The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 13, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 23 July 1914 — Page 1

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

VOL. VII.

OROZCO REAO OF NEWdEVOLUTION Former Maderista Is Now Man Without Country. CARBAJAL WILL NOT ASSIST , ! Leader of Back-fire Movement Has Support of Cientificoes, Spaniards and Federais —Trying to Save Big Land Holdings—Expect U. S. to Intervene—ls Coming North. El Paso, Tex., July 22.—Cientificos, Spaniards and Federal refugees are backing the new counter revolution j which has had its start in western I Chihauhua and which is expected to become formidable when Pascual Orozco arrives from the south. According to the reports from Mexico City, Orozco is now in the position of a man without a country. Both he and Marcelo Caraveo are said to have offered their services to Provisional President Carbajal to repel Carranza and his constitutionalist troops, but their offers have been declined. The constitutionalists have threatened to execute both leaders if they are made prisoners. Hence, these two former Maderista commanders, at least, appear forced into a new revolution whether they wish it or not. Both men took up arms against Madero after he went into office and later joined the Huerta forces. The two men will get aid and assistance if they successfully escape from central Mexico, where they are now operating, and can reach the vicinity of the United States border, for United States government officials here declare that the federal landowners in northern Mexico have realized that their only hope of saving their properties is to start a counter revolution in the hope that this will bring about intervention. While they do not think that such a counter revolution would ever grow to such an extent as to become formidable they are said to hope that the counter revolution will sufficiently embarras the Carranza administration that the United States will be forced to intervene in order to restore permanent peace. It is said that between $50,000 and $75,000 has been obtained for the new movement and that quantities of arms and ammunition have been purchased. Men are being sent to points along the New Mexico-Chihuahua border each night in numbers and are being supplied with equipment after they cross the line. PRIESTSIfORYMAY BARELAKEJRAGEDY Parents of One Missing Gir , Certain Victim Is Daughter. St. Joseph, Mich., July 22. —Sheriff Franz strongly intimates that he ha» the name, and the life story of the girl victim in the rowboat tragedy on Lake Michigan. He will not make a definite statement on this new turn in the mystery, however, until he has satisfied himself as to the authenticity of certain lines of information which have been presented to him. One informer is a priest who relates that a married man about thirty years old sought a dispensation from him to marry a Catholic girl on condition that he obtain a divorce. The priest refused the dispensation. Later the girl told the priest the man told her the dispensation had been promised. The priest links these two with the tragedy. The parents of a missing girl are certain that the victim in the lake is their daughter, but they wrung a pledge from the officer that he guard their secdet until the waters give up the dead. If then the identity of the girl is established they will claim the body and let the world know the misery of their hearts. Track Walker Loses Life. Laporte, Ind., July 22. —Matt Goff of Laporte, thirty years old, while walking along the Michigan Central railway tracks on his way to work, was run down by a train and killed. Demands He Kiss Wilson Face. Yonkers, N. Y., July 22.—Frank John was challenged by George I Wardo, a fellow Syrian, to show his I fidelity to his adopted country by ; kissing a picture of Woodrow Wilson. ! When Jahn refused a fight ensued, in which Warda’s finger was siloed nearly off with a knife. Firat Bale of 1914 Cotton Sold. New York, July 22.—The first bale of 1914 cotton gathered in the country reached New York from Georgia and was auctioned off at the cotton exchange for 12 cents a pound. It Weighed 300 pounds.

