Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 16, 1915, Page 1

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ALLIES ON HER SO; lvgflination to That Effect Cause of Considerable Anxiety to Entente Powers APPLIES TO TROOPS SEEKING REFUGE IN GREECE E! / Entenfe Ministers Contend That the Right Accorded the Troops to Enter Country Through Saloniki Permits /THem 10 Retire oy the Same Route, Should It Become ! Necessary. for Them to Do So—Germans are Declared to Have Assured the Greek Government That the Country Will Have Support of Central Powers—Austro-Germans . Claim Repeated Successes in Serbia—Russians Are Mak- | '‘ing Effort to Secure Control of the Railway West of Riga —No Notable Changes On' Other Battlefields London, Nov. 15, 10.00 p. m.—The in- timation of the Greek government that any entente allled troops seeking refuge in Greel territory will be dis- armed has been the cause of consider- able anxiety to the entente powers and consequently Field ™Marshal Earl Kitchener's Near East visit gains add- ed_importance. According to belated despatches re- zlcved from Athens, Greece bases her ision on international law, while in a few days of the time limit he Put on his life. In a recent letter Barnet said he baa been promoted to be a range find- e average life of a range finder is thirty~days,” his letter said. *“I have been on the job seventeen days. You will know soon whether or not 1 outlast the average.” CHICAGO HAS NO “ARMY London, Nov. 15, 7:39°/D. average daily loses in the Dardanelles; | for the el\tdnuflod from May to Oc- tober were-796. puass. %3314 Austrian_Airships Shelled Brescia. Rome," via s, Nov. 15 11340 p. m—It Iy officially announced that t Aus nrqn-n— mbarded. Bres- cia at eight o'clock this morning; kill ing seven persons and wounding ten. No material damage was done. Kitchener on Lsland of Lemnos. _ .. Milan, via London, Nov. 16, 4.04 a. m.—The Courriere Della Sera reports, that ,Earl Kitchener, the British war Secretary, has arrived at Mudros, on the Island of Lemnos, in the A j sea. MELLEN ACCEPTS BLAME OF ACQUIRING TROLLEY LINES. Adyised Supplying the Public With All Classes of Transportation. New York, Nov. 15.—Charles S. Mel- len, former president of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad, fook upon himselt today the responsi bility for the New Haven's pojjcy of acquiring - trolley lines in New ng-| land, which the government In the trial of the eleven former directors of the road charges was a part of the New Haven's alleged plan to monop- olize commerce. Mr. Mellen testified that in 1904 he urged upon the board the necessity of either adopting 2 comprehensive plan of acquisition of trolley properties or else dropping the lines it had already acquired. “I told my directors time and again,” he said, “that the road ought to supply the public with its needs, and that meant trolleys, steamship and railroad lines. It was my policy and I always put it forward that the public should be supplied with all classes of transpcrtation it demanded.” The question came up, said the wit- ness, with the proposed acquisition of the Fair Haven and Westville line, to which there was some opposition on the board. He told the board, he said, that not only this line but others should be acquired, “in order to fur- nish trolley terminals in all towns and give the people of New England the facilities they wanted. DMDANELLE. ATTAGK NDT A cIViLIAN PLAN EXPERTS ~COUNSELLED Says All-of the Expeditions Were Ap. _proved Before They Were Under: “taken—No Truth That He Ilssusd _Orders Against Advice of Experts. London, Nov. 15, 5 p. m—Winston Spencer. Churchill, who has Leen the most severely. criticized member of the government, and who has been held per- sonally responsible for the loss of Rear Admiral Sir Christopher Cradock’s fleet in the Pacific, the destruction by sub- marines of the British cruisers Cressy, Hogue and. Aboukir, the Antwerp ex- peaition and the Iatiure of the naval e Dardanelles, delivered a his defense in the house of today, following the resig- n of his post in the cabinet. won't_have it said,” was nis dra- matic assertion, referring to the Dar- danelles attack, “that this was a civil- ian plan. fostered. by a_political ama- teur -upon 1eluctant officers and ex- s pei And this summed his reply to all his critics, “Jn_every case he showed that experts had counselled and concurred before any of the expeditions which had been condemned were undertaken, and it was