Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 31, 1917, Page 1

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VOL. LIX—NO. 309 POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONN. FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1917 ' PRICE TWO The Bulletin’s Circulation in Norwich is Double That of Any Other Paper, And Its Total Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to the City’sv P(;p;liétion. ' ITALIANS ARE GIVING g":zes: [sonato hon on WheatPriceFixed | ‘o= oo W ARGHIPS CONV()Y - AUSTRIANS NO astian, Spain, Aug. 30.—Ra- L = ! ferry_del Val, father of Cardinal al’ 1Ty del Val, the secretary of the su- . A great gale swept the British Isles. preme congregation of the holy office 3y The fruit and grain crops were dam- T and of Alfonso del Caly Zulueta, the PSR IINE 2 — aged. Spanish ambassador+ at Logdon, is 3 —_— dead. TO TAKE FINAL VOTE NOT LATER |ANNOUNCEMENT MADE AT THE|_ The Paris Food Commission is con- sidering issuing milk cards during the ® Prominent Sinn Feiner Arrested. THAN SEPT. 10. WHITE HOUSE winter. . p—— Dublin, Aug. 30.—Jo: h MacDon- 23 e i e v —_— -« ough, m.her‘oamme executed renel 5 o T ot e i L . . leader, Thomas MacDonough, was ar- . % DILE S GRSy . : New Gains of Considerable Importance Have Been| :iic: Tir™® Y50 indincos the| MANY AMENDMENTS |A COMPROMISE FIGURE |“! in Manchuria An Effective System for Checking the Submarine Mer | ? arrest was in connection with speech- New York city’s health depart yste 9 armn sl e es recently delivered by him. He is began an_estimate of the food. stocks 5 3 s [ Made on the Bainsizza Plateau < | e e War Tax Profits Section to be Voted | Labor Representatives in the Gommit- |O% nand in retail st ace is Being Built Up. CONGRESS OF ORTHODOX : > " tee Voted First for $1.84 and the Women who are * British subjects. lized there, CHURCH AT Moscow| ©on (Not Later Than Wednesday of 7 Next Week—Senator Ramsdell Would | Farmers for $250—Vote for $2.20 AUSTRIAN COUNTER ATTACKS WERE REPULSED| v T fod Tie 0 800, Thr| et tonwy Tax on Gigarattes. | Was Unanimoe. (Mersinee Thom £, wennecy, .- | DETAILS OF THE CONVOY SYSTEM ARE WITHHE! born in Capada or naty to be given the ballot , Tuesday, Aug. 28.—The bells dead after a long illne: of Moscow’s 1,600 churches have been s Va i P — pEpsa e Washirston. Aus. 30.—An agreement |, Washinston, e 0 Ton Drice of | Earl Grey, former Governor-general . ' 3 & Howlick Loss of Convoyed Ships by Submarines Has Averag Hinging continually since dawn on this I'was reached by the senate late today o oIl et of Canada. died at W Hous 1| cror heat resident Wilson' to- | Northumberland, after On the Front in France and Belgium No Important Engage- ’ the festival of The Assumption, 1n | take a final vote on the war tax b ments Have Taken Place—The Russians West of Fok-|lonar of the opening today of the eeu- | " iate= than Monday. Sept. 10. and |BDi€ht on the recommendation of the :8fter; wlony ilinces Than Oneh s : . B oo o eth® O Tiaox | fhe clocure petition fied yesterday was | Wheat price commities headed by LF.| e foundry of the Swartzicopt Tor- an One-half of One Per Cent.—Airplanes are F shani Again Have Deserted Their Posts in the Regions of |than two' centuries of ecclesiastical [Withdrawn. = = 1 iy wheat deliverea ar | 2200 Works. Berlin was destroyed: 1y . . k A i & J G i gfcialiem imposed for politioall mo= | {00, MEE ep . R s consent, | Chicago. fire. It is thought many lives arc lost. Used in Conjunction with Destroyers Along the Fr Ocna-Vasarhely the Muscovites are Giving Battle to the |55 Py, Peter the Cweas aleo provides for disposition of the war | The committee finally asreed late| 1 Non Brisks of New Nork, dled 3 : g Ever since the revolution of 1805 all | e o o D ar Wednes. | this afternoon after several dayvs of | o' Norman Brisky of New York, died Coast and in the English Channel—American Ex voting. At one time today it looked | g, PACuEoRI®. following ind jever: th h h ardent helloyees (o iy Sl e day of next week and of the.income tax i ¥ Have Developed a Depth Bomb to be &r)np;-r‘ (o] Austro-Germans and Have Repulsed Strong Attacks— |veen desiing o rovival of the medic; Provisions