The evening world. Newspaper, October 4, 1916, Page 2

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ance od to take @ cen there are perted promise to keep M1 conte; yet great shortage side, where rom grecere =: our normal supply to-day,” sald Loton Horton, President of the SieMold Farms Company. “We will get more to-morrow. We let small dealers have 10,000 quarts, and to-morrow they cin have more. If they will give us time ‘we can supply the whole city of New York. Then they may put # fence— around the few counties where ail this trouble ts.” John J. Dillon, State Commissioner of Foods and Markets, sald he did not belleve the distributors received more than one-fourth of the usual supe to-day from the regular sources, though they might get more from dis. | tant places. HOTELS LIMIT PATRONS TO USUAL TABLE ALLOWANCE. | City hotels limited their milk pa-| trons to the ordinary table require- | ments, At the New York Contral's Haven yards to-day only one train came in add it brought only three cars, There are usually nine, A milk trein from Rutland, Vt, came ig one car short, At. the New Hoven line's station at One| Hundred and Thirty-second Street and Lincoln Avenue only eleven cans Mott milk | were shipped in from the regular | cents paid to the farmer districts, However, {wo car loads of milk were received from Boston at this yard, having been shippod in by ex- press as an emergency supply. These | express shipmenty were for the Mu- tual-McDermott “Company und the} Farma-Slawson At the Borden Company's depot, No, 342 East One Hundred and Thir- ty-third Strect, 1t was said that con- | ditions were much the same as yes- terday, with a one-half supply on hand, usual order and that others would re- ceive half their supply. Many cases of minor disorder were te districts. early hours of this-morning through the milk-pro- ducing counties and emptied many Reged milk that was intended for +, LAUREL RESULTS. Fae Lj haa ith sean ta oe a ie ACR "Mteeplechane handi- bout er eal Ha iene 7 Rose Finn, Lobelia and ‘Blowin sino Yan. —_ ~-_— — WINDSOR WINNERS, for thes. yearcoldy ana vp fis feticom. —Kotl gt fie Toa arose), sho ti 2 tilt i ai Gallant’ Boy fs ITEMS FOR aed ese i ree Com nay i, oarniny > ws § a a quar- os Nov. FF nd “ ECZEMA acutely distressing and persistently stub» | born, is treated most effectively with POSLAM which shows its healing power from first application when itching is stopped and | burning skin is soothed. The trouble, soon under control, should show rapid improvement aaily. AT ALL pRUGR STS. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One provesit. 25cat all taeee, | pe St ea Decker | It was algo said that some pa- | trong would have to go without their ‘90, $0, | Well as the consumer,” sald Commis- | “5° DARYMEN FIGHT TOSAVE CONSUMER, DILLON INSISTS saaunsie City in Grasp of a Monopoly of Two or Three Big Concern IS ASKED." | “JUST PRICE Commissioner Declares the Law of Supply and Demand Has Had No Chance. By Soyhie lrene Loeb. ‘These are the reasons that Cow Missioner Dillon gives for the pres eat milk upheaval, For forty years farmers have had no volce in the of milk prices or forty years there has been little or no competition to regu- late lower prices of milk Labor, feed and cont of tiving | have increased for the farmer | ‘There is no reason why people | should pay more than & cents per | quart right now for milk for | whieh they are paying 10 cents. | The difference between 4 wetting ae by the con- | uccording and 10 cents paid sumer is too great, the present system. If a better price were paid to the farmers the inducement to farmers to prod milk would | be greater in farms near New York, | As It is at present, producing milk is proving unprofitable ond it is necessary to go longer dis- tances to secure It. fight te for the es- 6 for 47 quarts (100 pounds) At present they are receiving $1.80 for 47 quarts (100 