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NEW BRITAIN HERA LD Ere e —r ESTABLISHED 1876. 3,000,000 GERMANS KILLED DURING GREAT WAR; | SOLDIERS ORDERED TO RETURN TO FATHERLAND: LEAGUE OF NATIONS IS BEING STRONGLY URGED SO AATS AT | PEACE ENVORS TO. [NEWBRITAINNOT | CONTEST SEATS OF [~y |01 s NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1918. —SIXTEEN PAGES. PRICE THREE CENTS. - RESIDE IN PARIS, ~ UP 10 ITS QUOTA TWOG.0.P. SENATORS |~ = ‘ —— ‘,LieIrtehant General Smuts Tells N SOLDIERS General Von Falkenbausen Urges i ‘ . . . ing to the increase of . & e | s i London, Thursday, Nov. 14. : His Soldiers to Respect Life e eroeton ' e core | Treaty Will Probably Be Signed Total Contributions Amount to Attempt Being Made fo Oust|| - ioreowan”on” wived | American Guests He Bxpects and Property as They 1] Ml o e i at Historic Versailles Only $179,326—0ne Day More | Newherry and Moses. e, g s coun WOFMF[};&COHC%MUOH to 1 to the consumer $1.00 per net ! cils have been formed in that 0 Ow ar Leave GOumI ton, on all coal shipped from KIS L city and at Antwerp, accord- — J umes S N “eniivman ot * | GERMANY ORGANIZED THERE CLERGYMAN MAKES APPEAL DEMOCRATS SPEND $663,000 | i0* in."iiiiec ™reicivann Hun Officers Volunta Strip Insig- | the New Britain Fuel Commit- | e T | Compan quoting the Tele- Unless Extreme Care Is Taken Durd i | tee stated today. graaf. ’ From Their Uniforms, Though | Peace Treaty Between United States | Robert Butler of Hartford Exorts | Predictions Arve That Elections Cost s i ing Reconstruction Period, Europe,| Some Do So With Bad Grace—Red| . and Great’ Britain Also ity to Help Provide Rec- | Republicans Over $800,000— In- ROCEIE Y, Menaced By Hunger, May Be Set-| | { Back So That It Will Require Gen-| Join in - | This Famous o1 French | reation Ior Ieroes of the War— | dependents Question Election of Sl][;lALlST [IUTBREAK Town. Luncheon At Elks’ Club., New York Democrat. fi“MPE“S INTR[]I]UEES erations to Recover— United State: the Marseillaisc, i | Paris, Nov. 1 Must Do Part. Ghent. Wednesday, Nov. 13 (By the : —(By the Associated | Ttev. Samuel Sutcliffe was the first | Washington, Nov. 15.—Contests of Associated Press here is no or- | IN AUSTRIAN BAPITAL Press).—Ve S, although = not| speaker at the meeting of the War | the election of two republican sena- LAB']R “]EAS "N PEA[;E London, Mhursday, . Nevs: 4 ganized authority yet in Brussels, but, | | formally chosen as the meeting place | \y o | s o Mi AR Now.' . &8 nae o i )OS . : A Work campaigners this noon at the |tors, Truman H. Newberry of Mich- | Lieutenant General Jan Christian with comparative calm and dignit for the peace negotiators, is regarded 5 p: : : re : S A5 Alhiost ceits b o place so-| EIks’ club where reports showed muts entertained a party of Ameri the Belglan capital awaits the coming tain to be the place : : can editors on behalf of th lected for the conference when | $179,326 already donated. He praised | Hampshire—were forecas : e TS O: o the govern: i League of Free Nations and |ment tonight. Addressing the guests of the armies of liberaton. : 3 . i 1e peace col s R Shots Fired When Crowd ;h‘(;‘:mfi:;] m'uenl ‘("nulv\\mlf e fismnl‘vT« - work in France and said: | ceedings today before the scnate priv- he Bald ths sreatestiond mas 2T oday. The real work of the negotia- gned in | Peopje of ¢ Flag Cheered and Parade Singi an, and George H. Moses of New ——— t in pro- the wa “republic of . Hambu arrived at | Attempt . o 220 0 “The boys were sent to France to |ileges and elections committee. Pro- 3 - o ful fact of the great war had bee Brussels, Standing on a balcony, ths | pts to Storm Par will be carrled or In Parts, whero | 1" 08 U8 D, U0 the | tests against seating of botn, eteer.| LADEItY of All Working- i, ooy thetier of Burope and military commander of the city ad- liament - Building. all the countries will reside temporari- | 3°P Well. When we heard the news of | ed on the face of the returns, were men Proposed e dressed a crowd of 3,000 soldiers and | > : their victory we blew whistles, rung | : ; 4 PO o Old Burope is dead and a ne Iy, the members going out to Ver- : g d received by the committee, which de- 2 Fan t civilian, | — i : bells, and celebrated the victo Now | 2 world is slowly emerging,” he said. i 5 ’ | sailles now and then for plenary ses- : ferred acti e L i “Three million Germans have been | ., o0 o o o { 8 Elohe oriihor Tt aven we have a chance to show our appre- Laacton) . Ia the uphuilding of this new worlg killed during the war, said. “That ' “\'l";;” ‘»:1":: f‘"{ “\‘f . f"““"j o ipreme mct of signing the | Clation and sratitude in a practical On the face of returns, Newberry| paredo, Texas, Nov. 15.