The Syracuse Journal i • . ‘ * •

|THE OLD AND THE NEW World Wonders if Peace Will Follow Huerta’s Flight. I - - F’l ,I . M 1 - i \ I ‘ 1 : BO " ' WM Km? gfc S' ; a r • 1814, by American Press Association. t SHORT CUTS TO THE NEWS i o O The headless and armless body of a man was found floating in the Hudson river by New York police. Otis Bisnet, fifteen, was accidentally I killed by Dick Koble, sixteen, at Garrett, Ind., While handling a rifle; Four persons were seriously wounded in Omaha during a gang fight in which 2CO men and boys engaged. Three persons lost their lives when a train struck an automobile at a crossing in the outskirts of Taunton, Mass. A federal military train from San Luis Potosi, Alex., was aceiaeutly wrecked and scores were killed or injured. Captain Jcssapow and his mechanic lost their lives at Otchakow, Russia, when their aeroplane collapsed during a flight. Robert Anderson confessed to the police of Davenport, la., the murder of Harry Elinger at Peoria, 111., three years ago. Two suffrffagettes horsewhipped the Right Honorable Thomas McKinnon Wood, secretary of state for Scotland, and were arrested. Charles Wallace and Charles Havner were burned to death when a! Broadway restaurant at Fairfield, la., was destroyed by fire. Captain Firsaff of the general staff cf the Russian army and a passenger were killed while making a flight in the aerodrome at Odesso. Mrs. John Allen, a seventeen-year-old bride, was murdereu in Dubuque, i la. Her cousin, George Delain, is being sought by the police. Elmer Gaul was caught under a mower when his team ran away at Lenark, 111., and sustained serious injuries that may cause his death. Mabel Probest, thirty six years old, Chicago, was shot and killed by Charles Danielson, forty-seven, who then committed suicide in Manitowoc, Wis. Eddie McGoorty, American pugilist, has accepted an offer cabled him from London to fight George Carpentier in London in October for a purse of SIO,OOO. Forest and brush fires in Oregon did cast damage which resulted in calling out hundreds of volunteers and pressing into service the full quota of the forest patrol in several districts. Charles Whitney, circuit judge of the district comprising Lake, Boone, McHenry and Winnebago counties, 111., and a member of the appellate court of the northern district dropped dead in his chair. Miner C. Gilmore, who once gave Lincoln a ride in his cab, died at Berkeley, Cal., at the age of seventyseven. Gilmore took the first passenger train from St. Louis to Bloomington, 111. ‘ Two social democratic women invaded the office of the Schwabischi I Zeitung and for five minutes merciless ■ i ly thrashed the editor because in an ; article in the newspaper he had i maligned women. L. W. Hughes and Lawrence Kane were killed and two other quarrymen were injured when fifty tons of rock in the government quarry across the river from Jefferson City, Mo., loosen- ’ fed by a blast, fell on them. A heavy coil of hair saved the life of Miss McNair, twenty years old, at Wichita, Kan., when a heavy pane of glass fell from a ninth story window and struck her on the nead. She was severely cut, but will recover.

GIVE QUEER REASON FOR POISONING PACT Thinks Man Being Sued for Divorce Couldn’t Wed Her LAFAYETTE, IND. — As the result of a suicide pact entered into a few days ago, Miss Grace Plant of Delphi, Ind., and Emil Buhrer of Toledo, 0., are in a critical condition in a local hospital. The two went to Tecumseh Trail park, near the state soldiers’ home, and after spending more than two hours walking about the grounds, each swallowed a quantity of poison. Buhrer walked to the station of the interurban line at the park and there became very sick. Miss Plant was found lying unconscious in the south part of tlie park grounds. Each had a separate bottle of the deadly poison, fine of the bottles was purchased at a Logansport drug store and another at a durg store in Delphi. Buhrer stated that owing to his having a wife and three children in Toledo lie could not marry Miss Plant. Before taking the acid Miss Plant wrote a sealed letter to be delivered to her father, Joseph Plant of Delphi, and informed him that she loved Buhrer and was going to end her life. Buhrer also wrote a note addressed to a relative in Archibald, 0., telling him that he was going to commit suicide. A few weeks ago at Toledo Buhrer’s wife brought a suit for divorce and in her complaint she mentioned Miss Plant as co-respondent. ELOPER SUSPECTS CAUGHT Pair Held at Evansville Said to Have Abandoned Mates. EVANSVILLE, IND. — Mrs. Elizabeth Harrington, aged twenty-six and Hampton Edwards, aged twentyfour, both from Somerset, Ky., who are said to have eloped from Somerset several weeks ago in an automobile, are under arrest here and will ; be held until the sheriff at Somerset comes to get them. .Mrs. Harrington, who has her little girl with her, is alleged to have left a husband in Somerset, while Edwards is alleged to haVe abandoned a wife. The pair first went to Indianapolis and from there came here. Mrs. Harrington says she does not want to return to Somerset, as she fears her husband" will kill her and Edwards. ; Mrs. Harrington claims that Edwards is an heir to a fortune. MAKES “HINDU” DISGORGE Woman Recovers Money She Gave to Fake Clairvoyant. LAPORTE, IND. — Thomas W. Conroy, a “Hindu" clairvoyant, who came here two weeks ago from Fort Wayne, but who previously had been driven out of Chicago, left Laporte suddenly after he. had been forced to return SSO to Miss Rilla Robertson, a j dressmaker. The woman complained I tc the police that Conroy had induced ; her to -give him the money to invest in a New York company, which he said he controlled, with the assurance that on Aug. 28 Miss Robertson would receive $14,000 in return. Conroy told the woman it was a sort of lottery plan, but, as he controlled the company, he ’ would “fix it.” TROUBLE IS LAID TO BABY Wife’s Suit Names It as Cause of Broken Love. EVANSVILLE, IND. — Mrs. Winifred Schultz, wife of Clarence E. Schutz Jr., has entered suit here against her husband’s parents, Clarence E. and Mrs. Schutz, for $20,000 damages, alleging that they alienated the affections of her husband. She recently sued for divorce and heavy alimony. Her husband’s father is a wealthy cigar manufacturer in this city, while his mother is a prominent worker in St. PauFs Episcopal church. Mrs. Schutz alleges that Mr. and Mrs. Schutz, when they learned that her baby was about to be born, threatened to disinherit her husband. £ ELOPERS THWARTED BY PA Angry Parent Chases Pair in Borrowed Automobile. SOUTH BEND, IND. — To prevent the marriage of nis daughter Lulu, nineteen years old, and Herbert Schroder, twenty-six, said to have a wife and child in Pennsylvania, J. H. Smith, contractor and politician of Bremen, Ind., chased the couple to South Bend, using a borrowed automobile. The couple was located in this city and through the aid of local officers the girl was induced to return to her home. Schroder is being held on a technical charge, preferred by Smith. Officer Shoots Prisoner. EVANSVILLE, IND. — Police Sergeant Norman Broshears shot and slightly wounded Robert Haines, colcred, who resisted arrest on a minor charge, broke the officer’s mace and attempted to take his revolver from him.

SYRACUSE. INDIANA, THURSDAY, JULY 23. 1914

I INDIANA STATE NEWS Young Elopers Arrested. CINCINNATI, OHIO — F. D. Pouch ■ and George Hartman, well-known citiI r.ens of Newcastle, Ind., who arrived in Cincinnati looking lor their ntteen- , year-old daughters, wno ran away ■ from home, were informed their daugh- ■ ters were married at Greensburg, Ind. I Clews picked up in Indiana led the fathers to think the girls were bound I for this city, but a search by the police failed to bring any trace of their whereabouts. The youthful age cf the girls drew the attention of the Greensburg officials, it is said, and they were placed in custody until their parents arrived. Serious - charges will •be brought against the men involved. Franchise Fight Is Settled. J LAFAYETTE, IND.—The Tippei canoe county commissioners have , reached an agreement with the Lafayette & Northwestern Railroad comi pany and it is likely that company I will be granted a franchise when the final hearing is held Aug. 7. O. L. 1 Brown, the Chicago attorney for the ■ company, changed his petition and did I not ask for a blanket franchise. He also promised the commissioners j that the roiii would use other* power i than steam. . People living in West j Lafayette objected to a steam read passing over the main street of town. Pythians Prepare for Camp. TERRE HAUTE, IND.—Major General Arthur J. Stobbart of St. Paul, ; commanding the uniform rank, Knights of Pythias, has arrived in Terre Haute for the international biennial encampment, which convenes Monday. He viewed Camp Arthur J. Stobbart, where the knights will camp next ’ week and went over the proposed line ' of march for the military parade Tuesday afternoon. Major W. H. Sloan of Nashville, Tenn., and several brigade I quartermasters arrived to prepare for their requirements. Drugs, Robs, Revives Her. , i HAMMOND, IND.—The northern I Indiana police are hunting a consid- ■ erate burglar who entered the resil fence of Mrs. ter Maher at Con- [ nersville and roSblfa her of her diaI monds and other Wwelry. After entering Wier bedroom he ! chloroformed her. BFhen he ransacked ' the drawer and obtained valuables, rej vived her by dashing a pitcher of wa- ■ ter on her head anfe opening the windows before escaping. Farmer Loses Damage Sult. 'BLOOMINGTON, IND.—After deliberating nearly forty-eight hours the jury in the $25,000 damage suit of S. T. Zollman, a Jackson county farmer, aginst the B. & O. S. W. railI road, found for the defendant. The i plaintiff alleged that the March, 1913, flood washed out a fill and that the i water from WJiite river damaged his land. School Fight Abandoned. KOKOMO, IND. —J. D. Van sickle, trustee of Howard township, has given up his attempt to abandon five district schools and build a central building, after spending about sl,o'oo for attorneys’ fees. A court decision after two years’ fight has defeated Vansickle’s plan at every point. Vansickle will not appeal. Cutting Off Policemen. MARION; IND. —ln keeping with the policy of economy of the city administration, John Q. Scott and Chance N. Hardy, patrolmen, have been dismissed. The force has been reduced recently from eighteen to thirteen. Shoots Arm Off Playmate. COLUMBUS, IND. — Norval, the twelve-year-old son of Herman C. Arnholt, accidentally shot the right arm off Paul, six-year-old son of William Pardiek, while tl»ey were playing soldier. The arm was shot off at the elbow. To Consider Water System. LAWRENCEBURG, IND. — A special meeting of the trustees of Greendale, adjoining this city, will be held Tuesday evening to consider a proposition of A. D. Cook to install a water works system. ? Crushed by Pipe; Dies. RICHMOND, IND. — George Helm, thirty-nine years of age, died in the Reid hospital a few hours after he was crushed by a two-ton water works pipe, which rolled on him as it was being, unloaded from a flat car. Scaffold Fall Hurts Two. PETERSBURG, IND. — Ras Johnson and Robert Glesen were injured l when a scaffold on which they were working fell. Johnson fell on a cement sidewalk and his right kneecap was splintered. Faculty Member Loses Thumb. JEFFERSONVILLE, IND. — Blood poisoning compelled the amputation of j the thumb of the left hand of F. E. Andrews, a member of the faculty of ' the high school. I Aged Woman, 111, Kills Self. TERRE HAUTE, IND. — Mrs. Susan Clickner, seventy-five, residing on a farm north of here, killed herself with poison today because of ill health. ; j inf i ir J —~~ ~ ,

VILLA EXECUTES French Charge Rushes to See President Wilson. EUROPE’S ATTITUDE FORECAST Two of Clergy Killed at Zacatecas Were French Subjects as Were Many Imprisoned—Huerta’s Regime is Divided Into Sheep and Goats at Washington. j WASHINGTON — An indication cf what will be the attitude of Europe in the final day of reckoning in Mex ci vas had here when Charge Cla »sse ol the French embassy arrived in "'r.hington from the summer embassy unc insisted on seeing President Wilsor in regard to the killing of two French priests at Zacatecas, supposedly by treneral Villa. The French charge called also vt the state department on his arrival and i informed the secretary that his government required him to see President Wilson. Action of Serious Import. i It is unusual for a charge d’ “fairs to ask for access to the ppresident. a privilege supposedly only accords to ambassadors except on extraordinary occasions. Similarly the promptness with which the French government is , moving in the matter led to the conclusion here that the Paris authorities ‘ intend to insist on arrangements being made for immediate reparation. The killing of the two priests occurred immediately after the capture of Zacatecas by General Villa. The I r.ien killed were members of the Orcer of Christian Brothers. Eleven ether members of the order were thrown into prison at Zacatecas. The state department has made fre- ' quent representations to the constiI tutionalists regarding their treatment i of members of the Catholic church and ! the church property, but has received ; little satisfaction. It is believed the ' treatment of the clergymen by the ( constitutionalists particularly in MexJ ico City will constitute one of the i gravest problems facing the Washingi ton government in regard to the Mexi ico situation. Huerta Had Good Days. It has become known that the ad- ' ministration has divided Huerta's acts i into the sheep and the goats. It will ! not consider legal any act of the Huerj ta government committed after Oct. 10, which was the day on which President Huerta imprisoned the Maderista members of congress and assumed to himself practically dictatorial powers. : It will not raise any objections to the : constitutionalists repudiating such of Huerta’s acts as were committed after , Oct. .10. | It is understood, however, that this i attitude of the United States will afi feet the general situation regarding I foreign interests but little, as Huerta : had practically no dealings with ; Europeans after last fall. The foreign j loans and other obligations underi taken by the Huerta government were ; all concluded before Oct. 10, according . to records here. i FOR MERIT SYSTEM IN NAVY Representative Britton Introduces Bill to Abolish Plucking Board. WASHINGTON — A bill providing for a merit system in the navy, | which will abolish the “plucking ' board" and make both promotion and rerirement dependent upon an officer’s record and standing under examination, was introduced by Representa- ■ tive Britten of Chicago. Mr. Britten | has steadily waged war upon the ‘ plucking board" system, which, he asserts, has resulted in the retirement of many able men. i He also introduced a bill providing for the reinstatement of Captain Frank j K. Hili, who was retired by the “pluck- ' ing board” July 1. Captain Hill will ■ appear before the committee on naval ; affairs Monday. TRACTION LINE IS LOOTED Ossoski and Hagerman Accused of $117,000 Fraud. j CHICAGO — Leonard A. Bus- ■ by, head of the Chicago Surface Lines, I presented to State’s Attorney Hoyne charges that the traction company has been defrauded of $117,000. Between June 1912, and July, 1913, Mr. Busby said, the Chicago Railways company had lost the $117,000 through fictitious and fraudulent claims for damages." Sidney Ossoski, general claims agent, and E. C. Hagerman, auditor of the claims department, were accused by Mr. Busby of being responsible for the alleged fraud. SIX HURT IN MINE BATTLE i -: Cleaton, Ky., Reported Scene of Fight with “Dynamiters.” GREENVILLE, KY. — Authorities of Muhlenberg county, who went to Cleaton, Ky., near here, to investigate reports of armed strife between employes of the Bevier Coal Mining company and strikers, reported that quiet prevails in Cleaton. . According to reports cf the officials, six men were wounded in an atDsy with dynamiters. Several hundred | shote were exchanged. |

° if ' JAMES T. M DERMOTT Representative From Illinois Who Has Resigned His Seat , .W.y. r ST XTs. y - . jy jME American Press Association. M’DERMOTT GIVES UP SEAT Representative Reaches Conclusion to Avoid Vote on His Culpability. WASHINGTON —ln the face of certain expulsion by the house on Thursday if he should permit a vote on his guilt in connection with the lobby scandal exposed a year ago, Representative James T. McDermott of Chicago resigned from the house of representatives. Mr. McDermott reached his conclusion to avoid a vote on his culpability following an announcement by Representative Floyd of Arkansas that he would call the McDermott case up on Thursday for final disposition. LIFE TERM FOR BOND IN IDA LEEGSON CASE Big Factor in Verdict Is Identlficaticn of Woman’s Watch CHICAGO — Isaac Bond was found guilty of the murder of Ida G. Leegson, art student and sculptress, by a jury in Judge McDonald’s court. Punishment was fixed at life imprisonment. Miss Leegson was lured to her death while seeking a position as a private nurse. Bond answered heT advertisement, and Miss Leegson believed she was on her way to her place of employment at the time she was killed. The conviction of Bond was obtained on circumstantial evidence. Witnesses for the prosecution identified him as the man whom they had seen in the company of the woman walking near and across the prairie. A pawnbroker also identified him as the man who pawned Miss Leegson’s watch, which was stolen after she was slain, and it is said this watch was the main factor in determining the jury for conviction. MARINES ARRIVE IN CUBA Under Order to Take Move For Pos- , sible Intervention. WASHINGTON, D. C. — Three hundred American marines, the vanguard of the expedition ordered to warn the turbulent little Dominican and Haitien republics that they must quiet down cn pain of intervention by he United States, arrived at Guantanamo, Cuba, cn the transport Hancock from Vera Cruz. This force, within a day’s sail of the coast of Haiti, at the first sign of an emergency w’ill be sent over to reinforce the crew’s of the American jnen-of-war stationed about the island. JEALOUS MAN KILLS THREE Farmer Shoots Young Bride, Her Mother and Himself. SPRINGFIELD, ILL. — Jealous because his wife left him a few months after they were married, Chas. Jerdes, an Edinburgh, 111., farmer, shot and killed his wife, Mrs. Nola Jerdes, eighteen years old, dangerously injured his mother-in-law, Mrs. Frank Gardner, and then shot himself. He will die. The slayer met his wife at the door when she returned from a carnival. Her father was putting a horse away and escaped injury. FOUR MEN KILLED IN PANAMA Explosion of Dynamite in Culebra Cut Plays Havoc. PANAMA — Four men were kill- I ed and nnieteen others seriously injured by the premature explosion of 4,800 pounds of dynamite in Culebra cut. The dead: J. F. Smith, of Philadelphia; CapTain David Katt, of Amhorstberg, On- , itario; Charles Sackett, of Parkers- i burg, W. Va., and. an unidentified man. |

For Rent-— For Sale or TradeLost — Found — Wanted—lc Per W )rd Brings you dollars ic return.

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U.S.LAWSEVADED Chinese Immigratior. Scandal Is Unearthed. TONG SOCIETIES PAY BRIBES Orientals in United States Through Underworld Politicians Able to Name Many ’lnterpreter in Imtnigration Department—Yonng Chinamen Helped in as Sons of Merchants PHILADELPHIA. — Coi ducting a country-wide investigation, he Bureau of Immigration has uneart led a Chinese immigration scandal hich is assuming large proportions. So far the government's investigatic has revealed the fact that the t hinese exclusion act to an amazing extent has teen nullified by graft. The On Tong ar I the Hip Sing Tong gamblers, graf. jrs, opium smugglers and vice pron iters, who have established Chinatow's in every- »- large city of the country t trough tha connivance of grafting p lice, have also invaded the immigrati >n service. Tongs Name Interpreters. Through such influenc i as the Tongs have been able to sxert over tenderloin politicians, the Chinatown Tongs have named the Ch lese interpreters of the Bureau of In migration. Immigration of this kind L is been at the mercy of the crooked i terpreters in the pay of the Chinatc vn Tongs. Between the Chinatown To. gs and the interpreters they have man ged to get into the government servic , evidence has been manufactured fr ely to obtain the admittance of Chi: ese. The Tongs are said to L ive paid a standard rate of SSOO for e.sry China- ' wan smuggled in' through the connivance of their interpreter , and the Chinamen brought into the .'ountry in this manner are in turn o iclared to have been turned over to .he Tongs to work for them in a so' . of bondage for a number of year to repay the Tong leaders for ing them. Loophole in Exclusion Act. The wiley Chinatown Ton ;s found a loophole in the Chinese' ex. iusion act which made possible ,the> recently discovered plot. The lav. permits minor sons of Chinese mt chants to enter this country and join their parents. The Tongs therefcr s sent to China for young men. ’ hey were brought to Canada and the Canadian government was ith a SSOO bend as required of every Chinaman entering the Dominion. Traveling east through Canada, th? imported Chinese laborer would rea t a point in Michigan or New York ’hen they would claim the right to snter the United States as the mim, • sons of some Chinatown grafter in < the larger eastern cities. A < hinatowjn Tong member, posing as a uerchant, would appear as the father )f the imported Chinaman and the ( linese interpreter would establish t e alleged parentage to the full satie action of the immigration officials; Joe Lee, Chinese interpi iter, connected with the fe'deral ii nigration office in Philadelphia, has ?een suspended and his brother and ix Chinamen have been arrested in Saginaw, Mich., on the charge of hi ing been interested in the smuggling rade. So far thirteen Chinamen, in orted as “sons" of merchants in Phi’ idelphia’s Chinatown, have also been arrested. U. S. ENVOY CUFFS 0 FICIAL F. M. Gunter Knocks Hat CI Harbor Master at Christian,.. LONDON, ENG.—-The Tin es Christiana correspondent says: “The reports of a deplorable incident involving an American diplomat ire eclipsing public interest in the gi jat international regatta here. “It appears that the Ameri’ an steam yacht Pauline, belonging to ' Mr.'McCullough, defied tlie harbor master’s orders to change its aneju age, the space w’here it lay being re wved for the German emperor’s sail, ig yacht Meteor. Notice had 1 been en some days ago but F. M. Gunther, secretary of the American legation, w io was a guest on board the Pauline, s >used the harbor master violently whe i the latter made his request and mded by ' knocking his cap from his h ad. The diplomatist in question is 111 sly to be recalled." NEW HAVEN WILL NOT YIELD Directors Expect Attorney General to Proceed With Suit. WASHINGTON — A series of conferences between Attorne General Mcßeynolds and a committ* e of the New Haven directors tailed to bring about any change in the dete~ rmnation of the government to file an -mti-tyust suit against the railroad. Late in the afternoon President Eustis issued a statement in • hich he said that the directors had found it impossible to yield to the re crictions placed by the Massachuseti legislature upon the sale of its Be ton and Maine stock and that he exp cted the attorney general would pr ceed to file a suit. Expires; $30,000 in Po< ret. BUTTE, MONTANA.—Ed ir Magness, a banker of Nashville .led suddenly while touring Yellowstone Park. H» had sso,ooo in his possession. ,