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NORWICH, CONN. SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1918 Only Mutual Bombardments are in Progress Along the Western Side of the Salient SALIENT INGLUDING SOISSG-RHEIMS Cabled Paragraphs Kerensky Not Coming to U. 8. Parfs, July 26—The Temps says it understands that Alexander Keren- sky, the former Russian premier will not make a trip to the United States as he hall intended. GERMANS WERE FORCED SLIGHTLY NDRTHWARD BRITISH REVIEW OF WEEK Before the Fighting Died Down the Villages of Oulchy le ON THE WESTERN FRONT. The Present German Salient is Now 20 Miles Long and 20 Miles Deep. London, July 26.—As a result of the Chateau and Villemontoire Were Captured By French |pa<t wee Vities the whole situa- tion on thz western front has been and American Troops, Who Advanced Their Lines East. | transformof. The Germans, according s : to despatches from tlre front, have used Declaredindependent BY THE PROVISIONAL GOVERN- MENT AT OMSK TO ANNUL BOLSHEVIKI Decree” Has' Been lssued Re-estab- lishing the Siberian Duma—A Rus- sian Despatch Reports Mutiny at Jaroslav. Washington, July 26.—Paper mill workers are not entitle4 to the 10 per cent. bonus allowed by the Interna- tional Paper company before the war labor board’s wage award became ef- fective, T. N. Guerin and C. A. Crock- er, composing a section of the board, Siberia Has Been |Paper Makers Not Entitled to Bonus RECEIVED 10 PER, CENT UNDER OLD WAGE SCALE LABOR BCARD DECIDES Ruling is Made by T. N. Guerin and C. A. Crocker With Sanction of the War Labor Board—No Reduction.in Pay For Shorter Hours. London, July government at Om: preme authority in Siberia and pro- claimed Siberia’s independence, = ac- cording to a Reuter despatch from Pe- king under date of Tuesday. The pro zovernment has an- decrees and re- The provisionas as assumed: su- Condensed Telegrams Vincent Pomp was fined $250 in Syracuse, N. Y., for trying to bribe-a draft official. g In June the copper production of the ile Copper company amounted to 30,000 pounds. John D. Ryan, head of the national aircraft board, is visiting the spruce district of the northwest. The food administration has been notified that 300,000,000 bushels of wheat are in storage in Australia. = Charles Edgar, former acting chief of the lumber section. was appointed director of the war industries board. The United States destroyer Ward was_commissioned by Secretary Dan- iels at the Mare Island shipyard, Cal. Senator King called at the White House and urged President Wilson to declare war against Turkey and. Bul- garia. Further restrictions on the sale for export of caustic soda, effective Aug, 1, were announced by the war industries Dboard. Premier Lioyd George Made the Announcement Last ! Night in Behalf of British Government = MEN WILL BE LIABLE Statement Points Out That Munitions Workers Have Ceased to Work Not Because of deavor to Force the Government to Change a National FOR MILITARY SERVIGF Trade Pursuit, But in an En- Pchcy Essential to the Prosecution of the War—They "Had Been Granted Exemption From Military Service Merely Because They Were Considered of More Value Provost’ Marshal General Crowder to the Nation in the Werkshops Than in the Army. accepted the enlistment of 1,528 white men for the engineer corps from Penn- 7 . 65 divisions on the Champagne front, | ruled today in interpreting the award. | nulled all ward of Oulchy—Big Allied Guns Have Been Pulled Up |ana the whole of the crown prince’s only fresh reserves remaining to the — B Tk Germans are less than 30 divisions at- i sylvania. e 2 * s - i s London, July 26. — Premier \ orks Resuming Opsrations. S S N Ad rti l Th B t Manntastarers ot afices Theva e (K- o0 Yoy 3l mipres £ <o : Which It is Proposed to Push Forward and Capture Fere jarmes. 0 000 ewspaper verising Is e bes s e e e orses aara-so | Geare tonizht announced in behall of | _Tiondon, July 26—The appeal of the 1| only have two shades of brewn, medi- | the government that all men who wil- les advisory committee, 3 3 y - s Monday next eemed t6 have | a good 3 5t By the Germans, But There are Evidences That Such |tack and the pevcholosical moment for Plans for placing the Chesapeake and Eoaynoxt M e a £00d effect, accordinz to news re. admini: nitions incusiries. Protection | this afterncon. At Coventry one of the 4 2 . |man sappear committed to the great administrator are before the railroad | the munitions ingusiries. el e A 5 a Move is Contemplated—Eastward From Rheims, in 5.t i croaress ana cannot afford administration. certificates will cease to have effect | largest wor enabled to resume ness and at a convention of advertising clubs on: of these in speak- _ and The new plant of the United States | proVvi Steel corporation at Pittsburgh has | the pr turned out its first electrode which| The passed all tests reserves have been exhausted. The % Thl in That Section and are Heavily Shelling the Sectors Over tacked to Crown Prince Rupprecht's > : Prince Rupprecht would be called upon en Tardenois—No General Retreat Has Been Attempted |, AL alied i i munitions strikers to Te 1 TObal1y hdus pasasdl Tor mcNE: Thers ‘are experts in ‘advertising as well as in other lines of husi- Delaware cana! under a government| voluntarily placed themselves outside( ce'ved from Birmingham and Covenry to Stake heavily on &) dubious operi= e men will become liahle to the | operations, while in Birminzham the ing to the members referred to the fact that some in chdige cof re- Chumpngne, the French Have Reglined Nwly All Their | tion at another part of the front, ac- { cording to the view of British Exper!s - £ e The present German salient is now Old Line Positions—In France and Flanders the Bnhsh wide and 20 miles deep and, is dominated by the allied < of the military service act, [ action of unions, inc'ndinz the r added. employes of the big power atemen pointed out that which supply the biz mun! ers had quit, their jobs | tories. in refusing to strike s d of their leaders and re-| result. and it reported this after- Among the heroes decorated by |mained idle against the advice of thel noon that there were less men on . President_Poincare in his present visit | union acvisory committee. strike than vesterday. to the battle zone was a nephew of | “They ha ased to work,” the| Another influence agninst the strilke Premier Clemenceau. statemerit said, “not in pursuance of a | was that wielded by discharzed sol- trade dispute but in an endeavor to|diers and sailors, whose federation, The possible connection between pro- | force the government to change a na- | representing 6,000 men pledzed their Germanism and traction labor troubles | tional policy essential to the prosecu- | loyaltv to Winston Spenceg Churchill. is being investigated by the alien prop- | tion of the war. m’nister of munitions. tail store advertising were inclined to the use of the mails in devel- oping trade rather than newspaper advertising but “advocated that retail stores should not consider direct mail advertising, for the two are separate and distinct, ind the direct mail advertising snouid be Have Been Compelled to Withstand Several Violent At- I ditee Hag. vhemhed he it the shape of captured documents to I t the enemy had made up his : the day after the allied of- gan to undertake a rétire- ment to a line along either (By The: Associated Press.) | Before th: Ming dled duwn alodg or Vesle, anq actuall S e ninth day of the allied offensive | the wester, side: of the Rheums-Sois- | ders for this, but th d as a complemental effort and not in place of newspaper adver- tacks of the Germans. tising” for as he later stated the newspaper is the retail store’s best _possible advertising medium. 3 Those who have nad experience in advertising have unqu on- had given or- A order were ||| ably reached the same conclusion for it is results that tell and it is ErpviCustodian SHITe While millions of their fellow| A statement issued today by thet eims s w a|gons salient the village of Oulchy le|) 2 s ¢ owing ) % countrymen hourly are facing danger|strikers representing than 100,000 = iy P 4 Tattle | Chateau and, Villemontoire were cap- | (ho d‘fl;f‘:j,‘,"‘l;,[“ffi;c‘f’{::g-‘mf“o‘;‘aex};‘ the ndwspaper advertising which produces results. The buyers de- President Wilson approved the in- | and death for their country, the men | men are out, appears to be greatly ex- alo western side of the salient, | tured by Irench and American troops. | retirement in the pinched salient, and ||| pend upon it, and when seeking the best, which of course band with a gold star | on strike have been gravted exemp- agzcerated. It was said today by offis where only mutual bombardments | Whe advanced their lines eastward of |it ble that the German Tt Marne, | Oulehy. The fall of Oulchy gives the | command however, and Sout: Rheims, | allied forces the key to the heights | present po the Frenco-Amiericans, sh and | dominating Fere en Tardenois, which | Meanwhile Ttalian troops still wers at deadly grips | lies only a short distance to the east.|out. ‘the allie: Witk the enemy cn v us Sectors. At Oulchy forty guns and hundreds of { man r Giermans strove hard in the for . | Prisorers were captured by the Amer-|Germans ar P r, morth of the Marne to ho'd | ican and Franch troops. vantageous back the Fremeh and American| Biz allied guns have been pulled up|is- entirely the wonds in | in this region and are heavily shell- |If the enc The enemy, | ine the sectors before them over which t forced | it is proposed to push forward and | ta I and | capture Fere en Tardénois when the now have heen a'most en- | time is ripe. Meanwhile allied hig guns | vote thef S Crtiiane over the entire salient continue to| One re of Rheims heavy rein-| throw shells from all angles into the | donment the plan for retirement is n thrown alonz | German forces inside the big bag. found in the repo Sritish, French| . While there has been no attempt by {Which’ show In the he Germiane at a general retreat from | 210N the 1 n of Reuil, where the bat- | the salient, the belief prevails alonz |¢ation. The Germans may be merely 15 sharply togard, Rheims | 1he hattle front that an indicationthat | Po!ding on as lonz as possible in order have captiired several im- | a retreat is purposed is shown by the | 10 effect an ‘order! 1 and he military writers point m:_rtl:;r”fi:a\y fE:z‘ey, author and sol- | than in the army.” strongly opposed to the strike, 3 are z up the Ger- “nati m in a battle where the Do ietlor ontinuously in a disad- ot on so0 the situation ctory to the emains in the salient sibly unde In the past week the following matter was published in its col- umns I army, No reason was given. HOW HEROIC AMERICAN ATTORNEY BECKER TELLS OF 4 ?’ Lisiit {Cor: ' AJIC Carpentant of .the OFFICERS HAVE MET DEATH. GERMAN PROPAGANDA American destroyer Fanning received P e L 5 e e z the British distinguished service cross | Most of Them Were Killed While, Dr. g for anti-submarine operations. Bulletin Saturday, ~ July 2 Monday, July Tuesday, July Wednesday, July Thursday July Friday, July Telegraph Local General Total 7 116 395 658 4 i) 143 204 500 21424 120 253 503 P 4 ) 113 410 633 ike any iMpor- and the alli htly and Ge- ergies elsewhers n for che Germans' aban- For Dr. Dernburg. the Leading Their Men. James Lord, president of the mining| With tne American Army on the sion of the American Federation of | Aisne-Marne Front, Wednesday, bor, was appointed head of a special | 24—(By The Associated Press). section ot the federal employment ser- |'onel Hamil vice for miners. New York, July 26.—The speech Dr. Bernhard Dernburg at Cleveland, in May 1915, in which he attempted - to justity the’ sinking of et Lusitanie ] % within a | and ‘which cansed his expulsion frem Fon 20 121 330 571 few. hours after receiving. a machine | the United States, was prepared by 6 140 ()3 3 4 _37 The Bethlehem Steel Corporation has |gun wound below the heart. Colonel | Dr. William Bayard Hale, self-con- e 14 0 X made arrangements for the acquisition | Smith was making observations after | fessed head of the German information of allied airmen, emendous congestion es of (erman communi- on Smith of the States army died on July the | }] signia of a bia b for each son sacrificed. The band will | tions from these epris only because | cials of the companies that not more < decided to vetain the ||| cheapest, there is none in Norwich or this part of the state which Be worn on the left arm. their secvices are considered of more | than 12.000 to 15.000 wera idle. and that ions as long as possible. can compare with Tha Bulletin. e value to the state in the workshops| the women and unskilled workers wete of 153 acres-of land adjoining its Ala-|a morning attack in anticipation of mi- | service in America, according fo & il 0 meda plant, Cal, to increase its ship- | proving the American positions south | statement here tonight by Deputy State i e babntor S IGAME | AM o ra > ar. |10 remove the vast accumulations of - . 2 3 llding facilities D hioaons Theds Missy i i sk e s T R R B S S S e B e R DL O B Totals™. ..b o0 ie 796 712 1896 - 3404 |}|vuilding tacitities. of Soissons, near Missy-au-Bois. Attorney General Alfred L. Becker. line northward, notwithstand- | riozs sectors: under attack, depending |£athered in this district, ready for a iolence of the German coun- | mainlv on his machine gunners to re-|8r¢at advance southward. the: BRogHEss s The S THtoE Al the erterles of the salient now 7 Tn Framce and Flanders the British|arc constantly under the allies’ shell g i Tne the Britien, the Ger- | tave hech compelled to withetand Sevr| fire, and work alonz them must be| A controversy over the payment of | established the Siberian Duma. Ap- hove racaptured Mery and Hill| ~rai violent attacks by the G very difficult the bonus resulted in a walkout at]proval of these actions has been re- iritish have retained their | =~ Hebpterne and in the v 1 AN several factories this week. curtailing | qucsted of the Vladivostok —govern- [Oof ordnance. vnd most of the other | Meteren. The enemy in both °'| SOUTH HAS DROPPED the production of news print by 75 per | ment. ‘ i . t* An appeal to the war labor board e , aken 11 that region. “vor repulsed with heavy casualt THE ONE-C e 3 i ! ¥ ebn EreaEn e Wheons el A e e b e fhls n” propa- | m Rheims in Cham-| On the other battle fronts the mili ROP SYSTEM|(o interpret the award which was Mutiny at Jaroslav. P atar ot War (Pal. To b eadert | Tt aaion was Iiled st Stiatwards | Cacs e e e T T am === e yesterday was referred to Mr. & s e o1 e ot and cvity is nominal althcugh con- [ In That Section Large Quantities of | Srocker. and. M. Guerin, who after |, London, July 26.—A Russian wire- |stood the Japancse reply to the Ameri- by a hizh explosive shell ducting at the request of the departs eir ine positions and | “dcrable fizhting continues in Maca- Food Are Batey Raiodd: Coneidering briefs submitied by both | less despatch received tonight reports | can . proposals for estending military | Soon after Major McCloud died, | ment of justice, included testimony of sing the Germans with | Tonia .and_Albania. with the allied T o e man hold the bomus | that: as a result of the investigation |aid to Russia was discussed. Lieutenant James C. Lodar was killed | Dr. Hale that Dr. Edward A, Rume- troops nolding the upper hand. Dalas, by machine zun fire near where Me- | ly, arrested recently in connéciion wth as “a voluntary contribution” on the | Of the mutiny at Jaroslav many per : £ . has dropped th D system and | part of the employers. sons have been arrested, of whom 330 | President Wilson proposed the for- |Cloud fell. the alleged purchase of the New York is beginning o feed itself and help| “The workmen are not entitled to the | Were shet, a majority of #hcm being|mation of a $30,000,000 corporation to| On diffcrent days the following cap- | Evening Mail, for the German PRESIDENT DENOUNCES the rest of the nation, thus putting an | bonus in addition to the wase award | Oficers in' the counter-revolutionary | encourage the prodiiction of rare min- | tains were-killed by machine guns and | ment, was introduced to him in. 1915 MOB SPIRIT AND ACTION | €1 (0 the story about & Texas farmer | by the war labor board.” Mr. Guerin | White Guards and league with Czecho- | erals needsd for the manufacture of | shells, ail of them léading their men| as“the special brotege” of Dr. Dern: = who bought his beans in- Boston, his|and Mr. Crocker.decided, “unless_the | Slovaks. l::g![;w;‘s to Seréxitu]" Henderson of the | when they §ell(‘i Jax}tt_s dA.RLdi@rlnnl. burg. The introduction, he {leclared, Were Taken All Over the Shipyard B b in | furniture in Grand Rapids, his food in |employers desire to do it as a volun- o rsTmaeecey E mes and mining committee. | Julius A. Mood, re amel. | was made by Dernburg. and Gk ERCRIG T D:,"’";“: L’cf"[;"“ of Nearaes in | Kanss City and raised oniy cotton |tary act as was done prior to this| KAISER 4S URGING HIS : e James N. C. Richard and James H. el 3 e South 2s Well as Enemy Aliens. | i e aranr o e rfif\-' result of the revelation in_ the | Holmes. ‘ Holmes | HOW DISCOURAGED 1adelphi =3 8 o 2 war, according to authorities,| The employers, it was held. are mor- | =~ army raincoat scandal, Senator King| Lieutenant Lodar, Captain Holmes E 4 today n today nal statement, ing i fiae f Zin: « is|retary of war to inform the semate sroads in a wheat field two kilo- - e e ap opportunity by the United | squson today. in a personal statement. | in bringing about the present situa- |and June because the notice originally | Says “The Hardest Part of the Job is crossroads in a w Prussian Rages a Those Who Sl Lieutenant Colone Clark Elliott was| Testimony given Appointment of Major B. H. Gitchell | killed by machine gun fifie in the same | the Information Ser of Detroit as chief of ‘the.industrial | sector wnile inspecting the front lines. | declared, was to the effect that the ad- of the ordnance de-| Major J. M. McCloud was wounded! dress wi dited and re-edited” by announced vesterday by |while leading his men when the Amer- | Hale in this city. and telegraphed to C. C. Williams, chief |icans crossed the Soissons-Arras road | Dernburg in Cleve'and on the day it during the offens He was wound- | was to be delivered. ed in the left arm and in the left side Another revelation of the attorney A lengthy conference was held be- |by mackine gun bullets but after re-| general's inqliry into German propa- a copyreader for ice, Mr. Becker rtheast, where the Ger- ‘The south|w PAN-AMERICAN DIPLORATS VISIT HOG ISLAND YARD. 2.4 tion in the south, where large quan- |granting it said the bonus would con- still B » how many officers in the army are |meters southeast of Missy-au-Boi States shipping board to see Hog Isl- | nouncing mob spirit and mob action 2 arge d 1 ;. till Before Us. et ] = c tities of food now are being rais 3 men w ‘med of and. the world's greatest shipyard, in | called upon the nation to show the | phc are being raised. | tinue until the men were informed E lr_luenxg: gifts or compensation from | Colonel Smith was buried at Orry-la Triumph on the Marne. <4 v o n immediate and important effect | the discontinuance. It also was held| The Hague, J _The hara. |frms dealing in army supplies. Ville, near Luzarches, and the other | - - e T oS, ccompanicd by| world that while it fights for democ- | members of agricuitural departments | that the shortening of the WOrl day | est mart o tne Job. s sl hefor = Amsterdam, ¢ Paward N uriey, ghairman of the| racy on foreign fields. it is not destroy- | say, is the shary decrease in tho drain | from mine to eizht hours was not to till before us | A PEASANT REBELLION officers were interred where they died. on the north and west, which no mit duction in wages. e e man et e BREAK general of the' emergency fleet’ cor- | referred mot alone to ~mob action | wui Ao st lOadmn s [ kde Lo s il b i J reach the point of decision and is S OUT IN UKRAINE poration. and other high officials, were | 5oqingt those suspected of heing ene- mits of greater overseas shipments summoning all his strength for a final 75,000 Fairly mfi“us R le on the Delaware to see the Again the Germans. of the Prussian lower house in the" vt againet those cuspected of belng ene- | from thoso sections. AMERICAN TROOPS FAUND defense and counter-defensive’ river front of the big plant. arl 2 Ten Members of the Crew of the Ves- |Dan-German newspaper, the Taseliehe Fixed government prices, insuring a ia Wi i ?;’r:’nl:)r;n:‘l‘m;g‘t ‘TS,‘S?L’.?\“‘.J,?&?"?Z fair return, couraged planting, HUNDREDS DEAD GERMANS Pe’l;::j"“:;“g:n Dl;::‘\l;i‘lelgnbyof t Ger newspaper, tie Tagelleh M i e L chinzs | agents of the agricultural departments = s o - e2 :undschau. Traub fiercely lashes the g iley In & iSpecch old the | and while he did not refer specificall | 4 asricultural schools pointed out | While Advancing” Along the Marne—| Rrgner in the Berlin Lokal Anselgger | London July 26.—A [peasant rebel- sel Are Missing. croakers “who dare doubt the official the great merchant marine now beins | i¢ 1Y Jorows, that ne Included haw in | L0 L1, Southern farmer the benelits of About 2,000 Fell There. General Foch's offensive. On the same aable. scale, aceording. to. fu: | «London,. July, 26— The British, arm- |Lodduarters reperts of VSIS built in this country brings prosperit: s L e; a varied crop, and the excellent 638 occasion Field Marshal Von Hinden- . e O an e makes a desperate appeal for to the republics. to the south, Ameri. | S haracterization of mob spirit as| weather brought crops that authorities| With the American Army on the) Puri gl Rosner the . following | tumacin Toeeived, (0333 e 'fi‘elEgd“:x::x‘:k“m“:r?:gr:xa:a:ubn‘x;;‘;gosfl nerve” and more faith and. Ui ca’s pride of achievement will be di- blow at the heart of ordered 1aw | say will result in still greater acreage | Aisne-Marne Front, July 26.—(By The | g/ttt o e SR, R, eficlent . e e ca, | thus: “If 'der alt Fritz' (Frede the i an2 humane justice: € of wheat and oats next vear, The ideal | Associated Fress.)—The American | St3tem roops, with their officers and in- . according fo an an Great) walked the streets today | minished. g Tt e Known (hat the Tymehing of| Yeather rosuicd o troons advancne along the Marne|, It iS to be hoped the people at|structors are advancing against the|ment made by the \British admuralty | &M Vo Mo m T g e would - Speaking for South America, Am-| jcgrocs, as well as attacks upon| © merer Goot ‘:l A L et | D ticovered. hundieds of dead | nome are’full of confidence. But they | German detachments of whom have |tonight. Ten members of the crew of | R HCPR 08 (8 GO, 8 S ar 4 bassador Naon of Arzentina congratu- suspected of being enemies or potzia, Aabara, Louy ave ‘discovercd fmpdrelsts | are not learned in patience. I hope | withdrawn before the hostile advance |the vessel are mi s pre-{ooncs 2C" as oftentdent ar T e peomle of ey na congratu | those suspected of being enemies or arolina, ‘Florida and Viry Germans. The victims fell before the| 2% o8 (S00CC Th RAHCACe, 1 hove | withdrawn before the Evinice;| Uiiiveas il &ai] When fortune was often dead against on their wonderful achievement for the | SimbacZers Nave been used :”}-fi" il harvest sheatly diversified food | heavy machine gun fire of tae Amer-| gverhaste is no good. U Sl armen . e PeRsnts AT | P me. admiralty. also announces that |53 Why srumble becuusefafSuEEY Selfare of humanity. “Your sucoess js | GSman propaganda throughout Cen-| crops this year. One striking result is | icans during the retreat. In one| ®“SprabiS (S N 8G0G, o 0 o f el e ¥ alsor annoy 3t |the Marne are not going as w Sur success, your welfare is our wel. | 3] and South America as well as in | shown in a shipping report from Ala- | horseshoe area the ground was cover- | g pertit ol 1§ B the Battle arfl) - e a_British torpedo boat, destroyer Ian expected? Devil take you! You cugHp: fare, vour glory is our glor;.” he said, | Lurope, fo contend that ¢he preten-| bama. Uniil four vears ago from 17 ed with dead. The Americans: buried | wortind with machines that can bo| " - ashore Wednesday and later sank|i; ve ashamed of ourselve mbascador Da Game ot Prog wd.| sions of the Unlted States as a cham- | counties in the state not a single car- | as many bodies as was possible. It is ON A BURNING BRIDGE. |; THE FIRST WOMAN UNITED STATES DISTRICT ATTORNEY. : ] smashed as soon as the job is com- it is presumed they were drowned. ressed his admirati cork | PION of democracy are a sham. | load of hogs was shipped. In the year | estimated that 2000 . Germans fell s PRk : B pres pressed his admiration of the work | *'De iy “concerned by the. situation. | ending Apcil 1. 1615 bogs to. S e | thave, plefed. We are working with the most Is Mrs. Annette Abbott Adams of Sam Francisco. = ing democracy at home. The president sion that the France-American coun- ter-offensive has made on the Germans BRITISH ARMED CRUISER at home is perhaps best illustrated by" MARMORA HAS BEEN SUNK |an article written by Deputy over the yard and then given h i i . ES sacred thing we possess, namely, the|Two Trainmen Were Hurt—Three =hipyards of the country. the president decided to address his| were sent from the same counties. The| Farmers alonz the “Marne report : 3 » " 2 fellow countrymen. and to declare that | value of the hogs now growing iy |having scen the bodies of German dead | Dio0d #md life of the German people.( Passenger Coaches Were Burned. JAPAN ACCEPTS OUR “every mob_contributes to German | hese counties was estimated at $4,. | floating down the stream. The military | onr, a5, TESCTVeS TSt be strong met | @k N, Ho Julv 26_A B lies about the United States what her| 000,000. Formerly the section raised | authoritics are plannting some system | £210 T heace taske. We must not be|and Maine passenger train from Keeas PROPOSAL FOR SIBERIA | most gifted liars cannot improve npon little except cotton. by which they can clear the river of 2 e > - s by way of calumry.” bodies! Lef: :;:u;r:eb:n:t‘l_g;e s:‘a:lsi“xe“dwx:-iu ixe\;- ;‘L\lr: n(:‘er:u;d (lhx: haflflc:nonn when it |She was built ":1 :'xc:‘t‘nth:;n 1-.70{ yas! San Francisco. July 26—Mrs. An That Aid Be Given the Czecho-Slovak WESTERN UNION CO, Three days after the Germans| " 5 5 e ganl Fp rni Tl'v*"'qsmri'x?:w-%;'r"a:;te%‘f‘f 530 feet long and had a beam of sixty | nete Abbot: Adams, today assum Armies. NOTED RABBI WORKING Za s feet. contain no erulser d it is po: the Peninsula Naval record named Marmora vessel sunk was P - the duties of United = States district HAS BEEN INDICTED | $yacuated Chateau Thierry the Amer- |\ NEW HAVEN REAL trainmen were hurt. The passengers —_———— attorney, under températy appooints London, July 26 (by A. P.)—It AS A DAY LABORER. e St Plero, hiding 1n a oellar.:The priss S it escaped serious injury, though some | DENIES HE OPINED THAT ment by Federal Judze William G: Vazi e, T B B it Sequel to Charge That Telegraph Co.| ouer oo Mame, Tirad of fio war and ESTED | were thrown from their seate, Three Fleet. She was chief deputy to Distriet T. J. MOONEY WAS GUILTY. | i o0 John W. Preston, who res & ol B signed to become a special assistant 1o Felix Franifurter, Chairman of ~the | Y000 “siqes - Attorney Gene‘t‘“ A War, Labor Policies Eoard. Gregary. She. is the first womn:; e hold office.of United States district at torney has decided to accept the American|Dr. Stephen Wise of New York Be- Sent Messages by Train, roposal to assist the C: ieves i 3 = gmfles gL ‘zecho-Slovak i It to Be His Duty. paThe Wesgel('ln Lnglr})dTeleEm!(Jl:‘ c?u&- food and later take a ch;nce by sur- a' Permit. Wishtaas” aiil Stamford, Comm, July, 25 — Dr,|P2nY_Was indicted today by the fed- | rendering to the allies. He asserted Lot Waskligiobe voriarry (s;y " | Stephen Wise, noted Fabbi of the Frec o Frand Juey In connection with the| that the German soldiers were dis-| . New Haven, Conn.. July 2%6.—F. Hen- sudea s News that an official announcement | SYN2£ogue in New York.city, is work- |G T ne by mestengers, using mail. | e eg Tiot e renerat " omirion | & Adonroe, & real estate dealer of the | PASSING ENGINE SCRAPED £ PR bad been made in London that Japan | i€ a5 a day laborer at a local marine road trains instead of by wire, armonE them was that the EFown DeIIs | nors Comiot by ooty e errested A PASSENGER TRAIN | policies board. today Lele(g‘ranhl‘d 4°| STRIKE AT WQONSOCKET. Bad declded to accept the proposal of | SORMICHOR RORE L Weork becauge | , [WO indictments were found. Ons|was unable to bring sufficient rein- |charged with attempiing the sale of | Ni e SayernoniSienkenp of €8 e RUBBER COMPANY PLANT, the United States 1o give military as- | 80 aet B tog D e e aman | charged violation of Seation 151 or | foreements or supplies to ald the forc- | 1n it ‘stock wiihout having obiainea | Ninetsen Persoms Wers Cut and|nial thal while actins A% SSCreRty 0 = 4 stance to the Czecho- B st i = s jut hayine. ¢ f resident n - . i Siberia did not alter the course of | Who could not emter military service |£0S United Stafes Criminal Code which | g being attacked from the south. |a permit from the state bank Commis- Bruised on New Haven Road cion he expressed an opinion that | Operatives Demand 25 Per Cent. Wages the government here in st meling | (0 contribute directly by his labor to|ciircd for the carriage of letters be: | p1FFIGULTIES BETWEEN. sloner. e statule under which the| New Haven, Conrl, July 26 Nine. | Thomas I. Mocney was gullty of the| Incresse ana Abolrtion'of Bonus: 2 Eo statement on the status of the ne- | $35000 R 0 "ot Work at the plant | (Veen DOints to which the government legialntuve of 1517 and. providss fog |teen Dassengers on & Shore Linelex.)|San EFranciace preareintos Cay BORE - (o) o Y 263 gotiations. On the other hand, va. |17 year old son ie at » e Plant | onerates mail service. There are clght GERMANY AND HOLLAND |(8isiature of 1917 and provides for | press train pver the New York, New |Blot for which Mooney ,u,"”‘;’,‘,'°°,“fj§w;'\“",.;,m‘;,.fl°; s riously published accounts of the nego- % counts in this indictment, covering e = oncd Haven and Hartford railroad, which | 9€ath ser o b $o'i tiotions were demounced as specuia- | The rabbi came with his family £rom | ne routes between New York and |interchange of Potatoss and Coal Has | Connecticut ouly when sanctioned by | 00 §lcve "o today from | New |, Ihe telesram was sent because in an | department of labor, conferred today tive and as possibly giving informa- | Yew Tork to spem Summer at|Boston, New York and Philadelphia, Stopped. Sod that an Inquiry concerming ihe| York on its way to Boston, were cut ¢ filed with Governor Stephens | with offivials of the Woonsocket Rub- tion to the enemy. Shippan Point. He and his son began |Now York and Baltimore, and New b ¥ stood that an inquiry concerning the > 2 " trict Atiorney Fickert, Frank-|ber company and a committee repre-- President Wilson's statement mak. | WOrk at the piant early in the week. J Ne New and x it 1o offer such Stocke frem g | and bruised when a grab iron on a| b} e oioer wiib et pEnY, et o B ek D2 R ST York and Washington and' the saverse | London. July A despatch to the [ Pues Riser resident ‘caused investiga. | Pssing engine ‘scraped. along. the{furier Was charsed with eRprossing & |senting *striking ool makess, WSS ject has been drafted. but will nct be | TO PROLONG LIFE OF THE " Exchange Telegraph from Amstexdam | Gon of Montoe's dealings and led ig | train breaking windows in the smoker belief of Mooney's guilt to the dis-|effort to bring about an agreement. fosed until all ths details have ‘Seon REICHSTAG ANOTHER YEAR.|RUMANIAN TERRITORY passenger coaches were burned. The engineer did not see that the low bridge over a small stream was afire and when the locomotive strucl it the rails spread. was determined to secret himself, not- T withstanding the fact that he had no;For Attempting to Sell Stock Without Washington, July 26.—Felix Frank- er, chairman of the ~war labor It Would Have Terminated in Janu- ary of This Year. One Forced a German Captain Down Within the American Lines. With the American Army on the Two Girls and a Fireman Probably Fatally Burned at St. Louis. says that free difficulties have arisen | the arest. 7 and ‘mext two coaches. Joseph Matula | (FiCt attorney. g:‘f c‘;fif“;‘;s; e e between Germany and Hollani over of Pawtucket, R. I, went to_the hos- e Spie ook * arranged. UNDER MARTIAL LAW |economic. questions. The shipment of pital temporarily but all others hurt|NEPHEW Ol : BRITISH GOT 25 ENEMY — rotatoes to Germany has heen stopped |TWO VICTORIES BY were cared for on the train. VON BUELOW'A PRISONER.| UNWARRANTED INCREASE - Dispatch From Amsterdam Says King [oWing to their urgent need in\ Hol- AMERICAN AVIATORS _— AIRPLANES YESTERDAY Has Issued the Order. land flt“dHC‘};;‘ e o == 230,000 CANS OF ETHER Was Astonished to Hear There Was a IN PRICE OF GASOLINE s A3 28 many to Holland have ceased. :‘ego- DESTROYED BY FIRE i i Fifteen of the British MacFines Failed TAEADIALGE Jne M, & 2003 of Whioh |, London, 3ty 36—A: despateh 1o the e e P Large Wmerican, Army in. France: | iy Not Be Tolerated by the United i . culties are Yy at e » ¢ B av: —_ istration. London, July 26—British airmen | to the reichstag prolonging the life of |learns from Bucharest that the king ¢ Aisne-Marne Front, July 26 (by The Aisne-Marne battle was a nephew,of | Boston, ‘July 2. —Unwarranted fn- prought down 25 German airplanes | that body another vear. The legisla- |of Rumania has been ordered to place German General Killed. Associated Press). ~An American avi-| St. Louis, July 26.—Two girls and a|Prince Von Buelow, the former.Ger- | creases in the retail price of gasoline snd foreed down six others out of con- |tive period of the present reichstag, |all Rumanian territory .under martial| Genova, July 26.—The German iews- [ator, Lieutenant Avery, succeede? to- | fireman probably were fatally injured [man imperial chancelior. The officer, | as a result of the recent advance of * trol in air fighting vesterday. Fifteen | which would have terminateq in Janu- |law. papers have begun to publish long|day in forcing down alive withir the|and 230,000 quarter pound cams of|who was a batfalion commander, was | one-half cent a gallon in the wholes of the British -machines failed to re- |ary of this year, was exterded a| In semi-official quarters in Ferlin, |lists of officers killed and the names|American lines a German captain who | ether for the American army in{astonished to hear that there was a|ca'e price will not be tolerated by turn. 3 year in 1917. A’ further extension is |the Gespatch adds, thie renort has not |cover several columns. Amongz them [had a record of sixieen victories over | France were desiroved wher a large American army in France. He | Leiited States fuel administration, acs This announcement’ was made in the |now to be made “because the end of [been contradicted and jt wa. i that of General Unverszagt, attach- |allied aviators. Another American | followed by many explosions, d'd $125 - |saia he had been convifeed, as had all| cording to_information received W on aeria! oper- | the war is not yet to be foreseen,” says nothing could be vouchsafed re: ed to the staff of General Von Boehn,|rear Villeneuve aiso brought dewn a | 000 damase to the Mallinckrodt Chemi- | Germans that the American soldiers in by James J. Storrow, federal fuel wtions lssued tonight the Tageblatt. the sigpificance of the measure. on the Marne front. German plane. cal Waorkers -here this afternoop. France did not exceed 50,000, e N S SRR hye y % ; A e e