Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 8, 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)

perfected -ganizatios fi.‘:‘-m o igaiion § eventl mile away at the Auditorium ,th. ve . - X 3 'y..uaumqta-‘vom-y | nent ornn: A twenty. m ln:, .t:e umor.q?m m” carefully fed “in * the.. talling brief peridds of hand- assembly, ‘when Chairman Hilles Te; \lbn tional - Secamne Bom his mrer 5 T mittee his ‘gavel at 11.25 o'clock it moved quietly and with pre- | udn until ‘adjournment at 125. * Leaders Almost Unnoticed, M the 0ld time leaders pres- ‘ to march down the seats to the tune of an ‘a majority of the )t know them by sight. in fhe'e m‘m»‘ = Sy it Chicago, _June 7.— ditorjum. today with a record-break- ing demonstration Mgflflpml Roose- For one hour and thlt?' three min- delegates spectators | ted, cheered and ap- ~sang. the progressive the aisles- and down all Demonstration Broke All Records. The demenstration exceeded the previous record for uuch affairs of sime year in the republican conven- (Continued on .Page Six) ROOSEVELT URGED TO : mdtctlon he had ‘was given in goed faith and that every made to his cus- tomers regarding a rise in stocks had held tme. “Had Checkered Career. Lyman, who had many aliases, mbemuAnhum,r’:xnm, and gain: r of the to re- e’ Do- | “of slegping to his work at the Koch instituts that Von Behring | P ‘obtained 21 years ago Marburg. Hi is uumfi.f?’?:'@“’“& hang RAIN SPOILS “JUNE WEEK" AT MILITARY ACADEMY. Good Shooting Done by the Cadet Squads. West Point, N. Y., Jine 7.—Rain dampenéd the ardor of the “Jumne week” visitors somewhat today and caused the cancellation of all the mili~ -| tary exhibitions set for the afternoon. Two squads of cadets participated®in 1'oni.rfll wméo coast defense guns in-the renoon, doing some’ especially fine with the six inch rifles fired target in the Hudson a floating -sooc yards distant. Twenty shots were _HASTEN TO CHICAGO. | fired, — Republican National Committeeman Telegraphs Him for Harmony’s Sake. ‘Chicago, Jfl!ie 71-—Former. Senator Jackson of Maryland, republican na- tional comglttemna from mm_ state, tonight sent a telegram - to . Colonel Roosevelt - at Oyster Bly him’ to mrms to Chicago in. the interest of y and announcing he would do gi: nunou: in case of an acceptance to Mr. Roosevelt given the privi- the convention floor. 3(!‘ Jackson’s telegram read as fol- “The national Intmlt deml.nal the u f . ihe re perfect undmtl-ndh‘ ‘hnwum and the ;flnublicfln convention now assembled. urge you to e common cause in our Mben.-‘ud tions. If you will indicate soma MEN ON REPUBLIGAN CONVENTION COMMITTEES. ; Charies "Honkins cf.rk on’ Mflbnu. -~ John T. and Cadet L. B. Meacham of Texas thel other. James B. Wise. ‘Watertown, N. Y., June 7.—James B. ‘Wise, one of the most prominent man- ufacturers of northern New York and where he had gone to benefit his health Mr. Wise was 58 years old and a na- tive of Stamford, Conn.- 4 TS e e S Cortelyou at the Convention. Chit .June 7.—George B, Cortel- u, former member of a. Roosevelt et, g0t {n:g p y. He came straight e con-- vention and said, after adjournment that he had not seen George 'W. Per- Kins or lny M.har ‘of the progressive _talked = with . Co!onal "Imhmwmder-nym]‘g can,” was all' Mr, Cortelyou “As a former chllmm ot tional | eircumstantial t.helitu,;\onmlutflla -justice s in their offensive movement have dis- lnodsed tae Tentonlc allies tirc? forti- led positions and brought aggre- %a of men taptured up to about 41,- ‘They have also 77 guns, 184 machine guns and bomb throwers. the men made prisoners are - nd(l _Claim Big Victory. As an_ effort to the Russian gains over the Tentonic allies, Constantino- ple asserts that in Asia Mindr, in the De )(uunmn district, the Russians driven - eight kilometres ousand men mfins in this imme- vicinity covers tropt ot over 31 miles, with the Turks the aggres- sors and with the situation favorable “‘. ’DM&L - Purks. Nip and Tuck in Flondm The Gérmans elsewhere - are still fighting desperately in the vicinity of Ynl‘es, both sides using their artillery in heavy bombardments and their in- fantry in occasional attacks. In ‘an inrust.ry attack against the village of Hooge, east of Ypres, the Germans succeeded in capturing front line trenches run- 'l;‘;as’ through the village, but all their ‘attacks elsew! 