Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
o VOL. LVI.—NO, 265 flwBulIetm'scn GERMAN FORT AT TSING-TAU_ First Decisive Victory of tion War Has Been W;m by Japanese and British 7,000 MEN HELD GARRISON FOR THREE MONTHS With Its Downfall Germany Loses Its Only Asiatic Posses- sion—Russia Claims Great Victory in Driving Germans Back to the Eastern Prussian Frontier—Both the Allies and Germans Report Gains South and East of Ypres— On the Aisne the French Have Retaken Town of Souper and Have Custured Some Trenches—No Developments in Operations of Russias and Turks Against Each Other British Aviator. ‘The first M!l\'. vmu"urry Ofthfiific‘l:! been won. Tsing-Tau, e Ger- = the Shans-Tung The Japancee ang British freces en- compassed the downfall of the strons- Bold after its garrison of 7,000 had beld out for nearly three monthe With its loss Germany is now evicted from Asia. Fighting with the British before Taing-Tau were Indian detachments. Russia Claims Victories. Onthe Buro battie front, Rus- sis claims, through Grand Duke Nich- \ her commander-in-chief, the greatest victory sirce the beginning of | the war in the drlving back of the Ger- ! maix G0 the easten. Prussian frontler aud defeat to (ae Gurmeant and Aus- trians below the River Vistuin. Qermany &ays Mo Change, Qermans bowever, does £t copon | statement, saying trut there. O v Jh ihe eastern baxtle front The fgLting . region, ver (0 uvercpuie -‘-w‘iea ig to the! by the w yes oF Bmperor | Y’l‘lndl-‘ml‘ Hard Fighting st Ypres. In the extreme Westera zome, -oud: and east of Ypres, hard tiaues, but with. neither o distinc: sdvantage. wsd (he Germans report gaims, bu nelttier make clalms that would indi- cile a5y ihing except that at all points tie contanders either are endeavoring 1o push forward or to check advances, French Have Retaken Soupier. On the Alsne the French say they bave retaken the town of Souj have captured some trenches. The Gormaus, on the other hand, assert fhey have won. important near St. Mihiel, and in so doing ‘n- fiicted heavy losses on the French. As for the operations by the Rus- sans and Turks against each other, nothing has developed. The Turks are #ald to be advancing in the Sinai pe- rinsula in the direction of Egypt. Berlin' declares that the Ameer of Afghanistan has sent 170,000 men to fhe British Indla, frontier And that. the Eheik-ul-Islam, the head of the Mo- bammedan church in Torkey, has had spread throughout the Mohammedan world a that in the war with Russia, Great Britain and France t is the duty of Mussulmans to be true to their faith. Greece, it is said, has satisfied a de- sire, which she had at the close of ine late Balkan war, by the taking % 'l'he " British ‘admiralty reports the loundering of the WNOTHER NAVAL BATTLE OFF CHILEAN COAST Setween British, Japanese and Qer- man Warships. < reading of t.hfl t:.ble seemed to indicate that ¥: has eurren red{ 3 itoa busrd it lurd‘n turned there from Berlin are to the effect that up to last Sunday the Ger- man concentration camps and hos- pitals held the following prisoners: Frencch, 3,138 officers and 188,618 men; Russians, 3,131 officers and 186,- 779 men; Belglans, 537 officers and 34.- 1 907 men; British, 417 officers and 15,- | 730_men. The correspondent adds the Berlin _dispa s these figures do not include prisoners not encamped. that IITURKC SEIZE ALL SORTS OF MERCHANDISE { Enter Shops at Beirut at All Hours of Night and Day New York, Nov. 8.—Merchandise of| ; every conceivablle value is being selz- {8 by officers of the Ottoman govern- ment in cities of Syria under the gen- eral orders of mobilization of troops, aoccording to reports from missionaries {made public today Dby the board of “orefvn misstons of the Presbyte.&in zhe order. of mobuinuon - Un i are “beh ll”l ‘mules. food | foader into a moet wicked and unbri- dled system of plundmer. The ey hay at Beirut "at all t-a5d day and have only fiour and’ articles . of food. tmt dry oot Clothing, hosteboi tenells, silk stockings by the gross, made ahoes for: women and o sets of furniture.” t present are working in Sy- it jJirection of the Presbyterl- an’board 39 missionaries, of whom 24 women. Flfteen of the mission- arice are at Belrut, 13 at Tripoll, nine at Sidan and thres at SUPPLYING 400,000 MEALS DAILY IN BRUSSELS American Commission Has Completed Plan to Cover Beigium London, Nov. 6, 8:30 p. m.—Provis- fons sent to Brussels by the American row with 1,700 tons of wheat. Both Ships will proceed to, Rotterdam, where their cargzoes will be taken over by representatives of the American com- ‘missfon. LARGE GERMAN STEAMER BLOWN UP BY MINE South of the Danish Island of Lange- land—Number of Crew Lost Comhm flllflndon. Nov. 8, 7:05 Swiss Deny That Germany Wants to London, Nov. 7, Bern send an army through Switzerlan Fleeing from Antwerp. . m.—A despatch to e graaf from Rozendaal ll.yn thal all l‘riil‘!.“ are of fugitives. Ou of '.hs tfl‘lflm de- clared that not a single German officer slept in° Antwerp last night, all being housed in the forts. Persia to. “llntlln Neutrality fov, 6.—Mirza AH Kuli- o 6t the Persian lega FORTRESS OF TSING-TAU HAS SURRENDERED German Force of 7,000 Made a Tena- cious Rofifllm Tokio, Nov. 7, 1125 p. m—It 1s of- Germ: clally announced that the fortress of Tsing-Tau has first step in bringing about the sur- render of the fortress occurred at midnight. when the infantry.charged and occupied the middle fore of the first line of defense. In this operation they took 200 prisoners. The Germans hoisted the white flag at 7 o'clock this morning at weather observation bureau of The capitulation of the Ger- mans was the causé of much surprise end joy to the men of the army and navy operating against it and also-to the people of Tokio. Charge Led by Japanese General. The charge against the middle fort was a brilliant one. It was led by General Yoshimi Yamada at the head of companies of infantry and engineers. The number of the German and Jap- anese losses which were large, have not been announced. The fall of Tsing-Tau ends the most picturesque of the minor phases of the great world war now rasins. v two continents and in many of the islands of tho seas where colonies of the warring nations were planted com- bats of more or less interest have taken place, garrisons have been cap- tured and towns occupled peacefully. but in the little German concession on the south side of the Shanting pen- insula of China there has been_ goin~ on since late in August a reduced scale of war that from al' accounts has duplicated nearly all the features of those batiles in Europe that have re- sulted in the capture of fortified po- sitions. Last German Possession in Asia. The: capture of Tsing-Tau loses to Germary her last foot of possessions on the Asfatic mainland as well as her last strategic position outside of the Germar empire in Europe. 7,000 Men Held Garrison. For nearly three monthss the litt'e German garrison, amounting to about 7,000 men and nearly wholly com- posed of reservists who were living or doing business in China, has held out against the land and sea. attacks of the Japanese and of cermn Brithh ipts | detachments of both white and Indian troops that found them uq n China at the oull:;elk of the 1 ‘What the. heavy cost of men on the part of the allfes. Besieged Since Aug. 15. It was on August 15th that Japan threw herself into the European war as.an ally of Great Britain. after de- manding that Germany withdraw or intern all German warships in Asfatic waters and relinquish possession of Kiao-Chow. In the statement from Tokio that accompanied this declara- tion, Japan asserted that her inten- tions were purely military and did not contemplate the retention of one foot of ground on Chinese territory and later affirmed that she did pot intend to extend her holdings in the islands of the Pacific that might fall into her possession during the campaign. Her demands ignored, when the ul- timatum expired a week later, Japan proceeded cautiously with plans to seize the German settlement on the Chinese mainland. Small War Area. The operations in this isolated far eastern theatre of the war have been (Continued on page two,) SENTENCE DEFERRED IN JARED FLAGG CASE New York, Nov. Jared Flags. convicted Monday of using the mails to defraud, was today given the pris- lege of submitting briefs pleading for a new trial and sentence was defured until next Tuesday, when Judge Rud- kin of the federal district cowrt wili hand down his sion regarding an- ther trial. When Flagg was brought imto court for sentence today his coun- m characterized his conviction as a of justice, and Flage miscarriage Himsel plemod vehemently for near- 1y an hour. John M. Coleman, Flass’s attorney, contended that the government hed to produce evidence proving Flags's business to have been fraudu- lent; that all the evidence adduced by the government had been taken from Flagg's books “stolen from his office in raid of 1911.” admission of testimony based upon Flagz’s books was equivalent to hav- in~ Wlace tes'ify against himself. Flagg told the judge that his trial had ween unfair because “the jury re- turned the verdict against me largely because of the fact that 999 men out of a thousand are regarded as guilty by the general public after indictments are returned against them” and be- cause the prosecuting attorney “made statements to the jury that were un- supported by the evidence.” EXPRESS MESSENGER ADMITS HE FAKED HOLD-UP. Implicates a Rock Island Conduotor in $1,300 Robbery. Litle Rock Ark, Nov. 6—Willlam Ahring, express messenger on “the Rock fsland-Hot Springs train held up between these two points Aprl 9 and robbed. of $1,800, today in federal court confessed to planning the robbery 'with a “former Rock h.nd conductor and another man. ~ Ahring declared that one of the men boarded the train st Hot Springs sud with ng permission bound end gaged him and locked him u pin a trunk. _Ahring 55ia he et the other manin Little Rccl and divided the spolls and that he received $500 as his share. French Not Wearing German Uniforms | has received archbishop of Rheims, an . emphatic the | He asseried that the Dt Mdn eims Not Used for ~\ Military Purposes, p2ome, Nov. 6, 12.10 p. m—The pope "(ro Cardinal Lucon, denfal of the reports that the cathe- dral of Rheims has been used by French ‘troops for military purposes. Eight German Marines Killed by Bomb 10.45 p. m.—“An allies’ lines dropped bs_on German naphtha tanks Thursday, killing elght ma-. e s dsepatch from Amster- Exchange Telegraph com- line, bound from New York to M iterranean ports, has been detained at Gibraltar. The authorities there state that the Italla has contraband of war aboard. This information is contain- in a_despatch from Gibraltar to uoya- Shipping agency, It doesn't make any difference the great accelerator of business. ing columns of the newspaper. It ‘who are seeking jusst what you wi trading redius is the best mean of This is what is assured by the best pub'icity! In the past week the following columns of The Bulletin: VJOE FROM AMERICAN CITIES Will Do So When Readers and Sub- Kansas City, Mo, Nov. 6—The newspapers are the forces ~that can arive vice from American cities and will do so when readers and subscrib- ers insist upon it, deciared Arthur Cap- per, editor of the Topeka (Kan.) Capi- tal.” and governor-elect of Kansas, in an address to the International Purity congress tonlgt. The newspaper Is uliarly sensitive and responsive to mnu:ed public opinion,” said Mr. Capp: esponsibility for the elevation of the public .(-lnd-x‘d of morals,” Mr. Capper declares, ‘“rests with the mnewspapers, which are directly respon- sible for the education of the individua, in_the truth about public affairs.” It was In the power of the mewspa- pers of any city, he asserted. to drive ice out of thelr Clty by & conscientlous campal; of publecity. ewspapers Srhich undertask to exploit bad condi- tions merely from sensationalism to sel papers, he said, would accomplish little good. TEACHER AND THREE PUPILS !URNED IN PRAIRIE FIRE. Schoolhouse From “Which They Fled Remains Unharmed. Belfleld, N. 0., Nov. 6.—Miss Gladys Hollister, aschool teacher, and three of her puils were burned to death today in a prairie fire which drove them from the schoolhouse twelve miles from here. Three other children were probably mortally burned. All the children were between the ages of six and twelve. The fire which was started by a threshing outfit, wos observed flrat when five miles away. ‘With her 22 children the teacher fled toward a plowed fleld some distance from the school.- The little company soon became divided, only four of the children remaining with tehir teacher. Those who fled in an opposite direction were saved. In the other group, some of their bodies were burned almost beyond recognition, was fund a few feet from the ploughed ground. Tm:a‘_m the schoolhouse stands un- DENIES STATEMENTS MADE E IN WRITTEN CONFESSION Soldier Scott Stone Sought to Conceal His Wife's Guilt Champaign, IlL, Nov. 6.—Scott Stone teday donied the statements made in his written confession last Saturday, that he had dynamited his home at To- lono, IIL, and thereby caused the deaths ofhis wife and four children. He said that his wife murdered the children and killed herself and that he set fire to the house in the hope that um JSrime of his wife would be con- stons changed his story when con- fronted with evidence that the dyna- mite he said he had used had not been touched. Movements of Steamships. .Y—Arrlved. steamer La steamer Almeira, Oc!. IS—S.HB\‘I. steamer Athinai, New York. Gibraitar, Nov. 5.—Arrived, steamer Italla, New York. New York. No'. 7.—Arrived: Steam. l T Nov. 6.--Sailed; Steam- .."&':.‘;“3_‘%.. — mma cm. samsm, 7, 1914 Paper, and ,m I:.n s the I.argest boanocficul~-m Propmn T ) MOBllJ'Z. ADEQUATE ARMY Get the Best Publicity apples or a stock of merchandise, the possessor thereof knews well enough that i he says nothing about belng in the market for the dis- position thereof he is very apt to be a long time selling them. Therein lies the reason for advertising. ‘where you are located and what are the virtues of your possessions hasing public. gets the possessor of goods into touch with the purc There is no greater or better medium of publicity than the advertls- reaches the largest number of people in the home field and the natural goes into the homes and it is from the homes that the demands arise. Make it your business messenger and not the results! Eumpean War WILL DOMINATE REPORTS OF .EQRETMIE! OF WAR AND NAVY Will Bs Recommended by Secrstary Garrison, with a Definite Military Policy—Secretary Daniels to Ask for $4,000000 for Submarines. on, Nov. 6.—Both Secretary Guv:r:nhx‘:nflnd smmry Daniels wiil{ lay, before congress in their annual re what it is, whether it is & crop of It is publicity which is Telling what your stock in trade is, sets your stock before the people ant to sell and the paper which educating the buyers. use of The Bulletin's columns. It It assures the matter has appeared In the news Bulletin Telegraph Local General Total Saturday, Gxct-31.. 79 132 979 1190 Monday, Nov. 2.. 78 147 320 545 Tuesday, Nov::- 3.2 95 130 264 439 Wednesday, Nov. 4.. 61 90 218 369 Thursday, Nov. 5.. 86 133 272 491 Friday, Nov. 6..”7 84 140 229 453 Totals < ouuee iugn 483 772 2280 - 3537 rts, soon- to ‘be made public, the les- Bons ‘which they belleve the srmy and navy of the Urited States shvuld draw trom the war in Europe. No extraordinary expenditures have been aeked. for by either the war or navy departments in the annual esti- mates already. filed with the appropria- | tion committees of congress, but the tiv canimet. heads will Olsouss in gT~at detail the best methods of obtaining a mobile and adequate army and a pow- erful and efficient fleet. Definite Military Policy. Secretary Garrison will endeavor to concentrate the attention of congress -|and the country on the necessity for a definite national military policy _ex- tending over a period of years. Sev: retary Daniels will remomend two bat- tleships, but probably will ask congress | to give the navy authority, as it did last year, to expend a lump sum for submarines - without fixing the pum- Daniels Wants Submarines. The spectacular raids ef submarines in the European war have drawn at- tention to the fact that last year con- gress appropriated an aggregate of more than $4,000,000 for the building of submarines and specified that one of these should be a seagoing Vessel, vir- tually twice the size of those used in coast patrol. Such a submarine, ac- cording to the explanation made py naval officials at the time to congress, will be the largest and most powerful in the world, able to accompany the fleet everywhere. European submar- ines have been able to make only com- paratively short voyages from their bases, and the great cruiser submarine planned by American naval officers, bids for which are soon to be opened, will eclipse anything of the kind seen in the present war. There is every likelihood that Sec- retary Daniels will ask for money enough to provide a second submarine of the seagoing type, and the usual number—seven or eight smaller sub- marines—for coast and harbor de- fense. Two Battleships, While the submarines have attracted most attention, the naval strategists with whom Secretary Daniels is con- ferring in preparation of his annual report do not believe there should oe any change in the plan set forth by the general board several years ago in the progrimme of two battleships per year and & proportionate number of auxiliaries and submarines. The Unit- ed States already has more submarines than Germany and Japan, and Mr. Daniels has publicly stated that the general board still belleved in the bat- tleship unit as the necessity line along Which the American navy should ad- vance to keep pace with the other | (5 fleets of the worid. What Naval Men Advise. It is conceded among naval men, however, that congress, with the im- portancs of the submarine impressed on the world, will discuss the advisa- bliity: of using the appropriation ordi- nerily made for a single battleship for the bailding of 28 new submarines. By sacrificing one battleship, the Ameri- can navy could at ore stroke step al- most alongside England and France in su'/marine strength. Some naval offi- cials point to the long coast lines and numerous harbors of the United States s requiring more submarines in com- B;rhon with the small coast lengths of ean nations. Fresh Gamln Troops for "Belgium. London, Nov. 7, 1.55 8. m.