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e R TR | Norwich WBulletin VOL. LVIL—NO. 159 POPULATION 28,273 NORWICH, CONN., TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1916 EIGHT PAGES—64 COLUMNS : PRICE TWO CENTS " g : T s ey s T 3 ot 3 7 : : The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is sie That of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proporticn to the City's Population NEW DISTRIBUTION | . fewre [Si000For New Thid bay of | seiet v ERENCH HAVE MADE womsbeliit i) London Harbor| Battle of SOMME| ...« see surmeneetn i ing the sittings of the duma. until Nov. and historian of France, died suddenly ] 14, in Paris. 1 NATIONAL EDUCATION IN RIVER AND HARBOR APPRO-|SHOWS THE FRANCO-BRITISH| A military train was wrecked in 4 ASSOCIATION IN SESSION. PRIATIONS BILL. LINES EURTHER ABVANCED.. . | SoriiecanBnkowlia, add 20058 nstrlany et Former President Taft Among the = Speakers—20,000 in Attendance. Two trains carrying the First Mis- Major General Funston Relieved From Responsihiuty N e A $42,886,085 MEASURE [RAILWAY THE OBJECTIVE fourl Infantry arrived vesterday at| pno Now Within Three Miles of Peronne, an |mp0|-tant education and plans for world peace . H were discussed at the opening session Fort Slocum, N. Y. touched the = 2 for the Entire Border at His Own Request of the annual convention of the Na-|Conferces Agree on Amendments— | Impetuosity of the French Advance is|highwater mark in recruiting, enlist- Strateglca| Point tional Education association here to- # ing 107 men in one day. day Among the speakers at the open- Weymouth, Mass., Gets $200,000 for Shown in the Capture of ages e ing session were former President Al details of David Lloyd George's William Howard Taft, President David| the Improvement of Fore River—| Whose Streets Were Lined With |appointment as Minister of War have WILL NOW BE THREE MILITARY DEPARTMENTS|E, Jorneon of ihe assoclation, Dr| §1,08000 for Los Angeles. Barbied Wire, been settled in London. BRITISH FORGING AHEAD, BUT MORE SLOWLY the association, and P. P. Claxton, e A boy while disrobing for a swim at —_— commissioner of deucation. League Island, Philadelphia, was mys- The educators, numbering nearly| Washington, July 8.—Conferees on| Paris, July 3, 6 p. m—The third day | teriously shot ‘and killed. o . . 20,000 from all parts of the United | the river and harbor appropriation bill [ of the battle of the Somme shows that e : 5 General Funston Will Continue in Command of the Sourthern| Siates, wers weloomod to the city by | togay axraed o s o o B | oL e e o e Somme shows that _More petitions are pouring in on|p b Attacks Have Been Forced Back From Some of the Po- D. Major G LBl and Brigadicr G 1 Mayor Mitchel and to the state by 886,085. The bill as it passed the | further advanced, with the French |fresident Wilson against the execu- epartment—Major General an rigadier General | Governor Whitman. On behalf of edu- | house carried $39.600,000 and as it|right sweeping to the eastward south’tion of Sir Roger Casement. e . ing—— P ) 3 cational orsunizations, President W, G. | passed the senate $4£000,000. of he Somme. A group of stratesic| . g TTame o sitions Which They Took Early Monday Morning . . illcox of the board of education, Su- The conferees struck out the senate | villages, a large number of German % J 5 - . Pershing to Command the Other Two Sections—Only | perintendent William H. Maxwell and | amendment Mmiting . the = smouat of | prisaners and heavy Funs have been | Plainfield, N. J., was sandbagged by Aerial Activity is Increasing in the Battle of the Somme Charles B. Alexander, regent of the|iwater to be diverted from Lake Michi- | taken. Yeggmen who escaped with $600. i - | University’ of ihe State of New N hon = = . = 2 5 the Appointment of a General Officer to Supreme Com- | ni¥ the educators welcome. B L D TiVer,WPIOVEMENt | Only Three Miles From Important | C. E.Van Sant, aged 23, of Philadel- —The Verdun Operations Are Slackening, Although at T i kit G Arnect i alC s £ | dan responded: e T Railway. phid, was killed oft Deach Haven, N.'7, i 3 TBNC B armIngln S C A Spest (ot s TR T e e 0 An item of $1,080,000 for a diverting| The advanced French lines are now |10 battle with a nine foot shark. Some Points Bombardment Are in Progress—Italian Of- re. |only three miles from the important £, o ra v o f Perc Daniel Barugian, Armenia's most . . . 