Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 23, 1915, Page 1

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ing that is now western line, reports trat after fghting etill These feats at arms med out in the called Marie hills in the Vos Germans were o ing to Pari and in France some ments and only at wi In the east, in only second: opposing io cording to Petrograd confirmation report thes ed_over Cromer. E Hungarian fore! American logded with foos Afmerican citizen ir ed from New $ the first vess b leave the United States gtuffs for Germ: The former I Feared That Missing Steamers Have London, . 23, paich to ihe Excha yoL LvIL—NO. 20 NORWICH, CONN., SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1915 RMANS ACTIVE The Bulletin’s Circulation in THE HILLS OF VOSGES Elsewhere in Belgium and France There are Only|. Intermittent Artillery Engagements INFANTRY ATTACKS ARE WIDELY SE PARATED Probably the Heaviest Fighting in the War Zones is in the Argonne and the Vosges—In Poland and Galicia There Are Only Secondary Collisions Between the Contending Armies—The Russians Report the Concentration of Considerable Forces of Austrians in Bukowina—The Dacia Has Taken Clearance Papers at Galveston to Car- ry Cargo of Cotton to Germany. the 1 fight- , Thursday and sank wit where n a o have met ss of 12 supposed with the numer the in the Argonne an ith the I o ot the | has been lost, either weathe a mir FRENCH REPORT RE are being ty of a field e. near and | : 1 of the In Belgium rtillery engage- = attacks took place, | Paris, Jan 11.05 separated poi owing official commun sued by the war office oland and Galicia, ns between the taken piace, ac- s been more a Last nd canncn firing. co havi le a of her crew. the steamer Hammar also night there h a loss of men of her crew, the steamer Apus is the same fate it is the in rough or by coming in contact with LATES SEVERE GERMAN ATTACK. | In the Argonne Forest Near Foun- taine Madame. p. m.—The fol- ation was is- tonight the south of Apres (Ypres) the ctive than pre- some csians report the concentra- n the region of the wood of St. b e eonend o forces of Austri-|Mard we silenced a German batters f kowin: n the Argonne some very flerco e AR L e B G eonsistory, expressed sorrow that there | taine Madame, at a field work called was not_even a presaging on|Marie Therese and to the south of early end of had done | Fontaine Jamiette. At Fontaine éverything (o term struggle, | Madame we repulsed the enemy aft- that the limitation of hiS|er two vigorous counter-attacks. At apostolic office permitted. The Pontiff | the Marie Therese works the fighting that the 1 must re- | went on throughout the day. It Was main perfectly impartial in the con- ducted 1with exeréme emergy by ‘When night ur position: ht attacks 1 able of al} ave pass{ ing ail “Some peling ag ziand. the Burlan, the = new Austro- | mann-Weilerkopt hills n ster, 1s on his | coed. to the German headquarters. the fizhting was still' g steamer Wilhelmina, | s consigned to Germany, has n Y since he wa with food-1vienna Reports Ausf - Ameri der Ame ARTILLERY BATTLE OF THE VISTULA RIVER came wo were 5. attemapted by enemy in the region of the Hart- did rnot suc- According to_the latest reports oing on there NORTH trian Success South of the Vistula, recet Jan. 22, via London, D e T e a. m.—The following Btk with & cateo of b | n official statement ny B { received here from Vienna: Sermany. North of the Vistula river (south- jern Russian Poland) there was a vic- MINE PERIL IN BALTIC artillery battle. Our artillery SEA IS SPREADING. rn Nida re- — where the traffic was apprec Been Sunk dwisturbed by a full shot on the station. ~Dur artillery also n, lar successe: Topen In addition t strength, h steamer which | “The situation in the mine off Raumo, Finland, | unchanged.” south of the t the ar- hanging th rpathians is GOMPERS SAYS FOUNDATIONS SHOULD BE CURBED BY LAW. Says People Are Not Ready to Sur-| render Their Rights to Such Charity. eration of Labo: any conclusion workers of dustria] unrest appointed “The effrt ding m: stant hum: foundation ite represent the people « cumulated.” recent arsenal fo; canal, and w ing a 2,400-pound ahell 21 miles, was hrought to the Watertown arsenal for its carrfage today 8 feet long, structed 1rc Consolidated Coast Gua ‘Waehington, Jan. 22—The senate to~ day agrced to ths confe the bill consolidating the lite saving Service and the revenue cutter service into the coast guard. already agreed to tie report and the president is expected to sign | BATTLE CONTINUES RIGHT BANK sential Chan; ¥ Jan, unuel Gom- ON OF VISTULA. On the Left Bank There Are No Es- ges. Petrograd, Russia, Jan. 22.