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Britain Heralti ERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. Proprietors. dafly (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. in., at Herald Bullding, 67 Church St. Zered at the Post Office at New Britain as Becond Class Mail Matter. ivered by carriey te any part of the city for 15 cents a week, 65 cents a month. aoriptions for paper to be sent by mall, payable In advance, 60 cents a month, $7.00 a year. | only profitable advertising medium in the city. Circulation books and press {room alwavs open to advertisers. | Herald will bo found on sale at Hota- | Nng’s News Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- | way, New York City; Board Walk, At- lantio City, and Hartford Depot. TELEPHONE CALLS. Office ne jorial Rooms . No Half and Half, Any man who now announces at althougsh he favors the Mted BStates against Germany, t he favors Germany against . istenq, is a traitor to America. \ere oan be no half and half th in this war. “DMBODORE ROOSEVELT. f A W BUESSING. m.nu ‘bf am always advised patients to- eliminate meat as . &8 possible in the warm days. mutton and pork are not the things in the world for the hu- system, so these old-time doctors to tell those who went to them \Moe. Now we have from the of Herbert C. Hopver, the Na- | ‘Food ' Dictator, the subjoined of pledge which carries with it semblance of medical advice, whi he wants placed before dtizen of'the republic: Vishing to aid my country Aur- | the war, I promise— | To eat one wheatless meal a r To eat beef, mutton or pork more than once a day. { To economize in the use of er. To limit my daily allowance jugar in tea or coffee and in ’r ways. To eat more vegetables, fruit fish. To urge in my own home or restaurants I frequent the ne- ity of economy. rould not be a difficult task to sut such a pledge or programme To eat one wheatless meal a ould iinvolve little if any sacri- Yet it would help mightily to e the wheat crop of the nationy that is far short of what it be and which will be called o feed not only our own people ose of the European countries of Germany. To eat beef, A or pork not more than once a " a precaution which health de- . The total elimination of pork 3 season of the year ls not a ea. ¥ ‘e are many ways in which the of the United States can help | ve the food of the nation and | ithout injury to themselves or werifice. The plan outlined by bover 1s simple and easily re- red. If enough persons follow ice printed on the cards which 1 distribute and ‘ take the " in this matter they will not enefit themselves but will aid Ltion to fight its great battle autocracy. Food-saving of d carries a double benefit. It es health and enkindles the fire lotism. OEVES IN THE NIGHT. who live in inland towns like ritain have very little oppor- to observe troop movements ese activities have to do with ng for European ports. Un- ftors bring In stories of troops ing for Europe, or news- publish such reports the people o not actually present at such jos might never kmow these ere taking place. The volun- sorship which the newspapers laced upon their news columns, with the rigid censorship im- ¥y the War and Navy depart- have held all this news from | . majority of Americans. What ctually "‘know of troop-ship bnts they ' glean through or acquaintances who live in towns. | hewspapers then have not been f giving information to the There was not one newspaper ountry that reported the day e of the sailing of Pershing’s | on to France. Thare was not paper in the land that even | hat this expedition was on the here was not a newspaper that e route the ships would taksl e Atlantic, although some | fid know from which port the t. Certainly, there was no per in the United States that strong, castle, eral of Louls XIV. du | came over with his | the knew the secret point of rendezvous where the (leet that carried Pershing's men would meet Admiral Sim’s de- stroyers, Yel Germany knew all this, and acting upon this knowledge, sent flotilla. of against the forces. a submarines American The question ““Where did the Imperial Government get hold It is answered “Through the in America.” suffice the to know German now arises, of this information?” only German Spy That American how long these activities of spies arc going to go on here unmo- There will be some relief to that the Government has al- started an active campaign against German spies. The de- spatches from Washington yesterday stated that if the government’s activi- ties against spies in the United States could be published the news would startle the world, For obvious reasons the Secret Service cannot tell what it is @oing; but there is a great way of finding out its good work, and that is by results. ‘If in the future the is not made of American in the abstract: stem will answer not people who want lested. know ready German Government aware of the sailing troops and these troops are not met upon the high because of pre- pared instructions sent “rom this country we shall know that the sples have been suppressed. There will be att8cks upon American troop ships by German submarines. That Is to be expected; but there should be such a rigid censorship of cables and mail and wireless and every other means of conveying information that such at- tacks cannot be planned days weeks ahead of time and according to schedule. Given a fair fight with German submarines .American gun- ners will take care of themselves, al- though they cannot be- expected to always successfully thieves that come in the night. seas and combat LONG LIVE THE THREE. In the famous old city of Nice, France; there is a celebrated highway which up to this time has been known as the Quai du Mici. It is a magnifi- cent boulevard which runs for a mile along the Mediterranean, from the River Paglione to the Castle Hill, a mass of limestoné which rises to a height of three hundred feet and which was formerly crowned by a beseiged, taken, and razed by the Duke of Berwick, Gen- The farhous Qual Mici, a waterfront street some- what similar to the driveway in Mil- waukee which follows the lakeside, heen re-named in honor of the United States. It will be known hereafter as Qual des Etat-Unis, in honor of the entrance of the United States in the world war. Americans will rejoice that one of the principal highways in Nice is amed In honor of this country. Even though separated by that great ex- panse of water, the Atlantic, these two peoples, the French and the Americans, have ever been held close in a bond of sympathy. There are in Washington, D. C., and in Paris many evidences of the friendship which ex- ists between France and America. This spiritual communion of the two peoples began with the Revolutionary ‘War when the youthful Lafayette compatriots to fight on the side of Washington. It has continued down the ages through the one hundred and fortyc®dd years since the signing of the Declaration of TIndependence which took the United States forever out of the realm of monarchial government. The naming of a street after the United States is a simple thing. Yet it is evidence of the deep admiration which the French people hold for the people of America. What has been started in Nice will be taken up in many other French cities. I, will not be surprising if the American Con- gress some. day adopts a measure which would authorize the naming a street in the nation’s capital after France. Bven if that event does not take place the French people will know that here they have friends who are willing to stand to the last ditch in order that France may continue in the family of Republics, that Ger- man autocracy may not over-run the glorious nation of Rochambeau and other defenders of Liberty, and that the world may be made safe for democracy. May the name of the street in ice which bears the name ‘of the United States never be Vive France! Vive des Vive Quai des Etats- has now changed. Etats-Unis! Unis! If Caesar were alive today he might change the text of his famous report to the war department to “I came, I saw, I censored.” FACTS AND FANCIES., This Kerensky fellow seems yet not to appreciate Kultur—New York Sun, ‘We shall probably hear along about next January that the government has forced a big cut in the price of ice. —Boston Transcript. Spain orders all submarines to nav- NEW BRITAIN DAII;Y HEfiALD. FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1017. SECOND GOULD T0 TAKE POOR BRIDE. igate on the surface when in Spanish waters. That must make von Tirpitz laugh.—New Haven Union. Careful examination of the Con- gressional Record has as yet failed to disclose any cooking recipes by Rep. Jeanette Runkin.—Bridgeport Telegram. Since it has taken so long to cap- ! ture Lens, it Is something to be | thankful for that it was easy to spell. —Meriden Record, Anyhow, that edict issued by the imperial folks as they go back into power in China shows that it makes autocracy more polite to be down and out for a time.—Waterbury Republi- can. The use of air bombs by the Ger- mans in the recent rald also shows that they are determined to defend themselves against the women and children of England at all hazards. We have a hunch that the word “Pershing” will soon become a per- fectly good.verb in Europe and that the Germans will know what it means.—Paterson Press-Guardian. In the event that you do not know how to pronounce it, and the chances are that you don’t, we vouchsafe the information that Donald Thomwpson, Topeka's intrepid war photographer, who had met him *“personally,” called him Gen. “Jeff.”—Capper's Weekly. Desire to kill things is epidemic. First its swat the fly, then kill dogs and exterminate sparrows, and now a Californian wants to wipe out cats for killing birds that devour insects. We may have to kill a few Germans, but outside of that really ought to re- strain ourselves.