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Show BRIEF TELEGRAMS San Juan Del Sur, Nicaragua. The United States gunboat Princeton arrived ar-rived here Friday from Corinto. In a dispatch dated Corinto the Princeton was reportetd as having gone to the Gulf of Fonseca. No explanation ex-planation has been offered concerning her presence at this place. Corinto, Nicaragua. Jose Santos Ze-laya, Ze-laya, who a few days ago relinquished the prisedency of Nicaragua to Drt Jose Madriz the same day his array met defeat by the revolutionists at Rama, has fled the capital and is in Corinto, surrounded by his bodyguard and a few faithful friends. Zelaya left Managua under cover of darkness anS escorted by fifty of his guard of honor and a squad of artillery with a Maxim gun. At 3 o'clock Friday rriorning a party quietly left the former president' home, and half an hour later went on board a small steamer, which sailed immediately im-mediately for Momotombo, on Lake Managua. Simultaneously with the departure de-parture of the boat, a special train with a small' number of friends and a press representative aboard drew out of Managua, also bound for Momotombo. At 7 o'clock in the morning the steamer met the train at Momotombo and Zelaya, with his guard and their Maxim gun, promptly boarded a special car attached to the train at Managua. The train departed immediately for Ze-laya's Ze-laya's plantation at Diamanto, where the party took breakfast. The entire party comprised 100 of Zelaya's most intimate friends, among them Joaquin Pasos, Louis Coasin, his two sons, Horatio Ho-ratio and Alfonso, his private secretary secreta-ry and James Hall, American partner of Zelaya in Nicaragua gold mines After breakfast Zelaya and his party boarded the train and went to Corinto, where they arrived Friday afternoon. The trip was made without special incident. There were no demonstrations demonstra-tions along the line, the population generally gen-erally being unaware of the identity of the passengers on the special train. All members of the party, including Zelaya, Ze-laya, were heavily armed. Zelaya appeared ap-peared calm and cheerful. At Chinandega news was brought to Zelaya that the United States gunboat Princeton had lft Corinto to take up her position in the Gulf of Fonseca. Kampala, Uganda. Kermit Roosevelt Roose-velt has secured a fine specimen of the male sitatunga. Colonel Roosevelt has not sighted this rare game. During the reception for the Americans Ameri-cans at the home of F. A. Knowles, the sub-commissioner, a native band from the Catholic mission played "The Star-Spangled Star-Spangled Banner," and then sang the words, first in English and later in their own language, a translation having been made and rehearsed for the occa-tlon occa-tlon Colonel Roosevelt said he was delighted. de-lighted. The expedition got under way for Heyma this afternoon. Before leaving the members of the party had luncheon at the home of Mr. Knowles. Colonel Roosevelt and Kermit are making a side trip to hunt leopards and will rejoin re-join the expedition Friday. The Indian merchants here have presented pre-sented Mr. Roosevelt with a number of purses of ivory and Congo curios. Paris. Gil Blss Christmas eve prints a nrivato (.ommunication from Madrid stating that the condition of King Alfonso Al-fonso has created the gravest anxiety in court circles. Another operation is imperative. Under the guise of departure on a hunting . trip in Andalusia, his majesty t will go to the palace of the Countess o. Paris at San Lucar, where the opeia.-tion opeia.-tion will be performed. For some tinivi disturbing rumors regarding re-garding the health of the king of Spai. have been circulated. The exact nature of his ailment hn. been concealed from the public. It i. understood, however, the post nasai parts and the inner ear are affected, une of the suymptoms has been a slight deafness. Last July King Alfonso is said to have been operated on at Biarritz for the removal of a growth in the nose. A somewhat similar operation had been performed a month earlier. Rome. The Congregation of Studies in Rome has conferred the degree of Doctor o Divinity upon the Rev. George A. Dougherty, assistant treasurer of the Catholic University of America, Washington. The honor was proposed by Cardinal Gibbons and anticipates the elevation of Dr. Dougherty to the office of vice rector of the university. Washington. Following a premonitory premoni-tory warning to President Madriz that the United States will hold him personally per-sonally responsible for the safety of Americans in the western part of Nicaragua, Nica-ragua, the state department tonight extended more than moral encouragement encourage-ment to the revolutionists. Under orders or-ders from Secretary Knox, American Red Cross funds are to be expended in caring for the sick and wounded of both armies, more than 2.000 of whom are incapacitated in-capacitated in Biuefields. New York. Dumont Clarke, president presi-dent of the American Exchange National Nation-al bank, and one of the most widely known bankers of the country, died Sunday night at Dumont, N. J., rom pneumonia. Berlin. Ernest Mendelssohn Bar-tholdi, Bar-tholdi, head of the banking house of Mendelhsohn & Co., died Saturday at Dresden. Peabody, Kan. Colonel Bertin Hink-ney, Hink-ney, a civil war veteran and a Kansas pioneer, died Sunday, aged 86. He was colonel of the Sixtieth Wisconsin volunteers. Rome. The condition of Cardinal Sa-tolli, Sa-tolli, who is suffering from nephritis. Is desperate, attacls of delirium being frequent. Extreme unction has been administered. St. Petersburg. The national defenso committee of the duma has rejected by a large majority the credit for new battleships. bat-tleships. Managua. The magnitude of the personal per-sonal sacrifice involved, in the overthrow over-throw of Zelaya from actual power and a possible flight from Nicaragua is shown in the statement that he derives from various monopolies and. financial ventures a revenue of $400,0000 silver ($40,000 United States money) per month. In the building in the Champ de Mars that housed the ministry of war, Zelaya Ze-laya conducts the monopolies of alcohol, alco-hol, tobacco, cattle, petroleum, hides, gambling, soap, candles, ice and drugs and lumber or railroads, fuel and ties. From these quarters he also has controlled con-trolled local monopolies existing along the Atlantic coast and covering traffic traf-fic in aguardiente, leaf and manufactured manufac-tured tobacco, cocoanut groves, abattoirs abat-toirs and turtle fisheries. In addition to these, he controls the dock privileges at the piers of Corinto, Granada, San Jorge, Monkey Point, San Miguelsto and El Bluffs and the lease of the National railway and of the National steamboat lines. Through some peculiar framing of the customs laws he also benefits from premiums on the exportation of coffee, lumber, gold, hides and rubber and from duties of from 10 to 50 per cent on importations of all sorts of manufactured manu-factured articles. Among his other known interests are the street cleaning of Managua, done by contract; the sugar refinery of San Antonio; the planing mills, and the sale of property to or by the government. He also exacts a share in all conces sions granted by the government in this manner, is a large stockholder in concessions con-cessions granted to-the Biuefields company com-pany James Dietrick Guichora, Sala-zar. Sala-zar. Emery and in a number of mining min-ing concessions. The system is so perfected per-fected that no land owner can devote his property to raising sugar cane or tobacco without the authorization of trusts created and controlled by Zelaya. Ze-laya. Boston, Mass. With the close of the big game season it is found that the cost 0 the chase has been thirty-four lives. Twenty-three persons were killed by being mistaken for deer, or by the accidental or careless discharge ot firearms fire-arms in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont Ver-mont and Massachusetts, and three in the Canadian, provinces of New Brunswick Bruns-wick and Nova Scotia. Contributary cauoes added eight more deaths. Among the score or more known to have been seriously injured five are not expected to recover, two will lose their sight and half a dozen more will remain re-main maimed for life. Maine, as usual, leads in the number of victims, fourteen four-teen persons having been sacrificed to the chase in that state. Washington, Pa. Antonio Dalesan-dro, Dalesan-dro, a wealthy merchant in this city, Is in the hospital with probably fatal wounds, inflicted, the police say, by a Black Hand agent, who struck the man down when he refused to give up a large sum of money. Warrants have been issued for the arrest ar-rest of John Cantafy, an Italian of Washington, and Antonio Folle, a nonresident. non-resident. The police are scouring the Italiaji region for Folle. Folle is said to have attacked Dalesondra while hi was in a barber chair. Dalesandro'3 face and threat were deeply gashed, an artery being severed, from which he almost al-most bled to death before a physician could reach him. What part Cantafy, who Is a leader among the Italians, took in the affair, is not definitely known, but the police believe he cooperated co-operated with an outside Black Hand organization. Omaha. Dr. Leonard J. Schneider, a dentist died Christmas day of polio-mylitis, polio-mylitis, a strange spinal disease, which has been the puzzle and despair of physicians phy-sicians here. Madrid. It can be stated with au- tVirM-itV tJint th&rc is Tift truth in Cnn vo port that it was at. the suggestion , of the Pope that the Order of the Golden Fleece had been bestowed on Senor Maura, who authorized the execution of Ferrer. Senor Moret, who succeeded succeed-ed Senor Maura as professor, was alone responsible for the appointment. The real circumstances under which Senor Maura came to receive the Order of the Golden Fleece are as follows: When King Manuel visited Madrid on his way to England.' King Alfonso thought it desirable that the erstwhile premier should be present at the state banquet. But, according to the estab-lished estab-lished rules of court etiquette, there were reasons against the one-time minister min-ister being invited. As King Alfonso insisted in his desire to have Senor Mpura present at the bnnquet, It wa pointed out by Senor Moret that all members of the Order of the Golden Fleece were qualified to attend, and that consequently the difficulty could be got over if Senor Maura, was raised to that order. The king promptly acquiesced ac-quiesced to the suggestion. Berlih. The German war office on the eve of Christmas notified Count Zeppelin Zeppe-lin that it would not mirehaso his dirigible di-rigible balloon. Count Zenpelin III, for. fear It would be out of date in 1910. The .. ar office notified the - count that it uust Keep in style. Prague. Tenpersons were killed and .,nty hurt Saturday in a railway ac-..uent. ac-..uent. An express train bound for enna and a Height crashed near j .litzen, Bohemia. Moscow. Tht action police of the Russian secret service arrested two men and four women here on Christmas day, charged with being implicated im-plicated in a plot to ki Czar Nicholas and the czarina, who are expected to arrive here next week. The men and women under arrest are also charged with complicity in the killing of Colonel Colo-nel Karpoff, chief of police of St. Petersburg. Pe-tersburg. It was through the killing of Colonel Karpon that the police learned of the intrigue against the life of the Russian ruler and the czarina. The arrests were made at a house in Baskakov street, but' the names of the captives were kept secret. A number of newly-invented bombs, filled with a high explosive, were also found in the house. London. British parliament leaders who have been abusing each other without mercy have called a truce, impelled im-pelled by the good will spirit of the Christmas season. Evidences of the unhersal amnesty was indicated on the eve of Christmas in the personnel of various week-end parties and Christmas Christ-mas meetings. The Duke of Marlboro is entertaining Win.ston Churchill and wife; also F. E. Smith, a member of parliament and one of the hopes of the Tory party. Smith has been engaged in following Mr. Churchill on a speak-' ing tour through Lancashire, attacking him in speeches of bitterest terms. Lord Londonderry's party at Winyard includes several fierce partisans on op posite sides, who have been engageu in mutual attacks against each other for weeks. Today they chatted in the most pleasant manner. It was noticeable, however, that political subjects were never brought into the conversation. The Tory press today joined in an attack against the dissolving of parliament parlia-ment on January 10, instead of the 8th. The former date will enable the bulk of held on the following Saturday. The Tories call this unfair, because Saturday Satur-day is a half holiday, and' will enable many working men to vote who would not be able to vote otherwise. This arrangement to secure the largest possible pos-sible labor vote Is denounced by the Tories as the latest cabinet trick. Chances for a Liberal victory in th? general elections next month seem to be improving. The campaign of the peers has been marked by disorder. Very rarely does a lord have an opportunity oppor-tunity to complete his speech once he begins it. The public sentiment is expressed ex-pressed at every meeting as against the Tories. Lord George has t.-own himself into the campaign "with all the vim of which he is capable. Paris. A special from Brussels says that Louise, the eldest daughter of the late King Leopold, has left that city without effecting a reconciliation with her sisters, and that King Albert's' efforts ef-forts to induce her to resume her place as a royal princess have failed. Cologne. Princess Louise of Belgium returned here late Friday, and will take lodgings at a hotel, intending to make her stay here a long one, while contesting contest-ing her rights to the property of her father, the late King Leopold. She is accompanied by Count Mattatachich, who. it is said she refused to put aside at the order of King Albert. Brussels. King Albert has asked Premier Schollaert and his colleagues to retain their portfolio's. Tne inventory of the estate of the late King Leopold will be begun upon demand of the princess, prin-cess, probably on Monday. The civil list for the last twenty years will be examined. ex-amined. Washington. President Taft last Thursday commuted the sentence of a New York "white slave" trader by cutting cut-ting off one year from a three-year sentence. The case was that of August Rousett, a Frenchman, who was convicted con-victed in the United States circuit court of New York of "importing women for the purpose of prostitution and of harboring har-boring an alien woman for immoral purposes. The law making the harboring harbor-ing of an alien woman for Immoral purposes pur-poses a crime has since been declared unconstitutional, and it was on this ground solely that the pardon was recommended. Rome. The condition of Cardinal Sa-tolli Sa-tolli became worse Christmas day. At times he was delirou3. New York. For the first time since Halley's comet reached this section of the heavens on its present visit it is visible vis-ible to the naked eye in New York. Professor Pro-fessor Eastman of Columbia university has been studying the comet without the use of a telescope. It is in the northeast. north-east. New York. Storm-bound in his suburban sub-urban home, Magistrate Geismar called his court to order over the telephone and disposed of six cases which were ready to be heard. Five of the cases were of persons who had overcelebrated Christmas, and the other was an assault as-sault case. The magistrate had the policeman who made the arrest swear to their complaints over the telephone and then had the prisoners make their pleas in the same fashion. The court's decisions were then announced over the wire. St. Louis. Mrs. Catherine Cleary, Missouri's oldest woman, will celebrate her ninety-ninth birthday anniversary New Year's day. She has drawn up a list of resolutions to commemorate the event and among them is a vow to live until Ireland is free. She is in excellent health, and swears she will never use glasses or consult a physician. Another Anoth-er of her vows is that she will live to be at least 120 years oid. She came to St. Louis seventy-five years ago from Tipperary. New York. As Samuel Leiberman was going over his accounts at the desk in his lunch room Tuesday he glanced up to see a forlorn and battered old man with white beard and hair looking at him appealingly. He asked what he wanted. The visitor, who looked as if he might be 80, asked if he could have some coffee and bread, as he had not eaten in several days and felt he could not hold out much longer. Leiberman motioned him to a chair at the first table ta-ble and told the waiter to bring some hot chicken soup and coffee. The old man muttered his thanks and as the waiter put the soup before him uttered a cry, threw up his arms and fell backward back-ward on the floor. A physician was summoned sum-moned and said the man died of starvation. starva-tion. . New York. Johan Gicoul. a would-be would-be Hungarian immigrant, is In a most unfortunate position. He cannot get his suit case from Hills island 'until he files a heavy bond, and he cannot get a bond, he says, until he goes to Ruby, Mont., and claims the fortune that his brother has left him there. Gicoui has a through ticket to Ruby, where he says his son Jacob is living. His brother broth-er Henry died there a month ago. leaving leav-ing him a fortune, which he estimates at several hundred thousand dollars. Boston. The discovery Tuesday of the wreck of the five-masted schooner Davis Palmer, which sank with twelve men Sunday mominsr at the entrance to Broad sound, was followed by the xe- port of another wreck In the outer harbor. har-bor. This second victim of the great storm that cwept New England Saturday Satur-day night and Sunday was reported by Captain Kemp of the tug Ariel, who asserts that he saw three masts of a schooner projecting above the water near the shoals known as "The Graves." Although Captain Kemp located the vessel three miles east of the wreck of the Palmer, some marine authorities think that he may have been mistaken in his bearings and that he saw the Palmer's masts. Seafaring men who believe the tugboat tug-boat captain is not mistaken about his bearings, suggest the possibility of a collision between the Palmer and the unknown schooner. Probably the last person to see the Palmer before she sank was Captain Sookamp of the barge Hopatong. who clocked at Lynn today from Hoboken. He reported passing ti e Palmer off Cape Cod late Christmas afternoon. At that time the Palmer's sailors were on deck singing and celebrating the holiday holi-day in true sea fashion. Yesterday's toll of wreck was increased in-creased today. The schooner Ada K. Damon sole support of her aged master. Captain A. K. Brewster of York, Me., went ashore near Ipswlcn. She will probably be a total loss. Her crew reacneo snore sareiy. I In Chelsea, where ,z tidal wave broke j p. dyke and flooded the houses of 2.000 people., a high tide today opened two ; new breaks. Many cellars that had j been pumped out by fire engines were again flooded. It will be weeks before people In the eighty acres of tide lands will be able to return to their homes. Troy, N. Y. "The age of patriotism has yielded to the age of commercialism. commercial-ism. Uppermost in the human mind today to-day is not the stars and stripes, but the dollar mark." Such was the declaration of Supreme Court Justice Wesley O. Howard, in an opinion Tuesday reducing the compensation compen-sation of members of a commission appointed ap-pointed appraise damages to property-resulting property-resulting from the construction of the Ashokan reservoir in Ulster county, which is to furnish a water supply for llj. "While the commission furnishes avenues ave-nues for the reckless escape of many dollars, there are other channels of leakage and waste fully as appalling," said Justice Howard. "It is greatly to be regretted that no public enterprise can be projected and consummated without this appalling loss, called 'graft.' Graft is not necessarily neces-sarily an iUal expenditure of money, but it is that unnecessary wasteful use that characterizes the construction of every public venture. At least 40 per cent of all money appropriated for public pub-lic use is lost in graft. All things could be possible if this frightful leak could be stopped roads, canals, libraries, asylums and hospitals. "Graft is as much an element to be reckoned with computing the cost of a public structure as is cement or lumber. It has come to be a matter of course this rakeoff a loss recognized by all who make estimates of cost in such cases. A house structure built honestly would be a freak." Cordoba. Mexico. Jose Santos Ze- j laya declared that he is still president of Nicaragua, although he may never go back to that country to enjoy privileges privi-leges of the office. Madriz. he asserted, is only a provisional president, and that he (Zelaya) has not relinquished the office. In a statement made to an Associated As-sociated Press representative on the train in which he is traveling to Mexico Mex-ico City, Zelaya said he was still the head of the Niearaguan government. He was leaving his country for an indefinite in-definite period in the hope that affairs would quiet down. In support of his declaration he exhibited papers, at- ttached to which were government seals and ribbons. These papers, he said, contained con-tained the proof of the truth of his statement. New York. The American Numis-matis Numis-matis society has just finished the medals med-als which are to be issued by the Roman Ro-man Catholic church in commemoration commemora-tion of the one hundredth anniversary o? the establishment of the diocese of New York. This event was celebrated last year and brought to this city hundreds hun-dreds of thousands of Catholic clergy and laity from every part of the world. The obverse of the medal contains seven portraits of the prelates who have been at the head of the diocese during the first century of its existence. On the lower left hand side is the portrait of the Rt. Rev. Luke Concanen, who was appointed tne nrst Disnop or isew York. At the lower right hand side is the portrait of the Rt. Rev. John Connelly. Con-nelly. These two prelates were succeeded in New York by the Rt. Rev. John Dubois, Du-bois, whose portrait is Immediately above that of Archbishop John Hughes, who was harassed by the race prejudices preju-dices of his day. The reverse side of the medal shows a faithful production in miniature of St. Patrick's cathedral. The sculptor has carried out many of the details of this imposing structure, the lower part of which is an almost perfect reproduction reproduc-tion of the famed cathedral of Amiens. On the left of the cathedral, in a shaded background, is shown old St. Peters of 1808, while on -the right, in the background, is a miniature of old St. Patrick's, in Mott street, consecrated in 1S15. San Jose, Cal. Natale Casalegno, an Italian, arrested in this city on a charge of burglary, will start for New York Sunday to be deported to Italy, acccord-Ing acccord-Ing to a message just received from the bureau of immigration at Washington by the local chief of police. On looking up Casalegno's record officers offi-cers found that he had served part of a long term In. Italy for the murder of his sweetheart, and had come to this country after securing his pardon. His residence here was declared Illegal. New York. "There wiir be the same degree of difference between the aero-plan aero-plan of today and that of 1920, as that between the ox cart and the automo- Diie, saici wininrop searttt, former president of the Automobile Club of America, in a statement to the Aeronautic Aero-nautic society. "The greatest peacemaker peace-maker in the world today," said Mr. Scaritt, "is the twelve-inch gun. The greatest peacemaker of the future will be the aeroplane. There will be Gettysburg Gettys-burg in the air, which will teach the nations na-tions to end all war." Oakland, Cal. John S. Delancey, a prominent attorney, accused of embezzling embez-zling $10,000 from the estate of the late George H: Cook, was sentenced to six years In the San Quentin penitentiary. Delancey took the judgment without visible signs of emotion. An appeal will be taken. Los Angeles. With the completion of a siphon fourteen feet in diameter under the Colorado liver at Yuma, the United States reclamation service will have accomplished ac-complished a feat unique in American engineering. The siphon will carry water diverted from Yuma dam, fourteen four-teen miles away, under the Colorado river, to irrigate 53,000 acres In the Yu ma valley. Two shafts, each 100 feet f i deep, will be sunk and connected under j the river by a drift tunnel. The top '''. ' of the tunnel will be twenty-five feet , ' , ' s below the lowest known bed of the Colo- t rado. and the tunnel itself will be l.OU'J feet long. s Santa Barbara. Cal. John Mulhol- X land, . a harnessmaker, carried out a : pre-election threat last Tuesday when he shot and killed himself. . ? ' Mulholland was a warm friend and . ' . admirer of Mayor E. J. Boezeke, who '. , was defeated in his candidacy for re- ' election. A few days before the election f Mulholiand said that is Boezeke was i defeated he would kill himself. Yester- ' " day he was found in his shop with a ' ' bullet in his brain. Rome. Approving the recommenda- tions of the consistorial congregation as presented by the secretary. Cardinal . . C. De Lai. the pope today appointed Rev. ' James O'Reilly, now rector of Pt. An- thony of Padua. Minneapolis, Minn., to the bishopric of Fargo. S. D.. and Rev. ' 1 ' M. F. Fallon of the provincial oblates ' : - of Buffalo. N. Y., to the bishopric of London, Canada. ' . s. Dublin. Ireland. The central commit- '. I tee of the Irish Nationalists last Tues- , 1 day decided to support the Liberals In f the general election. Premier Asquith's i recent declaration at Albert hall eon- t cernlng home rule for Ireland is deemed satisfactory. ' ' ': '. j '. The resolution to support the govern- - : ' " . ment was moved by John Redmond and was passed unanimously. j Chicago. A desire to get money with " , which to buy Christmas presents is tti ' i excuse given by two men who admit ' counterfeiting dollars, half dollars and 5-cent pieces. George Sulob and John , i Ryszko were the men arrested on Mon- j day. ; "I got into this scheme." Ryszko toM f Captain Porter, "so I could get money ' to buy Christmas presents for my fam- ily. I did not intend staying in it." Phoenix. Ariz. Charles Nelson, supposed sup-posed to be afflicted with the sleeping ; j sickness, awoke after a sixty-hour t sleep, subsequent to one of forty hours. ' ' ' with an intermission of a couple of , hours' wakefulness. ? Symptoms continue harmonious with . the theory of the African lethargy. Nelson, Nel-son, when awake, is sullen, melancholy, and talks but little. He objected to being be-ing examined by physicians, but has been removed to a sanitarium for ol- servation. St. Petersburg. The publisher of To!- ; stoi'. book. "The Kingdom of God . Within ls." was sentenced to a year'-) imprisonment in a fortress. Pasadena, Cal. Agnes Claypole. H years old. the daughter of a. wealthy resident of this city, was instantly killed, and Harvey Bissell, 24 years o!d, j a son of a Grand Rapids, Mich., millionaire million-aire manufacturer, was perhaps fatally injured Tuesday afternoon when their I automobile went over the grade on th Eagle Rock vallev road and fell lni ; ; feet. ' ' ; Miss Claypole's body was found un- rlr thfl mnnhino Rioall'B cratn rHona and right leg were broken and his spiius t injured severely. He is still conscious. ,' s but unable to move his lower extremities. extremi-ties. The transmission of the machine broke and the brake failed to work. Bis- ; sell and Miss Claypole were engaged to be married during the winter. , . Newport News, Va. Just before th . Atlantic fleet steamed from Old Point l to the southern drill grounds, it was ,' stated that the battletship Missouri hal ' been ordered held in readiness to proceed pro-ceed to Central America at a moment's notice. It is said that -the ship had been coaled and provisioned in prep aration for a voyage south under hurry ; r orders. Chicago. Mrs. Argyra Hunter, wife of Dr. Lewis L. Hunter, broke down a door of her residence yesterday and. arming herself with a pistol, drovr ; away a burglar who fled through the ;. ' rear door of her apartments with jewelry jew-elry valued at $200. Several hundred dollars in money i and jewelry were left behind by the thief in his haste to escape. Mrs. Hunt er had been visiting a neighbor, Mr. 1 Frank Storer. The latter stood guard at the front ' entrance, while Mrs. Hunter, who ran into her apartment, seized a foot rest and ordered the burglar to put the ' jewelry back. The burglar fled. . . |