5 here failed. Reverses for the Austrians. - ‘The Austrians again have essayed violent attacks against the Italians in the upper Arisa Valley and northeast Asiago, but everywhere were Te- pulsed. In the latter sector the Ital- ians drove back the Austrians im a to hand conflict to the bottom of the Campo Mulo valley. RU'E'FIANa SUFFER ; REVERSES IN TYROL. Aptillery, Mining ‘and Infantry Con- flicts on Ihllln Frontier. Rome, June fla Loudon. 6.55 p. m. —Checks for Austrians all along the line of their attack in the south- ern Tyrol are reported today by the ‘war office. The important Coni Zug- na position in ‘the Adige is still' irmly held, while near ‘ampo Mulo, northeast of Asiago, an Italian counter-attack was notably successful. The official statement follogvs: The enemy on Monday evening re- peated his violent attacks, supported by intense artillery fire, egainst our positions in the ve.uey ‘of Arss on Monte Spiri and along the camp Mulo valley, northeast of He was every where repulsed” with very heavy losses to him. “Yesterday along ‘the whole front from the Adige to the Brenta arfillery actiens occurred. Enemy- a.tuu?uw attack in the direction of Coj uq- na, in the Adige valley, and our positions notlgtdh;ut of \A»tuo were promptly repeat y- fire. = Carnia and Isonzo fronts there has been an intense exchange of | Ve Srid ‘warfare, and bombs and try activity.”™ ng ‘and infan- DECISIONS BY REPUBLICAN cnznmmu.s COMHITTEE. District of Columbia Has No Repre- |~ ‘sentation. Chicago, June 'I——'l'hue fro mth ination ‘of the between | at Dover, Del,, by fine it impossible not to be lmpresud by the confident predictions of these leaders, who say that the Hughes boom has now grown to such a formi- dable proportion that Clorlel Roose- velt no longer holds the veto power which until ‘this afternoon had been| conceded to him as part of ‘the pro- gramme to bring the republican and progressive parties to accord. Four days of constant and persistent effort to Pring the two parties togeth- er in which the personality of the nominee was subordinated to harmony, failed to bring the results desired, and the trend from the outset was definite- ly toward the nomination of Justice Hughes. Had Colonel Roosevelt an~ nounced during this period .that he would not support the justice the leaders were .prepared to turn to any one of the regular republican candi- dates. The colonel remained silent, however, and because the managers of other candidates had fostered the Hughes” boom, for the ‘of purpose eliminating Roosevelt it grew prodi- | di: gloutly l.nd even a combination of the strength was powerless | The reason for this was that the. candidacy of no other !!mb- Yican made any progress and delega lnu\lcnnaflnlemuvalutm were killed in a clash with marines MMM Pl Sl the last two Direotors of the Kenneoott Gopper %Mlfim m ‘a quarterly lv- fdend of $1.50 a : . The i unhunu of ita annual sanitary o fNew-York State opened at Springs, N. Y. Articles of incor, lan ‘were filed M'umlm- ,000. Ewom of orclllndho trvm tha | Port of New York for the x‘ June 2 were valued at $51,2! m The al election of officers of the | New York Cotton Exchange, H. H. Royce was re-elected president. manut Britain. MIM a wx{; 't Baron chairman, comi“E’ flueofltndoofthe‘ur A stock diviimd of 100 per cent. was declared by the directors of the Law- rence Manufacturing Co., of Mass. uring Co., capital §10,000, The twenty-third annual convention of the International Association of gm;m of the Police opened at Newark, Mrs. Sfiub.th