—Discussion | the co-operation of America is essen e e el B e el s storm ¢ Austrian par oty WO D s & e | anner. If a man is not giving | WS elected over Henry Ford, ther ot oot o he time | U2l It is for the good of both ' building in Vienna Wednesday rment probably will tak thers attempted ‘o enter while the | Place at Versailles in the same h b e Gt o in session. | toric hall where the German empire order could | Was proclaimed in 1871. | democratic candidate, and Moses over 2 { America and Europe that the forme | John B. Jameson, demoecrat, for the|of the pan-American labor conference | henceforth take an active share in unexpired term of the late Senator|her etoday. A resolution embodying | the councils of the old world and| Galling whole-heartedly, if he is lukewarm in the expression of his gratitude and appreciation, expose him to all his ral Von Italkenhausen, the vernor-general of Belgium, Gene German received the delegates and in the meantime French and Belgian social- m‘“‘fl‘ l:;xfe‘(‘l‘ lfx"‘(‘l“m’;:f(‘if S i associates,—convict him.” Mr. Sut- = )‘J-O‘M A S the peace plans of organized labor in 1 ‘I;‘kc up ];fr \;urden h; !wg]xld nohtlci ists g resse! . crowd. The L 5 ) erE the — & . ‘liffe insisted that convict was the U S agains’ Moses was Z st e merica. has become jointly respoasi {iiaiG At g lgl\v(]w([vrr\\, d. Then i crowd outside the bifilding were in- | The palace at Versailles has played | ¢[iffe insisted that convict » made in a telegram by Alexander | America was introduced by Samuel|pe with Burope for the new ordel g e el e B jured, according to despatches reach- | @ importang paft in the histories of | I'ER 2 & Murchie, chairman of the New | Gompers late yesterday. which will arise from the ruins off " cony and nailed a red tablecloth to the crime to refuse to support the sol- railing amid cheers. Hampshir tee, who informed Chairman Pomer- denied | France, Germany, Great 'Britain and the United States. Tn 1783 the Armi-| i€ democratic state commit-{ The resolution in brief proposes a {the war. America and Great Britain] ing nere. President Dinghof | are bound by the same great princi to the limit of one's abilit ; { that the firing began from the parlia- | ™ he) o ag ¢ ations, eliminati Military Governor Resigns. et [ stice preliminary to treatyof peaco| ‘The beys went out fo do 1her|end that charges of clection bribery |\ 2Eue of free nations, elimination of | jo;"ng" jqeats. Their close co-op “After an interview of an hour with | The mew national flag of three | between Great Britain and the United ‘”"_‘l"‘,“m,',.,,.;l e o oo | had been made and that a recount political or economic restrictions to ! gration henceforth will form the bes the. delesat Genetal Von Falken- | bangds,—red white and red,—was ates was signed at Versailles. Six ]‘)"'“Nmfw‘:“ e thalr . worst . ene- | ad been ardered for December 9. benefit some nations and embarrass | guarantee for the future peaceful de IX'AUSII‘H ]r : -)».».u~w|| zm‘d‘ ;;n..mm}m hoisted over the building, but soon -\1{";‘-“‘ '“‘“‘L'"“’;“mf"““d,“"l“fl;“""“(‘““” mibs.-and dvanvone Jehaive thel temp- Questions Campaign Expenses, others, recognition of the rights of | velopment of civilization R e Bed. redignbd A a accepted | afterward s AT i ré of imports vents in the French rev- PR 3 e 3 2 3 L0 p . : . Aga r ha i SiEghbes Ditotns. Yrihede. Wara:: | wilte. S O comna ! olution. The Gierman army hesieging | {atlons that assail men who are idle | The committee had planned to take|small nations and no reprisals or ter- | Organize Against Hunger. . S G Bie bl TR Paris had its headquatiors in the tows | i1 An army camp,” Mr. Suteliffe con- | up today consideration of the resolu-| ritorial changes except in furtherance When the great Ametican repub ;. DR, AEIOMETE (PRACS:. ABUONG, d0aL, the red flag. (1870-71) snd theve e tinued. “Wo should and must protect | tion authorizing an investigation into : . lic joined us in the struggle, it w telegrams be sent to the front in-| A party of socialists occupied the | (1870-71) and ther e negotiations | Bt - e ftwo enemics,— | the primary campaizn expenditures| ©f the weifare of the peoples affected. | not only with material weapons, buf] with all that moral reinforcement Idiers to return to Ger- | offices of the Neue be given | brought out special editions advo. ing the establishment of a social republic as in Germany reie Presse and | between France and Germany were S After the peace Versailles eat of the French ional mbly, and for a few years there- tor-elect Newberry, but action| Secondary principles of the resolu- rounding them with the good influ- | W temporarily postponed upon the! tion, affecting chiefly the wage work- | which can come from the splendid ences proyided by the socicties that [receipt of a telegram from Elbert H. | ers, declare human labor shall not be | vision and moral enthusiasm of Pres-| ecretary of the non-partisan|held as an article of cgmmerce; that | ident Wilson speaking on behalf of] structing the many; third, that no order without the assent of the soldie fourth, that all units, from idleness and lonesomeness,—by sur- | of Ser cat- t committec are taking part in this great war | Fowler, livision to company, shall clect rep | ) = ¢ ’ - | the official capital of France. Work campaign. The only way in | Ford-for-senate club, advising the therc shall never be industrial ser | the people of the United States. His ntatives to the idiers’ committee, | -ondon, T 1Girsday ov: nl.. - u‘n— which we can do this is by giving, | committee that he w transmitting | tude except as a punishment for | was the great vision of a League of] The pvernor geperal asked that | na newspape innounce that the Wilson May Attend. and givide to the limit of our ability,” | information concerning Newberry's| crime that free speech and free a. ations, and our main concern nowj m- [ semblage shall not be abridged; that | must be the saving of Europe for thel all | future of the world As we organized let us now or| the Germans depart peaceably and re- | German-Austrian republic will be spect life and property. German of- | broclaimed tomorrow and that for- request to be | ~—American [ he said. alleged personal activities in the Mr., Sutcliffe appealed to the so- | baign. The committee decided to|seamen of the merchant marine s await the arrival of this information.| have the right to leave their vessels | the world for victory ‘Washington, No delegates to the great peace confe ence are understood to have been se- | licito ers then of their own volition began | mer Emperor Charle not to stop at a day’s pay. Get * to strip the insignia from'their uni-Dermited to residc in Vienna as & |)ecteq by President Wilson. every cent it is possible to get in Oon¥eht Derncirat Kl cetin when safe in harbors, and that the | ganizé the world against hunger. That) forms, Some of them, however, were | Private citizen has been refused, Discussion in well-informed quar- | this city. “Put pep and zeal into the Petor B Tacuel of Host inde- | €ight hour work day and child labor | will be the best preparation for thel le nd depressed | cording tc an Amsterdam despatch to anar=i i b £ Al BUS R0 huny hblolSaes o aint: oW ondariol iternriiongl i fanlt n and depressec g ters today of the probable personnel | work and you cannot fail,” he told | hendent candidate for election as|12W shall be maintained. [ new order of international goo Von Hindenburg Wants Peace. =18 b ton of the delegation centered upon four | them. representative from Tenth Mas.| Delegates planned to adopt this|ing and co-operation. : A letter has been received from men. They are. Robert Lansing, sec- | $179.326 Ts Total Now. sachusetts district, S mel i refnlm;on_ today ;.n;_ (:u::plc[m all & The yzon':(:l\o 1\::?;#(’ & v”w ex- ) 7 , P 2l retary of state, to head the s B 5 . 2 e rlerk of > : - instruetions n«| Other business, including the formu- | treme. A W vorld order is pass- Marsha Hindenburg, wha W 3 state, to head the mission; » following reports were made at | clerk of the house for instructions as : : LS LA N T £ > | PEACE NEWS BREAKS The following rer lating of a plan for unionizing Mexi- | ing away. There is danger of things| meeting. to filing a cont John F. F . &. . Corbin (100 per cent,) | gerald, democrat was elected on the Russell & win, $700; Corbin |face of returns was at Bingen-on-the-Rhine. 1t was Colonel E. M. House, now in France the Sn AMERICAN MORALE | attending the inter-allied_council _as I am heartily in sympathy with the the Bwersonal frepregentativeiiofifithe i g3 regenerative movement. Soldiers must cesident; Hlihu Rdof, Tonls D. Bran- . obey the orders of the supreme sol- s’ committee. Let us have peace. Some soldiers then entered the par. can workmen in the United States going too far and giving Europe a) President Gompers expressed grati- | setback from which she will not re- 5 e lCabin et Took The democratic national committee|tude over what already has been ac- | cover for generations. The evils bred| Fr & Clark, $6,270; | filed with the house today a report|complished by the conference toward | by hunger threaten not merely the old $3,109; Union Mfg. Co. | Showing additional expenditures of | establishing a firm foundation of con- | institutions, but civilization. We saved Y 132 Dringing their total ex.|fidence and regard between the work- | the soul of civilization; now let us| ers of all the nations of the Americas. , care for its sick body ity « Screw, $1,6 s, associate justice of the supreme | s476: Lander Cote b N Stanley Work: The belief growing here that|'(100 per cent) $46; Skinner Chuck, fen In Cantonments in This Country Lose Al Interest In Milita; die hioh Bas Besn elonsd te the public] Life. President Wilson himself will attend | §175; New Britain Machine, $2,828; | penses to slightly more tha : MR o e e e the opening session of the conference, \ North & Judd, $2 Traut & Hine, None of the republican committees Encmy Needs Helping Hand. L e e e Washington, Nov. 15.-—Cessation of | though not to sit as a delegate around : fnir Bearing, $373; Hart & |has filed post-election statements, but PSR Not only the liberated territories ful ponds, broke their guns and threw | hostilities in Europe and dissappear- | the peace table. Cooley (100 per cent.) $46; Hart & |Dpre-election statemen showed ex- DRAFT DODGER FINED. of our allies, not only our small neu- Hutchinson, $34; American Hosiery, [ Penses of $868,000. — tral neighbors, but the enemy coun-| & Sin bavrels A . water. They | ance of the prospect of meeting the i the gun barrels in the water They I T eting th Additional coatributions of 4 e i b, o s - : 5 e . Parker Shirt (100 per cent.) 1 His Iawyer Wi ? ribe Ex- | tries themselves require our helping] ing the Maresliliins, paseded thronsh | un tomediite loms ot moise. sens | MAGNELL RESIGNS $104. Minon % Corbin (100'per cent); | 403, making o total of $660,822 were | 115 Tawver Who fried to Bribe Bx- || 08 BRI, C0h 20, o RS g the Marseillaise, para 8 an immediate loss of morale among B. & K. Mfg. Co. (100 per cent. and [Teported by the democratic national emption Board Sent to Jail. osity and magnanimity. The idea off the city behind the Red Flag. The oniy blaodshod in Brassels oc. | AMErican troops at home that s re- FROM FIRE BOARD | $100 aduitionaD); Veck & Youns . Lol . °G| Boston, Nov. 15.—Moses Entin, of garded s - X o a8 ice small factories (100 (Were Jahn D. Ryan and James C. 4 i 5 lands will help to purify an atmos- sired on Monday when a patrol de. | 8arded at the war department as per cent.) $196; small fac 1 ! y 1 James ] S ’ ands ) falld ' the soldiora op mities! ta|lBoMewnaL alarmmg.© Tt s unds e per cent.) $880; city officlals, $276; [ Brads, both of New York with §10,-| Fall River, an attorney pleaded| phere cursed with war, hate and un- : t s > . - s e et e [Dovencrs gullty in federal court today to altruth. Tt would all have (100 | committee, Among the contributors organizing food supplies for thosg tood been sof butchers, $64 Protective Commissions. $214; Vietor public utilitie: - keep order, fired t a disbrderly | that steps to deal with the situation | Chairman Decides tetire After : eromal KINE: o aloe VyekliAes S ana pditoant it eiRElnr e Saned (EEhT i SURERED U BRI, eX Ul s e it i, CVRR 1yt _— charge of attempting to bribe an ex-| much ecasier if Germany had fought] i oo “por ¢ the armi ¢ Years' Connecti i al me 7; grocers and i e aa| @ clean fight and not stained hen ounding about Upon news that'the armistice has Many Years’ Connection With fessional men, $1,407; groce an. emption board physician and was 4 i s D : S i chools and churches, GEN. RHODES HEADS b4 hands with such crimes, but even sq had disreg: ed the firir of a blank { been signed, the mental attitude of the soldiers. 5 the individual soldier is sentenced to ome year and 30 days|., must be influenced by the largen et B ) AMERICAN MISSION | imprisanment. Eenn b id to have tions. 43. mission to Visit German Headquar- | Sor' 00 act and we . ")’;‘”:H‘y;‘]’:;:”‘]‘ln’:“;]"‘:"]':""“;“O":";lé“-“*“;“c‘f Chairman Alfred I%. Magnell today | Newington, $98; Berlin, East Berlin | oY Samuel Bloomberg of Fall River in| “We must fecl that in the call tg riors wih queriés as to the probable | tendered his resignation as a mem- | and Kensington, $693; Berlin Con- . o = 5 8 whose behalf Entin acted, pleaded | common humanity there are other NEWSPAPER PLANT WRECKED G ot o 7 v e s beRorlinelnve Gommiasion o Mavon |[Hinution . American Paper Gouds, | United States Envoys Request Per- | guilty to violation of the selectlve] purposes hesides the prevention of ¢ fined $200. En-| war, for which a league of nations is} 7; corporations, $13 Give Whole Day’s Pay. | At the Russell & Brwin plant, the ters in Interest of Pea employes received their regular pay for the day and a half they were out he became anxious as to the date of | Quigley, and it was accepted with re- | 32 his release from service. Mor rious are reports ‘by some commanding officers that their men : are exhibiting a tendency to view |ty and the present fire commission tin in a statement in court, admitted | a sheer, practical necessity. One off that he offered the physician $125 to| the first steps must be to create an| declare Bloomberg physically unfit| organization against hunger and ra- London, Nov. 15.~—An American | for army service, tion 11 the countries where disaster threatens. gret. Mr. Magnell has been connect- gstown Tel ran . Ally and ed with the old board of public safe- Advoeate of Prohibition, Visited by mission commanded by Major General | naging the bullding, | 2r7ed suard sent, and with a jview “Dear Siri- 1 respectfully beg | Berlin, which come In the New Britain | cers and nineteen soldiers. The Ger- | With British Liner—15 e T s D e ol "‘, mitigating the punishment of the | o,y ¢ o present herewith my resigna- |-district, have both exceeded their |jan js asked to glve instructions to block were naged. offenders. tion as a member of the Board of |quotas. The total sum collected by | ;110w the mission to pas The Telegr the teams and reported today iS| mhe wireless message reads: ,647. The corporations = gave | uprom the Allied high command to $13,543, making today’s total $41,190. | 4y, German Migh command at Spa— New Britain s | snerican mission, consisting of st ailors Lose n raw materis in international machinery ig aty. We thus are making New York, Nov. 15.—In the colli- | straight for a league of nations sion between the United States de- | charged with the performance of] stroy Shaw and the British liner | tD€Se international functions. ind otherw o g rationed for certs Bombers During Night. themselves as already released from | for a number of years, as clerk and | of work on account of the celebration. —_— Predicts League of Nations. Youngstown, O. Nov. 15.—Bombers | th€ strict routine of the camps. It is | jpemper, and has rendered valuable | They unanimously agreed to turn over | Rhodes will leave on Saturday for “The existing inter-allicd machinery ittempted to wreck the offices of the | \NAeTstood relatives of soldiers who | gervice to both commissions. this sum to the War Work fund. Hart | oo German headquarters, Marshal U.§ DESTROYER SUNK Which ot raista vt e i Youngstown Telegram, shortly before | N@Ve absented thems3elves will be| g5 Jetter of resignation follows: |& Cooley have made their 100 Der) o o) o0 0oinces in o wireless message e g2 b S midnight last night. A bomb planted | 25ked to assist the authorities in hay- ‘November 14, 1918 cent and for the nest two days will | R s & A | nations, probably will undertake this) St fu (iSRG Drosh iooa wl ¢ go, | iNE them returned promptly to spare | .iy,, G e, N, attempt to double as many subscrip- | to the German high command. 