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] L] - v : cqln‘i ‘here,” Whfie Bulgarians Are Pushing ]heif Way Thrwgh the Mountains to Nish : SERBIANS’ POSITION GROWING GRAVER DAILY From All Sides the Germans, Austrians and Bulgarian Allies " Are Slowly Closing in on the Serbian Armies—The Serbs Russian gam.- Land at Varna. London, X 2.53 m.—A des- Dby A ihe Tires, frow Bnthareet "% | NOW DIGGING TRENCHES |SELF-MADE NEW YORKER AfiliONA ANTI-ALIEN LABOR LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL. Finding of Supreme Court—Was En- acted by Popular Vote. ‘Washington, Nov, 1.—Upon the com- Bisi LA k in bee, Ariz., court today cess of legislation. ‘The statute required employers of more than five persons to employ not Are Fighting Fiercely, However, and Inflicting Such iS5 *han 20 per cent auslified elec” Austrian cook, upon being notified he Losses on the Invaders That Reinforcements. Will be|would ve discharged because of the aw, appealed to the court and when . o he won the state took the case to the Compulsory—The Russians Have Begun an Offensive | h{iiTeet tribunal, | The sapreme court through Justice Hughes, svith Justice Movement in the Dvinsk Section—In France the Battle | McRevnoids alone difsenting. held that Raich’s constitutics®] rights as an . a1 = alien to the .equal protection of the far tha Rutte de Tahure is Still in Progress. law, as guaranteed by the Fourteenth mans have occupied Kraguayevatz,|and upper Szczara rivers, as well as at the arsenal town of Serbia, while|Dvinsk and on the Styr and Stripa their Bulgarian allies are pushing their | rivers, and with considerable success way through the mountains ot Nish,|in the latter sections. Serbia’s war capital. Closing In On Serbians. HOW BRITISH TROOPS From all sides the Germans, Austri STRENGTHENED ARTILLERY ans and Bulgarians are slowly closing in on the Serbian armies, the position trodueth of which grows graver daily. They are| >7 l:u i « N'F'I' dw 7t fighting fiercely, however, to save their Ohi She: RE00 I ElNINI, country and have inflicted such losses ‘s | . London, Nov. 1, 5.32 p. m—How the on ield Marshal Von Mackenzen's | British strengthened their artillery by the introduction of new weapons and more serfous work- of invading the | the skilful handling of the old along eastern and southern part of the coun- | the front in Flanders where the Ber. try to the Bulgarians, who have had|Mans were driven back In the grea more experionce. in. mountain. warfate | Offensive of September 25, is the chief such as the Serbians are wagihg. disclosure of popular interest in a long : official _despatch from Field Marshal " Bulgars Moving Westward. Sir John krench to Earl Kitchener From the junction of the Danube and { Which is published tonight under date Timok rivers, in the northeast, to 8‘ :;“9';“;‘ headquarters in France Uskup, in the south, the Bulgariane|Octeber 15. o 3 £ are moving westward, driving the Ser| The despatch is mainiy a technical bians out of the towns into the woods, | Military review of the inception the but from Uskup southward they have | CAITYing out and. the aftermath of lhe‘ force that he has been compelled to send for reinforcements and leave the hnddn/, Nov. 1, 10 p. m.—The Ger-|have taken the offensive on le\e‘ml been checked, as the Serblans in that|fishting around La Bassee, Loos and territory have been reinforced by the | Hulluch. ~Nevertheless, it brings to French and British with modern guns |the Pritish public for the first time a and with gunners who gained valuable | fuil realization of the intensity with experience in France and Gallipoll, = | Which the Germans launched their Peyond the forces landed at Saloniki | connter-attacks. These, General which- German estimates piace at 70,- | S3¥'s, were almost continuous from the e e fartatr |Gy ‘of the ‘biz British attack up- to gesistance heing-aens by the.pilies: in and_including October . Russians Reportcd Off -Varna. TWELVE PERSONS BURNED TO - fln.:;d.n ggo‘ops have been ,:ppngi DEATH IN BROOKLYN FIRE off Varna, but the report lacks: con-| e i 5 i firmation. There is, however, evidence | More Bodies Believed to be in Ruins in despatches from Bucharest that the ‘of Tenement. : people of Rumania at least desire in- _ tervention and that pressure is being| New York, Nov. 1—Twelve persons brought on tre king and -cabinet to|were burned to death in a fire which induge them to join the allies and per- | destroyed the th ten>ment mit & Russian force to pass through |house at 66 North Rum@pian territory to attack Bulgaria|lyn, tonight. More bodies are bheliev~ fromi the east. Greece continues her|ed to be in the ruins. » triendly neutrality. The fire started in the lower part-of ermans Fail to Reach Riga. e Sl sy spndd tapioly b the T#e Germans, having failed in two | UPPer floors, cutting off means of es- monithe of almost incessant attgcks to [ape. Nearly all the occupants were reach Riga and Dvinsk by various |3sleep when the blaze was discovere roufe: now trying alony the rail. | but quick work by the police and fire- Ay whien e e A e T he |ment enabled them to rescue many. Guft of Risa from Tukum and. have,| The bodies of six adults and four ucdording to_their repofts, reached a | Children were among the frst recov. pofnt west of Schlok. This is & very|Sred. These were found clad in right auEm advance and much low ground, | Siothes In bedrooms and in hallwayes i . o lics | The position of several of the deag in- o I8 meult to move US| dicated that an attempt had been 4 g + |made to reach places of safety when New Russian Offensive. avercomé. by, the ‘smoke. ;Inhthe Dvlfn);x secc?r, bo}t‘h va{mt and southwest of that city, the Russians Bave begun an offensive, apparently in | FIRE DESTROYS EAST anticipation of renewed attacks by the BOSTON CAR BARNS Uermans, and they are also on the —_— }z)m:/o lnvtlhe lake district east of the|lLoss Estimated at About $250,000— vinsk-Vilna railway and in Volbynia i Bnd Galicia. The resuit of these vari- Started in Machine Shop. ous battles has not been disclosed, if, indeed, they are concluded. Those at the southern end of -the line are foubtiess desigmed to prevent the Ger- mans and Austrians from sending re- | vertible street cars. The 105 wae eon Inforcements to Serbia. Hhoated Dy Conipans cmciam o Battle for Butte de Tahure, s mweny i In France the battle for the Butte de| From the machine shop, where the Tahure, which the Germans recaptured | blaze started, the fire jumped to a from the French, is still in progress, | 8asoline tank, causing an explosion without changing the positions of the | Which injured one man. The sparks two. armies. There has been some |Were carried through the barn and out fighting at other points in the west.|ovVer half a hundred cars in the ad What the attacks on this front have joining yard, threatening the com- cost is*shown by a report issued by |Pany’sipowerhouse and the nearby ten- Field Marshal Sir John French tonjggt. | ement district and gas and oil tanks. He says that the published lists of the | The firemen, however, confined the fire German casualties disclose that seven |to the barn and yards. German battalions which took part in Bostor, Nov. 1.—Flames swept the East Boston car barns of the Boston Elevated Railway company tonight, destroying or damaging 25 semi-con- -cent. amendment to the constitution were violated by the law and hence decid- ed he was entitled to an injunction to prevent the state officials from en- forcing the act. The court announc- ed that as a yesult of its decision it was not necessary to consider rights under treaties presented by the case. DISORDERLY SESSION OF PANAMA ASSEMBLY. President Porras Authorized to Borrow 31.250,“;&'% United States. Panama, Nov. 1—The national as- sembly, aftor a disorderly session, to- day passed a bill authorizing Presi- dent Porras to borrow $1,250,000 In the United States with which to re- habilitate the finances of the country. ‘The opposition endeavored to force the government to state the purpose ‘which the government declined to do. This led to an acrimonious debate during which Carlos Mendoza, the leader of the op- positior, charged the government with extravagance, and declared that its mismanagement of the public finances was plunging the country. into debt and financial difficulty. The debate finally became so disorderly that Senor Men- doza and the members of the opposi- tion lef{ the chamber. ¥ President Porras then prorogued the assembly for four dayg in order to con- der a proposal to- the import tities on certain: commodities 20 per much. on the part of the general public. CLOSE OF HOT MAYORALTY . CAMPAGIN IN BRIDGEPORT. Republican, Democratic and Citize Leaders All Confident. SUFFRAGE THE OVERBALANCING ISSUE IN NEW YORK OPENED HEAVY FIRE FROM ALL|OF ACUTE KIDNEY DISEASE AT SIDES OF THE TOWN HIS HOME —_— o nane "Novade aerived of “Reckiond, |PICTURESQUE CAMPAIGN Me., for her acceptance trials. One American Shot Down in Front|Was One of the Most Conspicuous of the United States Customs House Where More Than 70 Bullets Sped Through Throng. The 1M t Pt et Tn ey Catn Seladt st More Than 6,000 Suffragettes Will be Figures in the Newspaper Publish- |PY fire at a loss of $350,000. | at the Polls in New York City This ing Business and Politics—Ardent| Estimates at Harrisbu: Pa., are| Morning at 530 to Act as Watchers that woman suffrage will be defeated Defender of German Position in War | by majorities ranging from $75,000 to| for Their Cause. 100,000. Douglas, Ariz, Nov. l.—General| New York, Nov. 1.—Hefman Ridder, | Recsivers for the Atlantic Shore| New York, Nov. 1.— Villa delivered his long-expected at- | former treasurer of the democratic na- | Rail .Company were appointed by |shall be permlt:svfl %o vv:a.:':‘trh: :‘vne:r: tack on the Carranza garrison of Agua |tional committee and publisher of the|the States Circuit court at|shadowing question to be decided at Prieta late today and within two hours | New Yorker Staats Zeitung, died sud- | Portland, Me. the New York state election tomorrow. after the first gun was fired, machine | denly late today at his home in this m—— A revised constitution, drawn by a gun bullets and shell fragments show- | city. More than 1,000 women and _girls nvention with Elihu Root as ite ered over American territory, severe-| The cause of Mr. Ridder's death|will canvass in New York city Wed- | bresident at Albany last summer, alsc ly wounding Louls F. Taylor, a res-|was kidney trouble in an acute form |nesday, collecting money for the|ls to be voted on, and three congress- taurant waliter and endangering scores | He had been ill about ten months und | American Polish Relief Fund. men, a full assembly, eleven supreme of American soldiers in trenches south |for two weeks his condition has been P 2o court justices and some county and of the United States army camp two|critical. He was in his sixty-fifth| President Wilson and Mrs. Galt, his | City officials are to be elected, but ali miles east of Douglas. vear. = flancee, plan to visit the mew summer |Of these questions are far out-balanced General Advance. mon:?bz‘:'me &Snmag late today and | JVhite House, Shadow Lawn, near (DY that of equal suffrage. : What &b R S L T Long Branch, N. J., next wee 24-Hour Speaking Campaign. peare! ) The battle of the women campaign- vance béegan at 6.30 o'clock tonight £ when the Villa forces opened a heavy Conspicuous Newspaper Man. 3 "'...mi'.i"‘ L"T:;’. ogro, former U.|ers for and against fheir enfranchise- fire from all sides of the town. SAmong a large number of prominent | nore, A e e R o e i erman-American citizens of the 3 f esque. sp Stopped by Wire Entanglements. United Stotes, Herman Ridder was despatches received at St. Louis. tonight with a 24-hour suffrage meet- The firing, however, ceased when the |one of the most conspicuous figures| co ginal O’'Connell_offici the | 8, at Times square, but the suffra- :mmletlx::):: h-du:uhe;i 'l‘:lea :(h‘A e:x; in the newspaper publishing business |, “EC08) O Bonnell w;-“d'h ”:t"v: gists’ work is not done. More than iy I baeat £ 7;‘; ';am”lvul"m and in politics. His associates in the | gore jogt in the burning of St. Jobms | X, ousand women who will work ae eta a; gal publishing business had honored him | orochial school at Peabody, M: ‘watchers at the polls tomorrow agreed Carranza Garrison Responds. at one time with the presidency of e tonight to rise shortly after 4 o'clock B * tom Meanwhile the Carranza garrison | the American Newspaper Publishers’| wiliiam Sulzer, speaking at Corning, | ot b3y wciogr "8 2nd be at the polls Associat was sweeping all approaches with N. Y., on behalf of Phobition coun- by searchlights. ~Although it I8 be- | litica he was such a factor that he |'C FUR fOF EOvernor again next year. |iacular as that of their opponents. Al of tho T Vs T e ees Tang out|Was talked of at the national demo-| pglice Commissi Wosky of their speakers save one closed their i the Carranza treriches as every vol- | Srous convention in Denver in 1503 a8 | that the celebration and noises in the | sras Sroe Sire Sars s Stantes i ley was fired a possible nominee for vice president | ogigential sections of New York city o i g ftanton BRAteh, on the ticket with Bryan, whom, how- | chal) cease at 11 o'clock el president of the Women's Political American Shot Down. yer, Mr. m‘fif,'.: ow::ed at that 'iixrkne. b ¢ ock election night. l:”‘x“m hsd‘ u.li! gver the telephone Taylor was shot down in front of | He was also discussed later as a like- _— onight at 8 o'cloc t she was re- the United States customs house, |1y selection for ambassador to Ger- | s moot Harviis havs, Boen issued | tiring early to arise with the watchers whera more than 70 machine gun bul- | many. Aeged delinqueney ta pagurt for | tomorrow, word came from Mrs. Ar- lets sped among a throng of soldiers Backed W. J. Bryan. State billboard tax. - thur M. ‘Dodge and Mrs. Alice Hill and Mexican women and children who Following the nomination of Bryan . Chitterden, presidents of the National were coming across the line. The bul-|at the 1903 convention, after former| 1In addition to 611 passengers and | osoCiation Opposed to Suffrage and let struck him in the middle of the|Governor Charles N. Haskell of Okla- | 2700 sacks of mail for lee’r;oo A < the New York State Anti-Suffrage as- back as he turned to cover, paralyz- |homa had resigned as treasurer of the | {merican liner St. Paul carried away | toc 200, that they were going to the ing him. national democratic committee because | nearly 2,000 tons of Oregon apples and | Ne3tre: Mexican Commanders Warned. of his affiliation with Standard Ofl in- | dressed No Anti Watchers. General Thomas F. Davis, com.|{erests, Mr. Ridder was chosen as Ak No antl-sutragist watchers will be 3 treasurer and, in own name an Clement R. Sali at the polls. e antis say that the e e e e e opnon | those of his brothers, ho contributed | crushed to R Sty Yok was| o cmen ‘a0 Tiot belong &t ths polls and the commanders of both Mexican fac- | $31,000, “the largest single contribution | descending elevator while at work in | that they are confident of a “square tions to change the direction of their |0 the Bryan mpflg’fl- the new subway shaft at Old Slip and | 3al” from the men in charge of the firc and citizens on the American side | Ardent Defender of German Position. | Front street. booths, anyhow. ' were not endangered thereafter. Mr. Ridder was owner and editor Et o Leaders Optimistic, Villa Using Artillery. of the New Yorker Staats Zeltuns, P a4y g = Portiand, Ore, u!f::‘en ot both eides 4 one of the foremas! erman news- cense im] regarding e result of the ot be Genniely . asertained” g o |Papers in the United States, and|to Bunt big game. o, Slaimed o free | clection. ‘Tho estimates of the suftra- nightfall, which brought a Iull in the|throush this he was particularly con- [{Cense "‘z‘__m. his being a Civil|gist leaders were more conservative combat, but Villa artillery, fiving suc- | SPicuous recently in his ardent de- A than cessive salvos, played on the Agua |IER of tE German position fn the yhe 7,000 men of the-New York ETIOR o1 Mhattoring the Dorbed wita| A Sol-Mads New Vorker. |5 mcdical corgs Someiotime ot m b gplangiements snd_ destroving the| atr. Ridder was one of the so-called |clan and soven medical advisers. be- garrison of General Calles. A e M NG RANGE Xag posal would carry by less than 10,000, C from birth until his death. The story Charles F. Murphy, Jeader of Tam. Three Houses Blown Up. is told ‘of a dinner which he gave to| Cy Young, considered one of the|many Hall, in an eleventh hour an- Three houses on the west side of|25 New York men at the time Col- |Breatest baseball players of all time |nouncement tonight, said that his or- Agua Prieta were blown up by shells | onel Clowry first. established himself | Will become.a candidate for Treasur- | ganization was strictly neutral in the and, according to Carranza represen- |in New York to take charge of the |r of Turcarawas County, Ohio, on the | suffrage fight. tatives, one man was killed and eight | Western Union Telegraph company, A | Republican ticket. R Y Gy other persons wounded, including one [poll of birthplaces was taken at the CLOSE ELECTION CONTEST G o Ao One oL waman. table and the German editor proved| (Two highwaymen sprang front {he history of Bridzeport cams to a|, Ome of the Villa wounded was|to be the only born New Yorker pres- |of an automobile driven by Alexander IN MASSACHUSETTS. close tonight. Tomorrow some 19,000 brought to Douglas for treatment. Two | ent. 3 Kastilan, beneath the Central railroad X WO s = voters: will ‘g9 to the polls and cast others were seen to fall when a shrap- Began Earning Living at 11. bridge in- Bayonne, N. J., beat and |Republicans and Democrats Are Alike their ballots for one of four candi- dates for mayor. Clifford B. Wilson, republican; Daniel P. Walker, demo- crat; Henry Lee, citizens’, and Jasper la line Jate today was a mile|it that young Ridder began earning his | MOTTINg, Arthur Dube, aged 9 of one of his fleld pieces, put- | German parents were not far removed |nel shell burst over them. A shell He was -born March 5, 1851. Hig|FoPbed him of $82. Confident of Victory. gun out of action. from poverty—in fact, were so near While returning from mass Sunday Boston, Nov. 1.—The closest contest for the governorehip since the schism Mol cvy,-sooaliet. dre the. cundidates: Agua Prieta trenches. It was|own living when 11 years old as an| Woonsocket, R. L, was struck by alin thc republican national party at The citizens’ ticket, headed by ex- believed tonight that it was moving | errand boy. it a hat store. Fy stages |tOUring car and died a minute later of | Chicago in 1912 gave birth to the pro- Mayor Leer has adopted & platform | UPWard with cannonading and infan- | he served in a Wall Street broker's of- | fracture of the skull. gressive party, is expected at the elec- favoring the commission form of gov- ernment The voters will also vote on the ¢uestion of adopting the commis- sion style of government. Tonight the republican, democratic and citizens’ leaders predicted victory. The socialist leaders claim that a large |to the Agua Prieta barbed wire en- | YOrk city and won for his favorite vote will be polled. PLEDGE SUPPORT TO BOSTON CENTRAL LABOR UNION Teamsters’ Union and Brotherhood of Railroad Clerks. Boston, Noy. —The Teamsters’ union and the Brotherhood of Railroad Clerks tonight pledged themselves to support fully any action which m: be ordered by the Central Labor unicn, in the event of 1,500 railroad freight handlers is not settled tomorrow. Mayor Curley has invited railroad o ficials, representatives of business in- terests and James H. Smyth, federal |cided that the orders givenm to Amer- |He became president of the corpora- iaviator, leads in the contest for the conciliator, to meet him in .an en- deavor to have the roads concur with the strikers in submitting their dif- ferences to arbitration. Labor lead ers said tonight that they had the plans well in hand for a sympathetic | Douglas. Mr. Rudder made several trips |mines of the Keweenaw Peninsula is the State i strike, if one should be necessary. the Loos fighting—presumably a Ger- | M, J. man counter-attack—lost 80 per cent. W 9. CONNEEL Y. BRORTING of their strength. MAN. DEAD IN PITTSBURGH for the GENERAL SAUBERZWEIG Had A iaced it ~ RECALLED FROM BRUSSERS o ey B P Pittsburgh Pa. Nov. 1—M. J. Con- Man Who Signed the Death Sentence | nclly. weil known in sporting circles of Edith Cavel as ‘Buck Cornelius,” died in the West from a_complication of diseases. For London, Nov. 2, 2.35 a. m—General [evr thirty years Connelly attended Sauberzweig, the military governor of every prizefight of importance in the Brussels, left that city and his suc- |country and at one time was consider- cessof, whose name has not vet been|ed as referee for the Jeffries-Johnson | learned, has been appointed, according | battle at Reno. Conneily was 53 years te a [Rotterdam despatch to the Daily | old. Telegraph, which says that Saubers- weig; who is a Prussi cavalry-officer, NESS P 0L Clanios) Vow K ramvanl aboilt | o o £ONDITIONS & month ago. His accession, the de SHOW IMPROVEMENT pateh adds, introduced 2 new note of — % seveérity, which culminated in the exe- | Shown by Report of Federal Reserve cution of Edith Cavell. He signed the Agents Just Made Public. th sentence and kepy the matter a : secret, which permitted ‘of the execu-| Washington, Nov. 1,—Business con- 1 could succeed. | ditions throughout most of the coun- try improved considerably during Sep- tember, according to reports from fed- v ¥ ¢ eral reserve agents made public jto- further says, “that the last week | night by the federal re ‘e board. As the emperor made a tour of the prin- ja swhole the picture of conditions is cipal towns in Belglum occupied by |regarded by officials as the most fa- thue Germans. His presence may be | vorable received by the board in many assumed to have resulted in the re- [ months. : 2 % moval of General Saubecrzweig. : RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE Prsbitighen 4 : ; ;. ©.. Nov. 1— - S INBEVERAL FIELDE. | oo O e . the La Considerable Success on the'Styr and Biripa Rivers. at Genev fll:elczlt‘ll;mn 01 ; n Vening, “that the Russtans - —_— PLACES BLAME FOR STRIKES 5 Wit ON LABOR “AGITATORS” |is responsible for firing into American Opposed “Paper Trust” tholfeu:.wu‘lc. C. L. Taylor, President Hartford Man- ufacturers’ Association. Hartford, Conn. Nov. l.—Another strike—the eighth now in_ progress. occurred here today when 30 employ fifiafloio;;fi-flv.on ol 2§;w?}nyema:g’y:h:nt - fl:; mflm'@: While trying to escape a sentry at "°é‘o3§r:‘£°n‘;5‘&mx.‘ 0%‘;;:.'}mmx~ Villa Loss Placed at 200. agent. "At 18 he had become inter- | DUTIPEtom Vt, an imprisoned troop- |nated for a third term by the demo- . Salies reported his losses today as e . has eatly Saw Cavairy, Fort Ethan Allen, was shot | yees 1n thics Borae) Up Bis ‘cam- Clalmed the dash of the Vil troops |d the whole lower Bast Side of New |47 15 expected to die. Bl BT tanglements had been repulsed with | momination for district judge, later | Reports to the fish and game com- |plurality which I_confidently expect electing his man. missions report 405 deer killed in Con- | will approximate 35,000 votes.” ?rol:sa of at least 200 to tne Villa . : necticut since the law permitting | Former Congressman Samuel W. Mc- Nflfi i Shls o briel. Wi tarted Catholic News at 27. owners of land to kill the animals|Call, who was defeated by Governor ‘s He entered the newspaper business|Went into effect Avgust 1. Walsh by 12,000 votes a year ago, and e e prer Doy 8 forces | when he was 27 vears old by estab- === : again heads the republican ticket, gave oty Wt 10 Do OIERE lishing. the first Roman Catholic news- | _New York last week established a|this as his final word tonight: paper in New York city in German |WOrld’s Tecord in the export trade,| “I shall receive the largest vote cast and soon afterward started the Cath- |When the Custom House closed with |for any candidate for governor in the TO RETURN ANY FIRE olic News in English, which in a short [ 20 approximate total of $80,000,000 of | last eight years and shall be elected FROM MEXICAN TERRITORY |Lim¢ became recognized as a leading | 3r80es for the foreign trade. tomorrow by a very substantial ma- Catholic paper of the country. A diphtheria o i oat th Jority.” : sca .closing. the [ A g 3 Should Bullets Jeopardize Safety of Made Staats Zeitung. schools at Glen Cove, io I - Twe c,:;m';’e, Bmgh‘%(/m}:; %m: Arseriion Hosideate: In 1890 Mr. Rudder became a stock- | children, Arthur Van Vooris, 5, and rohibitioni x- holder n the dally Staats Zeitung and | Philip de Lara, 1, are dead: ~Forty | momne corndence ot they ramid oo Washington, Nov. 1.—After consul- Was elected treasurer and manager. | suspected cases are under observation. | ceive substantial endorsements of the tation today between the White Houso | Under his direction that paper as- respective platforms upon which they and the war department it was de-[Sumed a leading position in the field.| Oscar A. Brindi the California | would stand. ican troops on the border last May— |tion in 1907 and at the time of his|Curtiss marine flying trophy and the to return any fire from Mexican ter- |death he was publisher of influential|$1.000 cash prize with & Aicht ot sog|= ' =RCETIC GUBERNATORIAL ritory that endangered lives on the|moOrning and afternoon papers In Ger- | miles, made along the Pacific Coast. CAMPAGIN IN KENTUCKY. American side of the line—would be [ man. 2 4 —— effective in the present situation a: Several Trips Abroad. A record copper output from the | Widely Known Speal Have Toured Special Trains. Should bullets continuously fall into |abroad; during which he was received [in sight. Figures available indicate - Arizona and jeopardize the safety of |by Emperor William of Germany and |that the total production for the| Louisville, Ky, Nov. 1.—One of the American residents, American troons|he brought back the emperor’s en- |year will be nearly 260,000,000 pounds. |most energetically waged gubernatorial without further reference to Wash- |thusiastic wish that he might some —_— campaigns in Kentucky in recent month a ferry between | years ended today with both demo- e Lis ville, Staten lsland. and|cratic and republican leaders claiming ot taret New Jersey, wi operated. | victory in e election tomorrow. Major General Funston was enroute | At the time of the reciprocity ne- | This N A e e Among five candidates for governor, to Douglas tonight to take personal|SOtlations with Canada Mr. Ridder |aytomobilists between New York and |the principal struggle has been be- command of -the situation, % koo “"‘;';" "‘; oy oy e elphia. tween former Congressman A. O. Stan- ué‘éi'l‘ lnrm;neevu :int e: n:;nk ley, democrat, of Henderson, and Ed: NEWS OF DEFEAT ke Tainnly dng 1. thie Rt Tritch i A statement issued by the Depart- |win P Morrow, republican, of Somer- y 0 the fight which he | ment of Agriculture shows that the|set. They have pressed special trains ington are to Shell that faction which |day visit the United States. of the Jewell Belting company walkeil OF GENERAL OBREGON |and others made that cheaper news|outbreak of foot and mouth disease |into eervice and toured the state with out because their demands for an EARI RRDSEVES. setured. widely known speakers. Fred J. Drex- eight hour day and other concessiors|By a Large Villa Force at San Carlos Always a Loyal American. lera serum ler, progressive, Louisville; BE. L. had been refused. The concern em- on Saturday. Although Mr. Ridder championed i Pickett, prohibitionist, Wilmore, and ployes about 250. There are now S Germany’s cause in the present war, he Charles Dobbs, socialist, Louisville, about 2,200 workmen out of employ-| EI Paso, Texas, Nov. l.—Arrivals|was always a loyal American. His Bol other of Pres- [have contented themselves with less me ment in the city on account of the |here from rreon brought news of | motto was: “Our country, right or |ident Wilson’ fluco;, with her son,|extensive cam; strikes. Charles L. Taylor, president of the | Obregon’s Carranza forces by 4 much | wrong. to be set right.” 2 ly escaper death from hydrocyanic Suffrage Vote Manufacturers’ association >f Hart- the defeat of about 3,000 of General . If right, to be kept right; if| William H. Bolling an dwife, narrow- Posieytvi ennsylvan ng in their rooms in the| ppiiadelphia, Nov. 1. — Although larger Villa force at San Carlos, on The funeral will be held from the ford county, declared at a meating tn- | Saturday, on the line to Durango. Ac- [Church of the Blessed Sacrament here | Cordova apartment house at Wash- | somerrhat overshadowed by the keenly day that the manufacturers would re- | cording to the account, Obregon sent | o reday ing. Burial wil fuse to grant any of the demands ask- | his men to.clear out what he believed | in glliludty‘ s ST g emeed suj contested mayoralty campaign in this ed. He said wages and conditions had {to be a small force of Villa soldiers. Two Mexicans, supposed to be Villa | SitV- ';lg by fights for local offices in been good and he placed the plame for { It was said they ran into a force nf the situation on labor “agitators.’ SERIES OF BILLS TO CARRY . er sections of the state, much about §,000 men, The Carranza force | EAST HARTFORD BOY e e Ot D enrited States |interest has been aroused throughout troops near Sierra Blanca, 100 mil n’;u sald, with 22 cars of RUN DOWN BY AYTO. P ds ot TS, - it mily property in Car- | gustained a Fractured Skull—Driver an’s suffrage amendmen constitution at tomorrow’s. election. g OUT ARMY PROGR. ranza-controlled territory, amountin, st s Coiiie Are to Be Drafted for the o.u:M bt g L bl e o ger confcated. g Lo 5 ek e e 1o o Condines. v - East Hartford, Conn., Nov. 1.—John o8 5 ‘Washingtop, Nov. l.—Arrangements were made by Senator Cham- _ chairman of the senate mil- ee, to befln"‘dnlt- series the carried a will be' Introduced at &.‘w- Bmx ‘1‘ hok ing of congress to carry out army’'s part of the Nt stop after the accl-