The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 March 1915 — Page 1

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

VOL. VII.

U.S. WARSHIPSTO BfiCKDEMANDS Washington Notifies Carranza He Must End Chaos. ENTIRE CHANGE OF POLICY SEEN Strongest Note Ever Writi e n to Mexican Government Points to Serious Consequences if Safety of Foreigners Is Disregarded—Obregon Brings on Crisis. General Carranza, in an oral reply to American Consul Siiliman when the latter presented the note from the United States government on conditions in Mexico City, entered a general denial that General Obrego n had prevented food from entering Mexico City or sent any supplies out of the city. After a conference with President Wilson, Secretary Daniels ordered two battleships of the Atla n tic fleet from Guantanamo to Vera Crtiz. 0 WASHINGTON, D. C.—Diplomatists familiar with the contbnts of the note which American Consul Siiliman has been instructed to present to General Carranza, demanding an improvement of conditions in Mexico City, interpret it. as an entire changed policy on the part of the Washington government toward the Mexican situation. The communication to Carranza, which was drafted after conferences between President Wilson, Secretary Bryan and Counselor Lansing, was guarded with secrecy pending some worn from Carranza as to- his attitude. Administration Losing Patience. It was said by some officials that the note contained the strongest representations that ever have been made to Carranza and indicates that the American government is rapidly losing patience with his indifference to the objectionable acts of General Obregon at Mexico City. Those who know the contents of th? communication said it did not ** threaten force and in the natu.re of an ultimatum, but pointed eAin explicit- language the serious consequences 'that might follow if the welfare of foreigners continued to be disregarded. The general impression in Official quarters was that even though the use of force had not been threatened in the note to Carranza, the American government .was prepared to meet eventualities and would hereafter pursue an insistent course to compel protection for foreigners and their interests. . ' • , Fear Long Deadlock. Scarcity war munitions, it is believed here, has already affected Villa’s campaign, and while the forces h. ,e°feeen making more headway, ac cording to official reports, than that of Carranza, the posibility that neith er faction will be able to gain a complete victory and that the situation may remain deadlocked indefinitely, is known to have influenced the administration to take its stand. The plight of Americans, however, has been of increasing concern, for there are more citizens of the United States in Mexico City than of any other country. Tn order to give his entire time to consideration of European and Mexican questions, President Wilson will see White House callers only for ah hcur Wednesdays and Thursdays during the spring and summer. He will be in almost constant communication with Secretary Bryan and Counselor Lansing of the state department. Will Make Him Take Notice. WASHINGTON, D. C.—“ Secretary Bryan’s latest word to Carranza will make him sit up and take notice,” , said the British ambassador, SlrJCecil Spring-Rice* To Evacuate Mexico City. s WASHINGTON, D. C. — Secretary Bryan states that he ha<j received notice from General Carranza confirming the report that Mexico City would be evacuated, and that the diplomatic corps had decided to remain In Mexico City. JUDGE W. H. SEAMAN IS DEAD Federal Jurist Stricken Suddenly at Coronado Beach, Cal. CHICAGO — Judge William H. geaman of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals died suddenly as Ccronado Beach, Cal. Judge Seaman’fc home was in Sheboygan, Wis. He is « survived by the widow and two daughters. He was appointed a federal district judge in Wisconsin by Grover Cleveland. In 1905 he was promoted by Theodore .Roosevelt to the circuit court of appeals. He was one of the most widely known lawyers and jurist.! in the middle west. He was born in New Berlin, Wis., Nov. 15, 1842. In his teens he worked as a printer in Sheboygan. Later he served In. the First Volunteer infantry throughout the civil war, and was married to Mary A. Peat Dec. 17, 1868. He wag admitted to the bar and practiced lafiw in Wisconsin. He was president of the Wisconsin State Bar association from 1893 to 1905. a

