Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 14, 1917, Page 1

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F PR PRICE TWO CENT Clty's Population T8 Mines Kiled { e o TRAINMEN PLAN FOR Bolmnbm Treaty in Ionxplnsmns T T N ATION-WIDE STRIKE IN A MINE NEAR CANONBURG, poe i it & 7R e 8ix ons were injured when a mlleym the rails at Stapleton, S L AGREED UPON BY SENATE FOR- EIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE PA,, YESTERDAY border. Hiram Johnson, U. S. senator elect, will resign next Thursday as governor 5 OTHERS MISSING ot Calitornia. To be Inaugurated Next Saturday Evening Unles Shipments of fresh and cured mea from Chicago last week totalled 47, Two Rescus Teame Are at Work, | 554000 pounds. Eight Hour Day Is Granted With Eight Engineers From the| The State Motor cl.;-I Co: 78 in ‘Dover, Del - Bureau of Mines at Pittsburgh. R oF 36,000,000, o AGAINST U. 8. STEEL - Maurice Stern: of Liverpest, anpiiea| DEMANDS JUST WHAT WERE MADE LAST FAI 8ollcitor-General Davis Will Finish for a membership in the New York Final Plea Today. d4 3 — ashington, March 13—Modifica-| Canonsburs, Pa. March 13—ilight o ashington, March 13—Arguments | tions in the Golombis treaty wers|miners are kiown ‘to have been killed, st WEhaske: s vernment's | agreed upon today senate for-|their bodies having n recovered, & i dissolution suit against #he United | eign relations committee in tfort | and Gold coin to the amount of $640,000 ¢ g Under British Bombardments the Germans Have Abandoned|States Steel: Corporation were con_ fo most republican. Objectionaand 1o. | oF te. Sxplasions whick easly ioday | rue withdrawn from the Sub-Treasury | Brotherhood Heads Will Tell the Railroad Conference Co . today supreme court and | morrow Chairman Stone will Jay the | wrecked the interior of Hendersonville o . ’ Solicitor-General Davis began the fi- " i i Their New Defensive System West of Bapaume on a|5Sier SriSi arin. ety il | ooy, o0 beore the ponsee witn, 8| Mine No. 3, of”tng Henaerson "Conl| opitsation of the complate ngnt-| mittee in New York Thursday of Walkout Plans e will conclnde tomorrow. fore the end of the present extra ses- oday the bodies of f i it 3 Front of Three and a Half Miles to a2 Depth of a Mile— | Denying monopolistic intent, offect |sion. Republican leaders, still bos- | were taken from. the mines. Rescus |Mended by naval officials. Strike Orders Have Been Issued to the Various Orgas or promise by the corporation. C. A.|tlle In spite of the changes. said to- | partles Eave found the bodies of four| The American Locomotive Co. re- ' VOTE TO PAY $15,000,000 Further Notable Gains Have Been Made by the British * Forces Agamst the Germans i Nanevmsrssoe— Senator Lodge lssued a Statement Condemning the Treaty and Declar- ing It is a Case of Blackmail. BENDING TEUTON LINE NEAR SOMME AND ANCRE st o stish | Severance. of St. Paul declared in|night there woula be no filibuster to | othes d they will be taken from |.eved % zations—Th i ery Indication Tha it / The Turks Are Being Given No Rest by the British Glosing for the defense miat it ls | prevent sction but that more “than The' shatt during thenni‘!hl. o hofles | Sret e i Lor Ive. (J38rton ‘en n ere is Ev y t t President W i 3 lessing that there this coun- | thirty senators were pledged to vote|have yet been identified. ~The cause . P : Operating Against Them Northward From Bagdad and| &y such an Qorganization, so strong | against the treaty. of the explosion has not been determ-| The state police are investigating son is Prepared to Move Again if the Transportation | v ent that it can go out an U. 8. Not Apologizing. ined. the disapearance of Miss Nellie Aliano, e & 4 cilities of the Nation Are Jeopardized. 3 . . . B capture the 3 Along the Tigris River—Fighting Has Been Resumed in | ® 30 5o Sitas that the corporstion | AS amended. the expression of re-| Fight ensineers from tho =TUnited|ig'years old of Avon, Conn. ontrols 90 per cent. of the steel trade, | STet that ansthing should have occur-| ,ng two rescue teams are working in| Domestic exports from the port of ic: in Macedonia—; Submarine | Mr. S red to mar the friendly relations be- Galicia and in ia—Another German o8 theon cruhias ST, attall | fveen the. two countrics - would:. be | 7 e e tatcen | W York for the week ended March Has Stranded on the Dutch Coast. g o oatwpeking . fuitiattves | oe ool B s s oruo} teouy e e e Tha Yon Ean s T vRLURG L V4,165 1000 Washington, March 13—Comglete| Thé southeastern upion offic he said, had not been fixed by S oiombia, Instead of bYland relatives attempted to tear the| The Canadian Car & Foundry Co.