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News of the World By Associated Press ABLI HLI) 15‘0 ACTORIES WILL BE SAVED ' MUCH UNDER MEASURE PUT FORTH BY SENATOR HALL $330, 000 IS WILLED | l— Bill Relieving Them Of |/ I enate Acts Favorably On | Responsibility From i 'Damage From Polluted Streams reneral Assembly Votes to eet Monday to Prepare " For Final Adjournment on June 8. cial aid June 2 concerning stre ries te The } Scnator Edward pollution ams by rewson of vhich calls for Jinted by the ppropria- tavorably fol- the legis- Hartford, Hall's bill tresh aste from co ap overnor and entalls on of $50,000, was pon in the senate this morning wing a bitter battle ral and urban interests in the ture the vater fae amisslon to be an acted betweon 1 Into the menate with by the committee of which Senator The New Britain »d the purpose of the the Appropriation Opposed. The bill came tavorable report n appropriantion all is chairman mislator ex Il, appointment ¢ the appropr fose of s introdueced ichedule B, cut- ng out the $50.000 appropriation, hich explained in keeping ith a of strist economy Fretories Spend Much. An chalrman the appropriations mmittee, Senator Hall told the sen- ® that New Britain factories spend pwards to $100,000 a year in many stances to guard against the pollu- jon of waters and the attendant in- q to crops. He felt favorable action bill as originally presented was tive. B®cnator Seymour spoke in avor of ' Banks amendment. Senator Hall fan called for a vote on the amend- bill and the resolution to amend # killed, 17 to 11. Action .n the tier then resolved on the Hall reso- lon and was earrisd. Will Relieve Factories. The poMution il has been bitter- fought thr wctwt the . several of Yo rutification by the smaller wns. In effect, the bill will relleve @ factories of responsibilities from [amages causpd by the pollution of aters. The local factories have econcerned pselven greatly in the progress of i1l since vast sums have been ex- ended and much research work con- ucted In an effort to eliminate the llution problem sladr commission ary. At Senator lon his remarks, he vas of Preparing for Adjournment Hartford, June 2.—The gencral as- mbly today decided to meet Monday h order to prepare itself for final aii- urnment, Tomorrow's session is ex- wcted to bring in the last. commitiee eports. $26,000,000 Budget. The house today received the state judget which the senate adopted yes- rday and placed it on the calendar rom which it can be taken up when je members see fit. The total is ightly over $26,000,000, the exact gures to be determincd during the ay. The changes which have been rade from the original draft of the Il were by reason of passage of eclal appropriation bills covering ems which were to be provided in bu. the latter been sub- Mitted all special appropria- on bills had heen disposed of. The action of 1 number of opriation b made it necessary OF {he state finance board and the ppropriations committce to adjust gures to correspond Senator Bowers had hung in the enate chamber a state map on which he outlines had been drawn of the ix congressional districts .which he as proposed in his redistricting bill, Provides for Referendum. Charter for Stratford, which initiative and referendum, In town government in was adopted by the had oy ve bling a T™h arries the thing it new onnectic house. Agninst Liberal Voung Law. Mr. Brainard of Branford thought hat resolution for a constitutional hmendment for absentee voting by lsabled or |1l electors was a bad hing. It might result in proxy vot- ng. he sald Mr. Il of Shelton Liso objected. Mr. Hickey of East {artford defended the committee's port, which, he said, was the first LtyD to get an amendment to the con- tjtution gnd would come up again N monslof before it could go to rext convention. Mr. Hickey of tamford, a= a soldler in France in 918, sald he malled his vote and it as never recelved at home. ed the resolution. Mr. the resolution would make uni- versal legislation. The resolution was indefinitely post- house concurred with the sen- a bill which places public serv- joe corporations under jurisdiction of Tiaventh Page.) LEGION'S POPPY SALE NETS ABOUT $495 FOR MEMORIAL DECORATION ST H. C. Jackson, commander of the American Legion, an- nounced today that total re- ceipts from the sale of poppies last week amounted to $595.83, of which about $495 is clear profit. This money is to be used toward paying for the decoration of the Court of Honor and Memorial Arch also as the nucleus of a sink- ing fund to provide wreaths for Christmas Day and Armistice Day. TULSA DEATH LIST MAY YET REACH 100 Hospitals Are Crowded and Many Wounded Likely to Die 'MARTIAL LAW EFFECTIVE in Oklahoma City | Property Damage is Bstimated At Upwards of $1.