Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 21, 1917, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

e The Bulletin’s Circu Any Other Paper, and its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population CALL FOR CONGR Gaed Paragrnts [ Prosperity Goiersd Toerams BERLIN EXPLAINS GERMAN RETREAT London, March 20, 11.15 p. . p ooty i German gunboat in the harbor of 'm i 3 Tl { e o euter Scapaten from Hong “n Chinase trecps have taken over tho| D@cIares It is a Strategic Move to Revolutionize War- 4 3 ong. German'Soncessions at Tien-Tsin and ‘ 's € . Froderick W. Momahan Dead. |EARNINGS FOR 1916 WERE|FRENCH CAVALRY WITHIN 41 7 i fare on the Western Front Shipments of fresh and cured meats i e e e | $342,907,002 MILES OF ST. QUENTIN o Shipments of freeh and cured mest ONE OF ITS OBJECTS IS TO END TRENCH WARFARE Paris, W. Monahan, for many vears well g oy » known as an American business man BAD WEATHER HINDERS|, Plans for a nation-wide celebrat in Europe, is dead. He was one of the this year of baby week are under way President Discussed the International Crisis With His | 2w ussres st —st- Sionanan NET INCOME $284,026,565 i formerly resided in Chicago. Cabinet for Two Hours Yesterda ACCUMULATING EVIDENCE OF |Volume of Business Done by All the |On Their Part of the Line the British | The American Salva: of New 2 s 4 Y COURT SCANDALS IN RUSSIA | Subsidiarics Was $1,281,473779 —| Have Taken 14 More Villages and | 31,006,000 Lo $6,000,000. rom | Another Motive is to Render Ineffective the Preparations of Establishes Weak Character and Lack | 252,668 Employes Averaged $329| Are Within Twelve Miles of St.| The Copper Range the Entente Allies for a Great Spring Drive—Have ordered two 100-ton engines from the CABINET FAVORS EARLY CALL FOR CONGRESS| °f ferecioht of Nichelas Romancf. | per pay. Quentin. American Tocomotive Cor " Devastated the Evacuated Tersitory so That It Wil be Petrograd, March 20, 2 p. m., Via = \London, 11.50 p. m.—I: woula be un- g Four men were entombed by an ex- ‘profitable to go fully iato all the court| New York, March 20—The unprec Despite bad weather and difficult |Plosion in the mine of the Hecla Coal of Li!t.l_e Use to the Enemy—Statement Excuses Acts of . .. |scandais or the constanily accumulat-| dented prosperity attending the oper. | conditions Of terrain effected by the |& Coke Co. near Brownsville, Pa. ' 2 daghs To Make a Formal Declaration That a State of War Exists Ioevionca kg, witich, & jposeih 10 Lo ations of the \Cnitea States Steel Cor? devastations of the Germans in their| ‘g iy, Kelsey, 70 years old, of Gif- Barbarism by Declaring That the Germans Are Fighting N . e b4 : HCsAtan; e are set forth in the | retreat, = fords Lane, Richmond, was instantly Between Germany and the United States—Washington | £33 L e o rerg soight of| annual report issued today. e in Dece Davelmufle furthee leilied by Tal 1 ir Exi 2 i . v failing down & flight of stairs. ¥ : A g e L T e Earminge For 1916, e Do A Officials Virtually Unanimous in Their Opinion That a|fabic downfail. Most strprising of all| Total earnings of 3242997092 ex-|been entered by thc Britisn forces |, A call for 20 additional =physicians e e Criperor's atubbors refusel 1o | cesded (hoe OF 1315 by mo lege 1| Kom Srris sounwara: o Ham ang | or,the, Xew York divison of e NaL| . sturcn 13 (5, Wirsiess i) a0 tmportant In (his kind of wart Exists—F gui y_the counsel of members ,747,026; net income of 026, they have passed the general line of Gocinte Sl % v. s -] 7 i on that all was well with the n gre- nd St. Leger. The forward c AP e e Fadine best possible locations, with the Bureau Has Decided on New Policy of Insuring All Amer- | country at a time waen the whole | satcd $201,835085, as. compared with|march beyond . Entree-en-Chaussce | , lonacic Bonillas, Mexican ambassa. March” 20) —ithe “German evacudtiof | the best. possible locations it i he brink of 2 - | $44.260,374 in _the previous year. dor to the United States, received his|of Bapaume, Roye, Nov.n and Peron i nation was on the brirk of active rev- & P Vvear. places the British troops within twelve = a . lc un- | concrete shelters for the batter . - . F olution. This lant Item iz the more remark-| miles of St. Quentin final instructions from President Car- | 1% but a part of a