Newspaper Page Text
1 •r K? $je- \.»i ll I -, & v** i 01% A 4 1 This Issue 10 Pages mi ^OfetrM ESTABLISHED KftV. 17, 1891 Bismarck, N. D., Jan. 12.~AdJutant General Poole was again in charge, of Bis office tor twelve hours from mid night last night till noon today. Governor Burke again ordered but the troops and this time the door to the adjutant general's office was forci bly broken open. Governor Burke has ordered thegr regt of Poole. Colonel Peake has been enjoineJ from taking charge of the office. The foregoing are some of the new developments in the row at the state capital over the adjutant generalship. Secured an Injunction. Lkst night about 9 o'clock Adjutant General Poole applied to Judge Win chester and secured a temporary in junction against Colonel Peake to re strain the latter from attempting to assume charge of the offlc^. The pa pers were made returnable Monday and were served on Colonel Peake Who announced he Would make no. effort to disobey the order till the hearing Mon- Poole Took Charge. midnight last night General Poole donned his uniform^ and War paint and (sallied forth to the capital, where he took charge of his office. He remained there till' noon today WAd went down town for luncheon. ^1 is Arrest Ordered, Buringtjis absence Governor Burke Larger In spite of this, however, soon after work was begun the explosion occur red with a dead list that will prob ably far exceed that of the December explosion. The mine is the property of the Pochahontas Consolidated Coller ies Co., and is situated in the Tug river district, a territory that, until the De cember explosion, had b^en unusually free from gas* KILLS ME, SHU0T5 SELF, CUTS THROAT Horrible Double Tragedy at Oxford, Ohio Murderer and Suicide Gets to fl' Nearby Towii jDpforrf, On Jan. 12.—Mrs, Millie fJonnelly was murdered In her home here last night, having bee:, shot through the head. On a table in the room where the body lay was found a note signed by Frank Donnelly, the v.iman'h husband, in which he v. ished oil goodbye, and asked. that* his body be sent to his sister «it Shelbyvillet Ind. •Murdered Gets .to Hamilton. Hamilton, Ohio, Jan. 12. Frank OkHtnelly walked into the office of J. D. Marshall today with his throat slashed and his wrists bleeding and with three pistol wounds in his head. The man could scarcely whisper his name and he was at once taken to the hospital, where it Unexpected that he cannot live. V ILEX. M'KENZIE IS MUCH BETTER &? St. Paul, Jan. 12.—AIpx McKenzie of North Dakota, is still seriously ill at the Merchants hotel in St. Paul, where he has been und« the care of a trained nurse for several weeks. Hip condition is4 now reported considerably liuHSW-d although he is still inaec.es sible to visitors. Mr. McKemsie's troub le is a serious afEcctivu of thu tluroat, which will take a long ittam to cure. v 'I mm, Obi me Additional Chapters to the Military Muddle at Bismarck-Sit nation Has Assumed an Opera Bouffe Attitude and People Are Laughing Over Affair- 0#c Hundred Miners Killed in Lick Mine Explosion Today Second Disaster Occurs at the lick Mine—Death List May Be Much as There r" ,?.# :,- V.#'' 14 4 .• .4^ -r is ok m, jjj issued two orders, one that Poole should be placed under arrestv another calling, out a detail of soldiers to again "capture" the adjutant general's of fice. The troops went to he capital and. broke in the door. Poole awaited arrest down town and immediately after his arrest he plan ned to institute habeas corpus pro ceedings, after which he would again go to the capitol and take charge, of the office. i Records Down Town. Poole has all the records of his of fice down town, and there is nothing in the office except the supplies. Poole has issued an order to Colonel Allen of Lisbon, chief of supplies, forbidding him to issue anything under Pe^^i*« order. Proposed Stipulation. Last week Poole and his attorneys agreed on a stipulation to permit any officer in the national guard—other than Hildreth of Fargo, or Peake—to assume charge of the adjutant gen eral's office pending a determination of the matter in the supreme court. Governor Burke was at first in clined to agree to this proposition but later consulted Attorney General Mil lar and concluded to take the radical action of the past two days. The military muddle is keeping the people at the capital interested sind new developments are anticipated. Were From 280 to 300 iii the Mine,at the Tin^e of the Eptppiu ii ii ... 4 ,. ,*- 4 4-4 4 4 44 4 4 4 4- 4 4 4*4 4 4 4 4 4.4 4 4 4 Bluefield, W. Va., Jan. 12.—As the result of another explosion at the 4 •fr Lick branch mine at $wltchbac1v, about twenty mllfes frbm here, be- 4 tween fifty and 100 miners were killed at 8:30 this morning. This 4 4* number may be largely increased as from 280 to 300 miners were at. 4 4 work at the time and it had not feen ascertained, rflertly beforen^n, 4 4 how many had survived. 4 .t'4 4 4 4 4 4 4 '0* 4 4'4M4 4 4 44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4% 4 4 4^ .s- j- 4V4 i «v v •*. Bluefteld, Va., Jan. l?.r-At 1 o'clock this afternoon the reOewe party had' not been able to enter the mine on account of the intense heat. The mine officers refuse to give an estimate of the number that may have met death at the pit mouth and it Is now believed that more than 100 havrf perished. Fresh air is being forced into the shaft by way of a fan which was not,dam a®sdy.„ niimi 't V* Men at Supposed Model Mini, fclueftewi, W. Va., Jan. 12.—On ©jMS. 211 'last an explosion occurred in this mine, which up to that time had been regarded as the model mine of the United States. On that occasion the cause of the explosion was not ascertained and the death list reached fifty. The last body in connection with that explosion was brought to the surface only last Fri day, after which the state mine inspec tor declared that the mine was again safe and that work could be resumed. The majority of the miners who were engaged to resume the work at the mine were Americans with a few for eigners and some colored workers as laborers. It was stated that the mine was ex amined early today before the new shift went to work and that it was re* ported to be safe. Declares Hains' Attorney in Summing Up Defense VICTIM Of A CONSPIRACY "MAN. DID KILLING WHOSE MIND WAS DISMANTELkD AND DE THRONED BY THC CONDUCT OF A LIBERTINE" PROSECU TION WILL SUM UP TOMORROW JHushing, N. Y., Jan. 12.—John. F. Mclntyre summed up the case for the defense today in the trial of Thornton Jenkins Hains, accused with his bro ther, Captain Peter C- Hains, of the murder of William E. Annis at Bay side Yacht club on Aug. 15. The prosecution win sum up tomorrow and on Thursday the case will be given to the jury. The court room was crowded today when Mclntyre began his address. In opening he charged that there was a conspiracy of the Bayside Yacht club members to convict the defendant. The killing of Annis, declared Mcln tyre, was done by a mad man, "A i$an whose mind was dismantled'and dethroned by the conduct of a .liber tine." He denied that it was prompt ed by the defendant. turn: CONTROL OF CHINA'S TELEGRAPH Peking, Jim. 12.—The diplomatic corps has made a strong representation to the Chinese government concern ing the board of communications, hav ing urged the full control of the Peking telegraph office which the Chinese gov fr»ni«nt in 1901 agreed *lu)i£kl B|* foreign superintendence mio i BITTER Tawney Says Country Will fie Shocked at Disclosures MONEY PUT Ttt WRONG USE DISCLOSURES TO BE MADE IN THL NEAR PUtURE SAYS MIN NESOTA REPRESENTATIVE ROOSEVELT READY CON TINUE THE FIGHT. Washington, Jan. II.- -TaJtlng ooiir age from the big vote by Whlrh the resolution rebuking the president was adopted, congress at each end of the capitol intends tp carry forward its war on the White House during the remaining weeks of this administra tion. Chairman Tawney, of the ap propriations committee, is out with 0 bristling interview, purporting to show that there has been a gross perversion on the part of the government officials in expending the funds appropriated by congress. He says: The country will be surprised to learn how some of the money appro priated by congress has been expend ed. While no officer at the head of any tl°n' rta"«r it is strongly intimated today that, be fore the congressional investigation ends, there will be such a turning of tables that not only will the country be surprised but shocked. It Ml not determined yet whether or not volun teer evidence will be heard by the se cret service, but it is a safe prediction to venture that such testimony will be offered. If not "accepted, this testi mony, in the form of proven asser tions, may come out any way. At the White House there are indi cations that the president is all ready and more than willing to strike off a balance sheet showing approximately, at least, just how much crime, graft, fraud and how many violations of law have been run down during the past half dtween years. full record, it is said, will show that whatever has been expended in getting at the bottom of well-laid schemes of consipracy, has b&en well used. In other words, there have been results in the large amount of fines recovered and in parties' sent enced to imprisonment. V Among the more conservative mem bets of the Senate and the house there are expressions of' regret heard" that the fight is to be kept up, especially since Tillman $«£ feeNme eentral fffc •ure in it. 'IM5EK Minnesotan Killed Four of His Children and Suicided WAS UMM6TEDLI KiK WES*ONDiNt OVER THE DEATH OF HIS WIFE, A MANKATO QUARRY WORKER SLAUGHTER ED HIS FOUR YOUNGEST CHIL DREN. AMD HANGED HIMSELF, Mankato, Minn.. Jan. 12.—James York, a quarry worker, cut the throats of four of his children hear here early today and then committed suicide by hanging himself by a small wire. The sole survivor of the family is the eldest child, a young woman, who kept house for' her father. York was des pondent over the recent death of his. wife and was, no doubt. Insane. i Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 12.—While the attorneys for the disputants in the McKensie county seat fight were Supposed tp be presenting, their re spective sides of the controversy yes terday to the supremo court, in spe cial session at Grand Forks, the com missioners of' McKenzie county, ac cording to advices received here from Grand Forks, decided to name Alex ander the county seat. A S. D. REAL ESTATE MEN MET TillliT /&erdee», f7. Jan. l!.—The Dakota Real Estate Dealers' associa tion met .here at the commercial club today, with a good attendance. Pres. J. A. Cleaver of Huron is unable to be present, and Vice President F. A. Cleaver of Huron is unable to b« pres ent, and Vice President F. A, Brown of Aberdeen is at Washington, D. C., as the representative of the commere la] club in the negotiations to make Aberdeen the registration point when the 0h^enne reservation is opened to settlement, but Sec. A. N. Waters of DeSmet Is on the ground, and the local real estate men are seeing that the visitors are hospitably received, A number of matters of great impor- tance will be* discussed the meeting, AND DAILY REPUBLICAN. FARGO, NORTH DAKOTA. TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 12, 1900. Revolting, Failure to Give Crop Returns Is Handicap GIIMAT8 Mm CHANGE COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE SAYS FARMERS MAKE A MIS TAKE IN THEIR EFFORTS TO CONCEAL TH£IJ| CROP 8TATI8 nc* :*. Bismarck, N. D., Jan. 12 —The ques tion of securing form statistics re ceives considerable attention In the tenth biennial report of Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor W. C. Oil bralth. In the past considerable dif ficulty has been experienced in tha 6f securing correct information with reference to the crops produced each year, and in speaking of this matter, Commissioner Gilreath. in his refrbrt, say*:. "kuch care has beta exercised in an effort to obtain accuracy in "statis tics, but the results are not entirely satisfactory. It Is, however, the best that can be accomplished under the present system of gathering them, the assessors are required by law to carefully finish up their books before returning them to the county audi tors. These latter officials seldom have time to go over the assessor's work just when their books are turned in, and as a result discrepancies fre quently creep into the county audi tors' reports to this 'office. In many instances considerable correspondence has been exchanged with auditors of vari.oua counties with a view to as certaining the cause of Irregularities, and they invariably hbve attributed the source of all discrepancies to the assessors, who have failed to turn in sufficient and accurate data. Asses sors assert in many Instances that these inaccuracies are due to the farm ers' unwillingness to supply suffloieat information. "Farmers, apparently have conceiv ed the idea that by giving a full and complete statement to the assessors of all grain and stock raised by them will have a depressing effect upon the market and tend to lessen the price of Continued on Page Nina RASES I SOUTHWEST Louisville, Ky., Jan. 12.—Central and southwestern states today experienced the first genuine cold weather of winter with prospects of still lower temper ature tonight. Sleet or snow has oc curred generally over the district south of the lake region in the Mississippi valley and the southwest. The tem perature ranges from 8 to 14 abov. in northern Texas and Arkansas. ir« Ltuisvllle the rain and sleet of yes terday turned to snow that fell neiny all night and was blown into drifts by a brisk north wl id. A coat of slon: on the streets gave untold inconven ience and was the cause of many miner accidents. Trains from both direction* from two to four hours late. T. FISHT IS WHINS HOT IN M'KENZIE GENERAL STOESSEL ASKS FOR PAKDON Blixzard in Kentuoky. Dvansville, Jan. IS.—Southern In diana and western Kentucky today are in the grip of a sever" bllssard. The heaviest snow of the season fell today and as a result, many trains are de layed. St. Petersburg, Jan. if* General Stoessel, Hear Admiral Nehogatoff and several others of the officers of high rank now in the fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul, have applied for pardon or cummutation of their sentences. No action has yet been taken. General Stoessel was sentenced to death by a court martial In St. Paters burg for surrendlng Port Arthur to the Japanese. In March of last year this sentence was commuted by Em peror Nicholas to ten years' impris onment in a fortress, and it was then said that a full pardon would follow. Rear Admiral Nehogatoff is serving a like sentence for surrendering to the Japanese in the Sea of Japan LEGISLATORS ASSEMBLING MRS. BROWNING, WIFE OF MUR DERED CARPENTER, TELLS THE STORY OF HER LIFE—DETAILS OF CARMICHAEL'8 ACTIONS AFTER REACHING CARTHAGE. Burlington,- la., Jan. 12.—Coroner Barr of Fountain Green,, held an in quest over the body of Rev. John Carmichael at Carthage last night and heard the testimony of those who had anything |o do with the cafe. Nothing new wag developed and the Jury re turned the verdict that "John Car michacl came to his death by his own hands nd by exposure to cold." Deputy Sheriff Moore left this after noon for Port Huron, Mich., with the body by order of the stat'e attorney at Port Huron. Carthage) Ill,, Jan. 12,—When the po lice officials attracted wtHls place by the suicide of Rev. Carmichael, the self confessed slayer of Gideon Browning, at "Rattle Run," Mich., have fully sat isfied themselves as to the circum stances attending the last act in the tragedy, it is expected that the inquiry will turn to the possible motive for the initial crime. Sheriff Wegenseil', who started for Carthage as soon as the fact of the suicide became known, and Is today taking the lead In the Investigation was convinced that there was a wo man in the case and expressed regret that Carmichael could not have been taken home alive.' In the face jf these doubts however, the general tendency seems to be to accept the theory of mental unrespon sfbiiity until- tangible developments tend to throw light on the matter. Carmiehael's Actions at Carthage. Carthage, 111., Jan. lg.—On Friday evening, just when the C, B. A Q. train pulled intg^Cafthage. a stranger, six feet tiall, with reddish brown hair and smooth shaven face, alighted and wended his way up town, sought a boarding house and found one on street at Miss Miranda Hughes* board ing establishment. He had no baggage with him and gave his name as John Elder, said he was a cabinet maker and thought of locating in Carthage. Saturday morn ing he telegraphed to Burlington for his valise which was sent over that day. He went down town in the forenoon and afternoon and told in the evening of having visited the line poultry show that was in session on that day on the east side of the square. He talked very little and had little appetite. Saturday morning he asked Continued on Page Nina V if- i m- Bismarck, N. D.. .'an. U --May v*l members of the iecMlature have re turned from th« ad'ou nm«n( vacation and are ready to resume w%rk vmnnr. row. The bulk of them ar.» expocted tonight and tomorrow morning Lieu- i including the proposed Immigration Rurdiek have their rommitte? assign commission, which will probably men.s completed an,i„ fuj? ,ua authorised by the present legislature. nouncement tomorrow. 1 tenant Governor Leu a and itp#uk«f mmm %:ym i \N liB BURNS STREET CARS ,Rio de Janeiro, Jan. IX.—Twelve tram can of the American-Canadian company which Is supporting the street railway system were burned by a mob yesterday because the com pany's fares and Its itineraries were considered unsatisfactory. The police were unallc to cope with the rioters. The company then signi fied its willingness to submit to any .reform the mayor might deem neces sary and quiet was restored today. WILL RETURN BOOKS. Property of laeuranoe Company WiH Be Taken Baok to New York. Albany, N. Y., Jan. 12.—Superintend ent Otto Kelsey, of the state insurance department, announced today that the department had been advised that the books and assets of the Washington Life Insurance Co., which were moved to Pittsburg on Dec. ^1, folio^rin^^ the absorption of the Washington Life by the Pittsburg Life ft Trust Co., would be returned to the home office in New York City tomorrow. RED HOT FINISH FOR THE FLEET as authority for the statement that the w,n-" FOKUM ni'uVi hi "A**"" Use of Private Detectives in Brownsville Affair Carmichael Failed to State Mo- 'iv- ".** tive for Killing Browning GIVES DETAILS Of MURDER to out loose after leaving Gibraltar Burdlek means that Packard, of The and lace across the Atlantic, "ship valley City Timr now the against ship, and may the Jfeest boat house payroll as a fftemMrmpher, must REPUBLICAN ESTABLISHED SEPT. Shocking, Atrocious, Says Foraker Washington, Jan. 12.—Illegal divers ion of public funds by President Roose velt and William H. Taft while secre tary of war, to pay for the Investiga tion by private detectives Into the Brownsville affair, was charged by ^Senator Joseph Benson Foruker of Ohio, in the senate today, in hfs speech replying to the statements of Herbert J. Browne, of this city, and William G. Baldwin, of Roanoke, Va., who were employed by the secretary of war to secure evidence of the guilt of negro soldiers of the Twenty-fifth infantry, United States army, in shoot ing up Brownsville on the» night of Aug. 13-14, 1906. The government us© of the private detectives was charac terized by Mr. Foraker as "atrocious, shocking and revolting." This charge of illegally diverting 115.000 from the war fund of 13,000,000 appropriated by the deficiency act of March 3, 1899, was made by Mr. For aker in concluding his remarks, which consisted of a very careful considera tion of certain legal phases of the Brownsville affair, and the reading of a number of affidavits by soldiers whose testimony and "confessions," Mr. Foraker alleged, he had secured to unrave, thJ fhe Mm 41J %w_ the men who did the shooting, and these affidavits denied with great par ticularity nearly every statement of importance made by the detectives. Speaking of the 13,000,000 war fund of 1899, appropriated ns an emergency fund, to meet unforeseen contingencies constantly arising, tp be expended1 at the discretion of the president, Mr. Foraker said Uee Spanish War Fund. will probably be surprising 'In formation to the appropriation •rotnrnit tee, as it will' be -to motet senators, that this approbation, made ten yearn ago Senator Tillman Wants to Be "Convicted or Geared" MUCH INttftisT 18 MANIFESTED IN THE OUTCOME OF THE AF FAIR—SPECIAL "SECRET SER The special »aeret service investi gating committee, consisting of Sen ators Gallinger. Hemenway and Clay, has not agreed to enter upon the ad ditional tank of passing judgment up on Senator Tillman and it may prove desirable to have a special committor for that purpose. WILL MAKE "PACK" EARN HIS mm BSsmardc. M. D., Jan. XL—Aeoordtng to Speaker Burdick of the lower house of the legislature, th© house wUl be run on a strictly business basis during th© eleventh aaaembiy, "The clerk or stenographer who does not deliver the 'goods' will find himself In trouble,' said Mr. Burttick today. The youthful Iding officer of th© hoi oniy just and proper I. only JU« .I.d th« u» Philadelphia, Jan. 18. A dispatch p|0y^g of that body earn their salary from New York quotes James B, Con- ftn| perform the work for which they n»lly, the noted writer of sea stories, are to president has given carte blanche to other rausea. It will be up to him to Rear Admiral Sperry's Pacific fleet, re- disconnect himself with |h» payroll, turning from its world girdling tour Final orders His grooming and figured that with an insurgent house eoaitng of the raoer will be received the #uuid hav« a g^nnhte *tnr. But Wegro bay, an Oka «K?ast of Africa.!it will net be thus. Ured, In case any of them fall make good, from incompetency or Th« above statement from £p«a*«r demonstrate thai h* Is able to «am Mr. Connolly, ft iiald, has been In* his monej er the will get vlted by the president, to return with busy. Packard was on the car the fleet as chronicler of the race p®t, before Speaker Purdlek and a against time and will be the guest of commute, last night, and informed Captain Potter on board the battleship that he will not be able t« collect IU0 Vermont, The contest among A9- from the state as easily mimt Hperry's fighter* is to be ©bar. ago. It has practically bms\ de. uoterlsed with all the fire and "*o" elded to put Packard to worg *»d that Is the peculiar quality of the will be given a Job of revising the Roosevelt temperament. He wish## his hous* journal da*'y. This will keep term to end with a dramatic climax the Valley City newspaper man busy which shall excite the attention of the several hours day and comes as a werid. great disappointment to him for he ..LAST EDITION Roosevelt and Taft Both Grilled on Floor of Senate Today By Foraker—Makes Some of Strongest Accusations Ever Hard oa Floor of Chamber, CHARGES ILLEGAL DIVERSION OF PUBLIC FUNDS BY TEDDY "FRAUDULENT IMPERSONATION, LYING, DECKIT, TREACHERY, LI QUOR AND INTOXICATION COUPLED WITH PROMISES OF IMMUN ITY, AND HOPE OF REWARD, HAVE BEEN RESORTED TO TO SE 5, CURE THE TESTIMONY SOUGHT FOR IN THIS AFFAIR," SAYS FORAKER—LARGE CROWD FROM HOUSE PRESENT TO HEAR THE ARRAIGNMENT. 1878 at the close of the Spani*h-American war, to enable the president to meet emergency army contingencies slieh as were then arising In connection' with our military establishment, should have been construed to bo a penittinent appropriation. «m! that there is still a large unexpended balance out wf which payments of the character n«»w utadet1' consideration are being rnarle." Use of D«t*ctiv«o Atrocious, Speaking cf the use of private dew, tectiven in investigating the Browps vllle affair. Mr. Fora! de- Inred that "It Is impossible to find language with which to fittingly charirterlse such a procedure cs this* detective business fyas been from !ts ineipimcy down to tho monstrous stages it has reached. It Is atrocious, revolting, shocking to eyery sen^e of fairness, justice and even com mon decency." Mr. Foraker reviewed the statements made by the president in his messages to congresH on the Brownsville affair. "It will be noted," he said, "that the guilt of these soldiers, rts charged by the president, was, according to tha president, 'conclusively* established by the testimony first submitted. He took occasion to repeat this In his first mes sage over and over again. Why he should so often repeat It is inex plicable except upon the theory that ha is, after all, like all other men, and that, notwithstanding all he had said, he had some doubt about the sufficiency of the testimony upon which he had acted for, If he had no doubt, there could have been no necessity for surh un-' usual repitltlon of the statement Of that fact. It would at least appear to the ordinary mind that after the weak ness and Insufficiency of this testimony was pointed out, he recognized the ne cessity for strengthening his case, and thereupon dispatched Mr Purdy and Major Blocksom to Brownsville td se cure the evidence reported by them. Continued on Page Klgnu For First Time in Years France Sees Death Penalty MAI' (SET SPECIAL COMMITTEE14 DFSPtkAUIB BEHEADED VICE" COMMITTEE HAS NOT AQREED TO INVESTIGATE. Washington D. C.. Jan. 12.—Much interest was manifested by senators today in the procedure that will be adopted to dispose of the charges made by the president against Senator Till man in relation to his attempted pur chase of timber lands in Oregon. Till man insists that he shall be "convict ed or cleared" o* the president's charge of wrong doing. LARGE CROWD WITNESSES EX ECUTION OF FOUR MURDERERS WHO HAVE A RECORD OF LONG LIST OF CRIMES MURDERED FOUR MIEN. Betbune, Pas De Calais. Fmnoe, Jan. IS.—The first infliction of capital pun ishment in France for a number of years past were witnessed in this town yesterday when four murderers were decapitated by the guillotine. The executions were performed and took place in the presence of a large crowd of people. The record of crime against the four men was a long one. Working together they as members of a band had terrorised northern France and southern Belgium for several years. The specific acts for which the men were executed were the murder of Abel Pollet and bis brother and two other men named respectively Canut and Perru. SCHEER TO CARRY OFFICIAL RETURNS Btemarcfc, K.1X Jan. Beheer of Wells county was today fhrjfn tK. tii «„,» t—K»~~ ehoaea to carry tfte North Dakota elec toral vote to Washington. The elect presiding officer of th© house says that ..w ,1 & n.. V«X-h«v« day. Nichols, Schoer and Ilagvn were bnl ab. sent. In his places, 3d. (X Simmistead of Kdmore was chrw*n. then selected Behear. Constantinople, Jan, li—The Turkish he did "two tovernment today accepts the Austro Uuagariaa offer of 1M00.060 Turkiah. mo.»oe,o*0) Indemnity for the annex ation of Hoenia and Yl ^gova, thus removing every posuubii ty of war. Orand Vlater, KlamU Paaha, received Marquis Pallsvi.«lni, the Austria-Hun garian »niba*estder at noon today and mtifted him uf the decifetaa 4 council Of ministera i office to- Th« e'e«tar» •4k WAR AVERTED 1 AGREEMENT T0BA1 1 -v V* v.