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AIM REPUBLICAN, A EM IN DEPENDENT PROGRESSIVE JOURNAL TWKXTY-SrXTII YKAtt 10 PAGES PHOENIX, ARIZONA, SATURDAY MORNING, JJJLY 17, 1913 10 PAGES iVOL. XXVI. NO. GO THE ZONA 4 .i i i NATIONS' LAW NOT BRITISH MUST GOVERN 'ormal Force ( 'ourt I'm' T made Note D( livered t Tls:it Prize V Not t; ( 'asi ried Cuder Orders IIolP..'- oi:xr RA! or , sn).iKi"r COXTR MiAXI) Is to Not De Dealt Whi.-h With in 1. ow Course of I I v M1"JI i- by the D State part in l't I ASSOCIATED PREtS DISP TO WASHiNCTi X. July !. iioliic that tin- I'r.itod St h rights of Americans who r u' e fore I -1-i 1 1 1 i pri;:c ouurt.-. to if international law, and not n I ms British or.ti rs-m-. ounci: : ;.!.- ii ...ii .an- i or ir.a! i- tatcincnt ai..i 1 - j o:t.... j ! tonight ' cipal law. is sivi 11 in a hrii 1 cabled to Amhassad. r l'a-'c. seiitid ly him to the foreign Sc. retail Lansing rxp'aiiie that this communication is not ti bo lonfuscd with a general -note how in preparation relating to contrahaiul ami interference w ith American romm.-ive en the hisih seas. He sahl it was more in the nature of leeal cav rat, generally conserving the ri-'hts of t ili,:ens of the I'niieil Stales wlin.-i: canes are about to be tri al hy Knglish prize courts. In nsnui. !i as trie prize courts have not yet r.ile.l on ai.v Ameikan cases, tea; are believed t" ahout to do so, tlu: statement from the I'niteJ States sig- j nifiis in efnet that if there is a denial I if jnsti-e. diplomatic protests will hi fiiii-rid. I aseil on t lie fieni ral prin'-i ph s ! of international la .v eNtstiny hel.-ie la; I outbreak of the war. The statement ; will ht rna.le pul.Iie here tomorrow. " A Friendlier Tone WASIII.NHTOX, July 1 Amhas idor yon l'.eri:.urf f today told S.-c-'ary Linsini; that he l.ilieved the eiman r!y on the iiestion of rmaii suorn.triTie warfare present d an ic oitnnttv Tor a settlement of thi oiersv hy diplomatic net;oii.a The two conferr-'d for an hour. In son, the : I'nif not... the ahsent-e of Pnsid.-nt V.'il I.ansini; was unahle to inform nil assa.h.r as t. the course th--d S'ates will pursue in its next hut he heard interestedly von V rn.-toi f f .s explanation of the- pi--po.-e of I ;rni;i ny to .satisf puhii! opinion at home on tiie maintenance .f snhmarine warfare and at the vame time to maintain friendly rela tions w ith the tnite.l States. The nmhassHdor is .irsonally ron in:'d that th-r'- will he no repetition of tli" L'tsiiania disaster and that t Herman suhmarines are exercising i '-'rent ca ition fi avoid any incidents v liirh miiTht inflame puhlic opinion in the l'nite.1 States. Me tirtetl that the I'niteT states taki. advantage of the intimation in the flrrmnn rei.ly that Ormanv is willing th-it the iifStion of th" f re- -lom of t tie Hf as he mediated with ':re.-t Britain through the l'nite.1 States. The American offi-iais In.iiiitel that such a eour?e ir.it;ht he mor"1 veli-r.m if the sucrsestion were ae eompar.ied bv assnranccK that ilurii.i; he n lency of the netrotiition .Ami rioiin lives and vessels wou". he ! at" from attack. V..1 Ilern'torff refusrd to reveal what oec in red at the conference he yiniil saving that it was a satisfac tory interview and that he felt en "n'lrnsi 'I to believe that the dansi'-r of a rupture r.f relations had been reduced. He based this optimistic view- n the fact that G ermany does not want any break and is willing to do all in her power to prevent one. He is nlo confident that the t'n.led States brills a similar view. The interview was entirely infor mal and was held without special in structions irom his government. I. ant-it'!? would make no statement. That the note .from Austria on war fxporl was i:ot discussed was stated this afternoon on the highest au thority. o PROVIDENCE WALKS Pending Negotiations to End Street Railway Strike I ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH! I'llfiVIhrOiTK, It. I.. July 11 Throueh a roxisition that Mayor Oalncr act as arbitrator the street ear strike which paralyzed the Rhode Island company's system the last two days, is settled. The men are ex pected to return to work tomorrow. By an arrangement, supijpsted in a eomm; nication from union officials to the mayor, and immediately axcepted at a