Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 22, 1916, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

- Because of Heavy Casualties of the Russian Attack Against the Austro-Hungarians Gabled Paragraphs Sunk an Austrian Hydro-Aeroplane. London, Jen. 3% 1120 p. mK deat patc] hasige. * Telograp pany from Rome says a British &/bmarine hias sunk in the upper Adrl. ic an Austrian hydro-aeroplane and S0 an Austrian torpedo boat which went to the rescue, taking the crews of both craft prisoner. Austrian Statement About Sinking of the Persia. Washington, Jan. 21. — Austria’s S | statement that no submarine was con- cerned in the sinking 4n the sinking of the liner Persia “probably means that there will be no diplomacy bet- tween the Teutonic powers and the United States over that tragedy, in which at least two American lives were lost. TURKS LOSE SULTANABAD, PERSIA, TO RUSSIANS | action srouckT acainst MERIDEN CUTLERY COMPANY Wyor g Cutlery Co. of Wilkesbarre SmfllEnmmhianfil;Aflinfl’y and Mining Opera-| Ciaims Meriden Concern Caused tions in France and Belgium, and Infantry Attacks in the | tract. ; Austro-Italian Theatre Are Reported—No Details Have |ins “that 5 has Ziost “masinacs soa Their Manager to Bread His Con- Pol_mcafliefugm A POWERFUL KNOWN AS “GROUP B." ORGANIZATION MOHR TO’W WIR HUSBAND HIDING L T. T. LINCOLN A Self-Confessed German Spy, Who Escaped From a United States Dep- uty Marshal Last Saturday in New Two of the Servants Declared That on Christmas Morning, Mohr Declined Offer of Renconcili- New York, Jan, 21—Federal secret service agents received information to- y which convinced them that Igna- tius T. T. Lincoln, self-confessed Ger- man spy and former member of the British house of commons, was aided Providence, R. unsuccessful effort was made by the pmecutlnnxlcgi:y in the trial of Mfr; Plizabeth Mohr and two negroes for the murder of her husband, Dr. C.|pommd Nicholas Jan. 21.—Another of Monteneg: Franklin Mohr, to have the allesed | beurivy 2o tasremmioe hia oy in his ed on a Train Because of a Washout. w Tehgrms Flm D »MLLWMMM; Cal, is again in_eruption. Impmfmnhmmmedwdw- many after a Visit to Serbla. General James Buchanan Pearsall alea at Glen Cove, Lo L, ho was 90 years old. Many villages in towne about Na- mur, um, have perished in the floods there. Benjamin Gilbert, said to have been the oldest resident of Portland, Conne is dead, aged 97 years. A British lubmarim went ashore 1913, Mres. [the coast of Holland. Her crew taken off by a destroyer. Contributions ta the $500,000 fund mobiles in [llinois Towns—Chicago Firemen Kfim : e P T B - /Pumping Out Flooded Basements—A Gigantic Ice- {;?5%3”3,:?“3 :,“_‘,‘,,:.:.;;'t l{‘,},_.';:’,,?;’_‘ - Poured Down the Kansas River, Damaging an more coming in. iy : % — T ,pleted Bridge in Kansas City—<Fifty Passengers \ profits through interference of the Yet Come of Renewal of Conflict in Montenegro—A |Meriden Cutlery company with its contractual relations between one S. - . B. Austi d itself, the W i Rome Despatch Says Albanian Troops Have Arrived at | Cytiery company of Wilkesbarse, Pac. Scutari to Join the Montenegrin Forces. has brought action against the Meri- den Cutlery company for $50,000 and an injunction restraining it from further interfering with the carrying cut of Austin’s contract. Papers in " the case were served at Meriden to- The cessation by reason of heavy |inue to press the Montenegrins toward | 555 “*“1y,¢“Guit is returnable. to. the casualties of the Russian attacks | the Albanian frontler and lry o ¢80 | Muren term of the superior court. against the Austro-Hungarians near | Antivari A Home despateh says that| The Wilkesbarre company _allege the Bessarabian frontier, the capture | Albanian troops. under Essad Pasha,|that on November 29, 1912 1t entered by the Russians from the Turks of | provisional president of Albania, have |into a contract with Austin as gen- the town of Sultanabad, Persia, and |arrived at Scutari to join the Montene- | €ral manager of its plant for five the taki from the Germans by the | grin troops who are retiring on that | Years, and that from July 1, 1915 until Bflm‘:? additional towns in the | Albanian city. The entente powers|the date of the writ “the defendant, Kameron district of Africa are the|acting on the request of the United | With intent to injure the plaintiff, at- principal features of the fighting as |States government will release _the | tempted to induce and did induce the contained in the latest official commu- | consulgr representative of the Teu- [sald Austin to leave the employ of nications. tonic powers and their allies arrested | the plaintiff and break the contract. There also have been small engage- |recently at Saloniki. ments in Russia, around Pinsk and in| To hasten the manufacture of mu- the region of Czartorysk, artillery and | nitions the British government will PRESIDENT AND WIFE operations along the front in|place semi-skilled, unskilled and wom- ON TWO DAY CRUISE. Bipuice sgh Beivis 4t & soathyna- |on laborers with éifiied labarers i n . e tion of the artillery duels and factordies under the control of the|Final Plans Have Been Approved For &nd there Infantry aftacks, In the Aus. | government. tro-Italian theater. In none of these,| Premier Asquith has announced that however, have any great Tesults been | the trades unions which had pre- #attained. viously objected to this plan, were Although it has been reported that|now supporters of it. the Austrian-Hungarians and Monte- | In order to prevent the central pow- negrins are again at grips no details |ers from importing wheat from have yet come through as to the pro- mania, an Anglo-French corpo gress of the fighting. It is presumed, | has been formed to buy all the however, that the Austrians will con- |able grain in that country. Speaking Tour on Defense. Washington, aJn. 21.—Final plans for President Wilson's forthcoming trip threugh the middle west to speak on national preparedness, approved to- night, includes stops at Pittsburgh, i Cleveland, Milwaukee, Chicago Des Moines, Topeka and Kansas fity. Tonight the president and ¥Irs. Wil HARTFORD MAN TELLS FIRST FORMAL DINNER FOR son left on the naval yacht Mayflow- er for a two day cruise down the Po- tomac river and Chesapeake bay, the _ . OF CONDITIONS IN BELGIUM.{ DIPLOMATS AT WHITE HOUSE.|President having decided to seek se- *| clusion for the preparation of an ad- Praises the Splendid - Work of the | Representative of Entente Allies and |0ress he will deliver January 27 in Roflk’fflltr Foundation. 28 Nentral Nnfion- Present. p. m—Rob- | - Washington, Jl.n. 21.—Diplomate rep- New Yorl before a banquet of _the Railroad Business association and to outline tentatively the speeches he ~ | will make in_the middle He wili and 28 |t Sk stay In D Rl ar the Whits A S X o] Smith of nu“'uom. Conn., mT the’ entente. allies fl’l reports that n!flt ed 'mal dinners arranged by the president Touse tonignt fou. (he fizst of twe for. | Ll Tirelcss while away and plans to return Monday m orn! ‘the = e ufl :h work of feeding the |and Mret Wilson in Honor of members | qear wit o “{;:;fiflgfi';‘: g e clviilan wouuunn proceeding of the diplomatic corps. The second | night, January 28 ana will return on e e of food | dinner, to be ®iven next Tussday night, % several rovinces, which is due to|will be attended by the ambassador of Jack of llflvpln‘ tacilities and internal | Germany, the charge = daffaires of | po i l® Ve House. transports, Austria-Hungary and Turkey, the “Frederick C. Walcott, European rep- | minister. of Bulgaria and the same resentative of the Rockefeller Tounda- | newtral diplomats present tonight. throgh which his train will pass. The tion,” sald Mr. Smith, “has completed| With the departments in their court 7y on bealf of the foundation an investi- | uniforms, the State dining Toom of the | Pt wan e ot adminis. ot s e week of the Belgian relief | White House presented a brilliant | 1ot oty "Seil " thke up. other. subs sion directed by scene. n ac ition to the diplomats . The foundation is interested |and thelr wives, the guests included | spyear cuoiif, e Buropean and in the work as one of the chief con-|the secretary of state and Mrs. Lan- tributors - The president sent to the war and to the commission, having |sing, the courisellor