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Norwich POPULATION 28,219 VOL. LVIIL—NO. 56 MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1916 : NORWICH, CONN., The Bulletin’s Girculation in Norwich is Double That of A Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population FRENCH LINE FIRMLY |2 2o Rasord g [ Voo HOLDING GERMANS Ancona, via Paris, March 5, 4.17 p. - - Battie ot Verdun JANUARY INCOME LARGEST Fighting Continues Vigorous at Verdun, But Consists |t EIGHT PAGES PRICE TWO Con]iensefi Telegrams : Condonsed Taegrams WORK OF GERMAN COMMERCE RAIDER the new German war loan. 3 State Police conducted a saloon raid in New Haven Saurday night. A total of $407,000 gold and $69,000,- 000 silver is on deposit in the Denver mint. Pedazo station, near here, of @ military and a passenger train. Bulgarian Soldiers Attack Greek Guards Athens, via Paris, March 5, 3.40 p. m. —The chief of police reports that Bul- garian soldiers have attacked Greek IN .—At least 12 persons wero killed and many injured in a collision today at the GERMANS HAVE NOT ADVANCED THE ROAD’S HISTORY IN PAST TWO DAYS EIGHT ATTACKS FAILED and 1,000,000 Marks in Gold : Billy Sunday visited Cardinal Gib- bons in the archepiscopal residence at Baltimore. GROSS INCOME $1,543,022 REPORTS THE CAPTURE OF 15 VESSELS L% _ Great Britain's blockade of the 2 oc Bl Food Riots in Cologne. o i 73 e coast of the Kameruns has been com- d H H Basel, Switzerland, March 5, via|Expenses of Road Were Greatly In-|Semi-Official Statement Tells of Bodies | PI€tely raised. . nly of Artillery Duels i e ; o ion of Captured Shi — : Mainly ¥ lobme state That Tood siota browen oui| creased by Storm Damage During | of 40,000 to 50,000 Teutons Lying poRichard J. Martin_of New Haven, The Greater Portion of Ships Were Sunk—A Small ey atate: that” women who sesardaq| December by Demurrage Proceedings| Before the French Lines. Dilssing & week, o ron - Number Were Sent as Prizes to Neutral Pots—Among NTER the prices as too high made violent —— SR L ORM CE manifestations and that the police Another conference of the Scandl- the Prisoners Taken British = B DOUAUMONT STILL REMAINS THE ST charged the crowd, a number of per-| New York, March 5—Farnings of | Paris, March 5. 1030 p. m.Tt 1o |Davian Eovernments will be held at T: Were 29 Marines and Sail- sons being injured. the New York, New Haven and Hart- | stated semi-officially that the battle at | CoPenhagen on March 9. : St ik ford Railroad company for January|Verdun continued yesterd ol 5 S ’ ors—Part of the Gold is Reported to Have Been Taken ritis! teamer Rothesay. were the largest for that month in the |out the day with the same intensity ‘wenty per cent. of cornmeal must by French East of | r.ua0n naren b, .27 —Lioyds | history of the road, according to a|and without causing any chamess 14 | be added By bakoes 10 rye and Wheas From the = Infantry Attacks of Teutons Repulsed by relondon, Mareh 5, 927 p. m—Lloyds | history of the road according to a anges in Appam. the respective positions of the oppos- ing armies. Fighting s stilP going on for definite possession of the village of bread in Austria-Hungary. Vacherauville and on East Bank of the Meuse—French Artillery is Answering German Guns Along the ‘Whole ‘Verdun Front—In Lorraine the Germans Have Been esay has been sunk. saved. Her crew was | Sross income was $1,543,022, as against $1.254,088 for January, 1915. The net corporate income, however, showed a | Douaumont. e, the figures being $266,435, as| The situation as a result of this 5,692 last year. Storm dam- | second phase of the German offensive December, with bad |is regarded as altogether different weather, congestion of freight that re- [from that of the first days of the bat- The mer City of Baltimore went aground on Hampton Bar, Va. dur- Berlin, March §, via London, 3.26 p.| Part of the gold captured by the ing a blinding snowstorm. m.—Official announcement is made by | Moewe, at least, was taken from the the naval general staff today that the | Appam, which put in at Newport News. German commerce raider Moewe re-|several weeks ago under command of turned to a German port. She had on | Lieutenant Berg The Rothesay was a vessel of 2,007 tons. Her home port was Cardift. The last report of the steamer shows that she arrived in Barcelona, Febru- The Polish Committe has sent Pope t with a German prize from the Ciyd sulted in slow movement and much |te. The only prosress e wy ity |Benedict a letter of thanks for the aid :”‘fl'\'l(:givrl:nr:;;s and 100,000 mlu crew. "u:m ;nm:‘lm“:t =y £ = ary 2 from the Clyde. sulted % he on progres ade by the |he has given the Polish people. n_gol ars. e statement follows: | however, that the value of the Forced to