Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 15, 1918, Page 1

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Bulletin Service Flag VOL. LIX—NO. 195 POPULATION 29,919 NORWICH, CONN., THURSD , AUGUST 15, 1918 SOMME SECTION EVACUATED OVER FRONT OF FIVE MILES C;lbled Paragraphs Butter -and Eggs for Girls. Petrograd, Aug. 14.—Instead of ficw- ers and chocolate drops, young men in Petrograd, in these days of near fam- ine, carry presents of butter and esgs to ‘the voung women whom they are “courting.” While the shop windows are full of candies and flowers, butter and ezzs can be obtained only with Town of Ribecourt | Captured By French Parls, Ang. 14—The town of Ribe- court, on the road leading to Noyon and six and one-quarter miles south- American-British Aerial@erations London, Aug. 14—Twenty-one. Ger- man airplanes were brought down and ten driven down out of control: yes- Condition of the ! crop is reported good. i A Brazilian steamer ran ashore on | the New England coast. The British Y. M. C. A. has 40,000 | workers with the British armies. The Isle of Awaji, the favored spot of Japanese poets, is slowly sinking | into the oce: vew York, Aug. 14—Serious dam- i€ was caused late today by a freak ind storm which swept a section of extat dimcnity west of that town, has been captured | terday, accordinz to an official state-| The seventh Ferris type ve-"-sels! Hudson river around 125th street c Made Unt le b Allies’ B — by the French, according to the offi- | ment issued tonight on aviation opera- |built at Tacoma was launched and|and a part German Front Line Trenches e Untenable by Alr Bail Kiis Bernans. cial statement of the upper West Side. A foreign warship auchored in the issued tonight. 5 Bk ety thres 'more| Hidsen The toment follows: of tions. Six British machines are mi ing as a result of the aerial encouft christened Wakanna. The names Amsterdam, August 14.—A dispatch Activity—German High Command Possibly Forsees T he d ters. British A) L Cinny onie iy o o e s e e 1 ! “During the day our troops. contin- | ters. British and American airsquad- | American p < y|sale and wes swept helple toward 2 B Y h i g::n‘i‘redt:::r;;\rfix\?;IZ::\‘XI;D‘?e:a":e::x{ uing their progress between the Matz|rOns co-operated in an attack on an|were announced the war depart-|ihe rocks on the New York shore. Six N % = & 2 £ ¢ 1 ise, K % enemy i YR 3 X 3 ment. o Successes of the American and British Operations. e e O reYere! | and the Oise, took: Robeca v airdrome and destroved six |men i v umed full speed to the war “East of Belval our infantry ele-|machines parked near i i angars, & first nths of 1918}V age was done, especially in the streets the hangars. For the first seven mo 1 | m b ) Ssistance in response to sig- B T o e e Bertich - oiy|ments, having diScovered preparations |The text foilows: American shipping losses from encmy |Uals Jov heip. They threw lines fo - dusting the Ger- et sh air| tor a German counter-attack, succeed-| “The fine weather of Aug. 13 again |causes totaled 117 tens. \the heipless ship when she was in (By the Associated Press) the Sggli’goiflfm’:t e e S S onoay, ed in iaking. Hdiprigoners; seven OMi-|eOsbled ug fo. tamy out a largo| Applications for licenses to export|stallow water only a few, feet foir Cort nd s Somme the n - = ¢ v cers, of whom twc were battalion |amount of aerial operations. The con- |cottonseed oil will now’ be considered bank R B d south of the SO tam¢| In anv event the retrogade movement | REBECCA WINBORNE MADE D i and draggec her out into seemingly indicates that the ten mile| commanders, and a certain number of tinued bombing of the Somme bridges, by the war trade hoard. 1. | e river. Considerabie damags’ was the former region they | Seer FIRST CONFEDERATE FLAG |soldiers coupled with that of railway lines and | A school %or student clorks for rail-|ione by the wind to the war vessel's ted thelr positions over | Salient between Beaumpont-Hamel and | =i “In the region of Roye and Lassigny | junctions. which has taken place night |way licKet offices was opened at |SUPETSIucture but her officers repofts e front to the British north | Bray on the Somme, T order that| Wilson, N, C, Aug. 14—Mrs. Rebec. |the artillery fire has been spirited. and day since the beginning of the of- | Washington by the railroad adminis- “f,‘ it could be repaired without trou- while in the latter they!|aPex. now must e L intelca Winb¥me, 87 veirs old, who died| “Aviation—Our crews have downed |fensive, has interfered with the arri- | tration. e ten back in the hill and | the German front here .may”f"me g i 1 to have been the wo- {or put out of action 12 machines, On|{val of the 'enemy’s reinforcements. It| “Uncle Joe” Cannon, of the 18th| The fury of the wind was felt es- t bt oFiehe Qe AUENmENt Wit Jtuat K dRe, SOH made the first confederate | the night of Aug. 13-14 our bombing|also has forced the ememy to employ |Illinois district if elected this year |Pecially alonz Riverside Drive, where v the Fréach, across the Somme. In {gc. i ,ee:fl flag. I by Cap- | machines dropped 32 tons of projectiles | large formations of air scouts in will be serving his 22d term in the swept iinst the towering apart- Gértian front line trenches dt Bean-{ N0t improbable. that the Garmans PIo-j tyin Or, of Hen- |on enemy objectives endeavor to protect communications |Honse . {ment ho which line the cast. side it Tl rre, Puisieyx-au-Mont | Rose to readjust their rnn;) -mm(her“” Sor c. Mrs. Win-| “Army of the East—In Albania the |0l much vital importance to his other President Menocal has signed thej the thoroughfare. Large sections R Séane) % _| Somme to Arras, and possibly fur | borne when s was Rebecca | enemy attacked, after bombardments |arms, but concentrations of our draft bill for Cuba. Alij{ he roofs were ripped iro and Buecquoy have been found un | L X i > S | th seteiray D m two of $hkaNtG By thEyensy Ha Hhe Wice jof northward. ) ATl i Murphy, at Wilson in February 1861.]lasting several hours, our positions in |{machines have effectively dealt | tween 21 and 28 arellle ouildings, one. of thirteen stories $hé recent Activity by, the Brivn alj - foho capture of Ribeconrt by they ed to aid in making the | the region of Gereporocani. He was|all opyosition. Fifty-eizht tons ble for sery ; lund the other of ten. The tenants along the line from Albert to Arras;| Frenchumarks.an imggrtant epoch n d, because siie was en-|repulsed completely by our fire and |bombs have heen dropved Gurin Prices of Alaska salmon will not be|We¢re badly frightened but elevator chile the Fremch have pesevered|the offensive which has for its Ifi-}saged to a northern army officer. A |our frontal atiack. hours on ‘the forezoing objec- |increased if tne recommendations of |°P€raiors kept the cars running and while the Fr 8 o mediate purpose the freemng of theroy yeeks after the flaz was com-| “Our aviators have bombarded ar- . 21 tons by diy and 57 tons by |an investigating committee of the|“CQn calmed their fears. in their violent attacks against the ; hte e itnel : : . I | gating ; Soctor which domin- | region between the Somme and theipjeteq it was.adopted by the confed- |tillery parks northeast of Monastir. food hoard are adepied s were torn loose from s e pic Oise of the enemy. As a gain fromicrre con at Montgomery, Ala,|Important losses were inflicted on the \ raid also was ried out on Two objectors were sentenced to| and sailed through 3 156 Dife vallev) kua the strategic standpoint it ranks With .s the standard of the confederacy.|enemy. British aviators bombarded [hostile airdrome, from a low height, | dishonorable discharge from the army kites while hundreds of o hrcther thont he T | the taking by the French of the fores st banner contained only seven | bivouacs north of Gievgeli by British and American air squad- |and one was enced to fifteen and ¢ were shattered in apartments ¢ platpau and | nd hill position between the Matz representing the number of —_ _— rons. The raid resulted in six enemy |the other o twety vears' imprison- as well as plate glass ive canituré the Awe |.and the' Olie which Ras Drovent (e | it had seceded, but this num- | GENERAL STRIKE SUSPENDS machines on the cround being de- | ment for several blocks be. ~-‘",r"rnm~nuft French almost to the gates of Las- r was soon increased to eleven by | BUSINESS IN MONTEVIDEO, |Stroved and the hangars were set on Construction of four large ways at |- s of several structures S e Wil Through r?lb"cmll‘rt t“éi an wal of other states from s = '"‘l‘i the New shipyard of the.New York AWay. Trees were up- ave o | open route upithte Ose ¥ATey oo S0VCI By an act of the confeder- | A e = | “In air 21 enemy ma- | Shiphuilding corporation was reported Ingss alonz thd gny by the French | 5 route by rail and the big nationali Tt was nanzedl “THE S “;‘if;m;;l'_dfl‘;a: us. U—The seperal|cnines were down and ten 't ba pro ot i 1 the drive was filled with 1 positions be-| thoroughfare, not to mention the canal | ’ B settloment yet in Sight and further |riven down out of control. Six of| 0, . Carlton, ouston, was b t-='urth»= ?"‘R{Z.‘ which paraHolsf:h; roadways for uir-; At a reunion of Confederate Veter- |10 Sethement vet In Sisl T [i_;)hki-mr machines are | elected Democratic Commit- >m by the Aus-| greater part of the way. oyon. 18 ans at Norfolk, Va, in 1910, Captain e 5 e et — s | teeman from T state owever, no official 2 little more than six miles north- | Sinith _explained the meaning of the | ETOWINS out of i sorcTh aciom {HE TOOK ‘FIRST. TRAIN RS e e 2 e st of Ribecou : | various colors, in the flag as follows: | PAAVIRE fhE SICHe movemens. ThHest OVER 1200 MILES AWAY |Forc Worth. the Oise, ex Although théy are still encounter-|“The idea of my flag T took from the - ; e justi cone ised little dy b 2 . £ cu v] a sold sabred Department of justice agents con tle damage zion where the o lent resistance, the French are|Trinity. T tF bars werelfor the | Jccu-red wh a soldier sabred to D . o 2 5 s scarcely fel o FATRE The A IR S e izh | opay. The three bars were for the!geath a man who resisted an order to | Camp Lewis, T hn.. Aug. | tinue inv. tion of charges of dis- | scarcely felt in downtown T gains, the | continuing to make progres “}'”“r‘~‘;*"‘*1r"'v. staie and press all bound to-| oo et o o {14.—Leland L. Hudson, a select irom |loyalty against members of the Chi-| hag fnl‘()z“,‘ the wooded and hilly =country be-|scther by a field of blue (the heavens | QIR O Sar FOA8S L a, 200 es north of |cago Symphony orchestra company | S the :‘h"n'f tween the Ma and the _fivv' r\v}:"rr\mm: all), be 1 for each sta [\w;re Bemeiadlivaeet today nnterRed is here afte trip of more | of Chicago. iaUEMARINE GAS LADEN -:‘v'{‘.("rwl'ul’l“ from ;-»flnxk(\‘ln“‘l’]: Anrpiv\\‘ the r-{‘v"“;"er The seven white | T1CC P08 le mea: for public|t!an 3000 miles in which he trav-| Atlanta pentitentiary is too crowd- | OIL STORY DISCREDITED o ith 7: ad n L N“.‘" s : the n ze, were placed consumption was moving under ajcied by dog team, huckboard, mailled to receive any more prisoners. The gl . = of the British and | using machine guns innumerable in a circle, showing that each state had | (EZSSMPPOR HAS |barge, river sicamer, railway and|Maryland State penitentiary at Balti-| Washington, Aug. 14—Although f. centercd. On this | alse is being loosed in great quantities | cqual rizhts and privileses, irrespec- | "aYY Polloe guard, = L Moo Stvise vessel. more will have to accept the prison-|nal reports of the invesiieatios e o battle front the| by the enemy. Ajmost entire control | tive of size or population. e st opitals have | Due to a mistaken idea on the, part|era hereaftor the “gas att on’ Smitivs Isiand, delive! iolen e scourt lateat ] t — = —_ e S e regis >AXSOr P 7 | +1 o e , ver violent|of the Theiscour: platea: and il 56 they e’ iven o 5 per] S ihe regist at Passon, that all| John T. Murtha, former New York |North Carolitg, last Saturiay. mnds also has &' ucr|other high ground on.this secfor is| MACHINISTS STRIKE in pa & men who resistered tiere were obliged | poxing instructor, was commissioned [0t vet reached the navy depastment. o e | ney o M gadsyiol the “mench e AVERTED IN BRIDGEPORT! authorities have taken |10 give their address in “the states”|lieutenant in the sanitary corps at-|there were strong intimations today pidoatipne ] hions figiiele theicermans aenly =20 over the policins of all sections of the | Hudson gave his mother's in Seattle. | tached (o the maval aviation division | that the “zas” was not from a Ger, Ginasten: the French and Americans, who are| Bridgeport Conn., Aug. 14.—A strike | city where laborers live. A few com- | 1S ¢ard was sent there and on May s« physical director. man submarine as first renorted. No i e sl SRRl ATaE RBER osEo | of thousands of machinists in the war|mercial houses which had attempted {7 17 o e here for aute He| An attempt of one hundred enemy |cXplination of the incident, however, ing up of front line trenches| still holding & G o plants here tomorrow was narrowly | to continue business closed today and {“%% DepreDOTC b CEe s fon I N ©laliens to escape from the detention | een offered and none probably of Albert possibly may mean In the mountain region on the we % 3 * 8 e g : ‘s asked for a two wecks' extension be- . t G e will be . ~ . 3 A = ht, when Samuel|no business or industry of any kind 1 camp at Gloucester, N. J, was frus- be until complete information fs e German high command fore-| ern Italian front tihe Ita have ST echi Tan a Yalet Lo MHURC A S eHT o > cause a boat did not ieave Fairbanks|irated by the guick action of a com- |4t hand. Can T R LD e e Bl e S e B."“Walsh, jolnt| ~An announcement this morning that |Until late in June, but he received alpinior soldiers It is understood that there is rea. MRl (ish - Gp-Falions ¥elong sIoimiihe Anstiian 3 of the National War Labor fone street railway company would op- [¢PIY te ftale the first train or be| To bring Wali Street behind the|son to helieve that no submarine was , . B B ———-—————————— | Board._.containing ar appeai to the|erate its cars this noon was the sig- |CEPSel 28 L -Geastier’ —The nearest|war gs movement, forty-two of |In the vicinity of the island at the i main at work. nal for the assembling of great crowds | 1% aY ¢ At W hitenorse, an ock Exchange brok- | lime six men in the coast guard sta- WOMEN WORKERS TO RAISE CLOSER ANGLO-AMETICAN ike vote was taken because|of strikers with the intention of pre- |G Miles awa 7o BS erage houses are forming war saving:!!°n and lighthouse were reported to $3,000,000 FOR WAR WORK | COOPERATION DISCUSSED | \ge from the war | venting any moving of the cars. No i, H® Ieft Paxson May 26, zoing forty- | ocieties among their emploves. |ive been overcome. The theory thas pis i ; { board relative to the wage award to|attempt, however, was made to oper- | V% IS WO COE GRS = ittee representing internation- |4 submarine had discharged : gas- Me. Auz. 14—Mrs. Wood-| London, Aug. 14.—According to the| affect ninetv per cent of the industrial|ate the railway at the advertised time. iles: e bigh sl un lied at the White|@den oil on those waters never was was made honorary chair- | Bvening News, Lord Reading, the | population of Bridgeport was not re- —_——— iR Haa o ot d left a memorial for Presi- n";'fl‘“‘" ¢ many naval experts, and 3 v - and 2 t at 4 oting I i = : son asking hi P she ing i ional_Weman's War | British” ambassador to the United ceived at a meoting of the union held | PERSISTENCY OF WOMAN horses: down the Tanana river ang |J¢nt Wilson asking him to afpeal)fistermen living in that vieinity, have Work Council of the Young Women's|States. who is here on a visit, will|for that purpose fomight. The men AGAIL BEMONSTRATED L0 oo e rl. B s we lavuin | o the “hehalt CioF " igauasd (8 4t no submersible could Christian association today. The coun- | discuss with Premier Lloyd George | asrced to leave the plants at noon to- F e o s e l-mf; arrived at | Mooney. F jhave approached close enough to the &1 vebed of Mrs. Williamjand Arthur J. Balfour. minister of i morrow and ¢ out until the award| . aa R A \':erw{ e Hetool & tnar According to Polus Retrenski, O('I' nd to discharge gas that would kithing E ‘ew York to create |foreign affairs certain proposals for|wag received. One hour later the mes- EEIIBIOR TSl eIV TINE )~ Qi B e b At s 3L Petrograd, whe is stopping at a New |liaVe remained effective until the ofi Sk andta closer Anglo-American co-oper: fro Wl 3 5 women were arrested by the police in |fer Dawson June 20 and went 900 ool ho Biloss Pach aid New | Carrving it had drifted with the. tid sirman - ps O ool et i ISh ‘was recetved. Lafayette square, opposite the White |miles down the Tanana and up the | L : asv tol The only re rpasy N ttee ba appoint- |tion both during the war and afte Police permission was received to e 5 < ; p ’ 2 York .n permen were ‘“easy to| ¥ reports of foreign raiders 5 vard.. sk iatds b tirto : ) was re House, late today, when a third at- | Yukon, arriving hitehorse July s now in_Americ: 3 e of the President |war he newspaper states that pro- | speak in front of the shops Lomorrow . ’ = 7 's | Whi ruk chi < foor ! american. waters reaching the 3 sals involve an offensive and de- b tempt was made to stage a Woman's | While on the Yukon whicn makes a yRayy éoparimiasy todaw > o States to accept that |posals i L morning and notify the men of the - gtEati ot wide bend.and soes h of the Arc-|™ e e Ay care addl- s o Eommitten consists of | fensive alliance in which the co-ob- | po omt o the strine s teg | party demonstration there against the | W e ”dl‘m': nort of the Arc tiomn Anformation regarding the tor- Mrs. John D. Rockfeller, | eration of other democratic nations | report to work. Ao e yiif,‘;f“,;"i e oD e sl oy sl Lty ot e ietrict of bedeing of the ofl tank steamer Fred- I* rmyn of the Housingyagg-iwill be welcomed. i Walsh reported. that the award| ™ Afier bemns taken to police head- |drilled on the upper deck of the rives | Vashington : e verellogE, the vame of Whith a 2%Mrs, Henry P. Davison.| Lord Reading’s visit, however, | v Tafe ‘as the entiré | qunrtdps 2ihere they Were relekssd’ on:|HOAt undsr tHe light of the nfidnight|the B Fire Insurance;pAs Siven In naval despaiches- s s lures arranged in con- |mainly to do with certain financ deadlocked on the question FESER, > Bty ¢ : s company in response to a petition filed | !e0rY R. Keliogg. Several. of - the g S E e o e ass| e their own recognizance, the women |sun. : ; members of the crew whi + sessions of the Na-:adjustments connected with the as-| Y ssification of wages. . E : 5 W 0 . a year f ew who are miss- War IVork Council|sumption by he United States of re- returned to Lafayette sduare for an- | e oo e i s, Tallroad | | vestigation into working condi- |18 are believed to have sone down B GONOTK g G H SoprdibiTity y i ations | S s other demonstration. Soon after the|from Whitehorse to Skagway, D (DY OGN IO O [ with the ship, whict e e of a rivet by |sponsibility for loans to allied nations | gy \sr|NG EXCESS PROFIT Lt it tos i i 0 for palEaEE of M0 iaten Ton | tions and the charges of 18 motormen | Vith . which sank in five min- er, Jr. in the |heretofore borne by Great Britain, the £ 5 Ten e % came |Of the Brooklyn Rapid Trasit com- |Utes: et construe. | Evening News savs, and with the RATES ARE RETAINEDI [tHe Tolice infervered, but not in suf- lgrfived in Skacwiy In thne to ensase | 5 4% o0 58 o onnrs “als — 1nder cons =T e R L i St i stra- | passage a boat for Seattle, which |P3 P L e land shipbullding com- | Conclusion of negotiations for certain e L o i e ey b | cliicEeu) Soining the union |FRENCH WRESTED DOMINANT - a f _romnanh\. s‘;{dl;‘ (fr:’;; Britaln And France # id before the house ways|and twenty-nine of the demonstrators |He reported for duty here July 26 h-m"la ”] ;‘)il’y n York by the war POSITIONS ON BATTLE FIELD et o A v | to participate. d means committee today his plan | were placed under arrest. 1 wasnotnr iy estertiay, ien ey i o With the F - ssion of the council, ‘°““"~i 53 . r an excess profits tax with an alter- | Taken to police headquarters again, | Presented vOuchers for his expenses, | -oov )\ NOT WITHIN An e French Army in France, vhich was of an executive nature.| No Political Alliance for U. 8. |,5tive war profits levy to be included |the women refused to zive bail and |totalling nzarly $100, that officers werc s us. 14—(Reuter's). French _forces was the plans for a campalzn to raise| Washington, Aug. 14—It was stated |in the new revenue bill. The plan |told the police if released they ‘would |aware of his long journe FIFTY MILES OF PARIS |fighting for the key positions of Thie- $15000,000. In the campaign whichauthoritatively today that the proposes the retention of existing rates | stags another demonstration. Police = — - O it dad the. Bt Claads aue probably will open the last of Octo-)ject of a British-Ameri n the present excess profits law with | officiels then decided to hold the |FIRE WEDNESDAY NIGHT 4—A. mew drive | SEORVLON, JAIMS,, are s, IIDETeRsing) ber or in November the organizationiajliance never has been the alternative application of an excess | women until the streets were cleared IN NEW MILFORD CENTRE t the German positions either in | FOWY. North of Gury, where the will co-operate with the Yourg Men's|even suggested ' The profits tax with a maximum of the eveninz crowds. The women | — or between the Oise and|iefmins dre installed in- the “old ( + . on ¥ zh i 5 ; b of 80 per = S Ak nch trenche: f 914, hey stian Association through a ma- here is that Lord Reading's cent. affecting about 90 per cent. of all | were released late tonight. New Milford, Conn., Aug. 14—Fire | is expected by many army e saTaches of 1914, they have tional cabinet consis London is to report perso | the business corporations coming un- = which started .at $ o'clock tonight in| e as a result of the slowing |Eained no grou The enemy here prominent members of his work in the United States | der this schedule STORM CAUSED DAMAGE AND the barns of Young's Hotel, in the|Uup oOf advance in the Picardy |11 & ”‘_‘:‘»‘ r"_‘?"“‘m tumbled inte Hop : acquaint himself fully with develop- | Secretary McAdoo estimated thatthe| | 0ss OF LIFE IN NEW HAVEN | Dusiness district here, destroyed the | theate Bt el The sugg hudget for the Y. W.|ments at home! treasury plan would produce from | barns and damaged 'several nearby | Outlining the situation at his mid-| A the enemy retreats he is picking C. A fund as presented today includes| “Any sort of political allinnce with |$300000,000 to $400,000,000 more thar| e = Aug. 14— One | buildings before it was brought under | Week ice today, General March, | WP WS <loW-moving material and -is $2,000,000 for war work in other coun-|a foreign nation would be contrary to|under the plan tentatively agreed to | .. Ne¥. 'a(‘izedn, jonn.;” x?h‘,i - jcontrol an hour later. The loss was |chief of . confined his stateme: ac um‘u‘? ing an increasing number of tries, §2.700,000 for club and recrea- | American traditions, .and officials by the committee recently. He told | hic 105¢ and damage estimated at 390, | estimated at $10.000. The flames had | to pointing out t Germans o uan ey of muniions (X4s tion work in communitles war camps, | president Wilson's administration have | the committee that it was imperative | 200, was (hw toll of a severe wind and:gained great headway in a havioft |1nOw forced 1 ntil the, = ol Samie nayestenbalite $2.400,000 for hostess’ houses in Or near) peen careful always to emphasize that | that the revenue bill be enacted by | ficciical Storm which struck this ¢ity|unq while the firemen worked the fire (1ot fifty mile D St rileEy and E ieRafare vorks among girls | nothing of the kind is involved in the | consress before the opening of the | onisht. -Althoush the gale lasted but|spread to am adjoining livery stable, {point. The head of o e e e : and replac- | participation of the United States in |campaign for the fourth Liberty loan | 1VC mMinutes, hunvdrleda g] trees L;xe::e,c“.m\d by Robert Thoms The rear |ously t laid stres fact, how-| = 1{_ e e advancing againet ing men in service: $1585,000 for bu-|the world war as a_co-belligerent of |is opened Sept. 5. blown down, many plate glass windows [ond' of this structure. was weeched, |ever ntage won |the line whic inly held, but reaus, and $1,000000 for emergency |the nations fighting Prussian autocra- | S e ) e shattered arrrfi “‘Emfif;l?;: AWRIDES | 1t twenty horses were taken out un- | DY ).\h : way “‘";“jr'&fi'vj":" e r':=chxn§ guns housing. tey. . y and signs were rippe: . h d. Severa: rages & sma in having wrested the from | 1 are ing e atmosphere o S S 0 TR A s 00 HUERTA MOVEMENT WAS Yailing trees brought down many !qoaden buildimes “.’,".:"fm“";’i,', A |mustard zas. Yet they have wrested T SUBMARINE PERISCOPE FINANCED BY GERMANY | wires and lights were out in several|' In 1902 fire that had it orizin in i< discussion, Gen- | dominant positions on the battle fleld | CONCEALED THROUGH DORY ¥ soetions. Ruggerio Cuici, eight years|the Young's Hotel barns burned the General Persh-|from the enemy. s WiLL YauE N NOVENBER) Sl 2 old, was attracted by sparks from a|entire business area of the town ) American troops | = - New. York. Au 14—When s tion of JJS[On‘ B. X _in Chicago, | fallen wire and picked it up. He was £ g B i First Army Corg ‘ANT|-COLLAR LEAGUE TO Boston, Aug 14—Only a small| New, ot r‘- bt o Per- | that General Victoriano Huerta was | killed almost instantly. A biz electric| ALREADY THE GERMANS ARE mericans on e | number of Massachusetts soldiers |Mitted to tell of their experiences,|is the employ of the German imperial | sign on the roof of the chamber of | overseas will ve an opportunity to members of the crew of the torpedoed 1 BE LAUNCHED TODAY government, - 2 ol - : CONSCRIPTING RUSSIANS | Iug R o ) A was not a surprise to| commerce bluilding which carried an| of staff as the 131 Vew York, - vote in the November elections under | tanker Frederick R. Kellosg declared | federal officials on the border who un- | appeal to help win the war, was| e : | he 33rd (I New Mork } U 4 Charterfmem; the mew absentee voting law. Attorney | that while making for shore they saw | covered the Huerta revolutiomary plot | wrecked b ythe wind. London, Aug. 14.—A despatch to the | Divilon Bare of \the oul-Coliax, Teafile gain- General Henry C. Attwell in an opin- |2 submarine operating under attempl-|ang arrested Huerta in July 2, 1915 = Daily News from V i 5 ion on the Jaw today told the executive |€d concealment. A dory = suddenly | divostok dated | o tonight that their campaign While being held for trial as a pris- Sunday, says the Germans 1 = ready coutisl it | aphiications, for rose out of the water they said, and | BERLIN BRAYERS GIVE regis- 5 = e -"” h:mf‘«mnfiimrlx of hmgle _r;;cks oner. at Bliss, Gene conseripting Russians on a = . | o formally launched with a R i s o sy peon From one of the many holes'in tis keel |ya it d e At e e erta OFFICIAL COMMUNICATION. | “““According fo stories of orzanization of the First| mass meeting at Coney Island to- file in the secretary of state's office|3 Deriscope protruded. The dory|cateq the presidemcy of Megico he g taken by the Czecho-Slov an icat Spme: Doint | fatheenarrar s o Lelehipu ks, Sl Fenianber 1 floated for some time, the sailors as- | went to Berlin and had & personal in. | Berlin via London, Aug. 14—The | the despatch. “German flving column can attack at some RONC | father of the movement, will preside. As applications mailed before Au-|Serted, as though desigmed to attract|terview with Emperor William. He |Official communication issued by the | are impressing males from 18 to 43 SHete there Haa leen b redant s o B the island, the éregulepiteill gust 1 from France 2 unlikely to | Passing steamship toward it. then dis- |said ke had gold deposits in banks of | War office today follows:. “There have | vears of age and are bringing those No ool o Cont| the recruits will move upon Man- Feach the secretary's office before Sep. | 2Ppeared. Flve members of the|l,ondon, Paris, Berlin and Barcelona | Peen successful forefield engagements | who disobey the mobilization order al, or un-|battan, assembling at Columbus Cir- tember 1 only those soldiers who had [CTeW of the sunken oil tanker Fred-|Jederal officers here believed the |Detween the Yser and the Scarpe.ihefore Germanized revolutionary tri- | pis WTe DEER TRCTTEC e fcle in the eveni or a parade dowm previonsly started their applications in | crick R. Kellogg were today officially | Huerta movement was being financed | South of Merris and south of the Lys | bunals, which condemn them to death. || Tesshidislbon Persh- | broadway to_demonstrate devotion to the mafls will have the privilege of |reported dead.as follows: Sammel L.|by the German government and. tha |cnemy thrusts broke down. “These conscripted units have Ger-|NSS PIn I Foch iy the s prosent | p o e e L ok o ah MO voting. Johnson, 42 second assistant engin-|the purpose of the movement was to ‘There has been partial fighting on | man company and platoon command- | (el D : S ! had received telezrams from all Secretary of State Albert P. Lang- |Cef. American, New York city: J.|involve the United States with Mexi- | both sides of the Somme and north of | ers and are stiffened by twenty Ger- | £ o parts of the country assuring him try appeared before the council ana|Kramer, 45 third assistant engineers, |co and prevent the shipment of muni- | the Avre. ~West and - southwest of | mans or Magvars to every sixtv Rus-|NoTED BRITISH AVIATOR hat collar-cursed men were behind requested permission to sail for |native of Norway; Francisco de|tions to Europe. Lassigny the enemy again attacked | sians.” KILLED NEAR CINGINNATI him. France tomorrow to receive applica- |lousa, Portugese mess boy: Will- Siyores. & on both sides of Canny. The attacks LSRN ST Sate _NEA; tions for registration, but the council {iam Stillman 29, U. S. cadet, Shel-| ENEMY SEEMS TO HAVE broke down u"fljrd ataiie, ~k1‘“ur{h"r TOLL OF THE SUBMARINE It Bt \ue. 14—wWhat prom.|AN EPIDEMIC CF TYPHOID decided that the probabilities were | ton. Conn; fg’eé‘e};n%cf“g“;b‘- 21,15 ACCEPTED EFFECTIVE'DEFEAT,|S0uth we repulsed an attack by a COMPARED/FOR, THE VEAR |, S HE Rl e At o AMONG INTERNED GERMANS against Mr Langtry’s arrival in|U-S. cadet, , N J. unter-attack. s ; X = oo emaas foram piot s Framce in time to enable any consid-| AN oiler and a fireman. still missing,| ity the Brifish Army in_France, | o rLCer® has been minor infantry| puric Aug. 14—The allied and neu- | jeTICA Liators from the Asheville, N. C., Aug. 14 — There erable number of soldiers to register. |have not yet been identfied. {Aug. 14 (By The Associated Press)— | GENting on the T, | tral shipping sunk by enemy subma- | (550" Rhinehardt, who have been cleven deaths from typhoid = - = iy i Tl AR | Tn the battle area between Fouque: S | rines during July amounted tc 2700001 ° % 3 jfever among the German civilians and | TANKER KELLOGG TORPEDOES | court and Rove the enemy appears to o S tons, compared with 534.830 tons sunk |} iom Mneol N B and - British | ijors interned at Hot Springs, N. EXCEPT AVIATION RAIDS OFF AMBROSE CHANNEL | be ir a fairly_strong position in the New York Infant Mortality. in July. 1917. ‘This radical decrease |} | ce. coming from Indiananolic eaq. |C- and 130 cases of the disease. Thére PERSHING REPORTS NOTHING | — old trenches behind the rusty wire| New York, Aug. 14—Despite re-|in losses is doubly siznificant when |, et O iain | WeTe Teports today that some of the | New York. Aug. 14—German sub- | erected prior to July, 1916 cords of other warring nations show- | shipbuilding effort is considered. The | Ftmmorrie, 0f the Pritish Hogal | Germans had drunk unfiltered river Washington, Aug. 14.—American | murines approaching the very gates| There are no immediate sizns of a|ing greatly increased infant mortality | entente nations constructed during s S killan t west of | Waler in the hope that illness would aviators have conducted successful |0f New York harbor, sunk the oil | connter-offensive here or eisewhere. |rates during the first year of war, | .July, a tonnage in excess of 280.000 to | iy, prevent the government from trans- raids on the railroad vards at Con-|tanker Frederick R. Kellogg off the|The enemy seems to have accepted |New York's death rate ~for children | that destroved during the month by | Nemorte th ferring them to Fort Oglethorpe, but flans, Longuyon and Dommary-Bar- | Ambrose channel last night. Thirty- |defeat, preferring not to attempt any |under one vear since January 1. is|enemy operations. { hid landed: atlth {this was denied hy camp officials, oncourt, General Pershing reported in |five members of the crew brought here | o ons which might cost him heavy | 85.84 as compared with 86.42 for 191:.; The entente tonnage sunk in 1918) 4ijs Country Clu upon ris Shaliow wells are blamed for the in- his communiqué for yesterday which |today reported that seven others are |losses. according to a statement of the| was 30 per cent less than ¢ o5t | feten rminte okl i Siarat fection. was made public tonight by the war |missing. The survivors were picked According to the talk of priscners, | health department today. So far this|in 1917. | en; sudlenly died the e department. The text of the state-|up by an American steamship. { which may or may not be correct, at|vear, 7,532 deaths have been reported. —_— plunged to the arc Vienna Helped Ludendorff. ment follo The Frederik R. Kellogg was a|least five, and probably more, enemy |as against 7,543 for the same period Railroad Men Exempt? TaoEmistinst Geneva, Aug 14—Twenty divisiene “Section A: Aside from the inter- |new tank steamship of 7,127 tons | divisions have been withdrawn from |last year. Hartford, Conn. Aug. 14—Major | will make e ac- | mittent artillery activity there is|8ross register, valued at more than |the fighting in an exhausted condition. . : of troops were demanded of Germany’t Deaths for the week ending August nothing to report from sectors occu-|$1500,000. Under command of Cap- | John Buckley, in charze of the draftlcident. Captain F whose |allies by General Ludendorf during ! | e S g 10 _the hottest of the summer, totalled | jn this state in a message to local|home s in Scotla said to |the retreat from the Marne, according pied by our troops. tain C. H White, she was on her way Bavarian Beer Tax. 289 as against 313 for the same week | graft hoards today, refers to u protest ! x| y-nine German |to the Democrat, which received the “On August 11th and 12th our avi- |from Tampico, Mexico, to Boston with New York Aug. 14—The new Ba- }last year. made by the railwsy adm)ni_g"-;,[ir,““ s to T 3 \news from German sources. Austria- ators successfully bombed railroads at|a cargo of approximately 70,000 bar- | varian beer tax provides for a brew- —_— against the unnecessary drafting of | Earlier in the two pianes which { Hungary refused, but after General Lonzuyon, Dommary and Conflans. |rels of crude oil i x ranging from 9.50 to 1 Bank Check Bird’s Nest, railroad workers. The commnnication | started from Davton were forced to|lLudendorff had made threats Vienna All our machines returned.” The ship was owned by the Petro- per 100 quarts by which it is| Rajeigh, N. C. Aug. 14—A bird's | calls for more liberal action toward|descend near Middletown and both |sent ‘wo divisions to the western front. —_— leum Transport company and was|expected the net vield of the tax Will | nect that had failen from a tree in a | {hese men and asks district boards to|achines turncsi over, Lieutenunt | For this reason . the Austro-Swiss 3 . launched a vear ago this month at|be increased to 110,000,000 marks as|poiy noo. Raitimore, Md., after it had| re-open cases of railroad men placed | 11, pilot, w ightly hurt | frontier was closed recently. Knights Ask for Ship Space. Oakland, Cal. against 35,700,000 ‘marks during the | woatnersd many &’ hard. wind hao|in class one. on i Cincinati in an- g New York, Aug 14—Additional e last two vears prior to the war, saysljuct heen placed in the North Caro- _— |other machine. Foreign Naval Officers Honored. shipping space for the tons of ciga- Lieut. Jerome Died in Action. a Munich despatch in the Cologne |{in Fiall of History here alonssids Joseph Pulitzer Enlists. Bl 0 1 New York, Aug. 14—Secrefary jof rettes, candy and other supplies being New Haven, Conn., Augn 14—Lieut | Gazette. war relics and other things because St. Louis, Mo, Aug. 14—According rests Consolidate. the Josephus Danieis, Major sent to the American army overseas |Gilbert N. Jerome, of the American 7 s the bird used local building material, [to a despatch from Washington, Jo A\ug. 14— Consolida- | General J. Franklin Bel. commanding by the Knights of Columbus, probably | aviation service, who was reported last Trinity Training Unit. in the. form of a blank check of a Ra- |seph Pulitzer, Jr., 0? St. Louis. editor | tion of the pr | Whaling interests | the department of the east, Rear Ad- will be asked of the government, ac- [ week as missing in action, died in bat- | Hartford, Conn, Aug. 14.—President |leigh bank, in making its home safe|of. the St. Louis Post-Despateh, has|on the Paciii s announced here |miral Nathaniel R. Usher and more cording to adouncement tonight by |tle on July 12, according to a mes-| Flavel Luther, of Trinity College, |and snug. The distance between Ra- |enrolled there in the naval aviation|today in the poration of the|than a hundred officers of the army William J Mulligan, chairman of the |sage received from the American Red | today received a_telegram from Ad-|leigh and Baltimore is about 325 miles | corps, ground service, after being re- | Consolid. Whaling company. Lid,|and navy will be amonz the guests at orgaization’s committee on war activ- | Cross by his mother here today. He | jutent General McCain announcing | by rail, but it is much shorter as the |jected in the flying service on account|with 2 i of $2,500.000.la dinner to bhe given here next Wed- ities. The present allotment of 300 |fell at Berdenal. the message said, and | that Trinity College has been appoint- | crow flies. Ornithologists here say the | of poor vision. He will report to the | Headquarters of the company will be | nesday, in honor of the officers of Ar- tons a month is inadequate. Mr. Mulli- | was buried in the cemetery at Bla-|ed one of the student army training|nest is either that of a robin or a|Great Lakes Training Station about|at Toronto and the head operating |zentine and Brazilian warshins now is can said. o corps units. * thrush. ! Sept. 1. 1offices here. this harbor. y 5 N RPN | IS

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