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(ryr r Norwich Bulletin VOL. LViiL—NO. 170 POPULATION 28,219 & NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, JULY 17, 1916 EIGHT PAGES—SIXTY-FOUR COLS. PRICE TWO CENTS “‘,Q The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Doub! .at of Any Other Paper, and Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population 4 BRITISH ATTACKS | HAVE BEEN REPULSED :Berlin Claims Successes and London Admits With- drawal at Foureaux HEAVY FIGHTING ON SOMME FRONT DWINDLES Bombardments Along British Front Sunday and Quiet on French Line—At Verdun French Take German Posi- tions—Russians Capture Baiburt From Turks, But at Lutsk Vienna Asserts Advantage—Franco-Russian Ac- tivity in Champagne Region. pare new and bring forward material.” positions BRITISH ADVANCE BY OPEN FIGHTING Germans Ordered to Stand to Last Man and Bayonets Are Used. British Front in France, July 15, 10 m, via London, July 16—Contin- their offensive, the British who terday broke through the German ond line of defence now have taken of Delville Wood, which was storm- v the ith ‘Africans, and the High wo blisiments themselves beyond Bazentin-le-Petit, advanced parties having been to the outskirts f Martinpuich, Ponzieres and some ints close to the third Ger- erations the of defensc. The weather r ut Perograd re T, and warm [ wn ix Black Sea port n ions after more the on vesterday's the Germa avorabl, 200d_mackine rallying trenct opposite a nature of s using Italians Making Progress. Ttalians he st are positions ¥ reinforcemen while the B: them with eac Frequently th »ther that neither a Hand in Wood Fights. . rtant as that of vil- $ by : nan defenders | of s Waod had ‘orders to stand f . S, t man and the orders virtually . P in the woods fizhting where : 2 and Germuan have beon pierced the ® i & Dayonst. 'I€ i afnsz Four British Attacks Driven Bacl Stretcher bearers mane ritish a | Fresh German Artillery. le-Petit, w ey e e o Woods and [ rond of Martir B iich the new ed with transports, | acroplar German nz imm estruction. and Five Brit A wawler 1sic ve British steamers are re 1 to British Acroplanes Fly Low. have been s German . ST o W ines. | maris upon t ol rman UNDER BLANKET OF FOG spite he r nts in other arms. GERMANSCHURL ATvACK] SN dimien (i many Jetaces Have Surprise French at Biaches, But|IrinZ Upon German infantry with their Driven Out by Counter-attack. |of British infantry. Such. fligh | Lave resulted in remarkab mate | scouting. ! e | Action Beyond Second Line. rench [P scene of action hys been carrie south of the S Tot: Goran At e tacks against Sl ol e om e | tion surp it say they are too ever, fmmediaicly hed a vieo fighting to bother to bring them North both places. y the Ger- | i ct at C B e s A R AR e ng Conflict at Close Quarters ! es of the French but later were eject- ftiie Slundonily) fhol N o s e e when German gunner b ke s Gerr | s aw off their guns with Sline e Tyen Ver. | British infantry within rifie range. In O 55| the grinding conflict which is cour- : ¥ the ground taken nor the number TWO THOUSAND DEAD {[9F Drisonecs 5 fexpremsive (of tneiire IN SMALL TRONES WOOD are fighting Advance Greater Than Expected. British commanders merely say that they have advanced farther than they To the Victors Belongs the Task of Burying the Fallen. ». m., via London, July 17 X |and immense undertaking. g po ol e e L Brifish | Own Gunfire Destroys German Battal- continued to consolid new po- fon. sitions, the Germa re equal- | Among the documents captured is Iy ging in_opposite them |the complaint of a division comman and the artillery on both sides was ac- der of the destruction of a German e battalion by their own gunfire. On Water, food and ammunition must | Drisoner talen complained that the be carried forward over the shell- pit- | Only persons in Germany who really ted area of the ground recently gain.|had enough to eat were the British ed. Soldicrs who have this tasie In | Drisoners, thanks to parcels sent them task in hand are seen in the regr|from home and American interest in with the supplies and then by some |their welfare. Generally they com- magic disappear into the earth or|Plain more of the British artillery fire under cover and reappear where ma- | than of the food shortage. They think chine gun rattles against machine gun | that Germany is in no danger of and perspiring soldler parched with dust, fighting. Still “another task, grisly and ardu- ous, falls to the vicfors; it is burying starving and that the war will be de- cided by fighting like that of the last two weeks where every gun, rifle, man, trench or gully or tree which gives cover will count. , their throats are digging and $hc dead. 7. DMpers It is difficult for anyone not at the there are.2,000 dead i mate that|rront to reallze the changein the new Trones Wood lone, while They are | MY Wrought by these two wecks, thanks to the first continued offensive which is giving the troops practical lessons day by day. thick in the line of trenches taken on Pridayiand the Delville Wood and flelds beyond, up to the new British line. . A staft officer, speaking of the results of the allled offensive so iar, said: “While in the German offensive at Verdun the waves of attack always receded, leaving a large part of the positions gained in the hands of the French, when they did not altogether fail, we have been able in both our main attacks go hold practically every point_taken. Phis requires very care- ful arg‘nn:‘zatlon an a.gxe.pmcmg ot strict limits on the, objective of the t; when, the ' attack Heavy Rains in Virginias. Roanke, Va., July 16.—Practically all railway traffic in the southwest Vir- ginia and eastern West Virginia dis- trict was tied up today by washouts and slides resulting from the theavy rains of the past week. No loss of life has been reported. Comeitted Suicide on Border. San_Antonio, Texas, July 16.—Cap- tain Christian Briand,’of the Twelfth Cavalry, committed suicide - todey at Hu M., ‘by'shooting. The re- port to departmental headquarters, in- dicatedythat’ the officerwas mentally | ground | Cabled Paragraphs In Volhynia Germans Retreat. Petrograd, July 16, via London, July , 2:10 a. m—In Volhynia the Rus- slans in the region of Ostroff d Goubine have put down heavy Teu- tonic attacks laynched in mass for- mation, and forced the Teutons to re- treat to avoid the danger of being outflanked, according to the Russian official communication issued this eve- ning. Upwards of three thousand men were captured in the fighting. NEW BATTLE CRUISERS OUR FIRST NEED They Come Before Dreadnoughts, in Rear Admiral Knight's Opinion. ‘Washington, July 16.—In response to a request by Secretary Daniels for an opinion on what lessons might be drawn for the naval expansion pro- gramme from the Jutland battle be- tween the British and German fleets, Rear Admiral Knight of the naval war college has replied that far from di Forty Hours Battle in Open Boats CREW OF RAMOS HAD GIVEN UP HOPE WHEN RESCUE CAME. SANK AFTER HURRICANE Last Man of Crew Put Off Ten Min- utes Before Vessel Went Down— Two Mer Lost and Captain and Others Missing. Philadéiphia, July 16.—Stories of B 3 privation, a forty hours’ battle in open crediting the battle cruiser, althousgh |hoats against gales and mountainous vessels of that bore the brunt of | waves, the loss of two of their nun the losses in the engagement, the and finally when all hands haa fight added a new area to the field of [ almost given up hope, rescuc by the usefulness of the fast fighters. United Fruit company's steamer Jose, sramweetaohsy ton wi sthe time’for |were brought here tonjght by Battle Cruisers First. members of the crew of the freighter IThe. hattla has not changed the Ramos, which sank last Wednesday, miral's opinion that dreadnoust 0 miles northwest of Watling Is and will continue to be, the backione | and: 3 . b s Aottt et, but it has caused | The steward and one sailor of the him to recommend that if congress were drowned whilo leaving lecides to a apit ears are expressed for the it members of his crew who Changes in Naval Recommendations. ot fo 10,2 Sl boar but whe could The admiral expressed the lief | sible, however, tiey may have been |that the battleship would continue to | pickéd up by Some other ship. the backbone of every effi n'i Jose, bound from Santa Marta fighting fleet, but added develop- iladeiphia, res the 14 men ment leship design had been |on I night the North Caro- 50 rapi was glad of an op- | lina port ] change in recom- | The Ramos with a cargo of bitumi- mend naval building made | iled from Philadelphia on by k months the change | artagena, Colomoia. Two bein A |a he rar into the tropical £ the number of ips to be | zed off the Sot provided for this I re-|t week. She sprank commend that all rs. e down in a few hours, If the num 1| the last = wving her ten minutes four battle cri and two dread- | befor noughts. | - - S Deti omber ds ted L récommend ipREEERENGE 'DEMANDED noughts | FOR UNION WORKERS United States Navy’s Need. | B e pointed ot the diftercnce bo- | Ul That Is Granted 60000 New e ol etieSs| York Garment Makers Will Stay small North mnder | Out. which the Ur vould e — a0t apanat | New 1 July 16.—Until union yond the s. He one re- | 0the factur the ct in which the t ex and lockou e garment in- today is hampered or -|d ere, which T Ut {ered, in the even of w as | proximately 60,000 persons and have |no battle cruisers and ut « pre out three months, ns of gain 1 Samuel Gom- the hody blindfc that comm! need ded. 1 wh ts, it High Speed With Gr eat Gun formation r ) B | : |an enem ave gr ow- | which " they meet one which calls battle cruise ; speed associat Zun n power.” NAVANL COLLIER HEGTOR BEYOND SALVAGE But Only One Member of Crew R ported Lost. Washingtc n wrecked in olina coast the vessel ed saailors from the naval landed Saturday morning by \t- house tender Cypress. C: > | the Hec which is lying aground off Charlest = >, broken in two. | tured, ana tnree others t rew | . The Hector. commanded by Cptain | Joseoh Newell, hac led from Port Royal, S Naval Trairn Station, carrying s marines to Santo Do- mingo when she was partly disabled in Friday's hurricane. _She grounded while trying to make Charleston har- bor, convoyed b ythe steamer Alamo, High scas had prevented the Alaumo getting close enough to take off the men, who took to their 11 boats, In addition to her commander and tha marines, the Hector, which displac 11,200 tons, earried a one officers and men. SHARKS SCARE SUNDAY SWIMMERS Coney’s Surf Lacked 50,000 Bathers From Fear of Man-Easters. crew of New York, July 16.—Although two scharks, each weighing more than pounds, were caught off Staten Isiand today and fishermen returning from nearby Banks reported having seen several schools of the monster fish which have been terrorizing bathers, thousands of New Yorkers crowded to the various beach resorts as usual, In many instances proprictors of bathing pavilions took extra precan- tions by stretching beyond the breakers in front of their places. able decrease in the number of persons who ventured in the water. At Coney alone, it was said, at least 50,000 re- mained away from the surf for fear of sharks. 5 Life guards, armed with pikes, eel fors and similar weapons, patrolled wire. netting out | However, there was a notice- | m WELCOME FOR OSBORNE Prisoners Met Hin Prison Gate. at the ntry welcom- s vindi- in 15’ pres: the He ted by League hiss of huma w alad of carryiz by Wi t len CAPED AT MIDDLETOWN, Patient caped from Open Doors and Es- | H g Night 5= 1 early it Hospital | pried roke oper appeared carly a from ours nornir committed £ New Haven y against k being that o sncealed Wweapons “omr mado % ST. JOSEPH’S DEDICATED. New $125,000 Roman Catholic Church at Winsted. Wiristed, ‘Conm., July 10.—St. Jo- seph's Roman Catholic church, a new edifico erected at a cost of about $125, 000, was dedicated here today. Rt. Rev. Monsignor Thomas Duggan officiated and Very Rev. Anselm Ken- nedy, O. F. M., provincial, was the celébrant of the dedicato mass Monsignor Duggan preached the ser- mon at the morning service. _ The preacher @t vespers was Rev. Joseph H King of Torrington. FELL DOWN STAIRS AND BROKE HER NECK | Mrs. Sarah North of Winsted Came to a Sudden End. Prompt Action on BIG BUILDING PROGRAM NAVY TO BE SPEEDILY-SETTLED ADJOURN AUGUST 20 Senate Democrats—Army Bill, Car- rying $320,000,000, Will Also Ready for Conference -This Week. ‘Washington, crats, having resolved n an adjol RUSSO-JAPANESE AGREEMENT LEAVES CHINA OPEN Only an Arrangement to Combat Ge and Influence. n misconstruc- $340 A YEAR - ] New York Employes Can't Satisfac- torily e on Less, Bureau Finds. securities from E try passed throush this the way to New Y. made up of three s the valuables, for the score or more of armed e press messengers, left Halifax Satur- day, crossing the international border early today at Vanceboro. The train proceeded from here over the Boston and Maine railroad by way of Lowell and Worcester, Mass. land to this coun- city today on The train, cars carrying with coaches cel together Killed in Auto Collision at Tiverton. Tiverton, R. I, July 16—Ruth Mor- gan, the three-year-old daughted of Mrs. Vernon Morgan of Quincy, Mass., was hurled from her mother’s arns and almost instantly killed ltoday® when an automobile in which they rere passeéngers collided with another driv- Winsted, Conn. 16,—Mrs. Sa- rah North, aged 77 years, fell down a stairway at the Winsted Girls club tonight and broke her neck, dyirg al- most instantly. _She came from her home in New Britain, last night to the bathing resorts.-from Early morn- | visit her:sister, Mrs.sC.-D. ‘Sweet, who Jo_guntil-nightil. *in-aation; Qtther gl - = en by John S. Flores of this town. Flores was arrested charged with mur- der in the second degree, steam- Caserta, Genog. e National Defense FOR Early Date Has Been Resolved on by be July 16.—Senate demo- bill comes the | gram, tl re | tical ‘inactic ezislatior it will by n abser dreds o representatives are le e capi- 1 | tal FOR STREET CLEANERS ‘Stampalia, | coverad esterday and.that of the I Condensed Telegrams Bastille France. Day was celebrated in -.The house passed the Adamson wa- ter power bill. Pope Benedict is reported preparing a second peace appeal. Canada’s second domestic loan will be issued in September. Gen. Villa has demanded the sur- render of Chihuahua City. Exports of copper from Atlantlc ports for the week ended July 18, were 10,485 tons. Two men were killed and much dam- age caused af Summerville, S. C., by a hurricane. Willing H. Whalen, a private in Co. K, 5th New Jersey regiment, died at Douglass, Ariz. Carrying $14,000,000, the District of mment of consress by Aus. 20, if posei | Columbia appropriation bill Was report- pEleative program outlined by the | Garranza troops annihilated a body bt 2 2 bt Zapatista troops in an engage- When debate on the naval appro- |ment at Milpa, Alta. priation bill is resumed, democratic = : feadere will seele 6o hola ropmbiicans |. A meteor, the unburied part of which to their pledse of co-operation and |iS as large as a 5 room house, fell will urge their colleagues to limit de- |near Hot Springs, Ark bate. The, big building program prob- : : ] oae e ple bullding program Prob- | president Wilson re-appointed Brig. fhre day e Gen. Frank Melntyre chict of the bu- F »wing the naval reau of insular affairs. Approsimtony - Sato boiie FIINE | Santo Domingo's revolution is at an now jate that O theaders | gnd, revolutionists having been forced e dotonse Bills eon e eee."%: | to lay down their arm Thic unaie e oo | Gen. Tasker H. Bliss arrived at San up the shipping bill e nisse | Antonio, Tex., to begin his inspection to develop the only &e s onposition | tour of the army camr confron of the gislation . . e B e o e e A financial conference among repre- sentatives of England, France, Russia S afhereits tion of last|and ltaly, was held in London. democratic " cald Ma Letuder Kern today.’ “T can sea| A non-resident hunting license for on why adj nment cannot be | Virginia, ti st ever issued by the n by August 19 state, was sent to President Wilson. e democratic steering committee e Will mee early this weelk and probe|. Children under 16 years of age, com- ably will agres upe In- |ing from New York, will be prohibited cluding considerat wing | from entering the city of Meriden, Ct measures in the order named: ADpro — priations, - shipp revenus, werko| Greek soldiers at Kavala clashed men’s compen corrupt practices, |with Anglo-French soldiers who re- | Philippine self-zovernment, Civil war |fused to allow them to board a train {and Spanish w nsion and Inte there. | ment bills All of these The bodies of six negro troopers, Tthe h killed at Carrizal, were buried in Ar Thy orkmen’s compensa- | lington cemetery, with full militar | tion .s reported today, is to | honors. and_imm g he| John Grant, a private, died at the keen inte | military camp at Concord, N. H., killed | exhibitea by a blow In the stomach during & caucus. was tha oxing match A bill_providing an _extraordinary e war credit of $30,000.000° for Holland ibmitted to the Second C: The Hague. mber A case of infantile paralysis was |reported from the town of Beekman, {N. Y., in which the State mobilization camp is located Four thousand dock workers, em- ployed on the Manchester Ship Canal were o nstrike for a penny an hour No girl with an ultra-fashion le wardrobe will be admitted to Swarthmore College reopens i nthe fal when the institute Several hundred rioters paraded in | Cork, Treland, hissing and hootir | British soldiers, and shing window of recruiting offices. Denial of the reports that Peru and n ela have allied to take pos- : c | of vast tracts of land, was ons that seem at Lima, Peru. ble con-| Scientists in the Susquehanna Val- between N. Y., unearthed in an Indian useful 10 | mound the bones of 68 men buried government, | seven hundred years ago. ment, clearly ! they had in| More than 1,200 postmasters will at- politi ction in ftend the convention of the National Association of held s tecting that cou Washington German_plots An army of 50,000 men to harvest undue devel the wheat crop of the Middle West, ence—so t has been recruited, the government | open de labor department reported This follows Several passengers were slightly in- statement to The ired when the Wolverine, crack wes Viscount 1 ern train of the Michingan Central, at Tokio was derailed at Michigan City, Ind. Manned by naval militiamen from Louisiana, Texas, North Carolina and Florida, 'the battleship Louisinana led from Nrofolk for a 10-day cruise. Minnesota’s naval militiamen, num- Cooler Weather Reduces Spread of Disease in New York. ew York, July 16.—Abatement of the infantile paralysis epidemic in this city was shown by figures issued by the department of health for the 24 hours ending at 10 a. m. today. Dur- ing that period there were 17 deaths and 96 new cases, as compared with 7 deaths and 1244 ne wcases during the preceeding 24 hours. Officials of the department said they considered the situation generally moe encouraging. Cooler weather has help- ed to decrease tne spread of the dis- case. Canceist’s Body Washed Ashore. Guiiford, Conn., July 16.—The body of Tessle Garrick, of Buffalo, N. Y., the third.member of the canoeing party drowned off Madison in Long Island Sourd on July 4 was washed ashore at Mulberry Point today. The other two victlms were Margaret Burns of Buffalo, N. Y., and Robert F. Furgess of Hartford. Furness' body was' re- <rooned. 100.000 SOLDIERS NOW ON BORDER Strengthening of Patrol Following Reports 'of Villa’s Growing Strength MEXICAN DE FACTO TROOPS ARE ALS0 ON GUARD Accounts of Increased Numbers of Bandits South of Big Bend Region Reach General Funston—$300,000 Wanted for Medical Corps Preparedness—No More Troops on Border Until Thoroughly Equipped. San Antonio, Texas, July 12—Ac-yNO MORE TROOPS counts of increased number of bandits| UNTIL THOROUGHLY EQUIPPEL in northern Mexico, south of the Big Bend region, and repetitions of rg-|War Department’s Sunday Order Af: ports of Villa’s growing strength were fects 25,000 Still in Camps. the outstanding features in hington, Julyl 16— The var e and unofficial information that ent sent orders today to all de- | ed General Funston today. Under his|partment r\)mv‘-d\'rs dto deflay ({;mfl-, et gronU ik | on to the border of national direotion the strensthening of Oreahizationt (vt AR border vatrol, especially in the ot Thorbushh Bend country, was continued. Penn- order affects about sylvania troops today had taken s 100 men in the camps. tions along the Rio Grande, south of | About 104,000 guardsmen now are &t Marathon and.a section of Texas cav-|the border. With the 50,000 regulare alry reached Marfa, from where it | there and 50,000 additional called as re- = et 16 the horder Hng serves, officials estimate there is suf- M ok tal train win| ficient force to cope with any present | . General Pershing reported that| puplished reports that use of . a from Mexican sou had been | general draft was being considered srmed that amo re-captured | to fill the national guard ranks were nza prisoners were seventeen | denied by the department tonight. right ecars had been cut off by Food Shortage Denied. Reports that national guard unite Villa’s men. Hospital Trains Expected. re being supplied poor and insuffic- To meet any eme |ient £ e not borne out in pre- cal corps may hav | liminar; aphic reports received said today, he asked | from department commanders ment to obtain, 1 appro- | today, These accounts uniformly de- priation of $300,000. It also was an-|clared there is no food shortage among nounced that on July 1 a_ hospital|the guardsmen and that all have been train was expected to leave Washing- | supplied normal army rations of g0od ton for servico between here and the | guality NO MORE TROOPS WANTED A message from General Funston be run out of Brownsville. The train | today said General Trevino had sent from Washington will be equipped for | troops south to occupy the Guerrero, laboratory work and will have a de- an Borja—Santa Rosalia . line tail of physicians and nurses —San Borju —Santa Rosalla line Automobiles Replaces the Mule. |vance of ban Further evidences that the mule and |horse are being supplanted in the | SATISFACTORY SETTLEMENT A neement totay that the recently | Trouble Is All Over, Spys Mexico City ordered 250 Lewis machine guns will Official Announcement. be carried on light automobile trucks. Robert Bacon, former ambassador Mexico City, July 16—It is an- to ANCH who returned today from unced her officially that the dif- Brownsvil here he has been in-|ferences which have arisen between vestigatin conditions under whicht United States and Mexico may be national a nen re liv left | considered as isfactorily settled. tonight for F Poso. G ]l Tasker | It is expected that details of the con- | Bliss, assistant chief of staff, ex- nce between Secretary of State pected to leave here for Brownsvil ing and Ambassador Arredondo tomorrow given out Monday. TRIED TO KILL WIFE WITH SHOTGUN CANADIAN MISSIONARIES KILLED IN JAPAN Harwinton Farmhand Found Too Late |Rev. and Mrs. W. A. F. Campbell He Had Only One Charge. Stabked by Burglar. Torrington, Conn., July 16.— July 16—The Rev. W. A. F. Schaller, a farmhand, shot an 1'and his wife, Canadian mis- ously wounded his wife t s es, were stabbed to death early farmhouse of William Mosh today in’ the ummer cottage at Ka~ winton, where she has been em ruisawa by a burglar. The weapon The Schallers have been living used was a Japanese short sword. for some time and the refusal of Mrs.| Karuisawa, which is an American Schaller to return to her husband is | missionary summer center, has been said by the police to have been the |sreatly excited by the murder. reason for the shoo! According to the police accounts a Schaller, according to the police, [ Japanese, dressed in foreign garb, en- secured a shot at the farm where | tered a second story window of the he was employed and, goin3 to ge early today and after awak= Moshier place, smashed in a window |ening the missionarles, demanded and got into the h He confront- | moncy. This being refused the intru- ed Moshier with the gun and demand- | der plunged a short sword into Mr. cd to know where his wife was. On |Campbell’s breas:, mortally wounding being told he proceeded to her room. [him. Mrs. Campbell struggled heroic- She escaped a Gown thé |ally with the assailant, and was stab- stairs r |bed repeatedly, succumbing to her fired after her, wounds a few hours later. in_her back and shoulder. At the point of his sword, the burg- taken to the Litchfield county the police say, forced the Japan- tal at Winsted, where it was cse maid to disclose the cash box and ht she may recover he then made his escape with the haller was arrested on the 10.50 which it contained. winton road and locked up here to| The Rev. Mr. Campbeil recently vol- unteered for service with a Canadian contingent in the European war and was about to return home. await the vutcome of his wife's injur After his arrest, Schaller said he had intended to kill his wife and then himself, but found too late tnat he had only a single him when he rez The Rev. W. . Mrs. Campbell charge of shot with the wera Campbell and sent out to_the hed Moshier ttrmhouse. Far East by the Methodist Church in S Canada. They had been engaged in OLD COUNTERFEITERS' DEN evangelistic work in Japan since Sep- tember, 1913, BURNED AT EAST HAMPTON Karuisawa is a small town at an 5 bering 214, entrained at Duluth for employes is prope i) anfes Baniative | Llod0 Y, CEESS SvLR S theg atlantlc B Was Captured in 1914, is 'a_ favorite summering place report of the bureau of standards, | < T for Protestant missionaries who made public today. It ranges from : f Tt ast Hampton, Conn., July 