—The fol- pregident of the Amevican Fed-|lowing communication was given out dos believe th: t army headquarters today: Rockefeller Found-|{ “On the right bank of the lower V might reach as to industrial con- | tula, from the river up to Khorjele would conviction to theland further east, our troops continue or grea in-|to be in ciose touch with the enemy. be em of 1aho; ms of secondary importance are » today in testifying before piace. conducted here by t n the left banls of the Vistula, and commission on indus-|on the Dountetz, there are no essential to the administration|changes, except the usnal rifle shooting ¢ philanthropic fo and cannonading at certain points. ntry and the ca s Bukowina we have discovered the concentration of considerable he Rockefv n_ ree 1y | Austrian forces. William Jackenzie| “Weo sank on Jan. 19 and 20 several former Canadian min of | Turkish eailing vessels on the Biack m tudy of industrial|sea and in the neighborhood of Khopa and Riza we burned and damaged of the Rockerfeller Found- | Turkish ilitary barracks, destroyed a undertake to be an all-per- | lighthouse and cannonaded a bridges inery for the moulding of g of the orf the MINUTES FOR HAB thar o ist zet of Then Paid Pe EXECUTION DELAYED 41 EAS CORPUS Wife Murderer at San Quentin Prison nalty. the federal government gave ¢ indation San Francisco, Calif., Jan. Ta the franiing privile This.|A. Yarsen, a wife murderer, zained was a fraud upon 20V-1 41 minutes of life today when his ex- a viols ot principles| ecution, set for 10 o'clock at San and an Imposition upon|Quentin prison, was delayed until - Eoux 10.41, while the state supreme court re | here’ passed from Los Angeles. vas first m. the hanging. s there was barely time to get the war- an. 22.—The army’ den of San Quentin on y finished at Waterviiet |and instruct him to r the defense of the Panama | word, hich s capable of throw- cation, which was base The gun, which is required a specially con- Lt car for transportation rd Service. New York, Jan. 2 who have fled to Jerusalem, Jaffe and Bei J nce report on The house had | tee for general Zionist af it atl colonists” are refugeoe. included await Alexandria. upon an application for a writ of habeas corpus, telegraphed The telegram lay unopened on the desk of Chief Justice Angellotti until ten minutes before the time set for When he had read i, the telephone further The court then passed on the appli- d on_a minor technicality and promptly denied it, notifying the prison warden to pro- ceed with the execution. Jewish Refugees in Alexandria. ewish refugees from irut now num- ber 4,000, and about 5,000 more are on the way, it was announced here tonight by the provisional executive commit- fairs, of which Louis D. Brandeis is chairman. No among the has been | Were submitted Cabled Paragraphs British Warships at Callao, Pery o> Callao, Peru, Jan. 22.—The Xa¥> war vessels, the cruisers Kergs®® e auxiliary cruiser Orama, - * . hero today, & HUMANITARIAN VITIES OF AMERICAN RED CROSS. §1,188,112 Hae Been Contributed and $760,510 Expended in War Zon Washington, Jan. 22—Humanitarian ctivities of the American Red Cross n the European war are heing carried on by a personnel of 195 persons—i5 surgeons and 150 nurses—eight hospi tals in the various belligerent coun- tries are under charge of these Ameri- cans and vast quantities of medical supplies and other material have gone forward to mitigate the suffering of the sicl and wounded. An official summary of the society’s work in connection with the war from Aug. 1, 1914, to Jan. 8, 1915, was issued today. As 'to finances, $1,188,112 has been contributed and $760,510 expend- ed for these activities, A balance of $427.602 remains, of which $150,000 must be expended to maintain the present personnel in Europe six months and to provide for their re- turn. Further remittances probably will be made in aid of the hospitals where American surgeons and nurses are in charge and as medical and hospital supplies become exhausted the demand will increase and further funds will be needed. The Red Cross officials em- phas the fact that no administra- tive expenses are paid from the relief fund. All such expenses, which to date amount to $6,587, have been paid by the society out of its own treasury. Hospitals are in charge of Amer car surgeans and nurses at Paignton, ! England: Pau, France: Kiev, Gleichwitz and Gosel, Germany; Vien na and Budapest. Austria-Hungary, and Belgrade, Servia. Two other uni have arrived in Greece en route Servia. All specifically designated funds, the summary says, have been forwarded to the Red Cross societies of the desiz- nated countries. pplies purchased and forward- ed_incluced 00 pounds of cotto 802,400 vards of gauze; 709,000 ban 3.163 rolls of adhesive p! pounds of en 200 tubes of 3 blenkets; 10 barrels of alcohol ma, s of drugs, medicines, struments and other supplies, S. C. CONSTITUTION HELD UP AS A MODEL By Judge Aiton B. Parker Before New York Bar Association. of anaesthetics anti-typhoid of tenatus antitoxi malipo and in- Buffalo. N. Y. Jar ~William . Taft. former president, was the guest of the New York State Bar associa- tion at two sessions of its 38th annual meeting ' here today, at the first of which he was elscted an honorarg member of the assoclation upon thef supgestion - Edgar M. Cullen, former chief justive of the court of appeals. At tofight's meeling he deliversd an address on state constitutions in which | referred particulari £ the constitu s state and the quest the near ap- 1 convention ns that are to come before it During the afte: noon Mr. Taft attended a .luncheom | give: by the Y association and spoke briefly at a meeting of the local branch of the Daughters of the Ameri- can Revolution. At the two bu bar association on a number iness meetings of the reports by committe: important subje nd adopted and Judge Alton B. Ps president of the as- on, delivered his annual address, ncipal recommendation of which as the enlargement of the court of appeals by the adoption of appellate division > while cases involving constitutional questions were before it. He pointed to the constitution of South Carolina as a guide to the framers of the new constilution of this state in respect to the proposed change, ALABAMA TO BECOME “DRY” ON JULY 1ST. Both Branches of Legislature Override Governor Henderson's Veto. of | Montgomery, Ala., Jan. 22.—Alabar will become a prohibition state Ju 1st under two related measures which became law tonight without executive approval Within a few hours aftf‘rl Governor Henderson had vetoed the bills and asked that the prohibition | question be submitted to voters at a special election, both houses voted down hie proposal and repassed the bills by overwhelming majorities. he vote in the house on repassage 78 to 20. In the senate it was 4 Thé pronibition measures re-enact the prohibition law repealed in 1911 afler it had_been in force two years. Under the 1911 local option law all but eight of the 67 counties have voted dry. wa to OBITUARY. David H. Goodell. Antrim, N. H., Jan. 22—David . Goodell, governor of New Hampshire from 1889 to 1891, died today, aged S0 Years. Although for many years a manufacturer of hardware, he was greatly interested in agriculture and devoted miuch of iifs time to the study of improvement in farming methds. He was 2lso a prominent temperance worker. McCall to Be Candidate for Governor of Massachusetts. Boston, Jan. 22.—An announcement that he would again be a candidate for the gubernatorial nomination at the republican primaries next fall was made today by former Congressman Samuel W McCall of Winchester, who was defeated by Governor Walsh at the te election last November. Mr. Mo- Call said that his statement was prompted by numerous inguiries which had been addressed to him. i Colorado Lifts Embargo on Arms. Denver, Col,, Jan. —Governor Carlson today raised the embargo on the shipment of arms and ammunition into the aistricts affected by the recent strike of coal miners. The prohibition of arms shipments was ordered by the state authoritles shortly after the strike was called, in September, 1913. During the occupa- tion of the strike zone by United States troops _importation of arms into any part of the state was interdicted. Killed by Bursting Flywheel, Stoughton, Mass., Jan. 22.