New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 27, 1915, Page 1

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| HERALD BEST OF ALL | LOCAL ,NEWSPAPERS — B . NEW BRITAIN HERAIL i NEW BRITAIN CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1915 —TWELVE PAGES. PRICE THREE CENTS. l«MOVIE” ACTOR SHOT GERMAN-AUSTRIN ¥, actostor EFFORTS 10 CRUSH - . | Murder of Clarence RUSSIANS CHECHED zars Forces Counler German Dive| at Warsaw—Recapiure Stanislu in Easterm Galia. 3 GERMANS CAPTURE 1, s Authorities Chandler in San Francisco Valley. in- of a Los Angeles, Cal., Feb. 27.—An way today Chandler, was shot vestigation was under the death motion picture and killeq yesterday in the staging of in the San Fernando Chandler party of Clarence actor who battle scene valley here. | member of an attacking structed to capture soldiers caded In a cabin. Before word was given for them to begin firing with revolver: a single shot was heard and Chandler fell, shot head. All threw one laid claim with a discharged cartridge. The pistols had been loaded With bullets in order to produce a realis- tic scene in shooting down the door | of the cabin. a near was @ APTURE 1,100 RUSSIANS NEAR KOLKO Kaiser’s Aeroplancs Bombard Allies down their weapons. No to the one ® Positions Near )z(!mm'l—l«‘rcnch v | FIVE JAPANESE CRUISERS "L SEEK GERMAN WARSHIPS | Reported to Be | | South Pacific Lanes of | Aviator Drops Bombs in Metz—An- other British Mcvchantman Report- _Torpedced By German in l}\glish‘ Channel. The efforts of the German and Aus- ian armies fo erfimple both ends of | Guarding | lay to have been checked. es that the German drive | ¢ Walaiw from the rorth has been | Mered. * Tne oflicial report from | Tlin ~ says that new Rus- f sian l’orcm; have appeared in northern Poland and begun attacks. Near Kol- o, the statement anncunces, 1,100 ussians were captured. In eastern Galic d of the front, the orted fo have recaptured Stanislau. German Rald Nicuport. %4 On the western front there has been B Mo chan G 9 Captain Stevens said he had been . ge. German aeroplanes made | jn communication with several of the fa: raid on positions of the allies near | e e | Japanese warships, while in the south euport, .an a French . aeronaut|geas, and that he had been told by ropped bombs on Metz. S5 0t h s radio, ta have no fears for the safety nother British merchantman is|of the Maitlia as the cruisers were reported to have been torpedoed by a within easy steaming distance. submarine in the English channel. A 1 At Tahiti, Captain Stevens said, he . Erench warship has gene to the as-|had learned that the Japanese crui- | sistance of the vessel, the identity of Petro- Travel. San Francisco, Feb. 27.—A report of b Japanese cruisers guarding south | Pacific lanes of travel and looking | for the German cruisers Dresden and at the other | Prince Eitel Frederick has been Russians are re- | brought here by Captain William Ste_ vens of the British steamer Maitlai which arrived yesterday from Sydney, Australia. ALLIED FLEET ENTERS Probing | ins | barri- | in the fore- ! revolver ! | releasing the lsm(‘t clalms to have forced back the | DARDANELLES STRAITS | Shills Interior Forts and Progeeds Dowa Fourteen Miles From Eatrance |SWEEPING MINES FROM CHANNEL Prompt Action ‘of British Government in Ordering Resumption of Work Pending Arbitration of Shipbuilding | Strike Expected to Scttle Dispute. Feb. p. fleet composed of British- and French | London, warships continues today to hammer away at the doorway of the Darda- neiles, the strait which closes Russia's rich grainery to countries that wheat, and the very real necessity of huge supply of wheat which Russia has on the shores of the | RI Sea causes the general belief that the present attack on the Darda- nelles forts is a serious undertaking ard not merely meant for a demon- | stration. | Official announcements declare that | after the reduction of the four outer | Dardanelles forts mine sweepers went to work within the straits under the protection of the guns of the fleet, | while unofficial despatches from Athens and Rome assert that at least cne French warship actually has penetrated the passage. Germany Is Silent. Germany remains silent regarding her share in the military operations both in the east and in the west, while Austria- Hungary declares that Avstrian und German forces are hold- ing their own in the Carpathians and ine Bastern Galicia. Petrograd, less reticent, announces a repulse of German attacks in north Poland with heavy losses. As a re- sult of the desperate fighting of the past few days the Russian general need ack Germans along a front of twenty-five railes in the Przasnysz region. ‘Without Strategic Effect. ¥ sers made frequent calls at the French | % Which has not been established. |Society Islands. The cruiser Dres- A Paris despatch says that the |den was the sole German survivor of | French press is ununimous in its op- | the naval battle fought off the Falk- | osition to the informal proposals of {jand Islands with English ships. | < the United States tc Great Britain | and Germany concerring the admis- sion of food supplies to belligerent & nations for the eivii pcpulations and the cessation of submurine atiacks on | merchantmen. Great Eritain’s allies | — : i ‘also are said to have advised her tHat | Assyrians at South Church Mission to | they favor the policy of cutting off | Have Special Meeting Tomorrow. - | supplies from Germany. | aramé el dvatinen.t Saarb tary - Disturbances in Ttaly [ an's assistance. Villages plundered; Clashes between the,factions favor- | burned, women captive. Ten thou- i 4ng and opposing war continue to | sand in American mission threatenead | create disturbances in Italy, and the | with famine and massacre. Inform ! plan of the government to suppre: fans. | public meectings for the discussion of | “YONAN, SHIMMON, ABLAHAT." | this question led to a turbulent scene | The feregoing cablegram was re- | :4jn parliament yesterday. Premier | ceived this week by Rev. Elisha Salandra, who on more than one oc- | Adams, head of the Assyrian mis- | ¢asion previously defined Italy’s pol- | sion at the South Congregational | icy as armed and watciful neutrality, church, from men who are leaders | said in addressing parliament that he | of their countrymen in Ass did not know whether the nationals | are businessmen who received their destined to march. to war. education in the United States. | Warships of the Anglo-French fleet | The five hundred Assyrians in New #¥re reported to have penetrated thoe | Britain have practically all come Dardanelles after silencing the puter | from TUrumiah, the section which is forts, and the removal of mines is un- | noW being ravished by the ' Turks, der way preparatory to an attempt at | and many men, women é_\nd Chlld_ren further advance toward Constan- | have been killed. Special 'services tinople. An Athens despatch repeats | for the cause of the suffering people the statement that the sultan has | Will be held in the South church made plans for a hasty departure | tomorrow. evening at 6 ot‘_,!o(‘k. Rev. | from Constantinople, The great bat- | Adams will preach a special sermon | “tle in Poland is still to be decided, | @nd the people will join in prayer and ,although latest reports indicate that | fasting. ) the German rush from East Prussia | R Crromre o S U has been checked. The Russian| EVELYN NOT OFF COURSE. tatement that the Germans have TR i B ";wee:medefeated in tne region of Reports Commander Gherardi, annl! Przasnysz.and the German announce- Attache at Berlin. ment of the capture of the city leave ‘Washington, Feb. —The first -in doubt the situation on that part | ;. ort of Commander Gherardi, naval of the front where the battle at pres- | s¢tache at Berlin, on the sinking of Sent is being waged flercely. the American cotton steamer Evelyn Germans Thrust Back, Petrograd, Feb. 12:01 p. m, via | here today, and indicates that the ship London, 1:55 p. m.—The German in.| was not off her course, as was sug- \ | gested and was in fact, in waters, “fantry forces are being thrust back | . % agross the River Niemen in northern where she should have been safe. "4 Poland, and the Russian general staff | believes that another German plan of attack upon Warsaw has been count- f#ered succgssfully. 4" Relationship is divined between the . stubborn effort of the Germans to cut ‘% railroad communication to the north frggn Warsaw and the coincident re- ¢imption of pronounced activity near Borjimo n the central Poland front west of aw. To quote the opin- of a officer as deduced from ese -operations’ by the Germans at dely seperfited centers: “E\'iden(l,\'] Xermans intend to push forward < *®agein in the center. For this pur- “_'pose they mneed reinforcements of * troops on the Borjimow front. In the Kovno district activity is dimin- shing. Hence it is evident that the k;ermans are again using their per- Jfect railway system to * thraw over woops from Ko¥o ‘toward Borjimow. Trying to Cut Railroad. “jn order that we shall not be able to do the same thjng, namely, rush ‘troops southward to the Bzura and Rawka rivers the Germans are mak- Ing desperate efforts, first with cav- Mry and then with, infantry, to cut he railroad from Warsaw north to /ilna, Thanks to the watchfulness of our commands and to the energy of our troops, the efforts of the en- The Prince Eitel Frederick has been | variously reported on the Atlantic and | Pacific oceans. COUNTRYME}N IN DISTRESS. Bry- | a 27 the Evelyn probably struck a mine which had broken loose from its moorings somewhere along the Ger- | man coast immediately to the north and which was floating towards the ccast of Holland, where, according to reports numerous mines have been found on the shore. WILL OF MRS. BURKE. - Thomas and Edward, Sons, Are Most Favored of Children. The will of Mrs. Ann Burke filed for probate this morning. personal property is left to two sons. Thomas and Edward, who also receive one-fourth each of their mother’s real estate. : The residue of the property is di- vided among Walter Patrick, William and John Burke and Margar- et Burke Horne. The will was drawn on October 9, 1914, and was witnessed by Mary McDonought, Thomas ., Smith and Attorney P. F. McDonough. Thomas Burke is appointed executor, MOULIN ROUGE AFIRE. Paris, Feb. 27, 9:50 m.—The Moulin Rouge, well known as a cen- ter of the night life of Paris, caught fire early today. The entire fire de- partment of the center of Paris was | quently, | straits, by a mine in the Nérth Sea, reached | In the opinion of naval officers here, | Rev. | The impression is growing in Eng- land that the German advance in East Prussia is due mainly to political and economic motives and that conse- it is without great strategic effect on the easfern campaign as a whole. In the west the French continue to claim advances in the Champagne district, with quiet prevailing along the rest of the line. The shipbuilding strike is causing | some concern in London, but the prompt action of the government in ! ordering the resumption of work wkile arbitration is being resorted to is expected to settle the dispute, Proceeds Fourteen Miles. Paris, Feb. 11:15 a. 'm.—The Athens correspondent of the Matin has forwarded the following: “After the complete destruction of the forts at the entrance to the Dardanelles, the allied fleet penetrated the straits and shelled the interior forts. It pro- cceded down the Dardanelles fourteen miles from the entrance.’ i Fort Intepe Destroyed. Athens, Teb. via London, p. m.—An allied fleet forty warships today penetrated the Dardanelles straits as far as Hortari and within range of Fort Intepe, on the Asiatic side, according to reliable information reaching here today. Fort Intepe was destroved. Turkish Encampment Attacked. Various Turkish encampments, also were bombarded. The ships are now | within range of Fort Dardanos. A TFrench squadron is cruising un- der the forts at the entrance to the which are now entirely dis- mantled. 5:12 aggregating IFINANCE BOARD IS 'TO BEGIN AT ONCE | Schedule of Hearings for Considera- ! tion of Estimates For Annual j . Budget Announced. Begipning Wednesday evening, Mar. 13 the -board of finance and taxation | Will, start its sessions on the annua! | budget and hearngs will be given the | various boards when they present their estimates. Following is the schedule of hearing: Wednesday evening, March 3, board of public works at 8 o’'clock; munici- | pal building commission at 9 o’clock. Friday evening, March 5, consol dated school district at 8 o’clocky, New Britain Institute at 8:30 o’clock; pub- lic amusement commission at 9 | o'clock. | Monday, March 8, board of public safety at 8 o’clock; board of health | at 9 o’clock. Tuesday, March 9, board of chari- ties at 8 o'clock; water commission- ers at 8:30 o’clock; park commission- ers at 9 o'clock. EIGHT OF CREW LOS Washington, IFeb. 27.——Minister Van Dyke at The Hague cabled today an unofficial report that eight of the | crew of the American steamer Evelyn | | | | | sunk by a mine in the North sea, had been lost. Yesterday he sent an un- called out in an endeavor to put out | the flames. (Continued on Fourth Page.) official that the missing boat | los report d was safe. ! for P way | was said, will be of a friendly nature. | With the Denver and Rio Grande. ! holders of the two properties were to | violations, | serve to place guarantees upon Ameri- were not con- | i | tempted to use Norwegian merchant | as ! folse | the United States government. ! that tion _afternoon | hands in | posedly | other the same question in the same | ! tership?” { and Maine railroad train { from WILL SEEK RECEIVER FOR WESTERN PACIFIC After Railway Defaults Interest on Its | | Ilirst Mortgaga Bonds Due March 1—Bankers to Discuss Situation, New York, Ieb. 27.