Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 31, 1914, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

oporton 1o the Gity's Populaton Gaied_Paragraphs [Fqur Days pf , | Condensod Tsorams TDetais of Naval ‘ Barteat Helgoland o7 3 San Fi London, Aug. 30 416 o moA des- - - - price of flour 40 cénts a barrel i1l from Ticn-Tsin - ng g - ¥ James donated $1,000 to the at several points on toe z ?‘Q_’dm(im which now totals been landed coast near Kai-Chow. British Forces in France Reinforced.| REPORT FROM COMMANDER OF Henry C. Frick, the steel millionatre| BRITISH HAD 29 KILLED AND London, Au:i.:m 10:85 p. m—The| ool EORCES IN FRANCE. who is il at Beverly, Mass, is im- 38 INJURED. — It 'ln-.romd Mi”u; m-w& AT, ) ood monaition and spirits, nas been| CASUALTY ~ LIST 5,000 fciiniee Srovico. = = °° ®*** | AEROPLANE WARNS FOE TURKEY MAY DECLARE reinforced ce as many men as _— by twi were lost during the four days’ bat- The Senate interstate commerce WAR AT ANY MOMENT tle and retreat and is ready to meel committee ordered a favorable report | Between Claims and Counter-Claims of the Belliger- ents There is a Vast Difference — < Battl % First Shot From One of the Briti German Officers and Men are Being|the enemy again. /" |Battle of the Most Desperate Char-|on the Hughes convict labor bill. et " o Beitieh Poured Into Constantinople. Million Men Engaged in Battie on Aus-| 2cter Fought on the 26th—Britons gt ruisers Sank a German Cruiser— _ Postoffice robbers visited Castleton, = London, Aug. 30 2:05 s m—The trian-Russian Frontier. Have Been Resting—Reinforced and | U, 10CaY UENt ooeo e, vectors,| German Fleet Fled in Direction of Dailev Telegraph ~ diplomatic corre-{ Rome, Aug. 30, via London, 8:20 a. Ready for Next Big Battle, Pl s g Cuxhaven. spondent in an article printed today|m.—Despatches from Austrian head- 9 Charles Rudolph, N{'un old, of cays: quarters to the Corriere Della era » Philadelphia, shot and killed Emma “Turkey may declare war at any|state that 1,000,000 men are engaged in of The Bronx. He then killed moment. It is now only a matter of|the battle on the Austrian-Russian| London, Aug. 30, 2.30 p. m.—After London, Aug. 30, 11.15 a. m—"Twen- a few days —possibly a few hours.|frontier. The battle line extands|four days of desperate fighting the —_— ty-nine killed and thirty-eight wound- 3 . . S Ta W “All efforts of the powers in the tri-|from the Vistula River to the Dnics-|British army in France is rested, re- | Three members of the crew of theied was the price in men paid by the +A German Aviator Dropped Five Bombs in Paris—Two Wo-| . “citente nhave failed and the Lon-|ter River, over 100 miles. The Rus-|ftted and reinforecs for tho next | Hudson steamboat Trojan were taken |British i don embassy admifs the situation is|sians have penetrated more than or the naval action against - ed Furth e military party, now|ctwenty miles into Austrian teritory. |soon: bum'ma”.wy S ST UGS bt e osaro el Y he admirally todsy < very grave. e mi ry g od ol nouncement by Lord Kitchener, 5 1Ct e casualties as follows men !nlund—“e Germans Have Penetrat, OF On | inant in Constantinople, has Teach- 5 secretary of state for war. In a state- 2 “The light cruis. ed the conclusion that the present is ment based on Teports from Sir Brigadier-General Philip H. Briggs, | Lieutenant Eric Westmarcrr ooa ri. the River Somme—Further West the Advance Guard has | fhe ‘best time to secure the restora-| MYSTIC-BOUND SCHOONER ports from Sir John Brigs, o Y e French, commander of the British ex- | Civil War veteran died at the men killed; four men seriously d- tion of Macedonia and the Aegean Is- LOST OFF ISLES OF SHOALS. > g Checked‘ by the Fi h—D Figf = C 1and: peditionary forces, the secretary says|lyn Home for Aged Men. He was 84/ed and Lieutenant Been renc! espe:zate iting Con- s. — that the British after struggling |vears old. “German officers and men are be-|Two of Crew Were Drowned in At-|against tremendous odds, retired to a Iy. 2 et g ing poured into Constantinople to help t to Swim Ashore. new line of defense where they have| Prince Albert, second son of King| “The torpedo boat destrover Iih- nues the Austrinn Border—Ru:sians Take 3,000 |the Turkish army and navy. Turkey it g 2 s not been molested since Th: . The | George, who has been with the North|erty lost Lieutenant Commander Har- o ursday. % apparently counts on the Balkan| Newhuryport, Mass., Aug. 20.—-Cap- |casualties are between 5,000 and 6,000 | Sea fleet, was recently taken ill with|telot and six men killed: one man Prisoners—German Troops are Now Prsesing the Rus- |states guarrcliiss among -themselves | sizeq off the Isies of Shoals in o storm | Since this fighting T et 4 Since X ceased the | appendicitis, who has since died from wounds: one WRRY- . Turkey. SEUs (Eppne, Pearl Nel nch on the right and left hav seonss likely that Turkey’s declaration |1ast Dight, the schooner Pearl Nelson ris! ° - usly wounded: five seriously 1 t All ”' \ 0 gainst Greece will be regard was thrown on to the beach here to-|brought the German attack to a Isaac Leder, an inmate of the Mon- sians ai ensteimn. of war a; Wounded, and five slightly wounded. - | day, with five men lashed to her hull |standstill it is declared. tefiore Home for Chronic Invalids in| “The destroyer Laurel suffered three ed as a hostile act by the triple en-{ no oo, fente, which will send a fleet to dis- | 5 Two were d;ownedfliln Lord Kit er's Statement. Z‘h:l‘il;o::,m!nuw by falling down e:::n:i.uod. t‘:'»omlz:mhuda;ince dlied of hr;s ente, ~| their attempt to swim ashore. The ohes : gerously woun (! = " i all the Turkish and German v fter Lord Kitchener’ — ed; seven seriously wounded d twe . 31, 1.06 2. m.—From all |feeling is that the German advance |Pose of other three saved themselves after a ener's statement, which ly n and two A e sty bulle2| milst boonscome to an end." ships. 5 hard battle with the breakers. The|Was issued through the medium of the | Arthur E. Mackinnen, aged 22, of|slightly wounded. the far-spread 2 Count Von Schwerein, a nephew of | “The British government has warn-| gehooner was lumber laden, fro>: Lu- |official information bureau, follows: Dorchester, Mass., was killed when his Commander Killed. tins of Napoleonic brevity have come in |, . "German emperor, was among the |cd Turkey plainly that in starting any| ;o0 “Me, for Mystic, Conn. “Although the despatches of Sir [Motorcycle ran into a telephone pole,| ..., - Liberty, one of ihe British '{he last 24 hours. History is being |prisoners seht towards the west from |campeign at this time she signs her| “Spn “Growned were Capt. Joseph|John French as to the recent battle |near Essex, Conn. destroyers which took part in the bat made on three great flelds of action— [the seat of fighting. His hands and |own death warrant. Crossman of Bastport, Me., & former|have not yet been received, it is pos- tle off Helgoland, was hit by a shell 2 £ French frontier, | feet were chaied because he refused Y OF TU skipper, 71 years old,, who was cook |sible now to state what has been the| Mrs. Harry D. Hammond of Indian-| 0" ;280 20d, was hit by a shell {along the 250 miles of Frencl "lto give his word that he would not |PROBABILITY OF TURKEY of the Nelson. and Mate Gus Ericson, | British share In the recent operattons. | apolis won the Women's Western Golf | FUIER Bhatiered her mast. tore away on 200 miles of the Austrian-Hungarian try to escape. He had with him a ENTERING EUROPEAN WAR |a native of Finland. (“hlmplon.hlvlby defe?l.tling Mrs. A 8. lights and Xilled g ) border and through a wide area of |sword given to him by Emperor W e Y o] (oDt 5. A Tilton of Lubec master B D ot | s, OF Clenviow, TIL er, Lieutenant Commander Nigel K liam. Wireless to German assy a e schooner, and John Ericsen and 4 W. Bartelot Will 4 2 Bastern Prussia. = . o th - |days’ battle—on the 23rd, 24th, 25th| The Post Homestead at Mineola , L.| ¥ elot and Willlam Butcher, his Silence has covered Austria’s war EeTE i)Wath'lngton Forecasts Such Action. 332: Chutes of the crew are the sur 3?‘1,5‘“” ‘;i ‘;“:';.""i; 1?1":'.