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Show Caci this 1 tftSBpe OGDEN BAIL! OGDEN, UTAH. SUNDAY MOUSING. MAKCH 15. 1691. VOLUME IV. NUMBER Htt. II MAFIA MAY Chief Hennessy s Murder Avenged. MOB'S AWFUL WORK. Eleven of the Sicilian Assassins Aeqaitted by a Bribed Jury Meet Their Jnst Doom. MOWED DOWN BY BULLETS. Kew Orleans' Cltiteiis Perform th Act of Justice in Which the Law Failed Traffic Senes in the Boom of Death. New Okujlnk. March 14. New Or. lean struck Mafia a death blow today It rose in its might, almost at mid-daand wreaked horrible vengeance upon th Sicilian assassins who relentletisry slew David C. Hannesey and though there are eleven men dead tonizht who were happy yesterday over their victory in the greatest criminal trial the city has ever witnessed, the work of blood was accomplished without unnecessary dis order, withont rioting, without pillaging and without the infliction of suffering upon any innocent man, save one, and He we only siurhtiy nun. it was net an unruly, midnight nook It was simply sullen, determined body of citizens 4 Viai wVa Awn tinned vtiat m uv twtlr n aw IntA iu w vuuu wa justice had ignominious! failed to da y, ' i w J , - 0 j WESE SWEPT A WAT LIKE CHAFF Before the wind and in an instant the little ante-moleading into the prison was jammed with eager, excited men. Meanwhile the prisoners were stricken with terror, for they could hear distinctly the shouts of the people without, madly demsnding their blood. Persons who were charged with crimes other than complicity in the murder of the chief also shared in the general demoralization, soma of whom among the representatives of Mafia, wanted to die fighting for their lives and pleaded for weapons with, which to defend themselves, and when they could not find these they sought hiding places. The deputies, thinking to deceive the crowd by a ruse, transferred nineteen men to ther female and there the . i nr department a ill ti l : . in terror mieersoie Diciuans iremoiea until the moment when the doors would yield to the angry throng on the out side. , Capt Davis refused the request to open the prison and the crowd began the work of battering in the doors. Around on Orleans street there was a heavy ' CHIEF BEKRESSYI AS8AS8rJATION. wooden . door which had been closely The chief of police was slain on barred in anticipation of the coming of avenging mass. This the crowd seOctober 15, and that very night vi the lected as their best chance of getting in. - M and men aad womea and ehudrea crowded oo tb gliries to eaeoaraf tboee wbo were Uking part, ana to wit- its th scecM. When the satin crowd tram Cabal reached the prison there had already ooiiected there a donee throng, all eager to take a hand u whatever eusght bap-pe- a. Whea thwvangwsrd of ansed eiti-sos reached tfc prison, wttiea s icy squares from Canal street, that prim okl buildin was surrounded oa all side. Sheriff Viller. whea be heard of the movement on foot to take tea prisonea. armed his deputies and then started oa a bunt for Mayor Shakespeare. The Italian consul and Attorney Oeneral Rogers joined ia the pursuit, but his hpnor does not reach the office until boob and be was not to be found at any of his regular haunts. The governor Lad not heard of the uprising and had bo time to act, and the police force was too small to o Jer much resistance to the army of veogera. Bupmntendeet Gaster had ordered an extra detail of oncers to be sent to the jail and the small crowd kept the sidewalks around the old building clear until the great multitude, swelling all the time like a mighty roaring stress, surged around the door and crowded the little band of blue coats away. Captain Lem Davis was on guard at the main entrance with a scant force of deputies. They donoe began to aooumulate, showing that Tbe neighboring houses readily sup- g pi iea axes ana Dauering rams ana hands went to work to force an opening. This did not prove a difficult task . to the trembling but determined e throng. Soon there was a crash, tbe ' door gave way and in an instant tbe Brmed citizens were pouring tnrougn , , wit Vi ti.vtncr luwn 4.a.mivnWt mt.K. f Ailftd the small opening, while a KT '' to . , confct. La6t night a body 7vt.- IIGHTT.SHOtT 1'it cefll - beaded ?' wen, lawyers, From ten thousand Ihroats in glad ac the in doctors, merchanta A,1ind apolitical claim. There. was resistancetoofor was toon truders, however, but it iAn.lar De "J sill vuiiuina v r aumwvmw mnnantA snrl buu overcome witn a nuge Diuei or. wood yviiMua ana decided which the men carried. Then tbe turn1, jial tending, quietly met ' Hn1 key was overoowered and the kevs taken Iran uuu knrtiA atttAfl WVtliat vunui iu udv uv to se swift ana sure from him. By that time the excitement was intense; none the less so when the .Sieited upon those whom the jury had patrol wagon drove up with a detach'neglected to punish. This morning a ment of policemen, who were driven call for a mass meeting at Clay square away under a fire of mud and stones. When the leaders Inside the prison on Canal street appeared in the papers, got possession of the keys, the inside which ed torially depreciated violence. gate was promptly unlocked and the The significant closing of the sentence deputies in the lobby rapidly got out of of the call was, "Come prepared for harm's way. The avengers pressed into action." Down in a large room on Bien- the yard of the white prisoner?. The door of the first cell was open and a ville and Royal there was an arsenal group of trembling prisoners stood in The call side. They were not the men who were provided by a body of citizens. wanted and the crowd very quickly, warm nswered by the populace. though with remarkable ooLess, burst HE STATUE. into the Peering through the a crowd of oars or theyard. condemned cell was his death had been deliberately planned by a reoret tribunal and carried out bold ly and suoceesf ully by tools of the coo spirators. The trial lasted twenty-livdays, and though the evidence seemed conclusive, the jury, currently charged wu-liu- tut J'nl , f m ," i j f . Mr . I people ocn- - tue. They going to happen, I Jz ready to go to any e there were, of course, lower element in the throng M 1 proportion were the leading I eopi or tee town, mere were tnree Laddreeees, short and pithy, and business like, and the assemblage, not unwillingly, was soon keyed up to the highest pitch, demonstrative in its denunciation of the assassins. Each of the speakers said there had been a. great mass meeting months before which had met quietly and dispersed peacefully so the law might take its course. The law had failed. The time to act had come. W. S. Parkerson, the leader, is a here, president lawyer prominent of the southern atheletio club, and the man who led the vigorous reform movement three yeare ago. Walter D. Danger, another of the spe is one of the leaders of the New bar, John C. Wickliff, also a prominent attorney, and James D. Houetor, one of the foremost men of the state. After denouncing Detective O'Malley, who is alleged to have tampered with the jury, the speakers announced that they would lead to the Parish prison, Mr. Wickliffe, concluding with these words: "Shall execrable Mafia be allowed to flourish in this city; shall Mafia be allowed to cut down our citizens on public streets by the foul means of assassination; shall Mafia be allowed to bribe jurors and let murderers go scot ak-er- s, Or-lean- 's tree?". ' ; ' ' : GATHERING OF THE AVENGERS. By this time, the crowd had swelled to 3,000 or more, and before anyone could realize what had happened, the great throng, gaining eecruits at every step, was tramping down the streets to the neighborhood of the prison, stopping only once and that was at the arsenal, shot guns, Winwhere double-barrele- d chester rifles and pistols were handed out to responsible and respectable citizens in the party. The starting of the crowd had aa electric effect on the city. Soon the streets were Blive with people running from all directions and joining the main body which moved down the ramparts to the jail near Congo square. Doors and windows thrown open we A TERROR STRICKEN FACE ho was dharged with being back Ld when a abot struck tim uaatedi-ated- y Macheca, tte t r. tufted the ear ad his dath isetantaaeoua Ifcafodi, oa I tbe ol tillktaoos of the aesaeaios, drop; i baa The a wbea a builrt hit him ia the - P.ifport Sjttem ia Lorraine will not t Relaxed. d-- c Old aaaa Marches wee t&e ottlv svaa who was aot killed outright lie ws struck oo the top U the fad atile be stood bade Macheca, and, though toot-I- ! vwiaded, Ungered all the eveoinc. . THE OCFOEMtaa MIMSABia tf '.'.; ; '. ; order.. '.'