—Lester P. French, a manufacturer of poultry supplies, was killed by the bursting of a rapidly whirling fiywheel in his fac- tory today. A mnass of iron weighing more than e ton struck him in the face. {ment of Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and lts Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population £191,000,000 for Support of Army BILL PASSED IN HOUSE YESTER- DAY WITHOUT A ROLL CALL. $300,000 FOR AIRCRAFT Advocates of Immediate Strengthening of the Army Fought for Additional Appropriation Without Plan for Coast Defonse, Success— ‘ashington, Jan, | two days of debate on the g state o fthe naticnal defences, the house tc night passed, without a roll call, the army appropriation bill, carrying $101,000,000. Motion to Recommit Failed. { Advocates of immediate strengthen- | “Bald Jack” Rose GIVES SULLIVAN CREDIT FOR IN- i a Sullivan Witness| DUCING HIM TO CONFESS. { MINISTER THREATENED Because of His Activity in the Becker Case and Rose Believes Present At- tack Is an Aftermath of the Rosen- | thal Murder Case, New York, Jan. 22—"Bald Jack Rose, former gambler and the star witness in the trial of Police Lieuten- ant Charles Becker for the murder of Herman Rosenthal, appeared today in the role of character witness for James Q0L Sullivan, American minister to the Dominican Republic, whose fit- ness is under investigation by Gov- Good Habit Advert ress of every closely the trend of adve of matters close o wiselr and ac It i rtising in community ar associated with he man or woman who reads a The 3 an educat Most youn, pronounced pers an excelient one to induige in 00d advertising is always inte to the reader whether the e There ie a sood It supplies s that it The Bulletin The Bulletin week, which wit Bulletin Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, oung person who reads a on. drawn interest; people are a but ona profit time after. vertising. T busine d ad and be convinced. ublished the foll act pays to re advertising w Teleg: o) 9 9, Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. EROFaS e, miliiar establishmen fought last for udditional aj propriations, but their efforts met with no enccuragement from eithe democratic or republican aders. Th fast roll call, on a motion by Repre- sentative Gardner of Massachuset to recommit the bill with instructio: ing $1,000,000 for aviation, was defeat- | An amendment offered e Deitrick of Massa- | without oppositior the use of stop-wateh es and otker “speeding up” devices in connection with the so-called scientific mana systems in army’ arsen- als and_shoy Representatives of | inion labor have been fighting for this | for several years and bills | the Deitrick rdment and | applying to ail governr ps, in- n. rds, are pen be- fore committ Government Plants. The house also adopted an amend- ment by Represenfat Tavenner of Tllinois, 1o require that all the mu- itions of war provided for in the bill shall be manufactured in zovernment plants. The bill, whick: carries funds for the maintenance of all branches of the army during the comin fiscal year includes $300.000 for purchase of twenty-five acroplanes, and $50,000 for an *armored mot: o These items and efforts to add to them. furnished texts for long discussions on the nse of the aeroplane and ar d_motor car in the European war. The ap- propriation for the purchase of field artillery material was increased f $25,000 to 3170,000. $2,000,000 For Barracks and Quarters. Provis made_for n ing captains of the Porto Rican regi- commission- infantry as captains in the United States army and an apporpia- tion of $2,000,000 allotted for barracks and guarters. an amendment stipulat- ed that $5,000 be expended sk 10 complete the chapel at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. During today’s debale, Representa- tive Guernsey of Maine made a plea| for stronger coast defense, declaring| that if Great Britain should go to war with the United States over qu tions aris from the European war, “her plan would be to seize the city of Portland, set Maine off into Canada overnight and make property and life there worth no more than in today.” Beigium Movements of Steamships. ed, steamer Ainnehaha Copenhasen, 21. — Arrived, steamer U New York. Liverpool. Jan. Arrived, steam- ers Megantic, New York; Hesperian, St. John, N Fayal, Jan. Sailed, steamer Fin- land (from New York), Naples Mass, Jan. 22—Steamer tania, Liverpool for New York, signalled. No position nor time given Dock 9 a. m. Saturday. Ponta Delgada, Jan. ~—Arrived, steamer Carpathia, New York. Chemistry Building for Tufts College. Goston, Jan. nistry build- inz for Tufis college to cost $100,000 with an endowment of $150,000 was recommended today in the unnpual port of Acting President Wiiliam L. Hooper to the trustees. 