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S S R NN T R SR Y T R TSR, T Bulleting A - VoL LVi—NO. 248 NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1914 EIGHT PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS é The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Larg_eSt in Conochiost 8 I;ro&ot;fion % ihie“(}ity’s Population Cabled Paragraphs Heavy Firing Heard at Dunkirk. London, Oct. 19, 341 a. m—A des- patch from Dunkirk to the Datly Mail sent Sunddy evening, says: “Severe fighting is taking place today. Heavy firing has been heard at Dunkirk since eight o'clock this morning: It is sup- posed that destroyers or gunboats are being used in the canals.” DVANCE ‘ON DUNKIRK BY COAST ROUTE French are Said to Have Pushed Back German APMY | 1ve adaressed to toretgn untverst- Picked Up 48 Survivors of Cruiser Hawke. London, Oct, ~ 18.—The _steamship Modesta: which picked up 48 survivors of the British cruiser Hawke, sunk in the North Sea last Thursday by a German submarine, arrived in Chris- tiania last night, says a despatch from the Copenhagen correspondent of Reu- ter's Telegram Company. The Modes- ta picked up the survivors from a small boat five hours after the dis- aster and later transferred them to an English trawler off the Scottish coast. $he diporsions cast “wpon the German 0 . he ons cast upon Along Be'glan anhsr army, and setting forth that the Ger- mans_ destroyed property only when 4 - forced to do 80 hy treacherous assaults on the part of a hostile civilian popa- Iation. ARMENTIERES HAS BEEN RETAKEN BL FRENCH|,Fime xioe somws o pe pul ce of a plan to restors the Todarchy in Dortugal. The Germans T 4 2 have lodged a strong protest at Lisbon Germans are Bringing Up Reinforcements to Resume Of-|1375 2950C 5.500e" dititude - of the % ) . Portuguese government. The latter |/ o fensive, Probably Toward Calais—In the Center the Sit- 5:‘.? Batfthtes, v opsly; pustioljaiai i | uation is Stationary—Germans Have Established Civil | it Sums seports peisoners. ‘of war - even officers, to Siberia. Anglo-In- Administration in the Greater Part of Belgium—Ostend | dian troops 'have brought the plague to- CMI’.?. Already 50 deaths have oc- Has Been Called Upon to Pay $1,000,000—Reports | "% iy s From Russians and Austrians are Contradictory—British | °FF'®'At “:::_L:Fuw it and French Fleets and Montenegrin Army are CaIrying | illed, Wounded and Missing from on Attack on Cattaro—Servian Reports Say the Servians f{:i,z.:o""m iy are Sweeping Everything Before Them. London, Oct. 18, 5?60 p. m—An of- ficial report by General French, com- FIGHTING FROM BELGIAN COAST TO SWITZERLAND Germans Make Strenuous Efforts to Get Forts at Verdun, Toul and Epi- nal, From the Battle Front, via Paris, Oct. 19, 12:06 2. m.—What in previous wars would have been called great battles were fought today on the eastern wing of the fighting line stretching from the Belglan coast to Switzerland. In this great battle of nations, however, these fights are re- sarded merely as incidents. The fighting always has been of the most flerce nature in this district, owing to’the strenuous efforts of the Germans to obtain posession of the strong fortresses of Verdun, Toul, and Epinal, in order to open a way e X H manding the British expedifionary from Metz into France. lorcea,n‘;lm the total of British kill- ;ugall::;?loi lfla’f Meur':fl, 32 :m“:: 2 : and from of Epinal, was the center London, Oct. 18, 9.45 p. m—Two im- | FIELD MARSHAL FRENCH'S ;_‘; .:‘8‘:{',‘- 1 et 53"-3 Piieay R e BrStar fok Dortant successes in the battle for REPORT MADE PUBLIC| 1ol Dunkirk and Calals, for the possession 2 ; of which the Germans are striving, | Took Four Days for Allies to Check|er casualty list Teceived from head- are credlf to the allies in the offi- German Advance on Paris. quarters unod;r date of Sept. 16. O‘Xt communication issued fifty-one non-commissioned of- <iat unication i in Parls| London, Oct. 15, § p. m—In two|Acers nad men as having been killed, this. ; long, roports made publio hero today | 149 men wounded and 535 men ‘miss- i Marshal o] French, com- 3 e D to have. reoc- | mander-in-chief of the British farces hose of the killed belonged entire- o Arl::snflmfim an important rail- | 9B the continent, recounts with con-|ly to the Royal Scots, the Royal Irish b etion on the Belglan frontier | Siderable detall the fighting in which|and the Hast Surrey Regiments. The o OFiileang to have. re- | the British expeditionary force was|Bast Surreys, the King's Own Scottish i O attermpt of the Germans to | cneaged " the month . ending | Borderers and the Somerset Light In- cross the river Yser, which flows ( September fm; s Sy try figure largely e missing| that. little corner . of West fight included e faatiiba. ook tiel et Thrbag ment from thward to the ¥anders which s all of Delglum that | Seine ‘and the navance: afier & most| gives four killed and five wounded. vigorous offensive¥on the part of the wg-n.' cmmgfirmktg; ?:I‘“‘“mt‘fi?