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5 paggre PRICE TWO POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, MAY 14, 1917 8 PAGES—64 COLUMNS VOL. LIX.—NO. 115 The Bulletin’s clrculahon in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, and its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the C|tys Populatvon BRITISH RECAPTURE BELLECOURT VILLAGE Have Repulsed Violent Counter-Attacks Delivered by the Germans East of the Village POSITIONS HAVE CHANGED HANDS MANY TIME Along the Scarpe River East of Arras There Have Been San- Cabled Paragraphs I Suwml Operation on King Gustav via London, May 14, ore ng Gustav of Sweden Sk e operation on Sunday, according to advices from Stockholm! The operation was of a minor nature. Hollweg Going to Vienna. Berlin, May 18, via Amsterdam and London, May 15, 7.08 p. m~—Dr. von -Hnllwfll!- the imperial chancellor, left Berlin last night for Vienna. STEAMSHIP MONGOLIA HAS ARRIVED AT AN AMERICAN PORT Vessel Which Fired the First Shot in the War With Germany. ————— May 13—The Ameri- can steamship Mongolia, from which the country’s first shot in the ~war with Germany was fired with such ac- curacy that a German submarine was sunk, arrived at an American port to- day ‘from Europe, bringing a report McAdoo to Tour |Four LivesLostin the Middle West| Fire atManchester IN THE INTEREST OF LIBERTY LOAN FAR WEST AS DENVER States That There are Thirty Days in Which the People of the United States Must Make Good. ‘Washington, May 13.—Secretary Me- Adoo will make a tour of the middle west, beginning May 17, at Chicago, and going as far west as Deaver, in THE |[MORE THAN A SCORE ESCAPED l IN THEIR NIGHTCLOTHES APARTMENT BUILDING One Man Died of Heart failure Dur- ing the Blaze—Property Loss Estimated at $200,000. is Manchester, N. H., May 13.—Four persons lost their lives and more than & score escaped in their night clothes in a fire which destroyed the Weston Condensed Telégrams The parcel post service between the United States and Norway has been suspended. The Aero Club of France gave a dinnier in honor of the American avi- ators at the front. The War Department and the De- partment of Agriculture are in dis- pute over army rations. Twenty American teachers and mis- sionaries arrived at Berne from Tur- key on their way home. Germany’s internal cri is near, according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Amsterdam. John James, a chauffeur, was killed by an automobile as he crossed Eighth Avenue at 33d Street, New York. English airplanes bombarded Zee- brugge. At the same time a time a flotilla of torpedo boats bombardeded Streets Decorated With the Colors of France " Britain and the United Sattes Visito During Speech M. Viviani Stated the Present War M Fought to the Finish—Declared That if a Gern tory Were Possible the Free Peoples of the World W be Reduced to Servitude and Slavery by the officers of another apparent en- | the interest of the liberty loan, the |and Fitts Mercantile and Apartment |the Belgian coast. e s g e N e S e formal campatgn for eubscriptions to |building on Blm street early today. e Deeply Affected When Presented a Memoria guinary Encounters, With the Advantage in Favor of| The second adventure was on May | which opened today. Mr. McAdoo in | The loss was estimated at $200,000. R HLBmith; SriChlasse. hodrose 2 the British—Three Strong German Attacks on the Pla- teau of Craonne Were Put Down by the French Sun- 4, according to Lieutenant Bruce M. Ware, the man who commanded the naval gun crew which disposed of the submarine on April 19th, the annivers- ary of the battle of Lexington. his official capacity will tell his audi- ences that the United States is not en- gaged in half a war but is in a fight to the finish with autocracy still strongly entrenched. He will appeal The dead are Miss Jennie Moffit, 60 years of age, whose body was found in her room on the top floor of the butlding; Willlam Hickey, 50 years, a mill operative; Omar Godbou, also ‘an operative: John Shaw, an ambulance on the French front for eight months, returned to enlist in the American expeditionary force. The wet and dry forces in the Illi- The Monfolia was on her homeward | to their patriotism to do their part 50 years, a fur- 4 * nois Legislature declared a truce. No : 2 2. . Voyhee P reatonant: Ware seia “whea | in making effective the declaration of | niture dealer, who led of heart fall- egialature v truc day—Eleven German Airplanes and Six British Aircraft|[p7e5®, [entehant Ware sald, wher | the preament that America pledges all | ure during the fire. more Tiquor or anti-liquor legisation | poyon 135 Baston gave L& + ey | Th2 728 believad'” o be s toredo | her resources In the cause of democ- | The lower floor Gt the bullaing was | Wil be considered during the sexsion. | warm VT LR ] o Bee]" I ,0s| i E:llco]]n s’—!