Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 22, 1917, Page 1

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22, 1917 TEN PAGES—70 COLS. PRICE TWO CENTS The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwi : » : j | Cabled Paragraphs | Degision for the since the release of the persons ar- A rested at the time of the uprising last year, brousht about further disorders L lay. Some of them, carrying Iy K Sinn’ Fein flags, attacked residences of | IN CASE AGAINST THE INTERNA- g § ® ' | former soldiers, over which Union TIONAL NEWS SERVICE Jacks were flying. Windows were smashed, and police who came up were stoned. Eight men and five women 5 5 ', | were arrested. : GRANTED INJUNCTION . Tuesday Night in Big German Offensive HANDLING OF CRUGER CASE.|\ iy States Circuit Court of Ap- First Witnets to Be Calied Will Be| poais Says Thers is a Property Risht S Caplall of Detectives. in News Capable of and Entitled to TEUTONS LOST HEAVILY IN KILLED AND WOUNDED | quirsinio aii phases of the porice nan- | Legal Protection—Will Stop Pilfor- dling of the Ruth Cruger case was or- | . dered tonight by Leonard Wallstein, [ in® of News. commissioner of accounts, who was Badl directed earlier in the day by Mavor T s o Chanipagn Pri 2 roops Were Bat- | Mitchel to make a thorough investiga- | Neéw York, June 21. — The DUnit In ST et = tion of the cnime. States circuit court of appeals today The hearing will start tomorrow | grantea the full prayer of The Asso- tered When They Assumed the Offensive Between | morning. the commissioner announced, | tlated Press in 1te case against the In . and the first witness to be called will| terpational News Service and dlr’ecled injunc- - d—They Were Repulsed|be Acting Captain Cooper of ithe de-|(he djstrict court to issue Mont Carnillet and Mont Blon: ey R tective bureau, Detgtt‘:vel S:}rseams tion in accordance therewith. In re- Frank G. McGee and John La Garenne | yviewing the facts of the case, the by the French, Who Then Moved Forward to a Depth of | na other policemen who were detailed | ourt saye: to the case from the day \eléss Cruger's Whie Wit Gk disappearance was reported. a - 300 Yards on a Front of More Than 600 Yards—In Rus- | diszppearance = e T T e his investigation will in no way con-|oywosi terms) restrains defendant from sia the Artillery of the Russians and Aumo-Germm fliot with thoss of District Attorney eoitinued oo Bums Rikree) Swann and Police Commissioner . P s s icia— | Woods, but rather would supplement| , L S © - A Has Increased in Activity in Volhynia and Galicia— | Voods e e B . Mrs. Marije Cocchi, wife o redo alian: empting fo Break Through the Austrian | cocchi, under whose bicycle repair FOOD CONTROL BILL R e oo Snite Svgas vods " was Tommd, e will appear before Commissioner Wall- [ Senate Leaders Have Tentatively i Line in Their Drive for Trent. e be ey A No confirmation of a report that ibstio. ' Cocchi had been arrested by the Ital- | washington, June 21.—Prospect for ian authorities had been received here | . saze of the administration food ve against|the British troops under Field Mar- | tonight. Papers necessary for his ex- | ontrol bill by Jul as earnestly de- illon on |shal Haig. Artillery duels are in pro- | tradition have been prepared nad Go sired by President Wilson, appeared were | sress ‘on various sectors in Belglum, | ernor Whitman, who was in the ity [} richiar tonight after the house had gone al- |especially near Dixmude and Pype- tonight, was said to have beenin tele- | ‘ajoctoq important amendments which © French forces | gaale. phone communication with the depart- | promice 3 ool iAo e o sen- pliengirs e In. the Rus ment of state today regarding the|ste leaders had tentatively agreed to The big German of! the French line east of V. Monday, in which stormed and captured, most for naught, for t in a violent counte ian theatre, according gained nearly 1 their lost ground |y, the Berlin war office, the artillery | case. a 4 compromises. Tuesday night of the Russians and Austro-Germans| A bloodstained table knife was found| " To pass the measure with as few today in the yard of Cocchi's shop.