}.‘i allies, back to the River Aisne and m»u have | the first._stage of the desperate en- pulse foi the Germans with heavy casualties. The borders of both Al- sace and Lorraine also felt the shock of .pattle. and in the. Vosges the fa- French Alpine regiments were i, tact “with German columns These mountaineers contiually keep the Germans busy by utilizing their remarkable mountain guns and balff- ling efforts to drive them out. Their greatest achievement in the recent operations was the cutting of rallroad communication between Col- mar, captial of Upper Alsace and Muelhausen, Prussia, thereby in- mans in sending their wounded to the rear and in bringing up supplies, Hiluminated by Forest Fires. The Germans have brought up 10- inch mortars in this district, supposed- ly for an intended oventual siege of ort. In view of this possibility, the French have renewed their at- from the south and again ad- iced. ‘beyond _ Altkirche. A great part of the theater of o lons in ‘southern Alsace 18 alnated at Swiss frontier caused by shells fall- night by the forest fires along the ing across the border. BURGLARS MAKE HAUL AT NEW -HAVEN Made OFf with Nearly $2,500—Opened GIZRMANS REPULSED . WITH HEAVY SEAS During Two Violcnt Atticks to the North and East of Saint Die. Paris, Oct. 18, 1 /m—The of- fickal communicatioh. issued by ¢ war. also are said to Pack art ‘erman | counters the line of that river, e ek e oine slons the | Which included the crossing of the Belgian frontler to the coast. Stream in the face of the determined : opposttion by the Germans. The first * Clontinuous Fighting for a Weck. m :.l;tclo-uu that it mmscpm- The battle v ‘culminated in Ar- |1 the allies took . the offen- Lo ucd‘ e under French |8ive which the German Gen- RYS: e gy i E T T e gk S € e ot g e g Y en was seized by the | uired four-days to compel the Ger-|violent attacks were attempted by the um“m s Tamt ‘week ‘owing to. ita im. | mans to turn their back on the French| Germans fo_the north and east of Portance as a railway center, lines di- | capital. - Two days later the Germans,|Saint Die. These were repulsed with Verging from it in all directions. Be- |@ccording to the report, were back|serious losses to the enemy. sides, it is on the road to Lille, which | across the Aisne, having lost heavily| “No cther report of any importance T ermans stil ho'd despite Teports |In men, guns, and transport in their|has yet been received on -the opéra- to the contrary. The battle opened [retreat. Then commenced the battle tions of the day.” ith eavalry fighting which gradually | of the Alsne which lasted for a month el developed into a general battle which |and the first phases of which are dealt| NOTHING NEW TO REPORT IN EAST PRUSSIA indicates *hat the French are advanc- 3 ing in force toward Lille. 0:; b?: ;e\:flpfl;}l:‘.fiofi. ‘which, nlnl !g;x:\; Germang Being Reinforced. the attacks and counter-attacks which | Austrian Reinforcements Are Report- The allies also have made an ad-|were still going on when the report| ed in the Passes of the Carpathians. vance north of the La Basse canal|was concluded September 20. - rhat between that line and Arras and at| In an additional report, General| Petrograd. Oct. 18.—The Russian certain points between Arras and the | French makes special mention of = a|general army headquarters makes the Oise, This latter is a refaer long |long list of officers and men who have |following- annotncement: front, but the claims in the French |distinguished themselves in the fight-| “On the front in Hast Prussia and official communication are taken here | ing. on the Vistula, there ig nothing new to report. Austrian attempts to cross the San river Have failed. South of Przemysl the ting continues. At to mean that the German movement several points. theére were bayonet at- stward has been checked. The Ger- ;eu-. howe var.eearn:bflngmg up rein- |CHANGE IMPENDING tacks in which we captured 15 Aus- trian officers and more than 1,000 sol- forcements, seemingly. determined to IN NORTHERN FRANCE diers. resume the offensive either 5 f&.’."}.‘?