ence a reer ; los ; i a in 7 esa ‘ 8 Ligigeli is . enatad tate he tteatively tied. the ced at an early hour’ this morn- ford, Regina, James Carruthers, Among the tragic relics of the}/0Ss of the steamer John A. Me: ving the participation of Ja=| President ilson has created ajStates has elle a y lee ‘ ue ing. will not. undo the results of Leafield, Howard Hanna, Matoa|marine disaster washed ashore Gean, a 432 foot freighter. nan in the political problems of|most favorable impression.|purse strings of Europe to Mex- ’ P results Ges Se ak as hee ” ss wenty-ei ; : % ga ce Throughout official Washi gtonlico so long as Huerta remains the most gigantie political blun- seo re at Abbape sighs String One ee Ky oa ee Le atau oe he west IPOUSR ORE DACs Seon ; : om lder'of modein (ies. Everyone The following were a total loss|Huron, was the wreckage and a|have been washed ashore. M ( ty N we 14 Presi Sal Bh nae Prabhas’ ve Gan ae agrees that Larkin’s arrest and na cohint ae Pas” cn era on A aa ate exico 0 ; ‘esi. met rilé 2 t io { ' > dite oe " af a iy ce a s teh a : ; ; Naa rah tos tin.| many. and: other: sation: now Mexico City, Nov. 14.—Reports sentence was a mistake. The aia ret a es cee pear bight, te off 8 go ies Ottawa, Nov. 14, — Wireless S| 5 ulbiatase by rafuee standing together in acquiesence|that Huerta has fled from the|&0vernment realized that they], Slater. 5 “Movin and freaiée, rae et the hn cua ade ae ee te wk ee Pi le t th demands|to the plan of the United Stat ‘apital city were renewed yester were losing votes by Larkin’s im-|- Th fi 1ée : l i : be EY B y= 4 Hit ha wrecks on the lakes g cede to e demands 0 e pli oO e ed States, |capite j yes Pa q ‘. ‘ g s8els wal stery, 2 é F thin the time limit stated]the successful elimination of|day afternoon, owing to the in- prisonment, and that a_ revolt sisinadle Grech hetege: eh apes naipedpeaneliaen fiers H é sured ability of those interested in his] "4s occurred in the ranks of la- ; Totti , : . ERS he document that it would be|Huerta is secured, abilits bor. suppoMimee of tha’! goverti- ley, M. Andrews, Nottingham, Port Huron, Nov. 4.—Conser-|ronie none of the boats that were | le eras actions to find any trace of him, gaat Argus, J. M. Jenks, E. G. Hart-|vative estimates of the loss of|in trouble were equipped with — London, Nov. 14.—The British] Huerta a always ps ae ath: . well, J. T. Hutehinson, Schooner |life due to the storm on the| wireless apparatus. Wa gton, Nov. 14.—No re-|government is being kept in-|ious in his movements and dti- mame een having been received from] formed of every move by the Un-;cult to locate when wanted, and THAT CHINESE DICTATOR TL NTIC LINER F ARE ey ee ee ees ind the time limit for aJjited States in regard fo Mexico|t#is rumor may be the result of eo LA RS é having expired, the United|by the British Ambassador at|the action taken by the United nee are ree at A s now taking action for|Washington and by the United|States. Rumors that he was residen HELD BACK BY STORMS the elimination of Huerta and the|States Ambassador = in London,}planning to take a Germag tee POE. ate | powers were yesterday notifiedjand the turn the situation has|steamer to Europe have been Specialieg FOF Daily News, Each Bringing in Reports of Ter- this effect. Im the exchange]|taken is giving general sattsfac-|current for some days, but it is Pekin, Noy. 14.-The Chinese rific Gales and Mountainous eablegrams between Washing- | tion. believed in official quarters that} parliament was suspended yes- Seas — ind Ambassador Page in Be a ie he is in secret ¢onference with} terday, by the decision of a joint BOTH HE AND FENTON ENTERED AT SAME TIME—SHOT WAS London it is learned that an| Washington, Nov. {4.