Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 19, 1917, Page 1

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R " PRICE TWO CENTS s the Largest | 'llmn to the City's Population an |Russian Cabingt | Condensed Teleorams Bailrgad Sirike Has Sunk| Ministersin Office - s e - - | Been Called Off Japan has prohibited the importation u!eo’l‘nlo!lfi‘k!ndl in the regular THIS MORNING. CITY OF MEMPHIS, ILLINOIS AND |[CABLE MESSAGES SENT TO RUS- VIGILANCIA SIAN DIPLOMA;T. ABROAD Daniel Sheehan was nominated by President Wilson as postmaster at El- mira, RUSSIA IS NOW UNITED[™™ ™ __ | SEC’Y LANE’S STATEMENT The Senate rejected the nomination " In the Sinking of Three Unarmed American Merchant . S . sagrad. of L A MacGowan as postmaster at ) Ships by Submarines Without Warning Lostrogtad, Mareh 18, 230 p. m. ¥a | Fourtesn of the Missing Men Were On | Portraits of the Imperial Family Have |FToVidence, R.L Regardless of the Deoision of the Su- Romanoff, as the former emperor is| the Vigilancia, Which Was Torpedo-| Been Removed From Walls of Gov-| The P Imore Motor Truck Co. was| preme Court on the Adamson Law, now designated, left with his stac to- day ‘personal WERE SUNK WITH UTTER DISREGARD FOR LIVES [iinm e Footiem S o G| e e e | i Bt [ evanee corporated i ital stock of $10,000,000. the Basic Eight Hour Day Will Go Into Effect—Result of National Crisls Sunk by Shellfire. Regime With Soberness. : which left New York Jan. 22 for Ko CHINA REQUECSTS SUSPENSION . _—:_.1 o Petrograd, via London, Mafch 18.— e New “York, M 1 a London, March 18. 7.44 p. m—The on, . ew :York, March 19.—Tk ter- OF BOXER RISING INDEMNITY. | iniing” of the American stearmships| With the final cementing of the eie-| Gold cein to the amount of $500,000 |ence committes of ralliond cnrimors City of Memphis, Illinois and Vigilan- | ments concerned in the construction|was withdrawn from the Sub-Treasury |early this morning authorized Presi- All Doubt is Dispelled as to Whether Germany Really In- » Y s Foreign ster Calls Mesting of | ;o a5 announced today. Fourteen | of the new government.upon the ruins | for snipment to Argentina. dent Wilson's mediators to ke Ministers d!:unl Countries. men from the Vigilancia are missing, | of the old, the new cabinet ministers, whatever arrangements were nec- tends Sinking All Ships m Prohibited Zone, as are some of the men from the City | relieved of the heavy grind of the tiosi ot Amstntant Becre-|sary with the raflroad hrothernoods to Whether Neutral, Passenger or Belgian Relief—Presi-| aner asnouncing | the . severance of | f, Memphis _ The crew of the liinois | endicss conferences of the last fow tany of R Trcaury. Andrew . Betors | call oft the threatened strike : n 3 ere ; Before o i G e P Mihies e ik | ool e Eie ™ bateas s | S B M B g e R S e | e o Make Concassions. 3 z = 7 etter ch this au- dent Wilson May Act Assembling DEress— | ine calied a mesting of the ministers | Coraut for, New York was sunk by| o Which they were sssizned. Frofes| president Wilson issued a proclama- [ rhie formal letter in which this ¥ gunfire, The second officer and fif- tion designating April 21 a_day for y In Official Washi he Belief P ils That the o, ke entente nations later 2 |teen men of the crew have been land- | &t the foreizn office. In the afternoon |Uon Gesignating SBril o0 2 8%, 500 sha Lee. chairman of the manas- Crumbling of Turkish Power in Mesopotamia and Persia, moeting of the ministers of neutral Seticr Baat he received the diplomatic representa- countries. He presented a memoran. :}"tMAm,,mmN:‘;“&“:gm: tives of the allies, after which he en- | Ruthenians. Tn the national crisis precipitated dum at both meetings requesting sus- o by events of which we heard this aft ernoon the national conference com- ol Frwiii Bl Po tered upon long cabinet conference. . pension of payments of indemnity fOr | Taray” in Balteer o rne G An expenditure of $2,500,000 for im mittee of rallroads joins with you in ‘was sunk, at three Cables to Russian Diplomats. provements will be.made immediately e . |the Boxer uprising, consent to an in- | tnis morning. - - ; the ”wed Advance of the British and French in | creas import. es, and modifica- k me of the first acts of the minister | by the Newport News Shipbuilding & e s o Hon "ot Chinats - wndetaringn - whiah | o, Th¢, Vigilancia was torpedoed with- | was to send a series of cable mes: | Bry Dock Co. AL et peitiier st Rowie nor ion ny out warning. The submsrine did not| sages to the Russian diplomats abroad that the pm(,l’m“- ;:’)'_”"'hm ot .‘;.'» 'r‘:}i“' a France and the l.’roWar Revolution in Russia Ind<ates the End of the War is Near. will permit her to station troops at|apiear. . The captain, frst and. seer| o - , -{to the effect that Russia was united 1 & Pering milway gy e o on-Tein” lond mates, first. second and third en- | in the desire to Aght out the war with |, Felipe Gomez 20 years oid, was ex e et tartic, ne Gop, | gineers and twenty-three men of the| the allies, the determination to con- Prieta, Mexico, after being convich:d Seoe - on’ agal T-|crew have been landed at the Scilly| tinue the conflict until the victory is|= > etq: M€ Dy, roads of the country will be hamper: or impaired “Therefore-you are authorized to as- sure the nation there will be mno MRS Islands. The fourth e - E han er. = The Dutch legation 1 protecting|icen men are misting. o | Tne ammies by the Ao have advised basis for such assur- german ‘Lnt,e:"clt. T&:dagfluding‘ t:n that the abdication of the emperor has| Wi s :’h. lIi!l::‘l;-y. wt{}o llmd beer: s b uthorize the commit~ o Siarch 2 Seatiaiin et erman legaticn. e German minis- 2 aiesced in,|ensaged in the hardware business at|tee of the council of national defenss ; e e ebio o g b 3 # Pkine o e e T i - AMER::RAEN,: gl':?r':fs MEMPHIS iy o & Torlun amie gt Buseor, Me; (=68 ygars, iy dead, He|to wrant. to ({he_empioves wh +s | Pekin; ve days. Telegrams fi virtually all the com- |Was 79 years about to strike whatever adj: Slon U B i SN RReS Biascnant shipelEAy Tass & direct effect on Amerioh's | Dommark | 15 -Sasbihy dfiar Clilnase e Mns hech coeives. Noning your committee deams mecess to Vessel Had Weathered Many Adven-| R2Rdcrs have been recelted ooe s gned to give women the | cuarantee the uninterrupted and ef. tures During European War. anteed in advance by General MicRael | right to vote for presidential and vice- | fciant operation of the rajiroads n san - In the light of previous despatches o Alexieff, chief of staff. prgsidential electors was killed in thelindispensible arm of national de- ing | New Jersey Assembly. fenso.” from Peking, the action taken by the New York, March 18 —Forty-eight " $ mains in followed most keenly. The apparent|Cpinese foreign minister indicates that |men who were Americans by birth or| -25t Vestiges of Empire Disappearing Victory For Brotherhoods, ity. Whether this shall ed crumbling of Turkish power in M“'_:' the government is preparing o enter |by naturalization and nine others, sev- Mgfl""hflgug‘e 13‘;' "e"l’,i:r:!fm‘g; Governor Whitman signed the fK.LIlrI)y B T aciton: healhed bi - the Titans fore April 16, the date fixed = for potamia and Persia as shown in 'Jm. war with the entente. It was said |eral of whom were believed be| empire are ppearing. bill which ‘amends the section of the| 'Tho declion renched by the man- I by submarines, it was unoficially ad-|fature history. ttad here tonight that ually a Kaleidoscopic Developments.. sate Of rTeoxists between the United| mpe kaleidoscopic developments of Technically he United States re- [the last few weeks' history has been interests in Germany. - [capture of Van today by the Rus-|i, these despatches that aturalized Americans, comprised: the| the erstwhile members of the imperial | penal Code relative to punishment for 78 that the brotherhoods O e government, |slans, following the fall of Basdad to | 13 (s end were wmdor way sns tht| covn ot the Ammcrionn freight steame family, once_seen upon the walls of |gesecration of the fla. R A e Yo ma e yron President Wilson has not decided. the British, the unexpected SweePing|China hoped by joining the entente to | ship, City of Memphis, reported from T ot \Asssmblymian Larnsy has prepared [nOt bring them all their original 4 ard ghiain suspenslon of the payments of | London today as having been sunk by | 53R GERPUSS: . Ti%e THiven biace £ i e e Tos [mands. T the won creement. it is as- e a time for overtime on t May Call for Immediate Session of [a wide swath in the west front, the Eiie. Pro-war revolution in Russia, threats One step the president is contem- |Of internal trouble Germany and plating 1s & call for an immediate ses- | China's severence of realtions, have sion of congress to hear an address |3V e e o ority t5 adont "ag- |that the beginning of the end is near. gressive measures against the sub- e smarine menace. Already American | INPORTANT GAINS MADE shibe E06 DSk Sl .. dsfead BY BRITISH AND FRENCH rded pro rata e basic eight indemnity and permission to increase shdhitve . Tha vewtel Mlel:é‘:lly.lued 2| Dlain redsings, one of which ~foats | & e D e e armisned free | Tumed, they il S ldvc;ntubres in Buropean waters on oYL’ e ;I:"l:flswm‘l |"e’up:.l 600. d renewed once in each year. hour day which thev have heen as- previous voyages since the war bes n:‘“mnper desighation of the new | /A bill o demonetize existing French [ Sured. Thelr original demands call- o oduced in the SUBMARINE ACTIVITIES.| Owned by the Ocean Steamship com- | government appears to puzzle even of- [old coinage was ntroduce ey BB o commonty donewn ma Tt Bavan: | fotate SCovommant conseitutor s | French Chamber bf Deputics by Depu- d Eymond. Merchant Ships Aggregating 781500 [ neh Line, the City of Memphis, . of | the appellation used in foreign offiee | ties Lenoir, Bouffandeau an Tonnage Destroyed During February. | 5259 tons sroms, salied from New York | dompaohes ol r omisasen. oith| A battalion of the U. 8. infantry |Under the agrecment. These conces m'-flm duma committee, -although it |[now stationed in Porto Rico will be sions on the part of the managers are Berlin, Friday, March 16, by Wire- E Binet jrushed to the Panama Canal to rein- | Virtvally w the emploves contended to March 18, ‘at E 3 is coni t-mn.htul that the cabinet jrusl 1 they would pgain under the Adamson of an agaregate . = age or homo B shall | flfl%}; QDA FUPeS (The- gusrd of Lhat watecHmk ol 40T 10 Wate: declazed caneMtBtion: 81,500 were destr - - P < BERLIN'S REPORT OF ed for time and n_half for overtime on the sime basic day. The men will get thefr present pay for ten hours for eigh® hours’ worlk themselves; the next move must be to send warships with orders. to seel T ¥ Important Towns of Peronne, ; : haulnes and Nesle Taken. . - Some of the highest officials of the g e R sovernmest hold that the executive| Further Important advances oVer a iice the power to deciafe that a state | front of about z_hundred miles by “and to the British and armies in France, and additional gains by the Russians and British over the Turks in Turkish Armenia, Persia and Me- sopotamia are the outstanding fea- tures in the war news. out submarines and clear the trans- govern B 4 e The Line steamship Perouse |aJ. of war measures the cen-| Her captain was L. P. of ‘.?_fi‘fi'?”;fig'%'?’n?‘”‘ nr!l:::dF::nfi:w York from }-l:.vre with | “Tmmediately nafter Secretary Tane tral powers, the admiraity announced :, where he ‘was born of | popular vote, will be composed of ap- |15 of the crew of the steamship|had made his nnouncemenissestag OBz . ts. Her other officers | proximately 600. Tt will be the busi- | Georgetown, which foundered at sea|had made his ananouncement the The statement follows: all American born except one, were: |ness of the assembly to determine the | Feb. 27. , Y In February 368 merchant ships of | Wirst officer, C. G. Laird. Savannah; | torm of the future government and all the general ' chatrmen . Informing an aggregate gross tonnage of 781,500 | second officer, A. Carroll, born in No- | araft a new constitution. Hobowarn er, Clinton Miller and[them that the strike had been de- were lost by the war measures of the | ya Scotia, naturalized American; third Confidencs: Everywhere. Curtis Rockefeller, of = Cheviot, were | clared off. brotherhood leaders sent telezrams to 3 t towns of Peronne,| £8tral powers. Among them were Dierlan dress unkn killed when struck by a mail train near Chamines wod Nesle and “more. than | 292 hostile ships, with an agsresate T Berey chiot engtnees Sat| ,, Confidence is cverswhere exprossed | Kiled whep Birucc by R i Trefh BOT DEPORTATED BELGIANS sixty villages have been taken by the | 8T0SS tonnage of 644,000 and 76 neu- | vannah: F. Bevill, first assistant en- | that under the direction of the new |,..niown AR T NERL DIvTREES tral ships of an aggregate 8ross ton- | ginser; Savannah; F. McPherson, sec. | E0Vernment the military and industrial nage of 137,500. Among the neutral e ks forces of the country wil be enabled Porshing reported’ to. War: De- o e e et work a1d | (0" carry on operations upon a much | G et That the Iast of the National|Belglan Government Informed That British troops on a front of some for- ty-five miles and King George's men s 1 are continuing their pursuit of the|Ships 61 were sunk by submarines, | w. Thompsen, third assistant engineer, : parts fetreating Giermans. At some points| Which ie 165 per cent. of the total i |y qamror) - larger scale than before and consid- | Rartment that the last bf the NeHonsl R AL g il e e e rmmbirs ot ‘the| Sunduy's incursions into German. po- February, as compared with 29 per | “‘Gi" T iy et bouid B Siturk T o ot the e “iomd™ | wil start for their home stations by paiefae: TN i s Dol 1oaE Sitions: were 1078 Heptn of e TlEn | he inst 008 muthes ol losses In | surgeon, DF.. ' Shes. lived at 7. Van|yroc isonantion of the war. Ends |March sl pllavre, via Paris, March 18.—The S = elria : r Definite Policy Now Ready. front Tunning from Arras to Chaulnes, — Josa operatora 3. Weleh ang B3, beg. | the continual fear of the old govern-| Capt. Charles A, Polack, of the |l i’ £overnment continues fo re- P Today's developments brought the| Taking up the operations south of| There is a wide disparity between |ohue, lived in New York. as dia aise| TCht, that tos complete organization|erman-Lioyd steamship Kronprinzes- | 08 Boigiar rafirond cmpiones. A government face t5 face with the| Chaulnes, the French troops recap- | the official German figures of the de- | (re followina, all ogmamny might result in the sudden groweh of | G"Clllle ers summonea (0 APDSAT | Cordime o posit hrde B by g problem of formulating a definite pol- | tured their old positions on the Roye- | Struction of shipping in February, the N s popular power have left a greal 1“ before the United States DIstrict|men wihich ara in the possession of {he case the United | Novon road, including the important | first month of unrestricted submarine legro of the resources of the country inert|cg,u;t at Boston April 2. Belkian government, they are in real in Sintes actusily entens the war. Thia| town of Novon. In this resion, north- | warfars, and the figures Eiven out n| . Canty, baker; D, . Jackson, chief | and nseless. Bvery effort at the mo- e — distress, ‘some of them begging fat cast of Lassigny, the French have|England. It was eald authoritatively |cook: G. M. Clean, second cook; J.| bilization of these resources, each plan| p. E. M. Funk, manager of the Ao NEeE. Toat penetrated more ‘than twelve - miles | In London on March 3 that in Febru- | Léwis, messman; J. Cooke and C.| o organize and expedite the transpor- g eon Vi, plant of the Internation- | lecesritles be expedited, as they are gry German submarines sent to the | Cooke, walters, and G. Canty and G. M. | tation of supplies, met with the most | .\ i plosives Company, who was in- | Su ie®, Farcel post packages such bottom, in round numbers. 480,000 tons | Mitchell, mess boys. All of these | Stubborn opposition. jured Thursday by an explosion in the [fo 27% ent 1o prisoners of war ha of shipping. No mention was made of {Were American born or naturalized People Have Sobered Down. fulminate dry house, is dead. oners’ camp at Guben, but the Ter including the villages of Carlepont, ['ships destroyed by mines. Amerjcans. Probehly: 5ib €vent. ot simtisy tiagnl- i OrSTan cAmpL N ‘Guben; bat e ‘Gler- Morestiy: sut Nagreh. Vire . wece g o ey In this category also were H. O. Bo- | tude ever had & less colorful after.| Gov. McCall, of Massachusetts, an- |47 are said to have refused tg sre were captured by the French, | RUSSIAN IMPERIAL FAMILY Ville, stewards of Savannah; | math or was accepted by the people 8o | nounced the ' resignation of Brig.- | py SETV ole charmed with hav- While northeast of Solssons, Crouy has GUARANTEED SAFETY|S: A Fhillivs, electrician: F. Montere, | vitally_affected with less demonstra- [Gen. Gardner W. Pearson as adjutant- | ;. "o oco a8 T08 GECEC0 TURE BEre taken sk s, H. H. Hobbs and J. Alquest, water| tion. With the exception of a few pa- |general and the appointment of Brig.- | .ot 0" 0 Tillinry prisoners or in The armies of the Russian Grand " v.ehders- J. Rumbe, C. B. Winn and J.| rades, chiefly in the district of the |Gen. Leroy Sweetser as acting adju- + } 3 . C. B. o % X e that of interned clviliana h Duke Nicholas are pressing the Turks | Emperor Nicholas Had Made Request|Waiker, oilers; N. B. Clausen, bont: | mems seonic went coborm atous thats | ooy amroy ) S¥ee EhG b s e Jo oo in the Lake Van and Sivas regions in to General Ruzsky. i esterday as if satisfied with bidnlt i b bumiiio oy ity without the specific authority of | Turkish Armenia and in Persia in op- (Continued on Page Two, Bth Col.) | & snod task well performed. The French mil i TR st petonin . IO peported that 2 Several factories resumed operations | designated five French officers to pro- A A s S L e e | e ; the cutting off of the Turl e perior Nicholas, says the i in tha to the United States to act as President Wilson Informed. being pressed northward by the Brit- | Petrograd correspondent of the Times | -~ /LLED IN AUTO 53;{" s s e fifigmr.} instructors In certain Ameri- = e President Wilson was out automo- | ish in M 'fl-v"“flf;‘ Ie:|wa sthat sufcient guarantees should ACCIDENT AT BRIDGEPORT. i ey L e can universities, at the request of the| ORDER FOR MUSTERING OUT biiing when the first Assoclated Press | POrts 52y the town of Van, on the east|be given that his life and those of|, .. ‘ -~ | 141ST ANNIVERSARY BRITISH United States. OF GUARDSMEN SUSPENDED. despatches telling of the three disast- | Dank of Lake Van, has been captured | his family be spared. It is said he ur V. Phillips of New Haven— s IS ers came in quick succession. Through by the Russians and that further|was reassured by General Ruzsky, who Machine Skidded and Overturned. EVACUATION OF BOSTON Chancellor of the Exchequer Law,| Agiutant General of North Carolina Becretary Tumulty he was given all|Zains have been made by them in the | youched in the name of the whole army e in the Commons, appealed to all Irish i igieindfd illlacip sl available facts immediately on his re- | fegion of Kermanshah, where the Tur- |under his command, that no harm|_ Bridgeport, Conn., March 18.—Arthur | Was Observed Saturday h Exer- | members o join in the negotiations n Sc ed. kish column is reported to be in re- | would befall any member of the fam-| V. Phillips of New Haven was killed ~cises of Exceptional Impressiveness. |designed to effect a settlement of the Raleigh, N. 'C, March 18- work for the Germans. turn. In the meantime Secretary Lan- de; treat. In Mesopotamia the lly. The first t mad and James T. Patt Jr., of Milford flect a settlement of rders sing and other state department of-| o in full flight in the direc- s reques e by the - erson, Jr., for¢ Irish question to effect received at the adjutant general's of- ficials, as well as cabinet members, | forceS ate in and his wife were seriously injured in{ Boston, March 18.—The 14lst anni- |the Irish question. o g thiny - SINTABART \Ch tion of Samara, north of Bagdad, ac- an automobile accident here early to- | versary of the evacuation of Boston for muster out of the Second amd wate given tha iStorissigh: cording to the British war office. — : i oo Ssa . everal e R day. They were returning in Patter- the Britieh troops was celebrated | Fears were expressed at St. John's, " k. o - came from Coneul Frost. st Quens: o Saken piace on the] 2o son’s car from a dance at the Brook- | by the Soath Boston district yesterday |N. ¥ that the fening schooner Nind, e B I AT aESt Whigmile wt | 1253 Violence ave teken pisge. om the lawn club when the machine skidded | in accordance with arrangements to|which left the South Coast some |national guard and brigade headquar: front in Russia, but no ot | calmly f and overturned. Phillips was almost | make this year's observance one of ex- | weeks ago for the fishing ground, had | ters and directing that they be held and submit to the inevitable. His last| Instantly killed. v ceptional impressiveness. For the first [been lost. The schooner carried a|infer arms affer arrival Whe Third 2nd| Macedonia con- :fll‘fll utmm said to dhave mf‘:!flllltml - Iét e :l-ma ‘bunemm tim, aviators had been !ec\;lred to di- |crew of twenty-one. Siog. Deer SRt Rare from Texas for . firmed press re but added een that he been betray tant In the Second infantry, Con- | re~f their aeroplanes over the route of — Boc Rt Qetatin.” i Eresos. e e ccording | those he trusted most. 7| necticut National guard, and was the | march of ‘tne customacy parade. of| Edgar B. Ward, former second vice [Muster out. The Second regiment has President Has Authori 3 of |, The Times correspondent son of Rev. Dr. Watson L. Phillips, | troops and civilian erganizations, |president of the Prudential Insurance y ¥ Declare as rity. formerly of New Haven, and for many | which was reviewed by Governor Mc- | Campany and one of its original di- Col. H. 8. B 5 years chaplain of the Second infantry.| Call. rectors, died at his home at East ol. H. 8. Berry Notified. LhA‘ ge _hoPl:ltA.l tonight it was said 3 Orange, M. J., aged 68 years. He re- 5 »\Tfimphis.‘ Tenn., Ma:lch 18.—Col, H. - at rs. tterson, whose ine is EET ired seven years ago. . erry, in comman of the First - RUSSIAN BALTIC FL e S LRy 3 R ) Tennessee infantry, which arrived here some allied country, prebably Italy. | fractured, would probably die. He; - Setu . countex. yeataliy. 3 prcirrinn B pans B s bl SR JOINS REVOLUTIONISTS. [ MYSTERY SURROUNDS MURDER | today from Tagle Pass, Tex, was ad- 'EMATIC RETIREME not been able to operate. Her hus- s P .| vised tonight that orders had been is- B B A g B e o:::‘ el band, who also Js suffering from in- | Fortresses at Viborg and Svborg Also OF MRS. ELSIE LEE HILAIR.| 05 spending the mustering out of RMAN TROOPS. | jury ‘to the spine, as well as at the in the Movement. S national guardsmen “until further or- shipping. i R AN, o Ao ARSI base of the skull, has a chance for re. S Strangled in Her Room in ghe Hotel | Go 07 : to the o . any Strate- | covery. , March 18, 7.50 p. m. — Th would be subject tc PEOEgVES GRAND DUKE NICHOLAS gical Points in France. Thic: catiun: vosaspad At Brgeiiawi | s s St . The GERMAN TORPEDO BOATS congress. 4 Despite the unwarned sinking of big | RELEASES POLITICAL PRISONERS e ané Woodward avenues, the car skid- | fort at Viborg and Svborg have| New York, March 1 liners like the California S s Bertin, March 18 (By Wireless tofding as it turned the corner, against | joined the revolutionary movement in | Was made today by detectives seeking SHELLED KENTISH COAST. ng of| Calls Upon Soldiers and Sailors to|Sayville). Tetirement of | the curb, striking a tslegraph pole. | Russia, says a despatch to the Ex- | to solve the mystery back of the mur- e © Await the Will of the People. the troops between Arras and | overturning and pinning the occupants | change Telegraph company from |der of Mrs. Elsic Lee Hilair, Who was | r,,.. Were No Casualties and the German - — the Olee, on the French front, is an- | under it. enhagen, which is based on reports | strangled and apparently robbed in her Mat ' ps, Housatonic, the Lyman M.| London, March 17, 116 p. m—Grand ounced ' by the war office’ today.| Mrs. Patterson is the daughter of | cersived From Haparanda, Sweden, roum jo the Hotsl Martiioue, Whiese i Duke Nicholas has ordered the release | Peronne, Noyon, Bapaume, Roye &nd M. Gunn, a prominent banker her body was found e poltes.| London, March 18, 11.27 p. m.—Ge of the political prisoners who have|Séveral other towns have been aban- | of lford, former representative - in persons were questioned by the police. g et g i ) Ry > bBeen Incarcerated at Baku, in the|doned by the Germans. the state iegislature and widely known ONITHARY- Tt was learned, detectives said, that | man lorpedo 1oats shelled iowns alons Trans-Caucasus, Reuters Tifiis cors| . — In state political circles. Patierson is no_ons was seen to entor or leave the} LS 4 O re: Bererdiar s oo o e The Peronne was one of the strong- | secretary and treasurer of the Corn- John 8. Hyde. room oesupied by Mrs. Hilair after éhe | S8 L 210 TINS Canase, escording to The grand duke enjoined senior and | BOldS of the Germans on'the Franco- | wall & Patterson company of Bridge-| Bath, Me., March 18.—John S. Hyde, | had registered at the hotel as “lo; e Lot randa: AT advise the soldlers | Bel front It is & town of about | port. one of the most prominent ship bulild- | ence Gmy, Boston” The womer's| igic"enemy torpedo boats and A c On the Somme, and is of strate- | Mrs. Phillips, wife of the man killed, | ers_in Maine, died- at St. Augustine, | husband told -he police she wore $2,500 | _ “0T0 ached the Kentish coast bad gone ahead With another automo- ladt night, according to a mes- | worth of Jewels when she left home | Bt-oyers approached the Kentlsh coast bile party, and did not learn of the|sage received here today. Mr, Hyde | Thursday after recelving a telephone | &7 "= o'cl ml; ;l lay morning. They sccident until she reached home. was president and owner of the Bath |cail which has not et :een:h:mbfid‘ i B O A -“r,::‘{l; at Certain Iron works, where many government|The gems were missing when i1 | ties. The material damage was slight, nter Field. | wars! it is believed they wiil | trea H. Bo.u&twu!n?.qbr four years pastcr | Munitions Plant at Celogne Blown Up. bellevatdullz n:mm will be made to dis- | Peing hit.” 9f the Baptist church hers, today ten- iy ot e s PRESIDENT POINCARE CONFERS dered state OLD PEOPLE'S HOME BURNED WITH PRESIDENT OF SENATE * IN A SUBURB OF CHICAGO. S — In Regard to the Situation Created by One Woman Burned to Death—Three Resignation of Briand Cabinet. Men Believed to Have Perished. Paris, March 18, 3.20 p. m.—Presi- “Senator Al-| = Ty Chicago, March 18.—One woman |dent Poincare conferred today with the mffi condi- | Indicted for Murder of His Daughter. | was burned to death and three men |president of the senats, Antonin Du. | Damage Was Slight. mgm country: :d.l'!fll hun- ‘workmen are reported to have patch shows that he is still in com- ‘March " March & md_-:th-(hnouhnt.nm. 5 4 ¢ 4 nl ‘be able Me., March 18.—Albert | are believed to have perished in a bost, and the president of the chamber lena.- { of which early today destroyed the Bcot- |of deputies, Paul Deschanel, in regard for the. der of his daugh- | tish old people’s home in Riverside, a |to the situation created by the resig- uburb: Bach was an Inmate of the the ¥oot of

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