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Boalletin, . VOL. LVI—NO. 230 . NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1914 EIGHT PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS GERMANS FIGHTING FURIOUSLY, AT SOME POINTS WITH BAYONET French. Claim to be Making Marked Progress Along| .c ine zstn to the soen, ana up to far into the day of the 27th, the Germans Condensed Telegrams To date the Kaiser has decorated 38,000 persons with the iron cross. Auto Accident at Torrington PROMINENT MAN KILLED, WIFE SERIOUSLY INJURED. Malines is Being Bombarded. London, Sept, 27, 6.18 p. m.—A des- patch to the Reuter Telegram com- pany from Antwerp says that the Ger- mans today recommenced the bom- bardment of Malines. The people were obliged to quit their reconstructed habitations. Heavy gun firing also W‘&% heard in the direction of Hof- stade. Rear-Admiral Herbert Winslow, U.] 8. N. retired, died at Florence, Italy. ~Accept Carranza AS HEAD OF THE REPUBLIC OF MEXICO. President Wilson signed the “alley” bill which wipes out the slums of, ‘Washington. The New York State Board of the American Red Cross has received to date $164,653. REPLIES TO A PROTEST Japs Not Going to Build Railroad. ‘Washington, Sept. 27.—The Japanese embassy tonight issued this state- ment: “The Japanese embassy is au- thorized from Tokio to deny categor- FRONT WHEEL BROKE The Whyland Opera House at St. Johnsville, N. Y., was destroyed by fire = have not ceased, night or day, t0 Te-|ically the reports given circulation a : X : -~ the Three Rivers new on the entire front attacks of un-|fc \Gaye agy that the Japanese gov-|Svs His Sole Am 805 lomcon B No_One Saw the Accident—Motorcy- precedented violence, with the deter-|ernment intends to build a narrow range Existing Difficu Shedding Blood, If Possible. Dr. Romula S. Naen has been ap- pointed Argentine Ambassador to the United- States. i B ‘ mined purpose of trying fo break 8 ‘hr";";:gh om‘t““)fs' made with 2 ' 7 3 “These- attacks were BERMANS SAY ALLIES HAVE BEEN REPULSED|pniformity "whicn denotes ‘netits ~ seek the solution of the battle. “Not only have they not been able to accomplish it, but during the ac- Kaiser’s Aircraft Men Drop Bombs in Paris, Warsaw and| tio we bave captured one fog mais cannons and many prisoners. B . . . flag was taken from the enemy by Various Places in Belgium—In Some Places the Con-|21th regiment of Colonial infantry. “All our army commanders make tending Armies in France are Entrenched Within a Few | special mention of the fact thet the gauge railway from the seaport Lung- Kow to Kiao-Chow.” SEARCHIEAFOR CREW MEMBERS OF STRANDED REVENUE CUTTER. Four Officers and Fifty-six Men Pick- ed Up—23 to be ‘Accounted For. Washington, Sept. 27—Four officers and fifty-six men aboard the revenue cutter Tahoma when she went ashore on the western Aleutian Islands last week, have been picked up by the steamr Cordova and survey ship Pat- terson, near Agattau Island. Advices today to revenue cutter headquarters said search now was proceeding for twenty-three others from the Tahoma who landed from boats on islands nearby. The message added that the Ta- homa’s decks.were awash, indicating that the ship will be a total loss. No clist F..gund Mr. and Mrs, Lamb Un- conscious in the Roadway. Gold bars valued at $350,000 ‘were withdrawn from the Assay office for ‘Torrington, Conn. Sept. 27—Am- nada. ‘| herst G. Lamb, a well known citizen, shipment to Ca: — was killed and his wife seriously in- Gold to the amount of $415,000 was|jured today when their automobile withdrawn from the Sub-’ for|overturned on the Torrington road shipment to Canada. :e-; Burrivile. © A forward wheel 3 5 roke, ‘causing the machine to upset, it Jewelry valued at $18,000 disappear- |is believed. No one saw the accident, ed from the automobile of Mrs. Harold | but a motorcyclist passed by a short Brown, of Newport, R. L time afterwards aud found Mr. and Mustapha Bey has been elected Pro- M3, Tamb uncomscipus in”the rcad~ way. ey were brought to _their visional President by the - Albanian > where MF, Senate in session at Durazzo, Chihuahua City. Mex., Sept. 27.—Im mediate resignation of General Ven tiano Carranza as first chief —of the constitutionalists is the only basis on which General Francisco Villa will agree to settlement of the differences between himself and Carranza. This was his reply today to messages from officials in Mexico City who protested against his attitude toward Carranza. Villa declared he never would accept Carranza as head of the republic. General Villa's Reply. General Villa’s reply, as given out here toddy, follows: “I lament the circumstances that have brought about grave.danger, but sincerely protest that my sole ambi- tion will be to arrange existing difii- culties without shedding blood if pos- moral of our troops, notwithstanding this uniterrupted struggle, cortinues to undred Metres of Each Other—Petrograd Reports That | be exceinent, and that they themselves b o B = even have. trouble to .thold ':nck :ge jerce Fighting Still Goes On i ici in_ their desire to rush on the, F F g in Galicia—German In-| 5200 3, Sidiicred in defensive Y PR in is A 5 st P st g positions” = Ny & g Un- DESPERATE ATTEMPTS BY confirmed Report Says an Attack in Antwerp is Impend- GERMANS TO BREAK LINES. home here, where Mr. Lamb died & fcw hours later. His chest was crush- ed in and he suffered internal injuries. Mfs. Lamb had only-partially regaia- €3 consciousness fonight and was un- able to give any -information. She will probably recover. Mr. Lamb was 55 years old and was Micajah Weiss, who claimed to be the oldest man in New York state, died at Monticello, aged 112 years. With an erollment of approximately the only move that cah bring about cessation of hostilities on my part is that Venustiano Carranza deliver su- preme command to Fernando Iglesias <Calderon, so that, in the shortest possi- ble time, elections may be called. At the same time, I declare I shall not accept Carranza as president or vice president or president ad interim of the republic. N “I shall prove the rectitude of my intentions and the disinterestedness which animates the force of this d: cision. Later the world will realize where rests true disinterestedness and where abortive ambitions.” : 5 - e 6,000 students, the University of Penn- |fc in the Ex i Needle C - : ; Most Furious Fighting Which' Hag | details of the condidtion of the recsued | Ciije® 4 ¢ oremar: e Excelsior e Com ing—Japs Defeat Germans in Stubborn Battle. Taken Place Sincs Beginning of th| DR Yeeer € but it was said they | ' emphatically stdte, however, that | 8¥1vania entered upon iis 174th year. -f pany. o Campaign. PRESIDENT WILSON MOTORED TO BALTIMORE. Attended Church, Had Dinner and Re- turned to Washington. Baltimore, Md., Sept.. 27.—Without notification of his coming, President ‘Woodrow Wilson motored into Balti- more this morning, attended. church and after dinner in the apartments of his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and “Mrs. Joseph R. Wilson, returned to ‘Washington shortly after 3 o'clock this afternoon. " The president was accompanied from ‘Washington by his brother-in-law, Dr. Stockton Axson, and his cousin, Miss Helen Bones. They were followed h¢ car containing secret service men. ‘he White House automobile drew-up at the apartment house where Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Wilson have their home a little after 10 o’clack. Shortly befors Ehmnrch time the president and his rel- G-eorge Marsden of Dumont, N. J., was sentenced to from two to seven years in prison for burglary at Hack- ensack. face great hardships, inasmuch as plenty of supples and clothing were available from the cutter. The sixty refugees left the Tahoma in four boats Whether they were cruisin when they were overtaken by the rescue ships, or had taken refuge on one of the numerous islands, was not indicated in the meéssage which was sent by Captain Reynolds, com- manding the Bering Sea fleet. Commandant Bertholf does not be- lieve the search for the remainder will be prolonged. Boats from the Cordova and Patterson are searching the inlets and coves of the islands in the vicini- ty of Agatta. ‘The Tahoma struck the reef on Setp. 21. She had on board 83 persons, in- cluding nine officers, the crew and sev- eral members of a revenue cutter shore party. The exact location of the wreck has not been established, but she went aground approximately 90 miles west of Kiska Island . in the Aleutian chain. Revenue cutter service officers to- night were without information as to the cause of the Tahoma’s mishap. That she had stumbled onto an un- chartered rock or lost her bearings in a fog were suggested as explanations. MORE JAPANESE TROOPS ARRIVE IN SHAN-TUNG. < iy e Ay SR With Fifteen Cartloads of Ammunition Y " and Supphies. Pekin, Sept. 28, 1:35 a. m.—It is learned from Wei-Heisen in -Shan- Tung that a second detachment - of Japanese troops arrived there at sun- mn on Saturday with fifteen cart- ‘ On the Battle Front, Sept. 27, via g e et T ihe emtuation N | Paris, Sept. 28, 12.16 a. m—Desperate B T T T o o eaad | attemipts made’ by the Germans on the : Western end of the long line of battle :“,‘3’:&’.“‘ night and was made public| (™ o0\ through the allies’ forces, Z i rail. | Which are engaged in a turning move- o e e R el YAl | ment, have resulted in the most furl- erman army. miles southeast of Arras) an ad-|yag hurled against the flower of the yanced Hrench soivision was repulsed | pyench and English armles today, only In the center of the battle front we | t0 Pe thrown back. have made slight gains. Infantry Bore Brunt. “The forts under bombardment south | The infantry bore the brunt of the of Verdun have withdrawn their fire | incessant fighting, but the attillery f and our artillery is now engaged with | both armies continued through . 24 forces which the enemy brought up on | hours to bombard each other's posi- the west bank of the Meuse. tions. Hand to hand combats occur- “Elsewhere the situation remains |red at many points and bayonets were unchanged.” used freely. The French colonial infantry, most of whose men wear many medals for bravery displayed in colonial cam- paigns, was to the fore alongside the black Sengalese troops, while. further along the line the British troops held an important point with the greatest ‘determination. French Troops Show Dash. The French troops showed more than their accustomed dash in attack -and ‘of wonderful courage ; 3 xe‘re pe;fl;rme:. ‘The cavalry also par- ) y 3 - icipated in the engagement at many ‘Official headquarters reports tha8| points, the allies’ horses having en- the operations procceding on the ex-|joyed a long rest which enabled this treme right wing of the German army|arm of the service to distinguish it- have no decision as vet. In the cen-|self. The famous Scots Greys, finding ter of the battle front several attacks| that the color of their horses offered a. have been made on both sides prominent mark for the German rifie- p Des Renains near Saint|men, had dyed their mounts brown. amm and Milel, which was taken by the Ba-| Another prominent French officer, =i Ve nav et varlt;nsfls one of the barrier forts|General Marque, has met death on the 8::":.11';';. 23-%‘.3},"}%’&;2“3{.‘2’}5 ”-’om?mym?ts say that * Franc- fle};di Nubecourt, home of the parents ot mmfloodednn.me §%he Chis Tireaurs (snipers) suddenly attacked|of President Poincare, the 5 m’;éflnfl. o i a German sanitary. service detach-|broke open the Poincare family vault,| The American mission iscrowded ment which was carrying Frerchi|it is reported, and buried a number of | with women of all classes from the wounded and that the Franc-Tireurs|their dead there. The Germans pla- city and country districts. They are 52}1‘?&; :sumun and seven ambulance| carded the town of Valciennes, de-|said by the correspondent at Wei- Ton manding from the mayors of nelgh-|Hsien to ?". Pichon, former French minister, | boring communes lists of the avail~ v_hgecmne::u ao?:l':’r:he P affirms in an article that the Germans|able supplies of clothis A shoot prisoners kill = wounded ‘and o e Iow, mzhfas:;:::elm ?fl:“ e murder women, children and old peo- | _ bl ot ol Al e ple. French prisoners explain articles| FOUR BOMBS DROPPED Station &t Wei Tiste S Sidiad like that of Pichon. because wounded ; IN PARIS YESTERDAY. 7 st fire at Germans. A letter of a South el | g American miliary attache, who is ac-| Girl's Legs ~Shattered—Created a OFFICIAL REPORT OF companying the a v r beinpedlod s B it ety s oy Panic Among Promenaders. GERMAN CASUALTIES. not only from the military but still e Thore fram the humanitagian point of| Paris, Sept. 27, 4:10 p. ‘m.—Four | 15,674 Dead, 65918 Wounded and 23,007 view. bombs were dropped on the city from Missing. “The Paris reports from St. Peters-|a German aeroplane today. One mis- burg that Russians under General|sSile, exploding in Avenue Du Troca- Rennenkampf has victoriously - ad-|dero at 'a corner of Rue Freyoinet, vanced and re-occupied ~Soldeau is|blew the head from the shoulders of a pure invention.” man who was standing on the corner I : London, Sept. 27.—Along almost two- ¢ thirds of the great battle line across :frthmmrn France, the armies of the lies and Germany fought fiercely to- day, at some points with the bayonet, and tonight's statements from both ¢ sides are worded with the optimism which has characterized all these offi- pronouncements. It was agreed| that the allies had continued their advance. The French claimed “marked pro- " The German ' announcement from Berlin, though insistirig that the ‘advance had been repulsed, neverthe- less referred to it as an advance. ' No Notable Success. Elsewhere along the battle front, neither side seems to have achieved any notable success. i - The continued forward movement of e Russian troops in Galicia: the ap- ‘u.nmn’ of German -aircraft dropping ombs over various places in Bel- glim, and again in Paris, and Warsaw. Seven persons have died from the plague at Cantania, Sicily, and 10 oth- er cases have been reported in suburb- an towns. s Mrs. Josephine Winn., of New York, received $7,200 damages in her suit against the Erie Railroad for the death of her, son. F The Borough of North Plainfield at a special election voted in favor of being cosolidated with the city of Plainfield, N. J. % BELIEVED THAT CARRANZA WILL RETIRE BEFORE OCT. 1 The Yonkers branch of the Red Cross sent to the national Red Cross Fund the sum of $2,600 collected in General Leopoldo Papyista, revolu-, tionary candidate for the presidency of Venzuela arrived in New York on the steamer Maracaibo. 3 } Washington Authorities Pinning Their Hopes on Ferdinand Iglesias Calder- on. Washington, Sept. 27.—Ferdinand Iglesias Calderon is the man upon whom those in close touch with the Mexican situation here are pinning their hopes for permanent peace in the southern republic. It is general'y believed in diplomatic circles that General Carranza will retire on or be- fg:ai rtxxt ‘Thursday, O,ctobarm:, and t convention called . date at Mexi s City will ch 13: sias, ' was as sald tonight that a_personal repre- sentative of General vfi:. after a long wire conversation with his chief had telegraphed local constitutionalists that Iglesias would be acceptable to Villa as head of the new government. The fighting general has announced that he will not be represented in the convention called by Carranza, but it is believed that the selection of Iglesias would pave the way for prompt settlement of the trouble brought on by the breach between Vil- la_and Carranza. Iglesias is head of the Liberal party in Mexico and has played a prom- inent part in the _constitutionalist movement. While in Washington sev- eral months ago he was received at the White House by President Wilson, an honor no other Mexican has had. JAPS DEFEAT GERMANS IN STUBBORN BATTLE Lasting Fourteen Hours on Outskirts of Tsing-Tau. Tokio, Sept. 27, 9.58 p. m.—It is offi-~ cially announced that the Japanese have defeated the Germans in a stub- born battle lasting 14 hours on the outskirts of Tsing-Tau, seat of the government of the German leased pos- session of Kiao-Chow, China. The Japanese casualties, so far as GERMANS CAPTURE BARRIER FORTS SOUTH OF VERDUN Embassy at Washington so Informed = by Wireless from Berlin. ‘Washington, Sept. ~27.—A wireless ‘despatch to the German embassy from Berlin today announced the capture the i) o _orie of Verdun. The m foll > tives left on foot for the Frankiin t -Presbyterian church, a -few blocks distant. A pumber of church- goers recognized the pregident and he was saluted eeveral times. ., The party occupied front pews re- served for them by Rev. Dr. Harris E, “the gmr of the church and an 4 te friend of the presidént. No: change in the service wav.made.on acs == ‘count of the president’s visit, OWFIOIAL DESPATCHES TO FRENCH EMBASSY State That French Troops Have Ocgu- | Pied a Front at D o | Washington, Sept. 27 ial des- patches received at the French em- bassy from Bordeaux included the offi- clal communication issued at the war jpffice last night and contained the fol- g supplementary details: ‘At the end of the day our troops occupied a front at Dompierre (south- west of Peronne). Ribecourt and Noy: on were put on the defensive by the Germans. We occupy Burry-au-Bac., The énemy has retired on Blamont ‘with serious losses and has evacuateq Badonvillers. He was forced from Lesseux and the woods Detween Les- seux and Nissenbache. “The-Russians have taken Rzeszow, on the railroad leading to Cracow, and The United States cruiser Tennessee, | tWo fortified positions north and south which has been in European waters | f Przemysl. The Germans appear ta distributing American ' relief: will not|be fortifying, themselves north. of start for home on October 1, as an- | Kaliszy. nounced. The -indictments against J. Milo Hawley and William F. Fallon, high- way officials, for the alleged theft of New Yeork highway funds were dis- missed. ¥ e movement of vast bodies of Ger- troops - inta 'Russia by way of Bast Prussia, were chiefly signifi in a summary of -the events in bot! ters of war. { Of the German bombs thrown, none ms to have done extensive dam- fi. One man is ‘reportedd to have 8. & exriosives i baris, how- aer. fel! near tha' quarters occupied many Americans. There is ~n ‘rmed renort that an attack on Antwerp'is impending. Crack Prussian Guard Repulsed. [ Neither army has achieved anything notable since the allies haye reported progress in one direction. The allies at one point claim ‘to have thrown back a desperate advance by the crack Prussian Guard, and the Germans in- sist that today, with a_weaker force, their right has checked the advance of a mixed French and British force brought up by rail. e Bayonet Charges. ‘Recurring references to bayonet charges - seem to prove conclusively that this picturesque and romantic hase of warfare, which it was thought ad been killed by the advent of the great guns and other equipment of modern armies, is not all a thing of the past, The French official communication says that at some points the trenches are only a few hundred metres apart; thus a small portion of the millions engdged have known the stimulation and thrill of hand to hand fighting. Fighting Continues in Galicia. Despatches from Petrograd report that flerce fighting still goes on in Galicia, though Cracow, towards which the Russian hosts have been marching Fire destroyed the cable rooms of the Fsderal Telephone Co, at Baffalo, putting” 25,000 phones out of commis- sion for at least ten days, . F “tenem T $300000, Mo ohe wan imjured ), ! . o e was 80 families were made homeless. George Everett, a Louisville'& Nash-j ville engineer, and Willlam "Allen, fire- man were killed when a freight train went through a bridge at Sulphur, Ky. Henry Zeimer of New York, form- erly ar{awyar and wealthy manufact- urer, was arrested charged with forg- h;lg. a check for $30. He'is 65 years ol 2 Vg Col Franklin J. Moses, commander of the First Brigade of United States Marines. at ‘Vera Cruz, died of pneu- monia on board ‘the hospital ship Sol- ace. 2 Seeretary of War Garrison decided ‘l:g remit the $500,000 fine imposed on e Hamburg-American Line for land- anlg arms and ammunition at Puerta ata. 5 Violent fighting was under way in Servia in the neighborhood of Krup- anj and as far as the River Drina, the despatch added. Berlin, Sept. %7, by way of London, 910 a. m.—The total German casual- ties in dead, wounded and missing as officially reported to date are 104,589. 200 HORSES PERISHED sver since Przemysl was invested and with his daughter and crippled the | The casualty list announced today adds | 2scertained, are given as three killed 3 - : IN f{f‘i NEW YORK. the communications cut, has not yet| VIENNA SAYS GERMANS cild. The other bombs did little dam- |a total of 10,527 casualties to those |2nd 12 wounded. The Belgian commission which came | yaif of Manhattan’s Fire Apparatus been attacked. ‘To the north, the German invasion age. According to the statement the fight HAVE OCCUPIED PRZEMSYL| “Crowds, taking advantage of a| “phe iiap iounced. & to the United States to lay before the began Sept. 26. German gunboats bom- lled- Out for Stable Fire. The total casualty list is made up government a protest against the al- Cal Is assuming vaster proportions, not- R . |Dbeautiful autumn day, were prome- |as follows: 5 UP | barded the positions of the Japanese|leged atrocities will sail from New| : —- et b mionariions: oot | Bu Have Austrian Garrison|nading on the banks of the Seine | 308, missing 20007 o2ded 65-| foops. Japanese aeroplanes proved | York Sept. 3 New York, Sept. 27.—Fire discovered Insists that the Germans are being There Surrounded when the aerial warrior appeared di-| According to a letter from an officer | effective in reconnoitering expeditions amid, hey in a livery stable at 412 repulsed at the frontier. It is esti- mated here that the German front ex- tends from the Baltic coast to the southern boundary ‘of Silesia, a dis- tance of about 400 miles, Germans Meet Little Opposition. ‘What opposition the Germans have met is -believed to have been little more than a cavalry screen. The fight- ng centered again today along the ) *iver Niemen from Druskeniki in Su- walki, Russian Poland, to Sopotzkin. Che ocial statement issued tonight at Petrograd said that the German artil- ery had been unable to assume the wfcnse at Sopotzkin and that their wtreai was more or less general, There has been a dearth of naval jews in the last 24 hours, and al- hough the fall of Austrian seaport Sattaro hos heen renorted imminent t 76th street, the heart of one of he most populous districts of the city, drew more than half of Manhattan's fire. fighting apparatus to the scene yesterd: ay. The stable, a brick building, was destroyed. Two hundred of the 350 horses housed in the building perished. ©One map, ‘an attendant at the stable, 'was hurt by jumping two stories to | the street. X | Tenement houses, thickly populated, djoined the burning building on each 2 " The tenements were quickly emptied and-no one was injured. GERMAN ZEPPELIN ON BOMB-DROPPING TOUR. iHiew Over Belgian Cities and Dropped * Five Bombs. ; | London, Sept. 27, 408 p. m.—A Ger- X rectly over the Eiffel towsr, It is be- | of the German auxiliary cruiser Kaiser | 214 are reported to have escaped un- London, Sept. 27.—“The Russians on|lieved that the first bomb was in-|Wilhelm der Grosse, u.& \‘rsea:el wn.: harmed. Saturday occupied the greater part of | tended for the wireless station on the|not sunk by the British cruiser High-| 1ondon, Sept. 27, 4.47 p. m.—A des- the city of Przemsyl (in Galiciay. ac.|tOWer or possibly for the nearby build- | fiver, as was asserted, but was blown | Patch to the Exchange Telegraph com-| cording to & message from Vienna,.|\NSS containing army stores It land-|up when her ammunition was gone.|Pany from Pekin says it is officially | gone to her assistance. says the Rome correspondent of the|Sd iR Avenue Du Trocadro, not far|Only a few of the crew were wounded, | announced there that Pel-Ho was oc- —— Exchange Telegraph Company. His| [fOm the tower, with acrash and the|The officer says that the fire of the|CuPied on Sept. 27 by a emall Japan-| John Detman of New York, a walter, Foiton Contmuet: explosion was heard for many blocks. | Highflyer was extremely poor. ese detachment which repulsed 030|was injured by -falling from a car. The steamer Krenta of the United States & Brazil Steamship Co. is_Te- ported ashore off Cape Henry, Va. The revenue cutter Onondaga has “The ' Tissians approached . the| The houses in the vicinity were badiy e Germans. from the southwest, forcing the Aus- maged, many of the walls cracking | pETROG! trlans to take shelter in the eastern| WIS FIMOWS were, shattered The RA:UF;?::: ssuccess orts, where the entire garrison is mark distant only a ES. now concentrated and is preparing to g?:figogutgi A}"tfl:rw:n embasey at| e FOR RELEASING SAILORS. make a final resistance. The situa- aillot, where Ambassa- | Enemy o rom eights Near|gay There is No Legal rt to B e s o 8- | gor Miyron | T Herriok,: who, ald, not i 5 y . egal $uppor SRSl e accompany the government to Bor- PrzomyslL by HAapans Artillery Action of The Netheriands. “The Russian troops are advancing|I<I, S makes tis home, | 1| London, Sept. 27, 8:15 p. m—A des-| London, Sept. 27, 740 p. m.—A des- from Grodek on the Austrian posl-| ‘@ e W& AL th e patch to the Exchange Telegraph |patch to the Reuter Telegram company tions, while the right wing continues|% German flag. the sound of the|company from Petrograd says: from Amsterdam says that the Cologne to attack from the north. Troops are| XPIORIOn the promenaders first rush-| “w; "big column is retreating along|Gazette voices German indignation at Deing poured into the city of Praemysi| o0 for she ter and then as the airshib | the road toward Sanok from Przemysl, | the attitude of the Dutch in releasing br several dave, that event has mot | (0, iS¢ the atiack from the south-|Gi%ed [0 eV, Burned o the Scenc|Galicia. after having been held from |the surviving sailors from the British e been revoraed. ¢ WTh-e Potrograd correspondent of the|QUickly thrown about the debris and the heights by a Russlan artillery. 1In | cruisers Hogue, Cressy and Aboukir. The Germian emperor’s illness, va- | i Fetcofras CPUesPAnCEnt OF 1€ | the mangled body of a man killed was | thelr hurried retreat the enemy left|It says: GERMANS INDIGNANT AT DUTCH Hoffmeister, former employes of Colonial Trust Co. of Pittsburgh, pleaded guilty to embezzling $80,000, from the Freehold Bank. They wijl mot stand trial. Lfi_M. Preston,. president. of .the Phoenix Furniture Corporation, of Chrstianburg, W. Va., was killed and his wife seriously injured when their ! : man Zeppelin made a bomb-dropping fously described last week as & so. | Doy Telegraph has forwarded tho|riind“ina removed. Nearby the bods | PALL,Of their train of motor cars. “No legal support for the attitude of | Sutomebile was struck by & train at| {,ur during the night, visiting several rere cold and influenza, is now said to garding the operations in Russian Po.|Of the girl was discovered. Her lower ‘The Russians defeated the enemy |The Netherlands government can_ be 2 G Belglan cities, according ‘to a des- 1o inflammation of (i lungs due to | £15] limbs had Deen shattersd. | Women |2t Ushon in the Carpathians, captur. | found, elther in the Geneva OF The| s i secretary Lansing sald that|Patch to the’ Reuter Telesram com- em] v r-fille ~ Farich, “The movement of German troops|in the crowd wept audibly as the child ing artillery and many prisoners. | Hague conventions.” pany from Ostend. The airship pass- from East Prussis in the direction of|Was borne to a hospital. Continuing their pursuit, the Russians| The paper argues that the men, who the State Department was DeSoust-|ed over Alost, Ghent, Dynse, Minelbeke Cholfrw: AmonuAgstrian - Troops. - | oo est Brustia fn the direction af have entered the borders of Hungary.” | were rescued after their ships had been [ IN€ With the British Government for|,q Rolieghen, dropping five bombs. At To the cholera, heretofore reported | zovernment of Suwalki (Russian Po.| GERMAN REASON FOR 2 =t sunk by a German —submarine and|he Femovel °F FOmD OF Lol MITESR| Bynse a man §2 years of age was mor- smong the Austrian troops, has been | land), the Germars have suffered a King George and Queen Mary V later landed in Holland, should have TR CIat e tally injured. He happened to be in ¥dded, according to an Antwerp des- | <erious repulse. The left flank of the DEMOLISHING CATHEDRAL the Wounded. been guarded to prevent their further | °™ > . ithe vicinity of a hospital upon the roof tatch, typhus fever, which is said to | Russian army has defeated the twpops participation in the war. 7 v ) — 'of which a bomb struck, doing consid- ; L Ay < 16 raging in the German camps around | under. the eomimand. of Genéral on| Declare French Post of Obssrvation| earpe and Gucer Mere ths Siioreins Because his wife, from whom he had ral ed six onths, ble damage to the building. An- is | Hi Tg near Suwal i George and Queen Mary this aftern: a : been_separated for about b ‘ An- Stuseels and mear Termonde "It is | Hindenburs near Suwalk. Had Been Established There. ot Troms Al i e Bfl: arn :"g"d s '2‘,’;"_':‘,’ retused to become reconciled to him, | SthST bomb, dropped at I eported ti n} hse've ur;)r Ger- ‘At the same time, our troops won ;) Sy HIill where they visited the residence| parp Se)*o * bo’xm-. Gpl h.— arge | George Lainbach of Paterson shot and R:umfl‘ngs % e S pans aiready have succumbed to this | a complete victory at Mariampol, and| Washington, Sept. 27.—The French|of the former Empress Tugenie. A on Trumbull road, in the northern | jjjed himself while the wom 3 v was kizease. the attacking Germans were thrown|embassy today made public the fol-| number of wi s are section of the city, was totally destroy- Quick to Tealize, as did Germany,| back ten miles across the River|lowing communique: b tered there. g:;isgdt;?cfz:'enunnq(fl:r edlby fll;e early this evening, entailing he necessity of a high birth rate {0 | Scheochupa with a loss of many zuns| “The French government has Dbeen|majesties visited the wounded at the | imioss Of about $2.500, not covered by flsct the deaths due to the war, a|and prisoners. On the right flank,|informoed that the German government| Connaught Hospital. ISITANCE. - aavo DEVIAPELS st e SN novement has been started in Eng- | at the Nlemen River_the battle ended | officially alleges that the bombardment Ohaed bys Mo SUREmEREGE MW ek and to reduce the marriage fees and | in success for us at Siednikl, where &|of the Rheims cathedral (Arst denied|German Day Gelebrated in Wew York, | iy, 224 leased to John Carlson. The o encournge soldiers and sailors to|German attempt to cross the river|and now openly acknowledge Dy its =4 ork. | cause of the blaze is unknown. nke wives before leaving for the | was repulsed swith great 10ss.” authors) had been caused by a|, New York, Sept. 27.—Many hun- == in dropped two bombs upon the gas Do thire cansing considerable mon- etary loss. The airship then px'm:eedvd by way of Courtrai in the direction of France. their four children looked on. The finding of olothing belonging to Oscar Gally, a stationer of New York, at Coney Island, leads relatives to be- lleve he has met with foul play. He disappeared on _September 16 with Father and Son Killed in Auto Acoi- dent at Walllingford. ort. That seehbiahop ot Canterbury Freneh post of observation hewing |4reds of German-Americans attended | Socialistic Candidate for Congress. |™°T® than $1,000 in his possession. e e as addressed an open letter on the ) NVADERS CONTINUE been established on the cathedral. exercises’ in Terrace Garden today| Naugatuck, Conn., Sept. 27.—The| Instructions have been sent to all vidently father and son, and ubiect to a Lonton paper In Ges | N “A telegram of General Joffre to the| MATKINg the thirteenth anniversary | nomination of Fred W. Bull of Terry- | British consuls that the British Gov- :“r.‘;‘. t’;}om""Ch"mgfl were killed by be- 2any o shnilar movement was {nauvg- NIGHT AND DAY ATTACKS| minister of war shows that the|D®Te of German day-—a day set apart|ville for congressman from the Fifth|ernment has no objection to the trans- 2 hrown from their automobile ves- rated some time ago. : s e destruction whs. as stated before,|t0 Dring together the Germans in this|district on the sociallstic ticket was|fer of ships from British to Ameri- ;‘::’;ym; hendbag bears the name of e Determined Efforts to Brea rough | without the shadow of an excuse. The vigumi;.yt-nd to revive the sentiment of | formally ratified at a district meeting|can registry in cases where they have | o""G" " \orse, 2118 Michigan Avenue, L!GHT GAINS MADE Allies’ Lines. teleeram is as follows: ; g ostana. !i’s‘;'l‘;;f!"“:l ;‘g:"*;’;;“ here today. 2 been continuously American owned. |Chicago and another had the initials e—— “The fifth (French) army have oc- " Srp——— et - o ” . BY GERMANS IN CENTER| Paris, Sept 27, 11:37 p, m—The of-| cupled Hhaima wntll the 15¢h of Sep-|(he Principal one being delivered in Emperor William Sick. Further Cinformation” relating fo] 11 O AL CILCARD: flcial communication issued tonight| tember and then was relieved by the|in® evening by Representative Richard 4 e essive expenditures in \lies Make General Attack on Ex-|says that the Germans continued| ninth. Both declare that they estab- | Dartholdt of Missourl. £ charges of London, Sept. 27, 5.50 p. m.—A des- 7 Normal Fall Weather Forecast. - 1 to the Timey from Geneva says |the recent senatorial primaries i 11- : > \ trome End of Garman Right Flank. night and day attacks of unpreced-| lished no post of observation on the ———— = that the Huisse states that Emperor | lionis and pennsylvania was demanded Washington, Sept. 27.—Normal _fflJ(l \ = ented violence, but have been unsuc-|cathedral, the systematic bombard- Movements of Stemships. Willlam is {1l with inflammation of the|by the Senate elections committee be- | weather, with little ruin, was forecas Berlin, Sept. 27 (By wircless tcle- | cesstul The statement follows: ment of ‘whielh besan on the 19th @t| Genoa, Bept., 27.Sailed, Ateamer |lungs us a result of having fallen into|fore recommending action en the Nere [by the weather burenu tonight for the Papby to Sayvilte, 1. L)—The follow- 7s i# confirmed that since the night| 8 p. m.” . Duca dl Genova, New York & treuch thet was fllled with waten tis rsolution for invesigation. eoming wesk, i .