Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 11, 1915, Page 1

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SluwrPropeumHquGCump-m——lnG-hmthe . Tide ¢f Battle Flows and Ebbs—Germans Claim the ReqphqeofTrenchsEutofSoud:ezandatTnhm, *he city and have begu ;ear(ward towards “he moua- hich -the Serbianu. jast lear so, rm) l.cfended _against the A'ls & Sorbnnl Fall- Back: m e time to come the ‘invaders, ggiemd will: have to fight it t'wltl'.he rear guards, whose duty > lt i ;to ‘delay their progress for the| wm'aonmeu do _as .they l-:n:cx ~on previous occasiens—all tadk’ uhtl) they Teath . positions n | which they’ will have the est 6ppOr- | tusity of holfllnl thetr_zround. - In 1 z, milil here don™ ex- o pitchéa b-me on_this front for t days or a fortnight by which time aifles’ forcés landed at. - Saloniki &xz lnvev ned bands with is known, y_incursion into it ie" ‘beliaved 1 héld their hands. ungl how matters &> with -the. S contral powers ‘win. or War Froats. on - the, 3 heavy flxhflnt ing 6. the Jrms n.nd founts, they suffered a se- h;ve -bmdpnea for the m=~ chen un n! Sw- nr\. In ‘FB‘.IDW aqtéAmAus HAVE NOT: YET MADE. A uovti vt ahe umo MRS, eAL'r h X MOTOR TO BALTIMORE- President’s B Brother, Joseph | - R. wlll'fi. . > AL L TINNMI. PLYING BETWEEN lllw YORK AIQD novmnacl Passsngers Ware Transferned—Later Proceeded to New. York—Schooner ‘in_Crash Was Towsd Into New London Harbor. n, who had not met the next ‘While mistress of the White House. there they attended church and were he guests of honor at a family lunch- eon ‘Several hundred people in Baltimore Josrned of the Dréseiice of the couple and crowded about the church an: apartment house in which Joseph Wi son lives to catch a glimpse of the president and his hrid-—m-be Beauu it was Sunday, the applause of Fri- day and Saturday in New York and Philadelphia was missing, but the peo- ple voiced their approval of the presi- dent’s choice in audible comments. y Mrs, Galt wore a beautiful blue taf- i 3 feta gown, a black velvet hat trimmed léeys of hand grenades a. strong en-|with fur, champagne, colored . gloves, emy force attempted attacks against e Bied stiacks asainst |and o shiort face vell, and smiled hap- o“l‘ N lons on e rf €] il t the d. e president, he Plezzo. Basin, on Mrzlivrh, in | bmiled il ne iled continually. On the third s ontia Wevo Suns] at Datter i e or > ager of her left hand Mrs. Galt wore the Tolmino' section, and at Plava and at|diamond cogagement ring given her by Zagora, on the lower Isonzo. The en- had the president in New York. It emy “everywhere was repulsed witit| been reported that the platinum ring Rianee '?*5:» «ven leaving vfl!mfl‘" was set with only a solitaire d, * ‘our ‘hinds.’ but today it. was noticed that: had several smaller diamonds HEAVY FIGHTING ‘ON HILLS NEAR SOUCHEZ. narrow gold band. Efforts of a man giving hi Artillery Active at the Approaches to ‘the Road"to Lille. Joseph Pruijk and his Brussel Paris, Oct. 10, !5 p- m.—Heavy ar. Is. Belgium; to follow dent's party and later tillery Imhg ‘ont _the jills near Sou- chez was reported this afterngon DY { became suspicious, however, and pre- e wer: office.’ German attacks in thelvented him from entering the church. He protested that he meant no harm TR AT s e . o B o Liona sector. and in Lorraine. e @ Py shed visitors. t follows: ““The president shd Mrs; G Salt t decided ‘was continued ucuvny of the | jast night after their return Phil- mulnr.v on Both sides on the ridges|adelphia to make the trip uuu. ns,sg of So They were accompanied on Ly the Misses Lucy'and Mary uchez and to the south, at roaches to the ro-d to Lllle New Orleans, cousins' of -the president, Wwho are Wh!ta Hom 'u—u a the o &“’ i e ‘Givenchy church caused a ripple The man said he was for-the suffering Bel was visiting in Baitimore. The police wlations are pu the [$500 and six menths Belgrade Nw Compl.ufy in AL s e Hands of Teutonic Forges. Wireless to | %% i e wflfl'c hflgfi- ot w76 curtaliment Fr\rther et the BurCisey Wers bouton 31',‘,‘9,‘35"“;'.'."‘{?\-&“‘"“'.'..,'u'f'" LRy All cafes, hotels, clubs apd llquar dealers are compelled to exhibit prem- inently in thelr places a copy of the ;{.