'He said that the development of the chemical bus- iness in this country as a result of the European war made enlargement of the college facilities in- this connec- tion- desivabie. nual re- tely reflects the sentiment and prog- observ: freels knowledge and information of daily importance. to Cultivate ble that those who follow the best informed in multitudes s day life, advertising profits, dvertisin “ ciously acquires whatever ti habi ause ive the son eresting. It der buys =5 polic; is soen or a considerabie invoived in reading ad- vertising and it pays to advertise. owing news matte ent into the home during the past 9,000 or more: raph Local General Total 8 914 1149 1 221 451 8 168 402 5 385 183 267 482 ernor-elect Phelas tate department. Tose, who said that he turing ‘on “The Duty of in behalf of the was now Young t Live an Upright Life,” gave Sul- livan credit for inducing him to con-| fe to the distri attorney all that! he new about the Rosenthal murder and > beror t state’s witness, Sullivan was at that time attor- Besciged With Threats. The former gambler declarved ivan had been besieged with threats and promises because of his acti v in obtaining the onfession and su; sted that “the present at- tack™ upon the minister might be an| aftermath of this refusal to be swerved fyom his duty. Sullivan acted for him without pay, he said. | “All he out of it was ‘I thank vou’ " remarked the witness, | Knew Sullivan as a Sporting Writer. | Rose said that he had known Sul. livan f wen years, but stoutly de- nied, as had ~stified, that livan had acted is press age the promotion of prize Aghts at terbury, Conn. He explained this saying that Sullivan was a sporting wr on a local newspaper at the time and “covered” some of the fights wh | aate of Gondensed Telegrams Black smallpox is spreading in Vi- | enna, | England prohibited the exportation of copra | May wheat in Chicago $1.45% a bushel. went The Bank of England 174,000 peunds gold bars. purchased Massachusetts workmen received 1914 $2,229,521 under the compensatic law. Anti-alien land ownership has been passed by House of the Idaho legislature. Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Sr., is said to be seriously ill at her home at Po- cantico Hills. A seat on the New York Cotton change was transferred for a con: eration of $3,000. x- Rates on insurance against damage by aircraft in London have risen from 50 to 6 Oshillings per cent. a The Carnegie Steel Co. ordered the lighting of three in Dblast t mor dist furnaces the Pittsburgh The hgme of United States . elect James W. Wadsworth, ne: 0, was broken into and robbed. Gen Chief J e Conrad Hollenback of the* Nebraska Supreme Court, died in Lincoln after having been in office only two weeks. German steel manufacturers met in Dusseldorf with the object of extend- ing the operations of the syndicate in steel products. The china and earthern concern of J. Wedgood & Sons las been authoriz- to do business in New York. The cap- ital is § By a unanimous vote the New York State Assembly passed the Brown olution to inve the Public Ser- Commissions. The interstate Commerce Commis- Chicago is seeking to learn to t extent railroads are justified in aring embargoes Ex-Mayor John F. ton, has epted the New England capitalized for agde Fitzgerald, of Bos- the presidency of 0,000. The Pittsburgh plant of the Sheet & Tin Plate Co., . will resume tions in full February 1. Amer- at New opera- Cardinal Gibbons the galleries of the Senate and House. He appeared in the senator’s reserv- ed gallery wearing his red hat. was a visitor in Villa notified the United States Ad- ministration through Consul Carothers at_El Paso that he will continue his strugsle for the liberty of Mexico. The United States reported to be powered wire Detween Government is earching for a high- station in the woods Yonkrs and Tarrytown, N. Y. Holding his wife in one arm and ssing her, Nicholas Kosanoviteh of Pittsburgh, simultaneouly wielded a knife, cuiting her taroat and Killing Joseph J. Ettor, 1. W. W. leader ar- ed in St. Clairville, Ohio, for tra- son, was veleased on 35,000 bail. He left’ town pron never to enter count yagai President Wilson his addres: ber of Commerce of t convention to be ton to February has cRanged the before the Cham- United States at Wash The 1913 equal franchise resolution if concurred in both houses of the leg islature submit question_of Wwoman suffrage to the voters of New York State next fall The governing committee of the Chi- cago Stock Exchange admitted to trading in the unlisted department the National