meeting of the directors of the company, " the union will select one arbitrator, the company another and the mayor, will act as third. The strike was precipitated on Wed nesday nieht when the company refus ed to accept three men named by the union as arbitrators in the matters in dispute. The directors of the com pany in a session late tonight are considering the articles of arbitration be drawn up for formal signature, the union officials havini; announced that the men will not be ordered back to work until definite articles are signed. A USTRO-GERMAN'S GIVE THE RUSSIAN FORCES NO BREA THING SPELL ROOSEVELT ENROUTE SF.ATTLF.. July 16. Theodore ; Roosevelt, on his way to the l'a llama - Pacif ic Kxposilion at San ! I'laneisco, will arrive at Seattle l.y stiauior from Vancouver, next j Sun. lay night at 9 o'clock. 1'pon his arrival at the hot. 1 he will ! he receive! by u delegation of twentv -five progressive leaders. I u ho wilt report on the condition j of i he party in Washington. At 7 t". Moii. lay moining Mr. Rooso- j v.it will breakfast with the hail- j ii'S republican e.litor of Seattle, a a l at 11 o'clock w ill leav e by ! train for San Francisco, point; 1 diuct. I PEACE PRAYERS ;! ARE OFFENSIVE AT THIS TIE Tiie German Government 1 IT a It in Ietvee)j Two Old!lio71S I v'a !(' ill";' Its Course Tovaid Crnliiial Arehhisiio) o!' (.'oloii'iie A.MSTKP. rA.M, Jaly 17 fr..m I'.eriin state I hat the ernmetit is i onsiih rins th Dispatches Herman f-yov- a.lvisal.ilit y of indietinc the larc.mal tVilesne on a chaise of t ai hoi.-hop oi iso'l alleccl i to have hi en eoinmiltecl hy tin j cation of a special praxcr. wt j order i.f his eminence was off i in all H,.::ian Catholic clitirche; i archdiocese on Sunday. June pahli ah. hy red up in his The tion of s mat -o a s o t i't.p. i: ! yox-.-rnment ir in a po serious i!:ffieu'ty in rt sar.l t th ter. on tin one hand, it is .":esi suppress int lai of peace, id hy t! iti rivorously any attempt l" the Oeiman peoi le in favor all s.j. h efforts heii a regard -Kaiser and his a.'.'. isi rs a? I thidr iiv n cieat'r.-knell, hut t lie .me j time it hesitates to sice offense ( la. man ('atlioiiis of the ninne p 'ami of W'-Tcrn O iinaiiy. to uh carditail-ai'. hhiahop of I'oloirae i ; tire of espiM-ial v. ni'iaii-.!:. Tin: (let man if . ernnie at is a I luctant to take any sP ; which ! interfere si'h Ms Iriendly r to the ovince la the a Hu so ii- n:ii:ht aTions with the Vat I. -an. !e lievii.s, as fesses to do, that the pojie and 1 al court are pro-i,erman in thi ir pro the pa ir i.yai- I pathic-s. It reireinheis ,:l.o Hi;,; th' j Human On:!...:!.- in.hr constitute the i numerically stronutst .nrtv in 1 he i',er J man Reit hstafr, so that it v...nl.l he fol ly to provok-. thi ir opposition. A!i these onsiileratinns may in lin e th'' ruline; powers in Berlin to refrain from I i oscci.it inn the cardinal-archbishop of Cologne, -a Ivsi special prayer con tained the f.eloi' in- MriMji:? passa -'es ; "Xothin? on earth is "o erne! as war. and s'ji h a war as the present war, with is oceans of biood and lears. In the trouble and fear aused by this ter rible conflict, which menai es the cxist ance of nations, we plead to Thee, Ood of Mercy, save i:s from the.;e hor- rors. lo i nee, O i run e or i'i a e, u e lolfcr up cur heart !-lt -'upj.li ation . give i.s soon th'- peace Tor which we are lonmns with all the fervor of our souls. May holy love prevail and rule souls. May holy love prevail and rule through all the world, so that every nrnity may vanish and nil men may live in peace and "ood will with one fineiher. Have inert y upon us in this time of suffering, with its terri! 