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LVIL—NO. 306 : - i NORWICH, CONN., Wmssm DECEMBER 15, 1915 2 TEN PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norm;:;\is Double That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population iz 7 GREECE Now FM‘ *"| Cabled_Paragraphs | Chipaeg Gets the [Annual Report Gondensed Telearams | STORMADOS TOFREIGHT CONGESTION g & Cape Cod e AR e R b c ' s : A § ' i o T Eiad had reaches B ; Rt March 1L Adjenament | Wb epu . uonvention| oec y grlcu ture Teleoraphers o the Tewss woa| At Uanbury One of the Worst Blockades i : taken atter an imposing demonstration Pacific railroad are to receive a min- ury ades in the H in lil!b“ts ?&hfldunil;nie::m:nzl:.: S v imum wage of $70 per month. - Fihe Vistorious: army st the front | IT IS TO BE HELD JUNE 7, ONE|VALUE OF FARM CROPS AND Activity in cotton spinning througn- of That Section Hesuhed 3 out e coun ‘was greater } British Steamer Orteric Sunk. WEEK BEFORE DEMOCRATIC ANIMAL PRODUCTS $9,873,000,000 |75 7o COan in any month for London, Dec. 14 11:47 a. m.—The some time. report that the British steamship i . INCREASE OF $83,000,000 | ./t et ™Ey e trench ana | 9,000 PHONES OUT OF COMMISSION IN STATE i = i X Orteric_has beena sunk ew:eginflrl;n:d CHICAGO Despite the Efforts of the Hellenic King and Govern- |igiey, v Liovds " he imermbers et 31 VOTED British to" conauer German' East A% fiffi)(gfi 'gi two Sn;nese, ‘who :Qflt‘ rica. - H o 196 e ware monnfet. Besn Di I Inerease in Agricultural Ex- % Country Aloof There Had Division on Date | Tota It was announced at Sofia that the 52 - ment to Keep Their Ty AFTIaNIT (MADE BY JOHANNES | gy Decision Was Reached Without | ports During the First Year of the |Sobranje will meet December 25. TThe Conditions Were Worst at Bridgeport, Where 1,500 Instru- HEMRYKUS VoI KOQLBBROBN| (1 L 5 attipe’, Todkt N | - Wikl Wis BNSAOORineredss. | SO0 Bamin " ments Were Knocked Out—The Electric System of the NEXT BATTLE WILL BE FOUGHT ON GREEK SOIL Regarding 0 Allead, Ordinisd Cor | Cogntamnee’at Candidaton Meat Animals is Wanted.. J(llow republicans on the Ways ana RS Ra W s oz _— tives Hill, Conn.; Longworth, Ohio, e as Abandoned, the Few Trains Providence, R. L, Dec. _15.—The and Fairchild, New York. Providence Journal prints this morn-| Washington, Dec. 14.—Chicago was| Washington, Deec. 14.—Secretary (e ing the text of an afidavit made by |selected by the republican national | Houston's annual report, made public| Former President Taft was among L% 3 . 3 ting | today, places an estimate of $0.873,- g travel b iti i i British and French Forces, in Their Retirement, Are Now Ap- Johgnnes Henryicus Von TKooiberen e e i aetioeay] 00000 on the value of American farm TR v ditions Throughout the State Are Still Demoralized—In e g A n_San Francisco on August 27. Convention to be held June 7, one|crops and animal produs or ford railroad Monday night. . = Where Reinforcements Are Being |afdavit goes into much circumstan- ic convention | Year, a_valuation without precedent. Some Sections Main High: Are proaching Saloniki, tial evidence with regard to an alleged | 1o, YOS the Semottatic COMVERTIY | Tie, “however, - probably Will be| Thres persons were burned to death the e Almost Impass- i i 7, Philadelphia 2. destroyed a three-story house at 55 RN . . ing up munitions plants, on which in-| % - $83,000,000 Over 1913. East Grand Avenue, Chicago. Crossed the Greek Frontier in Pursuit—It is Rgported dictments have been returned by a Had Been Divided*About Date. b""‘" ,{‘K},‘“m e S e e Report From Two Feet to Forty Inck of S ol . i i about 3,000,000 over the value of That the Italians Have Landed an Army on the Albanian | fiineren, ¢ & Cromite st o sio? [nad been divided upon the date, a|fory', FRel N Miheet ever recora. | Boothbay Harbor, Me. to assist an e garet Cornell. ry Coast to Go to the Assistance of the Serbians and Mon- | The afidavit asserts that Franz | i qacicmes "Bty mvenis divided, S D 100, M cOto, Drfen 138 joeutd auchion: ihalde af Seguin Island] : et e - erecs] &t iBen e ots ter Gom. Ons “reri]|. Cable communication across the At- . New Haven, Conn., Dec. 14—Condi- | Traffic_communication hs far as the tenegrins—Italians Are Still Hammering Away at the |activities of Koolbergen and directed | roik,S3ll and, some said a record vote |value of the 1913 cotton crop, estl- [lantic was badly hampered by ‘the|tions in New Haven and vicinity are|New Haven railroad is concerned wds - organized German conspiracy on the eclipsed by the present year's show- . . . Landed — Rome Reports That the Bulgarians Have | 2, G i the ohjeat of plow. | c320 