—Application a receiver for the Western Pacific railway will be made after the railway will have defaulted the interest on its first mortgage bonds due March 1, according to announcement made to- day after a meeting .of the directors of the Denver and Rio Grande Rail- company, which controls the | Wesetrn Pacitic. The proceedings, it | This method, it was said, had been decided upon as the best cour: to pursue in adjusting the company’s firancial difllculties and relations it Bankers representing security mecet this afternoon to dis the situation. It was said that after the meeting a statement would be issued | in their behaif. STAND AGAINST DETENTION | OF AMERICAN VESSELS To Be Made Effective By Probe of Alleged Neutral- ity Violations. New York, Feb. federal grand jury investigation in progress here to determine if there bas been a systematic violation of American = neutrality and customs laws, there was said today to lie a de- termination by the United States gov- ernment to make effective its stand | against detention of any American | vessel by a belligerent power on a | suspicion that contraband is in the cargo. It was explained unofficially | that the government's position in the | 7.—Behind the matter of preserving neutrality would | be made more secure, in the eves of | foreign nations, by establishing a | rolicy jof prosecuting attempts at such since such prosecutions would in effect, it was pointed out, can cargoes that they traband. The docun jury contain burg-Amer charges that the Ilam- ps as auxiliaries to E German vessels on the Atlantic, war Misstatements, in clearance papers, | can be found,” Dr. Wise said. to ports of call or destination, and | 1y, | i ents in possossion of the | immoral of all moral heresies,” | an Steamship line had at- | EI\(FP COACHl | S“. SILENT T00 LONG - oo s | GO Switch at Elm Street Cross- | For € ; street cros | Ecwin D. Mead Dec'ares at Nalionali Peage Conferercs. GPENED AT CHSAGD TODAY Dr. ing— \ocident Averted What | nceident south of the J1Xlm street railros { ing early this morning | c*clock Berlin bound switch, well filled over Just ing is passed might narrow . 4 ren the dinke the re almost with causing passensg of the Elm h and the train had just and beginning 1« Absence of Women From the Coun- [ up speed when the engineer, looking behind, saw that the last car not cils of State Partially is Responsible | ¢ llowing the train but was careening | off to one He hurricdiy applied topped the train minute When the cars stopped the rear to west Stephen S, Wise Says That the a swit German Re ter to Wik was and Plach for Plague of War Upon Earth. g s Naval Attac kes and not a ton New York, Iriffiths, atto) the ¢ Feb. was opened here today Chicago, A natfonal peace for by £0on ch listing dangerously side and it gone & feet ther would have toppled over entirels The trucks were badly wrenched that the « had to be sidetracked | | and the passengers 'r?uvlml into the other coach, pices of emergency federation of peac “Stegler ha 1. C. MOODY ELECTED con. Mr. ( ference will close tomorrow ni conference the one fur- was Stegler in the T4¢ fraudulently purpose which the aid the tendered of adopting a plan nad fow now sympathy, influence and be 80 ¥ eariy of American people may ar indi client should | acy he would | gullty and th | ey of the cou To Ples involved the passport, of nations ropean and peace promoted. The conference, which was attended )y e advocates from all parts the nation, was held under the aus- war the cause o logical thi The federal to take action Of Connecticut Association | | Api Washington, Wilson today Mrs. Richard German rese York on a ¢h taining an A ing that Stegl project by Cal naval attache that her husb ter was refers justice, which vestigation of Mrs, Stegle ! her husband a month for Boy-Ed while would be giwvi if he was kille no money no she could sup husband were; Husl “When the to see my huw ler, e told he wanted evel could have saved hiny forgery, hut told everythil Silent Too Long. of Boston, in in the present ropean crisis the necutral nations ha been silent too long. “Their representatives should meet in conference upon the common wel- fare and our own government should | take the lead,” Mr. Mead said We should take a strohg. part in the cre- | necticut Association of Classical ation of a League of Peace. Our | High School Teachers held people must givé definite and per- |annual session here tcday. sistent thought to. their: opportunity | tions were adopted in opposition and duty.” | the high school tuition bill now “Is War C | fore the general asserbly, and_a com N Bdases Wwomen ' from the | Mittee of three was named to appear councils of state partially, if not large- | 2t the hearing tc this oppori responsible for the continuance | 100 of the plague of war upon earth,” said | Philip’ M. Howe Dr. Stephen S. Wise, rabbi of the | tired as president Free Synagogue of New York. “Is war | ' illimantic curel I the question he dis- | him. - Dr. C, L. Kirsckner of this city | was chosen vice president, IX. I ssod. | The belief that man was born Phyfe of Hartford corresponding retary, J. C. Moody ¢f New Britain fighting animal must forever main one, Dr called, “the cording secretary S, Hiteh- of New 1 The executive committee are Miss Belle | Whitne, Danbury, W. A. Wheatley of | of Middletown, and Harrison Allen of Waterbury. The chairman of the committee on conference with colleges is Rev. H. Buehler of Lakeville, and ol ihe athletics commitee H. A, Ter- | Edwin address, D. Mead caid that a i} of Classicoi and High School Teachers. New Haven, Feb, 27 The Con- and 20th Resolu- to be ite reless?” “The of , veien is of and y was choser to Rockville Case re- of succedd was a| se« re- | most and lden ways s onl and Wise and . cock sondon, t(reasurer he viewed diplomacy’s h of the ultimate the present war, wars “A substitute one X of Lot all cau but nat virtually for must and “There passion war must be some outlet for the statements in manifests the contents of cargoes, are and the investigation the charges being conducted understood, the theory that false state | nents constitute a against | i as to it such conspiracy Complaints are said to have been received by the federal authorities | that dozens of tramp steamers have sailed with contraband’ cargoes after | puking illegal manifests and false | statements as to destinations. Sail- | ings’ from other Atlantic ports than | New York are included within the scope of the inquiry. ! TWO BAFFLING MYSTERIES, | No News of Pos News in Zebris Murder Case. mastership and No Two of the most baffling mysteries | have ever New Britain people to lose their beauty sleep are | today apparently no nearer a solu- than they have been since first | scovered. Up to a late hour this | not a line had been | ceived from Washington on the post- | master situation in this city and at | 45 o’clock the police admited that | they had o new announcements to | make on the Zebris murder mystery. | Dopsters are throwing up their | despair and even the sup- | wise are shaking their in wonderment, asking each | | crused - ones heads breath swer: case ? and receiving the same an- | “What's doing on the murder | What's doing on the postmas- All together: “Nothing!” HEADING FOR HALIFAX, New York, Feb. 2 an | Line steamship Mongolian, 3 out a wireless call yesterday for nelp because she was leaking badly, 400 miles off the coast of Nova Scotin, is heading for Halifax under her own power and should reach .there tomor- row, local agents of the line announced today. ' . BURIED BY SNOW SLIDE, Paris, Feb. 27, 3:15 p. m.—A #&now silde near Radou in the Department of Hautes-Alpes, has completely buried the hamlet of LaCaille. " The houses are obliterated from sight, and it i§ beligved that some of the people | must perish before they can be dug cut. INJURIES PROVE FATAL, Claremont, N. H., Feb. 27 conductor of —Daniel : the Boston wrecked in | a washout here yesterday, diled today | injuries sustained in the acci- | dent, i et i o N, WEATHER. i Feb. tonight 27.—Falr, and Hartford, continued cold Sunday, e e e alleged, | some {cial i the citizens | nations were paying for | against | world-war? | must ! men will have to choose between kill- | | though of men to serve opportunity which {0 merge n th and strive together, for the play of burns within the interest rill of Norwich i W. B. Spencer of West Hartford A o atmieticn, re. THIRTY \ GR. instinct men for the committee of | ported that fifty-six scccnaary schools living lup to the eligibility rules drawn some time agc, and that these rules have had a tendency to athletics cleaner Trcre twenty schools in tie state which have not adopted the rules. After dis not millions, [ cussion of the term *‘piofessionalism tich the military powers of Kurope | it v voted to have the Lave spent in the last thirt ars | insert in the rules the following code were the premium which these | to cover the point rajzed: “No school the insurance | signing these rules shal! allow pro- ion eve to | fessional athlete to represent in in behalf of | any athletic contest i many nations seem to “For the purpose of this organiza- be ready fo hazard the adventure f [ tion any student whe has received Our opposition to war or other vaiuable consideration lu'un:nh real and final and in- | ;on athletic services, of v ho has played flexible. The time must when | with or against professional athletes, hall be classed professional game ¥iolating this section or any game played with who has and is ready interest of the coun- | are try.” make about Deepest Cause of War r,” he faith that could avert he deepest cause of the ws are On ntinued, “has the mighty armaments alone war, that the billions, Course been ¥ a nama - Pac committee position % San Frengl care lined up the start race o a it for war Is great vorld-peace as no n: ke a adventure s wrounds of national Expo filled the smal wae only a grandstand. the sky, and bureau had p there thil The distands clally annound rcquiring 104 The signal I'red Wagner, 1 kstell, No. shot out 'on ccconds later, Lragg, Now 1 luter Parsons, No. 10, got of tlights of th scconds, At the end No led. T Ruckstell, Ni money come . us & ing and being killed. No government | could constrain me to rlay my child, | Ii my country bids me slay m 3 aaf ame sha brother beyond the national frontier, | PIaYed under an asitfied name P T should say nay, though the govern. | P¢ forfeite ment slay me. The time has come when men must choose that they be lain for refusing to slay another ather than go forth to slay their brother at the behest of any govern- ment. “A substitute for war must be found | d can be found, some outlet for the passion of men to serve and strive together, some opportunity for the | play of the social instinet which burns within men and is ready to merge the | erest of the citizens in the in-, d 51 {crest of the country, Men must| _Washington, Feb. 27.—President | 0o "y b he given some great and re- | Wilson has practically decided mot 10 | Ly .y no merge the infividual in the com. | COREIGSE L8 FFOULTEEE it Honss Iesta’'s al munity. If you will not let men | Buan treatic 3 U5 | miles an hours : N was said that while the quus- warch and stand and serve together | € ““‘_" i - 2 g e v Earl Cooper they will stand and dis-serve and | tion still was under consideration ! . o, Sol efigies one ancther,. The | there wers J”,"': :‘»rlo[sp‘t-l'ls of & spen | et new emphasis of the peace movement | ial session being “f - off Besides the .must be constructive, providing for T'\" fv;.uo:uu;:\‘o ao;n:[x.r;lt;n" u- prizes amountl public and commonwealth service on | Senators makes it improbable that any | . a0, g0 the part of,the vouth of the nation, | action on the treaties can be taken to whom Professor James' plan must | during the present session. The pres be offered—a ycar of service for the | ident expects, however, that at least salbile-bbilad. youth ‘of the land some of his nominees for the federal 2 8 confirmed trade commission will be 3 ., Partially Responsible, before March 4. Any not confirmed | “T hold that the absence of women | are expected to get recess appoint- | from the councils of state is partially, | ments. | if not largely, responsible for the con-' The democratic leaders hope to take tinuance of the plague of war upon | up some general legisiation including tarth. Is it-less than incredible that | the Philippines, the general dam and cight or nine nations are engaged in | the ship purchase bills, but prospects the greatest wars that the world has | for passage of these measures are not ever known and not a woman in all | bright. Although conferees on ti these lands has been consulted as to | shipping bill have agreed to a report whether war or peace should be, | the republicans are expected to con- tens of thousands of men of | of | tinue their opposition to the measure. women born have died and the last | The senate and house banking con great terrible cost of war in life-long | mittees met today to consider the st sorrow and suffering will be by | uation arising from the Incorporation women borne. by the senate of the McCumber rural | et included “The last thing to be dreamed of in | credits bill in the agricultural appro- | ols, nineteen ccnmection with this war is revenge. | priation bill. 1t was believed the den:- | yen ‘hed shaely Gnly one thing could be madder than | ocrats would substitute for the Mes | dages, three s tie present warfare and that were a | Cumber bill the Hollis bill regarded #s | wheets, socks, determination to inflict crushing | an administration bill pita) ehirte a8 punishment upon any one of the con- | Debate Was resumed in the senais | Twenty-two s testing nations. Out of this terrible | on the conference report on the sea- ! gent out by th - | men’s bill, while the house considercd of the Red & nued on Tenth Page.) | the sencral deficiency bill. | boxes contill one were NOT TO CALL EXTRA SESSION OF SENATE a | To Comsider Colwmbian and Nicar- aguan Treanes Is Roport—Sub- jeet Under Conmsideration. THREE BO | New Britain Article S0 many A since the, pacl Red Cross rool the time came morning the committee ha é third box. ing a total of out today to soclety in Bro to Europo. The shipms ussortment of J heen made by § (Co:

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