'e hat red of mail asainst man and its awful waste of auman life. Have mercy upon the many mothers in Germany who are in sorrow or anxiety for their soum: have mercy upon the thousands of fam ilies ivhij have been robbed of their fathers; have mr-rfy upon 'I'lmany. on v. hon) so many nvsfortunes hav e des cended. Instil into our rulers and into our nation the thought of peace; let the conflict of nations cense; save ns. O Ood of Mercy, or we perish." It is obvious that a prayer RivinK ex pression to such sentiments must he GREAT RUIN WROUGHT IN FLOOD-SWEPT OHIO Tassociated press dibpatch COLFMBUS, July IS. Five dead, scores injured and more than $-',000,000 property damage wire the toll of the floods which last nisht and today re sulted from torrential rains through out central Ohio. Hundreds of acres are nnder water and vast areas are im periled by weak levees and embank ments. In several places the disas trous flood of March 1913 was exceeded but tonisht most of the swollen streams are stationary and fears of further ilanuise are allayed hy favorable weather predictions. At Lima three lives were lt, more than 3u0 homes were submerged and a laree area was flooded. The Ottawa River began to rise again this after noon and the city tonight faced unpre l'..., 1 I i i 1 . i , 1 .1 1 IV,.,,. 41,,. ' I'll i i unit i i f r 1 1 i i iirui t i i v Xorlh and 'n Ma -ken-Soil 1 roll I tlic South the Lpper and I lie Nether Mill slones GIGANTIC OF scait: o pl rations sual Contradictory Re ports (ei;ai'di!iLr Fiuhtin; oji Southern West Front. Fiioi'fi'ial Report of Al lied (iains at Dardanelles ASSOCIATED PHES dispatch LoNDoX. July lij. The Austro erman armi.TC which n.w appear to r working in perfect concert as a io- suit of the Gorman giv inn th'' Russians to reorani.e thctiiM li. at from Gaii.ia. organi.ation, are little lest or time Ives niter the re Siniultane. msly with tiie Oilman effort to reiich War- . i man Kassi. Ill tile r tk lines ser ins that i Hi. the Austrians tin 1 'niii-iter and oss:au the rlv- r at Ma. kens. n's J'.r- lortri 1 ac h'.e Se el . s lr itlacke.I alonn ucceeded ill ir I points. Vol Ill '. h h lias ih.aiitliss he. n waiting llin.lerihuri; to move !n the s a.sn e..me to life aain and h,,s hijen I'esanu'd in southern for von north h l'ii:!.tin J'ol.nd. In tins district north i Ii rniaiu. i laim to hav I ronn s. l.at with the I of Warsaw, the made further assians retiring it lot likely the main forces have i' la she. I vet. The combined operations ar the most fciaKntic yet ii lalerta hi n, the aim h ins, ac ordiny; to military experts to s.juee'ze ;he Russians out of V'.'a rsav,' .nul the cr.-ai slice of country v hi h tnev hold to the north, .-..nth and east of iliat city and at the same tune ..tPr.ipt the invasion of Bessarabia. So Ions as this f Tort to crush Rus si t or break her power for tile offen sive . out. mies, there is little possibility, military writers say, of the Oermans inakinK any important movement in the west, for il is believed that the Aiistro-Oermans uill for a, lont; time rcpiiic uii their available troops in the eist. Boor oetmarf armv corps comuosul of Bomera nia ns and ii.cn from S. h'c--wcjr. are said to have h ft Thorn to n inforee ( ;eneral von H indenbui e. In the west fijlitins is in prosres: ..n iho Lorraine frontier and in Artois v hi re the Fl i nch continue to attinipt tiie cantutc of Souchez. Tie r;erman t'rovvn Brince did try to break thr.a;fh the French lines in the Aruonne forest hut it is the opin ion of miiitarv experts that the inten tion was simple to weaken the Freie b hold on Verdun. Prman official claims are that one result nf this of fensive was the capf. re of ;-evcn thou find I "i em h soldiers in three weeks. on the other hand the French claim thai th'y resaine.j most of the pround they wire forced t pjve up, which they state did not exceed 4fin yards in ihpth. British rntics describe the ef fort of tiie crown prince as costly but his partially suceesnf nl advance was followed hy a counter offensive which definitely checked his prouress. The entente allies announce another victory in Africa where they captured N'H.iiin lore, an important trading cen ter of Kamerun, the German colony In western equatorial Africa Further progress. unofficially re poitefj from Athens has been made by the allies jn the Gailipoli peninsula. ( importance Is the news that Rumania has declined to ncecd,. to Germany's demand liiat Rumania allow munitions to pass through that country for Tur key. extremely offensive to the German gov ernment, who are still st imiila t ins. hy all Ihe means at their disposal, hatred of Knsland and the allies, as well as zeal for the const it tit ion of the war. Their final decision an to the way in which they will deal with the cardinal archbishi r of Cologne w ill be awaited with keen in'erest. Meanwhile, it is worth notimr that the "Vorwarts", the central organ of the German socialist parly, which rarely has anythiiiK hut abuse for the clerical party, ouotcs in full with warm approval of the cardinal-archbishop's prayer for peace. cedented flood conditions. Mayor Miles Standish issued a proclamation stat inir that while the property damage there would exceed $."i00,0(ln no outside aid in relief work would be asked. In Columbus both the Scioto and the Olentangy rivers after flooding a large section early in the day were slowly rising tonight but the weather bureau gav assurances that no serious dam age would result here unless the rain fall would l excessive. The Mounted street levee which be gan leaking this afternoon, threatened to send its trreat volume 'of pent up water to the overflowed section which suffered in the flood two years ago,' is being repaired. A lnrge portion of Kenton was sith- (Continued on Page Five) GARE1ESSNESS OF SUPERIOR IIS WN M.-Daniels, $:!)i0 I,,st ol'lice IJohher, Accident ally in Possession of Com bination to Safe, Yielded to Irresistible Impulse DAD A VISION ' ix tiii: XIGDT Thought lie Saw the Inner Door ,,f Safe Open lie Went to See, l''oiind tlu: Monev, and Left Xo Clii- ' f ASSOCIATED PREHS niSPATCHl S. X I K.Wi'lSCii. July 1 ( 'larencc McDanieis, the postal i h rk who con fessed to a $i;n. .mi robbery from the postofl'ice at Wallace. Idaho, in RU3. will leave cither Sunday or Monday for Wallace in chart;.- uf a I'nited States deputy marshal, lie will oe held there for the November session of (he strand jury. Mcpaniels told Inspector o'Gonnell: "I to-'k money because I had the com bination safe and because the inner door ol the safe was open, 1 am where I am now . - found the figures of the combination on memoranda left on the desk by the postmaster. 1 kept it three weeks with tl- temptation to use- it dailv beoemiriET irresistible. I knew lny perior was careless." "On thi niuht I took the money I lav- awake iinri 2 o clock ;n the mormuK fishtin .'own a coiisumiiur desire to steal t ae money whl'-h J knew w as there. had a vision of an open inner ioor. 1 scrambled from the bed, -natehid a suit care and hurried throuah the d sorted street: to the post office. "Th SW e.t i n ner the hill.. ioor was open and I and Rohl into a sait ick to tin- house. I had care, -,!,) 11. -.1 1 not met a soul." Ti e prisoner told his story t;onal!v. lie said he hid the the rafiirs of his house, went uni-n bills hack l ed at ins. The roitlv t 'ley t run!; h saov d reported for in.ik in the morn- posta I ir: -t e dupe, t h 'tors told how :i a year later - hen his iscove-e,I m 'e. J-Iausibly " in s...l ir xplainms it Munitions Act Is a Failure In Coal Strike ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH LONDON. July 1C. The day btoushl no chanse in the South Waa s coal strike situation. Wet wialiicr kept the men miioot.s but a lew nalherinss took place while the speakers devoted themselves to at tacks upon the colliery owners and the press, which is outspoken in con demnation of their action in iiuitting work. The executive committee of the South Wales Miners' Federation, most of the members of which opposed the strike, came to London and conferred f with Walter Runclman presidi n of the bojird of trade, who made new proposals it is understood for a settlement of the trouble, which will be con sidered at a meetins in the morniiiK. There is no indication of any wcak nins on tin- part of the men but the impression still few days will see prevails the end that a of the walkout. , It is not believed that the intro duction of the munitions of war act can force the men to return to work, for it is impossible to bring l.iO.ooo men before the courts and impose fines for contravening the act. The resort to that measure it is believed has made the situation worse, and the men's demands now include its withdrawal, so far as coal mining is concerned. o MACHINISTS WILL JOIN f A3SOCIATFr PRESS DISPATCHl RRIDGF.RORT, July It!. The ma chinists of Bridgeport by unanimous vote tonight voted for a general strike should the Remington Arms company decline to meet their demands. Two alternatives will be offered the com pany tomorrojy by representatives of the machinists. THE FORD DIVIDEND DF.TROIT, July 16. The Ford I company this