- 500,000 — Thousands of Persons H weless and Destitute. Tulsa, Okla., June 2 break today, this city under the control of strict martial law began a systematic stock-taking of the death and ruin which a few hours of race rioting spread in its path Tues night and yesterday morning. The military forces, headed Adjut. Gen. Barrett, started a check- up of the list of dead which unof- ficlal estimate placed at somewhere near 100, most of them negroes. Belief was expressed by all officials that the disturbance would not recur. Death Toll Growing. white men were killed far as a check of the morgues closed. Somyg of the 35 injured’in hosp'tals are expected to die. When the military forces search the burned negro quarter a number of nogro bodles were expected to be 'ound. This morning the bodies of 15 megroes lay in the morgues. Belief was expressed by officials that the bodies of all the negroes killed would not be found, as it was thought that a number in their homes Then, too were received at military quarters that a number of bodles had been thrown —With day- Eight so dis- reports | head- | negro into (Continued on Sixth l’ll{e.) FINED $50 AND COSTS P. 8. Porforis Is Assessed That sonville—Accident Last Sunday. P. 8. Porforis of this city was fined $50 and costs in the Thompsonville town court this morning for reckless driving, and he was discharged on a count of evading responsibility. The accident in which the local man fig- ured occurred last Sunday. It was alleged by the state that a car operated by Porforis wtruck J. Hazzard of Meriden, who was repair- ing a car along the side of the road, fracturing his leg. It was further al- leged that Porforis drove away with- out ascertaining the exact amount y damage. This was shown in the testi- mony this morning to be incorrect. Judge Willlam F. Mangan appeared for Porforis. TRACK MEET SATURDAY New Britain and Bristol High Schools to Hold Rglays and Events at Op- ponent’s Grounds. The New Britain High school track team will journey to Bristol Satur- day afternoon for a track meet with the Bristol High school. The events to take place: 100-yard dash, discus throwing, 880-yard run, 440-yard run, relay race yard run, broad jump, high jump, javelin throwing and shot put. The official starter will be Postmaster Willlam H. Delaney; referee, Willam Cottle of Bristol; clerk, Lester Benoit; assistant clerk, 1. Lawson; scorer, R. Goff; field judges, H. Lawson and Mr. Fremch of the Bristol High school: judges at finish. John Monohan and Joseph 8. Donald: timers. J. Kietch, Joseph Sexton and C. Brady. H. A. MATHEWSON DEAD. South Norwalk, June 2.—Herbert A. Mathewson, formerly city treasurer of the City of Norwalk, and president of the Lounsbury and Mathewson Shoe Co. of this city, died at his home late last night from heart trouble. He was 60 years old. Hec is survived by a widow. fl\‘l ay | . NE\X .SRI-AH\ (‘OV\E(‘H SUT, THURSDAY JUNE 41 Heral:” "~ Retter ! 'Mrs. Nott Changes Plea to Guilty In Second Degree; Life in Prison i i home | tres | Hartford ! Connecticat, | IN PUBLIC BEQUESTS Mrs. Mary I. B. Russell of Hartford Left Fortune For Public Good. Hartford, June the late Mrs, Mary city, made put $330,000 is bequc 2—In the will of 1. B. Russell of this today, the sum of thed to various in- stitutions and organizations. To the Protestant Episcopal diocese of Con- necticut she gives her home, 207 Farmington avenue, with all land and buildings to be used as a permanent for the bishop. It is valued at about $100,000. Other bequests are: d hospital $40,000 for endo memorial beds; Hartford Re- £20,000; Connecticut Institute for ®lind $20,000: Connecticut Hu- mane society $10.000; Visiting Nurse | association $20.000: Christ church | parish $25.000; Church home $20,000; Forelzn Missionary Society of the Protestant Epiacopal church $10,000; Connecticut branch of the Woman’'s Auxiliary Prgtestant Episcopal church $10,000; Trinity college, $10,000: Orphan Asylum Larrabbee fund, Union for Home Work, Wads- worth Atheneum, Connecticut Histor- ical Society, Missionary Society of Berkeley Divinity school, Children's Aid Society The same sum is given infirm clergy in the ! Connecticut $5.000 each. for aged and | Protestant Episcopal church. The occurred death of Aprii Mrs. 14, l1so Russell, which released $50,- 1 000 held in trust and to go to various | beneficiaries of a pu character and | $50,000 to relatives. Mrs. Russell gave | | about $200,000 to relatives and friends | degree -of M. | were burned | | te Amount This Morning at Thomp- } tice to revert ed in the hath estates about $600,- also about one half in tr finally to institutions na above list. The total of specifically bequeathed is 000. GRADUATES AS PHYSIGIAN ‘W. J. Robinson of Vine Street Earns His Degree—Plans Francis' Hospital As Interne. w Enter St W. J. Robinson of 16 Vine street, was graduated on May 31 from the lLong Island College hospital with a D. _Dr.. Robinson will start in on August ‘1 as interne at St. Francis hospital in Hartford. Dr. Robinson attended - Woreester Academy Prep school and later at- | tended Loyola college at, Baltimore where he took his preparatory medi- cal course. During the war Dr. Robinson served | in the navy as a hospital apprentice and is still a member of the United States Naval Reserve forces. ' $0. NORWALK STRIKE OVER Three ! sentence ' Union Carpenters, Out for Months, to Return to Work With 10 Per Cent Cut in Wages. South Norwalk, ment June of the strike of union carpen- here was made today when no- was given by the local union that a ten per cent reduction in wages, to be effective June 15, had been agreed upon by the members of the union. The strike, or ‘‘lockout” for three months. The new rate fixed 90 cents-an hour for journey- men carpenters. King George Reported As Going to Belfast Belfast, Ireland, June 2. (By Associ- ated Press.)—The News Letter today says it learned ‘‘on very good authority’’ that in all probability King George will visit Belfast for the pose of opening the Ulster pariiament in state on June 21, 2 London, June 2.—The Irish office today stated it was unable to confirm the report that the king would open the parliament of north Ireland in Belfast on June Four Dublin Policemen Are Killed in Ambush Dubkn, June 2, (By Associated Press).—Four members of the police force were shot dead and three others wounded in an ambush at Clonmore, County Kerry, it was announced at headquarters here today. The killed were Police Inspector MacCaughey a sergeant and two constables. The three men wounded were constables. Another Brutal German Officer Sent to Prison Leipsic, June 2.—Sergeant Neumann, accused of ill treating British prisoners in a German camp, was sentenced to- day to siz months’ imprisonment by the high court which is tqying Germans ac- cused of offenses during the war. PHILA. BANK CLOSES. Philadelphia, June 2.—The South Broad Street Trust Co., with a cap- ital of $125,000 closed its doors today, and is In charge of the state bank- | ing commissioner. Tnability to col- lect outstanding funds was given by ‘he directors as a canuse for the sus- vensio i | past two week | pleaded “gu’lty” { was imm | ! 1 to i similar crimes 2.—Settle- ¢ as the union men termed it, has been on | pur- | yesterday, | Join Edward Johnston, Ac- complice, Pleads Guilty to Manslaughter and Gets Year in Jail. June 2.—Mrs. Ethel on trial here for the for the murder of her | husband, ‘George B. Nott on August | 29 last, today pleaded guilty to second degree murder and was sentenced to life imprisonmant. Mrs. Nott was in.a state of l'ul]‘LpsO when court opencd and had to be car- ried to her chair in the courtroom. Changes Plea to Guilty Attorney Robert G. DeForest for the defc immediately addressed the court ying that ‘“certain docu- mentary ev'dence had come into the posses began that has put upon the case. The to offer a plea to a charge in the second degree.” The documentary evidence to which Attorney DeForest referred of some 50 letters written Nott to Wade while they Bridgeport Hutchins Nott different aspect defense is ready of murder by Mrs. i in jail here. The letters were marked for identi- fication and were then evidence and before being read into the record were turned over to coun- sel for Mrs. Nott' that they might know the contents thereof before they becamoa public. As they were not read in court and the plea of Mrs, Nott was changed immediately the contents of the letters wil' 1ot vow be made ac- cessible to the public, it was stated today. State Opposes Plea State’s Attorney Homer 8. ming opposed the acceptance of the plea declaring that he could not differentiate in law and morals be- tween the guilt of Elwood B. Wade, hanged for the Nott murder and Mr Nott was indicted with him. Carried from Courtroom Judge William M. Maltbie in ac- cepting the plea said he believed that Mrs. Nott's physical condition was such