Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 18, 1917, Page 1

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NORWICH, CONN. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1917 TEN PAGES—78 _COLS. PRICE TWO CENTS £ ~< " The Bulletin’s Circulation in ich is Double That of Any Other Paper, And Its Totab Circulation is the Largest in Connecticut in Proportion to th; .City’s F_’opulation. \B‘ ERLIN DISAPPROVES | et recsrs= _Five Japanese - [Strikes Holding Up| Soiers: Telegrams |IGE PRESIDENT MARSHALL ON W - Fire in Putiloff Works. Rome, Sept. 17. — (British Admiral- s G & Sh' ’cnns' : ke Baret or FnasHiLy ty per Wireless Press vit London.)— . undred membe: = | e" “' I £ klyn for Spartan- L o . s o mae ihat & arcet Daroas st Y latesm 0 mg 'p fruction Duvs, 8. GF POk org ST Gave His Views at Golden Jubilee Celebration of Sec out in the military factories at the 8 it . damage iz o e iatiton Pebiear®8® “MOURLE 1o STUDY OUR ECONOMIC CON- |ASSUME SERIOUS PROPORTIONS Telegraphs Baltic Flest DITIONS ON PAGIFIC COAST r The old Ma Van Buren farm, n ear Kinderhook, N. Y., was sold to tish Rite Masons Dr. B. H. Birney. Kere Petroj Sept. 17.—Pre; - The Fore River Shipbuilding Corp. . g - launched a steamship by number in- S it Tpett” Enslalnt | ARE MEMBERS OF HOUSE|ON GOVERNMENT WORK - 1 ' Wit URGED DEEPER SENSE OF AMERICAN OBLIGAT the cessation of acts of violence and all excesses committed under the pre- Secretary Lansing’s sisters arrived at "* IExpresses Regret Over the Telegrams Sent to Berlin 5 toxt oxz“yuie;uarflln{h the reyolution. Py Bordeaux with a party of American |- _ — . - n reality, he says, the men s ; o kers. . by the German Minister to Argentina ey T e it man Iy T Liapa People Attach the Greatest |Strikes Are On at Seattls, Portiand, | ross workers. B, 3 : g % .. |eaucing its Mghting Ity eiho | Intersst and Significance te the| Los Angeles, Sun Francisco and| The 69th Regiment of New York is|He Does Not Want Any Entangling Alliance With Europ = T e garty A 3 still taking recruits. It needs 300 Irish- 5 5 s 5 , SoathInEl and odds that ho awaits| Forthcoming Visit of Their Repre- | Other Places and Are Holding Up 12 |fnen {o il its ranks. Nations—At the War Council Table He Would Say 3 DEN AND ARGENTINA [ment of order. sentatives to the United States. Per Cent. of Ship Building. X = > A e G : he Canadian casualty list contains 55 e b TE'.EGRAMS SENT TO SWEI L e i e Cansdinn tonstnivyijar contaty the Germanic People: “Have What Government o . 3 seven wounded and three missing. : 5, ks ON UNION HATTERS| Tokio, Tuesday, August 21_among| - Washington, ' Sept. 17—Strikes in Please, But Let Us Know That It is Yours”—Wou , L apanese people the greatest interest | Pacific coast shipyards hlding £0v-| Heavy rans in some sectioris of | Argentine Has. Refused to Accept the Verbal Assurances of | To Restrain Them From Picketing Then o aioat sighificance. {s at- |ernment conifeNcle have assumed such |Raleigh, N. C., caused damage - to Have Great Britain Understand That While We Are Three Shops at Danbury. Umeed tsouf ‘; :’ .eodmll.u‘t\.vl-n ot‘c: ;-h- ;;rklvui mfiu Ithlt m;m‘lg::; !cmps amounting to thousands of dol- ’ . elegation ve | Hurley, eral shipp! : i 5 A f - . ars Under-Secretary of the German Foreign Office and| 1,.uury, Conn, Bept. 174 tem. | mombers ot the houas or 1on,of five | Hurley, of the federal shipping board. | lars. . lied With That Country in This War, That When It shipbuilding pro- porary injunction was served upon |tives. The :D&m obklct of %e m{:fl flfl.m k% to tg::\ 'F-;-nclslc“l’ 1;:0} British Colum| & officers and members of the Hat Mak- | 5:0n was sei an interview wi weel attempt to settle the |gram provides for the construction of Ov i ion ers and Hat Finishers Assoclation of | the Associated Press correspondent by | troubla, 80 vessels with o total tonnage of 117 | » er the United States Would Return to Its Isolation. Danbury tonight restraining them | Tokichi Masao, the chairman, as that StriXes at Seattle, ' Portland, 1Los|ggg, ‘ . from picketing three hat shops re-|Of conveying to the American people | Angeles,. San Francisco and othar cently opened here on the open shop |the sincere expression of the friend-|places on the Pacific coast NOW-a™ | . Cugtom officials boarded a Spanish Awnitsthe Arrival of a Formal Note From Berlin Before ‘KWS&ep.—NoSpecbuflerper-fianonahrge 2 2 ial Communications Fi plan following a strike in them. The |Ship and good will held by the people | holding up about 12 per cent Of the |vessel at & Gulf port and seized $40.. | New York, Sept. 17.—Vice President|all know that the world cannot M is Reported in the Official i [ e st Ml el government ships under constructiom. | (66 in gold hidden in a salt pork par- | Marshall, speaking here tonight at a |made safe for murder a The parliamentary delegates plan |The ehipping board hopes to settle all iyej’ golden jubllee celebration of Scottish | pilage and anarchy and cveryth States Hat compan: the fac- tories of the T . Les Hat company, |to sail for the United States laté in|on = basis to be determined for the H. McLachlan Hat company and |September and after spending ten |seattle yards within a few days Count A. Wrangel, the Swedish Min- | American obligation in the war. In the|W.s may stand and w the John W. Green and Sons, Incor- | days on the Pacific slope will visit the | Officials of the board conferred to- |istcr it London. left for the Contl- | ballef that: the. United Siates bould | thas such thinks e these porated. The injunction ecites Mar- | Citlemof Denver, Chicdgo, Washington, | day with representatives of “Seattle |nant on a few tweeks' leave of ab- |never become involved In Furopean |made safe for the world. 1 tin Lawlor, national secretary-treas- |New York, Philadelphia and Boston. |yards and umion leaders regarding an |gence. politics, he said, the question of dual{means the rule of the peopl urer of the, hattérs’ union, and Cor- | -About two months will be spent in |agreement under which workers would citizenship was not raised until the|whatever form of govennm nelius F. McCue, Jeremiah Scully, | the United States. It is the first visit i be given higher pay with the govern-| ‘A state of alarm is over Bath, Me., | war in spite of the great tide of immi- [may choose to express it but w Rite Masons, urged a deeper sense of which the syndicate | = Ppresdt ret over the tele- | transmitting the messages. = T No spectacular operatilon on a large Jrams sent by Count Von Luxburg:| iue i reported in the official com- ‘German mimister to Argentine, to fon: ‘Delligerent capitals. Thertin through the Swedish minister | On (e’ Bainsizes Dlatcan, nortncast | Huek C. Halboy and John O'fara.'lo” | fo America of an official deiegation |ment paying ‘@ proportion of tne inv |outing to thres familics declaring thet | Sration. " gl e g “at Buenos Aires, have been la;de to|of Gorizia, the ItaHans have repulsed|cal officers, and the members of local Foe panese house of represen- | crease. ‘orking ou behl 'w 4. (52w an airplane flying around the iron| “No one ever doubted the loyalty to|pressed, through - their chose both Sweden and Argentina By the| euccessfully four determined attacks|unions. Ives. awalits the arrival here probably Wed- { ) o" B B Mt e B B g Bid e BT o L T eign-born or the sons of foreign-born,”|the hour of war—however The restraining order was signed by | Mr. Masao, who was educated atinesday of officials of a Seattle vard ; Judge Howard J. Curtls, of the su-|Yale University and who for a number | which a Y omas Sranted the Dighest| Under the new Mexican constitution |said the vice president. “Our isola- |us may think that certain ¢ perlor Sourt na slleses that tho of e iR S e i, w::?l:dfie:.pfif: B g Torelsn pricsts In olexico must elther | tion made it immaterial to Da wheth- [cles are mistakes policles, ¢ f - change thgir profession or leave the|er there was any difference between |free press and liberty of con union have congregated near the fac- |MOSt preminent members of the Jap- | the system. . country. loyalty and patriotism, and we did[not justify criticlsm, for not face the question until it became [however unintentlonally, i German government. made by the Austro-Hungarians. In . The under-secretary of the Berlin|repelling the enemy attacks, General foreizn -office has informed the Ar-|Cadorna’s men captured 73 prisonera Fgentine minister to Berlin that Ger-|Increased artillery activity is reported fmany regrets the actions of Count{from the Carnia sector of the Austyo- Diet. - { Von Luxburg and disapproves entirely| Italian front, which lies northwest of|tOries and induced workers therein to | anese Ea! & 4 of the expressions used by him in the|the Isonzo fighting zone. Guit labor and have otherwise pre-| Representatives of Japanese People. | VALE TO HAVE COURSE The bride of a Bethlehem mill work- | of moment. glves aid and comfort to elegrams made public recently by the| Field Marshal Haig’s campaign of oot .mm’uon ' ‘I:U“ncm’f‘ I think it should be understood IN NAVAL TRAINING |er danced with 250 jnen who were at} “The years drew us closer and clos- my. . g stato ~ department _at Washington. | attrition during the breathing epells|£oods Tn addition to the i clearly that we are going to your — B the wedding. Thg celebration lasted [er to Europe in the ties of commerce| “Conscription as a principle Berlin asks for a safe conduct for|between mejor operations continues. HEe “n”! mpany claims dam- | country,” he said, “as the direct rep- | To Prepare Men for the Position of |2 Thours. * |and in the friendly relations of travel.|a subject of debate, but not n e s 5 Dot Sl G ons | mmd St Gusatin vus Briien oo | -“Date for a hearing on the injunction e R e e e e i s An important Gouncil of State was | tho warts: " ant eaanenr s a " and | pose of this wwar, and diseus B - v 5 E : suddenly a , and discussion o sonally. the German trenches, inflicted casual- (has not been set. cent. in our Diet. Viscount Ishil went| New Haven, Comm, Sept. 17.—Yale |held In Berlin All secretarics ' of | Tonavoh drank with milHary power|ousht to be neid in abeva J v X . i state and leading military authorities |and crazed with the idea that he was|government by its &hose v This turn of the hatters’ strike fol- |to America as the o 7 presentative of | will inaugurate a course in naval lowe, 3, Sonference held in New Haxen |the state but we speak for the people. | tralning. far its students beginning weeks ago when manufacturers | “Japan and the United States are|with the opening of the college vear i Argentine, 4t is announced by its|ties and destroyed tremch mortar em- ifforelen minister, declines to accept the| placements and _ammunition _dumps. verbal assurances of an under-secre- | The artillery arm is active all along rene iprteents divinely ordained to rule the world, |tives has deciared this g plunged Furope Into a war so awfui|be any who think it is not ju Administration officials and Entente | that all wars which had preceded it[let them not be of aid and c tary of the German foreign office and |the western front and in Flanders, |[In several shops declded to resume|now allied in fighting for a common |1 th, it ounced toda: jawaits the arrival of a formal note|Borlin reports, the drumfire has in- |Work on the open shop plan _after|cause and it is an ideal moment for us ;;g;:*;ymhu of the umiversity sor. |diplomats refuse to become intergsted [ o4, %, VirS, WHCh Ba the. enemy by voicing their Jrom Berlin Lefore taking mdditional | areased to one of violent Intensity. |! wpeakl been closed seven- (o go to the United States and talk | poration. The course . will prepare |in the reply to the Pope’s peace note [ PGl we stood by our ancient ideas |ments. steps. : French positions in the forest of|teen 3 over the questions which mutually ip- | Yale men for tie position of ensigns |from Germany. of isolation, but in two years and a| “I want this war to end terest us. It is our dream that this|in the United States navy and will half we discovered that there was aond until the people in every la: temporary alliance between the two |parallel the course in artillery train-| Dr. Alex Nordwall, a“ special Swed- | oty o QSCOVEred that there mas o | oasess the right to male ne countries will last much longer than star i - {ish envoy to the United States, said . The hearts of fRamed | declare war either directly or it -~ Ing e Gommisaiang_in the Arililoey | Sweden must have 13,000,000 bushels of | He ary 1amrety ia wesponse to " the |thele. chosen Teproschiatives. Tt } To Sweden Germany has sent &| Apremont have been attacked by the imote, unofficial reports say, Tegret-|Germans who succeeded In entering a |“MOVIES” FOR AMERICAN SOLDIERS IN FRANCE jting highly disagreeabie issues|few elements from which, however, Em by the Lixburg telegrame and |they were quickly thrown out by the Chonuies NN B s Rt weite . cmin ate E Seventy-five Cinematagraph Machines To Study Economic Conditions. branch of the United States army ser. | 8rain or starve. blood that flowed In their veins. Pa- |blood, and birth in social standing triotism showed itself as dependent, | educational qualifications and rel sh government for ' defenders. to Be’ Sent There. “We desire to study your economic A million copies of Elihu Roors | 10650 Shomea b ce Tor polit- | trend all to be forgotten in (i i} > 5 The students will be allowed to take < r, . “URGENT DEFICIENCY BHL SOLDIERS AND SAILORS Now Yok, Sept. 17._Seventy.ive |5 want to Kncw the chnsen ot youy |3 MiCe-¥eur Courte to" i (hemseives |spesch at Chicigo’on “america's bart | 2% Y800, PIRE ratmer wpon: navecity. | pariiurment of mow man, this feder BATED IN HOUSE CIVIL RIGHTS BILL |cinematograph machines . to 1y | pros or either army, or navy commissions, ! -| “Datience at last was exhausted and |of the world. o v Sk ¢ o L novies Tor Unttes ‘States soldiers in e I S mflune having. been - cut |out the country. thire wab HOLhing for & Self_teapecting| ~I 44 bt Want entanglihs ai e people to “do, if their republic was towith European nations. It is not days on the Pacific coast with - the nig the-ques- | mpociai tion .of Jaj =2 labor. I have the - gouncement made here tonight by the | feeling that some Japanese In the be allowsd ss part of the regular uni- ey T Ut " 1oz | Eage in the war on the side of dem- the council table of the world T tr nal War Work Council of the|United Stat inderetan: 3 s Fieba L Young Men's Christian Association. |t mew mateor sy on Unde i Eaas| It was also announced today that |troops in France. “I do not care to engage In any halr- |of a newer and better isols which Major General Pershing has | with the American life~ " {he French government had sent to| o\ .. sramsfer of the ex-Czar,|SPlitting, although there seeme to be|lsolation of pirit, free to say to rtinaied to take over the enterprise, | Mr. Masao was asked whether the|Yale a battery of four 75 millimetre | Hince the tranfer of the ex-Czal|much discussion as to whether this|Germanle people: Have what 4 - peci: -1t 2! » 2 safe for 10¢ itito, : o say to the o ‘Among associatlon workers' who | eat of Japan in China. He veptied that | United States war department was to |Showing signs of insanity. democracy sawe for the world' = Oflof constitutional government down'®one year by the addition of ex- tra work. Credit for this training will | Warden Thomas Mott Osborne, ce are . .now in soon ‘be' sent, a ing to an an- ol be true to its traditions, save to en-|essary to have them. When we iMany Amendments Increasing Sums|Calls for WW' Washington, Eept. 17.—The house| Washington, Sept, 17.—Legislation to y failed to reach a final vote on |piotect the civil and property rights e seven billion dollar urgent defici- | of soldiers, in effect a moratortum for *ency bill, consideration of sections pro- | the duration of the war in behalf of ividing additional funds for the war|men who are serving their country {department, consuming virtually the[on the firing line, may be placed up- y. Man in-|on the administration’s Sreaing tho sums Droposcd ln 1he |tor this sossion of congrons mem mine [have Just salled to he with the Amer. | be Gid bt betevr That Ious L ous hat | furnish other artlllery equipment as Dartmouth College will not _have {COUrse it ‘was meant by the president. ) fght with you as cur ally | r ican expeditionary forces ‘G L. G ‘well. o olieg ave | when he spoke of making ‘the world | British empire: “We have mad ofiflmx bill wers, approved. eseary clement of the raising of a|yioy, XPogitignary forces are: G I. wme‘:;t :z m:‘n a; the :;resehfi time. e professors who have taken spe- |half the enroliment of students as last | WHER € 0PSO "0 0 ine® e safe | of democracy, but we are not willing ® secretary of war was authorized | citizen army. Conaabia Unbracoey er Members. ion. clal work to fit them to teach artillery |Year. To date only 850 have enrolled o change our System. The Windsor t "neswxfx”:a ance-as s zup_ | o8I to carmy ou e o,_;he game ?, ‘basketball. !ga:uptblluchitu&n‘dwhot was a bar- | States army and navy officers in the A large cruiser launched at ‘Dantzig |cense mor democratic demagogy. We democracy. ael ropri _been introduced houses, years | courses. Smade or pending, but the broposed |hacing been framed in the offes. of anle remsining persomiel of this last | Cister at Jaw:el i o was named the Count S, £t — & party includes: R. C. and who is now editor of the Liberal as named the Count von Spee, after $3,000.000 for an’ ordmance proving|Judge _ Advocate-general Crowder. | FiI0 Party includes: Donc 12&1“"5!;- news agency and the Financial and |BREAK BETWEEN COSTA the German admiral. The ship was AUT ILE COLLIDED e cinteat e i85 DS ety Baker, It s, learned today, | 5" Charles W, Koyi, Boston; B & | Beonomic Monthly Fle has weiiten RICA AND GERMANy |ohristened by the widow of the admiral. | LUXBURG 'INCIDENT 18 i % Py . = e on recommends- | Afagruder. Cambridge, Mase: R 1. |DPooks on the United States. & e T NOT A PERSONAL MATTER ' WITH A TROLLEY C, : uns an ely in Ak o 4 Increases in the measure agreed to|tions that the entire welght of ad- |1r = wyer & 3 ‘Milliken, = Barnstable, M: Toshio Shimada is a Ja ana ] Sncinde ordnance stores and supplies [ ministration influence be brought to Mom;’f‘ el nfehe - LAi’vE: university lecturer. He has written |G°™™an Residents Have Been -Con- |, riot in which members of the 15th Argentina to Insist Upon an Explana- | Three Men Were Seriously Injured at B L e | Ieee s bt (sarly ensstugmtyurthe Xins, Pomfret, ‘Corn.; "F, A. Rugs, | scveral books on government and econ- spiring Against Costa Rica. e Ronintenicy] (noero) raxidut) tion From Germany. Hilliardville. E;&“";”Q’& 120210000t $220.317.000 | againet Sere or men roar he Tad Hven, " Gonns 6. %flgfi:mgi?flg?; ;‘gff,“"'fi, D e ke e e S 3 3 Buenos .Atres, Argentina, Sept. 17— | Hartford, Conn, Sept. 17. —Tnree L5803 0 s 1% 020000, that & man in he army or navy would |MEANS' CONNECTION WITH anale 2 professor ot the Mol Uni, |sroment today. General Tinoco,the |land: wwas suspended for. two-months | Cormany, had explained (¢ the Ger; | o1d Hydo, of Edst Haritont : i An appropriation of $676,713,000 for |kave no opportunity’ to make his de- gmountain, field and siege cannon was |fense in person or to arrange for its increased to_$695,100,000 and that for | proper hearing through counsel smmunition for such cannon was rais-| If such a judgment rasted against ®d from $700,000,000 to $777,182,750. |a man at the time of his enlistment Appropriations’ of $16/750,000 for |the bill would prevent its execution ermored motor cars, with authority to jthrough the sale of his property dur- .. b= % B Semibe president, discovered that German res- |for attacks on the Allies and President | = o wi Y we CAPT: FRANZ VON PAPEN | oot o sion 1o Br. Masasouse | lonts hers had Jomed with some. of | Wilson: Do bers, tho ovmstn. saintster, was | colided with & trolley car A Fifilard Exposed by Papers Found in His|Yamane, who is president of the Japan |followers of Former President Gonza- ¢ i Deatonal miatterfand aldinot sisnify Vil Thevaare. 0w o St % Apartment In New York. Medical School and has held many [lez in conspiring against the govern- | Private James Jarden ,16 years old, | * P! ture of relations, was classed as | hospital here and thelr recovery ook positions of Importance in government |ment. Three of the.most prominent |of Machine Gun Company, Provisional | % TaPtUre of reiations Was “essel 8 | Lospital here and thely rocove medical work. For a time he was ad- |Gefmans here, Kumpel, Altschul and | Battalion, 16th United States Infantry, | (& Pucyrredon today, It was trus | fractured skulls and Hyde bodi visor to the governmen-general of|Orlich, have been arrested. All Ger-|was killed at Camp Syracuse during a | (nat a rupture had not been created | juries. The first named 1s proprl New York, Sept. 17. — Papers and gontract for 35,400,000 more, and of [ing his absence. It would set aside [Memoranda found in the apartment ‘mane iding in $700,000 for submarine mines also were | statutes of limitation o that a debt |hore of Gaston B. Means indicate that | Koree: e e oostas Tcan . poree [sams e carda. v - & by handing Couni Von Luxburg his o the Flainville House and ienr approvi owed to a saldier might no out- Cap- Tinoco has called congress in special | Six auto bandits drove into Climax, S| ’ ot was by John 5 e lawed in his absence: it would pre- tain Franz Von Papen, recalled Ger- (PROPOSED MARRIAGE OF MRS. . lacssion and will lay the matter before |12 miles south of Batile, Oreck. Miehe e e R L I A S AR, PETITION FOR RECEER FOR | rent tho eviction of hia family whilo |man naval aitache "“whioh were not PHILIP VAN VALKENBURG |it- held up the villagers and blew open | Jiovide for any exp O o vhs e perty U. 0. OF PILGRIM FATHERS |dent. 1t woeld Drotect his adaily e | statoment made tonight by Antosis o O P eldent of Costa|the safe at the State Bank and got|® 'The “forelgn minister reiterated to- |begin tomorrow. The glire of ¢ s S S Court at| 227, Fouk estate or other purchase con- |ant District Attorney Dooling. Thess | T° D“k'T“ °:l°"° s :‘":"""“'“’ ey s (et oMoe Y, [wway with ¥1.000, day that there will be a rupture of|trolley lights blinded Byrnes as Filed In upreme Court a ake Place i 3 2 g if the latt 4 he drove the mgthine i o tract in which he might have be en |Papers weer found during the district ce in London was' overthrown. Gonzalez appealed | Two of the northwestern flour mills | [Siations with Germany, If the atters jand he drove the mginine : attorney’s intesiisation of Means' af- to the United States & s 9 intervene, but |in Minneapolis were shut down. The tory. H e- | el 1 Novello, of Hartford, fatrs In connection with an inquiry in- | Rome, et Al M P fous” |the American governmont took no ac- |largest of tne Washburn.Croshy mills O O i, ina | Cukel Novalioj fof T1ier {o the mysterious desth at Concord. N. | Valkenbur erican embassy today |ton. 1In an election held In April [was running at half capacity owing to | SNSB0NC, Sl of "easion set for today | Immedlately afier the aceident idow for whom he acted ne bueinsy [that her proposed marriage ~to = the |General Tinoco was chosen president. |the light receipts of wheat. 1o consider the matter, as he prefersinjured trio was hrouzht ¢ agemy, [of Whom he acted as business | o U Sporto jbrother of the late|The American government, hawever, to make all explanations at a public |and taken to St. Francls hospital T Names mentioned in th King Carlos of 'Portugal, preferably [1as refused to recognize the Tinoco| New York police are searching for [ eusion later in the week. acene of the crash is about three & a1 Mr. Dooting aoran- | should be arranged to take place in |BOyernment. the captain of a ship which arrived in | "Ny request for a safe conduct has|from Hartford da. according to Mr, Dooling, Includs should There have been reports several [port a few days ago. He Is charged | pone toesioed From ount Von Luss e T 0ose of several nited Senators and ile Mrs. Van Vall b1 has a |times since last April that Germans in | with looting everything on the ship burg. He has notified the foreign of- representatives. There also was found dlvworhce oLCiionte iuuod“"by“'.“c.mnw_ Costa Rica and Former President Gon- [that could be carried away. fice,. however, that he plans to leave | HUGE CENTRAL SPAN OF T oo Tioorning the output of | oo urt, it is believed that the best |Zalez were implicated in a plot to de- Argentina by a Dutch steamer sall-| QUEBEC CANTILLEVER BRID: o the comis, Pimnts In various parts| L tion of her dificulty would = be Dose Jinoco- Late In April it was re- | United States warships and some o |ing on September 28 or on & Spanish c . som . . . that Cos ca would declare {the fastest destroyers in the Unite t 2. R manufacturing munitions for the Unit- (found ’;‘bfec"a’;‘nf:;"fl“‘: e em- |War on Germany provided the United |States navy are patrolling the Ate vegi“nlceonbe(l)fig handed his Dassports [ was Lifted 28 Feet Yesterlay—Movin ed States and the entente allles. o e = c“"wn“‘”“l e | States recognized the Tinoco govern- [lantic coast in pursuit of enemy sub- Count Von Luxburg, it was stated, s Hi 4 AUTO MARKERS AND between the parties, both of ~whom }™ent- marines reported in travel lanes. bad been circulating the sthtement Without a Hitch. E J have called on Ambassador Page, are 1 e that the Idea of sinking Argentine 2 JOBBERS ON TRIAL |that the embassy has no evidence re- |IMPEACHMENT TRIAL (Mexican Independence day was col. [snips -without leaving a trace” was| Quevec, Que. Sept. 1T_Wit ebrated in morthern Mexico ' withou him by the forelgn min- |nundred and twenty-two feet yet Pleaded Not Guilty of Charge of At- | ThiorS uy Provicus marital stage of OF TEXAS GOVERNOR IS, ;" isturbances for the first time. in | FSe of Argentine. Ao & means of Dre- | be megotiated befors ‘1t is boited tempting to Monopolize Trade. Sixtesn of the 21 Charges Were Cov- [history. No Mexican flags were dis- | enting complications. This state- |place above the St. Lawrence 2 Mrs. Pihlip Van Valkenburg was di- ered in Testimony Yesterd: played at Laredo, Tex., on Mexican In- | nent was characterized by Foreign |the huge central span of the Quebes New York, Sept. 17.—Seventeen in- |vorced from her first husband, Lee oo i - dependence day. Minister Pueyrredon as 'hel“'zrfme:‘l, cantilever bridge viu;zu:.‘u s susper @ividual defendants named in the |Agnew, of Chicago, in 1906, in New | Austin, Texas, Sept. 17.—Sixteen of 1t oasing S st el o taced ek in Shly ke i enea: Toenaubind Soventy el e e e T AN o Tia e Gl thew 08 goss | o ooty one _ cliarges bronght e o e [coeen s R Shemn iR month by the federa ury. : 7 nst ro”the. senate _higl | Vic : = : i charging the individuals and corpora- [old. Mr. Chapman dled the followins {court of mpeachment were covered |ian iformation about the location of | BODY FOUND IN BATHROOM o kra S P tions included in the membership of | year, leaving an estate of $200,000 t0{today in testimony given by G‘""‘"‘orln(}erman of Wuhin‘gton is in custory OF AN UNFURNISHED FLAT |mendous eng n}eulna ‘ea ad g the National Association of Automo- |hls widow. who was then less than 31 | james L. Ferguson when he took the | & cr s, of Was! X i without a hitch. 1 > blie Acceasory Jobbers with restraint |years old. In 1909 Mrs. Chapman be- |3iand tn-his own defence. P f Chicago—That of an Expensively | The span is Being clevated two f 2 i e o Polwoda, a Russian, and John Lasky, a 0 place 916, w Shenpacd tn e Untted States dimrtic | aae. Gonn. in Febrasry, 1014, on the | taatiSpolornin article, which alleges |, *Poje, were: arresied In Waterbury, | Chicago, Sept. 17—In the bathroom |10 Ialse @ span into place in 1016, i o gt e Aartict R o e Since. then sho | toll where o recotved $156,500 1 urs | charged witn =vEAInK e igeatt S AL [ of an unfurnished flat, in one of the |;rom iis moorings In mid-air and £ most #im oS & a held without bail for action by |Dbetter residence sections, the police | 110 ARy e et Dl Ol ot Fullty. |has spent most of her time abroad. |rency loans this year constitutes om- |§7¢ AGC VIO DEL T today found the body of @ woman | PIIESd into the river Boston Yesterday. engaged in at the time he went into the army; it would - protect him Boston, Sept. 17.—A petition.for the fagainst the ordinary -results of de- Bppointment of & receiver for‘thessu-|faulted pavments on. business moft- preme colony, United Order of Pil- |gages. and keep him from being sold grim Fathers, a fraternal insurance|out: It would Insure any rights he organization, was filed in tho supreme |might have to public lands although court today by Attcrney-genera: Jen- [his service at the front had prevented ry C. Attwii on behaif of H.|him from completing the legal ac- Hardison, state’s insurance commis- fquisition of the property. Eioner. Another element of protection the The petition allezed that a state- | bill would, accord to the fighting man ment of condition fifed by the soclety |would be ‘as to his life insurance 2= of July 31 last showed unpaid death | which could not lapse through failo claims amounting to $254,693, with a|ure to make'mny payment. His prop- balance on hand of only 35,019 with |erty also wonld be protected from sale which to meet them. The court also | for taxes. was esked to restrain the company, prganized in this state in 1879, from | COLUMBIA UPHELD FOR EXCLUDING LEON SAMSON ponducting further business. WOMEN A FACTOR IN . After He Had Addressed a Meeting, MIDDLETOWN ELECTION | Where Emma Goldman Presided. ¥wo Out of Three of Their Candidates| New York, Se, 3 pt. 17.—Columl - Elected to School Board. versity was well within® ra" Henis when it excluded as a student there Middletown, Conn., Sept. 17. — Two | Leon Samson, after he had addressed put of three candidates for the school |a meeting where Emma Goldman was board here who had the backing-of uhe the chief speaker, according to a de- women won out today and the thi®|cislon toflay in ‘the state supreme was defeated by seven votes. The |coyrt, denying a motion for an in. tuccessful candidates were Dr. James |juriction sought by Samson, restrain- A Lawton, Alva H. Kelsey and Dr. A. |ing the’ college ‘authorities from pre- §. Campbell. One of those defeated |venting his attendance. was Johp L. Fisk, who had been a| The court ruled “the inevitable close member ‘of the board for 25 years.|contact that would place Samson with| With the consent of special govern- cu isconduct. . That y he women claimed that when he was | impressionable young men of his wven | mont wtor Henry A. Guiler the | CLOSEST ECONOMY IN O R i, hen T Dossed Bnils o T eias Gt Toes ol exvensively drowe- | your, the engisioors have introduged mayor he had opposed en_approprif- T Who might thus be Inoculated by | defendants, were given umtil October THE USE OF COAL | Most of the testimony was a repeti- | party: o 5 llea: &t the |tha o b ut the ous wag | Possible precautions against a rec Hon for eocial service In the schoole. | bim 'with the poison of his disloyalty | 10 to demur or take any other aeiien tion of that given by the governor be. |Amorican nationality —called: af © | the gas fixture above, but the gas was | ance and as evidence of the care w [he cther defeated candidate was|would constitute a menace to the |they may consider necessary to their 5 fore a house investigation committes |American field headquarters on their |not turned on. Ome of the woman's | VS 0N U0 600 SR 0 (0 0000 T . Robert W. Rice. . vniversity.” defense. Until then the defenfants|Urged on Citizens by the New Eng- [1000 O Olen o e the honse o way to a city in the interior of France, [ wrists had been almost severed with a [ W CRGUIREORS BETE BOOR T _— were released on bail of $5,000 each.| = land Coal Committee. Iittes of the whole In August. " [where they will train a number of [razor which was found on a window | WaS stated that the 2,000 fon mas rO REDUCE THE RATE NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS The corporate, defendants, who num- e Z N irs sratustesiand othdrloMicers Jalll in*the’ parior. e e Cad | inch from the computations as to how FOR HANDLING WHEAT PROTEST EXTRA TAXATION |ber 17, [will He jealied for pleadinz | et S L e P Taoat acon_ | M0, WHITE BREAD ON e exponsive underwear, were found in a | far it would bring down the Chinemieel ? ater DB omy in the use of coal the coming| WEDNESDAYS AND THURSDAYS| Samuel Gompers president of the A.|trunk within the flat. cayatis ghsARcOYY Il 0ok Vote of Grain Commission Merchants | Either P ive or T the Pos- nter as a patriotic duty was issued F. of L., cabled to Premier Kerensky | The only identification possible wag | Venca - e N A EDITOR OR ST. PAUL winter pa y_was Thousands of people lined the river at “Minneapolis. tal Service. i today by the committee on domestic [ New England People to be Asked to|a resolution, adopted by, the Minneap- |a postcard postmarked Decatur, Il i 5-‘ st D ray s VOLKS ZEITUNG INTERNED |fuel economy of the New England coal Refrain From Its Use. olis_conference of the American Alli- [and addressed to Miss Josephing Pa. |banks whao the span was moved on ance of Labor and Democracy, pledg- |ker. ' It ‘was signed Clara and said (scows from Sillery Cove to i ridg committee. Pointing out that the coal ecause of Certain Editorials Which | situation in this region is “critical” | Boston, Sept. 17.—All New England |ing the support of the American work- {“Do not Worry, your furniture is on e R Appeared in.His Publication. ‘because of limited transportation fa- |people will be asked to Tefrain from|ing class to Russia. the way.” . the HolatipCaiin ate o P cilitles due to the war, the appeal asks | eating white bread on Wednesdays Mrs. Lars Anderson said the woman |place and ihe scows slippec m: Fort Snelling, Minn, Sept. 17.—Or-|all householders: “not to use coal for |and Thursdays during the period of [ ~The presentation of evidence in tho |leased the flat a month ago but had | neath. The span swaved s fow miny ders were received today from Wash- {heating before November 1, or after|the war as the result of a resolution [trial at St. Albans, Vt, of Robert|rebuffed attempts of neighbors to be |lurching downward as the cantil ington for the transfer of Frits " |aday 1 unicss the house temperaturs |adopted today at & mesting hero of |Werm. the Burlington ~ cavalryman |friendly and had been so eccentric, |bent under the tremendous welght, editor of the St. Paul s below 60 degrees: to burn wood |food administrators of the New Eng- [charged with the murder of Jennie |the neighbors had called her the[soon became still.. 2 oy New York, Sept. 17—Thé{American Newspaper ' Publishers Association, composed of major and minor daily lewspepers, the membership embrac- ng papers vu::'!‘luha:h In all sections of e country, throu postal com- mittes, of which Don C. Seitz is chair- Minneapolis, . Sept. 17—Grain com- nission merchants at the Minneapolis thamber of commerde, havo voted to leduce the rate for wiieat rom two cents to 1 1-2 cents a bushel, t was announced today. The rate tecently“was increased fram onejcent long P two cents and Jullus Barnes, Pres-|man, etrongly protested again today | meler, e ent of the food admintstrationigwain | agalnst cfther punitive taxatio nof the| Volks Zertung, to Fort:l Ga., | wherever possible, or to use_small ofl |land states. The plan is'in line with | Hemmingway, his youthful sweetheart, | “German spy.” r thongs watched the pperdtions. Erporation, askeh thet the. ol rate jasmepper pubfishing business o ~the | Sor. internment Auriag th war beaters where necessary to keep cer-|the appesl recemiy sent to house- |was completed yesterday and the clos- | “She was up aud down o day ong | The engineers estifiate tha the 7 Diaced in effect. Aicommittee will[principle advocated by some of the{meler was arrested because:of certain ftain parts of the house at a special | wives, hotels, cafes and clubs in this|ing arguments were begun. It is ex- gll night watching the mail box,” said |foor mark will be reached tomorrow | rs. An , “but no one ever saw the sa nditions pre- | state by Henry B. Endicott, Massa- | pected that the jury “will get the case chusetts food, administrator. tomorrow. ¢ any mail in the box.” vall, ‘with . . Barpes:4n Chicago -to'use of the postal servi editorial; hich peared in his pub- |temperature; and to be economical lacuss Sthe 2 matter CRampriow. v . : aicument of imsaiant o B0 MBI s Which apps Lwith eas and’ electricity.”

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