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

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HERALD BEST OF ALL | LOCAL NEWSPAPERS NEW BRITA | PRICE THREE CENTS. NEW BRITAIN CONNECTICUT,SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 191 ‘—T\WELVI: PAGES. PINTOR BOUND OVER TO SUPERIOR COURT ITALY ON VERGE OF PARTICIPATING IN WAR | ON SIDE OF ALUES Every Possible Measure Preparatory {0 Beginning of Hostiities Taken by ltalian Government. ALL RUSSIAN FORCES -ARE EXPELLED FROM EAST PRUSSIA in Vosges, Won by French i Tubercular Patient at Underclift Held for Trial Under $5,000 Bounds for sShooting His Nurse. Meriden, March 27.—George J. Pin- tor of Waterbury, who while a tient at Undercliff Sanitarium, shot 1 nurse, Miss Josephine Flanagan and then attempted suicide with his 22 caliber revolver, lice court today on a charge of as- sault with intent to commit murder, The shooting occurred on March 15. Pintor pleaded not guilty and declarel that because of his tubercular con- dition he did mot know what he was doing. Probable cause was found and he was bound over to the superior court for trial, his bonds being fixed at $5,000. from the hospital ambulance as he lwas in a very weak condition. Tt is planned to take him to the New Ha- ven jailfsome time today, where he will be placed in the sick ward. Miss Flanagapn, although quite weak, was in court and testified that when Heights After several Weeks of ifard Fight- ing-—Aviators of Genmans and Al- . o she carried his breakfast into the lics Furl Bombs on Calias, Dun- | 0,0 4y morning of the fifteenth, Pintor grew angry because the door Strassburg—Turkish Forts Ll ond, e 2 was left apen and asserted that she was in a plot to get rid of him. He then began firing at her. A number of depositions were read from patients at the sanitarium, who were unable to be in court, telling nf Pintor’s actions and his statements | that certain persons would leave thc! world when he did. MRS, DAVEY PASSES AWAY IN"HER DAUGHTER'S ARMS Aged Resident Succumbs to Sudden Stroke of Apo- plexy Early Today. at“Dardanus Destroyed. Decisive action by Italy is re- garded in Rome as imminent. A brief despatch from that city today states that the Italian government has taken Hevery possible measure preparatory to beginning war on the side of the milies. L 1t is also said in Rome that there ‘ is observable a tendency on the part of Bn‘gari:\ to adopt a policy favor- ,able to-the allies and that the govern- ~ ment hopes to act in conjunction with Italy and Rumania. The attitude of Bulgaria has been in doubt on ac-!} count of her hostility the other Balkan nations, with the excep- tion of Turkey, which grew out of the second Balkan war. Prince Favors Ncutrality. Prince George of Greece is leaving Italy for Athens’to support the policy | { | i toward | Sudden death removed from the community this morning, Mrs. Eliza- beth Davey one of the oldest and most H > . of his brother, King Constantine, for | respected old ladies ir New Britain. | ¥ the continued neutrality of his na- | She made her home with her daugh- i i foosi i ter, Mrs. Kate Jenkin of No. 8 Kelsey: tion, in opposition to the faction | _ No. 8, e © which favors intervention on the | Street,.and suffered a shock early this | Ui, gide of the alles. morning. Her daughter rushed to her | Despatches reaching Paris, from asistance but the old lady died in her daughter’s arms before she could be carried to her bed. The funeral will be held Monday afternoon at 3 o’clocik | from her late home, Rev. Dr. G. W. ¢, Hill officiating. Tnterment will be in | Fairview cemetery. ‘When Mrs. Dav, who was vears old on February 17, retired lust | night she was in her usual robust health. Between 4 and 6 o’clock this morning Mrs. Jenkin was aroused by hearing ‘her mother call for a glass of water. She complained of feeligg | queer -and arose from her bed and went to the bathroom. She grew sud- denly worse and, remarking that her head pained terribly, she fell back- wards into her daughtgr’s arms. Mrs. Jenkin carried her mother to her bed chamber but she died in her arms | before she could get her intor the bed. | Medical L‘cammer Dr. T. G. Wright was summoned and pronounced death due to apoplexy. Mrs. Davey was borin in Cornwall, ‘Athens states that the Turkish forts %t Dardanus and Kilid Bahr on the Dardanelles, have been destroyed and that batteries which attacked mine sweepers have -been silenced by two battleships of the alkk 5 French warshlips are said to * have taken transports to the Gulf of Smy- rna, on the coast of Asia Minor. Skirmish in Egyp!. Notwithstanding the reported suc- cesses of the British in repelling the Turkish invaders of Egypt, the Turks have not been expelled from the country. An ‘official statement from Cairo says that a skirmish occurred on Tuesday with small losses on both sides. Reports contlnuc to come in of | important. Russian successes in the Carpathians. Swiss newspapers pub- lish despatches to the effect that the Russians have defeated the Austrians ninety in several engagements along . the front from Bukowina to western Gal- | England on February 17, 1825. She icia. was married in the old country and Russian Attempt. Defeated. her husband died there: Fifty-five war office announces | YIS ago she came to New Britain MThe German titat a Russian attempt to attack Til- sit, Bast Prussia, as was done to Mem- recent dash across the border to Mem- el, has been defeated. It is said also that several efforts of the Russian forces in northern Poland to advance resulted in failures. Unofficial ad- vices from Berlin are to the effect tRat the last of the Russian forces which invaded the northern part of East Prussia have been expelled. Hartmans—Weilerkopf, a height in the Vosges for possession of which the French and Germans have been fighting for several weeks, has been and with the exception of a few years during ‘which she lived in the west, she has always made her home here. In her younger days she was a weil known nurse here and was employed by all of the first families of the ecity. She was a close friend of the Sloper's and William Sloper, who was nursed | by her when a baby, thought a great deal of her. She was also a friend of Medical Examiner Wright and nursed his wife-many years ago. She was | one of the oldest member: of the South Congregational church. She is sur d by one son and one fvon by the French. An officialian- | Sanetic™ Willlam Davey, Mrs. Kato fpuncement to this effect from Paris | Jrilaren. Mes. Gooren oo x grand. is confirmed by the German war of- | Chiarem, Mrs. George Prest, Ernest e, Jenkin, Mildred Jenkin, Mrs R e I | Albert Sent, of Youngstown, Oni Aviators of Germany and the allies Sl Ciparech (1R, threw bombs yesterday on several ?;l::,'e\}\mi]\;lr:;‘o:“e‘?gld .ndd }\.]”m o towns at widel separated points along | yiies treinn prest neg Srondchildren, | flie, wostern fropt dncluding Btrags | 0 o oron Prest and Normian Seat, also survive burg, capital of Alsace-Lorraine, and S Calais, on the English Channel. So far as is disclosed, no seriotis damage was done. A French aviator was FAL LS OFF COAL CAR. kst sown by 5 * | Mike Koloza of 90 ' Winter Vgl ¥ the Germans near | glighqly Injured at' Depot This Mornig Ttaly Ready for W: Mike Koloza, « oy living at No. 90 ! oo i s " | Winter street, was slightly injured at Paris, March 27, § a lh M., Via | the depot this morning when he fell e S R HORS I a. Mm.—Every | off from a coal car from which ne wus asure possible has been taken by | picking up coal. Patrick Rosoff, who the Italian government preparatory |is employed by the -Adams Express to the beginning of hostilities by Italy on the side of the allies. * German Official Report, Berlin, March by Wireless to N. Y.