pounds) Farmers are at present able to bring milk to the city to a at 7 cents a quart. Seven thousand cans come in daily direct from the farmer through his agency. If it were possible to enlarge this system the consumer would pay less. The dealer has it way com- Jy¢ and going as to the consumer and the farmer, He allows the | farmer 10 cents extra fur 47 quarts (100 pounds) for making better milk and charges the con- ‘9 cents for the same eae OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND) HAS NO CHANCE. “In the present controversy my a). | sayinpathtes are with the farmer as sioner Jobn J. Dillon, as I spoke to him concerning the present milk up- heaval. “It doesn't take a mathematician to see that the price paid to farmer, approximately 4% cents, is too small and the price charged for milk (9 and 10 cents) is too great, and the consumer has to pay tn the end. “We hear a lot of talk about ‘the law of supply and demand,’ But whea the supply is controlled with such force as it has been for the past forty years in the casd of milk, then thu law of supply and demand bas no chance to work. Before the present crisis we tried every means to talk Prices with tho big dealers, but they refused even to discuss them, “The farmer bas had nothing to say about the price of his milk. The farmer is anxious to secure to the consumer @ lower price for milk. He ~|Kpows more milk will thus be cov- sumed; but he has been pracitcally ng | by the throat by ie dealers who fet the prices. The highest price ne receives now is 4 Tn apricg os summer he only juart. ~ 000 | qi “This o pantry is the only one in the id where a commo: like mi i} controlled tl it in ao ew ssibility to ition. A! peg arouse wahoers ion Berga bt te the y ef fixing Prices will pf and we ine of being brought in this Ad, for which the consumi iy di ONLY REMEDY LIES IN FARM. erated in |sell his milk, of cours THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1916. | STATE OFFICIAL WHO IS DAIRYMEN’S AGENT . IN'GREAT MILK ‘WAR’ | Bre eeteseeorresoreseee e 4 A | oeeregecoeonerseneoese » done by organization of toe farm- ers, such as the Dairymen's League represent: “The present. crisis has arisen be- cause farmers Are going out of the | business of selling milk, and although the best farma for milk are in the vicinity of New York, it i# necessary jon a@Count of the low Lotege paid tho from New | all wrong, tn farmer to go miles away York to get milk, ‘This is aud only the public can cure situation, “An organization to prevent this Is not a diMoult t it in no experi- ment, It Is no ried and untested theory. It has been tried and tested and successfully organized and op. vera! Muropean countries, in tenmark, and p ricularly system that country In balf a century from mere serfs or chattels to men of standing and made t onc of the most independent prosperous In the world. “Our plan Is to form local associa- | tions of producers in every section o| 350,000 GERMANS ‘One Reel | | occupy every | lage of Raucourt 1 Abbaye, three miles “5 CRUSHED ON SOMME LONDON DECLARES 29,735 Prisoners toners Fihon ts Beginning of the Drive for Bapaume. IN| NIGHT N Eaucourt L’Abbaye Now En- tirely Occupied—French Seize Line of Trenches. S 4 HISTORY IS MADE IN SECOND REEL OF 1. RAFT MOVE (Continued from os ies ele Page.) EW GAINS LONDON, Oct. 4—Following the oMclal announcement to-day, in which! League Club movie, which took plac the War Office declared that the vile €4rly in the evening, ran like this: How do you do?” asked Mr. Roose- veit, from Bapaume, wns now entirely nt “How do you 40?" asked Mr, Taft, the hands of the British, a gupple-, Neither answered the other's ques- mental statement was givon out show-| ton. Maybe they didn’t care. ing the details of the fighting since) Only the privileged saw the his- Sept. 15. ‘torical event. Newspaper men were The statement describes the cupture excluded. The affair, it