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i e pYwich Bulletin VOL. LIX.—NO. 354 POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONN., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1917 12 PAGES—84 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS : Buy a Liberty Bond and Back Up the Boys at the Front, Who Are Fighting for Your Honor, Your Home and Your Country IMPORTANT GAlNS Mo oy s Today (TownsinKentucky | Cordensed Telegrams |8y ngryising Food SRS Sam s on Liberty Loan| are Without Coal| oy maes oo - - Mm old.yesterday. : aviation school on October 15, accord- - ;r.gdco news received here to%a);. H‘l‘:. T aenes g ord was a Georgetown niversity W student. e Mt A FIELD FORCE OF 2,000,000 IS AT | RELIEF URGED BY REPRESENTA- The Chicago Board of Trade will TRATOR OF ILLINOIS close at noon on Liberty. Day. e | Pricesin Chicago SHOULD BE BEYOND THE WORK TIVE CANTRILL the Liberty Loan. $3,000,000,000 MARK TODAY Switzerland now shelters more than 12,000 Germ’n deserters. H. A. WHEELER, FOOD ADMINIS. General Petain Struck an Unexpected Blow Northwest Uil Rezerte =f - Lz, ond MPADOO GIVES KEYNOTE RELIEF IS PROMISED sl 20 oo™ |[FLOUR, SUGAR, SPUDS A . 1 , Oct. 28. t o e an a x of SOISSOHS, Tuesday Mormng l.{"ita‘;:f".’é‘:,m"dg"{c.. :fi';::y:»:at Not More Than Half the $5,000,000,000 | Mr. Cantrill’s Telegram Says Snow Is S : A A Prices as They Change Will be Pub- S ¥ T R T mbaceintione of 41| Hoped for Has Been Subscribed— | Falling in Georgetown and There is | National Stareh Co. ' resumed opera.| lished Daily So Consumers May . = 501,392,150 had been officially report-| Prominent Speakers to Help Out. Not a Lump of Coal in the Place. [ !oPS: ; Know What is a Fair Profit. PENETRATED GERMAN L'NE FflR 2 l 5 MII.ES scriptions upon which the first pay- - Many striking coal mingrs In Illinois, — 7 ment of two per cent. has been de- Misosuri and Indiana returned to e . posited in banks reporting to the re Washington, Oct. 23.—Tomorrow, ‘Washington, Oct. 23.—Kentucky's| Work. Chicago, Oct. 23.—Government eu- erve bank: Liberty Day, by proclamation of Pres- | blu ; £ . isl f food pri to_ef. El nks, Yy P! lue grass region, on the edge of one S A e fatedhas: Milc g:crlv l-noré;‘:‘ugg lgvdrl;el-wv;::t l‘t’n.eofl:fl = 3 g [ Unofficial figures indicate that an h}en‘;a yvumn.mma nl:.l::n ut-;: the, tes; of the richest coal flelds in the coun-| Seven Americans are listed as Wil N 3 o estimate of $2,500,000,000 for all sales | o ermining whether second | try, virtually is without coal, wou n of the dally prices which Harry A The Attack Was Made Over a Front of About Six Miles, With | S3o00s & %s ‘Icon-erv‘t!vle;‘ Tt K3 Liberty loan of 1817 shall roll up an|sentative Cantrill of Kentucky %y casualty list. Wheeler, food adminlstrator of Iilinols, < x impossible to - give unoffic esti- | overwheiming success. told the fuel administration. ging considers fair were announced formal- Greatest Gain Made in the Center—French Aviators | mates from all reserve districts. Many | It faces the greatest day of the cam- | immediate relfef, he argued that if | Failure of the Allies to answer ||y Prices as they change will be - fi‘e‘ - m A of them are experiencing difficulty in msora o‘:;'#o no; mm'c'.bm half of the|recessary the Kentucky mines, where P:g% eBe:tedtlhc; lvgircc‘:n note is causing | puplished daily, and from time to time oa2 2 e obtaining returns on account of , ), ,000 hoped r actually sub-|there were recent striks, should be W o 2 as the price committee can agree on : . Flew Over German Positions at an Altitude of 150 Feet, | 2t0ima® othors over the country ais- |scribed, according to careful estimat- | cperated at the point of the bayonet. ¥ prices other staple articles will be J > g . : tricts are not reporting. Some sim-|es compiled by. treasury officials to-| Mr. Cantrill presented a telegram| The 8ing Sing Prison farm at Wing- | 3dded to the list. The prices the re- 3 ly do not '0 and one-| ion dol- s home wn orgetown, ol tailer shou ay the whoulesaler alsa @ Using Their Machine Guns—German Navy Lost Two|riy report. night. ~ Two and one-half billion dol- | from his home town of Georget gale conducted by ‘trusties” yielded | tailer should pay the whoulesal = > Briefly stated, then, the situation to- |lars, they estimate, must be obtained|which said that snow was falling and | 9.000 bushels of potatoes. will be published, 8o that the consumer BT may know what the committee con- S . night is that the $3,000,000,000 mini-|in subscriptions in the four days that|there was not a lump of coal in the Ml\lmt, One Cflllle.l', Twelve Torpedo Boab, One mum quota set for the loan at the out- | remain. place. Similar conditions prevail | Thousands of the German troops|gigers a fair profit for the retailer. The . set of the campaign, on October 1, will 2,000,000 Million Workers. throughout his district, he said. found dead on the Flanders front are | prices given out today include flour, Transport and Numerous Mine S in Recent En- | 7> passed tomorrow if Liberty Day| . Fuel administration officials prom- | Youths of the class of 1915, 'weepers e fleld force of 2,000,000 workers|iseq relief as quickly as possible. sugar and potatoes. =ty s subscriptions come up to gBnservative | L gPe, feld force of 2,00 3 Half of th ger train service The Prices Fixe 1:‘ % 3 CETRCE e speakers, ‘including membera of _the in' Switserland has been dlscontinued | The prices fixed today as fair aver- 5 gagement With Russian Fleet. ! o They may carry the tofal bevond | SBRICT RUUNE MOmPORS O o e | RAILROADS SHOW DECREASE IN | n Swizeriand has becn, oo ages are about what are being asked P . & |3 ooo%gono&o 1s ;“md‘ m.:t however. | 2@ J. Bryan, Speaker Clark and other NOT REVENUES FOR AUGUST R by representative grocers in Chicago. [ = —_— s | o Sm—— el 3 ;| nationaally kpown orators. Twelve thousand men are neded by [ The price fixed for flour in_ quarter To attain it by the close of the sale | "gionaa! L F “be Used g 2 3 ry McAdoo, teiegraphing from | Figures Will be Used to Support|the United States Emergency Fleet | barrel sacks is from $2.95 to $3.18, for 'WHille the alifed troops were busily [been wrought by the guns. In addi-|Saturday will be a feat worthy of the | o yvine sounded the km‘;o“‘“ e i for o Wite Inoron Corporation in Newark, N. J. which retailers fecently have been ngaged in consolidating positions won | tion to the prisoners taken, the Ger- |best mettle. Bay in & & aliexiy Bay stoteaiat i s A asking $3.15. On eighth barrel sacks onday in Flanders, the French forces | mans also suffered heavy casualties.| Official totals of the varlous districts | (0%, "R % {oRTEY Washington, Oct. 23.—August rail-| Nathan D. Allen, serving a life term | the price was fixed at $1.49 to $1.60, as f General Petain struck a mighty an: In Flanders both the British and |follow: way net revenues which wil be used|in the Massachusetts State Prison, |againet $1.59 asked by the retailer. nexpected blow against the German | French troops are holding all the gains| New York, $609,630,000. Secretary McAdoo’s Statement. by the railroads to support their | bought a $1,000 Liberty Bond. Five-pound sacks werc listed by the {lime, northeast of "Solssons Tuesday|made in Mondays drive momheist of| Eoston. 3184300000, “This is Liberty Day in the Unit-|claims for a rate increase, were less, =4 | fdod administrator at 36 to 37 cents, {morning and made some of the most | Ypres, except at one place on the| Cleveland, $183750.000. ed States, made so by proclamation of |by approximately $5,000,000, than in| A. V. N. Powelson, former district|and retailers were quoting it at 3§ |important gains of terrain since they |southern fringe of the Houtholst for-| Minneapoiis, $63,250.000. the president and governors of the|August, 1916. This reduction in in-|attorney of Middletown, N. Y. dled | cents. ‘threw back the army of the German (est. where the Germans fn a furious| Richmond, $63180.650. forty-eight states of the American|come was shown in the face of an in- | there of heart failure, aged 75. Potatoes jumped In price over night Jerown prince which ' was besieging [ counter-attack forced a slight retire- [ Chicago. $185.303000. . Bk T Wil that 1t wero Libartylecoase of aporininsately-$96.000,000 B and were quoted by the food adminis- - : b ment by the British. St. Lovis, $45,522.000. Day for all the peoples of the world. |gross. revenues. The figures cover all| Nearly 200000,000 pounds of fish are | tration at 43 to 46 cents a peck, while \ e stroke was mad: over a front| The latest advices concerning the| San Francisco, $67.234,000. B it Mt o cmilioniin. iy’ Tordule © tho couitiy. tied up at Newfoundland by lack of [the grocers were selling them at 40 to ©f about six miles, from the east of | naval activity ir.the Gulf of Riga be-| Philadelphia, $44,079,00 the German kaiser. Let us make it| Bastern roads the compilation made |ships to carry them to markets . 43 cents. {Vauxailion to Pargny-Filain. Under|tween the Germans and thé Russians| Kansas City. $26,151,000. the beginning of the end of military|public today by the Imterstate Com- et Bugar 7 3-4 to 8 1-2 Cents. Tain and generally unfavorable weath- | show that although the.Russians lost| Dallas, $16,130,600. dépotisgs and Inhumen warfa: merce Commission shows, fell approx-| Dr. Harry A. Garfield, fuel adminis- i er c&)ndlxllmlns uph !“A;?nch i;:iuadhed for- | the battleship Slava and a large tor-| Atlanta, $12,962,100. - Imately 38,600,000 below net income | trator, will visit the Pennsylvania coal | , 1Suzsar 'prlcen Yers ‘:,’l(fdaux.l 3-4 te ‘ward all alony e - H »" i = - 'nts a pound, wl leale: we! TR ne, aided by au- |pedo boai destroyer, the Germans Muset Feel the Prick of Bayonets. of a year ago; western roads had a |district to view conditions there. ukm;’a e S acious aviators who flew over the|were the heaviest losers. Two of their|| |\mrpry | OAN CAMPAIGN “A few days ago one of the kaiser's|decrease of approximately $2,300,000 f o o SiCTuts ot o eelIE, fUnS o ter, Twalve tor- undersea assassins stroyed the oads a decrease of | Many women and children are re- N Y feet, utseiéngth;h(e}lg m?:fl;::: g:gonl:;::a.! :ne:p::n{wp:rr; ’i?& l:)m:ler; ~ 1S DISAPPOINTING | American transport Ad:""e:: killing :Egnt 'fi%%hffi i ported to have been shot down by|HOUSE OF COMMONS g g many of Z 1 S soldiers in food riots in Austria. %0 @ depth of two and a | action by the Russian flcet. While the | New England is Nearly $300,000,000 | Many, ofot ascres Sallant sons, Th® | ooro%s, ovenues for all roads ihe e N REDMOND'S IMOTION exact fate of these vessels has not been Behind Maximum Allotment. must be made to feel the prick ef|as compared with $326,950,719 a year ling vessel arrived at an At-|p .. cating the Government's lrish “important positions fell | ascertained by the Petrograd govern- s s T Bt v renn ase of approximately 13 |lantic port with a $1,000,000 cargo of oue o the hands of General | ment, it is announced that at least six| Boston, Oct. 23 Now England was |ber the Antilics. Let us mever stop | por cont. Operating expenses, how. | wool from a Seuth African port. Policy as It Endangered Success of thaaars men And in addition mors | of F:lhelh(}erxémn destroyers were sUnk.|running neafly $300,000,000 behind its |nor falter until this infamous apogtle |ever, rose from $203,307,968 to $246,- e Irish Convention. amount of war material and o heeee | fore e e A temDts 1% Apd [ maximum allotment of Liberty bonds, |of brutalized war, the kaiser, is brouht | 128,383, an Increase of more than 30| Roger Howell, of Holidays, Pa., a ' | amount of war material and 25 heavy|forees on the Esthonia coast to the lon the face of subscriptions tabulated |to Justice. per cent, leaving net revenues of | lieutenant in the British Royal Flying | London, Oct. 23.—The house of com. The S ! : porth of Werder have been repulsed|today. While 253 banks failed to re- $118,926,915 about $4,700,000 less than | Corps, was killed in an aerial duel. |mons tonight by a majority of 133 ra. it greatest depth of the drive was | by Russian detachments. port, the cpmpaign leaders said the| Does Not Spare German-Americans. |o viar ago. jected John Redmond's motion deud’- vmagz gf%fi;\?f the ling, wth"fi n;e On the other ‘!ronta no important |situation was disappointing and that| “To the families of the soldiers and| Operating income, representing net Demanding a 10 per cent. wage in-|cating the government's Irish pokicy as Ter oo ViEnon was Captured af_ | neagements are in progress excopt in|at tho present rate of approximately |sailors who were killed on the Antil-|revenues after the deduction of taxes | crease, 350 employes of the Plymouth |calculated to endanger the sygcess of e ei:s ‘K el "ressn e s Tx ture of bombardments. On the | $20,000,000 a day, this district wouid |les this war was ‘made personal. |and uncollectable items, for last Au- | Mill, Lawrence, Mass., went on strike. | the Irish convention. BEithe Dest B o Ton ook, Sewe [ Apiisn front f]l; the Austro-Italian the- | berely attain its minimum allotment[* * * Todaay let every . American |gust totalled $101,984,98 —-— The debate was a strong one, due te [ Bibien o e P e b the artillery activity again has|by_the.end of the week, realize that this is a ! 15.. These .Agures.show | Practically all the striking freight|the revelation by Premie: oyd F; prince were engaged in{become intense. An Austriin attack| Phere were unmistakable signs’ to-{bétween every American an that the railroads of the country, at|handlers of the Boston & Maine Rail- | George and Henry Edward Dulke, chief ideavoring to hold back the on-|with infantry in the Cadore region night, however, that the tide wasm be. i ¥, :ght, - - |man kaiser. = The kaiser has brought{this rate, which is regarded as a fair | road in Bast Boston returned to work. |secretary for Ireland, of a further Ger. h“slm‘»‘:ru!t;telreifltfl;tsiawm u;mvx:g- ;uu relgul-ed by the Italians with | ginning to turn. of cities | it to every American home, whether it [average for the year, will have an ag- man plan to land arms in Ireland. It intnch er the enthusiasm . of e | eavy losses. and towns already well beyond their |be the home of a German-American|gregate net income of approximately | All shoe factories in France will be|a150 derived unexpected interest frem rl-;rl:ce it n posi tlgx!s ‘which vivould The British merchant cruiser Orama, | minimum allotment and some already |citizen or any other American citizen. |$1,200,000,000 in 1917. taken over by the Government on|light thrown on the progress of the o b M e B i 2 i tons, husgietz-hmnk over the maximum were coming in|The kaiser does not spare German- | - Gross revenues of eastern roads in- | Nov. 15 to make the new national|lIrish convention. Mr. Duke and Her- s o ater AR e ‘ynae 5‘;. mn'l;e:e, a kz} - de- | with greater frequency. Americans; he fights all Americans and [ creased about $19,000,000, while ex- |shoe. bert H. Asquith both expressed most R B8 e LS Sk S 51'; yer has 8 n sgr‘A‘ n a wois!om There was an impressive sight on |all Americans must fight him. penses increased about $22,000,000. Op- e hopeful views concerning the succelis +°F »aa been hug ’g tone o‘ Steel ere was no loss’of life on the Orama | Boston. Commen today, where a great Amert Publ Trial erating income of eastern roads last| The Du Pont Powder Company an-|of the convention, Mr. Asquith saying Into ihe German line in front of them | but only two officers and 21 men are | (hrong stood listening to Liberty loan astgise: Ml =Y e August was $44,140,593. nounced that it had subscribed for|pe “pelfeved that only a few months - e atation for the drive. and when | reported to have been saved from the | addresses, when a life preserver from ( “Today the American public is on|”'Gperating income of southern roads | $50.000 000 of the Second Liberty Loan |would intervene before an agreed pol- it was started sad . started sad havoc already had ) destroyer. the Lusifania was suddenly held up ;::1 mThe g ':; the world are upon | wag $13,110,281, or approximately the [bonds. icy would be submitted to parlament = 3 v e T el S e b e DT S e gt O H. A. Gurlisld, Tuel adminteteat- | SODOSBING Fralond. -Joha WeSnowd, & E < e uncovered an 2| West. f - . H. A g Z r e o tion, - ‘.‘,SECURE REDUCTION CHANGE IN TRACKAGE soldiers and sailors stood at salute.|the eves of the military autocracy of com:: 2?“:4’2’,222,1';1#;': coorg;::'e;gwl;‘h or, announced that coal miners have m? :o %n.y nfi.“:"m"“m? moaea:::: OF CONNECTICUT QUOTA SYSTEM HARTFORD DIVISION }S::ter Ehzeg;gg. ‘:fl"fi;ofiea]‘?fi;fi' g-_‘o;r;nr%n;'ea:m-‘ outward contempt but|$48 926,675 in August, 1916. resumed work in Indiana, Ohio and | md helpful attitude of the Ulster The Object of Trip to Washington by | Larger Type of Locomotive Calls For iAm?n(z the city totals announced-at sm(;:r bfl“rtslt:"gerfi‘?g;c;gley !;; s;;:: TREACHERY IN RANKS Ilinois. members of the'conference, Serbians are arving and Governor and Homer S. Cummings. Rails Further Apart. : 509, ond Liberty loan. If we fail. it will OF GERMAN ARMY.| thousands are dying from insufficient | GERMANY EXULTANT : s New Britain $1,527,000; New Haven|be a victory for the kaiser. There i o : feeding, the American Red Cross re- Braperford: Conn. Oet 23—Governor| Meriden, Conn, Oct. 23.—A radical [$5.414,000; New London $715,000; Now: | no reason why we should fafl, because | Privates Leave Officers’to Thair Fate | ported. OFERCNEW WARLLOAN e raes of b sad Hower 'S |shaugo! in tHe trackage system of the|wich $1,032,000; Waterbury $2,151,000. | we are the richest people in the world. in the Face of Fire. Sy R 11ea |18 Sending Out Announcements'to All FEELE o v . 3 n_this division is oo —— est Virginia oil producers calle Dasninzion. phere they will take up|contemplated in the near future based | ol e OF COPPER Si ARl Wuet Bull Feoosthue. Washington, Oct. 23—Inieresting [ on Fuel Administrator Garfield to find Neutral Countries, Tote Sto Gt of war drafts as they re-|on the request of the division super- © accomplish this great task all|siatements about Germany's unsettled | out if he intends to regulate the oil[ oo oo o0 ~ZF—n o Comnecticut. T: is expected | visor that the rgad be permitted to MINERS SETTLES | = S tupsther: In de-|,olitical situation and treachery in the | industry. o s e ltant oY the success of its seventh war loan, of three and a third billion dollars, the German government through its that they will contend that the first|move its southbound tragks t mocracy no one class should be per-. — arafe = i s ten in- —_— ranks of the army. made by an East : e of the aiared on an inflated esti- | ches west across East Main street | in the Globe-Miami District of Ari- |Mitted to save or to cwn the nation.|prugsian prisoner, have been received | Premier David Lloyd George ad- €'s population and urge | When the matter was brought before If each does his part, if evervone i5|pere in official despatches.. According|dressed a meeting in London that dished more than its quota on the first | Jarger tvpe of locomotive engine and inyestigating |ernment and win this mighty war|cupremacy of fhe junkers by spring,| The Canton Steel Co. of Cincinnati, | . This proof of economic and finan. all, based on an equitable estimate [Tt will be necessary to shift its track | corriseion reported today a settle- |quickly and save thousands of precious ! 2nQ tne milftary authorities are adopt- | was acquired by the Hydraulic Press- that succeedinz drafts be made on a | i, zona—5,000 to Return to Work. ; i les, 1 di; 2 re 4 3 animated by superlative love of coun- offlcial press agencles, s sending out Fnore moderate Lasis. It has been fr- | oeaommoin P AoLC works tonight the Sk i try and resolute purpnse, wo can fi- | Sutsa ot e se api | chemedgh ¢ D€V natlonal economy|announcements on the subject to the gued that the state has already fur-|Haven road had ordered a new and W"::n,sng;ggé‘fict≫ ——_ President | nance every requirement of the gov-|that it is expected to endanger .the few remalining neutral countries. in war history,” the statements T population. although wear et ger |t ment of the strike of more than 5,000 St an - say, ent officials hold that About 600 more | Lririy LPart e mmeire | copPer miners in the Globe-Miami ais- s e 5. . e of B e e e ooy o, At & price fsuid. 0 be| g ¢hei hest ' answer which:the ceec- en are needed to complete the allot- | 5152000, Railroad station plattorm | Tict;of, Arizona on a basis which |solaters, our sailors and our suns that | bepvete lote thels oficors to thois Tate s ¢ . man people can give to Wilson's note ent called for. Dosing Taber Atapites cieemmens, O™ |are going to win the victory, vindi-|ir the face of fire, and of how officars | Emperor William sent a telegram of [ 214 to the hope expressed by its ad- will have to be cut, standpipe founda- | posin e aleanice o 3 tions moved, city pavements torn up | by - previding . for Cromiention of | CAte America's rights at home and up- | hated by their troops fell on batile- | congratulation on the seventh war loan R R o TO FACILITATE THE and other changes made to give the|work = immediately, the comsission | ongle PIEN seas, and make the world | fields with bullets in their backs. to German Finance Minister Count MOVEMENT OF COAL |Z2llrcs ! a wider path for its mammoth | paved the way for arbitrating other [ S27® for democracy. e NN e R onaeEn = RICE F. CARR LOCATED Bunker Coal to be Placed in T i o1 Ly O | tens ioues mine wtken) i e Picked men. from every otiersr | MU O L COOE LoD i nl o be Placed in Tran- ve caused loss of many million| “The least service of patriotism tha 2 2 4 . St Btnars in Ml wood block pavement was granted. | pounds of war metal in the Jast four |any man or woman whe stays at home PEACE AND EXPECT IT.| training camp in the United States are — . ity - S months, and resulted in deportations [can perform §s to lend their monev|Story of Italian Who Escaped from |NOW 8roubed in a special tralning |g,jigbury School Teacher Who Disap- Washington, Oct. 28.—To faeflitate |STEAMER ROMAN ASHORE of strikers and other disorders. to his or her own government on im-| |nternment Camp in Germany. campiin France, peared Oct. 7. the movement of coal through Hampe The commission, headed by Secre- | pregnable security at four per cent. in- z frdies ton Roads for government end New N LAKE MICHIGAN |tary Wilson, is expected to press for | terest. Washinston, Oct. 23.—An Italian N g TS oad Of| sanisbury, Conn., Oct. 25.—Maurice #¥ngland accounts, officials of = the g S e settlement of many other industrial Soldier Risks All. workman interned in Germany since | tred to crank an automobile without | F. Carr, an instructor at the Sallsbury ‘hesapeakd and Ohio, Norfolk and controversies during its western tour,| <«They risk nothing, while the sol- |the beginning of the war has escaped #chool, who disappeared Oct. 7, 16 now Western and Virginia Railroads agreed to P Gf which the Arlzona agreement is | ajer risks all. : O e s Aty 1o i o conped | releasing the clutch. D e o A TS e T GO W] esakes WA e . “I have visited soms of the great|with a report that the German peodle | An order for 4,500 aeroplane motors | arrived on Oct. 11, it was learned here e unl erh_l coal to transient ik 7 - it ge = camps in the west where thousands of | want peace, and expect it to come in|wag received from the United States |tcday. Word from the New Hampshire rs in midstream. This will | Steam man, o Pittsburzsh CHARGED WITH VIOLATING splendid American young men are|November. Official despatches re-|Government by the Wright-Martin |town is to the effect that Mr. Carr make available increased pier space |Steamship company, is ashore at Fox training for the army. ceived here today tell the man’s story, 2 suffering from loss of memory but for coal cargo carriers. Point; ten miles north of Milwaukee. SELECTIVE SERVICE ACT| “Th . Aircraft Corporation. - i eeicen 4 E ey are setting an example whick | according to wkich the Germans have — that his condition is Improving. His :EF‘l!c[odrlel.: in various parts of New fl‘her!e '!‘ danger of ;he vessel pound- L — the civilian papulation would do well | pbandoned hope of victory at arms,| Reports compiléd by the war De- | brother expects to bring him back here ngland have been appealing to the|Ing to pieces, as a heavy sea is run- |“Dr.” M. Gordon and a Russian Wo-|to emulate. Our brave soMiers are|laborers are threatening to leave the | partment indicate that there are now | soon. fuel administration for increased coal | RIDg. c man Arrested at Seattl = : Sney . o not: only giving up their families, all | factories If the war continues another | 35 000,000 men under arms, of whom S v (D ISt Shel Winternsens [l TRe SO vAS onl Fouls Sl Souln their material interests and putting | winter, and the civil population Zen- | the Allies have 27,500,000, That an moie sappiy can be amive | bers of the crew are abrond. The ite| . Seattle, Wn., Oct. 23—“Dr.* M. Gor- | their lives in the balance, but they are|erally ‘s living under terrible condi- < ered una-: > aing orew s Pesmbroad. , The life | gon, and a Russian woman, Mrs. Les. | actually subscribing feom their meagre | tions. He sall 800 soldiers attending| A statement issued by the Anacon- 5 _ them off. | The vessel 18 wvalned ni|Bheim, are under arrest here today,|Pay to the honds of their own govern-|a circus at Essen were killed at one4a Copper Co. says that the com- o SR o < $300.000. charged with violating the selective|ment in a larger amount per capita |time by bombs of allied aviators. Pens's riines ‘are now!béins operated 108 CFFICLZF3 AND Vst service act by plotting to perform |than the civilian population. * * * _—————— 578 per cent: 'of capacity. LONE PRIVATE YO AID FEEDING OF throat operations upon registered men Failure Would Mean Disgrace. MAROONED SAILORS TAKEN ] 188 s ] S e . whk{h _would render them unfit for “The faflure of one Liberty Joan FROM MOPEHA ISLAND. American’ army officers inspected recent order of the food l'dml;'xll!rl INFANTS IN RUSSIA |service in the national army. Authori- |\ o,1q destroy tie government's oredit. —_————— the Zeppelin L-49 brought down by |30 (Wr'’ qivision reduncing to 60 CRDER RESTRICTING OUTPUT FLOUR MILLS RESCINDED Eastern Mills Now Have a Sufficient Supply of Grain. IN CAMP Privates John g Five Bands S S ik, ties say they suspect the plot is of _ d There by German| French aviators. American marines to Entartain Him. War Council of Red Cross to Send |German origin. e Dot [ Wets Abandone e ™ assisted In capturing the airship's |RST cent the output of four mile in Camp 'Doniphan, Fort Sill, Okla, | 2000000 Cans of Condensed Milk L.;{“’t‘:d“’g‘t’he;‘“‘f‘{fo‘"m‘ey"’Be:’;‘fl;g;;‘ world. The patriotic peopls of the crew. ey lieve the grain uhonag; in certain A dier general, a colonel, g 2 | forty-eight states of the unign must{ Honolulu, T. H., Oct. 15—¢By Mail). = eastern mills, was rescinded today. It Two members of the British Food| . "siateq that eastern mills now A ES Al d to perform an operation upon £ix majors and 100 captains are to- |. Petrograd, Monday, Oct. 22.—The | 28Tee make such a disaster impossible. —Forty-four sailors marooned on Mo- o g day commanding John Goings, late of | Red Cross 'mission, recently recom. |{he throat of Joseph Gottstein, &|™ < when tne sun sets on the evening|peha island in the South Pacific fol. | Commission arrived in New York to|} iy, 3" sumcient supply of sratn. the Third Kansas, the lone private of |Mended to the war council of the Red | Seattle registered man. They asked|or Liberty Day ten million Americans |lowing the capture and destruction of [ Sonfer with the sugar interests in an the depot brizade. Until men from |Cross in Washington that steps be|Gottstein for $3,000 for their services|ghould have registered their subscrip-|the American schooners R. C. Slade, | Sffort to secure a sugar supply SIXTY PERSONS KM.LED the national army cantonment at Camp | taken to aid in the feeding of infants|2nd guaranteed that the operation|tions to the second Liberty loan.” Manila, and A. B. Johnson by the Ger- | England. TSy IN AN EXPLOSION Funston arrive, Goings will be the |in Petrograd the coming winter and |Would render him unfit for army ser- = Talder Seeadler, were rescued : sole” enlisicd ferce of the brigade, | already 2000000 cans of condensed | yice, Moore asserted, as It would re-| AN INTER-CITY CONTEST Dot 4'and landed at Tahitl seven days| A new shoulder knot of the colors e which is to be filled with the drafted |Milk, it is stated, have been engaged |Guce his voice to a whisper. ! Brcording to word received to.|Oof the Legion of Honor will be cre-|In the Principal Barracks at San Joss, soldlers. At presant, he has. five |for shipment to Russia during Octo- AMONG BOY scouTs|g °r ated by th; IencHiCoySEamaL (o ibe Costa Rica. 2ive hi; v ber and November. Confirmati £l o . E P h a the | Worn by regimen: are _— bands fo zive him music but on the o 1 OBITUARY. In Liberty Loan Campaign—New York | The men &:remsgg;d:mr = m:; BHaG e tines. San Tose, Conte Tolta, Oct: 38,1ty other hand his pleasures are spoiled|the arrangements was received here g = 1 e . - b o 3 S——; inet; - by the all too frequent necessity of Yesterday and it was said the first in Howard 8. Pitkin. Accenty: Chtieons of the Seeadler in a storm, salled ON | goyeral firebonts and all the appa- [BST0RS Wege ioled 0 HnCH, ¥ ex- i . stallment @f the milk soon would b e Ly Tt Superor OMTeerR s ey ®| . marttora, Conn., Oct. 23 —Howard S.| St. Paul, Minn, Oct. 23 —Mayor| ratus in Hoboken, N. J., wers called to| piosion which occurred in the principal i s Pitkin of East Hartford, formerly on |Mitchel of New York and Mavor Rolph | AUSTRO-SWISS FRONTIER put out a fire in the hatch on the|}arra0ks here early this mornin SAFE CONDUCT FOR AMERICAN WOMEN WIN the staff of the Hartford Post, died [of San Francisco, today accepted by Dutch steamer Rjseldjk. The damage | explosion was due to an accident. The HAS BEEN CLOSED | was not estimated. barracks and the penitentiary were destroyed. LIBERTY. BOND MEMORIAL kere today. He had been ill since |telegraph the challenge sent by Mayor DECORATIONS IN FRANCE | Oct. 12. Mr. Pitkin was born in this Irvin, of St. Paul, for a contest among & : o g ey 2 4 city Oct. 31, 1860. He was much in- | Boy Scouts of American cities in rais- |Owing to the Serious Internal Situa- | Convicted of having amima the Anne Morgan and Mrs. Anne |terested in public affairs in Rast|i Liberty loan subscriptions. Mayo; il in Austria. Government for entering ‘war, 2 | Ben ot W Sl Frederick Kraft, a Socialist, of Ridge- GERMAN REPRESENTATIVE In Uruguay Has Been Granted by. the British Government. Dyk Hartford, was warden of trees, and |Behrman of New Orleans declined. St. —_— =i hism]x;lsn and an assistant deacon ot | Paul boys today had procured sub-| London, Oct. 23—The Au:trn—swlas fleld, N. J. was ':n(enoeg. B&o“%x; TO HERBERT F. WATSON. London, Oct. 23.—Great Britain has| New York, Oct, Miss Anne Mor- |the First Congregational _church, a |scriptions aggregating more than $6,- | frontier has been closed owing to the | years in Atlanta and was fin X i guarintecd o safe conduct to the Ger- | gan, daughier of tne late J. Bierpont |member of the Press club of Hartford. | 250000, Sovlone internal situation in Austria, | by Judge Davis in the Federal Court [Radio Operator Who Was Lost With man revre xu]v. in Uruguay to em- | Morgan, and her co-worker, Mrs. Anne ;lfldt?flgnt lodge, F. and A. M., of East —V-V—P——- acy in Trenton. the Transport An bark on Netherlands vessel for|Dyke of the American Fund for | Hartford. Waiters at West Point Strike. despatch from Berne today. Sev p —_— Germany. French Wounded, have sash been dea.| A brother, Albert H. Pitkin, general| West Point, N. Y., Oct. 25.—Seventy- | munition factories were wrecked in re-| The New London Ship and -Engine | Boston, Oct. 28.—A Liberty bond me orated by the French minister of - | curator of the Morgan Memoral and rs in the cadet mess at t food riots in Vienna, Pressbrue, | company of Groton, which employs | morial to Herbert ¥. Watson, the rallio Uruguay sereved diplomry tic relations ricultureyin recognition of their n.:i-- Wadsworth Atheneum, died a short %‘:ue‘;ué;:u Military Academy v:n: %'r':mn and Laibdch, the rioters being|hundreds of men on marine engines, | cperator who was lost on the torpe- with CGermany on Octover 7. when|vices for the people of devastated | time ago. on strike today. Members-of the cav- | mostly women, the advices state. has subscribed to $81,400 in Liberty | doed transport Antilles, was plasned passports were sent to Baron Von|areas of France, according to a letter alry detachment were ordered to fill|police, according to the reports, fired [lsan bonds in a two days' cam . | today at the Farm and sz::"-uh.o\ Nordenflicht, the German minister at received here by Miss Elizabeth Scar- Every college janitor at Yale is althe places of the strikérs by order of jon the crowds, killing and wounding | The employes expect to pass the $100- | on Thompson's Island, in n har- of tha fumd subsaxibox n. bor, from which Watson graduated, Peomiqyideo. . to the new Liberty loan. Captain Dixo; many persons. .7 000 mark by tonight.