-The bodies of some of the slain war i, Tb Icw Emperor ARiioa to FrieadJy KelatfcBi Kith tkt Iron Prince ForvUra Kew. , rLt 1801, by Bajeux. March H- - (Cop; New York Associated Frees.) A eooaisting of tb Alsace-Lorraiparliament, as given ao toJieoo by Emperor William today. Hi majesty received the deputation in full stale. Tb leader of the dfu talks real a petition and the document was then deposited at tbe foot of the thron. . Ad dreeticg tb deputation, the emperor said: ''It is a source of that the provincial ccHLtuitte has spj bed directly to sneoo qnet ion of Cm itn- iutereet to A Ware Lorraine, rrtance and in this tact valuabl evidence of the increasing approbation of favor and sympathy show a by me in the progress of our cuuutry. I am also willing to accept your aasuraneea that the peowiU continue to ple of A take their stand oa the ground of the legal order of things sod that they will reject any interference on the part of tb foreign element and only look to the empire to proctect their interest. La tendering you my thanks for this expression of your loyalty, I regrvt to be anabl for the present to comply with your wishes in regard to the relaxation of the passport system in Alsace-LorrainI must confine my If to an erorwwion of hone that he data ia not far distant when it will be parmb--' si bis to again grant racuite lor intercourse on the western frontier of your province. The hope will b the earlier realized, the more the people of Aleaoe-Lorraibecome convinced of tb of the tie uniting them with Germany and the more strongly they prov by their deed and their resolution to at all times stand faithfully and unflinchingly by m and the empire." The emperor afterward gave a private audience to Hrr Schlumberger, president of tb deputation. He made keen inquiries a to bis views regarding th progress of the attempt to Germanize th province. aati-farlio- n e. n indie-solubili- ty BECOMlXOI ... rUlEXPLV with gerxajit. with a representative removed this evening. Caruso waa mar- of In aa interview Press Dr. Otto, seore-tar- v th Associated ried bu t leaves no ch ild ran. Remero b ss th deputation, said that sine a wife and children, and Macheca a wife 1888 of Alsace-Lorrain-e had been rapidly : and family. . OomiteE leave wif s. friendlv with Germany,. becosningfwre bJ CJTUtEJWf ACTIO ENDOBBED. .' TbePeopj ".believed that the province to be treated as a conquered The meeting of the Cotton Exchange should yS Kir expectations had been this afternoon- - was called to order by people, of th Prtdent CbaflW! who jiM"Xhnt he partly re Ued, but the renewal had fallen bad been called 'Upon byLlarg com BtringenLJiArport regulations mittee of member with a request that like a thunderbolt Nevertheless, th was extremely popular and he convene a general meeting for the emperor purpose of adopting a suitable resolution had won the entire confidence of the endorsing tbe action of the citizens in Alsatians who, being Germans, would the deplorable event of the morning. oon be reconciled with Germany. The Chaffe said that inasmuch as sll were people of Lorraine still remain hostile. familiar ' with the events, it was not They were Celts and still in sympathy necessary to dilate upon them. They with the French. The renewal of friendly relations be knew the facts and the itecessity of the tween the emperor and Prince Bissituation. The following resolutions were then marck approaches a certainty. The emperor will visit Kiel at the end of the unanimously adopted: Vhereas, the deplorable administra- month, and proceed thence to Altona, tion of criminal justice in this city and where he will review the ninth army the frightful extent to which the bribery corps. Waldersee, on a recent visit to conveyed a request of juries has been carried rendered it Friedrichsrube, necessary for tbe citizens of New Or- from the emperor to meet Bibmarck at leans to vindicate outraged justice; Altona Bismarck has not yet given assent to the resumption of direct comTherefore, be it Resolved, that while we deplore at all munications with the emperor. times the resort to violence, we consider BISMARCK Will. ACCEPT. the action taken by the citizens this Bismarck, replying to the electors of morniDg to be proper and justifiable. Geestemunde as to his candidacy for the Resolutions of similar purport were Reichstag, states that he will accept, but also adopted by the produce ex- reserves the right to refuse if tbe ma- exand stock change, sugar exchange rity returning him was not sufficient change. be socialists will oppose him. At the meeting of the stock exchange, President Herr Levetzowof the Reich of the action Foreman Seligman, of the stag, in announcing the death of Dr. Hennessy jury, who is a member of tbe Windthuret, pronounced an aulogy upon exchange, was discussed. The following the dead statesman, extolling his acuresolutions were quickly adopted: men, unceasing activity and personal inWhereas, J. M. Seligman, a visiting fluence on all sides of the house. He demember of this exchange, has by his clared that scarcelv would be so action in the Hennessy case evidently missed in the Reich anyone Btag aa Dr. Wind-thocontributed to defy justice, ignore the laws and scandalize the community, be it Tbere is any amount of gossip regardResolved, That he be expelled from ing the prospective reorganization of the this exchange. ministry, hut nothing definite. The re Seligman has also been expelled from port that Miquel will succeed Caprivi aa the Young Men's Gymnastic club. is generally discredited.. MiThis afternoon the coroner impanelled chancellor, s nomination would the em a jury and af;er viewing the bodies ren- quel full adhesion to imply labor reforms dered a verdict in accordance with the peror's and Liberal measures for relief of the facts. burdens of the workingmen. CAUSE OF THE TRAOEDT. nt Bnyinff French Horses. 14. At the sale today of Lupin's racing stud there were two American buyers, Mr. Scott and Mr. Debarros. The former bought Areolithe for. $5,000 and Rosaraonde for 14,800, and the latter paid $4,100 for Cebere. Paris, March The Death Roll. 14. Dr. Ludwiir Wind March Berun, thorst a parliamentary leader of the Catholic party in Prussia, died at 8:15 this morning. He was boan January 17tb, 1812. Davenport, Iowa, March 14. Word was received of the death at Oakland, Cal., this morning of Judge James urant, one oi me oiaesi ana best known attorneys of Iowa. Findlav, Ohio, March 14. Charles Kellogg, well known throughout tbe (Vitintrv 118 a civil uroinur !r,,.ann. . 4!oH e Kaa loot i 11 M-J o- rt:-- J New YORK. ' Marr-uuuuu, the actress, formerly , of the Margaret 1 J l Worthy of White Caps. Kansas Crrr, March Handy, a farmer living with his sods near Piper, sixteen miles northwest, 14.-D- avid tht t td EOVAL VISIT TO BISMARCK . PtttliM, tbe crary aaae. was locked in a cell ap stairs, Tbe doors were Sung open and one of the avecgera, taking auo, shot Lisa through the body. He was Dot kilted WMtright, and. ia order to satisfy the people oa the outside, wbo were eray to know hat was going on within, he waa drsged down tbe stairs and through the doorway by which the crowd had entered. lUif rwr-- ; ried, half dragged, he waa ukeo to a corner. A rope as provided and tied arouwd his neck and the people pulled him up to the (Toss bars. Not aalkned that tie was dead, s score of men took aim and poured a voJW of shot into his body and for several hours the body was left j eg in the air. ding' . was caught ia the first rueh Jgbtto np suirs and tbe first volley of bullets pierced his brain. He was pulled out by a number of eUlwart men through the main entrauce to the prison and from the limb of a . tree, his body waa suspended, although life was already gone. ' "THE BLOODT WORK OVEE. Just ss soon as the bloody work was dooe, Mr. Psrkerson addressed the crowd and asked them to disperse. This, they consented to do, with a ringing shout, but first they made a rush for Parkerson and lifting him bodily, supported him on their shoulders while they marched up the streets, , The avengers came back in a body to tbe Clay statute and thea ', dispersed.. Immense crowds rushed from all directions to the' neighborhood of tbe tragfront of the edy while the.atxeet4-.inewspaper office were blocked with peoplejanxioua to sea tb latest bulletins. There waa intense suppressed excitement, but from one end of the city to the other the actions of tbe citizens were applauded. O'Malley, the detective, who would have shared tb fate of the assassins had he been caught, bea disappeared and is not expected to return, and members of tbe jury are in hiding. Tb atmosphere and haa been considerably purged though taere is a big crowd on Canal street tonight the trouble seems all over. The Italian consul declined to say tonight what action, if any, b will take. The prison was surrounded until dark by a motley multitude, but the- - polios found no difficulty maintaining good , ' t eoaaty attorcev at Wy-'- . Kaeata, W and said that Tkurariay h. Barter, X. Overtu and 8. J. Swallow, alt proauMct f rars ci that vicinity, eaaj to hi bout, chopped opea the door, seized hubJ and oos, bound ttea to a taeo ia Uir Ught clothe awl then wrecked the bouse ard destroys the furniture. TtevWrtHaady and Lis At to th'r tenca, Bot wilhstaadicg the Bight was bitter eold, acd taking the youngest boy aiade hun alk bareuutd Whea they t him free. Th boy returned home and released his father a&d brother. Th tbea namad by Handy hav been arrested. Tb outrage out of a htigkUo. between Ua&dygrew and Caahmaa. ' r The XLfcinr Rafe. March 14. The Hambarg-America- a Plihoctb, he toamr Suevia, concernwhereabouts eonsiderabl ing whoa baa re-siaoe fH soriety . . . 1 - - V. .10 oeshet was I Durban ma inunmuj uisauea oa Lirrd, arrived this morning. I' pusher arrival hrre it was found that th Saevta' low pressur cylinder was smashed to stoma and the piston rud beot. She narrowly escapel the fate of o'Jier vesxek, whi'-- went asVtore eaa; ,atita, Denied Which some mistook for Scaffedi. A at the man and he dropped, but none of the shots struck him and it was subsequently found that he was not one of the assassins.. The inmates of tbe jail were ready to direct the way to where the Italians were. "Go to the female department," some one yelled, and thither the men with, their ..Winchesters , ran, but the In- - a modoor was - locked.. ment a - key was produced. Then the leader called for some one who knew the right men and a volunteer responded and the door was thrown opon. The gallery was deserted, but an old woman said the men were up stairs. A party of seven or eight quickly ascended the stair case, and as they reached the landing the assassins tted down at the other end, A half dozen followed them. Scarcely a word was Bpoken. It was time for action. ' When the pursued and pursuers reached the stone court yard the former darted toward the Orleans The following is given as a clear stateside of the gallery and , crouched down ment of the actuating causes which led beside the cells. to the tragedy enacted this morning: On THETB FACES BLAXCHED, October 18, 1890, about 11 o'clock at And being unarmed, tbey were abso- night, D. C. Hennessy, cbief of tbe police of city of New Orleanr, going from lutely defenceless. In fear and tremb- histhe office to his home was waylaid and screamed for but the mercy, ling they to pieces by a band of Italian assasavengers were merciless. Bang, bang, shot armed with such blunderbusses as sins, murof out the the reports bang, rang derous weapons, and a deadly rain of could only have been made and used for bullets poured into the crouching figures. the purpose of assassinating. The indigand excitement was such that Geraci, the closest man, was struck iu nation mob law and lynching were about to he the back of the head and his body resorted to. The entire community felt Romero fell to his pitched forward. knees with his face in bis hands, and in that, in the endeavor to reach the guilty parties, innocent Italians might be sacthat position was shot to death. Mona-ster- o rificed. To allay the excitement and and James Caruso fell together under the fire of half a dozen guns, the assist the constituted authorities, the leaden pellets entering their bodies and mavor of the city appointed a committee heads. The bloody excutioners did their of rlfty representative citizens to take work well, and beneath the continuing charge of the investigations and to aid trial and conviction of the assasfire, Cometex and' Trahinia, two of tbe in the men who had not been tried, but who sins. This measure arrested violence. The committee entered upon the work were charged jointly with the others Their bodies and at a mass meeting subsequently accused, fell together. were literally riddled with bullets and held in front of the city ball, the actions of the committee were ratified, and they were stone dead almost before the were encouraged to continue theirthey lawas over. fusillade to and secure bors trial prosecution by diswas When the group of assassins covered on the gallery, Macheca, Scoffedi the courts. After months of preparawhich continued three and old man Marchesi separated tion and t trial and in which distinguished con-se- l from the other six and ran up stairs. weeks, assisted the ab.e district attorney, Thither half a dozen men followed them the jury, terror-stricke- n ran as assassi 88 the and, coimnuED on fourth page, into the cells, they were slain. Joe volley was fired BUDGET FROM BERLIN. PRICE,"FIVE CENTS. Su-aiue- SWEPT BY TUE FL4MES Sjraense Visited bj a Million DolUr Blaxe.! THE ASYLUM HOLOCAUST. The 7Uin of th SaiariHe Inani Hospital Hold th Charred lie-- ' niaias f Sine Yktinw. STBAcrsE. X. Y, March 1 1. Syracuse was visited by a tremendous eonJiagra. tkm today. Th first show of fir waa at CJ0 o'clock ard io I ss than half aa boor the new II 'fcn block was dtwtroyed, bile th fire was spreading in all directions. Chief Rrtlly quickly saw that the threatened destruction as to great for his apparatus to tight He ired toUtica, Bom and Oaacgo to send relief and he had hardly done so hen th danger was suddedly doubled. Fire and smoke burst without warning from the top of Ibjaxw lirot, b story As soon as possible after the aocideot. block, in East street four id rMievia neatieu wiuuiwaru wua Weeks away. AWathicgtoo flying brand frvm west I 'mtar this mn'A t a tMi ravett street hud fiaiuuul iKi KtiArija Hint it.iiAfl until tcfritav before tbe already overworked firemen her engineer managed to disoirect the eon Id seod relief ths flames were I 1 1 i beyond tmaxuiKi po as...IO control The crowds of . cjiiuutr uu BrraEfrvu r 1 I people running uv . tw0 m (iar . Lorr vourr iwin wiui see the fir rapidly spreading ia Rusoo' about 23 mil south of Bishop Rock. with a single stream playing ' At first eh was enabled to prored at upon itonly . . tb rat of six mile per hour and some At 8:30 o'clock the fierce conflagration anou and was raging in th two lime later wne mcrgeo i upper floor of the finally reached Plymouth 'without Tates block acd was rapidly making it way around th Montgomery street corner. The building soon collapsed and a ' , ' A TKIPLE TBAGEDY.' man who had been aeon trying to aav. th furniture undoubtedly perished. Three Uvt Loat m the Resolt of a From the Vanderhilt bojse ana old and uew Montgomery fiats people rushed in ; . Vaxrf 1. all stages of dress. Bedding, f urniturs 14. TLre March men Ga mTAf and cooking utensils were bustled out of ibsir live in a bloody quarrel near rooms, only to be entangled in meshe of Maxsy last evening, and a white woman, wires. Cart men drove through crowds to get goods from trying to aav her husband ' life, had a recklessly in order , barrow scape, iiarvey bmith, a young buildings. 4 . . A UOHTKINO RUN. . " planter living near Matey, was roamed 9 About o'clock the Oswego relief came coly a few month ago, U had amoag his mnlores. a neero . boy named Boyd by special train, having mad the run Hilton, where n bad to discharge. from Lamsons, 19 miles, in seventeen Whil Hatton was preparing to leave minutes. Half an hour later the Utica last night Hmith went to his cabin to engine with a Lose cart and company of ' Hatton met his ap- firsmen cam in and began playina; on settle with him. proach with a dtscharg from a shotgun, tb Washington street tire. The fiatuea, bmith drew hi revolver and tired, urged on by th gale, were checked by tire striking Hatton in th shoulder. Bill th firemen, and two looomotiv Hatton appeared to help hi brother. engines from th Central shops were sent Th next shot from Smith struck Bill in to th Vandwbilt House oorner. They the heart and th next after that struck saved tbe botL Boyd Hatton in tbe abdomen. Smith . At noon, tb fires were under control ' fell in a swoon from hi own wounds. Th aggregat of losses is estimated at Bird Hatton ran up and securing Smith's 11,000,000, with insurance ct at least Tbe Journal opened aa revolver, shot him, and was about to fire A a seaowd bis am wan held offlc in tb Wsrri bloc and. priced back by Smith' young bride: ah bav their paper lo . the Courier office this ing been attracted by the firing..; The afternoon. - Anioncr the losses were T. IV uieu inim owvvg Hogao, block: Hier A Llghton, cigar) aeeprraia ngro soon . j. M. P. Walsh, hardware: Syracuse Far-Bro- s round, " Co.; Chrvst A Sehl, Justin Znbert s i Notes From th Capital.. cigars; John A. Link, liquors; United ! Wabhtnoton, March 14. Acttnff At-- 1 States hotel. VanRetiSBSlaer block: Ben- oa house; Fay block and Syracuse Sua torney Gamral Fait said this afternoon Tee heaviest loss was on, ply in response to an inquiry on th txV' tbe company. Montgomery fiata, agtrwratincfciOO.- that th United States, goveronu..! 000. The tenants lose $00,000 more. The would tak no step as far as waa ad JournaJ company lost .. v; vised, to secure the dismissal of proceedings instituted by the British govern, j 1.VSASE ASYLFM HOliOCtrsT ment in the United States supreme court involving the jurisdiction of this six oi tne inmates rertsnea ueiay s, government over the Behring sea of IJie TiM DenarrmMrt: v r T".- pending the reported reference of NAftavuxB Tenn March inav issue 10 eruurauuu. an auueu, that of course he could not be expected beautiful Central Insane-- asylum, aeveo to know what the counsel for Great miles from the city, is almost a mas of Britain proposed to do in the matter. rums. Beneath it are tne charred bodies Tbe president has cranted a pardon of half a dozen of tbe unfortunate in in the case of Charles Ingram, convicted mates. In the out bouses ar huddled in uaiiiornia, oi vioiaung me poswi the poor demented .treatures formerly iaws, to take effect at tbe expiration of inmates. ''i one year from the date of sentence. Tbe The fire was discovered at 10:15 last sentence imposed in the case of John A. night It started from unknown cause Powell, convicted in Utah of adultly has in the west main wing. When first eeea been commuted to six months. . it reached from the ground through the Weekly weather crop bulletin: gener- second and third stories and Cut off a few ally throughout the region east of the rooms behind it The moment tl e alarm Rocky Mountains the season is retarded, was given the ' 400 poor inmate were notwithstanding tbe fact that the ther- thrown into wild commotion. There mal conditions over this region are gen- were twenty-eigh- t men in the wing where erally in excess. Recent storms which tbt4fire caught. Twenty-tw- o were quickly have passed over tbe central valleys have removed to tne main the other six nail, been attended by freezing weather in left to their fate behind ' an imthat region, but as the growing season being wall of flames. passable is not opened, it is probable that the low This city was telephoned for aid, but temperature reported caused no marked Chief Carroil of the fire department injury to the growing crops, except fruit oould not be found, and the suborditrees in the gulf region. nates refused to move without his orActing Secretary Grant has detailed ders. Finally, after two hour's delay, Lieutenants Powhatan and Clark, of the the chief was found, and he with two tenth cavalry, to special duty with the engines left for the scene of the dissecond Westphalian Hussars Nail of aster. the imperial German army for the pur In the meantime the west wing colpose of studying the German cavalry lapsed and the main building was on service. fire. The inmates made frantic, were beginning to break from their guards A WIFE'S AFFECTIONS. and scattered like frightened animals over the surrounding country. The fire Herbert Worchester Places Those of engines arrived at 2:12 and began work. Previously, the inmates; servants and Mrs. W. at $50,000. with buckets had succeeded in Kansas Citt, March 14. Herbert S, guards holding the fire in check to some extent Those burned to death were J. S. Worchester, a young paint manufacturer of Pueblo, Col., today found his Johns, Burt Dexter, Blue Preston, John W. IL Beastry and B. F. runaway wife who left him February 28, Kelley, Kansas was at and came to City. She At 3:15 the Inmates who had been Andrew's hotel, occupying a room with huddled several hours in the yard were E. B. Maple, a real estate man of Seto the east wing. About twenty-freturned attle, Wash. Maple was Rrrested and ive a majority of whom are escaped, held in $1,000, bail for hearing on tbe harmless. . cm. Maple is ni years oi age ' Mrs. At this moment the west wing is en- Worchester is 24 years o' are and rather demolished and about half of the handsome. Her hue band is four years tirely The dangerous lnnatics main building. her senior. He began a civil action are locked in the east wing. At kept against Maple today, laying damages at 3:3o the tire was under control. It is eou.uuu and alleging amenation or bis impossible to estimate the loss. It is wife a affections. fully insured. corrected list or Later Following is aTTnllnuinll. Murdered in Her Home. John II. Fmnlr ii.. S. R. John A. GoodleU, 14. A N. March Poindexter, Atlantic Citt, J., W. H. Beaeley, middle-agemaiden lady, named Laura Johnson, W. J. Settles, on nuance. Ane J. Brooks, John Kelly, J Parnell, who has been living in a cottage escaped numbered between thirty and on South Connecticut avenue with a forty. Many of them have been capemail child some time, was found dead tured, some of them many miles from in the house today, having undoubtedly tbe scene of the fire. The loss to the been murdered. Tbe neighbors knew building is estimated at $50,000, fully little of ber connections. She came here covered by insurance. The fire is sup--" from Washington and the child's name posed to have been started by Lee an inmate. is Auburn rxlen. lr h k,r V. .k.. .' L . . l'i . ... .... two-third- sbe-wb- y . i- fish-erie- -- . ll.Th Hoi-low- L . d Al-for- d, |