Grocer Co.s $2,000,000 com- mon and £1,500,000 preferred sto commemorating e-hundredth anr r £ peace between Great Eritain and the United States was presented to Pre son by the Louisiana Historical As A gold medal Rose had managed. He had at one time been .associated with him in| managing a baseball team, the wit- ess said Promoted a Boxing Match. Two letiers from Sullivan to James <. McGuire, in which the minister told| £ his p fight connections, were| put in evidence. In these Sullivan said | order to earn money to g0 to| hool he had, with the brotuer e then masor, Edward G. Kill-| of Waterbury, . conducted one boxing match in that city. He ex-| plained that boxing matches had been | taken out of the hands of profession-| ils and were condu by ‘docal cit izens” and a license to with in a A the mavor ha is brother and the idea taht they “mi; legitimate w: d we didn’t make a kopec. = iv it,” he added. Rose was followed on the sis Frank J. R. Mitchell, presiden th Banco Nacional of San Dominge which has been accused of further] Sullivan's appointment connection with alleged plans to ntracts on the island for itself the deposit of ceipts. Mitchell's Dealings With Sullivan. ichell admitted he had asked Sul- exploit pu ecuring ms re-| | livan to help in getting his hank ap- L inted depositary of the custom: ts. This he did not consider ask- a favor, he declared, because he ought the bank was entitled to it as a matter of right” If there had been an honest minis- | ter there when We established the | bank, it would have been | offered us without the asking,” he said. Ve were an American bank ani tha only bank in the country established under the banking laws.” To virtually all other charges against the activities of the institution, he put in 2 general demial. He said he to had had nothing to do with furthe ing Sullivan’s candidacy, but had| originally promoted the candidacy fl John N. Dewitt of Natshville, n.. his intimate friend, who he . would be an impartial man.” Dewitt had withdrawn for political reasons, he said. Germany in 1913 had 11,785 autom bile accidents, in which 6,313 persona were hari. It ciat A Despatch from Berlin says that ajor General Wild ohenhorn, e i war, will ma Lieutenant Gener: the com- mander-in-chief in the To seek trade in South America, 274 “drummers,” representing twenty-sev- n states and Canada, sailed from New Yorl the steamer Kroonland for le trip, combining business nt by the n Government for the pupose eping open as late as possible in winter the port of Archangel, Ru was disabled. _Sixteen steamer: ilready been frozen in. The battleship Nebraska led ali bat- tleships and first class cruisers of the navy in enginecring competition for the past six months. The Michigan, < Jaryland and New Hamp- lowed in the order named. e fc Senator Works of California has pre- pared a bill to be introduced in_the e soon, providing that after Jan- 1. 1916, the United States shall not collect revenue on the manufact- ure or sale of liquor in this country. CCOLNESS OF CREW PREVENTED LOSS OF LIFE the Chesapeake Bay Steamer Maryland Was Burned. When Jan. 22.—Coolness on the crew and passengers on ship helped to prevent loss when the Chesapeake steamer Maryland, carrying 103 per- was burned almost to the water's edse off Mountain Point at the mouth sothy river early today. in all-day investigation, A. H. ! manager of the steam- announced tonight that everyone on board had ile said he had ascer- tained that there were 76 passengers and 32 members of the crew and that an aceounting, numerically, at least had been made for these by the cap- tains of the steamers City of Baltimore and City of Richmond, which went to the assistance of the Maryland after she had been beached. jife i ccurities Co., to be | 32 DEPUTIES CHARGED WITH MURD Locked Up in County Jail at New- Brunswick, NJ and Held Without Bail Si dige S EJ WERE INCLINED TO TAKE FIRST ARREST AS JOKE { e Sy o5 }Mayor Hermann Signed New Warrants and the Men Wer Placed Under Arrest by Uniformed Police—They Now Realize Seriousness of Their Position—Identified by . Strikers as Men Who Had Revolvers and Shot Into . Crowd of Strikers at Roosevelt, N, J. 22 = Thirty-two ed with murder were locked up in the Middlesex coun- Roosev elt, ten in Per ridge and =ix in New Brunswick, i s« they ‘wers lined other .deputies ty jail in New Brunswi ight, held | front of strikers and disinterested c; without bail, as bei onsible for | zens, by whom they