The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 March 1914 — Page 1

*’ ■ : ‘ ■ ‘' ' ' , Largest circulation in Kosciusko County outside of Warsaw. Mr. ' Advertiser, take notice and govern yourself accordingly.

VOL. VI.

CHIEF CARRANZA MUSTGET DOWN Washington Will Not Tolerate High Horse Antics. HOLDS POSITION IS IMPOSSIBLE Administration at Work to Compel Change of Rebel Leader’s Attitude —No Pressure from Great Britain— Constitutionalist Agents at Washington Oppose Policy Toward U. S. Washington, March 1 4. —The state department’s efforts tn the Mexican situation are now being directed toward bringing about a reconstruction of General Carranza’s obstructive attitude toward the actions of the United States in the interest of other nations in Mexico. Carranza’s position, as set forth in his notes to Secretary Bryan, is now pronounced impossible and totally inadmissable by this government. Until Carranza has yielded to what is regarded as reason the attention of th© state department will be concentrated on that phase of the problem. Pressure from Britain Quieted. Sir Edward Grey’s declaration in the British house of commons that since the British government cannot charge the United States with responsibility for the fact of Benton’s execution it cannot ask it to resort to force to administer justice, together with his admission of the total impracticability of Great Britain resorting to force in Mexico is regarded as placing a quietus on all talk of pressure from the London foreign office. The United States proposes to operate on General Carranza through the medium of Geoige C. Carothers, for many years a member of the consular service and now engaged in special work on the Mexican border. Mr. Carothers has gone to Nogales frpm El Paso to see General Carranza whom he has known well for many years. As soon as he arrives it is understood that the representations by which it is expected to bring about a change in Carranza’s attitude will be begun. It is considered likely that much of the discussion between Carranza and vhe United States will be carried on informally through Carothers. Think Carranza Erred. It developed that in its determination to effect a virtual withdrawal by Carranza from' the position set forth in his notes, the United States will enjoy the assistance of the Washington agents of the Mexican revolutionists. This assistance will not be rendereu by reason of any solicitation on the part of the state department but because the Washington representatives of Carranza consider that their chief erred grossly in his attempts to seres the United States and Great Britaii ■ to grant recognition. They appreciate to the full harm which has been done their cause and the weakening of Carranza's heretofore strong position with relation to the Wilson administration by his demands upon Washington and London. BISHOP BOWMAN DIES; OLDEST M. E. PRELATE - In S7th Year, He Ends 75th Year of Ministry. , « »! ■ ■ ■■■■!— Chicago, March 4.—Bishop Thomas Bowman of the Methodist Episcopal churhc is dead a,t the home of his daughter, Mts. D. B. Caldwell, Orange, N. J. Biship Bowman was said to have been the oldest living bishop of the Methodist church. He was born at Berwick, Pa., July 15, 1817, and therefore would have been ninety-seven years old next July. He was formerly president of the board of trustees of Asbury, now DePauw, university and was elevated to the episcopacy in May, 1872. He joined the Methodist* ministry in 1839, being attached to the Baltimore conference. From 1848 to 1858 he was president of Dickinson seminary, Williamsport, Pa., where he had previously been, a teacher; from 1858 to 1872 he was Hannon professor of biblical literature at the same institution.; In 1864 and -1865 he was chaplain of the United States senate. In 1842 Bishop Bowman married Matilda Hartman of York, Pa. He retired from active work in 1896 and has made his home since that time •with his daughter at Orange, N. J. MRS. FRENCH GETS DIVORCE Neglect to Provide Is Alleged Against New York Banker. Newport, R. 1., March 4.—Mrs. Pauline French was granted a divorce from Amos Tuck French, New York banker,’ in the superior ©hurt. Neglect to provide was alleged and no defense was made by Mr. Mrs. French formerly was Miss Pauline Lerojr. _ . .. .. ..... ......

■» \ The Syracuse Journal

1 * ■ -7- y-„ JOSEPH W. FOLK To Be New Chief Counsel of Interstate Commerce Commission. I MH * «l ■■ ■" l I 1 Photo by American Press Association. FOLK ACCEPTS NEW POST Will Be Chief Counsel for Interstate Commerce Commission. WASHINGTON. — Joseph W. Folk, solicitor of the state department has decided to accept the new post of chief counsel for the interstate commerce commission. He came to his decision after onferences with President Wilson and Secretary Bryan He probably will take up his new office next week. No announcement has been made as to his successor. The commission announced that Dr. Charles W. Needham, former president of George Washington University, had been appointed assistant counsel. Both Mr. Folk’s and Mr. Needham’s appointments will be effective March 1. UNION LEADER TELLS OF HIS DEPORTATION Tanner Says Guns Were Used - on Him and Moyer. HANCOCK, MICH. — Charles H. Tanner, auditor of the Western Federation of Miners, took the stand before the congressional committee and described the deportation of Charles H. Moyer and himself. “Moyer was standing at the telephone in his room,’’ Tanner said, “when there was a rap on the door. I was standing beside the bed and Moyer himself opened the door with bis free hand. A crowd of twenty or thirty rushed in, shouting, ‘Where is Moyer? Where is Moyer?’ At the same time three men covered me with automatic revolvers. Then Moyer, by the telephone, replied. ‘I am Moyer.’ “Several men made a rush for him and bent him over almost double. Another man rushed in from the hallway and struck Moyer, as he was bent over, on the head with a revolver. The gun exploit! and Moyer was wounded In the back.” Tanner said Moyer and he were then rushed out of the room, down the stairs and out of the hotel. They were hustled across the bridge to Houghton, where they were placed on a train for Chicago in charge of two deputies, one named Hensley, and warned if they ever came back they would be hanged. On the bridge the witness said he was struck over the eye by his captor and he showed the committee a scar resulting from the blow. MRS. EDWARDS IS PARDONED Four Governors Had Refused to Fix Date of Execution. READ IN G, P,A. — Mrs. Kate Edwards, who has been in the shadow of tjie gallows tor nearly thirteen years, for the killing of her husband, was released from the Berks county jail, under a pardon granted by Governor Tener and secretly taken from the city to begin life over again. She was convicted of first degree murder in 1901, and sentenced to be hanged, but four governors declined to fix a day for her execution. Mrs. Edwards was convicted of the murder with a negro, who was afterward granted a new trial and acquitted. The husband was found dead with his head battered in. A short time after her arrest Mrs. Edwards gave birth to a negro child. 1914 ’ MARCH~I9I4 I S |M | T |W| T | Frs~l II |2.j3|4|s|6j7] 8 91011121314 15161718192021 22252425262728 293031 ■■■ . - ■ ■■■■ ]

EAST PARALYZED Railroads Suspend Operations; Ships at Mercy of Seas. WORST STORM SINGE 1888 Nine and One-Half Inches of Snow Falla in New York City; Funds Are Exhausted From Other Storms; Milk Famine Feared—Hundreds wait in Stations and Railway Cars. NEW YORK. — New York and a large part of the east are suffering from one of the worst storms in their history. Five persons have been killed, so far as reported, railroad traffic is tied up and wire communicatioj crippled. Strees and sidewalks are covered with an icy coating, making walking difficult and dangerous, and vehicle traffic is almost impossible. Few trains are leaving over any of the main trunk lines for the west and south and street car and elevated traffic in the city and suburbs is lame and in some instances suspended. Not since the blizzard of 1888, to which old residents point as the worst in the history of the city, has a storm resulted in so much suffering. A milk famine is feared, because of the suspended train service in New Jersey and New York state. Nine and one half inches of snow fell during the day and when it stopped a howling gale set In. The temperature, which had remained at a tew degree above freezing, droppe many degrees, freezing the slush and snow that covered the streets. Street Cleaner* Swamped. With only 50 per cent of the snow from the two previous storms remov •d from the principal streets, the city street cleaning department faced a new problem. Already 1980,000 has been spent in snow removal work and city officials were unable to make an estimate of the probable cost of the nalslatest storm. With its telegraph wires down, signals crippled and tracks drifted high with snow, the Pennsylvania railroat made no attempt to run a train out of New York after 7 o’clock, and all Incoming trains from the west and south arrived from two to eleven hours late. A local train from Atlantic City arrived at 4:30 o'clock, seven hours and fifty-three minutes late. The conductor reported that the storm was still raging along tb coast and that the snow was drifting badly. In the Pennsylvania" railroad station forty sleeping cars remained on the tracks all night. In them were 800 passengers, many of whom slept peacefully ignorant that they were not on their way to Ijheir destination Hundreds Walt in StationsIn the waiting rooms were hundreds of persons waiting for the resumption of traffic. Lunchrooms and dining halls were kept open all night for their accommodation. Trains on the New York Central lines fared little better. Points up state could not be reached by wire and the wherabouts of several incoming mail and passenger trains could not be learned. Among other trains reported lost was the Twentieth Century imlted. Between Peeksville and Cold Springs, a distance of elevn miles, thirty broken telegraph poles are down. Albany and Buffalo were out of communication and New York Central trains between these paints were reported lost. The storm put nearly every wireless station along the coast hereabouts out of commission and after 6 o’clock communication with ships at sea was impossible. The aerials of the station were so crippled with slbet and snow as to render them useless. TAFT REJECTS $750,000 BID Owner of Cubs and Chicago Syndicate Fail to Come to Terms. CINCINNATI, OHIO. — The tjrms offered Charles P. Taft by a Chicago syndicate for the controlling interest in the Chicago National league baseball club, are not acceptable to Mr. Taft, who has held a conference here with L. J. Behan, the representative of the syndicate. Just what the terms were was not given out but the conference did not last an hour. Mr. Behan departed for Chicago after it ended. MANY QUAIL DIE IN STORM Some Say More Were Frozen Than Hunter* Killed Last Season. TERRE HAUTE, IND. — Jesse Winslow of West Terre Haute reports a covey of fourteen quail frozen to death in the storm. Many farmers near here say ths sudden cold and thirty hours of snow with zero temperature following killed more quail than did the hunters in the last open season. GRISWOLD, OPERA STAR, DEAD Basao Succumbs in New York After an Operation for Appendicitis. NEW YORK. — Putman Griswold, American basso and member of the’ Metropolitan Opera company, died in a private sanitarium here. He was operated on for appendicitis Feb. 10. Complications developed. Mr. Griswold was born in Minneapolis in 1878 s

SYRACUSE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, MARCH 5. 1914

INDIANA STATE NEWS ■ village Butcher Lassoed. RENSSELAER, IND.—George W. Hoehn, the village butcher of Wheatfield, while cm a drunken spree resisted when Town Marshal Fillmer attempted to arrest him and the index finger of the marshal’s hand was almost chewed off. Fillmore called for assistance and Undertaker Keene finally lassoed Hoehn and the prisoner w»s dragged to the-calaboose with the rope around his'neck. When released in the calaboose, Hoehn tore the bars from the windows and wrecked the inside of the building. Many people gathered on the streets to watch the enraged butcher and the town marshal and bis deputies fight the matter out. i Want* Pay a* a “Receiver." ROCHESTER, IND.—As the result of a favorable verdict returned in the Fulton circuit court here, John H. Thompson of Argos, north of here, has filed suit against Isaac Reed of the same town for $20,000 for personal injuries received in an encounter with Reed, . I The two had trouble over a land deal and Thompson was worsted in the fight which followed, his life being despaired of for some time. The case was transferred here from Marshall county, and Reed was convicted and fined S2OO for assault with intent to kill. The new suit filed at Plymouth is the result. Mayor Bosse I* Threatened. EVANSVILLE, IND. —An anony- ‘ roous letter, hinting at violence If the “vice” crusade inaugurated here is continued, was received by Mayor j Bosse. At the top of the page are the words “End private vice probe,” and underneath, and fitted in so as to form the end of a sentence, is a headline clipping from a local newspaper, which reads “May Affect Dynamite Cases.” The writer asserts the rights of a citizen “under the fourth amendment to the constitution,” and states that no search of a premises can be made by the police without a search warrant. Find* Metal Worth SIOO,OOO. GARY, IND.—Gold and silver metal drippings worth SIOO,OOO have been recovered from sand beneath a leading pipe at the .United States Metal Refining company at Grasselll, west of Gary: s For several months a loss in metal was noted, Mhefctai&t discovered the leak and spades and sieves were used ed t otum over the sum of $227.95 to Mrs. Foulice Makes Gift. RICHMOND, IND. — Mrs. Wiliam Dudley Foulke has given SIO,OOO to the Richmond Guest House association, which will begin a campaign next week to raise $35,000 to buy the building formerly occupied by the. Hicksite Friends Board school. Mrs. Foulke’s gift is conditioned upon the raising of $20,000 additional and that the institution shall be nonsectarian. Roit Cases Are Postponed. SOUTH BEND, IND.—South Bend.s riot cases will not be tried until March 10. j The sixteen defendants arrested last week following the fight at St. Cashimier’s church, when an effort was made to install Rev. Stanislaus Gruza as pastor, appeared in court, but Judge W. A. Slick postponed all the cases. Greensburg, Ind, Goes “Dry.” . GREENSBURG, IND.—The “drys” carried the election here by a majority of 61, the total vote being: “drys,” 766; “wets,” 705. Church bells were tolled every hour during the day and women served hot coffee and sandwiches at ail the polling places. | Three years ago the city went “wet” by a majority of 139. Close to Boose and Nature. CONNERSVILLE, IND.—On believing he was going to bed, John Johns, a farmer living near here, removed his clothing and went to sleep on the well platform at the Lambert farm. He had hung his trousers and shoes across the pump handle, and used his overcoat for a pillow. He was found -frozen to death. Hurt In Crossing Accident BLOOMINGTON, IND.—Miss Elizabeth Kakley, a senior at Indiana university and Dorothy Smock, six years old, daughter of L. Smock of this city, /were seriously injured, when an automobile, in which they were passengers, was struck by a Big Four train at Paris, 111. Tramp Is Shot on Train. DECATUR, IND.—In a fierce fight, while stealing' a ride in a freight car on the Erie railroad, two tramps quar-; reled and one was mortally shot by t the other. The bounded man crawl- j ed from the train and summoned the officers himself, but is in a critical condition. Judge Hurt In Fall. ’ WINCHESTER, IND.—The Judge James S. Engle of the Randolph circuit court fell while leaving his house. His left arm was broken and • minor bruises were received that will keep him from work for several days. Vote to Observe Suffrage Day. i. EVANSVILLE, IND.—At a recent meeting of the Woman’s Equal Suffrage league here the organization agreed to participate locally in the nation-wide suffrage demonstration set for May 2. i. , I HTrr-illih ll<M

FATAL BURNING ENDS CAROUSAL IN SHACK One Man Is Disfigured Beyond Possibility of Recognition. FORT WAYNE, IND. —John Stern, forty-five years of age is at a local hospital probably fatally burned and an unidentified man who had been carousing with him all day in a shack frequented by laborers of the Fort Wayne Tile Mill is dead as the result of a, fire which destroyed the frame structure. The dead man Is supposed to be either William Noble or William MeDivltt. His arms and legs are burned off and Coroper Cruse reports that it w>ill not whether the remains are those of Noble or McDivitt until one of them shows up for work. It is supposed the men overloaded the stove with fuel and went to sleep. MASONS ARE SPREADING OUT South Bend Masons plan to Erect a SIOO,OOO Temple. SOUTH BEND, IND.—A new 100,000 Masonic Temple is being planned by South Bend Masons. Although the present temple, erected In 1908 at a cost of $50,000, is near the heart of the city and is an excellent propositlon from a financial standpoint because of the income from commercial purposes, it is too small for the six lodges. The plan Considered is for a fireproof, six-story building. The first three floors would be devoted to commercial purposes and the three utfper floors to lodges, clubrooms and ballroqm and dining hall. The South Shore railroad has made an offer for the present property. TOWN HAS SMALLPOX SCARE Bedford, Ind., Health Officer* Order Churches and School* Closed. BEDFORD, IND.—There are now thirteen cases of smallpox in Bedford and a large number of citizens have been exposed to the malady. City Health Officer Voyles issued closing churches and Sunday schools two weeks. Picture shows are ordered closed for three weeks. A public meeting was--held-4®-the city hall to discuss ways and means to prevent further spread and to provide for the present victims. The school board has ordered the public schools closed. PLEADS FOR “DRY” INDIANA F. K. Landis Says Liquor Traffic Needs Devil As Receiver. MUNCIE, IND.—In the furtherance of their campaign some very great meetings were conducted at the Tabernacle by the “drys.” Frederick K. Landis, former representative from the Eleventh district, was one of the speakers. In a masterful oration Mr. Landis declared that he was in the fight for nation-wide prohibition, “The liquor traffic needs a receiver, and the devil should be appointed and told to go to hell,” were the words of the speaker. COUPLE IS MARRIED ON CAR Preacher Saved Couple Trouble of Going to His Home. WINCHESTER, IND.—Roscoe L. Regar, son of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Regar, and Miss Hazel Grace Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Wright, were married on a traction car near here. The couple had started for the home of the Rev. N. H. Thornburg at Farmland, but met the minister in the car and he performed the ceremony before about seventy-five passengers. LAWYER ACCUSeToF THEFT Veteran Muncie Attorney Is Accused of Embezzlement. MUNCIE, IND.—Clayton B. Templer, who is one of the oldest and best known attorneys of Delaware county, was arrested by Sheriff White on a grand jury indictment charging embezalement. The affidavit charges that Templer, as the administrator of an estate, failed to turn over the sum of $227.95 to one of the heirs. Templer was released on his own recognizance. DIED FROM LAWYER’S ABUSE Strictures in Court Room Led t* Death of Woman. CORYDON, IND. — While Attorney Robert Armstrong was addressing the jury in the McKenzie-Lamon damage suit, Mrs. George W. Lamon was overcome by the attorney’s strictures upon her family and was taken from the court room to the Martin hotel, where she died. The jury decided the case in favor of ‘he Lamous. The suit originated in Crawford county, where all ths parties reside. Curiosity Leads to Injury. LA FAYETTE, IND.—While he was standing on the east banks of the Wabash river, watching dynamiters blasting the ice gorge near Main street, George Waldren was struck by a piece of the blasted ice and was seriously injured. f His left eye was destroyed, and he vias badly injured about the head. I

GOVERNOR COLQUITT Texas Eecutive Asks Permission to Invade Mexico. WASHINGTON. — Governor Colquitt of Texas demanded of Secretary Bryan the right to send troops into Mexica to find the body of Clemente Vergara, who is supposed to have been hanged by federals, which was flatly rejected by the secretary of state, as it would involve the federal government. •••••••••••••••••••••*3SSS GENERAL NEWS, j *••••••••*••• •••••••••••• MADRID, SPAIN. — The Spanish government has received information that an important revolutionary movement fs in progress in Portugal. According to an announcement made by the Spanish undersecretary of state for the interior, a condition of anarchy exists throughout the repubic. Every effort is being made by the authorities here to obtain full particulars of the occurrences in Portugal, but it has been impossible to learn definitely what is taking place, as all communication, including even wireless telegraphy, is interrupted. “ "SAN MONICA, CAL. — Ralph De Palma won the Vanderbilt cup race here. He drove a Mercedes car. His time was three hours, fifty-one minutes and forty-one seconds, an average of seventy-five miles an hour. It was the. most exciting automobile race ever staged on the Pacific coast. On the twenty-second time around the course, when De Palma was holding the lead and Oldfield was pushing him hardest, Oldfield risked his life in the most daring piece of driving ever witnessed. LEXINGTON, KY. — Investigation into the death of Mrs. Laura Simpson, formerly a Chicago girl, is now up to the grand jury. The coroner’s jury returned a noncommittal verdict. Evidence tjended to show that death, which was caused by a gunshot wound, was not a suicide. Seven witnesses were examined, including the victim’s father, Dr. William H. Wilder of Chicago. COLUMBUS, GA. — 4 Open war on monopoly was advocated by United States Senator Borah of Idaho in an address here before the Republicans of Ohio at a “get together” luncheon The time has come for “remedies, not palliatives,” in dealing with industrial monopolies, he said, and urged a vigorous policy on the part of the Republican party. WASHINGTON, — Secretary of the Navy Daniels ordered the courtmartial of Lieutenant Charles P. Huff, U. S. N., charged with “maltreating an inhabitant of Newport News, Va.” Huff, it is alleged, struck J. Philip Keisecker because he had been tangoing with Huff’s wife. WASHINGTON. — Secretary of Labor Wilson was severely criticised for purchasing a luxurious limousine touring car. for his personal use out of government funds,, the criticism coming from a Democrat, Representative Fitzgerald of New York, chairman of the house appropriations committee. ALBANY, N. Y, — A fusion of Democrats and Progressives in the legislature resulted in the election of Homer D. Call of Syracuse as state treasurer to succeed the late John L Kennedy of Buffalo. Wm. Sulzer voted with the Democrats and Progressives. LONDON. — Charles A. Comiskey, owner of the White Sox, shook hands with the King of England. The game went eleven innings. Daly, the first man up in the eleventh inning, won for Chicago with a home run, making the score 5 to 4. TIEN TSIN. — Assassination by poison is believed to have brought about the death here of Gen. Chao Ping-Chun, military governor of the province of Chi-Li and former premier under President Yuan Shi Kai.

For Rent— For Sale or TradeLost— Found— Wanted—lc Per Word Brings you dollars in return.

NO. 45

WATCHMAN BARS THE PRESIDENT . - • ■■ I Chief Executive Is Halted in Patent Office Stroll. V HE FAILED TO SEE 3 O'CLOCK “But Who Are You?” Faltered the In. terceptor—“l am Mr. Woodrow Wil. son, President of the United States,” and He Entered—President Had Changed His Usual Walk. WASHINGTON. — Shortly after three o’clock in the afternoon a man of medium height, dressed in a gray suit and wearing a gray hat, walked up the steps of the front entrance to the patent office. Evidently he hatt walked briskly for his face was glowing with the cold. He failed to notice a sign at the entrance reading: “No Visitors Admitted After 3 O’clock.” The pedestrian had opened the door v.ben the white-haired watchman stepped forward and barred his way. I “The o ce is closed for the day; you cannot enter,” said the watchman. Then he added as if he was in doubt, “out who are you?” “I am Mr. Woodrow Wilson." “I am Mr. Woodrow Wilson, the president of the United States,” he replied. “Well, then,” falteringly said the watchman. “I thought there was something familiar about your face. Come right in.” The president, who was accompanied by his physician, *Dr. Cary T. Grayson and two secret service operatives, walked in and made a tour of the patent office. He examined with interest records of recent patents which have been issued. The president’s walk la ted about three quarters of an hour. He chose it in preference to an sutoi \obile ride or a game of golf whicn t re his accustomed forms of recreate n. ADMITS SHE DON’T KF 0W ALL Wom’n Beaten at Chicago Poll* Rests Up In Indiara. FRENCH LICK, — Mrs. Paul Gerhardt, defeated so? the nomination of aiderman in Cl icago, arrived at French Lick Spr ngs to recuperate, having had only six hours* sleep in five days. She de< lared that she had only begun the fight for political recognition and would lea candidate for office again at the next election. “Some woman must be willing ta devote a good deal of money to acquiring political experience, ’ she said, “and I decided to be the j loneer. I figured that campaign ex; enses for the office of aiderman, wi ieh pays $3,000, would amount to $1 ),000. Women must be educated; th< y are not prepared to vote intelliger tly. My experience proves that, with out education., they are no cleaner n politics than the men. The candid ite is disappointed to discover that generally they vote according to their husband’s predilections.” i. ■ ' GUILTY IN PHAGAN MURDER Negro Convicted as Access >ry at Atlanta—Year in Chain Gang. ATLANTA, GA. — aJ nes Con, ley, a negro factory swi eper, was found guilty here of being an accessory after the fact to the nurder of Mary Phagan, a factory gii 1. He was sentenced to twelve months in a convict chain gang. Attorneys for Leo M. Frt nk, under death sentence for the murd> r of Mary Phagan, filed in the supren 3 court ot Georgia, a motion for rehea ing of arguments of Frank’s appeal for a new trial. An appeal was denied by the supreme court, with two justices dissenting. ALMA GLUCK IS TO WED Prima Donna Confirms Report sf Engagement to Russian Violinist. KANSAS CITY. — Miss Alma Gluck, the prima donna whose recent statements concerning temptations that surround the American girl seeking musical education in Europe caused wide discussion, confirmed here a rumor that she is engaged to Efrem Zimbalist. Russian violinist and protege of the late Joseph Fels. Z’Ynbalist is touring Russia. Miss Gluck said the marriage probably would be in June at the Fels home in London. SLAIN AS PEEPER AT COLLEGE low» Man Dies and Students of Cor* nell May Be ArrestedMOUNT VERNON, IA. — Howsrd Manning, aged twer .y-five, is dead of a bullet wound Irec tn a chase by students at Cornel college. The students said he had been peeping through windows in the girls’ dormitory. The coroner is investigating and arrests of the students are expected. IOWA CITY, IA. — Emanuel Horn, formerly of Windham la., shot and killed his nineteen-yeai old bride and then committed suicido at Le Grande, Ore., where they located re* cgntly. . - .