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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUARY g, 1916. (Mail Orders Promptly Filled) ("Phone Number, Charter 5200) HUNDREDS OF PLEASED PURCHASERS SELECTING GOODS HERE AT COST ARE YOU looking to your best interes occasion, lasting but very soon you will m its benefis want at cost price, is it not worth while to get a stir on to make the savi Keep watch of our di that are possible at this time? Hats For Children At our Boys’ Dept. there are HATS WITH INSIDE BANDS, just right for thii weather. Colors are blue, grey, brown, chinchilla plaid effects, and brown, grey, and een plush. Regular 50c Hats with choice of selection BETTER GRADE broken lots, Velour Plush, values up to derful worth at sale each. WINTER CAPS, the inside band kind, regular 50c, 75c, 89c values, at this sale for 42c¢ and 65c. ANGORA CAPS, the regular 50c grade for 42¢ each. ANGORA TAMS in new colorings, 98c kind, 79c. ANGORA HATS, regular 48c and 58c grades for 42c¢ and c each. The kind that pulls down over the face as well as the ears. VERY, VERY SPECIAL. We have 15 Russian Coats, 3 and 6 years, and 8 Mackinaws, 6 and 7 years, regular $5.00 values, $3.75 each. HATS, or Beaver $3.00. Won- price, $1.00 ATTENDING THIS JANUARY s unless you are. limited time, and SALE ? You This is a but unless you look to Just think of it, getting are not once a year our necds what you store news. Some Good Gloves ‘Women's WASHABLE DOESKIN GLOVES, one-clasp style with prix seams. White ones, regular $1.00 grade, priced at pair. $1.50 quality, prcied $1.35 pair. WOMEN'S MOCHA one-clasp and silk lined grey shades, regular $1. $1.85 pair. ONE-CLASP MOCHA GLOVES for women, prix seams, spear point backs, $1.50 kind, in grey, specially priced at $1.35 pair. SQUIRREL LINED GLOVES of high grade, with choice of tan and grey. Regular $4.50 kind, $4.00. The $6.00 quality for $5.00 pair. GLOVES, tan and 0 values, SILK PETTICOATS At Cost, and some less than Cost. Taffeta or Messaline Petticoais, $2.50 value, $1.49 each. Taffeta Petticoats, worth $3.98, selling for $2.49 each. Plaid Petticoats, silk ones of regular $3.98 value, for $2.98 each. Taffeta Silk Petticoats, worth $4.50, for $3.49 each. Others of $5.00 to $6.00 kinds, $4.49 each. HavING AN ‘AU'N)MOBILE DELIVERY I"OR NEW BRITAIN YOU OAN DEPEND ON PROMPTLY RE- ORTVING John Emerson. cemetery, Berlin News JLROAD BRIDGE Paljfion Seat a Year Ago Was | Wooastoon ot key. Woodstock | Nott, a | Meriden. ent | bers, and Both Roland Evaded, Is Allegation FUNERAL OF MRS. GRAHAM Hear | | battle had | nothing but bones left of three fiftecn | pound turkeys. these eral | regret | The onsl Boy Scouts Eat Turkey and §}lort Talks—Carlisle Kron Appoint« eq Professor at Virginia Academy— | ©7) 5 Church News and Brief Items. Just one year ago yesterday First Selectman Gibney sent a letter to the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad company asking that pany to do something regarding the conditions under the Kensington rail- 'road bridge. Water and oil from the passing trains fall many passersby have clothes ruined. | interesting. com- | answered work. thur on the path and Carlisle Mrs. the As a remedy to the trouble, Mr. Gib- ney suggested that the company have a drip pan constructed under the gir- ders, which would have a pipe at one of *end, leading to the sewer and thus do away with the frequent baths the citi- | Mr. Kr vas zens get. It was felt the cost of such an improvement would be slight and the benefits would be great. The town has spent considerable money to improve the road there, building a new concrete roadway about eighteen months ago. Before that was laid it would take several _hours for the water to drain off the street, but now thanks to the con- struction of the drainage pipe, the street is kept in a presentable condi- tion, Mr. Gibney received an evasive gnswer from the railroad company and nothing has been done about the matter. This morning a traveling man, who refused to divulge his name, had the misfortune to be walking un- der the bridge as the 9:30 train went by. He pur d a new hat yester- day and while walking under the bridge felt something strike the cen- ter of his hat. Opon removing his headgear he found a black oil spot on the crown. At first the man was very ndignant but after awnile laughed | “3d said he would keep out from un- der the New York, New Haven and tartford after that. There have been everal similar complaints and it is probable a strong protest sent the “Yellow Building” i few days transferred to ed L During his careers he high was He will at the academy. | friends him in According to Jone: visit the with snow to the of the one below fourteen degrees there is culty in plows to from Fairhaven to to twelve hours Mprs, Sarah J. M. Graham. The funeral of Mrs. Sarah J. ©raham was held from her home in Kensington this afternoon at 2 o'clock and was attended by a large number | yioes will of relatives and friends: Rev. Carle- | 5 m ana 7 ton Hazen, pastor of the Kensington Congregational church. of which the deceased was the oldest member, hav- ing joined in 1857. conducted the ser- vices and he also read the committal service at the gr: The pall bear- ¢rs were Dwight Cowles of Southing- ton, Seward and Sidney Cowles, «harles I". Lewis and Thomas Rev. E, p. In the evening the wit ai Working; ward Upson and | M the 1ssion will Pre Burial Kensington, Boy Scouts’ Suppe: Berlin Troop, No. 1 America, held a supper in the Berlin Congregational church last night, the piece de resistance of which was tur- There were thirty-seven ent, consisting of thirty-one members and invited guests. The latter were A. Fiske, B. W. Mildrum, Commissioner of Meriden member of Troop No. 5 The entire troop was pres- | with the exception Turner Everett Turner of boys were confined v attacks of grip and there was gen- because ught on the birds began at 6:30 o'clock and when the smoke of cleared away of the supper short addresses ) were made by the invited guests on | the work of the Boy Scouts. | talk of Mr. Woodstock was especially He has been | sioner for five years and g:ve detail | of his experience in -the movement. | At the conclusion of his questions concerning During the evening the ten- derfoot oath was administ-red to Ar- Leifield of East Berlin and the | second class oath to Samuel Wilcox Appointed Professor. G. Kron, George Kron, Brown farm been appointed to the professor English and academy, born sraduated from High school in the class of 1910. | following year he studied college, Ashland, Wisco Midalebur Vermont, from which he was st June with the degree of A. B. school prominent letics, being a member cf the basket ball team st New Britain and playing Tasketball and football at Midadlebur have charge son former on Lower pepular among his cla predict a his chosen bright line Returns Home, reports who has just returned aft friends in storm of three in this town could not “hold a candle” in that state, country is inter thermometer registering about s nearly all inches of snow the trolley companies have great diffi- maintaining their schedules. Mr. Jones says it required three snow clear the track steam trains run anywhere from four late and was glad to arrive home to find most of the snow gone. Kensington Methodist Church. M. Pickop, be held m. holy communion will be administered. { b the closing exercises tomorrow at 10:45 In of the “week of prayer Congregationalists j Methodi er for Cowles, S, M. Cowles and ALL DRY GOODS PURCHASED OF US. Haurtford Theological seminary, will speak. A hearty invitation is extended to everybody Interested. Berlin Congregational Church. Rev. S. A, Fiske, pastor. Morning wership at 10:45 a. m. Sermon the pastor on “The House of Praye: Sunday school will convent at noon. The Junior Christian Endeavor soclety will meet at 3 o'clock. The Senior tian Endeavor society will meet 30 o’clock. The subject for dis- sion will be: “Why Join the Church ?” St. Paul’s R. C. Church. Rev- J. C. Brennan, celebrated church, at St, Paul's church, 10 o’clock. iensington Congregational Church. Rev. Carleton Hazen, pastor. Morn- ing worship at 10:45 a. m. The pas- tor will speak on “The Will of the Lord.”” Sunday school .will meet at noon. The evening service will be held at the Methodlist church and will be the final exercises of the union meetings, which have been conducted during the week. Briefs. The annual meeting of the Kensing- ton Congregational church will be held next Thursday afternoon at 5 | o'clock. After the business meeting, | supper will be served and there will be a roll call. wa 1 | . Boy Scouts of | pres- Major Frank Ao A, A. K. Richar1 of aud Mass Sacred at o pastor. the Berlin, of two of E: Lower mem- Berlin Lane. th will be at Heart st o'elod Ken- sington, 1d their absence there was The comm ddress he the Mrs. Henry Brown of the Turnpike is ill at her home with pneumonia. The repairs on the chimneys of the Berlin Congregational church were | completed today and everything is in | readiness for tomorrow’s services. Milton Gaines of East Berlin is at- tending the ice carnival at Saranac Lale Mrs. Martin Crowley of Norwalk was the guest of friends in Kensing- ton yesterday, umes C. Lincoln and son, Alden, are attending the automobile show in | New York. Mrs. Harry Taylor of Kensington at- | tended the funeral of Mrs. John Mans- {fleld in New Haven today. James North is planning a trip to Florida in the near future Miss Rose Fitzsimons has resigned interlocutor of the Kensington l.adies’ Minstrel troupe and has been :eeded by Miss Norah O'Brien. iffragan Bishop Acheson will ad- minister confirmation at St. Gabriel's church, tomorrow after- noon at 3 o’cloc St. Paul's T. A. and B. society fair ommittee will meet tomorrow morn- ing after mass in the Paris hall, of Mr. and residents Lanec histcry at the Warrenton, Va. in New Britaia New Britair The at Ashland <in, and then colleg graduat- and in college ath- of the athletics Kron was very mates and hi: future . of work. as from E Vit ago Castleton, weeks That part cold, the xteen time. and sely MEXICAN COMMERCE, the Oflices Created in Chihuahua to Fix Prices on Goods, El Paso, Tex., Jan. $.