‘l Afli wi i racy. e y stores an e two upper i < former premier of ¥ ce and head of | L Have t in Recent 5 oy CTY | minetier i 1t was ome, pessen undes| . Actual Campaign Has Begun. foors by apartments. Forty-eight passengers arrived at|inc™\orchch war mission to che United | of the m missile, if it was one, passed under an American port from England .on a % - = the ship’s bows. No ‘submarine was| “With the announcement today of y Briti - o0 N s | States. The distinguished visitor, | local headq Duels Are in Progress in Macedonia. Sighted, but & shot was fired from one | the. details of the Nberty Ianc Wr.|STRIKE OF ENGINEERS IN ey e D e e 9¢ | coming & day after the clty had out- | of the Mongolia’s guns in the direc- | MoAdoo said tonight, “the preliminary VARIOUS PARTS OF ENGLAND. |age. stretched its arms to Marshal Joftre, | o :,nmh from wmm-:i thchs\mpfsnr}l torpe- | campalign is ended and the actual cam- eE = fas feasted, toasted and ed by | b 0 had come and nothing further was i begun. Thi 30_d: t Sor I rtant t the M. i f : ousands. | On the southern end of the line held Lo P iho e of itod SO, CR N IS Men fine anptain, of & Norvenian ship st cold, drizzling rain, M After days ot intensive fighting, in which positions have changed hands umerous times, the British troops have recaptured the greater portion of the village of Bullecourt and repulsed violent counter-attacks delivered by the Germans east of the village. Along the Scarpe river east of Arras by the French the Germans Sunday morning made strong attacks on the plateau of Craonne on the sector north of Rheims and in the region of Mai- sons de Champagme. The French not only put down all three attacks with the fire of their artillery and rifles, heard or seen to indicate a submarine’s presence. The gunners on the Mongolia were jubilant upon their arrival. They re- iterated their conviction that the shot | on April 19 sank the submarine. It was fired, Lieutenant Ware said, by James A. Goodwin, gunner’s mate, of within which the people of the United States must make good the action of congress in piedging all the resources of the country for the conduct of a righteous war—a war for universal Tiberty. No Doubt of Success. “Failure to subscribe the $2,000,000,- Are Determined to Stay Out. Lordon, May 14, 3.15 a. m. — The strike of engineers in various parts of England continues. The Amalgamated Society of Engineers, the trade union which the strikers are disobeying, is urging the men to resume work today Baltimore declared that two months ago women were being used at Stet- tin, Germany, to load and discharge | steamers. The War Department ordered the | army aviation school at Memphis transferred to Chicago, whence it was Despite his lors of France United States and w thusiastically wherever they Guests of Governor McCall. The party arrived’ from ( were tak n and the auded e il there also have been sanguinary en- | causing heavy casualties, but they | Portsmouth, Va. removed to the southern city some|a. m., being met at the sta by re Countera, but again the advantage rest- | pushed back the German line and made | Lieutenant Ware declared that | 303, redirired would be & comfession of e e IndieConw wrs e s |tne e g e &l with Fisld facshay Hslgs foroes. | prismecs. through his glasses he saw the shot!moment doubt the overwhelming suc- | for instance, in Derby, where they and city officials, and were driven to | Por of the vilage of Reoux have| There are stfil no indication of the [strike the U-boat's periscope and that | 0¥ SONTR InS SUSTWUSIRRE CUnC | 20, SO g, [0 TProYs WRSER, TBO¥ | john J. McSweeney, of Brooklyn, a | the nome of D 11, I Senre on Tencon een by the Dritish and another | approach of any