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® ____ THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 19165. RICH CITIZEN SOLDIERS IN HARD DRILL AT THE STATE CAMP | ses 22IYRGE PRESIDENT | SCENES AT MILLIONAIRES’ SOLDIER CAMP; MAYOR MITCHEL AT DRILL [CROWN PRINCE i = wat 10 STOP BRITAIN'S KEEPS POUNDING Guardsmen. Navarette in the State of Tamaulipas BLOCKADE (F SFA THE FRENCH LINC have moved over into Texas in the | | territory surrounding § Brownsville _s— — 5 , rising. | Importers and Exporters Meet partment officials would not discuss Indignation. the report, but it was sald to be in their possession and probably would be one of the reasons for moving There assembled in the Hotel Bilt- tfpops to the border. more this afternoon a number of im- iieaatee are os there tray today porters and exporters intent on ex- to Vera Crus, galling hurriedly as a Deasing their indignation against result of a situation in Mexico re- Great Britain's blockade of the aan, a | sayd as the most alarming since | in the form of a letter of protest to j fuerte was forced from the country. pregident Wilson, demanding imme- n —_— 4 diate action to relleve the situation, | if TEN ORE KILLED The large dining room of the hotel y BORDER FIGHTS was used as an assembly room. A a WITH MEXICAN BANDS, \"°8° American fag was draped over the speaker's platform, and Philip J. | Cunningham, who presided, pointed us BROWNSVILLE, Tex., Aug. 11—/to the flag as indicating the nation- Little lessening of activities on the/ ality of the meeting. PARIS, Aug. 11.—Half a million | shells have been hurled against the | French works east of Vienne le Cha- teau in the last thres days in the violent onslaughts by the Crown Prince's army, aiming at the railway leading eastward to Verdun. The once heavily wooded slopes of the valleys around La Harazee have been swept clean by the terrific pounds ing of the German artillery. The northern stretches of the forest of Batis is a Weld of tree stumps aad fallen timbers. ‘This afternoon's offical communique nw AT DRIDL ~ part of the Mexican raiders inthe Rio) “This is not to be considered in Mant reported that the German bombard Grande Valley was indicated in re-|any way a pro-German meeting, ote ment was “very violent” yesterde ports reaching here in the last twenty-|aaid. “It is American pure and and last night, but that the Frenc four hours, which told of numerous| «imple and not for any country ex- maintain their positions at this poli f attacks by the bandits and of several | copting our own.” Be fights between the Mexicans and sol-; Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia was diers, Ten men were reported to have| the principal speaker and he dis- Gow béen killed in the fighting yesterday | cussed at Jength the conditions of the INDICATED BY ARROW , nd elsewhere in the Argonne. That's all right as far as their fam- | because of his aptitude to learn things | established the nations would give it eo A lively eter proceede. flies are concerned, but it {s going to A iamicard Nie eae or ogg bred the support of formal recognition and | ground Souches during the night. Thé be a little time—a few days—before| tia tid tnat he was the only man/|@**/stance short of armed force. The|Germans made one of their nightly the policemen themselves or one Rob- 5 Inst c available to tell the new men how to|most important result, however, | bomb attacks, but were repulsed. a: * Right, Bringing the death | blockade under international law and ert Bacon (of the firm of J. P. Morgan| set up thelr tents, He did He also| would be that if the United States|, BERLIN (via London), Aug, 11. \ i list since the beginning of the out-/as to ite effect upon American tn- & Co.) get used to their new military | hustled luggage. " 4 i The following statement was issue rages by the raiders up to nearly }dustries. R f " : There wero a tow members of a rom. |f'mally recognized a new govern-lig.day by the War Office: relations, because it will be up to peal " twenty. The ten reported dead in-| “I am neither pro-German nor pro- sither Webel, Etat fs P | pany who got away and had a bath|™ent an embargo on arms and sup-| “North of Souchez French hand ( ! a ” “ er Sorgt. Hughes or Sergt. Simon-|jater in the day because they didn't| plies would be imposed against all grenade attack was repulsed, cluded one United States trooper ani said the Senator. am pro- stead to tell Private Baoon that he te|ask their commanding’ officer, Capt. | fuctions of revolutioniste and bandits, |_"At, Courey, north of Rheims, the nine members of the bandit gangs. can. I am deeply interested inj very slow in getting his hand down | Kelly of the Thirteenth United State The recognized government alone | French attempted to occupy a cratet The trooper was killed last night| seeing freedom of the sea preserved, | from the lock of the breech of hie| Jfantry, for permission. would have the right under interna. |Which they made before our front BY at Palm Gardens, near Mercedes, | regardiens of what foreign country it from the Jock. of the preeeh OF Rs] cL thOuEDE,” sald Capt Kelly, “1! tional law to obtain munitions of war mine exbionens. bay were Cee ‘Tex. . | could find out @ lot about these men | the United States, F ed from doing this and the crater wi . when be, with several other! helps or hurts |the slightest noise against the side of |by not letting thom bave any ‘privic| rerco would soon put all rebel armies |takeD possession of by our tropa. " cavalrymen, be attacked by ae “We urge the United States Govern- \his leg when the hand strikes it. | exes and ge | ‘em Rat! hard all) out of business. Mere) in bere I i iay epee ape 5 ean bandite, who appoared suddenly! ment to insist upon the rights of ay. chel is about the only man in|” Carranga’s action to-day put him tepulsed an attack at Lingekopt by out of the darkness, shot at the sol-| American citizens, both importers and | PRIVATE ROBERT BACON THOR: | the company who has not asked me a! out. of consideration of receiving |= es at ‘ UGHLY “Oo ” favor, He is the onl hi and re Initec % diers and quickly disappeared. The) exporters, to transact their busine: ° RIENTED. Ir je is the only man who had rt and recognition of the United Private Bacon, by th ay, learned how to wear and adjust his vernment, at least. For 4 Mexicans, according to reports, had| through neutral ports of northern Ku- bask! she 6? ie any ie te rena reel k when the company was called for | ; the First Chief has not a eut the telephone wire connecting| rope without interference by Great | ‘ asda \P ‘k instruction. He is a crackerjack. | stood high in the regard of several Palm Gerdens with Mercedes. as the precise writers say it) “orient| If men of his Intelligence were to be| South American diplomats, : brie eo, himself.” Just before retreat sounded | our first line of defense in case of| Villa had strong friends in the| E A farmer found the break, con- “We support the administration and jast night, Tbe tvening World man | trouble, we oe go at the job of| Government, although he is not under ay nected the wires and reported the! we uphold the Presi, 1 found the eminent private in the midst Whipping @ hurry-up army into shape | consideration as an actual President shooting to Mercedes. dacant for modifies err LN evvaghen ri of a group of men older and younger | With @ whole lot of confiden: for Mexico, His bandit crimes have! cation of the British i. in front of the #econd tent on the| Nevertheless, the Mayor is not to|barred him from being elevated to| i Additional soldiers and a posse of | orders in council, which interfere with west side of C Company on the|#hine by attainment of high office in| the post of liberator of Mexico. @itizens immediately left for Palm | our commerce to neutral countries.” street. He was flat on bis back.| Wis camp. His eminence as a pub-| Secretary Lansing was asked what «Gardens. News of their possible] Senator Smith discussed the techni- Millionaires and Men of Note Quickly His lows were crowed. | The lower lie servant te a handicap to him. He was the, plan of the United, siat Fi with the bandits was awalt- | cal points of law raised in the recent : : : The head which encases the brain | body ‘who has been talked about and |ernment, but he declined to give any % ee riest trouble to be reported | British notes which attempted to jue- Lose Identity in Line-Up which made the United States tha! pointed out and photographed in|information on that subject. Ds occurred at Sebastian, Te: Lify seizure of American cargoes con- most popular power 4n Western Eu-| camp as much as has the Mayor— Gatinen te Wealinton tor be % s $ rope fur four years rested on his in-| much to his annoyance—can have thi , a day, where two Mexican signed ® neutral ports on the alloga- at P attsburg Drill. feflocked hands, which were at least| proper jafluence as an officer over his | sideration by President Wilson and ~ a tured by Texas Ran, tion that they were ultimately intend. ten inches lower than his heels and|fellow-recruits, 80, despite his good | his Cabinet on Friday. The Prest- to escape and were shot ed for Germany. He refuted the as- in the mud of a dried puddle, | work, the be the Mayor can hope|dent is to return to the capital for ana ied. a sertion that during the late Civil War Special From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World. carrying the air of “Sweet, for is to become a Corporal. that meeting. _. game from Matamoras, : Marie” or some melody of similar] Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler, who! rr Sy prem | the river from Brownaville,| the Union Government attempted to MILITARY INSTRUCTION CAMP, PLATTSBURG BARRACKS, N. Y.,|yintage. Nobody seemed to notice] once was Lieutenant Gove: “of the! BETRAYED BY VIOLIN CASE. that Mexican raiders there intended |interfere with British ships under sim. 1 eto was carrying the uir, it is| State of New. York, has the only aul - to make a concerted attack on this| \), rT | Aug. 11.—Members of the military instruction camp gathered as a body for dus! ave ae & cueainaen bane » At ie gus hy a hy ork, ae ony suit See Rueee tn ang American occu, | Ua? conditions, . . no pi p war cor-|of khaki on the reservation which '8| 4.0.4. conus Nelali y a A, Vere Crus. Primarily the meeting wan cailed| the first time to-day. Eight companies, all in khakt and campaign hats,|respondent, but rather that of Pri-| made of the famous German greenish | > ny vate Bacon's fellow-collegian, Herr| smoke grey fabric. Khaki is as vari- | by the Importers’, Committee, of} marched out and sat on the grass in a compact square, hollowed out on one} Doktor Munsterberg, to explain the] colored as Joseph's coat. It shades | which Mr. Cunningham t# Chairman, sige on the slope of a hill overlooking the sun sparkled expanse of|pexchological formulas which made| from salmon silver to a deep cheatnit It was Morris Cobn‘s violin case, \long ‘More. rangers, are. coming here, | “M4 concerned itself chiefly with con) Cumberland Bay, Lake Champlain. In the hollowed out area stood Capt. Robert Bacon a diplomat when he Was) brown, But every regular and mili-)a valuable “stall,” that betrayed him | while troops from Fort Melntosh, La-|*knments of goods from Germany, Citizens, alread: to “Lost and Found Bureau.” Room 103, World Building, will be lated for thirty days. These liste can be egen at any of The World's Offices. i ai bled adult trained to be & banker. i tla officer who gets a glimpse of |into the hands of the police early to ; 8 arch for other items s anier’ —he' ; : ; 4 redo, gre en route. ‘Austeia and Belgium that now are|tisistead Dorey, camp commander, first lecturer to the assetn CU es eene oun (pal Chane anlar hee & arate in day. He lived with his bride of two Se c Foy or fifty Mexicans were in «| held up in foreign ports. cadets. Leaning over a rail fence at the left. of the gathering, Gen. Leonard |"livanced intelligence indicated by | the awkward squad-wants to kaow months at No. 147 West One Hundred 2 \ fanning fight this afternoon about! phere in great demand for ‘ Wood, commander of the Department of the East, U. S. A, listened to the} private Baker, The Evening World| “whore Chanler wot that ft.” Jand Forty-third Street and held him twelve miles from Harlingen with a 48 ce voaehocted : % ts Chief of Staff reporter wandered to the street of G a self out to the world as a poor, patient e 4 detachment of soldiers reinforced by|*inds of foreign manufactured arti- | simple talk of Capt. Dorey, who oie: fet o Mt. _|Gompany. It was after dark. In-| | “pants preeners SibgA.. that: Mors Y @ citizens’ posse. The same Mex|-| cles, especially novelties, laces, Hnens,| “Tho purpose of this talk in to tell | spector Boland of the New York po-| |_ The neighbors noticed that Morris : tana were ocen earlier in the day trot: | chemicals, toys, leather goods and the | you men why you are here and what | same thing the same way whether !t Tee—it is wonderful (and it isn't) how | | often uN “case: ‘but thay, thougnt it queer what MALTED MILK you drink ling their horaex westward toward! iii. ‘the hotiday season la approach. |i oxpected of you,” anid Capt. Dorey, {18 the very best way or not.” these New York cops fall Into place | that they never heard him play one-note| Agi for HORLICK’S or Mercedes, There wore then about hip = |16 cupented of you, z ‘ as drill masters of the mighty—was| at home. How and where could he ‘The student soldiers who had bee | forty of them. ing, and the importers declared the| addressing the mixed audience of student soldiers d n\ putting an awkward squad through | e The fossip reached Police | YOUMAay get a cheap substitute Rangera to-day captured in Hi-| public may soon be without its ac-|soldierly looking millionaires, ‘ath- | drilling with guns and on the march|the manual of arms by lantern light, U ‘adquarters and Detectives Ginch and and pay the same price 4aigo County, west of here, a flax | customed supply of Christmas goods. |tetes, policemen, bankers, merchants | With only short reste since half past|Of the ring of observers om the out- Aerenies tasted tp ine villa ogee want pie sen Bia oc Tibereiion tor’ Me nish: | The committeo invited Senator |and professional men. “After xeolng |#X Jumped up and cheered and ap- okjrta sie RA DOTIRY Rane acing | ted—a fine set of burglar's DIED. i xas. any ihe exporting ecten pewars| You take hold in the Inat twenty- plauded their boas when he dismissed) anything worth a little mention in |‘"Storria waa Jdentified at Police Head- | HADLEY. LAREDO, Tex. Aug. 11.—A request | Gf the South, wo. that. the catives of | four hours it looks aw though you all | them. the newspapers?” qua-ters aa an old offender and he will{ Hanover, New Hampa for mote troops in the Laredo district | oth importers ot New York and ex-| know exactly what you are here for.| ‘There is not a polo player, a pub-| THE TRANSFORMATION OF DUD- be went over to Brooklyn, where he for-| Db, HADLEY, Rector of Bt. John’s P. By because of bitter feelings of some : f 500 bail lust July on a bur-] Churn, Jersey City. porters of the South might be joined t re here so | lle official, a banker, a lawyer, a phy LEY FIELD MALONE. Mexicans over the non-recognition of | °’Ainong the importers present were | BUt te sum it up, you al ; ; Wisse vilcas an a —— Funorel eervices at St. John’s Chero’s ‘ Carranza was wired the State Depart-| Congressman Herman A. Meta,|that if, In case of trouble, you are slotan, a scientist, an artlat, @ writer, | Cree econ aera thure’a a fellow on Thursday at 2 P.M. Intermeet im ment to-day by United States Consul] wig imports dyes from Germany; | called upon to take command of a | *® engineer, @ policeman, a dilletante| vey Mahone, down in the middle (Continued from First Page.) More! Bay View Comotery, Alonso B. Garrett of Nuevo Laredo, | (ar) W. Stern of J. Corbett. &| company of untrained volunteers, you |OF ® “society person” among them |of the street who 18 a card Soieee tee Sis aoe Tete ase talee opposite here. Co,, custom brokers; ‘Theodore Bach! Si) now how to go about the work | WH at the end of this first day of| ‘The second sald: "here's Just one qos ee te Gack lane denearee of Baow 9 United Bates Bameaes: 4 | to make a good start the first time of peace camp of its is Hee 4 ber ir SERPHE LAS: regard their conversations as secret —————————— ‘All “Lost and Found” articles @ ; a . |B 4 in The Worl ported: Strauss, importers of novelties, and| “A finished officer js not to be made| Kind in the history of this or any |suegch—nix name ie Mallon. and therefore maintained discreet dip i erst has Foune Bareaa™ oe , B, Schmitt of B. ifelder & Co. im-!in four weeks, But a man who can| ther country, Is not a little bit jarred) “And a third said: Maybe It's the |lomatic silence, | ig "i aaa eee . PARIS, Aug. Ria Vest wuedied, avenge: acs teach the elements of organisation out of his commonplace habits of|*ame man, but I thought his mame! To-day's events in Mexico, with | court-martial at Maracilies has sen: was Mellhon : : ; sehbout five hundred person an inet at be cratned in| SHOWRDE and his usual bearing toward |™As MMe as tone nay. | Carranza defiant and the bandits of fenced Henri Facing a millionaire 4 one B. Boumiat his fellow mon ’ porters of toys. ‘The permanent 6 r iller of Mentone, to per- reported recently regarding thé trip| that time. I have been asked an to cated and found there Dudley Field | ‘he north killing Americans along the | perfume dist : " sa cemmaltten ok fifteee 1a Wraeiane a sais g in molation to the requiar| _TB® bewilderment of all 1s perhaps| Malone, Collector of the Port of New | border, are likely to have important | Betwal deportation. Aad PAU MANE Of j ton with @ petition to. the State De- me reflected in an exaggerated way by | York. Influence upon/the diplomatic nego- | Costs of the proceeding for supplying officers, You are on the cadet status. : “You see,” said the Collector, “I'm essence of neroli and 600 tons of olive RETREAT AT LOMZA for toreign Se ent Het ten You are prospective officers. On mili. (,c0® H. M- Baker of Company F, wh0 trortunate in a way: 1 bappened to fail | tations for joint action of the Weat-|on through a Lausanne firm to a fa- — ‘wandered into the Plattsburgh work-|into a company in which there were|ern nations to bring about order | mous perfumer of Cologne. of trade across the wea, declaring that] ‘gy and obey implicitly. Fifteen| wre Teoreation Dour jak plabl. | Mr. Guainted Just on my own bottoméand| ° it has been very clearly stated by great losses would result if we could age = aaak bas bh tran Baker lives at No, 819 Weat Ninety- [00 'Petause anybody else in my tent|the South American diplomats that | (Continued from First Page.) Bes soon obtain goods rom Senne pea Mibacsttas Oe cites oP aur toate fifth Street. He is hore because he jever heard of me before or knows that | they would not regard with favor any | petition was deferred untill after| you are gentlemen and need no in- Pini rgeangaet bette fouesradl ae Ravine tho te of my ute, |attompt of the United States to in- Sehator Smith had spoken, voanei With it f be vade Mexico with force for the pur- Senator Smith nad wpowen. = | structions as to the limita of such 4) 91 of the rest of the men with whom Otto eheeen toe cently Be iM evacuaticn of the fortress and retire- ‘ tf setting up and maintaining j Areas toward Vilna. relationship. Mr. Baker is associated. slipped his mattress ally over his mat | pon, ie Soin vitnvno have been aie. | R&et Wyskof, where the Germans |WO NEED FOR DISCIPLINE IN| “gay,” said Mr, Baker, “it you re- [tress and had at thé orders of a|% overnment tn the Clty of Mexico mmiiatio’ and their equipment removedd tes 87 Dave been unable: to force THE CAMP. doubtful and watchful corporal At the same time these representatives Porters only knew your business youl, trench to keep the gatherin re willing to co-operate in any plan phere will be a check roll call at| would got a lot of atu out or this|water from making a rivulet through | sr meral euaaion and diplomatic ad- taps. This will preserve certain | camp, Say, did you know I heard |the middle of his tent o hours during which a good healthy| to.day that Mayor Mitchel of New|, Wandering back toward headquar-|justment which gives promise of H MM not be interrupted by late in the hope of getting a moditt bringing about order and setting up beften in 9 a iis Bo York City was out bere? And young |tion of the oMclal order that The|, reconstruction government under arrivals in camp and Is in no #en4°| Teddy Roosevelt? And a man named |Evening World photographer must Y | & disciplinary measure. Men who] Bacon, who has something to do with [not take any pictures of individuals, purely Mexican control, have given up important business | yp lest undemocratic notions be fostered | News that the United States Govern- Morgan & Co, and they say ; through. in camp, one encountered Rhinelander | mo nea ta ‘ey Riga nearly every day. 4 and personal affaira of great magnl-|ehers's a lot of the cops in there too. |Waide. once Tollce Commissioner. of [Ment had diapatched two battleships North of Warsaw, the most violeht Around Warsaw and in the south= | 44 qo not need to be put under! ang, pay, there's a man named Alec |the City of New York. Mr, Waldo | to Vera Cruz caused some uneasiness east the Slava are continuing their s 2 ts i3 " Infantry engagements are occurring | orderly. retirement. A. Hed Cro | 2necipline. If you did need It you Cochrane who built @ yacht ones and [Pc ‘tan 1 IT A ad pact iantobasr peculiar amore ’ | would Hot ere hai t factory who ought to be |¢ a ry i train, arriving at Gomel, reported | "iit may be necessary at any time| worth any lilt Poon (olive drab) shirt. the United Btates intended only to that two hospital trains carrying , > worth an interview. If you'd get|wALDO PROMOTED ON OPENING . For reduces guay fiom. Woreaw. wo (foT ton ct. 7a0 to a0 to Plattsburgh | about @ little, there's a lot of inter- DAY. afford protection and a place of refuge \to get in touch by telegraph or tele- for foreigners in Vera Cruz, He Siedico were bombarded by Zeppelina | vy Ke “4 ; . esting étems to be got around this} «promoted to a commission al- | gi, e e phone with your business affairs, ” mated. stated that this action should not be | and f , killed. camp. ready?” the Commissioner was usked, C 0 nstip ation “The war Steet ectter eau 2: Jup | There will be no difficulty about that!” Private Baker was naive, but he| "Capt. Stanhorn grabbed me out of construed as indicating that this plementary communique, — dealing |#f permission is asked, Jen't much more bewildered in his |my company,” croaked Mr. Waldo, "I/ Government jntended using armed ¢ uperatio c “ > here to get the latést wrin- i use Sith the'wherations against Kovno oa | “There are to be no alooholle | mental aurroundings than any of the came up here to get the latest Wein, | force aa affeAing the effort to bring lof the Monday Bebting, The (armans |vaucre brought Into this camp, | older and more distinguished persons |now 1 am told off to teach what little about order in Mexico by peaceful tf us mated. bombarded the fortress {think most of you are willing to fall| who surrounded him, Protty much |! used toknow’ 9 | | means. -= with siege artillery of all sizes up to\tn with our wish that there should Within another forty-eight hours | a 4 The Delicious Laxative Chocolate | , ded with the statement that | rock bottom purpose of all drill and! Simonstead of ths New York police. |the + Holt Weeit es | templating armed intervention, Ex-Las relieves constipation, regulates | ponstead pol the stories of the camp well begin to tly teetah amd bowels: ctimulotes (se the enemy, ot the ond of the Gay fe: | military orgentsation, every move-| ‘They went ail the way to the new form. they have hardiy had achance | It is understood that the discussion T IS IMPOSSIBLE TO DECEIVE A LOFT CANDY LOVER. A person who has cultivated a taste for Loft Sweets will never be satisfied with any other makes of candy, This may sound a trifle egotistical on our part, but it is never. the! true. Just last week a good customer of ours told the Veneer of one of our stores that he is com- pelled to find way to a LOFT Candy Store once a week. He declares that his mother will not be satis- fied with any other candy but LOFT’S. He told us that on several occasions he tried to ‘‘put one over" on the old lady by purchas- ing candy at another store and placing it into one of our \- But she knew the difference immed ly. The fact that he ps considerably more for the candy with which he tried to fool is mother rather places the joke on him, we think—don’t your Special for Wednesday. CHOCOLATE ROYAL CREAM K186- ES—A medley of toothsome crunched Nute aad richest, metlowest Sugar ed. unite In 10c Le LATE COVERED AS5OR’ Th—' oloeat NN eee Aleds ne well maar jp yet tring “Almonds, Became, Brartie Kuve vain arabis Rromium ‘Milk Checsice = BOG POUND nox Sar MAT Pee re weenie & passage of the Bug, and north Ostrow, where the Teutone are aim- ing at both the river and the W: saw-Petrograd Railway, The enemy in bringing fresh troops into action | on the Ostrow-Sniadova road in aj | determined effort to batter his way to other towns. Relics in the old palace have been taken away. Despatches received here thin after- noon reported increasing activity by he air wing of the German armies. q A Zeppelin flew over Ustdvinnk for- * treas yesterday. Taubes fly over bed east it 4 ‘Thin éxplanation served to reassure fixteen-inch and then attempted to _ At to bed early last night | tnis will be a new camp. Rverybody be none drunk outside of camp. It's | Sisrto get fondly | the diplomats whose home govern- ‘storm the forts by massed assault. sleep on the readadjust- | who now money, © nts to be fr reported hergic re- | only four weeks, anyway, men. mente of the day. Among those who | With every bunkie and company com- | ments had instructed them to refrain The War Offic and fellow camper will bi th the part of the Ruasiana| "Finally, let us remember the reall did not were Capt. Eddie Hughes and | PAbl: 4Y ‘from participating in any action con- a way how. i s begin yet. “ liver and promotes digestion. Good for) of Piple, won at Cont, | Ment in the manual of arms and in| Cumberland Hotel in the city to got | 0 begin Noche! 4 in the conference dealt largely with young and old, 10c, #5c, and bbc, at | Since this fignting evacs | marching drill goes to one principle. | picture card to announce to thelr Cee ae et ae wna! Ete details of an appeal to be Issued by all ys uation of Vilna, east of Kovno, was! A man who is in a fight must not be! families that after one day of ob- | unloaded on the parade ground from all the Pan-American nations to the | begun, and it was generally accepted | worried or bothered about the wa, ‘al, trains from Now York, made c | a y in| servation by regular army officers | special, trains ‘ork, mi Mexican people urging a peace con- 1, gen. Jeger UhAs ive. Oeticial fever | which the man on hia right or his| they had bean chosen Sergeanta of C | almost as good » notel porter as did forence of factions for the establish- Ne Extra tor ab are pee Memmi {gt Bb prepare the public for evacuation ot | left is going to do a thing, We must’ Company by the regular army drill| ‘ty., Mayor lost his chance of an ment of a provisional government, fe \ fortress. y \ he know that we are all golng to do the masters of their outit, early borning bath in Lake Champlain if such @ government should be , : 0 —