were identifiad as the fatal shooting of strikers here last | alleged to have been among thass viio Tuesday. Tw: the idle employes|fired upen the strikers. They of t merican Agricultural Chemical | rushed in automobiles to New B company died of nearly a scoré b: ot wounds, after wick, where they-will be arraiened to- d been hurt in a clash morrow in the county court, ileged to have heen precipitated bY | gderal Commissioners Denied At deputies guarding the company’s plants 5 on that gay. B Mayor Joseph A. Hermann signed While the identifications were Leln, the complaints on which the deputies [ made, Patrick F. Gill' and Dantel ,T. were arrested late today by a squad | O'Regan, representing the federal com- of uniformed policemen who came hore on "on " industrial relations, wio in company of John R. Perguson, a|are here investigating the strike, wers county detective. denied permission - to enter ‘e com- R Pany’s grounds, according, fo - their Regarded It as a Joke. R g The first arrests, Mavor ‘Hermann | *““We were met at - the |gate by & sl _A:h ding w‘ U?T “h.‘u‘:v of man-|guard who was identified to us by a slatighter already brought a >3 E man by the name of Mr. O'Regan sald. “We told him our business and olr deputies, e af Srmith, ties regarded it as and L joke. They now llesque is over. | mission and'asked permissior® to enter, yoR, done our full duly|We were informed we coutdl not come {2nd the action of today will tend 10| in and told to clear out. T ahowed | Show the strikers and others that they | him; my card, informed him tha e | Will have full protection. It will also | were government men and ssked fhag {be a lesson (o the’ hired guards that|the carq be taken to Mr. Pattérsoft {hey canuot in the future attack With | The guard replied “To he with vat ity and shoot down defenseless|and the government!® and then thiew Limself violently against me, forcing me back from the gate, which - he slammed in my face.” —— WILHELMINA LEAVE WITH i FOOD SUPPLIES FOR GERMANY, Passed Close to a British Cruiser and Was Not Even Hailed. Identified by Strikers. Eight of the accused deputies live in DEMOCRATS TO CAUCUS IN SHIP PURCHASE BILL In Hope of Reaching Agreement on All Features of -Measure. hington, Jan, - 22— Demacratic | Fire Island; X. Y. Jah. 23 tinder s of the'senaté today determined | the nose-of-a' British cruiser watching to hiold an all-day caucus on the gov- |at the gateway of New . York. the | ent ship purchase bill tomorrow, | American steamship Wilhelmina, which the hope of reaching final agree- fsailed today from New York with Irer ment features of the measure, | hold filled with food supplies for Ger— On ‘count the senate recessed | many, passed out to sea tonight nn- late In the afternoon until 11 o'elock | molésted and laid her course for Hame | Monday morning and tonight {lie dem- | burg. y ocrats resumed thelr ‘caucus, whicch| _After having her compasses adjust- w »e continted tomorrow until the | €d in the Lay, the Wilhelmina dropped | measure has been perfected down the Ambrose channel at might- | Among the voints of difiérence re-|fall. Six miles to theeastward of atme maining is Senator FHoke Smith's | Drose lightship the Wilhelmina sighted amendment. which would provide that 2 two-funneled British-cruiser just un- the government lease ships to be pur- der, steerageway ' and - with ail liglits chased to private corporations, instead | OUt- She looked like a black pateh of operating them through a govern-{8S8inst the fast-dfinming ekyline. ment coltrolled corporation, unless. the | SMoke was pouring from her stacks. latter is absolutely necessars. The Wilhelmina kept on her course: Another matier that fs causing con- | With all lights burning, the merchaate | siderable concern is the proposal to | MAan steamed past the warship, which |bind the democrats to caucus action,|3id 1ot even speak the American. An Several demccratic members are firm- | Bour later the Wilhelmina, - driving > aea e through a thick snowstorm, was lost e sl lan o £ .|swinging back and forth near the ure - continued . toduss wieh . Semngaes | UShtahip, contonten Homorr mut piies e s the speaters, | Ing her searchlight upon geveral Lratap The former as Dresident Wil- | freighters waiting for pildte ; | sow’s Indiar apolis speech and criticised l)()"])" one Bflzgsh warship has-been hat he called the prosident’s “whies | OPServed recently watching. commerce ping” of og =t Séntor L dge as- |12 and out of New York harbor, but ping” ; irpases ob: cone o8-l other: British cruisersgaie sai tois bill was to take over Ger |Stetioned along- the trans-Atiantio ' ocean steamships which are now :X: . qaptain Brewer of the VEilher- Amertens, poiig 02 flew: the code flage, giving the name of his ship, as he put out-to sea, e oo AEe COLONEL GOETHALS SPEAKS OF PANAMA CANAL, Says the Main Thing to Contend Wik is the Stid Chicago, Jan, 22 Goethals, builder of Insisting that ed_venture was perilous for Ty in any event, he declared > matt at ships were bought in oc ansportation, par- 1 the sea, this_cou try would be e dis { tance of war or 1 jon.” He read supreme court rulings to support his contention that the bill was unconsti- tutional Whe! the prog the co Colonel George W, rtor Lodge concluded his marks, nator Fletche es ki o, Fame, “mfla‘. of the: bill, hia cafl T SP ing today before the West oo, .l\‘ “;u‘ ;(A tel 5:9(‘1?!.\' ©of Engineers and the Chicago | che, Dlinoie Manufacturces’ o Engineers’ society, declared that. shigs {ana the Ja nville, Fla, chamber of | were passin~ throuhg the. loohs meurn | Sonmerce. ursing the passage of the{ mare rapidly than el hoor &oimuin s casire, Sk - “The only drawback is the slideg” previously thow/ho had aiven-notice | hie sald. *-One great slide it v aors, BIN tomerranatihe would discuss the | displaced 1,500,000 cuble sordn. Yooy day “that e’ Informed the senate to- {1 1eft in the middle of Desemioe 1oon e rd S (oulA not seel to Dol 000 Eardenhan b et S i Monday. He would then A appeared that o there was much more. altention. he said, to| "“We are spending haif the th - o griles o International law bearing | pairing the damage done by lides and on ansfer of a ship owned in a | the -other i nt belligerent _country to the flag of & he arent sitge T Boiat (89 channel. The great slide neatral nation. tioned reduced 1 have men- 3 “the depth of the; water from sixty feet to six inches. When I Li:‘:gme(mkr] zone there wae an av- © of three ships a day passing through the canal and now it has reached four and fiver _He spcke tonight before the Hat- Yard club. Colonel Goethals is to sail for “the canal zone on, Feb. 4. Plans for. present; —_— MEN WANT WORK, { NOT PHILANTHROPY, Statement by Chairman Walsh of In- dustrial Relations Commission. e 5 & him with a-medal be- i Ja Tt Ok rather|cause of his achievements were made ntirop: Tt Jmen need, | several monthe 2go. by - the: Chicas oy “valsh, chairman of the | Geographic. societe. Bovers coicoss trial yelaers commission on indus-[moving ploture films . of isthmian thial relations, in addressing sne Beo- | scenes“are ‘to be used in connection n here tonig ve men - his- appearan Geo- Work, added, the go nment should i i e i graphic society tomorrow afternoon. im lands from the people “imprudent acts of legisiators op 1z on the road- E Accident Due to Faulty Mechanism. Beston, Jan, 22. Poard the torpedo man 1 ene A7 Jutrs eater " a? | toncat \Charlestown: nagy Jan. 18, tramp reduces the standars s | i Which ‘one man was Ky st Uiinz of avery man in. the United|Others were. injured by a. Sareback: States today. under an ofl-burning boiler, was- dge to faulty mechapism, according to the report forwarded to the navy depart. ment. by a naval board of inquiry o- day. . Another boarg will be organized to make recommendations -for tie pre- vention of similar occurrences. . “The t th by the United Si g that could be done ates is Lo ge: back o the land, tha basic soures op oh wealth, wilere muscle and brawn alone are neoded. “The government should once to take back been stolen from begin at the land that hes the people. 0 1 Bope i Officers Muet. the officials of the slute and nation . Q"""'f' oecs_ My Will take back the lands, even if they | DOSton. Jan. 32—Opposition t0 - are called confiscation e man suffrage is holding its own cording to reports given today @t | mid-winter conference of the of the anti-suffrage clation of England. Among the speakers. u Mrs. A, T. Dudley ot New, i Mra. Clarence Morgan of Ve $10,00C Fire in New Britain. Conn., Jan. 22.—Fire uncertain origin, SEAFINE. 10 o Doy club on the second floor Iate ton! did damage estmated at from $10,000 Mrs. - Rowland G, Hezard, - of to $15,000 to a four-story ten Island, Wrs. W. T. Howe,. Main street ownod by Harry Ales Fha ou, - l’:hnu:.suescspede;n their night clothee. e police carris ree small childre; from the building. b B 2

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