—The Ex# change Te'egraph company’s corre- spordent at Amsterdam says the Ger- | mans have concentrated . in Munster, 78 miles mflhw of Cologne, 150,000 'Ill : sent into —— | be postponed on account of the war. l\. of M:fl- of b‘ mn, piize fighting 'lll -bon-had m "Galitornia: The winter sailings of the White | Star liner Olympic have been cancelled, the crew paid off. Chicago Union Stock yards send;? Btm:fiers and to Other Western Plants Fire destroyed the farm, house of John Dursa, in New Fairfield with a 1oss estimated at $3,000. ly of a y.unu ‘woman, well dnmd and wearing - spectacles, was found in a woodlot at Wallingford. 216 CATTLE AND 600 HOGS INFECTED AT CHIC { \ : ; Eight Hundred Prize Cattle are Still Held in Q Herd Valued at Several Millions—Massachusetts is in List of States Where Embargo is in Fo Supply in Large Gities May be Curtailed—No Rise in Price of Meat, But Poultry Advanced Four Cants at Chi- A small water spaniel, ran mad in New York’ Chinatown, biting five per- sons. It was caugut by a policeman. Prairie fires are sweeping over 500 square miles of tercitory n the ¢ :ddan, N. D. Many settlers ln missing. George P. Presser, who escaped from Blukwell's Island, New York, by swim- T¥ ! ming the East River, August 21 was recaptured in Brooklyn.' Julius Pittsburg, chauffeur of Brook- Iyn, was fatally injured when he was pinned under his taxicab, in & col- lision with a troiley car. Thomas -D. Schall of Minneapolis, who lost his' eyesight in an explosion, was elected as Congressman from. the Teuth . district of Minnesota. The steamer Pleidas arrived in New York from Sa: Francisco, via the Panama Canal, with a cargo of 66,000 of California fruits and wines. flmmMellw—hfededClfleFmdmun_' Chicago, Nov. 6—A large part of the catt e-receiving and meat-packing ndustries of the country, long center- ¢d here to.icht temporarily was hift- ed to Kansas City, Omaha_St. Joseph, Mo.. and other wostern cities and the Chicage. Unl, first time ce its organization In 1865, was closed down for nine days In consequence of the prevalence of hoof and mouth disease among cattle. The quarantive azainst the stock yards and#tll other cattle pens within the state w-nt into effect at midnight. The state’s action supplements the federal quarantine against Ilinois. No More Cattle Received in Chicage. No more cattle, sheep or hogs_are to be received In Chicago untll Nov 16, when business is to be resume eft~r the yards have bren thoroughly 3; £5Sted ar@ pronounced free from he Butchers Sent to The being contaminated. s valued at several mition doltare Milk Supply Curtailed. In an address bofore the Harvard Law School, ex-President Taft advo- cated a-single seven-year term for the President of the United States. An unidentified man was killed while crossing the subway tracks at:Broad- wa) and z38th Strect, New York, thice S ut of an ezpress train passing over s body. One of the amendments passed upen }in t e elect.on in arizona was the ao- ¢ & of capiial pu..sament, thus con- {vewning fifteen men convicted of murder. Awakened by her pet spantel, which mrde ioudly, jumped o: her oved a d kel her face, lirs. Jossph La.eau isand her hume at South Salem, alass., ablaze. Kansas City. Esi dress the animals which ordina-il would have been se-t to Chicago. Thes annoupced that the products from heir Wwe-tern ts would be sum at_to su fhe markef withovt any priees Clean-up of tock Yards. A. G. Leonard, president of the stock vards said: “By the middle of next week every i yards will have been the thousands of pens a~d miles of water trou ot §s2 | The Newport Rolling Mill Co., and jthe A drews Steel Co of Newport, | have openad after a three-weeks' 4 down, affec.ing 1,500 men. upritlis isn Dorohue, comman s and aieo chairman ¢ and e Ty TS N callod & taeeti for wmur‘uw at H!A!“ Rhode H-‘ Providence, R. L. Nov. 8.—] of the nunsr-.l of the hoof 2 4 - i 5 y of the ‘! Two masked men carried away at the point of revolvers the ballot box containing the votes of Rockhouse, Mingo Couaty W. Va. Federal officers are pursuing the men. ue cutter Itaska has been search for “the abandoni sehooner Charles W. Church, adrift off the Virginla capes. The crew not been heard from. i The German Socialist Deputy, Lieb- knecht, who when the war broke out was under a charge of imsulting the |Czar, has beem advised his trial has been’ postponed indefinitely, The Italian Government has mhlb- ited the importation from January 1 {of pork products from America, Tur- {key, Roumania, Cyprus and. Egypt be- cause of the cholera plague. Mexicans, who 'posted the placards in Mexico City calling upon all patriots to resent with force of arms the Amer- ican occupation of Vera Cruz have been arrested and imprisoned. ey acms atake, alfew degut - country. e, a few ther delay will not Oar. arprehension is that the cbread in other states which:the gov- ermment might quarantine would be umable. to get operation of cattlemen everywhere.” 216 Cattle, 600 Hogs Infected. m The 800 prize cattle brought here All the fire apparatus of Quebec was dairy show from b in action at the fire of Gale Brothers shoe factory, which threatened to de- {stroy the factory portion of the town. i Four hundred employes escaped. maining cattle and prevent, if possible, Charles C. Moore, president of the Panama-Pacific Exposition at San Francisco, wired to Mayor Mitchell of New York that the fair would not EFFORTS TO END STRIKE VERA CRUZ PLACARDED OF HARRIMAN SHOPMEN WITH "crrlznu TO ARMSI™ Ballots Being Distributed to Members| Papors Say the Americans Are to of Several Unions Withdraw Vllfi_n a_Few Days. men were burned to death in a fire which destroyed the Waverly Hotel, a four-story lodging -house on Eighth Avenue, Manhattan. Forty- four men were rescued by firemen. M. Jarmulowky, a banker of the East Side, New York, indicted for re- ceiving deposits after his bank be- came insolvent, surrendered to the au- thorities, and was held in $50,000 bail. Max @. Ernest, a New York iewel- ter, shot when he attempted to resist two armed men who entered, his shop and took the contents of the cash register. The robbers were captured. New Orleans, Le., Nov. §.—Efforts to end the strike of shopmen on the Harriman lines are made by the. employes, it became known here Baliots sre being distributed by . the officers of several unions affected here and it is understood they are to be re- turned not later than November 33. The shopmen went on strike mbout three years ago and it was then esti- mated 35.000 men were affected. Union men here scy- there is strong sentiment for a settlement, but on what basis is not generally -known. NEW HIGH RECORD PRICE OF WHEAT 10,000 Bushels for January Delivery at $1.23 a Bushel, Four sailors from the battleship Utah, in New York harbor, appeared against officials of the Columbia the- atre, Manhattan, alleging they were barred from the theatre because of | their uniforms. i i LHS Two German officers and two seamen of theGerma ncruiser Gier, now in Honolulu, who have been held in San- Francisco, will be paroled, but must re- main in the United States until athe end of the war. i i Portland, Ore. Nov. 6—Steadity climbing upward the wheat market resched new altitudes at the Mer- Excha: today and blue stem wheat for Jonvary delivery broke all previous records here when bushels were sold at $1.23 a bushel, =z it higher than the top price T The general beliet prevails that the highest prices ever known in the Pa- cific northwest will be recorded the early months of the new year. Chicago Wants a Residence District Option Act. Chicago, Nov. 6.—Claiming that the hio. “dry” forces l'wm have a majority of e three in the Illinois semate and prob- GOOD HOPE TOOK FIRE ANL FOUNDERED i Robert F. Herrick, Jr, of Milton, | Mass., a student at Harvard was sen- tenced to the House of Correction for two weeks for appropriating an auto belonging to another student. Herrick is heir to millions. Edison L. Rinehart, a chauffeur ana John Rapp, were killed and Mrs. Mary Balorin was fatally injured, when a car driven by Rinehart crashed into Rapp and Mrs. Balorin and plunged them in to a bridge of the Mad River, British Admiralty Declares Canopus Was Not in the Fight. London, Nov. 6, 10 p. m—It is offi- cially announced by the admiralty that the British cruiser Good Hope took fire during the encagement with the Germans off the coast of Chile last Sunda and foundered, The admiralty statement says it 1s believed that the British cruiser Mon- mouth, which the Germans reported had been sunk, was xun ashore. The crulser Canopus, it adds, was not pres- ent at the time of the fight. Indians Loyal to Great Britain Ottawa, Ont, Nov. 6—The Indians of Canada. from Nova Scotia to the Yukon. numbering 100000 have sent Ottawa declarations of alleglance to the British king, offers of un der arms and contributions of total $15,0000 - 2 ‘Washingion, Nov. 6.—The gross pub- He deh( of the Unlled States at the of th- treaar "T de- 1y ‘! , 783, asoens of detobet. 31