afternoon announced I that it would refund approximately Jl.'i.OOii.ono to owners of Ford au ! tomobikvi who had purchased ma- chines since the first of last Angus On the first of August the company announced that if 300,000 automobiles were sold dur- ing the ensuing year each pur I chaser would receive a refund nf j from $40 to $R0. The 300,01)0 mark was reached this afternoon. The I company says the refund will he strictly in the nature of a profit distribution policy of the company. . FOUNDER OF A CHURCH GOES TO MRS. ELLi3lG. WHITE TT;e Dead ..if tiie Seventh- I )ay Advent i.sts Sueeumbs to an Injury R eeived in j a Fall Sereral .Months! Atl'O 2 ? , A PKOIMTFTFSS OF LATTFR DAYS Devel-Tear-h-Miller. ChurVh Vas a unent from the f'i ol ol iv William Dead entv-l Milierites Se' Ye-ai's Atro f ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH ST. IIKI.KXA, Cah, July Hi. -Mrs. i;ilen Whiie. one of the founders oi the Seventh Day Adventists. died to day ancd SN. She was seriously in jured in February by a fall. Mrs. Klhn O. White was one of ithe founders of the denomination Iknown as Seventh-Hay Adventists. IShe was one of th !i,im Miller, who Converts of Wii 40s in the early larousid thousands t i belief in the- :-peedy r hrist. en out sion t 'i advent or seimnd corninK of According to information Kiv bv the North American Hivl nfi ri nee of the Seventh-Hay its, Mrs. While was con.sid practi' ally all Seventh-Day A d vent is ered bv .dventis I '.. a n i ts as their prophetess. n Gorham, Cumberland coun ty. Maine. .November 2'. 1 s7. she had lived to the advanced ace of S.S cars. Her maiden name was Ellen Gould Harmon, and she was one of eisht children, who, like their par-! i nts became staunch Methodists in jXevv Rutland. At the atre of nine: I years the pirl. who had shown re-. mnrkable mental powers, was strut's. in the face by a stone which a ( -choolmate, in sheer wantonness, had j thrown at her. fraoturintr the nasal ! bone and result ins: in an almost fatal illness and permanent disfigurement. The calamity, which made her almost unrecognizable wore uiion h'r nmonn her friends, In art. and she turned with trreat yearnins: to the worship ol ( 'hrist. In March. 1 she first heard Baptist evangelist, it", William Miller, a t.ll of the second Odmitift of Christ which he ;s4'.. She was then iiredictiiiE: for was frriatly stirred by the evanselist's message and consecrated her life toward spreading it. and, as she claim.-d in December. 1S44, God save her a vision of the second com ing of Christ, and added as her in terpretation of the Bible that It was her duty to observe the Seventh Day Sabbath, as she believed it wa.i so observed hy Christ. She and her husband, whom she married about this time, and who was one of the believers, therefore began the obser vance of the seventh day, and taught his in their meetings which even tually were held all over the country. Whil" they believed that Christ's comii'iii was near, they did not be lieve that men knew the date of the event, and so never taught or had any sympathy with "time-setting." Ilcr husband was James While, a lineal descendant on his father's side of Reregrine White, horn on the May flower in the harbor of Cape Cod, hi fore the Rilgrims had made their homes in the wilihrnes. Mr. White died in IS I, but Mrs. White kept on with her revelations. A paragraph from a story given out in official quarters as to her re markable powers, reads: "While in vision she was repeatedly examined by skeptics, unsympathetic physicians, and by one physician con-j versnnt with spiritistic manifestatons, who had boasted that he could im mediately bring her out of vision, but who was compelled to leave tha house in alarm. oiher men had the same experience. Mirrors and candles have been held before her mouth while talking, showing no indication of breathing. One skeptical man held her nostrils tightly closed with hand over her mouth for ten minutes with out in any way affecting Mrs. White. At tim.s she arose and walked the floor talking of what she was there beholding." She believed in the ultimate an- (Continued on Page Five) t ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH CHli'AGo, July 16. Counsel for the western railroads pointed to the figures presented by