—The|the Constitutionalists with the|session of the few remaining (Special to the Daily News) FIRED BEFORE THEY KNEW ARVTHING WAS £ ent has been entered in-|united support of the great pow- hope that united Mexico may members of the two houses, the B ston, Nov. 14—Three belat wore with Great Britain that the/ers abroad for the American po-|make a stand against the United|rest being in prison or in exile. A aed a kien ; ; ; . : ft th Me Eta b-|liey toward Mexico is shown in a]States ————————— ed trans-Atlantic liners, the} When the G. T. P. train fromjed Fenton with revolvers and 0 1e Mexican prob-jlicy towa - ; NOBEL PRIZE AWARDED Cambrian from Lendon, the Han- the interior pulled in at 5.15 last forced him to open the safe. Fen- Dictator Huerta GREATEST POLITICAL BLUNDER IN HISTORY Release of Agitator Larkin Fails to Appease British Labor— Strike Threatened London, Noy. 14. from prison of James Larkin, the labor agitator who did much to inflame the minds of the Dublin strikers, does not seem to have served to modify the bit- ter feeling of the labor world of the British Isles, and a general The release 80 LOCAL CHEQUE ARTIST IS WANTED IN UNITED STATES len, IN POLICE OFFICE. ; N ; —With her been awarded to any but a white Ae de : ae ‘ | Halifax, Nov. 14.—With her} oicon. for days. The Parisian encoun-|such a narrow escape from los-|which was the first intimation to table Bailey, of the city|file, which was from the Wash- | forward hold converted into a Bi iy re tered head seas and _ westerly|ing his life being a bandage tied|the public that anything was force, who has made aj !ngton state penitentiary at|fiery furnace by the spontan- THREE PEOPLE KILLED gales all the way across. over his nose. He was accom-j|wrong. ae : Poe A 8 at Walla Walla, it was found that!,ous combustion of her cotton ; ~---=-— — panied by Dr, Stone of the Haz-| ‘A peculiar coincidence in con- set Are ane ee Oakes had been sentensed to @/...0 6 the British steamer Muir- Pennsylvania and Qhio Passen- KILLED BY EARTHQUAKE elton hospital. Both were met!nection with the robbery is that g criminals as a means Of}igpm in that institution of from field Vedran bavai faet iat She ger Train Derailed écyv by Mr. Broderick, manager of the| Fenton did not have the combin- ication, this morning com-/xsjx months to twenty years for nad st > Sa . Cae 7 7 Two Hundred and Fifty Bodies in| |ocal branch of the Union Bank,|ation of the safe until Saturday, ut rad steamer ore é é 7 ‘ : . : p ued mea : ye ; s 8 : 5 ted his classification of the|forgery in the first degree. He dred miles at full speed from (Special to the Daily News) One Peruvian Town and Mr. D, G. Stewart, chairman|when it was given to him with my ; of the hospital board, The lat-|the consent of the manager as linger prints of James W. Oakes, | sentenced to six years yesterday ofideclared a was released on conditional par- don on April 26th, 1943, but was ing out. vielator on August 6 ~|STEAMED FULL SPEED _ WITH CARGO ON FIRE Steamer Manages ke Port After Thrilling i Atlantic CONSTABLE BAILEY’S FINGER PRINT CLASSIFICATION LEADS | Experience oh. Ahan TO DISCOVERY OF THIS INFORMATION FILED Special to The Daily News. midocean with the flames burst- now under The fire is Prize for Literature Goes to Hin- du Poet (Special to the Daily News) Stockholm, Nov. 14.—The No- bel prize fer literature was awarded yesterday to the Hindu poet Rabindranath Tagore. This is the first time the prize has to Wooster, Ohio., Nov. 144. Three persons were killed and twelve injured, one of them fat- HUNDRED AND FIFTY LIVES LOST IN THE STORM OF SUNDAY LAST Sixteen Steamers Were Lost, Many With Their Whole Crews, and Ten Were Stranded---the Loss in Dollars Estimated at Exceeding Five Millions over from Bremer-Havyen and the Parisian from Glasgow, arrived last night, each bringing reports of having encountered terrific gales and mountainous seas. The Cambria reported the worst pas- sage in years. On, the Hanover the storm life lines were rigged to prevent the sailors from being carried overboard, and passen- gers were not admitted on decks (Special to the Daily News) Nov. 14.