‘”1' the whols | L,.one. of the owuuu;dm‘;u m;‘fie :xsm&n m Their deaths were in- ia for several days, but that 3 2 o The Pear] Nel left Lub Wed- | © s perio e British, in conform- |island was destroy: Y re. e | stan! “ E: ;:;hbf::n’:u et binor QaFAL -of the 2 Wadninmtoh, WUk 30, o, e orbin g caben T e e Vs |ity with a genmeral movement of the | bulding was 260 years old. Battle Perfect in Execution. death struggle of the European Dow- 3 'RUSSIAN FRONT NOW SCENE OF MAGNITUDE [ Robinson and elfven men wounded, but not serious- ENGLISH DEFEATED AT ST. QUENTIN. < French armies, were occupied in re- Accounts of the battle say 1 truggle as an ally of Germany and b i Py < R > say it was Found Its Retreat Barred by Masses east gale, the water galning so rapidly |3 g and checking the German ad- Frank Tidegan, a parachute jumper,|perfect in execution as well as in ers. Austria, and possibly uprisings among ., RS R e S5O e Cavatin. T D D OmS | 4list the pumus’ ware dyeless. A heavy vance and in withdrawing to new lines |of Gloucester, N. J. was Killed by |plan. Led by a fearless small detach- events of the greatest magnitude, but sl 0 2 are forecast in a wireless message to |Sea capsized the schooner and sa~>ral A falling 100 feet at Fairmont, W. Va.|ment, the destroyers crept within the between the claims and countre-claims| Berlin, Aug. 30, By way of Copen-|the German embassy here, received|Of the crew barely escape! being Checked German Advance. The parachute failed to open. German lines at dawn between Hel- vi 5 oy ) > # = St oland and the German coast of the belligerents there is such a Vital | pagen and London, 6:50 p. m.)—The|today from its foreign office in Ber- | caught beneath the sails that we-e flat The battle began on Sunday at " & - - Qifference that it is impossible to form | correspondent at German headquarters |lin. ' The message says: tened on the water, but all menased tc | Mons during which day and part of |, Four, persons were killed. and three Sighted by an Aeroplane. an estimate of which way the balance | of the Deutsches Tagesche Tages Sei- | “Former Minister Burns' speech |regain the tilted deck. There they |the night the German attack weg |injured when a Cnd T aevica| An seroplane sighted them and gave swings. fung, reports the defeat of the English |against Karl Grays policy hes caused |lashed themselves until the wreck |stubbornly pressed and repeated. was | Nomeo s conty Toxas and Mexico | T o o Cormans. whose Bt News from Northern France Delayed.|at St. Quentin, accompanied by great|a deep impression and there are hints | drifted into the breakers herc, when |completely checked by the British troyers then came out. The British . Trance the mews ap- |iosses, The army, utterly defeated, he|of ‘faial consequences among the Mo- | they cut themselves loose and jumped |front. On Monday, the 24th, the Ger-| The City Markets Commission dt|dcstroyers ired the Germans 1o tha From northern France the news ap- | S0e% (10 i8 retreat . barred by [Rammedan subjects. News from Con. |into the sea as the only means of |mans made vigorpus efforis in eu- Chices cgmp, ted plans for the es.|open sea, where other destroyers were Lohucip Sy unees | masses of -German cavalry. stantinople foreshadows the active | escape. Perior numbers to prevent the safe |y aRt SOPRITNC BTN O (o wets | Walting spread out In fan shape. e e T e hvara fishting on| The correspondent adfis: participation of Turkey against Rus-| The schoomer, which is 33 years old, | withdrawal of the British army and | (ablishment of two municipal markets Stk Ghoth that there had Deen hard e e my| “It is particularly satisfactory that|sia and England. will be a total wreck. to drive it into the fortress of Mau. |t combat the in g - oo il flhx(htl ng!’o ce a1-‘1-!;151.:,' and also | the English suffered not only the loss| “Professor Delbrueck explains the beuge. A Cibaral i s e A m'.h.'“ engagement followed and P e o Cforess are. maling |of their communcidtion with the|unheard-of unanimity of the Germans|PRESIDENT AUTOES OVER Stormed British Lines, . | 0oolon, s Co. of Amer | s piug, Sorman crulser came out. that the German S N | northern French army but also their |of the convietion that this is a strug- B ARG This effort was frustrated by the |jca. died at O o 2o At b o A Kt coRipit Avathusn, af SN e e Tt nication along the road to the|gle for life which has been forced on AMPSHIRE HILLS |, TH Boim & ca, died at Ocean . N. I, ter a sighting shot, got her rans apparently means thet the French left| communication along the, road 0 '0¢|&le T ;?3“4 ness and skill with which the |73 years. He was a Civil War veteran. | splendidly and hit the foremost gun A s setired somewhat further, but | Fest o F:enc‘;n statements iney had| -The Fast Prussian suthorities are |Requested Newspaper Men Not to — 'r:tlremevx‘:t i ¥ §5 300 o¢ the Garman cruisers, demol- it is not revealed how near %:Ger- ke e Menbege. ter great vie- low Him, That He Might Gain on the previous day, very heavy| Tne Seamen’s Relief bill Loaring the ¥ ‘have eppraached to the Fere | establ v Iegal ishi; it. The Arethysa then fired a army eral Ve iigehburs. out, losses, far {n excess of anything suf- |approval of the House, went before|few proadsides at the enemy. 