—"Offices for the regulation of commerce” have seen created in the principal cities of Chihuahua State by decree which ar- arily requires that Carranza cur- be accepted at the same value ver coin, The heads are on the line Rutland. The Mr. Jones pastor. of the different offices to meet every ten days and fix es. Wholesale grocers are restricted to profit of ten to fifteen per cent.; re- tailers to twenty to twenty-five; dry vods dealers, wholesale twenty to twenty-five; retail thirty to thirty- {ve per cent.; hardware, wholesale twenty to twenty-five, retail thirty to thirty-five, | the morning held, forces for and [2d- and will be ining The topic ‘Praying Power.” of Mr student of the son GOURT SEVERE WITH Pialm}rflrl(_’,‘ News | e | FREIGHT HANDLER Transfer Station Employe Fined $32 and Given Thirty Days GRAND JUROR MAKES ARREST Samuel Dennison Before Justice E. P. Prior—Schools to Cost About $14,- 000 for Year—Service for Masons— Hens Make Record, Imposing a severe penalty to demonstrate to a rowdy element in the ! gang of freight handlers brought | Rere to work at the transfer station | that the authorities will not tolerate | abuse of the privileges given to | sients who come to Plainville, ice E. P. Prior last evening fined .muel Dennison of New York $32 and costs and sent him to jail for | thirty day The accused was out of funds and he was taken to the Hart- tord jail where he will spend the next -ce months. Since the arrival of nearly one hun- dred ‘“rustabouts” at the freight vard he police have experienced some Lou\no with an element which seems inclined to cause trouble at every op- portunit Some of the gang hail from New York and are rather rough looking characters. Apparently they regard Plainville a “tank town and they act as though the laws are to be ignored during their s here. | One of their number must realize their error. He was arraigned in court last night on the charge of | drunkenness and indecent exposure and he left the chamber a much meeker individual. Dennison was ar- rested vesterday on Central Square. His actions caused Grand Juror M. A. Norton to take him in tow, subse- quently turning him over to Constable Ccrnelius Downing. Justice Prior fined him $7 and costs for intoxica- tlon and an additional $25 and thirty days in jail for indecent exposure. The punishment meted out to the | accused is expected to have a salutary effect on his associates. It should serve to make them realize that the | town does not propose to permit them | to ride roughshod over the laws and that during their stay here they must deport themselves as gentlemen. Service for Masons. lodge, A. F. and A. M. accepted an invitation to attend the evening service in the Church of Our Saviour Sunday. The sermon will be given at 7. o’clock by the rector, Rev. R. H. Burton, who is chaplain of the local lodge and associate chaplain of the grand lodge of Connecticut, | serving for this Masonic district. ons in other towns in this locality Fave been invited to be present at the | service tomorrow night. The service, | however, is not for Masons only and the public will be weleomed. The morning vice will be 10:4 Sunday school beginning at o'clock. at | 12 “We Love Our Teacher-"” The following self explanatory com- munication was received by the Herald today: “Plainville, Conn., Jan. Tth, 19186. “The New Britain Herald: “Gentlemen: Following is an ar- ticle I would like to have appear in Plainville News Item: “There is a great need of a child wellfare league in Plainville, Conn. There is not a single thing for a boy or &1 to do in Plainville except to roam the streets evenings and then they are apt to get into bad company as all the rum holes are right in the center of the village you can plainly see what scelety is like for young boys and | girls to mingle with . “That isn't all that league will find that ing. “Our schools are under the present management, simply rotten. The board are of the old reactionary type of men, who believe that might is right and so the children are thrashed and thrashed and then thrashed some more, until the schools are nothing more than a preparitory | to the reformatory at Cheshire and | while it costs the town of Plainville | one-third of their entire income, this money is simply thrown away, be- cause the: children hate the very ground the superintendent walks on and therefore there is nothing learn- ed and nothing gained. ‘This particular situation has gent need of a wellfare league, the sake of the children and we going to work for the formation the same. “Very trurly, the Wellfare needs correct- ur- for are of A. B. Bentley” Schools to Cost $14,000. According to tI\: estimates p re- pared by the schol board, which have been forwarded to First Selectman Johnson to be incorporated in the budget which will be presented at the adjourned annual town meeting Monday night, it will cost Plainville approximately $14,000 fgor the educa- tion of the children of the town dur- ing the fiscal year. This is an in- crease of about $3,500 over last year. The town is to be deprived of $2.- 200 this year as it is no longer en- titled to any part of the state's enu- meration grant, the grand list now being over $2,000,000. The erection of a portable school house and the extra teacher the engagement of which was made necessary by the adding of a room will bring up the cost of maintenance and as a resuit the school hoard believes it will have 1o spend ahout $14,000 before August 15th, the close of the fiscal year. The selectmen estimate that they will perhaps spend a little less money than they did last year. ) The figures will be submitted to the [ they cscaped when the tax It is likely that rate now serving next year, although voters Monday night rate is decided on. the fourteen mill will be continued | some believe an extra mill should be of the payment of forcing the town added to permit the bills without further into debt. Passengers Get Scare. Passengers on the trolley car New Britain due here at 5 werc . given a bad scare over a switch near White Oak. The car was brought to a halt a few seconds after the rear end was dropped to the ground and while the passengers were frightened without injuries. A wrecker was dispatched to the scene of the accident and the truck | was pot back in position in a short | time. But one trip was missed on | account of the incident i Hens Make Record. While poultry owners are deplor- | ing the scarcity of eggs, I'rederici | Johnson of Forestville avenue is re- joicing over the high prices brought by the product of the henn , his flock of Rhode Island Reds having | niade a record during December. | Mr. Johnson has thirtyfive single | comb pullets and last month they | did a great deal of crowing, judging from his report. He collected 628 cggs during December, a record which he does not believe can be equalled in this section. At the Churches. Congregational—The pastor, Rev. F. L. Grant, will occupy the pplpit at_the morning service Sunday. Methodist—Rev. R. A. Houck, the pastor. has returned from his home in Lima, N. Y. where he spent the Christmas holidays and he will con- duct the services Sunday, both morn- ind and evening. Baptist—Preaching by the pastor, Rev. Vietor W. Ferranti will preach in Italian at 5 o’clock and the regu- lar evening service at The pastor will preach. The weekly prayer meet- ing will be held Thursday evening at 7:45. from New Teacher To Report. Miss Ellen Hubbell of Bristol, who has been engaged by the school board to succeed Miss S. Eleanor Pease as a member of the teaching force at | the local schools, will report for duty Monday. She will be assigned to the eighth grade. Miss Pease severed her connection with the force at the close of the fall term. During the past week Principal O. L. Judd has been personally in charge of the grade. Members of the hoard reported to- day that a successor to Miss E. Mil- dred Bedford, substitute teagier, who | also resigned at the close of the fall term, has not as yet been elected. The seventh grade, which Miss Bed- ford taught, was in charge of Miss Helen Dunn of Southington during the past week. Secretary Rogers report- ed today that the board will make a choice between two applicants and will probably announce its selection Monday. Brief Items. Judge George R. Byington will give a hearing in the probaté court Fri- day afternoon regarding the admis- sion of the will of Miss Charlotte Scott. In the document F. S. Neal is named as executor but he has de- clined to serve and the court will ap- point an administrator Friday. Rev. W. P. Kilcoyne will deliver a sermon before the Holy Name so- ciety of St. Mar in New Britain at tomorrow eve- ning. Rev. Thomas Rooney, who has been visiting his sisters here, has returned to Crown, Pa. William and John Cassidy and Barney Mason made a record catch in fishing through the ice at Jordan’s pond yesterday. They brought home a string of twenty-seven good sized pickerel in addition to Keventeen snapper turtles. The latter were dug out of the mud where they were hi- bernating for the winter. CAPTAIN REFUSED TO GIVE UP SHIP Heroic Efforts of Crew of Thessaloniki Gave Hope That Boat Might Reach New York. New York, Jan. 8.—The how the crew of the Greek steamer Thessaloniki, before abandoning the vessel on Jan 5, worked for ten days in from three to four feet of water in a desperate effort to leep steam in the ship’s boilers and work the pumps, was told today when Captain Goulan- dris and the crew of $9 arrived on the steamship Perugia. Capt. Goulandris said the behavior of his men was so heroic that he did not give up hope of bringing the Thessaloniki into New Ycrk until the coal supply was entir:ly exhausted on January 5. He declined to comment on statements by some of the Thessa- loniki's 177 passengers that the cap- tain had refused to send ocut wireless calls for assistance artor the steamer | had sprung several leaks. The Perugia brought twenty-seven | sack of mail removed from the Thes- saloniki. story of ZEPPELIN WRE.CKED. London, Jan. 8, 1 m.—The accidental wrecking of a Zeppelin at Namur, Belgium, ported in an Amsterdam despatch to the Exchange Telegraph Cc. Accord- ing to this information the dirigible became entangled in telegraph wires while attempting to r ake a landing. | Two members of the (1¢4 are said to have been killed. 102 p, yestcicay, is re- FROZEN BODY FOUND, Waterbury, Jan. 8.—Fatrick Mul- hall, a middle aged man, was found | dead in a lumber yard morning: nounced death due to ¢ hall evidently had gone to sleep in the | lumber yard last night and was frozen | to death while he slept. :+ e early this The medical examiner pro- csure. Mul- PARMENTER & POLSE ANIMAL FERTILIZERS FERTILE SOIL plant food does more than feed profita keeps it always fertile. is the result of wise fertilizing, not merely of sowin, any kind of fertilizer broadca t over the land. Rel ble crops, it enriches the soil and Parmenter & Polsey Animal Fertilizers are real fertilizers made out of BONE, BLOOD and MEAT—the most natural, effective and profitable of all fertilizers. Our dealer can show you how to make your soil rich and fertile, or our free booklet will tell—try them. PARMENTER & POLSEY FERTILIZER COMPANY, Boston, Mass. | PFOWERFUL 5nd PRODUCTIV AMERICAN MINISTER TO CHINA HONORED Dr. Reinsch Elected First Vice-Pre: dent of Chinese Social and Po- litical Science Association. (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) Pekin Dec. 6.—Dr Paul Reinsch, American minister to China was elected first vice president of the Chinese Social and Political Science association, which was formally or- ganized yesterday at a meeting held in the foreign office and attended chiefly by Chinese and American of- ficlals and scholars. The president of the new associa- tion is Lu Cheng-hsiang, the Chinese minister of foreign affairs. Tsao Ju- lin, vice ninister of foreign affairs, is the secretary to the new organization, and Wu Chao-chu, councillor for the foreign office and the son of Dr, Wu, the former miiister for China to the United States, was made treasurer. Among the members of the execu- tive council are Dr. W. F. Willough- by, legal adviser to the Chinese gov- ernment, who was formerly treasurer of Porto Rico, and Ronald Macleay, councillor of the British Jegation. Dr. Reinsch and Wellington Koo, the pres- | ent Chinese minister to Washington, first suggested the ssociation and | initiated the plans which resulted yes- terday in the formal organization. Dr. Y, T. Tsur and all the members of the faculty of the Tsing Hua college, which is supported chiefly through American boxer indemnity money which the American government re- funds to China, are active members. Dr. Henry C. Adams of the Univer- sity of Michigan, who Is temporarily in China reorganizing the stem of accounting for Chinese railw h isted in organizing the asso- Reinsch was the chief speaker vesterday’s meeting, and outlined the plans‘of the association, which he believes will result in much better to the Chinese government through a scientific study of law, politics, so- ciology, economics and administra- tion in China. The association will publish a magazine in which the or- iginal work of members will appear. Dr, Reinsch predicted that this maga- zine in English will do much to fam- iliarize the world with China’s inter- nal problems, and result in a general inter-change of ideas, which will be beneficial to Chinese political tems. T TO FRONT. ¥French Will Use Them to Drive From Trenches. Jan. 7—Four special trains of dogs have just been sent to different parts of the French battlefront. One train of twBity-five cars had twenty five dogs in each car—fox terriors, rat terriers, police dogs and other breeds—to be divided between dif- ferent sectors of the front and most of them employed in chasing rats out of the trenches. Attracted by the remains of the soldiers’ rations, rats invaded the advanced works, shelters and trenches, even on the first line and multiplied to such an extent that the soldlers are’incapable of exter- minating them. Dogs are now to be tried. Three special trains of dogs, carry- ing about five hundred dogs each, In a large proportion wolf hounds, but including specimens of nearly all breeds, were a gift from Canada to the French army. They are to be employed mostly in the mountanious regions, in the commissary and san- . ome of them sentinels and Rats will he trained trench dogs. as WOMEN'S PEACE PARTY. Miss Addams in Charge of Second An- nual Session. ‘Washington, Jan. 8.—The second annual convention of the Woman's Peace Party began here tcday. Miss Jane Addams, national chairman, pre- sided. Consideration of a proposed consti- tution and the election of a nominat ing committee were among the first matters “HARTFORD” MAKES LAST RIVER TRIP Connecticut Will Be Closed for Navi- gation After Today—Much Freight Carried. Hartford, Jan. 8.—The Connecticut river will be closed to navigation for the season with the sailing of the steamer Hartford from this city tfo New York at 4 o'clock this afternoon. The river is thick with broken ice and more is forming all the time. At this place j t above the steamboat land- ing the ice is five inches in thickness. Tugs have been at work for two or three days keeping the channel open | between here and Saybrook. The | steamers Hartford and Middletown | will go into dry dock for repairs and | overhauling and officials of the com- pany said today, will probably be put into service on one of the Sound lines later. The river steamers have done a tremendous busine: freight carry- ing this scason and navigation is like- to be resumed at the earliest iy possible date, | where a GOES 250 MILES FOH FIVE MINUTES CO. General Joffre Personally T Castelnan of Appointment to mander of French Armiet (Correspondence of The Assoclated Paris, Dec. 3 eneral Jo person informed General Courl Castelnau of his nomination mander of all the French operating in France and B Ile made a trip of 250 miles by} car to do it, and the interview] Just five minutes. On Friday, December cral headquarters was called telephone from Paris, Thirty o later Joffre was in his car on ¢ to L , the headquarters d group of armies then comman General de Castelnau, 125 mil tent. Arrived at L Joftre into the headquarters unannd crying: “It's don embrace| new commander of the operat France, exchanged a few WOl citation and in five minutes y back to general headq: He stopped just once on the lunch at an auberge in a small detachment of soldien at rest. They were at table jumped to their feet when Joffre” came in. “Let no one disturb himself cried the general. “All I want a little place at the end of thd between a couple of these bra lows, and some cold meat couple of eggs.” The hostess, nearly deliriou pride at serving the general-in} Jet almost frantic she hadn't prepare a ‘‘plece de resistan: because Joffre insisted upol simple fare and upon eating i bare boards like her habitual the simple “poilus.” During the lunch General chatted with the soldiers aroun: inquiring how they were situal to winter comforts, where they] from, how long they had been front and if they had been hol leave. It took him twenty min eat his cold meat and eggs, 0 the campaign records of the soldiers who brake bread witl ume his journey back td dquarters. GERMANS DRESSED CHINESE ARRES 11, t Aboard Crosd Three Discovered Siberian Train While Bridge Over Nonna River, (Correspondence of the Associated Harbin, Nov. 18.—Three G prisoners disguised as Chinese arrested on the night of NovemH on a Trans-Siberian train at Tsl two hundred miles west of Harbi The conductor saw one of thd Jooking out of a window in the ridor of one of the coaches, whil train was crossing a large bridge Nonna river. When questioned man in Chinese garb refused to The conductor pulled off the pi ger's cap and queue and discol that the man had brown hair ned his skin the color of a Chi A search through the train res in the discovery of two other pa gers similarly disguised. All o men were detained at Tsitsikar. A heavy guard has been placed all the bridges on the Trans-Sibi line. So many attempts have mude upon bridges since the begi of the war that special squads bcard all trains and e mine the sengers before a train is permitt cross a bridge, RECOVER FIVE BODIES. Total Brought up From Sunken Reaches Seven. The bodie| today sunken which Now New York, Jan. 8 five men removed the hold the partly tank steamship Aztec, on internal explosion occurred last M day, while the vessel was at & Brg lyn dock The bodies of two men were rel d on the of the exploj king a total of seven known s were of day S FOURTH OPERA/ Jan. 8.—Gen Huerta' yesterday ung went a fourth operation. His 4 dition is said to favorable. @ eral Huerta's ailment was pronoun as jaundice and gastritis, with o plications. UNDERGO! El Paso, Victoriano Tex., be