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g S S : e & » TR Bulletin Service Flag Bulletin R POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH,, CONN. FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1918 TEN PAGES—80 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS —_— e - ~ Catled Paragrahs | Nohammed V, Sultan Saw Five German | Condensed Teearams | ' | P — ’ . Bradley-Ogden Marriage. % § 3 Germany last week landed large mil. k | : 2 itary on London, July 4—Miss Margaret Van itary forces at Hangos, ! Cortlandt = Ogden, daughter. of Mrs. ; u mannes u“ coast west of Helsingtors. ; Francis L. Ogden of New York, was : married Tuesday in St. Paul's church, | . Thomas E. Donnalley of Chicago ::;. “Knightsbridge, London, to Captain | Fetnop an . ibeen appointed chief of the pulp ar Fueh Bradley, of. the Grenadier | | paper section by the war industries | ] i Guards. Captain Bradley is a son of |35TH SOVEREIGN OF THE HOUSE | PASSENGERS WHO ARRIVED AT |board. : B e ot e e it o] e OF OSMAN AN ATLANTIC PORT Herman Bielohlawek, formerly a s : | S e : member of the Austrian reichsrat and e ——rr of the Vienna city council, is dead in | i 2 5 4 . |UNWRITTEN RULE BROKEN R k Planned as Celebration of | In Independence Day Speech at Mount Vernon Presi- BY ENGLISH AMBASSADOR |33 YEARS A PRISONER|IN EUROPEAN WATERS| ' -—- |Bya ourprise ck Pla a bra ] In Attending Celebration of American i verity was recorded on, the selsmo- . | dent Wilson Answers Peace “Feelers” Indspendance at Lunchean in Paris. {Eraphs of Georgetown. university ob- American Independence Day . . Sultan Was Born i i Worl iti itish | servatory. 1 i e e rn in Constantinople, | Work of British Transport and British 2 ; gt . | — day of the American Chamber of| Nov. 3, 1845—Was Never Strong in| and American Destroyers—Witnessed| Appointment of 25 additional in- ¥ Commerce, Ambassador Sharp thanked : spectors to conduct the campaign for . | France briefly for the great mani-| the Government. Torpedoing of a Freighter, cleaner coal was announced by the 500 GERMANS WEHE TAKEN PRlSONERs ; | festation in honor off Independence ; fuel administration. day, and continued e Ll y 2 “Lord Derby, representing England, : Naties. of i toniiibre) Ao smran ol _ | « ‘broken an unwritten rule whicti| Amsterdam, July 4—Mohammea V.| An Adantic Port, Juy 4—Destruc- | gjers who have been locaied in Ger- - . urkey, died at 7 o'clock last | tion in European waters of five Ger-|man prison camps were received by | S night, says a C bmari ¢ Bri e oke Barrage the | . spect to an English ambassador at- t, s a Constantinople despatch |faan submarines by British transport, |the war department. At the Tomb of George Washington, Before a Small Gather- | [thect G 20 Susist dmiessiton 807 received here today by way of Vienna,|and by American and British destroy- | e "ar department. Under Cover of a Smoke and y 4 < E < " pendence. It is in keeping with the Held Prisoner for 33 Years. ers convoying them, was described by | - The comptroller of the currency has G - ing of Officials and of Diplomats of the Allied Nations, | British spivit of fairness. We know | yp oot "HS thirty-fitth covereien | PASSCNEETS Who arrived here today on |issued a call for the condition of all Forces From the Antipodes Penetrated a Mile and a Half e h e e T mmed V. - sovereizn |an English liner. The transports, one | national banks at the close of busi- & 3 : A .. |come Lora Derby here in the name of |°f Turkey in direct descent of the|of which was carrying 7,000 American | ness on Saturday, June 20 Into the German Lines East of Amiens—South of Moulin the President Thus Summarized the Object of Humanity e : House of Osman, founder of the em seldiers to ' Buropean port, account- £l The audience rose, cheering Derby vame to the throne by a coupetatied for three of the U-boats, and the Several members of the Russian in the War: “A Reign of Law Based on the Consent of |an shoutins for & spécch. Lord Derby | o April 27, 1300, after having been | destrovers sank the other tws, accord- | roval family. Look passage an a Lteamer Sous Touvent the French Cut Through the Enemy Ranks : Gemirred at first but the choers would | he'd for thirty-three years [ prisoner |ing to the vovagers. Officers of the|which recently sailed from the Mar- G Iadh i 2 g T e v his brother, Sultan Abdul IT in the |Liner confirmed their stories man coast, on the White sea. rmans—} Area South the Governed and Sustained By the Organized Opinion ! " " (12 4 o My youtn, a Toval palace and sardens in Constan- | Witnessed Torpedoing of Freighter. - and Captured 1,066 Ge e = teacher spanked me, saying ‘You will | tineple. The scheming ‘Abdul 11 in- s s A wrecking company went to work % : = . f Mankind”—Roundly Condemned Germany’s So-Call. | thank me later for this, I say now that | {ended that his own son. Prince Bur. | The passengers witnessed the t0r- | riiursday in an alempt (o float the Piave the Italians Continue to Advance—Germans Met y y " |1 wish to thank America for the best|han Tdine, described as the _most Ljoie. of [the( Bdss fon port 9% | steamer_Seneca, which ran ashore in % 3 lickina we over got. It has done ps|brilliant and. gifted of the princes of | IFeis Orlars, P a fog off the New England coast. . E - Drive Ameris cd Treaty of Peace With Russia. both a lot of zood. We are grateful |the House of Osman should succeed |tNeir convoy, when the fleet was ap- With Utter Failure in Attempts to e can Forces o vou hecause that licking taught us |him. But this plan was thwarted ",‘r':r;"“"lffl:“:i;}f»‘k]':;" steaming West| Aprest of members of the Archangel F Their Positi N v West of how to treat our children; it is the|When parliament deposed Abdul and § kil provincial government by the Bolshe- €] ositions INear Vaux, est of Chateau reason why we now have Australia|Dlaced his vrisoner brother, Moham- | The Orissd bound in ballast for the | v s reported in a despatch from i a4 ? = and Canada,’ and even South Africa, |med Reschad Effedi, on the throne as|; nited States, was sent to the bot-| \mpassador Francis dated at Vologda. . § Speech in Fuli, fighting beside us today Mohammed V. tom hy an unseen submarine. Thierry. The president’s speech in full was as o it Took Oath of Fidelity. Depth Bomb Made Hit. Henry F. Shoemaker of New York e my follows STATE CONVENTION OF The Sheik-ul-Yslam. head 3 t the|, A moment later, however, an Amer- ciu‘,hidemificd with rmllroidsl\ ch;eflé' . ‘Gentlemen of the Diplomatic Corps Moslan ctiire Bam 0% ican destroyer in the protecting fleet|in the west. and several banks, diei (By The Associated Press.) forces and the peasantry is reported [0 ms Fellow Citizens: o UaE bR Ry S gty 1 s dearaarof detected the undersen boat below the |at his summer home in Riverside, Ct| 5 " " ot jurprice attack on the|from Yekaterinburg, the city in eastern 1 2 I am happy to draw apart with |y i Acnastion, watsilanasset ot surface and dropped a depth bomb, : == : = Russia_w h : - |sou to this quiet place of old coun- |Nominated Frank C. Macomber For :n.:‘: v”:j ?vw;‘ ntm:d\m_r}f. s”" min- | making a direct hit, according to the| A credit of $100,000,000 was granted |German lines, plarned especially as a Tr::‘:—Sih:i:":n‘reajlr:‘:n‘g {)snejolg:d !g; : sel in ovder to speak a little of the| Governor—In Session at Hartford, |7 Al ;:““i'“' 'fl“ 0 during his|giom: related here. The same eve-|to Irance by the treasury, making the | celebration of American Independence|the branches of the road running to « meaning of this day of our nation's| 5 impriscnment had had no exnerience a U-boat was sighted by the |total advanced to France to date $1.- N s Bl B S Favtrora! Corin,| 71y 4 The xvac|| 1M he GuRcy ok Egabramast. DotiL fass| Wik e U-boat ‘was sightediby - fie | total astvanced o Trancs in L-lday, Australian troops have wrested [north and south Russia. It was re- : idependen le place seems very ar . Jul; e Na-| In the dutle mment, ssenger vessel, whose gunners sanlk | 762 000.000 and the total credits to the " village of | ported recently that the Czecho-Slovak t still and remote. 1t is as serene and ate convention here to- | Dosely denied education in such mat- | b e nelifre allies $6,081,500,000, from the Germans the ' village of ; : fEIL S et rene: s fateqcox Afanoaty i 2 - |it by : $6,081, - : ! v & Vaire | troops were in control at Yekaterin- untouched by the hurry of the world ed the foliowing ticket: |ters hy his brother, was declared sul T = Damel, east ot diuns, otami burg and it is said that f M8 1t vems i thiose GiEAt.dAVETIonE dn overnor:. F G. Macomber | tan. The same afternoon he took the ransport Rammed U-boat. Lieut i and Hamel Woods. south of the vil- | PUXE It 15 cald SORL AR R it was in those zreat days long ago o . utenant Frederick R. Clements, 200,000 ta, woll 3, has hee ering. of off When Genei W e Hartford oafh of fidelitv to the Turkish consti-| The other three submarines were|an American fiyer from Hicks Field,|lage, and captured more than 1,500 A -edl‘g“a" ) well ‘armed, has beext the allie and held leisurely conference with the | Lieutenant Governor: John|tution and 101 guns proclaimed the |destroved, according to the returned |Fort Worth, Tex., was killed here yes- | Drisoners. The Australians advanced | formed there.. < i s imen who were to be associated with |Cairns of South M new sovereign travellers, on the eastward trip of|terday when his airplane fell 1,500 |under the cover of a smoke barrage iGermans Fail in Attack on Americans. spok » his “force | him in the creation of a nation, From| For Secretary of 1| Mohammed Y was horn in Constan-|another convoy. They declared that |fret ag C: i and were Ted by tanks in the breaking | German attempts to drive American ; E m. rom | t 2 at Camp Dick. P w n declaration of | these zenile slopes they looked out|Hovkins of Sevmour. tinople. November 2, 18: He was of |4 large British transport, with 7,000 = of the enemy's line over a front of | forces from their positions near Vaux, sever s azo upon the world and saw it whoie, saw| For State Treasurer: Lewis K. Bur- |2 studious disnosition and rend wide- [ American troops aboard, rammed a| Anti-Semitic outbreaks have occur-|more than four miles. The attack|west of Chateau Thierry, seem to have n president declar- | it with the light of the future upon |dick of Stonington. Iy in the Turkish literature. His long jSubmersible which was revealed with|red in Jaroslau and other Galacian |Penetrated a mile and a half into the|fafled utterly. There have been mo ed t 3 be no 1ht of a it saw it with modern eyes that turn-| For Comptroller: Robert H. Schol- | imnrisonment with lack of exercies |tWo others in the sudden lifting of a|towns, according to information re- | G€rman positions. further reports of desperate German P d not mean the destruc- fed away from a past which men of [lev of Shelton. and rich livinw undermined his health |heavy fog. Almost simultaneously|ceived by the Jewish correspondence| The Pritish war office has announced | efforts to regain the line from which tion « tary autocracy or its re-|liberated spirits could no longer en-| For Attorney General: Wilbur G.|[and several times he was reported|With the disappearance of the first|hureau from Vienna. that American troops participated in|they were unceremoniously ousted by Sttt 1 it Hotence. Hove ~ 1015 or DhaE rede bl e Manthest R dead or serlously ill. Tis appearance | Supmarine beneath the transport's the attack. This is the first time they | the Americans on Tuesday night. R e of ased on the con- |cannot feel, even here, in the imme- state cenral committee was au- ! showed the ravazes of time and the |DOW. the big ship's gunners accounted | Admission that Austro-Hungarian | have appeared in this part of the battle | |/ 4ooendence Day Celebrations. gent of the gover nd sustained by |diate presence of this sacred tomb, to fil lany vacancies on the | worries of an unsteady throne. Rv |for another of the German craft. while | and German war prisoners are fighting | area. I llied ies and their t zanized ¢ o of mankind” | that this is a place of death. It was ticket. e platform of the | his enforced secnlsion he was totally |8 British destroyer disposed of the|on the side of the Bolsheviki against Frénch: Attack Savagelys roln ‘au t:‘; aAle :ioumr’ !dm dt acc was the way he summarized in a|a place of achievement. A great prom- |National organization was endorsed. | nnfit for nublic life and is reported to | third. Czecho-Slovaks in Russia is made by| The French also have struck sav-|go0hles tTie merican 'neeperocacs g'nzle sentence ohjects of human- |ise that was meant for all mankind utzon Porglum of Stamford and J.|have said regarding it: “During mv e g s T 53 the Koelnische Zeitung. agely against the German lines, this |32y Was P! < = 7 In Lond d the I o the Work War- was here given plan and reality. The|A. H. F f Morristown, N, J.,|imprisonment of thirtv-three YESTERDAY'S ARMY CASUALTY == . time'cutting through the enemy ranks | MARRCT, I8 Lonion Aad - fre Jareq Spoke of Attituds Toward Germany.|ASsociitions by which we are here sur- | were kers, the latter|mv enemies have slandered me and LIST' CONTAINED 52 NAMES | A message of personal greeting from | near the town of Autreches, south of | S8, 9F Farand Ihere i 'o“s";‘-’m_ hether the mrasident was Addrees. | TOUNded are the inspiriting assoclations | criticizinz the members of concress | ealled me a madman hordering on im- iy Presiden: Wilson was delivered vester- | Moulin Sous Touvent, where on Tues- | $ercises. Even the small towns join- "ni was address- | of that noble death which is only a!for what he said was their unwilling- | heelitv." He was. charasterzed a8 Were Killed in Action—Six Died | 42y by the American Red Cross to ev-|day night they won a local success and | & : : . o the rec y ; : Nine Were Killes in Action—Six Died | 92 : ; France, the people of Paris and a great > Cacrarary |Elorious consummation. From tais [ness to favor prohibition and woman | cood-natured. | weak and ineenious S (€Y American_ soidier and sailor in | captured prisoners. Here the Ger- |y ianie SO ST RS S0 8 €70 spe oreigi creta green hiliside we o ough o be |suffrag S e Piarias 4 . hos; s ireat Dritai s los § s, 3 = of ar neace offensive. | the w at lies around is and con-| —— = ; : Washington, July 4—The army cas-| By the will of Miss Catherine John- | improved their positions by gaining |Verbial enthusiasm, and elaborate pro- took the occa- | ceive anew the purpose that must &ety of j.olitical relationshin, upon ¥ Favored Young Turk: ualty list today contained 52 names,|son of North Andover, filed for pro-|rather high sround which can be|SFams were carrieq out. Iz Italy the can | men free of the GrpsClationshin, upon the ask#| At his accession he espoused the |divided as follows: Killed in action, 9; | bate at Salem, Mags, her home with | readily defended when the Germans|Smaller cities vied with their larger , orld | It s significant—significant of their {loment Te- the neasle Cimores Sel- ! cause of Younz Turks. the party which[died of wounds, 6: died of accident|$20,000 for its maintenance is to bé |lannch their expected offensive. Sistechin theacelobradion of, thepday. n can only | own character and purpose and of the | eneornen” and ok ohle, immediately | o 'in opposition to the form and cer- |and other causes, 3: died of gdisease, 5: | used as a home for aged women. TeHaing Coteimie Se Ravm s oo R SITOKICANEOI, - that o i the | influences. they were sotting afootos | oNcored. and not upon the basis of | 1E% 1 DRPICHON B0 he LORn And - 1 U0, Meq severely, 26: missing in ac- sl : - T | it had- dectared Ena St f or an ilar | that Washington and his associates, | |1I° T (€0 al jnterest or advantage of| the feposition of Abdul ~Mahammed [TOW % prisoner, 1. An official note issued at the min- [ At the same time that the British, | holiday, participated in What SIEFuSHE o s D e Spoke cloquently |like the barons ut Runnymede. spoke | gl o' SRCRl O DAL WVER MAY | was welcomed by them as a champlon | Killed in action: 1stry of finance in Paris says that cer- | French and .Americsis werel attacking jwas & workt-widci doosiSe America’s atitude toward v-|and acted, not for a clas for a | (e & ifferent settlement for the| o freedom. He promised a progressive| Licutenants Roland Jackson, Colo-|tain newspapers have alluded to the |the enemy, the Italians continued to|commemoration of American indepen- ' ed peace treatfes In the |people. It has been left us to | s2X€ OF its own exterior influence Or|\qizn in o speech from the throne read |rado Springs, Colo. possibility of an American loan being[2dVance in the area near the mouth | dence. : ¥ mrour seople of {see to it that it shall be understood|™25tery: : by the grand vizier. He was, how-| Hedley Cooper, Riverside, TIL. issued in France at an early date. of theoBiaye |Scatlered maching giin | “Alongy theyanjerican eetUIEIEINE . unorganized and | that they spoke ana acted, not for a | —The consent of all nations to be|PY, S Erand vimer. | He was. how | Lo Fointh, Nya emplacements have been cleaned out, | battle line in France the day was ob- he peoples of ihelsinzle people’ oniy. but fof il man- |Eotersed in thelr eonduct towards| w5 TN dienouen e sent out fo| . Privates Arthur The federal trade commission ‘has| ¥hlle IISht boate tcom the Htalian navy fectved by, the boye i kiak, who aiece i g against the enemies|kind. They were thinking, mot of | ach sther b E: ples of | o " F Y e T ad | Sturzeon Bay, Wis dismissed its complaint against the|laVve ente ks : a s 5 themiselves and of the material inter- | Hnor and of respect for the common |ty World the messaze that he had|“U0R 0l 1 hunce, Ashton. §. D American Tobacco company which | 18Nk of the Austrian armies and given [ was absolutely. The Germans, who The past and‘the present are in|ests which centered in the little groups | /% of civilized society that govern the | {0775 20, L 00, BTEENE, SUPPOTEr OF 1 Charles J. Houston, Philidelphia. |charged unfair methods of competition | Yaluable assistance to the land forces. | had been expected to seize upon the dead lo and the peoples of the|of landholders and merchanis and ual c:bizens¥of Sially Smodera|i o Ti : Fred L. Strong, Hart, Mich. in_the maintenance of re-sale prices, | she Italians have also won ground in|Fourth of July as a dramatic setting world are heing done ¢ 1 between | men of affairs with whom they were| StA{eS in their relations with one an- |PFOSTESEL L CEelliR. Sl ieliee Mont ! nce o the San Lorenzo valley, east of the|for an attack azainst some part of the L restdent Wilsor accustomed to act in Virginia and the | Other, to the end that all promises and 2 2 Tom R. West, Oliver Springs, Tenn.| The first inctallment of records | CrEnta river. Nine, did: ot (ntecrupt the cslebixtiins There Can Be No Compromise, | CClORies to the north and routh of her, | COvenants mav be sacredly observed,| His hand in the government was| pieq of wounds: g showing unusual profits of manufac-| I iEhting between the German-Soviet{along the front. 57 by {but of a people which wished to be|DO Private plots or never strong. Tliness. a naturally easy Privates Beraldo Delbeato, Pachino, |turers, gathered from income tax S —— Jhere can Do ebut ope issue. the|done with classes and special inter- |hatched. no selfish injuries disposition and weak ¥ill-power kentlyiayy turns, will be forwarded to the senate . = final. There d’:cy:sif;;{n;h @nd the suthorlty of men whom | h mpunity, and & mutual trust es- ot e o e merce Of thel “Pat Rogers, Glasdrummond, Ire- fsoon by the internal revenue bureau. | FOURTH OF JULY SPLASH “MARCH FOR FREEDOM” > dse. X6 av decision | they had not themselves chosen to rule | f2blished unon the handsome founda- | Turkish officers and the liberal party.|jand. = IN AMERICAN SHIPYA IN NEW YORK CITY - ot Ot way, de- | over them. They entertained no pri- | tion of a mutual respect for right. He feared deposition during the Tur-| " joseph Summartine, Brooklyn. Panama informed the state depart- = o _— STt oies ate purpose, desired no peculiar pri f -The establishment of an organ- | ko-Ttalian war in 1911 and spent a| ‘\qolph Tonetti, Millshoro, Pa ment that the decree postponinz the | Incomplete Reports Tell of Fifty-two |110,000 Residents Were in the Parade 5 Gehting and whicn | lese. They were consciously planning | ization of peace which shall make it | nisht praving in the various shrines| YVirgil E. Weaver, Fort Wayne, Ind.|election for members of the national | Vocasls ' Sont Overbaard Up Fifth Avenue. " oy Pfi';‘r ‘Tr:"r that men of every class should be free Sefaln that m”» r’rvm]‘nnr'l power of ?‘f Con: m‘m-;mfl" l{'s]finnefllifl 53 carl R. Williams, Yoder, Kas. assembly had been withdrawn and that | S 3 5 Bl ‘em before there|anq America a place to which ree nations will check every invasion | the ~ to be loyal to him and sai Died of disease the elections would be held Sunday, " i E e “ " v ca out of every nation might resort who | 0 right and sorve to make peace and |that their {reasonable demands en-| emonor homas H. Elston, Os-|July 5. TRHS undas| Philadelphia, July 4—The great New York, July 4—Escorted by two rary Power. | Wished to share with them the righis |justice the more securo by affordine | courazed the enemy to attack the Dar- | wogo, Oregon. R ARl lsn‘:llfa-hafimgme';c?:n s in Dabe oreanos ew n of every arbitra- A0 'L'\i‘r'”:fl:ff‘fmflffie;“e‘g And wea_definite tribunal of opinion . to ;‘,fi]“r;‘r"":vn fi"‘m’f‘ign‘“i'nn;;'sf of Mis| " Privates Anthony J. Tevilacous,| Fire of unknown origin which | il biiiiders of the Unitel Stetes |and soated oiit therdorie AF ratil o hat can separate- | t3] k —do_we not? | which must submit and by which |Furopean dominions he alkan | Colfax, Cal started while the enlisted men were | Jrom a 2 o' 5t | e i 3 " sie choice, | We intend what they intended. e |evers infornational readjustment that|wars. The Youne Turks invaded the | Craflee. Samuel Carpenter, Little- lon parade Gestroyed the mueal bar|1Tom one minute after 12 o'clock last |eagles, 110,000 residents of this city AR -cuuic les Sam penter, P y night, when t¥e first ship was launch- |drawn from 34 nations, celebrated the : the peace of the werd: e i¢|Bere in America believe our partici- amicably agreed upon by |Palace in 1913 when Mohammed was|ion. . H. rackg at Sewells Point near Cape May. | aq- at Superior. Wis, Butl Iate totay. | Fousth of Tuly ihig sesr’ by moviag an vesently destroved. ' at | PAtion in this present war to be only directly concerned shall |renorted to have - become reconciled | Bertrand C. Howell. Nelsonville, 0.[N. J. The loss is estimated at more | (0 2t Superior, Wis, until late today, | Fourt Ty Y. movie s ratnetion “to sirtaal im. | the fruitage of what they planted. Our | be sanctioned. AR b1 Frother o el TR b ieano |carzo carriers and other types of ves- |up Fifth avenue in the greatest “march = n"to virtual fm- ..o differe f: s 3 o Henry O'Neal, Columbus, Ga. 3 g sels were sent overboard in every part |for freedom,” the world has known. ¥ thae giffers from theirs only in this,| “These great obfects can be put in- Blamed Triple Entente. Died of deciden er canses o {of "the country to help build the oce: From morning until night this seem- >—The settlement of every ques- | (DAl it is our inestimable privilege to | o a single sentence. t we seek is| 1 1914 nt tn brcalciaf Privates Geors he, New York., Bequests totalling nearly $4560.000|; iG00 for the allied fighting fa ingly endless col f civili d P oF b : . concert with men out of every nation|ihe reign of law, hased ot &t thes Quiregk offthe pres- iy e . he M My of |bridge for the allied fighting forces |ingly endless column of civilians an fion, Whather Of WA, ot Soversign. |whiat” shallmike hotionl s D B tes| ot ot ey, based upon (1 €0E ey Mcnammbd Bixsueya prouins |« Theodore L. Braafiat. (Plasa, N. D). 1o the Melronclitan Museum of ‘Art i1y mhmppe fighting men passed under the Wash- of economic arrangement. or of | 5"y Shall make not only th el e e b or & ¥ | mation hlaming the triple Entente with | APraham Brown. New Y ~ew York, by Isaac D. Fletcher, who| ™ rpeomplete reports zave tile number |ington arch and up the avenue, bes politica tionship, upon the basis| ot oy e, eCure DUt the liberties of | the erzanized opinion of mankind. thrusting war on Turkey. He nx-| Severely wounded was president of the Barrett Ma of vessels sent overhoard as fifty-two, itween solid walls of red, white and f the free acceptance of that settle- | oi JIUET DooDle, as well TWe por | e b ot e ends can not be achiev- | changed telegrams of greeting _with | _Serceants John Martin, Mount Cars iactoriiplcomt iy erinl of which thirty-three were steel-and |blue, that ail might see how steadfast ey e people immediately con-Imitted to do what they would have|ele ni oecormmmstocokilE to recon-| the German emperor from whom he Mmel Pa. £ nasauntaical johiine € the other nineteen wood. and unshakeable was the morale of med. and not upon the basis of the | done had they been In onr . pi ¢le and accommodate what statesmen | jater received the Iron Cross. When| Robert Yarbro Jamar. Ala figures do include the | America in the world war. ! interest_ or advantage of an¥ | There must now e settled once for ot | oy, Vi With their projects for bal- | Enalang and France declared that a| Corporals John Lewic Clinton. Ind.| Two representatives of the depa hing 0f naval vessels which are| In this great outpouring of the tion or people which mav de- | what fsettied faprcd once for all} ance of power and of national oppor-| state of war existed Witk Turkes he| Charles T. Sierman, 952 Park street,|ment of labor arrived at Lowell, Ma iilt directly under the super- | meiting pot were Armenians and Chi- fifferent settlement for the sake|great age upor wicme ooerica In the |tunitv. They can be realized only by | 3iee oF for existed with Turkey he iy, itorg, Conn and requested union officials to ‘the navy department. Cur- |nese, Cubans and East Indians, Span- own exterfor influence or mas- | draw today. This is suren o piime | 1€ determination of what the thinking | Wnanever nesded. In. retun he way| Privates Alvin Bealer. Vohnton Pa.}an agreement to abi | tailed wire communication. due to the |jards and Czecho-Slovaks, men and . " { place from <which calmly to Jook erp|peorles of the world desire, kith their| Jn it fiald marshal by the Ger.| Harry Coszrove. Philadelnhia. |of the national wa | noliday, is the cause of the failure of |women of all races and creeds, reso- “3—The congent of ail nations to M | upon our task, that we may Zortiry eor ‘w ging IY,UJX‘ for justice and for social| man emneror and recaived the baton of | Arthur Martin Drur. Bowling [ case of intervention. |the offices at headquarters of the|lute in the defense of that great der- governed in their conduct towards |spirite for its aecompliohment Aoy | (resdom opportunity. that office. from Fiold. Marctel Ven|Green, Ohio. P A e Emergency Fleet Corporation here to | laration signed in Philadelphia 142 each other by the same principles of | this e S 1 can fancv that the air of this|\fackensen. Alfred J. Garcean, 364 Newbury| The Lonc 0;“ ,’,“‘Zh Lk T~ Ireceive fuller reports of the initial dip | vears ago. B o ety the coMmMON | which to avow, alike to the friends | mies conin s pecni ameic? PR |t “February, 1917, In a_speech in] Street. Boston. : flle, | Correspondent <o the effect that goods | °f the iz fleet. ‘were | ngELen, Germany contributed to_the law of civilized society that govern|iwho look on and to the friends with | C..cS With a peculiar kindness. Here! , liament, the sultan promised Turk. | Ermest T. Goodnough. Greeneville, At by the Germans are be. |, In many of the vards new keels were | pageant. but possibly not the dele- the indi «citizens of all medern |whom we have the happiness to be as. | FCIc, Started forces which the great|jon particination in the war until the|S- C- vl fans r[adfiv.\ 'v", mf’"{‘"’l re be- ely laid after the ships left|gates whom Berlin would have select- states in thelr relations with one an-|sociated in action, the faith and pur- | LN, 2831t Which they were prim-|¢ng 'and declared the alliance forced| Charles E. Futton, Rockville Ind. 5§ eent to Ruseia by Chinese me | ed, for over a division of loyal persons other; to the end that all promises|pose with which we act. PUr-|arily Qirected at first rezarded as a|pic A7 Seclated the afiante foreed:i marolq . Jolley, St. John Mich. ghants and are almost certain to falli “pyo "jyrzest boat launched was the |of German birth or descent flew a and covenants may be sacredly ob-|' “This, then, It our sonception of the | TSVOIt against its rightful authoritv | Tamg o oI : 22 1 Alert Kainula. Gilbert, Minn. Sl A { Indianapolis, 12,500 tons, at the Puey |bafner reading: “Born in Germany, served, mo privats plots or conspira-|great strusgie in which we are en.|Dut WHICh I has lonz since seen to|*® [ S {_Thomas M. Knight, Kimberly, Ida-| . 0 . ¢ trained |ond Jones yard at Gloucester, N. J. |but made in America.” cies hatched. no selfish injuries|gaged. The nlot is written plain upon | 1AVe been a step in the libewrtion of aid Dearly For Enterine War. :po. et e b T This ‘eane.and safe’ Fourth, which wrought with impunity, and a mutual | every scene and every act of the ey. |itS OWR Deonle as well as of the peo-| The Turkish empire paid dearly for; Martin G. Lehman, Detroit. [arses depicted thiough the calling Of i MESSAGE O [WOMENJBY. brought with it to the ear hardly the rust established upon the handsome | preme tragedy. On the one hand stand | PIe Of the United States: and T stand | his entry into the gréat war. Russia; Frank Jeremiah Long, Mazerstown,) thousands for/service in military and FIRST LADY OF THE LAND |pop of a firecracker, nor the flare of . oundation of mutual respect for right. | the peoples of the world—not only the | M¢T¢ MOW_to spealc—speak proudly and | overran. Armenia a dthe British droveiMd ke i e e e tHe . a rocket, was made hot a day of friv- Organization of Peace. Peoplés actually engaged, but many [ 7ith confident hone—of the spread of|the Turks far un the vallevs of the! Gerald H. Lundegard, Chicago lto call immediately for 23,000 student | Independence Day Greeting by Mrs, lolity, but an occasion on which “the he estalitieh ( an- | Others also who siffer under mastery | this revolt. this liberation. to the great | Euphrates and the Tizris and took) Frank A. Matson Hatficld. Ark. 10 00 ImECiol smerican hos- | Wilson, Wife of the President. |folks at home” might pledge to the 4—The estalilishiment of an otgan={ byt ‘cannct act: peopl : stage of the world jtself! The blinded | Jerusalem, Bagdad and. other import-: James Virsil Moran. Louisville, Ky, |nlrdes for training in American hos-} : L cer upport which zation of peace which shall make it! not act: peoples of many races 8! ! pitals, boys over there” that support ch e har the combined power of|2nd in every part of the world—the |Tulers of Prussia have roused forces |ant cities from them with great loss of | Palmer A. Rove, Farmery 112 Ta. > o Washinzton, July 4.—This Independ- | knows no faltering. As concrete evi- . nations will check every invasion | PeOPle of stricken Russia stili, among | they knew little of —forces which, once|life and treasure. Under him Turkey: George N."Sebren. Crystal Springs,; a piop iecord for daily production j€nce Day message was given today tndence of this supnort. there were in ¥ right and serve to make peace and | N® rest. though they aae for the mo- | FOUSed, can never be crushed to earth | has become virtually a German vassal{Miss. meov. 0. |Of rifle and vistol ammunition was set | the worien of America by Mrs. Wil- |the pageant, Red Cross ama Liberty ice the more secure by affordine|T.cht unorganized and' helpless. Op-38ain; for they have at their heart|in the autocratic scheme of the Ger-| William H. Shellenberger. Troy, O. io, "y d when approximately 27,- |sen, wife of the presiden {Toan floats. shipbuilders and muni- \ definite tribunal of opinion to|hoey ‘O them, masters of many ar.|an inspiration and a purpose which|man powers for Teutonic ascendency! John P. Sulliven, Tutte Mont - 1000,000 cartridges of every description| “The greeting which I am glad to|tion worker 3 Mich all must submit and by which | Tie%, Sand ah iolated, friendless | are dcathless and of the very stuft of | in central Europe. © T | Toseph T Thowoteh, New York. . yeie’t, SETORT ST (SN | send fo ‘the women of our heloved | France‘and the other allies contrib- o i et moh | group of governments who speak no ph! e next heir to the throne, Yusse T Take, i the United States, cxclusive of com- |country who are playing so large and [uted men and floats. but far more rannot be amicahly azreed upon by the | sonimon Purpose but only selfish am-| President Asked Many Questions, | [zzeduno, is the son of the late Sultan| FErnest Wendell. Houstton Take,:orcial production or work for other,so nmoble a part in tiis day of our|significant was the participation of eoples directly cancerned: shall be|Pitions of their own by which none! During the trip to and from afeunt| APl A7z and was therefore, first|Mich. g A upreme test can have but a single |Great Britain, which gave 300 of her Reler, diticn sha . e wneclvenss oa e Maviower Phsien o0 Roisnmed Vo Momimseds) Willn Whitshead, Glenalon, Ses = !ihought for its theme—the thought|warriors to the parade. Indeed. of the These great objects can be put into | DSOPIe are fuel in their hands: gov- | Wilson haa many intimate personal|C1dcSt son Zia Eddine, a man now over kalchewan, Canada. ! Raymond B. Fosdick, chief of thethat is m all our hearts. 125 or more floats, that which per- single semtence. What we seck is |ctnmenta which fear their people and | ¢qiks with the represemiatices o nal| thirty, is ninth in the line of succes-| Mistinz in action: S I ominTteRlonfwar catap, activities) Wi “éThat Phoughts isi st wel are. sus.|Bnps irevelsealiihe = reatenrus o Lo » singl . . - ivet are for the time their sovereign|ple who have left th. cozebe0ligiont | Lieutenant Parr Hoover, Baltimore. iy, " hoon investigating the work of the | taining, not a sovernment, but the|was _“Brittania.” surrounded by the reign of law, based upon the con- (jords mak ;i ple who have left their native lands T s h NG e b ent of the governed and sustained by , making every choice for them |to find homes in Americs. Testing out T | rivate Joseph Macelra, Havana.. juxiliary organizations with the Amer- | very principle of our nation’s life. The | wonnded veterans of her home army the organized opinion of mankind, | 2nd disbosing of thelr lives and for- | satiment. seeking opinions, he csney | WOULD BANISH ENEMY j Cuba. R Pure W, Tov. iCanearmy in France, such as the Y. 1aorale of the war is in the thouzntsiand those from each of her colonies. e e e ohnial o (uue st Hiey will asieell e of the ! ellmeRS mecking opinions he asker] ALIENS, MEN AND WOMEN|_Prisoner: Tieutenant Rurr W. Ty~ 3 €. 'A.and the Knights of Columbus, {and aspirations ar 2 hoves of the wo- | Starting at 5.30 oclock in the morn- P : ; > s of every people who ) DR e : | son. State street, Boston. i will return to Washinzton at the end |men as well as of the mel inz. the head of the column _soom : by debati seeking to| g . then a sharp phrase or two. g . 4 Hie eturn ashi e ; 2 :':';:“r’l‘: R i, feexing, to (r;;lth\elgfliruhms‘h‘; power—sovernments e s inica lgn:m\or(\h::osr::: ! Gov. Holcomb’s Declaration on F”""';‘1re:;fif§"fi‘h«r—«n1ryd Tentie moeeeq | OF this week to report to Secretary | hey stand at the very center do( reached the reviewms stand at Madi- v s 3 o ; T Srou ; ave heen slizhtl sed | Baker. every isste involved, as the men do |son Square. The Russian continzeni statesmen may wieh with their projects i = ttv of DPINgS | Czechn-Slovaks. Chinese, Hunearians of July Speech at Bridgeport. | , Ve i LSRRG el 3 . for balances of power and of national | fnat is. altogether. alien neq toctic’ S5 | €¥en Germans for the natives of cou : l?:?n e N Green. A3 i HOWED 178 e e N e e e pportunity. They can be reaiized only | our own. The past and the neecer | fries whose sovernments,are America’s| Bridgeport, Conn,, June 4—*If T had | o mamard Jh Crect ITALY SHOWED ITS Io b war for what ls iumano | and|stand at'210 'cloce i [P"%he determination of what the | oo 1o aeadiy grapple and the peopies | CNEMiCS. were among the visitors to|MY WAy no enemy alien, man or wo- G DS ! ! AEEECTION FOR AMERICAHSIEt, Thevican put: all thatilecpese ot thkul:: poopléy n‘: thsrwn’rld Aesire. | of the world are being done to geatt | the, :hrina of frl;{*dnm they have found |man, wnul;l‘ be ;llllowe tn_drcmain | INTERNATIONAL PARADE Pt LRz X G of them into the sirusgle. And thes | ypegaGE FROM JAPAN with their longing hope for justice and *ath | in the new worl ours on these shores.” said Governor o E n Ceiekrating Fourth of July—Towns &re doing so. s ] 2 5 or social freedom ana opportunity” | Coimeen, oD 7 Marcus H. Holcomb in his Independ- | FEATURE IN BOSTON and Villages Vied With Each Other deeply admire them and am TO PEOPLE OF AMERICA 2 R ¥ There can be but one issue. The Personnel of the Party. o ide el : A oud to stand with them. A nmew An ldeal Da setilement must be fi\;ml. There can| President Wilson's personal party | munition workers at a hi: ourth | Thousands cof Citizens of Foreign| Rome, July 4—All Italy was astic!Zlory attaches to the Fourth of July | Delivered by Viscount Ishii at Fair- A cloudless sky, with the heat of |De no compromise. No half-way de-|on the trip included Mrs. Wilson, Miss of July parade and demonstration | Birth Were in Line, cday in ceiebrating the Fourth of;because w: are striving to make the | haven, Mass.—Loyal Goed Fellowship. tke sun tempered by a light breese |cision would be tolerable. No half- | Margaret Wiison, Mill Helen Woodrow | nere. today. . The sovernor made. s uly, not only the larger towns but|Wworld free.” iidaib which swept over the historic Poto- | Way decision is conceivable. These are | Bones and Rolfs Bolling, while the “after saving h e : orna e tiny viliages vieing with each oth- ! =l Fairhave Mas: Iy A B e e e o Whion o ablcy Thes ¢|statement after saying he greeicd ev-| Boston, July 4—An rnational | the tiny viliages vieing with each oth Fairhaven. Mass. July 4—The [nac and eang gD e Ol ke ot | et the world are fopiated peo- | suests numbered among them Secre- |ery man and woman loval o the Unit. | parade 1n which thousands of citizens fer in showinz their affection for | OBITUARY Japanese ambassador, Viscount Ishi Mount Vernon, made the day tdeal for | DS o e he conaeded 1uing, and|tary Lans'ng, Atiorney General Greg-|cd States whether they Were native or | of foreien birth, many of them wear- | America. At Ancoma a roception was | Ly , concluded an address here today with ‘, pilgrimage. 'l rolling banks of e gt be °d them before|ory, Postmaster General Burleson, the | foreign born, but he had no greetinze|ing their native costumes, marched |given in the town hall and the muni- William L. Dickinson. this message from the people of Japan irginia and Maryland, rick in mid- | there e " 2 .| French ambassador, Jules J. Jusser- |for those in this country mot loyal to|under the flags of the entente allies' Cipality inauguratel a new avetnue| Sprinzfieid, Ma July 4~—William | to the people of America: summer foliage, gave reminder of the| “I—The destruction of every arbi-|and, the British ambassador, the Farl|the United States. to the music of their national an-|named after President W:lson, !1.. Dickinson, a founder and former| “We trust you—we love vou and, If peace and plenty which has made this | trary power anywher.efl that can sep- | of Reading, other members of the dip- Governor Holcomb said the '.‘n-;:flfllthems. was a novei feature of the|name being coupled with that of Ri president of the Massachusetts high- | vou will let us, we will walk at your country a haven of refuge for all na- | aratel: 'secmtlyk.l and%f its simgle loma corps, Senator Mar ‘n of Vir- | States has the kaiser and his zroup|Fourth of July observance here. In|the Italian nava! Lieutenant comman- | way association. for 11 years prior to |side in loyal good fellowship down all tions, while the frequent passage of | choice disturh the peace of the world: | ginia, John Barrett, director ,of tlis|of militarists on the run and “we are | addition there were patrictic exer-{der who won a signal victory in the 1900 superintendent of highways hede | the coming years” pmilitary and naval boats, the flutter for, if it cannot be presently destroy-|Pan-American Union and Jo'n Me- | oing to keep him soimg” o re. |cises in all sections of fhe city | AGriatic recently. The Ame ind considered ¢ on high- | Karlier in the day Viscount Ishil took »f a hydroaeroplane keeping watcn in | ed, at the least its reduction to vir-| Cormack. An informal reception was| aled to the audienc that Connecti-|. The ban on the sa'e ¢ < | Cross presented wreath to constrictio hix home [part in an Independence day parade the air, and the ways of a shipbuilding | tuai importence. i held for the introduction of the giests|: = has given 45,000 of its best boys |made it an absolutely quist “Fourth,”|i nmemory of Garibaldl. aged 69 “native of |at New Eedford and in a speech de- company at Oil Alexandria, told of| “2—The settlement of every ques-|immediately after the Mayflower sail-|t “he army and amongthem were |and the. police reportad thatthe d Capri, once a nest o' Germans, was |this city and was largely rumen- | clared that the machinations of Ger- activities neceseary, to make that|tion, whether of territory, or sover-|ed, President Wilson. receiving, wi ' |si.ie with the first-combat troops to|was without a serious accident of any |transformed today by & forest of |tul in betierinz the highway condi- |many were to cause dissension amomg ce and plenty secure “for all time.” " eignty, of economic arrangement or' Mrs.. Wilson and Miss Wilson, se. their feet in France. "kind, ’ American flags. Itions in this part of the state. the members of ‘the entente, - i R A