great strategle un- | o0 While tho enamy is comir ican Ships Except Those Carrying Actual Munitions of Grand Duke Nicholas Michaelovitch | able from the fact that It includes reg | " Fronch Cavalry Near St. Quentin, |"7= 27 left for Washington. Conize warfare on ihe entlre western |to them he will be in the gre made most persistent ts o - | ular and extra dividends of 4 4 - $ £ 2 y witie: himeel n the War. e e o ehar 1ho| o the commion stock &8 against oniy| . On their part of the line, however,| AWred D. Buess, who suffered a|front and constitute one of the most |possible dificuitics himaclf in e country was in danger and the throne | $6,355,781 disbursed in 1915. the French have thrown their cavalry | broken back in a fall from a scaffold | decisive moves in the war. — VASAIRSO T tottering, but the emperor showed no 'Net Expendit $64,680,648. th wltlhh\ ':“’."‘fi a half lmleido( St. o Ahugu’t 1” last, died at the Meri- e\{.'::\:(:: T"n}.on!:th”:.'l; xeh(omb»or:lm:;\: Foreing Destruction of France. g - uentin and also Ve reo id et tal terda a . o a impoy Lodg o - L e ceedingly that this Washington, Murch _20.—For two mavy department and went into con-| TG, fiEnS Of belng ‘stirred by thi| pypenditures during 1916 for main- | Sdcrable Lerriiord between the Somme| o o L Yeelerday atternoon Ancre, but kept the tict secret for a |, "y Iefet &¥Great “destruction. of hours today President Wilson discuss- | ferencg with members of the general| ampress and a multitude of other per- | (enance, renewals and extraordinary |and the Aisne. Paris reports that the | Premier Lloyd George announced in | Week, while the British hombarded the | peautiful part of Fran Yet the de ed the international crisis with his|board. Information for the president,| sonages who ADProached him replacements totalled 369,392,627, an|losses of the French troops in their |the House of Commons that on Thurs- | émpty trenches, so today's —report| ericeion fs not so great as cabinet and heard urgent susgestions|and tentative plans for further navai| TLate in November . Grand Duke | NCrease of 60.01 per cent. over 1915.|pursuit of the Germans have been in- [@ay he would move a motion of con- [Shows the most import 1.t development | yruction inflicted by the Brit that the date for the extra session of | activities were discussed. i AT s T Net experditures on property ac- | significant. gratulation to the Russign Duma. Of 1917, on; any Lfront. Tii ssofor - §ine S3tranen onn 4 battle cholas aciovitch took to. the Cluding the evacuated cities virtually | the, ¥rench on the & neress fixed for April 16 be - | rn count amounted to 364,680,645, 5 T et e 'In e At pirhcet T B s Lveee Wi whih ke o e Volume "of Business Don B,,.,:, r:,'," ,:’::;:h‘:‘c:"":‘} tion | Twenty-five hundred students ana | covers the great Somine batie tront, | ol MRG0T i "Looi: ¢ fense of American commerce against|against the early calling of congress|empress. It expressed i ¢ blunt| Ve 2 bu 1 th mmunication | 150" namber of professors in Cornell | Reports from this secicn of the front | BS e %ia destruction upon iiself 1t 1s understood | was that the president himself can 0| tachion the Janper. the Countos Won I | st e e o e e ning | Says that in the retreat of the Ser-|University “hit the trail” at three ser- | tell of effective work of destruction |is s war measure. Weo are compelled 0 3 ed the field se- | U carri efore co a 5 - volce | almost_overything possible immedi- | ana showed how onfy by the brompiest | by combined Sross sales and earnings, | lected for the comink engagement with | yie® DUIY Sunday conducted at Ith- | Carrieq ous, befors 1he Qouplel JRd o take it to o y out a m litary plan ately. But in spite of this argument | acti . aca. was given back to the I'rench and the i, meet the big offencive the ent e pracient mimsete did not | e e o ey lmo;-mt:,e by coll;ld m\:;hxno em- equalleq $1.231,473779, as _compa: the entente forces useless from a mili- British, so that it will avail them noth- | 18 /Be% (00 B GOt o o ed noth. b complete collapse. e grand | with $726,683,589 in the preceding year.|tary standpoint. having rendered ev- ing as captured soil, accordin to " o his views, and so far as coul?, 0e | seemed to be that congress should be|duke took mno pains to conceal the bl Smceg s By V3l The Farm Loan Board announced |ing ap L 5 ing except out of miitary necessits earned Iater had not determ- | summoned as soon as possible so| Rasputin scandal, but when the name SXD00 Engpisaes hive bean of advantsge Tot thel op|LISL the interest rate on al) loans made | Views expressd hare. We have saved every: ing we could ined upon the course to pursued. | that the full power of the government | of the empress was mentioned the lat. | The average number of employes In| NS DE€M Of SOVARIARS 1OF Ihell Ob- |to farmers throughout the counry by To End Trench Warfare. No Wilful Destruction. The prevailing belief vas that uhe would be assembled in Washington. ter snatched the letter from Nicholas | the service of all th. lubol;:h\-n'te com- S ey told Tho Assotisted Preas that F‘ed:rll Land Banks would be & 5 Per| «with the fronts uc long .as they | wwe did not wish to destroy homes - eivi E 5 3 = e pla i rr by o . vantage to the enemy Question Is What Shall Be Doné? | A further step in the plans to pro- | lence the statement thet. Pectopopoft | aries and wages of $263,385,502, an I | Snoe e Plans of the entente for their| Negroes at a mass meeting at Ashe- | troops said a high German military | DUALY, advantage Lo e e | tect American commerce was taken | (minister of fhe interior) had been | Crease of $86.084,635. Sow Bositions the. Germans will gieg | yile, N. C- subscribed funds suficlent | authority” today, “ther 1s mo_particu. | 79,160 1073008, % TAti 2 eIl 070 O S after the cabinet meeting when thel foisted upon nim by Rasputin. and Average Wage $3.29 Per Day. battle to the British and French as |loonadobt ‘50 Belgian bables. ~The|jar military significance attached to | Wentine will take place and we could eral . - | listened to the other accusations with- v, ex- | they come across the devastated bat- | ipeme r Ty At d especial section of the enemy's v he hands of ¢ Footion of Betretary MaAdo; Eabuno. ~ Average salary or wage per day, ex y thres monthe, i leave nothing in the actually a state | oq o new policy of insuring American | St Oor¥ing or showing signs of belng | clusive of general administrative and | tlefield. = E g ¥ Therefore, we can give UP|emy. So we were forced to destro: of war exists as the result of the ruth- | chine under which policies would be E‘x‘x;eki':;ffi'x'msi? Dy them, the stand | seiling force, was $3.29, an increase of Quiet on Other Fronts. Peter Ham Rimers, a German, was | % Portion of the weste n front, secure | roads, _raliroads, wel's, bulidings of written on all vessels except those car- | his majesty: patience and shouted at |36 cents. From none of tRe other fronts has |arrested at Yuma, Ariz., by BOVern- | masded wnd end trench warfae. That | value for military purposes, depot ships and the killing of American cit- - ¥ The undivided surplus of the cor-|there come a report chronicling par- ing with tw pes. = TR - That|even whole citles. It has been hard, izens in deflance of internatiomal law | 7 "5 8ctual munitions of war. Do none of these things move you? Hoaariy sansuinty | eneatmonts. | Mostcans " at tnt Southern Bacie | i3 what this really a.dounts to. We %o, for the French topulation, bt and of the most solemn warning one Motor Boat Patrols. AR s e e e oy e ing the $23,000 cash provided in or-| There has been an increase in the out- | bridge near Yuma. 77C| are now getting the eneny out of thelr | tha is the fault of their:government nation can give another. The only| pony for organizing patrol squad- | seventeon - goa the emperor signed by | ganization, amounts to $381,360,913. |post skirmisnes in Russia. In Mace- | g o lls Spri . All the men of military age we took question is what shall be done about seventeen grand dukes made no donia and north of Monastir the| Daylight saving by setting the clock orestalls Spring Drive. back with us. The reainder we hav of privately owned motor boats| greater i i - e s 5 y . it, further than the arming of -mer- | 2o7S impression, and Vladimir| BOARD TO SUPERVISE THE Frenen war. oiie “The giving up of t'ns portion of our | turned over to their countrymen chantmen to resist submarine attack|Snd yachts slong the Atlentlc coast]Purishievich vice president of thel .A:E OF bW PRI BAPER] T o oy L e e | O O T e reint comar | front puts an end to i their finely | they are now in French hands if they get the chance. e Daniels. m of True Russians and a promi- chine guns and twelve hundred. pris- |mittee on davlight saving of the Bos- | 14Xl spring offensive plaxs, Ever since * Fighting for Existence. The cabinet members generally. are o duma, paid i = var 3 jHundréds o2 thousands of ingness to support a programme based | $0T Zo¥, oPerAtions. W1 S e o s ‘Ar““mis. :r:el‘y 5.3 Pool is Arranged. have been without result. The Merchants & Miners Transpor- | (renches, munitions -, atlroads | DeE O, O W e on an early -all for congress and a nger to the On the Austro-Itali ¢ el £hat inhing | and cable lines t for the ce. ere compelled by formal declaration that & state of war | tOf and other coast points, in enroll|dynasty and the necessity of his pro- | Washington, March 20.—The fedsral| usua) artill e e e o stenmsily . service " Between | Digxest spring off the war, | refusal of the entents fo make peace o ery duels and minor in-|today its steamship service between ilable craft. Captain Marvell re-| tecting himself i Now + gor to defend il a st th exists between Germany and the Unit- | 272 cting self against the influence of | trade commission plans to supervise i by - | Now at one blow all tFat is gone for efend _ ourselves again h e port=d he had arranged contracts with | the empress. To all thess the emperor | the sale and distribution of news print O T L e R e T hoaa e SUY dthfns. In " the fAce of-our :withs promised ortensive. W have done o Tonight the president went to the|MSnY own L o replied: paper through a board which will rep- |, drawal all this 1is - seless. Iour |erything we could to a needless theatre—a thing he Ifrequently does|Sultable for mounting guns and chas-| “‘What has Alexandra to do with | resent all interesas concerned. BENNY” CHANGES HIS STORY A Royal Daniesh proclamation an- | months' work, of millions upon milliong | suffering, but what nappens i3 {hel O e e I e e faot|ing wul Oor patrolling the coast, | politics? 1 refuse to believe that she| The board, to be named as soon as a| ABOUT MEETING MRS. HILAIR. |nounging the transfer of the Danish | Of dollars in value, hes been rendered | fault, not ours. to turn thelr vessels over to the gov-|ls unpopul B : sion ow a grave question and wants r; 'popular among the people.’ price-fixing pool proposed by the man- g2 il West Indies to the United States and | useless and valueless. while, more Reshaping West: Front Line distraction in order to look at the prob- | STPTICHE [0 00 STEWENCY. | 4 nummber Dfacturers: finally 1s arranged, will| Admits He Met Her at a Broadway |bidaing farewell to the subject of King | important till. all the enemy plans | qov o008 Fesert ] O Treanonad mind at owners also agreed to volun. i s 28 y | b N e wriog or S s We expect the enterte to claim a em anew wi ened mind. tBEET o naave G CUBAN LIBERALS WORKING comptise five members..ons each. fron Subway Station Thursday. Christian, was issued at St. Thomas. |2 ewise oI mo worih. They must|this as a great victory.,” They will sa o~ Mo Blaval - Ondbe Toih Bl s e and 8 the manufacturers, jobbers, large pub- make entirely new ona to cope with | (S &% & grear victory. T The Atter the cabinet meeting Secretary | tary Baker spent severai hours at thetr| 'O AMERICAN INTERVENTION | iishers, small publishers and the trade| . York, March _20.—Benjamin |, Mrs. James Hamilton Lewis, wite of | the new situation bave not. ‘Thoy have not wor them & Daniels, ssyingthat no mew mnaval|offices tonight. ‘golig over depu,nm:n{ Unil s commission. The trade commission otherwise known ac Ben. |the United States Senator from Illi- “This is a difficult matter, entailing | PAHE ROto, REY FAKC {;(’)\vm;m;‘h' orders had been issued, hurried to thel business. nited States Forces Th.l’e Have Not | representative !’ill operate the pool detained by the police as a ma- nois, announced that she will be a can- wp‘eix(!, ves, mo_nlhn of work, anrd o | o of enemy .pressars but. we s Not Interfered With Civil Government, | from offices in New York. Other mem- ] witness in connection with the |didate for president-general of the|duiFing an enofmous Guantity of mew | reshaping the western front lines s bers of the board will serve in an ad- | ;urder of Mrs. Bisie Les Hilair, whose | D2ughters of the American Revolution. | ohservation. Meanwhils the er that we will nive g =Sarespive Iit TWO ESCAPED CONVICTS TRAPPING OF TWO Santiago, Cubt, March 15.—(Corres- | Visory capacity, and their powers Will | Loqy was found last Friday in her tive. Just in this manner Von Hix pondence of The Associated Press.-|be_ purely mnisterial. - ix Ribot, minister of finance in New- Positions Taken Up. 2 e The Tea 1 Poiagd SHOT TO DEATH GERMAN SUBMARINES | Liberals formerly high in government| Manufacturers who have been ac-|nocie '% xé‘}ir:‘jfifln-’rfi?ifi"fif’slgfi the retiring Briand Cabinet, called on| It j5 most important to remember o i o Thke Hosatif RS K 1 = = rank have begun an insistent propa-|cused of intimidating publishers into|pne told the police when he surren. |Eresident Poincare and informed him|ihat the new positions we are taking |the great offensive of 1915, and simi n a Battle Wi sse in a Suburb of | Reported by Captain Smith of the|®anda for American intervention. _|remaining out of =~ the _ price-Axing|dered yesterday, Inspector Cray de- | °S2rding the progress of negotiatlons|up back of the old froat are built with |larly we permitied the Rumanians to Birmingham, Ala. American Steamer Alaskan. Scrupulous care has been exercised | agreement have, it ig understood, as- | ciared tonight. with a view to forming a new Cabinet.| the aid of every possible device de- |sweep across the Carpathians last g 3 by Captain Belknap commandinghe | Sured tho commission that, if there has | “ 1. "% original statement, the poiice e % veloped by {wo and a haif vears of | summer that we might destroy the Birmingham, Ala., March 20—David | Newport, R. L, March 20.—The trap- | Aferican forces ashore here and at|been an ynitimidation _subordinates|say, Sternberg asserted he did not ses | Franik Koucher, an Austrian em-|warfare. The old positions were the |armies when they got out of the D. Overton, the former county olerk |ping of two German submarines wae|Other points along the coast both on |have been responsible, and that officers | Mre. Hilair on Thursday. the day she |Ploved by the Aetna Explosive Co., at | resuit of the breakin® off of the un-|own lines. under sentence of death for the murder | reported tonight by Captain E. I.|the north and south sides of the is-|Of the companies themselves have mot | registered at the hotel ‘as -Floence | Smporium. Pa. is under arrest in con- | finished offensive towards Paris.| “The Rumanian campaign s of Judge W. T. Lawler, was shot to|Smith of the American steamer Alas- | 1and, not to zive the Cubans. the idea | countenanced it. Gray, Boston.” He now admits, In. |nection with the explosion on 13st|yany portions of our positions were|what the possibilities. of the pre death in a Birmingham suburb tonight | kan which arrived today from Le Pal- | that the Usited Statcs government is| Members of the trade commission |specfor Cray said, that he met her at | Vedanesday, in which six men Were) heid only with the greatest difficulty. | movement are. It is the only kind by a sheriff’'s posse sent out to cap- |lice, France, for New York, according | Interfering in their affairs. just back from New York, where they |a Brooklyn subway station Thursday |<1ed- The trenches were difficult to maintain | strategy that can make possible & ture him and six other prisoners who|to the pilot who brought the ship in- | At every point the local authorities|urged on publishers the necessity for|and that they rode together to the - and the artillery obs.ivation points, | decision on the western. front.” had escaped from the county Jail[to the harbor. The U-boats, Captain |have been assured that the Americans|Strict economy in the use of news-|Grand Centrai etation, where they left |, Freight rates on sheep and goats early in the day. In a battle between | Smith said, were detected lurking be- | are doing nothing more than affording | Print paper, say the war situation| the train and started for a theatre. _|from Utah. Idaho and Oreon poinis the posse and the ers, Tony Ma- neath the surface of the sea by Keen. | Protection, ana that the conduct of al | threatens a new condition. in which| At Breadway and . Forty second |on the Oregon Short Line Railroad tolpgg| |EVE TWO INTERNED WANTS PROGEEDINGS. OF lino, another convicted murderer, also |eyed observers of the aircraft patrol, | Civil affairs remains with the Cuban |the news-print demand threatens tp|street, Sternber is quoted as having | LS Angeles were found to be unreas. was killed and J. L. Lathem, held on a | The airplane signalled for trawlers | peoble. Cuban police have contlnued | Outstrip production. The balance has| said, he changed his plans and lefs |oDable by the Interstate Chamber of AERNANISAN-ORE RECARED!: [OOCIEININIRUNL SURTI R e NI forgery charge, was seriously wounded. [and circled about directing the placing | their duties as usual. courts have con- | been extremely close for the last year.| Mrs. Hilair to go to a pawnshop, where | COmmerce Commission : The other convicts escaped. of nets. In a little while the nets wers | tinued Functioning, and American ma he pawned a_ ring belonging to his ; olice of Philadelphia. Are, Sald te: be|Jolin Dille iCella. Attention. s |Vl About fifty shots were exchanged|drawn quickly about the unsuspecting | Val officers have been punctilious in all| WOMEN TO BE ENLISTED wife. ' He asserted that he did not re- | !mmediate nationalization of railroad Working on That Theory. tion of Asquith’s Pledge. during the fight, which took place in a | submersibles, which were hopelessly | their dealings with Cuban officials not IN THE AMERICAN NAVY|join her and did not see her again. |Sontrol was urged by Robert S Lovett, == fm thicket near Birmingham College. The | enmeshed and brought to the surface | t0 appear to be exceeding their author- The police d chairman of the board of the Union| Philadelphia, ‘March 29.—Notwith- | London, March 10.53 p. m.—F - eclare Sternb 3 2 , Ma , 10.53 p. m.—Prc sheriff, notfled by a negro that the|They were lying side by side in the|ity. In return they have been the|For Shore Duty in G MR (oo g e Thers oM tem | pacific, in testifying’ before the con-|standing the navy department's an. | testing in the housé of commons (o prsoners were hiding in a thicket, sent [ harbor of La Pallice when the Alask- | recipients of appeals to induce the|' Const Petonce Wene" '"Rltan at any time Thursday. gressional committee investigating all [ nouncement that all the sailors of the | night asainst the government's refu six deputies to round them up. Over- |an sailed. American government to autherize o Coast Defense Work. Te “was Thursday afiernoon that |Phases of the railway problem. German auxiliary cruisers interned at|sal to publish the proceedinzs of ¢ L) ton and his companions at first at ‘The steamer, which W ‘more xten: = - ! by My Hilai: & the Philadelphia navy yard, wWho last|court martial of the embers o g e Tien Ty the Citended wceupation of the is-| (wasnington, March 20 —Secretary | prs Hilair went alone to the Martin- | Minnesota’s Railroad Commission, b~ | nisht made a dash for Iiberty, had |Simn Fein in Dublin, thus viclatis tempted to escape and then at a com-| American and Hawsiian Steamship |land and a supervision of elections. K 3 ~ . que, wearing jewelry valued at $2,500, 5 ~ : : . : : on promising at certaln | The jewelry was missi & Z, 2 Natlonalist leader 5 o e | ot prous - - x ; ew Bonar Law, cha eral firing followed before ' the con- |102 horses wers swept from her decks | days after the pacification of Seatie e S . :;h?xer‘n‘;::d to have been strangled late | getermination as to their validity. S SR T g A R R U L T T L Licts Tetreated Into ohe pajioess.|and lost The return trip was even |go. Such a promise If kept might serve|,, The Judge adyocate general has ruled| * Sternbers said he became acquainted | American mircraft manufacturers | Chorth and Hermann Schroder ma. | seneral elsction, said the Nationa s Ettle, was: scarcers mors. sen.. | oS stormy. She was sighteen davs | fo clear the record but the liberals|jhat TOMCn can 0% Shisged under the|with the vouns Brooklyn matron |nave been called to mest In Confer- |ohinists mate, reported to have been | would mot injure the Eovernment in sational or dramatic than the jail 46- |was :;rv:dm:n';u‘dt e e lb.eux!h:;nt He ’3‘5:.?5.‘.‘;’:’.5’“?5:":,’.' = While it 1% not ntended to place wo- through a fiirtation at 2 matinee in 2 |ence at Washington next ;Thursday | drowned in_the -attempt to swim 300 | the prosecution of the ar, o s mawen s, thrse ot then e | Mot T D° Drocesdad tonigut for | iniloriaated vote T o e ] Tamice b0 diseuss ways and means of | ved jate todar A Tasze squad of da- |lon suid, OF punlahing the Sovers death sentences for murder and three| Captain Smith was In_command of -efi':nf,?::fi:ozléc‘:onmfl\[&:'::.‘;' h coast dstense work. ection IP | BARON ROSEN'S ESTIMATION Speeding up he manufacture of air- | fectives was detached to Watch rail- | which Nad let Hisel 1oose in ire OeTy el O e o Pema alo- | (¢, American steamer Kansan, the|use of the military to intimidate vot-| Grades corresponding to the yeoman| OF NEW RUSSIA GOVERNMENT planes. road terminals and all other exits from | The Nationalists would welcome Comcerte e e ot oy, |Arst =hip to be held up by the U-63|ers in the provinces of Santa Clara, | 1252 Will bo given' to those qualifying e Mo Bopmier o New Yok | BSpcity, and “alers” “containing de- | general election and would oppose armed the Jall guards, tumbled into |Ostober § in her sensational rald on|Camaguey and Oriente which in the |33 stenographers clerks, typlsts of | Composed of the Greatest and Most| CHACies M, Boyoten B0, Sove CoUT | WORtions, B1 Goni™ S eport that | pariiament. in order to forc Sere $one betore ap SIarm coald | be | He wae aimwre te paokyt USHISHup, | past Bave besn strongly Mberal b gt Ml o d Men. T B hamber of Commerdiiarriyed at To- | pee of the men had been captured in | Hon. If My, Bonar Law raised mtt given. Within a few minutes armed [Rose, commander of the submersible, | DEVELOPMENT OF MILITA ed under the auspices of the Navy kio on his way to Petrosrad to pro- |the southern section of the city to-|Irish feeling in London he would find possesswere sent out in all directions | baing credited with referring to the in- sk League, also will be recognized by = mote the development of commercial | night was dented by the police. the Irish could fight as well, and man @nd an all-day man hunt through the |cident as “an encounter with AND NAVAL RESOURCES | navy officials as a factor in choosing] Londen. March 21, 1 relations between Russia and Ameri- | Electricians today strung wires over | things would come out of the situ city and the surrounding country fol- | sea lawyer: o — i e cacen & | or since I have been in the service of |ca arter the war. the meadows In the vicinity of the | tion that the honorable gentieman and lowed. S Is Urged in Petition Sent President| 'Another srade of work for which| the COUNIIy has the goverament boem - paxy yard and erected a large num- |his friends would not like The officials ve that Overton Wilson by 180 Membe: 5 ¥ be o Tadio | comPposed, as 3 -| A bill which would permit either | ber of high-powered arc lights. To- e o St who - lost” nom: | CHARGED WITH CONSPIROCY - T T o Yale Fac- | I e e e e tonaiC | stituting ‘the fower of ‘the nation—|party to a case before the superior | cight the meadows were as bright s their lives, were the leaders in pizn- | TO DEFRAUD NEW HAVEN ROAD Visions. Difficulty of obtaining men | th, Sreatest and most distinguished |court to challenge the judge assigned |at midday. ENLISTED MEN, TO BE dell d a1 ind of *j 1 Mayor Smith announced that the in- sing the jafl delivery. ioamds New Haven Conn. March 20.— | stenographers and clevks for the navy | ™' s the estimate of the new Rus- | 130" 5rc odice” was defeated by the | terned crews, numbering about COMMISBIBIED A LIELTENANES Frank Osborn, a Conductor, and Two | Prompt and adequate development of | rom among the regular enlisted per- | ' government as expressed to Thel tts h r resentatives | men, would be’ transferred to Forts | g; . SESSIONS OF NATIONAL Others—40,000 Spurous Tickets. :g: m ‘;!;fl payal e ,'fl :::.t'o au;ege .fifp qg;uflt;,nm‘a:h Bm- t‘M1§d Press by m,; s ::.".-‘f(;::'vowo"“ olisenEenen | Ouictiiorpe. ana MaPhevson early fto- | S F:m"‘E.chD Reg';mnn: in the prop - - | former Russian ambassador to the morrow. | His announcement was made outhern Department. DEFENSE CONVENTION| iartford, Conn, March 30—Charged | the nation is urged in a petition sent | sitions on shore with women the de-|ynited States. One of the greatest|OPPOSITION TO CONTRIBUTORY |after communicating with navy de- with forgery and with conspiracy to| {9, President n tonight by about | partment expects gmergen- | penefits accruing as far as other na- partment ,officials at Washington. San Antonio, Texas, March 20.—Six- To Be Conductsd in New York on|dofraud the New York, New Haven & |30 members of the faculty and ad-|Cy to relleve the men for fleet ser-|yions, particularly the allies are con-| SYSTEM OF OLD AGE PENSIONS ty enlisted men from each regiment of e L Bl ministrative officers of Yale Univer- | vice and sea duty. - he regular army on duty e Lines of a Public Forum. Springfield, Mass., a mum the | Sity. The petition says that the honor ?:"vf:' l‘:e:rfin:p‘:w‘m o:t&mmnemm':i Developed at Legislative Hearing in e 7 Frk s g ey New York, March 20—Sessions of | am, mved 20d Adolph Wilkins and Shat S Sountry of & handred mities | UNIVERSAL. MILITARY Tra o e i e M R St captalie i s vormmicer iestey Bl - arry 'ew Britain were UNIVI L M TRAINING i ition of 3 IN CA WAR | and captains in a volunteer army have the maticsmliduiiane cexvention to be JexBOmS, Jth yaal resoutces yat unde- e il Mareh 20.—Opposition de- s been selected in purauance of war de : “It will be realized now, as never| Boston, held here next week under the auspices veloped' cannot afford to stand under Detiia hat Rnasia 6 mot. nominaln] veloped at @ legislative hearing today Pprotectorate. e cont s ok e, oCTFRN ek, commerce upon the fleets el ast Baron Rosen fkened the revolution- | na Spencer of the epdole) cpmmissian| ‘Barsgofs. has been forwarded to Washington = . “foosing the pent-up indignation | ure if it was designed in any way 10| New maven, Conn. March 20 _Dis- of the country against the inequities|taks the place a;e non-contributory | cussing What Yale would do in the | RUSH OF VOLUNTEERS FOR 9f the old regime. which Broke down | plan recommended by some of the com- | svent 5 war, Dean I, S. Jones of the Completely under the weight of its|missioners. Brvin R. Hurse, actuary, | cotlege. in an interview which the SERVICE IN NAVAL RESERVE and incompetence. Of the Massachusetts Savings Bank | Yale News Will Brint tomorrow; sae | A¢ Naval Training Ascssiation in New d%:-:::. President Ar- | traini nationgl he Life Insurance department said the bill { he. would like to see the university d partment instructions designed to pro vide a junior commissioned personnel Campus Into Trai ] 8 paredness. The national rfllfll commanders of ‘haflroad many states will be present and it is| e rafiroad, which they sold expected that every state will be rep-| train ana on the street at rates presented. g? “Eéss § | 8 H kA . S. Jones ot fsusrd. he characterized safe} was a duplication of the work of that| grounds = turned Into a training York City. coliege: Russell H. Chit- rtment and Frank W. camp, the,dormitories into barracks, -« of the Sheffield Scientific school | States against of the state board of trade,|the “commons” dining hall used as a| New York, March 20—The al Professors William fleet ar that consideration of this and|mess room, the athletic fields as pa- | Training association announced to- ish and French battle lines in Europe.” in questions hs deferred un’fl all ,:%. grounds, all extra-curriculum | ight that the rush of volunteers fos s of war had passed. activities eliminated and the students, | service in the naval reserve is so great superior court at Bridgeport Steamship Arrivale.. - Representative J. Weston. Allen of | while attending classes, giving the | that two additional oficers b grand jury brought in a true bill| New York, March 20.—Arrived: Newton, sponsor for the measure, said | greater share of their attention to mii- | detailed for duty at the recruitlug of 1 nthe first degree against|Steamer Alicante, Barcelona. it would be merely extend what the|itary preparedness. He would also | fices in this city. A traveling party Ferdinand Laudati of New Haven, who state is doing in teachers' and state|like to see the students. should a call | obtain enroliments started from (ho OBITUARY, Henry E. Marshall. %% BREE f i -G wvflh Mu-numuz- Fire destroyed the Morgan House, at snplaves spbasne, I FRrticipan for volunteers come, formed into a|New York navy yard foday fo visit loow, Ernest Pompo, ‘Poughkeepsie, N. Y., at a loss of $250,- A distinctiy Yale organization, if pos- } N Haven, [Bridgeport and othes Stamford on March 10 Jast. o00. N mvestor Sioated with nterest. sivle, clties,

Other pages from this issue: