New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1918, Page 1

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HERALD BEST OF ALL 4.0CAL NEWSPAPERS PRICE THREF CLNTS. Nr\\” BRIIA[N (“ONNI(,TICUT 'FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1018. —SIXTEEN PAGES. ALLIED MISSIONS IN Efl!‘flEST NEWINGTON |HEAVY PUNISHMENT 'REVISION OF CAPITAL REPORTED IN FLIGHT| RESIDENT IS DEAD, ON PRUSSIAN LINE \ finister Horris at Stockkolm Sfiflflfl” ELU$E TflflAY John S. Kirkham Was First Town | American Artillerists Send Shells | _ Cables They Are Making Wlll RE[!P[N I‘FB' 18 Clerk There Tnto Enemy Battalions | TOOL MAKERS IN coN)l(\Ié:I&;_lr Their Way to Swedish ———— Exemption from enforced rest ” akers was contained in the follow . % g —— _— Thomas W. Russell, state fuel admi LAST WORD FROM mously to Support 123'! Was 91 Years and 10 Months Old and | Uncle Sam’s Sharpshooters Make “With special consent of \Vashifi % | olaced in force in Conncecticut : 3 3 16 Had Been Member of Newington Short Shri T H Snipers—Licu- I ooy . s Administratic laxt SANE of Mon Shlerss L Exemption under the \Vashing Congregational Church Since 18 13— nt Who Bagged Boche Airplane | hereby granted permitting the use of FRANCIS FEBRUARY 2| At o special meeting of the school | Judge Kirkham a Son. Was N w0 the Games in factories not specially exempted byS Pt by P ublic Sn P etros ) board held this noon it was voted to |y o provided no more fuel is required ford accedo to the request of State lTucl N tinucs—Cellars and Stores Being | Administrator Thomas H. Russell and close the local schools from Monday, Looted—Troops Called Out to SUP- | Jebruary 11, to. the following Mon- press Distnrbance Belleved to Have (47 It was announced that the Not-| yusy of died at 4 o'clock this|roads, dugouts, light railroads @ mal school, acting on the advice of |,,orming (i his home in the neighbor- | houscs in which enemy troops are bil- FAVOR DRAFTIN ‘Killed 120—Kaledines and Alexieff | the state board of education and fol- | . ,wn seneral breaking down | leted lowing the plan of the local authori- | .gincigent with old ame. Mr. Kirk-| Iovidently the American tactics an- e Quarrel, n:'l h.n;\' also xlm-m«zdl (\nl vl\; s li\"’“\\;\ ham was 91 years and 10 months old sred the Germans, for they started a | Washington, Feb. 8. Favarable re- | Mdrshal-Gelit Washington, Feb. S.—An uncon-) s I.»\.”;S_““““ e n e “M{“‘ .'l‘“"‘h':“”“_H,“””;\ . s ;‘;:::LI“:”I;»[N;::‘ (ll:“’l'l‘\"v'l“':“\‘(';‘l‘t‘1\UrL on the war departments, bill ifl"{:';'dm firmed report that all the Allied mis- Every member of the school hoard isior & I e < | American heavy guns s;,'(v‘m.‘,d tho | amending the selective draft law to re- ,WI,‘- New to re Petrograd had been driven |was present when Chairman B. I |jine of the oldcr generation of Kirk-| German artillery. quire registration of mien as th& | youths at 19 yeas Bolshevik government and , Gaffney v-nfl«'d the f“““"v‘": to ’m(lvl‘ Lhams who rcsided in Newington, ha | larly today observers saw a body ! reach 21 years and basing quotas on | rejected. 2 way to the Swedish bor- | this noon ard he rl\n”un‘m? that he | jng heen the Jast of nine brethers and [ of cnemy infantry, estimated at two |the number of men in class 1, ifstead Another bill fa der was received today at the state |had called the meeting carly in or- | gisters. lle was born in the house in | battalions, near a forest. A heavy fire [ op on state populations, was unani- | which affects the draf départment through Minister Mor der that the actlon of the board | Newington near the old Mill pond and | was dirccted on the spot, scattering the | mously ordered today by the senate | ize the president in any at sStockholm. might he transmitted to the teach- |jp his boyhood days attended the Cen- | Germans. It is felt certain the enemy | mjlitary committec call into immediate milt y he department has not heard | €rS, pupils and janitors of the schools | ter district school there. At the ago | sustained numerous casualtics. Later | 3 hof choo] | The proposal to exempi men as they | skilled experts in industry or @8 Ohsiderab, from Ambassador Francis at Petro- | this afternoon so they could govern | ¢ nine years he moved to Springfield | American shells started a fire in | raaeh 31 years if they have not ! e s grad since Feb. 2 their future actions accordingly. | with his parents, his father having) German town, which burned for an 5 % Kirkham, Newington's old- [ With the American Army in France, 3 i L o est resident, veteran town and state | Feb. 7.——(By The Associated Press) if the tool makers were not ““‘I\l“ ‘:R official, one time Democratic nominee | The American artillery is keeping up @ for licutenant governor and one of the | a harassing firo on the German lines, F of the California gold | bombarding batteries, trenches, cross- » b culture, regardless of classification, {§is o j'S estimates of : Irafted, as approved by Irovost | res S a. 02. i St Uepartment officials were un. | Without adverse comment, Dr. J. L. |taken a position as school teacher | hour b i apPrC y rovost | residence or quota. 1 Tt ds now beligved complote re <olly : S RS o 5 : St ! Sl z ———/"| turned will show th®number d prepa {o believe the American am- | Kelly moved to close the schools as | {here. Subsequently, the family re-| Patrols have been active. An Amer- to be nearer 200 than 100, of S bass Wi leaving Potrograd be. | requested by the fuel administrator | furned to Nowington, where Mr. Kirk-/ jcan patrol last night entered a Ger- ! & il : cause his last dispatch contained | and L. Hoyt Pease seconded the mo- | ham attended the academy and later| man trench. They found a laaded BLAN [D N A 4 JA":’ Corresponidention TN L N Hothing to indicate that ho contem- | tion, saying he thought it better to |became o school teacher there him- | rific on the parapet and fresh foot- sociation at an Iriglpoyt At S Dlated soing, It was considered pos. | co-operate with the authorities in |self. He also taught in Hartford and | prints, but no soldiers. PUZZLF TO ARMY OFF[CIALS A t‘"‘]" AT ;"t‘]‘”‘ e "*';E“'—‘-" re: SiblC, however, that expulsion might| Spivit, rather than hold out and then | New Britain. Cllearing Out Snipers. “ | where of Major B. . Wade. ‘fi'vo", \so include a refusal to permit thoe | Possibly be compelled to shut down. Went to Califo in 184 Ny R SR Pt . " ade of Wash diplomats to communicate with thelr| Suberintendent H. Holmes sub-| Tn 1849, when gold was discovered | - RECam A7 OmY G0 N m;jm_"y | ington, commander of a contingent o governments, mitted a report on the coal situation |in California, Mr. Kirkham became [ #2GGeRCHC M CERORE 078 & 08T | the ‘:tefimnr‘ and hundreds of Ameri . rrin. at Stoclk S arious schools as follow enthused with the idea of searching | ¢ 3 oL EAuSoC congiceran o | P , - can troops. reported that.two trains from Petro- tvery S SR 2 3 : Gl Tl was taken over by the troops. Snipers s e grad had arrived there, one bringing | depends on the weather” If the|the late Harvey Brawn, a former the Rumanian legation. He 'also re | eather is mild the coal Wil last as|local grocer, and William Humason, | POStS in buildings have been destroyed BAS!S F{}R PEAEE Regiment of Each Soldier o only two Wwomed gt KSE . : e Seb nondi L > 2 | by knocking down the shclters over ccount says, Mrs. Collins and M pagted the capture of Tornco by the |follows: High school (Academic, 25 |another New Britain man, he set forth | DY FUe oy e Yer Parsons, went down a rope into a. life White Guards. tons, 5 weeks: (Vocational), 10 tons, |in the late '40s. Instead of going by L“‘. "‘_‘_";,;‘; EG ‘]"r_‘l‘“‘_"* _“_’\”‘1 ‘1“ 1]"“ Required by Regulations' s \,u:l that il G 2 weeks: Open-Air school, one-half | prairio schooner as so many of the | Snipers hidden in bushes or shell holc 1 ) Rioting Resumed in Capital. ton, 4 weeks; Grammar school, 40 | pioneers did at that time, these men | HAve boen Torn ediby sxmertean iy London, Feb, S—Tresh outbreaks|1ons Pre-vacational, 20 tons, 4 weeks | went by boat, sailing around Cape ""‘“" ;]“'! SO, ’f":;“i‘““‘ e (’?'f of Litintid saa lr‘»;ning In Petrograd | (March 13 st Street school, 60 |Iforn, and thence up the west coust "‘I‘“-‘r ‘L'l“‘c "”'_“ el i Mgeshi