for the state de- 2 given it o million dollars’ Worth of | partment and Mrs, Polk, the assistant | Favy ocbartments today for informa- food at its inception and $200,000 late- | secretary of state and Mrs. Osborne, |ne used in the praparation of his 19 for the supply of clothing for desti- | Senators Stone of Missourl and. Suth: . T e har acin tute Belgians. grland of = Utah and Representatives| anied him on the Mayflower and he “Mr. Walcott expressed himself as|Flood of Virginia and Cooper of Wis- | bani=d him on the Mavdower and 1 not only satisfied but enthusiastic over ! consin, ranking majority and minority | "5 8 the splendid work of the organization {leaders of the senate and house for. and the results it has achieved. He|eign relations committees, with thelr | THWARTED PLOT TO sald it was correct to say there is no | wives, and several personal friends of serlous want in Belgium, yet such a|Mr. and Mrs. Wilson. BLOW UP BROOKLYN BRIDGE statement must.be Seupic) With the] 3. T Jusserand, the French ambas- i reservation that this ‘fact was due to|sador, dean of the Washington aipl the work of the commission, and that|matic corps, and Mme. Jusserand o sven 2 momentary suspension of its|cupied the seats of honor mext to the Y NewsXarkiRetioe Aotivities would lead to fterrible dis- | president and Mrs, Wilson. The other iregs aad misery within tairty days. | guests were arraned srouna 'the ta- r, Walcott reports com- |bles in accordance with their rank. plssion deserves continued support 15 | Arsenting, Groece and Colombia ‘wers T R e ® | bomb, they believed they had thwart- oulties in maintaining its_service | heads of the missions heing away from 3t fecding 000,000 people. e sald |the cify. Partlcular interest stached SRAIEID Dlow-ap e et ¢, unlike other relief organizations, e dinner because it was the first Delligerent lines, | affair of its kind given in Washington | syt o foonasted jof an agate can since the outbreak of the European st a muititude of | represented by charges d'affaires, war, o to 14 n : "t oo bt: Towical NEW WAGE SCALE FOR srganization for feeding the other dis- BITUMINOUS COAL FIELDS “Whitney, | Probably Will Be Adopted at Conven- iressed populations of Europe. Am-fl ey Caspar representing the commission in Bel- tion In Ind tis. o, M. raicott Jett hero.this weok e o or Poland, where he and Mr. Whitne Indianapolis, lnd., Jan. 21.—It was ?ou:{ learned tonight from usually well in- ‘When these are completed the | formed leaders in the United Mine Sarty will go to Serble with the sams | Workers of America, which is now in urpose. These investigations are un- |convention since Tuesday, that those the, approval of all the govern-|in control of the organization expect ments concerned.” tha convention to Dt a scale for Mr. Smith concluded by saying that | the bituminous coal flelds which will inless there is an immediate improve- | call for at lellt ten cents a ton in- will make invufinum of the aveds. ment in ‘the shipping situation there | crease in w: extreme] sly serious shortage| There is &ho 2 likelihood, according to some of the leaders, that a two- a two year con t,. so that both BY SOCIETY OIVIL ENGINEERS | a€zeoments if made for that term, will expire at the same Thelr Action Sustained by Deision of 3 .mc“‘;’. THREATENED FISH FAMINE ‘ AVERTED IN BOSTON New York, Jan. 21_—hpplication by b oz hiuds s, Nora A. Blatch S daugh- | When Five Schooners Came in Yester- ‘of Mrs. Harriet Stanton Bllll:h. for day With Thflr Fares. ln?ol: fl.:t.n. ll;—A threatened Xl):n- was averted to ‘when five schooners came in !lvmfltg banks country, should been supplied for the Friday gfl- R T 1y - were high A the advance av B any weather on the banks were responsible for the fallure of the supply. o Tetired, died here today, aged 7. Ho entered the army as a private in 181 ::: - Mifl“i‘bnvra“rz After '-.uamtm-xmzhlrcyyuuotur- year ls:'::ment will he;emmud. The anthracite miners ars ko, WOMAN DENIED MEMBERSHIP i gl e February 4th in time for the judicial In adition to the formal addresses, the president is expected to speak briefly at several citles and _towns Mexican situation. When Arrest Was Made of Bomb Man New York, Jan. 21.—The police an: last night of Michaele Grasiano, while carrying a suit case containing a bridge or the new municipal building. about four inches in diameter and four deep into which an agate cover had been tightly driven, with a fuse con- necting with the explosive. Members of the “Bomb squad” had been watching Grasiano for three months, having learned, they say, that an attempt was to be made to blow up a “big building” They also ar- rested Leonardo di Vizeo, in connec- tion with the case. FAULTY CONSTRUCTION NOT CAUSE OF EASTLAND DISASTER 1s Claim Mldc by Counlol for Six Men the government in federal court here this afternoon rested its case against the six men indicted in connection with the steamer Bastland disaster in Chi- cago last July, the defense immediate- 1y sought to establish its contention that the accident was caused by the vessel settling on river bed or striking submerged piles, and was not due to faulty construction. ‘The preliminary attempt was unsuc- cessful, however, the court ruling out W. Pear], a Chicago civil engineer, and the defense finally withdrew the wit- ness after trying to set forth that made a ble print of the depths in the vicinity of the Eastland’s dock. DREADNOUGHT OKLAHOMA 1S UNDERGOING REPAIRS. Boiler Tubes Were Weakened by Heat Durin' Trial Test. Boston, Jan. 21—The new _super- dreadnought Oklohoma was undergo- None Can Afford to Be Without It According to a conservative estimate the direct annual States outlay for advertising amounts to something like 700 million This means that those who are spending that money are rendering a service to themselves and at the same time aiding the purchasing public and it must be recognized that inasmuch as such large expenditures are made there are responses which make it advisable that they should be continued for advertising is an in- tegral part of selling. The businessman knows that he cannot deny himself the use of printer’s ink and keep in touch With the people who want to buy and the consumers have learned that if they are to preserve their ability to spend their money wisely they must keep in touch with the ad- vertisements. The paper which therefore renders the greatest service is the one that thoroughly covers its fleld and goes into the home. and this part of Connecticut that medium is The Bulletin and none— reader or advertiser—can afford to be without it. In the past week the following matter has appeared United dollars a year. In this city Telegraph Local General Total Saturday, Wednesday, Jan. Thursday, - N2 MO .. 020 439, 1105 _il- % The fint‘ volunteers undn;elardl Der- \ , oo g i s "“‘m opneting for duey. | Chicago, Jan. 21.—Northern Tiinols jer bridges. Explosives were tonight faced flood conditions such as|Preak ice at several places. The twenty-sixth annual reunion of tha e Swenty-sixth annual reunion of|have not been experienced for a de- | FLOOD WARNINGS SENT OU T be held at Birmingham, Ala. May 16 |cade. Small streams were swollen FROM LITTLE ROCK, 18. into torrents today and larger rivers oxdeodilbobn bl e s e aE overflowed their banks and inundated | Extra Gangs of Men Have Been Called: Gameghd Sres p“b'“‘;"c"“"hml":'u"\m“ thousands of acres, marcomed hun- on to Repair the Levees. at Harrisburg, Pa., at a total loss of | dreds of homes, threatened pollution A3 $0,000. o€ watar zupplies na 314 dtsaepe eetlc :z!:,‘".'{:.du“";"hfi{‘mz";‘ e = mated at many hundreds thousan ay over virtually all of ATk Charles G. was _elected caused e O e, it | f dollars. Joliet and nearby towns Stesd Qooq. waralngn) Gh D Syndicate for life at the conference in |suffered from 'the overflow of _the | SO this city today to residents of th New York. Desplaines river and its tributaries | n0100 WNEY Yeglon, “he Tiver la : which inundated the village of Rock- [ cnd THETT RO, 1 Goor m reports indicate that the|dale tc a depth of six feet and inu- | Soaaon 580 McClelland. . where the capture of seven United | dated the lower section of Joliet. Tovess. - States cavalrymen near Doyle's Wells,| In the valles of the Fox tiver from N. - is untrue Elgin to Ottawa, the floods damage - was