4 500,004 s xe|railway junction of Peronne, the de- |, E ugian, x 5 2 & duced to $500,000 and to an appropria- | {0, 8 Which has been sreatly weak. |1oved poet, died of wounds received fensive Continues Without Cessation—Heavy Fighting ,000 for the improvement at | foncr OF Jhich has been greatly weak-| on the batilefields of the Caucasus. dam in Los Angeles harbor was ro trained services in c na- 1 disaster if it does not teach its o h to take its place in the forces|tion of $2. Any Desired Proportions—Nothing is Known Concern-, | ing the Probable Date When Carranza’s Reply May be |: o defensc of the republic” | San Diego harbor the conferces attach- | Sunday of Mereaucourt Woods, SOUth | rwe men wers Killed and a third is at Many Points on the Russian Front. Supernintendent Maxwell, lef 2 B . e aSuperintendent Maxwell, in‘a lotter, R R e e xpecied. beopirds s e e v Five Corners near Lynbdook, L. L R unteer em in the United States, it S . should embrace the training of all ang The National Guard Camp at Van o ashing Gen- melman’s to plunge perpendicularly, fo," Jaiy 5,-Tohile tha’al/| tionpa) toward iiherhonter iaAlicrea el ] i cavEate (HEC TesbunEloral shil Courtlanat. Park, New York city, was | Gnder command of the dashing Ben_ )| BEINAN ‘ot s machine breaking off ploma pects of the Mexican diffi-|a good jmpression in Mexico City. He| fraining, he said, should not interfer opened to the public for the first'time. | 5T JOCR N0 FIOHREY (i British in T culty showed no change tonight, war | was hopeful that the differences be- | with cultural training, which would | — s st Sonme River department measures for a new dis- |tween the two governments would be | brovent milithry training o deoen The entire force of mechanics at the | the gTeat offensive in the Somme BUIC | TRAINS LOADED WITH ibution of the border patrol clearly [adjusted amicably. As Subporting the | brcyen: moilitary training from dege Panama, Canal, $00 in all will vote on | LeElon have made notable SAIER T 0| \wOUNDED ARRIVE IN LONDON. ieated that months of active ser- | declarations of his government that it | “Former President Taft devoted his L strike because of a practical reduc- | firection of PErORtS PR CTaon that dail s e along the frontier await the |was taking all possible steps to Stop | addvecs (o a4 Soslbion el tion in wages. e ¢ have captur- r gathering in the south from all parts |gion, Mr. Arredondo said that as rap- | Peace, of which he 14 president. . Jack Barrell, aged 22, only son of|ed Herbecourt, Feullieres anf Foots bt ealig ) s of the country. Only the appointment [1dly General Pershing’s men had it e Sl il | Finley Barrell,’ New York stock brok- | court and farther south redch "HOF ] o 0 00 yoiv & 12.40 a. m—Several of a_general officer to supreme com- | moved northward, Mexican troops had er, was drowned on his father's estate | try stormed and occupled 2s3ev' St% | CioPCon. 10aded with wounded mand is lacking now to complete ade- | taken their places and a strict police | HUGHES IS STUDYING néar Havana, Ill. They followed this success by catyiol | fevm the bartleficias in Franceiis (N q administrativ achinery not | controf e te vy had bee ¢ oy the sec ierma enches as | fro e b alas - s SUSTRLIONS - W <5 8llom .- -ained —_— . s, importer, a pas-|far as & = Buse d | las svening. Great crowds asse S omian Of why Aasired. pioGoTiou a oiten 2 o s : : 5 e ~|came the cap of Buscourt and {last evening emb] Frontier to be Divided. ders of the de facto government have | pooo oo e iy thus gained, which, added to previous o e Under the new plan the 1500 mile | brought about a cri the object ardgehampion, v The 47th Infantry, N. G. N. Y., lost all | 2ains, gives the French troops a clear| fipa¥s = frontier will be divided so that the | Which the Washington =overnment | fharies B Hu e trace of the epidemic of sore throats|advance of sbout six miles at the| In a fow cases the men wors suil 89 southern and “western miltary de- |had consistently sought, it was point- | ful defailed studs of all phascs which attacked it in the armory, when{ farthest point, to within three miles | (8584 JU8G C02¥ YWRE INC0 Gniion T artments wi take care of the east- |ed out, seems in a fair way toward |2PProaching ca 4 ) ol reache e Y. © eronne. e gt s i Srn ana wasters. exitemisien o ihe | being. mecompManed, " "o (OWRT| will encross nis entire attention during S - OO i the British, moving more | most of them was not very serious, It ine respectively fajor | mho o et ey purpose, | the rest of his stay here, with the ex- Company A. 15th Regiment, N. Y. |slowly but over a longer front, have|Was wem: ble how few men were Frederick Funston, relieved from re- |it was said, but to withdraw com- | (CPtion of his short weekly trips G., iro regiment authorized | captured Lo Bolsselle, where the fight- | suffering from ehell ot bullet wounds. sponsibility for (he entire horder at | pletely from Mexico when the de fac- | NeW York. Ior more thar month Governor man, was mustered | ing for the past two days has been of | A0St of the his own recmmendation, will continue | vernment showed the willingness | he expects to do little slse than study |in the service of the stated. the flerest character. The British al- o soldiers had vivid st in command of the southern depur:- |and ability to furnish adequate mili- |21 ejnip himself to discubs in detail i so report ‘“substantial progress in i tordon highland =gk ehile AL S et o |t Hoh o e e all issues of the campargn. i bt i It A the repulse of many |battle to relate. A Gordon highlander ment, while Major General J. Franklin | pr o the border region : 5 D . During June, 1916, thirty-five per-|some places”-and the rep declared that his famous regiment had Dell, commanding the western depart- | Thit is being given, upparently Not only is he working intermit- sons were killed by autos in New |counter-attacks by the Germans. 5 i ment, will fer his_headquarters | in the sections m ich General :fr;\‘(ls' o ‘\’: ‘]f”lrx!"' <:’~>"\'!v‘ “'f fl'("“({‘]" | York, an increase of 45 per cent over| British attacks hfl\\'n\-e\',{ h:‘i\'e been ‘ from San F neisco to Dougl has withdrawn, although it |ance and o 1e ten or twelve speech- | the same month a year ago. orced back from some of the posi- “ry . ” e in direet touch with ared that ‘the Mexican | #S he will deliver during his proposed Feags Dt o ose tions which they. had taken early on | The kilties led the charge he said. of t r work n disposed for tne pri_{ trama-continental trlp witloh begine Infantile _paralysis continues to| Mondny mornin and it is evident that | [ 5%, VIR, Sing of P tera i ‘ Peri TG Ofars purpose of making a display of | earl= in . but he s _ goins | spread in Greater New York. Fifty-|the German artjllery fira has beco Teq theinoer i e . B ftacsds O o dn; \eaimst southern movement by | throush t amount of data bearing | EWo new cases were reported, 43 in|much heavier than during the earlier | Without a single man falling & Ta.the The mid-scction of the border line, | the Americans on all issues before the Ame peo- rooklyn, 59 victims died during the|stages of the battle. e Pad eoncealod o A all territory between E : ple with n view of Javing the founda- 2 il S Sritish | Germans ha S Doint. moor Danmiee™ ama | Nothing About Carranga Reply. | Ple Win entire campalgn up to pree The prisoners taken by the Dritish | o hine guns, and a hurricane of lead- northward to the Colorado| The state department had no ad- |elaction day. i . |50 far number 4300 while the FreAch | was poured into those in advance. But T T e M vices today regarding the probabie | {iuonreds of documents, letters, ro- = ¥ ACsoran L WiVey sl p pronl have captired 8000 oF 2 ool tnclude | tho Gordons never hesitated. They ment of New Mexico, date w 4 reply to the demands |ports RS = The U, Fore e ss man of Hartford and|materlal tak ysthe fHrene °|1caped into the trenches, clearing line e N el 0 | prencnted imorod thiny el watnl S | L91 %\ newRDuyeE (lippinkg and suk. e nion @ ver?s |an orizinal member of the Putnam |seven batteries, three ‘of large cali- ;GRREd, 0 MG ITERCR, s o e L il the fex | (PRt he recelved\ Mr. Arrendndn el B ao8, Love beerl nurhuged (for My Phalanx, died at his home here aged |bre mony machine guns and trench |15, 5l q g the village, although 1t was u M., and Brigadier General John | SO Professed iznorance of his govern- | nis libracy e il callers todis “Th g £1 T 5 lands | 71 years. une. (-“t"°"”h‘;mffi‘x:so:’ ‘h‘“r_w still being shelled by artillery. As soon J. Pershinz, now commanding the ex. |Ment's plans. The latest intimation | inar ne nog Sl b ion of lakes, the union of lan ! also fell into the ba the Trench. | 100 1 fined a foothold, the eleva~ Pegitatacs otes mae nk ook | reathing the istate: Wepartmentetwug| cieolie hutdilett New TorkBotatse 1 Smon L Y | Ten persons were shot and fifty more |~ Bavond admitting the withdrawal of zuns was altered and a the post of department commander, |that the Mexican note would be trans- | santrate his mind on his task amid {he . jarrested in Berlin following the con-|a division from their first line "‘,'fi"fi;’,] a £ fire poured on to the ground A ‘message went to T Porai. | mitted throuzh Ithe embas: B = haie iht e cansctan |t The union of States none can sever. viction of Dr. Liebknecht. Demon-|ecs on the Somme, the German offical |y o003 hore the enemy supports were ing today, asking if he desired to as. | Arredondo emphatically denied sug- | (atorubtions there. that he cxpected || strations took place at the Potsdam- |statement makes meagre reference to | pCA AT ¥ sume the duties of d i chief | Sestions that the communication al- | 5 {he republican party against Wood- | i - f L the battle now in proress. | “Every yard of tne village streets In addition to those shich mow fan|ready had reached him and was be- | Of (e Tepublican party against Wood- |} The union of hkearts, the union of hands, 3 . : e o operations apparently | EVery yard of fhie willags (EAeels to him as commander in the field. |ing held up for telegraphic instruc- D oo o o e [Pime a-a( gte hloxstmg]engl\peers ‘yvhltz are slackening, a ‘\‘Ousr!"] n: _cv;m\g pushed up, and by nightfall the high= A tions to deliver That was the Shends Fots o . » are on strike along the New York|joints a heavy bombardmen being | ), rs secured possession.” Troops Drawing Necarer Border. course pursued with the long demand | Rortant suit, and that he had come to And the Flag of our Union forever. | waterfront, 8,000 lonsshoremen and | harried out, but the infantry are rest- | 14nders hiadisecn £ e The expedition is belicved to have|for withdrawal of American troops | riazehampton to get “mentally satu- 7,000 tunnel and subway workers have | jng. virtually completed the movement be- | Sent severa: weeks ago ard which was [_‘l‘l"‘_;un“"‘ Bots i Faulet; and iees promised to walk out. Aerial activity is ingreasing in con- GERMANS PLEDGE THEIR : it g0, when Gen- | brought by messenger from Mexico | Clusion. ; — fion with the battl Somme, e ‘Peran porc AE0. Wheo gen. | SrOURLC by wiesssuEsc Serem N MexiCoR Sin o Siourth will be observed: qulst- ool nection with the battle of the Semme, | A} | EGIANCE TO UNITED STATES eral Pershing, for strategic reasons, |City. e Eonsthonlll bevabas ,000 barrels of | nundreds of muchines g engag ordered the lines drawn m_closer 1o —_— y at home by the 1 American flour began In Rotterdam by |in rcconiottering, directing the EUNS| Ay Now York State Convention of the the border. The war departm h === a committee of dealers acting for the|anq fighting. In three days’ engage- & e e e department hos| STRENGTH| OF NATIONAL PROTEST TREATMENT i ___ |sovernment. ‘A ‘great number of buy- | mn¢ e British have lost fifteen ma- German-American Alliance. ot Whereabouts of the various camps GUARDSMEN ON BORDER.! Bl ian wonkmen &rs appearcd. ment e e Ay ~ but it is thought that the most ad- | 39000 wi == ! Bl nient il ed a provision requiring the city to|of the Somme, and between g The <ian war office reports the| ~uBffalo, Y., July 3—The state vanced patr now are within 150 | 3% ill Be Either There or on thei . . o o\ . o Neote to Commis. | dcnate 500 acres of tide lands instead|and Frise. This was Missouri mounted police guarded the | .aninre of 2200 prisoners in the vari- | convention of the German-American miles of the border. Way Teoday, o T X { leaving the donation optional with |fortified position of the German scc- |first section of the military train car- | Snn setors of the eastern front. There | alliance closed here today with the re- L S S R —— sion For Relief in Belgium. the city. ond line of defence on the entire front |1ving New York National Guardsmen, | o' rvy fishting at many points on the | election of the present officers and the © Reply From Pershing. New York, July 3.—Approximately $170,000 for New London Harbor. |Of the attack, but the French division |following threats that plans had been | fyiecian fiont and the Austrians have [ adoption of resolutions which set fortl No reply had been received from |30.000 national guardsmen of the de-| London, July 3, 7.20 p. m.—In a com el 5 S which took Frise continued to advance | 1aid to wreck it. Russian front erful oftensive south of [ that the alliance was not to be allow- cneral Pershing late tonight, It is | Partment of the cast will be either on ! munication addressed to the Spanish [ Other senate amendments agreed 0| with such impetus that the Germans opened a powerful ot e They tn-|¢d to becomo the instrument of poli~ possible that he will see dificulties in exican border or on the way|and American ambassadors and the o e o oomag | were unable to resist, even under the | While army headquarters at El Paso, | ineWka and, west 50 0,07 Mactions, | ticians, but aech member should follow the way of combining command of the | there on Independence day, it was an-| Duich minister here, as patrons of the oL 3L B0 ney ea 3800, e | protection of this formidable work. |Tex., announced the arrival of troops|aufurated ¢ Petrograd, were re- | his own political faith. Another seses ¥ mand of the oA P A . 3 1 lgi th or improvement of pa at the 4 DS by ccording to Petrograd, were It ution 3 1 by 5 ed w department and of the expedi. |nounced tonight at Governor's Island,| Commission f elief of Belgium, the | D s o i fo B, Sbatlonen At Bl Bash, Tforiation lution adopted by the alliance state onary force under one head. In that | divisional headquarters. Reports from |forcizn office calls attention to a de- | mouth of tlwc.llxs~u-§lf‘xr‘lnr\‘e : 51~"- ierce Struggle for Stone Quarry. | regarding the passing OF troops to piised. . stensive continues with- | that in the Mexican crisis the mem- o there are indications that he|lhe 22 States comprising the depart-! 2514 1o have been Issued on May | 000 appropeiated for Duiuth Supertor| o o 0 L P CR U | resarding the passing The Ttalian offenstve conttnues with- | ¢ 08 (1 [NERICER S0Cq” their prop- ra; he £ Py harbor and $180,000 authorized for the ) S T cos: on, both ar ery and In Tk 8 Vi a4 be expected to relinquish direct |ment showed that 60,500 troops had ! Governpr Von Bissing, the Ger arbor ant 0. the stone quarry, als out cess 2 and lives at the service of the Tongly forti- S fantry being employed m strong force creating | same; $1,500,000 for improvement of s : X SEa. Teating | Sa 3 = a mile east of The four companies of the Arizona commend of the expedition and estab- | Deen mobilized in all the states except | man governor of Bel te and nation. This resolution said:} of e fled, three quarter: : L o s hmninst Belsian | the Mississippi river instead of $1,200,- ax oL A 3 against the Austrians. e tmpent e e e Sefie colvment | 009: 31000008 for AWIDipa saver (s | SURIBIT Siere GG amnans e o [ Sational sustd 1o Nossles Are ses- = crioss i out ot Gifterensetatl 4 b e L e Pe vyl tia o on et Bepieiibe irrouRhithe patrons or the | HORIOL $141,000miore; S20,000 Empraves| & 7Lick DTS French Awmorlean colocy TaRCn Dy, companios and Jdistributed | the German-American alliance of the supervise the disposition and training | brigade vivania, a regiment | S , through the patrons of the | tlon of $147,000 more: 320,000 30 nials, with one of the most celebrated | Westward along the border. AN IMPORTANT PART | th¢ i el S i o aenInE | entey TroraATa v iand, ity B on, painst decrees issued by state of New York places iteelf fully corps of the French army, rushed the Al oee First Fie v on August 14, and 15, re- | A provision inserted by the se osition with such : , i S . a reservedly at the service of the! T The Tine within’the mow depnboroan | and hospital Sorps. Fom. g S <" s in. Belewm, " Heferring | xithorising ‘investigation by the seo- | BULICR, TR eueh enerey that the| It is eossible that ox Presidents Taft | 1y the German Defense Against the | 31 "INEINICY 5 ledea the prop| The war department has suggested Ei| A Virginia regiment of infantry, the|to that protest, the present communi- |retary of war of the character of ves- | BOuitig, DIo Frise aiso|of Charles E. Hughes during the tak- British Attacks. erty and lives of its membres to the| Paso_ for department headquarters; | Twenty-third infantry of this city and | cation states that at tmat time the|sels which Welland canal when en-was prilliant, as it straizhtened their |ing of the campaign “movie’ showing Support of our sovernment, to wWhose' but left the final choice to General|the Seventh infantry of Buffalo were | Marquis of Crewe wrote fo the pafrons | 1 line south of the elbow of the Somme, |the candidate’s home life, Press_Headquarters on the TFrench|continued glorlous development as & Pershing. With the line of commu- |ordered to entrain tomorrow. Within|that if the German authorities used|ed. i . thus avolding exposure to cross fire, Front, July 2, via London, July 3. 6.30 | free and independent nation we shalll nications greatly shortened, the gen | the next 43 hours, it was announced | the machinery of the commission and The conferces struck out senate < eral still would co-ordinate the oper- |at headquarters, the Second infantry,|that of the Comite National for the adding i ations of the various regiments now | the Twenty-second engineers, the Se ;)vurposa of coercing the civilian popu- [ Proving the Narrows X"f Tl e yond the line, probably with the[ond Field artillery, Squadron A, and,lation of Belzium, against its will and | Plain, *-OM!‘W lox;vgn;ntnmfi 1_mxro\vl senior colonel asSigned to direct com- | the remaining troops of the First cav- | conscience o indirectly, into|ment for the Sabine-Neches canal, ! g e The French announcement today of| County officers o - _|p. m—Machine guns played an im-|ever devote onrselves. amendments adding $437,000 for im-| po" capture of the village of Herbe- \'f'sliz.l(g;lg aerzpniz.rtep’.(::s b)elget‘?(‘::!"ls portant part in the German defense| The resolution was telesraphed to court and the outskirts of Estrees and |fired upon a troop train on the Mis- [ 8ainst the Pritish attacks, and al<o| president Wilson and Governor Whit-| Assevillers carries the advance about | souri, Kansas and Texas road Sunday [in the British repulse of counter-|map six miles beyond the point of depar- [night between Dallas and Lancaster. | attacks when organizing positions mand of the expedition. alry at Van Cortland park will be or- | the service cf the occupving army = e $25,000 for Arcadia harbor, | tyre Saturday. taken. Both German and British have | EPIDEMIC OF INFANTILE In this connection officials here are |dered to the border. they must themselves provide the re- | Michigan. Wisconsin National Guards _| them in amazing numbers. known to be considering the effect this Divided Into Six Divisions. liet’ which those bodies dispense and | oo Stone Houses Transformed Into Bat- | fused to entrain for the Tromt until| During the bombardment before an PARALYSIS IN NEW VCERS o ve on Gi ) - arrai e Britis . infa ry atta Germans main 2 . ourse might have on General Carran- | Tme troops from the department of |?ll @rrangements between the British |STEE teries. the cars furnished had been replaced | infantry” attack the Germans remain| . = o\ ="Neo Troe Have za’s suspicions as to the real pur-|inc cast will e divided 1ot government and the commission would BETTER THAN EVER.| Tn A by ottiers Fhat tisfactory. The|in dugouts so deep that they . e e o six di- i . . he impetuosity of the French ad- [P were satisfactory. The|in d ! Qeep ithat th poses of the American government.|yisions on the border, it was learned |DAYe fo cease. i maward vance is shown in the taking of these | ArSt ot offered contained no headrests. [ CTushed in only by a Girect it he expedition, without a general offi- | 4" headquarters. New York and |0 % Subseauent lotter Sl & pe ra|Production is Larger, Profits Greater|villages, which were strongly fortified = e LI e e S et §s said, and_could be viewed as noth- | Lisions b¥ (hemselves, while other|{ics cither with the sale or free distri-| the Streets, ,Lhe stone houses were |0l V- Stormvine Sagedy 0 @ free: | bring up machine guns from the dus-|up to tonight $2 lives. Since, Satur~{ Tmore than. the’ pelioing Foroe j¢ | lates will be crouped according to| betian of foedstutts fo those whom the | New York, July $—In a statement | transformed into batteries of machine |£oT all at Stormyilie. N ¥ a et | NS UP, WIZIAS, FUND WONUN d | 4R, o Fere have been 26 {deathms| h A 4 their geographical locations. ] Sk G 5 .| uns and the entire villages were en- v S o ‘amp Whitman = bty o als & i t » s designed to be. Some officials | ‘TR S{RERPLICR] locations. busily (ézxsner‘::ks;)'m;ra:‘fihth;]&rrnne considered | issued here ‘8?2%5‘&?{15&{;5 (;?gx veloped in a dense network of barbed |2nd 48 landed in the guardhouse as a | chine guns forward and the moment a|Many mew cases are reported. The a Been 23 Deaths. believe this might not be lost on Gen- v . Vi g i o | resuit. position they occupy they emplace |'department of helath today placed:pia~ | STt Carianss sEaeed fotay preparing plans for con- s e corporation, asserted that the steel ;‘rxsms:s;'“:til?z:tl“t'!‘z(;:ft‘s.\'il?:g;lwdr)i'q(?bsch“ B | cards warning the public to keep| proposal to General Pershing, however, 4 v = S T % . expl . the|the fighting agree that barbed wire|or more cases. More than Tas viewea hore e et | ments n the fleld will be trained. The FOUND IN CHIHUAHUA. | than ever in its history. Production | Douaumont ploded in the drying house of _th: St ave | amte ot — i = Summing up the French advance |Aetna Explosives Co. at Emporium, | entanglements, however 3 n & r ~workms 3 : 2 r = Reported They Are ’gfi,c‘“mfe(vfl’;gfifigfi:?’fiag%’:’ Nr_rcg south of the Somme, two main fea. | P3.. and seven employes were Kkilled | Deen invariably well cut and there is|describing preventives, were sent| i re ~ | while five vere sly | universal praise for the mew mortar, | broadcast over the city and ”"’Z‘Xi e o dlcloesds et tharocoupd. Sieothary S were acHoul | i ventisriiar vernment civil| Health Commissioner Emerson engineer in Ezypt, which the British|the police to revoke all licenses amd tured in large numbers. | permits for Independence day celebra- tentative locations of the camps were often reiterated statement that Presi- = dent Wilson is not now considering | “[\thheld from publication. Sl R e [ withdrawal of the expeditionary force | Letters Pouring Into Headquarters. eing Returned ¢ " | “Unfilled orders of subsidiary compa- |tion for a length of eight kilometres | Wounded. ' from Mexico. Tinal decision as to his| Hundreds of letters are daily pouring | o0 o oo oo o | Unfilled otion. he said, agere.|0f first line German trenches from <ourss will await the formal reply to |into headquarters from anxious par- | Mexico City, July 3. e e o c 5 S % it o A rid have manufs i Secretary Lansing's note demanding | ents of guardsmen complaining againgt | vino reporfed ‘tonight to the war de- | gate nearly ten million tons. The cor- | the Bamme fo tho willage of Tay, and Antiroideries motoroycle from which | Mot requently the deep Germarn |ilons fomorrow in those districts that General Carranza explain his | what they term the “futility” of send- | Partment that a number of wounded | poration Is producing at the rate of ;30 0% VG ThaReS SIRE & 900 | first Street had’ been thrown went on | dugouts, instead of being rallying | strects in which infantile paralysis hostile orders to his troops in the vi- | ing “raw soldiers” to the border. Many | American soldiers who belonged to de- 51,000 or 52,000 tons per day. ing from Haracourt Woods to Asse. |for a half block in Central Park West | poinis, become traps, with the occu- | prevalent. i cinity of the expeditionary columns. | of the letters susgest the delegation of | tachments engaged In the fgbt at A bt e e Mr. Gary | yiliers, | The struggle continues with |2t Sixty-fourth street and struck and | pants either surrendering or being —_— Pershing’s Orders Not Changed. regular army officers to the guard Eartator thamiats of Chihnabas | oete SThacle Rl ,,In‘n“‘y real ground | Intensity. ~Observers declare that the | hurt two passersby. blown up by bombs thrown into the |WILD: STORY OF STORM i It can be stated on the highest au- | Tegiments. stated theyiwere beingiTeturned to the | for complaint on the part of employers | frst three days successes, while great, Saimance Rl Ty, 3 COMES FROM PLAINFIELD. e The appointment of regular army ;’;‘L’,“i,{"z&efieé‘:;:gg*:;h;‘;;;,g;gggi officers to the militia, ¥ was pointed | American side as soon as encountered. and that.the shortoning of his lines OUt at headquarters, rests with the LOF oomlal: are only initial cpisodes Tn the in| Hetty Green's holdings of Cnicago|der. s S 3 e creasing pressurc of a vast offensive, |réal estate and mortzages on Chicago Sowemployans af labor decheaie Tealty were estimated at from $10,000,- | HOW GERMAN AVIATOR Approximately Thirty Places Struck S| war department, Which is now consid- Movsmente of Steamships. Gary, ‘I would say: “reat your sl NATIONAL AMATEUR 000 to $20,000,000 b 1 estat DuringiEfectilc % e e ions ey oy putsly mill- | oring -a score of such cases, Kiricwall, July 1—Salled, steamer | right; treat them justly and liberally. ¢ 900 to $20000,000 by real estate men S epo G E { - T Tuumoly, andidstense, Kristianagord, from Bergen, New|To employes T would say: ‘Loval, effi- PRESS ASSOCIATION. | at one time much larser. o Sy f Flaloneld, Cona. July TR determin T i eneral | +p60PS RUSHED TO York; July 2, Hellig Olav (from Copen- | clent service is sure to be rewarded. — - i = British Account of the Death of Lieu- [ tonizht indicate that lightning struck ;-:mamn gfl'-he]utt. relference to Wash- hagen), New York. Do not permit outsiders to influence | Officers Elected in Annual Convention| Homes for 5,000 soldiers, in event tenant Immelman. in approximately thirty places in town, gton. mplete lack of any local ELEPHANT BUTTE DAM.| Fayal, July 3.—Arrived, steamer|You to act contrary to your own inter- in Boston. > ey, hate, during @ severe electric storm here to- : of war Mexico, - hav - = . 2 ests’ To both employer and employe, ranged fx}“iln nic;sxggch}m‘xz‘efts}’ e::co:};- London, July 3, 8.30 p. m.—Tha death | 4ay. No great damage resulted, !zmr-‘[ I would emphasize the fact that each| mBoston, July 3.—The National Ama-|ine to v M of Licutenant Immelman, the famous|ever. It.was estimated that about an| must rely upon the other foT Success; | teur Press assoclation at its annual|William &?&?“fiifi:fi.,”’é‘r‘fiifi’en‘[ "ot | German aviator, who was killed in a|inch and a half of rain fell in the, neifther is independent of the other;|convention today re-elected President|the Boston auxiiiary of fhe National | combat with Pritish fliers, is described | course of an hour. The downpour i they must succeed or fail together:’ George J. Houtain of Brooklyn, N. Y.|Security League. briefly in a statement given out today | accompanied by a fall of hailstones, suppliss of forage, as well 08 the ap- v-r:n’t lmm!mf'clnf‘e(,vf n]n‘lf,exlc.;-in at-1135 Miles Northwest of Columbus— tack in , led General Pershing to i order his men northward. Northern| Irrigates Valley 150 Miles South. $lexicc has experienced many dry V. e e e Dy the | ,Columbus, N. Re d'Ttalia, New York for Genoa. Naples, June 25.—Sailed, steamers Regina gltalla, New York; 26th, Na- poli, New York. Lisbon, June 26.—Sailed, steamer M., July 3.—Troops ) : of the Now Mexico national suard haval Roma, New York. Gtner officers included: Vice presi- by the British aerial board, Some of them as large as marbles, L ‘fi%&mx%? T outh | been ordered rushed to the Elephant] London, July L—Sailed, . steamer Newspapers Raise Prices. dents, W. J. Dowdell, Cleveland, O., and| . The senate, following its annual cus-| According to this account Lieuten- == e i | Atlanta, Gr., July 3.—Prices of both | Harry Aldrich, Cutler, Me.; secretary,|tom, voted to strike from the agricul- |ant Immelman in a Fokker was at- Hay Resolution Signed, I and ts mownts. —lButg‘ dam, 185 milesénortheast-o£4Co-f{{Amsonia, "Montreal. 3 tes ot A4 e 2 " ' lumbus.. ¥ G - amers | tlanta’s afternoon papers, the Villiam Harrington, Vermilion, S. D.; | tural bill the ati 1 eds | tempting with another Fokker to at- "Washington, July 3.—President 8tgtoment by Mexican Ambassador. | The dams: thessecond slargest. arti-’ .'i?.-fi'" 24, s;fims. New|Journal andfthe Georgian,. were raised | treasurer, Georze Macauley, Grand|to be a1s:rmm;§p§¥p$mumDgf‘ceon- tack a British aeroplane approaching|son today signed the Hay resols Hlispa_lArredondo, Mexican -ambas- | ficial R l4an lad % 4in_theiworldtends elphia,{from two to;thres cents today. In-|Rapids, Mich. Zress to their constituents, The item|Annay from Lens when another Brit- | to provide for bringing members of th dog- S poiited. out,. today | irrigatesmasvalio or IS0 IBb 10 the 4 costjof¥production; was given;| Mrs..H. P. Adams of Tupper Lake,| heretofors always has neen restored in|ish fler appeared and dived on the [ national guard into the Tesular |2 ‘mdvement of fthe BOuth. S-S e s MM ST T Py INL Y- was “elected officialveditor, s,y — - conference. two Fokkers, causing Lieutenant Im- ' service. 2 frs