Abandon Position—Russian s and Germans B e grertime are said to have contributed | Germans was Gucin tho et two s “The naval general staff states that |the Appam was leas than $200,500 AN EPISODE OF THE o the road’s expenses. In this con- | days of the second attack. For the last i ° the H. ). S. Moewe, commander Cap-| Announcement was made in Londom Fighting in Northwest Russia. BATTLE OF VERDUN | diom charees fo ooty carhns Do | forty-<ight hours they have not ad- D e e T Y cetey. o @in Durgrave, Count Von Dohnajon Jan 10 that the British bati] ighting in _BATTLE dlem charses for frelght cars alone |vanced. e 3 Plttsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad. | Schlodien, after a successful cruise | King Edward VII had been blows 1 ased $213,258. Trans b mparison also is in favor of lasting several months, arrived today |by a mine. The place at which the Germans Piled Up Their Dead to Form | penses increased 3453524, _compared | the Frerch hecause the Germans have| The c. e at some home port with four British|disaster occurred was mot revealed by in the reglon of Verdun |ment is powerful, but adds that the a Barricade. 39ian Increase in earnings of §1-|now lost the ndvantage of surprise|eq n meries of Dublic storcs tn Maorico|Oficers, 29 British marines and sallors, | the British admiralty, ‘it wen es ‘The Germans in the reglon of 2 —— 281,743, and <0 because the ground has been whet by > e c oo 166 men of crews of enemy steamers, | lives were lost and onl; two m are being hard held to the positions French gunsham :,;‘5‘;?5‘,,’25&2"3%‘:5 Paris, March n episode of he| An enormous increase is shown in <o torn up that it cannot be orsx ("(xh\zr(‘ necessary articles are sold at| 0% men of crew Tadinme &% peioners: | Bt > n wWere they occupied by the French. The,u;e Gem;—‘mfi st battle of Verdun is told by a wounded | the net corporate income for the seven | properly. g and 1,000,000 marks in gold bars. Sank B fighting throughout the reglon 1s sull | of the o oun B e the forest of Thia- |Man Who has arrived here and who|months to January 31, the figures be- 45,000 Corpses of Germans. The British steamship Umbloti, List of Steamers Captured. ic Soven: Beitial N vigorous, but it consists mainly of ar-| In Lorraine, near the was posted in a quarry at Louvemont | ing $2,040.434 for 1916 anq $650,008 for S ot 4 8 ~ ot " o The Moewe first became wids tillery duels. ville, the French fire, concentrated on fas FOSUC 4 B HIATRY Af Touve 1 The net corporate income of | This information from semi-official | Went ashore near Greenpoint, Africa.| “The vessel captured the following Enewn Wikt b e 1deiy Dovaumont s the storm center, and | the positions the Germans had previ- | on 1}0 Ticnse hoenss, He says: 11305 | Jhe Dot corporate facome of | .orccy noints out that 1t must be de. She was later docked in ' leaking |enemy steamers, the greater part of poct News with a siery cirn il liere and in the wood east of Vacherau- | ously taken from the l-"re;‘lc . in or- | deep cafe running under the plateau of | which the New York, New Ha and ralizing to the German ondition. Sy Which were sunk and & small part of | 0" B8 So) & e T M““"“ t bank of the Meuse, |the Germans to evacuate them, in or cl G v e ad- artford h; n_interest amounted in 3,000 cohpses ¢ : 2 which were sent as prizes to neutral e R that SIS o dne ses ding to Berlin, “to avold un- | Which the Germans would have ad-|Hartford has an_ aiounted . Defore Directors of the Atlantic Gulf & E the commerce ralder had captured and have occurred the only infantry at-|der, Sooming 5 vanced to the attack. A detachment|January to $1,217,690 as against $3 . ore the ¥ West Indies Steamship Co. declared |Pons: . o £ sunk seven British vessels in the main tacks. On both these sectors the Ger-|necessary losses.” =\~ = . rth-|to which I belonsed took refuge in the|335 for the corresponding month Half Million Teutons in Battle. |a dividend of $1 a share on the Dre- |3 esn tons " o Tos tone "ErdE®: | lina of trafMic between South Africa ang mans_were repulsed by the French.| The Russians an fehting furi- | cave, while the heavy bombardment|vear ago. sttty 3 sl bl 3.657 tons: o - gy ons; Trader, | Surope, in addition to seising the & The German attack at Douaumont cx- | west Russla have been RgBtng TUr's | jocting 48 hours was going one and — —— Reinforcem ror Spotm ) the | SRt atvck: 3 tons due, 3,035 tons: Dro- . in additior ng the Ap- ont wood to |ously near Illoukst gt S g anoen = nauguration of the e T e e rdne. to | the Sraters of Tourteen mines exploded | &iter which the atiack was delivered. | BRYAN FAVORS WARNING * Farringford, 3.145 |P3M. Which had been almost given up md phase of the hattle on Wednes- | Eight passengers were hurt, one seri- for lost.. ol b "Russi Tograd reports|AITiving at the top the of pleteau, the T tle on Wedn, i Paris, it was stopped by the curtain by the sians. Petrogr < r h, 5,581 tons; A Arrivi > e OFF SHIP! wre estimated hore at 250,000, |Ously, when Grand Trunk passenger Weatbuen, 3309 tons: | The next heard of the German raides 7 fire and the Tifies of the French in- | that six of the craters were captured | Germans dug an - opening into | the AuBmione e minastis toet o flized by the | train’ No. 13 was deralled near King- o Prmeaas® tons: | was on the arrival at Canary Telsad fantry and ended with the French|by the Russians 2nd that the Ger-|from entering, as they saw us with a| Will Use His Influence With Members to more than half a miltion. | ston Mills, Ont. tons: Saxon Prince, 3,471 tons. - ,‘“;‘“,E’},"f":"’p,.‘:e”;?;‘:“' = i 2 mans are surrounded in a partly de-| "o o s th es show w EE— & “The sh sallin vessel Edir . - - - - TR e S e Woevre | molished. hlockhouse, having. suffered machine gur e of Gongress to That End. ance talls of lo Wreckage of the German steamship | byrl, oot [ras then made known that the Moswe me they had got in- . e stae) 66 ABE. . a was washed asho > Dan- | 0 oon. 147 ad sur region, about Fresnes, the bombard- ' severe losses. to the quarry. <o that part of our do- | Washington, March 5—The fnfluence |10 the size of the reserve "forces | Delta was wazhed ashore on the Dan- i Tench steamer Maroni, 3,109 | 54 surk five more steamships off the tachment had to rush forward to de-|of William Jennings Bryan will be feit | Pronsh . T rvers deduce | =he ¢ = s = ons. e T 3 fend the entrance to the cave. The|tn the Aght over the armed ship ls- | that the Gerr DREL: @ fvmey| IAySIREACE Tl ;The Delgian steamer Luxembours, |, € Saxon Prince o i TURKISH WOMEN PROTEST VERMONT TO VOTE ON Germans had no machine gun, but|sue, which administration leaders pian | NSavy vrice 0% squsreanten ol b L el s axrgettal to he | TS BN her way back to Gemany. s i S| Y. | they used long jets of liquid fire of red | to bring to a vote in the house Tues- of ground they h: gained. " i S At several points on enemy coasts | '°0 b - - ny. as thale SENDING OF MEN TO WAR PEOHISTEION STUESDAY. | Shevivesd lang Jets ot Higuid fies o ned [ 4o 3 sty Sapviider o F Y open for mayliation earlier than usual|the Moewe also laid out mines. to | SAUIE dates show they wers Doth o { s SOt < -y. - - this year. Immense grain cargoes are | .. ihe high sess toward the end of Feb- ! . 18 Shveai that Fhe at Sl 7 e & " o elaws oril e e e ‘ which, among others, the battleship - They Threw Themselves on Rails in | Also Referendum Vote on the Direct |of this siven tiat ihe struggle went on. T o e ey 4.9y T5on of the village of Vaux alone | waiting transportation. King Edward VII foll victim.” ruary. Front of Troop Trains. Primaries Act. held, their ground by pliing up their|armed merchantmen yesterday to Rep. | attor tho eighih wnsuccesstul atta A decrse prohibiting the import or| The Moewe's capture of two of the| ooty Made at Canary lslands. s s ey dead so0 as to for ma barricade, but at | resentative Stevens of Nebraskaz, will [ This part of tle, though over- | export of pa; and fixi he maxi- | o rn® ot cn of o of The ident £ the M Ofessa, Russia, March 5 via Lon-| WMontpeller, Vt, March 5--The ques | jost our machine gun drove them|come back from New York tomerrow | muiachey 1 Bt for Dosmmmt, | oot ,0f Faper. and Txing the maxi-|ffieen vessels listed by the’ German | ern® Aatity of the dchmivery Poiot don, 536 p. m—It s reperted from [tion whether Vermont, which for four- yack ana they were then attacked and| to spend the day and he has an en: | b ocmghdjo he Aeht for fous check | the German soventment. " "0ued BY |admiralty bas not besn reported previ. | coct Satablished here def i Constantinople _that Turkish women | teen years has permitted the licensing [ jIiUL M0 (RS VAT, HAAn Srtartied and | 1o <pend, the day and he Representa- | for the atiainens ® ane gerlous check | the German government. ously. They are the Saxon Prince and | transterred rof the Weern pre broke into rallroad yards where troop | of liquor selling under a form of local | {iiyoh, GUE B WEOCTIEr OF oub, Qo0 | Sasernent for unch with Representa. o e s The clechuans oaE- | 1L - = s the Maroni, both of which are enzaged | tneir. aertoat the G et protests against sending the men “to [will be decided on at a town meeting | A ey consressmen make their homes. He | Thon ine oo 5t ok o7 the fie &tor g - 3 >rince, 3,471 tons &r - s e Bo to thelr death. 