clear, before he had gons far, that the house of commons sympa- thized with him. Cheered by Supporters. For months Mr. Churchill has lived under reproaches, His entrance to the house today was passed almost un- noticed. As he rose his supporters him encouraging cheers. Appro- baton increased in volume as he an- swered one question after _another, and be concluded amidst a Lurricane of applasige, while members of all po- G. BURKITT, - ASSISTAN Pm! MASTER AT WINNETKA, ILCL. ORDER IS UNQUW Criticism of President's ~Engagement to be Married Not Considéred Suf: ficient Ground for His Bemoval— President Acted Promptly in Gase. Nov. o0 the ‘relmatate- ‘Washington, Wilson _today president’s engagement to be married. It was said at the White House that the man would be rest to oflc.. regardless of various charges against him. Order Had Taken Dismissal of Burkitt was cently by Assistant Postmaster Gefs erai Roper on the recommendation of Postmaster Kloepfer at Winnetka and the order actually had taken éffect although all the legal formalitfes not been completed and ohly todny the papers in the case. turn- ed over to an inspector fof further in- vestigation. Not Sufficient Ground. Mr. Roper said tonight that the White House order had not reached him, Barlier the department had i sued a statement saying that the re- marks made by Burkitt about the president's cngagement constituted only an incident which would not have been sufficient ground for his removal, but this was one in-a series of ad- mitted offenses which had been ac- cumulating for several months against the reocrd of this emplove. President Acted Instantly. The president acted as soon as- the lered re- ..-aum h- i ;;&;w@.,* Zeaie: A_heavy snow and rainstorm swept over the British m.-.':nnu "several shipwrecks. and Nm-n lld:--’.‘i Bwlnl:.u, 'O%O:r. ] : & Mrs. Bryan, has gone to his home at/| Miami, Fla.,.to mn for the winter. Robert Burns Eiiteen, weil- Snaws painter and grandson of Robert Burns, mpmumwmlnnmlyn Salvation army workers E hate been exempted from enlistment on the ground that they are ministers of religion. New Zealand’s government is con- sidering ucormbhm preséntéd by the e men of military age to San Francisco. ° ‘Robert P. Skinner, American Consul General at London will sall for Eng- land om Nov. 27 after a visit to hi ome at Ml.l‘fltlll. Ohie. . D5niel Regan, “aged 70, of Paterson, N. J, and grandson Lec "Smith, aged s iware KINST Whew vicmek by an Erie express train at Paterson. Charles W. J. ll-k-. oldest son of Baron -Wallscourt, dismissed from the Brivish army,. He: was '8 lieutenant in the Welsh Fusiliers. The Great Lakes freighter Charles A. Duck, until recently the City .of Berlin, was lost with all hands ae- cording to a report received at Duluth. Gen. Carranza will renew his appli- cation to the United States for the ngton, against the sinklnx “of the Ttalfan Tiaer Ancona by a eubmarine was handed to Secretary ing today ambassador, ot Marchi d Ce denouncement cabled from Romé .- Shelling the . wireless a duty to denounce solemnly to all na- and humanity will ca: Dmneodasa“fiufluloas“seof&uhshm Against Private Property of Innocent Persons”’ Declares Vessel Could Not Have Been Suspected of Carrying Arms or Contraband or Persons in the Service of Any of WITHOUT WARNING, WITHOUT EVEN BLANK SHOT That Passengers Swimming Toward the Submarine Were Driven Off With Jeers— Denouncement Has Been tions. Pruented!oAflNenh'.l‘ Na- Washi; by the Italian The protest was in the'form of tus, the appara decks and’ lifeboats, and killing and wounding many passengers. Presented to All Nentrals. The denouncement has been pre- sented to all neutrals. In it it is atated that many ngers swimming in the 1t concludes’ as. follows Contrary to Ci: “The royal govérntent regards it as the circumstances contained Their sentiments - of Jjustice them, withou* instance of such unparalleled atrocity as in the case of the sinking of the Ancona. The unarmed liner, en route to New York, was stearning westward between the coasts of Sardinia and Tunis, carrying passengers and cargo destined for America. No Arms Nor Contraband. “It was out of the question that the vessel couid have been ed of carrying arms or contraband or per- sons in the service of any of the belligerents. In fact, none of the cir- cumstances alleged in other cases in an attempt to justify actions described by their authors as a necessity of war, or as a reprisal, were present in the case of the Ancona. Violated