1 i" k. In the period of reconstruction Dreling. wldows amd crushing dosey!| the families the disgrace of having an | ~wayt BRSRET RIE SO 2 tions as possible. Plainville and | The mission will consist of six offi- Shaw Cut in Two in Collision | after the war, all countries, allied o ¢ E g | neutral and enemy, will have to 1 | Lives. Here T re Commissioners. FS PENSION FUND $100. I thank you, the members of the Common Council and Board of Fi- nance and Taxation, and particularly | The grand total for m has been strongly pro-Ally and is one of Ohio's fore- most dry advocates. | — 5 Garvin Amnounces Giff 10| ;. asspcintes on the Commission and | now $179,826. | onicersiiand nineteen soldisrs in' nins | Aquitaing in Furopean waters on Ooe| jen bon: 28 resaxds the primufs oy ARMY DESERT TENCED. and Police Departments. members of the Ilire Department, for R .P, Butler Speaks, | motor cars, with General Rhodes as | o\ "o oy Ject of the league, from SHnUSNS ' AL Thomas F. Garvin, proprictor of|the encouragement and assistance in | Robert P. Butler of Hartford was |chief of the mission, will leave for | °°or % 88 announced by the navy de- | Constantinople the map will be cod Private From North Adams Must|(n, Thomas F. Garvan & Co., paperi the aims to have the finest of fire de- | tne principal speaker at the luncheon. | Spa on the morning of the 16th by | Partment two days later, the naval|ered with small nations divided by Serve Ten Years Federal mill in Newington which was de-| Partment He opened his addres: by saying ‘!lhr way of La Chapelle, Beaumonte, | vessel was cut squarely in two thirty- | Profound antipathies nd most .0‘ them with minorities conducive to in-] ho war is over, but the victory is | Philippeville Leige and Spa. Please | jive feet aft of the bow and the for- wr from won, hecause of the mali- | give instructions to allow the mission | 1o pass.” | 1 | stroyed by fire to the amount of Respectrull ysubmiite: $125,000, yesterd. called at the po- “AL B MA lice and fire department headqus S ox ters this morning and announced his (Continued on Fifteenth Page) intention of pr I TO BE DEMOBILIZED. E " ternal weakness, We may, therefor: ward section sank immediately, the | expect more dangers of wars in B S other section catching fire, it was |rope than in the past. Therefore, if AVING POLAND. learned here today with the arrival |iS imperative that we create an interd national organization to keep peace. Ayer Mass., N 15 Fme Carn of North Adams, a private in the th field signal battalion, at Camp , wos sentenced today to .ten imprisonment at Fort Jay, N. Y Peve HUNS L senting hoth depart- LK i D Tl ey o oe certion | TA€Nts With checks of $100 each in| Washington, Nov. 15.—Men of the === | Landon, v. 15-—The German | of the Paclfic Line steamship Melita, “The league also would bakri & o eneaping from an officer whe | LccoBRitlon of their wark at the fire.| qevalopment battallons will be the || WEATHER. ff {#my has'begun a general evacuation | carrving twenty-five survivors of the |, “'The league also wot b I : i The money is to he put to the pen-| B of Poland, according to an Exchange| Shaw 8 2 Tl i bringing him back to camp after | ¢ioa funds of the two departments. first units of the army demobilized, = 5 || | Telegraph despateh from Copenhagen Other destroyers steamed to the America Could Give Help. arrest in Springfield. The finding | The local departments and the|'Secretary Baker announced today. Hartford, Cor Ll quoting reports from Berlin Ger- | scene and when they took the burn- FFor instance, when the is the court martial recommended 25 | Hartford departments responded to a|There are 50,000 men now in these New Brita nity: {man troops in Warsaw have been|ing section in tow the inrush of wa- | established, America might he asked vears immrisonment, but reviewing of- | call from Newington when it was seen | battalions and they will be mustered Fair tonight, Satu | disarmed. and arrested as have all | ter quenched the flames ) Bl et ntaet S L -wai““ reduced the sentence to ten|that the fira had got bevond control] out as soon as they can be given the warmer. Il | German civilians in the Polish capi-l The navy department’s announce- e S iz SOC e it S ‘nmn«mv physical examinations. b SR PR . | ta1 ment said fifteen lives were lost (Continued on Fifteenth Page)