31, San Franeclsco 13, St.” Louis i ¥ P S0 N s SUUNR T Mg which able, " Owing to the Deep Drifts—Some Inland Towns federal grand jury in San Francisco| Earlier in the day the committee is an increase of much-discussed problem with senti- | .5 ™ qq i enge Gecurred in the face | unidentified three-mated schoomer at Bopp, German consul-general at San |mpe decision was reached without a the attempt to hire him and blow up | MiEht have brought a different result. | ;i iy O $896,000,000, was $264,000,000 | failure of the cable companies land |slowly returning to normal tonisht, |demoralized (hroughout the dae Sad. : s = o » 1914 crop, although the | Wires between New York and Nova |after vesterday's severe snowstorm. |few trains reache dthe eity Thooe that Austrian Positions Around Gorizia- e e o | e e Oy e e etion | i 2t Souri e Somt posmie | Bootn e e e T e B o2 wee e e e v ; e and on the city lines fair- |and telegraph com: ex The aMdavit also declares that Bopp |dafe argued that now was the time|in quantity. Since the system of inspection of Iy Eood time was made. Suburban | considerable diffculty repating . the zz; il;e n;‘cel '!‘5"?&5?;&92’"“3;&5"?‘?2 h;;- the re;;:!;xl‘l:zml papr;lyn_tat;lt:l‘:mtl!;: Tremendous Flood of Exports. British prisoners’ camps was insti- |lines, however, are still working under |damage. No shipment of freight or 2 . £, offensive aj its i s I s: the London, Dec. 14, 10.20 p. m—The and Albania, where the Montenegrins | inprocsion that the work had been | animem rany o the oacal enemies| Of the tremendous flood of exports | tuted the staff of the United_States | difficulties. Sxpress matter was made during big battie will, in all probability, | and Serbians are keeping up a stub- 4 which began near the end of the fiscal | embassy at Berlin has paid 155 visits | g¢raighteni i . {day. The trolley service in the city £ Hellenic king and government | reported that the Italians have lan Dademdic i, s many hundreds of millions represen _ an h £ onigh > 05 anve thels countrs from the hoFrors | an army on the Albanian cosst o go |Gmcials working in conjunction with|and principles. Tt was argued that |fany hundred Paucity of war news from Europe|¥Orkir~ night and day in an endeavor | road announced tonight that ite traing N the party should not consider a de- [ 1] 1 >y Ay o to straighten out railroad trafic_on |will be runni ? war, to the assistance of the Serbians and il . : % p ‘Between, August 1, 1914, and Feb- |is expiained as due to the storm, = o0t running on schedule time to- ®The British and French forces have | Montenegrins. of the debtraction of mimerennt -tons | fgnsive campaign. ‘bt “should blaze | ryary 1, 15, the report says, vex- | which has interrupted communication et yious lines in the state. The|morrow. Trolley service will probably made good their retirement down the Fighting on the Gallipol el Py et iogs solkionts b v gl . ports were $1.157,000,000 and imports jalong the land routes of the ‘cable|WOrst ¢ l‘:gzelsm\m\,:‘: ;ll;rh; lwge;z the | be demoraiizea for several days. Vardar valley and are now approaching | mpere has been more fighting on the| The affidavit also _declares that | “Technical objection to an early date|3771.000,000. giving a favorable bal- | companies. service was all but prostrated. owing | TRAFFIC CONDITIONS AT Salonikl, where reinforcements are be- | qajlipoli penansula. The Turks here | George Wilhelm von Brincken, Bopp's [was raised by representatives of West | #0ce Of $383,000.000. Of the total value s . 4 i to the many breais in the feed wires ing landed, while reports received in [ G2l assistant in the San Franci b bt of exports, $662,000,000 represented| The annual championship tourna- |t 3 e : A : m to have repulsed an attack nt in the San Francisco con-|Virginia and South Dakota, where |of - 0,000 i " |five miles of cable was shipped to- Paris and Rome say that the Bulgari- | C0 ' (i s "Wing at Seddul Bahr, | sulate, worked out all the detalls of | pemiss taelon onvomtios deloenim T g AR ON 00, o i oo, ntefooliegtate” SOIe W0 sigiit: from: Bostén t5.Btanilimd. to. ro- ans have crossed the Greek frontler |yl ®on, 1ol *oicial accounts say |the Dlot and that he and Bopp went |hre held June 8 but the matiec was el commodities, chiefly man- | sheistion next autumn will be beld on | Jir the breaks. Sixty-four miles of | The Few Trains That Are’ Rumning in pursuit. The reports of such action | ,,iping new has occurred at Kut-el- |[over maps of the Canadian Pacific | adjusted satisfactor e . e s mont club near | ipnal wire was repaired between Are Drawn by Locomatives. by the Bulgarians come somewhat as | 10 'RE OEW RAS, RERENED BT L IoC e | railway with Koolbersen in the con. | o Vs X e senutuar el the | ETESIUESS: pringfield and New Haven during the a surprise, as it had been thought against the British who retired from |sulate and directed the latter where to | Fight for Convention Was One-Sided. | fiscal year ended June 30, 1915, prac- Do 14, " STAMFORD DEMORALIZED strict of the town of | 4ay. The fleight situation is causing [ Stamford, Com that such a move by them would pro- ion. This is taken in |blow up the tunnels where they would | The fight for the convention proved |tically the first year of the war, were| The business worry, i bet 1 v - octs 7Pke the Creeks and that consequently | mlitiery ciroles horo 25 an admission |Iniertere most with the. {ransporia- | to bt mere One-sided than frionda. of | SLAT0007000, Whch s an ‘increase-of | Necedan "Wia, ‘was Gesirovea by fire Morry: Gl lines being congeed |is slowls recoiering rom ' the ‘eteck if the entente allies at tion of munitior f war. the citlies whi had belleved it IPRINN o > O - - ifficult e de n: i v zed. No the task would be alloted to the Aus- | 9% the Part, of the ‘urks that whewr | fon 2 Boouit staces also that Kool- | weuld be. Tha fast thay veneved It1of the preceding vear and of $433,000. | houses were destroyed. The loss is TR e o Pt Pt o | e are el e e trians and Germans. Tigrie river had failed. bergen was instructed to steal the|crats meet in St. Louls Jtme 14 and|000, or nearly 42 per cent. over theestimated at $260,000. walk sud_ Stamford At the. Sl |afternoon st 538 Goer e pra Greece’s Situation Complicated. The previous reports of the losses|dynamite for these plans from cer- |that many thousands who will attend |&Vverage of the five years 1910-1914 offices of the New Haven road tonight | the New York, New Haven and Hart- - 4 . - Regular sales of Anglo-French 5 ; the Turks inflicted on the British |taln construction camps on the Pan-|have made reservations at the hotels| |ncrease in Meat Animals Wanted it was said that every effort was beins | ford railroad are running irregularly. Greece's situation diplomatically has | (5o FHEES JiEied O down the|adian Pacific, the location of which |there for several days ahead. undoubt- 2 | Eox_ceut._bonds wers, made -on the, iR S0 conditi he the C house been complicated by the reauest of | HUS 1ae, TELeR, reted, 0WR the |5 0" outlined to him by Bopp and | ediy had ite Infuence aeamat Sr fanss | What Is needed more, perhaps, than | New: York Stock Exchange Tuesday |Tade (o restore normal conditions as | he power at the Cos Cob power Germany To know whether ine Athens | FLYCT, 85 deciared 16 Brvets nforer | Kok e after. the-commites liad decided on |RNVELINS sl the secrelacy savs is an)at 95, 7-8 estavlishing & new low |700% 08 Srcunsinces Remld permic|bas not beem tumed on beceussi cabinet does not look upon the use of ample, -the three| “My name is Johannes Henrykus|June 7 as the date. = . - e Greek territory by the entente allles as | SSaESSraist:, Yo7, Xmple, (e IRESS | van Koolbersen. the department has extended its ac- 5000 Telephones Out of Commission. |ITiC POWer would be unsafe at pres 5 : t s : e ent, for the signal wires are still down. a breach of her neutrality, and this s “My occupation is civil engineer. 1| T90k No Cognizance of Candidates. |tivities as far as its funds-would per- | Miroslav Siobinsky, a Ruthenian, Th 1 offices of. the Southe Inquiry s consiaered to foreshadow | 1o, have been a tusboac and ~twa, i SEMGENCD S eneneer. | “rhe committee offlaly | took o Mt Elimination of common iivestac | who in 1008 aseacsnaied Count Aneld | L1 eneral TIePhons Company ih | drawes . T i are Funnisg German partioipation in the pursuit.| PASeS 3 A stk ifornia. goenizance of candidates, although the Jlseases, from which losses are sald | Potockl, governor of _the _Austrian | ni' iy 'reperted that 5,000 telophones F Gepac vy Aiguetion Mt 0 lians Hammering at Austrians. .Some months ago, in 1915, I do not | lobby of the hotel where the meetings | 0 be enommous, would result in a ma- | province of Galicia, will be permitted | ar.“ Dt out of commission in. the i the Germans have many troops in that| The Italians are still hammering | remember the exact date, probably |were held was well filled with repubi. | terial increase of the meat supply. |to remain in the United States. state. Conditions were the worst in | RELIEVING TRAFFIC part of the Balkans, their main forces | away at the Austrian positions around | five months ago, say about April, I met | cans, who have been mentioned as Losses from Animal Disea: Rumford, Me., | Drid8eport, where 1500 instruments CONGESTION AT HARTFORD Four families at were knocked out. New Haven was having been diverted to Rustchuk,| Gorizia. The town of Gorizia itself |a man named Wilhelm Von Brincken | presidential possibilities and their “It has been conservatively esti- | were: foreed. Lo move teim e Vowias when the Russian threat of an inva- | has again been bombarded. Austrian |in the Heidelberg cafe in San Fran- | supporters. r x fext with 600. About 5,000 Men Needed to Clear the sion of Eul&t&h s?‘emEfd liktdhv 0t‘e!“!‘; g?’”fiz&?ofi”&efix%“{fin{"fl% 255“‘3 o;:algrf x}rlu address was num-| To Wage Fight on Plain Principles. :,‘:.‘éf"km"‘fm?i?"'y‘efi:“?{.':? m? al:s :‘:o;% ofi“r:u'::&egl:;“: n'r'eu:‘hm 400 Poles Broken Off. Streets of Snow. oope fof the. preseat only have to | ecHibe the Italian artillery fire as more | Francioeo and by apon ment, 2 San [ The republican fght, the gossip went | nual direct losses from anima diseases | nrors oyt o a o (Y, & fite wh About 400 poles were broken off T ERRY forcthy Eulgacions St the Austrisns | ferrifio mnd oontiruous Hit any They [hie e g D that T Intended ;‘;?,:g;p,:";!‘ [ ‘X‘m:flff,: Photn fi;f’{:};’:“‘s{‘:fiufl:&o'fi:s“}”‘.“:‘{ Dr. H Vi Tt i A completely in different parts of the eri‘y,“ni“"fiiad.‘i‘;’}“ B ki today - are still belns occupied in Montenegro ! have previously experienced. a5 AaiTI to Canada g0 that I|iierce and industry and . defense of | cannot be estimuted at all, The Giect | miomst e o e, the American |state and many others knocked out!towara 'relleving traffic . congeciien did not think I would have occasion of alignment. Between New Haven American lives. One of the points of | loss ascribed to each disease is as|the Belgian relief committee in New caused by the stcrm of yesterday, but to do that until I came back. I spent ~ and Derby sixty poles are down; forty ormal ATTORNEY MARSHALL TO BOSTON GIVES INCREASED about- five weeks going up to Canada [21ack Wil be that the =democratic "".5,‘;‘;;- cholera, $75.000,000; Texas fe- | forky 10000, for the benefit of in- |between New Haven and Bridgeport L TS e e “trotiey INTERVIEW SAMUEL GOMPERS MAJORITY FOR LICENSE. 314 when T came back I was Informed | an adequate plan of preparedness un- | ver and cattle ticks, $40,000.000; tuber- | st o = - @ndjand twenty on the “meadows” north|jines open in the city and four on the —r see lived that Vo Brinchon maq ere & |til evente across the Atlantic forced |culosis, $25.000,000; contagious abor- o e e suburban routes. Trains from New About the Activities of Labor’s Peace | Candidates of Good Government Asso- |jved, that Von Brincken had called |ihem' to change their position. tion, $20000,000; blackles, $6.000000; | Herr Schroeder editor of the Am- |by" the New Favon oer darca gd | York are six hours late and those from Council. Sintion! Win Council Bets. One of the last things done by the |anthrax, '$1.500,000: scables of sheep |sterdam Teloeraat, i el - Eoston are three hours behind. No ol 0% Tnowing onap 10,5 him. | committee was thé selection of a com- |and catile, $4,600,000; glanders $5,000. | ot Cum | TSICETaAL, was acquitted at Cathanm Colohertor ang’ Oranchester: | trains came through from Poughkeep- New rork, Dec, U The federall c2osiqn: Dec. 14—Candidates of the| went to see him-at the Picadilly apart- | [aittee on arrangements which will se- |000; other livestock diseases, $22.000.- | canclusion of his trial on the charge | nisht all’ the exehunces wans Seachod | Si€: - Mails arc-fifteen hours late. Tel- grand jury which has been inquiring | Good Government association won all| ments about the beginning of Aprl, | 150t 2 temporary chalrman of the con- |000; parasites, 35,000,000; Doultry | of having made mpeopar utctermmrsy |iSht all the exchanses were reached |agraph companics are still greatly in- into the activities of Labor's Peace | of the four city council seats voted for | He * * * told me that he was an |Vention and name some of its impor- |diseases, $8,750,000. in his newspaper. Hockville a5d Orange . o O o i Council, Franz Von Rintelen and David | in today'’s election. License advocates | officer in the Germany army ang at | i2ft temporary committees. This com- | oy Fruit Industry Threatened. et o 1 I L > : % J ivi i hed by way of Albany, while New Lamar in relation to strikes at muni- | were again in a considerable majority.