1 fortress. o ik s A AT ;.f,gfif <o Vigfla’m‘&g; tory e hioh srideniatin] . fered by us, were-ir e e the " | the Senate. This Dill is intended 10| practice was excellent. he hit & Ger- ke bt SBher S asba] to:ndYance further! heré, said tonight that he had recetved| Windsor, Vt, Aug. 30.—President |enormous’ improve the conditions of employment | man cruiser which at once burst into enormous masses, marched forward |of sailors. t £ Other correspondents, describing the|no worq from his government indi- |Wilson today found quiet and seclu- |again and yet again to storm the : pafe o el ettt o i ot L ey 0 o et | Ghone fhat T, rlended 85 o o | o L™l | R e S, B¢ Loyl s et of el T Soine o f e vt A cor or court-martial con 1 - ew mpshire wit! Professor i - - have rein 0"5‘3 ihe Fronch have been | Seized with arms in their hands.|nications. he said, he had not heard|and Miss Margaret Wilson. His route | “The British retirement proceeded on f&?&;}’%fith e“n ;m;e:e“ St them | Among these were two clergymen who |from his government for several smoke and flame but soon afterwards - The destrovers Liberty and Laertba A er took him high above the Connecticut [the 25th with continuous fighting, | OP°F [hext Monday giving employment |, n, 2°crang fight. The Lacrtes was and have brought the German steam ;‘,:'d "“9‘""““;“ ammunition among| weeks. :aney through some of the most plc- gmu&h‘ not_on '-hed-e;letgt the pre- ¢ hit amidships, a hole was shot through 2 a ench irregulars —_— uresque scenery of New England. The lous two yS, an y the night of her funnel, her forward guns wers YO G 6 SO for- 5 Baie. Tieutenant General Hopfigarten of| GERMAN AVIATOR DROPPED president drove past the Cornish ar- [the 25th the British army occupied | bt e1s bmn mine Ty feor e o | damaged ana she received aiso a sheil Awaiting Word of Great Batfle. the sixtieth German brigade reserve FIVE BOMBS IN PARIS |tistic colony which includes the beau- |the line of the Cambrai, Landrechies | ™ % - The Germans are believed to be|infantry, was slighthly sounded. TVE ROM in ti dynam: d hot aft tiful homes of Maxfleld Parrish, the[and Le Cateau. (Cambral is a forti- | SORSSauence of the war The recelts P g T e flied town in the department of the |2 ar’ - German Fleet Fled. eam 1,160 casualties in )is i Tate & 'i’i’.‘v'?‘bi‘é’é’f o Ot Tt o] | o Dhe. 186 Tafantry from | 1o, Failed xg:‘:’;‘?gz‘r“ e e “i’x’ufin(;"ffl}h.“"fiifiyii; north, 32 miles southeast of Lille on |INS the canal i, . sy e e A fously awaits word of a great battle, of | Wurttenberg suffered 335 casualties. 2l J Cox, Percy Mackeye, Winston Church- |the river Scheldt. Le Cateau is four-| o, — = plete M| ¢n g:"mg' l‘_"’m' “lln :n:";""&'l‘ .which her army may be a focal point.| Among these was Jacob Wetzel of Sa-| , .0 4. —‘30 1158 b m- Il and others. He requested news- |teen miles east by southeast of Cam- bu.inf‘lmol 5 l"‘*‘huo“ b“""y 5 pre- i CHEh S Nl ana Sattte iHo wfar the Uhlans have spread into|lem, Ohio, who was slightly wound. |, “0AcoR. Cus- S0 o8 B T:'*Ah_ paper men not to follow him in order |brai). It had been intended to resume TR O n"m““ will -doc"""m' on | for which: the e i et French territory it is Impoesible to|ed. The 83th regiment of Saverne had | Zarls fespatch to the that he might gain complete peace, the retirement at daybreak on the | Whether or e e for w they had been waiting and \learn from the many wild reports fu- |181 casualties. The general staff pub- (STARh combany says: = = s| _One of the tires of the automobile, |2th, but the German attack in which [l depend v ons ristng, heir execution wes deadly. The first Kmr;’e; hl"’;’""’“‘"{’é 1i“‘° E;!"t‘“d- Pt “5“35 “:e f"“"?‘m‘g iussia under com- |this afternoon and dropped five bombs w““gnu‘f 3“ m";i ‘;"g” e D :;’;:;_‘ ,:,_“,“,Svc'],,,mamy P prsabitried it i ; cruisers Sank a German cruiser which a rich country wi mportant manu-| “Our troops in Prussia u om- : S | punc y a nal uring the ride 0 and flerce thai facturing cities is evidently in their [mand of General Vonl }ianafnbi“rg m:l%l; fzil.l; l;tt;:e Eogflgagxgl:tggw- P atter the copmiine g e T8 | as not Possible te ey orc® ot 3] George Deisondro of New York, a|had been battering a destroyer. The grasp. after a three days’ battle in the dis- - i sistant and Thomas Corr,| German fleet then turned and fied in B excltis chase after the president’s |tention until the afternoon. morgue as d ) Meving - 6 T 6 Russian | trict of Gilgenburg and Ortelsburg, | M¢R were injured. car Tollewed. 3 were each sentenced to one year’s im-|the direction of Cuxhaven, but they oving erman Troops ussian East Prussis, defeated a Russian army ‘One bomb fell in front of the shop Battle of Desperate Character. prisonment for stealing diamond rings | were pursueq by the British destroy- Frontier. e iating. o five army corps and three |of @ baker and wine merchant at the |pony FOUND IN CONNEGTICUT The battle on this day, the 26th, | valued at $1,640 from a body. ers, which did terrible execution with From Holland and Belgium come | causlry aivisiols, Our {roops are mow |Corner of Rue Albouy and Rue Des was of a most severe and desperate their four inch guns. circumstantial reports, that the Gor. | wareuine the anemy. beyond the fron | Vinagrierss; two on Quai De Valmy, RIVER NEAR SUFFIELD character. The troops offered a su-| [Peace in Santo Domingo appears to -man i + one of which did not explode; the G = perb and most stubb be certain, as the president, Bordas, B Al Saet Tt Pelbtin s A | et A2 other struck the walls of the Night |Unidentified Man with His Clothing |ihe tremendous odds with whioe they |has promised to resign, and leadors| Many of the Germans landed from ently the troops are destined to meet | DESPERATE FIGHTINGCONTINUES | Refuge behind St. Martin’s hospital German Officers Shoot Men. i i i the British ships after the battle were . Weighted Down with Stones. ‘were confronted d at 1 - |of the rebels will disarm their ment, B = the Russians and, if the reports are 2 Two others dropped in the Rue Des S = fricated themselves In " good. ordar,|and release political prisaners. P s T e et true, it may mean that the Germans|ALONG THE AUSTRIAN FRONTIER |Recollets and Rue Martin, neither of | gumeld, Corn, Aug. 30—The body |though with serious loss and under eclared that the revolvers were veed feei strong énough on the French fron- = T aE e - which exploded. of an unidentified man, the pockets|the heaviest artillery fire. No guns| ,A delegation of business and profes- by German offic - tier to spare part of their force or|Russians Took 3,000 Prisoners in Op- The aviator, who signed himself surrendering to the British boats X o in his clothing weightéd down with |were taken by the enemy, except those | Sional men of Chili has made plans|Wen Yo thelr fiiawi- that they consider the repulse of the erations East of Lembers. Lieutenant Von Heldssen, dropped |small pebbles, was found in the Con- |the horses of which had all been killea |to Visit the United States early next|which had put off 10 =ave thefr dromn- Russian invasion more important than g L manifestos on which was written: |necticlit river near here last night.|or which were shattered by high ex- |vear. The object is to establish clos- h‘l'm e 7 eGicNS" of . thie Ghr- throwing a great army into France. Lohdon, Aug. 30, 11.40 a. m.--Des-|'The German army is at the gates of | The body had apparently been in the |plosive shells. er relations between the republics. SO I nall. e el Dpow S Naval Victory Cheers Briti perate fighting continues alonz toe|Paris; vou can do nothing but sur-|yater for ten davs or more and was Germans Lost Heavily. German cruisers. 