Kline of Rootstown, 0., was stung to death when she at- tgmnud to take honey from a beehiye ere. Edward L. Dobbins, first vice-pres- ident of the Mntual Benefit Life In- surance Co., of Newark, died of beart sease. ~ Field Marshal Von Hindenb 18 re- by hnwhun ted to the ‘pledgeg to tzvonte sons gmm; flo th- § presidential Justice g\igfie‘ to whomfllay could turn thefr mn:th Hughes Leaders Confident. Justice Hughes thus naturally - be- -camethe choice of virtnally all dele- gates instructed for others. They be- came eager to go to him as soon as they could secure release from other pledges.” -The Hughes managers to- night- reiterated their claim that he will ‘have about three hundred votes on the first ballot. *Frank H. Hitch- tempt to nominate the justice on the first ballot and that it was their de- sire to have all the favorite sons del- egates deliver their complimentary votes. He. believed, however, that the second baliot, with the release of many delegates from their obligations would swell the Hughes vote to such proportions that his nomination would ;:!rost certainly be made on the third Tot. May Nominate Justice on Becond Bal- fot. . Many of the Hughes mvponen Were even more optimistic and they thought that before the resuit o! the second ballot was announced the drift would . be apparent to all dele- gates and there would ' be enough changes of votes to bring a nomination o nthe second ballot. The Hughes managers expect Arizo- na, second on_the roll of states, to vield to New York so Governor Whit- man may place Justice Hughes in nominatior. At one time it was said Alabama would yield to New York but it ~developed the delegation was dai- vided between two or more candidates and. having no candidate to offer, would pass when the state was call- No Progressive Favors Wanted. ‘When the Hughes tide became ap- parent ‘late tonight many inquiries ‘were made of those who are supposed to speak for him as to whether his acceptance in case of mnomination, ‘would be in any sense contingent up- on a third party nomination by the progressives. = The answer was that + ch a contingency would in no wise taken consideration by &‘:{ convention not_likely that Govern son also will be draft ticket will be on in 1912, Rosevelt and 'ohnson. m IUFFRAG!TI'!‘ PARADE _IN_ HEAVY STORM [l ke ‘or Women Advocates Walk Two Miles at chlmna. Chicago, J’tms 7—During a heayy storm, driven by a cold west wind, 5,- 000 women today marched in the pa- ndpntchaNntlnm.l Equal ~Suffrage ‘association giving an (mmusdanud dnn‘mtlm of loyllty to the for which they are fighting-we votes. wu:pmoqnotponumw o.u the wo- to 'Yolu purch: elt | Great Northern Lippincot partment store, the largest in the city, was burned. Hearing on the Shredded Wheat case will be held by the TFederal Trade Commission on June 21, - probably at Buffalo, N. ¥. Striking emplu{n of the Union Station at Washington returned to work, having been awarded a slight in- crease in wages. Brazil's receipts are placed at $355,- 820,000 and expenses at $438,844,010 in the 1917 budget presented to the Chamber of Deputies. Explosives Co. is re- ported to be negotiating with one of the Allies for a contract for 40,000,000 tons of smokeless powder. Three bandits broke into the Pros- pect l-?loci.-.l Club l.t Cleveland, l:;ld t‘l‘xp a card game, an mm e “Kitty”, uu.mated at $5,000. Following the uhHinhmnt of the French censorship at Saloniki the Greek government has suspended com- munication with Macedonia Announcement was mudc by the Se- cret Service of the appearance of a new $10 counterfeit note, on the Fed- eral Reserve Bank of Dallas. ‘Three persons were killed and two injured when Denver & Rio Grande west bound passenger {rain No. 15 ‘was derailed near Colton Utah. Gold bars amounting to a Ittle more than $2,000,000, received from Canada, were_deposited at the New York As- say Office by J. P. Morgan & Co. Directors of the Hercules Powder Co