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Show 1V1EXIGQ WILL ASK FORJPEES Diaz Embassador Expresses the Opinion United States Will -Give Them Up. CREEL AND LIMANT0UR v HOLD TOO MUCH POWER 1 Aged President Said to Be Apprehensive Ap-prehensive Concerning tHis Ministers. WASHINGTON, Nov. 27. That so ineffectual in-effectual a movcbicnt could bo launched against tho strong Mexican government as th present revolt Is a problem that officials in the republic to the south arc unaulj 10 olvc, according lo a statement made by .Mexican Bmbassador Sc'nor K. L. De la Uaira today. "I don't understand how it is that Senor Madero came to join tile revolutionists revolu-tionists cither." says the embassador. "It Is only a few months ago, If 1 remember re-member correctly, that ho published a book In which, although criticising tho government, he praised President Diaz highly." The embassador had heard 'nothing of tho' possibility of President Diaz changing chang-ing the men who surround him in the administration of the natlon'n affairs, Enrique Clay Creel and .lose LInidntour. tho two leaders of the present Mexican administration, are believed-' to hold n degree of power sufficient to dissatisfy the veteran president. Whether ho ahall take advantage of, tlio situation lo ills-lodge ills-lodge these- men is not known in official offi-cial circles. Liraantour Is Abroad. Asked when Senor Lhuantour would return re-turn from Europe, Senor Dc la Carra. could not answer definitely. Llmantonr, ine mmipicr 01 nuance, wcm. 10 i:.uiiiu some months ago, supposedly on financial finan-cial business iu behalf of the Mexican republic with the bunkers on the other side. Ills return liaa been looked for for some time past. The embassador has no Information as to whether any leader except Madera was likely to have had a hand in the uprising. As for the effects or the outbreak, the embassador appeared t'o take that side of the question philosophically. Mexico always profiled by anything that revealed re-vealed the true conditions there to tho real of the world, so he believed. A3 a Mexican ho was always glad to seo anything true published about Mexico and always sure thai the truth was to Mexico'n credit, and helpful in dispelling delusions. Apparently the embassador had in mind the varloua articles unfavorable unfavor-able to the Diaz government published within the past few months, when ho spoke of the delusions. The present occasion oc-casion would prove that the Mexican government allowed the greatest iiheri to its cillr.ons and was Just as truly u republic as ine 1 prove that there were no restriction! on allusions to persons' private life and tho restrictions preventing open incitement to rebellion. To Extradite Refugoes. Senor re la JJarra said he believed there would be some attempt to extradite extra-dite refugees by Mexico. If they escaped Into this country, he believed that the prospects would bo good for securing the extradition of the recent re-cent revolutionists. A precedent has been laid down, bo maintained, some years ago in the case of self-styled revolutionaries, revo-lutionaries, who raided Ciudad Forfirlo Diaz on the Klo Grande, wlien 200 in number these raiders shot up the little Mexican city and then on the approach or the Mexican troops returned over the border into Texas. When the Mexican government requested request-ed "their extradition tho refugees demanded de-manded asylum as political offenders. Tho lower courts affirmed their )m-munitv )m-munitv claim, but tho supremo court, so Senor" De la IJarra understood, reversed the lower courts and turned tile leader of the raiders over to tho Mexican government' gov-ernment' to bu dealt with as a criminal offender. |