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el R _NORWICH, CONN., mn'ssmv.~mmasn 29, 1916 Condensed Telegrams .’J Sh af fresh and cured me: npmnnt‘ MACKENSEN CLOSING ;,v,.,e-,;«,:;,«:-:;«s,. A i St s o ““"" pil Byt Hostrendort. torawnty chist of tne by fl uflf 'den cflp Lackmna Ir aln , EADSOTE oraL 6 LE 5 tae The British Board of Trade prohib- v general staff of the Austro-Hungarian : lN ON BU‘ HARE I army, has been promoted to field mar- ited the use of wheat in the man- shal, says thé'Overseas Ncws agency. ufacture of beer. THIEF HAD FIRED FIVE SHOTS |PASSENGER TRAIN PLOWED | Fire destroyed a block of warehouses CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE AT THE POLICEMAN THROUGH CROWD OF 400 MEN |and thirty residences at Tampa, Fla., at a loss of sswoo AGAINST JOHN E. TEIPER — - Eandhlhit ; A bleach mill will be built at Eik- Comtinues e e the Sete. "**"*|OFFICER RETURNED FIRE |FIVE ' OTHERS = INJURED |ior- 34 ¥ - & , ., by the Jesup & Moore Paper Are Still Progressing From the North and the West for the' Gtats. E 2% Dot of Sovon0. i Bl:gnlo,ulf. '.Yo.éaNov.- ‘2!8,—'&“(("25‘5&3 4 T Gold coin amounting to $1,200,000 v e continues . i ithd: 1 - ury and the South and Southwest Chroumstantial” evidencs. against Jony | James Melly. of Boston, the Miscreant, | They Were Crofaing Tracks When an |25 JILEICaN, f00, (2 Sap reas 4 » Edward Teiper, on trial charged With| gustaineds a Fractured Thigh—Po- the murder of his mother, Mrs. Agnes Express Bore Down Upon Them— Railroad traffic betwen Mexico City They Became Panic Stricken and |and Vera Cruz is paralyzed as a resuit of a strike of railroad employes. Were Struck Before They Could Teiper, in the Orchard Park road last| Jiceman Was Less Than Ten Feet TEUTONS 37 MII.ES FROM RUMANIAN CAPITAL |ifone i ine story 5 vencs'in the voad | O When Me Was Fired Upon by during the hour after the murder oc- = cupied the day. the Escaping Man. Dr. Willard B. Jolls, who was called to attend Teiper after the tragedy, > it e . testified today that he did not regard § oo = The Norwegian steamer Niels, bound Fre Bucharest Says the Rumanians Are Meriden, Cofn., Nov. 28.—Patrolman | Passaic, N. J., Nov. 28—Five men prNo s 1 Unofficial Dispatch From ys i G O A o ey s head | John J. Custy had a narrow escape | were killed and at least seven others [£0F Viadivostok with a genoral war q o cargo, is in distress 250 miles off Se- Gl 2 ® | from death this evening about 10| injured tonight when a passenger train | $378° Retiring in Perfect Order Toward a New Front Already R enomatlents, :’b,:‘;“;';‘e.rei“;‘r o'clock when an ‘automobile thief |on the Lackawanna Railroad plowed |%tte: 4 a hom he was pursuing fired five re- | through a crowd of about 400 employes . apparently had received, but that Teip- | ¥ The sixth annual meeting of the Na- Divergent R e About volver shots at him. Custy retaliated | of the Canadian Car and Fogpdry Co. Settled on for Defense—] eports Com: t or was a powertul, healthy young man | ¥ o e x| e e iking long the Thacks ¢ |tional Council of Teachers of Englisn . i will be held at New York on Nov. 30 .o . - . the escaping man in the left leg, frac- |a special train which was to take Events Transpiring in Macedonia—On the Russian Front |0 easily. =~ =~ =~ = = . |turing the thish. The priosner, James | them from the plant at Kingsiand to|*°d Dec. 2. Melly of Boston, was taken to a hos- | their homes in this city, Hoboken, » b . . who went to the scene of the murder = Gold bars to the amount of $7,500,- Considerable Activity Has Developed in the Region of |when summoned by Constable Baker, | Pital. He is charged with theft of an | Jersey City and Newark. = o et A corroborated the constable’s statement automboile and assault with intent to The men who lost their lives and and deposited to the credit of J. P. " . . that Teiper had been absent from the ill. The police received word at 3:45 | most of the injured were mnegroes. Morgan & Co. Riga—In the Carpathians the Russians Have Begun|that Teiver had been absent from the [(cjock that an automobile had been | Work