16. —|assemble there between July and Sep- » minimum of $540 for unskilled work. | Five companies of the 6th [llinols | rnc Goldhagen place in the town of | fember to discuss church and mission ers to $15,000 a y commission- | [1fantry are in camp at cement plants | i3 1horough, where Philip Lieberman, | guestion at La Salle and Oglesby, Ill, to sub- |5iias john Davis, known as “the Ming e e amuiroty By Abakers “Our_conclusion: says the re- VEEone by st of the counterfeiters,” was captured | KING CONSTANTINE port, “that below $840 a vear an un- |0 onodndrrxww2edi onaza by Chief William Flynn of the federal rAPBED BY e nail skilled laborer's family of five pgr- : ey : - | sécret service in December, 1914, was 3 Sons cannot maintain o standara Yot | American sheep raisers will receive | itiioq®to" the ground late . today to- s s caaner melntain o standard P of | afout $76.000/000 for this vearsiwool | Dooiod to e Sroundiiate teday too o Manarch! Hessusd i Exontica it and Ho rate below $840 has been recs |STOP: the Department of Agriculture | Fusigy o5 riie "iocs G5 placed at bew Fire by Soldiers. ommended for the rank file of the |#nmounced. Canada's second domestic|iween $4,000 and $5,000, covered by - et cleaning department and for |10a% Will be issued in September. insurance. Athens, via London, July 16, 7:20 unskilled manual workers.” E The fire apparently started from a|p. m.—King Constantine had a nar- e DY The Greene-Cananea Copper Co. was | gofective flue, according to the. ex- |row escape from death in the fire BRITISH GOLD Potified by the State Department that|jressed opinion of the owner, Kopel|which destroved the royal summer res- the embargo on supplies and explos- | Goignagen. Women relatives who had |idence at Tatoi last week. The king CAME VIA HALIFAX tives to Mexico has been withdrawn.|peen bathing in a nearby storm said |was trapped by the flames and fainted, ’ = PeTations at the company’s propertylipat when they returned all of the|but he war rescued from his precari- Taken in Three Steel Coaches to New | Will be resumed at once. | buildings were a mass of flames. ous position by soldiers and moved York City Sunday. INFANTILE Ly Lidberman was captured at the|from the danger zone. = 9 FERRARAEVSIS house by Chief Flynn while surround-| The fire in the forest around the Portland, Me., July 16—A special SHOWS ABATEMENT |ed with counterfeiting equipment and |chateau is apparently under control, train bearing a shipment of gold and = was sentenced by the federal court at |although it is still burning on the Hartford in Ju in the Danbur counterfeiting ¢, 1915, to ten months jail for keeping a plant. FIVE LIVES LOST IN NORTH CAROLINA FLOOD $10,000,000 Property Damage Follows slopes of the Parnes Mountains, which are covered with oaks and pines. FASTENED SHOTGUN TO BENCH: Then Franz Widell of Hartford Lean- ed on it and Pressed Trigger. ; Hartford, Conn, July 16—Franz Slanline 30 ieiipn Custaf Widell, a funsmith emploved Asheville, 'N. C. July 16.—Five |8t a local arms factory, committed, known dead and property damage es- | Sulcide at his home here today by{ timated at $10,000,000 resulted from a | Shooting. He fastened a shotgun to a sloudburst and flood over western |Dench in the basement of his home, North Carolina early today. he |Placed his breast against the muzzle and discharzed the gun by pressing a long sticke azainst the trigger. He was an elderly man and is survived by three children. He suffered from hal- lucinations, it was said. known dead are Captain J. C. Lipe, Miss Nellie Lipe and Mrs. Leo Mul- holland, all drowned in Captain Lipe's house at Biltmore, and Lonnie Trex ler and an unidentified nggro. The floods extend througn a great portion of western North Carolina. Re- ports late today were that two dams at Hendersonviile and the big_dam at Lake Toxoway had broken. Railway traffic in this section is at a standst as the result of slides and washouts and telegraphic nervice is badly_crip- Dpled. Several trains are reported ma- No Loading on Deutschland Sunday. Baltimore, Mr., July 16.—There was' no loading on the submarine mer- chantman Deutschland today. Reli- gious services were conductod this morning on_the interned North Ger- man liner Neckar by the Rev. Otto Apitz for the crews of the Deutschland | and*Neckar.