Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 6, 1915, Page 1

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. NORWICH, CONN., IDIDIY- SEPTEIBEII 6, 1915 Tl ircula : Vvafile That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population TEUTONIC ARMIFS | Cebled Parasrasis \Aytg Siryck by |Soldiers Kill Two | Condensed Tolearams |Tgrpedo Failed to- TEU{%MAC S%%flg:‘ssn , i“vu?-»t_e::.g«:‘% An Electric Car| Mexican Bandits| ... Sink Allan Liner last reported as having arrived at SOUTH COAST OF IRELAND were received at Duluth. Pennsylvania Railroad officials plac- ed a ban on war talk by their em- RIO GRANDE e A tropical storm passed over the south of Cuba. No damage was re- ported. More than 100 cars of new wheat Manchester, England, July 6th. ED NEAR ROCHESTER Seized Vessel Flying Greek Flag. .tEither the Driving Power is Exhausted or it Has|.APse, x5 Vi Feris Sept & 10.45 a. m.—Montenegrins poste at AT GRADE CROSSING | TROOP MOVEMENTS the wireless station on the summit P s 08, oThe Armour Grain Co of Chicage Been Decided Not to Penetrate Russia e e et el B At Glens Falls, N. Y., a D. & H. Train | To Put 4,000 Regulars in the Lower |bushels. ure by two Austrian .destroyers of a vessel flying the Greek flag and evi- Struck an Automebile Killing Five dently bound for Cattaro. The Greek : " government is investigating. of the Six Occupa ne Injured. MADE NO ATTEMPT TO CROSS THE DVINA - = Lo GATHERING EVIDENCE IN Rochester, N. Y., Sept. 5.—Five Brownsville, Tex., Sept. 5.—Two MOHR MURDER CAse | Rocherter, X X, Sept S-Pive| Browmsviie, Ter Sept SoTwo|SRCTL e T Mrs. Mohr Makes Application to Be |When their automobile was struck by | American soldiers who returned the Lon s . = 30 o 3 - i nk of Ni Line steamer Hesperian, with three Russians Have Taken the Offensive in the Vicinity of Vilna— Appointed Administratrix. an electric car travaling at Digh speed | bandits’ fire across the Rio Grande at The Power City Bank of Niagara - fifty passengers and Cavazos crossing. The gravity of the |Falls ,increased its capital from $100,- | hundred and 2 3 i ering i H Provids t. 5.—Th miles south of Rochester. ik ion \oran RAAMWERL roliewad by | 000 to $300,000. crew lot' 300 ;lboard. bound n—:n u:‘ Muscovites Offering Fresh Resistance at Rovno and Dub- |, Providence, R. 1, Sept. s—The po-| "The dead— the active co-operation of Carranza erpool for - Montreal, was. -attackts s . that they l'uu;w:\f:-lx‘ndt three Ten who s‘ghfn a Enun%n. 73, of Rochest- | military authorities who removed Car- | Kaiser Wilhelm conferred the order | Withou ng by a German ‘no—Reports State That the Germans and Austrians er; Louis Lawson, 50, Florence Trues- may help clear up some of the circum- ranza troops from the riverbank at|of the Black Eagle upon Fleld Marshal | Fine off the Irish coast just as dark- stances surrounding - the mysterious 0’ Maeanasts ness was 'lenx s“m n:venlnl. x . Althoug’ e torpedo foun: mark, Are Moving Troops to Other Fronts—In France the [$iootng on the Navatt road last Tues- An important part of the Turkish | the vessel remained afioat and, sc’ : * | wealthy. physician, - was killed and forces has been surrounded on the 5 ¢ Heavy Artillery of the Allies is Bombarding the German | his secretary, - Miss Emily G. Burger, Gallipoll peninsula. SOmPERFtONINEL, Thvery: et was_serlously wounded. Lin : : Two of these men, the police say, - €s. . were fishing in Echo lake on Tuesdey g, e 4 T el - : night not far fro:n the scene of the was saved. The Spanish government denied the| XNO submarine was seen aml shooting. They told -the- police that ; Iandon, Sept. 5, 9.50 p. m.—Either |is-on its way to New York, where it|they heard shots and walked up the the driving power of the Austro-Ger- prob- ably it was too dark to observe the Do e B oy to mobllize | wake of a torpedo, but all the past is expected to arrive in a few days. An|road to investigate. There they came man offensive against Russia is nearly |official announcement made this after- | upon two. men standing by a motor- exhausted or the German generals have sengers and members of the crew who noon said: cycle on one side of the road, appar- decided that their armies have pene- " " ived at Queenstown in the An epidemic of typhoid fever has |2 broken out at Rosebank, S. I Twelve | Steamers today agres that the attack “The Anglo-French commission to | ently listening for something. The mo- trated the Russian emperors domin- | America in connection with Ameri- | torcycle lamp was out but the fisher- was made by a German undersea boat; cases have been reported. basing their opinion on the force of Game wardens arrested 10 Italians | the shock and the great volume of at Coney Island. They were charged ;"r‘og;d‘ Beck on the etk irenching ions as far as is_considered safe and |can exchange has left England. The | men expressed the opinion, according with using nets for fishing. passengers, who were taking an after- are preparing to dig themselves in for | British representatives - are Baron | to the police, that they were negroes. dinner promenade, feeling quite e, the winter. This is the opinion ex- |Reading, lord chief justice; Sir Edward | The third Tman, the police say, has The New England Westinghouse Co., | ;"\ 1 lief that they had passed the ipressed by ,military writers here. Hopkinson Holden, managing director | told them that a week before the at Springfield Mass., granted an elght- | ;10 ine danger zone. Certainly very little progress is now | of the London City and Midland bank; | shooting, he had seen a negro looking hour day to 1,800 machinsts. being made, and at many points the |Sir Henry Babbington Smith, former |over. the ground where Dr. Mohr's au- $ vy iC Force of Explosion Tremendous Germans and Austrians are contenting | president of the Bank of Turkey, and | tomobile was stalled when he was shot According to the monthly statervent themselves with repulsing the counter- | Basil B. Blackett of the British treas- | down. The police declined to give out attacks of the Ruesians. From the [ury. The French representatives are |the names -of -their informants, but Gulf of Riga to Grodno, Field Marshal | M. Octave Homberg of the foreign |stated. that they would be taken to- Von Hindenburg's armies are at a |office and M. Ernest Mallet, regent of NO LIVES WERE LOST Carried 350 Passengers—Captain and Crew Returned to Ship When It Be- Came Apparent that the Vessel Would Remain Aficat. Rio Grande Valley to Help Maintain All cases of cholera in Germany are reported to be under the Imj au- Peace—One American Wounded. | thorities. . An order prohibiting the export of sugar was issued by the Government of the Treasury Department the coun- | The force of the explosion was tre— present circulation is $3,625,432,- | mendous and of the passengers landed at Queenstown many of them scant-: o i Hetatolt county:: il . ily clad, about twenty were !njureé. morrow to st n . 2 . al 50 standstill, baving apparently made no | the Bank of France.” Warren: There they will _confront He IW“ to Learning H A German economical league for Tar un the Amscican Cobeul oo attempt to cross the Dvina after carry- | The commission is representative of | George . Healis, C. Victor Brown and For Love a cozy home he’s found— South and Central America has been |, " ionight, but two members of ing the bridgeheads at Lennewada and | both governmental and -financial ele- | Henry Spellman, the three negroes formed, with Dr. Dernburg as presi- | (om0 0 S e American citizens and Friedrichstadt. ments and the membership is consid- | who are charged with murder in con- Tis he who keeps these kings and queens ||dent ey were Bath aibef ‘To the north, southwest and south of | ered exceptionally strong. All discus- | nection with Dr. Mohr's death. Al Vilna, the fall of which has-been pre- |sion’ regarding it was restricted until| No ene excepi those having official ive. dicted for some days, the Germans are Carlton E. Sand’>rd, president of the | About thirty Canadian soldiers, who People’s Bank at Notsdam, N. Y., died | Were wounded in battle in Flanders, last night at that place. He was 64 | Were going home years old. of the other the members were ‘well outside the | business was allowed today to see the by very strong Russian’ forces submarine war zone and only vague | th; isoners who repudiated before who by their offensive make it dan- | speculative statements were made con- |a cal = h ; % - him tgerous for the Germans to push thelr | cerning its personnel. Oy Sl Speniou They tell that they’re in his debt Way westward, morth or ~south of | The appointment of Lord Reading as | noed by siee Blisancth 5 Mohr. the And Labor toils—but listens. Miss Alice Wilson of Baltimore, niece [1and or English people on their way to 5 head of the commission places in that | doctor's widow, to kill him for $35,000. His seal of honor is the sweat of President Wilson, is expected to | Cana 4 German Objective Not Known. position a man who has been inti-| Mrs. Mohr, who was arrested as an ~ = make her debut at the White House Captain Remained on Bridge { The Germans, on the other hand, |Tately sssociated with the fnancial accessory i the mbrder of ler hus. That on his forehead glistens next winter. The torpedo struck the Hesperimi ex- and and who is a! e] on A * b = e and the o e e e and Koo | chequer since the heginning of the | bail, spent today quietly wiith her iwo They catalogue his works, but lack One hundred and sixty-one foreign | ! thS forward engine room, { immediate object is not obvious unless | War. both under David Lloyd George |children at the boarding house where built vessels were admitted to Amer- | ShiP immedjately began to setfie By by ican registry between August 18, 1914, lered and August 28, last. passengers and crew into the boats, e et Dt o oun uniess | and_ the present - chancellor, Reginald | she. has lived ' since her. saparation The time to tell all here md now: position on which to hold the Russians | McKenna. from Dr. Mohr. some time ago, It was [ throughout the winter. ltearned tonight wc has petition- 1 ?s tii s but with his o?;«- rcmall:ednon the bridge, although at that e he must g urtner south the }ufil.uh.n ot-| BRIDGEPORT ITALIAN. the manicipal” to be appoint- ove g an i e S T Rt °:fl;f,‘§7§ have felt sure that his ship would go e s t £ Then Labor el i o [ s g vl G U L “CHARGED WITH MURDER. | tate, which is valued at $100,000. straightens Wounded by o mkn whom be refused Discipline Was Perfect which Rovno and Dubno are centers, e vewenne “Ihearing on the petition will be held moedsty a bushel of potatoes. while in Galicia they still hold the line | Arrest Made-at South Norwalk—Said | Tuesday. {ot_the Sereth river. to Have Confessed. With the rainy season a few .weeks s roft, the opposing armies, especially in | South Norwalk, Conn., Sept. 5.—Act- the marshy region of the center, can- | ing upon a clue unearthed by Sergeant not hope to carry on the operations | Thomas Hunt, John Purett, a 40 year It is° understood that Charles M. Mohr, .a son of the physiclan by a former marriage, will oppose the peti- tion. The discipline was peefoct. -but o0 A number of police lieutenants tnd of the boats, the falls of whicl sergeants from New York City will go | Jammed, capsized and those in her to Plattsburgh next week for a course [Were thrown into the water. In-the of military training. darkness confusion nearly prevailed, —Grif Alexander in the Pittsburgh Despatch, rea but all were picked up and with other - 2 Governor Whitman uested the | passengers and the crew were trana- much longer, and some reports state| old Italian, of 148 Linden avenue.|gaw EVIDENGCE OF Constitational Comvention met to in. |ferred to the rescue steamers which that the Germans and Austrians are geport, was arrested at 10 o’clock arrived in answer to wireless calls for |already moving troops to the Serbian, |last night by Chief of Police William BRITISH NAVAL ACTIVITY i SIS B, - | i The Mt s e ' Rimanian and westem fronts, R. Pennington and Sergeant Hunt, — Z g M ey e, g 150 miles to the westward when struck Heavy Artillery Active in France. |charsed with the murder of Luigi Di|Correspondent Visited the Grand Fleet | dale, 24 and Nellie Hayner, 45, all of | Cavzos crossing and promised to try to s Y, W Sokve | Giovanni, a Bridgeport laborer, at 2 antGreat Naval Ba: Spencerport and Mrs. Edith Keith, of | keep their men away from the river. Colonel Robert B. Woodward, Civil e In the western zone the heavy artil-'} oclock yesterday. morning in Bridge- ! Washington, D. C. Major Hay, chief of staff for Major | War veteran and vice-president of the | OFFICIAL WASHINGTON &?Gzi_léks l:xt,l‘lel:s dio!tnsgu;}ll t:.g:enl‘;:l:ndzz port. Purett, when located by the two| London, Sept. 4, 8.15 p. m. (Delayed The party. had journeyed from |General Frederick Funston, arrived to- | Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Scienc- local police officials, was asleep in a|in transmission)—For the first time |SpPencerport to this city to look over ! possible and trying to break the morale th e T the grounds of the state agricultural B e Gorman o e Tee | bed in the home of Charles Seeley. on |the vell of secracy over - the British EPXRESSED SURPRISE < £ d industrial schools at which Miss there Is no indication of a general of- | LORUS avenue. Broad ~River. Chief|naval operations has been lifted. Dur- |and industrial schools a day from San Antonio and was fol- |es. died at Cooperstown, N. Y. lowed by several troop trains, the be- ginning of a troop movement which| Army men at Fort Leavenworth,|Comment Withheld Both at the White fensive. Penninston said last night that Purett | ing the past week a correspondent vis- | Hayner was a teacher. ill put ‘ffltlleovrtgurl‘s:l'; in the lower Rio Kan: claim & record (in hayine went House and State Department. i Parls reports that the Turks have | With his friend, Di Giovanni, and that B e R I et 1 AR e One Carranza officer and one cumari ing the army’s newest apparatus. Washington, Sept. 5. — Official . Anzac region, but beyond that no news Qrdiioniiin ShichlIfeT Isen Dulle A ALY OUTING | e fighting ai Cavame Gresaine, | Albany appotnted Eliku Root to name | by o Germaa obnintins with musen has been received of the operations in | FIFTEEN RESCUED FROM s 5 e nd:‘f- ‘::kme oints | Five Killed When Their Auto Was |2Dout 50 miles west of here, hetween |a committee of seven men to have |cealed surprise though there was none the near east. A BURNING BOAT | oinere G nbma it Sl bacn 3 ® | Mexicans and American soldiers and |charge of the revision of the new con-’ | of the grave anxiety that followed the T lete tins Tomn. s reacimil of S e e Ge e Struck by Train. Texas rangers. Proof of the deaths of | stitution. sinking of the Arabic. While -com- ! ports from Athens of dissensions be- s e | Ehiad N g NRIET fhas ralEs) of — these two men was brought here today ment was withheld at both the Whit twéen the Turks and Germans at Con. | WoMen Wers in Hysterical Condition | the attacks were clasalfied under “cap- | Giens Falls, N. Y. Sept b—>Five|from atamoron = © ©19%Y| Governor Whitman orderea out |House and the state department pend.. stantinople and of depression among —In Boston Harbor tured,” “supposed sunk® and “sunk.” |persons, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Norton, : Company 6 of the National Guard at the Turks as the result of heavy losses —_— When bubbles are observed arising|of Whitehall, their daughter, May, 19, Dozen Mexicans Seen to Fall. in Gallipoli. No evidence of this, how- | Hull, Mass, Sept. c of th mal G ¢ |ing detailed reports on'the attack, it Vatertown, N. Y. to take charge of | was learned that high officials re- 5—Fifteen per- [for a long time at the same spot in|a daughter-in-law, Mrs. John Norton, o 1 . . Mrs. bl - Cantay 3 the strike situation at the St. Regis|ganded it as inconceivable that, after ever, is to be found among the Turkish | SONS, including nine women and a|smooth water it is taken for ‘“‘{,"e"’ 30 and a granddaughter, Edith, 5 were | ynite States cavalry, in comynand of | Paper Mills. i et e troops, who are reported fo be fighting | Daby, were rescued from the burning |that a submarine's career has been|killed here late today when an auto- | tne troops at the croscing fEht. repore. government last week, a German sub- wetie ol their ol atabbornsers. motorboat Nautllus off Long Island |ended. = = 0 0 = isked “How|MmoPlle in which they were riding was |3 also that there probably were other| The exchange of French and Ger- |marine commander had without warn- prtbur I Balfour, ‘arst lord of the Head i . Boston harbor today. nlle{, Whea, o o0 o T aked How n(ruscel:‘glg: 2 inclaware and Hudson | casualties among the Mexicans yester- | Man prisoners of war, incapacitated |ing launched a torpedo at a peaceful ritis| miralty, in a letter to the - |d — -+ | pas: n. John Norton, a son, | Gay. It 1 : Mexi- | for further fighting by their wounds, | passenger vessel press, gives cfficial recognition to the | Plosfon of the 200 gallons of gasolene bsm‘;“g“‘ by ‘:mm'"b" ""m,‘"{"" Who was driving the car, was seriously | cans werl: As:e‘r? o rl:fi!‘li\?n:‘;z::e x‘i.g);:‘n will be resumed the latter half of this | President Wiison and Secretary belief here that the German promises |On board, a launch manned by E. W. L e oY SWDLOSNODE | hurt. The totai American casualties yes- |month through Switzerland. Lansing heard of the incident first to America not to sink any more pas- | Reed and Fred Souther of Hull dash- MA"mfi:’ !;n ay et the' Batly The family had spent the day with | terday and in today’'s shooting were through The Associated Press des- senger ships without warning were edT%longsxde = edfl Ce": d‘g e e Pattle-lrelatives at Lake George and were re- | one man slightly wounded and one Chinese merchants in San Francisco | patches. Later cabled reports from ‘brought about by the realization that ey had only room for the women, | ships fl!" “"‘mo e ;“ ‘"! g'e e‘fl- turning home when the accident hap- | horse injured. and the Orient have subscribed $5,000,- | Ambassador Page at London and Con- ul:, :ubmm:n; warhdte aga}llns( mefl,_ 3.}:’ ;vael:}? 123? r’;stst:;ng: c:;r;g}ugo&azg ;ILOT“'& °wh\x°‘;:!‘r§;ud‘:d!‘;sm;;e:: pe;;uelir 7 s s R Jesse H. Johnson, American consul |000 to operate a steamship line be- |sul Frost at Queenstown announced chantmen had proved a failure. He E ew of the raflroad crossin - | tween Chi Fra pedoi again intimates that many German |With difficulty. A lifeboat from the |SPOTt.’ The . professional opinion Was |where the tragedy occurred was one | AL atamoros, came here today on be e ¢ with Japee e i o e L e submarines have been accounted for | Rarbor excursion steamer Nantasket | eXPressed that the reason the Germans Ty he g half of General E. P. Nafarrette, com- | competition with Japanese lines. loss of about eight lives, none of them and adds that British mercantile ton- | 10Qk off the men a fow minutes later. | 27¢ Gcclated fo be ready to forego subl _— Crire Dt et T LG o o et |- Governar Browsr of Mississippteiin | it oo haot Lo Tt nage is now greater than before the ¢ Nautilus was destroved. o m‘m;dn“ and the personnel to|SKULL CRUSHED AND the body of a Carranza soldier lying |muted to life 1mpriuonm? he death |ing passengers. The reports as made . Jeenieithoudemine donghy dhe = carry on their campaign. on the riverbank near Reynosa, which | sentence of J. A. Taber, & Confederate | public by the state department madse submarines. GREEK PARLIAMENT BODY BADLY BRUISED |is almost opposite Hidalgo, the nearest ;eter;'m. u";!enc;dhm die on Sept. 6| no mention of whether the vessel was —_— 3 2 —_— town to the fighting yesterda: This | for the murder of his daughter-in-law. | warned or attempted to escape, but it ANNIVERSARY OF THE HAS ADJOURNED.|GUARD OF A WATERMELON Strike Breaker’s Body Found on Rail- | soldier, a Carranza cavalryman, Nafar- N Lid sl e is known that other advices indicated H - " - road Tracks Brid; ke rette told Johnson, went to the river ight elevators fel n the Bowling | that while the British admiraity be- BATTLE OF THE MARNE.| Without Statement of Foreign Polisy PATCH FOUND DEAD ridgeport. with his horse, whereupon peraons on | Green Building when part of the hy- Soldiers’ Graves on the Battlefield From Premier. lieved there had been no warning it would not announce it as a fact. Some significance was attached 4o 3 " Bridgerort, Con Sept. 5.—The bod: the American side shot him. His com- With a Charge of Shot.in His Heart— | ¢ “Danifi”S" Siihones aged | 33, wf | rades said they feared to approach nis Partner Missing. Taunton, Mass., believed by the police | body because they might be fired upcn. Visited by Crowds of Parisians. Paris, Sept. 5, 5 p. m.—Soldiers’ draulic machinery broke. The ma- chines were kept under partial con- Athens, Sept. 5, Via Paris, 5.50 p. m. —After passing a stringent law trol and no one was seriously injured. |Consul Frost's statement that the to have been one of the strike break- | Colonel Robert L. Bullard, command- ———————n e a Hesperian carried mounted and vis- e i e 3 | 28ainst contraband, congress adjourn-| New Haven, Conn. Sept. 5.—One |ers brought to this city to work at|ing United States troops here, sent |SUPPLY SHIP CRASHED ible guns aboard—a 4.7 'nch riffe, ‘SN n the battlefield at Meux ané|ed until October 2§ at the close of an|armed guard of a Watermelon patch the freight house of the New York, | instructions to the troops at Hidalgo ts environs were visited today by |all-night session. Premier Venize-|In East Haven,- Rocco Graccio, aged | N i crowds of Parisians observing quietly INTO SUBMARINES, | While international law permits mer- o v v ter Cast AMa e, frorens - New Haven and Hariford Railroad |to eee that Mexicans were not harmed | chantmen to have guns for defensice z - ¥ e a statement re- as i ay Wi a|company, was found on th ilroad | when they went after the body. 5 208 o purposes, particularly when they and Slmply the anniversary of the|gardine the ferelgn policy his govern- |charge of shot in his heart and the | tracks near the foof of Whiting Streat. Cut F-2 to the Water Line in Hon. |PUrPoses. particularly when ? d':m:“‘: i ;v:n&nofllcl;l 0“:18*;’1;: mglx‘u will - pursue. police are searching for the other |carly today. Mahoney's skull had beer, olulu Harbor. g Al oK 3 i i - acter, many members of patriotic and e pressure of the allies upon | guard, Luigui Lorenzi, aged 45. Two was pointed out that if the Allan liner Grushed and his body badly bruieed | TEN PERSONS INJURED e g acted at all suspiciously after being acts z oo 3| Greece to meet the sugestions of the |shotguns were found near the body, | Medical Examiner S, M. Garlick- was WHEN AUTOS COLLIDE.|q onolulu. Sept. ~5—The United|approached the presence of this gun e | societies - pince ags and| quadruple entente regarding territo- | Which lay among the melons. notified and gave permission for the *|States steamer Supply, while docking | probably would figure prominently in Wreaths on the graves. rial concessions to Bulgaria apparent-| The melon patch, which is said.to|removal of the body to the local e oy crashing into a flotilla of | the submarine commader's explanation nmfl: ofolaéto;:a;ysho m‘;l;&:-d wt:;: ly has slackened for the present at|have been owned jointly by two men, | morgue. Dr. C. A. White and Howard Judd|submarines of the F type, cutting ot in oo 8 e ICt ayehe|least. Interested diplomats declare it | is locatd .off Thompson avenue. Both F-2 to the water line and putting the P AT - The authorities are making an in- Were Most Badly Hurt. =~ e wne Soiee Jues apd many Of lis:now D to Greece to act. men, armed with double barreled shot- vestigation to determine whether Ma- —_ after end of the underwater boat out|CABLEGRAM DECLARED THAT ascial e U TR e suns, left for the patch last night to|honey met death accidentally or other-| Spencer, Mass, Sept. 5.—Ten per-|f commission. The impact jammed ofigsts :and soldiers” home “on their I be on the guard against thieves. When | wise ¢ 4 four days' leave of absence paid | BORDER TROOPS READY TO the submarines tozether slightly, EIGHT LIVES WERE LOST they did not return -this morning a v sons were injured none seriously, when | genting the hull of the F-1 5 BT - ot homage to the memory of their fallen MEET ANY EMERGENCY.|search was instituted -which resulted = two autpmobiles came together here — Ship Carried a 47 Inch Gun Visibls comrades. They explained to rela-| . *{in" the fnding ‘of . the body. tives and friends the exact positions g today. Dr. C. A. White and Howard Injuries Resulted in Death. on Stern, War Department Orders Extraordin-| Coroner Mix started an investiga-| Meriden Conn. Sept. 5.—The Polish|1add of New Haven, Conn. were the| Winsted, Conn., Sept. 5—Chester E e o cmetan ooy, thelos ary Vigilance. tion. An autopsy .will be performed | Faicon Athletic association of the state | most badly hurt. Mrs. White, her son | Cargill, aged 22, died tonight in the| Washington, Sept. 5.—A cablegram Dlayed personally in the action which e b o NI single; Lorens: T o e I thte | Emerson, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Judd, all | county hospital here as the result of from American Coneul Frost 3t & s renz! . N " : v e ueenstown to the state artment ch«‘:l'(ed the German advance on Str;::h::‘og:g:‘ose(p}:é %nraerAlv{'e:_Venl‘::e hasiafamily. ; are. in attendance from other’cities.. A of New Haven, and Mr. and injuries received today in a motorcycle lep: It e bt o e e : v v collision with Joseph Dube on the Tor- | tonight, announcing the torpedoing of s g . Vi riding e lan line steamer A _solemn high mass was celebrated | der orders tonight to be ready to meet the state contest and a silver lovin - e e i, loss of probabl In the orming In the Meux catheiral | Ny emergency. War department of- AuTos speEDED e the state contest Snd & allver (O¥IRE | fered minor The accident | toward Winsied when Dubes machine|a 10ss of probably eight or ten lly by Monsignors Marbeau and Chesne- | ficials said extraordinary vigilance had Won & ailver wrenth. & parade will be | to0k piace when the automobile op- |skidded and struck Cargill's machine said the liner carried mounted and i been ordered a sa result of repeated AFTER KILLING MAN. x5 erated by Gages came out of a side| The latter suffered a fractured skul e P e AT Sre82ion | raids in American terltors by Mexi- held tomorrow. with a military exhibi- | gtreet and struck Dr. White's ma-|and broken neck. Dube was thrown message, dated 1 p. f. dressed in native costume and bearing | €an brigands and soldiers and renew- | State Police An Aiding Police of s chfhe. to the ground, but his injuries are not | tod: the historic banner of Metz and|ed reports of preparation for an or- ‘Manchester. PR serious. Cargill was the proprietor of | “The Allan liner Hesperian torpedosd Stratburs. ganized invasion from across the Rio 3 Swam Forty Miles. VETERAN ASSOCIATED o garage and promoter of motorcycle | by German submarine 0 miles south: m:m :hslmflar commerative gl";r‘x%e ll‘re\o :Lha states of Coahuila and| Manchester, Conn. Sept. 5—Alex-| New Lork, Sept. 5. — Robert PRESS MAN DEAD. 2 Fast: ‘clock - ny g RS T WA ander, Smith, .50 .vears old, a foreman | DOWling, 18 vears of age, accomplish- of Paris receiving the blessing of Car- urday evening. lOM ln. ‘Amrtflfl board, none lost. of life of a tobacco. farm, was killed early[ed a difficull and unusual feat today s ight. Vessel has not su dinal Amette sfanding- in the peri-|pp . ® thi smorning when he was struck by |in swimming around Manhaitan Is-|Charles A. Bownton, One of the Best London, Sept. 1 5, b Ay d ght Lieutenant Morrow of Pitts- | 71 P2t T "0 " on the state high. [land. a distance of forty muu. in 13 P jor J. S, Barres, who was returnin oats landed passengers and troops.at style of the Chukch of Sacre Couer. Biesbdl Siinned e O g~ The wetomutna | hours and 45 minutes. finown Men _in_the Business. " | Sinaa with tweive officers and ;r;,. $30 this moruiag - Tkwy SRl te speeded away and all. efforts on .the R 2 R Sept. 5. — Charles A.|ty-eight men to recuperate o ’ E BRETSH: FINANCINE Brownsville, Texas., Sept. 5.—One of | part of the molice to learn the ownes| Fatal Dive in Shallow Water. oyt ot ine vetorann of the| Wounds, said concerning the torpe- B e e aheoe il b COMMISSION ON IT8 WAY |the United States army aeroplanes | have s far been fruitless. New Milford, Conn. Sept. 5.—While [ Bo¥nton. one of the veterans ®| doing o fthe Hesperidn - i T Ay —_— fell about fifty feet just at sunset to- | . Smith and a companion had left a|diving in the Housatonic river near |Associated Press and one of the best| <“Perfoct order prevailed. One boat ‘mm e oy By - Representative of Both Govc,rnm-ml | night at the aviation field. Flight lieu- | frolley car at Oakland Station about | here today, Willlam H.' Thompson, | known newspapermen of the last 25|capsized through the falls getting :mmd i viiie it Gt Sl and nanc tenant Joseph Morrow, of Pittsburgh, | midnight and were walking to’ their |aged 30_a hatter, of Danbury, struck | years, -died here t.od-y at his. home, | fammed and some one cutting the . s -| was ;stunned and badly bruised. Pri- | homes when .the . accident. occurred. Lendon, Sept. 6 D. The vate Adam Khuenkryk, who was mak- his head in. ghallo Wwater, was stun- faged 79 years. =He had not been in|ropes to facilitate the lowering of the bound for Montreal.” Smith wa sthrown about forty feet|ned and drowned. Fellow ummun .cuve service sinve uov dut unul re- ish ‘flunchl commisuion to take up|ing a flight with him, also was badly |and deat! -ered boats. Movements of Steamships. -wa salmost instanstaneous. | recov: the body an. hour cently had been in fair heaith. A few The Hesperian, nccorflln. to_ Captin the problem of exchange in the United | bruised. The machine was complete- | The state police are l.l.l“n‘ the Thu.gnn came. here to vlllt fi'l'!‘- he was taken ill and has|Main, was 130 miles west of Queens- *suu-. hu been appointed and already ly wrecked. ¥ cal uur.horluu. . 8 ¢ day. ed untll uu end came. town when she was torpedoed. Tuscania, New Y

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