createst, where whole sections of | /U NOREDS OF FAMILIES | Twenty-four convicts, serving terms | the city were flooded. DRIVEN FROM HO from one year to life imprisonment, Sildgis "Thoabbenid Sy escaped from the State convict farm ges - By Flood Sweeping Through the 1l at Cummins, Ark. Farther north the Rock river and jts ol Fox RIGE Wb — confluents, the Pecatonica and Sugar ‘Rivis, Valleys. The Texas Co. has leased for five | tivers. threatened the destruction of years the Sewall Shipyards at Bath, | interurban and steam railroad brids- | o, Otaw®; Tl Jan. 21 —Hundreds Me. and will builr immediately five|cs. Beats and rafts took the place |y /=8 Bave DEST Crives from f coastwise steamers. of wagons and sutomobiles in many | go0CS, TENY PUSEES FAVE e towny and cities. closed as the resuit of flood Al agricultural implements, machin- | No icss of life was reported, but|S09¢% a8 the result of flood which | ery for manufactures, ofl and wine [ many persons were asisted from their | F1v P nf, [ e may enter.Gresce frés of duty for a|homes. In Chicaso a warning to period of four years. boil the water was issued by the th authorities ‘cause of possible p Adelina Tricello, 2 years old, died |sewage pollution and all day fremen :,’,‘;f,‘n,ds:"h’"&"“& 1‘: fog of burns suffered ‘Wednesday when a | were kept busy pumping out flooded | Siver which 1s fee Denons ite B pan of hot grease Tell on her at her |basements. The hyaro-slectric piant st Man 5 T GIGANTIC JCE. F LD POURED P ot e BT U Y, g DOWN THE KANSAS RIVER. |flooded this atiernoon, and all & e M‘”‘Wa:'r‘“fl hto- Gresc Was Releasod By Warm Rain—Bridge | Joliet, a distance of a hundred S . in Kansas Gity Damaged. ' ‘“,_:"“."‘"f,:,{,"' Mra. William Gosrken_was burned |- Otiawa nd to deatn in her bed Tames from| Kansas City, Moy Jan. 31.—Rel A e cased 5 is no street car traffic. l"hhfll&hfi% to her home ight's I-In l‘imue 4t Lindenhurst, ice fleld” Highwayman Robs'! or today. - It struck the new b Stockholders of the Trumbull Stesl | Thicd Bireot bridge. Undes courss of | Los Angeles, Calif, Jan. Co., have bun ukod o pprove an in- | construction at Kansas avenue, car- | Wayman today robbed tb o-)nr crease stock from | ried 120 fect of false work and threw | Commercial and Savifgs bank in his escape from a deputy United States marshal “Group B,” a powerful organization of European political refugees. The gov- ernment agents also were satisfled that Lincoln has never left New York city. Wanted Promise of Immunity. Following two boastful communica- tions to a morning newspaper defying the government to recapture him, Lin- coln sent a letter today to Superin- tendent William Offley, head of the lo- cal bureau of investigation of the de- partment of justice. offered to surrender if he was fromised i This was taken to mean that he wanted a pledge United States government that ot be turned over to the British authorlties. Before his escape an order was jssued for his extradition as a forger, but Lincoln has always ineisted that the English government intended to shoot him as a spy. Harbored by “Group B.” Group B, the organization which the federal agents believe arranged Lin- coln’s escape and is now harboring him, s & body Which was formed in this' country in 1872. prominently into public notice some years ago when it went to the aid of Jan Pouren, a Russian political exile, whose - extradition was demanded - by the Russian government on the ground that he was a murderer. attempted to start a revolution in the Baltic provinces of Russia. Colonel Roosevelt was then in House, and Group B succeeded in se- curing an order from him for Pouren's conspiracy,” all the evidence which |- En een admitted only as concerning |four trainmen hurt when the . east- Cecil Victor Brown and Henry D. TR DiaSanann . Spel the negro defendants, be |was derailed near Trenton, Mo. CASE OF EDWARD WEINACHT. now considered by the jury against Ay 2 the widow as well, Judge Stearns replied that he was |partment of the reported friction be. not inclined to change his previous |tween the American Embassy at Mex- fuling. The attorney general said that [ico City and Geenral Gonsales. L e would