not Jater than the foowing |28 1L 1t would be unable fo come to u s congrosses which they consider the |Friday, Sept. 7. It provides further | concius ! t before six o'clo Advices from Vatican circles declar Premier Kerensky Announced that Death Penalty Will be | (11 Cire’ means of | rescuing the | for _earlier action if the Gebate ends # compromise was reached and the yynug (he Pope will not issne a cecond 5 | Church from its erstwhile servility to | sooner than expectes. Vo s unanimous. to clear up the first of his| Spot Where the Presence of a Submerged Submar Imposed on Cowards Who Throw Down Their Arms in | ihe state of cleansing its dogmas and A Day of Spirited Debate. ompromise Vote s # i ritual and inspiring its formalism With | The agreement wan reached after a| Representatives of the producers be- § — Indicated—Many New Devices are Being Develop the Pr e s living faith and_ zeal for social; Pa- | qay of soirited debaie batween Sena. (4N by voting for a price of §2.50 and | American soldiers and sailors will e Presence of the Enemy. triotic service. In this fervent Spirit|fors Simmons and Cnderwood on labor’s representatives for §1.84. The |escort the delegates of the Labor L« Check the Effecti loday all of Moscow and thousands | muite ateer mrech memotation. over | (WO extremes = eventually = narrowed |alty’Conference at Minneapolis to th eck the Effectiveness of U-boats. 2 down until the vates were only a few |special train . of pious Pilgrims from elsewhere con- | getails, and after Senator La Follette regated in the city chiefly In and |had blacked an effort to fix mext Mon. | CONts apart and most of the day's vot- — On the Bainsizza plateau of theing two Russian regiments deserted |around the historic Kremlin, to wit- | day as the day for a vote 1If the de-|iNS showed only a slight difference.| Ronald MacFeeley, inventor of many Austria-Hungarian territory General | their trenches and figd, but the Rus- |ness the imposing inaugural ceremon- | pate runs through until Sept. 1, the[Both factions appeared uncompromis- |picces of machinery used in the man wshing : Cadorna is giving the Austrians not |sian commanders have taken steps to |ies. Lill will have been under senate dis- [IPZ at the start. s ufacture of shoes, died at his home |, srees ure ¢, keeping up his Intensive attacks [restore the former status of the line | The event was made doubly slgnifi-l cussion sust one month. It passed the | ON the basis of $2.20 at Chicago. the |in Beverly, Mass. - RV ong_the entire front. New gains of [by filling the gzap with loyal men. cant by the presence of the mewly- | poue X3! feodnaaistontions worked out 1o~ Sz 3 Conatder importance in the gen- | - Following the reports of fresh dis- |elected prelates and lonz perspeuted | "Gmee bofors at this session on the |Night differentials for the various| George H. Hartford, n ‘ 1 t oAl seheme of the Tialian commander- | affection among the Russians oh the | champions of reform, the chief of | ool conirol bill clotire. was initiated |Erades and classes and for the several |Great Atlantic & Pacific i f in-chief’s offensive have been made |east Bukowina front, whieh came prior | Whom were the new archbishoDs|ang dropped by mutual agreement for | terminals. for 12 years mayor of Oran J v that th f and here and thers, where the Aus-[to the commencement of the retro- [chosen after the revolution by DOPU-|fina) isposition. Th- cloture petition| The price fixed tonight is 20 cents|died at Spring Lake. subm irians have striven to hold back the | grade movement in southern Moldavi, |1ar vote and by a synodal decree Yos- | on thegwar fax measure was fo have [DIEher than that named for the 1015 | > - walf p Itailians or to recapture lost positions | Premier Kerensky im & speech at thé | terday ziven the rank and title of Me- | 0 tNCQNAT 108 MEREIIE was 10 TOC€ forop by congress in the food control| Larry Chenoy,” a pitchor th he they have been repulsed. More than |closing session of the Moscow con. |tropolitan. With them have arrived | oi8 FOCL 0 SWRRIOW, T8 BU0rIbill. The §2 price set by congress was |Brooklyn Nationals, was arrested for ! \ 500 new prisoners have been taken