'They threw them- |day nest Tuesday. There will be S MEN WITRCDYRANITE Wl be there. While the house Fules | Larm, the-ofiicers, it 1= "old. wére;com- jaccording to vice President McLean of {353 feet lony andown®d by the Prince I i Wi selves on the rails in front of _the|referendum vote also on the accept- x f committee is framing Its rule to bring | Marnered orcr that ot e the Remington company. ine_of Newcastle, England, was built | cotmh, She was formerly = tramp trains. The authorities refrained from |ance of the direct primaries act. ARRESTED BY BOSTON POLICE | hefore the house for action after lime | ool rod aver the; pes ‘of _ thelr % = X in Sunde in 1899. She was last|peen' fitre f scveral which had Heing force ta remove them: these ad- | A pronibitory amendment . to the i ifed debato the report of the foroign | (*11°7 Cprarades for the last Assavits. | _Information has been received at|reniried on siling from Nerfolk en |DSeR ftted out with guns as come vices say, fearing & mutiny amons |state constitution was passed by he|Were In a Shed Adjoining St. Mary's | rfai roamen ro oD c o7 eHEn Tried to Envelope Vaux. SenovE to the «foct that cholored hsse. ror Sristtuatil: e uders. The last previows i the soldiers. The men were taken |last legislature and will come nefcrel Cathelio Church. the McLemore warning resolution be| The attack on Vaux bezan on the | PFoken out anew in thirty-seven vil- | %p0 YRROIRSIR \ o oo 1o o | port of the Moewe _was she parted from the cars, but later were sent off mej pgople{or;l e yes and mo vote. A tables and setting forth that the pres- | evening of March after a furious | 12568 and towns of Austria. Berdeaux for New York. She was|gompany :"1?‘ ;'nn:“';s h{llmv::. Feb. 9. secretly by night. aadockyof e balloa/crat e & Boston, March 5.—Thre arm- shoul mitted to exercise | shelling and continued untll the fol. m—. built at Port de Bouc el pias L5 on , the Moewe's com= Tt Is. also reported that the Turkish |clties and towns will be suflicientto e e e (e gt ROt e peEnITO) toTanercibe [ Mdlling and | conitnuedy o Grest pleasurs at what | generally | e Compagnie Goncrate. Tra A ngs fo the Schicdien or eneral staft declined to summon be- | determine the issue. B e e iR MipTaniae it i TG it Germans, | called “a Wilson victory over the L RE e o : 1 of his family, whic R - G nee B Eo] T first appeared in | S S e e T L S 2 terem ihe | German-Americans unanimousiy o el ¥ | headed by Prince Richard Von Dohna. commander of the Turkish army in the | the Vermont statutes in 1852, the state | d of police on a shed roof ad-|- Mr. Bryan has deciared that he|the villame. Fromeh aptilece tmrmeqr | eXPressed by the French press 1 ads Tamcnsiby He Explonts | He formerly commanded the gunboat i i oun- | g pol o e g : 2 A Ma xploits. | the China sea. It was Caucasus, on account of certain dis-|being one of the earliest in the coun 5 St Mary's Catholic church in|would not participate actively in the|ately oponed a heavy fire which %ep- | A draft for $800 vacelved, Byl Tha Mot st e s clogires whilch ight be mede ] Con- | iyled forbid the sale of tntoxicating | Nerti Mg’ district; atfter’a sharp| controversy an@ ‘His. closcat. Trienfs | arated the Brt weave of Cormiaah mob- ey o B M i S e ety ot o D con sequently, the commander will receive | liquors within its borders. A quarter n They refused to tell | here say he has no intention of chame. | thete. Terit ove Of Germans from | Secretary of State Hugo with & re- | exploits, has performed one of o German raider an_honorable discharge. of a century ago agitation in favor of | [LUEE (PG aer vetused, b v his mind. Hie views are Wil | the fresh prosm e on sox oies? [quest that it be added to " the “New | e of the war on said to have made These reports say further that theja local option law was begun and.|yoro higing near the church. known, however, and they are being | ers saw plainly the tragle spectacla of | L OT% State “Conscience Fund. a_home port in s yrbe e Deople of Constantinople were led to}eradually galning strength, culminated | ;0 olice had questioned them unsu peatéa striously to members of [ lincs of men nluneine into that storm | = > ptains of the British steamers Beleve that the German army hed |fa @ femeal of the probibifory amend- | L 20 il DUl In §20,000 cach | the house. . He Teaves Woatrin.of|lnes of m i ahat storm | A man giving his name as Henry | is on the _ihe Moewe who were brought achieved a much greater victory at|ment at a special election in February, | of breaking and_entering, | again tomorrow. DIght for. Wikeiee. | ther crrand 5 o tmeents Tt | Mac)Maken was arrested at Springfield, patrolled with ce United States on board the Ap= Ily gained and |1902. The vote in favor of local option e e 3 t g- | th ; Some continzents 10st | Ohio, on the suspicion of being Jean by British warships 1 the Moewe was the converted Verdun than was actually gained and | 1902. ; P burglars tools in ton, Del., to deliver a lecture. six out of every ten men befora firl - that when the facts wero ascertained | was Yes 29,711, No 28,892, a majority 0 ae-aiit BpoR S = e @ shot, . C ey tenmen before firing | Crones, the Chicago soup poisoner. |through thece waters. which have been | fruit trader Ponga. Lleutenant Bers rloting occurred. Tt is stated German |of 729. S s AP _ | blocked off in districts for patrol by |of the Appam, in denying this and alee troops suppressed’ the rioting. On the next town meeting day 92|r8%er, they were identified throush| oo, nroN MAN MORTALLY and-t2-Han 3 Monthly bonuses of & per cent. will|the different Dritish units, the Moewe |3 report that the raider was the Gers Forty persons are reported to have|out of 246 citles and towns voted in | PHS o 00 TORHCS EalERY @5 Jom & The s daunted, resolutely | be paid the 5,500 operatives of the Yale vo threaded her way to home [ man cru'ser Roon. said the ship was been Killed in the wreck of a passen- | favor of liquor selling. The following | {ogie of Claveland, O, and John De WOUNDED BY HIS ROTHER | stormed neh trenches and | & Towne Co. of Stamford, as long as “His Moew: ger train on the Berlin-Constantinople | year the number of license towns drop- | 555 . ° s A%k 5 == 2 fousht nd In flarce melees |the present wave of prosperity lasts. rallway near Nish, Serbia. Investiza-|ped to 40, and there has been an al- | ““J7%% inspectors were much inte-| 11e¥_Had Trouble Concerning the|at the ontskirts of the village. The tion, showed that ails had been loos- | most vearly decrease ever since. ot e ers, Tneh, e $80,000 Estate of Their Father. mont bittar Aehting was for possemsion | _lssse Rogecs; newspmper mam of|4000,000 SHELLS USED BERLIN SILENT ABOUT ened and many arrests have been| At the elections a vear ago 20 placs o eab O Sy e of road 1 ‘0 Douaumont, the ad- | Galesbure, ., who gz s made. favored tiquor " seliing, incluaing 'the e TR B amios. Ta. B S Gt €. vantaso of as ‘obvioh " The | “The Galesburs Liar” from his whim- N BATTLE AT WEHCUR BATELE AT N e == citles of Burlington, Rutland, St. Al- | 1eR80 OF & COarse of bt 3 Brenneman of this city was mortally | Germans charged t times theme. |sical yarns, . aged 79. n o = " i GERMAN REINFORCEMENTS bena ard 'Vergennes. In ete ofithe 18| 13 Iood Sorvedigm churchubanguet &) Col RS o S O T | The suprans. st whs. o e Nothing Like Such an Expenditure of | Merely Mentions There is no Infantry > comparison of records carried out the v . i ; I FOR CONSTANTINOPLE. |toWns voting ves the authoritles re-| ocomblance in many ways with the ex | Brenneman of Factoryville, Pa., near|by six regimer's, advancing in close| The Senate naval affairs commit- Munitions Known Before. ng of Importance. HCON "| fuseq to iesus any licenses, which lett | (TR0 MIRICS I, A S wh (R e here in the Taw office of Charles Hop- | formation R ) ayueo, - ¢-| Beriin. March 5 via London. ¢ p nati Bennington, Bethel, Brizhton, Canaan, T RS T e b “|er today. The brothers have been at ol ns Di s 3 priatin; 2,065, o equ 21 Paris, March 5—"rench artillery of- Berlin, Ma via London, Rumored Assassination of Enver Pasha, | o510 0 0 ™" Fairhaven, Pownal, Shels e paies expracoed the ominion that | 10EEerheads for some time concerns |' orch Guns Did Gruesome Execution. | BOu, 1'% .1 for Lattieship Construction | ncemr mrme o part i e e °T ‘af Verdun recefved Strong German Supporter. burne, Shoreham and West Rutland | o'y, POUES CRbressed the opinion that | 0% %650 000 estate of their father: i Verdun estimated that during the first g mention in the war office as the only towns in which liquor|ge pris AIenced o rob the safe In|pnohjel Brenneman, an fron manufact: b g A huge vein of phosporous has been | four davs of the strugsle the Germans t of todav. It is said French London, March 5, 1235 a. m—Reu-|coulq be obtained legally. Caotice B e rCh AUNGY. | irer Lere. They ms€ ut tlis ttorne refully under cover un- | discovered near the mouth of the|ajscharged two million shells, most of | artillery is kecging up a very heavy ter’s Athens correspondent says in a| It tne prohibitory amendment _enough excises, the offiche féan agtecrient ot van force approached the | River Estrella, near Rio de Janeiro.|them of h calibre. The number | fire, especially in the region of despatch filed vesterday: adopted it will go Into effect May 1, _(.:n;mr' o f}‘"&.