—Paterson News. Santa Patriclo’s Day. (Hugh S. Davery in The Docket) Santa Patriclo, granda man, Live-a far over sea, Take-a da cake-a, kill-a da snake-a, Make-a da Irish free; So on da Santa Patricio Day Ireland-a man feel fresh, Make-a da frisk, drink-a da whisk, Have-a da fine procesh. Santa Patriclo, granda man, Fix-a da Irish quick; Catch-a da job, rule-a da mob, Run-a da politick. Make-a da ver' big Irishman Boss-a da Tammany Hall— Poor Dago man sell-a banan’, Make-a no mon’ at all! Santa Patricio, granda saint,, Make-a da Irish smart, Catch-a da ‘“‘cush,”in wid da “‘push’— Dago push-a da cart. W'y don’ da Dago have-a one saint Help 'lm along like-a dat? Own-a New York, don’ have to work, Hold-a da office fat! Santa Patriclo, granda man, Make-a me feel like a fool-a— Dam-a da shame—change-a name— Call-a me Pat- O'Toola. Den on da Santa Patricio Day- I wear-a da shamrock new, Folks say, “Dere go Antonio— He Is one Irish, too!” PERMANENT ROADS BUILT FROM RUINS Soldiers Constructing Highways to Endure for Years (Correspondence of the Asso. Press). Behind the British Lines in France, July 6.—Hundreds of milles of the smooth white macadam roads of Northern France will remain for many years after the war as a real memorial to th# devastated towns which the Germens left in ruins aft- er thelr retreat this spring. All over Northern France the roads are being widened and resurfaced with stgne and rubble taken from the wrecked houses of Peronne, Albert, Arras, and countless other ruined towns and villages. As fast as the British soldiers clear away the debris of the towns, it i lled into lorries and distributed in_heaps along the main road. There German prison- ers toil the day long pounding into level patches which the great ‘Steam rollers, many of them bearing fa- miliar American names, grin ick- ly into smooth macadam f§ the business of transport. The brick and stone of th: old buildings makes as good road ma- terial as could be obtamed anywhere, and the work of the German dyna- miter has been so thorough that much of it is crushd fine enough to need no further preparation. The roads of Northern France were always excellent, but they were never better than today. The only com- plaint travelers had against them was that the paved strip in the cen- ter, was too narrow. That com- plaint cannot be made after the Brit- ish highway plang have been com- pleted, for all the #hain highways will be macadamed to a width permit- ting three broad-gauge lorries to run abreast, and even the byways will haye a paved surface wide enough to allew trafic to pass easily at any point. Excessive dustiness is the only fault of the roads today, for war eco- nomics will not permit the use of precious oil on roadways. There is little need anywhere in this district for straightening roads or altering routes, because the roads of Northern France mostly run straight as an arrow’s flight. Most of the great highways were laid out im Napoleon's time by military survey- ors, and their strategic value and im- portance hasalways been kept primar- ily in mind by the French govern- ment. | George J., Jr., Weds Orphan at Quiet Ceremony Philadelphia, July 6.—Following a | few days on the heels of his brother | Kingdon’s wedding, George J. Gould, | Jr., youngest son of the financier, was | married here yesterday to Miss Lauru M. Carter of Ardena, N. J. So quietly were the arrangements made for the wedding that even Rev. Dr. William D. Chalfont of 147 North Fifteenth strcet, who married them shortly after noon, was unaware of the bridegroom’s prominence. No | member of Mr. Gould's family wds present. Dr. George A. Coleman, a dentist of 2956 South Fifteenth street, anothar man, and a woman, said to be the bride's aunn Mrs. E. J. Callahan of Ardena N. J., witnessed the ceremony. 1t is bello\e(l that Mr. Gould came to this city Wednesday, and took rooms at a hotel in Broad street. He | was joined here this morning by his bride, who is said to he an orphan. Shortly after noon the pair walked to the City hall, and entering the marriage license bureau on the Afth floor, took their places among those waiting for licenses. Mr. Gould was identified. for Chief Clerk Ferguson by Dr. Coleman. Leaving the City hall, Mr. Gould and Miss Carter walked to the home of the Rev. Dr. Chalfont, on North Fifteenth street, about three blocks away, where the wedding ceremony was performed. It is beligved that they were married there at the sug- gestion of the marriage license clerk, as Dr. Chalfont is known as a ‘“‘mar- rying parson” at the City hall. Following the wedding, Mr. Gould and his bride, who wore a traveling suit of serge, disappeared. Dr. Cole- man, who admitted he was an in- timate friend of Mr. Gould, said he did not know where they had gone. George J. Gould, Jr., gave his age at the license bureau as 21. His bride, who also gave hér age as 21, 1s a handsome brunette of medium height. In signing the application for the license Mr. Gould gave his occupa- tion as a clerk. Dr. Coleman said last night that he belleved Mr. Gould had obtained a place as a school in- structor in New York city for next fall. Dr. Coleman would not di- vulge the name of the school. According to custom Mr. Gould was asked to show his draft regis- tration, and he produced it. LOW WAGES BOOST BABY DEATH RATE Economic Conditions in New Eng- land Textile Center Revealed Washington, July 6.—Low wages of fathers and the gainful employ- ment of mothers away from home ac- company an excessive death rate among babies in Manchester, N. H., according to the report on infant mortality in that city which has just been issued by the Children’s Bureau of the U. S. Department of Labor. The study was based primarily on interviews with the babies’ mothers. It was absolutely democratic in scope and included all babies whose births were registered during a single year and whose families could be found. Of all the babies studied, one in six —165 per 1,000—had died during the first year of life. There were wide variations in rate between different groups of the pqpulation, according to the fathers' earnings, the employ- ment. of the mother, the congestion of the home, and the way in which the baby had been fed. Nearly half of the 1,643 babjes had fathers whose earnings were less than $650 a year, and more than one- eighth of the bahies had fathers earn- ing less than $450 a year. Only one in sixteen (6.4 per cent.) had fathers earning as. mu(\ as $1,250. The death rate Yafong the bables in the poorest famflies was more than four times as high as among those in the highest wage group. Low earnings on the part of the father’ appear to be the most potent reason for the mother's going fo work. Where the fathers earned less than $450 a vear almost three- fourths of the mothers were gainful- ly employed during some part of the vear after the baby’s birth. As the fathers’ earnings rise the proportion of working mothers falls until in the group were fathers earned $1,050 or over, less than one-tenth of the mothers worked. Keeping lodgers was the chief oc- cupation of those who worked at home and working in the textile mills was the chief occupation of those who worked away from home. The mothers of 267 babies went out to work during the first year of the baby’s life and these babies had a dedth rate considerably higher than those whose mothers worked at home, or were not gainfully employed. The rate is especially high—277.3 per 1,000—among the 119 babies whose mothers went out to work before they were 4 months old. The babies were grouped also ac- cording to the kind of house in which the family lived. The death rate for habies whose homes were in one- family houses was 86.1 per 1,000; in houses containing seven or more fam- ilies 236.6 per 1,000. Similarly the rate showed a steady increase accord- ing to the number of persens per room. Tt was 123.3 per 1,000 where the family had more rooms than per- sons; and 245.9 where there were two or more persons per room. In each economic group the babies who were artificlally fed had fewer chances of survival than the bables whose mothers nursed them. But the economic status of the family modifies the influence of feeding, and the difference in the death rates for breast-fed babies and artificially fed bables is least striking in\the highest income group. 'MARKED THE CARDS ON RUSSIAN PRIEST All Goes Out None Comes In to Rev. Alehin Garfleld, N. J,. July 6.—A deck of marked cards with which a worldly wise person ‘might accumulate four aces on & pinch, or acquire a work- ing knowledge of the potential force of an opponents hand, alleged to have been found in the rectory of the Rus- sian Church of the*Three Saints, forms the basis for three arrests that last night set all the political, business and religious elements the Passaic re- gion on the wire edge of excited gos- sip. The Rev. Alexander Alehin, rector of the church, charges that three of Passaic's best-known men sat in a friendly game with him at the rectory upon numerous occasions, and that he vielded more than $800 in the coin of the realm for the poor return of such vocal exercise as was afforded by the repetition of the stock phrase ““That's good.” According to the priest his three friends could at will draw to a shoestring and catch a tanyard, while McMILLAN STORE, Inc ALWAYS RELIABLE JULY SELLING OF TAFFETA SILK DRESSES' SPECIAL SATURDAY $12.98 EACH. ‘Women’s and misses’ navy bl ue silk taffeta dresses in this sale -all new, just purchased this week in New York at manufacturers’ Clearance Prices. WOMEN’S AND MISSES COATS Another important purchase of smart coats for women and misses wear. Velour checks and rose. While they last MORE NEW plaids also plain Your Choice Saturday $7.98 each. STYLES IN tan, gold and SUMMER NECKWEAR The new creations in dainty seasonable neckwear brought out by the foremost designers from day to day, are shown here as soon as put on the market. Saturday we offer many exceptional values in stocks separate oollars, collar and cuff sets of Georgette crepes, silk pongee, wash- able satins, chiffons, ‘volles and pique. PRICED 49c, 98c, $1.49 to $1.98 each. he couldn't make a full house bring home a pot if he caught it pat. The story was told to Prosecutor Huchin of Bergen county, who turned the facts over to Justice E. M. John- son. Warrants charging forgery were issued for Isaac Rubin, a justice of the peace, of 190 Monroe street, Pas- saic; Frank Schnell, a poultry dealer of 243 Monroe street, and Alexander Levy, an auctioneer of 258 Monroe street. Additional warrants were is- sued against Levy and Rubin. The three are charged with forging the priest's name to checks, and the last two with defrauding him at cards. The defendants were held under bonds for $1,000 each to await subse- quent developments. They denied with one voice the charges, but ad- mitted that they had frequently gath- ered about the priest's table to dally with the pastboards and to fondle the red, white and blue evidences of pa- triotism following the ante. The Church of the Three Saints is a new edifice that replaced the build- ing which burned more than a year ago. Its rectory is new and charming. The church ministers to the Russian colony. The priest's story to the public pros- ecutor runneth thus: He had known Rubin, who holds the scales of Bergen county justice, for some time, and he told the prose- cutor Rubin introduced him to the other two men as gentlemen who had some skill in passing upon the rela- tive values of three of a kind. They came often to his rectory, and the rif- filling of the pastboards went along with pleasing monotony as they wan- dered among the jackpots seeking di- version and profit. One evening, sald the priest, his wife came along after ene of the pok- er parties and examined the cards that the men left behind. She discovered, he says, that their backs bore such marks as no perfectly gentle and im- partial deck of cards ought to carry in polite soclety. From these marks, he averred, one might as well pick an ace from the back as from its honest frontal view. The Rev. Mr. Alehin had just dropped the trifle of $289 in the game preceding and had paid $113 in cash and given a check for the re- mainder. He says that when he rushed around to the bank to stop payment he found that the others had beat him to it, and that he had in addition three other checks to pay, none of which, he swears, he ever signed. The three checks called for a total of $329. All three of the accused men asserted that the priest had lost his mind over the departure of his funds and that they had no part in any forgery or fraud transaction. They agreed that the priest was a consistent loser in their many games. NSORSHTP REMOVED. “Emergency Past” Is War ment Announcement. July 6.—Secretary Baker last night revoked his order diverting to the war department for censorship all press cablegrams con- cerning. American troops in France. The public information committee an- nounced that ‘‘the emergency having passed,” the war department would permit cable matter to go directly to the press associations or newspapers. In addition to this the committee on public information called the at- tention of the newspapers to the following precautions: “1. Information tending dlrectlv or indirectly to disclose the numbet or identity of troops in the expedition- force should not be printed. Only names of staff officers may be used. Names of land officers, also reference to individual units, should not be printed +3., Information calculated to dis- close location of permanent base should not be printed. “4. Information designed to be- tray eventual position of American force on the firing line should not be printed. Depart- ‘Washington, ary Py “5. All reference to returning transports must be suppressed.” RAILROADP REVENUES GROW Washington, July 6.—May reports of 130 of 186 railroads to the Inter- state Commerce commission show an increase in net revenue of $1,600,- 000. THREE HUNDRED PIECES SAMPLE NECKWEAR All fresh goods, on sale Saturday at one-half SAMPLE SALE PRICES 25c, 45c, BDo nch. SALE OF PARASOLS SAT URDAY CHILDREN’S WOMEN’S .28¢, 48¢c, 69c and 98¢ each 88c, $1.69 to $3.98 ueh WHITE HOSIERY Every item here mentioned some instances we include black WOMEN'S WHITE SILK HOSE . WHITE FIBRE BOOT SILK llOSE WHITE THREAD SILK HOSE MEN’S LISLE AND FIBRE SILK SOX . is a special value for Saturday. In and colors at there special prices. .~ 35¢, 29¢, 39¢, 45¢, 50c, 65c pair . .85¢, 50c, 59%¢, 75c pair $1.15, $1.25, $1.50, $1.65 pair .15¢, 19c, 25¢, 29¢, 39¢ pair KNIT U NDFRWEAR UNION SUITS— Children’s—29¢c, 45c suit, Women'’s—28c, 45¢, 58¢, 75¢c to $1.25 suit. Men’s—49c, 59¢, 98c, $1.25 suit. Separate Vests, Pants, Shirts and women and children. Drawers in all styles for men, SUSPECTED GERMAN DIVES T0 DEATH. Finds Openmg Arteries Slow | Method. and Leaps From Window New York, July 6.—The suicide of Richard Adam Timmerscheidt, once | manager of a German bank and rep- resentative of important German in- | terests, who threw himself out of a window of his apartment on the tenth , floor of the house at 200 West Fifty- ninth street yesterday, was followed by the disclosure last night that he had been interviewed on several oc- casions by the Federal authorities in relation to the activities of secret agents. The fact that the last inter- view took place not more than seven days ago led to a report that he had been under surveillance as one of the men who had been glving Germany information of troop movements, but this was denied. “It is true,” sald John C. Knox, as- sistant United States attorney, “that the federal authorities had occasion to question Mr. Timmerscheidt, but noth- ing was learned as the result of these interviews offering a reason for the suicide. A similar statement w: made by Captain Willlam M. Offley, chief of the department of justice bureau of investigation for the New York dls- trict. Captain Offley sald he had talked to Timmerscheidt, but had asked him for information having no relation to his own actions. Like Mr. | Knox, he knew of no reason for thei suicide. Timmerscheldt threw himself out of the window shortly before 5 o'clock in the morning. He had severed the veing in his wrist with a safety razor and there was evidence to show that he had laid down to die in the bath- tub, but evidently had grown im- | patient and had jumped from the window. TUp to 1909 he had been manager of | one of the foreign departments of Ladenburg, Thalmann & Co., at 25 Broad street. According to a state- nent made by a member of this firm, he then left to accept a place in the forelgn department of the Disconto Gesellschaft, in Berlin, at a large sal- ary. He left that place to become manager of the Hongkong branch of | the Deutches Asiatic bank which has close affiliations with the German government. At the outbreak of the war he re- turned to New York, sending his wife, who is an English - woman, and their | murderer of Ruth |long telegraph yesterday to léarn detalls of hig busi- 'ness were not entirely successful. At 41 Broad street, where he had an of- fice, a clerk told reporters that he did not know what Timmerscheid’s busi- ness was.. The office itself appeared to be too small in which to carry on ‘a very eéxtensive business, and it was later explained that it was used main- ly as a place to receive mail and keep records. J Officials of Ladenburg, Thalman & Co. explained that since 1909 they had very little to do with Timmerscheidt. . ! “Richard Timmerscheidt was in our | employ in our foreign exchange de- partment, from 1906 to 1909, when he had an opportunity to improve his position,” a statement issued by the company read. ‘‘He became manager of the German Aslatic bank, Hong- | kong branch. Mr. Timmerscheidt was visiting this country at the out- break of the war. He had a small * personal account with us, and these are the only business relations we have had with him since August, 1914. At the outbreak of the European war, in August, 1914, due to the fact that one of our partners.is an Eng- lish subject, we abstained from all credit business with German banks, and, in accordance with this policy we have not since handled the busineéss of the German-Asiatic bapk or any other Institution with which Mr. Tim- merscheidt was connected.” An effort to obtain from Timmer- scheldt's frisnds an explanation of his act was not successful. It was learned that he had for many years been & member of the German club, but no one there knew anything of his af- fairs or his relations to German bus- iness or banking institutions. " Timmerscheidt, it was explained,, had, because of his business relations, been on intimate terms with Hugo Schmidt, director of the New York branch of the Deutches bank, who ob- j tdined considerable publicity, because of his attempt to buy up the output of the Camden Iron Works, but was sald to have taken no part in the plot. CAN'T QUESTION COCCHI. Rome, July 5.—Emanuele Fino, an Italian lawyer, who, on behalf of the district attorney of New York, is in- vestigating the case of Alfredo Cocchi, Cruger, sent a report to New York after an interview with the minister of justice today. Signor Fino ex- plained the impossibility, under the Italian law of interrogating the pris- oner but said all facilities had been granted for pursuing such an investi- gation through Judge Zucconi, who is in charge of the case. MORE GOLD ARRIVES. New York, July 6.—Gold amount- ing to $6.500,000 carrying the total children to London. It was under- stood that he came back to the city as the represéntative here of the Deutches Asiatic bank, but efforts of the present movement up to $12(,030,000 war received here today : ty . P. Morgan and company from Canaila and sold to the federal banks,! 3