|additions to the original draft as pos- Although the German crown prince |pas jncreased in activity in Volhynia 5 C 0 had launched his attack h huse {353 Galicia. At several points the |hidden in a pile of rubbish. The dis-Isible in order to expedite conference effectives, composed of picked troops, | Russians have attempted to carry out | trict attorney considered it a valuabie|consideration is the plan of Repre- and covered it by a heavy artillery | rajds against the Teutonic fronts but | fined, the theory being that this was|gentative Lever. He told the house fire and by bomb dropping aireraft, |ore said to have been everywhere re- | the weapon used to inflict a wound in |ioday that minor changes could be his tenure of ;hedc"n‘lu'w tions | pulsed. 2 3'_;-; “;‘.‘f’-;’?‘-‘sl abdomen. 1 that|Made at leisure while it nog' of the was short-lived znd only a nt - : e e district attorney stated thatutmost importance that the- con- metres northeast of the Moisy farm | ite news explansiony of he Yeal| Eward Fish, a private detective who | (ol machinery be started. B now remains in his hands. In aadi- | §ituation on the Treatng CONL h AP lis being sought and was last heard of | resentatives are rallying generally to tion heavy casualties were inflicted on | ISR CRE AT BONS (82 i he battle, | in Bloomington, IlL. last Tuesday, is|support of the bill, one of the speeches > ;| wanted only to determine if he can|todav in its behalf being delivered by vails on front in France held by land B: the Germans, who left many dead ON | opiop s of great proportions, extends 3 b i e the ‘crown Tlone tha oniice e fhn Eemiaees PR TR e O vs ce1. | RePresentative Gillett of Massachu- Lijewise in Champasne the croWn |y, '{, the Asiago platead. It is ‘in ish, we learn, was in Cocohi’'s cel- | setts. prince had been badly b b | region that the Itallans are en- | MBya great many times he said.| While perfunctory debate was pro- tween Mont Carnillet ar cnt Blond. | (08 Ho o break through the Aus. | While Cocchi claimed he was working |ceeding in the senate, substantial pro- In an attempt to reca positions [ 88T OTE 10 e of their main ob-|On a motor sled last winter. We do|gress toward compromising differ- prev lv taken from the G-or- jectives—Trent, not know that he was in the cellar|ences was made by the leaders at in- ma first were )b.\ flthe Ee is little information com- | Fith Cocchi on the day that Miss Cru- | formal conferences. Thed changes French, wl then U the offen- 2 4 R - & it re atively 2 inel 3 :i?p a:n ‘;R:—dmga the'r line on a front | ing through concerning K[\"‘lonel‘m{g;‘\y o SRDE —_— {0"1'7}!;"‘1:4::;)" ngyre;;.de ;:ct‘l?;:-xua:ldhorlz‘lng in exces 50 var Here also e notiTes mieR € . ‘ bl oy heatii” in men llled |tors and that there have been local =« YN NEW YORK CITY. | Lo finds it wecessary. - > and wo Comparative calm pre- | engagements between the. Bulgarians o > Elimination of provisions authoriz- tish in the Struma valley. More Than Half of the 800,000 italians | i fixi g of wages, including those of in the City Turned Out. m laborers: - Elimination of specific authorization CHANCE FOR CONNECTICUT TWO FORMER COLUMBIA York, June 21.—The royal Ita iro regulate consumption by rationing ; sion, headed by the Prince of |or control of individual meals: S TIONAL | cORROSIEY SEUDEIIS EUUND SHILEY. on of Italy's rezent and cousin| Exemption of foodstuffs stored by from the anti-hoarding pen- of King Victor Emmanuel III, w produc for Commis- | Cf Conspiracy to Frustrate Operation To Equip Themselves o = 4 e 2 2 given a roval welcome on its arrival |alties: sions in the Army. oF Selective DRt here today. Provision for control of foodstuffs 55 g T ~ More than half of New York's It purchases in this country to prevent Hartford, Conn.. June 1.—Connec-| XNew York, June 21.—The jury in the |}, population of $00,000 turned o competition in buying between the al- ticut national guardsmen are to be of Owen Cattell and Charles F.|greet the representatives of the ItaBan |lies and the United States; and <13 ortunity t> equip them- ips, former Columbia university |government. There were as mahy| Further provisions to prevent e e : ? ns as there were Italia hoarding or speculation in foodstuffs. E e Y Amer udents, charged with conspiring to|pMETCans 28 there were lMallans Hon of the selective | jineq the rouse of the mission's p 1 verdict of guilty | ress from the Battery to With these tentative asreements, senators believed the chaotic condi- tion in the senate is clearinz, with a celves for commissions in the army,|e according to a sta 2t made by |obstruct the ope draft law, returned Adjutant G night in wl in_the federal district c tonight. |of Pembroke Jones in Fifth prospect of an ultimate complete com- arrangements The jury deliberated five hours and | Where the visitors will be enterta | promise except on a few basic pomts. | during their three da recommended mercy in announcing the durs ys stay here 1 verdict. A motion to have the verdict | From the moment the ur s t aside on the ound that the find- | almost diffident figure in {RED CROSS .CO RIBUTIONS was not in accordance with the|Uniform of an Italian nav: ARE ABOVE $62,000,000 Morris Hill- | Was recognized as the pri ks s training camps in this state to the officers’ training camp & 10t be ma several days regarding loc 1 tions of the | mony was made by c camps and_their number 2 attorney for the Yyoung men. |throngs cheered with an enthusizsm|About $18,000,000 Was Added to the General Cole declarcd that there was | Judge Mayer announced he would hi not exceeded during the visits of the | Fund Yesterday. no reason why Conr rational | arguments on the motion next Fri- | French and British missions. | bt guardsmen should not rded the f gay- More than 10.000 took .part in the| ington, Jume 31.—From, sharp fit | In summing up. Hlquit tried to im- | demonstrations at the Battery, but!mig week rivalries of many cities in 1 ss the jury with the importance of | When the procession. escorted by tWo |the Red Cross hundred miilion dollar AN NS | the fact that the leaflet opposing reg- | Platoons of mounted policemen and|campaign, about $18,000,000 rolled into he re-listration had been written by the de- | tWO troops of Squadron A, swung into |{ne fund today , bringing the four fendar s before President Wilson had | City Ha'l park, fully 20,000 vo ' total reported early tonight to signed the selective draft law Mayv 18.{Many of them those of Ttalian school | nal headquarters above $62,000,- The lawyer contended it ha@ been ; children, roared a greeting. 1 New York city has produced more $27,000,000 and the remainder of benefit of training which wou'd them for commissions. the statement that office camps would be establ fused to discuss the mat ADDITIONAL TAX OF 5 PER CENT. seized before the youths had had op- e o ON PUBLISHERS' NET PROFITS | portunity to revise it. I1e urged It was | HARVARD EXPECTS A - |the country $35,000,000. TR not intended to be published. In spite of the generous out-pour- Over $4000 Per Annum—Measure| Judse Mayer instracted the jury DECREASE IN ENROLLMENT |, = O mpaign managers tonight sent Adeopted by Senate Finance Commit- | that.if they believed it was the inten. 3 2 i warning to local committee: i tion of the defendants to make changes | Total Gifts Received = Last Year tMZ TWTUTE 10, D08 PORTVEICS, . in the leaflet so as to bring it within | « Amounted to $2,271,900. the part -that will tell the story. Do - : not grow over-confident.” , Cambridge. Mass, June 21—Har-|"pepores from the west today showed vard University looks for a decrease unexpected activity and placed that | 250 BROWN STUDENTS In onrollment next vear of at least cection third in standing with about nue bill, adopting by a vote of S to 6 ENGA -000 students said President A. Law-|g4600,000. The north central division 4n incréase of oné-quarter of a cent a GAGED IN WAR SERVICE. [rence Lowell in addressing the Alum- | i)} Leld first place with more than pound on second class po s { President F: = g o ASsoclation today. This, he added |3$15000,000; the middle Atlantic second B B anenl T & resident Eaunce Rredicts, & LiphtoAt- | would \meks s réductlon’ o 3200006 {51tk nearly:$10,006,000; Nevw: Hngland oa Jbiishers’ fnet profits over $4,000. | tendance Next Fall. ipirece D O o oS he front |fourth with more than $3,500,000 and Revenues of $3,000.000 annually from | — e e Eogto the Tront | the south fifth with nearly $2,000,000. the increase in postage rates e o '“ SENEYRIS “ng“c‘ on ‘l e Ih | Fifty more citles and towns were cents a pound. which most pib families Wil be mrotenton prond their |added to the honor roll for having have vigorously opposed, and about A e y0e, Protected from priva- |passed their preliminary apportion- $9.000,000 trom the profits tax were, Lion today, estimated that the attend- | Yo S e mnmounced. | ments. Except for a $3,000,000 con- Nuoiiniced Roday | ance next fali would be reduced at[ANY Pro e~;or or faculty member '~';>'l[rmunnn by the Rockefeller Founda- i lttee’s decision was reach- | 1€ast one-third bv the war. Records, |INE to the front will receive from the |{ion gccredited to New York city’s to- e compnlifees o g | he sald. showed that 250 students had | UNiVersity the difference between his|iz) most of the donations reported to- galary and the amount paid|gay were from individuals and were | the oners. w, then it must acquit the pris- Washington, June 21 finance committee late to the members expect to I on publishers' taxes in the war r Providence, R. I, June 21.—Presi- dent William H. P. Faunce of Brown university, in a report to the corpora- <t o the Amc = - Rl £l bl iom | 1eft college to engage in military, naval | FeSular st $ rd- |and agricultural service and that 150 |PiM by the government. 3 | comparatively small. The total gifts received by Har- | “"RPAENER BA0G 1o rieord, Conn., others have enlisted and are waiting | to be called out. Fifty Brown men L ] vard during the past year amounted k S5y, 1% putiisters of. DeWEPT| ope e °e It BU-; - Govermor ‘McCall, Sir Cecil Arthur|{uinttaq® Conn, and Gardiner, Maine, Pgansiges and all other PErloMSEly, . | A" conrge of militacy i i Spring Rice. the BRitish Ambassador: | 1.0 exieeded their allotments. Bos- The commttee also decded fodi® tol,, > [OTTC, 07 Ttacy Instruction at| gowara Eljiott former president of | cisC EXceeded thelr allotments. Bos. fetgn £he House Increase ‘of: 50 Per | parge of Col C. W. Abbott adjncar:|the, New York, New Haven & Hart- |30o St0 1e29s W o nRspsg ot cent. om letter rates. but tentatively | GateR8 T hr (o [l APPOt, adjutant | forq Railroad: resident Hibben of | O Cgete! S o Caaiten i agreed to strike out the doubled post- | Senera: of Rhode Island. Princeton University and Herbert C.|The first report of the campalgn ir card rate. The letter increase is eX- | pANBURY HATTERS TO Hoover, food administrator, were oth- s\ ouqta * Maine, tonight passed its pected to raise about $30,000,000. er speakers at the meeting of the |\ EUSER > Tn revising the excess profits tax to- REMAIN ON STRIKE. lalumni association. day. deferring a decision regarding the Pl ke G = oo oAC rate of taxation, the comrittee de- | Action Reaffirmed at a Meeting Held | NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS PRUSSIANS DEPORTING <D i) oo S Last Night. WILLING TO PAY TAXES BELGIANS FROM MONS viduals in trade as well as corpora- tions and partnerships. Tt a'so was| Danbury, Conn., June 21—Members T Ee 2 = LI 3 to sivi . ion A i B nos In decided to zive an exemptior of 6 Per|of the Hat Finishers’' association re. But Protest As;ln-fra Discriminating oreF.d ? Wer&m::hlni“m“. cent. to corporations having sub-nor- | afirmed at a meeting tonight their de- ar Tax. rance on ry . twn:": Drnfn; d;';':i:‘:,?,;:‘::a: P;chrié cision of 'ast week to remain on strike Washington, June 21.—Rspro Havre, June 21,—A large number of Sew" corporations” orsmniied since. the | s thelr demands, chleliof which fa|siug teribers of the Amiaricen Beisian ' clvillang from the Mons ro- Ced oaTtEnce hat wage scales be|iaper Publishers Associatlon met hers | clon have hoen daported by tha Clor- w-r began, based on the selling price of finished tien, today and immediately =esdopted a|man military authori noeording to ! _— St s meun = 1t | statement declaring their willingnoss circumatantial Information reeoived 4z 3USTRIANS HELD & ed as a result|i; nay any rato of taxes congress finds | by the Belgian government, The des of the statement issued by Frank H. | . FOR EVADING DRAFT | Lee president of the Irank H. Les S e R ot | R e o s —_— at company, several days ago, that . e n otabl n 0 i “*fen Made Threats to Free|he would closo his factory and srect|als Spabria Aicoiainating war” tak |and sther. nses’ i tbe, LR Tocw—Taken From Leadville to|a smaller one on the opon 8hop plan | pgainat nowspapers Dougl, where {hey were forged to Salida. ;nlel‘n,a !ememeni was roached. The| “whila the publishers wers in ses- | work in all weatheps en militark tasks, | Hat Mokers' assoclation had previous- | ,en tho sonate finance commities by |such as railseads, tremches and hand. T ead-le, Coio, Jume 21—Foriy-two |1y decided to continue the strike, @ vote of § to § wrots inta its revis. | ling war material, - } 4 ustr’a 1 prisoners held in the county > i gt lon of the house war tax bill a seelisn The vietims are wflh& ta laksy here on chorges of cvading the | Torrington Man Indisted for Murder.|(ncrcasing necond class mail ratss ie | twelve hours daily i g Winsted, Conn., June 21.—The grand {ona and ene-fourth cents & peund and | de additienal weork at nighi, ARy icetive draf. law werc romoved to- by a squad of natlonal guard | fury today returnied a trug bill asainst |levyins & tex of five Der Geaf, whe haq never deme manual wesk fore were yeugiliy treated And Ltroops afier inrcots hod seen made | Pandidc Giordamo, 36, of Torrington, |nublishers nat profiis gves fb-. their ccuntrymen here to free|charging him with the murdss by | year, Haif an heur later a e=mi seantily fed and padly heused. ifest them. In charge of a Un.ied S:ates|shooting of Mre, Angelina Peperora en|tes fram the newspaser mes preses of the ynfortunates are Rew aeiually rarshal the prisoners were taken by | My 28 Jaet. It is alleged that Gier- | ed their pretest tq Chajrman.Simmons |siek and every pne is debiltated. speclal train to Salida, whee they |dame tried to induce weman to|and weat away wilh definite as- | Amensg them ars several pergens whe were arraigned and heid for the fed- |elcpe with him and that when she re- ' suraases but wt t there will had previgusiy beem deperied te Ger= eral grand jury, : fused he siot her, 3 “be a recemsideratien temmerroy,; many aad them repatrigte (= S SR S, vllr ik o, : H bie Thzitv'ol Any Other Paper, and its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’s Population Unlawful Control of Fish Industry CMARdID AGAINST VARIOUS BOSTON FISH FIRMS 41 WHOLESALERS NAMED Bill Alleges That the Accused Com- panies Have Agreements Involving Fixing of Maximum Prices for Buy- ing and Minimum_ Prices for Se Fish. Boston. June 21.—Procee§ings aimed at alleged unlawful combinations in control of the fish industry ‘were brought by the federal government un- der the Sherman act today against the Boston Fish Pier Company, the New England Fish Exchange, the Bay State Fishing Company, the Boston Fish Market Corporation and the Common- wealth Ice and Storage Company. Price Fixing. The bill which was drawn by Unit- €d States Attorney George W. Ander- son, alleges that the companies named have agreements involving fixing of maximum prices for buying and mini- mum prices for selling fish and that through them, practically all the fish coming in on the northern Atlantic coast is marketed. 41 Wholesalers Named. Forty-one wholesalers of this city are named as owing all the capital stock of ‘the New England Fish Ex- change, each Gealer owning one share. The government charges that the de- fendants have “perverted an exchange which sheuld have been a market open to all witliout discrimination, and greatly improvea physical facilities furnished in part at public expense by the cocconwealth of Massachusetts in- to a means of enhancing prices to the consumers and depressing prices to the producer. Started With $5000 — Accumulated Over a Million. The bill alleges that the exchange was formed in 1909 with $5,000 capital stock and that it levied an assessment on all fish sold by its members and others until it accumulated over a million dollars. The Bay State Fishing Company is declared 1c be the largest single pro- ducer in the fresh fish jndustry. It is alleged that this company has at- tempted to buy out all the wholesal- ers and has In fact bought out nine of them and now causes them, wifile still ostensibly independent, to be op- erated for its benefit. Agreement Entered Into. “In October, 1916, some of the wholesalers,” the bill allewes, ‘organ- ized the Boston Fish Pier Company for mutual protection against the growing power of the Pay State Fishing