| present working in the secret service | Pittee Will meet either in New York 8 Investigation of the Congressional | Storm Divided Into Three Sections. |iacched by tions plants will not reconvene, it was | Opposition to taking land from the | of the German empire and worked hev | O, Chicago in a few days. tateg, The Tepont HaeeY O e i | Union to find if it is employing lob-| The storin was divided into three |haven IS in communication through learned today, until Sampel Gompers, | Common to widen busy thoroughfares | under Mr. Franz Bopp, the imperial |, T e, CommMittee gave an hour during | states the report asserts, is serlously | byists in the cause of woman suffrage | complete sections, the telephone com- R ase e president of the American Federation | prevailed. German consul. He then told me that | he afternoon to proponents and op- | threatened, by, c ke ohhishly | was proposed in a resolution intro- |pany says. In the eastern part of the men are necded to clesr 3 fectious bacterial disease. While the : = the streets of snow. -Automobile fire of Labor, and other labor leaders have | The vote was unusually large, espe- | he was informed that I woe in Ponents of woman suffrage. Applause | in! duced Tuesday by Representative | state there was a heavy rain and some been interviewed by United States Dis_| cially in the absence of the mayoralty | and that my nationality had becy ja® [and laughter greeted all the speakers. Fovae Missiocions ant - Alabeenters In | Byrnes of South Carolina. snow in the central section, sleet, ice | {PPRTA{NS tas been replaced temporar- gt Attorney . Snowden Marshell | as an issoe. Mayor. James M. Curley | quired into ‘by. detectlves on behalf of | D Anos Howard Shaw asked that the [Texas, Misslasippd and Alabama have and snow and in the northwestern |!¥ bY horses. Mr. Gompers Ly not Leen served with | has two years still to serve, but In his| the English authorities in Canada and | oPuvicant Platform carry & plank|been eliminated, complete eradication| When the State Department has|part, dry smow, which practically did 4 subpoesz and the federal suthorl | campalgn address in support of four| sald “therefore I know, you cotld do|Promising a federal suffrage amend-|of the disease {rom Loulsiana and|pjied all diplomatic and consular va~ |ho damage to the service The “beit:| AFTERMATH OF. STORM ties say that until they obtain a| candidates opposed to the £0od E0V- | something fer ws i et e o T A e s, BpOKes- | O e e e e® ovill |cancies in Megico the treasury de- |of trouble near Stamford was about AROUND NEW YORK CITY statement from him they cannot name | ornment ticket he said that his ad-| T answered that I was willing to do ™27 f°F the anl-suffragists. require large expenditures for at least | partment will be called upon to send |50 miles wide and spread to Seymour pch ot v the manufacturing plants where [ ministration was on trial. €0 if it was for an innocent purpose. Tours. approximately $50,000 annually to that |and Wallinsford. Hartford was Skip- i 8 strikes aro belleved to have been| The result of the vote on license| I’ woula have no objection, but he|ADDITIONAL FREIGHT EMBARGO|.The Pofash situation the report|ciiniry for salarics in addition to that | ped and the next some of trouble wha | o™l Ritules of Kinimaag Weckina it financed by Von Rintelen. had been considered more doubtful|should first name his price and he DEactizally Ho potash avatiabla forfer: |Row being pald. in Rockville, Manchester and Stafford. o nn e o s The government knew little of Von | than in the past, several clements| aaid that it would be womth ons thon U St L e e B g e N e R A large force of men fs mow en-| . o ov . L TTET L L Rintelen’s activities, it was said at the | having joined in’'a no-license move- | eand dollars ($1,000). I told him that ina | ity Fo e e il "ot he| Tuesday was peace day at the|gaged in repairing the trouble, but it e I P federal building today, untll he and| ment. ~The majority proved sreater|I was too well known in Canada, that | Announced By Officials Representing |supply for that purpose will not be|goythern Commercial Congrecial Con- | will be some time before normal condi. | in out of New York o SinayT Andrew D. Meloy were held by the| than last years, the vote being yes| he could hardly use my pamers har the Trunk e Association. e e gress at Charleston, S. C. James |tions are obtained. The wire chiefs |'OnIght to release them from the grip British - authorities at Falmouth on| 45,835, no 31,881, that if it were worth one thousand Recommendations for Legislation. |Scott of the Carnegie Foundation, and |and assistants worked from 9 o'clock | 9f the first storm of the season. Fallen their way to Germany. Von Rintelen| | .. £oiore No-Licenss Colu dollars ($1,000) to see a friend that I| New York, Dec. 14.—Additional em-| Recommendations _for legislation [Arthur D. Call, secretary of the|last night until tonight without in- | Wires e l Cb“ Sy m““ was taken to the Tower of London a| V! eenmn: | Would have no objection to gom yselt | bargoes on eastern rallroads were an- |made by Secretary Houston to con- | American Peace Society, headed the | termission. In Danbiiry, where it was |Armies of linemen had been at w prisoner, while Meloy was sent back | The change of Lynn from license to | ang act for him. nounced at the close of a meeting this [gress include - the following: list of speakers. impossible to hire sleighs, the linemen | for hours and it was hoped something to_the United States. ot a8 the Jnost noteworthy | “'So he said: “Well, you had_better | afternoon of a special committee of |~ Legislation designed to Dromote bet- rode out into the country on horse- |llke regular schedules could be re- To save himself from punishment for | feature of the elections in Massachu- | come over some day 10 the German | freight traffic officials representing the | ter handline and storage of farm pro- | At one time Tuesday the Western |back. el e g = B AT i o et | o anaction, e i navile | consulate and I will introduce you 0| Trunk Line association. Action was | ducts and tradink on the basis of Hxed | Union Felmmepn maoalpihe, Western | back ira Girle at Switchboards. D T A e naane ot Baward A Gates, |most of the cities, there was no shangy | 416 German consul” "I went to the| declared necessary to avoid blockades |grades and standards, including a per- | ually without 8 wire leading. v | Onerrrm, irs ot e e s L upnder the name of Edward A. Gates, Sxoept in Lynn [TeTe Was no change | German consulate and met Franz Bopp, | impending on scme roads becayse of | missive warehouse act, a cotton stand- New York eity up’ the Hudson River | volume of business i Nesw Haven, o | Gentinl ool 1t Bad oogutad for Meloy is sald to have told the federal P Mo the imperial German consul, and upon | continued congestion which will be in-|ards act, a grain grades act, and pro- [and all the signal wires of the New | i bis mro OAILE R Al the switoh=[all-or fy tralie’: Ladk or tulasah authorities all he knew about Von Ten Cities Elected Mayors. different questions being asked me by | creascd by the interference of the | vision for a market news service. York Central railroad used in operat- | bonrds, . 1 ial bt o Bons) By ol sl Sy ih%o 1o Rintelen. _According to Meloy, it is Mr. Bopp, the German consul, I be- | Storm with freight traffic. A land-mortgage banking act in-|ing its trains were down. I e A ooe ‘duiky. | Setactn s 1o ro o incite stril ou . Kane, | gion of ndling farm finance and lace 3 ol - " Faore coula be accomplished in the in- | Who was filling the unexpired term | g oft "the German consul and was | 43,000 cars mow_on the e ey o | Favas Socurities npon the merkat in | ;A hearing on the Massachusstts- [calls were also increased greatly. RS SFoevall, Bty oeials IS terests of Germany by obtaining op- |of the late Mayor Michael J. Scanlon, | admitted into one of the other offices| at terminals will require elevator or|a responsible way, Northeastern Street Railway Com-| The telegraph companies are still |powerful plows had forced paths output of munitions | Was defeated for a full term by John S o e pany’s petition for the right to in- |in difficulties, owing to the great num- |through the drifts which buried the tions on_the _output of e e T T on the fifth floor of the Royal Insur- | literage service for final delivery eith- | Assistance to communicate near the |PARY'S petition for the A B e e e e i xoflmf‘g;?;‘; ‘:2::‘%‘:’11301; 1oht o Tt B Do MI'-';:‘;}; ance bullding on Sansome street, cor- | er for export or to points in New York national forests in roadbuilding ana D D T B e s s ot o e ity snaldenr. SNl Gaice- ks oheratud il g 2 n 3 g rough a 3 ; Ty T e o oY | O e D, 7. Gotiesr Inaasmiqeln | and asied me'if T would do something | last wesk over the previous week. |for these purposes (o be chargea |Mossachusetts and New Hampehire. |A number e o e | s Sathae - N arrest E . 3. Coalley, independent : : . 2 trac) Were arrested at Falmouth. e e for him in Canada. He said: “You are| The Pennsylvanja railroad has apaieciis stitan future share ol rn [ et o s | oy aiine Thoe ahaoe T oo G | Emmemtes sl i Wow. Yk 2 % *he man; you can make good money.” | plas mbargo on all carloads and x CHINESE CABINET s W0 were SUSoosstul for xe- | Von Brincken then asked me 10 come | less than carlond frelght, | iacluding | Authority to grant waterpower per- |ed at London, has cominandeered ail — s crack JEaNetn | G CONGRATULATES PRESIDENT [ clection were ames F. Malone in Chel- | ¢ His foom in the’ Ficadilly apart” | traftic switched from connecting lines, | mits Within {he national forests for Groek shippini in Britich and Amer- [BRIDGEPORT IS SLOWLY e Dt T T e ~ 5 , » | ments the next day. I went i e g s Pn His Forthcoming Accession to the [ Charles Ig-s:‘}:m;,e::‘b u”.fy’;’,?r‘é"gfi’.‘:.’; Von Brincken told me that fhey wen %’ifi:’é’&u‘é‘n‘.&“fisfi&&‘f:fi"’.‘fé‘ vr:lall:?;:- More effective control over the pro- | deflicency in food and coal which ex- i e g et et Thon O. Childs ‘n Newton; Z. B CU in | Dlox Sy ome "y Tipe "Dy t0,C2nada to| ton railroad ‘and West Jersey and Sea- | duction of hog-cholera serum. A plan |lsts in reece as a result of Gthe en-|g i ii That Damage Will Total|CONCENTRATION OAMP FOR blow up one of the railroad bridges involving the establishment by the |teute restrictions. Peking, China, Dec. 14—The Chinese | omerville, Harold P. Johnsan in Wo- | on the Canadlan Pacific rallvoad, of sue | T Tomrs o e 0 N | foderal Eovernment of a station for Close to $100,000. GERMANS AND AUSTRIANS cabinet went to the palace in a body | cester. XREEL Eht In WOT-| of the tunnels, or anything at'all, he | Newark, except dressed meats and |testing all serum intended for shi Replying to a question in the house Monday to congratulate President | Wit Attieh a §aid. I asked him what was in it and | other perishable freight, flour or other |Mment in interstate commerce, is out- |of commons yesterday, Harold J.| Bridgeport, Conn., Dec. 14—Bridge- [y yon from Ships by British and Yuan Shi-Kai on his forthcoming ac- | ) pitieboro and Lowell accept- | he said he would tall it over with the | foodstoe lined. Tennant, pariiamentary under-secre- [port and vicinity sre slowly recover- | T44® o e session 'to the throne. The president | gof %f “in pae This oS aremen one | German consul, Bopp, but he wanted | - The Mew York Central railroad has | tary for war, said that it was calcu- |ing from the effects of yesterday's rgach Crulgsra—iit. Surbedes: said condolences would be more in or- [ prdv i) in' all eities of the state. | t0 know what I approximately wanted put an embargo on all flour and grain | FLIMSY CLAIM OF WEAKNESS lated that Turkey had 650,000 men in |storm, which was one of the most se-| . o Paaa A crntion der, as he had assumed the gravest |’ es of the state. for It. I answered by saying that I| products for export and also lumber| jN AMERICAN NOTE TO AUSTRIA |the fleld and that this force, under|vere that has struck this section for i e s mf Avatrins Tt responsibilities for himself and his did not know what such a thing was|and hay consigned for lighterage de- 2 7aghis certain circumstances might be in-|many years. It is estimated that the |cam| e tamily. WORCESTER_REELECTS Wworth and that te had better make|liveries; the Erle railroad on ship- ! Virtually That the Latter Government | Creased to a million. damage-will total close. to $100,000-1n | S shive by Beitish and N mb‘d&‘mdent discouraged any idea REPUBLICAN MAYOR. Bomeb proposition to me. I don't re-|ments of flour for export, requiring | Was Not Familiar With American '4‘15?1‘23"..?—&25.“ restored to prac- | West Indian waters has been estab- ot entertainments or celebrat- member now the exact amount of re- | “lighterage free” delivertes: the Baltl- Edward B. Trafton, found guilty |, o ror oo o e Tate this atc |lished at Barbados, according to pas- Ing in other ways the reestablishment | 1y cie v, License by a Majority | TAUneration that he did offer at that|more and Oblo railroad on lumber| Attitude. several days ago of holding up and Telepho ) i1 be | Sengers who arrived today on the the monarchy. He urged his min- y. Voted se by a Majority | time, but I said I would think it over ow o d|erncon. Telephone service will not - to redouble their efforts to bet- of 2739, and sbout a week and a half after 5:2“‘&‘;%5?“'&;"62‘;‘.’;’.;"’.}.’”..,’ | Vienna, Dec. 13, via London, Dec. 14, | [obPin& geveral stage coaches of tour- |in its usual condition for three or four [Steamship Acre from ~West Indlan o ports. - When they left Barbados the ter_conditions in China. that T,7Tote a letter to Wallace C.| New Jersey on all traffic destined for | 930 a. m.—The 'American note 101914 wag sentenced In the United | 42YS officlals of th . iclephone | o esenge: amp 4 - S say tonight. Trai rs said, the held 120 The Japanese charge d'affaires, M.