2 e o Austrian frontier, says an officia! state- | render. so badly decomposed that it was nec- # Heavy rains at Healdton, Okla, The British people find cheer in the [ment .issued at St. Petersburz and “General TFrench estimates that exploit of their navy, which sank three 28 ACCNE essary to bury it today. helped to extinguish an oil fire which GERMANY HAS ACCEPTED ;. |during the whole of these operations |had destroyed everyth within an German crulsers and twn pomnnk three | telegraphed here by the correspanlent o) jnslia et THSE ou-the - Dody. e - from the 23rd to the 326th inclusive i~ | SHOEMAKER MURDERED IN i g of Reuter's Telegram company. NEUTRALITY WIRELESS PLAN|The fact that the pockets were found e. | area of two miles. The loss is estil & -] under cover of the fog| “In East Prussia” continues ths Rus- £ 2 '? | his losses amounted to 5,000 or 6,000 000 insur- EWTOWN —_—— loadeq with stones leads the authori- - " mated at $400,000 with $150, T HIS SHOP AT N . e stte Helgoland | sian war office, “the garrisyns and | proposed by the United States for | ties to believe that the man ended his N iia B aLothes "‘“"Infl:;e::':' ance. r Behind With g early 900 & 7ot . = ermans > ren ruck i men on the German flect ata cost of 29 fz:;‘esoslesm%t Vil!ql?fig) :-l:dt&. T+ ari| Communication to Belligerent Coun- gmzégeflms?l?:t l;»:lel’e.: )‘1‘1:: l?e?: foul |tacks across the open and through| Nine members of the crew of the Apv:" ::yc ?I:hil MN':in; Shoer. lives and a total of 38 woundde and |with a large number of siege & trioe. Dlay. - Deputy Sherlg Woodrug iIs con- |their dense formation, are out of all | schooner Emily P. Wright were plck- ages to three British warships | have taken 3000 prisoners in which will be repaired within ten days. ducting an investization. proportion to those which we have|ed up lsland lifesavers. by Brazo N , Conn., Au. erations east of Lemberg (c.pital of| Washington, Aug. 30 —Germany The man was about 45 years old |Suffered. The vessel foundered off the Mexican b iy Ry -3 has Bombs Dropped in Paris. Galicia). virtually -accpted the plan of the Uni- Lan ree: aged mal vho iv. 3 “In drectes alone on the 25th as Green, an shoemaker, who and was well dressed. coast and Captain Peterson was red in his sh. Angther raid by German “Near Podgorz (just south of {he|ted States for the enforcement of neu- aa im:;rgce a ’Gernimn infantry bri- | arowned. Nona_ W; founndu;m;‘:’;. R e sulted in the dropping of several Vistula) the enemy lost 3,000 w>n and |trality over wireless communication to| GERMANS ADVANCE WITH gade vanced in close order into a|. —_ today e into the city of Paris, tc w we captured four guns, a number of |belligerent countries. Though the for- narrow street which they complete- gan women tourists’ s st in_going | Calssons of ammunition and n o guns |cign office at Berlin has = suggested INCREDIBLE RAPIDITY.|ly filled. Our machine from London in the fa.« f - | abundoned by the Austrians when ‘ney |some slight mo: ons, the sugges- Ah ity : monstrance. o offclal re- |0 sed the Zolokia. North of Toma. |tion made by the Washington govern.|Never Giving the Retreating British a Among the German prisoners of the | Cheff we took 1,000 prisoners and sur- |ment two weeks ago in the main has Moment’s Rest. naval action is the son of Admiral Vo | rounded and defeated the Hungarian |been approved. ‘beh! with an axe, as he Twelve persons were reported in e s guns were weeck! Kansas brought to bear on this target from | oo o the I s Southern nger train No. 1 near . The the end of the town. The head of the | Fort Smith, Arkansas. The smoker| :‘;;‘,‘,;"‘:,:",‘:’;.1,';:}’“3‘:2‘,‘5 Col- colums was swept away. and chair cars are sald to among Lhose | ", eartion Band, in connect.or. with : o A Frightful Panie. derailed. the crime. He denies all knowledge of! “Tirpitz, the German minister of ma- | 16th division of Tomacheff, eniro regi-| The plan permits the German em-| London, Aug. 31, 5.50 a. m—A des-| *“A frightful panic ensued. and it - it. His clothing was founl tc Le rine, to whom the first lord of the ad- | Ments surrendering. bassy, as well as the diplomatic rep-|patch to the Times from Amiens,|is estimated that 800 or 900 dead and| May , a champion ©OW | hloodstained. He explains iii - _miralty, Mr. Churchill, has sent a mes- ‘The enemy is making his principal |Tesentatives of all other belligerents, | France, says that since Monday morn- | wounded Germans were left in this | ghich last vear produced 1095.55 | gaying that he had a fight 1 ‘mmge of his son's safety, while Count |efforts in the direction of Lublin (in|to send code messages by wireless but|ing last the German advance has been |street alone. Another incident which | pounds of butter fat, was sold, by Ed-|ang cut his hand, the blood c Von Sherwein, nephew of the German | Rissian Poland, 95 miles southeast of | American naval officers of all stations|one of almost incredible rapidity, the |may be chosen from many like it, was | ward B. Cassatt for $5,010. The|srom ‘the cut. emperor, is a prisoner in the hands of | Warsaw), where the fighting is terce.” [must be taken into communications. | Germans never giving the retreating |the charge of the German guard cav- | whole herd, estimated to be worth The murder was probably committed tho French, Grand Duke Nicholas, comma i —_— British a moment’s rest. alry division upon the 12th cavalry |$100,000 were sold for $21,000. early last night, but was not disctvored A British colony played its first part |Chief of the Russian army, de-lares,|GERMAN ARMY NOW “The first great German effort has|brigade when the German cavalry unti] this morning. Rev. Mr. cwell of the war when the German colony | 52yS the correspondent, that ‘the Pulish PRESSING THE 'RUSSIANS | Succeeded” says the 'correspondent |were thrown back with great losses| General Carroll A. Devol, of the in Samoa surrendered to an expedition | S0KOIs, in view of their disloyal cor- —_— mending saoes Three powerful blows were strucs. with went to the shop last night to get & G “We have to face the fact that the|and in absolute disorder. These are|Quartermasters department of the|j,ir of ghoes, but saw no signs off from ‘New Zealand. duct and their use of explosives and|Have Captured Many Prisoners, In. |British expeditionary force requires|notable examples of what has taken |army. conferred with the committee| g o™ He noticed that the room’ o O O flat-nosed bullets, have no eiaim to : immediate reinforcements. The in-|place over practically the whole front |in charge of rellef work among the|_.omeq to be in great disorder, but cluding One Russian General - : ¥ GERMANS PENETRATING lt've i‘ra:‘er{’ with I;l‘!iaxngmity and there- ol Bt = e vestment of Paris cannot be banished |during these engagements and the |Persons made homeless or destituta ore e const Teq - FURTHER ON RIVER SOMME e Tnot as combat - thought nothing of it. Today Charles’ & from the field of possibility.” Germans have been made to the | by the Salem, Mass., fire of June 5. ants but as criminals under tho mili- | Dorlin. Auz. 30, by e : treme price E 3 - Ghorem, ptered the establishmen: ard. o * extreme ice for every fo! marc ’ urch, ent: e shment ar Britieh and French Have Resumed | Sl Giuect R R e o et mona | KIAO-CHOW DEFENSES they have made. PE B oar e:hn'pn?k be et e ter | discovered Green dead under A pile of Vigoréua™ Offsnaive Movement. that fhe German tailnere ar prenoes |from Allenstein (a town of East Prus- : ARE FORMIDABLE | British Claim Glorious Achievement' . mattresses and blankets. - a provisions of the new registry law, i8| D eputy Sheriff Blakeman called upen oir | Si2, 5 miles south of Koenigsberg), in- “Since the 26th apart from cavalry egaard. Norwegian built sta e Paris, Aug. 30, by Way of London, :egst:gnt;?:n’tp flaig;:o?usé?m their | icates that the German army is ener- | Military Experts Expect It to Hold | fighting, the British army has mot ::?p’::‘:ed by ihe ocean freight Line, g;,,, g_npfi“fpfifu,n“,’:,“;‘,‘;‘:;. e 6.40 p. m _According to the Liberte, g W g getically pressing the Russlans (wire- Out Until End of November. been molested. It has rested and re- [1ne. She is in charge of American of- Virelll o Tiee Ol ATteET00, . is! the s have penetrated a short | BRITISH ‘CRUISER LEIPZIG T R O e ftted after its exertions and glorious | gcers. thought that any of the thrso blows - x . 4 ‘okit ug. ) —M. levements, s ount- ~ H B Bt ar OB e Hver Semme: REPORTED CAPTURED. [scribed as terrific. Corpses le I 2 - French. left have resumed a vigorous upon Green's head would hav> caueed in | here are said not to expect the fail |Ing to double the losses sustained. al- | Officials and members of the Grand|iban & a ey 2 heaps on the battlefleld. Many Pris- |of Kiao-Chow before the end of No- |ready have joined. Every gun has| Army of the Repudlic in Afassachu- Oomtn:“ "‘:{, found at Sandy Hook oftensive. ~ Further west 'the French |BY French and British Cruisers Off|oners ,including one Russian general, |vember except by the voluntary capi- |been replaced and the army is now | getts left for Detroit to attend the an- But little is known of him at present. troops have checked the enemy’s ad- Vancouver Island. were captured tulation of the Germans. The defenses |'eady to take part in the next great|pnus] encampment of the order. After Sor Pholan - of . SRRt . S vance guard. At the other extremity i 4 are reported to be most 'formidable |encounter with undiminished strength |},e encompmen the Massachusetts del- | pere today and announced that ha will of the line on the Meuse the French Vancouver, B. C., Aug. 30—A news- Lieut. Windsor Chive Wounded. and. virtually impregnable from the |and undaunted spirits. egation will go on a sight seeing trip| commence his inquest Tharsday at 11, A ofl;t‘lr:n 2 strenuous and_suoccess- | Paper del:x;ateh savs that the German| Cardfll;r, Wales. Aus. 30, via mul::‘. German Attack Brought to Standstill. |in Canada. Py re: ce which extends along |Cruiser Leipzeg has been captured by|Aus. 30, 11:50 p. m.—It Is repo ‘oda news is again favorable. The rorkt eory nearly the whole front, "% | the French cruiser Montcalm and the|here thit the Hon Archer ‘Windsor-|res g 2 -rx:;r Brl’;i:l‘:. have r‘:fu beennhenm:; Two patrol wagons full of miscel- | ¢nat the -l:l;?u:?r:r m"ffi"v::!:a'shmx-'- The Liberte says: & British cruiser Rainbow off Vancouver | Clive, second son of the Earl of Ply-|are three lines of these defenses. but ‘the French armies, acting vig- |laneous articles were taken from bery. ‘Green came here a few years “Our offensive succeeded on our|Island after a fight in which 120 men|mouth, who is a lieutentant -in the| The food supply in Kiao-Chow IS |orously on the left and right, have, of Gustave Pitschman, in New ¥ : t, but was checked on our left. | were killed and wounded on the Leip-|Coldstream Guards, was seriously|said to be ample for three months. correspondent says the ago from Hawleyville and was gener- for the time being, brought the Ger- |York. Pitschman was arrested and e Germans gaineq ground ag’ an- | Zis: wounded in_the fighting at Mons. (O aisnns photoy, Teought. while clalming the goods as his own,| o’ reopected. He was 65 yearse old. nounced toward La Fere. At any rate| Officials at the British naval station | Lieutenant Windsor-Clive is 24 years Servians Find Town Deserted. “Sir John French also reports that|blames his trouble on women MNving A e we hold firm and even under attack— |at Esquimault refused to give any|cld. us. on the 28th the British fifth cavalry |in his apartment. German Army' Corps Wiped Out. e sure sign of the gonfidence of our |irformation concerning the capture, : e troops fought in - brilliant fashion e London, Aug. 31, 3 a. m—Telegraph- ‘army.” but do not make a denial of it. It is France Calls Out More Troops. German cavalry, in the course| As a result of the killing of Joseph a from Dieppe, France the Daily: _General Lacroix, former command- | expected that the announcement of the| Paris, Aug. 20, 3.25 p. m.—The had of which the Twelfth Lancers and the | Mackewic in a guarrel u.n.Prvvw-w-. I's er-in-chief of the French army, con- | battle will be made in London. Royal Scots day min- ist; f war announces that it has been siders that the Germans are {aking| Seattle, Aug. 30—When the Van- e class of 1814, R. L, Fri mnl“:n.mhc'llwvlmmlp Dieppe officially an- » 34 decided to call out the and speared a large number in flight. | struck over e heart with a bottle, great risks in lengthening their lines | couver story of the capture of the|which will give at least’ 200,000 addi-|of them “It must be remembered throughout was held of communication. “One step gained |Leipzig was reported to officers of the | tional troops, and also to call out the!found 20 them in France is a ste byl!hqhmu.nltnxvdmflonrwmhmacuvarr;srumdm:fl“eh-n k P t. Russia,” ey o Stanley iewiocki in the operations in France are vast ard | $5,000 ofr a hearing 11 o a he - it was pronounced g fabri September that we are only on the wing of the a manslaughter charge. A plea of not ¥bole Geld of batile, ¥ © guilly was eutered,

Other pages from this issue: