Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 12, 1917, Page 1

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VOL. LIX.—NO. 266 NORWICH, CONN., THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1917 The Bulletin’s Circulation in No is Double That of Any Other Paper, and its lotal Circulation is the I.argest in Connecticut in Proportlon t]» thie éity’s Po;ulationr USSIANS PUSH ON TOWARD LEMBERG Have Compelled the Teutonic Allies to Flee Across the River Lomnica g THE NEXT NATURAL BARRIER IS RIVER STOKA On the Belgian Coast, East of Dunkirk, the British and Ger- mans Are Fighting Along the Yser—By Destroying Bridges the Germans Weye Enabled to Advance and Oc- cupy an Isolated Section—Berlin Claims the Capture of 1,250 Prisoners in the Penetration of 600 Yards Along sont of 1,400 Yards—F alling Off is Shown in the Ef- fectiveness of the Submarine Campaign. zo- | scene of many hard fousht battles, By ‘e in the vicinity of Halics, | destroying the bridges across the Yser fi’“":‘ by f’{\‘»“fl between Nieuport and the North sea v g e Ward | coast the Germans were able to ad- from Haltcz toward Lemberg, the cap- | vance and occupy the isolated section. ital of Galicia, and from Stanislan, in claims the capture of 1250 gt lers in the penetration of 800 e e eeoward toward the | yards slong a front'of 1,400 yards. R e e DT ¢ Halen, on the| Further inland near Lombaertzyde tront from Halicz to Zolotvin, about | the Germans did mot have as much thirty miles south, General Korniloft | Siccess. After gaining some advanced e T e Seoe] ool ., “the Dritish threw the at- timue their retreat In their advance from Halicz the Russians forced the fleeing enemy across the Lomnica and ocoupled two towns on the we DPani of the river. Tha next na barrder is the River Stoka, about miles west of the Lomnica. Having broken the strong Au man_effort is another attempt to reach stroke to offset a probable British of- yet. South and west of Stanislau Russians have r: eiuvia-Karmacz of which, Lesiu of the River Bystritza. about seven miles east of nearest large town west and which is situ: in the Stoka river. The extension o Russian fighting line to Zolotvin brings the battle ground o foot- hills of the Carpathians On Tuesday the Russi 3,000 more prisoners and : Bringing their total captu July 8 to 10 to more 0 cers and men and eiz large amount of machi war material also was t gives no details of Tue in Galicta, merel ments south of the been executed il now Artillery Active on Champagne. the Mot of Dolina ness of the submarine camp: he wee report of British losses Fourteen merchant vessels over 1,601 st, a_decrea: s o b exception the loss is the lowest of any On the Bel fighting azain alonz © es four months ago. CHANG HAS WITHDRAWN GILLIGAN CASE MAY TO THE IMPERIAL CITY Troops Are Fast Deserting the Chi- | Chief Counsel for Defense Finished nese Imperial Argument Yesterday. Mrs. Amy E eges v poison weeks the Peking fo: and final abd emperor, expected indications w w_afternoo: the | The state is expected to sum up i se during the morning session noon recess. Apparent position to carry ou eat to | testimony admitted vesterday stroy the pricele mp £ regarding the amount of poison found for “desertions are thousht e|in Andrews’ body. Dr. Victor C. left him so . Vaushn, the recalled witness, cited alome remains p. 3 cases W The lcga s lof clear as to ing suicides, to take returned to h ing President still_servine. to be no rea should not t once again 2 tion government. Today's despa resignation of D minister of foreizn aff: ach SESSION OF GERMAN CROWN 1 Created Unde- Socialists. ground of ill health. Dr SEEAT Snl " Snies, Det Amsterdam, July : : £ oy hiic 1 . July 11.—The ression of thougnt that, now the lic has | ¢he e N s ohpe eomhic e crown_council on Monday, accord- will retire from office permanently Expects to Be Deported to Russia. |the socialists, Herbert or David. Jefterson City. Mo, July 11.—Emma| The above despatch does not reveal Goldmarn arrived hers today io serve a |the identity of the ministers who re- ouri prison | signed. Forcign Mipister Zimmerman for attempting ‘o obstruct the federal[and Vice Chancellor Helfferich have taken | been mentioned most often during the as not a|past few days as the ministers who o M two vear term army draft law As she to the prison she said she martyr and would obey the rules of | Would lose their portfolios. the prison in every detail. — John T. Whalen. in whose custod Miss Goldman was brought here, sald that on the trip she wrote to friends that she would be deported to Rus- = liaat the expiration of her term,| Between 50 and 60 Placed though she claims American citizen- ade at Ellensburg, Wash. =in through her father. FEDERAL TROOPS ARREST Li_L TO GREATLY INCREASE Military Committee Friday. - <hington, July 11—The adminis- ke Tt I, ke wrest Liberty Bonds Sold Below Par. cuses in the army air service = Friday and probably pa the | tod 1se Saturday. The ho ommittee agreed today to reopen its | for the hearings tomorrow to hear Secretan | = Baker on the general pol inve! d! All the 30 in the aviation program. First Chamber have been re-elected. Cabled Paragraphs Registration in Porto San Juan, P. R., July in_ Porto Rico selective draft law was 104,986, announced today divided as follow: ed 24,605, aliens registration LITTLE LIKELIHOOD OF DRAFT UNTIL NEXT WEEK Only Twenty-one States Have Report- zation Complete. ed Their Orga; Washington, July 11.—Postponement until next week of numbers of the men who will be call- ed for examination f army seemed probable became evident completing rrganizatl trict exemption war department Only twenty-one states have r their organization in most_others only The drawing will not be for the ‘country the national boards as ra are comyplete. ed revised census estimatc is of the draft resistratio determining Each_city, nish two-thirds of one paper population, apportionm the purpose rather than to represent accurate pop- ulation totals. 166 Men From Cities of 25,000, Thus New equalizing allowances volunteered attemptine to show = are improvised considerinz back to their own lines by a counter-attack. Whether the Ger- population, Dunkirk or Calais or is_merely a showings for ries where inflow of workmen wit fensive movement has not developed . . The latest Pritish official statement At Foothills of Carpathians. loes not mention additional infantry ¢ e | fighting on this sector and says that ied the osiccz-Le- (German artillery fire has diminished in intensity. German attempts south- east of Arras and In the vicinity of Lens on Wednesday were without suc- the number apportionment. }rerances and disloyal activities Specifically, it is charged that bank- sted in Liberty loan bonds were thractened with withdrawal of that the sale of war bonds ely opposed: that Red Cross_relief work has met with an alarming antagonism; that the Luther- a single step toward organizing for war relief work and “its conspicuous representa- have shown marked partiality for the German cause: that certain fessors at Nebraska university bave s, and that there are communities where the ympathies of the people are with be entered ents, employer , the provost fice' explained Violent artillery fizhting marked et seon: Wednesday on the Alsne and Cham- pagne fronts In France and east of in_ the Verdun resion. Northwest of Selo, on the Carso. the have occupied the Austrian but may be ord to be examined elsew Estimates of Population. population esi Connecticu A slight decrease in the effective- gn against British shipping is noted in The dummy Hampshire tons were sunk the past week in com- parison with fifteen the previous eel. TUnder 1,600 tons, three were of two. With one|as follows: < since Great Britain began is- reports of shipping GO TO JURY TODAY,| Hartford, Conn., July 11—When ad- journment was taken in the trial of Archer-Gilligan this af- rged with murdering to whom the istered a dead- e he was an inmate of ome for elderly people at Wind- 3 re that the case would go to the jury some time to- A THIRD SINN RETURNED TO PARLlAMENT Unexpectedly Large Majority For Ea- | ward de Valera. | Edward’ de Valera | liament for © to be returne nexpectedly < diner Greene will probably cliver his charge to the jury after | Benedict M. Holen, chief counsel he defense, finished his argument v',.c afternoon after the state had re- one of its expert witnesses to nationalist isappointment Trish convention. The most s hoped for majori 500 and this revelation permeated nance of the Irish and with objec vm‘ guine Sinn Feiners o here 300 grains and an ounce he poison named had been found in bodies. The defense claimed that it was not possible for a person, exclud- a 23 grains of the son, the ‘amount the state alleges was recovered from Andrews’ stom- to nation- attempts to suceess of the convent anything to do'with the pronosed con- vention and COUNCIL WAS PROLONGED An Imperial Ministry of Labor is to Be | non 1ol Sinn Fein represent:tion will not satisfy the Irish people. I. W. W. MEMBERS ORDERED TO LEAVE COLORADO Instructions of Gov. Thomas E. ing to a Berlin telegram, lasted until one o'clock Tuesday morning, when the resignations were accepted defin- ERlNA COLBRRI - WrLIIRE itely. The imperial chancellor has = decided to offer the vacant ministerial TO OBEY PRISON RULES | portfolios to leaders of the richstax — and Prussian Diet. An imperial min- Has No Desire to Pose as a Martyr—|istry of labor will be created under Workers of rounded up by home guards were brought at Needles, instructions of would leave this district. Some said 200 ACRES OF WHEAT, FIFTY BUSHELS TO ACRE INDUSTRIAL WORKERS. a Stock- A Kansas Record—Seven Acres Yielded 68 Bushels to the Acre. Eilensburg, Wash., July 11.—Federal troops stationed mear here today ar- fested between 50 and 60 Industrial THE ARMY AIR SERVICE | Workers of the World, charged with interfering with crop harvesting and Srabably Will Be Reported in House | 1082ing, in violation of the federal statutes. The men will be brought to Bflensburg and placed in a stockade. Valley Center, Kas., hundred acres of wheat farm here, are aweraging MAfty srade wheat to the acre. this ie a Kansas record. ured acres_yielded 8 bushels v being threshed, Farmers say i New York, July 11—Liberty bonds ual Submitied to Elks. « 1cported from the military commit- | sold below par on the stock exchange ay, one $500 bond selling at 99 ary | 46-50, the lowest price yet recorded preparation sion for three ve: the grand lodze of the Benevol Protective Order of Elks Maximum Price Fixed for Gorn == BY . DIRECTORS OF CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE PREVENT SPECULATION For December and May, 1918 Deliveries $1.28—Maximum Price for All Other Futures is Already in Effect. Chicago, July 11.—Directors of the Chicazo board of trade this afternoon fixed a_maximum price of $1.2§ for the December and May (1818) deliveries lof corn. No action was taken as to September corn. Met Behind Closed Doors. A meeting that lasted thiee hours behind closed doors preceded the ac- tion of the directors. After adjourn- ment a formal notice was ziven out telling of the couree adopted but no expanation was offered. According to n official of the board, the establish- ment of a new maximum price for the undue speculation and unwarranted hizh cost to such a meas: closing of the board of trade. other old crop futures w. effect and was not disturbed. DISCLOSURE OF ANTI-WAR With Disloyal Activities. Lincoln, Nel opin hany mcil in a te university with “tre ers who inv deposit has been ac an church has failed to tak tiv been guiity of disloyal utterancy many. head of the food conser 2 the ‘council, said ume such that the council could n longer repress the bitterness it feit. assertions had _been obtained. -Chancellc = jand has ta or itterances of several professors i 1sions at the university. NO DECISION REACHED ation With Government. officials and a_spec e D ued 1916 WAS A HEALTHFUL Lowest on Record. New York, July 11.—: its histor: departmen issued today. ord. Paralysis caused 2,448 death ¢ thous the total being 137.664 in 1916. STRIKE OF MACHINISTS of 10 Per Cent. s of the Dutch|principal. entertainment of was an outing to Nantasket Beach. for the United States government. December delivery and for aill later options was needed to bring trading conditions into harmony with the government war policy of preventing consumers. In taking the directors were id to feel that more drastic steps were averted, including the possible A maximum price of $1.65 for the September deivery here and for all s already in ACTIVITIES IN NEBRASKA. Leaders of Lutheran Church Charged 11.—Anti-war vities in Nebraska which, in the n of the state council of defense, tend to give aid and comfort to Ger- have been disclosed by the statement it issued today rging leaders of the Lutheran church and certain professors in the onable ut- The names of men accused were not made pub’ic, but George Coupland, vice airman of the council of defense and ation divieion ‘Conditions be- He said ample evidence to warrant its | amuel Avery of the University of Nebraska. who has been y active in patriotic relief work cen part in the campaign cruits, would not be quoted, but is known he has strong'y disavowed | whose German remarks have caused dis- AT STEEL CONFERENCE. Producers Give Assurance of Co-oper- hington. July 11.—Government al committee rep- senting the American iron and steel industry began conferences today re- garding the needs of the government steel in its war program. After a session of several hours it was an- nounced that no conclusions had been reached, that there had been no dis- | cussion’ of prices, but that the pro- ducers had given hearty assurances of fion in the war problems the conferences were Secretary ker, Secretary Daniels, Chairman Denman of the shipping board and Bernard Baruch of the defense coun- cil's raw materials committee. Secre- | tary Baker issued a statement eaying that “pending the Inquiries of the federal trade commission, no consid- ition was given to the subject of ces,” adding: “The discussion took a wide range, involving statistics and estimates of possible production and further estimates will be submitted by the manufacturers in the morning, en the conference will eb contin- YEAR IN NEW YORK. Leath Rate Was 13.89 Per Thousand— ‘ew York ex- perienced the most healthful year in in 1916, according to the of health annual report Despite the infantile paralysis epidemic, the death rate was 9 per thousand, the lowest on rec- | and there were 9.000 cases. Child mor- | tality was reduced to 93 infants in nd, as compared to 125 in War's halting of foreign immigra- tion and a low marriage rate the pre- vious year are believed to be responsi- ble for a_decrease in births of 3,952, AT BRIDGEPORT AVERTED. The Men Have Accepted an Increase Bridgeport, Conn., July 11.—William E. Blackman, agent of the national board of conciliation, announced to- night that the threatened strike of the toolmakers and_machinists at the American and British Artillery com- pany has been settied. The men ask- | ed for an increase of 15 per cent. and | accepted an increase of 10 per cent. | Blackman appeaed to them on the President’s Appeal . to Business Men TO PUT ASIDE EVERY SELFISH CONSIDERATION TO AID THE NATION Declares There Will be One Price for the Government and for the Public— No Extortionate Profits. Washington, Ju every selfish considcration and to their aid to the nation as freely those who go out to offer th on the battlefield. Warning to Coal Operators. assurances that just prices will be by the government and the pub during the war, but warned that attempt fo extort unusual prof be tolerated. Not Profits. dent’ France, cr it is no patriotism at and patriotism in the same sente; “I sha!l expect every man who mreatenterp win honcr who t ks of himself. The president de found loval to the last degree and th; the problem of war-time prices wh he declared will “mean victory or de- patriotic co-operation. Condemned Ocean Freight Rates. the country for maintai ule of ocean frei in_the path of the government “The fact, is gaged against German. for whose p ae not taken up termination of war prices. REPORT BY PUBLIC Against the Connecticut Company. cut company, including charge fic condition. | mission today |ing: made pubi should not be construed to relieve th Connecticut company from its charte ture traffic conditions and needs reasonably provide for the same. proved at this time. | depending upon the Connectic was ordered by the commi towns complaining. JURY OUT IN THE liberated Six Hours. and bituminous coal operators a charge consuming {wo hours. at 11 o'clock PLAN TO FREE INDIA Wagel; a Hindu writer and philosophe with conspiracy to_organize a militar amination in removai proceedings. tions soi Hans Bernstorff. SUSPECTED OF CONNECTION . K. Koszlowski, a Rus: - rested at Esparto, Cal. ‘Woodland, Cal., July 1 lowsk! &round that they were imdustrial soi- ldiers. The company is making goods marine corps several weeks ago. Condensed Telegrams “Herbert Kel summer home at on' Stk " e R VAl | Administration Measure Adopted by House Without shot down the disturbe out in Cologne, Five men were burned to death in neis v 11 — President Wiison,_appealed to the country’s bus-| iness Interests tonizht to put aside v lives In a stutement addressed to tre coal | operators ana manufacturers. he zave s will | “Your patriotism.” sald the presi- appeal, “is of the same self- denying stuff as the patr#tism of the| mnen dead and maimed on'the fieids of all. Let us -mever speak, then. of profits not a slacker to be at my side in this ise. In it no man can One Price For Government and Public ed there must he one price for the government and for the public. He expressed confi- dence that business generally will be| t feat” will be solved rightly throuzh France to reors: assembly to revise the constitution is called to me In measured terms, however, Mr Wilson condemned the ship owrers of nz a sched- ght rates which has placed “almost insuperable obstacles” New York wiil celebrate nounce: he asserted, “that those who have fixed war freight rates have taken the most effective means in|Jielang off Lowestoft. I their power to defeat the armies en- stroved by th: German fliers we Gold ccin to the amount of $331.000 has been withdrawn from the . sub- Coal production and other industries ducts the government has necotiated prica agreements are il by the presi- dent, his appeal dealing only with the general principles involved in the de- UTILITIES COMMISSION On Investigation of Complaints Hartford, Conn.. July 11—As a re- sult of a prolonged investigation of complaints filed against the Connecti- of in- adequate service and undesirable traf- the public utilities com- the follow- be abolished July 16. Impc drinks will be raised five cents. of a container of beer will 5 cents. jumped to “The absence of a positive order Dutch papers report that the dam done at th French aviator number of work the plant was destroyed coms. 1htp obligations to furnish adequate ser- vice, nor from the exercise and man- date of good judgment, based upon ex- perience and careful consideration of {all the circumstances, to anticipate fu- and The commission’s report does not include recommendations that the in- adequate service complained of be im- on June 4. He s recovering Afte The investigation resuited from nu- | merous compiaints received by. the commission from a number of towns t com- pany for trolley service. »The company | ssion to | show cause why an order should not be issued compellinz it to make im- provements reauested by cities and expending $10,000, Dr. W Hasting. | '"], 1 Mount Vernon, Ind., has produced a { IS farm animal. the zebroid, a cross| between a zebra Mrs. Guthrie, wife of th VIRGINIA COAL CASES. | Locked Up for Night After Having De- Yew York, July 11.—The cases of the Vifzinia and West Virginia _sefni- or- porations, on trial on alleged violation of the Sherman law, went to the jury late today after the court had delivered Vissoche Zeitung, Lokal Anzeiger and After having deliberated eix hours, the jury wds iocked up for the night indemnities. FROM BRITISH RULE.| Paul Fuller of New York has been |, appointed chief of the trade intell ce division under the Export Coun- This is the organiz check over the names of all firms trad- | pita Federal Agents Expose Conspiracy to Organize Military Enterprise in U. S. New York, July 11—Srinivan R. and Waiter C. Hughes, a boss truck- man, were arrested. here joday by agents of the department of justice as the result of a blanket indictment re- turned in federal court at San Fran- cisco last Saturday charging about 100 persons in various parts of the country elected were R. R. Gwill enterprise in the United States to free India from British rule. The prisoners were held in $5,000 bail each for ex- Hughes handled all the war muni- to the Tauscher Arms com- pany of New York, headed by Captain Tauscher, former agent in this country for the Krupps, and who re- turned to Germany with Count von WITH MARE ISLAND EXPLOSION n_Pole, Ar-|members who enlist, it was announced K. Kosz- a_ Russian Pole, arrested at Esparto, near here, is held today by the local police as a suspect in con nection with the Mare Island navy yard explosion Monday, when six per- sons were kilied. Koszlowski is said to have admitted “being in Va'lejo, but says he left Sunday. He is 22 years |tary “strikebreakers old and was refused admission to the ton where dining room suspended by a strike of waiters. s y, actor, died at his Bayport, L. I food riots, In which troops | have broken front 1 oved two roor on the at . which de TRADING-WITH-ENEMY BILL PASSED a Record Vote brevenrs Tow Tmine e wrior | IS MODELED AFTER GREAT BRITAIN'S ENEMY ACT occurred last winter. Frank E. Groner of Sefinsgrove, Pe. e Ved 16,500 volts in nn electr Hack and. lives' to tell about Prohibits Business Intercourse With Any Country With Which the United States is at War—Provides for Governmenta Seizure of the Property of Alien Enemies and Enem nize her arm in October e on Her. Parades will be held da e Two Germian seaplanes were de ritish armed tawler e taken prisor == here Krupp works th has laid off a I s. One-fourth of Twenty-five wounds in his back, [ /1178 W in knee, three in head and four oS in hand, were what Gunner P. Breiter Sayps of Kingston, Canada, received in actic o experimenting five years and nd a mare. An American armed yacht arrived |17 1he d with several members of the|$oanty ¢ all Harvard men, suffering fr Enger and from inhalng smoke while || ot in Tokio to endo Berliner Tageblatt, all print articles [ national etically requesting the German |.fe . government to adopt a pol of an|Ferrand peace without annexations and |secr - the tions that wil ing from the United States. the gttty i W. T. McConnel of Pittsburgh was | Other elected president of the American Op- | Homer ‘Association at its annual meet- | of the St ing at Columbus, O. Other officers | who wili Meriden, | berc of Europe will receive the same treat- | American * in hotels in B service was | mater rvice. MURDER GF RUTH CRUGER Says She Refused to Plsdge Silerce Plans Are About Atiack the Fiend Had Made | s York, July 11.—Ruth murde: Whe ountr fighting a fire in the bunkers protection.” Ameri-| cop PREVENTION OF TUBERCULOSIS IN FRANCE ndation. F was organizer and executi Associated with him d, will be Dr. James A Folks of New York. se ;- |ing at its maximum the personnel and | ¥ ial reserves that back up this|F Rl ot liese Patents—A Section Which Would Have Forbidden M. an was sunk by a mine or tine | q 5 on June 30. sages Between the United States and Enemy Territor Edward Chambers, vice-president of Was Stiicken Out. Santa Fe. has od the. posi- tion as assistant to Hoiver. _ food dictator. Washington, July 11 | Lieutenant Clare A. Page, of the tration ling-with-t - was Killed by a stroke of lizht- | .o Pores] nine while flying o, cour T Colonel Vignal, tary attache of | 1 . [foenas ench embassy at ~Washington, | g pol¥lsr i £ 1o Harvara offiters | ooy O n_enem ininz camp today. sotkiiad At he lav s 1 Deserters from the provisional guard in's tradin he at the Wrightstown, N. J., cantonment | e t certain f ¢ . ' vemembered with graves sultably . rked with cross weeks old twi d cov- T market basket una ‘avan- . a'In Jackson Park, Chicago. Thes a boy and a xiri mes : |Sizes between Unitea States and | Kermit Rcosevel has received a|enemy territory was stricken ou and | perm commission i the British army. . He|the provisions restrictir 1| Join the forces operating agalnst | Feutral couniries we. that | e Turks in A minc 1en rms would re vers will T ] e o COCCHI GIVES DETAILS OF To UTILIZE hance save h dge to » silence a | inz to additionai deta ver's oo fon made pub- | e t District Attor 1 freasury; $300,000 for shipment to|continued (o .scream for . i South America, and $31.000 goes tc : ing o ] th Dispatches from Christiania report Le cellay of hiy bict | Smking of three more Nerwegian |CTHIS the excavation h made | g steamships by ermar’ sibmarnes | {71 With & weoden box e om | v were the Hendrik, Lovvakken |® Pair of leather zioves y kg them with benzine Harry Weinberger declared he was| Il was not ur he _next. da |fre preparing papers for an appeal of the | (Pnf€ssion sas jaer ; Goldman-Berkman _decision. e L A on, | placed peal wi aken to the Cireuit Court | PArts of m tev of Appe a fnd. it he | Free Inuch counters in New York [With bim. m mina ws . | Army, sent n | onight to a ne girl w the early part of Februa 1dle of March. attired ving, escaped - 1 improper surro to eomm s a memorial to her husband. | Pretiminary Arrangements for a Com 1fie —— mission Have Been Made. | expedite Headquarters at Grand Forks, N. D. e | deatine B. Burtness, leading republican! New York July 11.—Completion of | ~Shipme candidate for congress Monday's | preliminary Ansniaerits, oF . Slection, vesterday conceded victory 1o|commission for the prevention ¢ by a plurality | herculosie with T 2 ingston and, president of the tonight by hoard of r ten of the nationai associa dv and prevention of tubs professor of clinical medi- unfversity, and di s work at Bellevue ho who will have charge lief phases of the com Qirectors w e Charities Ald assoc clief work of the Amer: » in France and Prof. Beiskar | 1 . . second vice president Red Cross Sz M. Gunn of Massachusetts Institute o German wounded on the battlefields | Technology, Hoston. secretary of ic Health associati ment from American Red Cross units S fake charge e education 25 the wounded of the Allied armies Tapaien. whith (e comselo B i siatemicut s mads b7 | Bt conduct former President William H. Taft. — — A n diti & IN CHARGE OF RELIEF i i bertn Y tna® Brtsh| WORK FOR FIGHTING FORCES|Doing Business Columbia_are being operated, coal | prices will be advanced from 28 per John D. Ryan, President of Anaconda| to 35 per cent. This will ap- Copper Company. | #aresn Proximate 75 cents to $1 per ton. S S s Washington, July 11.—John D, Ryan, | compante The Woodmen of the World Fratern- | president of the Anaconda Copper | for 19 al Order will pay premiums on fra-|Company, has joined the group " Sornal Ties. insurance policies *'or “ai | prominent induatrial executi ex : today by William A. Franer, sovereign |ing war without compens commander, at the opening of the|has be assigned as dlrec f sovereign camp's convention at At-[of mijitary relief He will be lanta, Ga. chargé of all the relief work for S fighting forces A David 1. Walsh, former governor « A head of the military relief, he e Massachusetts: August Herm devote virtually ail of his time com chairman of the National Base- |vast problems of maintaining prem ball Commission, and Elks from hospitals abroad and at home. n parts of the country, served as volun- | cantonments and camps and of keep- TWO CENTS MEME LICENSING OF $1,000 FOR FIRST AND FRANCHISE TAX INSURANCE New Haven

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