rloting. ant r Sirosra: L ) 5C89 : § e e some of the positions. B - . b 4 TR tons, 7 week (April 1): Smalley | of Sauth America to California. They 2 s < 3 Words on Na- ',L.':H””‘:"_“I(,"I‘ Slopas l‘f:l"f‘f"‘_“l"("fi.»i.mn_ 40 tons, 11 weeks (April 30); | were six months in making the trip, | At one ""I‘l"‘] SonStE e discov- ds on N tussian capital. Wine cellars, Jew-| it ¢ihool, 50 tons, 11 weeks (15 |and in his memoirs Mr. Kirkham | Cred in a shell hale. A few well-placed e e elry ghops and clothing, food andjiong left over): Rockwell school, 46| makes Darticular mention of a terri- | Shots from light artillery ended thelr | tional Grouping. T erd] JEuE gy arefbeiux piindareds tons, 9 weeks;: Lincoln Strect school, | fie storm they ecncountered off the|C4reer. At another place a hail of todny: ends oficily anxlonslyiawaitad | 1d) thely bost and.ar Cue I SA Troops employed to supPress tho | 53 tons, 11 weeks (8 tons lett overy: | const of Brasil. The search for sold | Machine gun bullets was effective. . X o dditional details to clear up the con- | & swimming or floating man we 0 sturl res i o] shoc o i o 2 Sl % & A s s & >, v ssibly pe, S ers’ Amsterdam 'eD. 8 Murkey s in| o foreig 1o > - P o vy bog Soo > 4 disturbances did much shooting, in |nfonroe. Street school, 45 tons, 11 |did not result in any sudden wealth [ One two, or possibly three, sniperst | - BERCHIL €O, Sor MEESH 18 W filet with forelgn figures on the lo him into the boat. SoANCHISAVE N which it is estimated 120 Persons|yeeks (20 tons left over); Northend | for the Connecticut men and they re- | POSts are still in front of American | COM1 AusiEi i erpianaen | e N were: killed, school, 25 tons, 5 weeks; Smith school, | turned home a year or sa later. positions but are not likely to be | Germany and Austrin as expressed inj - cavle pr dispatches from an | tressing scenes. Iiventually we e Fighting between tho Bolsheviki oha TSWerhe: CasooiENI Hohoel v i v o e RS TR b recent specehes of (he Gerbiin | irish port lust night saying the ¢4 |on board u destroer. T don't re e 5 “ 4 21 8 : J & . : bt chancellor anc e Austrion forcig v e e N ember P o o and Cossacks is said to be increasing tons, 1 week; Stanley school, 12 tons, | devoted himself to agricultural pur- Amexican “No N Giete Avintor i s T o ’ mn’nj:‘ N | hodies American soldiers, tered | me mt 1 harder bit of \’ vk in the south and southeast of Russia, | § wecks; Iilm Street school, § tons, | suits and was for many years a direc- hd voilng Amerioan Heutenant who || Nessimy. Hey, told the chamber bevoud recognition, had been washed A young officer, answelng a aned where the Cossacks are joining the| 3 weeks; Camp schoal, 18 tons, % [tor of the Connecticut Agricultural |, 3 e e L e whore 15 miles from the scene of the | tion as to what the soldiers did whi had the honor of shooting down his | deputies rda o lso declared: | orpedoing, dampened hopes that the | waiting for the destroyers after i | | Bolsheviki in increasing numbers. . Bart sch 5 = S elctr N bainel one S . asing s. [weeks; Bartlett school, § tons, society, being one of the few who so |, : : . e ‘he D : ; I first German airplane while accom-) “The Dardanelles will remain 0bendiroop losses would prove very small. | fivst cxcitement was over ¢l anying a French escadrille on a |in e to internati u According to fizures given in carlisr | ”\4‘“' boat left the Tuscania many o of War Department. the troops had been thrown out i the lowering of the next boat. “We were surrounded by men in thi hinston, Feh. 8——Advices to the | iC¥ Waters swimming feebly,” she saf ‘We had only two men in our boa who could manag the oars. The witr department remained unchangzed l Foreign Minister Deaf in| | ] Gen. Kaledines and Alexieff are re-|wecks. successfully opposed the transfer of ported to have quarreled and Gen. “There are six weeks to the end of | torrs college. He was also @ mem- Kaledines has disappeared from Cos-|{he present term, March 2 er of Newington nge and at one | | | c 4 0 “Oh, we soon steadied dow hombing expedition Tuesday night, | in the t and on the same condi- dispatches only 101 of