renew his motion on Mon- —— Wet sald to be ashingto —Death day when the case is to be resumed | The British steamer Penisfone, which | sn A urerionn ditisen wios s o P 327 and would submit authoritative de- cisions in support of it. The state |ported passing a burning Norweglnn expects to rest its case Monday. Newspaper Writer on Stand. At the hour Gertrude Steve; In this letter he Group B came “was to be'his alibl” son sald he asked her to give the pa- oty s made pud per to his sister and also requested| Samusl L. Jewett, former mayor of | Cerman marks. belonging to the D oL Tty that ‘the “witness get Mrs. Monr to ‘earren: sen, an attorney. vantageou agal ricans “Brown told me to tell Mrs. Mohr | city's oldest ex-mayor. e s g uiized | By s Sabe not to say anvthing about the motor- cvcle, “the witness said, - he would say his wife saved up money enough to buy it.” Members of Group B Visited Him. Secret service men eaid today that had learned that several members of Group B had visited Lincoln when he RN capfoey 1o TRyl MaiN: Jar ta also recalled th: the fugitive was in the company of some of the group at the time of arrest. Stories that Lincoln had been asso- ciated with Paul Koenig, chief detec- the Hamburg-American line, and others who have been indicted for their alleged parts in German con- spiracies in_this country, were denied today by secret service officials. Mohr toward h': lais, Me., were formally admitted to Germany: Weinacht continued in husband before and after their sep- |the United States. = aration. Two Ql’mner\"::ml’c}’ mecmw BI out of her course by heavy|Sense a part of his plan in remov- TRAVEL THROUGHTS heard Dr. Mohr say that he “wanted |Storms, the Norwegian steamer Sam- |Ing the money from London. to make up with Mrs. Mohr” but that | nanger, New York for Rotterdam, put refused. VILLA ADDS BIGAMY TO OTHER CRIMES,| Secreary Daniels appearerd before | Suggestion That the Proposition Be Forsakes Cavairy Saddle to Ride Im|3dVocate the passage of a bill in- Coach With Bride. e s the e o AIBOUE | Three hundred thousand dollars for | striking employes was rejected at a|Mme. Rosika Schwimmer, Loul three RUSSIAN SURTAX ON GOODS OF HOSTILE NATIONS 85 incompetent the testimony of James| 10 B¢ Recommended by the Minister London, Jan. 21, 3.18 p. m.—Upen the Pearl took soundings of the river and |reassembling of the g ing repairs here today as a result of her recent government trial runm, in which a number of the boiler tubes were weakened by the heat. These re- pairs, it is understood, are confined to replacement of the tubes. New tnbes are being installed from Supply carried on the batticship, and most_of the work is mtbecs of Hs ctow. The il s which W terrupted after a 12- mwmul?mifiw%n“:flkr i _E;E?%i’ : £ £k 5 H i i f !’? i in Cul 4,000,000 to no.m,ooo. weight of are re cantilever ver City, near here, of $500. o fle e e e T er a0 | after Jocking ity casmier i (ha confessions of the accused negroes ad- | The Commercial Cable Co.announced | erncon the west end of the structure | Packages containing appi by | mitted as evidence against her. that direct cable communication with | had fallen ten feet. It was feared the | 000 wereoverlooked. Shanghal and China, interrupted since | bridge wovyl be carried out. . . Jan 8%, has been restored. Reports fbsm Lawrence, Kan., said | Two Dead—Four Reported D The court had previously ruled out - the river was risis idly, but the| , Sulphur, Okla, Jan.' n-_Twe this evidence as affecting Mrs. Mohr,| Announcement was made Friday that | ice pack there had Bot bro a gut At:tor?EYv’Gene;tll Rice moved lD; b ay that in view of the testimony of ands, will increase wages 5 per . kmen ta- | result of hea hich ci (g, i ey By g s:v s, ag per | river, hundreds of worl were sf of vy rains wl u chauffeur, ‘which he said showed conspiracy,” ken, sons are known to be read and the Lawton mills, Plainfield, employing | At points along the upper Kansas |others are reported drowned here nt, commencing Monday. o tioned this afternoon, protecting oth- Rock creek to overflow today. eer J. L. Collier was killed ana FORMAL CONVENTION OF MEXICAN Rl Determines on Death to A Mexico and Destruction of Property. bound Rock Island California limited Denial ‘was made at the State De-|On Trial in London For Violation of Trading With Enemy Act. London, Jan. 21, 552 p. m. — The an_American citizen whose residerice | Americans in Mexico and truct] Is Elizabetn, N. J’, resulted in:a dle- of thelr property, as well as war to & agreement by the jury. Wel sh against Carranza, was. Bark. N6 signs of life on the vessel. charged with violation of the - | mined upon, it became known here Fron the beginning of the war untll | 5oty ine, Snemy -act, night, at a formal convention of arrived in New York from Havre, re- ear] hour's _deliberation | can eaders hell adjournment Miss | Nov. 3 last, 1,073 British seamen Were | tho renen of th Jee ropon o oy g of Boston, a new: paper writer, wag on the stand. She aigen: estifie 1A e interviewed the three v hela under bail for a new trial. f Vila, Za; Ay Higi: negToes Brown, Speliman and Healls| The German Oriental Co. capital| “\Weinacht was former forelgn man- I:;un:—' mep(.::imo bgm.h:::'fl ’,;,‘,‘,g":m il R s Wuins. 4000000 marks ~was organized at|ager for the Adams Express company. |iesser chiettains erlin to. import raw mate from m‘: T Miss Steven- | the Orlent and dnte trade in them, | He tock the stand and tuun-d Meagre reports the foreman of the jury reported to the | vember at a .ranch near court {hat there was no chance for |Present and doing in the ent. The defendant waslare said to have been representati lost on merchant vessels torpedoed by submarines or blown up by mines. he had taken foreign’ money, including | came to the atate depmant , from London o Rotterdam |Gl tonight fewspeopie in W Haverhill, Mass., died at the age of 85. | by FO™ - il il He was elected in 1895 and was the | oy T s & general or there. . The government yesterday | that the various rebel factions in ‘adding that| Harry Tallmam aged nins, was|had sought to show by evidence that|field in Mexico hadl e frected any drowned in the Maumeée River at To| Weinacht had assisted in transferring | of an agreement for concentrated : Healis told me also | lado, while trying to warn his stater | TOT® than 5000 marks from the Lon- | tivities against the de facto to tell Mrs. Mohr that “if she'll stick 3 don office tq the German agent of the [ ment. 0 1 eI It BT and three chums of an airhole in the Domestics Give Testimony. A number of domestics formerly em- | _Four German orisoners of wa - company at Hamburg, but the defence | Thé recent massacre at Santa ;:" ; contended that the transaction was | bel, attributed to bandits led by Villa o | SO reaponatbiity bee- | potented Tn. acondance il = ‘The responsi ity for -ny sul - | petrat n accory Ice o b A g Ko B L quent use or the trandfer of the mon- | convention_order. hh testimony today, rested with the | FORD PEACE PARTY TO Rotterdam office and was not in any One-Half of the American M in at Fayal, Azores, after jettizoning | PLYMOUTH CORDAGE EMPLOYES Have Left The Hague. part of her cargo REJECT 5 PER CENT. INCREASE| The Hague, Jan. 21, mm g e 22, 325 a. m—About one half. rned Down. |expedition Voted on by Ballot Tu own. . dflh led ’u:u - Plymouth, Mass., Jan. 21.—An offer | hagen on their way of a 5-per cent. increase in pay by the | party will travel through Plymouth Cordage company to its|cluded among these in the party ! the House Naval Affairs Committee to creasing the number of midshipmen at the Naval Academy. col- mass meeting of the Silentes late to-plochner and the office n... by Carranaz umns sent out to bring him in, dead by day. The compény or alive, Francisco Villa, th Representative Humphrey of ashington in a bill ya-mfl.u. k. Charles, infant child of John Klin- [ The suggestion that the proposition be | be-perml )mwlk:t..:led at m of scalds|voted on by ballot tomorrow was re- o ‘ered at the they Ton g Hill & day or two uv.h:?:n e | Previous to tme meeting there was a ury :ummlu-.' of boiling water. parade hich banners various | had been sent Tt T et lnsmwl:n:wenurflot One banner | at Rotterdam to be ked “Who_can_ live on 39 a week' USE OF AEROPLANES IN DETECTING FO“EIT FIRES

Other pages from this issue: