Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 19, 1917, Page 1

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TEN PAGES—80 COLUMNS " PRICE TWO CENTS VOL. LIX—NO. 325 ; POPULATION 29,9 ; NORWICH, CONN., WEDNESD «ammén 19, 1917v The Bulletin’s Gircul=tion in Norwich is ‘Double That of Any Other Paper, And Its o Circulation is the Largest -in Connecticut in Proportion to the' City’s Population. e == T CANTONMENTS TODAY _ THE COONTRY’S HISTORY Raliroad strikers_wrecked a bridge 150 feet long near Buenos Alres. 4 .» |PROCLAMATION BY ] . = ; They Are Driving the Germans Back to the Dvina Line PRESIDENT WILSON |GREETED BY BIG CROWD . $7,000,000,000 [, o525, 50 305 Nevar Academs: | These: Civilians Are to be Trained for the Batile S T L Russia will turn the clock back to . - . Calling Upon the School Children of K . i in the Riga Region - the Nation to Do Their Part. i fneludés ‘Huge Appropriations for the |the Greenwich time, 2 a.m, October Against German Autocracy = = : i wfx'.’.;?‘;‘lfi"e’&' .s;?m;.m‘.,"‘m’."?:';fl?fii Mo S Comperate et Coindrech] GEBNE EEiESRIRe ana | Biivoing Ame per cent. of the senior class of - calling_upon the school children of| With'the United States—Says Japan | Boapd—Prompt Passage by ‘the Sen- |the Boston college have enlisted for KERENSKY HAS GONE TO GREAT HEADQUARTERS | " 2557 . Sty n B wsr | win oo e por e Expuced e T " INEXT MOVE WILL BE TOWARD THE BATTLEFIELDS sist in the mercy work of the senior —_— 7 . although opposed to war, must fight in . — RUSSIAN TROOPS ARE |- flosn Woomes called peace rumors which the. man censor is permitting to sprout in leading German newspapers convinces the London press and public that Ber- — in is preparing home opinion for an- » £ other adroit peace manoeuvre, which | BANQUET GIVEN AT THE COPLEY probably will take definite shape be- | PLAZA 8 fore the snow flies. organization. ; 2 /| The proclamation follows: ‘Boston, Sept. 18.-Ji th ional \ £ g , . 18-~Japan is in this| Wi on, Sept. 18—The $7,000,- |the national army. ‘ " “To the School Children of the United | war on the side of America and the W war deficiency bill carrying b - r On Monday the Russians Captured Teuton Defenses North-| - States. ( allies, “to’ win with you: to cooperate, | huge sporopriatisns for the army. for: |., Dr- Gatz, Minister of Finance in the | The Men Represent About 45 Per Cent. of the Total Quota A PROCLAMATION 1o coordinate and to contribute” Vis: |uifiestions and shipping board pass- L o d iy M. B jedri i i g i count ec onight at a ban- |ed the house t "a unanimous rie, . . Fiv east of Friedrichstadt, South of Riga—Rumanians Are | “The president of the United States guet_given atgthe Copioy Plasa’ in|vote. o955 i e ned Under the First Call From Each of the Nearly Five . S . - Cross. It is from these office: fiied | IONOF. /O panese mission ‘The bill, the largest supply measure - P - Carrying Out a Successful Offensive in the Souchitza |{ e that T e son n mon o¢ | which he is the leader. in he countrs’s history, 1iow goes to |SrOm Fort Ogelthorpe ‘prison camp Thousand Local Boards—The Task of Obtaining Equip- " i< greeting at this time when so many Japan Honors Her Treaties. the senate, where prompt action is ex- | 4Urins s 5 i i i Valley—A Section of the Fortified Austro-German De- | ot,you e Desinning the school vear, | «We do not enter in treaties to tear |BSeted, It directly appropriates 31-| Thres mors ambulances were given ment and Supplies for the Army is Moving Satisfactorily 5 : : erh up. and scatter them e | 830,000, to General Cadorna’s army by the ¢ 2 = o . prepared a 'junior membership with | winfis,” P $2,314,000,000 additional. : > - 3 “ fenses Near Varnitza Have Been Occupied by the Ru-|fchool activiiies in which every pupil | treatiis cee con s et ety "oz | " The senate appropriations commit- |committee of American poets. —No Attempt Will be Made to Furnish Full War Equip- = 1 = in H 0 in the Dnited States can find & Shance |have tried to play our pavt and earry | 196 has been at work on the ' house| Henry Baker Brown, the founder serve ir N a e school is | ou: share of the burden. We ha e for sev: gt ot el V: ' Ini- il i - {imanipns—The German Crown Prince Again Has Met o ThRenr Cenin: oroySur hl | 22t 5 e e burdem. We have | et ?fif g "tomorrow, |04 Presaentit (he VaiparatioUnls ment Until the Eve of Their Departure for Europe- . roug] you can ‘worl in e | ships id the influence of the nation | When Secretary er will appear and i . . i With Failure in Two Attacks Against the French Trench- great canse of froedom to which we Which has thrownyoff ity thin dovers pubably submit furthor additional es- a0 $3,000,000,000 is to be Spent to Provide for 2,000,000 e all pledged ourselves. ing of decency and now stands reveal- . new army and other| tors f) th dical divisi r - = E “Our junior Red Cross will bring to |ed in all_the horrid nakedness of the | 43! tes, the senate committee may 18 iy diclared tiat the baseachs i ! es on the Aisne Front—The Italians Are Withstanding |, Jrion s S o mrvies oo Sons | S2,I0 8l the horrid nakedness of the | Witimates, the senaie committee may of the army declared that the barracks Men for the First Year. the Austro-Hi jan Assaults. community and to other communities |to win with you. We are ere to co- |arsund one billion dollars. o p Dix, N. J. e Aus ungarian all over the world and gulde your ser- | operate, to co-ordinate and to contrl- mate republicans favoring a con- 3 5 ’ i m,,";,f,,‘; Biow 2o save in ortet e eniln d the e, paventiitures - Supervising| Scveral members of - Congress will| washington Sept. 18.—Marshalled jtional army There ar ron reeted ti ssion. o ee wve been planning to pro- i Ve by - 8 r e are indication . 5 that suffering children elsewhere ma¥ | The enthusiasm waidl was mani. |PoSe such a_provision as an amend- D Yo o oo wer® | for the last time as civilians and un- |that a deficiency in men will be « Russia, having recovered in a great of the western front, with both the|Dove the chatce to live It will teach | fosteq when a great crowd greeted the | Mieft to the bill but may postpone their | month, der civilian authority, moge than 300,- [ $105eq when offictal reports imeastre from ths effects of Teceht in-) British and the Germans as the ag- | Y00 POW {0 Prepare some of the sup. |mission at the South Terminal Station | SOXt in view of the general desire to 000 men of the national army will g0 |available. b ‘ternal difficulties, is- gressors. Berlin, however, mentions et upon its arrival in @ pouring rain from |hasten adjournment. Byron R. Newton of New York was 2 23 ailable. S . i 5, is preparing to make | STeforE. Beriin, however, mentions | homeless families lack. "It will send | XROD I*S arival in & pouring rain from nomron B: Newton of New York ¥i®|forward tomorrow to the sixteen can- |~ Seventeen divisions of the natic ® firmer stand against the common (Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaeria. |t VO3 throush the Red Cross bule-|its climax tomight as Viscount: Ishil | PRESIDENT GIVES | Sonifaua CoNBstoT e nsiomisat Ney: | (Ouents 0 be irained for;the battlo |guard have been organtzod tins of thrilling stories of relief and 3 against German autocracy. . Their |the exception of the New Yorl enemy. It s announced that the lead- | ~The artillery and aerial activity on |Hn% of thrilling stories f2nd spoke of Japan's faithfulness to. ité NOTICE T+ York. | et e ivant d o fe b ership of the Russian armies has been [the western front remains intense. |joSQhe, ARG DSt Of 8ll Inore perfeel: | ireaties and to its -friendships. s 'O_GOVERNORS § next move will be as " fighting men |sylvania and a fow others, the i school -lessons, you will learn by do-| Ties That Bing. That in Exemption Cl Theodore Roosevelt will make three |06 ) 0 P00 0T Wil be astir with | France, they are not at maximum w reorganized and that the fruition of [From Nieupert to near Arras and es- peci ecto = ms He Will LaElJUs : By i) the. Tyires g o tie op. EpSt cuen DU SUadle Wt mna ndellhu movement of the selective forces.|strength. The fighting s/ ngth reformative plans in the armies them- 1iny % those kind things under your| In both the addresses the viscount| Consider Only Evid Alre; Sub- Jew merica’s part ider Only Evidence ady Sub-{in New York State on America's part |t i ih ropresant approximately | the seventeen divisions under "i—'f:m"ir“‘if.iiifls;?"".’z;a the war|tvity T showing increascd ac- | teachers’ direction, *to be the future | gave foday, the one at the banquet In| mitted to Board: i the e snarine ministers in his cabinet have| If two attwcks asainat the French fvohcighdmfiflof this great country |response to warm expressions of good i o Boards. - o 45 per cent. of the total quom]umlnr tables of orsanization would be G Mohiicy, Russian great head- | trench the Aisne Gov- | Tt . will by Governor McCall, Mayor Cur- e " the first call from each of nearly five | men, supplemented by many tho eaders. y wil ‘General | failtire. ear Rive ple plan | convention to revi the tate consti- 5 L' Co . camps is the advance guard o ve per ciencies ere are ied e Mg o T Near the Miette River on the |which the American Red Cross has | tution he dwelt wpon the. ties that States today that In hearing claims for |aviators on September 7. The Consullien of the total, composed of experi- [promptly from the nation n Bt s (SOmMug, UB. fiom iheLaie. R e U o8 ~ enced men, including cooks. Out of [the guard will go first to the on oot “revole W hethor “Korniloff. the B bt et ptly & P Trorked [out lo provide for vour co|bind America, and particularly. New | Giot ouras e wonid consider onjy leader of the summer offensive in Gal- | thrown.out again. In Champasne and [ *PREItlon knowing aX T do that school | England, to Japan. e referred more | evidence already ssubmitted to the| The Department of Agriculture is (RS Gt | el e i fcia this year, is to suffersthe supreme |on the Tight bank of the Meuse the |upace o mirory eiimin oot SCTVice [than once to the friendships formed |boards wnd mothing cise wnless the |trying hard to frace the report that |Sanizition into which the second In-fas to the probable total de SR v the =t - Ly, Tl de- | arptllery ffe has been more splrited. | struction' of their teachers. - Is not this | equcated m sach Eoeat mumbers in | Poards recommend. it. the nation is going to take over the |SrMEnt WL PEEIR €0 be aberbed 107 |TCT, Svepared in the absenc = still - withst - 7 o 3 abs ences at Monilev. " | successtully Austro-Hungacian efforts o s T T o eThich You | New England colleges and to the m’l‘&fififif it po".}f‘dfi?t:n:;feg&" 2 L e the last men of this increment arrive |plete reports from all fuard ¢ this has been created a skeleton or-| So far as known no defini The Russian rorthern army, which |on the southeastern edge of the Bain- bas made some progress toward driv- | sizza plateau, while the big guns are |Snd efforts in some measure to meet | carried their ideals to the island king- | b hrougnt b i a [are rotting in_western Maryland and » re orgn - ing the Germans back to the Dvina |hurling monster shells over the battle- [OUF mational needs? o dom. i el nd oo e cidiron eastern West Virginia because of lack |other half will ‘follow as ‘rapidly as |divisions are organized many v line in the Riza region, on Sunday oc- | torn area of the Carso plateau. - ¥ s e of_the cases to ghe evidence. of men to pick them. pdnaEteiRany Pequipment . axp) jumiade [IIIL be R 8 b ot fmeen Pekoft and Rigs. On Monday | Painleve. says will continue the War|CONFEREES ARE AT ODDS B A BRITISH POSSESSION; |overnors by the provost marshal-gen- aFolice are taking meagures to ston partment ‘says the enormous task of |train incomplete divisions i i3 e=st of Friedrichstadt, south of Riga.|the Germans have made paymen ON THE WAR,TAX BILL ; S 3 i iaims ke ho h: R ahieh . thels obtalning, equipment, and supplies. for e kel SRRl In its official report, Berlin makes no | the-damages eaused by their ru St Premtier Holman of New South Walas | ¢4latms for :’xg&!g‘;; or discharge | Strker N0 M vy 0% - thel" | the army “is “moving satisfactorily. | maximum strengtn. mention of activity in this region. ness in the occupled areas of the,re- Final Enactment of the Bill Might Not| Sals Germany Has Forfeited Her [P0 "20 FFOUTl O SRSEREMONC, M indiss e~ Some of the men of the national army | Tn a statement today the wa umanian front, = are expanding rapid ® Rumanian front, has carried out ® urged that the powers con rds. Decision of the district bogrds|Texas introduced in the House a bilt| 0%, " ttempt will be made to fur-|meet the army supply demar is final except that the president may | DY the terms of which each state will |Ti, ™Sy e ™ Wien" fun war equipment |only minor shortages are expect cessfully an offensive movement in | solidate the strength in the common| Washington, Sept. 15.—Tncreasing| New York, Scpt. 18.—Germany has e Suchitza valley, northwest of Fok- | effort. .France by the end of 1917 will |strife tod: y forfeited her- right to possession of TO troops. - : shani. A section of the fortified Aus- | have expended 105,000,000/000 francs Tor | Srisoriad s, Ptyeon senate and house | Toroed O e whioh” il remata s e Dwese anen o | SIS OWR RemTo ook until the eve of their departure for |the training’ camps.#Quartermaster tio-German defenses near Varnitza |military operations and civil admin- |votes were approached, foreshadowed |Part of the British empire at the -close [ 120 0 5 0 it b4 "’5“,‘;0"! Caleb Bragg, an aviator at Mineola, | Europe. Some civilian clothing, such | ficals regard the food situation were occupled by the Rumanians. Ger- | istration since the beginning of the |considerable delay in final action. Sen- |01 the war, declared W. A. Holman, | FTESATIE0 OV Mm. The resulations |, 3. claim yesterday to a new Ameri- |28 overcoats, will have to bo used for |isfactory. - ottt man sttacks in the Pantziu region, to|war. For the last quarter of the vear [ator Simmons, heading the senate|Premier of New South Waies, in an [ PESECHIPS i e B ode o |can altitude record, asserting that he @ time, as the clothing industry has| The problem o nhLA\Imnz cloth the southeastward, were repulsed. | its expenditures will total 12,150,000,000 | conferces, said the. oonterohees probe | address at a luncheon given in his |SbPeal from the deeision of the dis- )tk QIR (R0, JOTTIIE, ! not vet caught up with its work, and_ othier pquipment. Howevar, ! Ralds continue on the northern end ! francs. ' ably would extend until Friday ;and | honor here today by Lord Northeliffe, | {Tict board on agreultural and indus. = With the mobilization of onc-half of |presented many = ebstacles, most that final enactment of the bill might |NeAd of the British missions in ' this | o Ly GO R Witk “tna district baard | Heavy detachments of Argentine fthe 687,000 men of the first call under which alreaty Mave beon overeon troops. were sent to Rosario, where a |the selective service law in progress, | With the.2,000,000 men to provide country. REORGANIZATION OF RUSSIAN |60 DRAFT MEN P rens s o "roaky, nowever, | - AUSiralla A4 not ehter this war|Who will send all'evidence and other |{TO0PS Yere oot lo Rossrio. Where &lin apestion a'to ‘whethertnatSum: |and 36000000000 10 apend 11t £ o | b ilit: rd e i " |ber of men wi e sufficient to all |year the department faced a gigar HEADQUARTERS STAFF TRANSFERRED FROM AYER 03 many ;g‘l{g‘g{;fintde;}ég;ugah dflg;h: ettt ‘J'f“g';‘s,;,‘f”,hi e . o president for his consideration, It EESYensaE moysmEnt o toops units of the national guard and na- | task at the outbreak of the war. Has Been Completed—New Com-|Those From Connecticut Wers Sent|0RC system for increasing =second | buf because Wrelonds cause Was the|decided to submit new matter, the ais- | f Al DI LR Gl manders to Take Charge at Once. to New Haven. e nd acome tox Sociions” o | obligation: And we had no interest o | rict board may report on thecase |SRELY. §oSHRYSE 4100 (e nad uver | PUBLIC HEARINGS ON GOVERNMENT UNDERTAKES serve. It s a fact that as a result of the P Lumber Co., at Westwood, Cal. THE INSURANCE BILL TO SETTLE STRIKE length and tomorrow expect to begin Potrograd, Sept. 18It is announced | Aver, Mass, Sept. 18.—Six hundred | freisive Soting. War that fhe territory of northern |dheres to its origtnal decision, for- W from an buthorized source that the|members of the draft force at the | The question of publications postage | New Guinea has fallen into our hands, | ¥ard such new matter to the bresi-| pejegates from nearly every state in |Were Concluded Before the Senate|Of Iron Workers at San Francisco reorganzation of the headquarters staff | cantonment here were transferred to- [rates tentatively settled today ~was|2nd We intend to keep it But we did | 501 1oaras” cannot be considered on |the union are at Cleveland to attend Finance Sub-Committee. Shipbuilding Plants. has