Rules of Humanity. “There are) principles that no state ought to disrezard and no_private in- dividual could violate with impunity. Respect for the lives of persons in no way participants-in a war is among these fundamental rules of humanity and international law. This rule im- poses upon belligerents the strict obli- gation to do all in their power in every circumstance to protect the lives of § doubt, to judge as it Arats e con- duct of an enemy which is obviously tradition of Victoriano Huerta on the the enlente ministers contended that charge o fmurdering President Madero. the right accorded the troops to enter litical crossed the house to congratulate him. case was brought to his attention. such passengers. first it was ‘announ it Burkit NEW TREATY BETWEEN Without Any Warning. OF UNEMPLOYED” THIS YEAR. i no other contrary to the dictates of civilization| the cow _through Saloniki permits ¥ e e UNITED STATES AND HAITI| Notl Apologetic' About Speech, | reinstatement was ordered - A Naples ahd the fecognized principles. of inter- ‘Without any warning whatsoever, them toj retire by the same route, | There is Work for Everybody—First| - There wasf nothing apdlogetic about | foaises omeiar mated that T ordes | King By o Sl i ) without even a blank shot, without should become necessary :for them Blast of Winter True Test. Discussed by French Ambassador and | the speech of the former first lord of | was unqualified. . 1sed Pope Benedict that after It is pot ‘stated .in the denounce-|ODserving any of the formalities ac- to do ‘ministers are demand- Secretary Lansing. the admiralty, who some menths ago Bulgaria will become a Catholic | ment whether the submarine which mmv-.nylns the right of search, ing- Greece unequivocally define| Chicago, Nov. 15.—There is no “army was_ transferred to the chancellorship 5 TS PR TR TR counitry. A sank the Ancona was an Austrian or | Submarine encountered by the Amcona the at she would observe should | of “the unempioyed” in Chicago this| Washindton, Nov. 15—Ambassador |of the duchy of Lancasier. the offics| TRIBULATIONS OF CHICAGO'S S — a German craft. It was presumed by |in the aforementioned circumstances ::lc!l.a event ultimately present it- ;oar. according to the Daily News to- | Jusserand of France conferred with |heshas just resigned. Hi SUNDAY LAW DEFIER.| The submarine fiotilla which left|officlals of the state department that|Commenced firing on the ui Secretary Lansing today regarding the [to Admiral Lord Fisher, Honlulu on Oct. 29~ arrived at San | Claims- of Hospitality. ¥ the claims of hospitality ‘whiel entente alliés declare they have ‘on Greece in view of Y.he then Premier Ventaelos' invitation to fo vd « foccs to Saloniki to to fulfil ~ob] m ‘and that it was, blained only e il habe pewecs Contribute 4000 pounds S0 ) yearly for the personal use of the , which the followers of s insist he aid when he ng ne wofld be reminded that his re- of ‘the throne of Greece de- the continuance of friendly towards the entente powers. ans Reassure Greece. on the other hand, are | to be assuring _the Greek jent that Greece will be pros iost b cutents wlios noutd try support the central pow- "that a8’ Svidence of the abili- Russians’ Continue Offensive. tinue their -of- and are making to ‘secure control of the feomnocts Mitau with Din- | er south they have at- Germans near Sm IN FRENCH TRENCHES Killsd Within s Few Days of Limit ~ He Put on His Life. alif., Nov, li.—-N of ews aant. Jonn W Eas b o!eheUnlveuny ofc.l. lay. The first blast of winter, which sent the mercury down to 23 degrees last night, was the test. For years this has been the signal for an army of vagrants to appear upon the estreets or seeking employment, and SLAEN D maud thy cheap laiging and . ups.. iese places . were erowded last night, but today there were few of the lodgers about, and it was thought that they were working. “Ti Is difterent from last year,” said Willlam B. Taylor, manager of the Rufus Dawes hotel, a cheap shelter. “There is work for everybody, it seems. The men who drift in here are marking time between Jjobs, They don't stay. Last year we had them all winter. The state.has 1,500 )obs ,open, and the railroads want en.” CONVICTION FOR VIOLATION OF THE GAME LAWS. East Haddam lnd “Colchester Men Sold to. a New York Hotel Agent. East Haddam, Conn., Nov. ward Delamore of New York cit; to he an agent of a hotel there, was fined $50 and costs by Justice M. H. Watrous today for violation of the game laws. Delamore was arrested on Saturday with 36 partridge, 21 qualil and 6 woodcock in his game bag. He Wwas about to_board the steamer for William Clark of this town, charged with selling game to Delainors, pleaded guilty —and was given a like fine. George M. Cafe of Colchester, ar- rested Saturday night, was tried be- fore Justice John R. Backus in Col- chester and was fined $40 and costs for selling game to Delamore. these prosecutions were brougnt about by deputy game wardens. ARRAIGNED FOR DEFRAUDING AT FORT ADAMS, NEWPORT. Two Sergeants in Quartermaster’s De- 15.—Ed- Providence, R. 1, Nov. 15.—William B, Hamer and Arthur R. McKee, ser- geants in the quartermaster'’s depart- Frant at_ Fory Adams, Newport, were her today = before United States Commissioner Matteson on a charge of conspiring to defraud the overnment in the weighing of coal olivorea at he forr, Tach pleaded not guilty and was held in $2,000 bail for a heacing Nov. 23. This makes new treaty negotiations between the United States and Haiti, -under which an American for ten years. The ambassador of the Banauo Nationaie, which repre- the investment of & large ch capital. -1t is: ur t Tance has been given by the state department that all proper con- cessions and invested interests of for- elgners in Haiti will be recognizea and Dprotected. The new treaty has been ratified by - | the Haitien pariiament and will be submitted to the United States senate next month. In the meantime the provisions cf the convention for financial and pelice control in the little country by Amer- ican officers will be put into. t temporarily and the marine force occupation probably will be kept om the island until peace and-erder under the new plan is assured. TROLLEY CAR HURLS JITNEY TO ONE SIDE Three Persons in the Bus Were In- jured at Devon. Bridgeport, Conn, Nov. 15.—Three persons were injuréd today in a col- lision at Devon between a large jit- ney bus and a trolley car. The injured were in the bus. The most seriously hurt was the driver, Joseph H. Har- vard, who is suffering from concus- sion of the brain and’a broken arm and nose. The others are Napoleon Harvard, his father, who has a broken rib and cuts and bruises, and Ora All [cuts and bruises and a = dislocated live at Devon The trolley car hurled the bus against a trolley pole, smashing in ohe side of it. The injured were taken to their homes. LA W TAX ON GROSS EARNINGS OF PUBLIC SERVICE CORPORATIONS May Be Tested in Courts on Cl; Unconstitutionality. Hartford, Conri., Nov. 15—The state- ment was made at the capitol today that the constitutionality of the law m of nrstullm‘d"o, he said, had openly opposed the Dardanelies under- !&h head of evateon: he that -Ad- Frederick Sturdg that the dispositions were eould be made in the circum stances. There was no truth in the charge that h ordered, against ‘advice of the experts, the Hogu Cressy and Aboukir to remain at lel‘ whiere ‘they. wer¢ sunk by German sul protectorate would be | tak gstablished over the lsiand republic | cond ernment; ,whuo the naval attack on was elaborately con- sidered and had the tull BUPPOFt of the advisors at home and those on the | spot. ‘Was Advised of Danger. tary, as to the dangerous situation develop- ing then and the grave consequences the fortress. “no action was Dardanelles Endofsed by Council of War. ‘As to the Dardanelles, before a naval war council, Arrested on New Charge of Selling Liguor Without .a qup-.. Chicago, Nov. 15—Captain ‘Wellington Streeter, who atetsteg, unsuceessfull homa sa Do Xaad Tocs of Lake Michiyay a police raid, swung like in and out 9f police custo Streeter, his Wife and fourteen oth taken in the Sunday raid on Sf ville, where, according to the polige, Streeter was enjoying a. lively busi- ness -in the sale of intoxicants, Ap- peared in court in the morning and demanded jury trials. The cases were assigned to another court and Streeter and his followers liberated until a date Wwas set for a hearing. Before he left the courtroom Street- er was again arrested, charged with having sold liquor without a Heense on Nov. 10 and 12. He was rel ter on this charge and his hearing set for tomorrow, It was learned from Washington to- day that no patent has ever been is- sued by the land office for the land Streeter occupies and that a ruling was once made by the land office that the tract belonged to the state of 1lli- nois. EVASION OF TAX ON GRAPES AT SAN FRANCISCO Charged by J. J. Scott, Collector of Internal Revenue. San Francisco, Nov. 15.