The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 7, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 June 1914 — Page 1

Largest circulation in Kosciusko County outside of Warsaw. Mr. ' Advertiser, take notice and govern yourself accordingly.

VOL. VII.

125 FISHERMEN TOLL OF STORM _ ' I Terrible Tragedy Befalls Bay of Ghaleurs Colony. Ml MEN IN FAMILIES LOST Victims Met- Death In GsftWßSweeping Sheree of New Brunswick Thursday and Friday—Schooner Captain Eye Witness—Wind Blows 150 Miles Per Hour, St. Johns, N. 8., June 10. —Meagre and disconnected stories coming in here regarding the awful gale which swept the Bay of Chaleur between the North Coast of New Brunswick and the capes coast of Quebec on Thursday and Friday of last week tell of a terrible tragedy. It is variously estimated that between 100 and 125 lives went out during the two days, , All Men In Families Lost. The victims were fishermen and a particularly sad feature of the tragedy is that in most cases more than one member of a family was taken. The Bay of Chaleur fishermen ply their craft in families, the father owns the boat and his sons sail with him as assistants. Thus is was that practically every one of the fifty or sixty boats hailing from Quebec and New Brunswick fishing villages which put to sea on Thursday last carried father and son or older and younger brothers in their crew. ’ There is but indifferent telegraphic communication with the fishing villages nestling around the coast of the bay and for this reason there has been but little opportunity, to get a connected idea of what happened. The boats, however, estimated between fifty and sixty, put to sea on Thursday last and but very few of them have since been heard from, while scores of bodies have either been brought in by other vessels or have been washed on the shores. Schooner Captain Telia Story. The first connected story of the tragedy is told by Captain Samuel Breau, or the schooner Warren P. The Warren P. reached Chatham from Shippegan in the track of the storm and Her captain gives some slight idea of the great loss of life, Captain Breau himself was out in the gale, but, not laeing so far from land as the fishermen, managed to make Shippegan without damage. He says the wind blew 150 miles per hour during the worst part of the gale. Looking southward from his vessel just before the storm broke he saw eight fishing boats each carrying four or five men. After the clouds lifted a little he looked again for the craft but they were gone. Later when the storm subsided somewhat he sent boats near the spot and some fishing boats were found bottom up with bodies of men still on them. Fourteen bodies were recovered in that vicinity. From Paspebiac comes word that thirty boats are missing and that they averaged three men each. Some of them have probably made shelter in other villages and owing to the difficulty of getting communication their safety has not been learned of previously. It is estimated that probably forty fishermen from Paspebiac have drowned. Other losses of life reported are: Stasimon, 16; Caraquet, 8; Shipegan, 6. JURY GIVES DIVORCE , TO SCHUMANN-HEINK Din Wins Victory on Every , Point In Her Case. Chicago, June ID.—Mme. Ernestine Schumann-Helnk has scofed a new triumph, being granted a decree of divorce from her husband, William Rapp, Jr. Judge Sullivan, after two lengthy conferences, instructed the jury to return a verdict favoring the diva in every issue. One of these was complete vindication on the charges which her husband made by insinuation. The jurymen followed the court’s commands to the letter*. They signed the verdict without qved leaving the® seats. There Were three things that had to be taken into consideration by the court. And each favored the singer. First, the judge held that Mme. Schu->xnann-Heink is a resident of Chicago, and therefore entitled -to the right to sue here. Second, her husband has been guilty of too great friendship wjth blond “Kitty” Dean, to whom he wrote the "Nonnle letters.” Third, that all insinuations made by her husband against the diva were igroundless. Carl Person Obtains Bail. Chicago, June 10.—Carl Person, the Clinton, 111., .labor editor, who has been in jail since he shot Tony Musser, former Clinton chief of police, on Dec. 30, was admitted to bail by Judge Walker in the sum of *IO,OOO.

The Syraci se Journal

JAMES P. CLARKE Governor of Arkansas Challenges the U. S. Senator to Resign. I —■ -■ AWW! LITTLE ROCK, ARK. — Governor George Wz Hays has issued a written statement in which he offers to resign tbe governorship if United States Senator Clarke will resign as senator. The statement and offer from Governor Hays come as the result of countercharges made in the recent Arkansas primary campaign. WANTS FARMERS TRAINED Sullivan of Illinois Would Have State Hire Experts. OLNEY, ILL. — Roger C. Sullivan, in his campaign for the Democratic nomination for United States senator, put out a new idea. It was a theory for helping the farmers of the state! n away that has not been suggested heretofore. “What I would like to see,” he said to an audience at Bridgeport, in Lawrence county, “is the establishment of expert supervision of farming throughout the country, and particularly in Illinois. • “I would have appointed and paid by the state a* supervisor of agriculture for each county. He would have to be a graduate farmer, one who has learned the science of farming. It would be his duty to advise the farmers on the treatment of eoil, on the kind and variety of crops that pay best, and on the whole business of scientific farming. The state could not make a better investment of its money than to pay it out for such expert advice.” BAD TEETH MAKE BAD BOYS Charles D. Hilles Thinks ’Dentistry Can Cure Much Degeneracy. NEW YORK. — Chartse D. Hilles, chairman of the Republican national committee and president of the New York Juvenile association, says he believes that much of the socalled badness in boys is primarily due to decayed teeth and their consequent inability to properly masticate their food. He bases his conclusions on observance of boys sent as delinquents to the Children’s Village at Dobbs Ferry, where an average of 550 youngsters are getting a chance to become decent and self-respecting citizens. He declares that ninety-one per cent of the boys received suffer from bad teeth and that after two years of care with a dentist, together with practice in the art of using teeth brush and paste, the boys are turned out 90 per cent good instead of 90 per cent bad. TOLLS BILL TO BE AMENDED Compromise Has Been Agreed to by Norris and Simmons. WASHINGTON. — A compromise amendment to the tolls repeal till, drawn by Senator Simmons for the administration forces and Senator Norris for Republican senators, will be offered when the bill comes to a vote in the senate. The new amendment embodies all cf the original Simmons amendment, recommended by the senate interoceanic canal committee, as well as the more emphatic reservation in the amendment proposed by Senator Norris several days ago as a substitute for the committee amendment. The resolution of Senator Sutherland to arbitrate the tolls exemption question with Great Britain may come up before the vote on the bill. BLOOD IS GIVEN FOR FRIEND Physician and Students Volunteer to Save Instructor’s Life. NEW HAVEN, CONN. — Dr. B. H. Moore, a Yale graduate, gave a quart of his blood in the nope of saving the life of Dr. Otto G. Ramsay of the Yale Medical school, who is critically ill with pneumonia. Several seniors in the medical school who are members of Professor Ramsay’s classes also volunteered their blood. Dr. Ramsay’s condition was improved late in the night

WOMEN TORTURED i Many Are Victims of Salvarsan Experiments, It Is Alleged. EDITOR MAKES ACCUSATIONS Trial of Berlin Man In Progress In Which He Says City and Doctors Are Inoculating Underworld Habitues—Challenges Them to Exhumt Fifty Bodies—Sanity In Question. FRANKFORT ON THE MAIN.—Th e trial has begun here of Wasaman, e 11tor of a local newspaper, on a charge of libeling the city council and th 3 physicians of the city hospital by charging that the latter experimented vith Salvarsan on women of the underworld. Herr Wasaman took the witness stand and reiterated his charges. He testified that the physicians of the city hospital forcibly inoculated women of the underworld with Salvarsan and used them as experiments the same as it they were rabbits. Wasaman declared that it pound of Salvarsan while the manufacturers charge *2,000 for the same quantity. Asks Bodies Be Exhumed. 1 Addressing the presiding judge, Herr Wasaman said: “You sentenced to death Hops, the man who poisoned his ' wives with arsenic. If you exhume the bodies of the women of the demimonde, who died from experiments made on them with Salvarsan, you : will find that the physicians injected I twenty times more arsenic than Hops gave his wives.” i He added that fifteen women of the demi-monde had died from the use of Salvarsan by physicians at the City hospital. . The court refused the request of ’ Herr Wasaman’s counsel that expert , authorities on Salvarsan be summoned t from Vienna to testify in the case and ! ordered that Wasaman be kept under . observation during the remainder of , the trial in order to detemine wheth- ' er or not he was mentally responsible for his charges. INDICTED AS PLUMBING TRUST i Leaders «in Masters* Association Aci cused by U. S. DES MOINES, IA. — Indictments were returned by the federal 1 grand jury against thirty-six officials ’ and members of the National Associa- ; tion of Master Plumbers and officials 1 of state organizations in Illinois. Ne--1 braska and lowa. The indictments charge conspiracy in restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman anti trust law. j It is specifically alleged that the National Association of Master Plumbers , has been operating in violation of law ever since its organization in 1884 and that it has continually conspired to in- • terfere with the business of plumbers 1 and plumbing supply houses * — : SPOILS IN REDFIELD PLAN National Civil Service Reform League t Opposes Trade Fostering Scheme. NEW YORK. — Secretary Red- . field’s plan, embodied in the legislai tive, executive and judicial appropria- , tion bill to appoint, without civil seri vice examination, fourteen commercial . attaches to foster foreign trade has i aroused the bitter opposition of the - National Civil Service Reform league. Richard Henry Dana, president of the league, said that all friends of i civil service are opposed to this plan. DELEGATES FAVOR REPEAL 741 Out of 886 at Baltimore Are OpI posed to Free Tolls. WASHINGTON. — Senator Gore ■ of Oklahoma made public the results cf/the referenuum he conducted of delegates to the Baltimore convention or the proposed repeal of the fre< tolls law. Os 886 delegates, 741 declared for repeal and 111 expressed their opposition to repeal. Noncommittal replies were received from 34. BQY SPELLS 1,400 WORDS 11-Year-Old St. Louis Lad Wins Match Against Field of 35. EAST ST. LOUIS, ILL. — William Roselager, an 11-year-old boy in the sixth grade of the public schools here, won a spelling match here when he spelled 1,400 words without missing one. The match was limited to thirty-five toys and girls of the sixth grade, and lasted eleven and one-halfhou rs. BALLOON EXPLODES; 60 HURT Bystanders Hurt When Gas Bag Explodes at French Fair. SEZANNE, FRANCE. — Sixty persons were injured, several of them probably mortally, by the explosion of a balloon at th annual fair here. The balldon had just started to rise when a gust of wind blew it against a tree, tearing the envelope. The escaping gas exploded, injuring bystanders and wrecking the fair booths.

SYRACUSE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, JUNE 11. 1914

INDIANA STATE NEWS Third Party Again an Issue. CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND.—A sensation has been cansed in this city by the filing of a WpHk ot promise suit against Dr. Th||yilJL. Cooksey by Miss Florine oif Elwood, Ind., who asks $5,000 damages. Dr. Cooksey Was married here Feb. 24, this year, W Miss Minnie Beatty of Hico, Tex. Mts<Sabring's complaint alleges that on the day Dr. Cooksey left for Texas to be married he wrote to the plaintiff, teHing her of the fact and stating that hi had to do it o n account of his financial needs. It is said that Dr. Cooksey-Mtoits he was at one time engaged to plaintiff, but that tbe engagement bad been broken off and that present a - they had exchanged had been returMwP-' Son-In-Farmer. VEVAY, INBfcjoseph W. Higham, sixty-two years old, one of the best-known farmers in the eastern part of this cb®ty, was shot and killed by bls son-ta-la w, a youth years. The murder wfi the outcome of a quarrel betweettJE two men over the presence of an a<«d uncle of Gillum, v ho had been doing light work on the farm and who H|oam hud ordered off the place. Gillam alleges that Hlgham started toward him with an ax, and that he she| in self-aeiense. He admits that aftif a quarrel with his father-in-law he Went to his own home and returned to jllgham’s farm with a shotgun. Son of. Bunhert Marries. GOSHEN, lIW- Dean L. Barnhart of Roches®, "Ind., son of Congressman Barnnart and editor and publlsSy of the Rochester Sentinel, and MligLouise Bean, daughter of Joseph A|'Bean, postmaster ot Goshen and owiW .it the Goshen Democrat, were manned here at the home of the bride’s They will reside in Rochester. Congressman Mrs., Barnhart attended the ifeApW- Iss Bean, following her from the Goshen schools, atte|»fted National Park seminary at Washipgton, D. C. Old .Tioketvln Hoosierdom. EV AN SVIJ,LE, JND.-*-Former Pres id ent William Howard Taft, accom panied by. (ormer Vice President here at 8:40 and spent the night at the home of former Republican District Chair man Marcus S. Sontagg. Professor Taft and Mr. Fairbanks were the guests at breakfast of W. fl. McCurdy. Later the party motored tc New Harmony, where the former president was on the program at the centennial celebration. Boat Upsets; One Drowns. SOUTH BEND, IND.—Howard M. Rowland of Elkhart county was drowned in the St. Joseph river, near Osceola, St. Joseph county. Walter Bar tholomew of Indianapolis, said once to have been on the police force of that city, was rescued. The men were fishing when their boat overturned. Evansville, Ind., June 9.—Elmer Eubanks, aged ten, while swimming in the old river bed of the Ohio river here was drowned. » Will Probe Geisen’s Death. LAPORTE, IND. —County coronet Walkinshaw will reopen the investigation of the death of Peter Geisen, the wealthy farmer whose body was carried into Chicago on the pilot of a Lake Shore engine in the belief that he was the victim of foul play. Geison had a large sum of money in his possession and nothing of value was found on his person. Ade’s Brother for Congress. LAFAYETTE. IND. —William H. Ade of Newton county, brother oi George Ade, had no opposition for the congressional nomination in the Tenth district, and his selection was by acclamation. The Rev. Burnaby Bander of Fowler, who had been mentioned for the nomination, in an eloquent address nominated Mr. Ade. Two Drowned in Day. FORT WAYNE, IND.—Fred Aldrich, sixteen years old, was seized by cramps while swimming in Merrit lakh, near Lagrange, and drowned in sight of his companion. The body was recovered. Heber Hartman, sixteen, drowned in a gravel pit at Sedan. Carl' Meiser was saved by Russel Morrison after a terrific struggle. Prisoners Escape County Jail. FORT WAYNE, IND.—Frank W. Stacey, Harry Lounsbury and Fred Craven, charged with grand larceny, and John Byron, a tramp, sawed through two sets of bars at the jail at Albion, Noble county, and escaped. Teache- Given Diamond Ring. OOLUMBUS, IND. — The Colum-' bus High School Alumni association at its annual reception presented Mrs. ( Lucretia Condo, who has been a teac her In the high school for twenty-five years, with a diamond ring. Three-Year Course Adopted. ANDER ON, IND.—It was an Bounced h re that the Anderson High school sys am would change next yeai so as to allow students to complete the four years’ course in three. . -

COLLEGE STUDENT IS ON TRIAUS SLAYER Paul Barger Accuseil of First Degree Murder of Father. LAFAYETTE, IND. — One of the most sensational murder cases ever tried in Tippecanoe county nas opened here. Paul Barger, a college student, is charged with murdering his father. Barger shot and killed ms father about a year ago during a family altercation in order to save the life of his mother, as he alleges. Mrs. Barger, it is said, was being attacked by her hn«band, who was said to have been intoxicated. Young Barger has just completed a successful year at Purdue university, where he is a freshman. He is known as a brilliant scholar. The shooting was investigated by one grand jury which failed to return an indictment. When the next grand jury was called the case was reopened and tbe grand jury returned an indictment for first degree murder against Paul Barger and an indictment charging his mothei with being an accessory before the fact. > The son will be tried and If he is exonerated th e charge against his mother will be dismissed. Prosecutor Homer Hennegar will be assisted by Frank Kimmel. State Senator Will R. Wood and Parks & Parks will appear for the defense. INJURY KILLS ABLE STUDENT Pitchfork Wound Fatal to Senior at Purdue University. LIBERTY, IND. — Nelson Huddleston Lafuze, twenty-one years old, the youngest man in the senior class at the Agriculture School of Purdue university, died of blood poisoning at bis home near here. He left Lafay* ette two weeks ago to spend the senior vacation on the farm of his father, Oliver P. Lafuze, and five days ago he fell and a tine of a pithefork passed through his left arm. He expected to return to Purdue this week with his parents for the commencenymt exercises Wednesday. Hte was a member of the honorary agricultural fraternity, Alpha Zeta. He also was a member of the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity. Lafuze was editor of the Purdue Debris, the annual publication of the senior class. TAFT ADDRESSES RAPPITES New Harmony, Ind., Celebrates its Centennial Anniversary. NEW HARMONY, IND. — With the booming of guns and the clanging of bells from historic belfries New Harmony’s eight-day centennial celebration was opened. The 2,000 residents of the small Posey county town and hundreds of visitors sounded the “morning call of the Rappites," that their reverend ancestors In this beautiful valley of the Wabash might be awakened in spirit from their death sleep to bestow a blessing upon the exercises meant to commemorate the sociological principles of freedom that were given America from the heart of the Hoosier wilderness a century ago. Former President Taft delivered an address today. CROPS OF COUNTY ARE SAVED Opportune Rains Make Indiana Farmers Again Happy. CONNERSVILLE, IND. — The downpour of rain which fell in the Whitewater valley saved the wheat, oats and corn crops, according to reports from farmers. During the last few days many had been unable to plow the young corn because of the severe heat and dust. The oats and wheat had begun shriveling up and truck gardners had been hauling water from the river. Farmers say the wheat crop is not seriously damaged and many are still predicting a banner crop. VETERAN SCHOOLMA M QUITS Miss Nebraska Cropsey Closes Fifty Years Service at Indianapolis. INDIANAPOLIS. IND.— It has become known that Miss Nebraska Cropsey, assistant superintendent ot , schools in charge of the primary work , and one of a small group of women ( who assisted A. C. Shortridge in placing the public school system of Indianapolis r -a firm basis in the early six- ( ties, will tender her resignation at the ( end of the present school year. Miss Cropsey’s resignation will mark ( the end of a career probably unequal- j ed in the United States. ( FAREWELL IS SUNG AT BARS ' Muncie Becomes th e Largest Dry City , in Indiana. MUNCIE, IND. — As the result 1 of a city option election and a court 1 decision every legal saloon in Muncie < quit business Saturday night. 1 1 Muncie is now the largest dry city ’ in Indiana. Just before the closing 1 customers sang “Shpuld Old Acquaint- > 1 anca Be FqikqL” P

PRINCE HENRY Third Son of King George, England, Menaced by Suffragettes. i I 1 Photo by American Press Association. The militant suffragettes are becoming more of a menace than ever before. Not/ only has the comfort of King George been seriously interfered witr, but information of a plot against the safety of Prince Henry, the third Son of the king, who is now at Eton college, was communicated to the police. After a consultation at Scotland Yard the police authorities, who took a serious view of the threat, sent to Eton two detectives specially charged with the duty of watching over the safety of the prince. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ | SHORT CUTS TO THE NEWS | ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Harry Thaw’s case la now up to the Supreme court of the United Statss. Thaw hopes for release pending a review of the extradition proceeding). N. E. Nelson of Duluth and A. A. Ccmell of Northfield, Minn., were killed when an auto in which they were riding overturned near St. Paul, Minn. A chief gunner’s mate at Annapolis has been imprisoned because he gave a salute of only eighteen guns to Secretary of the Navy Daniels. The proper salute was nineteen. Fifty more guards have been placed on the John D. Rockefeller estate by the sheriff of the county, to guard •against members of the I. W. W. who threaten the town with a talk-fest. Madame Ernestine Schumann-Henik, the grand opera singer, was granted a divorce by a Chicago judge from William Rapp, Jr. The madame won a signal victory, Rapp maxing no case. The Earl of Lucan, aged 84 yars, la dead at his home in London. He was aid de camp to his father, the third earl, who was largely responsible for the charge of the Light Brigade in the Crimean war. Enrico Caruso paid .Miss .Mildred Meffert *3,000 for the return of his “baby” letters. The young woman had sued him for *IOO,OOO for breach of promise to wed her and the case was settled out of court. Robert H. Abel, the detective who worked several weeks on the Winters ease at Newcastle Ind., has communicated to the officers his willingness to appear before Judge Jackson and give wha evidence he has on the case. Protest against the payment of the $500,000 fines assessed by General Funston’s government at Vera Cruz on the German steamship Ypiranga and Bavaria for transgressing the Mexican law in comment at Vera Cruz has been made to the secretary of war. > ..A recently discovered method of treating tuberculosis by injecting bacilli into the veins of the patient was described by Dr. Hans Karfunkel of Berlin at a meeting of the Philadelphia County Medical society. He claims good results in 60 per cent of cases treated. Dr. Eliot, of Harvard, In a speech, declared that cities are a menace to health and happiness and predicted 1 that should conditions remain unchanged the country would see a wave of dengeneracy. He advocated garden plots for the laborers of the cities and more parks for the public at large. Extraordinary precautions are being taken by the French government for 1 tbe protection of Theodore Roosevelt. Officials there have information that, the colonel is being trailed by ah an- 1 archist, who intends to slay Roose- 1 velt while the former president is in 1 Europe to attend his son Kermit's 1 wedding. . _ i 1

Kor Kent— For Sale or Trade— Lost — Found — Wantd—lc Per Word Bring* you dollars i» return.

BLOCKADE IS OFF Dictator's Action Averts Upset ' ■ot Mediation Hans. WILL ALLOW ARMS TO LAND Grave Crisis Threatened Over Cargo of Supplies Carried by Antlia to Tampico' Subsides—Watchful Waiting Policy Gets New Lease of Life In Mexican Matters. WASHINGTON. — mformatlou that Huerta will not attempt to prevent arms and ammunition from reack ing Carranba.by way of Tampico gives ai other lease of life to the watchfi.l waiting policy and brightens a trifie the prospect of its success. That is the way Washington offleia’'dow views the news of the day—that Huerta had decided to abandon hit blockade of Tampico. Tha A. B. C. • mediators will go ahead. Huerta will quit if the interests of his party are safeguarded. Carranza and Villa wi’.l get guns enough and ammunition enough to force an entry into Mexico City, where, in the meantime thev send representatives to Niagara Falls they, although victorious ai.a with the situation in their own bands, may agree to a program for complete pacification in whihe their ow.i influence, ol course, shall be parantount. Huerta Weakens; Blockade Off. MEXICQ CITY. — The Mexi cau government decided to suspend the order for the blockade of Tampico. This step was taken on Jie government learning that the irsdiators at Niagara Falls were taking some action in regard to the mo r ements of the steamer Antilla on th* way from an American port with ar ns for the • Constitutionalists and also to prevent a setback in the peace neg rtiations. New Plan to Media >rs. NIAGARA FALLS, OI T. — The three mediators have in tl air possession a new and complete j an for the settlement of the Mexica situation which has been submitted o them by the delegates- of the Uni ed States. This plan they have bee carefully perusing, and it will prob: >ly occupy most of their time today. This new plan is a comprehensive rt iew of all the vital points in the Me. ican problem. Although nothing definit> has been given out regarding this n w note, it is learned that the plan ontains a compromise offer through hich it is expected to bring Genera Carranza into the conference. Justice Lamar and Fre lerick W. Lehmann, the American de agates, arrived at the Clifton Ho se at 11 o’clock and remained on) z half an hour with the mediators. After the conference Justice Lamar s- id: “The mediators have hen ofore submitted to us a complete pl n and we have now submitted to ther our plan. “Qur counter propositioi contains not only the suggestions vhich we make and upon which ther< has been neither agreement nor dit- agreement to the plan, but also the p ints upon which they had already agi ied. Some of the points suggested ha e already been discussed.” The chief feature of the new plan submitted by the United St iteg is an understanding through whic i Genera] Carranza will take part in tae confer ence. Americans Are Releaied. WASHINGTON. — Gr< gory Alcazar, Max Blum and Geor e Duvall, Americans who have been in prison at Mexico City, have beei released th lough the efforts of the Brazilian minister in Mexico City. Th< minister, Senor Cardoza, notified the state department of their release. Not In Mexico City. WASHINGTON. — E. D. Doster and Patrick McKinney, American newspaper men, for whom r» aeated ’aquiries have been made by this government and the goven ment of Brazil are not in Mexico Ci y. CAPTAIN CHEAPE IS INJURED Nos* Almost Broken by Ba I, but He - Will Play Tuesday WESTBURY. L. I. - Captain Cheape, the hardest hitter or the English polo team, was hit in the face with a ball in the final pracf ce of the team and for a while it ▼ is feared that hi 8 nose was broken ax 1 that he would be incapacitated for the first game of the international se les Tuesday. Later in the evening, the d< :tor, who examined the injured player said that the bridge of the nose was; t broken and Captain Cheape would rin condition to play on Tuesday. ’ he cartilage of the nose was torn rnd that caused it to bleed profusely. U.S. MAY SETTLE LAB: R WAR Senator Owen Will Ask Fe eral Action in Colorado Trou e.* WASHINGTON. — A federal commission to settle the Coloradostrike troubles was propose, to President Wilson by Senator O en, who announced his intention ot inooducing a bUI for such a body.

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