‘1} mx urd.;lnlnce, which says inly “each person must give east gre In our hands. The Serblans m. order and pay for his own drink.” were\ thrown back !arlher east [ The only exception fo the rule i3 that 'wherever uwy rested. . Our troops are|drinks ordered with a full meal may advancing.” be pald for by & ho CONFEREES. 1'0 RECOMMEND 3 RECOGNY’ OF CARRANZA ‘war- office an ‘these operations follows: ~ “Belgrade and the -nmunflln. helghts” to “the -southwest and south uncement re- QHIGABO SALOONS CLCSED FIRST SUNDAY IN 44 YEARS. ing Business, of His Wlfi.n Towns and Villages Did a First Chief Recelving Sengratulations. i e s 0’ fluu nd Near Tahure 1“ .M Mwmz‘ 2 Mile Front. tly | tion he: !n the vléht« &eot 'mmr-. cwtnm last week b French, the Germans Chicago, ¢ 0.—Saloons and hotels| Vera Cruz, Oect, lo—G-ntrd Car- were closed here | ranza recelved with great pleasure the | first Sunday in 44 years!news that the Pan-American confer- an‘order by Mayor|ence at Washington .had decided to l.h police to enforce a |recommend recognition of the papty %m been ignored so|led by him as the de facto government ?nnt have ba-n forgotten. | in Mexico, although he pointed out that regulated { he had reiceved no official notification m:.nce which required | to this effect. ’l‘elcpfrn.m. from Car- e i &nlh-rh-d dbetweenl d , ranza_agents a wmhxon brought et @ i the news and “the first 5_o'clock in'the mornin M received Ram of: u viol were mads | the - congratulations. of assoclates BN a.,m,;“:rw A T nof wi n the theater m\.fl . ln the -Mmrhu vil- | enthusiasm. towns proprietors General Carrapza will naot. alter ‘hig plans for a trip through the north- b g “which: he of public wai'% nported to have ed “The usual ‘ern sthtes, fc is to depart sment tiu-th-wn-u tomorrow. iwellers. . VOLPLANE INTO BAY. mm Sensatioral Dip Ove o g e o N\'m joy by’ the miita newspapers BELGWAOE NOT T DA.AG‘D > 8 BY THE nouul\pumn'. ‘,‘;"”"““"“mumcuvm-n m lnalnt in ’ifio chy. Berlin, viaiLondon, Oet, 10, 12.10 p. m- from the fier!N-n fron: ment. The - city ble, . al- Amboy, N. J. torn in their sides above the water line. Transferred Passengers. ‘The. Tennessee sent out radio mes- sages telling of the accident and sev- eral ‘Sound steamers responded. The Concord was the first to reach her and it Wwas deemed aahvinbo to mer the passengers, who were nemwfllmnmfiumamd the was effected without special lneuent. The Concord then proceed- ed to New York. The Tennessee made her way to Bartlett’s ‘Reef lightship, where re- pairs were made and about 4.30 o'clock this morning she comtinued her trip to New York. The schooner was towed into the lower harbér by a tug from a local wrecking company, which. had been called upon to assist. The schooner’s bow was badly crushed. No one was hurt. The Tennessee plies between New York and Providence. PASSENGERS BROUGHT TO NEW YORK Told of Panicky Conditions Aboard the Tennessee—Several Injured. New York, Oct. 10.—Nearly 250 pas- geneers who were transferred from the Bay State line steamer Tennessee after s demolished by the| . Captain c.lmtd the Women. Passengers told of* panicky condi- tions aboard the Temnessee after Thorpe jammed her prow into their boat slightly forward amidships, but He then sent out the wireless calls to which the Concord was first to respond. The transfer of Jgers was effected without aceident. The Tennessee's freight and decks were stove In and the funnel damaged, bm she was able to pro- New York under her own obert J. Noble, general manager of the Bay State line, said the schooner, [eastbound, suddenly luffed up in the wind and struck the Tennessee a hard glancing blow, ENTENTE ALUIES URGING GREEK DECLARATION Cabinet Has Not Succesded In Rezch- Ing Any ‘Agreement. Athens, Greece, Oct. 10, via Parls, 18.16 p. & representatives of the entents powers, while exercising no pressure an the Greek government, are urging it to reply to the a on put last Thursday in regard to its ture course. respecting the Serbo Gre- clan alllance The cabinet deliberaiad this question at great length yesterday and today. but has Dot aicoeeded tn reaching any agreemen A neutra) fl’vlomll in A(h.nl Teport- ed to his government his opinion that ‘within less than a month Former Pre- mier Venizelos will be returned to power, or else the ports of Greece will blockaded by the entente powers It is learned from an authoritative dipl num that “the uadruple entente l-fl advi Gneeo thAl Bulgaria's present attitude results from a written en- et Eagement mh;:eo: July 17 by Prince enlohe- nburg, en _acting g ambssador to Turkey, This t, made on: behalf of Aus- to ul including the Greek ports acedonia, of Salonikl and Kavala: of Kastoria, |a in of CANAL wnu. BE CLoSED TILL FIRST OF YEAR —_— 10,000,000 Cubic Yarda of Earth Must Be Taken Out. et Re- | O steamship Czar arriv- Archangel. ..?ll:!“v!artfi_ Twe Others Were So Badly Injured That They Died Soon.After Reach? ing the Hospital—Others are jured. Va., Oct. 5.—While fire- $500,000. VILLA NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR SAFETY OF FOREIGNERS Because of the Recognition of Car- ranza Government. El Paso, Texas, Oct. 10.—Geperal Villa’s formal declaration to George C. Carothers, special agent of the state department -at Washington that be- cause of the recognition of the Car- ranza govesament he would not hold himself respansible for the safety of the lives and property of foreigners tocny created little apprehemsion of edlate to foreigners. lmerlcm Consul Thomas D. wards of Juarez, declared were few .foreigners now in ritory, the largest body being the Mor- mon colony of Grandes. About 100 employes of the mining companies at Parral had refused to obey the state department’'s advice to leave, but he did not believe they were in any dan- ger, Edwards said Half a dozen fora!‘nerl who arrived from Chihuahua City - declare they came only on bmlneu and expected to_return. Fear of an uprising at Juarez after the departure of General Villa for Casas Grandes has subsided. There was the usual large crowd at the bull- fight and tonight the (own had the usual quota of foreign vi WARRING NATIONS WILL v ALL BE EXHAUSTES: People Will Be in. .mu Make Demand: Ed- there ter- New York, Oct, RETIE exhaustion of both victor and the vanquished at the close of the resent war in Euro) ex-President llilam H. Taft #aid in an_address the | today. will result in the people of the Warring nations being in a position to d'm.mi ul thair ere that some en to make the recurrence as llt!l. prob‘Bl. as poasible. The for- mer president «deciared that it was none too early to begin a discussion of the proposals which he hoped this na- tion will offer, through its representa. tives, at the conference of nations that la certain terfollow the war, In his address, which was dellvered at the Mt. Morris Baptist church, -Mr. Taft outlined the prcposals of the lu‘ua to enforce peace, of which is president, and expressed the ho) that the United States would take the lead, at,tbe close of the war, in ‘the establishment of the ledgue as a world power for fhe erforcement of peace, PARCELS POST CONVENTION WITH ARGENTINA. Postmaster General Burleson “An- nounced Its Signature. ’ Washingten, Oct. 10.—Signing of & rerrllx post eonvenmtion between the Tnited States and Argentina, effective Oct, 15, .was announced, tonight by Postmaster General Burleson, Para- guay ls now the only country ef South or Central America with which such a treaty has not been concluded, The Agreement with Argentina correspends to those in effeet_with other American republics, It fixes a welght Jimit of 11 pounds and a rate of 12 cents a pound, the maximum rate in the do- mestic’ parcel post service of the Unit- ed States. Mr. Burleson's announce- ment sald the department would now push vigprquely its plan for extending money order exchange between - the countries of the western hemisphere. MEXICANS ARRESTED FOR FIRING ACROSS RIO GRANDE. Pleaded They Were Celebrating Recog- recognize the Carranza go emmmL fl"mhdfl:hhflmfl of $100,000 nl‘fbnnv-nioc in - trust the erectl ‘r.ua- Pythlas in A.l::‘;y*:: & An impending French § per cent. unlimited loan was reported in Lon- King Frederick August of Saxony. captured two escaped Russian pris- oners of war. Normal conditions have been storéd in the districts of Hayti w American troops. _ > The British steamer Rufford from New York for ashore near mle. the Ban! ation opened at St. Louls. Two blast furnaces of the Lacka- wanna Iron & Steel Co. at Reading. Pa., were put in Op-'llion West Virginia o..l operators that millions of tons have been oM: ed by the French ‘ovemmmt. Ca in Roal Amu»dun. discover- the South Pole, has abandoned hll expedition to the North Pole. “Auntie” Mahaley Gibbs, a ress, died at Memphis, Zl'u. ocard“.l'nx to city statistics she was 137 years old. Three m were killed by the falling~ —Md from a school under construction fn the Bronx, New York. Bon-dle( is reported to have uks belligerents to .allow war B as a day After a record-breaking tri O oy e w‘- creating the Dlnc.ur National loe—ent in Captain Roger Well at the Newport naval tralning station has been assigned to command the new super-dreadnought Oklahoma. Frank F 1aent of the. Wi Girl™ commandant company, vlmnl in St. Louis. gasol ed on the Infleld of the ball park at Philadelphia to put the fleld in play- ing condition for the world serfes game. Herbert J. eaddy, was struck and I'I.ll.d. a golf ball driv- en by Dr. Joseph l( Douthett on the green of the tsburgh, (Pa.) Fleld Club. K= From her country home at Stricken, Bcotland, Mary Garden, the American actress i{ssued a statement denying she had undergone an operation, as reported. Elght hundred em; of the !llchlnn Alm L‘k Cily. suburb fll ining t.. olherl onl The Grgek steamer Antonios M. Mavrogordotas rammed the British steamship Kilwinning while entering the harbor at Genoa. Both ships were damaged, Department medlators - ed af Schenectady, N. Y. from Al- bany o try to end the strike of the employes_ of the General Electric plant thére. The gift $ ‘Willtam gymnasium at Phillips Exeter Acade- my was announced. ing Investigation. So far.as known, no fogs Vindivostok: 18 WILL BEGIN IN NEW YORK OM WEDNESDAY CONSPIRACY IS CHARGETD Ma: an 1 Penalty is One Year in Jai 00 Fine—Government Ha: Subpccraed More Than 100 Wit nesses. h': York, Oe':"w—mnen tors rectors of York, New Haven and e road and counsel of federal codr Hunt on Wednesday. Is one of a numbe; hiie " directors themselves are brought into the court with the pros. pect of facing imprisonment. Mamimum Penaity $5000 Fine One Year in Jail. The maximum penalty. if they convicted, Is ome year in rison ané $5.000. fine. as provided in thaat sectior of the snm law known as the anc The lhdlct:n.n! of the defendant which occurred it November rep- the presnt ad it is said, to carry to a ourts tho question of personal gullt of directors of an al- leged monopilistic coporation. The Proceedings e, faken. it i under- at the direct instizaty President Wilson. oA There were criginally twenty-one de- fendants, whose names amo t.be foremost in financial affairs in® i United States. Three of these ;u..a immunity on the ground that they had testified at previous New Haven pro- and six were &ranted sep- mmm!.hepl. they were not directors when certain of the acts ehu-.aa in the Indictments were com- T\-dv. to Go On Trial. MM cmflynmlfl—,flcml Mellen, former president of the New Haven, who is expected to be the gov- ernment’s star witness at the trial They charge In a genmeral way that the New Haven directors for the past twenty-five years, in fact from (ho day of the enactment of the Sherman law. July 3, 1890, combined under the control of the road virtually all th rafiroads, trolley lines and water lines of New England which they did not drive out of business, thus extinguish- ln&nll competition, ore than 160 corporations are mentioned in the indictment as thye having been unlawfully controljed and the goverrment has in its possession & mass of evidence in regard to the most innumerable transactions by which they were brought under the alleged domination of the New Haven, that rivals, If it does mot exceed, that collected In any other of the proceed ings brought under the Sherman anti- trust Jaw. .For the government more than 100 witnesses have been supoenaed And there is every reason to belleva that the trial will last three months At leant. Much of the testimony adduced will :ndfl\!hldly be a ';?lfl“nl om _l&l rought out at tl lnw-flfins- ew Haven by terstate Cowamerce commissiod, but new and sensational disclosures are promised before the trial is completed The investigation of the commission baFe- 1y touched some matters, It Is under- stood, which the study. have succeeded In fully wrmg- ing to Neht. Notable Array of Counsel, The defendants have engaged a no- table array of co which includes AUTO RACE DRIVER . INSTANTLY KILLED

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