important fghting|the hit was followed by a cloud of |are made to realize that no great work | work. It is also said the men out in |Special patrolman guarding the Man? | circet for break After a morning ep forward has been gained Ly them | between the Austro-Germans and Rils- | white vapor, as if an internal explo-|o¢ this kind can be accomplished un- | Manchester will return to their posts, |hattan Bridge, was accidentally shot t, the party were zuests of Gov- n the western siopes of Greenland |sians on the eastern front from the|sion had been caused. After that, the|less everyone throws himself into the | though some reports from Manchester |in the ankle by another guard, Clif- MeCall dinner Sears H Paltic sea to Rumania. Along this en- |submarine did not reappear he sald. | task with the energy and fire of de- | indicate that doubt is felt that they |ford Hill Later Frenc smar - Thers has been no let-up in the air tire lne the operations consist merely termined patriotism. wiil do so. was the cent n the \ehting which has been EOMg on since | of kmall skirmishes and reconnais-| NORTH AMERICAN CITIZENS it Tpeasis A campaign to increase the meat | fioston Pubiie library the epHny GIarEtes)| Tewes- Wi=wer | sa s IN THE GERMAN ARMY Wars, Cout Money. Barrow and Bivkenhesd, the’ men ave | 8UppY of the nation by 100,000,000 Ibs. | Losto", TUnLe Tibrar German airplanes were accounted for| In Macedonia violent artillery duels “Wars cannot be conducted without | ropo 0%, %’ o Gatermined to continue |in four months by raising chicken was | Viviani Spoke from Grand Stairway.| ] Saturday by the British, ten of them |are in progress along the entire front, K =7 money. It is the first thing to be pro- | qno® T 1€ o8 S ETRVAES 10 CONEINNC | jagun by the American Poultry As-| M i ‘atr Dattles and one by an anti-air- | with the preponderance in. the gun- |Her Kunert, Socialist Member of | 11305”" 1n° thig war It i the most m- ment ia the vehmmence with swhich the | sociation. aug craft gun. The British themselves lost | power apparently on the entente side.| Reichstag, Trying to d Out Their | mediate help, the most effective helD | girikers are being m“dgm“d‘”b;?omg | " six machines. Sunday saw no Infantry actions there. Status. that we can give. We must not be workmen. A great number of the Owing to the lack of safe oversea }'mn" in his That More Than $175,000 Had Been Raised chusetts for the Fatherless Children of France content with a subscription of $2,000,- | griy routes the German mail service to|With much emotion’ to the traditional BALFOUR PAYS VISIT TO SUPERINTENDENT OF THE socialist member of the reichstag.’ at |loan as an indication that America 18 | exemption for spectal work, would ali | ral America dnd the Orient wis dis- | U e '\v'i"("'r'\‘a placed his hand or the sitting on Friday, according to a |stirred to the and_arous De 1 th . i continued. the ehoulder of Marquis de Chamb; o e ARMY TRANSPORT SERVICE | pouter qozpateh from ~Amatordam | the summic of her greatness in the | afice 'Iy hothing more. tham 52 Stc| v o — {2 asscendint” of Lafavotte. and then = which quotes the Norddeutsche All- | cause reedom. tempt. t > e formation of an ambulance and | that he have beer - Attended Service at Cathedral of St.|Colonel John M. Carson Has Been Se-|gemeine Zettung, questioned the gov-| “Buy a liberty bond today—do not|jembe fo Gedge miltary service by |y, nospital at the College of the |able to bri relative John the Divine. lected by Secretary Baker. ernment ‘about the incorporation of | put #t off until tomorrow. Every dol- | cxemption is endanmered by the aboii |City of New York s under way.|of the nt - foreigners into the- German army. He | lar provided quickiy emd _expended | £io7" 0t the so-called trads oard. sva- | ISty -six privates will be taken from |part in his New York, May 13.—Foreign Minis-| New York, May 13.—The designation |declared the foreigners in this cate- | wisely will shorten the war/al save|tem, which is their chief grievance, the student body. country’s histor ter Arthur J. Balfour of Great Britain, [of Colonel John M. Carson, quarter- |gory infludeg bNoruvx American cu;- hu;lnlll :ile‘;" ARl o & L "R M \'\\'\.rn] Mm;tnl that 2 the - = zens who had been provided with of- 0w to buy a liberty bond was tully enry Charles Somers of icago, | never alarmed at the head of the war mission to the United | master in New York, for the United | £00% Y5 tification papers. Herr Ku- |outlined in abstracts telegraphed to- | CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE Bis b Rlice an o Genman ] Uaisd Bt States, spent a somewhat ‘militant |States army as superintendent of army | nert asked what the chancellor con-|day to the federal reserve banks. CONSIDERS WHEAT SITUATION |friends, were arrested at Geneva as| He pra the Sunday although it was supposed to be | transport service of the port of New |templated doing in connection with Application Blanks Distributed. German spies. Dr. Somers has an|ofcers and so'diers this subject. Statement to Be Given Out After |American passport. front. asserting that they a @ay of rest for the weary envoys. In the morning the British_ states- man went to the Cathedral of St. John |ordinate military shipments of the |£0vernmant, said the war minister | heen distributed widely. = Sl 28 The Divine, where he listened to & war | United States and. the entente allies |would ~communicate with military | "% apphcations must be in the form | Chicago, May 13.—Board of trade|iig, Sisd drmies will sail from (hi Pleaded for a Spiritual U sermon by Rev. Dr. Charles H. Brent, | from this port through the appoint- [ PTRreanders and after an investigation | prescribed and be accompanied by & |directors met today to consider the |7t consists of a complete medical unit| e pleaded’ for “a spiritual union Episcopal bishop of the Philippines. In [ ment of a special shipping board, vet | 2f the Waole question wou'd order the | payment of 2 per cent. of the amount | wheat situation and at the end of a|of 950 men and women. across the sea,” which he said would | the afternoon he went to Oyster Bay [to be named. e on oy s unjustly incor-|o¢ bonds appded for. Applications |six hour conference in the Union : forever guard the pr ples of true for a visit to Colonel Theodore Roose- [ Edward D. Page, chairman of the |POrate "‘&‘ s B the | MUSt be for $50 or any multiple there- | League club President Joseph P. Grif- | |t is understood that information democracy. The present w he said velt. There were no formal entertain- | New York advisory committee of the |, tunora toem osked hether < | of, but any application for one 350 or | fin sald no_statement wow.d be given |heing sought by the Brazilian minis- | m: be a fizht to the finish. If a| ments for the members of the mission | quartermasters department, in a|Chancellor was aware that the same|$100 bonds until further notice may |out until after a meeting is held at § | tar of war regarding the possibility of | German victory were possible, he add- and Mr. Balfour's colleagues spent the day d they pleaed York by Secretary of War Baker, is the first step in a definite plan to co- statement tonight sald in part: “Hundreds of thousands of dollars Colonel Marquardt, replying for the compulsory measure had been applied to Frenchmen and Poles. Application blanks for liberty bonds, printed by the hundred thousand, have be allotted at once and payment in fuil accepted against delivery of an interim Meeting to Be H. This Morning. tomorrow morning. Among the members of the board it America’s second contingent to join eventinally obtaining arms and ammu nition from a great industrial powe dispe’ throats in the enemy who jumpec 1, t would be red ed, t the w ose of A > free peoples of include 1ced Marquardt’s answer was that § There was a_distinguished congre- |carn be saved by cutting red tape, |, Colonel Mara e certificate. Applications must reach|was said that an order would probabl ey e fad gation at the cathedral Mr. Balfour |storing fogether goods for shipment |Ne had nothing to add to what he al- | the treasury department or a federal | be issued curdailing or e ] o s s e Praised Watkc of Atericans. | ocoupled a pew with Joseph H. Choate |abroad, for the allied governments, | "®20y had sald. reserve bank not later than noon June | trading in July wheat and May corn 1t t Eliis Island did not ¢ | & - ard Sir Cecll Spring-Rice, the British | shipping together. for the same dea:| When Kunert insisted upon knowing |15, 1917, the right being reserved by |amd fixing a settioment arice. ri, |German liners at Ellis Island g Ot | e praised highly the work of Amer- | Eenera r ambacsador. The cathedral was|tination and releasing some 20,000 | What action the chancellor intended to | the secretary of the tremsury to close | action was taken on Friday reEarding | oo o o eeal hays | lcans with the French and = Pritish | . crowded, aithoush admission was by |freight cars now stacked up on the | {2K° 3E2Iel Such & Xioliion of 1% | the subscription on any early date. |May wheat, but, notwihstanding, |may elapse before the change can be | Fance cwed fhem a dent of meatiude | world Sred outside o eatih & Elmnpee of Mr. | Ty Tains e of tho Ao B gelence. the president intervened, say- | SENATE IS EXPECTED TO g:c;\.xlynnw'}l;zit ina Ay Com T e —— foriihe woldertul mmorifice (et ey | Teibute te Men Tt et Sley dncurui Xegt e |y SF W Heimee Mol w0 | Y : RS oY PASS ESPIONAGE BILL TODAY | this condition that ied to the meeting | Jesse Williamson, Jr, of Philadel- | "S5 D000y 0 tinrary om M v The congresation eat under the in- |war department puts into the hands | MYSTERIOUS POISONING 2 — R s : phia, and former secretary of _the | oiivaryctteY 04, TRrATY oMo the me fertocked flagn of the alMes, Hihop|or Colbatr Corsin Hocrbie’ fataiact CASE IN SPRINGFIELD, | House Will Continue Discussion of | 5 Rt emphatic that | Pennsylvania Company for Insurance | jrofl i 0\, o0 i vpadibes e Drent, who preached at St. Paul's ca- | capable. of &reat expansions o8 =N e | the $1,800,000,000 War Revenue Bill. | Shofe ORIE e 10 closing of the ex |on Lives and Granting Annultles, was |iocal institution and contributed to its s, M thedral, Lomdon, a momth ago at a| YW, 5 ot maximum 1ts | Police and Medical Officials Are Com- ; il B L would |arrested, ed S at- | first collection of book » e Dnfted Btates 1 R oy a i U y, i i i 01 e Frenc] tates n_ appeared el Il of,the entry of |department, the shipping board and all % With the calendars of both houseq siiy | trading of the country, and entall se- | Germany’s fuel difficulties did not| The Fren P a, 1 g v d ipping in this through medium of | Sprinsfield, Mass, May 13.—The Do- | fijloa ‘with Jesisiation which the a4 | rlous losses on the farmers and others |end with the late unusually sevore |deeply touched when Charles H. Le- e T this new organization.” lice and medical officials of this city | ministration feels is essentia] to the | FN0_have contracts to fill or grain in |winter. Germans are being warned | land, grandson of Samuel Carr, one of | wormth of s i ol e ey the Diitiall are completely baffled in their investi- | guccessful conduct of the conflict with | F2PSit: that it will be impossible to supply | the public lib trustees, presented | had warmed the < e e HOUSE VOTES FOR gation of a mysterious poisoning cese | Germany. the indiviaunl ‘consumer with all the | bim & memorial stating that more than |and Eonsiitut coal he needs. 175,000 had been raised in this s SELGIANS DEPORTED FROM PROVINCE OF LUXEMBOURG ROOSEVELT DIVISION Staff Army General Strongly Op- which_resulted in the deaths of Miss 1l Cushman, Hilda Francis and Clif- ford Gordon, a 6 vear old boy, whose bodies were found in_a _three-room The senate, after two weeks' debate on the espionage bill drawn by the de- partment of justice, is expected to pass that measure tomorrow. FIRST CONTRACT SIGNED FOR SHIP CONSTRUCTION Start on Administration’s Billion Dol- The Appellate Division of the Su- preme Court in Brooklyn handed down a decision confirming the con- ch of France. for the fatherle gifts that the g KAISER PATRONIZES AN 40,000 MEN RECR All the Males Between the Ages of PomedEs O . basement apartment at 70 Byere street | The house probably will conclude ] : thie afternoon. The appearance of the r Building Program. Vietion of Arthur Plaut, one of the e Fifteen and Sixty-Five. Jashington, May 12The way was | kitcron ndicited that the thres vic | fi\enue Bill sasy i ths' wark ok | - Seondants I the Johuson Avenue AMERICAN DENTIST | FOR OFFICERS o2 o 3 cleared in congress today for Colonel | tims were taken Ill while eating sup- ashington, May 14—Signing of |slaughter house cases. = = o T e, May e iorma | Roosevelt, 1f he is eiven authorization [ per, bu: the medical authorities say e sasionage B Hias been stripped | the st coniract for ship construction oy Arthur Newton Davis of Piqua, Ohio, | Full Quota Twenty Da povernment 1s to ihe efect thet op | oY, the administration, to raise a di-|that death did not result from pto- |of the press censorship section. e |URder the administration’s bulion dol- | New York State and city employes Repairs Imperial Teeth. Issuance of ¢ Fovernment s fo the cffect that all | vieion of volunteers for service in | maine poisomng. oD e e ection-. iih® |lar building program, was announced |who enter the military service wil 5 The Diister m\-ifif_‘; e L“f;em_ France. Reversing its previous ac- The apartment was occupled by | prohibiting the use of cereals or |tonight by the shipping board. The [not lose their salaries if they enlist or openhagen, via London, May 13, New York | bourg have been deported for work in|Gon and overriding the conference | Mrs. Clifford Gordon, Who has been at | grains in the manufacture of Intoxi. | CONLract went to the Los Angeles fare drafted. Gov. Whitman signed a|10.45 p. m nperor William recog- |of 40,00 P e oy i e e m | committee on the army draft bill, the | a local hospital sirice Friday. Miss |cants during the war probably will | Ship Building and Dry Dock company [bill compeliing the State to make up [ nizes no state of war with the United | ment r od 1 g ol house voted 215 to 178 to empower the | Cushman, a middle aged woman, |not greatly delay ultimate passage of |and called for delivery in 1918 of eight |the difference in pa: States so far as his personal comfort [ing c tho frontier. men also has been|PFCSident to extend authoritp for re- | served as housekeeper and Miss Fran: | the omtive moamir steel vessels each to carry 5,500 tons e is concerned. This is shown by the | was recruited w tatten andl thoy have Been diviasd oty |cruiting such a division. This sent|cis was a roomer. The boy was Mrs.| Plans of leadérs in the senate are |Of CAT£o. Paul Daeche, the wealthy German |fact that he has summoned his / ssuance of hres ontegories The frst is como | e army bili back to conference but | Gordon's son. They were last seen |not clear as to what measure of the |, 1t 2150 was announced _that the [reservist, at liberty under heavy bail |ican dentist, Arthur Newton Davis of | F. Cros r e T bomiod o 500 | the senate already had adopted a|allve Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock | several imporiant oncs shall he talen |Poard is bargaining for 250,000 tons |since his conviction for alleged plots | Pigun, Ohio, to visit him at Great |camps’ assc Dosed of the able-bodied whe will be | similar authorization during original | and thtir bodles were found at abowt | up atter the cepfrmage DI bot ‘4 |additional steel and wooden tonnage, [to set fire to munition ships. was seiz- | Tleadduarters this week and attend to [night compelled to work in the flelds re-|consideration of the measure and its | fhat time this afterncon. An autensy | Lobennr wit b By ahcy Dhky DUt ¢ |for delivery as early as possible. oa by agents of the Department of |the necessary repairs to the imperial | It is expected » placing men; the second. mothers with | conferees are expected to agree quick- | was performed this evening, but the | Gonferees on the army bil caited to | The shipping board plans to have | Justice, who exhibited an order for his | teeth. camps wil : . 1, the er th y S actntte Gare R B © at least 1,000 ships, steel and wood, o : othache to be no respector of in- n : will remain at the disposition of the |will be given Colonel Roosevelt by the | fhan o state In o Eenerdl way fhat 1t |coiny iomevn® Lolecting the so- | more than 3,000,000 ageresate tonnaze, | The cruiser Boston, gunboat Prince- [ 1ernational relations and throughout | not select o s untmown, oS s o ok, Spoicmatical The | resulted from poisoning. A further | wants to put it in, are not expected | t0 combat the German submarine cam- |ton, naval tender Iris and training |the long months of tension between |have an op; sion is unknown. ) army general staff, whose advice Pres- | nvestigation will be conducted tomor- | to take lone at thelr task and toeoe. | Paign. Bills to be introduced in con- |schooner Rainbow were transferred|Germany and the United States the | tion for th I en Ia (OHOw G ickisely i ewe row . the Bill may reach the semats |ETess this week call for an initial ap- |from the navy deparment to the Ship-|imperial and ropal famlily ~and the | Cosby. “Tt SHOETAGE IN WINTER B s mn el e Gooe propriation of $400,000,000. Later an |ping Board to be used as cargo car- | hishest officials of the state have con- | who contems WHEAT CROP.OF CANADA. | S5l & &7an, declaring veluoteer units LLWE( 4 e additional $350,000,000 will be asked |riers or other purposes in connection |tinued to patronize their respective lcamp to of that character have no place In the | TOTLWEG WILL ADDRESS o T T e Lo b made |and if this is mot emough still more |with the merchant fleet. American dentists. Each new crss |as due no - Winter Killing Has Destroyed About |8reat war army. THE REICHSTAG TOMORROW | {0 Dut feod control lesisiation | il be souht. il was marked by an almost ludicrous | newspapers. 23 Per Cent. 2 In both houses the food leisiation | Under the bills to be introduced, the | James D. Standish, secretary and |rush of members of the royal fami- | department t FIRE IN WHARVES It is Expected He Be Able o], o B i eause mueh degate i |overnment will be empowered to re- | treasurer of Hammond, Standish & ilies, foreisn office oficials and other |Gateas poss b b T A it s AT WILHELMSHAVEN Beat Off His Opponents. T e e T et it |Guisition ship- yards If mecessary to | company, meat packers, and _well |dignitarics, to get thelr tecth attend- [next cams et 1 106 SDtar bRt ot be passed giving the department of |hasten construction and in an emer- | known in packing circles throughout|ed to before the possibie departure of — e - e Submarine Building Di Berlin, May 13, via London, May 14, gency could take over the country’s|the country, died at his home in De- |the American. dentis Some WHAT FRANCE EXP Canada was revealed by & report of |Submarine Building Department was .y 14, | agriculture money and authority to Z : e e e Eopar Al L s 114 a. m—_While the baiting of the |make a food Sorvey of the couniry ang | Steel mille® output and put it into | troit, Mich, last might. Mr. Standish [most rabid vituperators of the i public today. The acreage estimated el =il imperial, chancellor is going on, the|to curb speculation in food products. |ship building. was born near there in 1849, States have been mild doves in Amer- i to have been sown last all was 818,400 | Amsterdam, May 13, via London, |Svent of the past forty-elght hours =3 e beiare Sansonal view of the | Ekntained to n ¢ % i " | would seem to indicats 3 OBITUARY. F SUBMARINE The emperor's personal view of the and the estimated destruction through {10.4¢ a. m—For seven hours on Wed- [ Foui® Soem, 15 indicate that Dr. von|EACH SECTION OF COUNTRY s v 0 relations with the United States ap- and So eloga ks 1Ny 2o o X Iiesiny = sest firs rassf tn fhe molneeito Be. \sbecluich fascuresiivhe MUST FEED ITSELF Daniel R. Hows. CHASERS HAS BEEN LAUNCHED | parently is the official interpretation er ., lea % cres harve T, AC- | chancellor return Tro sl i of his government which in com- Petro harvested. The estimated condifion of | cording to advices received here today. | (it 5o grast. headauareers Satimacd | Warning Sent Dut by Assistant Secre. | Fartord, Conn, May 13—Daniel R.| a¢ the New York Navy Yard—Many |Liunication regarding the continuance | bert Thom O o e any provious sowy | The submarine hullding department|morning and left the same night for| tary of Agriculture Vrooman. |iness man and widely known for his| Others Will Be in Water Within a ot the Belzian relief work, sneaks not | nitions was i« : Phe & iousy. 5 25 °0tire | Vienna, after having spent the et Ll sty civio orsaniza.| Few Weeks. of war but of the “abandonment ' of | noon by since 1009 at that date. gistrict has been closed to the pub- |1y “conferring with the reichstag ST | Tatbaoe WD T30k vt thiab N e e X M, & A, of neutralit Sy Wi it g A0 gt - OMNIBUS DRIVERS OF = leaders with respect to the interpelr |each section of the United States must | which he was president for many vashington, May 13.—The first boat | Along the same line is a declaration in ate lations on Germany's war aims. feed itself or go without food _was|years, at his home here today. For|of the navy's fleet of submarine chas- | the reichstar committer by Major | LONDON ON STRIKE, Their Grievance is Non-Recognition of ‘Wilhelmshaven is the great German naval station and war harbor in the North Sea. Both his visit to great headquarters and his trip to the Austrian capital were made in connection with the volced here today by Carl S. Vroo- man, assistant secretary of agricul- ture. He said that with cotton at 22 cents a pound, southern planters are many years Mr. Howe has been a di- rector of the Comnecticut Fire Insur- ance company, being second in service ‘ollins company of ers has just been launched at the New York navy yard, it was announced to- night, and the second will be launched at the New Orleans navy vard In a no intention to intern Americans EXPLOSION IN LABOR jon. s = chancellor's declaration’ covering the ‘board: Fihile Unton CELEBRATED AMERICA’S e Sine, witigh e will SubEit o Che | SMNEE R (ot Rae Sl T e e ctitt Toost | fow 3ays. Kbels of both wers i | London, May 13.—Omnibus _traffic ENTRY INTO THE WAR | relschstag Tufsday. Sown with cotton and putting in food- |ana Safe He was senior | April 1. Many other of the 110-foot TEMPLE AT KANSAS CITY. | , throughout London was virtually st a standstill today owing to a sudden strike of the drivers, their grievance being the non-recognition of their un- Enthusiastio and Largely Attended Mesting at Trinidad. It is contended that the chancellor holds enough strong cards in the pres- ent military situation, the success of the U-boats, the record sixth war loan and the improvement in the food sit- stuffs. “We must awaken” he said. “The submartne is a much more potent wea- pon than we imagined. The allies were losing the war when we entered Y. member of the board of the latter com- pany. He alsc served ou the board of directors of the National Exchange Bank, which recently _ consolidated with the First National Bank of Hart- motorcraft are nearing completion and will be put into the waters within a few weeks. Fire Warden Says It Was Caused by Bark Lost in a Hurricane. Dynamite. May Kansas City, Mo., 13, A “Military Necessity” BOSTON'S GREETING TO RENE VIVIAL G FRENCH STATESMAN WAS WILDLY APPLAUD non by the operating companies. Port of Spain, Trinidad, — The y-n—me pis ext:;:dly ‘unpopular | America’s entry into the mfl'ul:ex_ uation, to beat off his opponents. it and will lose it unless we expend|ford. He resigned his directorship| New York, May 13.—The Norwegian | plosion caused by dynamite, accordir with the public, thousands of whom |ebrated here last night by an enthu- every effort of men, money and econ-|ghortly before the consolidation took |three-masted bark Hedvig, which left | to Fire Warden Marvin,, partial San Franciaco, fa on Sundays use the 'buses for their |siastic and largely attended meeting Convicts Wore White Roses. omy. It is now a war of conservation | place. Norfolk May 4 for Christiania with a | wrecked the labor temple here this | necessity” ran & lne of ¢ : sutings. Yesterday wes o drive of reai | under the chairmanship of the gov- | Wethersfleld, Conn, May 13—In ob- |of resources.” He is survived by & widow and three | cargo of coal, was lost in a hurricane | morning. George Buchanan, askep in | private property and summer heat and a large number of | ernor of the islard. Warm apprecia- |servance of “Mother’s Day,” = 500 in- children, Edmund G.; Mrs. Clement|May 9 about 200 miles off the Ameri- | the bullding, received fractures of the | Presidio, San Franciacs the poorer classes of Londoners were | tion of the action of the United States | mates of the state prison today ap- General Joffre in Montreal. Scott of this city and Mrs. Maynard |can coast, according to the officers and | skull and was taken to the City hospi- [and waler terminais in Su peared at chapel wearing white roses Monbael caa 10—Geuseed - Jofive {iamen fof. Boston.” A sister, Mrs.|crew who arrived here today on a|tal. Two men in the basement at the | today. The work was . Seprived of their weekly jaunts. These was expressed by v‘rxmu Sbeakers In the Iapels of their uniforms, the ‘of Warden Carner. fiand -8 ~- J. Woo‘ o‘ tllll dw also | ship from Halifax which picked them _uD at sea.. - time of the explosion escaped and are last night and & guard was piacs being sought by the police. _ * - 0 it _by military authorities.