—J. J. Scott, collector of internal revenue, said to- part, and only a u‘ quantity shipped heg e government tax woul pmflunt o lhout $360,000 on 30,000 tons of grapes when made into wine, he said. Mr. Scott said he could not determine the amount of tax tha tended and where nobody spoke & word | Cni t, and’ Y ' by ‘the French ministry of { ‘«Overrulpd by Experts. passed at the last session of the gen- | S eral assembly for the taxation of the gross earnings of public service cor- | ¢t porations_might be fivo arrests in conmection with the |0 nt's investigation in the al- leged ll‘rn‘uhflthz in the purchase of supplies for the fort. NEW WORLD’S RECORD ¥ FOR RED POLL CATTLE. More Than 700 Pounds of Butterfat in One Season. Duluth, Mich., Nov, 15.—Jean Duluth ear, of a local farm, has established a new world's record for Red Poll cat- tle in the 1915 club contest by scoring’ more than 700 pounds of butterfat in Pear, mother of Jean Du- luth Pear, formerly held the world's record for'the breed with scares of 803 610. The record of Jean Duluth tions feel aggrieved and their griev- ance may be more fully aired in court when the claim will be made that the law is unconstitutional. MAYOR MITCHEL OPERATED UPON “FOR APPENDICITIS Hospital Authorities Say His Condi- tion Is Satisfactory. | was made under the eupervision | thro of the University of Minnesota. No leeding was permitted during OBITUARY., George W. Crawford, Newark, 0., Nov. 15.—George Crawford, dealer in imported dun hmu and known all over the country as a breeder of rons, died at his country place near here today. dicitis early this morning. symp- The toms increased in severity and after a consuitation of physicians removed to a nn-plm ‘where the oper- ation was performed at once. Will of Mrs. Mll’-M Armour. He (B mhemlakllln‘hul'—h!uruwm" lual-n Pianist Sues for Divorce. Nev.,, Nov. 15—Tina Ierner l!ichur the Russlan pianist, filed suit " | tor divoree in the district eourt today Louis J. against Bachner, - charging cruelty, failure to provide 'and deser- tion,, at New York ‘were married at wed | city March 31, 1909. The defendant is in Berlin. ed Ne i the country is MM to, .:mm“ orivilege, NON-TRANSFERRABLE nmmfim MILEAGE BOOK been informea. The war tax of al:lu cents a. is payable when the wine is delive to ‘the consumer by the last di it. HARTFORD MAN BUFFETED BY THREE AUTOMOBILES, Twice Knocked Down and “Straddlied” By a THrd Machine. Hartford, Conn., Nov. 15.—Thomas R. Commerford, a stone mason, was the tral figure in a series of un- MFMKWW’WW : eh-&mmmr-.fm CATTLEMAN SUFFERING PROM FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE.| hmw&"mm H D-nlnMV.r‘I. Nov 15. Francisco. The submarines were tow- €d on the voyage by a crulser and a vy 8. ’1:.. new .ewm- are T AR of the m’? N 3. National B-nx dléd in Patérson from heart failure, contracted by while playing golf. Bosto as secand only to New York in the volume of exports during Oectober, the total reaching $15,000,000. Raw York exportéd about $175,000.- 000 worth of goods. The British ed to allow. [ United States of sclentific, technical, philosophical or educational character. The battl ips Texas, New York, Louisinan, Arkansas, Minesota and South Carolina arrivéd at Norfolk, Va., to coal preparatory to manoevres and speed runs along the coast. William _Southworth, _Paris - repre- sentative of a manufacturer of electric belts, was convicted of illegally prac- tising: medicine and sentenced to a year in prison and fined $200. over-exertion jovernment has decid- A formal order was issued by the fice Departm cept parcel many, Austria and Hungary. Because his name in - Chinese was spelled Go-da-! Fred Kattmerer, in hudn-u in Hong Kong and Shang- hai, China, had his name changed to Fred ‘Barton in court in New York. Officials mvu!lglfing the fire which the plant of the John A. Roebling Sons’ ‘Co. at Trenton, N. J.. discovered that the fire alarm boxes had been tampered with before the Papers in the dlvnm case institut- ed at Pittsburgh by Harry K. nw inst Evelyn Thaw were. served Thaw by Deputy Sheriff Bradiey et |98 o train leaving Pittsburg for St. uls. Six ‘Christian Scientists of Berlin, attended the famous actress Butze von Arnauld during here tal fll- ness, were found guilty of ide. ::qm-enmmnxmmun son. | Speaking before the students of the ‘orcester, (Mass.) Pol hnic Insti- Ti6eGen” Loonard Wosa. uree ly of the 750 ed to sail for the United the Italian government had not defi- nitely cleared up, that point. The Text of Communication. The_text -of the ‘communication fol- w0 :":ae govarnicnt ‘of © the! United s is_doubtiess aware of the par- by the press in con. _Hallan shipping ‘on Ruthless U. of Brutish Force. “More than ‘brice the destruction of Itdllan merehantmen had taken place Which permitted ition than that there was behind the procedure a ruthless purpose to use brutish force against private property of Innocent persons. Non-combétant veisels and_ crews have already been victims of these Toetkoan DUl Bevar haa here Déen on liner, ruthlessly shelling not only the - wireless apparatus, sides -and - decks of the ship while she was at a stop, but even the Nifeboats in which the terrorized passengers. were . Tefuge. Many of the passengers were kmed outright or wounded. Some who approached the submarine in the n' of rescue were driven Off with jeers. A= a result of this inhuman procedure more thahi 200 men, ‘Women and chil- dren lost their lives. Dencuncement of Act. . “The royal government regards it a duty to denounce solemnly to all na- tions the circumstances ' described above. Their sentiments of justice and humanity will cause them, without doubt, to judge as it deserves the con- duct of an enemy which is obviously contrary to"the dictates of civilization and the recognized principles of inter- national law.” SYSTEM OF.HEALTH INSURANCE FOR WORKERS Bill for That Purpose Being Perfected by Labor Legislative Association. New York, Nov. 15.—The American Association for Lahbor Legislation to- day made public the text of a bill de- signed to establish a system of health 'insurance for workers in this and other states. The association purposes to introduce the measure in the next New York legislature and in_ other. state legislatures - during the next few T The & of th sed e general purpose of the propo: th ingt tate would contribute one-foyrth to this |ed in labor and to GREATEST MOVEMENT OF GRAIN WORLD HAS EVER WITNESSED Now in Progress on Great Lakes Be- fére Close of Navigation. Philadelphia, Nov. 15—What is Probably the greatest movement of grain the world has ever witnessed is now in progress, impetus being given to the movement by the impending close of navigation on the great lakes. In Philadelphia, not only are all th elevators filled to their utmost capa city, but there are more than a tho sand cars of grain on the railroad tracks awaiting their turn to unioad. In addition to the regular trans-At- lantic liners, known commercially as whole cargo carriers, twenty steam- ers are due at this port to load grain. In all the westward bound fleet head- for Philadelphia has a carrying capacity of more than five miilion Ths bm applies to -ll‘ltlho-a cunm bushels. Ocean freight rates continue to ad- vance daily. Rumors are current that the Italian government wiil soon call many of her vessels home for war pur- This would intensify the lack poses. benefit |of tonnage, with a corresponding in- Siso offers special care for fhia wife of an insured man. UNPRECEDENTED PROSPERITY FOR NEW YORK HOTELS Many of Them Unable to' Accommodate s Number_of Guests. New York,- Nov. 15.—New York ho- | of the national from ‘the small- eastern dtlu-ndn-riymmn FURTHER CHANGES IN . ~PURE FOOD LAWS creasc in rates. MILITARY TOURNAMENT IN MADISON SQUARE GARDEN To Demonstrate the Progress of the “"" National Guard. York, Nov. 15.—A militasg tournament under the auspices of the Military Athletic league, intended to show the necessity of preparation for war and to demonstrate the progress guard, opened in Mad- ison Square Garden tonight and wm continue through the week. of the Fifin Uhited ‘Seates caoilry: appeared in- cavalry maneuvers and detachment New astthe. Plattsburg camp will display their proficiency at drill, the fleld ar- llllery will be shown in action, wire. less stations ‘Wood and Governor aflwmmn will review the troops Fri- nigh DENVFR JUVENILE JIJLGE FINED $500 FOR CONTEMPT. to Disclose Information in Murder Trial of Mrs. Bertha Wright. Denver, Col., Norv 1 —Ben B. Lind- ey, judge of De: Juvenile, court, was held guilty ot ‘contempt of court Sohn A Pfi:::ol T Samtriot st n the district co today. an case grew out -( The|Lindsey's retusni 1o discioss khh‘:‘rn o s on a e murder. ‘informa- Judge Lindsey claimed the tion came to him in a privileged man. Wrisht 15 years .f&"f:m..& years An information charging the aanigidary were allowed for

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