The Syracuse Journal

JOHN R. SILLIMAN U. S. Consul Who Presented Carranza With American Note. Photo by American Press Association. A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR. Thursday, March 4.—The bombardment of the inner forts of the Dardanelles was resumed this mdrning. According to a British officer, only two forts remaiq intact. An Athene dispatch says the Turkish, fleet, assigned to give battle to the Anglo-French warships, has fled at th e approach of the allied squadron. The German war office announces the capture of a trench near Arras and the repulse of French efforts in th (( Argonne. The Russians have suffered severe losses in attempting to advance at Lomza, in northern Poland, but are admitted to have renewed their offensive near Przasnysz. A dispatcli from Santiago, Chile, reports the sinking' in South American waters of the French bark Jean, and British steamer Kinaldon presumably by. German sea ra’ders. • ■Friday, March s.—Six' German submarines have been lost since the beginning of tljie war, it was asserted at the British admiralty, following announcement from the French ministry of marine that the German U-8 was sunk by French destroyers in the channel o Dover. The Bucharest correspondent of the Evening News telegraphed that the Russian offensive movement in Galicia had forced the Austrians to evacuate Czernowitz, the capital of Bftkowina. Th e dispatch adds that the main Austrian forces in thi£ region have retired in the direction of Franzenthal to the south of the Carpathians. The Berlin war office statement says the situation around Grodno is unchanged *and that Russian attacks to the northeast of north of Lomza failed, with heavy losses to the enemy. The allied fleet is pounding away at forts Kilid Bahr and Chanak, 145 miles from Constantinople. Chanak’s fire-has become more feeble and Vice Admiral Carden is confident that the Turkish stronghold will soon crumble. Saturday, March 6.—Constantinople is now threatened from two sides. With the allied battering down, slowly but surely, the fortresses on the Dardanelles, a strong Russian squadron is speeding across the Black sea to bombard th e defenses on the Bosphorus and prevent, if possible, the scape of the Turkish fleet, which is now said to be in the sea of Marmora. The Dardanelles now has been cleared of mines as far as Chanak Kalesi, says a Tenedos dispatch. From the sea through the dunes of British and the Belgian armies appear to have withstood successfully all the attempts of the Germans to break through their lines, while from Arras to the; snow-topped j ridges of the Vosges, the French continue to win jdo'wly forward, according to the office French, communique. Sunday, March 7.—The French ministry of marine statement says the battle ship Queen Elizabeth, statimed in the Gulf of Saros, bombarded by direct fire the two large works on the Asiatic side of the strait which defend the narrows near Chanak, namely Forts Tamidiehi-Tabia and Hami-dishi-Sultan. At th e same time battle ships, which had penetrated the strait continued by direct fire the bombardment of the works at Dardanos, on the Asiatic side, and Souan Dire, on the European side.” A French cruiser was put out of action and an English cruiser badly damaged during' the bombardment today according to the official statement of the Turkish war office. The German office has sent the most urgent representations to Greece in an effort to strengthen the hand of King Constance, who is opposing the entry of his nation into the war, while France, Russia and Great Britain have taken equally prompt and strong l measures to prevent the development of any situation that might embarras the present campaign in the Dardanelles.

RUSSIANS WIN IN I SOUTOOLAND Infantry Attacks Drive Germans from Positions Along Pilica. 4 MORE TURK FORTS SILENCED Allied Fleet Continues to Destroy Strongholds in Dardanelles and Some Craft in Turn Damaged— Roumanian Senate Empowers Government to Proclaim Martial Law. (The Roumanian senate has adopted a bill empowering the government to proclaim martial law through the country whe n ever it deems such a measure necssary. PETROGRAD — Russian infantry attacks have dislodged' the Germans horn several positions along the Pilica, in southeast Poland, according to dispatches from Warsaw. The Russian offensive is proceeding in the direction of Tomasof. For four days furious fighting has been raging around a chain of stone buildings and villages in the PilicaEawa region. Four Mo& Turk Forts Destroyed. LONDON — The British and French fleets have battered their wqy a step nearer to Constantinople, not, however, without damage to the ships engaged and the battle royal for the Dardanelles continues. Four mor e Turkish forts have been silenced, according to official statements here and in Paris, but the Turks are making a terrific resistance and th*. shells from their German-made guns have found more than one mark on the besieging' craft. Shells Hurled Twelve Miles. From the number of ships engaged and the size and range of the guns, the battle o*f the Dardanelles is unlike anything in history, according to naval experts. At 21,000 yards, nearly twelve miles, the huge battle ship Queen Elizabeth of the British squadron .assisted by smaller ships, is still hurling hell across the Gallipoli peninula into the Turkish strongholds on the Asiatic ohore. —>— The British admiralty statement carrier the operations through Sunday and admits that the Turks not only scored three minor hits on the Queen Elizabeth, but that the majority of the ships inside the straits, both French and British, were struck. None was sunk and there were no casualties. The Turkish forts Rumili Medjidleh Tubia and Hamidieh Tabia, fringing the Asiatic shor e line, which previously had withstood the bombardment, were sjlenced, as was the Mount Dardanus battery farther south, acctirdtng to the British. Hidden Batteries Silenced. The French report says the guns at Souaine Dere and other hidden batteries were silenced, in addition to those mentioned in th e British admiralty’s report. The Turkish casualties are unknown. A Turkish official statement from Constantinople, issued prior to the admiralty statement, insisted that the fighting in th e Dardanelles was developing in favor of the Turks. It was stated that no batteries were being destroyed and that the hostile ships were forced to retreat. Aeroplanes, taking wing from the decks of the besieging craft, are playing a notable part in the One British machine became unmanageable and dived into the sea, and another was hit by the Turks twen-ty-eight times. > ZEPPELIN IS LOST, 17 DIE Belgium Correspondent Confirms Report of Destruction of L-8. AMSTERDAM — The Telegraafs Tirlemont (Belgium) correspondent confirms the report of the destruction there last Thursday of Zeppelin aii ship L-8, which was forced to make a hurried descent owing, to a derangement of its motors. The correspondent says the airship collided with trees and smashed its cars and that seventeen of its crew of forty-one men were killed. Floods Sweep Villages In Alsace. BERNE -- Flood conditions in Alsace are becoming worse and serious damage already has been caused. Communication between Altkirch and Muelhausen has been Interrupted. The lower part of Altkirch is under water as is the Village of Illpfurt and many other places in the valley. Troops hav e gone to the assistance of the inhabitants. Russia Prohibits Fobd Export LONDON — The .Russian gov- ; ernment has prohibited the export | without special permit in each case of ' any article of food or forage, a Petrotrad dispatch to Reuter’s Telegram j company says. The sale of such ar- ' tides to foreigners engaged in the wholesale trade in these commodities alsc is prohibited. La Touralne Arrives at Havre. LONDON — A message to Lloyds from Havre announces the arrival of ' 114 Touralne at that port - Tli - TTB

SYRACUSE. INDIANA. THURSDAY. MARCH 11, 1915

iINDIANASTATENEWSi —♦+♦****>— Dope Law Cause* Suicide. LOGANSPORT, IND. — The federal anti-narcotic law, which went Intv. effect last week, claimed a victim yesterday in Frank thirty-six years old, who shot himself to death here'at the home of his father-in-law, Charles Kerns, because he could not procure his usual supply of drug to which he was addicted. Several weeks ago in a conversation concerning the law Sullivan said to Kerns, according to the statement of the latter, “I’m going to ‘stick’ until next pay day, and then I’ll end it all." Saturday he drew his money from the Pennsylvania railroad and, returning to his home, fired a bullet into his brain. Collapse Kills Three Miners. ’ PETERSBURG, IND. — Three men were killed in the Ayrshire mine, Nc 7, when a\quarter of an acre of the mine roof collapsed without warning and buried the victims beneath hundreds of tors of coal and earth. The men were making repairs in the mine. Had the accident occurred on any other day except Sunday it is almost certain that scores of lives would have been lost. The dead are: James Wiggs, thin-ty-eight years old, assistant mine boss; Charles Sharp, forty years old, assistant mine boss; William Smith (known as “Gunboat”), sixty years old, mine boss. Prchl Meeting on Up Stairs. COLUMBUS, IND. — While Emer--Bor E. Ballard, a lawyer of Crawfordsville, was denouncing the liquor traffic and other vices for the "drys” on the second floor of the city building here the police raided a poker game in the First National building, arresting nine men, and while the “drys” meeting was still on Mayor Volland held court immediately below the meet. On pleas of guilty the nine men were fined $5 ana costs each for gaming and sentenced to thirty days in jail. Dope User Ends Life. FRANKFORT, IND. — After falling in her efforts to obtain a drug to which she was addicted, Mrs. John Spangler, ftfty-fbur years old, committed suicide here by drinking poison. The woman was under the observation of neighbors after she threatened to take her life, but escaped their attention. She- had been refused morphine at a number of drug stores because of the new federal anti-narcotic law. On the pretext of being tired she ertered a bed room at her home and swallowed the poison. d Wife Deserter Is Sentenced. ’ CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND. — Robert ' ’ ;nson, twerfy-nine years old, a barber, was sentenced to the state reformatory for one to three yftars, when he pleaded guilty to a charge of wife desertion in the circuit cour£ here. Gleason finished a fifteen day sentence in the county jail on the same charge less than a month ago, but was re-arrested on the complaint of his wife. . — Compromise Will Contest MARION, IND. — Parties to the Jesse Johnson will contest, involving a $200,000 estate, have virtually agreed on a compromise, by which the Grant County Orphans’ home will receive $15,000 and the due estate will be divided among the heirs. Mr. Johnson’s will left the entire estate to the orphans’ home. She Can Now Repeat Deed. FORT WAYNE, IND. — Mrs. Helen Lohmeier, who pushed her four months old son on a red hot stove ana held him there until he was so badly burned that he died soon after, was held by the court to be insane at the time of the act. The court also decided that she is now sane. Lincoln's Telegrapher Dies. ELKHART, IND. — Timothy J. Dawson, telegraph operator for President Lincoln during the civil w<.r, died at his home here. He received the last message sent during the battle of Gettysburg by General Meade to the president. Dawson was engaged in railroad work here for fifty years. - Horse, Mad, Bites Boy. FRANKFORT, IND. — After developing .a case of rabies, a valuable brood mare, worth S3OO, belonging to A. H. Hodgen of Antioch, has been killed. Bernice Hodgen, twenty-one years old, who was bitten by the horse, has been sent to Indianapolis for treatment. Man In Jail Has SmaHpox. TERRE HAUTE, IND. — The Vigo County jail was quarantined by th e health authorities a 8 the result of the discovery of a new case of smallpox. James Caldwell, charged with murder, is afflicted. Matron Quits Owing to Age. PRINCETON, IND. — Mrs. Olive Marvel, who was matron of the Gfbson County Orphans’ home for several . years, has resigned, giving her ad- * vaneed a» the MMoa.

MINISTER INSISTS ON PROBE I ■ I Indiana Pastor Demands Investigation of Report About Family. j COLUMBUS, IND. — The Rev Wirt Lowther, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church, surprised and astonished his congregation by devoting the service hour to denouncing a report which he said had been falsely circulated regarding a member of his family. The pastor told his congregation that in the event the report of an investigating committee is not satisfactory to him.-ftlfwlll resort to the law for fuli vindication. The pastor said that the bishop would return him for fiv e years if need be, despite the congregation and the church board, to clear the stain from the good name of the member of his family. Rev. Lowther did not designate the paiticular member of his family to whom he referred, but nearly everybody present knew that he had in mind his oldest daughter, a student in the high school, for the report which attacked her character has become comjnon gossip. The report had spread through the schools and the school officials had started an investigation of it. CONFESSION IN GRAFT CASE i ■ Township Trustee Said to Have Bared I Fraud* in Indiana. BRAZIL, IND. — Clarence C. Shipp, Orville M. Hendricks and George M. Ray, of Indianapolis have been arrested on chang>es of filing false claims against Jackson township, Claj county. Former Trustee James A. Muncie of Jackson township, with whom the Indianapolis men ar e alleged to have been involved in excessive charges for township supplies, is said to have made a full confession. Muncie’s confession is said to have been obtained after a fisherman found coal buckets and other articles, supposed to have been bought for school houses, in the river at a point, not far from Muncie’s home. The tracks of a buggy ; are said to have led between the river and Muncie’s house. The supplies were new, still bearing the shipping; tags. Muncie’s confession exi plains this matter, it is said, though i his reason for dumping the supplies Jin the river is not explained publicly i PROMISES A PARADISE TOWN ; Famous News Butcher to Be Candidate for Mayor at Seventy. RICHMOND, IND. — “Little Tommy” Cale,. Sixty-eight years of age. one of the most famous “news butchers” in the United States, made formal announcement that he would be an independent candidate for mayor of Richmond in 1917. He said he had retired from the news business to go into politics. / For forty-nine years Cale worked for a news company as a "butcher” on thirty railroad’ during that time he wag- in twentytwo wrecks, including some of the rnqst disastrous ones, but each time escaped with slight cuts “and bruises. Ho boasts that he knows more persons than any man in the country. C|)e says that if elected he will lift the municipal debt and make Richmond a j second paradise. * NAME 19 BABIES BY ALPHABET Indiana Couple Kept Busy With Triplets a n d Twins. SOUTH BEND. IND. — If the alphabet holds out, there will be enough names for the children of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Scott, who recently left South Whitney near here to seek ! a new home in the west. To the i Scotts have been born five sets of triplets and two sets of twins. Here arc the children who ar e living. Six have died. Ashbell, Archer and Austin, triplets, four and one-half years old. Arthur and Arnold, three and years old. Allen, Almon and Albin, triplets, two and one-half years old. Alfred, Albion and Adolph, triplets, eighteen months old. Abel and Abner, twins, six months old. Mr. and Mrs. Scott have been married ten years. The husband is thirtyone and the wife thirty years old. RICH MAN’S BODY IS FOUND C. C. Green Dead in South; Foul Play Is Suspected. SHELBYVILLE, IND. — The tele- . grams received here by Mrs. Thomas Qoyle and other relatives announced . that Mrs. Coyle’s brother, Columbus C. Green, sixty years old, was buried at Huntsville, Ala. Mr. Green was a resident of this city and vicinity for many years. He disappeared from his home at Waynesboro, Miss., Jan. 11. Mrs. Greene and her children have identified a body found in a wood near Dadeville, Ala., as that of Mr. Green. ; There was evidence he had, met with foul play. He carried a large sum of money the day he left home. Mr. Green was in the land development business end leaves an estate valued at $200,000. Indiana Elevator Burns. ' CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND. — A grain elevator at Garfield, four miles north of here, owned by J. B. Price of this city, was burned to the ground, causing a loss of more than $5,000, ■ ■ partly coverad by Insurance. j

LUNCH TIME AT FRONT French Officers Taking Their Meal While the Battle Rages. Photo by American Press Association. CARRANCISTAS CLAIM IMPORTANTWCTORIES Monterey Falls Into Hands of Chief; Gain in Yucatan. EL PASO, TEXAS — Montereyfell into the hands of the attacking Carranza army at noon, according to advices received by the Carranza consulate in El Paso. General Pablo Gcnzales, who commanded the victorious army, is declared to have sent 2,000 troops to Monclova, to assist General Maclovio Herrera, operating in that district. Carranza forces are gettir?! closfi to Juarez and ate doing much/mischief in the rear of General Villa. Confirmation is had of the Carranza report of the cutting of the railroad between Chihuahua and Torreon last Friday by Carranzistas and later has come the news of the of the railroad south of Juarez only eighty-six miles. This was d,one Sunday when a Carranza band captured a freight train loaded with provisions and some military equipment consisting of saddles and clothing, flfhe raid was made by a band o? abdut mounted men. . Fierce fighting in is also reported in which it is claimed that the Carranza column advancing on Merida, the state capital, has inflicted two severe defeats on the rebels and expects soon to occupy the city. Yucatan recently declared its independence of all factions. RUROEDE GOES TO PRISON Pleads Guilty to Furnishing German Reservists Fraudulent Passports. NEW YORK — For attempting to aid German patriots to get back to their country by means of fraudulent passports, Carl Ruroede, a naturalized American citizen, was sentenced to serve three years in Atlanta penitentiary by Judge Neterer of the United States District court before whom Ruroede entered a plea of guilty. It was chiefly because Ruroede was a citizen of the United States and cculd not, therefore, lay claim to loyalty to Germany as an excuse for his acts that Judge Neterer was so severe in his sentence. On the other htnd the judge was extremely lenient with the four young German reservists who were arrested on the Norwegian steamship Bergensfjord as they were leaving with passports obtained for them by Ruroede. He fined them S2OO each. COTTON UNDER ALLIES’ BAN Southern Staple Put on Contraband List by British Decree. WASHINGTON, D. C.—The British embassy announces that cargoes of cctton consigned to German or Austrian ports shall no longer be permitted to proceed by the British patrolling fleet. In a statement dealing with the cotton situation the embassy says that cargoes of cotton consigned to neufral ports can go forward under certain restrictions. But in effect the embassy, in its statement, places cotton, heretofore not interfered with, in the contraband class. This is the first official declaration supporting England’s blockade declaration and it is expected that it will form th e basis for the first concrete protest by the "United States. Russ Capture 18,016 Turks. LONDON — Since she beginIng of the war with Turkey, says a Petrograd dispatch to the Reuter’s company, the Russians have eaptured four Turkish pashas, 337 officers, and 17,675 soldiers.

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

AMERICANS TOLD TO OUITMEXICO Two More Warships Ordered to Southern Republic. GEN. OBREGON IS HEARD FROM Carranza’s General at Mexico City Declares Tales of Horror Are Manufactured by Reactionaries—Says 180 Imprisoned Priests Have Given Lie to Storie s o f m Treatment. Washington, March Id. —Secretary Bryan has warned Americans to leave Mexico City. The order came from Secretary Bryan land was transmitted to the Brazilian minister in Mexico City on March 5, according to this dispatch. General Obregon has ,withdrawn vitli his army from the Mexican capital, leaving scant if any protection for the city. Villa’s representative in Washington announces that the Zapatistas are again in control of the city but this has not been confirmed by any official dispatches. These developments, following so closely upon the sending bf two warships to Vera Cruz by the United States government served to emphasize the acuteness of the situation. Washington, March 10.—Having sent to Carranza the most vigorous ‘ possible representation short of an *■ open threat to jjse force and dis- > patched two more warships to Vera Cruz, the administration again resumed its policy of watchful waiting ou Mexico. It is now up to Carranza, officials say. The warships ordered to Vera Cruz are the battle ship Georgia and the armored cruiser Washington, the latter the flag ship of Rear Admiral Caperton, who will take command of all the naval vessels cn the east coast of Mexico. The vessels were designated by Admiral Fletcher, commanding the Atlantic fleet, and both are under way, leav'ng l frJin Guantanamo, where the fleet is based for the winter. It is exp ted they will reach Vera'Cniz Suggestions that the United States’ latest note to Carranza was an ultimatum were repudiated at the White House, where the president declared that the views of the United states regardingi certain conditions had been clearly set forth to Carranza and that it had been left to him to act accordingly. Obregon Makes Statement. Washington, March 10.—The first statement by General Obregon regarding conditions 'ln Mexico City, for which he is held responsible,.was made public here in a dispatch received" at the constitutionalist agency' from the general himself. General Obregon’s statement says in part: “I note what you say in regard to the perfidious efforts of the reactionaries to disseminate false information in the United States in regard to conditions in Mexico, City for the purpose of discrediting the constitutionalists authorities. “The resident foreigners are absolutely in no danger whatsoever. When I levied the extraordinary assessment on merchants, bankers and professional men in general in an effort to alleviate the poverty stricken condi- ' tions, the foreigners engaged in business here through the minister of finance petitioned the first chief to be exempted from its provisions. Mr. Carranza granted their request, and since then these foreign merchants have been very favorably disposed to our cause. “Many of the business men, bankers and merchants gladly paid the tax imposed anti others stated their willingness to comply with it if given additional time. They are now daily endeavoring to meet its requirements. Denies Fooj Story. "It is utterly false that I have prevented food at any time from entering Mexico City or at any time took supplies from the city to furnish them to the army. “Owing to the depredations of the Zapatistas the water supply has been short but every effort has been made to remedy "this condition. Flour, coal and other commodities that must necessarily be imported at all times have net been abundant, but vegetables and small trucking that Mexico City at all times obtains from the Indians who cultivate small patches in the suburbs of the city have been as plentiful as the times justify. “When I heard that American papers are reporting that Catholic priests have been subjected to mistreatment and that they were suffering abuses In prison I authorized the correspondent of La Prensa and the local secretary of the Associated Press to interview the clergymen themselves and discover how they were being treated." General Obregon then proceeds to quote from a report said to have been made by these two men asserting that. the priests, 180 of whom were imprisoned by Obregon for not giving the money he demanded, declared themselves to be kindly treated and allowed them communication with their people. ,

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