—The German general today gave out a report on the of the fighting, which reads as follows: ¥In the Vosges the French yester- day evening occupied the top of Hart- :manns-Weilerkopf, on the edge of a company, saw the boy lying beside the tracks and asked him what the trouble was. The boy said he had fallen from the car and was unable to walk. Mr. Rosoff carried him over to the police station where Sergeant Herting examined the boy. His iimbs were un- injured, but his head was consider ably bruised from the fall. He was taken to his home in the patrol ambu- 27, was arraigned in po- | | Pintor had to be carried into court | Street, | | | 1A | transit and | of the board, | until the safety of the American mission- aries in the district as it had been Lefore. He thought thar Mr., Allen, ! the American missionary beaten by pillaging Kurds who stormed the American mission, had probably stood guard at the gate o the mission | DIES WHILE TELLING | | 1 ener, who formerly lived in Kensington | died suddenly at his home shortly af- | ter o’clock this afternoon. He was sitting in his parlor, joking and laughing with his wife when he suf- fered an attack of heart disease and TURKEY 10° PROTECT MOB-RIDDEN PERSIA ' Grand V.zier Orders Sebordinates to| ‘Hury Religf to Innabitants. U. S. STATE DEPARTMENT LEARNS Turkish Head Expresses Belief That Reports of Outrages in Vicinity of Urumiah Were Inaccurate—Gen- eral Massacre Impended. 7.—The grand instruc- York, March vizier of Turkey has tions to his subordinates that all in- ‘habitants of the mob-ridden section of Persia, including the thousands of Christians in the vicinity of Urumiah, must be protected, according to' ad- vices received from the state depart- ment today by the Prcsbyterian Board | of Foreign Missions. Latest reports from Urumiah, made public yesterday, announced that the large village of Gulpashan had been destroyed, its men shot and women | outraged, and that sixty-five refugees { had been taken from the French and Ametican mission compounds and hanged in the French Mission yard. massacre impended, according to this message, which was delayed inI several days old when New issued made public. Signed By Lansing. The communication from state de- partment announcing that the grand vizier had exten@ed protection to the endangered men and women in the vicinity of Urumiah was signed by Robert Lansing, counselor to the state department, and was Written under date ,of yesterday. | “Mr. Lansing advises us,” said Gecrge T. Scott, assistant secretary “that Ambassador Mor- genthau at Constantinople had com- municated to the grand vizler the re- quest of the state department for pro- tection of Americans in the vicinity of Urmiah, The grand vizier, the letter | 's, expressed the belief that the Te- ports of outrages there were in- accurate and told Mr. Morgenthau that he would immediately instruct his subordinates to protect all inhabi- ants of the section, imciuding, of course, the Christians. . Delayed in Tr “Mr. Morgenthau's cablegram, the letter said, was dated March 24 but did not reach the state department | vesterday, March hu\\n' leen delayed in transit ror two d Mr. Scott added that the poard was 1ot so apprehensive at present as to | sa; it. and had received the rough treatment accorded him because he resisted the mob, who were intent upon reaching wome of the native refugees inside. To Hurry Relief. Washington, March —Efforts to have adequate measures 1aken for the sufety of American missionaries and refugees near Urumiah, Persia, were continued today by the state depart- ment. Turkey had Informed the | United States that reliet would be hurried to the scene, wneie a Kurd uprising threatened a general Chris- tian massacre, but the number of troops to be sent and other details of the proposed expedition were not yet known. The state department's renewed éfferts were made after the Presby- terian board of foreign missions at New York received alarming reports of atrocities at Gulpashan, Persia, a few miles from Urumiah. It was de-~ clareqd sixty men had been taken from the French mission and five from the American mission compound and hanged. JOKES TO HIS WIFE Henry M. Cowles of Southington, ¥dr. mer Kensington Man, Succumbs to Heart Discase. Henry M. Cowles, a well knawn Southington farmer and market gard- died before medical aid could be Sum moned. Apparently he was in the best of health this morning and was about the Southington center attend- ing to busin duties. Mr. Cowles was about eighty-four vears old and is survived by his wife, who was Mrs. Emma Supliss;’ two sons, Henry C., a professor in the Chi- !‘lglgh;}lheld ?;reGel;man t;z:;:)& lance. cago university, and Dwight W., of 3 gyer SCAITen ed. o ol S8 Waterbury; a brother William L. . “French aviators yesterday threw | GF°N: VON KUSMANEK PRISONER. | Cowles Dl HTe hok o A Bombs at Bapaume and Strassburg London, March 27, 12:27 p. m.— |iously ill in Waukeegan, 1ll, and a without doing any military damage. The Reuter Telegram company has | nephew, Sidney M. Cowles of Kensing- Bapaume eleven Frenchmen were received a despatch from its cor- | ton. hfid and twenty-two respondent at Kiev, Russia, saying For more than thirty vears, Mr. unded. that Gen. Von Kusmanek, the Aus-|Cowles was a deacon of the Kensing- “a French aviator was compelled | trian officer who commanded the |ton Congregational church. At the ¢ome to the ground at a point fortress at Przemysl, has arrived|time of his death he was a promi- e there. prisoner, and been assigned’ nent member of the Congregational (Continued on Eleventh Page.) SORUBATLOT church in Southington. .ceeded down Delawar, Steve | found that his wife had possessed her- BATTLESHIP MORENO COLLIDES WITH BARGE | Latter Sunk in Delaware River by Catastrophe—Ncw Argentine Ves- * i | | | ! sel Goes Ashore Bug is Floated. Philadelphia, March 27.—The new | Argentine battleship Moreno which | sailed from here yésterday for Hamp- | a| collided last night with barge oft Newcastle, Del., thirty mil down the Delaware river from city. The barge was sunk and Moreno went ashore, where she mained fast until. 7:30 a. m., toda when she floated. The Moreno pru Bay. apparent- pected to pass ton Roads, 1y uninjured, and is e out to sea during the day. The Moreno, which draws more | water than any other battleship built | on the Delaware, anchored at Deep- | water Point yesterday, waiting for | high tides. She got under way about | sun down anl met the tug Mars, tow- | ing a string of three coal barges in ballast from Boston to Philadelphi: Bargemen declared today that the steering gear of the Moreno was working badly. ,The battleship and | the barge Enterprise collided. The | Argentine ship swung around and, despite the efforts of her pilot, went ashore on Goose Island. The Enter- prise had a hole stove in her side and slowly settled in the river until her deck was awash. The crew the barge escaped. moned from Philadelphia during the night, and had no trouble in pulling | the- Moreno off. The Moreno is one of the most powerful fighting ships afloat. She was recently turned over to the Ar- gentine Republic and with a crew of 900 officers and men, is on her w ay to Hampton Roads, where a in. her honor will be held. TLater she will return to Delaware Bay, where she will take on additional coal and |95 o then steam for South America. EPIDEMIC OF WHOOPING COUGH IN THE WEST END Thirty-Four Cases Found, perintendent of health. The belief that all children must have whooping cough sooner or later and that it is not a fatal disease is ascribed by Dr. Reeks to the ignorant carelessness shown by the mothers. Wiooping cough is just as dangerous as many other diseases which are regarded with fear, the death rate being three or four out of every 100 cases. “Mothers should remember that a child dead from whooping cough ss just as dead it would be from smallpox,” Dr. Recks said. “We do not guarantine cases of whooping cough, but we do ir that the chila having it does associate with well ch dren. It may go outowdors, but not un- less accompanied by a,parent.” FINDS HOM BROKEN Spenek, Month’s Absence, Gets opP. Coming Home After Terrible Shock. after Coming home today an ab- | sence of a month, Steve Spenek, of 59 | Broad strect, received a terrible ghoc: | wien he found that during his absence his wife had sold off furniture. Steve $340, which Wi all his household | had also saved in tie bank. up He self of this, too. Investigation showed that the banik book was made out in both of their names, so the irate husband will hava | to stand his loss with as much forti- tude as possible. GOVERNMENT RESTS CASE. Indianapolis, Ind., March government rested its c Terra Haute election s after 10 o'clock today. ready with witnesses to side of the case, 21. in U\(‘ Jefens; begi . 1 WEATHER. é Hartford, March 27.— tonight, Sunday fair with ing temperature, B T NS g | TEMPORARILY HALT of | Tugs were sum- | reception | ‘RAISING OF F-4 .. | ‘ Minister Press Comldy paign Agal Madrid, March m.—Marquis de | While Cahs) Atlaclwd 1o Sub- mirine Are Tested. 1 27 I 2%, Tem out § a, minister, has come that portion of the Span which iz conducting . POSSIBILTY OF SAVAG MEN i i | ? | These newspapers, the for@ —_—— ister declares, are willing to @ Imprisoned in Submerged Vessel De- facts, a cour hich in time is to destroy the ami e relation clares Captain of Naval Yard— isting between the two countries. i the desire of the Spanish gow Army Hospital Ready to Receive ment.” the marqguis “to put K end to the ridiculous stories whie Crew. present Spain ¢ nourishing a hosti Honolulu, Merch “B7-0he fraistig | 2ttitude and ambitious Intentions eos e ward her sister nations of the United States submarine F-4, | Afier the cabiiet meeting yesterday | lost in the deep water outside Hono- | Premier Dato declared that the call | S8 lulu harbor since early Thursday, has | Of 20,000 men to the colors was mere- | he been held up temporarily, while the | ¥ the carrying out of establiched re- | fil§ , ) quirements. These men will remain | g cables attached to the submerged | ynder the flag only three months, a ¢ craft are tested, sufficient time for their military in- | 12 Captain Duffy says he believes there | Struction of. 18 & possibility of saving Yhe lives of | , Iie denied that these steps of mill 3y ' . 4 tary preparation were the resuit of | o jthe men imprisoned in the submar-| gigcord with any nation whateve i ine. ! “Spain,” the premier said, “will [ De} | The dredger California, despatched | continue to guard a most absolutc conl from the Pearl Harbor Naval Station | Meutrality. She will maintain most | o cordial relations with all other mna- | oo in response to a radiogram, reached | tiong but in case of a possible mobili- zation these 30,000 men will be called in place of the regular reserves.” but did not He- The mother the scene at midnight, the 1 [ will work work immediately. with the Alert, Flotilla. gin dredger | CUPID CAPTURES SISTERS ‘ e FROM PLAINVILLE fAMIlY | dredger sunk into the water and the { m.k [ chains tightened. The water then One, Miss Pearl-Coons, Be- | rirtoe ship | TR 1 prop the submari | on!l of e i To Use Pontoon System. | t ke Hified 0 early ; The pontoon system probably will be | used to raise the I"-4. The chains will | I be passed under the bow and stern of | Will be pumped out of the dredger, ob faizerlin, f causing her to rise higher in the wa- | came Bride of H, W. Smith | it in s at b thus providing lifting power to deal Whde wi formel the | hospital is in ter, raise the submarine. 'lhv army department This Afterneon. | pant on of diness to receive the men of the 1"und, | of 1 when the submarine is raised. | Dan Cupid, the winged God of Love | the plihd Ok The bright moonlight facilitated work ‘ who shoots little heart tipped darts | Fast Hed, hol of the relief craft during the night. mort, ne of has been hunting ith such accuracy, i‘ the tréflon wa When late yesterday the atter pt to | Most of Them in Lincoln |tow the submarine to shallow wates | Plainville of Jate and has made | was toke the was abondoning, the naval - tender |tWo heart stealing ralds in the fam- | fore A Street School. | Alert was despatched to the scéne and |ily of W, E. Coons. This afternoon | The $ind in B el i bar { it was decided to raise the damaged | Miss Pearl Elizabeth Coons, the young- uated oblledge craft by means of the crane witn | 3 s0 muchk to 4 Aroused by an epidemic of whoop- | which the tender is equipped. E ighter,: became the , bride of | goubt SN I i . REBTRR i Howard Welton Smith of this city, and | g y up ing cough in the western section of | Lifty Fathoms of Water. ki : sttt ol | """""” i a the city, Dr;, T. B. Regks; superintend- | E | on Tuesday next her sister, Miss Hat- | tim h ent of health, is making an mvestisa: | ol Are? STiAblished that -4 lay un- |tie Coons, .will become Mrs. Charley *mall = - Wt B y fa s of water. | Francis. sible, anll uj tion to learn why the cases were not | To Detter carry out the plans OWing to an fliness fn the bride's | He conldy naul reported to his office and is consider- | rescue a radiogram was sent to Pearl | family the wedding of Mr. Smith and | PrOPerty @procd ably worked up about the situation. “'v’ "'x” aval Station in response to Miss Coons this afternoon was a quiet | '8 WorkgRoISey With the exception of two cases j;m‘”[‘mb““ H'w):m—m,um steamer Claud- | affair and was performed at the Firsi G G O Wasl b ortad o T Recision e n‘\g e dredger California, left | Congregational church parsonage, the Learningat a ¥ { ks, o0 for the scene of operations carrying | nuptial knot being tled by the Re belonged tarrie turned his talents to the . detective 'chains and other supplies needed for | Henry W. Majer. The bride was at. | to find heri afe field yesterday and learned of the the m?al ofrort._ The vessels arrived |tired In a traveling gown and was New Britalsa M others. Most of the cases are of bovs shortll; before midnight and found the |attended by her sister The best ma daoys in a 8h for and girls in the Lincoln street school. \-nlvmerg‘fq o e e o i s II’T'M o A farmart et ) RS T S ¢ s craft. scheol class mate of the groom. Others | ford papér an Dr. Reeks said today that the disease The Alert is anchored in 160 feet | who were present at ';].”: ‘”-n vlvr'jm‘ nuun‘v'ul ”nfi‘ h"l:, is spreading rapidly through the | of Wwater, five hundred feet from the | Were Mr, and Mrs. Coons and Mr. and | cated her SHartf] neighborhood. resting place of the submarine and 1t | Mre. Howard Corbin, came down De Most of these . the health su- |iS Planned to draw the hull to the llowing the marriage ceremony | sell him therired perintendent believes, are due to care- | Alert’s anchorage, where divers may ;mp bride and groom and their at-|the same W dra lessness on the part of mothers. '1n | OPerate. | tendants left by antomobile for Hart- | cal eity clerMice. only a few cases is a physician called | Sudden Rise in Ocean, | fard where a wedding dinner was |only transfed { in for whooping cough and thus the: ) | enjoyed at the Hotel Bond Mr, & ertain des ¥ |, wom sovmutifits uud sk a a el Bond. r. and | certain dese ' are not reported escrip- | nrg § r e a ome oir Jed i e hol weported to the health office. | tions of the ocean bottom over whic n | e TN b A Hibme o el Lhei IS TR ut it is a requirement of law that the | the vessel must be drawn the rescu | friends at their new home at No.!the right tol off] cases should be reported to the child | taisiibth of & sudien: Hivs-in t )“ 1ers | 145 Winthrop street after May 7. The | west half, wh w school teacher and she in turn reports | floor fiSarly firty Yoot };i 5. _“‘t ocean | young couple have received numer. the transfer Th to the principal, who informs the su- g his ridge | gus gifts from their many friends | limited to tweears, forms the lip of a submarine crater in | | which F-4 fs believed- to lie at a - ;\,h \1.111111 ,H- a well known loc further that pid AeDihior 450 fagt. | young man, having made his home at | right to crosmy No. i Wesgt Main street He was | as far as to £ hi Word Anxiously Awaited. | a gradaute of the New Britain High | crossway beinlim Washington, March 27.—Every h“”r;whnul with the (',I"\‘\ of 1911 and in s I8 customs, M that passes without favorable . werq | LIS connection it migh: be noted | deed to the to) l from Honolulu lowers the hope that | (13t he is the first male member of | it recorded, theby any of the men in the sunken eoatithat class which had enrolled in its | tercsts marine -4 may be alive. While there | 1o 1o ortY-tWo of the masculine gex Berii S is always the possibility of lite, naval | e ones almaiy oo O matriman Thé bricknijet authorities are agreed that it will be | girls who avers | three Of the fifty lsaw mill, on SKhE little short of miraculous it any of the | yeren ~1 il et (oo .hw," fo- PR Thasst S F-i's crew should survive their fear- |asked the magic question ok It e ful ordeal. Jasiced the masic hmaspn. . dh. SR ) i i ecretary Danlels and his aides anx- | p. Dend v s s LU 1 1 INOS r husband having been killed in | on what he sbiie fously await some word from Rear Ad- |4 fatal automobile accident last s L 16 e miral Moore or the commander of the | mer. - Mr. Smith is a prominent u;n-“‘ g e submarine flotilla, upon which they | ber of the First Congregational ,”:”“ hs ‘Visited s ShyTE might base some hope, but as the day | is - ation: ch, | yesterday andéxj s lay {is ‘an officer of New Britain couhcil. | Agked this manin went «on and none came they sadly (0. U. A. M., and is employed as bhok n ¥ rane admitted that the first submarine boat | keeper at the Andrews, Swift oo | oo et oo v | accident in the United States navy|pany. His bride tormerly I | 0 co that hedie { probably had taken a place among the | this city and was employed 3 tne | e Terersary § OB worst in the world. { office of the Vulean Iron Works . s L & jokingly that f he . 2 G = P e 3 : The second wedding in the yons | get short of Food CONFIRMATION TOMORROW. | family will be solemnized nest -origmreh tre W - { day when Charles Francis o 3 : Wy fr i Class.of Six to Be Confirmed at Eng:| ington, slaims Miss'HTattie ab his PR b slgtty cpame Lutheran Church, | The wedding will take place in Bain- | @ Mest lari was fof A class in catecumerns, of which | \‘:”' = ]“hrfll(;'”' is Is a newsfaper | elephonc fis afte Arthur Clausen, Bleanor Olson, Tiens. | ploved ih the office of the Bristolhien. | 1% he had nothing Josephson, Jennie Norden, Hilma | \pacturing compans ristolpan- | matter, buf it is saf Quistberg and Mrs. Manthey are mem- | - P dict that 1 will lool bers, will be confirmed at the morning | nett, who inow. m service of the FEnglish Lutheran| WEBELS ATTACKING DURAZ0, | Granby, amd cause I church of the Reformation, which Rome, March 26, 11:25 p. nf via | 8020 Héholdgith commences at 10:45 o’clock tomorrow | Paris, March 8:10 & m.gsixey | 204 can, ¥ is oy in Junior O. U. A. M. hall. The pasios | thousand Albanian rebels are sfa 1o | 100K to her for re | Rev. £ Schaefer will have charge of | be engaged in the assault “xm! Du- | the exerci razzo, designed to force the ’.W, THREE GERMA Services will he beld at the O, 7. A, | ment of Essad Pasha, the Tirkiss ;. | M. hall, Good Friday morning at 10.45 | Provisional president. The borhard- ;“,(1. o With Iron (] o'clock. The pastor will dejiver u . Ment of the port continues an| sey. Baltie sermon. | eral persons are said to have bec ol % — wounded, The residence of ml Stockholm, Swede LIVERPOOL DOCKERS AT WORK. | oot} fire el ol ; st London, March 27, 1:53 p. m.—TRe- | AN b [[itic of thres (HEN SDC ing g g 3 | Bavaria, the Germa sponding Lo appeals mude by War STATE POLICE WERE, iagubeny, ail laiden Secretary Kitchen the earl of Derby State Policemen Dridgeman and | announced today in and the leaders offgheir unions, the | Fischer were in town today on { case, § Social Demokraten Liverpool docke nanimously re. | The management of the Berlin|Brick] The Bavaria went sumed work toda The men at (company called them in to see § thew | With her entire Birkenhead, howey till' remain out | could ind out who stole the $40) pelr- | her sinking is not and are tying up work on several bis [ ing from the factory and it is thught | talls of the destrue ships. fthat is why they arc here | vessels arc given,

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