been completed and that the new |day to various units of the 26th di- |One Of the most troublesome of the | ol SWor the war fon (At DEIROSC|appeal to the president. e U o e - high commanders will enter upon their | vision, United States army. They are | noai aetermination. & ° somusemic | 16" “While district boards are not courts, | tional Re LUBE AR e 3 Washington Sept. 18—Public hear- | Washington, Sept. 13—The gove functions forthwith. The war min- |the first five. per cent. of the draft|incorporating provisions of the house| Pesce at this time world be merely and” the Fametton”of tho Cpréniasnt |1, Syedes of Chicago have pledged their B e el iontd oo o | Brcihs ot Inon Woridhes st Ast Hrsud jster, General Verkhovsky, has in-|and ‘seasoned by two weeks of train-|Zone plan, the McKellar amendment (2 Tespite in which the efemies Of|eramining their decisions s quasi- |1OYAlty to the United States and the |fore the senate finance sub-committes |co shipbuilding plants working frowiient S B b UpeeE o RO with Insurance men and others sug- |government contracts without awalit formed the newspaper representatives |ing, are belleved to be qualified to|and Senator Hardwick's system of in- ai 1 that the t |1 gaps in Maje ards’ |creased rates vigorous onslaught upon the Jliberty |judicial. ~Since the general rule must|iion will be held in about two weeks. et other strike the object of creating a strong revo- |fall. ‘| Postmaster-General Burleson ap- | Premier Holman. e e '‘d°] Four women applied for work as g e > 1 lutionary army. % The six Nundred men will be_added |peared before the committes today in |{OUSAL to a finish, he added, in order Srouid be Sverse. of he-epirie of tny | conductors on sireet cars of tho Or- e o eroer ot Sow York, urgsd | Billeousy D s e e It is authoritatively stated that the |to the 102nd Infantry at New Haven, behalf of the special advertising in- |that “democracy shall be free to take | OIS he Supyerse Bf the spirit of the iange County Traction Co. which ope- |0 oo TR &7 Gmena the' bill so |cific coast, indicated a more favora government considers the procimation | Conn; the 102nd Artlllery at Boxfora; |orease plan and Secretary Meadoo's | UP its gigantic task with a tree hand | 9% 800 LIQRINS OF 100 F ), '0e |rates surface lines’ from Newbursh, N. | 12, i aministration would be placed | outiook on the situation which s of a repubiic as merely a declaratory | the 103rd Machine Gun. Battailon st |Influence was thrown for the McKeflar | and undiemayed by the frightful spec- | HoR that {s belng executed to make ex- | v, s i panston ofioo, which ho pro. | terfering. with one e e i posed bo transferred to the treasury |ernment's ship constru shipp ect and does not propose to form a |Framingham and the depot brigade |Plan and generally against drastic rate ceive particular cases pending here o 5 3 ™| Commander James H. Netherington, | 8070, 0 ¢ ™in"order to effect a large | Chairman Hurley of YEDuZIllctan taf]minl;tlm}lon ‘betore the|at zwzengveld' HConnectlcllt men were incx;mea. Adn Ancreisge sot a quarter of appeal.” U. 8. N. jred, fo ars constitutent assembly is convened. sent to New Haven. cent a_pound until 1918 and one cent | SWEDES IN MEXICO = J.-8. N., retired, for many ye: i ™ as- [board expects to leave for San F The commission of inquiry eitting at| Greater Boston men went to Box- |thereafter, with a zone system of COMPLAINED OF CRONHOLM | SPEAKERS AT CONVENTION governor of the United States Naval O o e it Wil : Home in Philadelphia, —died at the ™, ", enament permitting disabled [mon, a department of labor conciliatc Pskoff has ascertained that General [ford. Thosé' from New Hampshire, |special increases on advertising por- Xiembovsky did_not participate ac- | Maine, Vermont, Rhode Island. .and |tions of publications were. said to be s = 7 tively in the Korniloff revolt. The |Parts of Massachusetts went to Fram- |features of the compromise being | That is the Reason Why the Swedish commission therefors declares that he | Ingham and Westfleld. Announcernent | drafted. Foreign Office Recalled Hi OF BUSINESS MEN |home. soldiers to remain under the care of [ Before departing he will con: ers, pres i ; o the surgeon-general of the United |er with Samuel Gom 5 Urge Entire Reorganization of Gov-| George Nef, of the 165¢h TUBited|i)ieq” during rehabilitation was ure- | the American Federation of ol i e ed by Dr. Charles W. Richardson, of |and Chairman of the defense cou is pot liable to arrest. The evidence |of the exact numbers.from each stafe | Other agreements reported were on ernment’s Purchasing Syst in the case has been forwarded to|assigned to the various camps was |the passenger transportation and au- | _Stockholm, Sept. 18.—The recall of g System. e, St e orains.‘as- bl | od. byt D ¢ na Ehairman of (ho deicnst cou ¥remier Kerensky. :vr!thhgl{d. Drafted men from northern |tomobile tax provisions. In lieu of the | Folke Cronholm from Mexico, accord- Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 18.—En- [company was drawn up at “attention” _}‘;‘eflsec B which mnakies optiotiall| for SiT. 3 New York were not affected by the [house tax of ten per cent. and the sen- hing to information reaching The As-|tire reorganization of the govern. |in the fleld drill. th okt o Tnsapance B oriet i g | - Beertary Wilson hus ordered oyce, assistant commissioner of A CONVICTED transfer. Bl BURGLAR er. ate rate Of fve per Contr ootimated to [sociated Press, was not due to political |ment's puichasing ayetem was urged| o~ 0w, |was vigorously assailed by George sl T 3 ELE, Vield about $57,000000 as compared | reasons, but was bécause of charges |by speakers today before the o : ; ¥ ation at San Francisco, to B BN BT NCREASING COBT with $75,000,000 ' under the original | brought by Swedes in Mexico in con- | vention of Amorican businces’ meen. |See, chairman of the House Naval Af-|Ide president of the Home Life Tn-|misration at San Trancisco 1o Eilisd Witioh Mall Bean Sinteriosd house plan and $37,500,000 under the | néction with certain business activi- | The war industries board, recently |fairs Committee, introduced a resolu- (Surance ComPRny OF Feew FOrl W0 S Giov s’ nas joined in the move OF WAR TO FRANCE |senate revision. For the senate federal | ties of Cronholm and his assoclation | created, has failed to meet tho situa. |tion to increase ‘the sailors’ clothing |gaserted thaf & opened, the Go0r (00| G0N 000 Mr "Cohterrea during license tax on automobile owners of | with individuals of doubtful charac- |tion, It was declared, by. the lack wof |allowance to $100 a vaer. e ontinia | das with: Dir.| Husiey, concazal to Three Months in Jail. . and was class leglslation. effect of wage increases on nav Senator Lane, when dying, asked | Some minor changes were made in | tracts. This Year It H Amounted to 2,060,- | about one per cent. of original list|ter in Mexico. The Swedish foreign |complete authority under the law. Waterbury, Conn., Sept. 18. — The rnm prices of pleasure cars, the copferees | office Tecalled him to make an expla- | Formation of & 2 guses of Jolin Wuilt Harry Stautter, 000,000 Francs Monthly. ere wxifl ity weruisid (o i nation, after receiving a letter con. |partment, similar T the Britien min- |that many of his accounts be burned|the bill at the suggestion of Judge e A sky a M. - = 2 plan for taxing manufacturers’ sales |taining these charges from prominent |istry of munitions, was because he did not want his adminis- the 2 " fon, charced with manslaughter fol. |,,Bacle, Sent. 18-—A bill appropriating |7t ghout three per cent. and exempting | Swedes in Mexico. - Cronholm explain- | Wadaill Catohings’ of New: ¥her acy |trator harassing scores of people to |Jullan Mack, who drew the measure. |CUBA'S $30,000,000 kc an Labor’s interest in the passage at WAR BOND motor trucks. ed his activities and then was retired |others. Mr. Catchings proposal was |Whom he had loaned money. B from the service. contained in his report as chai E the present session of the bill was _ WAR fnal eide of the superior court opened | Shamber of deputies today by Louis L. o raatn as chairman, submitted to President Wilson today _ S Edward Wilson, who had been sen- | carries 1,200.000,000 francs more OF HUSBAND AND WIFE | Swedish lesation In Mexico City, wa [by the Chamber of Commerce of the on enlarging the facilities to help con- | Morrison of the American Federation ed fop Half of t& tencgd to three months in jail for s appropriated for the third == proposed to the German foreign office | United States. It carried the recom. |Serve perishable food and on rgeula- |Of Labed. Mr. .Gompers said later the| . = . = Pl statitory hurslary, had been released e 01T Moresithan ol Albans, Vt—Discovery Madelas a candidate for a German order by | mendation that the government be |tions for warchouse licensing. DR PR L O e Dbt B O PR L e g ) B on prohation through a mistake of ase e war depart- by a Boarde: German Minister Von Eckhardt at|gsmiven funl 1 [Hiat S:heSneasureialion R s Pt i court offcials, Conrt sheriffs were still | €nt, While the navy requires 167,000,- Sexico City. Cromholm, Von Eck- | onty o sales 15 the sovermment hor| Willie J. Moore, former head of tho [ROW. el Eunting himtonight. 009 francs additional. . St. Albans, Vt, Sept. 18— hardt sald, had been of gfeat service [on materials sol United States Weather Bureau, will Giovanni Guerrera, charged with as- Th’;n:'?,fi;’. of 2ppropriations for | Grant L. Prentiss was found by a|to him in Mexico, well. WS To TR Bablic s | DR e Ho will rus for #iate | ALMOST INSTANTLY KILLED Franjbond fssns halhnesn o sault with a dangerous weapon, for- | 2Ty ar 18 shown by the | boarder tonight unconscious at her The subject of war prices and the |Senator from Montgomery county, Md., BY AN AUTOMOBILE |rémaining $15.000,000 will be dispe where he conducts a peach orchard. alhi¥ R Akl ’ feited his bond of 3$500. Fifty-two |jonedules attached to the bill, as fol- [supper table from a bullet wound in |CHICAGO BAKER MELD duty of industry in meeting the gov- Samuel C. Stevens, 73, of Middletown | Authorization for this loan was « lows: cases were disposed of. her head while her husband was in a rnme ‘war needs oc Toic e ent’s n cupied the en- —1,173,000,000 francs monthly. | similar condition in his bedroom on FOR MAKING THREAT |tire day. Secretaries Baker and Lane, |, Kent lsland, the Chesapeake Bay Walked in Front of Car. tended by the Cuban congress to Pres- ident Menocal some time pe ;im’xzcm g::::?»“fl”:‘?u‘ Mo }gi‘?‘:}g“%svggg francs monthly. |the floor above. Both died a short = - who spoke during: the day, touched or | Arcadia, will not be taken for an ar- Judge Edwin B. Gager of New Haven| 1317 5500 000 009 oncs Zonthly. | time later. That He Would Poison the Enflre | these topics and declared ihat the war |tillery proving ground. The senate > Sam- | decision of the United Stat presided. T ot mmu Ic$ monthly. Fred W. Watson, the boarder, sald u d ‘States Army. could not be won without the fullest | Committee on Military Affairs voted | Middletown, Conn. Sept. 18.—Sam- Beciyton £ ube UnlaS - — s Sppropriations since the |that when he arrived at the house for co-operation by business. unanimously against Secretary Baker's |Uel C. Stevens, 73 years old, was hit $ LRt R e GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER | civil administration, to the end of 1917, | comnd, 15 said sl womn Sut o820 G hd T s [CERTRD w.'mx SInnox Secertary McAdoo told a delegation | Hartford, here toRight. - Stevens, wio | state department of Cubi. « Usitsd States Cavalirgar Comvicted|" | o000 francs. S e e e AT MAXIM ARMS PLANT |or southern consressmen there was no | 1veq In Sromusly, Mos raling e [sures. ¢ is said. the early coi 4 prean wounded. er * notifying Sherift 3 ward his home on tbe outskirts of this | sures, 2 o early cc ) of Murdering His Sweethesrt. | BURDEN OF PRE Goorge C. Holmes, hio called a Dhysi- |the entive United States sy, """ | An ‘Agent of the Federal Department | nitnavawai of $110,000,000 "of Britisn |LOWn tonight when Allen came alons mation of President Alcnoca o a R clan. VAL ‘According to witnesses Reiger, dur- of Labor Visits Derby. P o e e oa foon | in his machine. The lights cn the au- |reaching plans for Cuba’s activ Ibans, Vt, Sept. 18—Robert KERENSKY LIGHTENED |, AD open razor lay beside Prentlss’|ing’an argument on conscription, said 3 lands. - [oaicu ] svelbelieyediitol navel ioon | HANCERpAh the SDnt todi Siatanida it Warm, of Pottstown, Pa., the United body but there was no indication that|if her were drafted he would serve as | Derby, Conn., Sept. 18.—Howland \A. fused Stevens, who ran directly into|war. States cavalryman, who has been on|By the Submission of General Kale. |it had been used. A revolver with|a baker and put polson in ail the pMahaney, an sgent of the federal do- e smotor car, 1 Fils batl ‘was broken partment of labor, today conferred |Boston architect, died at his summer lowing fatalgaccidents, were continued [1%150,000.000 francs for the fourth until the ndkt term, when the crim-|3uarter of 1917 was introduced in the John Goddard Sterns,” a prominent r 3 trial here charged with the murder of i iwo shells exploded was under th and other injuries were sustained. FINANCING OF THE the C. r the |bread he made. . = S8 swestheerl, J;n;:mhi;:én,;é.‘.fi;m& = % the Cossack Leader. bed in his room. e With representatives of the strikers gt |home at Duxbury, Mass. He was a chfi?"(}fnfle"a‘l“‘fr;‘* RN SECOND LIBERTY L mansiaughter by @ jury in the county | sion of Gessrel Biert - The submis- | FEDERAL EMPLOYES ARE court tonight. Counsel for the de-|loader, has remecesoines, the Cossack fense announced that the case would [gecond march on Botriere nage,of & DELIVERY OF LIBERTY the Maxim Arms Plant here. He h: Harvard graduate and a member of A - o) previously been in conference with |the Fellow of the American Institute of | 20d Was on his way to c#mp when the [ pe Ajded by New York Banke T S BEGINS SEPT. 26| Pepresentatives of the compans. Avi | et ieno accident _occurred. No arrest . was A — 5 VENTION i = — Banke | the conference it was stated that no i —— Sl NYEhea' SupRiyiol, Monsy. earried to the supreme court on 2 o e Twelve Federal Reserve Banks|agreement to resume work had. h Z echank e Ee il ey 3 s = and his associates in th 5 it uion shop p! e officials of |[New York for supplying soldiers in| Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 18.—All of- [ ma r - oA Dos Nots Baiooiis Bibens. nis iates in the committes ot = Washington, Sept. 13.—Delivery of]the corporation Were just as deter- |uniform with drink. Rudolph Hirsch, | ficers and diréctors of the Minneapoiis, | mrice Lob the free supply of mon Fashineton, Sept. 18 —Appolntment o i roral e pace ot ats |day, of the foRotal mples homecond | Liberty bonds to subscribers, Secre- |mined to have the plant run on an|a laborer, was sentenced to 10 days o | St. Paul and Sault Ste Marle railvoad |jromatiy el el that ool i wo bishops of the Roman Catholic| workmen's and nvention | tary oo announced tonight, will | open shop basis. imilar ch: Soo Li -el £ e e (i M G fi soldiers’ delegatos 1o |to o o0 & Petlonal foncest L a similar charge. (Soo Line) were re-elected at the an- |the financing of the coming Iiber reh wert announced at rgani le: employes’ | begin September 26. . The twelve fed- It was said that Mr. Mahan had — 1 1; h T Vi 2 re b; Sspostolls Delcgation here Fhoy ch|SIow Jess abiection to a coalition cab- union was spent selecting tomporacy | eral ressrve. banks will aistribute the | Eone %o Washington $o ToPOrT oa 1he| With a band of 500 men, Francis- | hos tais® bne et The reciors |loan was made here today by o com Bishop of Denver, Rt. Rev. J. Henry | rettrn from fiold headeum cos boR ;1 | officers and various committees. H. M.|issue. Considering the probable re- | condition of affairs hére and that he|co Villa invaded some hamléts on the |meeting was changed from the third |mittee was appeinted. mo the e FTimen, 8¢ precent bishop of Lincoln | ter bart of the wesk: quarters the lat | McLaren, president of the “vx\;mo»‘ ngton | tention by many subscribers of interim | would likely be backc here again soon. |Chihuahus-Duranso line. Instead of | Thursday in September 1o the third|Ieserve Lunis to. co opiiate with o ol 3 of s A Rev. | anno 3 od, s es- | to a s upon , which |raiding the town he threwgopen the | Tuesday in May to corres 7 e to inve: 1_”!, 3 Cantweh ‘5 Baa pEole fty, c® the constitution of the min- |unanimously elected president’of thelfimate that the work of distribution | agresment to end the striks could be | doors and gave out foodetults and rocont changes In the fscal vear of thellie mappoal commiite (o tnve S — > will require several weeks. reached. clothinz to the peoble. company. 3 a stringency during the loan campai=r

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