thosa |iounzed about and smoked but W had never operated a machine gun | tions ¥ L sack headquarters at Novo Tcherkask. timo helonged to the state board of | Togt NYEr operated S o e d. inetuding soldicrs, smbers: | didn’t ven low to gather up ov Gen. Alexieff is acting independently T b Ot Lo (1Y, i b [P Skt ST Gt R “";“\‘_” e e Fion M of the crew and passengers were mis belonzings for fear the ship = wou and is said to be in commandeof 30 GEORGE A BATES DEAD man’s! assoctation il Mr Kirkham alsoy| Jeon over the enemylines. fHle got hiof it »J A DL e This had led officials io believe | suddenly capsize. We talked abot 000 men who are marching north- Tiadlalacenlicast lof thelclisiousta o o nRCYOLENRRGEIOEn Fal (VoD Raanieg) S s e with the heavy loss ficst indieated | the misfortune of crossing the A ward. Joined the Newington Congregational |DU'&: The bomblng squadron was | (Pl B Ll (UM vek, but he had [AMong tho crew that most Amerear | lantic only to he caught in the I8 _ S saber of Second Advent | 6lurch in 1848, He served as clork | OFOT ce o linitie SR OL D o she. Wnle arare ldicrs nad been saved lap. We cheered the first destroyd e M Prominent Member of Second Advent | €205 8 BE L any, vears .i;:..‘»i»m' 'n..mzx‘.:n“‘h:-:\n v:;“f-nl) air- | No attempt was being made thug | that came alongside and its m Paris. Feb 8.1 e G Church Expircs at Age of 75—Was | and was deacon at the time of his |PIanes Were, Been approaching rapic- | for to preparc list of the missing. | cheered us. Their work was magnl aris, Feb, 8.—The Petit Parisen Saath 1 By the time the bomb-dropping |* i o L 2 Only the names of a few survivors | cent and only when they saw thg continues today publication of official Expert Mcchanic. o inont 1ol Politien had been completed the encmy was [&0 @y price . o '\'\‘f) {3 have heen rocelved and indications to- | could save no' more life ‘did /it German documents, which, it says, 2 s el a el onchl TomAtionk o SoeocnaRENC FBresTden CRRVHISON LRl Ih S L e R e were brought to France by a prom- George Bates, aged 75 Politically, Asr. Wirkham was al- | which this American and another tent mianch ddlcabat Rl o iaiss | ways afliliated with the democratic them from a Russian revolutionary party and was elected town clerk in paper. The latest installment con. |Street after an jllness of two weeks. | Newington, serving from 1870 to 1890 sists of a sories of documents tending| Mr- Bates was born on May 13, | He was also a justice of the peace and desirability of concluding peace, said, “we will never conclude a pe: Premier Lloyd George, he said “We adhere tn the standpoint that [ Would continue to come in slowly as | parest port and herc 1 am amg assembled in Ireland by rap- | people who have overwhelmed American had accompanied as gun- ners was at an altitude of 10,000 feet. The lieutenant, who is a Missourian, fook of his gloves so that he might died today at his home, 39 Trinity resentatives of the war, navy and stage | with kindnes cannot be regulated except by means | department A report from tire Irish Behaved Like Americans. of institutions ercated in accordance | port also sail army identification tags | o American soldiers beha before the wat | | [ the fafe of national zraups which they are | were not independen | with tt cclaration (- he was in wearer \lthough there was no of Peter Rumisis of Union Strect Being Held by deral Authorities on a BEIRInE s AT OFtal lines: LThe o | haveat sitnon v, T. B Giles, | Tort Omaha, Neb, and Miss Graco | pulsed an enemy reconnoitering . | male of the species is more deadly | pastor, will officiate. The body will | J1ine of Deham, Mass., and Harrieit | party. The artillery was active north Middleboro, Mass., Jeb. S.—TFour . than the male,”” has been brought | be taken to Springficld, Ma for | &4 Julia G., Frances K., and Laura | of Monastir automo band vho started out home with force to Peter Rumisis of | hurial. | A. Kellogg, the last four being the | *“Allied aviators have bombarded 1st nizht to raid postoflices on Cape to show the Bolshevik movement has | 1843, in Fairhaven, Mass, son of | fown health oficer. Hizher political gperate his machine gun more effee- | vy W5 OIS SERE R B0 R found on hodies washed ashore bore | cpon“tnec found that the boats been financed by Germany. Franklin Bates and Mary Ann Terry. | 1”"“;“:‘ s ': o ed 1o 1 | tively when he saw an enemy DIans | Gar country.” ks no names or numbers, making iventi- | St STt pcanta \mong the documents is a circu-| For 40 years he was foreman for the | Sirkham and he was clected to the | gpiving in front and firinng. The bul- | VU reign ministor said he re- | fication impossible causing constder- | peen smashed is told by an Ameriod lar dated March 2, 1917 from the | Pr: it . artford, | eneral assembly in 1878, and in 1887 | 104 whizzed close to the French ma- S ’ Syl % T tion hy repulationeres || et s e £ e the | Pratt & Whitney Co. in Hartford, | 20 & o v tha T - jeeted all prope-als which meant in-:al speenlation. Army regulations x officer who landed at an Irish pod German imperial bank to all repre-| being considercd an unusually fine | W o° ¢lecte e scnate, having en- | opine nhefore the American could get i , jire identification tags bearing name. < : ] - s d sually = e S : fefiente i thBinterno) Al brlanirelident jon tags bearing - | o sald his men behaved as he h sentatives in Switzerland, instructing | mechanic. IHe was mechanical super- \j{"\-"" ““.‘“‘“”‘:"’_“\ i .ln.'[““ the only |y, picce into action. Then he turned | 7' "l ang ended his address rink, company and regiment of tho | eyhected them to. Two full' ba them to honor all demand for money | intendent of the Mergenthaler Lino- | Gomocratic senator ever clected from |, gtreamn of bullets into the enemy und | loads under his command assembl from Nikolal Lenine, M. Shineoff, | tvpe plant in Brooklyn, N. Y., for ten | DS district. = The distinction of hav- | yerore he first drum was exhausted | . G 3 inl eonfirmation o Ay G0t nal|ona 8 St . | tvpe T in Brooklyn, N. Y., f et ke complete accord with the German and ficial confirmation of this repo on deck when the tresis sl Leon Trotzky, M. Kamenecfl, one of | years and received an offer to go to |in8 been the first town clerk of New- | iy, ohemy machine toppled and start- | \uetvian policic: ofticiuls decline to comment, it was | | A Yo Dok e R 1L, BEnS T Ronel b | ington also went to Mr. Kirkham as L [[ Y i , | iner and marched to the boats the Russian representatives at Brest- | Germany to engage in the samo | SR o ed to spiral. Then it flopped and flut- pointed out that the dispatch said the | Gopneq them. Arriving at their st Litovsk negotiations; M. Soumenok | line, but refused. || B il p o CUGERl B S TR e e a0 G s ahpiL | soldiers had not been assigned to def- | on S o A boats had be ind Mazta Koslovsky who has been As a church worker, Mr. Bates was | Newington was set aside as a separate | g 00 4y its wake. It crashed to the [ e units e gl 3 rch worker, Mr. s i ) Wotk Heldl TaisEs nn init it destroyed described as the chief German agent | well known. He was first deacon of | LoWD from Wethersfield. = In 5 MU | ground a short distance from I Potal Mising Said to Be 210 1l Kirkham was nominated on the dem- | & | = The men lined up on deck at 4 in Russia all who have taken a prom- | the Second Advent church and for- | SIKHAM, Was BOMMRICC OF JHe (O | Gormun city \ceording to advices in the hands |4 oo WOt e officer, “and nent part in the Bolshevik move- | mer president of the Life and Ad- | QCratic ticke a8 Lol ‘(‘ aneSoyenoLy The other American aviator, also of the war department, the total miss- | rocarved the utmost composure m ment vent Union. He was a gifted writer | TUnNing with former Governor Mor- | jioyienant, was not lucky, for A fiHT AF'{ER [;HASE ing from the 2,379 souls aboard the |{i| » destroyer came alongside &f o = = on religious subject hose who sur- | 1% . } . the machine he picked out to cngage | Jiner is 210, of which 113 are Ameri- | frected the transfer from the gH ] die Whitehead of Wallingford, and *"‘(‘_f “";,m“'l""""U;‘;!;['l“ 'fl‘ 1‘]“\ first | ihle to get in any effective shots. e Gubis press! dispatches’say 298 | Pinra stood alonamde with A a son. Irank Bafes, vice president | W!C ' i G IR Eae = 5 Q 4 persons have been landed and are be- | man was taken off, who was the €of = 4 S ¢ living. They are Thomas A. Kirk- = our Auto Bandits Staried | ' . L A ? of the Portland Cement Co. and yow 3 - r 4 2 St 13 ing cared for in Irish villages and [ mander of the sk The patients | Sk ; 2 iy antry on Qui Vive. ing ¢ or s g wander of the ship. o patient member of a hydraulic engineering | 1Am of Bridgeport, and Judge John Serhian Intintey o o e it {ho ship's hospital, including seve firm in Seattle, Wash. A grandson, }l ISICEh A RoL ““:‘1:“‘ He also Paris, Feb. 7.—The “"I“”"' report on Tour to Raid Reports that the British destrover |cases of scarletina. and :Zovers i = g | leaves seven grandchildr They are 5 e war offlc ght reads i " R IS o8 g ; L M‘;.“,m Whitehead, also survives. il :“; even BT ”}”“W:‘nxil ||’Kv:‘; \“,,',. 1 2 th ”\‘\.v)“:1r ‘ml- b ead Post Offi which was convoying the Tuscanis |among the first taken off.” Charge of Failing to egister. The funeral will be held Sunday | * i AT ¢ . SSiuke O ¢ P Do e 0S ic pursued and sank the submarine lack b S afternoon at 3 o'clock at the Second | With the U. S. army aviation corps at | environs of Sokol Serbian infantry re- oL hation and tne!reportof the Socs U. S. More Determined British admiralty Is eagerly awaited. | That the sinking of the Tuscaj Navy officials are inclined to view | Will stimulate the United States that the Tuscania incident is an iso- | ¢V (]l: ;"\'vgor resolve on b&\:m-lt|ol | s fight for democracy is the opinion ¢ i : st e s ave no reason ' to |fi8 3 Union street for, as & rest : | daughters of Henry L. Kellogg of | with success enemy encampments in | ¢ eie CAnturenl neret foany atter) loted onso and hays e sressed &n editordl comment il » a result of his 2 M 5 ! | chango thelr view that the submarine |V d escapades with a fair young damsel, | Newington. Mr. Kellogg's sccond | the valley of the Vardar. Two encmy ; aRontonicere RN R owaN SRERER B R e morning newspapers. he has been branded as a slacker and EIGHT HOUP\ LAW VIOLATED { wife, who survives him, was a sister | sirplancs were brought down.” and at Warcham, 15 miles away flnol I"‘lrh’, |'0‘dw‘ i T o Satisfaction is expressed and cd \as been arrested a 1 e | of his first wife anc s, before her | — h e as shot and probably ot ks - : 5 rra endec v has been arrested and turned over to of his first wife and was, before her th now hot an robably ’ {the survivors had become availabla gratulations are extended that t the federal authorities. , marriage, Miss Mary K. Atwood emy Gunners Active at St Quentin. |, a4y injured <t the war or navy departments. The |first disaster to any American tra I'he local police arrested Rumisi ~sident of Switchman's Union'| London, Feb. 8-—The German ar The police found £300 in cash and port shows the emptiness of the G S artial list contained the 30 s the . 7 Ak S 303 n X (illery has been active north of St mps of an equal value, dynamite, °nly partial (4 at submarines WO Jast night, following information gtven ) ) HEATLESS MONDAYS Ulexy i hos ! TSN S Rt palvatue, (Xnamite ey announced yesterday. man boast that submarines WO them by the erstwhile girl of his| Claims Railroads Ignore Regula- | Quentin, according e o nitro. zlycerine and all of the para- | PAmes annovncod vesterday. = render the transportation of tho dreams. It is claimed that Rumisis Q n} tntement from British headquarters | . ) «cd by yeggmen, in the| Y S S g 3 a3 | erican armies impossible and wo originally lived in New Jersoy. but| tions Because of Lack of Penalty | IN SOUTH SUSPENDED | {{"50000 2nd felsium ssued today. | Dot NS W YEEEHCT - an (o | ista of survivors, it was said today | FLORE S ES (00C, o Nevert & L sw Jersey, but bandi mobil at the war department, may greatly . - i ailed to s o - B fot aas Feoni Ostervilie) the tobbers) - S 5 s too much to hope it wilk failed to register and, to keep from | cqause. N, e | et a m Osterville, the robbers | 4 ;. "o plication of an accurate list | 1838 it is too much 12 TCRE '~ (M St i s COAL COMING IN? carried off the commission of Char- = - the last victim though the convie 3y ~ - - - | X : of the lost. The survivors have been | at the American nat from one place to another. He came; Washington, Feb. S.—The i Administration Hopeful Regula- lotte L. Parker, the postmastcr i Tnti 1 expressné th 3 0 K a h .l landed at various points. Until offi- | : e alfculties andiR here from Waterbury and went to livo : In addition to the loot and tools i 12 i realizes fully the diffic : N oni Union street’ He subseqiently tion Can Be Lifted AN Over in City hall this afternoon to the ef- | 0 rinal o ros the men had 200 Cials get in touch with them and | "0 " (5 meet them Ciide Fio egliafitence arlel souns 2 | that six carloads of hard conl wera | enptridies and mans of the Cape with < check them off against the muster | PTCINE,ne cditorials say the \de the acquaintanc : g Country After This Weck. « cartridges and maps : il thorab s nol wasiito) detesmbne o s mids G s o et rolls there is no way determine | “UNF [ qce has not yet been m | in the Berlin freight vard. consi zned marks designating certain postoflices. T G T e T R B love and conflded the error of his|union today told the railway wage Washington, IFeh. 8—With the | for this ecity. Tt s also annotnced | A shot fired into th wostruck an £ b gh the number ; . ed and remains a grave problam ways. Later the two had a quarrel | commission. ¢ d it was because | total abandonment of heatless Mon '[ the local cou 4 would fold | automatic revolver hold by one of the)| Wiy batlknown i vhich the Al especially Gu and the zirl threatened to tell the po- | the Adamson law placed no penalty | days throughout all the states south :un special meeting fternoon @t 3 1 men and tore to pieces Many i Hospitals. Liritain 1 the Wnited States, m) lice what she knew of him. Peter|on overtime | of Virginia today, fucl administra ock at the N ‘Phe wounded man gave the name | The navi department today an- |devole their energies, in view objected; in fact he objected so stren- “The only hours of work law which | tun officials were hopeful that | roal Co. office t John [% Murphy, 25 vears old, of | nounced that -latest reports of (he |the need of keeping Atlantic ro uously that he slapped the face of |is observed,” he sald, “is the 1G-hour | tinued warm weather and in toston, driver of the car. The otheér; survivors show 76 officers and 1,274 | oben his sweetheart and threatened to kill | law violation of which is punishable | ment i traflic wonld permit veliva prisoners said they were John Con- | enlisted men of the army have been | Miore men will step forward to “‘squeeled.” ! through indictment.” | tion of the order all over the United - \ = : i years old, of Syracuse, George | landed at Buncrana, Treland, that 16 |the gap left vacant by each of nted by the threat the girl| He said overwork was responsible ) fter next Monds § s, 25, of Boston, and James | officers and seamen of the crew have dead,” says the Daily Mail The police heard the | for the extreme hazards of the | As & ved TTomes, 43, no addre been landed at Larne, Ireland: and Reports received at the Amer|| recognized it and Peter s switchmen's occupation, exhaustion fera lid e I 1 —orecist \ later examination of Murphy's | that approximately 570 officers and | embassy yesterday indicated the irance vile \using so many accidents that the | B « fon N aind. vicinity: s showed he not as ser- |‘enlisted men of the army hawe been |of 101 lives, while the British ad; | & o ! . alty figures were 210, The fig | | fir ) it¢ -} land ‘ i fonie warday proo- hurt as W t thought and [1andea as TIslay, Scotlar ] N e e ; spected he will be taken with “In addition.” the department ar i supplicd to the embassy evidently An unverified repc was received hour day for railroad workers | being observed gencrally, S. | | berling, president of the switchmen's f she er sweetiheart y nion's insurance rates very ve mi for P ¢ said small pay prevented \ joinine the union throush ! W 1 R t other prisoners to Roston today b e B Peay j ) oy 5T A (R Bttt On Fifteenth Page). (Continued On Fifteenth Page:

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