&“ some other point of the [point Chosen for: G S Bt 3 “Austrian reinforcements are repos ed in'the passés of the Carpathian: Berlin says it 1s not known where Movement is Not Known. i e —— e Deobaby will soen dearn their | Berlin, via The Hague and London, GULF OF FINLAND SOWN WITH MINES Russia Takes = Measures Against New Haven, Oct. 18—With low flat connecting roofs, screened from the streets, serving them as a veritable playground, burglars who must have chuckled as they worked, ransacked business blocks In Chapel street be- tween Church and Orange, during last night, opened six safes without, match, fuse ‘or powder and made off with nearly $2,500. Descending 40 feet into the Grand Five and Ten Cent store they opened the safe and took $350; in the Reglino Shoe store they opened the safe and took $300; In the W. L. Taylor Five and Ten nt store they touched up two safes for a total of 3600 they entered the real estate of- fice of J. C. Lounsbury and thade a haul of $700, and then opened the safe in the Boston Branch Shoe store and got $202. Skylights over the store of the W. P. Judd company and the Loomis Temple of Music were opened 2nd the People institute library was also entered, but nothing was taken. tination as their aviators are said |Oct. 18.&All the signs indicate thaf ?D-In ‘busy everywhere over the Ger- |& change is impending in the pro- Iman lines It is thought here, how- |tracted struggle in northern France, T et it probably. will be some |Where for weeks the hostile armies davs before the Germans make their [have faced each other in such strong- presence felt, although they have made [1V entrenched positions that neither Threats of Attack by German Sub- a has been able to advance except at| - v Cigarette stubs strewn about the s m_"'ml‘“ :‘;‘:‘“‘C" “f:‘:“.‘::: enormous cost. The principal eftect mariaes. floors in all places testified to the Situation onary i < |of the mutual fanking operations h8s | peirograd, Ot I8_The Ru coolness of the robbers and as nothing In the center and in the Vosges, the [been to extend the battley lines with- situation is stationary. This is not |out either side finding a feak spot. taken here to mean that no fighting is| The German army which besieged taking place and It s considered like- | Antwerp is now free and the invading ly that the battle on the Alsace fron- |forces have been strengthened other- tler, which has been going on for some |Wise for an assault against some point a3, has yet to reach dtn end. in the extended battle front. The. point N utond Taxed $1.000,000, chosen for this offensive movement is ster bt being guarded zealously. The bulletins The Germans have established civil | giver ‘out by the German headduars ,‘;"“’,fi'“"""{,"“" in Pgflt x;“‘"dl’m g‘ ters throw no light on the nature of elgium and are said to have demand- | tpe is - ed war levies from Ostend and Blank- | bending. © Amerion 1o ooy ooims enberghe, Ostend being called upon |informed concerning this than is Ger- to pay $1,000,000 and Blankenberghe [many, The latest bulletin' reports this to supply certain provisions for man " and beast. | The arrival in Lonfon of |5 oobed. seitence: * “The - altuation thousands of Belgian refugees has stirred up the population in the poorer districts of the clty against the Ger. |BELGIAN ARMY REPULSED mans. Thousands of Germans are s carrying on businets or continuing in GERMANS AT RIVER YSER their places of employment, not only In" London, but throughout the coun- | Between the Region of Arras and the try and the agitation for the discharge [ Oise the Allies Have Made Slight of those employed in hotels, barber | Gains. shops and other places is growing in intenaity. Paris, Oct. 18, 2.47 p. m—The French Contradictory News from Pruss official statement issued this afternoon Again the Russians end the Aus- |Says: trians flatly contradict each other as| ‘The Belglan army in Belgium has to the progress of events in the east. Esowusly repulsed several attacks by The Austrians claim that the Cnera oals at crossings of the river tions are progressing favorably for | YSOT. them, while an official report from h%n our left wing north of the canal Petrograd received tonight says that |La Basse, the allies occupy a front at tempts by the Austrians to cross the [ Givenchy.. Allies from Fromelles have Elver n failed, and that in the fight- |Tetaken Armentleres. Ing south of Przemysl, which took the 'To the north of Arras yesterday roE ot bayonet charmes, they cap. |Was marked by a notable advance on tured 16 Austrian officers and 1,000 {OUr part. men. It would appear from reports| “Between the region of Arras and of correspondents at Petrograd that |the Olse we have progressed slightly the Germans made repeated attempts |2t certain points, to cross the Vistula at Josefow, but In the center and on our right wing were driven back with heavy casual- the situation remains stationary.” Hes ~These correspofidents say this —_— was part of the general at- | OFFICIA i on the Russlan positions on_the LAWAR NEws By was stolen from the Loomis Musig Temple, some wag ventured today that the robbers:simply topped off their night's prank by dashing off “The Tin Roof Glide” on one of the ‘planos. WARNING ISSUED TO POULTRY SHIPPERS Spoilage of Dressed Poultry Last Autumn was Unprecedented. ‘Washington, ~ Oct. 18. — Warning against a repetition of last vears ex- perience when many poultry dealers were financially ruined and tens of thousands of pounds of chicken, tur- keys, ducks and geese Were sent to the crematory because of their alleged unfit condition was issued today by the department of agriculture to poul- try shippers throughout the country. According to department experts the ‘spoilage of dressed poultry during the autumn of 1913 was unprecedented, the blame for which is placed on the shoulders of the man who killed, pick- ed, chilled and pacid the poultrv and sent it to market. Measures of hand- ling the birds to ensure high quality and a minimum change in composition are given in detail by the depart- meat. government announces that because of the presence of German submarines in the Gulf of Finland and the sowing of mines in Russian waters by the enemy it has been compelled in turn to have recourse to similar measures. Consequently certain zones of Rus- sian waters, especially those near the Gulfs of Riga and Finland and the lit- Conall & OilpetaaD, TAG e ConANICERY as_dangerous, In order that non-combatants shall not run risks the entrances and exits of the Gulfs of Riga and Finland, it is sStated, are considered closed from the moment of the publication of this no- ce. BATTLE CONTINUES TO SOUTH OF WARSAW: Situation Remains Unchanged in Other Fields with Russians. ‘London, Oct. 19, 140 a. m.—The foi- lowing official report from German g:;flflux‘:lm, ‘:m«: ‘:n B-rlal: Sun- morning, sen! y Repter’s Am- sterdam correspondent: “In the western theatre of war yes- terday was generally quiet and' the situation unchanged. “In the eastern theatre our troops are advancing in the environs of Lyck. The battle continues near and south of BRTISH GAIN 30 MILES & IN NORTHERN FRANCE. During the Last Few Days—Press Bu- reau Announcement. London. Oct. 18., 9:25 p m—The of- ficial press bureau issued the following announcement tonight: “The British Dead Man was a Bridgeporter. Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 18—It was learned in this city today that Charles Butcher, who was found dead in New Canaan, was a resident of bfs city, living at 15 Wilson street. He had been visiting a daughter, Mrs. Emma Carey, in Patterson. N. Y., which ac- counted for the address on the let- win Butcher of this city, knew of no ters found in his pocket. His son, Ed- reason why his father should be in Vistule and that they wroved a fail- WIRELESS FROM BERLIN | troops have made good progress during | New Canaan and has asked the police ure. S the last few days. In the northern|to investigate the case. Attack on Cattaro. Number of Belgian Soldiers Who En- |area the allies have driven the enemy The Brittsh and French fleets ana| tored Holland Placed at 30,00 Y itenegrin army are carrying on f:x. ..‘?& o Cattaro. the fortified gea. | Berlin, Oct. 18, by Wireless to Sayv- port df Austria in Dalmatia, the first | Ville, L. IL—The following matter has D T e hich e Montenegrine | been given to the press trom offcial Bidin #G have 2Spulsed. O he. number of Belgian sold o o 3 oldters Servisns Sweeping Everything Sefore| 1o cnterpd Hoitnd, it is now stated, Them. was 30,000 whroughout thelr sphere of opera- | “The Daily Mafl of London reports Servian reports say, the Ser- |that the Anglo-Belgians were defeat- aro mweeping everything before |ed cast of Ghent. Reports from The it 15 not beleved here, how- | Hasue are that the revalt of Doers in that very serious fighting has|South Afrfca is teking on larger pro- taking pleoe there recently as |portions and many arrests are being “weather and the conditions of the |made. _raust .havecbeen against. i, “Twenty-two — German universities g e ke hest wnieagie g back more than thirty miles. German Military Aviators Killed. London, Oct. 18, 9:08 p. m.—A Reuter despatch ' from Amsterday says that during a cross-country flight at Doe- beritz October 16, a German military bijlane whe nnear Rathenow, Branden- burg, Prussia, suddenly fell to earth, killing the pilot and severely injuring a passenger. Watterson Calls on President Wilson. ‘Washington, Oct. 18.—Henry Wat- terson, editor of the Louisville Courier Journal, caled on President Wilson at the White House today, folowing the example set two weeks ago by George Harvey former editor of Harpers Weekly. The meeting marked the end of tho controversy between the pres- ident and the two editors which arose during Mr. Wilson's pre-nomination campaign for the presidenc: Movements of Steamships. New York, Oct. 18.