the protesting states in the hearing before the In terstate Commerce Commission, and declared that the figures support tl eir petition for advanced passenger fares. S. T. Bledsoe, assistant general so clicitor for the Santa Fe, questioned AN ARIZONA W NESS IN W. JI. Sangster of the Arizona Cor-lferent rate on short haul business, isiration Commission concerning thejbut that the. road should be consider figures presented by Sangster cover-ed as a whole. This contention ing a number of western railroads, Ibrought out a protest by representi dealing with conditions from 1904 to. fives of state commissions who argued lli. that the state and inter-state fares "You show that the number ofineed not he 'he same and that even Santa Fe passengers per mile of the'should inter-state fares be advanced, road in 1911 were 143,000 and in 1914'state fares should remain at two cents ,!were only 137,000," said Bledsoe. TER REWARD HOW TO SERVE GOD I. OK A XGKI-KS, July 15. Wo men were ursed to abandon giv ing ice. cream suppers and so cials for the purpose of lending financial aid to their churches, and instead, to devote their ener gies, to assist int? the pastor in spiritual work in an address by Rev. George Taubman of Rout? Reach at the twenty-seventh iin naal convention of Christian' churches in Southern California, which opened here. ON THEIR 1Y TO SALT LAKE Three Italians Chained With Cleverly Swindling Salt Lake Greek, h'xtradited by Governor Who Doesn't Want Them Around Deputy Sheriff Carstensen of Sail Lake City, accompanied by J. Glezos, the youns; Greek who was swindled oat of $.".imiO by Hctor Oppicini, Rouij Ba -odi and Alohonso Anfusso, ar rived in i'hoenix yesterday morning to make requisition of Governor Hunt for the three Italians. The- deputy sheriff was eminently successful, and by 4 o'clock in the ; afternoon had secured the necessar..' paners and was ready to start for j l- 's Ar.seles, where he will be joined i by anotner deputy nc-.v on lus way j to meet him. ''juucim ilia; jatioui maue no enoi; to fr j t'c: put up a fight against being taken m the state. On the contrary, An so van not disposed to return with out some sort of a dispute. The I hearing was before the governor yes terday afternoon, with Attorney Jas. I-avin acting foi the accused Italian. He claimed he never was in t'tah; that lie met his countrymen in southern Colorado. When askec' how he came into the possession of the money, issued from a Salt Lake bank, he- claimed he won it gamb ling in New York just before he lift for the west. The money was then shown to have been issued within a few days, and was of the same serial number as the bills in I possession ol the other two men. In I reference to the three mn all having ! new bank notes, and all with like serial numbers, Deputy Carstensen said yesterday that at the lime Gle zos went to get the S.VIOO to give to the Italians, the bank ofiicials hau just finished counting and signing number of bills, and they reached over, took the necessary cash off o: the top and passed it out. This un usual circumstance will probabiv lead to the conviction of the three men. In his attempt to gam his liberty, Anfosso stated that he would he ex onerated and turned loose upon hi arrival at Salt Jake, as ho could I prove that he had never been in that city. The governor then expressed I the opinion that such being the case, j it. would bo better to go back there and be released in Utah, than to have ; him roaming aiound Arizona. Dur ing the proceedings, some question v.'as raised as to the validity of the j notes. Happening to have an auto , fciajdied picture of Joseph Young hanging in the executive chambers, and as the notes were all signer! by Young, thu governor made a close scrutiny of the two signatures and 1 ronounced them iho same. It was through the medium of .1 police magazi-io called the "Detective" that the three men were caught. Shortly afier the trick had been pcr pt crated on Glezos, Carstensen re ceived a copy of the magazine, eon- (Continued on Page Five) WESTERN RATE HEARING "Y'es," replied Mr. Sangster. "The passenger service train revenue per milo of the road vou show- was $3,796 in 1911 but only $3,671 in 1914," said Bledsoe. Sangster assented. I'. G. Powell, of the Nebraska rail road commission said under cross examination that in his opinion the higher cost of hauling passengers a short distance did not justify a dif- a mile. FIRST LIBERTY E .Verdict of Jury Declaring Stanford White's .Mm derer Sane Accepted b Supremo Justice, Dut the State Takes Appeal D0XD JJOLDS ITTAT TO FLI.RTIIER OI'DFl (towcIs oi Rroa.thvay Clu f 1 the Tjj'tti Prisoner as lit is Taken 'to Jersey Cit to Ie Pormally Turntt. Loose . ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH NFW YORK, July 16. Ilary Th.av today shook off the grip of the motored down Broadway to the up iu.se of his admirers, crosseu ierry to Jersey City, bade the she.:; good-bye and whirled away towar iiuladelphiu. Willi his car thiowin dust on a procession of uutomol.ile f.Iied with newspapermen under or tiers to stay with him. His announced intention was t , motor to Philadelphia and there t take tiie train for Pittsburg. For the first time since ho fin. the shot that killed Stanford .Whit, at Madison Square roof garden mor than nine years ago. Thaw was fre. to go and come as he pleased. Supreme Court Justice Jlendrici acct pted the jury's verdict thu Thaw is sane. The state's lawyer appealed from the decision and Thav was released on $3.").0i'O hail pcmlnc. the result of the appeal. The bond, which was furnished bv a surety company, differed from thi ordinary bond inasmuch as it as sured Thaw's obedience to any niajj date of the court until the final ms position of the appeal. The agent m the surety company said that th. Thaw family had deposited with tl. company negotiable securities value at $3.", 000. As soon as the bond: was sigre-i Thaw entered an automobile accop panied by a deputy and his secret.u.. The machine, which was followed i six cars containing reporters an photographers, moved a block aero town into Broadway and then start' downtown toward the office Thaw'3 attorneys. All the way dow Broadway persons on the sid -alk cheered and applauded Thaw. Traf fic policeman sought to prevent th. crowds from gathering. Thaw got his traveling bags at hi lawyers" offices and then proceeded to Jersey City by the way of the Cort land Street ferry. There he was for mally released from the custody cf the sheriff. Under the terms of the bond Thavv is to hold himself amenable to th.; court's orders until the appeal n finally decided. Meantime he may go wherever he pleases. Thavv delighted. He appeared excite seemed 'd sonv - what by the demonstration wlib u hailed him good natureiily hut bois terously, and said he was very happy. He. frequently stood up in the auto mobile to bow to those around him His private secretary accom panic, him. What Thaw's attitude will he to ward Kvelyn Nesbit, Thaw- was matter of considerable speculatioi To no question bearing on this poin would Thaw return a direct answe One interviewer asked him if he ex pected to see her soon. Thaw answer was a look at the question, steadily a few moments. Then V. turned away without a word. Thavv reached Newark about tw o'clock and stopped for luncheo His presence became know n imm. d -ately and a crowd which taxed tl capabilities of the police assemble . outside the restaurant. They clc-en ' when he approached, and Thaw, smi ing nis apprciation, resumed the tri Outside Newark Thaw lost some the cars following. Apparently 1 headed hack, to New- York as a ru to elude newspapermen. This cleat, some speculation ns he previous had said lie wanted to attend a th atrical performance on Broadway t night, and hud abandoned the Id rather reluctantly when he saw t size of the crowd awaiting his d -part u ro from the courthouse. Changed His Mind ATLANTIC CITY, July 16. Hat Thaw arrived here by autonym shortly before midnight, havi changed his mind about going Pittsburg. He refused to be int : viewed at the Beach Hotel. PROBABLY MURDEIR ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH LOS ANGFU'S. July 16. AVi blankets wrapped about her head a, body, Mrs. Frances Harrison, the t vorced wife of an Indianapolis brok was found in her home here where s had lain a week. The police are wnr ing on the theory that the woman w murdered and the body robbed jewels. There is evidence also that t woman was shot. WEATHER TODAY TENS OF HARRY THAW WASHINGTON, :ona, Fair, July 16. For A