—Official Lima, re- evening the platform was crowd- ed with citizens assembled out of curiosity to have a look at the injured bank clerk, J. C, McQueen whose arrival was announced in yesterday’s papers. Nearly every- one was surprised to see Mr. Mc- Queen step off the train without assistance, the only thing to in- dicate that he had experienced ter upon hearing that Mr. Mc- Queen was to pass through the ton did not have the key to open the treasury box so the robbers had to force it. When they had secured the cash they marched Fenton into a bedroom and made him lie down in bed and promise that he would make no alarm until one o’clock. After about 20 or 25 minutes, which probably seemed ages to Fenton, he arose and fired two or three shots Mr. McQueen expected that he might be out of town when it morning on several charges ‘ ie i . forgeries committed here. The|25th, when the circular with the control. ally by the wreck of the Pennsyl-|ports from the province of Ab-|city en route to Vancouver for| would be required. Mr. McQueen — Classification is tabulated lfinger print classification and E 1S DECLARED vania & Ohio eastbound passen-|ancay state that two hundred and the purpose of having located by had the key of the treasury box ikooO | complete description was sent PEAC ger train near here last night.|fifty bodies have already been X-Rays the bullet which has not}in his pocket but. the robbers dieik occa A iout. Attached to the circular are a T Pp anes Stricken to The locomotive ran off the rails.}recovered frqm the ruins of yet been removed, communicated made no attempt to get it from 1ROO ltwo photographs of Oakes, a full reece Too eae 3 ; n Pane Chalhuaca, one of the ten towns|with Mr, Broderick and yery|him, | : \s soon as he had reached| front view anda side view. Both Continue Fight Cablegram of Condolence destroyed by the earthquake of kindly offered the use of a ward Aside from a few arrests made — this result he started looking|photos were telling likenesses of Benes the Dail News) ccncenieaaa last Friday. in the hospital should such be|the night of the robbery no fur- through the various classifica-|the prisoner. The circular offers (Specia o 16 y. ews (Special to The Daily News.) deemed advisable tor the comfort|ther arrests have been made. ms filed in the office. He had}a reward of $50 for his appre- Athens, Nov. 414.—The treaty Ottawa, Nov. 14.—The sympa- HORRIBLE ACCIDENT of the injured clerk, This, how-|The police are keeping a sharp lookout all through the district and everything possible is being ever, was quile unnecessary as of peace between Greece and Mr. McQueen was suffering no , thy of the Canadian government Turkey was signed last night and with Lord Strathcona in the loss not searched far before he found | hension. A News representative Fifteen Killed and More Than a was the classifleation corresponding | exactly with that of Oakes and it Was found that the classifieation Was for none other than same man, On examining the cireular on the | circular present when Oakes was brought out from his cell and shown the and the photographs. He looked at it in a rather surprised manner but had nothing to say, MATE WASHED OVERBOARD James Carruthers in With Hali- but, Had a Rough Trip rhe steam trawler James Car- 'uthers of the cold storage fleet arrived in port last night with 120,000 pounds of halibut. The ‘rawler was out for seventeen “ays and experienced a great deal ' 0 ugh weather, In one of the Mate MeGee was Washed overboard but saved him Self by hanging to a rope, Telling his experience to a friend this Morning the gentleman remark- th es he supposed the next sea came along washed the mate (. thoard his ship, Mate Me- tt ‘ijoyed the joke more than "Oe Narrow escape he had. heayy seas Basketball r Brotherhood vs, Bankers, at me Auditorium tonight (Friday “me called at 8.45 sharp, Ad- Us8s8ion 25 cents JIM BLUDSOE REDIVIVUS Oe lee F, Burning of the “Prairie Belle” to be Shown at Empress Who has not read that histori¢ of the race of the Mississip- pi steamboats in the olden time, of the nigger sitting on the saf- ety valve of the “Prairie Belle,” of the tearing down and throwing into the furnace of the pilot house and upper works in order race, and of how the boat took fire and her famous captain, Jim Bludsoe, “held her nose against the bank until every All this 1s Stewart. to win the man Weekly Review. The Daily News has the largest circulation in the city and dis- trict. To be had at all the news- muddle, dealers. once more ended—for a time. intendent telegraph morning from a business trip to While there he put in- to effect a few minor changes in connection with the service, The business at Stewart will in future be handled by the Stewart Trust Co., and the headquarters of the repair men from Stewart to Maple Bay, named accused produced galool was ashore.” shown in the Empress films, everything, including the steam- ers, being life size, There are] trate Carss also a number of other excellent features, including Pathe’s | offset that constable who and the case was dismissed, the Balkan wars are of his wife was expressed in a cablegram despatch last evening Score Injured pain and was quite able to get around without assistance. a representa- done to apprehend the robbers. A stage driver who passed the bank about 6 o’clock on the even- SOME MINOR CHANGES In Government Telegraph Ser- vice at Stewart W. Dowling, district super- government returned for the service, have Charge Was Dismissed The adjourned case McKenzie, charged with supplying liquor to two In- dian girls came up before Magis- this morning, evidence that of the girls and the the charge laid Future historians will speak of the situation as the been by Hon. Geo. E. Foster, acting premier, ‘ Social Hop Beginning Saturday, November 15, a social dance will be held in the McIntyre hall, Also 5 nights in the week, dancing lesson will (Special to The Daily News) Fufaula, Ala, Nov. 414.—The Georgia. Central passenger train left the rails a few miles south of here last night, three of the coaches plunging down the em- 'hbankment and quickly in flames, Fifteen persons were killed and this]be given, 268 M. M. Cooper, Instructor. more than a score injured, some of them fatally. Interviewed by itive of the “Daily News” at the Savoy Hotel last evening, Mr. Me- Queen related the story of the | rohbees which differs in several respects from the stories already published, About 6.30 on Tuesday even- ing Mr. MeQueen and Mr. Fen- ton, teller and book-keeper re- spectively, returned to their quarters in the bank building af- EMPRESS moved This is a really wonderful against a the two steam boats and th picture. PATHE'S An excellent number of this rent events throughout the The From the biograph studios Mexican in a gold camp. _,. TO-NIGHT... JIM BLUDSOE AND THE BURNING OF T RIVER STEAMER “THE PRAIRIE irie Belle’ is actually produced, A full sized river steam- er being burned to the water's edge in order to secure the “THE SUPREME TEST” A comedy drama from the Essanay studios “MAN'S LUST FOR GOLD” THEATRE MISSISSIPPI LLE” spectacular film, The race of e final burning of “The Pra- WEEKLY ever popular review of cur- world. . This picture is based on life ter having partaken of their sup- per. They entered the building at the rear, going into the living room first. The place was in semi-darkness and Mr. Fenton was ahead. Neither had any sus- picion that there savas anything wrong . Mr. McQueen as_ he walked in put out his left hand to protect himself from knocking against anything and almost as he did so a shot was fired, the bullet grazing his thumb and en- tering his nose at the left side. He immediately dropped to the floor where he remained in a state of semi-consciousness. Af- ter the shot was fired he realized very little of what was going on. Mr. Fenton's story, as told by Mr. McQueenelast night, is that ing of the robbery reported that he had noticed four or five men hanging around in front of the building. Mr. McQueen left on the 8.8. _ Prince George this morning for | Vancouver, accompanied by Dr. Stone. The bullet, after passing through the nose, jlodged some- where in the right side of his — face, which was somewhat swol- len last night. It is hoped that the bullet can be successfully removed and that no complica. tions will follow. Dr. Stone, of the Hazelton hos- pital, who left for Vancouver this morning with Mr. McQueen, the injured bank clerk, does not intend taking ashrdlip hrdlu expect to return for several weeks. He intends taking a well earned holiday. * A Pleasant Evening Mrs. Walter Owen entertained at her residence on Fourth Ave- nue last evening. She had about — twenty-five guests who wil games, musio and dancing + an excellent m sup the robbers immediately cover- spent a most