for the day had just ended and s Rt - | stolen this evening in Springfield. | crowds of the employes were hurrying . . When Grace Teiper was put into an The Navy Department awarded a About an hour afterward Custy saw |along the tracks tot the special train Another Attack Against the Austro-Germans—Nine Ves- automobile to be taien to the hospital, | {1 achine ass through the CiLy. | swalling them on & siding. contract to the Seattle Construction & i Dry Docks Co. for one scout cruiser to z ¢ He started pursuit in an automobile i i T an: er but he declared that would 5 Bodies Hurled in the Air. cost $4,975,000. els H Been Sunk Either Mines or o 4 i talled nea . ST s ave n by orpedoes be Impossible. It was then suggested | WNICh stalled hear the city limits. An| gyqqenly a westbound train dashed that Teiper say something to his out of a tunnel near the Kingsland| Thomas Kearney, well known commandeered and the policeman P wounded sister. He went to the auto- i station and the men on the tracksfthroughout the state as a road builder, mobile and said, according to the wit- | SAUSht up with the stolen machine at 9 2t | were thrown into a panic as the ex- [died at his home in Merider: yesterday. The operations of the Teutonic al-vergent reports. Berlin says fhat 7 did they hurt you last | > 8arage near Brown * peach orchard | Lo " a50n’ upon them. Before | He was 66 years old. lies in Rumania have brought them |north of Monastir renewed attacks by 2’ and turned away from the car | IR Wallingford. =When Custy stepped | they coylq clear the tracks the train — bly nearer Bucharest and arc | the entente allies failed, while the |with a sort of a sob. That was the | out of the e a oY, noticed | had struck them. Bodies were hurled | The Edward Ford Plate Glass Co. rogressing from the north and |Serbian war office claims _that _in |only sign of emotion George saw Teiper | Lig Upiform and started to run. ®lin the air or carried under the wheels |of Toledo, announced an increase of he west and the south and south- | Gghting along the entire front the|display at any time. it e My e R n"at "ot | of the cars. The'injured were rushed |8 per cent. in wages to its 1,800 em- R R A T o Slcer it was Tozs hanton . deo | (0, Eavtaly and Ketington, " " |pieyes, eftcetive D 1 in Rumania extending westward from | the other hand, zsserts that attacks|FIRST. WEEK OF TEST Lol Ch“EW §fi“’;’“ the fire and one | o TR SRETSSE OF | ,m’,":h, e tniatton |~ Threetmen: wers killed i an explo- Ghr.lu%n the nm;a-l mm..l,:w of Bu- o Hill 1050 tagd zheb vi:}‘ageB olr Para- OF CHICAGO DIET SQUAD | 9 l‘:"‘:n ‘e“'}: "?E"*t";‘a i anlge ;;lg sounding the whistle to warn the men. | sion, which destroyed the mixing e g:wna m‘%o:a ,rt dis- ow; ;eere pu owlr_nk "x e Bul ;sagm_nf —— % $87 on his persan. e is 28 years old. He said thany of them appeared to be | building of the Aromatic Chemical e or, is now | and Germans, as likewise was a Brit- | On Food Costing 33 2-3 Cents a Per- bewildered 2nd instead of trying to get | Co’s plant at Newark, N. J. in Of the foroes of fhe cen- | lsh offensive’ in the Vardar region | yon Each Day a Total Gain of 27 = off the tracks kept on running straight E= tral powers. The gtolnl 6 m | sofiih of the witageof Hegoraaleit b o s Has Basn: Mides WAGE INCREASE TO MEET ahead of the train. e 2ur bersons wore killed ~when o 1 and Rehovo by tha ‘Bulgarians | Austro-Italian theatre - nothing but 3 £ 3 THEGHIGH COST OF LIVING ik gywa.mpasse:yge‘:er:l;inmgat a 0 seem seriously to menace the | bombardments have taken place. South | Chicago, Nov. 27.—The diet squad e EXPERIENCES ABOARD A Street crossing at Kokomo, Ind. | Atroops from the Orisova | of Dvinsk. on the Russian front ar-|which is undergoing a two weeks' test | Has Been Granted to 10,000 Employes GELIG Sainas iner PHR ond sectors who were[ tiluery duels have been in progress.