{”{l‘fw»m" sediately developed. Both d out to meet tho on- The deposit willbe mined as govern-|of projectiles fred by the French | Douanmont, but t there has been “No further news has been received the day on which all licenses expire. sl SRyt the odidee were armed, and they pulled stmul-|™Sh W cold steel. The fizhting | ment property. probably was as great. n further infant fighting of great of the reported assassination e e G v s fnished in a fe 5. - thinz ke such an expenditure of ance. The statement follows: T the Tted inatl of Enver = TR taneously, Gustave fired twice, both|% finished in a_f minutes. The hinz 1k u X t | 1mportanc Th tates t follows: Fama, TV toremtion mecla PLANTO ORGANIZE COLONEL E. M. HOUSE e e L D S Sl ans retired, leaving hundreds of | Mrs. Helen MoNally, aged 22 who|muntions kas becn known before even | =¥ ern front: . Towards evenme e significant TEOFaton: s spectators | hy Charl fired | mangled a torn in the barbed de- | was severely burned at her home in|, tho Champagne attack. The whole | lively artill lery fire of the enemy de- been received here from private sources| ~ AMATEUR RADIO OPERATORS A oM B RO | e ball encteating . Gustave | fonres and thousands Jaia low by ma- | Hartford on Febroary 34 whon her | In.he Champagne dttack = The whol | Uively artiliery fire of the ensmy des that the Turles are removing the mines itici g zht . ckine guns and bayonets. clothing caught fire, died last night in Heard No Crit of the United |right lun; in the Dardanelles, which appears to| Would Make a Valuable Asset of Na- o Criticiem e United | rig s defenses at I Detween the Meuse States in Bell range, drive out ., %o @ measure preparatory to opening straits. and the Moselle tion, Says President Wilson. erent Countries. Strategy of French Commander. a hospital there. Kill defenders ana then occupy the | French artiliery continued very active, s ttle procee: s ¥ She— groa by massed rushes infan- | especially in the region of uau- the same corresnondent said ad- | throughout the country into signai|On a confidential mission for President dornof ot ] G e L M Taple GRIgNter-0D A el | Tpry Wi eanalty henwy ahely | e vt e P »-m had been received there from a|corps and give them military traimug ‘Wilson, arrived here today on the Information of the Damage Done Not | General Castelnau_in .‘!N‘ battle _of thy 4§on(.)rn mnc’her. T - n:"m dprn"hd“d e ee ev:xr\.'y."ed Vfislfl}d‘ 4 (hl"lron'ehes m:’ diplomatic source in Constantinople |as outlined by the National Amateur |Steamer Rotterdam from Falmouth. As Avallable. Nancy. ntral Petain’s withdrawal £ her. vorks and then, when th s ,"“.“‘f o] e mthe French on February 28 that an attempt had been made to|Wircless Assoclation ‘“undoubtedly |S00n as he landed from a special coast e e D N o | _Eupens: B. Munoeh confidentialiag- | (Ce0EN WKy Wers Appeoactiad ki o | near the Forest of Thiaville, northasss assassinate Enver Pasha, Tubrkisr war | would be a valuable asset to the na- [8Uard cutter which met the Rotterdam | ~London, March 6 1255 a. m.—A |General Castelnau's withdrawal to the | Euosne B, Mangel confidential adl 3 forces on the run, to ca e s . minister and one of the most power- | tion,” in the opinion of President Wil- [t Quarantine he fiqnnunccd he would | Zeppeiin raid took place Sunday night | platcau of Amance away from the with multiplied enfiladin ful German supporters in the empire. | son, from whom a letter to J. Andrew |leave at once for Washington to meet »rraine) before the ; ater assistant secretary of | the when two hostile airships crossed over = In- Durham, N. H, March 5.—Military the counterpart so far as possible of those in actual use in the war areas of Europe, are to be dug and fitted up by members of the stu- dent cadet regiment of New Hamp- shire college as a part of their train- ing for fleld eervice, according to an announcement today by Lieutenant Sutherland, a regular army officer, who Is in charge of the department. The work will be started as soon as weather conditions permit, and it is planned to make the entrenchments suitable every respect for actual occupation. One afternoon a week is to be devoted to the work of the military depart- NAVAL TUG TOWING SUBMARINE TO PORT i ‘The Egero was a vessel of 1,373 tonst K-8 Developed Engine Trouble While |and was built in 1883 Bound for Key West. ‘Weashington, March 5—The naval| Danbury, tug_Peorla reported to the navy de- late today that she had pick- e e e oo THert dinewss was the caucs K-6 developed engine trouble while|0f death. She was 65 years old and bound for Key West for manoeuvres | leaves her husband and two sons. and o number of specially qualified young men along carefully planned lines will be of great benefit not only in an edu- cational way to the young men them- selves, but also to the country at large when the necessity for their em- ployment, individually or as an or- ganizatioh, may develop.” NORWEGIAN SEAMEN BELIEVED TO HAVE BEEN DROWNED ‘When Steamer Egero Went Down Near Deal, England. Deal, England, March 5, 8.05 p. m.