|Dlans of the four rafiroad brother- told by the brotherhood chiets ¢ domination, but competition and | the United States only as in original g togl oDetior of e Sorompstition and| sratt, ana the amount to be paid Co- Sovering from the bodies in order to|has closed a contract for 2,000 freight | hoods for a nation-wide strike to be creased greatly, both in numbers and | lombia for the separation of Panama is| JeRTY T8 CC0C, WSS © S foig S & s Inaugurated next Saturday evening | certain group of roads at Further notable gains have been|don, except in the last named sector, | strength. restored to $25,000,000. Last year the 1S SRIZSNCE, OF, Toe MNTS, DOOIINC nt| Fritz Wulf, believed to be an es. | UPIess the rallroads grant their eight| (eastern #tandard time) made by the British forces against|where the Germans reached _the| In beginning the final summing up | Sehate commitiee cut the sum to $15,- |75 "5eate police to aid the companies.|caped German sailor, and who was ar- | NOUr day demands were ratified lere|and gradually extend to Germans in the operations which have | British trenches and made prisoners|for the government Solicitor-General | 000,000. In adition, the committes to- Tested at Chicago last Friday, was re- | 10Jav by local union leaders from the|the country by next Wednesda as their object the capture of Bapaume | some of the occupants. Davis said that the possible use of |32y recommended an = accompanving| nemMOCRATS OF HOUSE Hopray q southwestern territory and by a sim-| Kach 24 hours until Wes as to have the walkout b and a general bending the Ger-| Blsewhere on the line in France|the corporation’s potential power was|resolution proposed by Senator Knox. ilar conference of representatives of|new group would be affected man line eastward in the Somme and|there have been only artillery en-|more important to consider than its|¥hich would declare that the United TO CAUCUS APRIL 12| General Obregon, minister of war, | t0¢, Southwest held at St. Louis. progressive system, the union men tates must not be undevstood to be o has sent a telegram to President Cav-| The brotherkood heads will tell the | was adopted to avoid paralyzis Ancre regions of France. gagements. past conduct. According to the British war office| The Turks evidently are being given| “The government brings this suit,”|aPologizing and that there is nothing|To Line Up Democrat communication under another of the|no rest by the British operating|he said, “In the belief that a combina- | t0_apologize for. the Speakership Fight. terrific British bombardments the | against them northward from Bagdad|tion of able competitors in any trade| Semator Knocx, who as secretary of Germans have abandoned_thelr main | along the Tigris river. After the cap- |0 as to suppress competition between | State under Taft, negotiated a conven-| <u. ui, cton, March 13.—Another se-| Arthur Lowent] defensive system west of Bapaume on | ture 6f Bagdad Sunday the British | themselves is a violation of the Sher- | 'lon with Colombia on the same sub-| S5V S 0 |0 ) mone democratic |sentenced to serve 10 days in the oity @ front of three and a half miles to a | cavalry kept on the heels of the re-|man laws if such restraint is uridue|Ject. voted in the committee today to |y i cc"jcaders today desulted in a call | prison, without the alternative of pay- depth of a mile. treating Turks and occupied the town|and it is undue when combining com- | aPProve the present treaty, after he | '"0 '\ 0 here on April 12, four|ing a fine, for speeding. organizations will become offective. | committee in New York tod of Kazimain, five miles to the north, | petitors possess a preponderant or a f:g;r‘:;fl-athf_o-?spg;tt;f the democrats, | gays before the opening of the special The demands are just what they were | substantially correct, except taking more than ome hundred prist|dominant share. Intent of combin-|Secured app e proposed res-| Sl fon. to lne up democratic meri-| Mayor Mitchell appointed a commjt- | last fall when President Wilson avert- | specific roads to be affected d bringlng the advanceq British forces |oners. Gunboats are proceeding up|ation cannot relleve from condemna- | ©lution. bers for the speakership fight. The |tee of 75 citizens to welcome James W. | ed a strike after the call was out by | day were not named accurate Members For | ranza announcing his determination to | [Ai/road conference committee in New | flc suddenly throughout pit ey st gl ork Thursday that if an ngreement | country and to give railros Is not reached this week for the es-|to stop the strike's spre: 1, of New York, was | tablishment of an efght hour basic day | ing the union demands if with time and a half for overtime, It was admitted that the strike orders alreadv issued to local|disclosed by the rallroads at the former place to a scant mile and | the river in pursuit of the Turks. tion of the law.’ . Opposed by Lodge. republicans will caucus April 14 and[Gerard, ex-ambassador to Germany, on | Inducing congress to pass the Adam- | the brotherhood leaders would = half from the northwestern out-| <Considerable fighting has broken out| Reciting how early pools were fol-| Senator Lodge, ranking republican | the five independents who will hold the |his arrival in New York . son law, which never has been put In- | for publication about their stri to effect. pending a decision on its|rangements, they declared a Bronson B. Carter, three years old, | constitutionality by the supreme «ourt, [ had been given unanimous appey skirts of Bapaume. In Galicia and in Macedonia between |lowed by combinations of the corpor- |member of the committee, Issued a wer between the two bij Norta of the Ancre the left wing of | Lakes Ochrida and Presba, according | ation's consituent subsidiaries and | Statement tobight — condemning . the | bortee il conter ot apout the same the British in this particular opera-|to the German war office. In the form- | then by the eubsidiaries and then hy | treaty and declaring that even If he|liime in a further effort to agree on|was burned to death at his home at| There is everv indication that the |the sestional meetings so far he tion has sent back the German line on|er regicn north of the Zlochoff-Tarn- | the “huge merger,” Mr. Davis said not | favored it he would not support it at|some concerted action. Oakville, Conn. He was playing with | president is prepared to move aziin|that similar sction wag certalr @ front of about = mile east and north- | opol_raflway the Germans in a raid{oné of the subsidiaries “could alome| this time becaue he was not willing | > Demeeratic Leader Kitchin return- | matches and set fire to his Clothing. |If it becomes apparent that the na- | taken by the meati east of Gommecourt and somewhat|on Russian positions captured 823 |stand the test of lezality of ¢he|tc have the country blackmailed ed to Washington early in the dav and tion, facing. the gravest international|and St. Paul tomorrc straightened out the curve ‘extending [ Russians and thirteen machine guns|Sherman act.” “We are told, and truly, I have no| talked over the situation for three| The purchase of 16 non-rigid dirig- | crisis in its historv, Is about to have| “We will go before from Hssarts les Bacquey to the re-(and near Brzezany and along the| ‘“Their organizers had but two|doubt” he said, “that German _in- | houre with Speaker Clark. . The cau. |ible alrships for coast and harbor pa- | transportation fachities paralyzed. Al- | represontatives Thursdas gion northeast of Puisieux au Mont. |Narayuvka river also made gains and|pwrposes in mind.” he continued, “to|trigues and German influence hawe | ous call sent out afterward contained |trol work, at a total cost of $649,250, | though still confined to his bed bv a | tire membership united behind i A} To the north of this region, in the|took more than 250 prisoners. escape the disadvantages of competi- | been active in Colombia and therefore ‘was announced by the Wi D rt- | cold, th Ha, h - V. > f " g o b o y the War Depa , the president heard reports dur-|mands” said W Lee, head i yletnity of Armentieres, Couchez and| Another German —submariné has|tion and to secure the profits of stock | we must ratify this treaty at onice and | ameie represontative be present. The |ment. ing the day from Secretary Wilson on | trainmen the plans of the brotherhoods. Calls for meetings of local e g Neuveile-St. Vaast and southwest of | stranded on the Dutch coast and a|promotion. These illegef subsidiaries | pay Colombia $25,000,000. We are told At ) German converted crulser . is heing |.are still lving. but thoir: ooty | tiat Golombia will furnish. edbmacte O it s ol ‘witl vaks|. The license to conduct boxing bouts | There wns no statement as (o what | tees the next three days in ab Shased by Japaness and British war-[and mavagement is controlled and | bases to Germany from which she can, Sepe to swing republican memberi ln. |in Madison Square Garden granted to | action he.wae contemplating, but it s | teen cities over the comntry to L ocean. their policles directed by a handiul of | assall our shipping and the Panamal.; fine and clear away prelimin- | Grant Hugh Browne, was revoked af [ unders; to_be probable that his|ceive Bnal instructions for the str men comprising the committees of the | canal, and therefore in the present | 22,0 "6 M T S™ There stilf is|® meeting of the State Boxing Corh- | first “mayv be an appeal to the em- | went out today _from brothe corporation. crists, we must ratify fhe treaty and | amiem i ot o br partisan house or. |mission. ployefs and emploves to reach an |headquarters in Clevelana MAETING LF SO gt i e 1 oo SPECIAL MARK OF HONOR o anciogy. . (THAL W man Tt piop. | paisation; but Mr. Eitchin aaid today | . Ly tor ainatiopsl cenvention of | sebe. Kacwn St ihs aey ths on] sonealelaly; brothis oot SR =1 3 bl Tk (BT Ot eRDUCE mich . plan to M- a o 'n during the day that on | phas| r determination to OF NEW ENGLAND STATES HOUSE OF A PROFESSOR TO LATE GEO. W. QUTHRIE | ZIF Drepared for war T am well aware A e " gorolled Progressives; to be held in St | March 7 the brotherhood chiefa wrote | nothing to prevent the strike « % 3 —_— . W. e have not vet sunk so low i blic ul . 18, 5 - | to thte president advising him > the | concessi 1 the railroads Resolutions Adopted Pledging Their | Charles E. Vawter of Virginia Tech.| | Colombia, can' levy tribute from U’ | 1 oms S, o rauren |5ed by Mathew Hale, acting chairman | meetine. fo hc henl with the ratiroad | decined. to. disciss (Hels couces o Support to President Wilson. Refuses to Talk. apanese Warship to Transport the e e e T are taning Dace ot the party. committec Mnrch 15 and assuring him | supreme court should hand dows = % e BT Body to the United States. TWO MEN CHARGED WITH ticular pains to aveid anv appearance| o Lo e—om L <L that B the country should become in- | decision holding the Adamsor ofSoston, March 13—he sovernors| Roanoke Va, March 18_Chades E | . T o — o COMMITTING WIRE THEFTS|of sharp practices amone their fol- | o, Eifty-nine of the 72 American sailors | volved in war they would Go-operate | constivutional. It is posaible that e Bng] ates, after sev. | yawier professor of mathematios at ki, “Monday, March 12—As a . Jowers In the contest. Yesterday Mr, (rom the Yarrowdale, who were held | with the government in every possible | cision will be announced by @ Disturbed Condition of Affairs tonieht | whose home ' Stockton Heth, Jr, & | Georse W. Guthrie, American ambas. | Have been Turned Over to Stratiord | Mann ursed Governor Whitman "of |8 i overnment, have arrived safes | " Mopiaey, the next dnciiig e adopted resolutions pledging their | student at the Institute, was Shot ang | Sador fo Japan. the emperor 1o en- Authorities For Trial. AL the vhcancy fn the democratic fif |1¥ in Swiss territo support and the support of the people | seriously wounded early today, vol- | pected to detail a Japanese warship to h district of that death, and t and B CUBAN REBELS TO SNOW, RAIN AND SLEET ©of their states, to the president In|untarily surrendered to the authori-[transport the bodv to the United| Milford, Comn. March 13.—Leibar | feenth district of that death. and to-| Tpe Colorado and Southern Railroad " carrying out his announced policy of | ties at Christiansburg tonight and af- | States. The official announcement | Baldino of this place and Mikola Di- |32y Speaker Clark telegraphed Sen-|y,¢ geclared a dividend of two per| CONDUCT GUERILLA WARFARE IN THE MIDDLE WE protecting United States lives and|ter waiving preliminary hearing gave | designating the warship 1s awaited |0, 35 vears old, of Stratford, were ar. | tor Hollis of New Hampshire asking |cont. on the second preferrea stock.