Com- pany and to strengthen thelr own power, but have now entered into an agreement or urderstading with the Bay State company governing all their dealings on the exchange, Including the fixing of maximum prices at which the fish shall be bought on the ex- ~hange and the minimum prices at which the fish shall be resold.” Dissolution is Asked For. The government asks that the Bos- ton Fish Company. the Bay State Fish- ing Company and the New England Fish Exchange be adjndged unlawful combinations and that they be dissolv- °d and that reccivers be appointed; also that the defendants who are the shureholders of the New England Fish Exchange be enjoined from combin- ing for th illegal purpose complain- ed of. KRONPRINZESSIN CECILIE HAS BEEN SEIZED. Big German Liner at Boston to Be Turned Over to Shipping Board to Be Put Into Condition. Boston, June 21.—The North German Lioyd liner Kronprinzessin Cecilie, in port here since the early davs of the war, was seized today by Collector of Customs_Billings and héld for the United States shipping board, which will_proceed to put her in seaworthy ‘condition. The seizure was a formal proceeding. as the collector's men relieved deputy marshals in charge of the vessel since February, as representatives of the federal court, before which was pending suit for damages_instituted azainst the owners by two ¥ew York banks. Federal Judge Morton had previous- Iy signed an order directing that the steamship, which had been Teld In an action_for damages brought by two New York banks against the North German Lloyd line, be returned to her owners. The order was signed upon receipt of the mandate of the United States supreme court, which recently held that the Natlonal City bank and the Guaranty Trust company of New York were not entitled to recover dam- ages for the Cecllie’s failure to deliver a_shipment of gold bulilon to Burope at_‘the outbreak of the war. Next to the Hamburg-American ‘fner Amerika, the Kronprinze: the largest of the six German ships in this port. She reglsters 10.508 tons grosa and is valued at $4,500,000. Experts have reported to the court th it would cost about $110,000 to repalr damage to the Ceclile caused by her crew under orders from Capt. Charles Polack, her commander, GERMANS NOW DEPORTING JEWS FROM WARSAW Belng ent to Work on Farms In the Country—Food (Cendttions Ina quate, Copenhagen, Jun!‘v)i,r‘l’he muniel- pal autherities af Warsaw, with the cooparatien ef the German adminis- tratien, nre transperting frem War- saw ta the villages and esuntry dis- trists the unempleved pear, laraely eemppsed of Jews, Tha measuss js inspired by the diffieuities af the foed eupply in ihe eapital and the improved opportunities for werks in the ceun= oy, 5,648,888 Men Resgistered, ashingten, Fune 51—War registia- tien returns, viriually gampleted to- night by reperts fr Freming and Hentueiy, shaw 0,648,088 men hetween 1 and 89 ve?n, inelusiva, he a of een led fi $:1 try's é:;éu:, emrelied fof the geuntry's in Coctlie fa| | Condensed Telegrams fiakmg Tesfimony Constantine, the ex-king of Gresce, arrived at Luzerne, Switzerland, with in Gilligan Trial A decree issued by President Poin- care of France creates a special gub- marine department —_ ONLY ONE COUNT MENTIONED IN Governor Holcomb named R. H. W. Strang of Bridgeport a member of the THE INDICTMENT state dental commission. Emma Goldman may be freed on MURDER BY PO]SONL‘"C bail of $25,000. Her anarchist friends have succeeded in raising $22,000. Contracts for 3,567,200 pairs of |Charged i knitted socks were awarded by the vecd ‘With Having Caused the Navy Department to 18 different firms.| Death of Franklin R, Andrews of Two men were killed in an explogion | Cheshire—Dofense Secks to Prove at the du Pont powder plant at & Chance, six miles from Uniontown, That the Alleged Victim Had Stom Pa. ach Trouble. H. V. Jellicoe, nephew of Admiral S5t Jellicoe of the British Navy, enlistod in the British aviation corps 'in New| Hartford, Conn., June 21w York. complation’ of the jury and the Sy ning of the presentation of evide The King of Bulgaria fears that Ve- [ DY the state, the tria| m’“\fr’n e rx- nezilos, one-time premier, will get the | Archer-Gilligan, accused of mugel & Grecian throne and declare war against | the flrst degree, gor fof ly under way Bulgaria. in the superior court here today. Hha — is charged with the murder o F p The Spanish Ambassador denied the |iin . Andrews of cpmmie yf JT80K news circulated in the United States “deadly poison” while he was an that the interior of Spain being in a of her home for elderly paopie state of war. Jsor. The Indictment fy —— g jury named five erso, 3 Three hundred and forty-one deaths | having met denth by waerms Cr ol are recorded In the necroiogy of Har- [at her home, hut ihe® qepancy P10 vard university for the past ycar,|time aco me that the state choose made public yesterday. one of the 8 HDE 1 e direc.ed while denying a further am. Two neroes who shot and killed a | piicaiion by the derense enr i 1er 47 policeman who arrested them for |er counts be nolled o siits robbery at Charlotteville were clectro- | chosen to try her for tha® "iat cuted at Richmond, Va. death, and the other counts werr et Two packages of dynamite were found (Contniued on Page Six) n Dayton, — —e *8 sald: | DEMONSTRATIONS AGAINST WOMAN SUFFRAGE PICKETS on the steps of City I Ohio. A label on the “More of this to follow. ki Herbert C. Hoover has been invited to advise the Society of Restaurateurs|in Front of the Main Gates of th of New York on elimination of waste| Wwhit e . and conservation of food. it House—Police Take a Hand Two Germans at New Orlears were | demonetietions * wawisl; "oy crsisten tions ~ against the woman arrgsted by Federal authorities for g, saying they had in their possession | g, trunks filled with bombs. To e Iat ffrage pick in front of the m tes of the White House caused e to take a hand in the situation today. They guarded the wom. n Marquis Okuma, “the Grand “ (14| censored thep s arded Man of Japan,” said that it s time for | ang mer ol eot-inciting bann Japan to interfere with domestic af-|{his nfrernoen thery LCCe8S that iate fairs and duties of China. of hostility to disturb the peace, T Srraeny Reserves fro ¢ e Col. Roosevelt's two sons are at|.ipore v-'nron-rdrr?nnh",f.%\fm."n',",” e Governor's Island from Plattsburg. the | o (he " peesigentn® ooy e o officers’training camp, on confiden- | the crowd’ ity Wansion and kep tial orders from Washington. | bicyele poficemen 'saw to it thatore 4 = tomobiles did not e i Revolutionary outbreaks have occur- | jiy. 1 not loiter in the n red in Prague, captal of Bohemia. Th The iactyite” o ke soltse Crechs have formed a powerful asita- | rived ton Inte to orererionet, Sho ar tlon for an independent state. e ey o anere Treu . e Russian mission wa: e, The strike of 7,000 machinists of | Whita Fouse and raier i eching the the General Elictric Co. at Schenecta- | antly solven the pomics, (048Y, appar- dy is far from settled due to the em-|,¢ Pregident \\,mff'm " "; Browing out ployment of a negro college student. “martyrs” of the w”m':n"'bflv‘ }:_df_n’-r: . == _|them remov . Authority was received by Major | Bty 1 the day a crowd of ses Ruggles, in charge of the western|eral hundred watched two men toas Massachusetts army recruiting dis- | from its wooden frmms | nen tear trict, to enlist British subjects for the | similar to the ona ooet venVal army - claring to_the Russian mission . resident Wilson and Elihn Rog Funeral services for the late Rt. 1\%on and Elitn Root. '@ special amabsador to Russia, are James A. McFaul, bishop of the Cs Golving olic diocese of Trenton, were held y democracy. 1 lNing America a terday at St. Mary's cathedral, Tren-|Gepartments' Tumen nour a Tonornmen post, Y- | rowd, e Mrs. D. W == 5 Was mar S orosiad The contract for the Fort Riley it man, - destroy cantonment camp was let 1o the Geo.|plavea by the s banners . A. Fuller Co., of New York, and the 4ot inels be Fort Sam Houston to Stone & Webster both e crowds were e forc Fire which broke out when seven was used the cars of gasoline on the Clover Le r o Rafiroad exploded in a wreck at {03 ‘ado Kirkpatrick, Ind., caused about $100,- | pceorteq ) 000 damage. House with suffraze colors and de i | Vices the women have dlsplayed w _Harvey Engel, a salesman of New /| .t prorest for months, kept a line of York, was sentenced to six months in | ocetuen sione ihe nue, made the workhouse for making SIZOtINg re- | crowd move - or g g 8- §ero 4oV = on. oemen - marks about the United States mili-|Gho showed ton mueh Tnterom orony tary uniform. the banners Bt i wome: ‘ .« |bearers lefr t - Darty. hind Acquisition of North Island in San | o 08 IC0E (hE women's party head Diego Harbor as an aviation training e to the Hasomne wopiion address station was recommended by a_sub-|eanvas the poles aid oo et bor Y committee of the House on MINtary|crowa A Heutenant 1o tetfore ang Affairs Committee several plain eclothesmer an 2 = 5 | word quickly clipped it One hundred and twenty-five priests | ¢\ pped from all parts of the state attended the ORToht. 108l Tatns the Savs Ain funeral of Rev. Jeremiah J. Curtin, g Hades T i :_’r;r“r;: . pastor of St. Francis aavier's church, banner beating & nothion a8 Waterbury, vesterd sident Wilsan's war speeclt to Sae. Army orders disclosed that the War Ver they were alloced oL lromes Department is considering the avail 4 s R relr billty of the Columbia University W. 5 - 1 1 Hospital as a receiving and forward ing hospital for the medical hospital. | ASSURANCE THAT RUSSIA Government troops and Villa troops IS TO PROSECUTE WAR were reported in a fight at Pil dac Conchos, east of Paral, according 1o a message received at El Paso, Tel each side claiming victory. Given by Ambassador Bakhmetieff, Head of Russian Mission Here. Wi ton, J TS = The United States navy’s submarine | seqration 1o war to the end mts G chaser S. P. 55, formerly the GYPSY,|man racy was avowed today b a 40-foot powerboat, lies on Stony | Gl i v Beach, at Hull, Mass. a_wreck, hav ,ui;r(_‘ head ¢ fii";'zhi‘u'ri’nfi..‘f.?rfi”‘#’;. Ingibeen burned to the water's edge. iy 5 statement:fo the AMeErican Deo - ple. Only through victory, he said Extraordinary. precautione. ars be- ng taken by American, British and Jepanese ships to put out all ligl le world peace and the fruit of the Russian revolution be secured “The Russian people thoroughly nn after 10 o'clock. Only oil lampa are| g, oS FFUssan peorie th . 3 i 'S d e ully convine 4. allowed {n the officers’ cabin and mess|q,iq Mr, Bakhmetfeff, ‘that it s ab rooms. | solutely necessary to Toot out the au- A toer: rinc p . When the exoursion shin Theodore | (2°T2tC principles which underile and Roosevelt ran on & pile of rocks off | Li8, FRPERSCRies by, German militarism Chicago with delegstes to the encamp-|aom anq the happiness of the world ment of the Modern Woodmen of 4 1 America, the playing of “The Star T T e Spangled Banner” and “America” by |TO SERVE A8 Y. M. C. A. the band averted a pani: SECRETARY IN FRANGE PRESIDENT ENTERTAINED x — rancls G. Sayre, Son-in-law of Pres- THE RUSSIAN MissiON ident Wilson, Appointed, At a Stato Dinnor at the White House | xov vork, Jume 21— Franels 5 Last Night Sayre, son-in-law of President W — son, has been appointed to serve as Washington, June 91—The Russian | Young Men's Christian Assooiation missien headsd by Speclal Ambassador |secretury with the American troops in B, A, Bakimetieff wase entertalned by | France, it was announced tofay and President Wilsen at a gtate dinner at|will sall soon with about twenty-five ;’hq White Heuse tonight with mem- [other men who have been chosen for ers ef the gabinat, cengressionnl Jead- | this work, Mrs, Sayre will spend the ers and high effieials of the army and | summer with Mr, Bayre's brother, the nayy present, Rev, J, Nevin Hayre Ambassader halum;ol!er! tedey po- g eepted an invitatien frem Vice P'resi- | ROCKEPELLER FOUNDATION dent Marshall te address the genate CONTRIBUTES $5,000,000 S kIS tyom Willams 3, Bryan, estve s : n, s SRR v B pazsing thioueh | Largest Donation to Date Made te ‘Washingten, Amerlean Red Cross Fun Beeretary Bal aeeempanied by S—— Major (eneral Bliss, assistant ghief W Verk, June 31,—A donation of of plaff, (eday yeturfied ths effieial| 35,900,000 (o the Red Cross war fund eal] paid upe phim vestepday hy Lieu: [ by the Reckefeller IMoundation was tenani Geneval Reep, the military |anneunsed here teday. The total sub- @m%r af the missiga, and thanked |seriptiens made today to the thirty m for his greetings fram the RHussian | teama werking here for the fund was T Teparted at $46,684,000,

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