that she would not be able to hold out during the trial and state’s work might o for nzught. Mrs. Nott was then sentenced after she had to a charge of second degree murder as read by the clerk. She was then carried from the court- room. Mrs. Nott will be taken to Wethers- field this afternoon to begin her life term. Johnston Given Year Edward Johnston, indicted with Elwood B. Wade and Mrs. Nott for the murder of George B. Noti, was then brought into the courtroom and put tgo plea. He said he wished to , blead gui{y to John the charge of man- ' mlaughter.i This was accepted and he jately sentenced by Ju Maltbie to,one year in the county Jail. (Court is Satisied “I thinK the penalties already meted ! out, the .fhanging of Wadc and the f life imprisonment upon Mrs,_ Nott'in court this morning” the court declared in impousing sentence o Johnston, “are suficient insofar deter . others from committing is concerned, and as this is one of the most important facts to be taken into consideration I think we may dispose of it and consider the case of Johnston alone.” State’s Attorney Cummings in ask- aided the state in all ways within his | Power. PIONEER IN FIGHT Rev. Phebe Hanaford, 92, Was First Woman Ordaincd in New Eng- land—Legislative Chaplain New York, June. ! Hanaford, 92 year old suffrage leader who died today at Rochester, was a pioneer in the -movement for equal rights and a contemporary of Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and other early leaders in suffrage | work. | She was the first woman ever or- dained in New England where she be- came a minister of the Universalist church in 1868. Two years later she appeared before a joint session of the Connecticut legislature and acted as chaplain of bhoth upper and lower | houses. The check which she received for this service was one of her cher- ished possessions, as it marked the ; first instance of such a position being ! held by a woman. Following her ordination, | Hanaford held pastorates at | ham, and Waltham, Mass, New Haven, Conn.. and Jersey City. N. J. | For 20 years before becoming a min- ister she taugh school, lectured on literary and reform topics and for a ! time, edited the Ladies’ Repositor and y The Myrtle. Rev. Hanaford was an | official and member of many literary and temperance societies . and the | author of several books of prose and poetry. Among these were biographies ,of Lincoln, Dickens and George Pea- body. Rev. Phebe A, Rev. Hing- * THE WEATHER. e Hartford, June 2.—Forecast for New Britain and Fair, warmer tonight; Friday in- creasing cloudiness. jore of the state since this trial | consisted | hoth were | admitted into | Cum- | the ' as | ing for a sentence of one year in jall ; ! for \Johnston, said that Johnston had FOR SUFFRAGE DIES | 14 2 &y 1921. -—TWEI VE Pn(,I:S PRICE THREE- C 'FOREIGN OFFICE DENIES LERQND HAS BEEN RECALLED IN SILESIA FRENCH AND GERMANS IN BAT] | English Speakmg Peoples Should Band Together 3,000 Teutons In A In Leading World to Peace, Sir Geddes Declares. Which Fails Mis ‘Bntlsh Ambassador, in Char- P“u[;[ HNI] Bfl[]ZE lottesville Speech, Says War Between U. S. andi England is Unthinkable. ! —Rustik Gets 90 Days For Bond Theft. Charlottesville, Va., June 2.—The English speaking peoples of the world : should be “‘banded together in leader- | ship of all the nations, to the era of world peace and, as a first step, to the; i era in which the wars which even now A whiskey glass filled we can recognize as futile and unnec- liquor which had Been ! essary are done with forever,”” Sir lips of a patron in William Walsh"s Auckland Geddes, the British ambassa- arcade cafe, was seized by the police | dor said in an address here today at last night and offered in evidence this : centenpipl exercises of - the University morning when the proprietor was tried | of Virginia. on a liquor charge. Judge B. W. { No Rupture Conceivable. imposed a fine of $100 and costs. | **The continuance indefinitely into the Lawyer David L. future of peace between our peoples is the accused. He entered a plea of nolo S0 obvious a necessity of our national contendere. The raiding party, consist- | lives,”” Sir Auckland said, ‘‘that I do ing of Policemen William O'Mara, Ed- not dream of the contingency of its ward Kiley and Patrick McAvay, was rupture. What I am concerned with is represented by Policeman O’Mara. He something that seems to me far greater told the court of the visit to the place and far nobler."” at 5 o’clock, testifying a number of men Deprecates War. Deprecating war as a sapper of the physical vigor of nations and denying that ‘‘peace will rot the vitals of a nation,” the ambassador expressed be- lief ‘‘that now is the time for the Eng- lish speaking peoples with their great and peculiar advantages to resolve that never again will they permit this fair | world to be devastated by unnecessary war if by standing firmly together they | can pg vent it."” ‘““What is to hinder their coopera- tion to this great end?’’ he asked. “*Nothing that I know of but ignorance ' of each other's ideals and inspirations and the suspicion that is the child of ignorance. Recent ‘Horrors Are Dim. “*Already the memories of the beast- liness of war grow dim and the recollec- I tions of the fellowship, the courage, the = store built, eight complaints investi | glories of the human spirit rising tri- | gated, nine applications for permits umphant above the terrors of the body, , rejected, two applications modified grow bright and brighter. Our minds ' and 63 inspections made. are straying back te the old circu'ar e e path that leads men to speak of the honor of war and then ot 1ts siory una, JUDGE ACCUSES PRISONER _ just before they again know its horror, | ?of its desirability. | I abate no jot or tittle of what T ‘Bumls Jacob Horodner as a Murder- have said in the past bGt abating ! op in Open Court—Prisoner Makes nothing 1 think it is no derogation to | | speak of the gross folly of war and to , No Comment at AR beg of this great university that it will, New York, June 2.—Judge Otto see that its sons and daughters, ere they , Rosalsky of general sessions court to- go forth to their appointed places in day accused Jacob Horodner, before the higher or the subordinate leader- ' ! ship of their nation, know clearly what is the cost of wa H. Leland Hoar of This City and M raised to the (Continued on Sixth Page.) MAY BUILDING REPORT Permits Issued Total 132. Operations Costing $167,835—Forty New Tenc- ments. During the month of building permits were total of $167,835 May, 132 issued for a in building opera- tions. The buildings are listed as fo1- lows: Frame, 69, $131,428; brick, 19, $18,820; alterations, 43, $17,087; buildings moved, 1, $5. Forty tenements were added, one tand fur manufacturer who was mys- | teriously killed at Coney Island two | years ago. “I denounce vou not only as a Lnotonous criminal but as the murder- \er of Joseph Cohen” said the judge | when the prisoner appeared in the docket, a judge to make, but I know what I am taiking about. I am told that you i coverd your tracks well in the murder and although arrested several times for crimes you were only conviced «wice for minor sentences, I now sen- tence you to serve ten years at Sing Sing. Horodner offered ns comment. APPOINTED CHAIRMAN Mrs. Charles Hughes Elected to P iss Katherine Price United in Marriage Today. H. Leland Hoar, son of Mr. and Mrs. ! Henry Hoar of 587 Arch and ss Katherine Price, daughter of Mrs. Ida H. Price of Martinez, Californta, were married today at the home of the bride’s brother in Pittsburgh. After ! the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Hoar left on a short wedding trip and will make their home for the summer at Wood- i mont, Mr. Hoar, who served during the war 2 " e . {on the U. S. S. Agamemnon, is at tion on Women’s Auxiliary. to Suc- present employed as a salesman at the s A / Sianicy Bwon SN aISE =N iol v s fICS LA LD graduated ‘from the University of Minnesota in 1917, immediately joined a coliegiate unit and went to France where she served as a nurse during the war. MAYOR PICKS COMMITTEE Group of Five Selected to Prepare for street, Washington, June 2.—Mrs. E. Hughes, wife of the secretary of state was recently inducted into the position of chairman of the; Women’'s Auxiliary Committee of the United . States of the Second FPan-American Scientific congress. She succeeded . Mrs. Robert Lansing, wife of the | former secretary of state. Wives of the Latin American ambassadors and min- isters here attended the cercmony, Under the direction of Mrs. Lansing the committee has endeavored to pro- mote better acquaintanceship among women of the western hemisphere and an exchange of views between them on Charles Dedication of Klihu Burritt Me- morial Monument, Mayor Orson F. Curtis has selectea | a committee of five members to make arrangements for suitable exercises attending the dedication of the Elihu Burritt Memorial in Franklin Square park. Those who will serve on the group are: Charles F. Smith, Marcus! White, Stanley H. Holmes, Rev. Henry W. Maier and Frederick G. Platt. No dates have been set for the ded- ication although it is probable that the exercises will take place in Octo- ber on the birthday of Burritt. relations as well as on subjects of spe- cial interest to women. STEAMSHIP NEWS, New York, June 2.—Arrived: North State, Londo Liverpool, June .2, sailed: Carmania, New York; { Southampto, May 31, sailed: Orduna, New York. old GOV. OF HAWAII Washington, June 2.—Wallace R. Farrington of Honolulu, Hawaii, pub- lisher of the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, was nominated today by President Harding to be governor of Hawaii, succeeding George J. McCarthy, re- i signed. ! Hero of Vimy Ridge May Govern Canada Montreal, June 2.—Lord Byng of Vimy has been offered the governor e generalship of Canada to succeed the AMERICANS WIN | Duke of Devonshire, according to the | Associated Press)—William Tiiden of Gazette today. The paper says that | Philadelphi and A. Jones of Prov- contingent upon'Lord Byng’s accept- | dence defeated Feret and Couiteas of ance ‘an official announcement of his {'France in the men’'s doubles of the .mnmnl"wnt may be expected within | world”s hard court tennis champion- alling | Upper Silesia that Gen. Lerd all matters pertdining to Pan-American ! | these wagons entered the IN RAID AT ARGADE iWalsh is Fined $100 in Court German Casualty List with alleged | | When Big Tanks Brought Against At Town Of Be —Bloody Encounte Polish Troops — Volunteer For Se ari: June 2, (By Press).—The foreign office | sued a denial of the repo Dunn appeared for | | i were either drinking or had consumed | That is a broad statement for | of the inter-allied commi had been recalled. Reported As Recalle Oppeln, Silesia, June 2, ( ciated Press).—Gen. Lerond the inter-allied commission per Silesia, has been recal unofficially reported here. Gen. Lerond assumed cont provisional government Silesia in February, 19208 sharply criticized, following revolt, it being asserted tha knowledge of the impendi situation and had failed to to chéckmate the Poles. Gen. Lerond declared tha informed the Allies of the surrection and had asked fi but added that the number ( under his command was not] to preserve order. French Troops Attacld Oppeln, June 2, (By Press).—French soldiers fo garrison of Beuthen, in so | Silesia, have been attacked organized by the German i of the town. Reports state mans in the fighting nu 000. The French have used charging on the Germans, said to have gained the upf in the battle. There have b German casualties, it is ren French have not suffered I Three Conored Confl The situation is complicat] presence of Polish insurgd around the city. The Poles fight with Germans in the of the town on Sunday, the French were attacked, him for a sentence on a larceny charge | rushed men to their assista of the murder of Joseph Cohen, a hat ports are not entirely clea] would appear that the Frel mander refused the proffer it is said the French ar the Poles from entering t Attack Well Planne] The attack by the Germa French is said to have planned. Telegraph and wires between the French ters and the barracks were tries were driven back and quarters , detachment s Tanks were rushed to the 4 the Germans, who were ary pistols, were driven into from the windows of which was opened. The tanks cl the buildings, firing volley; the doors and windows. Polish Vandals Killd All wire communication Beuthen and Kattowitz, furt has been interrupted since Refugees arriving here say t} at Kattowitz have killed a Poles who attempted to 100 tor lorries loaded with foo Germans and Poles have a battle near Gross-Streh! | Germans have attacked the have forced the insurgentg draw from strong position: Many German Dea German dead and woun been removed from the scq fight and taken to Krappi farm wagons loaded with| dead ernitered Krappitz the was so excited that Baron commander of German voll ganizations there, had dif controlling the temper of The correspondent of ciated Press was at Krap saw the dead, who ranged vears to 60, removed fro: Women Want to Women began volunted night for service at the declared they were ready t places of men who were number of women, weari: clothing, are driving waj automobiles. some of then] army revolvers in their b Advices received here stat mans in control of the Cit] witz, about ‘10 miles no Betithen, have mined the will, wreck it if the Polqg attempt to capture the pl bers of the Black Watch, a part of the British ‘force: Silesia have reached Stu miles northwest of Gross Sabotage Is Orderd Reports have been re Ce D on Eleventh