Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 6, 1915, Page 1

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The sure way to satisfy | your wants is through -1se of the want ad pages of The Bee. Try a Bee want ad. VOL. XLV—NO. OMNITA, OMAHA DRIVER WINS 300-MILE RACE AT HOME Eddie Rickenbacher Drives His to Popular Victory to In- augurate Sport. ONE RECORD FALLS IN TEST Cu; f Tom Orr Thrills Crowd by Break-| ing a World’s Record—Five Miles in Three Minutes. [ ABOUT 30,000 WATCH THE RACE| i o) Rickenbacher . .. « Heart-Break- ing Pace Right from the Jump, [ Which Was Hard to Follow. | BROWN ENTERS AT 100 MILES o | Rickenbacher first. Elapsed time, 3:17:89.20, O*Donnell (Deusenberg), second. Elapsed time, 3:30:27.68, i Orr (Maxwell), third. Elapsed | time, 3:40:17.25. 5 Donaldson (Emden), fourth. | Elapsed time, 4:50:86.25, Eddie Rickenbacher, driving a Maxwell, won the first annual 300- mile gasoline classic at the new Omaha Speedway yesterday. His time was 3:17:39.20, an average of 91.74 miles an hour. Eddie O'Donnell, Deusenberg team, er's old mechanician, clipping the distance at an average of 86.16 miles an howr. Tom Orr, Rickenbacher’'s Maxwell teammate, | was third, tfaveling at an average of 82.30 miles an hour, and Lou Don- aldson piloted his Emden into fourth money. W. W, Brown, in a Du Ches- nau, was flagged off the track after he had done ™0 laps. Brown will get a good-sized chunk of the prize money for his game showing, as he antired the race after it had pro- gressed 100 miles. Thirty thousand people saw the race, An Omaha product won Omaha's first big automobile race. That was Kddie| Rickenbacher. Kddje was a resident of Omaha for several years and he learned the racing game on the half-mile dirt track on West Leavenwdrth under the telelage of* Roy Coffeen. 8o it is only natural that every speed enthusiast in Omaha regards Eddle as a personal friend and take a persgnal delight in seeing the | daring lad win a race. It was a great | ovation hee got when he waved his hand in air in answer to the finish flag. Rickenbacher was given first position at the pole and he paced the preliminary lap around tre track. On the flying start| Rick was leading the first and he re- ceived the flag from starter Fred Wag- ner. When the flag waved agdin it was to herald the lasj lap of the Maxwell pilot, and when it waved a third time it announced that Bddie was the victor. Never Loses Lead. Never once did Rickenbacher lose the lead. Billy Chandler of the Deusenberg team was In hot pursuit for a few miles, but Billy's car went to the bad and he was forced to succumb, When Chandler left the race Eddie O'Donnell took up the chase, but Eddie couldn't drive the turns quite as fast as Rick, and even though he passed him occasionally on the stretch, Rickenbacher came in fifteen laps ahead at the finish. O'Donnell and Rickenbacher furnished some merry sport for the speed enthusi- asts. Brushes between these two were frequent and xciting. First O'Donnell would come roaring down the stretch and | pass Rick. The crowds in the stands would rise en masse and cheer and yell. | Then Rick would pass the [iculenber" and the crowd would again rise to its feet to give, this time, a still louder| cheer and vell. Has & Narrow E During one brush O'Donnell narrowly | cscaped a serious accident honnldmnl was just ahead of the speeding daredevils | and O'Donnell was a trifie in the lead of Rick, He attempted'to swing high into the curve to pass Donaldson, but couldn't make It. It looked for a moment as if O'Donnell would erash down into Don- aldson or turn broadside before Ricken- | bacher. But the Deusenberg driver threw his wheel over and plunged straight down off the track and ploughed along the dirt safety track for several reet, then to swing up on tha. boards again safely. It a clever bit of work and dangerous. Tom Orr, who drove his Maxwell into third position, also put up a mighty pretty race. While Rickenbacher and O'Donnell carried away the honors, Orr dia some mighty good work and was con- gratulated for his showing. Makes Game Showing. Lou Donaldson, driving the Emden, .and W. W. Brown gave an exhibition of gameness that is seldom paralleled. When the first three cars rolled over the tape and recelved the finish flag, these two captain of the and Rickenbach- pe. e R ———————————————— (Continued on Page Two, Column Three.) | ington monument, which stands in the The Weather Forecas for Nebraska—Partly cloudy |is a historic record of the cornerstone | and warmer for tonight and Tuesday; probably showers in the west portion. 1 MORGAN REPORTED | . T0 HAVE PASSEDg WINNER AT THE BIG CLASSIC AT THE SPEEDWAY ;Pulse and Temperature of Wc\mded Financier Are Normal and He Passes Peaceful | nght | He Is Unable to sn Up in His Couch | ! When His Keepers Come to ! | Call Him. | FURTHER INQUIRY IS HALTED noL STIN. ! | NEW YORK, July 5.—A bomb| |was exploded tonight in the base-| | ment at police headquarters, directly | under the detective bureau Most |of the windows on one side of the building were shattered. | GLEN COVE, N. Y., July 5.—J. P. | Morgan, who was shot twice by | Frank Holt last Saturday, is out of | | His physicians so noti- fied his family this morning. Mr. Morgan’s pulse was normal, his tem- perature was normal and he passed a restful night. Holt, the would-be assassin, on the | other hand, was so weak today that when his keepers went, to his cell to arouse him, he could not sit up in | his couch, Unless his condition im- proves rapidly—and there seemed no reason to expect so radical a change—it will be impossible for him to be taken into court for examina- all danger. HORE ARRESTS AT | EL PASO PROBABLE! Indications that Other Men Impli- cated in Alleged Huerta Con- spiracy Will Be De- tained. FEDERAL OFFICIALS ARE ACTIVE EL PASO, Tex., July 5.—The pos- sibility of additional arrests growing TUESDAY POINT -OF DANGER' MORNING y JULY THE OMAHA DAILY 11010 I'WELYE PAGES ITALIAN MARINES firing from ing cne of the Austrian Adriatic ports. L — " — was second, |out of the alleged plot to launch a;tion next Wednesday. {new revolution in Mexico by Victor- those in custody {with him was the central feature of iano Huerta and interest here today. Although nom |inally federal offices were closed in- cident to the celebration of Inde All plans to submit Holt to a further | questioning today were abandoned be- cause of his serious condition. Agent Convoyed Down Channel by Two Warships. & Holt 1 Near Collapse. AN'S YACHT MEETS HIM Dr. Guy Cleghorn, the jall physician, ,MORG N | was summoned early to Holt's cell. The | - | physician examined Holt thoroughly and NEW YORK, July 5.—The Ameri- can line steamer St. Louis arrived | found that his injuries were graver than ”:dence ] {edemlmor'“c:r? Bfient{n first thought. KExtreme rweakness a busy day pursuing their investga-| .4 (o be the chiet feature of Holt's tion and preparing for the prelimi-|inaisposition. This was due, Dr. Cleg- nary hearing next Monday of Huerta |horn sald, to a great quantity of blood and others under arrest. It was be-| w,mm Holt had lost from the wound over s eve. lMeved that General Huerte and fiVe | e stitches had been taken in this others confined in jail late Saturday | wound, but the flow of blood was not would arrange bond of $15,000 ench’:““"';’ thdecke;"- ‘m;‘n l‘:t! W':\mfllwr ressed today s evidenced a tend- tomorrow. However, it was equally ency to .blesd and all possible efforts here today from Liverpool. It was escorted down the St. George chan- probably owing to the presence on ish capitalist and coal operator, nel by two torpedo boat destroyers to a distance west of Daunts Rock, board of Mr. D. A. Thomas, the Brit- | Thomas comes here to supervise and | | night, certain that if released from jail they would be kept under close survell- lance. J. L. Camp, United States attorney for the West Texas district, who arrived last conferred with federal officers [here and assumed such supervision of the legal phaseg of the case. It was under: | stood that the activities of the federal continued to develop new evi- dence which subsequeutly might lead to officers other arrests. Probable Plan of Action, Wi o6 35 SreveRt s furthes Jte Bt expedite the production of munmona‘ blood. In addition Holt sustained a |fOF the allles. black eye, a shoulder severely wrenched | The two destroyers remained with the and he was struck @ powerful blow in|8t. Louits two ddys and nights, it was turned black and blus “"Holt is very sick,’” sald Dr. Cleghorn; | “sick physically and mentally. He is ap- zone was cleared. When the St. Louls docked here Mr. parently exhausted and {s unable to | Thomas was met at the pler by Sir Cecll | janswer questions.” | Spring-Rice, the British ambassador to Sheriff Grifenhagen of New York | the United States, and Willard D, Stralght, of the firm of J. P. Morgan & Co. Mr. Thomas was accampanied on county came here today to question the prisoner. He stayed only a short time in Holt's cell. When he left the jail Sher- | from its case into Independence Bquare. the stomach which left a mark that had |said, and 4id not leave it till the war ) | pended were decorated with the chofcest [ the rellc leave the buflding. { morning of June 27, when federal officers {until he has been officially advised from W | ther complicate the Mexican Officials wero silent as to their plans. The customary proceedure in such cases would be to bind Huerta over to the fed- ehal court at San Antonio, It basls for such action is found at the preliminary hearing. This probably would result in Huerta's removal to San Antonio or|feared, Mr. Morgan rested comfortably some other point removed from the|8t his home, East Isles, during the night, iff Grifenhagen said that he did not see how Holt could be taken into court next Wednesday, the day to which his exam- ination was adjourned last Saturday. With the knowledge that his wounds were less grave than the doctors had first the trip across by his wife, his niece, Miss Jamison; his secretary, R. H. Carr, and two business associates, V. Lloyd- Owen and R. H. Mahon. One of Mr. Morgan's yachts, its name not distin- guishable fhrough the pouring rain, lay close to the pier, ready to take Mr. Thomas and his party aboard. border pending trial at the next regular |AWoke much refreshed and seemed cheer- term of the district court in December, |ful. The X-ray examination of yesterday Should it be desirable to keep him under | (Continued on Page Two, Column Two.) closer surveillance than If released on Supreme Court bond it would be impossible for the im- | migration authorities to detain Huerta | Cannot Consider Protest of Huerta for deportation, in which event the law | requires that he be “safely held,” prob- ‘WASHINGTON, D. C.,, July 5.—General Huerdta's telegraphic protest to Chief ably in jail. Word was recelved from Newman, N. Justice White of the supreme court against his incarceration by federal of- M., today that a revolver, cartridge belt and check book found in the Meaquit near there had been identified as be- longing to General Pascual Orozco. It was presumed they were discarded the ficlals at El Paso and demanding that instructions be given for proper treat- ment of him was taken to the State de- partment today by James D. Maher, clerk | of the supreme court. The telegram was In Spanish and it was translated for Mr, Maher in the Latin American bureau. “It's a!l old; there is nothing to give out; there 18 no news in it,” was all Mr. Maher would say as he left the depart- ment. ““There is notning for the court to do; it does not meet until next Oc-| tober anyway." H Department officials say the court can- not take jurisdiction of the case and the | expectation is that the telegram will be referred to the State department and the! Department of Justice for its Informa~| tion. | Secretary Lansing said today his dis-| patches showed no developments in L.... rope or Mexico. and soldiers appeared at Newman where Crozed had gone to meet General Huerta. Authorities here still were without definite information on the whereabouts !of Orozco, who escaped Saturday. He is generally conceded to have crossed the border. No Actlon of Extradition. AUSTIN, Tex., July b=Governor Fergu- son unnounced definitely today that he would take no action on the reauisition for the extradition of General Huerta { Washington that the Villa govermor of the State of Chihuahua, Mexico, is the proper person to request extradition. Governor Ferguson pointed out that for him to act on this requisition might fur- situation, which he did not propose to do. He was asked what probable gction he would take In the event he was advised to act “I have come to America prepared for an indefinite stay,” Mr. Thomas said “I may stay till the end of the war, and I don't know how long that will be. It looks as it the war might last a long time. But mo matter how long it lasts there can be but one ending—Germany | must be defeated and will be. “My stay in the United States and Canada—1 expected to go to Canada roon —is to co-operate with Mr. Morgan's firm and firms In Canada In the purchase of munitions of war for England. In this connection I want to say there has been no criticisms of the manner in which Morgan has fulfilled his contracts, What criticisms there has been was chiefly In Canada and was to the effect that Can ada had not been favored so much in the awards of ocontracts as the United States.” Mr. Thomas id he did not care to comment on the latter subject. His im- mediate plans, he added, were not yet ripe for publication, but embraced a trip to Canada within the near future. News of the attempt to assassinate P. Morgan had been received aboard the | ship. “It gave us all a feeling of nervous- nees,”” Mr, Thomas said. Marshall Sleeps Through Reception | | by the federal government. “I will consider the matter then,” he replied. LITTLE ROCK, July 5.—Vice President T. R. Marshall slept through the recep- | Interned Belglans |tion arranged for him by Little Rock | at Swansea Celebrate Fourth|°"'“"' upon his arrival here this morn- | ing from St. Louls enroute to Hot Springs to be the principal speaker at an Inde- . 4| which the monument stands. | . 8| The third tablet contains the names ot | .' eight celebrated Marylanders of a cen- 6| tury 63| tablet elght oak trees in the parking of ' men, First Monument for Washington is One THE HAGUE, July S—l\'lu London.)— Twelve thousand Belgian soldiers interned at Zeist, held an athletic meeting today | d p l | in honor of the American national holl- 4 rt, T TR TN R 1 e RStk vo gl ot gl Lyt oy ot e preciation of the timely help given bY which had saved thoullndl of the interned soldiers’ fellow t".llenl} from starvation. The camp was decorated with Ameri- , can, Dutch and Belglan flags. BALTIMORE, M4, July 5.—~The cen-|Americans, tennial will be celebrated tonight of the laying of the cornerstone of the Wash- heart of this city. It is the first public memorial erected in this country to George Washington. While search llghts play on the monu-! ment, three tablets will be unveiled. One; 1815, by Levin Winder, governor of Maryland. Another tablet s commemorative of Generals John| d Bamuel Smith-Mary- | donated the site on laying on July 4, D Omaha would like to have its visitors acquire the *‘stop off" habit. Our out~ of-town Fourth of July guests are invited to come again and often. go, Including General Lafayette, | who was made @ citlzen of Maryland by tpecial act. In connection with this| Mount Vernon place, named for the eight | will be dedicated. | pendence day celebration. {the order of who met the train were Governor Geor W. Hays, Mayor C. E. Taylor and mem berg of the Arkansas supreme court through the noise made by 60 or mo persons who desired to shake his hand ‘The special remained here only ten min- utes. WABASH SUIT WILL BE HEARD WEDNESDAY | 8T. LOUIS, July 6.~The petition to vacate the order to sell the Wabash rallroad at foreclosure will be heard be fore Elmer B. Adams, TUnited States eircuit judge, at Woodstock, Vt on | Wednesday, July 7 The sale was postponed to July 21, and la few days ago a petition was filed on behalt of certaln bendholders to vacate sale. It was understood that the only bidder would be the Equitable Trust company of New York, holder of the mortgage being | toreclosed, and that a sale would termi naie the tecelvership and pave the wa Jfor reorganization Among those but | | | | | | DESTROYER BOATS [Liberty Bell0ff ESCORT THOHAS Liner carrying British Purchasing | ., apmLeiia, on Long Trip to Pacific Coast Pa., July b5.—Phila- delphia sald goodby to the Liberty bell t'e deck of a warship while it was recently bombard- THE WEATHER Cloudy == ] T\H) CENTS. ifixrfcfiknlsm 70 MODIFY NOTE 0 PRESIDENT SL\(HAI? wS? ’I’rnlnu.lnd " COPY ‘Ind ications that Amwer Will Pro- i pose to Exempt Passenger ! Ships from Submarine Atuckl {NAVAL PABTY IS OBJECTING is Making Strong Newspaper Campaign to Prevent Any Con- cessions to United States. 1t ‘ | ADMIRAL ADVISES | —— BERLIN, July 6.—(Via London.) —-All the naval publicists of Ger- many hitherto heard from have been | devoting their energles to accelerat- ing public opinion against any modi- fication of the submarine campaign | and endeavoring to prevent, or to limit, concessions to American de- mands in the forthcoming German note to Washington. The campaign between the advo- cates and the opponents of a com- promise still {s intense and delivery of the note which a few days ago was scheduled for Monday or Tues- day will probably be delayed several days. It is hoped by those who favor a compromise, that these days of additional conaideration will produce a change in the attitude of the naval party, whose views thus far have been opposed ++ any note of a character outlined previ- ously in these dispatches. In all probability the reply will em< body proposals to exempt ships em- CAUTION GERMANS MAKE GAINS IN WEST Official Report Says Fifteen Hun- ployed wholly or principally in passen- ger traffic from submarine attacks, today orted by the First brigade, dred Yards of Allies' Trenches | though making them subject to stoppags National Guard of Pennsylvania, the old Were Stormed and examination. The naval party, how- revolutivnary rellc passed betweon nmi * ever, has been bringing heavy pressure lanes of thousands of persons to the hoisted on a specially constructed car and | ¥ 5 ! Adsatval Advites (-_._ on. amid cheers left for the Panama-Pacific | BERLIN, July b5—(By Wireles 19| Aamiral Oscar Von Truppe, late one- exposition | Sayville.)~The German army quarters’ y... goversmor of Kato Chow, the Ger e bell is being taken west on a spe- | statement today says: man concession in the Chinese Province cial train, which will make more than | “Western theater: A British attack|or gnan Tung, saptured in November b seventy stops for local celebrations be- | north of Ypres and a French attack the Japanese, cont 4 4 3 A 3 ributes an article today fore it reaches San Francisco on the | against Souches were repulsed. to Der Tag, warning his compatriots not night of July 16, Six months will elapse | “On the .western end of the forest of to uMOrfil('fil’ll‘. the danger of a breach before it will be returned to its case in | Le Pretre the Germans stormed 1,600 Independence hall The principal celebration the planned to Tit in with the ceremonies at- tending the departure of the bell. At dawn the precious rellc waA rolled There It was placed on a motor truck in a pouring rainstorm. The truck and the hanger from which the bell was sus-| flowera. Only a handful of persons saw At 10 o'clock the Independence day ex- | ercises were begun. They were of the same character as those held in the his- toric square from the early triotic addresses and prayer. {High S8chool Cadets Camp with Army at Luddington, Mich, | LUDINGTON, Fifth United States cavalry; Company C and band, Third United States Infantry, and several hundred high school and col- lege students have gone Into camp at Lincoln Fileld, near this city, for a month’s instruction in military taotics, Captain Weeks, Twenty elghth infantry, is in command. While strict military discipline will be maintained the students will have all the afternoon free to enjoy the attractions of the lakeshore summer resorts. NEW YORK, July 6.—Several hundred high school graduates and students from castern and southern colleges went into camp at Plattshurg, N. Y., today to be taught the sclence of soldiery by regular in this clity of the 139th anniversary of the signing ot Doclaration of I[ndependence was With the United Btates and asking fnem to welgh seriously the question whether (the value of Germany's submarine war- fare against British commerce is great yards of the enemy's position and ad- vanced for a distance of 40 yards. We made prisoners of about 10 unwounded Frenchmen, among them the staff offi- cers of one battalion, and took two fleld guns, four machine guns and three light and four heavy mine throwers. ‘“The bombs thrown by aviators yes- y terday on Bruges, | neighborhood of the most valuable mon- Balgium, fell in the | uments of the town. ““Eastern theater: Teutonic ' allled troops under General von Linsingen have reached the whole front of the Ziota Lipa and have cleaned the west bank of Russlans. In almost a fortnight of enough to justify a continuance of its present form at the expense of a rup- ture with the transatlantie nation. The article tu remarkable not only for its Open statement regarding. the wide- reaching effegta which the participation of America Irl the hostilities might exer- cise on the future course of the war— effects which Admiral Truppel says are greatly underestimated In Germany—but also as a contribution from a naval offi- cer. days of the| republic—singing by school children, pa- Mich., July 6.~Troop A, ! fighting against strong enemy positio We have forced a pessage aoross the Dniester river and have driven the en- emy from position to position. i Germm—eny_lluss Report of Sinking i ‘Cucused” i "ot of Big Battleship rylow, “Between the Bug and the Vistula the | BERLIN, July 8.—(Via London.)—The Russians were repulsed near Plonka and |Russian report regarding the destruc- Turobin and mear Tarnawska and |tion of a vessel of the Deutscheland class Krasnk." Is untrue, according to & semi-official French Ofticlal Report. tement fssued here. It ig also denled PARIS, July 6.—The French war office |8t the mine layer Albatroes lowered | statement "today save: |the German flag before running ashore | “In the reglon to the north of Arras |OR Bwediah territory. The Russians are LWo Attempts at attack on the part of the |*&d to have fired 150 shots at the enemy, preceded each by a violent bom- |AlDatross, of whioh only twenty-five were bardment, were checked by us at about [PtS. An eve-witness of the naval battle 10 o'clock last night. asserts that nearly the entire stern of “One was directed particularly againat |On® Russian warship was shot away. our positions In front of Souches. The Germans came out weveral different times from their trenches armad with grenades and bombs. We, however, com- pelled them to withdraw, leaving many dead on the ground. The other took place at ‘The Labyrinth,” but it was at once stopped by our fire. Yesterday afternoon and in the evening the Germans assumed the offensive along a front of about The Russian officlal statement, fssued yesterday, sald that a Russian submarine blew up on Friday a German warship of, the Deutscholand class, which was steaming at the head of a German squad- ron at the entrance of Danzig bay. The Deutscheland is a battleship of 12,007 tons displacement, with a length of 430 feet and a beam of 72 feet. Its com- army officers. This s the fourth con- | three miles stretching from Fey-En- |Plement in time of peace is 720 men. The secutive student summer camp held by | Haye to the Moselle. To the east of |Other battleships of the same class are the War department in the east. The | Fé¥-Fin-Haye and in the western section |the Schlesien, Schleswig-Holsteln, Hano- students will be drilled for five weeks |Of the forest of Lo Pretre, along a front | Ver and Pummern. The Deutschland and those who pass muster at the end|Of &Lout two-thirds of a mile, they were |Wa8 bullt in 1503, of the camp will qualify for appointment | Ucceseful, after a very violent bombard- | ——— v as officars in voluntser forces ment in again kaining a footing in thelr NORWEGIAN BARK SUNK BY SUBMARINE LONDON, July §. s'ily islands. Its crew of elghteen men, after twenty hours in opea hoats, Among the crew are six Anevipns The Bee's Fund for Free Milk and Ice Our free Milk and Ice fund has a| Wayside, two villages about thirty miles fine start, thanks to generous folks | o™ here. and suthorities today began | | who are contributing. We do not know of any way in which a samll sum of money can be | { made to do more good than in help- ~The Norwegian bark | s has been sunk by a Hrvlnufl\fnllfll in seventy miles southwest of the | landed | port from the rest of the front.' | old lines recently taken by us. But they | found it impoesible to move beyond these | lines. “Further to the east on a line running from La Croix-Des Carmee to the village of Riept, on the Mosells, the Germans an attack and they suffered | very heavy losses .| ““There is nothing of importance to re- | The qu 's War News e Moselle. The ‘ Three—NegTefire Shot to Death by tement of the while recording of the attacks ong other parts of the fromt. IN SOUTHERN POLAND the Rus- n armies driven over the Gall- prder are il x deter- cheek the Teutonle The most re. trinn offick that the Russians | been “atromsly attackl era) sectors, Mob in Georgia | | MACON, Ga., July B.=Three negroes | were shot to death by a mob of 60 per |sons last night near Round Oak and to wcarch for others who are missing. l Telephone wires leahing to the villages | were cut and news of the lynchings did | ot become known here until today when sheriff's deputies arrived with three negroes, who are being held in conneo- | retirement in Guila Lipa and to N P tion with the killing of Silas Turner, a ing the hot weather little tots. |tarmer, whose death precipitated the | TORKISH STATEMENT declares the Contributions from 10 cents to $5 | Iynchings | lest honvily in §n ‘s & " Turner went to the home of W, H. | are solicited and will be acknowl- King, a negro near Round Ooak, to col- | edeed in this column. {lect @ bill and during a dispute which re- | the effort w . te e Previously ullw'loll'd | sulted he was shot | TWELVE PER! were kil and Henry B. u.ru. A ”‘ .o — P jured on the Britlah A Friend . 1 oo [ steamer Anglo-Californian from Ba ¥. Kennedy . | ARCHBISHOP QUIGLEY Montreal by shell fire from a Ger- Dr. C. ¥. Folts : oo HAS ANOTHER RELAPSE | ,uan submar Charity Instead of Fireworks. OMAHA, July 6.~The Bee Free Milk and Ice Fund-Dear Sir: Inclosed find $1. which 1 am sending for the fund in stead of buylug fireworks. A FRIEND, GRAD REITERATES the that & Russian submarine ROCHESTER, N. Y., July Arch- bishop James Edward Quigley, who has | been serfously 11l at his’ brother's home here, has had another relapse and the doetory say today his condition is very grave | a4 class in the Baltie This i semi-offh. in Berlin,

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