| e gk property on the high seas. bond for appearance before the grand | with great interest because broadly in. | rested tcday by Chief James Maher of | that the state lesislature amend the|mpe jast previous disbursement was | Evidence That They Have No Organiz- | Schedules of Electric Lines and Ste The supreme importance of recruit- | jury. Two Institute professors are his | terpreted it will be a special mani. | Milforc, assisted by Bridgeport de-|}aWs %0 an election could be held be-|;;5ge on October 1,1913. *ed Military Movement. Roads Are' Disrupted ing the army and navy. to war | bondsmen. festation of friendship for the Ameri. | tectives, charred with committing wire | foro April 16 in the republican dis- = e : AR i o e strength, of manufacturing amp. ~mil- | It is said that doctors who were|can nation, especinlly as Japanese|thefts that have interrupted tele-|trict which was represented by the| The Supreme Court refused a hear- | Santlaso, Cuba. March 13—Additton-| Chicago, March itary supplies and equipment, 'and |summoned to the Vawter home after | warships are at present occupied in|Phone and telegraph communications | late Representative Sulloway. ing to Thomas A. Sheridar, president a1 evidence tenting fo show that the |sleet amd’ hish ar 3o mpesd mypammxm.-;umé such steriale “th;p‘lrhm;n:‘;omfle% l;:nmn the | patrol duty In the Pacific and In.|In this section at intervals during the of the First National Bank of Rose- | liberals have virtually decided 5 mube ] ih M . :lvcm;xa\u Aisturbed e onl jamas. o ast t ths. t “were Burg, Ore., convict - | = aon of fire and pila the central west Etates, 8o that they might be availa- | Neither Professor or Mre Vawter will | O Grest mimberd of persons have is. | bwined over 1o the Stratford muthons|STUPY'NG THE ATLANTIC tion of Tuhds belonging (o Aeposiiors. | for an orsantred military movertont 1 | toAass " Saint (Comtre) ble at once in an emergency, were al- | make any statement. The wounded |iteg the Ameriean navai = hospital| ties for trial there for a wire theft and AND GULF COASTS contained In & report of & meeting held | sectio $1a_ not be Tesan =0, ssked Tor. g 1ty | 280 is unconsclous and in a serious | whero fhe bodv lies in state, the rlosed | Ach Was held in $500 bond. Baldino, e The New York Municipal League of | vesterday at Songo, the headquarters | sraph. or telephons wires. for e Eovernors urged ‘the necessity|condition. The only other persons in|coffin surrounded with a beautiful | the police say, recently sold a lot of | Preparatory to the Establishment of the United Irish League of America |of Major Rizoberto Fernandez, one of | and then only intermitientls copper. wire. Eight Aeronautic Stations. has adopted resolutions calling on_the | th. rebel leaders. The Western Union and Postal of making forthwith the most ener- | the house at the time of the ShOOLINE | wreath from the emperor Japinese getlc preparations for nation: ‘ence | were the two Vawter ldren and a | omcers and American milit: A Ha- | _Suspicion also being directed against United States to “pillory” Great Bri-| " Although it is certain that Fernan- vere wit TR MRS i O edtions] Tat be Wan ekl . il awakened | val attaches constitute ‘the ‘guara of | Dido, Bridgeport detectives placed him | Washington, March 13. — A fointtain for its failure to grant home rule | dezs' = leutenants dissented, he in- 1'5'3.‘.’&‘;,5"’5‘:?2?‘,‘5?":‘ and e ;‘va 1 as_as) a 3 Py under surveillance and learned, they | army-navy bcard is studving the At-|to Ireland. sisted. according to reports, that the [ most serious conditions in that re wers by Governors Cerl E |He, too, has refused to make a state-| " Tt wag unofficially announced foday|Say, that he recently disposed of | lantic and Gulf coasts preparatory to time had come when his forces must|in Jowa, Minnesot: and Indi Milliken of Maine; Henry W. Keyes of | ment. 3 : Edge, of New J k- e that the first class cruiser Azuma|2bout $400 worth of wire similar to|the establishment of eight aeronautic| Governor Edge, of New Jersey, ask- | he divided and guerilla warfare begun. | storm had been In progress £ oNte'V Hag;x;zgun ggn;;e ;‘} Gr?-hm:; THEFT OF JEWELRY VALUED probably would be designated to trans- | that taken from the poles in Strat- |stations which besides having two |ed General George W. Goethals, former | He urged the.sending of bands bear- | hours at midnight tonight erm Sam . McCal EWI port the body of the late ambassador | ford, Milford and Orange. dirigibles and six or eight seaptanes|governor of Panama Canal zone, t0|ing torches Into every cane-growing! Reports late tomight to ti Massachusetts: Marcus EH. Holcomb of @ AT $600, IN NEW HAVEN [to the United States. The most recent theft was in Al-|each for aerial patrol work, probably [accept the position of consulting en- | gicirict it fs said, with Instructions - A the shifting Wi Connecticut and R. L. Beeckman of lington, just outside of New Haven,| will serve as bases for the new 110-|gineer with the new State HIiShWaY |t hurm, loot and bring desolation. R, the wlis e T ors and their adjutant- | Evidently by Two Men Who Said They | KNEISEL QUARTETTE HAS last week. The two accused ~are | foot scout boats of which the navy will [Commission. The encounter between the govern- | northeastward. generals, who were called into confer- Wanted to Have Watch Repaired. section hands on the New Haven voad | order more than a hundred in a few ol el G tmach. P ment forces and liberals that has been e 1y Iatiiion of Gy — GIVEN ITS LAST CONCERT |and, according to the police, used their | days. A. T. Cook and S. Jacobs, of Har- | oiiie, 2tcq® B0 et T "not vt knowledge of the outlying distriets| Sixteen dirigibles and a suffictent risburg, Pa., were arrested for invol-|t.icen place, although there was VON BERNSTORFF HAS LEFT Can, eir delibera-| New Haven, Conn, March 18—Com- S : fioms i Mador Caneral Teonasa | plaint was made o the polics tonsgnt | Franz Kneisel is to Devote His Time [alons the railroaw ‘to ’cut the wire| number of ssaplanes already have heen | untary matslaughter in connectlon | ficitmishing todny in which a few COPENHAGEN FOR BERL Wood, U. S. A., commanding the de- | that a tray of diamonds valued at $600 Hereafter to Teaching. where they would have the best chance | contracted for, and officers and men |With the Mount Unlon wreck on the|men were wounded. partment of the east, and with Cap- | had been stolen from the jewelry store to ret away before trouble hunters ar-|for the air service are being selccted | Pennsylvania Rallroad Feb. 27, when | “ajor Fernandez has placed gunrds|Uncertain When Train Will As tain Willlam R. Rush, U. S. N., com-|of P. W. Suttin late today. Accord-| Boston, March 13. — The Kneisel | rived. to ve sent to the station at Pensacola. |20 persons were killed. 80 as to cut himself off from com- Because of Ice Conditions. Tla. for training. A school dirigible munication personally with the out- mandant of the Boston navy vard.|ing to the story told the police by the | quartette, the ploneer orchestra of this 8 e atiocs ot the navy Aui Gumy | Despeietor, ‘& At cauns 1ok S s | country. setarising on ‘emes v | PLIGHT OF GERMANY for ‘the station is about ready for de-| P. A. S. Franklin, president of the | sido. = Fis declaration that he 1s d6- | Gopenh e i 4 and members of the public safety com- | and asked to see an alarm clock. While | sic, which has played in_ the = larger BH roas crssa| T International Mercantile Marine, de-| termined to force American Interven- | 9.0 b o Count von Bornstost ¢ mittee of this state, wehe in attend- [ he was busy with this man two oth- | cities of the United States and SIS| The cight stations will be dlstribut- |clined to grant the demand of the|tion found echo today from othet | mer German smbassador to the 1 e along the coasts to cover strategic |sailors fo Ta war bonus of 75 Der cent. { praminent liberals, who are confident | States, and hie paciy 1ort Conen , both at the conference session | ers entered the sto: abroad, ve last concert i 3 ance, re, stating that they gave its fonight-| | eader of Bavarian Peace Party Be- areas to be determined by the board. |increase in wages for men on armed|in the justice of their cause and|on & speelal train at 145 B b and at the dinmer which followed. wanted to get a watch repaired. Soon | After 32 years' direction of the or- after they left, saying they would cail | ganization, Franz Kneisel announced lieves People Should Be Told. Each will require six officers and}American merchantmen. believe that Washington will act Berifa: It s’ upcertain wi 1 RECRUITING FOR ARMY again and a few minutes later the|that he would devote his time here- forty men. Quiet prevails at Santiazo and all| train will arrive because of i S “GOING SLOW.” | first m“m"]_kgd out. i Shortly aft-|after to teachin; QETl,hep Hr:f“;’!tv:: I&loend::éat]‘.‘r:h nl,!; Senator Martin, majority floor :;-d;r, the other points where American sawal | ditions which have made all £ —_— erwards ie proprietor discovered that . =l e in e announced that an effort woul e | forces are ashore. trafic highl; unsatisfactory for General Wood Says Pacifist Campaign | the diamonds were missing. He OBITUARY. Prussian_house of deputies March 6, | CORDON OF POLICE THROWN made to get a vote at this session of past week, I Pustly: 4o Slams could give only s measre description sl on the food crisis, Dr. Heim. leader AROUND FORT HAMILTON |the Senate on the treaty with Colombia of the men. Samuel Pasco. of the Bavarian peasant party, pub- providing a paymen of $15§90,000 for | REASONS FOR HIGHER 3 lished ‘an article concerning the sit-|Probably as a Ruse to Test Their |the partition of Panama. PRICES OF miLk |PATRIOTIC DEMONSTRATIONS Boston, March 13 —Major General - Tampa, Fla, March 18.—Samuel Teonard Wood at a mass meeting in | BERNSTORFF'S VIEWS ON Pasco, former United States senator [ Uation [rof which the Vorwaerts| Readiness to Meet an Emergency. e nts the ng extracts: Miss Alice W. Griswold, 23 years old, | Scarcity of Labor, High Cost of Feed the state house today, held under the from Florida and a member of the |PTi 8 RS o Tis w: ensaities o rec OUTLOOK FOR WAR | G0 e mational cominittes - froth It is high time that the facts,| New York, March 13.—Wnhile the|daughter of Frederick A. Griswold a and Inoreased Expenses. FOR JAMES W. GERAF Former Ambassador Passed Thro cruiting of the Massachusetts com- | Asserts It Will 1880 to 1900, died here tonight. which up to the present are known to| sarrison of Fort Hamilton was peace- | prominent insurance man of Hartford, s h Early Last Night mittes on public safety, sald that re- Pt/ Lot e M Captain Gilbert Johnston. but few of the unitiated, should be|fully sleeping late tonizht a cordon of | Committed snicide by hanging In the | New York, Maren 13— Searcity of avannah Early Last Nig Sliting Ty ihs Seuv Soonspon the iy & Montresl, Que. March _ 18— Captatn | Deopia the truth satarers thar oo con: | 100 Bolice reserves was thrown around lattic of her home in Wethersfield. No | 1abor, nigh cost of feed and other in-| Savannah, Ga. Mareh 13.—Jame Sons Tor This condition, ha save pros- | ,,London, March 13, 1054 p. m—in|Gilbert Jolinston widely known on the | fintie to work on a system Which has | iice Commissloner Wood. The police | 251 fOF the act 1s known. croased exponses are resporible for | Gerard, formor ‘American s an interview granted to|St. Lawrence river and the Great|hopelessly broken down through its|were told “German reservists” were the demand of members of the Daliry. | t0 Germany, passed through here perity, prevailing assarance of em-|{hS 5% o8 dent of the | Lak a1 Approval of the action of President ’ for high for|ly tonight with Mrs. Gerard Dovnent and “peost of all, the unpa- | the n_correspondent o es and long actively connected {own faults. ~We must hold out one|mobilizing to attack the fort and that pproval men’s League for higher proces for o Jrs. Gerard. | o SacticSnpnieh. s Chabales Bt Toetlons g & Sedanes it s Skl S el Nt | et ana ey onees wni ey e S repehit” “Foned ponts (MU enong e MmOt | ik ror S o na” Sl | B 0 et "ok, O O 4 Btaton ey | S1OTT, Interrogated. aa to whether he | Lines, Limithd, died at his home hers | brontnt Tanber pesces we wouls we| onmiot me Waters In front of the |Siiic (o the Secretary of War "and | ance here today with & commiltes rep. | dor's trip through Forida and G 2 o thought there would be war between | today. He was 64 years old. unable for months to get a pound more °Clp';;":’“h’,hm‘ n commana o |Council of National Defence was an- | resenting the New York State Milk [Bla cities today was ma Conferences are now being held in Ge: many and the United S e % A ) sed B the Board of Directors. . | Besiean Ssontaronoe board: Fies ot patriotic demon various parts of the country to ses tates, Dr. Henry L. Coit. of Dread grain owing to of ton- | three companies of coast artillery |1OUD e tatemens issued by the confer- | noisy ovations in his honor what can be done, Major General |Pled: B e _ I nage and the world’s crop failure. hich garrison Fort Hamilton sald h ;5 his. houax, LA Wood_stated. “Thersis o fine spirit “That depends on our U-boat war- ERioe o R I Lo S “This must be told 'the "peopls Fad heard mothing of arf :Impending , Hearings on the general subject of | ence board said that while an increus: rard will reach Washinaton tomop all over the land, but It is not a well- | fare. e milk movement in this country and |Sduarely, an: e ruthless measures | ngsault by “reservists” and thousht | transportation production T e o R L L e B * he said. get war. I not, I suppose we | TR, MOVETOM just be borne, whether they affect een son | Washington, Monday, March 19, before | a further increase in price to the con- 2 state d trained spirit,” he = 1y as a speclalist in ds- | ™ ot 1 B | e WUl maTe D e T fon | the fomnt eongressional committee ap- | sumer should be avoided “if possibie.” O e, i breaic 1 can avold It & ” eases of children, died at his home here | Peasants and town dwellers not in Ba- | an attack had been imminent. The a i ENT OF A NEW A Taskel e cothespodent, | S67R g varia and south Germany, but also th ‘the ted at the susgestion of President|No adjustment was reached and the A Cgtuiany: P 1L Sae son at theage or 63 yeara. He was| D ian sera el B B e Yo st N e o i oestiants Talloien: roll | onitetance, bosrd, exviaibed It e 1D ENGLAND FOOD COUNCH. | american citizens aboard?” president of the International Society | Prussion agratians’ = L ness to meet an emergeney. lems. The committee ig to report|power to enter into contracts for its| CAPTAIN BOY-ED To Disseminate Information for Ben- | pyig. hi# Count il 1 50 R e B ST AT e B R e P SheRt winter. A Rl SO EN WAS SEEN IN BERLI i efit of Housekeepers. S et i merican Assoclation of | gimance to surrender the barley crop "R?Er\nlc:;-llsrl‘lzfiEIRWEGULAR TWO PRISONERS ESCAPED 745439 BOSTON RESIDENTS Bidiviag ad Pross Goncor ti i Nl of 1916, which he says has not yet FROM VAN IN BOSTON ARE OF FOREIGN BIRTH ter of Marine. Boston, March 13.—The establish- | ORGANIZATION OF THE Charles Almaria Tinker. been done. P Aianeminnts Infoation Concerning R | i e i | ierr oF S0 WORTH e e ictomee s Foared""%| Kicked Open Pane er, a er ut Violence is Feared. e Pt and distribution | was Completed Yesterday With Ap-|guring the Civii war, and who resided of JEWELRY AT DANBURY = in the Bu: et o Ppointment of Officers and Directors. | here wth his daughter, dled in Winni- ‘Washington, March 13.—Street car . —_— peg, Msn., yesterday according to a the Work of Profe service on the Washington Railway Boston, March 13.—Two prisoners Boston, March 13.—Of the 74 ,(go through Savannah tonight Weshington, March 18—Organiza-| message Tecelved today. ~ Mr. Tink- Believed to be the Wo, ession- | gna Electric company's lines was ir- | escaped today whils being conveyed |inhabitarits of this, city shown by the | way to Washington, said Capt tion of the rural credits system was|er during the latter part of the war al Sneak Thieves. regular today and traffic was sus-|in a small van from the South Boston | census of 1915, 168154 were foreign Ed was geen in_ Berlin by newspas completed today with the appointment| was on duty at the war department pended entirely again tonight for fear | district court to the Charles Street jail | born, according to figures announced | correspondents Just before hth» of officers and directors for the tarm|and for a time was there in a con- Danbury, Conn., March 13—The theft | of violence from conductors and mo- | While the van was passing through |by the state bureau of statistics to-|the German capital for le Jands, form |1oan bank at Berkeley, Calif., the last| fidential capacity. ‘He recalled how | of betwar:n 380: and $1,000 ':'rth of | tormen who went an'&h.tlflku‘nly“t;;. m b“"‘lu: dlé:erlct (h;y kicm meg :l‘hfilo M;,n,!lv:]b?;;!fi:::ld;:;; llf‘:lfi-e:let‘: :;‘l‘n‘:"th.”‘t::;e:ar‘glll‘l‘:r‘;n -(hll: " 4 2 ‘om the apartments Mrs. lon o eir lon. No els in “rear door, y ane che w R | T o e e Dot o Do el & o Toar fl-e:: was not discovered until the | by 265, 000 in the five years preceding assigned to duty as press censor count wm latest war news . H. McAllister here late today serion isorder occurred. "5’39.&.‘:‘."‘—%“ un?zrm“ of i ug b > Eo-:trep:m to the police. The :f - s driver reached the jail. One of the|the census. the minister of marine and still wes of the Door While | Figures Given Out by the State Bu-| Savannah, Ga., March 12 ess District. reau of Statistics. of the party of James W. mer ambassador to Germany, e farm loan board. _ : i, Tinker was tn his 80th year and thoritles belive ‘the theft was the| Vermon'ts ocldest marble dusrcy ers surrendered, but the other,| Ireland contributed the greater part|serving in that capacity s Jaic o o No date has been set for the open- | had wide acquaintanceship | 3 thieves. | opened about 1795, still is being op- of the forelgn-born with 64,455 per-|day or two before Ambassador Gerard

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