Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 26, 1918, Page 1

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Bulletin Service Flag : = VOL. LIX—NO. 178 POPULATION 29,919 ALLIES ARE CLOSING UP THE MOU OF POCKET FILLED WITH : i . : ed Paragraph = . : . | Both Jaws of the Pincers are Moving:Smoothly, Work-|m. BMM_NQ _"‘ sw ALL MUST ECONOMIZE STATEMENT TO PUBLIC|, rend Asminsiator voower vt o | PRISONERS ALONE NUMBER OVER 20,000 MEN ing in Unison 1 Rome, Wednesday, July 'Jio(hy A . il 7 % P.).—Pope Benedict has appointed the 3 i 5 B . 3 i & Nigr foe Denedict has appointed the | Printers, Publishers, Stores,» Business |Board Finds That the Unions Have| Secretary Baker postponed his de NORWICH, CONML, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1918 TEN PAGES—80 COLUMNS = '~ - Paper Conservation |Lake Seamen Have | Condesed Taeorans | GERWANLOSSES AREMORE THAN 200,000 The Austrian tobacco rationing plan a War Necessity) No Cause 0 Stke "~ e o s : SN RS EL RS In Recent Battles the Amerjcans'Have'Inflicted Over Total sales of thrift stamps and war| « 50,000 Losses on the Enemy 1 i s || WARNING -ISSUED BY WAR IN-j FINDING OF FEDERAL SHIPPING |savings stamps are $447,520,970. DUSTRIES BOARD BOARD The names of six Americans were : g z i ? ball play . : s . —_— delegate to ihe Philippine Islands, as| Offioss, Hotels, Clubs and Private| No Grievance That Would Justify sien Oagee “tending of ball viavers| The German Crown Prince’s Generals are Driving 'nmrMe_n . I . s : Homes Are to Be Asked/to Cooper-| a Strike at This Time—Would Im-| According & t in Babylon,| ~ Mercilessly i off Alli AMERICAN TROOPS ADVANCEDABOUT 2:1-2 Miles ! seanish Ministor of Marine Resigns. > T e e (German submarine was suits roilessly inian Efort to Hold the Entente Allice ari, retny T A | ate torAveld Waste. pede War Industries. by airplanes. Pidal, the Spanish minister of marine, has resignea owing to différences of i Long Enough to Extricate the Armies Threatened at the ; " Count von Luxburg, former German 2 . e obinion with Premicr Maura. Admiral| Washington, July 25.—The®War Tn-| Washington, July 25In the fabe of |minister to Argentina, is in Gothem-| . Bottom, North of the Marne—The American and French The Germans Have Thrown'Thousands of ;Reinforcements Mirarids nas been sappointed to) ics dustries foard today issued this|a thl;ea}te:cd ‘srike of scamen on the | Purg, Sweden. o T Closely Pr th . ¢ 5§ d Lo ment: 4 reat Lakes, which would tie up the 5 s ¥ i treating Enemy—The Into the Already Crowded Salient -and HavetStarted a |4 11e0 Srip Fires “T. E. Donnelly, chiet of {the pulp|transportation of iron_ore. coal and oaiuste 2 ot anejsiougd of game. in roops are Closely Pressing the Retreating y- » and paper section of the War Indus- eat essential to the war programme, TN < . 4 1ol All Al he Semni ON U. S. SUBMARINE |tries Board announced today;that his'|the Shipping Board tonight issued a |'VaSmome in May or June. French are Using More Armored Cars Than Usual and Counter-Attack of Great Violence ongfthe Semi- section would undertake shorthy a gen- | statement informing the public of ev- ; o ; : William Powell of Lansing, Mich, : 3 2 American Craft Taken for Enemy U-|eral publicity campaign for economy|ery step in the controversy and de- s e Ll alry 1 Circular Front From the Ourcq River to the Region| boat—Outer Hull Was Penetrated. |in the use of all kinds of paper, the |claring that the board “does not feel | WaS sentenced to 20 vears imprison- - sl hemad Fimie i o TR purpose being to cducate the consum- | that there are any grievances to jus- MENt for seditious utterances. s e . L 3 3 . Washingtan, July 25 y A’ P.)—|ing public to the importance of com-|tfy a strike at this time.” . i earin; e Iorests., Immediately Southwest of Rheims — Within Eight| | Fastinston, Julv 22 (G 4 Po S ion ‘as’a war measure. _Telegrams were sént to the Sailor's| Dr. George Michaclis, former Ger : submersible which has been operating| “This new work has been placed in|Union and the Marine Firemen, Oilers| "85 FRenceon 15/ How heading & Days the Allies Have Reduced the Width of the Mouth jorr the North Atantic coast, an |charse of R. E..O. Merchant, a mem-|and Water Tenders' Union, pointing| "5%4¢ on the western front. / ! American submagine of the fatest |er of the section who is’ also inout the disastrous efteots ' which 4| Tirey American Red Gross workers| o With the Ainerican Army on thelines, some of them have beensub- - . S o ¥ as i 3 New Ei charge of the paner investigations:of |strike would have upon the country| - . 3 '® | Aisne-Marne Front, July 25>—(By The | jected 2 of the Pocket From 37 to 21 Miles—Therejis No Indica-{JE¢ vas fred uvon in Hew England | e federal commission. and its consequent effect on the prose- | %7 Wounded during the recent drive Preat) o With. fhe, &iaes. ot gncr:pne1mangCcéfiéon‘:hou?fiemhg_::um; i £ b G It Rather Ap. | Ticta by an armed vessel. No one| Muct ‘Realize Valus of Paper.. |cution of the war. : t oL She s RRto; alleripan forces, the Soissons-Rheims sack coming | damase. 3 & ireat o German o BBGard. thok buhiinb e Bl b asne o pten. | Chairman Hurley signed the state-| | ouic Grossman, a storek in the | Steadily closer tosether, the German| Behind the lines long transports of" pearing as if They Will Stake All on Their Ability to. % Vi hor I the igentity |Tcalized its value. But war conditions : e s . their mer mercilessly in an effort to|the front, the allied planes and ob- ment today did not reveal the identity | pored its value, But wap conditions | party to the controversy e uR T hold them off long enough to extricate |serving ballcons giving warning Pock ""]"‘)';““\{':“““‘;d:‘f lo‘;fi ‘;‘me:‘t “Vf:S::: in the habits of consumers. and the Statement by Hurley. An ammunition factory at Plauent|l€ @rmies threatened at the bottom,)against interference by enemy artil- th as = 4 4 : < e Keep the Pocket Open. ailied transport. Unofficial . reporgs | memoers of the pulp "and paper sec et | uing this statement,” Mr. | was partly destroyed on July 19 by an } ~Orth of the Marne. | : : tion are confident that, when the con- | Hurley said |were that the submarine haq been i blic is sh eason and v e ey marine e Sen | suming public is shown the reason and]gone fully 3 lery or hostile aircraft. e Taatens 3t | vas b geloretion duly e The American and French troops are | Intermingled in the line of battle and B s B never far behind the retreating forces, |along the roads are white, black and Lsuri g ] 5 : o ; ; : ; and the vicious rear guard actions are | vellow i i L R necessity of such change they will re-{tioned in the joint resolution because| Fire which started in an immense L : 2 ctions are | yellow races in all the units, avigi s dho s Sl . bz j*‘“’;d The |spond to the appeal for conservation|of the grave menace to the national |naval airplane hangar in Norfolk, Va, | (or sufficiently resistant to enable the | big machmne is moving without a knogk (By The t e the Marne midway between Chateat| iy hepioned fire «nd had made Onelas they have done to the various other{safety involved in a strike on the | threatened to destroy the structure, ermans to proceed in the orderly|or lost motion. Now and then the eneral Foch has taken a leaf out of | the Mame ay en Chateat |hie before the American craft- made |t Co% T2FC G00€ 19 DA FOC OIS o e e ke Donn R SET manner planned. At Dormans, north | color scheme to the gear of the fight= el B P N tary strategy | Thierry and Rheims, the French have|kuown its identity. The shell jiene- e aLakes, & stoppage Of o] The Middletown, N, Y., Daily Argus|of the Marne and cast of Chateau |ing lines is broken'by a column of inined the Gse by the allied |extended their line northward in the |trated the outer hull of the suima- Effects of Waste. Sht J0F thp ake Vems el O e enaRa Te et i T best | Thierry, the Germans counter-attack- | gray-clad prisoners, whose appgarance 3 e eyutem of offen- |forest of Fere, in the Ris Forest and lrmne hut did not cxplode. The only| “It Is the intention of the paper:sec-|Cut Off the supply of ore needed in|suspended. It was one of the besti.q “tiiing the position, but were|is always quickly noticed by tog. s s heims salient, |north of Dormans, while the eastern |cficial detuils were contained in this|tion, with the co-operation of the dafly |(he manufacture of steel plates for|known publications in that section. “arive et e I s of the pincer are mowing|Jaw' of the pincers, under the pres-|st Y .« - pre ment by the naivy department: |press, to show how the demands of the | ShiPbuilding and many pivot along the |Sure of the British, has mnotjceably| “The navy department is informed |sovernment for various kinds of pa- nivan and the pro. |moved forward in a northwesterly di- |that a United T i 0. eapmire mamy of | rection for about a mile ang a halt] SRSt promptly driven out. They occupied | who are more accustomed to the khaki | ding and many other essentials| | eut. Warren T. Hobbs of Worces- | Teloun, west of Dormans, and have |of (e Americans and British and the : jeopardiz o iout Nyarren T M held it. blue of the French. In scores of cases Stites submarine was|per and various chemicals and other |Ment of wheat to our army abroad|ier, Mass, is oficlally reported miss-| “inor agvances have b de b " 2 ir gua ired on Dby mistake by an armed | materials used in paper making, are|and to our allies. No strike should be|ing since July 17, atter an air fight. e : o1 tn: that phet. of | tell them tart o ait e with : nd to o the allies in the woods in that part of | tell them when they are to be shot. * . the mearly half @.million Germans in|over a three mile front to Mery Pre-|merchant vessel on July 23, oft the |incredbing rapidly, and how every|called which might be based upon a| o il covernment control of strect| N Sector, while further to the east, | The madority of them, nowever, stolid= | e el et i Well on ihe way to|mecy and Gueux the last named Vil- | American coast. Gne shell penetrated | pound of paper wasted represemts not |misunderstanding of what has hap-| Partial government control of street|.ouih of Hheims, there were additional | v accept what they Beliové to be thelt BT S St anetd i e lage five miles west of Rheims and a |the outer hull of the submarine, but|only the waste of valuable materials|Pened. or which is capable of a differ- | FIWAY Combanies 1s expected bY O~ | ,llied successes. e. sticce<s. o scant mile and a_ half from the|cid not explode. No material injury |such as coal, pulp, chemicals, etc.. but[ent solution . il A The Americans have occupied Cour- The Germans, however. evidently do | Rheims-Tismes road. At Mery Pre-|was done, only a small section of shell jalso the waste of productive, labor,| The first reason given for striking| g o\ Daniels announced that|POll on the road to Fere de Tardenois, nd to permit themselves to be|mecy the allied line now stands about |plating being Jamaged. No one|working capital and transportation|Was to compel the Lake Carriers’ A Ny withoat fighting. Having]ten and a half miles southeast of Is- [aboard was injured and the subma- Back of the lines there are dressing tations and fixed hospitals, and the I i t i i e i ining s e! Cr > i r six. - u s ind skilfully, in a manner Thousunis of reinforcements |mes, whieh s the central station on{rne proceeded to her base under e |cregsing scarcity. ernment in training seamen, - ° |en crulser San Diego now number si¥.| gominated by the guns, reflecting the qualities of veteranship ok th v oo ed salient, | the railway running between Soissons|{own power.” : ard has eci se |- = ¥ T Neares Sols g € v D e ogeeted thatk of|and Rheima. & Tl the, shell exploded ‘afterscated |+ i aat: Shnoid |Goianepats: the Great Lakes for training and re-| The senate committee investigatig |, " 017" IPSioi% ;335‘35,'.'5“‘",‘,?"55\“‘“‘ ;‘i::mbeil:‘;?r‘.ng‘r!a%cmeAAm:—i"mnamfih e e e 2 e the acmi-cix-| Tor a week and a day the allied |ing the outer hull. it was said,”the|, EYinters. and publishers, stores.|cruiting mariners, as it has used the |aircraft production for the government , s e. American doctors sreat vi ong th -cir- - uter hull, i . X 4 £l 1 business offices, hotels, clubs and pri- | coast. hut i beont from the Cmreq river to|troops have hammered against the |submarine probably would have been | 5 d pri 3 I I madiately southwest . of | Soiseons-Rheims- salient until its | desfroyed. As it the inner hull | Vate homes. will be asked to:co-oper-|to the navy left that field largely | #ill recommend taking over the plants. Z‘c‘:"‘fe‘r"‘fic :s;gf‘"cemenls and their |and nurses, men the hoard declared in s and women, are =1 5 o S ght | Losking night and dayi{o relfeve pain oiscons- . il its | destroyed as, the inn I e T e [t Allon beard) thel Gloticestor s ] is cstimated unofficially tonight|and restore injured members To Rheims and their men are said to|width :.rrno:;dhg“:honr:"tb; r.“;::;sf};‘-'g cvidently " ws ot dama uf!, and g_lé; e e e freply Pt schooner Robert ana, Richard, sunk by ll;:g;fizhe enemy losses are more than|them young men representing almost have orders to Stem the allied tide of {been narrowed to about 21 miles from |submarine wiil be ready for service|igy bo efiminated, and all waste pa:| .. iEriotis ot eiven |& German submarine, were accounted | -0%:000. of which 50,000 were inflicted | every state in the union, and occasion- nee at all costs an original width of 37 miles, while|again as soon as the damaged outer | ¥ 1oy clo) "be saved. collected and|,, “HOWever patriotically” ' conceived | g, . by the Americans. The prisoners alone | zlly a French or British soldier, are Shvathotoas . o accounts the | the triangular « ":1”:1‘., Dl o BR BIER P replaced. - |Foturned to the mills for use again in | this mart of the lrt~ollltlondmasr 5l { ¢ gumlbgu over 20,000, anq the losses in | hurried to be cared for until they alilbetohii, Proock sh and Talian |into a cifcular cul-de-sac. = Over the| This was the frat meldent of tts| ori o ing cannot constitute a groun or Italians living in Russia have formed | 3¢d and wounded ‘are uppalling, could be transferred elsewhere. troops, thes es well remvmrcerl to : ntire :xo(‘ ? tholl: o i Tt 1{1 g .0’?‘. \;r in .-“m rican \\g\ Lt-l's_.t s0 v strike 3 R ) a battalion and are fighting with the e French used more armored carg The same spirit of co-operation is meet the new turn in affairs, were |tinues to rain shel e ar as has heen announcea. but it is| pEVELQPMENTS IN STRIKE Refusal of the Lake Carriers' As-|G,ecnd Slovaks against the Bolshe. | than usual. and cavalry or mounted |displaved in all the hospitals of ths stead pressing forward at nearly all jairmen are keeping up ir n’”\d‘ not the first since the United States sociation to send- representatives to | o patrols were effectively employed in|allies. Buf the number of wounded.is = * < oh the battle line to Rheims,|sive bombing of troop' formaiions and |entered the war. Last October- the £ OF PAPER MAKERS!the National Marine Conference here S clearing the forests. and maintaining [not so great as might be expected Thile east of the cathedral :city a mkhlar.,v works. Sl by ishie A_Terl:c;lm ;unh&’n i\;;:}!m“e' Wh”;\.‘,;: . a v 'A_w'_'aAGV O since Mays- sinee such meud-_ne: e Kimeriin Red Cross has given | contact. from the magnitude of the operations, <3 “contingent—the first of the| AS yetnotwithstanding the in {patrol duty in the Mediterrancan fired | No Hehearing Will Be Grinted Unél[would be recogniion hat organized|songon francs to assist in the fgnt | TOWArd Soissons there has been in-| Y. M. C. A men also are close o enter the combat—is declared |of the allied troops, there has been no jon an Italian submarine, which faile Ali‘Men on Strike Return to Work. |labor represented their employes. | cainct Spanish influenza in Switzer- | Creased artillery work and bitter and | the heels of the advancing American » carried out successfully an|sign of an impending gex}crul 1{"6:! to promptiy answer signals for identi- which thev dened, was made the sec- |1 13 steadier fighting. The French . and | One outfit appeared at Jauigbnne earls rise & t the enemy in which |on the part of the enemy, and, "f he|fleation. One man aboard the subma-! Washington, July 25.—The contro- |ond zronnd for striking. American soldiers disregarded caution |in the morning with cigarettes, choco- ’ an 200 Germans were made ::‘eectsalt‘?(’;zar_':i::dcfimz\l&tnscou‘:-i&n o Diie s killed, but the vessel reuched | versy between ‘the International Pa.| “The Shipping Board regrets the at-| The Belfort, France, municipal coun- | AmOst entirely v prisoner. ed g 5 [ d 4000 titude of the Lake Carriers’ Associ e A sterday, advancing |late and other delicacies to be disposed E t Land per Company and some employ- | titude of the Lake Carri - as das! e ; heir lines in open order and taking|of in their canteens. The guns were - ONET. stern jaw of the pincer con- |same Success as herdtofore, it seems| Licut.-Commander Einest Friedrick,| e in waper mills ‘o New. Xorn New [ation in this respect” Mr. Hurleys | i Jas declded to change the name of | Wiyt came. without bothering to hunt | soarig on ol aides, but Semeame tinues to move eastward along the|that with the daily, narrowing’ of the|commandin gthe Nashville, was or-|Hampshire and Maine was referred to|statement said. “but in view of the down machine gun nests. This brought |it was announced, had been captured, e e ™ on “Doth sides of the|neck of the pocket he necessarily will |dered reduced thirty numbers ingrade|foday by the war labor board fo a|matiomal labor policy promulgated by % |them into closer contact with the main | and the Y. M. C. A. took charge. The tram, and the Franco-American |lose many of his men when the time Ly the naval court which tried him, |section composed of C. A. Crocker and |the president’s proclamation of Abril| Stockholm advices reaching Paris |00 Of the retreating forces. commanding officr ordered the Y. M. sops now are virtually knocking at|comes to make his way northeastward. |and the sentence was afproved by |T. M. Guerin. It gvas recommended |8. 1918, (which provided that the WAT | epori that Germamy wants to Put the| In numerous cases - machine gun|C. A. men out_ explaining not only e gates of Fere en Tardenois, the| Some perturbation is beng caused |Secretary Daniels. although the Ital-|that.the section interpret the recent |should not be used to force change in|rommor Greck king Constantine on {he | COMpanies surrendered, although it |that it was too hot, but that the men portant railway junction and store- |in England through a strike in several jian government officially interceded in|award of the board,, disagreement over |labor relations) it did not feel that it|iannich throne. 7 | was necessary to clean up many others. | would gather wherever they were, and house for Germany's war supplies. |cities of munitions workers. The hehulf of the officer, and the courtfthe application of which led. to the|would he justified in forcing the lake 3 e Division headquarters are constant- | German shells had a habit of going B er outh to the Marne nmew ad- |workmen threaten a further extension |rccommended clemency. and also that | striice: carriers o meet with representatives amcec in keeping with those in the|of the strike unless their demands are|the officer be commended for his zeal. ! : i me The coal production for next winter |IY ChHanzing on account of the com. |where the German observers spotted h of r b o Authority also was given the section |of the unions. Will Do 15 per cent greates than o | paratively rapid advancement of the ' crowds. TR s o v beth Sitaicied. t. o reopen_ the cause and hold further c f Bitterness. 1916-17. There are 15 per cent. less MEETING ,OF CATHOLIC hearings if that is deemed necessary.| yp,., R i e iiite e wi T 2 TR : t no rehearing will be. aranted untii | ) ; - e < H ARE TO EMULATE DID U-BOAT DESTROY A 3 EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION |} 3 seamen and their employers has aris % 3 FEELING OF EXPECTANCY FAILED TO SETTLE STRIKE all the men now on strike retum to|SA7CL "I OL ENVNCE Giiiiae | Destruction of two enemy airplanes BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA| BIG SHIP OFF NOVA SCOTIA? PERVADES WASHINGTON| AT GENERAL ELECTRIC PLANT |yotes Whole-Hearted Support of W"‘”B-“‘ Baa o e book.” adopted by the association as lnyla’; lla(;wn aviator |n§1m;m l;gu!:; s, — 4 - ity oth Parties Given a Hearing. |2 means of keeping a record of each |last Tuesday was reported in an official | in General System of Physical and |Commander Told Captain of Fishi Of Great Events Impending on Battle [ Manager Declines to Recognize Unios| President Wilson's Conduct of the| popresentatives of boti -the com- |man's service, and objected to by the |despatch vesterday from Rome. T oot Tola_Captain of, Seaig Fields in France. —Negotiations tc be Continued. War., pany and the union were called befors | unions because of (he alleged use ol (B2 ol o e 5 g 3 , d : 3 the board to expiain thelr differences | the books to blo,klist men active in c alConsn St e i 5 ; ot Washington, July 25.—With Ameri-| Lynn, Mass, July 25. — Failure tol Sa{‘d"f“m‘s“-t Tl ey wrhole- | vhich resulted in the closing down of | organized labor. The Shipping Board | Day square, East Boston, yesterday, ew York, July 25—The Trench| Gloucester, Mass., July 25.—The .n. French and Pritish forces press- |bring about an agreement between |hearted support of President Wilson's s 'S |ten mills and a consequent curtail- |ordered the aholichment of the books |Killing the motorman of one car and |EPyernment & ot the ememy hard on all sides of |10,000 striking employes and ofiicials "‘f’“?““ of the ot a"!d ,?°"f‘em"?“°g iment of about 75 per cent m tne pro- |and fhe substitution of certificates arme battle front, the air [of the General Electric Company in|Pf PNf:‘fln absolutiém” were voted|quction of news print paper. Both |and its statement today said the Lak \ington was clectric tonight [this city was announced late tonight|DY the Catholic Tducational Associa- preparing a_ general |German U-boat that sank the Glou- oy e ity system of physical and moral training | cester fishing schooner Robert and Tyl Y0 RYssenser along the lines constituting the na- |Richard off the Maine coast last Mon- % o i e Bt Ly, Thany e L oy 3 B A sides were agreed that inability of |Carriers’ Association haye taken| Johm Grady of No. 110 Nam\lsh!L’f'}f,;ol;‘;g:ri?:gfdf,’,‘: thel by oot ey S::',’f.‘ e e § feeling of expectancy, as of members of the state board of |tion of the United States today at the|their commitiees to asree on the|steps to comply with the ordets, and|street, Hartford, is probably the Afth|p, a0 "(0d0y at scout national|ccrding io a remark made to Captain Sreat events impending. Rumors of |conciliation and arbitration following Closing session of its 15th anual con- | working out of the award presented |the decisions have met all the reason- | Person in that city to be drowned in|PS/G PRICE tOCRY at Seoue nagoiel|criens toa, remark mads to Captal lsive vietory ran through official|hearings and conferences lasting all | Vention. o < the greatest difficulty and they joined [able objectors of the union. the Connecticut river within a week-|giophen Pichon, secretary of foregn|schooner by the German officer whfi es like wildfire day. Negotiations will be continued| The resolutions particularly attack-|in the request for aninterpretation. Demands for increased pay were = 3 | aflatrasinsIrance; The Boy Scolr of-|Foarded the vesselii It wasloianibel niraceable reports were current|in an effort to end the labor trouble |ed the German educational system. After hearing the explanation, the |made in the strike resolution which| A Moscow report to the Berlin Lokal | i ion ™1 rance have been |today that Captain Whaston recalled at the army of the German crown |which has crippled work on war con-|, A resolution excoriating modern bus- | board adopted a resolutlon, _which | nevertheless. suggested that they be |Anzeiger says the former heir to the ) WHVFIERSS wn FTERCE HBaYe Oeeh |100ay ARl ©F e prince had been trapped and even that | tracts for more than a week, iness efficiency systems as destructive|was presented by Former President|arbitrated. The Shipping Board | throne, Alexis Romanoff, died from ex- | 45 4 2 =" 1 "While the U-boat officer: was search s crown prince himself had been) Hope of reaching an agreement to- !0 initiative and individuality alsoTaft, one of the joint chairmen of the | pointed out that last September when |posure a few days after his father was “PFC, o 1 oioin forces in France |ing the cabin of ths schooner. he picke aptured night vanished when Walter Fish, lo- | Was adonted. In part it reads: “The|loard, that the subject be referred |Similar demands were referred to the | executed. 5 s . Bficial reports gave no foundation | cal manager of the company, definite- | modern efficiency expert in industrial v ef : back to the section “whose action this |hoard an order was issued within =iy o | EO0300 ot ol B D et on which the feeling of suppressed |ly rejected a propositon made by the |life has too often driven the laboreer|board approved,”.’for the purpose of {three days, granting the union de- | Captain Barratt O'Hara; former lieu-| .y (o "0 T 00 WOEE DO STt Ea S SR o e boat was excitement could be based strikers involving rec nition af their |0 the limit of endurance.. Moreover, | caring. the application for an iuter- | mands in full. ienant governor of. Ililnois, b¥ & War | yycual ability of former. scouts who | Commenting on the. stury appest® The latest despatches” said Secre- |organization. In o siitement to the | the demand for efficiency in production|pretation of the award. department order was promoted to the ; s 2 ¢ v apr 1ph_of Captain Whar- tary Baker, “show continued advances |board this afternoon at a public hear- |has had an unwholesome influence on| The section also has power, “if in|rocH 1S MASTER OF rank of major and assigned to. over- | Sre brivites and offfurs in thejante (:{hil]?: 'r':%v}ur;nflggzduné“nirfi:é several places by American, British |inz, Mr. Fis hsaid he was willing to {modern education. its opinion a case is bresented to seas duty. | Bhis nd French troops. They are not ex- |take back all employes who went on ‘The economic producer regards the srant such re-hearing as it may deem ALL ENTENTE TROOPS of themselves in the trenches and to just and wise on ihe ground of mis- N ensive but are important and show |strike and would consider their de-|child merely as a future economic < e TE take or otherwise in any of. the issues | If British Are Not Attac toat the battle is continuing iwith |mands. unit in the industrial s reat vigor.” the crew adrift. Among them' was, a : set out of, and help others out o[,‘hu- six years old. It was prefty 5 1t s in | panre e e s ePuties | tght places in field operations, ha|rough that night wnd 1 doubt If thsy involved and disposed of in the award, Accordance With His Orders. ishment for -ofMcers with. the ranis of |F50 Very Rotlceable and. s JrSWIEOL sdliorSl L b o it vikad ol Earlier in the day a prees despaich | A GIANT SUBMARINE BRITISH MUNITIONS WORKERS |out that :uch & srant of re-hooring | T o Eis gegfrzl who lose troops or ground by | {aRORoible, KOF Hhe OmC re e e | firet. cighted. the. submarine 1t wase ol L t the shall not be made except on condition aris, July 25.—The Journal's cor-|negligence. e IAG et DRaEDE Sl Bl N 3 itish, west of Hneicas had seored 1 LAUNCHED AT QUINCY. TO STRIKE TUESDAY |fiat al men ceasing lbor Shall re: |respondent at the tront telegranns to- ITench government (o the effective- |comins from tae north. a o decided success and advanced toward e en 3 3 turn to their employment before such |day as follows: Twenty enemy. aliens were taken [ 1538 OF £18 5oOHE DrCETaTur e @ o tor |Ship” was sunk off the: Novid il smes, the German rail base’ midway ||t Embodies All the Latest Designs in|!f Embargo is Not Removed—300,000 |ycaring is granted.” “Foch is master of the situation, and | from New ~Yerk to Fort Oglethorpe, | TICNt Isstied at scout headquarters ot e e oY between Soissons and Rheims. Later Submersibles. Workers Involved. Ordered -to, Present . Brisfs. if the British troops are not attacking|Ga. to be interned. Severteen were |“*Y" = i whether the ship’ was & B o reports confirmed this to the extent of == Mr. ‘Crocker and Mr. Guerin who |R°Y> in order to relieve the pre picked up at various points on the w. : X . stride forward by British and| Quincy, Mass, July 25.—A giant| Leeds, England, July 25.—At a con-| - St 2 s LI 20! the fatt: YI{BELIEVES HE SIGHTED LARGE [sailing vessel. 3 According to Captain Wharton, the U-BOAT OFF FIRE ISLAND |.ybmarine officer was very anxious_tal AueEn the French, it is in_ accordance French forces on a three-mile front |submarine, said by its bullders to be|ference 'of members of the engineer- |Conducted the original hearing in the |ino commander-in-chiefs orders = just west of Rheims, throwinz the | the largest ever launched in this coun- [ing and allied trades today, with del- | cuntroversy, directed the com-| " uThe last has not yet been heard| High grade whisk&y is scarce in ‘nemy back a mile and a half. Proba- |try and embodying all the latest de- |°gates representing 300,000 workers,|Pany and the men to present iriefs e T pany and the men to present Iriefe|of the German reserves and the pos-|Fngland. At a county fair recently a |Captain of a Coal Steamor Now in | eont" oreordon pie ang oo cew wagt o biy it was this which started wild re- |signs in submersibles, went down the it was decided to cease work next|lOmorrom. after WhEh CRCiion Willlsibilities along the Flanders coast. sum was realizéd when one shil- et it Bt T s o e yorts of a sweeping victory. ways at the Fore River plant of the |Tuesday if the embargo is not remoy- | P Teached on the AUeSiion Bf reopen” | The three years I have passed among was charsed for a Sniff of pre- ort at Boston. they left us screnty milesiat sea in an Bethlehem Shipbuilding corporation | ed. ng, w10 b % 8, 4t 2 oyr allies enable me to know how they | war Scotch. 3 Bot Jul cantain of a|it wanton cruelty,” sail Captan NEW MEMBERS STATE here this afternoon. Several thousand o e award. #.4 ~'|are straining at the leash, awaiting the + 1 Boston:(July D et o At COUNCIL OF 'DEFENSE, | WOTKers joined in a mighty cheer as| Dirmingham, England, July 25.— Mills Shut Down. order to advance. Let us be patient.| Members of the reichstag voted to[codl steamer now at (his v 2 *ithe new #ndersea boat struck the|The workmen of the “slack country,”| Information before the board was|A great time is in store for the armies sighted a larg erman submarine | iome here to i ay after relating hi: & e the pay of the members from | 3 e Alton T. Miner of New London One of | Water: She was christened the AA-%.|one of the chief industrial districts of f that mills of the International Paper o e e he Dy oL N members TOM|of Fire Island, N. Y., last Sunday at|perience to-navai intellizence officers r o The new submarine is eaid to have |the Midlands, are joining the strike|Company are shut down at -Glens — — the e from. $5>to $7.50%for ‘abpetice| 00w Hel wasiiconfident 'she twes i Bepror? the Additional Appointees. a cruising radius, without replenishing |and the situation is considered more |Falls, Fort Edward, Parmer and Ti-|15 OF JUSTICIA'S ENGINE from a sitting. SEman e e e st e 3 5 . her fuel tanks, exceeding that of any |serious. conderoga in New York state; Wilder, ROOM STAFF MISSING $ B s onin. . She was sina| o A Fhrt{erd. c: July :sf\zx:{udae- ship of this type ever constructed here Vermont, and n-;mkun iré N:\i:v Hamp- > Action by3 congress on the plans of | “\" MNCEIERE DO S etant. There OF ALL STEEL MAGNATES' ditional members were appointed 1o |or abroad. The craft was designed by . shire and Rumford and Livermore [ Remainder of OFf Were | Secretary Baker to ecxtend the army SUbS el il Clatant e the Connecticut state council of de-|the Electric Boat company. 4 fiCngEtikefatucou Y Falis +in, Maines -One_ other' mill; op. | o inder of ‘Officers and Crew 'Were |t de Timits and provide for & > cHtios m iy time e AR Dovies, Maitis 'Tok Jenticn S ense by Governor Hoicomb today,| The submarine was christened by[ Coventry. England, July 25. — By|erated by Finch, Pruyn and Com- Saved larger army ptain_ of the .collier ‘expressed the three of them women. The appoint- appears improbable until M. Aivin Hovey Kins, wife of the|000n today 18000 of Coventry's 24,- pany at Glens Falls also is tied up. ments follow. o hoze and the sicam-| . ernment Supplied With Steel. the recess period ends in August. ninilon” that the paze and the S i e looy skilled workers were on strik ¢ London, July The British ad- = er's camouflage prevented th sub- — chiet paymaster at the Fo ; o. | 3. T. Carey, of Albany, N: Y., Lres- 0 S 1 t g ; A4 Frank D. Cheney, South Manchester: | plant. - The ceremonies wero witneovey | Altogether 80,000 workers engaged iniGant of the International Papérmak. |Miralty's announcement savs that| A mew recortl for rapid troop mo‘,fi_l sarine from sighting him. 1l Philadelphia, July 25 —Charles M. Alton T. Miner, New London: James|by Rear Admiral Spencer S. Wood, |, manufacture of munitlons &re of-lers’ Union, told the board the men |fifteen of the White Star liner Justi-Iment was ' established. at a training |Meted the lenth of the subme Schwah, director-gepera! 6f tae ‘Emier= T. Moran, New Haven: William Bro- | commandant of the First naval dis-| Coieo: : had walked out despite the fact that |Ci&'s engine room staff are missing as|camp July 7, when 19 tr: g | at between 300 and 400 feet. gency: Pleet ‘Carpbration, Todus: ¢S Smith, Hartford: Ira M. Ornburn, Mew | trict, and a party of naval men. The’ joint committee of engineering | hahad advised agamst such a course. |2 result of the first explosion, but that | ganed 1%, It MRER 25 trains With 229 S fa conterence on Monday of represen- Haven; Mrs. Mary M. Beach, West and allied unions which urged that|pje said an important part of the dis- | the remainder of the officers and crew | the camp between 3 o'clock and 9 p. m. |[COURTMARTIAL SENTENCE e e L Hartford: Mrs. F. B. M. Bulkeley, work be continued pending a confer-|pyte is whether the meri shall receive |0f the vessel were saved. The sub- ikt devise means for keepinz the govern- . Hartfgrd. Miss Caroline Ruutz-Rees,|SEVEN YEARS IN FEDERAL ence has been repudiated by the strik- | for May and June the bonus paid by rndzl'ine \\'hichbnrs\'inuih‘ \vz;‘s Ep_o‘nl. SOUVENIRS OF ATTACK ON OF EiGHT YEARS, HARD LABOR pplied \\'u‘h" m(nl S0 xlx-m;“;hte 3 i ers. i pany héfore ed as having been sunk by the British 5 mme will 7ot be interrupt-. « i% SR s s 2 PRISON FOR SEDITION (b plernional Comenty S8 1 | S50 b5 SRt Shafve "TA TUG PERTH AMBOY AND TOW et ina e e, e been appointed to the couslcil. their OBITUARY. company, he said, declined to pay the |One of those endeavoring to get into s < For Frank koo & Bridgeport, | alled for a toial of 4- appointment being a part of the re- |Max Freudenheim, an Austrian, Tried bonus for -those two months because | POSition: to attack the Justicia” says|Were Auctioned Off at Vineyard Haven Charged With Desertion. 0000 tons a year. organization of the committee of wom- | to Contaminate Negroes in Harlem. Edgar Loomis Davenport. the board’s award is retroactive for|the admiralty statement for Red Cross Fund. Ayer: Mgss., July 2 courtmaali e 2 o SR o en on women's activities ; Boston, July 25. — Edgar Loomis | that period. : Ayer, Mass, July t F New York, July 2%5—Max Freuden- | Davenport, an actor,, who has play. |, John Lundregan, representinz the (70 GERMAN DIVISIONS IN Vineyard Haven, Mase,* July: 5= |tial senfence of clghit years atsnird SODA WATER GLASSES' LAKE SEAMEN ASKED TO heim, an- Austrian, convicted of at.|ed with diffcrent stock companies in|International Paper company, said tho PRESENT FIGHTING ZONE Souvenizs of the atack’ on. the i was announced at Camp Desens (oda g tempting to spread sedition among |New York, Philadelphia_and this city [men had struck after mpany m— E erth Amboy and her tow off Orleans RS e kuith g : X CALL OFF PROPOSED STRIKE |negroes in Harlem, was sentenced in |and had appeared i the support of [ad notified them that —adjustments |Battle Regarded as Biggest Since the on Sunday by an enemy submarine|!idseport, Conn, charged with deser- | Causes Action by Surgeon General's " ST . |the federal court here today to serve|many .roted died at his home|in wages would be made if the com- Beginning of the War. were auctioned Off here - ldst night,|tion. . Harlow vas oEERE, HE o Office of the Army. % ould Virtually Tie UVCW" Making | seven years in the federal prison at|here today. He was 56 vears old. Mr,|Pany's interpretation of the award adding a large sum to the funds of the | V20Y, €. 301th Infantrs =t Industries of the Country, Atlanta, Davenport was a tmember of a family | was held by the war labor board to| With the French Army in France,{local Red Cross chapter. German|Ver 80 to May 1% TFreudenheim, who Was an industrial | of actors whose name for generations |be Wrons. July 25—(By The Associated Press.) |shrapnel sold high. The tuz's coffee Bath, M i Washington, July 25.—The Shipping | insurance collector, was accused of |has been widely known to the Ameri- 4 —Up to the present seventy German|pot went to a summer resident who| Destroyer Launched at Bath, Me. |unclean soda water glass when the % I'oard today telegraphed the Lake Sea- | carrying on “a sort’of private agita- |can stage. His father was the late| Brazil to Close German Banki divisions have been identified in the|toasted the alffed cause from coffee| ‘Bath Mairs, July The torpedo | surgeon general’'s office of the army. men's Union asking today that the|tion” among negro patrons, telling|Edward L. Davenport, the moted| Rio Janeiro, Brazil, Wednesday, July | present fighting zone, and the battle|made on the spot. Battered .bread|boat destrover Philip, was launched |requested the heaith department. to Sirike of seamen employed on vessels |them that if they fought for the Unit. | American tragedian, and his sister was | 24.—By order of the Brazilian govern- | therefore mal be regarded as the big- | pans brought as high as 75 cents each. | today at the vards of tne Tath Iron|have a rigid inspection made of places. Z ,t the Lake Carriers’ Association,|ed States they would be treated cruel- |the late Fanny Davenport, a distin- |ment, the operations of German banks|gest since. the beginming of the war.|Most of the souvenirs were purchased | Works. The new craft, which was nam- | which™ sell’ soft drinks. The purpose “ulled for next Morday, be abandoned.|ly by the Germans but that if they |guished actress. Mr. Davenport was |throughout the country have been re-| The prisoners taken number over | by Boston and New York summer res-|ed for the iite Rear Admiral John W.|is to protect soldiers passing through The strike, the message said, virtual- |resisted the draft Germany would es- |the original “Chambers” in Frank |stricted solely to. liquidation .of their|25000 and more than 500 cannon and|idents. The souvenirs were contrib- | Philip, was christened by Mrs. Ifar-|the city, and incidentally the public,. & would tie up the mar-making indus- |tablish a separate kingdom for me- !|Mayo's production of ‘Pudd’nhead Wil- | business. This measure wiil result in | thousands of machine guns have been |uted by Captain James Tupley of the|ret Philip. of New York, daughter-in-' from the danger of contracting diph- the 'early closing ‘of these-institutions.! captured. Perth Amboy, tries of the country. _ groes after the war. son.” law of Admiral Philip. theria or other communicable- diseases. New York, July 25.—Fresh emphasis. was given today to the menace of the 4 2L 2 i T silsiiadethl Sbr iRt sl onii

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