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= ————\ HERALD BEST OF ALL LOCAL NE\VSPAPER“SV PRICE THREE NEW BRITAIN CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY, JANUAR | O PUBLIC POTATORS | WAKE BIG CAPTURE ~ CALLED BY DEATH .5 FIGHT 1S PENDING { | weather, it is certain that hun- | dreds of bushels of potatoes grown at the municipal farm Wore Prisoners Than Mrs. Annie Sherwood Hawks Dies | Wii™ve “0 ot e S5 Sullragists and the Antis Have | cated by the condition of more Had Men Engaged at Daughter's Home in Vermont | 5. viweria it sm oie || Their Say in Washington Today | , | rear of Main street, between Chestnut and Church streets. THEIR HEROIC CHARGE HAS WRITTEN MANY HYHNS | Arciiimassio | PRESIDENT GAVE PROMISE? e frost had raised havoc with the Was Eilled With NearnessHo e Mass tubers. At places near the outer Those Against the Amendment Say Approximafl | : out by the scc e for When' She Wrotes “I Necd Theo wall, where the potatoes received S e ut by Among the 1,100 Austrians (nug.ll‘ EraWheni She AW R L R G i e e Those Favoring It Circulated a with the appe ahe Two German Officers Found very Tour,” 1ler Most Famous were frozen in. a solid mass. -, . rilse S Sl their places of . Oil heaters have been suspended Card thatiWikeonsrzomiced (of Sox Stephen Robhituy | HMymn—List of Hymns. from the ceiling but it is be- cretly Support Meastre to Miss Paul centage ‘15 sai | lieved this action has been too i As approxi . Ttalic Headquarters, Northern | late as the heat only suffices at || Washington, Jan. 3.—Woman saf- this city it L Ton (By the Associated | Sherwood Hawks, author of many TR e e e -agists and anti-suffragists came out returned. | | Treated the Same as French Officers ‘ Captured by German Bennington, Vt., Jan. 3—Mrs. Annie famous gospel hymns, including *I toes already frozen. It is re- in force today before the house suf- Secretaryiy at frage committee for the last hiz con- questionnaires: Press.)—The French in their recent Successful operation on Monte Tomba | Need Thee Tivery Hour,” died at her || Dorted that potatoes stored s e emee U U || et e o R0 (e o8 HEL another place ave in a similar had men engaged, according to a With the death of the celebrated condiuion ImpropenstoraEe veteran officer who witnessed Fanny Crosby some time ago, M facilities is responsibic fight and saw the prisoners, guns and | Hawks was left as perhaps the last e e e National Army. di booty brought in. Among the | of the noted writers of the gospel president of the National American apprehended therel prisoners were many Austrians, the | hymns of the past half century | =y Woman Suffrage association leading captured by the French. | From her fourteenth year, when her y e the argument in favor of the.amend- dition to the 1,400 prisoners | first bit of verse was published in a }“/9 il ! entiaseiaredine Aot haa we 4 560 dead on the ground,” | newspaper in Troy, N. Y., she devoted I\ Q4 ! S eeh fagstnim ency 5 a i [T T (o iy N o iy Wil down to a question whether the ex- he s The perfect French mili- | a large part of her long life to the tension of suffrage to a large number tary system enabled them to accom- | production of poems and hymns. Of E‘ :‘H,ag'i‘” E? ,E'E‘Fi] of inexperienced women voters, na- plish this with a loss of less than fifty | her hymns which came into common 5 fih,f- U iUd{!’E b turally sympathetic with human suf- € | use the best known is, “I Need Thee i men | use v ! fering would tend to weaken prosecu- The 50th Austrian division, which | Every Tlour,” which is said to have tion of the war. She contended em- was the one attacked,‘is considered a | been translated into more foreicn phatically it would not and that on good fizhting organization. But the | languages than any other modern | (Gives War Talk at Third of tne vasis of sympathy with human Austrians were accustomed to fighting | hymn. suffering alone women were opposed Russians and Rumanians and this was | Mrs, Hawks, who was born in Hoo- - fi¢ Tnayoural Ceremonies |to an ill-advised peace, i ) . th time they had met the *:”» »]-1\-, “]‘ ‘;‘m s C»:;“-“";} in 3 The anti-suffragists set forth their & Gichilys trainedd Rrenchl troopsi W The | the publicischoolsiand ifn e Loy T . principal argument in a prepared s, seminary. After mer marriage o at Washington. | statement by Mrs. James W. Wads- MW athing ey \"“' ‘\'\m’l h; r-i““‘" ];r.‘.:m::\:rxi\f;d ”; E—— | worth, Ja, president of the National |~ 3 T BERIY'S “hypocritical peace pro@ Brooklyn until the death of her hus- Boston, Jan. 3.—Governor McCall, | Assoclation Opposed to Woman Suf- s Asserting the governmient of Russ in 1 never saw a more miserable, piti- | ¢ yation for a third term said the United The argument for the antis de- conditions, he said that if the Centl % : o made her home with her daughter in e A Homra BECAUSE OF THE ¢ & - ful, starved lot of soldier: Thoy (0 s States must concentrate all its re- | clared suffragists and socialists, seek- »owers did not agr looked like the riff-raff from the | g EO% N tten in |Sources to win the war., but this | iDg to destroy the right of each state Newport News, Va., Jan. 3 Vel 0 tionalities of the Polish and Lot slums of some hig city. Even the | joee™ ot tho sugzestion of her pastor, | country ought not refuse to give at- | to settle the question by popular vote Two soldicrs, 1z mquires rflmlse nations it would urgently nece officers appeared underfed and under- | 15 "9, TUE FHEEEHO G o8 O everal | tention to any honest proposal for | hadhresoru-d to the lowest political duty here, are reported sary to defend the Russian revolutiol clothed and I saw only one With a | ¢inem to music. | peace. | charged them with cir \ve heen frozen to « B He said need, ror whole pair of breeche: Notio i o he denthii s “In time of war,” he said, “there | culating a canard that President Wil- i Al S nhn t mrn Fnfimflates Nm m be met “When the officers were lined UD | Hawks thus deseribed the writing of |iS danger of the deterlorating of | SO had promised Alice Paul, leader wh cortificates say il b there were 42 Austrians and 2 Ger- |nest famous hymn | those —institutions of government | Of the White House pickets, that he : Petrograd, Jan (By the AM mans. The Austrians were told they | «y premember well t orni which ave the glory of peaceful times | Would secretly aid the amendment. a ey i lah, Braci would recelve the usual treatment |many years ago, when in the midst | and which are superseded by a rule | Such a statement, the argument de- m[} f%l fly fll’ Na‘!y egation officially h uggested to giyen officers and gentlemen but the | or the daily cares of my home, I was | military. ClRCEl o G BRI Ho WG el k e e meahincay two Germans were told plainly that |go filled with Senselofincarnesst to “War has little tolerance for frec- | dent’s character, and added that the of the pe: t be transf they would receive exactly the same |the Master that, wondering how one | dom. We must sde to it that it shall | President had been the foremost of f gl el prag treatment given Krench officers. in | could live without Him either in joy | l¢ave no permanent trace @ its au- Woman suffrage bec ause of “his well ) B e e ins 5 A Germany. The Austrian officers were | or pain, these words, ‘I Need Thee |tocratic methods, 'and take nothing ; known preference to have the states > " Jonlboazdlinis s monns impressed greatly at this and openly | Tve Hour, were flashed into my ;irom the body of our liberties. settle the question for themselves. - declared their hatred of the Germans. | mind. Seating myself by the open A little later we heard the Austrian | window in the balmy aic of the bright soldiers cheering and it turned out | June day, I caught my pencil, and Y test which will precede the fight in Their names W the house Jan, 10 when the suffrage if the police cai constitutional amendment comes up adjutant general for a vote and if he fails th resu!t was that rawness and indisci- pline were swept away before disci pline and training. ¢ to free the woul | “But we are in the war and we | Mrs. Travis Whitney, of Brookiyn, 1 : s i | must wage it with no divided energy | Sid the New York vote to answer to g veRbEn e l'of the nation. We must concéentrate | Mrs. Wadsworth’s contention that KRoW B gy | Ara it < oy 1 Dea they were cheering their French cap- | the words were soon committed to |&ll our resources in order to win it, suffrage was won in New York by the i ¢ anct an English tors, paper, almost as they arc being sung | #nd we must surely not abate in the | ‘Ol of pacifists and socialists 10 ¥ ' g 2 afetiviedgeud "he success shows the necessity | now LIy G0 1R R T ) Ul R S “lt';' B e | ; 1 100 mem ! 3 Ssity 2 . . sl members they had done by federa A e for trained troops as untrained troops | “It was only by accident, as it | peace. ey G e oRe Dyt L one of {he could not possibly have secured such | would seem, that they were set to “Do T mean that we should not think , £ ekt Hes ZSRaf I DR i = ot : S e e IR : o Mefore, and continued ] d at the results. music a few months later and sung | of beace and not be ever ready to e s N Y . ol fhe lercmTtion bonuatt “The spirit and enthusiasm of the | for the first time at a Sunday school | secure =a righteous peace in any e e e e o « has 100000 memb French troops as they leaped into the | convention held in one of the large | rishteous way? By no means, it H s e e S et Birore enemy trenches is beyond all praise. | Western cities. T'rom there they were | Would be far better to conside L et S o 1 to join the societ Their earnestness not only éarried | taken further West and sung by thou- | peace, even frandulently made ! o ea e e Sl e bR nake an affirmat them into the trenches but actuall . | sands of voices before the echo came to refuse to give attention to o it e = 3 e S - ] A o ) s actually | sand; e e ooy be a jewel far beyond them. Some detachments | Pack to me i labor and finances enga 1 the atten- i — - tion of Dircctor Gen. MceAdoo and hi § ou pledge yourself noi armonizing, domfl et onlEoins buntil bl eachadiin Among other hymns of which she SepmTar 4 = 5 5 7 o e ok 1zing S e e R e SRR S AMERICANS DIE. BRIDGEPORT AGAI Saff tod1y alons with the movement Cnited the enemy. They found deserted |JCSus.” “Good Night,” “Why Weepest 5 E of coal to New Kngland ast f 2Lk villages and little evidence of enemy | Thou?”, “Who'll Be the Next to Fol- II. J. Poc of Tos Ange One of Those IN THE LII\IELIGHT Hends ot the four rallway brother- | foria. in ane. ot he ple : g the - Bl occupation and could have held this | 10W Jesus” and “In the Valley.” Killed Near Sonora. : ; he, R i hoods were called iuto conference to ! German is repeated opposite o sent an offig r‘u‘ ‘H«"I'l position back of the enemy T . '|"m\<<.;\_‘ AT J.K.x\'; 3 ]”\l J. Poe, of S diseuss the general cmployment 1. “Wollen sie sich verpoflichtc hairman of the & ines. But it was beyond the objective | s Angeles and iguel Martinez of = » PR A At ol eeilhien b ° i o sought and would have n.-«»min:nmn BRAY P\EPLAGES PEEKS Nogales, Americans, were among the | This Time Masked and Armed Rob- f““;, o A nol intentisn & Mar 'f,‘: R \J“},‘.I», i H t it e 1‘;:::\“:‘,.“ re-organizing defenses so the pre- | PPN 36 persons killed yesterday When | o geoc Sensational Trolley Car | Of Dréssing their demands e e e ihe adiren 5 i vious detachments were erdered to | Yaqui Indians attacked a Southern = it e it showe@ what enthus. | Stress of State Tealth Work Compels | Pucific train south of Empalme, Son- | Holdup in Daylight. ora, according to me res reaching | the railroad’s offices here today. | Bridgeport, Jan. 3.—Within a short Traveling Auditor Ralph Snovel, an | distance of the North Main street American with headquarters at Maz- | police station early today five masked Dr. T. Eben Recks, former super- |atlan, was wounded. Alberto Joffrey, men with blackjacks and revolvers pledge that is as fo Y 1 s are that the cent. higher pay at this time, it' ix oder der Polizel irgend ciner Ior ? rotintions on new understood their case will en up ¢ anzuschiiezen ? » transtor | long with many other w s, | The societies have their local meet Aference to holm. The B fasm can do in forcing a wedge straisht through the Austrian line.” Former (o R From Draft as soon as the railroad administration | ings once a month. The Germa ram declares t replies to the m has disposed of the more pressing | branch, No. 126, meets on the fourth are expected by Russia in Pell problems. Many railroad executives | Thursday \ch month at 33 Church | R | Boara. Repulse Raiders. | London, Jan. 3.—*“Hostile ding 3 i parties were repulicd last might souis | intendent of health and one of Gov- |another American of the Border | beat unconscious and robbed the crew | increase particularly for un-organized | mects o . third Sunday of each ana southwest of La Bassee, leaving a | €T10T M. H. Holcomb's appointees as | Trading company at Nogales, was shot | of a trolley car i labor to prevent the men from going | month at 178 Arch street few prisoners in our hands” the war | Member of the first local exemption | three times but will recover. Among Motorman H. K. Warner is in St. o other industries where wages ar The ofiicers of the German branch | are prepared to recommend a general | street. The knglish branch, No. 302, | Articles 1 and 2 of the Austro-G | man terms bmitted December: (December 23, new style), the | sage says, arc in direct conflict the principles of sclf-definition of tions insisted upon by the Russl peace delegation and upported by Russian republic nd the centd executive committee of the Congrd office reports. “The cnomy artillees | district draft board, has resigned from |[the trainmen killed were Conductor | Vincent's hospital with a fractured | hetter |@re: President, John Hendler: re showed considerable activity m,,.mf,‘ this position and his place has been [ Paredes and an express messenger. skull, while C‘fonductor George Frantz John 8. William: comptroller uf“"""-‘”‘l ry, John Rudolph; the night east of Epehy.” ‘ltaken by Dr. Henry T. Bray, it be- | Th railroad reports also said Mexi- | was robbed of §14 the currency, and the director gen- | financial retary, Henry Bauer = ume known today. an federal troops in pursuit of the The attack was so sudden that the | eral's advisor of railroad financial | treasurer Preissel, The offi- Frenct Shina s unt Dr. Reeks, who worked hard and | Yaquis encountered a party of raiders | men had no time to defend them- | questions, discussed with Mr. McAdoo | cers of the so-called inglish-speaking iris, Jan. 3.—Nine French mer- | conscientiously as a member of the r Quero de Babi last night and lost | celyes. Warner attempted to grah a ; the situation which will develop soon | branch —are President, Frederick | or workmen's and Soldiers’ delegal chant ships of more than 1,600 tons|draft board during the registration |5 killed. The Yaqui losses were nof | qwitch iron and was felled by a blow | when railroad honds and other obligi- | Charland: —corresponding secretars Petrograd newspapers arc _ungl were sunk by submarines or mines ! )ast June and the first draft last [ given | on the head jons fall du A plan will he worked | Bdward V:‘Qvnmnn_ financial seere- [ ous in declaring. the Germaniil SOl Austrians have, aft® one week throg off the mask and made it clear # the Central powers do not want real democratic peace. The Pra¥ during the week ending Dec. 29, summer, has been obliged to resign | S | There were no passengers on the ' out by which the debts may be re- | tary, .V There was no loss of vessels under |because of stress of other work. At | SUGAR SITUATION, 1.600 tons or of fishing ships. Two |Present he is in the employ of the Washington, Jan. 3.—Food Admin- s N the government may buy. Final ar- ¢ ittacks on steamers failed. state health department as state epi- | istrator Hoover's statement of tho | CAN'T LOCATI SHIP. rangements will depend much on the | Pinds it together, is that the mem- demiologist. Ilis office is in Hart- | sugar situation begun yesterday before At 2 legistation congress enacts. | bers must pledse themselves not to Ttali Too. ford and the nature of his work takes ? the senate committee and elaborated |yyipeless Apparatus On the Shino Since Directo McAdpo became | Pring charges against the society or Rome, Jan —Enemy submarines, | him all over the state. | into a discussion in favor of govern N Billeved o Be Dicablod head of the unified and government | anY individual n’.:ml,m? of it during the week ending Dec. 29, sunk Dr. Bray, the new medical member | ment purchase and sale of sugar, gov- el St controlled railroad system a Jithronshith e press e stormFofipros one Italian steamer of more than |of the first exemption board, has al- | ernment control of foods, enzagzed A Pacific Port, Jan. 3.—ailure of the main tangible result has been | Posal of all the male ndidates funded with other securities’ which/| A second interesting pledge of the | car, . society, which keeps it secret and \an imperialism is again ginning to show its clams.” Germany's apparent unwillingni 1.600 By AR . ) o e s, one ne. | to give Poland, Lithuania, Livon 600 tons and one sailing vessel of | ready been inducted into his new | the attention of committeemen today | the Tove Kissen ';,‘““"“' steamshid | ¢jj0" aeceleration of coal shipments | ;‘l';‘“ o In ‘(‘"““\"_"i““”lfi' i one in BNS- | courland and Esthonia the privil less than 1,600 tons. Two steamers | duties. | e e company to receive further sh and the ot terman s k 1 prt which were attacked managed to| ——= BN cten heaninepuasfne uo o MENININ (|| e s Rt SO D = e o G in| e sdnner ; which the esemption [ Of Uve Lelf defilion I the Pt escape & ! e e e T etk O e s o iio lunnan || omctaisironndilouc anereitnsl soci sty HISHNthefnesotiations L v Sy X priority orders. Surveys are also S Ai andidate for the | Other peace conditions are ignored Paris Statement. ! heen put out of commission. A re- | wicarient draft, in order to identify himse e Bo iki leaders who say Paris, Jan. 3 ‘Heavy artillery | layed distress call from the freighter e on cortain rail- § brought forth the card of member- |INaNy OpPpOses the most vital primj = & = Serious congestion 2 e s | ple underlying the Russis evoluti fighting occurred during the night, | ]¢X],MP l‘ FRO'\,I MH I T AR‘I SER‘]](\E was the only message that had | ,.onqs while others Adloining or con. |Ship in this society. He was at a | Plo undsriying to ussian rov i especially on the Aisne front, in the | = B L A4 reached herc. i e 's report. | 10ss to know whether he would not | an interview, Foreign Mi I | i necting are al, w 1 be conflicting with the rules and reg- | Trotzky sdid peace negotiations pf cgion of Landricourt, and also in the | The steamer, which left here De- Ing T e i ol v e e sector of Maissons-de-Champagne and | cember 21 carries many tons of mer ommeree Commission- | ulations of his society if he filled out | 2Pl L E P ai r o 5 T | Titovsk as the Rus ans oppose sta m the right bank of the Meuse”, chandise and steel and a crew of fifty i o chaik6 of ithe com. | auestionnairelfor he ‘waslrequired |I:tovsk 2 1 i ppo t today's official report “Pwo by the society not to join any mili- | Iy the principle of annexation 3 nemy raids, one south of the Oise, | 8ress today on the progres f the “Whether this guess (1,000,000 comditions reported so | 1ary organization. He was told that ‘ v'v I‘u‘\\‘l‘l\ eve ; in : w\ ‘J > 5 A 5 StoRn o o aire | meeti « e Centrs utive cg the other near Carnilet, were repulsed | draft expresses for the first time a | “¥iilable men) be justified in practico REPORTS RESIGNATION. (B teo i vuie on the Low | D B8 0l FU oub e qlisstionmuige | B SRS @S L) R completely or not. it can he announced now as of regardless of any society’s ruling. ‘ mittee o e L oldiegs | | and a beginning of the clearing up on today to Director General McAdoo Washington, Jan. 3.—Provost Mar- General Crowder outlines the new | shall Gen. Crowder reporting to con- | Dolicy in this lanzuage {wo men. No passengers were aboard i S definite promise and ¢ of the gove - Iennsylyontaglines west T A s e g < | workmen's s enresntat] = F : Amio st V= | the policy and helief of this office that | Ambassador May Lpave Washi E on the Connelsville and Dhefsoctety Shasfis fpaner which il = 1 3 7 th >of R ernment not to take for army auty |in all probability it will he possiblo = " | published, it is believed, in New York |of th pe e Pe Steamer Sinks. iSeniibd el e i 11 probabilit will be pe © . Recanse of von Ludburg Telegrams, mberland divisions of the _Balti- | BESREASC, 3 0 e e and 1t is | srad work: s liers' cod London, Jan. 3— The Norwegian | Y other men than those listed in [to fill ou. military needs without in i nd on the Western | Clty callec e Solidari ol e i . S class 1 of the new draft question- OitE eTasses T Gkeineal Buenos Aires. Ja t - ' | thought that its propaganda is spread | and re foreign office reports that the Nor- 1 | vading classes morc eferrec 1l i . 2 Y Cumberland Valley N D Sl il i Al naire. it o o S ported. without confirmation, that e e | through means of this rmy co e e e ey Lo This classification excludes married | standard. and Jt. . Naon, the ambassador at W Haven the ] The officers of the No. 126 branch | of the : men entirely, whose wives or families time announced, toward which sign conseauence ol ; ume | of society for last vear were: Presi niniou arc dependent on them for support, administrative’ effort. of this| fiction anising from thel publicition S e : : : ce te and other men with defendents SHall e direaiea” Y or the secret telegrams s W Cou Eines in (he SioD A ety | tary, John Rudolph; financlal secre- | Germa itude Gen Crowder does this on the esti- | vonLuxhurg bef _ ' tary, lenry Nauer; treasurer, Joseph | tic provinece t mate that 1,000,000 men physically | German minister to t . Preissel thor the governme il or army <« i Vil e % ! hroug the med t 3 ¥ 32 A 3ranch 302 is not ted e 1916 | to trar er future )€ fit for army duty will 1 ilabl \D, v : lin 1 1 the med e e, Rranch listed in the 191 1sfer 1 from class 1. This number he thinks B | ish legation directory o a neutral countr sufficient for the present itary 3 ) | ing ! quiry into s Russian enerally favor needs of the nation but to as the e - ~ W s th ARRESTED FOR THEPT. holm as the place for the peace future supply for thes he TinaT s coni the Na | Charles Donaldson, an employe of |ferences but it is said the Gen recommends that men who ¥ 5 L y { 1 T he “New Haven” road at the freight |are not willing to go to Sweden. come 21 s since June S5 depot. was arrested today by officers | Articles 1 and 2 of the Austro the fi A 1 come o X s wetfoid, X B Foue t « 1 5 of the company, for alleged theft of [man terms as cabled under a H 1 cl « this st for w o Britain and vi t goods at the depot wrch of the | Litovsk date by the way of Berli cinity now tomight, Friday Q| ntract negotia- | prisoner’s locker at the freight house nday, covered the ending of yair, continued cotd. this is the promisc the goal, here for th inglon, has resigned in consequence o torpedoed and sunk while on her wa from B: to Rouen, says a Central News despatch from Copenhagen to- hortag dent, Ifelix Hammer; recording secre eace term d Five men on the vessel were Thirteen of the crew were | BELGIUM'S were | s A viult andl com- | disclosed canned goods, stomach bit 1 000 L ] ers IFairview cemetery ¢ ters and other articles, it is claimed. (Continued on Heventh Pu