| Worcester, Mass, Dec. 14—Mayor | Orchard, who is one of the assistants | New York for delivery to coastwise fi‘-;lt;;-‘g"!;fmn""_‘;g;;‘:g!A‘:‘_l"go;‘.flfi_ States district court at_ Cheyenne, < has been interrupted. The | prisorers, mainiy German and Aus- DI visited the foreign office to-| George M. Wright, republican, was | Of the general freight manager of the | steams Wy ears in the Fede: - i T cshi ves taken - oy T denied that he had discussed | reslected for his fourth term todsy and | Canadian Pacific railway in Vancouver, O g ot e S e ML i Ot icat L ovasrne s s T Rrat train, ooty Beskahire diniaion | o v et same e in - . C., s o ’ o] ic the pending ng orm the city voted for license by a majori- ana '8 substantially the | FORMAL HEARING = s‘efi:";l oF ftd m“""hum - Trains from the west are from twodican countries, together with sailors t. The attitude of Japen |ty of 2789. The next cit; ern same facts as hereinbefore stated. 1 ; Tow the subject of gTeatest speo- | will consist of eight mp\{hgg.n u"éi‘.‘f received a telegram from Mr. Orchard ON_LUMBER INDUSTRY| This concerns the standpoint taken | The announcement by the Southern|and one-half to four hours late and |f0und on ships that cruisers have stop- ulation at Peking. men and three democrats and in the | IR reply of the following tenor: “Come that the Austro-Hungarian govern- | Pacific Company today that it hfi%oo& those from the east about one hour P"-Ammmg s s common council there will be 21 re- | immediately to Vancouver; your trav- | Manufacturers Ask Government Aid| ment should be familiar with the :m- :;M to o!:" “’,,:“"fl".f,' g{ oy taligflml‘:g:{ No freight trains are W A b'gmmwo-n‘ - the publicans and nine democrate, gling expenses will be paid” I wired| in Solving Competition Problems. | tude of the American government re- |Shares SR LMD Buean L DSOS AMdot. boxti e Mm. back that I didn't b h ing the freedom of the seas be.|Company stoci f e The fire alarm service, which was N swep! e AW 1O PEC. 918 e e I S e il kakad nizs 1o arr fos]. Washtngton .. D 16, rlonn | e e Wilson hafl exoialoed |Company was taken here to 'mean |put mut of comimission. o apain work by the allles of all male representa= Favored by House Ways and Means | Readron, jomocrat, 9,302, " 2.pass to Vancouver, which he did. I|lumber manufacturers had a. final that the Stars and Stripes and the|ing satisfactorily. From towns back [tiVes of enemy nations. Women and 2 N ikt received a telegram from the Canadian | hearing Mg in the federal trade| implying that .Austria, as Germany's |Pacific Mail flag will remain on the [in the country come reports of from |chlldren are not to be taken, but all o o Committee by Strict Party Vote. Morvssins ot Bhaaabisn hdc‘tlc railway office to the following gm;;imfi‘.“fiiumm of the Tum-. uly,‘:lnémla ibe acquainted, with the Pacific Ocean. S0 taa ‘to” focty. fuchios of‘sndw..on g g e o indus B hearings hel - s lal lown ant lesired by e A Washington, Dec. 14—The house| _Gibraltar, Dec. 9—Sailed, steamer | * That a first class passage to Van- | s ey’ Jabteorings Reld In va | principles la The Stats department probably will of neutral countries. hE - ways and means committee, by a strict | Taormina (from Naples), New York. | couver was waiting at there om, of ills affecting their trade. Today th Againet this stand of Washington ¢t the explanation made by Bar- | WATERBURY IS STILL IN The camp where they are to be held tonight reported favorably | | New York, Dec. 1io-Salled. steasaer | Sor fmies us GoE at thelr of o s | st S i e St on Erich Zwiedinek, Charge of the GRIP OF STORM NINGIs Creranis, quatay snt AN ler Kitchin's resolution | Nieuw Amsterdam, Falmouth and Rot- | Southern Pacific Railway company at |ernment aild in sols transporta- Austria-Hungarian embassy here, re- o B a5 they to the emergency tax law to | terdam. Arrived, steamer Montevideo, | the Pal: hotel building. i competitich ems. are not compelled to work. December 81, 1916, The resolution will | Barcelona, T the meantiine | nad accepted Von | Tosonn ur pent of Puriand, Ore- fro-Hungarian consul-general in New [No Shipment of Freight or Express be reported tomorrow and voted on| Falmouth, Dec. 18.—Arrived, steamer | Brincken's proposition to go to Cane |Zon, asked for help in determining Yorwk suggesting that neutral pass- Matter Yesterday. Meriden—The Daughters of the KI rhursday. Mr. Kitchin said tonight | Finland, New York. ada and he offered me five hundred [how far manufacturers might go in diplomatic ports be bought to assist reservists in of St. Andrew’s church are g - to not expect more than four dem- | Genoa, Dec. 10.—Arrived, Call ymbin! jo to reach Austria-Hung-| Waterbury, Conn., Dec. 14—This city | send a Christmas box to Ne 1 Ca (4 : bria, Sombining to meet forelgn competi country te . t0nstinuad an Paca Theaal 1s still in the grip of the storm king.| lina. BEACE - Pt e