chapman. Albert S irz. Aehille Wailons. Carl Asphvnde, .1. F Johnson, J. Allen. V. Y. Anderson. H. P. S'odges, O. Talbot. .1 M. Robinson, J. C. Hell. J W. Gill. Eric Joasen, A. Lilly. B. T. Barker, 0, P. Bailey, 0. B, Woody. T Hewett, P. Connors. "All following this have been em balmed ; "C. C. Jones, Isador Straus, Reg Butler. H. H Harrison, T. W. Xewell, John J. Astor, Milton C. Bong, W. C. Dulles, H. J. Allison. George Graham, Jacob Birnbauni. Austin Partner, F. F. White, Tyrol W. Cavendish and Hourv K. Villnor. " William Dobbyns, secretary fo Colo nel Astor, said he had been advised by the White Star line of the recovery of Colonel Astor 's body. Mr. Dobbyns said Captain Roberts, commander" of Colonel stor's steam yacht Nona, was in Halifax and would look out for the body. Hays Added to List. HALIFAX, April 26 The body of C. M. Hays, president of the Grand Trunk railway, has been added to the list of identified dead picked up nc3r the scene of the Titanic disaster. This announcement was made this morning by A. G. Jones A Co., Halifax agents for the White Star line, who re Caved the news in a wireless message from the cableship Minia. Buried at Sea. By International News Service PHJLAJDfilLPHIA, April SO -N'pwb was received here tOnlght that tho body of George D widener. the Philadelphia financier, which waa recovered by the caMe ship sfackay-Bennett from the Ti tanic disaster, has been buried at sea. It was found Impossible to preserve the DOdy for burial here. DAUGHTER OF ASTOR TO ATTEND FUNERAL By Int ernatlonal News Service NEW YORK. April B6. The body of the late Colonel John Jacob Astor. which was today recovered from the sea near the apot where he lost his life by the foundering of the Titanic, will not be burled In New York In fact, the re mains will probably not be brought to Now York city at all. The International News Service -v;is also reliably Informed Mint Mrs. A.va Willing Astor. the divorced wire of the lap- Colonel Astor. is nearlnp New York On board the Kals. r WilhHm dnr Gross-.- with their yount; daughter, Miss Maii el Astor. The latter will be permitted to attend the funeral services for her fa ther. Mrs. Ava Willing Astor Is not ex pected to do so The funeral plans are not to he made public for the pres ent The International News Service was asked to state that, the will of Mr. stor has apt bean opened or read it was also stated that the matter of this Instru ment for probate will not be taken until after the funeral is over . of course, uncertain whether Mrs Ava Willing Astor, as the mother of Vin cent, will le appointed his guardian. Provided that the matter Is not disposed of in the will, there are those ci,-,,,. ,, Hi late colonel who win reoonunend such a policy At most such guardianship win he brief, u the young man la i..ss than a year under legal age. Mr Madelene Force Astor In still weak The younur widow ha., only been visited by members of the Fore- fam ily oner and by Vincent As tor since she returned to her Fifth avenue home. " Rate War Goes On. SPOKANE, Wash.. April II At a con ference held by H. M Stevens, attorney for the Spokane fhlppers. Perc Powell conference chaJrman; J. c. Woodworth' reprssanttng the carriers, and R. a Min er pf Portland, representing tb Oregon Railway & Navigation compHnv, ropre sent.ime .,f the arrters riatly refused tonight to accept amendments 'made bv the shippers to the proposal of the car riers for h settlement of the rate war which has extended over twenty vears The entire mutter now is just where It started before negotiations were heunn several WanSS ago Heyburn's Suggestion. By Intornatlonal News Service WASHINGTON. April 'Jii.-As u meauU of regulating drinking. Senator Hepburn BUfrjfeKted today that licenses be Issued to the drinkers Instead of to the saloon keeper" The senator mnlc tl: .-uirm-t-tlon while talking on the subject of treating tn connection with the new oxie mm for the District .,f Columbia, i H.. .thought the license scheme would arMjltsl, th treating- habr Orief Causes Suicide. N i:VAKK. . J., ApriJ L'6.-Pear that her sister, who sailed vosterdaT OB the steamship Caltic, bound for Eng land, might mast the fate of the. Ti tanic victims, is believed to have un balanced the mind of Mr. Boatriee Bartrelj and ca.ed her to commit sui eide. She n. found dead lace last niKht iv fri rati its i I Morgue Ship Mackay-Bennett and Its Commander, Captain F. H. Lardner ROOSEVELT ATTACKS TIFT I j Wt (Continued from Page One.) oency. Hut remember 1 am not com P'alnlnt: of these ililngs; I care nothing for Mr. raft's persona attitude toward me. I allude to it onlv In passing and merely because Mr. Taft lays such em phasis on the ma.tter." Takes Up Lorimer Case, Taking up his accusation thai Preel- dent Taft had accepted the support of Senator Lorimer without protest. the colonel cried out "Although Mr. Taft began by being against Mr. Lorimer, I do not know, and l do not !.eiiei- thai he has been againal Mr. Lorimer recently. It is out of the question that Mr. Lorimer. an astule and powerful man. could have been Ignorant of Mr. Taffs attitude If thut ,-ittitude had been one of efrlclent opposition, to him. "Mr. Taft never Intended to raise his voice against Mr. Lorimer In Illinois or before the Illinois primary, He hoped for a victory which could only have been won by the aid of Mr. Lorimer and his hackers. "After the primary election in Illinois, t When Lorimer had been beaten, when there is no more support to be gotten out of him. then, and not until then, does Mr. Taft announce that he was once against him. 'When I went to Illinois I waa warned again anil again not to speak of Lori mer, because there were :i great many people who believe. 1 In hlin and that I would lose their Support If I attacked Lorimer. I answered that I would rath er lose every delegate In Illinois than fail to express my abhorence of Lorimer and of all that Lorimer stood for. Says Taft Acted Badly. "f denounced Lorimer when there was danger In denouncing him. Mr Taft without a word of protest, accepted sup port from the 'mess and mass of cor ruption' which a yeHr and a. quartet pre viously he had denounced I think that Mr. Taft acted badly in accepting Lori mora support In Silence but I think he iias acted much worse in comimr to the front to repudiate Lorimer here in Mas sachusetts, where he thinks such repu diation can help him, after he has thus kept silent about It when the repudia tion might have hurt him. 'Mr. Taft says that I changed front on the reciprocity measure. This is un true. He publishes a letter of mine. In answer to a letter of bis marked 'confi dential ' incidentally, one of the unpar donable sins on the part of any man calling himself a gentlemon is to publisl confidential correspondence without per mission. As tO thll I care nothing, but j I warn Mr. Taft that In discussing ne gotiations with a foreign power it e well not to publish such expressions as that in his letter about making Canada only an adjunct of the United States." Roosevelt went on to say that he sup ported Taft' reciprocity measure until he found It was obnoxious lo the farmers. Charges Baseness. Because I had stated that I would support tho treaty. I said not u word against It until It was dead," he said. "F.ven then T declined spenk on the Subject until In Several states Mr. Taft managers themselves, with what I an only characterise as unpardOnalIe base ness, begaji to circulate the fact of my support of Mr. Taffs proposal as a rea son why I should not be nominated." Plunging IntO the president's allusion the' "the Influence of federal office holders In Hie ChloagO convention this year will be less effective for any one candidate than ever before In the history of the party," Roosevelt exclaimed with hissing hrealh. "This Is not only an un truth, but It is an absurd untruth. Never In thirty years' close observation have I seen sueb scandalous abuse of the patronage as this year Moreover It l out of the question that Mr Taft can rclv be Ignorsnt of what Is hemfr done under him. The outrageous utie'npt ;t debauch the forestry and redaiiui 1 1, ui service i chu testify to the truth of my self because forest officers have for warded me the letters sent them hy Mr. Taft'H managers. "8ome of the abuse cat patronage has been done directly bv Mr. Tfift himself, as In the case of the various North Caro lina nominations Moreover, does Mr. Taft think that the people have forgotten I the letter his srcretHry sent out as to rest.'rlni; t the Insurgepr senators the patronage of which he had deprived them" Condemns Payne Bill. Booaovatt thn took up the president's defense of hit attitude on the Payno A)drkl, tirtff law. j "It ! a moat curious thing that Mr. jTttl should KOtUadl) criticise me for not K assailed him abojt the Payne tariff law. I have eugerly endeavored to praise Mr. Taft whenever I possibly oouui and where possible l have merely kept. SilenOe where I disagreed. As Be now insists thai I should break ihc- si lence about the tariff law. 1 will say that I hOld him culpably responsible for having led Hue people to believe thai he favored s substantial downward revision and thai he would work actively for It. and ior then having sat supinely" by and allowed his new friends under the lead 01 Messrs. AldrfCfa and Cannon to pro duce a bill which made him convict him self of Insincerity when he signed It." Roosevelt mentioned that he had tol erated the support of Senator Aldrlch. Cannon and other standpatters only Wheti i hey were for the "right kind of legislation." sUCh as the railroad bill. Talks of Anti-Trust Law. When Mr. Tafl speaks of the trust law he is guiiiy of deliberate misstate ment of a great and vitui fact " the colonel proceeded. ' Me saya I propose to abolish the anti-trust law I never made any such proposal and this he well knows. When he thus deliberately mis states mv position he ia himself guilt of a crooked deal." He characterized tlie president's state ment oi the Standard Oil and tobacco trust actions as "disingenuous " Up to the time of the rendering of the decree iv ine supreme court" he con tinued "all he did was to carry through the suits i had begun. Then ho and Mr Ickershani took exclusive charge of the matter and they declined to appeal baek to the court from the order of the su preme curt as to the reorganization ol the trust ,,'T-l1a'e niVor ra''e this Issue, but as Mr Taft raises it. I will say ihat i be lieve toe action taken was Incompatible with j the theory that the administration was acting In good faith for. If actlna In good faith, the least that could have been done would have bean to permit the case to come back to the supreme court, which had declared these corpor ations outlaws, ' Excuses Himself Taking up President Taffs strictures upon the third term ambition, the c adverted to his own utterance after the lyni election, and went on: "Now. ns a matter of fact, the danger to this country from the third term can only come from a man's being so in trenched in power by successive terms that It is Impossible to get him out When a man Is out of office, the fact that lie has once been in the office can have, and does have no possible effect in securing him a single delegate. "To test the truth of this Statement, all yon have to do i.s t... look at this very contest. The entire machine of the fed eral office holders, (he entire federal po litical machine, the great majority of the state machines, the enormous majority of nl the bier business concerns whli ii In any way represent or benefit bv special I interest or privilege, the great majority I Of the veteran political leaders, all that portion of the press- Including most of I the metropolitan press, which Is Subsi dised or directly or indirectly eontr died by the interests all of these are agalnsl me BS "lie man. I have nobody with niv except the people. Thinks Chances Slim. "I have not rhe slightest chance of a nomination unless the plain people are able to assert their wishes against the blc Interests, the professional politicians, the subsidised press, the fedora office holders, the bosses of hlsrh and low de gree. . "The leaders on my side arp voung men who are lighting for an Ideal and we have not a part Lie of hope, exec;.'. In otn f.eiief tnnt the plnm people are with us and "we know that unless they art overwhelmingly with us we shah not be victorious. "Therefore It is as clear as day that It Is and can only be a consecutive third term which violates the tradition: and I hud this In view when I said that "the custom regards the .substance mid not the form'. "I wish ro call attention tu the fact that Mr T.ift s method of attacking me on this point is deeply disoredltabla He s.iyj of m.- that 'the promise and tils treatment of It only throw an Informing light on the value that ought now to he attached to any promise of this kind that he may make In the future." Com Ine: from Mr. Taft this statement rep. resents S peculiar Obliquity of moral Judgment. "Mr ''"aft S president nn'v because I k-pt my promise In spite of Infinite pres. Sura t" break It: and now he hhvs thai I inn not to he trusted to keep mv .,-.l and tha' If I a er. elect d now I must be president the rest of my natural life. "Mr aft says that oro who eo lightly regards constitutional principles ami especially the Independence of the ludlciniX one who Is so naturally Im patient Of XT") restraints nd Of due legal procedure and who has so mis understood what liberty regulated by (aw Is. could not safely be entrusted ' with lUOCeeslVS presidential terms' Resents Imputation. "it does not ii in his mouth to say this. He served under me through rhv seven and a h!f years. He did not then r that I hod any of the faults which he n w finds In me. He prULsed ma, he eagerly followed my Leads, he eagerly supported me and sourht my support, he thankfully accepted what ever I had to give him and be only dis covered that I was dangerous to the peo ple when I discovered that he was use less tO the people. "When 1 though! be ;va- the best in strument In sight for serving the people," continued the colonel, 'i was for bin . and 1 would have continued to be for him, without any regard to his personal actions toward me. If only he had continued to act as the interest of the people de manded." RoosOVelt half-heartedly conceded that he did not think Mr. Taft "means 111. "I third; he means well," he said ' He means well feebly and Indulgently, but during his administration h has been under the Influence bf men who are nebher well-meaning nor feeble.' In this connection he declared that tlie president's conduct in the Ballinger-Olavls-Plnchot case, especially in the mis dating of important dOCUmSntl was such as- would (tet the head of a hank "into BOrlOUS trouble with the bank examiners and possibly even with the district at torney " "Mr Taft," tie continued, "is funda mentally out of Sympathy with and ut terly Ignorant of the nerds, the desires, the aspirations and ideals Of the plain people of tho t'nife.l S'.ates." Democrats in Caucus. Hy Iriterr.T local News Service. BALTIMORE. April 26. Fifteen mem bers of the Democratic national commit tee held a caucus here tonight In which they decided plans- r'oi the coming na tional convention In Baltimore Chair man Made announced after the caucus that 'here would he no attempt to change the date of the convention and. contrary to previous reports, the place of the gathering would remain the same VvTille they would not allow tnell respective names to be used In connection with the statement, many of the committeeman emphatically stated that ROOaevel! would not be nominated at the Republican con vention. Chairman Mack says that a temporary chairman Would not be chosen until a week or two before the convention Wil liam F Mcl ombS, national manager of the Woodrow Wilson campaign, con ferred with th committeemen In the in terests of his candidate The Clark Uh derwood apd Harmon managers will be here tomorrow in I he interests of their respective candidates. Taft Men Betrayed. Bj international News Service. ST. LOUIS; April :'C.-Thr Hadlev ma chine "steam rollered" through the Re publican convention at 10 this morn ing after an all-night session. As an aftermath Missouri is in the contested column With two sets of delegates at larce t ', the natloTiV, convention At daybreak with 150 dlsc-ited dele gates missing and the belated convention already In session tn hour'. Governor Hadlev rallied his lieutenants about him Shelving the gentlemanly agreement of nn iinlnstnioted delegation which com promise had made the convention pos sible they forced 'hroiigh their slate and then crammed down the throats of the raft men a set of Instructions eiI1V'vl"be"';iv:i1" 'U1'1 "no I d out" filled the big convention hail Hal? or the delegates, awakened to action after their long vlcll. "limbed on o hairs and produced a terrific din. in ihe midst of the disorder, the Instructions wnt tn Instantly Mayor Krleemafl of SI Louts and Charles f) Morris Stats central committee chairman who had tee., ele.-le I del-Rates. leaped to their feet :,nl restcm-d. They ur,-r HH. ,,nu. Taft men in the Hat of eiKhi delegates at large John w. Tiffin of Springfield and A peer of sne COUnty Wert selected to fill their places. "c tp(l Major James C. Dahlma,,, Omaha. Neb. often called the ''f'ow Hov Mayor," writes 0f the benefit ho do rived from Foley Kidnev IbDs. and aaygj "I have taken Fo'ey Kidney Pills, ami they have given me a ereat deal of relief, so I cbeerfu.tly rsor) mend them.'' Scliramm-Jolinsjn, Drugs, 5 stores. Reform Legislation. Bj International News BsMViOS NBW HI.hank. April .-a resolu Hon which In effect provides for thsde t"'vatl, n of femle as well as ma!e criminals of the power reduction was 'V ".. L- alslii na Stat--Medical aasot Latlofl , majority ,,( ,.' - beis of both Iicoh. s of (he leeUU I ' e have pledged themselves to ,mu ir resolution a law. tne Assist Nature. You have bass told to "hitch vour I wwcon ho a star"- that nature will as sat you. That's all right. There are times, however, when v0u should as sist nature, and the spring i. one of these times. Nature is now undertaking to cleanse vour system If you take flood "s ar lapanlla the undertaking will bo suc cessful, and your complexion bright and clear. 'P'sjiiiil m : Jjpllil Finest quality, j strength and' I solutely pure M healthful I iiake it McDonald's Waft v J ASLEEP 1 1 hauled in and i ?! 'H , jBj -ho' into the air to w.-l,, t ;-,! i KJ i - - -,". w th" J in '' which hi tiH Br International Newi S Franklin's Aclmisslon, i p. .. 'Sr LP. '. -BjL sunk .. JSV New He sending llils b. hb ,i mP nras true T Ai beginning . , .-.iBw satlsfH with t! ' '.itnier.t -H eivlng. W l-t-i said that f :":P to S the i ''W'f "To . halrican Thai - - HSi Ington. "fo;..plao rlrlt:.n isaH -'r.MilHUH rpiliv. (b"e:.ty - ipr-clati a8IH nvlnjr this. -: .-d.i "P.evii.-.;.!s N50JH 'I do not think tills calli SBH nlal upon my part." said lei & ' The chief t'Vf-svatatlv( '!H pany, w'-c-e snrt .?iH the only British jcts HsMH more than ild I : ' 'F' aomber of tn.- ' :i:ir;'.tt'- VH I rest upon that stptement." TU following cotaaamiutlejs n afternoon. "Xofe by the cn'Jm this would 1SH ceipt " 'H to itlofl dHK to take " Ht was t'ne onlv 'mtu with nt thrit' time aa r" MjH oould hear .K (Itrni d.i ..ricr.'ir station, Naw Yard i Inquiry in England. j: I.nNpoN'. April 'jr. '-JB Ihe T" - re wvir ! Bf to this ,ounttv on tli it3"B before the court of InqUlryfB sel et r'ves . : I'lvrcUth tcnMH courl head wih .e Lord kH betrtr 011 '.tflh A grea t ."'i:-"i "' mnrlc held st 8t West minster " t'',s.Hl H "'dl "I"' l,frJHi d'.-r.ster." Ca?e K can, ' " ' ''T ,, 5E or - inent in h'.'smcsf cirrisM condu r.-l ' i""" '"t''t( 1-mn.ass idor I-:. -id snd !M members of the etnl-.iV. '".rl fit Its ',:"J '"B A :itl can Ni 'v lonfruc and ,h? JR. "' ''"'-,i " "1 I:.n'"riiP tw E Amerl can yls ltorsjlLjMf Imp i v ' n -sv vlctn. '"r ,,.ftBP Burdock '.:-d wyry. 1 cure the .-aase -ImiIMs "Doan's Ointment '-!re? that had annoyed Vr- lT core was permanent , A- IH thews. Commissioner Regulates Ihe '-0W-;..PS natural mm mnt Vour -SM Doan's Regulefs ask y I a box. eSH wo-.'t p 'fJ'rW croup if you apply 1 ,,krtn& oti nt o,ujj;m wrought article 'f Salt Lnkfl High fc: fumo ami h for sal p. WA1