Newspaper Page Text
TS^.- 1I ,r- 4 5V m" N r/ ^.X RTs-i!^ «, „'£.'~ 't •"w*'*• rv^ -y »«,,•!? $ E I I O N 4,000 Government T?roops HaVe Revolted in -I ,Chihuahua\ Agua Frieta, Sonora' April 29. President Carranza's. "steel ring," which '-jt was ani^bifhiecd from Mexi co City he intended'placing about revolutionary Sonora, has }roken "part of the ring" haying joined the revolution. In Chihuahua approximately, 4,000 Carranza trpops had revolted, ac cording to an estimate made by P. Blias Calles, rebel commander in the northwest, at his Headquarters 'here. These troops have ^already beeir in battle with loyal federal troops. General Calles sai?, today. Ho said he had frill confirmation of the. re volt of the four thousand and of tne fighting- which was declared favor able to the revolutionists. ,.v The* Chihuahua situation has as sured thi. iSonorans their stat.« will not be invaded by federal troops,.' Gc-r-a1 Calles said. General 'Calles said he expected Juiue -V on the international bound ary to join the revolt. Mexicans here called attention to a Mexican belief that "he yvho takes Juarez jUtkea Mexico." Maz^tlan, the largest Mexican port Pacific coast, was reported on the. by' revolu tionaY«jCytroops under •'General Angel Florca.'The report had' not- been con firmed today... From the heart of Mexico, in states near Mexico City, the revolu tion continues to grow, General Calles said, and rebels there "have created a situation that forbids Par ranax sending many troops north. A^alt Action. El Paso, Texas, iApril 29..—Ameri can ttoojSs were established today alongi.the Mexican border hero waiN^ana ing for the iirst sign of a rumored tio'n and reinforced by a detachment" of local police,-were deployed near the international boundary, forming a cordon,beyond whlch^ no civilian might pass. The measure was a preventive one to protect this city from possible stray bullets from the ^5. Escobar and Col. Anigustin Mora at the Juarez garrison had split over the revolt question were set at rest by a joint statenent that they would l-cmair. loyal to. Carrahza. x-" The most serlbus situation in- Chi huahua early today was at Chihuahua City, where revolting troops had been driven from the city last night, seek-' ing refuge in th£\ smeltery'' a mile away. Senor de ^Ja O, a civilian, as suned control of *the situation •CffVfSlH6f:"5fla telegraphed last night he could hold the place .'until •$* reinforcements could be seiit. Francisco Villa/ rebel chieftain, warden's house ungmyd^d. Scores Of Colleges •K ••',-• lilltl /. lT?n t'*c \n -the vicinity: of... Chihuahua "City, wis reported yesterday to have opened negotiations with the revolting troops. Ex-Prisaner Gives Banquet For Fifteen M(!n Serving Terms Ossiriing, N. Y„ April 29.—Seven teen'men wtio are serving life sen tences in Sing Sing prison were tenc gues One-of the' feature '.events^ of the two days', program is the two-mile college relay championship "of the United States in whi&h tne "Oxford Cambridge team is among the ^en trants. The British, feani, will mpet some of the fastest men in American cglleges^ The British runner^ also will com pete in several other events, includ^ /ing1 the distance mfedley' relay,, tbe 120-yard hurdle and the three-mild •race... TO DISCUSS WAR'PR6BLEM8.~ New York, April 29.—Economists^ banKers an^cducators will discijtw problems arising from the war, chiefly as- they affect .the high cost of living and nricit inflation, at the semi annual) "*»fieeting of the Amertcan academy of! political science "to be held here '"'.tomorrow. professor Samuel McCuhe Lindsay of Columbia university, in in»king the announce ment said the prime purpose of this a violation of the law. The .attorney general said that pros ecutions had' been brought against "hundreds and hundreds of'profiteers" by the department since last fall and all were on the theory that the price 'charged for a, commodity beyond a certain figure-was unfair. ests last night irv the residence of and an *2Hsh lace pillow slip from Warden Lewis Lawes, given by Wil- Captain Bojuk of the New York Ate li im Perry, who was released today department and his wife. after serving 15 years of a life ter^. attention of the governor's military been planted ii^ Montana, Spring, Lit sepretary, who investigated the case tie' Prickley Pear. Meadow and Can and-intecceded in his behalf., -',.|yon creeks. The fry were distributed I *n Via mtaA tf a T)wlnl/1mr The prisoners who attended the Under the supervision of deputies from dinner last night were permitted to the- state fish and game cfOBUQiasion. cross1 the road from the prison to tho Entered In Cardival ciutvrca 1U varmysi ter. Philadelphia, April 29.-^Scores of college athtfi^es from the east and' middle west arrived here today to compete iji. theV,Universityv of Penn sylvania relay carnival on Friday and Saturday.-'" .' •Th^ entry list thirf. year is onte of the largest in the history of the games. It' fhclddes representatives from nearly all the pleading colleges' and schools in .the country., national for^im was ,1'to being together the best thought of the nation in an effort to. remove, the'-' hazards' of .the round, era of Reconstruction." O^orge :H. Richarda, siBcretacy of state aMoclatton declared 'the take un v&tious jaue»tl«lis ajiteinv ft^m the'Acute fin-Jl ancial situktioh brfKUght about by the •hort&go /iffxears.- Wdrti» Wish* W J* The attorney .general declared that by the deparwngnt's acuon as to L6usi«- SU revolt in ther Mexican city of Juarez ^ged for ThU sugar/ =„nr,,»/. with ommnni 1 Five thoasahd invitations were is sued to friend^Shd ralittivfes, including, sfeveral hundred former ddGghboys. who served with young Vanderbiltv in' France with tbje Twenty-seventh divi sion. A wedding 'cake, ,sald to' be the largest "in the world, was. provided for the guests. Gifts valued" at near a. million dol lars have befen received by the couple. Among .the the most prized presents w«^e a leather pocketbook fKm a coachman .who has been in the Van derblit service yearly a quarter- of a century a poem' from headquarters troop, of the Twenty-seventh division PLANT TROUT FRY. Perry's sentence was recently com muted by Governor Smith after -the prisoner's ooliteness while serving in tfie wartleiiTs" home had attracted the that 50,000 eastern brook trout fry has ^Lake, have not beetle apprehended, thel attention of the governor's military been planted in Montana, Spring, Lit- authorities announced .today. There is 86pPA'atr tirVk r* I tf Aof 'V s* 1S'/ft ./imupeg Tradesmen .r r^Mdve.OiitTo Suborbuiv it Farm* To Beat H. C. ,." V:. -"S 'Winnipeg, Man., Aprtl M.— Artisans of all lines of t*md«— hricklaSbrs, c«rpcnt#rs, anto me cbtoics. Htone -masons. Building laborero form titc army of liicn, alltnifh families who ire. moving out to' farms and acreage proper ty this toeelc to escape the hlgli cost of ltring. Wages are going np but the cost of everything rises In common, and. besides nearly all of these mechanic! only work about 60 per cent, of the year at theirs 'trade and have to pick up ,odd jobs the rest of the year. Hnn tlreds are leaving the city this wrecks IcaTinq younger' mombefB of the family in istar^i and offices. EIGHTEEN CENTS Palmer Declares This is Not Unfair Maximum Price For Sugar., i, Mr..Palmer declared that the #c ceptanceVof the "fair" prices was "not fixing a. price," but the exorcising, of gar "millions^ were saved Dubllc on WOuld pound,"s he. told tru Juarez loyal darranza troops J!. slept on their arms, ready for any {"*5^ contingency. Rumorti that General J. kept it locked in my breast. tor the have been "Without the action Louisiana sugar wou'a .upwards of 22 cents a the -committee, ex ana growers had lh shown him "without regard to price' tracts made on a basis of 21 and. 22 cents a pound, y "I .would hare hated myself," con- Eyes Of New York .t' Society Focused On •fJtrt Vanderfailt Wedding New Tork. April 29.—The eyes of New ^ork. society were focuaed today on the 'weddihg in St. Thomas church of Miss Rachel Littleton, daughter of the late Mri and Mrs. TfraiAas J. Lit tleton of Chattanoog&,~Tenn., to Cor nelius Vanderblit Jr. Helena, Mont., April 29.—Game TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS 1 •¥,ium^-xabrielo d'Annunsio's bat- Wred on ari" Itallan torpedo boat in the vicinity Of Fiume but thert wer&s,no casualties. Antwerp^America won second Place, in the_Oiymplc hookey contests, "defeating thie CaechjtSlovaks 16 to 0. San Francisco—-Illinois Athletia club won the 400-yard /national re lay. swimming champfonshi Boston—The Massachusetts legis lature completed passage of a bill to make 2.75 beef available for sale in the state subject to federal legisla tion. N^w Halven, Conn.-—Michael E. Tracy, one of the founders of the Knights of Columbus, ^ied at his home-'Hn Orange. Berlin—'The national assembly and the Prussian diet- defeated a Social |s^motlon to i^aXe^May day a legal Warsaw—A state of siege, has been declared in Posen as the result of fifch* Rdme^-The'Pfrtfssianv^egatio|» to the Holy' See has b^en made- an em bassy of the Gerihan empire. Kenosha/—Battling Levinsky out-, fought ^ony M^Jchoir. in. ten rounds. *Gri«»d- Rapldtt—Bob'^tortln 'ksock- «d' 6ut Ted Jtunieaon in the aeebnd 1 r.s IsfBE! PXiAlCNKb, *0lis, Minii.,' April ?#.—^Twd |^,'Vof.'-- the'. ^liank'C'rsy.la^fclaiibirvlliave 1 ifduncetl CUte"',.''.ti| If Tatith district^group meeting In Min-f .'•^neapo'is. May 20, and the Third' dUK •^^ictvgravip 'in gt ^auI' May -10 cdMMuNnYHousE €OMMilmWILL REPORT TONIGHT for the wm he. niwiwiww i— wn» of tte wMu in 11m- crenintt's meeUog will Ate W ftV 'i. Av'i Vs.'*. W.ltoC®,-' As wwut of the von by Wedntjuttay, it is two liouaes hM» either one of Snkabie -. Mr Wm f- «f }i, '*V: 7 ft V* ^*,A( J4"V^ ':a#'i l^viV .-HI iiir ..SS^i'A^NORfH DAKOTA'S JliiffidREAfEST *. i«tiu t' MA»^ ._•.... ... ,_«.. .. l_Lr: _'. Arrests Are Expected to Be Made Withiri a Short T'ime. The', authorities Are also investigate ing the actions Qf different members of the family of' tbe.lglrl with whom Wolf.is said to have' been intimati. This phase of the situation, offers the best motjve for the crime, the authori ties believe, but up to the present time no .i)ther connection between the membeni of this family and the mur ders has been fiiscovtered by the au thorities^- Still nWd Hanson. Besides these tWo phases of the mystery, the authorities are stfll re taining Dave Hanson -in the Washburn jail. Hanson was arrested late Tuesday afternoon after a thrilling chase over the prairjes. J3e is not believed* to be implicated In the crimfe", but because of his auspicious actions, the aufhori ties are holding him. The two jnen in the automobile, one of whompstole a shotgun from a farm- Warden J. L. DeHart has announced ^r, boy a .few mile's tratsfd^ of TurtVrf usual are being, put in, because /l 'K'.v Turtle Lake, D., A|rii 29.~7rAr restsv|ire expected to, be made soon by the. authorities at. Turtle Lake as they draw tighter the net which they hope will engulf the riturderer or murderers who last Thursday' killed Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Wolf, their Ave young daughters and thev chore boy, JakeK Hofer, on the W61f farm three miles north of Turtle LaKe. The authorities are working on four, different and widely separated angles. A farmer of the neighborhood has been put through several Revere cross examinations in an attempt to check up 'his movement late' Thursday dur ing the Umo Which the authorities be lieved the crimes were committed. A strong case, based on circumstantial evidence, has been buil€ up by the au thorities against hint1 and he may be wiviinco Hiqwjipi xiitis ctilu iits iiia^ Washington, April 29.—Aoceptance, arrested -at any tifne, possibly today. -of "fair" prices by the department of justice was defended today by Attor 'ney General Palmer before the house judiciary committee "which is investi gating hi^ agreement with Louisiana sugar growers that 17 and 18 cents would,, not be considered, an unfair maximum price for their product. This man, the authorities have learned, was practically the only farm er in the entire Turtle Lake district 'aw\ Lill feeling between Wolf and the sus- operation was performed. pect are the only evidence that Wolf He pointed out-that inteHt to de had any disagreement with neighbors., stroy the life of the younger woman Question daughter. -r...-.-1* .^..V-r 1 X.J 'llftiisg V. '•'"i '0'' *1Q'''' M'Zfih.. V.« yft rtt&ftf GRAND: FORKS, N. P., THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1920. a possibility th^it these two men .might have committed the murders, remain od/ in hiding uhtil Tuesday, Btole an automobile and. tried to mako«*helr get away. This contention is supported byj&e fact that one of the men, mask ed with a handkerchief, demanded that" the farm bpy obtain gasoline for them from a nearby farm house, .'v -j Laager After Another Man. Attorney General William Langer, who has been assisting* thp McLean county authorities in solving the mys tery, left last night for some place be tween' Dickinson and Beach to locate a man. who is alleged to have said that he intended "getting" Wolf and the whole family. The authorities refused to give out.any further information oil this clue FAMOUSTABOR who had had any difficulties with having performed or aided in an il-r with the executive committee of 'the Wolf. On-several occasions, the au-. legal operation which caused the general federation .until late last thorities have learned, "there, was fric-' death of he (laughter. Maude Tabor night trying, to persuade or force the tion between them, the last time being Virgo, was giVeh to the jt}ry at 10:46 latter to support revolutionary over the running of cattle on free a. m. plans. range. Wolf having taken up some of Judge Howard Wiest instructed the More than diplomatic secrecy has the suspect's, cattle. The- Alleged rela-'jury that its duty was to determine been maintained as to this consul —. lions between Wolf and a farmer's whether the body found in the -Tabor tation, but, as fuf. as- can be ascer the jawful discretion in announcing daughter has been a favorite story. home last November was that of what the government would regard as These and several other evidence of Maude Virgo and whether a criminal .. ..... ... ... .Virgo, a pregnant women, died as Besides, these facts, the authorities the resuU of a criminal operation, upon questioning tho isuspect eldest performed by tlie use of instru daughter. a girl about 12 years of age, n\ents at the hand of the defendant, Toun^ that the man had been absent frcun the house Jnost one day last manslaughter," he said. but the girl could not state posi- He cautioned the jurors that the IT, waSi pected man-was very, much interested reque&ts for purchases huntlilg ftnd ^hat lie was considered and con-1 a 4°°^ shot» ,^iis fact coupled'with^-the discovery of the doubly barreled shot gun in slough one mile In the op- Chicago, April 29.—With the cir posite direction from the Wolf farm cuit, expanded to eight clubs, the from whioh the suspect lives, strength- Three I league was scheduled to op$n ens the sftprfesltion that the man may have committed the murder.' He was one of the first on the scene when the bodies were, discovered last Saturday and Sunday mornifife. I Statements Contradictory. Statements made at: the coroner's inquest Sunday by the suspected man were contradictory to .those he made previous. H« .Was put through Another stifl:.. cro^ ejeamination 'Wednesday, tffternQOit^ while the funeral services were in progress. ., Questiijin Others.- '"'K GOES TO JURY Mother of Woman Alleg ed to Have Aided in -~Cau?ing Death. was not necessary. "If Maude Tabor or another, at her direction, it is The girl, was age of the defendant in itself was not questioned while hefr father and moth- for their consideration. er were at th« Wolf fun«ral Wednes-' —J t%SgS2Ts». E E I E A E lts 20th ida« IcVwf TO OPEN SEASON season today. Cedar Rap- ,and Rock Island, 111., are new cities in the league. The schedule called for Rockford, 111., to take the field at Kvansvllie, Ind., Cedar Rapids at Terre Haute, Ind., and Rock Island at Blooming ton, III. The Peoria-MoiiAe game was transferred to Rock Island be cause of the flooded ^condition of the Moline park. Pre»ence Of ilsjtf Alleviated Farn Helena, Mont., April 29.-—De spite a persistent demand for la-% borers, reports are coming in of activities of "hoboes" and "pan handlers," for the first time sincc the boom came in 1915 in conse quence of the world war. There is no actual unemploy ment in Montana among men who wish to work. Reports from all agencics dealing with labor show farmers arc clamoring for Jubnds and highway and other.construc tion soon will increase the de mand. It is common knowledge that farm jobs at as high as $75 per month and' loard arc going beg ging: and that smaller crops than of tlic fear that there will bcjiouc to harvest them. Its A Good Thing I Have A Strong Constitution By MORRIS i: M1 *M or CO^T a*™ .. WT v» Vv $mm FirSt Dononstiration Likely to be More General Than Supposed. i»aris,',April 29.—The general fed eration of labor of France today de cided'to support the railwaymen's federation by ordering a general strike to begin at midnight on May l.": Paris, .uApril 29.—Extremists who have captured control of the Rail road Workers' Federation are at tempting to make the Mat '1 strike a starting point for unlimited gen epal strike for the nationalization of public utilities. In the past plans for the day have contemplated a mere demonstration by labor. Strike notices subject to the ap proval the general labor federa tion have' been issued by the execu tive committee of/the railroad feder ation, which does not' wish to risk failure' because .of lack of support ,Paw Paw, Mich., April 29.—The case of Mrs. Sarah I. Tabor, 80-yea'r old Lawton woman, under indictment from the parent organization. Dele for manslaughter, charging her with gates of the railroads were closeted ained no'decisi^was reached the eration will see Premier Millerand to day, and a meeting of the cabinet, has been called to consider the sit uation) which is confused, but very grave. The walls of Paris are plastered with appeals and manifestos from all,, shades of opinion in the ranks of laboh One appeal issued by the United Unions of The Seine depart ment concluded with a bit of uncon scious humor. "Do not work on May 1," it said, "so that the maxim 'he who will eat must produce' may be applied." TALKING MACHINE RECORD MADE OF _______ VOICE OVER PHONE London April 29.—Experiments which have been carried out here have resulted in the making of a talk ing machine record on wax of a voice transmitted by. wireless telephone forty miles away. While the voice was ^speaking at Chelmsford in the county of Essex, where- there is a—high power instru ment capable of transmitting the voice hundreds of miles, the equipment at the receiving -plant, in the 'Strand iondon, was attached to a, recorder, which engraved the messages in soft! wax in the same way as an ordinary talking machine disc is manufactured, The record when produced was per- I fectly. audible, though a trifle "patchy." With larger amplifiers the] result, it is said, would have been louder though rather hoarse in its effect. PLAN TO LICENSE MEAT PACKERS IS REJECTED TODAY .Washington. April 29.—Proposals to license meat packers and create a commission to enforce laws affecting the industry were rejected today by the. house agricultore c^«mitteo. With thes3 elimination's agreed upon, a Subcommittee headed by Chairman Haugen was. appointed to draft a cpmpromise legislation* for the regu lation of the packers. AVfir^i !"?'& II I iI II, mil II I. irirniliii.niin'iiii.111,11 ^Iiin•i#iijilriiliiji».i»i»^iiip^MP U»'J *W4f 'W -3|5 A- W-- 0'Sl|sp N.E WSPAPE B»«fiiSffl 5 Lovers 01 London Out Of Luck Have No Courting Places ljondon, April 20.—London's acute housing shortage presents another complication—hundreds of young couples ore declared to •have no suitable oonrtlng places. This phase -of the situation manifested itself in a court pro ceedlng at WiUesden. where a man living In a tenement house complained of courting couples sitting on the stairs. 'He was granted a summons against a suitor, who tho complainant said, had assaulted him when he fell over him. SKYONCElORE IS CLEAR, SAYS LLOYD GEORGE Tells Commons That Misun derstandings Existed Be fore Conference. Londoh, April 29^—Premier T^loyd/ GporKe- labor federaUon be^i wnnosed iif !commons today said that before the 'Northwestern railroad met in a head principle to political lirikes. Thelfc'an Remo conferee therc 'had been on ,c"115^r' executive committee of the labor fed- ?°m'? misunderetan^Hngs made, grave ... 10 clock this morning. A mio by deliberate fomenting on the part of very re.clcless persons. "Bdt," he continued, "I am glad to say that the Sky is once more clear. So far as I can see everyone is satis Red at what happened at San ilenio." The premier declared the confer- various organizations representing! ^nce had been the most remarkable bound train, sanv the approaching all shades of onlnioh in the ranks of I one in every respect held since the westbound traini in time to their one in every respect held since the armistice. There never had been such a "conference as regarded satis faction with the agreement by all the parties concerned or the happiness which they had been able to bring about," he 'said. The conference, de clared the premier, dispelled all sus picion that the treaty of Versailles was not to' be enforced. A misunderstanding arose, he de clared, over the question as to who 1 f-hoiild put down, the disturbance* in the Ruhr. Pontiac, Mich., April 29.'—An son Best this morning, in the presence of his. attorney, Prose cutor Glenn C. Gillespie and a number of newspaper men, repu diated the confession the prose cutor declares he made In the •Vera Schneider murder ease. The prisoner maintained that his first story, told when lie was stopped at the scene of the mur der. Is the troth and that his ad missions made, according to the prosecutor, in the presence of (several officers yesterday, were all false and dne to his fear of officers and fatigue femn ques tioning. Plans to arraign the man again in circuit' court today have been deferred •bocausc of the new de velopment. liarge imyAs- pM'f iMi'fii'li")] jMii'ffi given out by Prosecutor Gillespie, de- tw„ clared lie killed Miss Schneider "he- °i6 cause she asked, hint11 to." Last night, 1H. 1ac?" while they were sitting on the porch of the unoccupied hovjse, where her ",n body was found early last Sunday! UlU ror ine Rlintistfi New York, OPPOSITION OFFERED AMERltAifSHEKT REACH PORTS IN THE SQUTH TODAY «0'k0' E E N & I & N PRICE FIVE CENTS. Killed and Twelve Hurt In Headon Collision of Two Trains Near Minnesota Town speaking in the house of trains on the Chicago and which threatened the peace not only of Germany, but of Europe. This difference had been settled, he said, and the Germans informed that the moment the German troops in the Ruhr were reduced to _^the propor tions fixed by the Allies last August, the French troops would be with drawn* from Frankfort and Darm stadt. CONFESSION OF ALLEGED MURDERER REPUDIATED TODAY u) & Vs- Among the Injured and Taken to Hospital. Winona,, Minn., April 29.—Th| man responsiUe for tlic wreck on the Cliicago and Northwestern railway near1 Lamborloii early this morning in Which live per-, sons were killed,. Is /Operator's^ Joseph Tauer, of Sanborn, ao cording to Martin J. Boyle, s«.**^"| perintendent of the Minnesota A division of the.- road with offices is| in tills city. "The blame for the wrcck,M sfi said Mr. Boyle this afternoon, "belongs to the operator at San- "Sf-1 born. Joseph Tauer. Tauor for got to give, the engineer and con- 1 ductor of tlic westbound train orders to take the siding at West: Wye about a mile west of San born, where the castbounri train ,-Conypuod on toward Eambertoii, aiida ftiost rcsrcttable wrwk followed," said Mr. Boyle. Tauer*s home, according to 8upcriiiundetit Boyle. is at Springfield, Minn. Lamberton, Minn.," April 2S.—Five persons were killed and twelve in jured. one seriously, when two pus- The dead are vrt" EEv,CjjARK, condiictorif -trSln'^1: No. 516 from Winona. L. S. FULLER, engineer, of No 516 from Winona. E. C. LARSON, fireman on ifo. 516 from Winona. A. FELTZ, car repairer, Tracy, Minn. E. W. AUGUSTINE, Pioneer, Many Injured. The injured, who were taken to {Mankato and Tracy hospitals are: W. H. Niesser, fireman on No. 517 ifrom Waseca. A. B. Heller. Winona, mail clerk. Joseph Friefeing of LaCrosse Wis |. Bert Olson,"Slsseton, S. D. J. -Cassidy, brakeman on 517, Sleepy Eye, Minn. C. Snyderjg&ard, Lake Benton, I Minn. H. Enke, Lake Benton, Minn. Bert Roe", Allaniont, S. D. rid Changed Confcssiou. Mrs. W. F. Lathrope, Tomahawk Pontiac, Mich., April 29."—Anson Wis. Best. 21 years old, factory worker, On Straight Tra'k last night changed his confession to i- Tlie ^nnt H. Haack. j^ail clerkX Winona.'^ W. J. Jennings, mail cleric. Winona. Conrad Hess. Williston, N. n. nh«„ the killing of Miss Vera Schneider. !an opeT lra^k- Tn t.^ l" ,'S according to sheriffs officers, so as to curve ,? „. eliminate all allegations of suicidal in- vVL °^tructl0"^ tent on the part of the trirl \,T"- arcordinp: to those wbiX Best, in his original statement, as Soln^"1^1 ,v.„ 1 morning. |AUhaugh all members of the crew ot train No. 517 who were -familiar with Lartrp fiiff Fnr TTia Annminr»l1&t DapUSU IS JinnOUnCeO meeting at Lamberton, which order." movement of northern Ba^Jtists were billty foT^the ^ktrntil Of the Lauri Spellrban Rockefeller Pledges 41,000.000 is conditional upon the raising of $62,500,000 by the Bap tists. and a second'million is condi- JAP FORCES TAKE NEW LOCATION "NO it. Ital8 at Trjacy ana Toklo, April 24.—(By the Associ- I ated Press.)—f-The Japanese force on rushed from thia .i^tace ahowed that1 its wajj t6 the-reUef ot the. N^ko- inone.had reo«*ved hurts ot* iecided laeVsk district In eastern Siberia oc- :'y serious nature. %nke wa» the on* cupied he northern Section of lln Island. (Russiaji territroy posed', it? wafi announced in a' war of flce.^o'lnmUhixiue t6d.ay. -meet was scheduled, the orders received, were killed, it is believed that their train was -racing Apfril 29.—An outright ^bound tr^in, had been cancelled, and gift of $2,000,000 and conditional^ new order issift?d to meet at- San pledges of art additional J2,000,000 born. from the Laura Spellman Rockefeller memorial fund' to the $100,000,000 fund being raised by the New World *'3$ 6 Misinterpretation of Signals Hejd ^fe§ponsible For the "Wreck WilHston Man is lk\ here' °raerB, which sOiould hjive held the ,westbound train ai Sanborft for the pa,ssage of the cast bound train, is said to have caused the acci dent. Engineer T. J*. Currey of Waseca and Fireman Xiesser of the east- westbound traini in-time to sftk their brakes and jump, both escaping un hurt. The eastbound train had vir tually stopped when the speeding westbound train crashed into it-, smashing the wopden smoking car of the eastbound train' to splinters w"hich caught fire and consumed the bodies of Engineer L. S. Fuller and Fireman E. L. Larson, both of Wi nona, engine crew of the westbound train.- Conductor Ed. Clark of Winona in the oaggage coach of the westbound train, also, was instantly killed, and A. Feltz, car repairer of Tracy. Minn.-, and E. W. Augustine, Pioneer. Ohio, in the smoker of the eastbound train, were crushed to death. The bodies of Feltz, Augustine'and Clark, were taken to Tracy this moftiing, and most of the injured were brought here. H. Enke of Lake Benton-, Minn.,y sustained two fractured ribs, but none-of- the other, injured were badly hurt. '.. it' PI '-. S" '4 'H it) -i' 'ik Jr. J-' A Mi 1 •t1 0,1 with the ,l was 2o 11 '"oadbod at thai 7 &>r "v:r mmutcs lale an ^*as the officers say,' he broke down com- 'u ,V.me when it reached in) pletely and admitted he attacked heir °.n', ^at„ sPeeding to make, x,°- 517 af'ea at might not le Sanborn, where the crew., cJlar^e of the eastbound train un» be on time for the according to tlje crew of- the east- ToStake Investigation. Railroad officials said (that it will be impossible to-place the rcsponsi- announced here today. Aided to the investieadon or JlT nprwinat mntHhnHnns iannnvins.nj-1 ... orders.issued and personal contributions announced last n)ght from John D. Rockefeller, Jr.-, the Baptists have received gifts an3 pledges in the last two days totalling 16,000,000 from the Rockefeller family. tional upon-'thtf funds reaching $87,- suffered pi 500,000. *.v. .iuries. Niesser, fireman on -517 was Vinjured about the h«ad and shoulder* ing shaken. The p^n^ra'^fRTredi j» from bruises recei^ed .wlten thrown tp* -. car -from terths ana retfioved To hospl ---.SjUwkato. -Hurried- e*an)inatioas sponsible F®"» toi f».—Vbe md&k. by physicians E Sagha- Jy person Whose bones' were brokei£ unop- he having two firactared rtbs. Only a sfiiall- strips track Th# front..£nd. of both tj-a}ns piled up In-t^^car,"toijKths of track,: but it wllT twenty-f pur' I^oubIKiv age": andplacethe: In shap^ to re#im« The hcnir at iwhl' & fij a,Sr the manner in whitfh "they handled h"as been checked. The fire which started shortly aft-« er the cars piled on top of the twtf engines burned itself out after the one wooden car, the only one of that type in the two trains, had been con sumed. The steel cars were but slightly damaged.v- -y Those htirt Euffered tpnly rainor in4 when he jumped^Gurrty, m^o jump- ed with him was spot hnrt beyond, bei" J' leasts wreck. railSh b»en re*.