—Arrived: steam- ers Cameronia, Glasgow; La Touraine, | The steamer Victoria arrived in Se- Havre. Sailed, steamer Finland, liv- lattle with $500,000 in gold bullion erpool “ from Nome. Boulder Placed on Track Near Berlin MOTORMAN SAW OBSTRUCTION INTIME TO STOP CAR. FENDER WAS SMASHED Fifty of‘More Passengers Were Thrown Into ?anie When Car Came to a Suddgn™ Stop on Branch of New Haven Road. Berl#h, Conn., Oct. 18—An attempt made tonight to wreck the 6:39 electrif train from Middletown on the Berlin branch of the New York, New Haven? and Hartford Railroad at s Station, near here. hing from 75 to 100 pounds, n placed between the rails. otorman saw_the obstruction, not have time to bring his complete stop and the fender ‘was smashed to pleces. The fifty or more passengers were thrown into a small panic, when the car came to a sudden’ stop. No oue was injured. The authorities started an investi- gation at once, but so far have not found any clew. ED SCHOONER TOWED INTO SALEM Had Been Drifting Before a Gal Four Days.. Salem, Oct. 18.—After drifting before a gale since last Tuesday, when her foremast, mainmast, bowsprit and top- mizzenmast went by the board, the schooner Helen Montague was towed into this port by the steamer Buc- The Montague, which was bound for Salem with a cargo of rail- road ties. was off Fire Tsland when struck by the gale and her captain and crew of five men had much diffi- culty in keeping her afloat until they were sighted by the steamer Suffolk, Boston for Baltimore, yesterday morn- The Suffolk put a line aboard the schooner and towed her until the creasing the difficulties of the Ger-|Buccaneer, boynd for EXPLOSIVE MISSILE THROW ON PORCH Of the Home of Former State Senator Wright of Centerbrook. Centerbrook, Conn., explosive missile, hurled upon porch of the home of former state senator William H. Wright, president of the Connecticut Valley = Manufac- turing Company, early today, did su- perficial damage but did not Mr. and Mrs. Wright, who were asleep in the room above the porch. No frag- ments of the missel were found. Mr. Wright says he has had no dis- agreement and no anyone sought to do him injury. He belleves, however, that someone tried to throw the bomb through his cham- ber window. ———e, WEDDING. Taft—Bowers. ‘Washington, . Oct, 17.—The wedding ardtoday of Robert A. Taft, son of for- mer President and Mrs. Willlam How- ard Taft, and Miss Martha A. Bow- ers, daughter of the late Lioyd W. Bowers, solicitor general doring a part of the Taft administration, was of ab- sorbing interest to official and diplo- matic society. The former president and Mrs. Taft had arrived in Washington for ‘marriage, with Mr., and_Mrs. Henry Horace. Taft, .Miss Louise Taft, Charles P. Taft’ Jn, and Mrs. John Hays Hammond. The ceremony was performed at St. John’s Tpiscopal church at noon, Rev. Roland Cotton Smith officiating.- Premier Motor Car Co. in Receiver’s TIndianapolis, Ind., Oct, 17.—The Pre- mier Motor Car company, one of the largest automobile manufacturing con- cerns in Indiana, is today in the hands of the Fletcher Savings and Trust company of Indianapolis as. receiver. The action was taken on the petition of the American Foundry company, which alleges that the Premier concern owes it $1,691.75, and is in dangey of ‘becoming insolvent. = ANV S South America Despatohes No Longer Oct. 18—The Western Union Telegraph Company announced today ‘that code and other messages for Brazil and other South American cities transmiting by way of London are no longer subject to censorship by the English military authorities. Boy Killed White Playing Indian. Bangor, Me., Oct. 18.—Harry Thur- ston Adams, 12 years old. son of Mrs. Marie Adams of Hampden, was acci- dentally killed. The boy was “playing Indian” in the barn at his home and apparently caught his neck rope, falling from the stairs on which he.was standing. The body was di covered shortly after the accident oc- curred and physicians who were sum- moned stated that death was prac- tically instantaneous. 157 Prisoners of War Exchanged. London, Oct. 18.—In 2 despatch from Amsterdam the Reuter correspondent says the Cologne Gazette has pub- lished a_message fron dent at Kiel saying that 157 prisoners of war, men attac ambulance corps, have arrived at the German-Danish frontier for exchange with an equal number of German am- bulance corps men held by the British. The Englishmen will travel home by way of Copenhagen. its correspon- ed to the Eritish Chicago’s Shipment of Food to Europe Supplies and food amounting to $150,000,000 have been sent to Burope from Chicago war was declared, according to figures made public by John J. Arnold, chair- relations commit- Chicago, Oct. 18. man of the foi Thief Took Razors. 18.—The barber Condensed Telegrams | ANTE-GCMAN RIOTING IN. LONDON San Francisco on two Steamers from the Orient. oot AT e <or swiv-| Twenty Shops Were Wrecked by Mob Led by One Hundred Dock Laborers Burglars entered the National Bank at St. Lobaire, Quebec, an descaped with $5,000 in cash. o g e ssens ot one | EXCITEMENT PREVAILED THROUGHOUT SUNDAY Phillipine Legislautre. President Poincare signed a decree admitting fresh meat to France free of duty until further notice. The Australian House of Represent- One Store Was Set Afire and Others Were Pillaged—Police atives. hax passed s Wil apyeaveisive \Unnble to Cope With the Mob, Which Was Dispersed by The British K:uumw, Munster Cas- a Detachment of Soldiers—Twenty Arrests Were Made. tle, bound for Yokohafa; went aground in the fog on Sandy Hook bar. i i — ti- | threatened to attack German places in Indiana suffragists joined the cotton| London, Oct. 18, 2 p. m.—The anti- | RFEREUES P By SO0 = x ek crusade by buying gloves, hosiery, |German rioting in London during last |\SPotiey €00 By i PBRERe B nn dresses and other things in cotton. night seems to have been more gen- Lod"by Glackc Lokl eral than was at first supposed. Twen- President Wilson will assist at the |ty shops were wrecked. Damage was| The rioting was led by one hundred Tercentenary Celebration, October 25, |dohe in the Deptford borough and in [dock laborers who had been turned of the founding of New York city. Old Kent road. out of a lodsing house to make reom Ous Stine: Bot Alica. for Belgian refugees. The men gath- Mrs. Eva Wallace, 36 years old, of e ered in a German saloon and smashed : Pasaic, N. J., was killed by falling from | In the former district several stores |¢he windows and the bar. The dock- a window on the fourth floor of her |Were attacked and one was set afire.|ers charged the owner of the saloort home. In Old Kent road meat markets were | with having started a report that two- 8 smashed late last night and this Was | British battleships had been destroyed. . followed Dy the wrecking of & <on- |The shop of & German butcher in. th fectionery store early this morning. |window of which a picture of Bm= The British steamer Kwarra, from Montreal, was beached off Sierra Le- £ the shops were pillaged. William was one, Africa, because of fire in her coal | SOIS, of the Shobe WOrR B o twenty | Boror &V displayed, was Remiun arrests were mado. Precautions have TS Oteppedt; i, dkiiater s A been taken to prevent further 3 The rioting p: ded Toksh: nual e :v'xl‘l”r.;oax:’:::; f;m::::; Great Excitement Sunday. of about a mile before it was m,..“'"' for the l:':'rmy looking to the building up Great excitement prevailed through- |by a dal::‘hl;‘!mt of soldiers. The shop- of a reserve. cut Sunday in Deptford and neighbor- | keapers ived above their places of i iness eir apartments, were ing boroughs. Crowds thronged the |busi and th Erederick A. Gleveland, protessor of [Streets and refused to move at the |sacked. Twenty men were captured in rederick A eyl D eee | orders of the policemen and soldiers. |one house. They rown & piano O Ty P Ho was|In all it was found today that twenty |down the starway and the i i Polly <oty < ovgbadin: bakeries: - butcher shops and sacons | became, jammed and held them Dris- T s were completely wrecked. The rioters |oners. 3 As horse racing is virtually at an end in England, Harry Payne Whit- ney is shipping his stable back to the United States. At the close of the New York Wo- Addressed Conm-flo-_- of All Souls’ men’s Suffrage convention at Rochest- Church, Washington er, Mra Haymond Brown of New York ‘was elected president. 5 e of privats iife, afier a long public|Hunt of Arizona telegraphed Presidons Poinfare of France bas| e, nore kel o3 s P | mement Lo e S accepted an invitation, extended by | dent Taft tfld‘z’ ’:n brief ad e o ot i e e i N P attended’ All Souls' church |them proper medical attention 3 D and at the conclusion of the service| Mexican side. 2 Rocepted an Igvitation to address the| The state department mg TAFT ENJOYS PLEASURE \ DANGER OF WOUNDED s OF PRIVATE LIFE MEXICANS BEING LEFT TO DIE! By Rigid Enforcement of Order Not to Permit Them to Cross Borden son and ex-President | oongregation. cently that it was not permissible to| Taft will meet in Washington on Tues- | “wThe last 19 months,” he said, “have|make the American side a : day at the annual meeting of the|peen as happy and full of comfort as|ground to which the contending American Bar Association. any period in my life—the comfort|tions across the border of struggling to help along in & quiet, | all their wounded to be Charies H. Weston, formerly of Salem | humble way—of being able to say what | neutral territory. It wes Mass,, was found guilty in London of | you choose and say only that which | that while General Bliss the murder of his and at.tze|you really believe without Tesepvation |instructed to take such same time was declared”insane. —is something that the previous ex- | be necessary to 7 perience in Washington in positions of | against humanity, there would Four more cases of typhoid fever | responsibility makes you appreciate | change m“m‘-‘m_ o pea ijn:» have been discovered in St, Anthony’s | When-you have left them. bringing of M T Orphan - Asylum at Atlington, N. J.| Later Mr. Taft visited the National|American side except in urgent cases This brings the total up'to 25 cases. | Press club, where he shook hands with |1t was explained that ordinasily : several hundred membbers, cabing|was no goed reacon for making | 5 ice- many of them by their first names. tates take - care these A SN et o | ™ In a bricf address he said: ‘it is| wounded, as . all necessary medicall Pitisburgh dled of wounds he received | & real comfort to go away and aettle | supplies ‘could be procured and take: Guring the fighting around Antwerp. | 4own to a quiet, modest, silent life and to them on their own side of the bor-} then be catapulted onde or twice af der. 5 [ ‘ontributions amounting _to $3,657 | Year into this vortex of eel- ————ateada O Ny Yoak Bisis|ing and ambition and struggiing for | ENRTHQUAKES IN GREECE Board of the Amerl Red . Cross, | the best there is in the country and HAVE DONE GREAT DAMAGE| bringing the total amount to $251,398. | find that whether it be one administra- } tion or another, human nature in poli- Villages Destraysd—Province of Because of the heavy rains through- | tics is very much the same. S 3 ; out. ¢he Hudson Valiey, ul:‘:avmor “Ontil you have been elected, until Boeotia Suffered Most, Sulzer abandoned his campalgn trip|you have been forced into the’ apple S . Dorhont Duchess. and - Putnam | tree of observation, in the absance of | , Paris, oot gt - from Athens ol < influence, you really don’t know much. | Agency countjes. S . You'might have thought it valuable | (hat sreat damage was done e | Police Captain Wilifam F. Peabody, | but you don’t know how valuable for |cart] FaotEny. g of Wlhlteslogt:, . T. Wil face charges | peace and contentment a sense of |Kaparelll and Pyri near Thebes, were| of neglect of duty and conduct unbe- | humor i rluu-oye:.‘ ad.u D'ly‘h»- :;:“ma- Wy coming an officer preferred by Com- R e oo e STEAMER BIANOILLA tia suffered most. ~Twenty distinet: Patrolman Michae | J. Nugent, of BROUGHT INTO HALIFAX|shocks were felt there = The apmber I i thi e of casual known. Pro B en When hia wife. who haa a | As Prize of War by the Britsh Aux-|sions and tents are being hurrd ed for | small tortune.‘declared that she no ry Cruiser Caronia. ?;eAwL;l:nm: lost mw”hnm- : longer loved him. . move were Telt % Halifax, N. S., Oct. 18.—The steamer|for twenty seconds, Seversl botses, Manager of New York theatres re- | Brindilla, flying the American flag, | Were Wrecked SO0 i fused to rent to Christabel Pankhurst, | Was brought into port today as a prize ™40V Were SBUIER o 0 4¢neng says | the English suffragettesand of their [of war by the British auxiliary cruis- D e D as 1o Wik s s theatres despite her asesrtions that|er Caronia. The Brindilla was for-|that ail the houess 12 SU R €0 Woo| e ey the German medmer Wastk- || Arista lino wiffered much and & good Seton Hall College iias dropped foot- | She cleared from New York for Al-|deal of damage wes dons e om its athletics at the request|exandria, Bypt, last Tuesday _and|Atalante an ] ‘experience: ) faculty. The acti came fui | was captured the same day by & Brit-|yore Proverty losses Shocks werkl : . Cyclades, lowug the death of Char'es Hayes, of |ish cruiser. Later she was _trans-|folt in the Peloponnesus Fordisom University ferred to the charge of the Caronla,|Euboea and Ionian Islands. which placed a prize crew on board. e P Ail Nesican chieftains are now ¢vL- | She is reported to have contraband of | GOAL IN PARIS WILL jext to the orders of tho Aguas C war in her cargh. The Admirality MONTHS | entes ccnvention, wm,nl n!un stormy | court will consider the case at once. LAST TWO } secret convention votad itself suprente s L e $ awrerfty of Mexico. OBITUARY. City Worried Because the Sources cf | = o ah oot S Supoly Are Cut OF The Rev. omas _Sherman, an e army chapiain, son of Gen, William T Mre. M.5C, Geodliait. Paris, Oct. 17.—This city has not ex- | i Sherman, was badly hurt in Scranton,| Nashville, Tenn, Oct. 18.—Mrs. M.| perienced as yet any considerable rise Ta. when the horse he was riding|C. Goodlett, founder of the United|in the price of commodities owing to slipped and rolled over him. % Daughters of the Confederacy, died at|the w ar, but there now is some .-nxi-! her home here Friday night after a|ety with regard to twe important arti- A small detachment of Mexicans|long illness. She was 70 years old. cles, coal and sugar. under General Aguilar, threaten to at- —_— Greater Parls normally consumes tack Vera Cruz, and have two moun- " million tons of coal tain gune trained on the American| Contracts for Three Battleships. | Jiner It is estimated that the p res—, lines which have been lengthened. Washington, Oct. 18—Contracts for| ent stock will last to the middle of } the construction of two of the three| December, but no longer. Some of the | Victor E. Innes and his wife, of Fu- | battleships authorized by the last|largest coal fields of Burope are wholly gene, Ore., charged with murder and | N&val appropriation act were let to-|or partially closed. Nothing can get conspiracy, were released on bail in |93 by Secretary Daniels, one to the|from Germany or Belgium and very San Antonio, Tex., by Judge Anderson, | Newport News Shipbuilding Compan¥| little from the “hlack country of without any evidence having been |8t $7.115,000. and the other to the New| France on the Belgian frontier. Eng- heard. York Shipbuilding Company of Cam-|land, in fact. is the only hope, and of den, N. J. at $7,350,000. English sources the supply in North- - The funeral of the late King Charles umberland, Durham aund Yorkshire of Houmania, was held in the city of | Explosion Among Express Packages. |are limited, if not cut off by the Buchurest, #nd later the kody was| Freeport, Me. Oct. 15.—An explosion | Insecurity of navigation in the North- placec in a crypt in the cathedral at|among the express packages in an | S€a- Ourtea de_Arges, ove' of th3 anclert |electric express car, bound from Port- t1s of Wallachit. land to Brunswick and Lewiston, as it | TRIAL OF MRS. CARMAN = < was leaving Freeport, practically NING | The famous old _battleship Oregom |destroyed the conients of the car, said TO BEGIN THIS MORI Which will lea e naval parade(to be valued at $2,000. The car was Bee! through the Panoma Canal next spring, | saved by means of a hose at a farm. | Panel of 150 Talesmen Have - was placed ir dock at the Puget|house on the line, Subpoenaed. Scund Nav: to undergo repairs g ne TN - - . 2 5 hefore going into commission December Cieetor Bias Dasts. Ofineola, N. Y, Oct. 18—Every de- | tail hed been arranged today for the | beginning of the trial on Monday of Mrs. Florence Carman for the murder | ‘Washington, Oct. 15.—From the con- dition of sugar :::1(5 on October 1, the department of apriculture, in @ fore. o — cast issued todey estimates a harvest | P astenger s pueband. s of 426,000 tons, compared i Carman, at Freeport on June 30. The Cop g ek B e gy 150 talesmen for the first panel have | ponnds, of been subpoenaed and the selection of | jurors will begin Monday morning. A peculiarity of the panel of tales- : men drawn for the trial of Mrs. Car- man is that nearly half of them live Simons, a reporter, of s killed and four oth- ers injured n an_automobile con- tairing a party of Progressive cam- paigners was struck by a Philadelphia & Reading express train nea: Souder- ton. . Rear Admiral Moore, Commandant of the naval = n at Honolulu, was |de: ordered to close the Marconi wireless [€rn avenie ¥ within a few miles of Freeport, in station there unless the company sat: |l0ss estimatad at 00. The fire | which village Mrs. Bailey was killed, | isfactorily expla a message an- |Started in a storeroom in the basement | and nearly a dozen live in Hempstead, | nouncing the arrival of the German|fom an unkpown cause. Three men | which was the home of the murdered | gunboat Grier. and the watchman who were sleeping | woman. there had narrow escapes. Paiiadelphia, — e Frank M Marter was arrested in Rain on Battlefields. shop owned Caranzio, at 2 d conducted by Carlo Temple street, was en- tered last night by a burglar who se- cured 12 razons and several shawing brushes. The fro: ed, | companies forwhom_hesworked 95 aeTious Brooklyn charged with swindle. He Secretary Lane Has Grip. Paris, Oot. 15.—A steady downpour s & Stiff right arm which he can dis- | Washington, Oct. 18.—Secretary | of rain last night has drenched the locate at will. He has obtained thous- [Lane of the interior department is|fielis of battle. The discomforts of ands of dollars by dislocating his arm |confined fo his home with an attack | the troops have been augmented by 3 and getting damages from diTerent [of grip. His conditiin is not regarded/ the rain and thes "fi} 5