|to helpestablish an ecocnomical stand-| of Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey - el : Aplication was made to the Stat ’ several days ago to be in re- | Considerable activity also has devel- |ard of living and to prove that palata- —_— Which Sank th Danish - Stea: banking department by the Gi l’ | treat to the southeast. oped in_the region of Riga. In the|ble and nutritious meals can be serv-| New York, Nov. 28.—A wage in-| ' on San ST MM Trust. Co., of New York, for permis. { occupation of Giurglu brings | Carpathians the Russians have begun |ed at a cost not to exceed forty cents | crease to meet the high cost of living Therese in the Bay of Biscay. Sim to'astabiah: & hranch, in‘"l',al’r?:” e = m:o l,tltmn thirty- vvonm‘ll(:ckn; (n;.nenther Mt;:id‘fi ?x?msits e ’fic‘.’é‘e‘e’g' e a}:}:)s?a;orbigzdtidm‘s‘:x;:idw:: k.’id“z; fi’ “mdfi 194 o%o ofiits ‘employes will ]| ;o riin; “Nov- Mk oernt - Wicelbes ) 5t TmMans an ghtin; > & -, =y , D . 28— " T e o the oot T e s e the g d cents a person each day. On this diet | bas e caseq nriNE December b | Sayville). Bxperiences of a German | oM, Unidentified man about 55 vears on south, e cap- g re. the b 2 total of 27 was announced here tonight by the b 3 hi old was struck and killed by a Brook- e 7 Curten-an rpen 00 ilee| "Bebrortia aamice e one rurcs| (e pad as Sained o total of 37 | BBl Compuny oF St Yorsey: | sibmaring which Semic me Denish | e Rin, 4L AN Sl & Bk o cu e towns of Adram . cleared the Topolog sector of Ruman. | and Koshishogly south of Van, Tark-| The first week of the test was fin- ;‘fifi&“‘;fi;}"‘{na"mfl"@“e *;,,::, and of the crow of the Danish vessels |Street and Rockaway , Jamalca. fans and given the invaders the rail- | ish Armenia. ished tonight. A statement of f00d | refineries from $2.20 to $2.50 a day |are Dublished by the Copenhagen Poli- { —The American Emba: han't road to the important town of Pilesci,| The American steamér Chemung has [ consumed, purchased at random at re- | ong o5 cents flat for &1l classes of la- uken, save the Overseas News Agen- | mureq to the Foreign. Offi S the junction of the line running from been sunk in the Mediterranean off [tail stores in the downtown district, |por now mfl,g bigher than .$2.20.|CY- The Therese, says -this account, || % the Arperiein cs conda_ Campulung to Bucharest, the coast of Spain by a German sub-'|shows that tho total cost for. food for | vy, s, it wrga stated, who are | a3 Y by an explosion of bombs ;’;";:m = g:‘“mm""" et o In the center the Teutonic allies arc [ marine. The crew wae landed. Bight 12 persons w : t yuring: & storm. The crew of 19 men, |£1° Se8th of B iperor Fr. Jose; still driving eastward, having left the | other vessels, two.each-fiying the-Brit-| p.mon to the advance o, were Bmglish, ini Alt valley far in the rear. An unoffi- | ish, French, Greek L 2nd Norweglan | cHIMUAHUA CITY EVACUATED for. fneBilind. Nabor.. The compairs :;’é*‘* on a‘;"g.{d‘flffl"lg“"m"‘“ Whete at gwdn;’m""sfgu'?fly".".’: cial despatch from Bucharest savs the have been sunk, either by mines refineries are located ' at Bayonne,|llcy remained for 18 houss. On the Vt, was found in a local club retitement of the Rumanlans ieipfoglvr tirpedoss, | L8 BY GENERAL TREVINO. Rahway, Elizabeth and Claremont. R e e Pl [ house “with a bullet ‘hole.in the heart. et order towa: a ne eir 2t onnage was al . "h 3 ted that e front already settled on for defense. 20,000. In addition the Danish steam- | Baid to Be Because of a Shomtage of ,ncre:,’e"s‘“?rflfif’e'&e"‘bi‘“ :het c%m;’:fi; from England to Italy. Since there Inhabitants of u,‘ dhy- of = Lk The rotions in Macedonia are | er Villemoes has been captured by the ‘Ammunition. ‘ since August, 1915, bring the total te|Was no room on board the submarine | gopoio s beod motibia by ‘&‘.f somewhat beclouded by reason of di- ! Germans. - 37 per cent., not including reduction :gr the cre?r 3‘1 "—R Norwegian vessel, | o r o " thorities to prepare for de- Juarez, Mex., Nov. 28—For the first | in the hours of labor. e crew of the Therese was sent on | Jorotie h o e podied workmen EMILE VERHAEREN, BELGIAN | AMERICAN STEAMER CHEMUNG | e S e re e mittoa : OPoaeted G0 tane fhem o Brest. 2® |next week. 3 tion, a Carranza official kere acmitted | migs EDITH F. RANGER TO : f : 7 =25 5 %5 3 Meantime, says the account, a Brit- e, ESTROYED B B Jate today the possibility that General o , 8ay T h i oG CRUGHED o D. sele DESTROYED BY SUBMARINE | 1 Cvino had been forced to evactate CONTEST BROTHER'S WILL.|(Sh steamer had appeared. A British | twe hundred and Ch'i'ca,gf e While Endeavoring to Board a Train | All on Board Were Saved—Ship Was | Chihuahna City because of a shortzge —_— torpedo boat destrover which was hid- |yuig of a country-wide round-up at Rouen, France. Carrying Contraband. of ammunition. Landscape Painter Who Left §213,320 | en behind her Spened fire upon_the e 3 —_ Tl Parls; Nov, 28, £33 p. m.—Emile| Washington, Nov. 29—Officisl re- iEyans swis for fem. c i L o gl ° | policeman follofwng the 35th Black to “Promotion of American Art” | sereiag > " Uich eseaped BY SUb-|gang murder of the year. v s Dolel I LDttt the Aastvection oF 1he Rraaets v reasons only. . He add- | New York, Nov. 28-—The will of May L. Peabody of Warwick, R. L. Yo e ékfim e o onas | han steamer. Chemune by & German|d that: Trevino would move south- | Henry W. Rauger, the landscape paint- | HARROWING EXPERIENCES charged with manslaughter in connec While ‘endeavorin 1o busd a train " | Submarine was recolved by the state|ward as soon as Murguia reached the |er, who dedicated nis 213,320 estate to OF SYRIAN REFUGEES|tion with the death of her four jen Y train. ! ® | scene of action. Carranza officials ex- | the “promition of, American arf months’ old daughter, was held for The French government Las been |department late today from the Amer- | Lie ™, telogram dated Nov. 27 as | attacked in the surrogate's cou X id i aid Were ike | the grand jury in $3,000 bail. hold a matiomal faneral for Verhaeren. | 5aid all on board had been landed | Proof that Trevino was in Chihuahua |today by his sister, M Tt w0 I8 c““;.":‘Aw“"' Hunted Like He suggests that his hody he placed in | safely. City yesterday. Ranger, of this ang, E e Four ?‘eu;:nl vll:‘en injured when an the Pantheon, there to be held til The case appears to be similar to E AR R AR | J arti; 5 = N, s automobile in which they were riding Belgium s freed. © be held untll} ;o destruction of the American ships | HUGHES WON MINNESOTA, ne of New York, Nov. 28—Harrowing ex- | collided with ‘another car and turned ! e i B e oA e 51 tion of the will s periences which Armen! refugees | turtle at the corner of Bedford Avenue Bmile Vernteren was born in May, | Poth carrying contraband, damages for X0 JUST SEgRONES fismarnt ity LR R e T o e e | M B ki e 3 ¥ erp. Fe|Which are to e awarded by diplo- i : vt g, T A e The | matic mezotiation. ~ As there was mo|The Final Official Count: Hughes| The artist lcft his estate to the Na- Jdescribed in a cable message re-| The Rhode lsland State Board of Louvain, and after graduation was ad- | 108 of life nor apparent violation of 179,544, Wiison 179,152, tional Academy of Design, with in-|Seived from the American consulate at| Agriculture has issued an order pro- e e o R i e e e Wiean Strictiogs that the incomes be used for | Tiflis, made public here tonight by |nibiting tne importation of cattle thio Mrs. Mary McLaughlin, aged 75, was Clear the Track. S burned to death in an explosion at hber home at Saratoga Springs, N. Y. P | | declared that a retire- requested by Senator Marchand to |ican consul at Valencia, Spain. ~ He ¥ fe : garded as alarming. St. Paul, Minn, Nov, 28.—Charlcs | the purctase of works by North Amer- | the American Committee for Armenian | Rhode Island except by permission of Fla poct ara oo e 0 Hterature: | ®n the long-arsued case of the Frve,| B Hughes' plurality in Minnesota at | lcan artists to be presented to public | 21 Syrian Relief. The committee|John J. Dunn, secretary of the board. wiltten by Vo-hasren have® heen | Germany agreed that an American | the recent presidential eclectior was | galleries throughout this q.uniry and | States that whe demand for mere nec- i translated into English. ship carrying contraband znd sunk be- | 392 votes, the state canvassing board | Canada. sities in ome district alone to re-| Tentage and other equipment belong- cause a submarine could not get her |determined ‘oday. Discovery of siight e the suffering has reached $100.-|ing to the Fourth Regiment of Marines, T o B 6 AT, PO into port, should be paid for in full |errors in the original tabulation re-|muygr RWAY 000 a month. The message, signed by | which formerly wis stationed at San MORGAN DISREGARDS WARNING | 'The Simoant of damages is thought to | suited in a net loss of four votes by NORWAY ACCOMMODATE thgifi‘n{:lsiio‘y:;rwz.fsfi;g;ng 1 cavesiese: Ct?l'iuwm hfiishinpmli COLEOLE an be the only subject for negotiations in | Mr. ‘Hughes, the flnal official count 4 = 7 L o LV nce, Haiti, on e naval collier Ne- OF FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD. | t1e present case. being: Hughes 179,544, Wilson 479,152, I ERSELE TOGERN AN WISBES? Drafea e v snliidhe | thonsunde reue: Will Offer English and French Treas- T Berlin Lokal Anzieger Says So— | D e FaEees o re oo e Bus- J g g fed by the Rus-| The lumber barge Exile, bound from ury Notes Ranging from 30 Days to | RIDING HALL AND STABLES EMPEROR FANCIS JOSEPH'S Also Must Alter Economic Policies |sian government but are destitute of | Alpena, Mich. for Cleveland, sprans a Six Months. AT NORWICH UNIVERSITY. BODY IN HOFBURG CHAPEL| London, Nov. 25, 5.20 p. m—An Am- | boorioe Teom ton oerere Moo Shge: T AT ROl e Alpena, S e oo ' 7 PXOVoiiss: -+ 20 - | suffering ere ate. - ch., and was abandoned by its crew pYew York, Nov. 2%—The proposed'Plans Made for Coilection of $150,000 | Throngs File Through to Pay Their | Telesraph company. auotes the Bers | Cidonona! investigation by our com. |of seven, who in small boats landed at offering ¢ a series 0 short term treas- 3 < = . if lon e. T o oy m o Rhart [ ens- for That Purpose. Respects to Dead Emperor. o[ lin Loka Anseiger in Sommenting on | §100,000 for bedding for 15,000 mnew T the Eritish and French governments | New York, Nov. 28— Fifty-five thou-| Vienna, Nov. 28, via London, 9.50 p. | ernment has conceded that. its sub- | TorUEees" Canstian Yeoldiers, s who (have’ hren it oas authoritatively stuied | 10day, | sand of thé $150,000 meeded for the|m.—The doors of the black-draped | marine restrictions cannot be main- Ebancing [(ns infernetional bridee. e e rade, regardless of the warn- | erection of a riding hall and stables at | Hofburg chapel, where rests the sii- | tained, as follows: FORMER ‘HARVARD FOOTBALL = | Vancaporo, Me. for nearly two years. A% e v the federal reserve | Norwich university, Northfield, Vt.|ver casket with the body of the late| “It may be supposed that a final STAR HLEN S e R o el e by e e, i S5, made necessary Dy the war depart- | Emperor Francis Joseph, were opened | agreement will soon be reached, but i Ty e SERlOEIveS, (The notes, ranging from 50 days to | ment's desiznation of the institu at §.o'clock this morning. The wait- | in addition to the submarine question, | g2niey B. P k. G (i bl ke six months, will be issued in limPed |as a unit of the reserve cavalry offi- | ing throngs of people then began to|there is also the cconomic question | Stanley B. Pennock, Guard on Plans for a 40,000 ton battl amounts in response, it was sald, (0 a | cers’ tramning corps, has been raised, | fllc- through to pay thelr respects toland the positlon of Norway as an in- Football Eleven. Bt e apeed R rat Tondr | 38+ Faoty . despread demand from banks and | it was announced here today at a lun- | the dead emperor. All classes were|dependent neutral to be considered. od 2 have asgee of af lea.s ot aox; nyestors, and will not be renewatle. | cheon given by tha preparedness com- | represented, rich-and poor, gentry and | To maintain good relations with Ger-| Newark, N. J, Nov. 28.—The body | hour i““ Gt oo “m'mme’; nkers vopresenting the allies de- | mittee of the Spanish American War | workingmen and women standing [ many she must alter her economic |of Stanley B. Pennock, star guard on|l6iinch guns or possibly even larger glined to say to what extent, if at all,| Rougk Riders. Plans Wore made for | shoulder to shoulder in the crowd tak- | policies and accommodate herself to |the 1914 Harvard football team, who|wéapons are being considered by the future international undertakings may | the collection of the £ull amount ing their turn in passing before the | Germany’s wishes.” was_ killed yesterday in an explosion | Navy Department. be affect=d Dy the agigon of the reserve | Major Gensal Leonard Wood. who | unopened casket. . X at the plant of the Aromatic Chemical 5 board, SODKS &L the T-BEHAE AT 1AL N company, of which he was a_partner, n K r, 2 student — 3 TWO ZEPPELINS DESTROYED vas claimed today by his fath d [at Northwestern College, ~Naperville, wic ee P : was claimed today by his father an , 3 RAHROAD EMPLOYES ‘CLAIM | Dacking 1han any other mistary en | WED. OROSS RELIEF WORK IN RAID ON ENGLAND. | removed fo his home in New York. . |Wwas instantly killed when an automo- UNFAIR METHOD OF MANAGERS | lege in the country. It was for this IN SOUTHERN SERBIA % Pennockutlidenm; e thet lfotoot;:;l ggflaign‘g&hfl?&e“:‘f ?‘?én‘]gm?el;msfi]d s i reason, he said, that the university w = b irships [ Man was not leatned here unti < Al To Prevent Men Voting Their Convic- | endorseti. TSY V43| las Been Extended fo Territory Re- | 02M29° Done VY"YG;:;:;‘ Altehipe He plaved left giard against Yale in |prison honor camp. 5 A 2 ;i 3 and_was chosen tions on Strike Proposition. e { SAHETy Eeconunened by Aliisn. London, Nov. 25—The destruction | WAIleE Camp for the same position | Former Sscrstary of the Navy Ffll- Naghville, Tenn., Nov, 28.—Officials D WHILE BInE ON Washington, Nov. 28.—Extens] of. two .GF: the Leppeiins. that particts] b oa !'*DA?L‘;?« iofh :g':m”n o Harper alled at the White House to of the Railrond Brotherhoods whose| BUMPERS OF A LOCOMOTIVE |Red Cross relief work pated in last night's air raid caused| invite President Wilson to attend the members employed by the Nashville, ] N e tricts of southern Serbia recertly re-| greap enthusiasm in the northeastern Confederate vaterans’ reunion at Chattancoga. and St. Lo Ra‘lway | David Benjamin, Prominent in Coal | COnquered -by the allies and provis-| oot towns which had suffered so|AN $8000 FIRE IN Washington in April. ere voting on a strike proposal. issted Fields, Fell Off and Was Kilied, |07 Of an'additional fund of $16.000 10| oeten in previous air raids. NEW HAVEN LAST NIGHT A statement today, charging that the —_— carry on relief at the Armenian re-| ™ mnis morning the naval airman who _— Linford McKinney, 19, a_member of road was emploring unfoir means,to | Hazelton, Pa., Nov. 28—David Ben- | [U8¢e camp at Port Said, Egypt, were| ,;pjveq to report the success of the|A Four-story Brick Building Burned— |Company M. Fifth 8. Cavalry, is prevent the men from voting _their | jamin, head of the Pennsylvanin Quar. | 2nnounced tonight by, Red Cross| piiich in their fight against the air- Fire. of Undetsimiried Ocigii dead somewhere in Mexico. The lad convictions. The statement replied to | rying, Stripping and Contractine com. | Pcadauarters = here. Relief agents| ., which was making her-way home- o BELTR Lo ' enlisted a vear ago and gave his age as one by road officials eiving notice that | pany, president of the Benjamin Iron | Gproad have reported that a large| ..q" when she was brought down : Nov. 28— Fire of |22. He was a son of the late James strikers would forteit their priority | and Steel Works and one of the best | beLcentage of the 200,000 people in | i/2s”given a tremendous ovation by | New Haven, Conn., Nov. 88 7Rire of |y o0 7' Hackensack etanding with the company. known men in the anthracite coal field, | ¢ Ie-conguered portion of Serbia | ownspeople, who ~ carried him | indetermined origin tonight aestroyed s S0 v strike yote wag ncaring com- | was killed and his son, Harry, serious. | Jag Monastir in need ~ of food and| §,uiger-high through streets crowd- |2, four-story brick billing n 'Rl .ol §. Hawby, a chauffeur, and pidllon today, but brotherhood officials | ly injured today at the Ebervale op- |C°thne =~ ea with cheering people, while the si- | niolesale district In Water street o | wrilliam Westerland, a steward on the said the courit would not begin until | erations of the concern. Riding on -rens of the shipping shrieked triumpn- | Cupied by the JF. C. Bushnell com. | amship Stockholm, were arrested on all ine halloty were received. the bumpers of a smail locomotive|PITTSBURG AFTERNNON PAPERS |7t B e S mpany and the Stand. |o charge of being implicated in a plot GOVERNMENT FEEDING e peciqvard up & Srade at high| HAVE DOUBLED THEIR PRICE. e ard Rivet and Washer company. Es- |to shin rubber from the United States off and was crushed to death:” His 50 g OBITUARY timates of the loss range from $80,- |to Denmark as passengers’ SOLDIERS ON 27 CENTS A DAY | 2% 200 Was crushed to death. His son | No More Freo Copies Even for Adver- ——— 000 and upward?. Instead of cargo. Priag o 0 FesCue | tisers-—Increased Expenses the Cause. A «Foster Higgins The firt started shertly before mid- - Greenwich, Conn,, Nov. 28.—A. Fos- | night and was not controlled unti] an| Charles F. Mott, tt, convicted of bribery Pittsburg, Pa., Nov. 2! 1\ after- |ter Higgins, an authority on marine |hour later. At one time the blaze|in connaction with the Onondgna French Chamber in Secret Session. noon papers in this city anrounce to- |insurance; former president of the |threatened to spread to other large |County Tuberculosis Sanitorium scand= S-n 2ntonte, Texu, Nov, 26-—While | - Paris, Nov. 28, 5.00 p. m.—The cham- | day_that, effective Dec. 1, the price of { Knickerbpcker Trust Company of New [ mercantile establishments. al, was sentenced to State’s Prison the . thleago ” health department is | ber of deputics met . today in secret | copies will be doubled and that ad- | York and a former vice ~president .of e m e for not less than four years and nine etriving to_hold the cost of food- for | session. vertisers and others heretofore receiv- | New York chamber of commerce, died Movements of Steamships. months and not more than nine years fil(flrh:lfllol the Dist a wm:ln the fln e \nndg me‘l ca.}.es will have }‘5; pay tile |at ‘his h?néf “m upgy of a.xgomph— Bgdel.ux, r1.:«»-. Yz'l.-i-s;ued: Steam- | and six months. imit orty cents 0. ¢ t expected that many questions vanced price, two cents he papers | cation . of e was years | er pagne, New York. ” the government is fecding R thonar | vitsl to the Sopduet of tha was wiil by |re the Chrinicle Tolosraph, - Ivening |of age. Mt Hmw reputed to| New York, Nov. 28.—Arrived: Steam- | 25000 of Turkeys for Soldiers. inds of soldiers on the border at a|raised at this session, which is the | Leader, Press and Sun. 3 be a multi-milli He was aler San Gugllelnw Genoa. Brown: Tex., Nov. 28.—Twenty- daily per eapita cost of 27 cents, The nd secret meeting llnce the be- “Owing’ to the enormous increase in { member of several hunting ;qd yacht- | Bordeaux, Nov. 28. — Arrived: nv- tho ounds of turkeys for flmpm u-me- the best of rations 2 cost of white paper and other mute- |ing clubs. Steamer Chicago, New York. « - dinners of the sol- u-unay yes nflhu at the rials used in the production of news-| He took an active M h« the ;,( g T T TR o | fluh on the horder in this vicinity ar- In;o t for papers, it is impossible: to produce.a|fairs of Christ Episcopal ch The R in the in-| rived here tocey. The price n:i-"."’q;m Allevvarce Provideg Bect of Rations, With Bomo Boholclu. N Egg Bquofl in Full Swing L, STATE AND CITY OF- FICIALS ARE BUSY TURKEYS DROP IN PRICE High Prices of Living Responsible for Suicides, Death From Lack of Proper Nourishment and Birth Control, Is- rael Feinberg, Head of Coroners' Commission, Asserts. New York, Nov. 28. — New York city’s fisht to reduce-the high cost of living began in earnest tonight with a boycott on eggs by thousands of housewives. This was followed by a direct ap- veal by the National Housewives’ League to President Wilson for the regulation of the country’s food supply and mettings of federal, state and city officials and investigating committees, (Continued on Page Six) ALL READY FOR TEST OF ADAMSON LAW Last Step Taken by the Government in Perfection of Its Appeal. ‘Washington, Nov. 28.—The case of the Missouri, Oklahoma and Gulf rail- road, selected to test the constitution- nllty of the Adamson law, was placed today on the supreme court dockes, the last step in perfection by the gov- ernment of its appeal from Federal Judge Hook’s decision holding the law unconstitutional. The department of Justice advised the court clerk’s office that next Monday a motion would be presented- to set a date for early ar- gument. Solicitor General Davis asked the clerk to have the record printed at once. Outside of the record before the su- preme court, and not so far made a part of the official transcript, is the stipulation, agreed upon by Attorney General Gregory and railroad counsel to abide by the court’s decision in the Missouri, Oklahoma and Gulf Coast in all other suits uuectiomn‘ the validity of the Adamson act. In the presenta- tion of arguments to the court, how- cver, a stipulation making the pend- Ing case determinative of all other suits may be filed. ‘Unless the supreme court gives the Adamson case precedence OVer many others already assigned for hearing ning ~Monday. 1t fs cunddamd doubtful whether it could be reached much before the middle of December, even should the court agree (., ad- vance the hearings. There are : ma forty already assigned, many of tiem lmporlant cases specially advanced. Mevertheless it is general {ly expected that the railroad case will be submit- ted before the-court recesses for the Christmas holidays on December 22. GOVERNMENT RESTS CASE IN TRIAL OF EDITOR WATSON Accused of Having Sent Obscene Mat- ter Through the Ma Augusta, Ga., Nov. 28.—The govénr- ment late today rested its case against Thomas E. Watson, the Georgia editor on trial in federal court here charged with sending obscene matter through the mails in articles in his periodicals attacking the Roman Catholic church. Much of today’s session was tuken up with expert testimony by Latin professors regarding the meaning of Latin phrases contained in the alleged obscene passages. Watson contends they are quotations from widely cir- culated Catholic works and he at- tempted to show in court today that their meaning would not be under- stood by the ordinary reader. After the government had concluded, he opened his defense by efforts to es- tablish his “literary character.’ During the day, Watson, acting as his own lawyer, had several heated controversies with opposing counsel, declared he was bei submitted to “infamous persecution” and was ad- monsihed by the court that he must “control himself.” He repeatedly charged that the church he had at- tacked was behind his prosecution. WORRIED OVER FOREIGNERS IN CHIHUAHUA CITY Villa Reported to Have Said He Would Kill All Captured. El Paso, Texas, Nov. 28—Friends of the Americans and other foreigners who remained in Chihuahua City are worried over the safety of these for- eigners as Villa was reported to have declared he would kill all forcigners when he captured Chihuahua City. There are believed to be six Ameri- cans in the city. They started to come to the border on the last train, it is said, but were advised to remain by friends who feared the bandits would stop the train and execute them. VANCE McCORMICK ANSWERS CHARGE MADE BY O’LEARY Democratic Chairman Declares That His Assertions Were Justified. New York, Nov. 28.—In his answer to his suit for alleged libel brought against him by Jeremiah A. O'Leary for a statement published on October 3, filed here today. Vanee McCormick, democratic national committee, deglar- ed that his assertions were justified. “Mr. McCormick quoted in full Mr. O’Leary’s telegram to President Wilson on September 29, maintaining that his criticism of the president for the sale of war munitions or loans to any na- tion or nations with which the United States is at peace, was groundless. TWO CENTENARIANS AT FUNERAL OF WILL!AM HARRIS. Hundreds of Actors and Theatrical Producers Also Were in Attendance. New York, Nov. 28.—Two centenari- ans attendcd the fumeral of William Harris, Jcan of New York theatrical ‘They were Kii-