declared an extra dividend of 13 per cent in addition to the regmlar quarterly dlvidend of 2 per cent. Ten United States soldiers _were killed and nine wounded in a battle with Mexican _tfalders near Glen Springs, in the Big Bend of Texas. thousand new cars have been oma.ud m:’ the International = & Railroad = from ' the Mount Vernon Car Manufacturing Co: Lieut. Commander Chosuke, Japan- ese naval observer on the British ] tle cruiser Queen Mary, was lost she sunk in the Jutland naval m- na bcnebnalo'hewh!lcg v ‘months. consulate and stones hurle at the foreign club, in the belief ths it 'was an American institution. < Protest Against Intervention. test againi tion = presence of th punitive force. was called for the Cen tennial theare. ' The theatre prove too small ‘to contain the crowd and a over flow meeting was held in' th Alameda near the American consulat: There were various orators who mad speeches of protest. ‘The crow snatched the consulate signs whic Wwere later recovered by the police. After the trouble commenced Gener al Lopez arrived with troops and re placed a strong guard around the con - sulate. The mob then threw stones s the foreign club, breaking some of th ‘windows. e military dispersed th crowd and placed a vy - guar around the club. The few American who remained in Chihuahua were na molested and no private house attack ed. = The demonstration was aimed, | was asserted not so much agains American individuals as against th American government’s policy of re taining troops in Mexico without, a the rioters believe, any apparent res son. Roosevelt Received No Message. . Oyster Bay, June 7.—Yolonel. Roose velt said late tonight that he had re ceived no message from Former Swi ator Jackson. - He declined to discus the question of his golng to Chicag¢ U. 8.-MEXICAN. DIFFERENCES MAY BE ARBlT‘RA‘I‘EI} Government ccnudlflnc Proposal ¢ Submit Relations to Internations c-mm..m... I‘Mn:&m J\fne 1-—4A proposal tr - Gereral Carranza - that - the Unitel States nnd the Mexico de facto gov u:fl t submit thé whole subject o relations to an international com. Such a proposal’ if it is made wil serve as a reply to the Mexican not demanding withdrawal of the Ameri can troops, and may contemplate ad justment of many unseftled difference: tm for years have caused accumulat ing embarrassment in the relations o the two nations, Settlement by a com: mission is provided for expressly b: the treaty of 1348, which provides fur ther that “should such a course be pro posed by either party, it shall be ac ceded to by the other, unless deeme: by it altogether incompatible with thi nature of the difference or the cir cumstances of the case.” Meeting ir Neutral Territory. President Wilson and General Car ranza would appoint an equal num ber of commissioners under the plax and the meeting probably would b held somewhere outside the territor, of both countries. There was no indi cation tonight that the president, Wifi whom rests' the final word as ‘whether the proposal shall be made had yet reached a decision, CHINESE PRESIDENT’S DYING WORDS WERE REGRETFUL Yuan Shai Kai Deplored the Monarch. ical Movemont—Did Not Wish to B/ Emperor, Peking, China, June T7.—The las words of President Yuan Shi Kai wer( an expression of regret for the mon: archical movement which, he said, hai ‘brought - disaster to China, and ha¢ hastened his end. Calling Hsu Shih- Chang, the former premier, to his bed. side, Yuan Shi red: “I ai¢ not wish this end. ! did not®aspire tc be-emperor. “Those around me said the people desired a sovereign and hal nemed me for the throne. I believed and was Flags are at half mast and Peking GERMAN DREAM HAS VANISHED No Possibility of an Invasion of Eng: land Now, Says Balfour. London, June 7, 5.10 P, m—One re: it ot the Morth sea batile of Jasi ‘be impossible for the mg naval movements thes u.mfi!:’lm.-ldA.J M‘::m lord ot the admiralty, in an address

Other pages from this issue: