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Show Fvery One Connected With Angeles Execution Harked for Vengeance. , v, PA?a T,",,c Nov 27 Pf rsi8t" nnior of 'Ui- hutching up of a I 5L2S plot to Villa elements In the lt!.- nf chihuahua, following the exe- B of General Felipe Angeles, elS rebel leader, at Chihuahua City j 15 fT-rifl- reached the border today. g-r.-ovo ronii.-eted Uh the trial of Villa chieftain ha- been marked fcrengeance, according to the re-111 re-111 Francisco Villa, the ally of An- i plana to stnn Immediately up-PSS up-PSS campaign of reprisal, Chihuahua ,! being his objective point, it is ',i Ti,o rebels are reported to be I Sinning to destroy the railroad be JLn Juarez nnd hlhuahua City. I Disorders were already said to have' Loured in Chihuahua City, but no oflnaatlon of these rumors were ob-Si ob-Si Klnible. here. Consul General An-; o Garcia of Mexico, said he had I Jarf nothing of any outbreaks at the Meanwhile preparai inns w. re being aade at the garrison in Juarez to vent anj disorders on the border, uvti police have orders to keep diet atch on all suspicious charac-Lg charac-Lg and a 8tn Dg patrol Is maintained e3 the streets Dettaila of Capture. Details of r! capture of Angel i i Lacbed here tonighl After learning Jaat General Audi' s, iccompanled by jivtcD men, was operating among the Pi of Nonoava, Chihuahua, C-abfno Sandoval, chief of the norae guard -Vaile de Olivos. left Huojatlt'an ori jfoember S accompanied by forty vol intefr9, to pursue the Villa leader. iJier search mc for six days and dc- lefDding to the arroyo of Santome the I pursuers discovered the Angeles' par- I in a cae The loyal forces ex. 'thiaged shots tvith rebels fur ikout fifteen minutes and during the acouuter Angeles and four others E' r.ice d to , tniaug refuge in I bill that faces Santom'' When trje ; tae guards reached the cave where I tie followers of Angeles bad bc"n hid- ' they found five of the latter dead 1 ud captured five guns, seven horses led a quantity of corn, b an3 and j mL The guards also took Jose Hoi pun Hudoz prisoner. Immediaf rl Ihe home guards con-' itiaoed the pursuit of the rebels thai La escap' d. :ll'iv.'ing the ; mil until Ik next day w h"-n arriving a' Ihe nscn of the Peach, they picked up lie scent a cant am! r- ached the hill Hons at 4 o'clock in 'b aftenonn. Bere th-y found Angeles and hi. com 1paalon, who thought themselves safe too pursuit. Upon l-.trniug cf 'he presence of Sandovnl and his troops, 4ey made brief resistance, tien triod Bight for about one kilometer, fighting U they ran, but were finally overtak-4 overtak-4 The state troops returned to Par nlw1;h their prisoners, reacairg that Ay at noon of November 19. I Angeles Intellectual Leader. .General Angeles, intellectual leader m the Villista mm incr.f md fnmous Httroughout the world as an artillery Ojtn, wont to trial csterday morn. ft The trial lasted throughout the For three hears General Angelas fried the military court of four Car-IHn Car-IHn ;cp.Ht-ai.- and defended the ito of himself and hi companions Two of the fou i li ra captured vu'h fcfei already had been execut d h Cirranza Fiddlers The roldier Trjllo trial with Angeles is but 17 years Courier-: brought the story of Hie Ufa! to iho border. Attempts to ob-telegraphic ob-telegraphic information failed uiurlcrs, however, left Chihuahua wore sentence wag passed. A Ifcrin; his address to the court Gen-!j Gen-!j m Aiigeles pr.iised America and J ll&erlca ns In Mil- connection Ve was I Worteil io have said Lpe Mexican people always have lted viih dislike and apprehension great Amc-riean nation; always be Hh brought up to believe (heir power. ) Br "tigbbors are harboring thought Bate C0Dquesl N'othing 1 mere er- Our great neighboring nation, Wtd by its grai president. Mr Wil- has only thr- kind'.ieal feelings for Jand our welfare. It is often said , hej-e that the American armv is nun entity. Though true that itfl former army was of lltflo importunce. its pre.-, ent army is ono of the Treat, t m ok iatence. it omhodles all of ihe Ho cr and young, clean blood ol the ju tion." Angeles Denies Charce. I In his testimony before the uiilltarv board by which he was tried. r,enen4i n-geles re)cntedly d.-nicd that he bad taken arms against the Carranza gov ernmcnt but asserted that he retain. .; ( to Mexico merely to effect a union of all elements, according to a detailed story of the trial, published bv El Her ;aldo. of Chihuahua City. General Angeles bitterly attacked what he termed "The strong paBBlons" of the Mexican peopk ' To correct these errors, I exposed my life Despite my previous relations with Villa, it was dangerous for me to (real with him, for he made tire of threats when I made bold to contra dlcr him "We held our first argument in Tose f.igua, because he called Madero a fool I retorted something, and our volcea rose to shouts VJlla'8 soldiers expected expect-ed that he would order mo hanged, aa he had done to all those who contra dieted him Afterwards, when he calmed down. Villa told me that I was th; fir. t man 'hat had contradicted him and escaped ali e. "This confirmed in me He beli I that Villa would have been a good man had it not been for despot.; and sveophani ' In the course of his lengthy ud. : to the court. Ang. Ies BpOke ol U tor Hugo's "Los Miserables." comparing compar-ing Francisco Villa with Jean Valjean. Suddenly the prisoner raised his voice and shouted : 'Those who accuse me and Lhosi who arrested mo ar Vlliistas! The masters should be the people, who should govern themselves, who should cease being servile. fnr thev are great From the balcony and the gallerj , of tbo large theatre In which the trial was held there came such a storm of applause that General Gabriel Gay Ira, the presiding officer of the military board, had to warn the auditors that such demonstrations were prohioked. After vigorously denying thai he had resisted the efforts of the state guards men to capture him. Angeles launched forth into a discussion of socialism and quoted words of Jesus Chris and the works of Theodore Roosevelt and the Austrian Sociallsl Kausskj |