OCR Text |
Show MADERO DENOUNCES THOSE WHO PILLAGE, AND THREATENS : BANDITS WITH DEATH 1 Ia trip to PhUi aad other parti of Mexico, -s MEXICO CITY. Jua 17. With the same enthusiasm that characterised hit (rat entry into the capital laat week. Francisco f. Madera waa welcomed here by an immense throng laat night on hit return from a flva days' trip through out hern Mexico. With Madero waa Ambroaio Figua rea. who onea commanded 12,000 men composing the inaurreeto army of the oiith, and whoae loyalty to Madero ad mittedly haa been one of the reasons for the rapid triumph of the revolution. Madero returnee satisfied that the inhabitant of tha aouth will support him and that ' normal conditiona hare been returned id that section. Only one person and ona placa are exceptions to complete peaca. The person ia Emi-Ho Emi-Ho Zapata, an enemy of Figueroa, un der whose command ha was supposed to have acted, and tha place ia t'uer navara, where Zapata's men were quar tared. Madero haa ordered hie paymaster to distribute his goods freely' in fuer narara, with tha bona of mustering out Zapata's 1500 men quickly, and last reports are indicative of the lure era of the plan, though Zapata as a source of trouble, it is admitted, haa not beea removed. - Trip Successful. Madera's trip through tha snath, where ha conferred with rebel chiefs, hastened the dispersal of tha large bod ias of inauxrecta Iran pa. It ia believed that of tha 12,000 men which Figueroa onra had, only about 3000 remain on dor arms. Figueroa, who haa developed a warm affection for Madero, ia eo operating with tha latter ia dispersing tha armed forces and Tentorial order where needed. Zapata is characterized by tha rebel leader aa a bandit and aa -inkling of what might ba in store for him shonld ha refuse to abide by Madero 'a orders waa given in speeches made by Madero at ona of the towns. It was rat at Cnatla, whara Zapata 'a men are said to have burned and pillaged to such aa extent that tha smouldering ruins and charred houses invited a bitter bit-ter denunciation from Madero aa be addreaaad tha tewa's pejwlatioa. Death to Bandit. "Death to bandits," ba erisd, ang rily, as ha pointed to tha work of destruction. de-struction. ''Death it shall ba to all who plunder, whether they call them aelvaa revolutionists or aoi." At another towa where Colonel Tat epa, second in command to Zapata, aad also denouaeed aa a bandit, was executed exe-cuted recently, Madero made aa aqu ally al-ly threatening speech. "I am glad -he was executed," he said as ha gesticulated emphatically toward tha placa, where the bandit was killed. Madero will remain at his home her for at least a fortnight before making |