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g of state, arrived at his summer home at Henderson Har- ‘bor to take a rest, spending most of his time fishing on Loke Ontario. No Mails for Aust Hungary. 3 The Hague, via London, Sept. 19, « » P. m. N direct telegrams from Austro-Hungary They Have Almost Surrounded a Portion of the|heve been receivea in “Honlana: cor e that Austria Hungary is concentrating H H x against Serbia, but the Balkan min- Russian Army in That Section Iotar st The Hague say (hey have ne B information on the subject. TR British Naval Mission to Greece. DECISIVE BATTLE IS LOOKED FOR SOON |a miseich icGrieco has font boer ve: newed for one year. Admiral Mark K‘Gl’r remains at the head of the mi: sion. Russias Express Confidence in the Outcome of the Impending The naval mission under Rear Ad- miral If(e;-r has served since thechnt.er " . part of 913. It was sent to reece - Conflict—Austro-Germans in the Southern Area are Un- fo rthe purpose of reorganizing the reek navy. able to Hold Their Positions—Both the Germans and the | 12 MEMBERs oF RUSSIAN French Claim Minor Victories—Nothing new of Impor- bt Rail: Stati in Pet d H. ance is Reported From Italian Section Nor the Darda- " Baan 0=v-:;7:d by fh-"?r:-ry- i Berlin, Sept. 19 (By Wireless to nelles. Tuckerton, N. J.).—According to Stockholm despatches, the socialist deputy Tcheidse and 17 bther members London, Sept. 19, 9.40 p. m.—The stmt*ic importance, except as a sec- | of the Russian duma have been arrest- Germans have occupicd Vilna and by | tion ¢f the general front, and that it |ed. The duma buildings in Petrograd a wide sweeping movement north of |was not the purpose of the Russian|and all the railway stations have been that city have succeeded in almost, | gencral staff to defénd Vilna at all |occupied by the military, the advices if not entirely surrounding a portion | costs. add, of the Russian army which is fighting Vilna hes been an important indus- - in the railway triangle between Vilna, | trial and trade center in the midst of Considerable dissatisfaction was Lida and Vileika.. a region studded with lakes, forests|evinced last week when the Russian At any rate the Russian forces in|and marshes. Recent estimates have | duma was prorogued by imperial de- this district either must fight their | stated that probably half the popula-|cree to the middle of Novembe! The way out eastward or retire to the|tion was Jewish with only a small na- | cabiret had objected to the programme southeast, to the only railway left|tive Russian element, it being the |of reforms proposed by the majority entirely in_the hands is that which|home of numerous Lithuanians and|in the chamber, comprising the liberal runs from Vilna to Lida and thence to [ Poles as well. and progressive elements, and had Baranovitchi. v ‘With the capture of Vilna the Ger- | threatened to resign. ‘The army of Field Marshal Von Hin- | mans seem likely to find their way Premier Goremykin paid a visit to derburg which took Vilna and has|more easily to Dvinsk, virtually the|Emperor Nicholas at field headqudrters reached Vileika, east of Vilna, is work- | entire railrcad line leading north- |and discussed the situation with the ing in close cooperation with that of | eastward to thgt city being apparent- | emperor, who gave his sanction to the | Archduke Leopold of Bavaria in an|ly in their hands. prorogyation of the duma. When this effort to catch a part of the Russian decision was announced last Thursday army, an operation which has been atter ] 4 often’ tried without success since the | BALKAN SITUATION 196 ang lri‘;xc':{";!;\.}u::sffi? the éi:onl;- Austro-Germans _ commenced their IS GROWING SERIOUG, | ber, muttering: “It is a crime. arive in western Galicia in early May. sl It was announced later that Premier Histinie Eivpnn Eriidencn Bulgaria Said to Be Treating With | Goremykin had conferred with the mil- i ini itary ang civil authorities at Petro- Allles ‘on’ Baais 6 Joiuleg Theas Tl Sy Moacov{) for the purpose of = sia forestalling possible popular demon- be decided before complete success | qecovims ax the EroWing serimsansy | strations. falls to one side or the other, but|oe"he Balican situation resuiting from | It Was stated that the programme of with their northern armies closely held | %, 10 o St SIHEHEL TSR NG (0% | the majority in the duma, which was along the Dvina and the German flank | & Preatec® ni 04 TR (oI, OEG, 07| considered untimely by the cabinet, in- well protected by theizr cavalrymen |oyssed by fhe Temps and. the -Journal | cluded autonomy for Poland, g con- which recently occupled Widsy, across | [ iSeq BY the TIPS, POS the JORTRel | clliatory policy for Finland, 'afanesty the Vilna-Petrograd railway, it seems osition to bo equivoeal as| for bolitical and religious offenses not Impossible that any aid can come to | g S ER EOSIUON 1o pO SUUNOCAL 021 of a criminal character, complete ces- theem from that direction. Pacia of joining them In the war and|sation of religious persecution, removal i The battle seemingly must be fousht | qeating Tarkey on the basis of rec|Of restrictions upcn Jews and the out between the troops now in the | om0 neutral. It characterizes | TScognition of the legality of trade un- district between Vilna, Lida and Slo- | 31."a28, dancerous attitude. one that| ionism. nim with the assistance of any rein-| ¢ have to be speedily changed or|,. The Programmeswas said aiko. to call forcements that can.be spared to old |yl g {0 gerfous results in the Bal-|fOr an agreement beiween the govern- the German force Which has reached | icing ment and the duma regarding the rapid eilka, = adoption of bills relating to the na- At the sguthern end of the line Gen- | 1, 1", Sofresnondent of the Tournalliional etense and the care of wound- era] Ivanoff is still keeping Iield Mar- | €8 OP8MS 8F SETAR AUOLES & TCROT | ed and also to contain a long list of shal Von Mackensen at arm’s length | ¢ THrkew Intends 19, cett to Ber- | measures for internal reforms. from the, fortress of Rovno. the kev | oo Cin code to Bul:’.:ir'a > s i to the rolitc to Kiev, and in counter- | "ares Wil cede to Bulsarie, .| MACEDONIAN REFUGEES attacks Nas retaken a number of vil- ? E 4 lages both in Volhynia and in Galicia. | pGenes, Switzerland, Sept, 19, CALLED 7O THE COLORS. 1ot Seems apparent from the inabile | commission of Dritish experts, the | Number of Men Responding Exceeding thefr positions in the southern area | Dritish minister at Berne recently All Expectations. that they have sent reinforcements visited the watch factories at Lo'{le. from that front to Field Marshal Von | 2fter which a large order was given| London. Sept. 19, 7.30 p. m.—The Hindenburg’s northern army, which, as | [0F _the manufacture of munitions|correspondent of Reuter’s Telegram heretofore, is expected to score the |tPere. The Italian government has|company at Sofia, Bulgaria, sends the buggest success. given similar orders amounting 10| following under date of Saturday, Sept. Both the Germans and the French several millicn pounds sterling to 8: claim mingr victories on the western | V2tch makers at Chaux-De-Fonds | * “Early this morning numerous front, but neither there, it the Italian | P2F Neuchatel groups of Macedonian refugees :who | The Russians express confidence in the outcome of the battle which must theatre, nor in the Dardanelles hav: BT, have been called to the colors passed | e hounte of wrest moane esn o | AMERICAN DOCTORS TO through the town to their training | ported, INSPECT PRISON CAMPS, | Erounds, where uring the entire day | there have been animated scemes as 5 - recruits and legionaries, the latter The political situation in the Batkans | S°d. o Russia at the Expense of | yjacedonians from Greece and Serbla, ts still shrouded with considerable Austro-Hungary and Germany. acclaimed their officers and choered | L v - . : H continuously. A the Macedonians | Zf."wfi"féhaf'éfief'iz‘fifé’é”éré‘;‘ iy | Berlin, via London, Sept. 18, 11 p. m. | coming from the terfitory occupied by | in the cessioh of a railway line, ap- | _Lne North German Gazette an-|Greece and Serbia who answered the pear to be well satisfied for the pres- |IOUnNCes the completion of arrange-|call displayed remarkable enthusiasm. ent. But thers is now telk in Beritn men!§ for American'doctum and nurses “The answer to the call from all} of the Bulgarians taking by force, if | oo biocced o Russia and inspect the|over the country surpassed all ex- they cannot get it otherwise, the por- | a ioan prison camps. _Twenty-five! pectations, the number of men pre- tions of Macedonia taken from them | AMerican doctors ang fitty nurses will | gonting themselves at the different po- by the Serbians and Greeks during the | liake the trip at the expense of Aus- | sitions being greater than had been last Balkan war. It is asserted that | Tosfiungary and Germany. etor. | hoPed for, chiefly because of the great the Bulgarians have called to the col- | The newspaper also prints the®fol- | influx of refugees.” ors all the Macedonian recruits now |10%ing tribute to American phyeicians _— in Bulgaria and that generally a war- ;;‘e,?_-e‘““zv Kozel, Vienna and Buda- [ YACHT KATOURA WON CAPE like feeling exists among the Bulgars | % merican Rea Cross heretotore MAY CHALLENGE CUP o b b 3h ¢ |has slven its medicaments and ban- sy , T o yumania and her casts|dazes in a gratifving manner. It gives | Twenty Minute Margin in a 264 Mile belleved here that Buisaria wlill tes- | huanitarianism in not ceasing to be| e e e sl o with | active during the course of the war”| New York, Sept. 19.—The schooner Political Situation in the Balkans. e —_— yacht Katoura today wo nthe 264 mile the central powers and Turkey. - ‘Turkey is declared to be having her | WARLIKE ACTIVITIES IN by Crossing the fnish Tne more than Dedeaibaton rallway. The Missaiman THE BALKAN STATES | twenty minutes ahead of the schoon- er vacht Atlantic. The race was for population in this strip of land is said the Breton Reef cup. The Katoura to be in revolt against being placed |May Cause Diversion of Russian under the Bulgarian government. Troops to That Front. ‘;,”; E;e:k,;vcz";m, %’:Ee\:{;;lfch b —— N 7 S TRy i The two schooners started yesterday e Rome, Sept. 19, via Paris, 5.40 p. m. THE FALL OF VILNA. under way on the frontiers of the tic at 11‘00’45- -The Kaluur; led ‘l’ialkanrsmtes. the Tribuna decllares it fro mthe u'.;rl < The schooners finish- 3 P d earns from competent sources. It says 3 Government and Private Institutions | that an Austro-German movement nas ;«?4;?}9' ;s_telxnggr;‘uas ;9;11975. Katouro Had Been Removed. t\g]eenhmam;‘ea !;or (xhe l'ntter part off e L S - ctober, the plan invelving the ex- Vilna, a city of some 170,000 inhab- | pected diversion of 300,000 men from | SRISTOL STRIKERS RETURN itants, on the Warsaw-Petrograd | the Russian campaign to the Balkans, TO WORK TODAY railway line, has been the object of | with the simultaneous securing of Bul- —— a German offensive movement for | garia's adherence in the move to open | Accept Offer of the New Departure weeks past in the course of the wdie-!a route from Budapest to Constanti- Marufacturing Co. spread operations of Field Marshal | nople. . —— Von Hindenburg on the northern end| The Tribuna and other journals ar-| Bristol, Conn., Sept. 19.—The strike of thc extended battle line in the|gue the necessity of offsetting this|at the New Departure Manufacturing bt move by the concentration in the Dar- | Company was settled today when the After the fall of Kovno to the north- | denelles of all possible forces of the|employes at a mass meeting in a local west and Grodno, to the southwest, no | entente allies. declarinz the issue turns | theatre accepted one of two compro- fortress bdrrier remained before the|on which side takes Censtantinople | mise oers made by the company. The German movements on Vilna but|first. the German-Austrians through |offer that was accepted almost unani- stubborn fefensive measures were | BBulgaria or the allies through the Dar- | mously provides for a fifty hour week taken by 'the Russians to hold back | danelles. schedule with 571 hours' pay and ex- the Teutanic advance, Vilna being the! — tra_for overtime. northern, key position on the im- Gold Premium in Bulgaria. “| The 1,600 employes who have been portant /strategic railway line run-| panin via London, Sept. 19, 10.45 p, | 24t fof, some days .are expected to ning_sotheastward to -Rovno which | _The Frankfurter Zeltung reports | '™ to Work tomorrow morning. the Russians were striving to retain. = T 1t was jon this line. running through | % GeSPatch ftrom Bulearla that the British Steamer Beache: Iida, that the defenders of Vilna| s Sofia despatch to the Zeitung Am| 1ondon, Sept. 19.—The British tank had apparently their sole OpPPOTtUNity | Mrittag. received by way of Ducharcer | steamer San Zeferino, which was re- to retreat along railway routes when | 3 aac; Tocelved B¥ way of Bucharest, | Jorted vesterday as torpedoed and the German offensive recently de-| ¥e\ been confirmed. that the purpese of | SUnk by a submarine, has been beach- veloped intensive force, the lines|ine king of Rumania in taking a week's | €d» according to Lloyds. southwest of the city andthose to the| vaeation on the Danube is to meet = north and the east having been cut.| King Ferdinand of Bulgaria. The previous despatch did not give The fall of Vilna had been antici- the location of the steamer. She was pated for several days, the German : last reported as having sailed in Au- encircling movement having develop- Threatened Revolt in Portugal. gust from Puerto Mexico, her destina- ed sufficiently to make it apparent| Lisbon, Sept. 18, via London, Sept.| tion not being given. that its abandonment was only a|19. 1015 p. m—(Delayed in transmis- _— question of time. Last week Petro-|sion.)—A report was current here this Erb Recovering From Poison. grad despatches stated that Vilna, as|afternoon that the adversaries of the| Deal, N. J. Sept. 19.—Newman Erb, well as Dwinsk. another of TField|#overnment, aided 'by the republican |wealthy railroad man, was reported Marshal Von Hindenburg's objectives, | opposition, intended to try to start a |tonight to be in a satisfactory condi- had been emptied of stores and aband- | revolt. The troops were. held in bar- | tion, no important change having tak- ed by government and private insti- |racks under arms, but at nightfall ev- len place since he recovered from the tutiors. It was declared that neith- erything was calm and they were dis- | early effects of the poison tablets he er point was regarded as of further missed. swallowed by mistake five days ago. N i ARy LR o | New York, Sept. 19.—The proposed | Southington, Conn., Sept. 19.—Elev- | the Rio Grende in the = section of| Washingtop, Sept. 19.—High of- mammoth credit loan to Great Britain |en men from New Haven, members of Brownsville was reported. ficials indicated tonight that no furth- and France, it is to be underw: Mammoth Credit |Picnickers Fight Loan Arranged TQ BE UNDERWRITTEN BY SYN- DICATE OF AMERICANS TO PAY 5% INTEREST bmu-.-l_—abfi Washington Subscriptions to the , Dumba’s Letter Polish Farmers| e.....:: . .| 10 Sec’y Lansing ELEVEN NEWHAVEN MEN PLACED e de P It ren | DENYING GUILT OF ANY IM. UNDER ARRES’ ey PROPER CONDUCT NEAR DUNHAM'S BRIDGE United States Senator William Hughes of New Jersey, is in favor of woman suffrage. CRITICIZES TREATMENT Amount of the Loan is Placed at Be- | Alleged That P-ry Had Stolen Water- | man was not given. Accogded Him by the American Gov- tween :$600,000,000 and $8,000,000,- melons—Revolver Shots Were Fired G00--Bekiirad k- Govireant: Wowdio: | - Disladt.the- Fhacts: rived at New York from Liverpool The White Star liner Adriatic ar-| ernment in Connection With the Request for His Recall. with 250 passengers. A complete lull in fighting across was reported tonight,|a picnic party, were arrested near er steps were contemplated against ritten by a large syn- | Dunham’s bridge late today, following | An order for 10 freight locomotives | Dr- Constantin Theodor Dumba, the dicate of American financiers and |& spirited fight with a group of Polish |for the Erie Rallroad was received by | Austro-Hungarian ambassador, on ac- bankers who are to recelve a com- |farmers. The New Haven party went mission for their services. The secur- |to the picnic grounds in a large mo- the Baldwin Locomotive Works. count of his letter to Secretary Lans- ing criticizing the treatment ac- ities offered, it was said, will be Brit- [tor truck. It is alleged that some of ish and French 5 per cent. government | the party stole watermelons from a German: ment in congection with the request bonds and the price to the investor |nearby farm and when the former re- | Bcann o T henlout 20 mad | oo Nin recall. is to be par. 000,000. ‘Whether muni included within posed credit, so far as could be ] tonight, has not been decided. The underwriting syndicate, it was [Jured. having been kicked in the reported, will be ever established and probably will be open to nearly | MOrrow. f K all national banks, trust companies|, Those arrested gave their es as | 90 lives. and s*ate banks The amount of the loan, it was re- |as weapon: ported, is as yet undetermined, but will be between $600,000,000 and $800,- A London marine publication corded him by the American govern- It was stated that the monstrated, the fight started, Revol- | -"5nnd seven of her submarines. | .. iiity of hastening the dipiomat Between $600,000,000 and $800,000,000, | [T, Shots were fired and beer botties, | Emperor William received Dr. Dal- | departure from the country by hand- bricks, stones and sticks were used|por, the new Archbishop of Poland, | N8 him him passports had not beer g at German army headquarters in the | COnsidered. Ten Received Medical Treatment. |fleld. Letter Subject of Conference, The fight was broken up by the au- o s Dr. Dumba’s letter was recel: itions of war will he |thorities. The New Haven men were| The paint factory of Belknet, Mc- | the state department yn.rd.y"d.:; the scope of the pro- |taken to Plainville and ten of them |Sherry & Moran at Willlamsburg. N. | was the subject of a conference be- earned | feceived medical treatment. Timothy | X. was destroyed by fire at a 1088 of | tween President Wilson and Acth Sullivan was the most severely in- | $30.000. Secretary Polk. No announcement stomach and in the face. Th ot me\ MR s A the largest of its kind . e men \d no idea the ambassador intend- in the United States|Will be arraigned in court here to- A ed to make the communication pub- lic as he did last night in New York. The official view, as authoritatively that may care ¢y par. | follows: Timothy Sullivan, Phillp Cu- explained today, of that part of Dum- ticipate. While the amount of the | Sch, Richard Berkins, Timothy Cron- | Gottlieb Von Jagow, Ge e : %o ahoy commission to EOan Coivnayy: Boitwerd Bty major in reserve of the Third Regimen a small one, possibly one-half of one |a€! Hanley. per cent. Victory for American Financiers. ba’s letter in which he sought to show be paid these banks |ln. James Cronlin. James Murphy, | Minister, was promoted to the rank of | thas he had not been ‘gulity of ime proper conduct warrenting a request e for his recall, is that the ambassador S e Diad) SsareaNisn O A e 08 e b P of e ican lectric lway As- . intion will b ned i geaiway Af- | The ietter defended at lensth the right U. 8. 8. NORTH DAKOTA = of the ambassador to inform nationals Elimination of the reported differ- OUT OF COMMISSION. | co October 4-8. ence in opinion financiers and_members of the Anglo- | Will Have to Be Equipped With New French commission over the manner Turl of placing the loan apparently has r sulted in a victory for the American financiers. Previous reports indicated [ nouzht North Dakota, the gunners of that the commission felt that the loan | Which last year held the record fo: ;fllhlu country that they were vio- e P ating Austro-Hungary laws in work- varine, badly damaged the paint and|ing"in plants turning out munitions ne Engines. 0 o of war for the allies. It was point. = = e o00g0. - The loss is estimat-; og ‘out by oficials that this point ladelphia, Sept. 19.—The dreac- eacaacd } was not in issue, but that the reason Arrangements were completed for for the Washington government's ac- between American Tltion was the following statement in should ‘be placed by subscription and | marksmanship in the United States|ihe trapsfer of aPnama Canal em-| . intercepted letter to his foreign that there should be no underwritins | navy, will have to be equipped with syndicate, The ‘Aerican conferees were re-|take her place in the advance line ported to favor adoption of a plan |again, according to statements made we could, if v whereby & syndicate would underwrite | today at the Philadelphia navy yard, | 204 eneral manager of the Duluth. e, S hot._entlsiy Staseat /fhe v minister: new turbine engines before she can |CiVil Service rules. | Objectional Letter. “lI am under the impression that William E. Fitch, former president South Shore & Atlantic Railroad, died | production of war materials in the big issue and would receive at|Where the vessel has been In reserve ¥ least one-balf of one per cent. for its | since July. The authorities at the|™ Marquette, Mich. Bethlehem and the middle west at services. This, i the plan tentatively agreed to. of the vessel, which was construct- Foreigners e any rate strongly disorganize it and C'I;:. three-masted schoomer Lanie {mld it u: for months, :hl:’k Gll:cord- ol went ashore during a dense fog | Ing to the statement of the Tman ed in the Fore River yards aa a cost et o Of: $5,9390) and s Iauiehed ' 1518 | vaior B s e T Y e 1o S Tt v t is reported, has becn | Yard would not discuss the condition Maintain Silence. Efforts to elicit an expression of the | py: if was admitteq that the engixi vessel will probably be a total loss. ance and which amply outweighs the commission’s views on this point to- night, were futile. The various mem- relatively small sacrifice of mone: are not in_good condition. It was State department officials have not Beginning November 1, all station stated unofficially that during the|agents and telegraphers P g F ey 3 - T g e O thave ana '\ | manoeuvers last egring the turbines |the Wabash Rafiroad A g A e e AR Jm';::; was said at their hotel‘that seme of | TorS, O erratic .that (=4 of the high |celve a nine per_cent wage incréase. |it is known that he has asked his them were not expected to return till | mava GMcials advocated taking the tomorrow. However, word _that - an agreement had been tentatively reach- . ed on this detail of the negotiations, | men_Of the dreadnought have been |olulu report that the disaster was | does not ap| one of the chief several other sources whose ability to speak with authority cannot be ques- tioned. PROSPECTS FOR RECOGNITION " government to order him home to North Dakota entirely out of com- Naval 3xperts who examined the |make a personal report on his case. mission. Most of the officers and|wreck of the submarine F-4 at Hon- |So long as he quits the country and > pear again as an envoy in Seaiiired; cme ot transferred to other vessel The reg- | caused by an explosion of her bat- | Washington it is understood that the . ular crew consisted of 52 officers and | teries. United States government will not 886 men, while at present there are — be disposed to question the manner only about ten officers and about 200 A proclamation issued by the Ger- " of his ing_or the natgre of his men attached to the vessel. man military governor of Poland | orders f'r:m‘VIennn. X TR Ry promises work for the unemployed, Declares Report Was Held Up. good banking facilities and better OF GENERAL CARRANZA |5 YEAR OLD HOLYOKE GIRL Foads. Regarding the ambassador's chanrge —_— ASSAULTED AND MURDERED. in his letter to Mr. Lansing that hé More Favorable Now Than at Any — Because they were refused one daily | kad not been allowed to communicate Time Since He Task Office. Had Been Enticed Into Cellar—No | session during the hot spell by school | freely with his government and that rbeemh Clue to Perpetrator. authorities, about 100 pupils at Chattle | message giving his report on his ‘Washington, Sept. 19.—Prospects for — High school at Long Branch, N. J.|activities had been held up by sensors the recognition cf Gemeral Carranza,| Holvoke, Mass, Sept. 19.—The body |Went on strike. I D ooty ML Beereaid 1 o1 i the it was admitted night, are much more favorable than | cellar of the tenement block on Ma. |Salled from Portiand Ore. with 361 they have been state and navy departments tonight that nothing was known of such a message. Secretary Daniels under whose ju- .| of Lillian’ Begley, five years old, was s in official quarters to- | g0, 3" o ioht under the stairs in the| The Norwegian steamer Strinda at any time since the | ple street in which she lived with her [ 958 bushels of wheat for Englan: x = i iy v This is he largest cargo ever loaded on | Fisidiction the wireless censorship o i ‘ + its in- | moth irs. Pridget H. Begley. Ap- 3 oad: P }h:‘eir‘:cde zso(:':rsd lgi‘:s':blle:lfr:mm of a | parently she had been enticed into the | the Columbia river. f‘unl'l_: ;;::m:“m:;'::ulidmho:o;np;::_ central government in Mexico. cellar, assauited and murdered about S o The decision conference of di to study within - tch ted but - of the Pan-;\merlu;l Lh?; th:. be;:;:rzhe discovery of the Go‘“::m:"':lfi"; (;" 137;:,‘—1?1‘. nrof é:e :g(; e:.vr:rr': rg;c !sznnfih :ymgr lomats in New Yoj 0 o 2 - n 3 Phe mext three weeks | Nothing had been seen of the little | |Umbia presented a petition to Pres- | DPmba had never been called to his - ident Wiison asking a Saturday half | attention. ‘This question will be in- the ‘material and moral capacity” of | Eirl after she left her home about 7 n ? 3 the elements aspiring to recognition | o'clock to buy some candy at the cor- | Boliday the year round. vestigated further tomorrcw has led to the general belief here by | ner store. The police have no clue officials that unless the military situa- tion in Mexico in that period, the recognition of the | GREENWICH NEGRO ARRESTED Carranza movement is virtually cer- Dr. Dumba's declaration that a Col. Eli K. Cole and Col. L. W. T.|Dbrief confidential message sent by him ‘Waller of the American expeditionary | t0 Vienna by wireless asking that he force at Hayti, left Cape Haytien on | be recalled on leave was allowed to an armed train for an inspection of | become public is now being investi- as to who committed the murder. was much changed FOR A DOUBLE SHOOTING | the Grand Riviere district. gated. This message was published tain. S e AR TS York newspaper and it was R TRt a n Hiding the Woods—Weak lohn McConnell of Stanhope, N. J., that efforts were being DONALDSON LINER St il oF ool was found buried to the neck in the | made to discover whether the law ON FIRE AT SEA. bottom of a well he was digging near | Prohibiting telegraph operators from Athenia, Glasgow to Montreal, Carries | Harding, a negro. charged with shoot- | BOUTS, but was soon revived. Sept. 19.—Robert | his home. He had been buried five | divulging messages has been violat- ed. But Few Passengers. ing Henry Walker, Jr.. and his wife, e e “Disturbances” in Munition Shops. ol 9 both colored, last Monday, wa sarrest- | _John Cramer, a blacksmith of Cooks| With his letter Dr. Dumba enclosed Halifax, N. S. i his son, Willk C aldson line steamer Athenia is on fire [ M 022l Harding had been hiding in L at sea, according to a radio message received here late tonight. The steam- er is bound fro: lieved to be Glasgow, for Montreal or Quebec. It was believed here that there are few, board. A subsequent minion marine the steamer had been abandoned. The Anchor liner Tuscania had previously | FELL FROM POWER BOAT ly. He was released at the request been reported standing by and it was thought here that she had taken off T Sept. 19.—The Don- | here late today by Special Constable | Falls, N. Y. was shot and killed a copy of a memorandum drawn up by @ Hungarian editor in this country and furnished to the ambassador by Alexander Nuber Von Pereked, Aus- tro-Hungarian consul-general in New York, relating to ‘disturbances” which it was proposed to cause in munition plants at Bethiehem, Pa., and in the middle west. This memorandum was one of the documents taken from James F. J. Archibald, the American newspaper correspondent, in Lon- don. Acting Secretary Pnll:’( tonight said this mnorandum would not be made of the American consul and h - 53 AND WAS DROWNED |ised to leave the country. e prom- | public :or the present because Dr. the wocds near here since the shoot- | claimed that young Cramer took his ing the police say and when arrested [ Mother’s part in a quarrel. he was weak from the lack of food. —— A loaded revolver was found in his | Between Aug. 1 and Sept. 10, 240 clothing. He made no resistance to | Rersons died of starvation in Mexico arrest. City. Because of lack of funds, the Mr. and Mrs. Walker both received | Ameri Red Cross has been forc- two wounds in the body. Although |©d to abandon relief work there. they are still in a hospital, their " wounds are not serious. Harding will | _Giovanni Carreno, son of Mme. Te- be arraigned in police court tomorrow, |Tsa Carreno, famous pianist, was ar- rested as a German spy at Milan, Ita- m a British port, be- it any, passengers on message to the Do- department said that those on board. —_— Dumba said that the original was in s One of a aPrty of 24 Meriden Men | Ankervycke, the historic mansion | HUnE3rian and that he = could not Denial by M Who Were Going Fishing. at Trasbury, Eng., in whose grounds | tramslati y Maentrenl Agents: King Henry VIII wooed Anna Boy-| o oation Montreal, Sept, 19.—The vessel re-| gsaybrook Point, Conn. Sept. 19.— |len. was destroyed by fire. The cwn- Archibald Documents Today. ported on fire in passenger liner Robert Reford & company, local agents the Atlantic is not the | Arthur Brandle, of 220 Cook Avenue, | ers were absent and the cause of the| Copies of all the documents taken Athenia, according to|)\eriden, one of a party of 24 Meri- |fire has not been ascertained. from Archibald are expected to ar- den m« who were going on a fishin rive at the state department this of the Donaldson line, who received |trip in the : a0, . 5 advices tonight is the Athanae, was' being taken to Halifax Mrs. Maldwin Drummond. ‘was stunned by the fall. The chan- So man OBITUARY. water. The body did not appear again | turned. trip in the Sound today, fell over- Elijah M. Sanford, an attorney of | week. When they arrive officials will that the boat on fire|poard from the power boat Bonnie |East Orange, N. J, who disappeared |decide whether to take any action a former German ves-|jaes and was drowned. Brandle | from his home on Sept. 10 has written | against the Austro-Hungarian con- was sitting on a stool on top of the to his wife from Pittsburgh saying | sul-general, Captain Franz Von Papen, cabin and when the power boat turned | that he will not come back. His wife | the German military attache here he lost his balance and fell into the | will make no effort to have him re- |and the Austrian editor who drew up the memorandum. on the surface and it is thought he o A Archibald himself is expected in excursionists, frequently | Washington this week to explain to New York, Sept. 19.7The death of nel was dragged for !e\:’nl hours, but | in pe: ly conducted parties, have|the state department his action in Mrs. Maldwin Mrs, Marshall the body was not located. been journeying from Paris and |carrying messages for a foreign sov- CE 'é’:{"c:;'g The drowning saddened the fishing | other cities to the scene of the bat-|ernment while traveling under an party and the members returned to |tle of the Marne that the military au- | American passport. at her estate, Cadland, near Southamp: ton England, was amaounced in a ca- | Meriden by train. thorities have prohibited trips in g blegram received here today. . Killed by Trolley. o g Movements of Steamships. Marshall Field, ITI, her son, and his wife sailed from here yesterday on the| Norwalk, Conn. Sept. 19. — While| Thousands of tons of wine grapes | ILiverpool Sept. I9.—Arrived steam- liner St. Louis Ea General Scott Lansing that G to eliminate himself, if necessary, in order to bring ico, and now all that remains to be done is for Villa to decide that it is necessary.—Indianapolis. News. reports that Secretary Redfield would walking along the trolley tracks be-|in California will be fed to hogs, as|¢rs New York, New Yo Saxonia, g Bhengas. tween Westport and this city today, |the California Wine Assoclation an- | New York James Brennan of Providence, a la- |nounced that grapes will not be pur- | New York, Sept. 19.—Steamer Ordu. Settled. v chased pa, Liverpool for New York, signalled. borer, was struck by a trolley car and because of the uncertainty of "w:"w'm:: fwrellurv“ received injuries which later caused|whether :dx-- war tax on wnies wiil be :7 g':‘:; nndm:-; :iv;; GDoc“ ll: dlm: s wi re - eneral Ng | death in a hospital g ln:quct when it expires on Jan. 1, Nuplen for New York, fed 740 ——— — miles east of Sandy Hook at noon Sun- Accidentally Blew Off an Arm. day. Dock 9 a. m. Monday. Salled, Norwalk. Conn.. Sept. 19. — While | Stéamer Calabria, Naples. resign on his own initiative.—Boston of g Transcript. ton discovering| Danbury.—In accordance with a about peace in Mex-| . £ 3k B Dok Inherently unworthy of denial are Essex—~Announcements of the mar. an alleged horse thief, J. L. Middle- | policy of the state game farm at Mad rige of Miss Belie Robinson and James Hazardville—¥azardville, appropri- | brook accidentally blew off one of his I::; in encouraging the E. Bliss, of Santa Cruz California |ately named and once the center of an|arms with a shot gun. The alleged Wednesday, Sept. 15th, have been re- |important powder industry, may again|horse thief, Richard Taylor the state, the other day twenty ceived. Miss Robinson formerly re-|enter the limelight. There is a 2 sided 4n_town and at one time taught | storage house for explosives there stables, but was later arrested in New in the South. district school, distribution of pheasants over from & number of con- | ants were received hers from the state game farm. These pheasants are to hool and in the Nott|the Du.Ponts contemplate using it |Canaan. Middlebrook was brought to|be placed in the woods of this sec-. enterbrook. as a supply depot for dynamite a hospital here tion. i “