— Seven seamen of the Norwegian steam- er Egero are believed to have been drowned when the Egero sank after having been struck by an unknown steamer near here. in Dropped Dead on Way to Church. Conn,, March 5—Mrs, Mark A. Beltaire, wife of the head of the Beltaire Hat company, dropped dead while on her way to Movements of Russians in Bessarabia standing by to see| Zurich, via London, March 5, 10.48 hat she came to no harm. The Peoria|p. m.—Extensive movements of Rus- Penascole. tol sian troops in southern Bessarabla are reported fram Bucharest. o A S el it el speaking people Asked if he had noticed any marked change in the attitude of Europe tow- anrd the United States since his previ- ous_trip, Colonel House said: “Reports of an unfavorable attitude toward the United States by the people of Europe are exaggerated. At least, 1 heard no criticlsm in any of the countries I visited. I will say also that we should remember that the people of the belligerent nations are llving with their nerves on edge and we should make allowances accordingly.” AEROPLANES TO DO SCOUTING IN NAVAL WAR GAMES LOff On the Southern Drill Grounds Guantanamo. ‘Washington, March 5.—Naval war games in which the aeroplanes will do the scouting for the Atlantic battle fleet, have heen ordered on the South- ern drill grounds off Guantanamo. Captain Mark Bristol, chief of the naval aero service has been ordered to take charge of the work and will join the battle fleet as commander of the cruiser North Carolina. The orders mark the first step to work the meronautical service coordi- nately with the battle fieet as is being done by the Europcan navies in the war. There are about 85,000,000 German in’ the world and about §2,000,000 speaking Spanis] A further communication will be is- sued later.” TORPEDO BOAT DESTROYER LAUNCHED AT QUINCY Largest in the Navy—Overall Length of 315 Feet. Quincy, Mass., March 5. ed States torpedo boat destroyer Sampson named for the late Rear Admiral Willlam T Sampson, U. S. N., was launched fro mthe yards of the Fore River Shipbuilding Corporation Yesterday. The Sampson is one of the largest destroyers in the navy with an overall length of 315 feet. IHer guar- anteed maximum speed is 29 1-2 knots. She went into the water 78 per cent. ompleted. LIEUT. ROBERT W. ADAMS DROPPED FROM THE ARMY For Being Absent Without Leave— Believed to be in Mexico. Washington, March 6.— President ‘Wilson has directed that Lieut. Rob- ert W. Adams of Texas, attached to the infantry on the Mexican border be dropped from the army for absence without leave. Lieut. Adams recent- ly was arrested on a charge of em bezzlement and court-martialed. He later dis and is now believed Were Guided to Shore by Search- lights of U. S. Cutter Seneca. St. Pierre, Miq., March 5.—While the searchlights of the United States coast cutter Seneca played upon the shore so that dangerous rocks might be avoided, the crew of seven men of the British schooner Montana, whose anchor chains had parted in a gale last night as she lay in the roads, guided their vessel to & spot from which they were able to reach shore in safety. The schooner was wrecked. The schooner had a cargo of frozen herring _and was bound from St. John's, N. F., for Hlifax. The Seneca is on ice patrol duty. The storm, which was still raging today, was declared by mariners to be the worst that has been known for a long time. OBITUARY. Fred Leighton. Concord, N. H., March 5—Fred Leighton, city editor of the Concord Monitor and ,onz of the oldest news- paper men in point of service In New Hampshire, died suddenly today. He was a charter member of the New Hampshire branch of the Sons of the American Revolution. Movements of Steamships. New Yorlk, March 5.—Arrived, steam- ers Rotterdam, Rotterdam; Cymric, London. Sailed, steamer 'Calofirnia, Glasgow. Street Raflway company, has been ar- rested. It is said that he is charged with embezzlement of funds amou ing to $50,000, extending over a period of seven years. Street car service in Washington stopped at dark last night after about fifty per cent. of normal runs had been made throughout the first day of a strike of unfon carmen for higher wages and shorter hours. Edward Francler, four years old, dled last night in a hospital at Stam- ford as the result of burns received Saturday night when a pot of boiling @ftee was spilled upon him accldent- allly. - Pope Benedict has again raised his voice for peace. In a special letter, written for the Lenten season, the pontiff says he cannot sit silent, in- Aifferent to the terrible conflict which is rending Furope. PRESIDENT AND MRS. WILSON SPEND WEEK-END ON POTOMAC Expected That President Will Confer ‘With Colonel House Today. ‘Washington, March §.—President Wilson, who left on the naval yacht Mayflower with Mrs. Wilson last night for a week-end trip down the Potomac river, is expected back early tomorrow morning. He probably will confer dur- ing the @ay with Colonel E. M. House. New Bedford, M: March 5.—Two of the £ bark Alice wies of this city were killed In an r with a whole off the according to advices re ed here today. A private despatch from St. Helena says that the bark put into that island to recruit p, having lost the mate, Antonio T. Pina, and a sailor, Fidily Cecelia. The encos men were in a small boat pursuing a | whale which had been harpooned when the quarry turned and attacked them. The mate and Cecelia were crushed by a blow from the whale's flukes. Other men in the boat were hurled in- to the sea but were rescued by the crew of another boat DEFECTS OF AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL METHODS. Given Out in Pamphlet Form By Da. Charles W. Eliot. New York, March 5.—Aspects American educational methods which he considers seriously defective are cutlined by Dr. Charles W. Eliot, pres- ident emeritus of Harvard university, in a pamphlet written by him for the general education board and made public tonight. “To correct giaring deficiencles,” In_secondary schools, Dr. Eliot urges cultivation of the prospective power through laboratory work, manual training and more attention to the of study of music and drawing. heaviest blows of the adversary to a|lalef assistant sceretary of the In- and machine gun fire. At times | concentrated fire of the enemy against It was said an appeal had been sent| White, acting head of the association, | the president. the portheast coast of England. The | dominating position. whence he could | Irelor 18 (Ao WIa, BAIINSE WS W70 | this fire was suddenly suspended and astern Tront: In the nelghbel to Pmperor William to send reinforce- | was made public here today. He declined to comment on his mis- | cfficial statement announcing the raid | not be dislodged. French officers pre- -— B " TioARed I hand- | ol of Touket an sttact piaasi ments to Constantinople, “in view of| President Wilson wrote that it is|elon or what he had scen or done|&ives no information as to the dam- |dict General Petain's stratery -will| of spo oirival at Christi of the|to-hand clash rog b il el the gravity of the situation. only through the agency of such or-|While abroad, reiterating the state-|age done. have the same result. so that the Ger- | icamship Oscar II from New York, operations against our positions could e ganized bodies under the direction of :nerge he l:nadt» pri hr m,le.’x\'lnz: here (",\1 tho mnfl o(dmu ;eport," the | mans will be mmreu;-.l vfn sf{‘ol‘ a de- |y ar Holubowski, a Russian was ar-| TWO MEN KILLED IN “{";‘ o e gy T:‘“m_“ b representative American civil, military { In December that his mission was to|statement continued, ‘“their move- |cision elsewhere on the front. este st of the American coi = s of the B T AERSCHIBATNING Af gt st e e i s S e i ) clearly defined. —— R T e e ERCOTNER OB WiALE iy parties i AT NEW HAMPSHIRE COLLEGE | iency can be ebiained. bassadors information having to do|Some bombs were dropped which feli | CREW OF WRECKED o, g e e ek polnts were repulsed. - “The value of such an organization.” | With international questions which | Into the sea near the shore but infes. BRITISH SCHOONER SAVED |’ 3 — it ? ; = 3 ! As a Part of Field Service Exercises|continued the president’s letter, “in|COuld not be supplied them by cable|mation s not yet avallaple as. to Percy Farrant, auditor of the Mantla Pecpoosed Eaviattan. For Studsnts. co-ordinating the activities of a large |or letter. whether any damage was done on land SECOND DEATH RESULTS FROM NAPHTHA EXPLOSION At British-American Co. Plant at Springdal Stamford, Conn., March 5.—The seo- ond death in connection with the ex- plosion of naphtha at the Britishe American company at Springdale on Saturday, occurred today when Sam- uel Rocco died in a hospital. Peter Sautalago died on Saturday. Coroner Phelan of Bridgeport, who' is conducting an inquest, said today that he was perplexed as to what caused the accident, although he i convinced that there was no criminal responsibility on the part of the come pany. DELICATE ENGINEERING FEAT ACCOMPLISHED SPEEDILY Placing Railroad Bridge Across Deers field River at Bardwell, Mass. Greenficid, Mass.,, March 5.—A cate engineering feat was accom ed speedily today when the final of a new Boston & Maine bridge, across the Deerfield river Bardwell's, was put in place of old section ogr:flm in nv.u 22 seconds. e span is 38 and the total weight which to 2}0? tons wu‘;cvod on total length of bridge resting on six piers.