wae ex- of villages, includjng Combles, Geuda- Piained, was only a little private mat. court'kad Talepval, and peéoueds: ter between gentlemen, arranged at “These victories brought oug front Considerable trouble for the public line at moro than one point @ithin a 6°04: milo of the German fourth’ position (Oniy Ree deen ceptures by weat of the Bapaumo-Transloy Road, | ‘he French. They found a mar- “The enemy has fought stubborniy vellous tunnel fitted with all to check our advance, and since the conveniences to be found in Hept, 15 seven new divisions have the Union League Club.) been brought against us and five Versions differ, Anyway, Mr. ‘Taft against the French, Tho severe and was in an alcove, Iii to prolonged struggle demanded on the Chauncey Depew tell one of his best bart of our troops very great deter-' stories, Somebody led the , Colonel mination and courage. Lover, According to one report, it was “At the end of September the sit-' George B, Sheldon, former National uation may be summarized as follows: | Republican Treasurer. George W, Since the opening of the battle on Perkins, however, says he invest!- the July 1 we have taken: 26,785 prisoners gated carefully; and it was Gov, Whit- has raised the farmers of and engaged thirty-eight German man, Whichever one !t was, having divisions, of which twenty-nine (about conducted the Colonel to a position + community | 360,000 men) have been withdrawn where he could qee Mr. Taft on both and exhausted or broken, We hold the sides of Mr. Depew, said, half moon upilind aouth of the Ancre, it were: height of tmportance, “Col. Roosevelt, I want you to meet Ngbtly, as | the State, “The producer will legally | @n@ #0 have direct observation round Mr. Taft.” appoint the for the sale of Thjs will put all of the milk of a neighborhood into one agence for sale. And the pro- ducer, ving appointed inoy to is unable to well it personally, “The local organization will then recover the implements of distribu. tion that have passed out of its hands, It must provide cans and pasteurizers und control the creamery or shipping stations, These local associations will then be federated in one agency for the sale and distribution of milk. NO PRICE FIXING, BUT A SELL- ING AGENCY. ii DOt be a mere price-mak- ittee, It will be an organ- iaed beeen f agency, such every manufactuking busineys in the coun- try now embloys. Its business will be to know the cost of production; to find new and economic means of dis- tribution; to educate the consuming public ag to the comparative value and cheap f milk 48 an article of food; to increase the consumption of milk, and to see that the consumer gets It at a price consistent with the cost of production and a reasonable protit, “We have no disposition to disturb the existing conditions if it can be avoided. We believe in utllizing ex- isting: Agencies rather than attempt- ing to destroy them and create others, Any radical disturbance resulta in @ waste and 4 waste has no place ip the economic system of distribution, We tre more than willing to distrib- ute milk through the agencies now existing, but these agencies must aot be Our giasters, “We are willing to work with them, hand in hand, and we will be glad to see them fully reward- ed tor the time and capital neces- sary to distribute milk, but they must not tyrannize us, The: must not exact ‘unreasonable prices from the consumer and hereby out off our outlet for our product. There must be no more two-cent mlik to the producer, and at the same time tweive-cent milk to the consumer, “They must not drive independent dealers out of the distributing of milk and they must not keep new men out of the business, We will glad to have the co-operation of the large dealers in our efforts to effect an economic aad efficient distribu- be? of ae pa “It was wi is in view, as weillas redoing the cost of other food Grice that 1 helped make the recent law that governs the Commissioner of Foods and Marketa, THE PRESENT LAW GOVERNING THE SUPPLY OF MILK. The principal points in this ute under Which I am acting in the pres- ent situation is summed up in the following phrast i of the law; ‘The Commissioner of Foods and Markets shall investigate th cost of food production and m, keting in all its phases; ‘Ald and assist in the organ- jzation of co-operative societies among producers and consumers | ERS’ ORGANIZATION, “If the public would only realize that the effort here ts to give the farmer a just price and eliminate some of the artificial profit, they | would understand that this can only Lem Il Vi Ih TH TT i] i" 5 EA OR a | | Century Favorite Time has enriched this per- fect blend of selected ryes, for the purpose of gecuring more direct business relations them, of promoting and c ing the interest of produc a reduce the cost of iving to com- sumers; “*Advise and asvist In the Pit A A om E bey | 7 ill, A s his agent | to the east and northeast, The enomy hi fallen back upon a fourth live behind a low ridge just west of the | Bapaume-Transloy Road, “The importance of the three | months’ offensive is not to be judged by the distance advagced or the (NEWBURGH, Oct. §.—Pros- pects ‘for a big ice crop in the Hudson this winter are said to be excellent.) Mr. Taft put out his bonest hand. Mr. Roosevelt put out his honest |hand, The honest hands approached, number of trench lines taken. It touched, interlocked, loosened, with- must be looked for in the effect upon grew. ‘rhe Colonel screwed his face the enemy's strength in numbers, into a smile. Mr-Taft smiled. Th 6 two material and morale. The enemy has, 4, -nogt inquiries were made as to the “CHARGES MPGRAW | MADE ARE DROPPED, | LEAGUE SHOULD QU ens STRIKE AHEAD (Continued from First Page.) wateh playing like that, and f refused to be connected with it.” In the opinion of many fans who watched the decisive game t Giants played their hardest to win, but were forced to acknowledge superior bass- ball from the Brooklyn team, GIANTS’ PRESI| DENT SAY. BURDEN.WAS TOO HEAVY FOR MANAGER M’GRAW Harry Hempatend of the Giants is- sued @ statement this afternoon in which he dweit on the ups and downs of the Giants during the season now nearing ite finish. Coming down to the final Brooklyn season and the MeGraw trouble, he says: Due to the unusual standing of the clubs at the beginning of the) Brooklyn sertes, the crux of the Whole year's play seemed to centre upon the Giants winning or losing to the Brooklyns, If we beat Brook- lyn four straight, Philadelphia might win the pennant, if we lost, Brooklyn would win the pennant, and it was much talked about that the Giants must win the games, because if they did not the public would feel that the 2 Wanted Brooklyn Many of my personal friends spoke to me of thie last week and said we must win all four games. “It was no wonder, therefore, that with this burden to carry that Mr. McGraw yesterday during the 3 was much upset by the'loose playing of the tgam, because apparently the burden was all on his shoulders due to his former intimate relations with Manager Robinson. If, however, I was asked to nominate any one club that McGraw would rather have beaten, I certainly would have picked Brooklyn. When he asked to be re- leved of the management during the balance of the game I felt he was right and perhaps the team might pull itself together and win There is no doubt that the game Jwestorn end of the Macedonian front, jwhere heavy fighting with the & of Teddy-Taft Movie “Honest Hands” |(7AR’S LOSSES AT. and wouldn't I have [pees In runs, looked simple leaving the grounds. "It there was anything wrong why didn’t McGraw pull the offenders from the playing fleld and send other men in? If the.charges are proved the men responsible can be punished by | being barred forever from the ranks ie organized baseball.” ON MACEDONIA FRON Occupy Part of Village South of Seres Road—Violent Fighting on Struma, Says Sofia. SALONICA, Oct. 4—Advancing from Karazadakol, British troops yesterday stormed and occupied part of the village of Jenikoj, south of tne Seres road, it was offictally an- nouncéd to-day ‘ The Bulgarians counter-attacked three times, losing “heavily and suf- fering a repulse at each onslaught. BERLIN, Oct. 4 (via London).— German and Bulgarian forces on the bians has been in progress for several weeks, have again fallen back. T day's oMcial statement reports the withdrawal of troops near Presba Luke to prepared positions. SOFIA, Oct. 4 (via London),—The War Office issued the following state- ment to-day regarding the operations on the Macedonian front: “East and west of Florina there ‘was lively artillery activity without to win.) | lery activity, which became more vi: Fo PTE TTT LUTZK ENORMOUS; ATTAGK REPULSED cutalipidal Petrograd Admits That Ger- mans Are Hiding Posi- tions in Galicia. BERLIN, Oct. 4.—The Rusians suf- fored enormous losses in a renewal of thelr attacks west of the fortress of Lutzk yesterday, it was oMcialy an~ nounced to-day, Thousands of dead Russians jay before the German trenches at nightfall, Every attack was repulsed without the loss of aay ground. a | The Russians continued yesteriay |their heavy assaults on the Austre- German lin ‘The official announeé~ ment reports the defeat of the Rue- sians by the troops of Prince Leopold> Russian regiments which stormed |the Austro-German works west of Lutzk twelve times In fruitless “as- saults were ordered to break through jut any cost and capture the town of Viadimir-V ka, said an y statement n Vienna to-day, quot. ing Russian prisoners, The Ri preceded the assault with drumefire, Jand when their troop began to flow |back in retreat turned cannon against |ther In unsucceseful efforts to drive them back to the attack, CONFIRMS REPORT GREEK CABINET HAS QUIT Message From Athens to London Seems to Leave No Doubt of Resignation. LONDON, Oct. 4.—Reports that the any Infantry action, In the Moglenica {Greek Cabinet had resigned have Valley there was artillery, infantry) been confirmed, said a Reuter de- and machine gun fire, On both sides |spatch from the Greek capital ote of the Vardar there was weak artil- lent south of Lake Doiran. At ihe foot of the Belaschitza Mountains there was quiet. “On the Struma front there was violent artillery fire on beth sides and the fighting near Karafjakoi »voa- Unues with stubbornne: . ‘ROUMANIANS FLEE BACK OVER DANUBE, afternoon. ‘BRITISH RED CROSS SHIP | BLOWN UP NEAR DOVER Paris Reports Disaster, But Has No Details, Says the Figaro. PARIS, Oct. 4—A British Red Cross steamer blew up on Sunday morning in the Straits of Dover, @e- cording to a Bolougne despatch te_ used up his reserves in repeated./two honorable health indifferently played, but the al the Fae costly and unsuccessful counter- ae coeat “eb aisan ge Neage runs ‘oa the Giants made mowed IN ERTS ‘The despatch says news of the Gis attacks without causing our allies or a Ol great effort on the purt of the piayers aster was received by wireless! butt stay longer. Mr. Depew continued win,” ourselves to relax our steady, meth-| 11 funny story. to win pear a | that details are lacking. } abtonl preasure, ' All were pleased. | M’GRAW IS TO BLAME, s ps + | , (Contin Fi : " In this action troops trom every] (OCHAN BEACH, ire Island, | SAYS MORAN, ANDSHOUL ued from Firet-Page) = | ROUMANIANS REPORT part of the British Empire and British) ocr 4 —-according ¢ | ! ‘SHOULD 1STRO-GERMAN DEFEAT. Islands have been engaged. All be-| Of + According to an old tra | Have TAKEN MEN OUT | €0¥i0E more violent. with their] Al j haved with the discipline and resotu-| */f0” 1 Suffolk County the ex Russian allies the Roumanians are IN TRANSYLVANIA FIGHT toh ob velesana, treme smowfall of winter can be | (Special to The Drening World.) attacking with the utmost vigor, “Our aircraft have shown in the| @¢curately gauged by the height | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. 4.—Pat seemingly to prevent the enemy from} BUCTTAREST, Oct. 4 (via London). highest degree the spirit of the offen-| tained by the wild flower “In. | Moran, manager ot ® Phillies, said Shifting reinforcements to meet the|/—The Roumanians have inflicted @ tive. ‘They have patrolled regularly! dian Posy.” This fall the Indian that Manager McGraw Roumantian invaders, further defeat on the Germans and far behind the enemy’s lines and have| posies have grown from tweive to |f the Glants was as much to —_—-— Austrians in ‘Transylvanie, the War! fought many battles in the alr with| fourteen inches.) as his players for their exhibi den . ROUMANIAN TOWN ON Office announced to-day, = hostile machines and many with enemy| Owing to an oversight the Coloneiy "it Breokiva yesterday score DANUBE CAPTURED, IS_ | gasement in Ter aetetag fmcam ge troops on the ground, For every enemy| and Mr, Tatt were catefully separates nis, 6, (2 #19 the fifth toning when" PepOpT FROM SOFIA.\. machine that succeeds in crossing ouf| during the rest of the evening. Bome-| No naa pase, he Snare Apes : | Nese Beenen ate Woe front it ig safe to say two hundred) times It was Mr, Depew by himacit,,{* ld.” Re said. Many’ a time our SOFIA, Oct. 3 (via London, 0 nul Aubin “Puanore has, bag British machines cross the enemy's sometimes, Mr. Depew and other| {2m 188 been losing and were away | SOFIA Del. | He Oct | pointed na ne. of the ests. Occastonally it was red vel-| 7 a toa TDemetaneasrtnes Coy | Cee front, | guests, | crossed the Danube and invaded Bul- In his report to-day Gen. Hatg/vet ropes. Even when it came time) y oe net | garia ate described aa “considerabl says that Eeucourt L'Abbaye was|to eat the mistake continued, for Mr.) Sf Can't Gutta oe thenee” th an ofhoin’ etait completely occupied last night. [Taft sat at Table 8 and Mr. Roone- | tith tute /) be ~ Bi ment issued by the War Office to. The British lines were pushed for-|velt at Table 2. Neither got an oppor. | 4% jieet S-gail’.! wus 5 S| day, Which, towavit, done het raver: ward into the village several days |tupity to tell the other he took back Am ‘4s °. i) Bh — ©! aay clay between the Bulgarians and ago, but the Germans clung tena-|all the unkind things he bad said in| am HW. « Pty 492% | the invaders. Tho text of the state- ciously to several houses. These|the dead past. But it wasn't neces. 25 Pty H+ 15 | ment gallo lod: he cna or were cleared of the enemy in last| sary. Reconciliation and burying the | Am vt = Ry yy Soe eae ea night's fighting, dead past was the order of the eve. | A: Ste cy * > a8 beng ee be anus ¢ PARIB, Oct. 4.—A strongly fortified | ning, for among other hands stretched |" i, ‘. BS AAR TL" with success the post and ba Mine of German defenses between | ut to take the Colonel's were Ben- | \i<"i* Muse. Ys fos + 3y| racks at Malafat, near the village Morval and the St. Plerre Wood, on} urray Crane's, Senator Bolag |). 4 Ad ee 78) oe eae a dstasuanent whith the Somme front, has been captured | , former Gov. Benjamin B. |i Sonn” oe wie sik | ring to Intrench, “Neat by the French, the War Ofice an-|Odell’s, not to mention Gov. Whit. | ON Be, | of Kahovo the enemy nounced to-day, Three hundred pris-|m4n's and twenty more, Even Will- # % 1 suecene se in hy ge Ke sures oe a iby + th over e river by whi oners were taken. fam arnee haa bi Deon be by- WAN os INN OB) able to convey Lcrons considers “North of the Somme,” says the off-; ones and was intending to shake 8 H mgt 7B] able units of troops. Austrian chal statement, “we completed the|>4nds, but arrived too late. w% w#% £19] monitors destroyed the bridge at : 4 VTIAGO, ORili, Oct. $.