by |ference let it be known again that |§C archbishops, bishops from all quar- | irefgth, but overtures for the voting |taken into consideration by the com- |not paying his wife §3 600 alimony 2 Depth Bomb © the Italians. order was to be brought out of the |iers of the country, representatives of [ SocTELD: DUl overtives for the VOLnZ | mittee in considering a fair valuation |of his $4000 salary flects « o On the front in France and Belgium | chaos by putting to death the cow- |the southern Rus churches, | the “Gghf for higher tax rates, wab 1 |[OF this year's crop. £ merchantm no important engagements have taken |ards who threw down their arms in|noted lay and eccl reformers | concerned anxious to avoidiactual and/| 1IN 8 statement accompanying the an- [ Chairman Hermann of the N eing supplen " piace, althoush on the various sectors |the face of the enemy. The possibil- | and the former procurator of the holy |jnitia] imposition of cloture. nouncement of the price, President | Baseball Commission de - t held by the British and French artil- |ity that the rule of “blood and iron” |s¥ynod, Vladimir Lvoff. Wilson declared it is the hope of the [put policemen at ever ers and other , lery ar being fought and small | aiready has begun'with the deseriers SEcaraan iints \bie ‘BItS: Many Amendments Introduced. food administration and his own as ton to stop gambling | Chcking Submasine Wonacs ] K Dhace, ous by Infntny are aKIng | N ecian oflal sommmnisating | o All Jast night thers streamed Into| Anticipating possible adoption of | bili e the market and keep prices with- | Philippine, China and Japan cable- | American naval o z Sohile the Russians west of Fokehant |oties Lo thas polal communication |his city Trom nearby: villages shaggy-| cloture, many amendments avere intro- 170 (IS FoaFior 200 Becp prices with- |~ biliep/ne, Chine and, Japan eable- .n efrective tam t d again have deserted . thelr . posts, |regiments was ‘disperacds 0" Y | bearded peasants, in many cases ac-|duced iate In the das. Semators Hol-| g quring the current year. . |rections but owing fo heavy flings |SUPmarine mor ! thereby permitting the Teutonic allies | As is usual when the Gi companied %y their wive: bearing | lis, Gore and Brady 'sponsored pro- |} = i here is much and increasing delay jisradust) ; o make furthef @ains, in the regions |a faltering amon, i’,‘,pir‘}oee*’gg“’hsefi hempen packs on their backs and car- ions to increase the wa~ profit - rice of Bread Will Be Kept Down R | vices enter into t of ‘Gena and Kesdi-Vasarhely they | thrown into the battle line in Moldas | D€ Tude fmages In their —hands.| to rates ranging from 50 to 66 The price of flour and bread. too, the | Apnericans returning from Canada | SRpdL hor are giving battle to the invaders and |via some of thelr tried nttach.s | These figures, mixing with the city|cent, and Senator La Follette present- | president declares, will be kept down. mav bring in $100 worth of canmed | [2Ctve. Official ¢ on both sectors have repulsed strong |troops who doubtless will preay tg ipS | Population, moved in dense masses to-|ed a substitute bill désigned to raise| The committee in its report to the [goon "l 00 U00 U o0 SIS | Americar a bt e sl sl i il TH e o > | Wards the historic Red Square under |about $3,500,000.000 principally ffom |president. gave as the three chief con- | fos ay' ihe renbar Moot i ~veral U-hout NS o T ok | ot nkeaie i The Rremiin's walls, where the core: | war Profits, incomes and liquor taxa- | siderations that entered into its de- sury d pons N _an . | s 5 St monial order provided that the vast| tion. liberations the following: Falva Meindred Tavas: snd Okidho idents w 1 “procession of the cross” should take| Today's debate was occupied largely | The fact that the United States is | T wove hundred Texas and Cklaho- ... apsotte pro tiat f place and all-national service for the|by Senator SimMimons, chairman of the |at war, the need of encouraging the | mae, Wives of coldiers are organizing a |, t . —rrtrs NEWCYORE SADE salvation of Holy Russia should be| finance commiitee, and Senstor Under- | producer, and the necessity of reduc- |epom ng jearn, L ¢ fussian 13 b EiinGets Gptived & ITS MARE ISLAND STATEMENT.! FAREWELL TO SOLDIERS | heid wood. former house leader and revenue {ing the cost of living to the consumer I A i et St Leaders of the Church Officiated. | CXpert. The latter vicorously criticized [ All members agreed in their discus The _Norwegi teamer Kongsli, | the Américans. It Acknowledgment May Lead to a Re-|The Greatest Military Spectacle in the | A1 o omons o tne eorning. | in| e committee’s war profits plan, and |<ions that the price fixed Will permit | om® s/ Cnssire Fronrer wae sk | oent o Wi o sumption-of Relations With Navy. | History of the City e e I e . | Senator Simmons defended the plan [of a 14 ounce loaf of bread for five L™ i Loat i’ the Spanich const | boveral havs” n sy Alkid the Cathedral of the Assumption in theland attacked Senator Bankhead’s sub- | cents, allowing a fair profit both to the | /Fa Kongeli was a Belginn relier o | Simer deseraves . . Washington, Aug. 30.—In a statement | New York, Aus. 30—New York bade | eag'ea throne on which for hundreds | Stitute, :upported by AMr. Underwood. |manufacturer and the baker. =~ = cent today, more today the Navy lcasue announced its |farewell today fo the 25000 coldiers | of vears the cmperors recetved . the |, TomorTow Senator Smoot republican | White Houss Announcement After a two mionths’ trial, officials of | Wefore, that the Airplanes which the state is s & own, was held the dedicatory werv f the finance committee. will | _The anno ent was made at the |yp. pennsylvania discharged omen [ will be substar acceptance of the report of the board | irich the state is sending to the firing | crown, was held the dedicatory service. | feSiime a speech opposing the Hank- | White House in the following states | L1¢ Pennsylvania disci : ; on the &are Isiand explosion and ex- | militafy spectacle In the istore of mu | At (RS, In cloth-of-gold vestments and | head sutstitute. He is to be followed [ment by the president e o hande RS A8 too | number of ¢ ‘ - e e history W tres mleaming with : . ctio of the food act provides, |4V Lva v the w presses tegret that In a former state- |City. the troops paraded down Fifth | stones. there oficiated the D3 Senmtus e JFoNate, eshtieon B ol the food et hiovides - 1" Reports from Ic ment it gave currency to an opinion | Avenue, between throngs of spectators | ihe coureh Would Tax Cigarcttes. ond sate of wheat and flour by the |« O-, Lz MeLellan, former Louisiana | re wo; that the investigati : up in large part of relativ. m Exemption from taxation of divi- |sovernm e r by the|gate senator, was wounded by a re- | s an former atement led to the bitter con- | millions thronged with mitred bishops | o8 prafite sccumniatd o carned peier|TPost and Sour for enr silies, and to | DUt oSt S " gu Disbanding in historic Washington | ing staves and zemmed crozicrs. |to March 1, 1913, w.is proposed in an |sountiies aloe. has heen riaced oaos =% tension of the zon Rapid De Saquare, the various units scattered to | Priests in the purple biret | amendment by Senator Pomegene. An- |ine control of the food Rdminictratien. |, CoPenhagen reports that Germany is|it s rezarded as m TR Relue's. atad so regrets |their respective barracks and tonight | owned and often ecstatic monks and, | ather by Senator Rancdell wobia pit a | g, control he food administration. | ¢, seal her frontiers to prevent mili- |ihe increased ar that in referring to labor influence it|the work of enthaining for the camp |mingled with them, laymen of note.|fay on: sisarettes. ranging from twe | lerirc, Whointed a commitice to tary plans and the real intgrnal situa- |of the antl.submariy was not made clear that it did not re- |at Spartansburs . C. was well under | the most prominent of the 11st Delng | ente for Those setaned 1o hor mare | lermine a fair price to be paid in gov- | (o2 fom hecoming known to the Al |y responsivie t fer to the standard labor unions but|way. From the southern camp the | Premier Kerensky, who remained but a | than five cents, to 50 per cont. on those | ecommended b that e price lies. Now Dovises in- Liss, to the Germanized L W. W. The state. | troops will be callea to Join the Bersh. | fow moments, and Former FPremicr |Som st 25 cents or more. ‘Semnin | Locommended by that committee—s: st . . fSsued with the approval of Col. |ing overseas army. Tvott. Hollis ooposed to ‘eliminatc the bro- |Erude —will be rizidly, adhered to. by |4 FortY;eight thousand cans of con- | Tho eflect of (e - on, presiden he| Obser: si liday. ; i SR de-—will be, rigialy, adhere Y | dense e e of oon:ar the employment of o it M. Thompson, president of the| Observing the occasion as a holiday Processions of the Cross. vision fowering the minimum incomes [f1¢ food administration. e ot Deen puEchased | the adniton of gue, eays the organization is con- | the city left nothing undone to impres L he service there|to be taxed from $4.600 on incomes of s s by the supply service of the American vinced ‘here were no “hampering in_ |upon the departing soldiers that the |, efoTe the end of the service there | 0 Be ed, Ho o o e To Stabilize Price Red Cross for immediate hipment (0| Anti-submarine sweapon d structions or restrictive directions as|pation is behind them in the strugsie - ondin the square out<ide pro | Sons to $2,00 0and $1,000, respectively LTt is the hope and expectation of | Salonika. force the U-boats under ,_the me of investigation in_which they are engage. 3 : e fooc inistratio v ow —_— eater degree heir_eff vestigating the explosion which killed |head of the parade along the line of | thredal and monastery —churches, the | CEREMONIES IN HONOR {bilize and keep within moderate hounds | which permits but one saloon for cvery | down a merchant =hiy A fve and injured more than thirty in|march. but after Major General John |harticipants in w = OF MEN DRAFTED | the brice of wheat for all fransactions | 500 inhabitants many of Lang Island’s | *Pecd if kept ander watc v. the league issued a statement|F. O'Rvan had passed and the spec- |1han a thousand brazen bamners piint i ; hroughout the present crop year, and |famous hotels will have t0 close Oporate only against <hipe that aring a reliable informant had told | tators had begun to gaze upon the long | ¢4 With effigies of the sain emeen = 3 , n consequence the prices of flour and most stumble upon them. A 1 the | that a time fuse leading to the black |lines of khaki ard glistening havonets, | Nese processions came groups of 1av-|Are Called for in Proclamation Issued [hrend al<o. The food act has given | Adolph Deutsch, a soan hox orator. |time they are under wate nagazine had beenfound butlthey seemed to realize that the men [Men. some bearing historic ikons and| by Governor Holcomb. llarge powers for the control of stor- |was sentenced to (hree monthhs in the | consuming the stored “powe investigation was being | before them were face to face with the | S0m® holding up rude home-made im- |age ana exchange operations and these | workhouse for having attacked Presi- | storage batteries, = decrea v powerful labor influences. |zala oceasion .even thoush the entire | “E°s. in the hope that these by touch| 0 = ——= Powers will be fully exercised. An in- {dent Wilson and saying that he o rane of under-water act ) 1 uance of the statement |=rim task of war. It was not wholly a | With or proximity to the famous ikons Conn, Auz. 30—Connee- |cvitanle consequence will be that finan- [to be hung pelling them to come up at nizht and { indet ; controversy with Sec |city'and particularly the ling of mareh, | Would_gain_ something he occa- (Lowns and cities are called upon |cial dealings cannt follow their usual | s lie Hdle Gl ANa surtaoe.wh A : w t once cut all 1 been bereckel with the colors of | Sion's sacred spirit. y__Sovernor Marcus Holcomb 2 |course. Whatevef the advantages Charged with having referred dis- |engines are used to re-char t with the N league, or- | “pontaneous outbursts throughout, but Evidences of Religious Spirit. proclamation issued by the state's chief | gjsadvantages of the ordinary machin- |respectfully to the uniform worn by a|teries P ' g ts member luded from |America and her allies. 1o correspondent witnessed many | ane iveyloday to arrange exercises lery of trade, it eamnot function well [marine, Mr rthu Anuth. a Brook- Swift Fighting Machines or it and refused to fiking evidences that the religlous | ong ceremonies in honor of the men Minger such disturbed and abnormal |lyn socialist, was convicted and sen- [ The decision of tr v " the mavy eontributions of —— e T e St ot acenEigas [800n to leave for ‘training camps who [Coi\ditions as now exlsts. In Tts piace |tenced ta 30 s in jail et Lo aentt §360.000.000 & . e semes by thou- |(OLDIRRIZERIGHT ARENA side every ikon of note trudged aged |countrey flas wnder the sepnder theil fihe food administration now fixes for —— strovers and destrover of women throughout the coun. e, 7. 0 g und selective se e auahaos g R = sapers has|STOYers R official report of the Mars Island S o e Toscy, he elon clergymen to make reverent trib- |acnoca umant interests and all |the Kinght Grand Cross of Bath upon |'0°"t Wilson. 15 based o g disaster, made put < little later,| At Hudson, Wis—City Officials Tele- | cArTying of the heavy, iron-bound|ute to these men part of their regular |Lettions and e O e hamampent o = b T e s of (o tine fuse) araph Protest to Goverfor. Famous Bishop of Ufa. SlEE s i ana owie. 1 e B Sumatsaseaion Aies poe: |anibassador to/ Gernian ADDITIONAL RECEIVER JAPANESE MISSION known, but denied that the in-| Minneapolis, Minn, Aug. 30.—The| At the head of the procession of tire | state, according to Information re- |(he full light of day, maintain the pub- | Major-General O'Ryan, commandant| ASKED FPR THEM. K. L T.R R FLOOR OF T s worked under restric- | 0ld prizefight arena at Hudson. Wis. | CToss came the church's most famous|ceived by the Connecticut State Coun- ljicly stated price for all, and thorough |of the 27th division and ‘whor was for - . . will be the scene of the national peace | Féformer Andrew, bi o b o ive taken up {..onomies made possible by sta - |mer commander of the New York Na- | Petition Presented to Court by Speyer | Viscount lshii Delivars s acknowledement and|convention of the People’s Council [ life story began when he was leading |plans for such celebrations. Under aliion and control, better the position of |tional Guard. was ordered to leave for & Gos oFNew York expre regrets now s expected | of America for Demooracy and Peace, |3 Worldiy life as & prince and an of- |Vote passed by the councii at its|consumers also. Mr. Hoover. at his|camp ai rtanburg. S. C., today. g iabany TR apL to lead resumption of relations | it was stated here tonight. Despite re. | ficer, reads like a_romance of spiritual |meeting Wednesday, the =Dublicity loypress wish, has taken no part in ~ St. Louis, Mo., Aug. 0. A I # A w s that city officlals of Hudson had | FeScneration by Tolstoi.. Inferspersed | committee of the council today besan | {ne" Galiberations of the committee on | Attorney-General Gregory instructea | ' Toule o, Aus Tl — = telegraphed Governor Philipp that the | Were choirmen in brocaded robes, aco- | addressing letters to town ch: | whose recommendation T determine the |tho States attorney at Mobile | for Ap additional recelver fo f b ' TIDINGS OF NORFOLK'S meeting was not wanted there, officials | IVtes carrving episcopal staves and ;h!‘fl’ughflult the M-;*lék‘"'—""'n' that steps |, vernment’s fair price, nor has he in |to hold Bernard Geisel as an enemy | souri, Kansas and Texas Rai 1 is delivere ISSING TREASURER | °f the peace organization wure plan- | hooded with gold cloths, and vision-| e taXen at brce looking o such cele- lany way intimated an opinion regard- |alien. Geisel is in jail with 12 other [fled in the federal ¢ her #t T = ning o eyen flis conventifn Sunday {85ics, and myetios from he morfhersi oS & & lines of ac-|jng that price.” |men, most of them taken from a Not- | today by Spever & Compa diiis Blists: 5 Biliver Abssonder Upon he ons are to continue for a{forests, clad in rass and shed in birch- |UVlty. LE - wegian ship o = c bark, who, as they reached the hi he governors proclamation foliows: | New POLITICAL PARTY o5, York the ¢ Payment of $500. Touis P. Lochner, exegutive secre- | toric spot, bowed and kissed the stones PROCLAMATION. IN GREAT BRITAIN An investigation is being made by Circuit Judge Hook will hear a — e n, declared that Kissed Sacred Relies. e m e 2 lihe " Massachusetts attorney-general's | ments on the petition in N Aus. 30 —First Se- | speakers would abide by the law. A Pter. tha Beriites I e ionlBadeallere o D S e he |0fice into the recent report of the Fed- | September 7 | Ina teibute irtiss of this town to- | After the convention had b b E the congress and president of the Unit- | Is Projected by embers of the | ., Trade Commission: which charged 1 1 adm that he had received [red in Mimmesin T o peel Par- [ the tiree metropolitans and the six-|ed States to pay its toll of manhood | House of Commuons. SH8% cot O-alee ot Bostoyi msde L) il i R ) [ ) ter from a man whose name he | from Governoe 1. &) Tnenoiig, Onaer: | £, bishops proceeded to the monastery |to the cause of liberty, and its sons | = e sonabie i oroltte ARk pETInE: | elaEstion (CRC QR oy r ¢ revea), offerin for $500 10 des [ wera mae n it 1 UpauSt plans | where are deposited the relics of Al |nave beon chosen under the selectiva| London, Aug. 39—The Birth of an|’ ey A PR la - : = frxia, one of the most revered salnts of | service law to g0 to foreign shores un- | attempt o establish a new political | A life size portrait of the Grown | ino "Copamans i mship | panv ‘claim that this reorsanizat orth | programme makes too mu w cur- [ ot b iver, alive, former town ed Januar smon W. Johrson, a | These were abangne 4 ; H . WHo GISADDeAr- | mante hemere 2 ned at thelast mo- | the orthodox, and ceremoniously kissed |der the fiag of their country As In |party in Great Britain was announced | princess Cecile of Germany and 28| pan, o udson selected|the sacred objects. In the meantime|times past each town is making its |yesterday in a long manifesto signed |other ofl paintings from the s by 27 peers, members of the house of [ Kronprinzessin Cecilie, of the nd ¥ t. "After Johnson’s | because of i i becan: f its proximity to the twin|the mass of the clerzy and lavmen |contribution to the common army and disappearance an allezed shortage of | Loy $20,000 was reported in his accounts - r marched through the Kremlin grounds|soon these young men will be depari- | commons and others who have seceded | German Llove b 16 be sold with the town. Johnson Ieft a note | 1p e mep e o (iAnS. 2lSo was due,|and on through the Gates of the Sa-|ing to training camps to make ready | from the Bnionist party. to take Indes | ot e A ren anont ot [ tallment in the fixed charse n. saying he was going to take his 1ife [ citians of Nowih Tofots Lt from | viour into the Red Square. to fight on fields unknown. They have | pendent action “in Which national con- | ere sale at Toston. 3 g ‘Ebe - statamentsalsy. I8 mede. it 1 on Camagn Mountain. What atten-|icarned the convontioe s o b hoY Qarvice ot “ilaadinarls. Placeh met this duty cheerfully and withowt | sideration will be the sole concern.” — - — = petition that Mr. Schaff is inclir » fon, If any, the town Will pay to this | Jotthere ttats 2 wig to b hald . e e shrinking. I therefore, deem it proper | The slgners of the manifesto have | CROCODILE CLUB DINNER take too uessimistic view of ‘he offef had not been determined tonight, | pihelr state. vast that many climbed i0 vantage|that those of us who Temain at home, | all heen with the unionist tariff move- E COMPOUNGE. | P°g% °f the road. T The town of Norfolk has offered | o onmaioss o all Parts of the coun. | ¥ast that many climbed to vantage|and whose lives and liberty they o |ment, but, although they are prominent SRS & -]~ Speyer ana Company filed the : reward of $100 for Johnson and b already had started | P ot 3 : forth to protect should observe their |and highly respected men, they are not — tlon as holders of $7.000,000 of tw through the bankruptey conrt, a re- | T FATzo, were notified tmmediately | S{Rers Perenag nder the fwisted cu-ldeparture by some fitting ceremonics | generally rogarded as leading states- |More Than 400 Attended—A Sheep | O T8, LVUNET (s Rian of the men- oy g L e e nge and special trai 0 as of as - ‘ i - yea oW ke OL tHs menis| A romes through his having a $9.000 in- | °1 t0 Hudson. bishops made for the “Headman's|ang boards of selectmen thai they co- |THE BRITISH 7,000 TON Bristol. Conn.. Aug. 30.—More than |1Tst refunding fous. PR FS surance policy on his life which can Place,” the scene of the sanguinary ex- | ghorate. with the town committess of 400 attended the i1st annual dinner of | The fixed charges and sinkine fund ASE IN SOk B Tameried untl poor or s - | ecutions under Ivan the Terrible, and |the Gonnecticut State Gouneil of De- STEAMSHIP VERDI SUNK.| the (rocodile club at Lake Compounce | tharges now aggregate .|LARGE DECREASE IN o h. S| PEACE DELEGATES As ¥ held a solemn service there. Many of|fense in arranging such exercises. 1 today. This club is composed of mem- | ¥ ear- It is stated that the reorzaniza | FIRE LOSSES IN B T From time to time s summer| WELCOME AS HCPSE THIEVES| LG, [AY Witnesses of the ceremony be-|alg0 recommend that the clergy pay | Of Crew of 112 All But Six Were Saved | hers and former members of the state |00 Dlan of Hallgarten and Compar Johnson’s sister and brother have had i il san to pray aloud, and the more deeply | roverent tribute ‘at the altar of Al- —No Deta en. legislatuie. A sheep barbecue was the | and Saeper and Company cut the f1x- |1, 1016 Losses Wers $5 Eearches made of the Cannan Moun. | Hooted Out of Hudsom, Wis, b moved shed tears and threw them-|mighty God to the sacrifice that these ' chief attraction. Seventeen mayors of | €1 _charges to $3,800,000 while Speye T 1915—3 351 A CONGRESS TO ORTHODOX 5 ' Y an|selves upon the ground. young men and their families are call- | An Atlantic Port, Aug. 30.—Word | Connecticut cities attended today. the | and Company think they shou'd he e - SSRED (et Binc ni et ngry Crowd of 1,000 Citizen The five hundred members of the|oq upon to face. > | has been recetved here Indlcating that | suests of former Mayor James Pray of P04,090; ston, A ance ho authentic report of his hav-| St Paul, Minn, Aug. 30.—Fibe m ggflgmsawi"ihes"? their fl'?‘:“!-fomm Given under my hand and seal of the British 7,000 ton steamship Verdi| Bristol. Neither Governor Holcomb or | y fhg Bomn Botn has been mage. e e em- | Wednesday in the Temple —of the|the state at the capitol, in Hartford, |has been sunk with the loss of, six of |any other state executive was able o = | ateributed S B heen Demorerany ang- pewse onference for | Saviour bullt in the Teruple of the|this twenty-minth day of August, in | her crew. The Verdl left here'for an | attend, ¢lthough Invited. President's Reply Reaches Vaticar | (ir 1y b MacMillan at Home. Findecs Tk L 0y o) o rentito [HbenEtin e st Ne o ke the year of Our Lord, One Thousand, [English port on Aug. 12 with cargo| After the sheep and fried corn had nspection xystem A Mac)Millan, the explorer, who h tiom, = nited States by several of the club members and the [Feply® to' the pope's peace proposi zation ¢ 1 Toturned from the Arciis arrived ot | Sngy erow et L om0 Siock by En| Chicago, Aug. 30.—A thief last night |the ome hundred and fort-second. A_cable message to the owners of | visiting mayors, and ofieers of the Gl | Was presented at the Vatican today bs | vaiin: Jre : his home in Freeport tonight from: |ed 1o the Gubor-any el isons, /eaco roke open the strong box in the| By his exceliency’s command the Verdl refers to the savirg of all but | were re-elected as follows: President, [Count De Salis, the British minister. | ¢jorjo, . Sydney, N. 8. He will remsin thare | bound for Be. Be lp ced on a train|South Chicago police station and es- . MARCUS H. HOLCOMB, six of the crew, but gives no details. | Gideon Wakelee, Shelton; vice pre«l-' Council of Ministers at Madtid los: ' © St. Paul, according to a|caped with the money, watches and Governor. [The message indlcates, th i dent, Eaward Sewal, Bri chl of ot 85 2 , the owners|dent, Edward Sewall, Bridtol; secre- | Madrid, Aug. 30.—The council of min- |of $ ihe It was presided over | The d rtment respo o 4 1 said, that the vessel was sunk about|tary, George A. Beers, Bristol; treas-|isters met today five days ago. Ry «salurer, R. L Pierce, Southington. by King Alphonso. alarms as against “flfl]v tomorrow, when he will proceed | telephone message received m the ewal; i to New York. sheriff at Hudson. - i e e o m«g:mef Tpagaare o gii’ém

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