New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 29, 1916, Page 1

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HERALD BEST OF ALL 7 HERALD “ADS" M LOCAL NEWSPAPERS BETTER BUSIN iirteied Do 4 = = " 55 - ol . PRICE THREE CENTS. NEW BRITAIN CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1916 —TWELVE PAGES. ESTABLISHED 1 * TITANIC CLASH WHILE DEAD ENGINEER I | eremrsowrom oo CURTIS IN FIELD. | U. S. WILL STAND FIRM 739 OFFICERS, 17,847 MEN FOES GRIP IN BATTLE | BAMEDFORWRECK || siuiiisiine »e AGAINST QUIGLEY | AGAINST ATTACKS BEING wa areas published during the month Germa ] d RN ol 'S EN ‘t = i i lesslll "l“(’)‘:'iagsi 5:13?1“ i(::vx:zh?\:[l;kglelem Curtis Failed to Obey Automatic fifigggfig;fi%fi?m100uncilman Announced Candidacy New Qem;)an i;;te laang fiefore gr.e?(li]el(l: . y ' € | Wamings, Coroner Saps Re SRR today and Bxpects to Defeat, | Gabiet but Alleged Order to British &3 Desperate Resistance Every Inch ganding Crash ag Millond | S -omet Sovsvaver ke e | tains to Sink Submersibles is Missing. ; | New Britain’s “Boy Mayor” 2 TEUTON ONSLAUGHT C ONTINUES; S el — SUBMARINE CAMPAIGN SCHEDULED 750,000 CHARGE ON DEFENDERS | SI6NAL SYSTEM IS FOUND sertin, eb. 25, b wiretess 10 <o | HAS INFLUENTIAL BACKING TO OPEN AT MIDNIGHT TONIG ville—The speech of Forei T0 HAVE BEEN IN QRDER | ier sworor i ‘e micaitn buiia | AND TAX PAYERS' SUPPORT | | last week is replied to gth by | ! ® Germans Sweep Past Dieppe, Abau- FIFTY EUEST M L e e m,,,,o,,mal" N:)l_:!“’ (‘,"”‘:“:\;‘“G”“ FflREST BL“WN UP AS i Conference Today Althought court and Blanzee—Paris Admits | Commends (o Attention o Public | 2611, FPecial emphasis is laid on |" Announced That Ne NS Made to Arrive at Decision to Sazonoff’s Speech in Duma — | Cabinet Members Mum Reg Third Warder Answers Call of the M. Sazonoff’s allusions to Germany el S R BY BAN UET l[;E EREAM e vt (e v i as having Drought on the war. K Thinking: People) to] Put City, GOy EERMANS RUSHEI] lN ; § : - 4 } he Faze says that on the | gagements—Berlin - Says Attack Trains Left New Haven Three 1 evening Uf}(l(l\ following that on crnment Back on Substantial Basis | b < { which the Russian order for a gen- Minutes Apart and Also Notifies | eral mobilization w E Arrival of Documents From Torce Has Taken 16,575 Unwound- — lin, Delayed By War. issued the —~Considered Best Informed Man in city—mnas | French Soldier Tells of T: Washington, Feb. 29.—Gerf | | i | | latest communication on subl i | i | 1 Privoncrs: B Railronalomt T French government was ignorant of Methodist Clergymen and Al R akic the fact that Russia had taken this| OF Municipal Affair Berlin, Feb. 29, via London, 3: . e le Against “Bunching.™ step, and argues that this apparently DX cal cor it ri e i e inatin Wives Are Victims of i was| done to'maKel it appear | whatl|l Lo on Foe With Fright warfare was discussed in detalf . 3 f New aven, Ieb, 29.—The failurc | Germany, by mobilizing. P king Y i O. F. Curtis : 1 day's cabinet meeting and at Ineividrive towards Verdin anl e o o gl o | G ¥, by mobilizing, was taking | Councilman O. F. Curtis announcec e a v ; Poisoning. of William R. Curtis, engineer of ex- | the agsressive instead of merely re- | tcday that he was to become a candi- ful Results. ate conference between PH ey re Wilson and Secretary Lansing, strict was announced by | the war office today. The German — troops have passed Dieppe, Abau- San Francisco, Feb. court and Blanzee, and also have |fifty guests, all Methodist ministers taken Manhuelles and Champlon. ond their wives, became seriously il sitter’ partalinz of. food which ii al: |/the Connecticut River|special on the plying to Russian mobilization. Tl | cate for the republican nomination ! y Lt i 7 indicates, in the opinion of the Ga- |for mayor of New Britai e i e L S conclusion was reachec Wi the signals set aga i e DI > Ga- | for mayor of > ritain ir v . T = against him and to | sette, that M. Sazonoff's statement|spring primar He stated that he Paris, Feb. 28, 6 a. m.—(De- | cided to await data now on tH ey them was responsible for the |regarding “The dreams of plunder | was unable, at the present time, to [jayed)—"Do vou know about rom Berlin, regarding instructh running of taat train into the rear of | and rapine” cherished so long by |give an indication of what policy he ?( ck we played on the Germa ed to have been issued by thi certain Germans should in reality be |would adopt if elected or as to what | cqures Wood?” was the qu h admiralty to merchant tra passenger train No. 5 to observe The war office also announced that i ey D . i o i | for attac n subma es, % ® small armored work northwest of |1€8ed to have been poisoned, at a | New York, New Haven and Hartford| 2PPled to Germany’s enemies. platform Ho mould advance toladvos | withiwhich 'a Frenchiioldler wioihad | for R e ot SN 8 2 n s ; jLanquet give g ini ailr - 11£ -ate his election, Verd fighting inru- ibine ers 2fully Douaumont had been stormed by nauet given by Methodist ministers | railroad at Milford on February 2 a8 Tt the Vil TN ons on whether Germany 2 qu the' Germant in the Howard street Methodist [, . Yiess R Mr. Curtis has long been interested | gyceqd his account of an incident at > b g vy - total number of unwounded prison- | ©fficial report of the affair was made | Bli Mix today. 1In the wreck ten pe: the best informed cog in the wheel of | ' wwell. to the north of Verdun T in a note to Secretary city government. He has made a Per- | . ntinyed, “a little beyond Beaumont, Yesterday was acceptaplc © ers taken as 16,575. There have been |35t night to the Methodist Minis- | sons lost their lives and more than two | | i rava) e ve a captured also 78 cannon and 86 ma- |terS’ association by the Rev. Samuel | score were injured i gistent study of the lf)cal government | 1.0 "o uras Wood. Tt was a poini to l(‘.n‘| wi\)u.nrnn.n‘l. ll I'v\]:llsl:::, Quickmire, pastor of the church. 3 proposition In all its phases for [ S8 1&UE oLt e devoted mpecial Merely the facts were la from a standpoint of efficiency than the councilman from the third. i Mr. Curtis has been several times Neutral, Armed With defeated for the office of mayor but i doubtful if he ever entered the with backing as good as he will receive during the present campaign. on the fringe the enemy, a and his men chine gun : ' o g 5 it ) i o rabine: v « d ¢ effort bel . Sl R e No report of the incident had been he coroner cq'lls ‘d(unuun to the 1any ears, It is doubtful if local | a-tentlon, and therefore everything (.AI||.ulv\nll)v)\ll]hl(rl»i“:]t\I heing gl e e e [t S e sl S republicaniem could figd & more | L., gone to glye them us good a re- FO STFIRE SU ST . * The text of today's official state- |Of those who became ill aid mot feel | ven three minutes apart, and com- 4 | promising candidate for the ‘office | i "o oasible. o T T e 6,000 Ton Vessel, Posing As nited States ment on military operations is as [Jistressed until after they had | mends to the attention of the Con- follows: reached their homes, although two or | necticut punlic utilities commission “Western theater of war: Very |three, feeling slightly ill, left the | and to the proper officials of the rail- strong artillery activity has continued | banquet hall before the termination | road company the subject of the & at several points. {cf the dinner. ing and “bunching” of trains. to take | Tovo Guns “East of the Meuse we stormed a | According to Dr. Quickmire, none | such action “as they shall deem o ; small armored work directly north- |Gf the sufferers was positive which [ ducive to the safety and che live While our infantr of the wood held o firmly upon its position that af should not be made on mercha e T unarmed or armed for defensf made their final preparations in the JielRCE o BOAE, 0 German wood, which had been carefully minea ' PORT NEC, W8 eition. is beforehand. When all was ready the | gorves Tre chief, darger S !infantry fell back and the Germans o omoials to lie in a possible | west of the village of Douaumont. |course had caused his illness. Most | the traveling public, His service in the present council has | In"an he e wers oSG Repeated enemy attacks in this re- |Of the victims, he said, were of the New York, Feb. 29.—Wireless warn- | proven to all that he is willing te | convinced that our m jion f AP g Bgarnis2c il E¥ o 2 e . 2 TS Finding Is On Woman’s Death. . . Y -, | make a stand for what he considers | tore after th in the woods, yelli The note 1ssurances gion was stopped at the very outset. | Opinion that the ice cream contained ings that a German commerce raider, | mak; S gstang jor e 5 Serp s i tHe. Lust 26, declarel “In the Woevre our troops have ' Poison. The finding is on e ded f s ) 0SS ace e sonsorts, was |18 Tight ¢ pite the odds against him, HL ) y tin the Lusitan gase, dec P P! € the death of Miss | possibly accompanied by cons Tl Poiv ofi 0o Fhioh has) o e When the last Frenchman was ! (hose assurances have not been i passed Dieppe, Abaucourt and Blan- n Hyland of this city, who w . i 3 P . bok. After | 2ttacking shipping in the ARIGOE |0 Lot ot bumds praval Bimelbsatl | “zee. They have cleared the exten- WILL REFUSE DEMANDS crushed to death in the w 29 ) a : pive wooded region northeast of referring to the sending out of the two | Were¢ received by the Standard Oil {ynder the thumb of the Dictator he fely out of the wood on the o' T fie de some one posted near Beauriont | tres by the announced -inten rmed merchant ships o Watronville and Hakudiomont and trains from this city three minutes tanker Communipaw which arrived |has many_times thrown his hat in \ | pressed a button. There was a heavy | enemy as auxiliary cruisers aftes ,r | here today from Algiers. i the-ring in a stand for the right de- | boom, and trees mingled with bodies | night tonight and attempts to i have taken in their heroic advance apart, and the breaking or bursting of ’ ; 4 Manheulles and also Champlon. Master Masons’ Assoclation Wil Re- | the air hose on the express which | The first message was received on | ipite the fact that he realized fully |shot into the air. Virtually every man | the new policy by presenting evid \ T & i ve o 5 D, T ras i 1 s b P » odds agai ere over- | of ] emy e ol ¥ leen y and assertions designed to proye Up till last night we counted un 1 : S alled it a mile and a half west of | Feb- 17 and was partially in code. | that the odds against him were over- | of the enemy in the wood had nd asser & ¥ wounded prisoners 288 officers and [s TUSC to Grant Demands of Lathers | 5% b e s e R i | whelming and defeat was inevitable, | kitled.” Great Britain has instructed hers 16,676 men and ‘further 78 cannon, or Stone Masons—May Strike, of a flagman from the express with | Abmb calling Caaw and reported | He has given lu\'ww- to the cham- | _ chantmen to use their armame “Feven of these heavy and of the most ¥ torpedoes and fusees to protest tae | PeINZ chased ba suspicious ship | pionship of New Britain citizens and | attack in violation of assun modern kind and $6 machine guns The members of the Masons' asso- | rear of his train, and {he crashing | Which she Dbelieves fo be a Germsn |done his utmost to secure what he EGROES HELD FOR given the United States. while uncounted war material Gl W) MR fo U e, 6 LB o e o dn i i Ak el SN o R G J“:\‘l».-!ch(:::i::u»lv:‘nmem“fi i ATTACKING WOME British Instructions Missh reported as booty. was stated today by a leading mem- | continues: se st { mos ailing. i 9 WOI SRR -k ¢ ) es | certain that his recent record will in- | Official indications of what af The Communipaw was some m ' House at Thia- | ber of the organization, to refuse to As a result of said collision two the United States may take reg At the Forester 5 v i ville, northeast of Babonviller, the |accede to the demands made by the | passengers, the deccased being one, | South of the Azoresivnen dhigmenjisuie that “;“ Sntensithe) Tacaliwithiehe - ing the note were expected to fi et a Frenc iti : hers : incre: ver: ain No. 78 > ex sage was received. At noon a sec- | lacking influential republicans that B | ing the note > o projection of a French position was | lathers some tme ago for an increase | who were on train No. 79 (the expre e . ey oy IesEnegiin publ St | 1 onds Fixed at $20000, Each When!| ok s Ral S ENU sttacked and faken. A large number |from 25 to 27 cents a bundle. The | together with the engineer and fire- | ONd message, apparently from the |Las heretofore been lacking to his h et mestifie. - HONS demands also asked that all work | man of train No. 5 (the colliding ex- | Same ship, arrived. It said: “Al- | political fights. I e Gontitionror ™ | is considered by Secre gfiprisonegs remained figur handa as the all-important element im tered course to Wpn and Nt ~ “Eastern and Balkan theaters of |done on churches and schools should | tra) were instantiy killed and a for Republicans Are Split. eituation. s itxse sianat T Al Dy ” Lte done by day work at 60 cents an employe of said company who The third and most significant mes- | | tims Is Considered Serious. war: The situation is unchanged. mer employe of said ¢ pany . i Fo D s T s & 2 3ritis| P hour. The lathers included in their | was upon the engine . Four other | Sage was received aboput 8 o’clock this | Never in the history of New Britain | of the so-called British instru French Admit German Gains. ultimatum to the master masons that | passengers who were removed from | evening. Its text was liowever, has the republican party Newton,” Mass., Feb. 29.—On the | to shipmasters to hunt for subl rines, which bhave not arrived been so poorly .prepared to wage a | girength of a report from physic r i Paris, Ieb. 29, 2:35 p. m.—The |no one but a member of their union | the wreck died subsequently from in-| ‘‘German steamer is attacking ship- as | bombardment to the north of Ver- |should be allowed to put on laths on | juries received therein; ahd a large! ping in the Atlantic and may be a ;‘““l’f“l"s” as thig spring. Harmony |, o5y o “fisiian of Miss. Helen M. | ”":‘n ‘“yh‘»“«:,‘.l\.1“Un ':xdnlxln‘ded - dun is continuing with greater inten- |any job. number of passengers were more or| sisted by capturing vessels which she |Das flown out the window and the | =0 0 (SUi B Gl PR Lol | Ambassador G 5 oy B ot 1 LLL D e s st & leaders hardly speak to each other ot receipt and a subsequent do@ sity t is reported that a meeting of the | jegs injured. | armed. Description 6,000 tons, | leaders hardly s Lo lton, who ‘were attacked at Miss| ooy Am0 & titade of the 18 2 peed 15 knots, combination freight |When Yimmeet son (thp atabe Crane’s home last night, were more | abers or of the Meuse last night there |lathers will be held this evening to Before colliding with train’ No. regarding the attitude of SR resumption of violent local at- |take action on the reply of the con- | ¢the coroner says, the engine of t States, the sta T Near the village of Douau- |tractors and it is generally expected a | Ny, 5 struck and killed Flagman mont the fighting came to a hand to |strike will be ordered. The attitude |-George L. Tourtelotte, of train No. 79 Band encounter and the Germans were | 6f the lathers has been somewhat in- | who in ‘“‘the faithful and loyal d repulsed by French troops. different of late, many of them | charge of his duty was endeavoring ain | and passenger steamer. Carries {wo | The big split is between the Quig- T i 1 e s SRt {ley and the anti-Quigley factions, The | The Communipaw was the center |L0TMer has been sailing serenely of sensational rumors last December &IONE in the belief that the opposi- when 1t was reported that she Lad |tl0n Would not dare to show its hand but the situation is changing daily serious than at first supposed, Albert | pureq’to consider any overt aet Saunders and Frank Sldney, negroes, | nitted by the Teutonic subma | arrested after the assault, were held | commanders in the light of in $20,000 each in the district court|gyets. The department, it was today. The men pleaded guilty to a | yould not act upon the case of After intense artillery fire German |obenly asserting to their employers | ¢o sto in N and who at the | b ttacked and sunk by sub- | 5 = = . i stopftrain SR 0 SNC PO conpataccol ancy R Subs i i charge of breaking and entering while ; who sustained injul Porcéa captured he village ‘of Man. |that If the demands wers ngt serssd | {ime ne was strick was sbout 600 marine in the Mediterranean. After [S1C A0SO 18 an underchrrent, of | SIRFER 08 O T8 OO0 S g Rn R DR 0 | SmelBen, e o et 3 c N 4 idge- 5 < of! hig trai ar- - i o P it anti- ey eling stirring e 2 1ty aboarc ; heulles, but a counter attack brought | to here, they could move to Bridge- | feet in the rear of his train, appar-|some days during which Washington e it The bombastic | @ charge of breaking and entering | finitely established carried gun§ the French to the western boundary |Port and obtain work there. ently endeavoring to place torpedoes | tried in vain to ascertain her where- of this location. They now hold Man- The master masons have also upon the track as a warning against | abouts she put into Algiers and her huelles under their fire. |asreed to refuse the demands of the | tne approach of said train No. 5.7 captain denied that any attack had ~ In Lorraine the Germans succeeded | slone masons, and the letter to that been made. S o A ke o $5 bchupyine el small section effect will be Tead at a meeting of the citizens and they are ready to vote | t0 Jail p F stig It was | t . Britls o of s for almost anyone, in preference to | &rand jury. matic circles that the allegations French trenches, but they were very | Bricklavers' union next Friday even- coroner finds that the railroad i | Zors . 15/ alster of the actor, | Ge c e flatly de shortly driven out from these posi.|ing. The stone masons ask for an M- |y .o ey e New York division a LA PROVENCE IS SUNK |Quistey. that is. anyone wno can put rane is a sister of the actor, Germany would be flatly denieds while armed with intent to commit | offensive purposes, ed | and transparent administration of : | city affairs by Mayor Quigley has in- | 1arceny. Their plea was not accer cited the animosity of hundre of | by the court and they were remanded saredasory] ration by thc It was indicated in British 'dip England Will Deny Charges. Signals in Good Working Condition. the c back ‘on its feet again and . Crane and Miss Fafrington | was said that British masters ions. crease of wages from 50 57 1-2 it ¢ - signals y ) u ] A rench: OMcta)l Shacoment. cents an hour. e iy o taeins cénduot govatnimont businesssroma (iin her compadion, It wasietyied oVl 20k, 1o CHCEERINE The text of the official communica- Tt cignals, installed gbout two vears ago, | One of Largest and Fincst Ships of | Eovernment standpoint. - New Britain | would recover. Jewelry va [ marines; that Gay e fion on the progress of hostilities, TANKER IS HALTED. are regarded ai %cient and as de- lagineverghadganmayorinh ofailoweddi $1 000 Rwas ol Sl ; | of & submariné approsssibh S given out by the French war office | e pendable as any vet.devised, that on French Line Ts Sent to Bottom—In | his l'el‘”,s"“{‘ “‘"“{‘f‘v’_” run - away IR [(.m warning were the i “To the north of Verdun the bom- British Orulsers on High Sea. nals were in good woking order, and 3 Ll T motis hate o The state department is Undérstoy Paris, Teb. 29, via London 25 | gometimes amounting almost to boy. | to feel that the possibility of difiey p. m—The auxiliary French cruiser | jchn His autocratic manner of |German Flotilla Under Protection of | ties arising in the near fubir® @ La Provence was sunk in the Medi- | ruling in the council, shutting off the | result of the new German anc ul terrancan issk Saturday, it w an- | speech of duly elected representatives nouced cfici R of the people, has aroused no little | i, Territorial Waters, Is < hat the engineer of the extra, -“pro- Hew wor Bep 20 TR Elanddnd L;;om;:u St ina\{l ed Oil tanker Brindilla arrived here to- | 4,y from forty-five to fifty miles per day from Lamo and Helsingfors and | pou; passed a signal set at caution, reported that she had been stopped bardment. has continued with in- creased intensity. “In the sector to the east of the Meuse last. night there was a re- sumption of the previous violent local Twenty Patrol Ships Outside Swed- | (rian policy is more or less remot | Officials believe that commande at which he should have slowed down. v today. : 3 B three times west of the Orkneys by | at o ) i o Wes . Wts will take par attacks particularly in the vicinity of i v e B and that at point still further west| _ 1o e neen lande comment duri his two years in of- | the undersea boats will take partig the village of Douaumont, where the Titish cruisers and allowed to pro- | three persons were ohserved in the en- | o d Entesiin il o ¢ T i I hagen, V London lar care not to attack without WARS fighting ca i T ceed after brief examination. gine cab. one in working clothes oc. | 1SITY of marme estimates the number | fice. From the unassuming candidate openhagen, Via. Londo . = o hant - veasels S ighting came to hand and hand en- EHostisaf L S e v . Ry 1 | of su.vivors at 870 cf 1914 he has become a capital T so | 5:55 a. m.—The Aftonbladt reperts jIn& arme v Dbt e iie e Stns s b Shortly after leaving Helsingfors, a | cupying the enginecr's seat, one not | . g £ a capits o | . g 2 which there may be Americans. g s resulting In the driving back | ooy away was discovered. He in working clothes ocoupying the fire. | 10Ur Lunired survivors were land- | that many of his friends who spent |that a large German flotilln is en. | W o by ourodpa his name was Heinrich and that he | man's seat, The fnding continues led at Milo. Ta Provence sank in the | their time electing him two years |gaged in laying mines south of \ Lansing Makes Stgiusa #°In the Woevre district the Germans | % 22708 Wo8 € 0008 o8 P ° S S | middle Mediterrancan. |ago are hardly recognized on the |ttcrbo, but outside of Swedish ter ] Seccretary Lansing fook with i were successful. after an intense pre- g £ \utomatic Signal Not Obeyed, Sy streets now. Neither are they al- [tory and that it is understood the | Secretaist LOUSe 000 KRG Gl he denied that he was a deserter- l‘;:;r’w’x’wrf:‘m]Ipn"l’]"‘rp' - n\mning PO% | He was turned over to the immigra- “I find that within a second or two | lLa Provence was one of the lar- {lowed to give any advice although |protection of twenty German patrol | (5 "€ b oiin (he German mem s i b ameer P enllen | on nutboriiies = before the engine attached to train No. | wl fmest of the IFsench Line |their wisdom and time were carnest- |sbips. | okandum and other papers relatin An Immediate counter-attack on our At e = ! Her gross tonnage was 13.. |1y Sought in the spring of 1914. i s o | tolthe case par oug] us ack to Ve s o 1 3 7. : 5 e ~ s i als Pl S smal seaport o < | e o - boundary of this village which we now | . CLEAR WITH GUNS ABOARD @9, the cmergency hrake was applied | s built at St- Nazaire in Big Tax Rate Coming. s D { ater he issued this statementt il Boldiunder our fire. . ¥ g St Al e % in said engine of train No .5 and the feet long, 65 fect hemun What really hits the taxpayer hard, | >n e Baltic Sea. A despateh fromi | View, of the publication this mors N T orta i P sty was s 2% “as}(".‘"’:"m' “'h'd‘” —‘rh" Italian | no appliance of brakes was noticed | and . p. She wus reGuisi- | however, is the fact that the tax ,;" dm ('L - [O"M th ‘, "Ll Swedish | INg 0f what purports to be the vie “sOrtalne theé as cess- | liners Giuseppe rdi and San Gusz- | by any one on said train No. 5 from | tioned 1 He it 3 : ) A > .ondon toay sta a e Swedis! y r i #41 in penetrating several small sec- > 8 Pty % o e £ v | 1ed by the ench government for | for the coming year wil be at 5 e i Ini e g i of the, state depariment on ‘he com S o e craeall Seg | llelmo, at New York with mounted |ithe time it left the New Hayen { naval servive at the outbreak of the | eighteen mills unless Important and | ScAmship Knippla had struck a mine | o nication received vesterday from . o s, guns aboard, were ordered cleared | until the time said emergency brake | war A : t andlscuth of Falsterbo ad s L g ML A e o they were almost immediately driven . L | much needed improvements are al- | | the German am or, i wish out of these positions. ) foday on ass‘;_‘m“c;s.rmm the Italian | was applied just before the colli ——— lowed to go by the hoard for political | T T | eay that the contents of the cont LSRR e e | S e | I R G e W ) o PRISONER COMMITS SUICIDE. | purposes. It is helieved by scme chat | MYSTERIOUS SHOCKS FELT. | munication have not been made jul remainder of the front."” : : : -“h‘“{";”‘l ']““ i “‘?9‘“ “:“:“‘:‘5 : Bridgeport Feb. 29, — George | cighteen mills will not be suflicient | Quebee, Que., Feb. 20.—Three suc- | lic by me and that any statement at the dclay occasioned to train No. | . = 2 = ST " > ‘ —— C N = s i 2 s Croutcher, aged of Bayonne, J., | @and that nineteen mills will be the | cessive shacks resembling an earth- ! to the views of the stat epuriraen 750.000 In Attack SIX DEAD, TWENTY BURIED. 19 by reason Offthe bunstior broken |l vy ol didql have completedl Aaiy al| fisure quake were distinctly feit all over | on the communication are absolutel e st ST Cumberland, Md., Feb. —Six | air hose was (hree minutes Vet note!jail senterce of thiee montiis m the | Mavor Quigley is preparing for the | the Quetec district at about 12:15 | unauthorized i ERE m.—Military | mniers were reported dead and twenty | Withstanding this situation, the | rirfield county committed sui- | election with a vim. He is joining |, m, today. The local obsarvatory | have made no comment and X were obeyved T am of m would have no opinion in regard 1o thel fraternal societic which is “old stuff the opinion that "Luried by an explosion in the mine | #utomatic signs which at the be-|of the Davis Coal and Coke Co., at |the opinion no coll critics here expr t# German for i sht S sn Al Tered | e et e but sometimes ef- | mograph record of | Press the disturbance and was mystified matter. cide in his cell at 5 o’clock th < niorn- ing. He slashed both arms with a sar.’ ginning of the battle around Verdun | Kempton, W. Va. near here today. | Occurred, as said signals automatical-y Gt =88 SPAEE RECE G0 convictea of | fective. Likewise he is condescend- | It was indicated in well iuformed numbered probably half « million, | Large forces of volunteers are trying | 1y Spaced said trains aboul one mile| o S50 hotor Boat: i {ing to smile at many who were mere- T quarters that the president would in4 e ",("O“i"' . to save the entombed men. apart. ; S i i Iy numbered with the hoi polloi since Y. W. C. A. FUND GROWING. | gigt' ofi @ strict intefpretation of i e situation is now decidely bet- “I am aware a n travelling forty- | Y His ra resented with o o i Wt ) ‘ fissd " : " fer,” is the phrase commonly used| yrayy TAKES GERMAN SHIP five) tol fifty miles iper Thour | would INEEE e o s o - <:I(I{J]‘\‘:!1“\“i\I‘))llllfi condu "r“n“‘r‘:‘li Ihgn “{;p“rf\‘;” e fnaare the ¥. 1| :M"\ s d ‘W]j‘:‘; i v AKE MAN S S, § " . 5 A e co vhic J « s for the budget esiimate of the i to any’s new submarine warfargs this morning in tne Paris press re- S. | cover the distance comprised in one WEATHER. e e e Sl el torwirded from DN garding the struggle for the great| London, Feb. 29, 3:24 p. m.—Tt | ;e very quickly and would allow a oters two vears ag0 this spring. The | seived at the association thix noon | purasrtng to oo " e ron By < 3 ras i se S 7 : \ 8¢ ) e | served a i Heiatio S noond par utain g t French stronghold. The French are | Was announced in the house of com- | flagman but very little time to Harvttord, Teb. —For ap on the back and the warm hand | showed that $672 bad been pledzed. | ’\ulw. tmiralty had 1 caps beginning to react vigorously against|mons )wdlu\ that the Italian govern-|and properly protect his train. i Hartford and vicinity: Unset- wsp are bein K&71 OUtOL TNGEBHIIN| Nemberston the bteinia raporti e o bt et 4 B deon ke enicn :‘I:Lvnihi‘.«l( : \(vmw('v"mefl Chatyfont OF nals wers obresied and obesed Qne tled tonight and Wednesday. and the haii-fellow-well-met spivit is | ing with much suceess and are confi- | tack submarines had not arrived, Mg - R D sl “u](":‘" ’”:»““" SECBTH Ll e ! ( Slightly warmer tonight. dent that the required sum will i (Contin enth I ) ;i Lol k (Continued On Tenth Page.) i o P e e s (Continued On Tenth Page.) sehed before Saturday. : (Continued On Eleventh lage.) 8

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