— BS WR + S| the Dobrudja aide, capture of a powerful line of German Phlisas maie : oan et Be gh .8 “in the Dobrudja the enemy's trenches between Morval and the St. . ries ac » ey TRG H offensive on the testhaul-Amzate Plerre-Vaast wood. We made about| Will command an expedition to Be og BR wa-Fervetl line was stopped by 900 prisonors, including ten officers. reecue the members of his party be t oe wine Galak ta tee ee uth of the Homme there was al left with acanty provisions om the He ‘ie tte Oe eo aun she Paee ively enemy bombardment of the the South Pi wo bet § A ee native region of Belloy-en-Santerre. The ond “ee ud ner oe S iy Ge tit] PAE Oct Rimmer postions: 4a | ¥ we 1%] enemy battalion was practical). Bight was calm on tho rest of the| ‘There wae more hand Wik Ime 54 thilated and. t % front. ‘° shaking and % s % | @nnthilated and two officers and br sper hes. Both the guests of honor 119% +s 100 men who eurvived were Bad woather interfered with aerial Spoke, and #0. did Elihu Root, Mr. 43. ‘a? = 8) prisoner. Lisi pe ‘ations on the greater portion of Roosevelt alluded eloquently to “Mr. 108” ime + 1, “A hostile torpedo boat unauo. Address Dept. T10 for Free Catalog, efron ty | Promeees Ssmrage Ghanengy 20 °ah $3 "se "Git = §] cesstully bombarded the town of 307 FIFTH AVE., .¥: PRLIN, Oct, 4.—The Germans re- |jivered. in & piace #0 happily named {iia gk sy BG Mangalla (on the Back Sea) on E pulsed English attacks near Thier’ | Shadow Lawn,” and had to be set Se ho" BST} Sunday.” wel and Mouquet Farm last night, and | right by Mr, Root and reminded that |Kiwiwo" Comer... 88% 4 io — "4 also repelled French attac! long the the man he meant was named Wil- | /4*k., ° OAT sty P Sailly-Rancourt road, near St, Plerre gon, not Lincon, Except for this|ies” 1% § ifhy os $14! Vaast Wood, it was officially an-/triffing faux pas the occasion, accord. | Maxwell Motor yo” BET y nounced to-day. |ing to uthoritles, exceeded the wild. | Ne ame te Oe aR ——__—-— joat ho} o! promoters. etek iff nm” % Head of Cancer Association Dend.| Another, guest of the evening was Mint tient “OS "hy te SQ Charies Evans Hughes, former Su- | Seco! {ow t wy t § i°| preme Court Justice, who also spoke. | AuMIt kinins’ stat Wie 4 48 xray Honorary Sy Sere I” ioe tae te t! ternatl Ca. | x 4 o% Lap ‘Anaocintion, died to-day. eee ot U-BOATS SINK 35 ey SC fret § iU- ms "By Ba = 8 Special for To-Morrow, Thured ~” + 1% or To-Morrow, ursday, Octob We 1085 +3 ; » 'y, October Sth tion and establishment of local | VESSELS IN 9 DAYS Bt By || foakte Mien, Do you lke the markets whenever he determines : %5% AR & very wy. Each ‘pi geist mo raat fat that public necessity or the Wel- fy tp t & | Lse betes ieipeeauaet 13c fare of the community requires Total Tonnage of 14,600 Sent to wae 130 an weer amare weeded Beyanall | Bottom in North Sea and BR 2. s willbe ‘successfully operated by the English Channel, Me™ 0% +h mat ues vat Have power to ke rules BERLIN, Oct. 4 (by wireless to ty et % t y of Rg a ms ‘Chocolates y and regulations for the grading, | gayville). — Thirty-five vessels of Sa Bp) ‘ Teaeleslther tasty srunched rheestete eee inke Of all faodethite withte [countries at war with Germany, with ¥ + asormans le Waele the State, not contrary to law, @ total tonnage of 14,600, were sunk t3" containern bait thst A 34c rat antelt Rr teats tant (te Serage eveneriain i te Mors +18 | ceennoeay sinner + | Sea or the English Channel between b4 wetae a Ow, jane ia aan court of competent pt. 20 and Bept. 39, the Overseas rg ATi tae ep ‘ ° we Sone legioner. shall conte News Agency announces, % rowdy ar. id oO en a! such pointe m ? W Btate ae he deems agvies |, The is in addition te sleven Brit a Chae asa te Abin uation caadeeta AHA |tsh fishing steamers and four Belgian orto eA ae ry Ree theres Sat, Ughters, whgee sinking already. h td BAST S30 8 (\ | ar of acquire such premiaes | been repo iS Ly + 8 mech be s Fn 7 Kowa, 3:42pm. % The coreg,

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