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The Dispatch from Moline, Illinois • 1

Publication:
The Dispatchi
Location:
Moline, Illinois
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Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE HOME PAPER MOLTO BAIE5T BMP ATCH 5 O'CLOCK EDITION 37TH YEAR. CIRCULATION BOCKS OPEN TO ALL. MOLIXE, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, JULY 13, 1915-TWENTY PAGES. ASSOCIATED PRESS LEASED WIRE. TWO CENTS, C3 Abe MHihlg) CLOUDY.

ROBLES TO SUPERSEDE 4 VILLA? 4 -T Sky Will Be Overcast Tonight Show MILITARY CLIQUE SENAS VICTOR Russian Paper Considers German Reply Result of Effort of War Party. ers Are Imminent No Change in Temperature. GARRISON HOLDS OFFICERS SERVE IN CIVIL RANKS MASTERPIECE IS GIFT OF BELGIUM Van Dyck Sketch, Treasured Prize of Art Collector, Sent Toledo Museum. CALM INDICATES MACKENSEN COUP Military Observers Look for German Marshal to Spring Surprise at Any Time. Partly cloudy tonight and Wednes- SwpSoVm WW" 7: day.

Probably T8 FUMK A ers. Not STUDY AND MAfe TO GO TO SUMMER much change in 3CHW1 El Paso, July 13. Gen- eral Villa is about to turn active command of his army over to General Jose Isabel Robles bo -f peace terms may be agreed on, according to a report credited -f here today by well-known Car- -f -f ranza adherents. The report, however, lacks confirmation. -f Robles is said to have been the intermediary in a plan for peace, -f Present report is that Villa's of- fleers insisted on his retirement in favor of Robles, believing that -f Robles would be able to effect -f some agreement with Carranza.

-f temperature. Secretary of War Permits Ex, Highest temper ature yesterday, S5: lowest last WHITLQCK'S WORK CAUSE BULGARIA BLOCKS TURKEY perts to Resign to Build New Munitions Plants. night, 69. Precip itation, none. U.S.

DIPLOMACY RIDICULED Editor Assumes Germany Pokes Fun at State Department Wilson Studies Over Policy. River stage at 7 Belgian Nation Deeply Appreciative of Ambassador's Lators and America's Charity. a. 7.1 feet, a Sofia Will Promise Only Friendly Neutrality, Impeding Efforts of Sultan's rise of .1 foot. Only slight changes in the Mississippi MAY SAFEGUARD COUNTRY will occur from below Dubuque to WRECKED CREW IS SAVED London, July 13.

Contradictory re ports regarding extent of the Austro- Adequate Development of Pri IN Muscatine. J. M. SHERIER, Local Forecaster. Government Thermometer Today.

Lowest. 9 a. m. 12 m. 2 p.

69 SO S4 S6 This Day Last Year. Ever'buddy you meet these days has a story tell about gittin stung. Wealth may not bring happiness but it enables ypu take a vacation an' go after it. Hungarian reverse at Krasnik southern Russian Poland, continue, STEAMER CHOCTAW RAMMED LAKE HURON, BUT MEN ON BOARD ESCAPE DEATH. vate Arms Concerns Public Service, He Says.

some even claiming that the Austro-Hungarians are contemplating a gen No 73 Time for Sailors to Obtain Lifebelts Wahcondah Has Yawning Hole in Side. SO S3 Relative Humidity 7 a. m. BRITISH HASTE IS LESSON S3 1 p. m.

Today. 7 p. m. Yesterday. 55 Today.

SI Editor Assumes Germany Pokes Fun Petfograd, July 12. The Novoe-fremya, in editorial comment on Germany's reply to the American note on eubmarine warfare, declares that the reply indicates a Tlctory for the delegates of the military and the naval elements in the German cabinet. The paper says: "Every line of the German answer tramples on neutral rights and honor of the United States. Every word breathes the solid conviction that America will not dare to insist on her rights, and that America's cry about right, justice and humanity will remain empty sounds. Rejecting America's demands, German diplomacy transforms Germany from accused to accuser, who puts before the United States her own demands.

The paper concludes that the German admiralty is making fun of American diplomatic eloquence, but expresses the opinion that America "will bend the head and engage in further diplomatic exchanges. Two Ways Are Open. Pointed to As Proof That Peace Is the Time to Prepare. DUBUQUE ELK IS AGAIN SECRETARY Fred C. Robinson Reelected to Position at Grand Lodge Sessions in Los Angeles.

eral retreat, but the mystery of the situation is the persistent silence maintained by Field Marshal von Mackensen, who is making no effort to resume the German advance on Warsaw. Petrograd reasons this inaction of the Germans as being due to the fear of Field Marshal von Mackensen that his left flank would be exposed while the Austrians were on the defensive, but some fear is expressed by London observers that the brilliant German military commander is planning an unexpected coup. Expected Reinforcements Arrive? The German attack on Souchez, where French advances had threatened the town of Lille, may indicate Toledo, July 13. As token of appreciation for what the people of the United States have done for Belgium, Charles Leon Cardon, artist and collector of Brussels, has presented to the people of this country the most celebrated painting in his collection. It is a Van Dyck sketch.

This information has just been received from Brand Whitlock, American minister to Belgium, by Marshall Sheppey of Toledo. In a letter to Mr. Sheppey, 'Mr. Whitlock says that in Mr. Cardon's home on the Quai au Bois a Bruler, in Brussels, there are the results of two generations of artistic appreciation and that the Saint Martin painting is the prize picture of the collection.

Generosity Is Unparalleled. In the letter of presentation, Mr. Cardon says in part: "The Belgians have contracted toward the citizens of the republic of the United States a debt of gratitude from which they never can free themselves. With a generosity, an enthusiasm, a grandeur of soul of which history offers no example, they have come to the aid of our population, whom famine was staring in the face. "Thanks to your noble citizens, thousands and thousands of Belgians EDISON'S TALENT TO IMPROVE NAVY Washington, July 13.

On the theory Detroit, July 13. A report reached here this morning' that the crew of the steamer Choctaw of the Cleveland Cliffs Iron company of Cleveland, wrecked Sunday night or Monday morning in Lake' Huron, had reached Port Huron safely aboard the steamer Wahcondah. It is believed the Choctaw and Wahcondah collided, the former sinking. Choctaw Sinks Quickly. Port Huron, July 13.

Captain Charles Fox and crew of the coal steamer Choctaw, of the Cleveland that safety of the country may rest on the adequate development of Its commercial gun and ammunition factories, Secretary Garrison announced today he had decided to accept the resigna tions of Lieut. Col. Odus C. Horney Los Angeles, July 13. Election of officers and transaction of routine business were on the program today Inventor Heads Advisory Committee with Aim of Raising; Sea and Air Fleets' Standard.

and Maj. William A. Phillips of tho army ordnance bureau, who have been. Cliffs Iron rnmnanv wVilfh trnci mit in offered posts with companies holding as the principal feature marking open halves off Presque Isle, in Lake arrival on the weste.rn front the I ti rr Ann-if nil nut rT 1 1 Ti tnrPP. long-expected Teutonic reinforce The Reich, after making analysis of ron, during a fog Monday morning, i ments, but evidence still is lacking of the German answer, says: ing of the grand lodge of the Benevolent Protective Order of Elks.

The only contest which has developed is are safe in port at Sarnia, op-j any concerted offensive on either side. posite here, where they arrived today, "Subtleties of President Wilson's mind we do not know, but there ap aboard the 'steamer Wahcondah of-the Ion? the battle front in France and Washington, July 13. Announcement by Thomas A. Edison, of his acceptance of Secretary Daniels' offer to head an advisory board of civilian inventors for the proposed bureau of in Canada Steamship lines, limited. The! fglUPJ for the office of grand trustee to sue ceed James R.

Nicholson of Bos Germany and Austria-Hungary, ac Choctaw sank immediately after col- ton, Mass. Edward Masters of Char- cording to dispatches from the Balkan have not been victims of a horrible hision wifh the WahcmHah pear to be only two alternatives open, lie could forego the role of public crier of human principles and look on the affair from a narrow, practical viewpoint. In that event, he could leroi. is the leading candidate. large munitions contracts from European belligerents.

The resignations have been pending for several weeks while Secretary Garrison asked Attorney General Gregory for a legal opinion as to his power to hold the officers in the gov eminent service. No Opinion from Gregory. The department of justice has not yet determined the question, but meanwhile Secretary Garrison decided to act. Colonel Horney is now in charge of the Picatinny arsenal at Dover, N. hunger and will continue to live andjter's bow was punctured and she had states' are using every diplomatic re- worK ior me approacning reDirtn oil a laro-e hno in hey lu muuue ivouuiaui iu jum It was practically conceded today that the following officers would be their unhappy country.

watertight compartments kept her "I should be happy if I could be i afloat. discharge one more minister, send more notes to Berlin, deal out safe- military forces with the central powers, or at least to preserve an attitude of permanent friendly neutrality. It vention and development in the navy department, was received with gratification today by naval officials. Secretary Daniels was especially pleased, because on Mr. Edison's acceptance depended almost entirely the develop favored by seeing this souvenir of art Grand exalted ruler James R.

Nich According to the report of Captain olson, Boston, Mass. Grand loyal knight William Lown, ment of the secretary's plan of utiliz ing the inventive genius of the coun D. F. Cornett of the Wahcondah, the '18 onea mat tne Austro-ungarian Choctaw Sank so quickly that some 0fiminister at Bucharest has offered the the crew could not reach lifeboats Rouniania government liberal terri-and were compelled to jump over-ltor5al for armed assist-board. The lake was comparatively ance, countering Russia's offer -of calm, however! and they succeeded in I Transylvania with that of Bessarabia, postmaster at Saginaw, Mich.

Grand loyal knight William L. Own, postmaster at Saginaw, Mich. try to aid in perfecting the navy as a Grand lecturing knight E. R. In- fighting machine.

Mr. Daniels, who appealed to Mr Edison to undertake the task on patti ITr reward for friendly neutrality is conducts for possibly six, or let us say eight 'enemy Or he could take his stand on the high plane of that historic problem, the yoke of which he took up two months ago. lie will feel the whole Insulting cunning of the German answer and will show in deeds that even to his peaceable trusting heart has come the convlciion that the time has arrived to put an end, once and for all, to German pretentions." Wilson Ponders Situation. Cornish, X. July 13 President keeping afloat until rescued by boats said to be Bukowina, as far as the otic grounds, went ahead today with River Pruth.

From Austrian sources the perfection of his new plans. De comes a report that Russia is giving of the Flemish school find its place among the collections of the Museum of Art at Toledo. "In that city, the residence of Brand Whitlock, it will recall the many admirable things that he, by his high intelligence and inexhaustible devotion, has been able to realize to the profit of our unhappy- country so cruelly and unjustly tried. "I beg you to accept, excellency, the respectful assurance of my high consideration. (Signed) "CH.

LEON CARDON." French Present Paintings. New York, July 13. A collection of original paintings and drawings by some of the noted artists of France, from the Canadian Loss of the' Choctaw and her cargo is estimated to be at least $125,000, while the damage to the Wahcondah will amount to several thousand dollars. tails of the proposed organization, gersoll, Seattle, Wash. Grand tyler Thomas E.

Donehue, New London, Conn. Grand inner guard Charles Black, Oklahoma City, Okla. Grand secretary Fred C. Robinson, Dubuque, Io. Grand treasurer Charles M.

White, substantial proof of the possibility of however, will not be completed until Roumania accepting one of these Teu the secretary has had an opportunity tonic offers by building trenches and entanglements along her Roumanian to confer with Mr. Edison, which he hopes to do very soon. It is planned WAR WILL HELP FARMING frontier. (Chicago. Bulgaria and Turkey are.

said to The latter two are to be reelected. have reached a deadlock in their ne gotiations, on account of the refusal of Sofia to do more than preserve a friendly neutrality in return for territorial compensations from Constan Cheap Nitrogen Will Be One Result of European Conflict. Hot Springs, July 13. W. II.

Bowker of Boston, addressing the National Fertilizer association convention here today, declared one of the beneficent effects of the European war would be cheaper nitrogen and predicted it probably would be disclosed Wilson devoted his attention today to a detailed study of the situation growing out of the receipt of the latest German note on the submarine warfare. After a game of golf with Dr. Carey T. Grayson, on a course near here, he retired to his study at Ilarlakenden bouse, with tho official text of the note before him. The president gave directions that he be left undisturbed and he did not pay as much attention as usual to the morning mail received from presented to the United States -by the Society of French Artists and Writers, arrived here today on the steamer Rochambeau from Havre.

The paintings and drawings are a token of appreciation of the work done by Ameri Thomas Succeeds Frohman. New York, July 13. Appointment of Augustus Thomas, the playwright, as art director of the Charles Frohman company, recently organized to conduct the theatrical affairs of Charles Frohman, who perished with the sinking of the Lusitania, was announced today. Mr. Thomas will take tinople.

Sortie by French Air Fleet. Taris, July 13. Official statement "In front of our positions at the Laby- cans in France since the war started. tnat me uerman cnemists nau louna rinth a German attack was attempted and Major Phillips is detailed to ordnance work at the Sandy Hook proving grounds. Mr.

Garrison said he considered that less expert olficers were fully competent to operate plants at these stations already installed. The skill of Colonel Horney and Major Phillips lies in the construction of new plants. The plant they will build, Mr. Garrison said, may in future prove of vital importance to tbo American government. It is more important, he said that a large number of plants be ready to turn out ammunition than that the most expert officers be held to the work of superintending those already in operation.

The secretary said the situation ia England, where extraordinary t.fforts are being made to increase the output of guns and ammunition, showed the necessity of preparing for great emergency in time of peace. "This question of developing more factories," Mr. Garrison said, "may mean the difference between safety and disaster to the country. These men are expert in (he installation of machinery to make guns and ammunition. The mere superintendence of plants- already installed can be done by less expert men." Horney'a Envelope Swelled.

Names of the ammunition manufacturers which have employed Colonel Horney and Major Phillips are not a matter of record at the war ment and are known only to personal friends of the two officers. Colonel Horney, it is understood, is to go with, the Aetna Powder company at a salary about five times what he received in the army. In addition he receives a cash bonus. Name of the firm which will employ Major Phillips was not disclosed hers today. The collection wras in charge of Mrs.

John Gardner Coolidge of Bos new processes of extracting it fromjast night, under protection of a vio- to have men prominent in special lines of inventive and research work associated with the bureau, several names already being under consideration. Among the others mentioned as possible members of the board were Alexander Graham Bell, Simon Lake, Or-ville Wright, John Hayes Hammond Hudson Maxim and Henry Ford. Dr. Bell, besides his invention of tho telephone, is a wide worker in the field of science; Mr. Lake's name is associated with submarines; Mr.

Wright, it was suggested, would work on aerial problems; Mr. Hammond has conducted successful experiments with high explosives, and Mr. Ford is an expert in gasoline engine construction, a feature of naval-aero experiments, which would he prominent. One of the big problems to be laid before the new bureau will be that of improving the navy's submarines and aeroplanes, the imperative need of which is recognized. over the duties of the late Mr.

Frohman, who had exclusive control of the ine air. jent fire. The assailants were deci- "One of the essential ingredients of mated and completely thrown back on rlpRtrnrtinn in PYnlnslvps 4j nitrnu-pn their lines. ton, wife of the-special agent of the American embassy in Paris, who will deliver them to the state department at Washington. he said.

"Chili saltpeter has been the artistic development of the Frohman enterprises. In announcing Mr. Thomas' selection as director, Alfred Hay-man, manager of the company, said that the late Mrr Frohman had been a remarkable stage director and ad- Ogden Fights Contempt Rule. Elkins, W. Va.t July 13.

Arguments on the motion made yesterday to quash the rule for contempt were resumed when the hearing of the con chief chemical source. While the ports of Germany appear to be closed, she does not seem to be disturbed about it. It is evident that the Teutons are getting nitrogen for their explosives and their agriculture from tempt case against II. C. Ogden, the viser to his stars, and that Mr.

Thom- Wheeling newspaper publisher, wasjas was one of two men who were re- rtmnon Km. LAr.n 1 TTVl here Ed "There was a combat with hand grenades and cannonading in the forest of Apremont, in the region of Reg-nieville, and in the forest of LePretre. "In the Vosges, an attempted attack by the Germans, directed at a bridgehead occupied by us on the east bank of the Fecht river at Sondernach, was repulsed. "An aerial squadron of thirty-five aeroplanes ascended this morning and, in spite of a forty-mile bombarded the railroad station strategical reopened today before Judge equal in garded as Mr. Frohman's those respects.

otner sources tnan from Chilean nitrate, probably from coal and from the air by a new process. After the war the poverty-stricken world will have the benefj of their discoveries. mund Waddell In the United States district court for the northern district. The case grew out of the appeal of the Manufacturers' Light and Heat company, from a decision of the public service commission of West Virginia lowering its rates. A.

L. Weil, Twenty-three Ask Pardons. Springfield, 111., July 13. Hopes of twenty-three convicts, yearning for freedom from- Illinois penal institutions, are centered in the quarterly session, which began today, of the state board of pardons. Twelve of the prisoners are serving long terms for murder, but none of them has such long sentences staring them in the face as does Fred Mink, a Pike county man, who was denied a pardop at the April session of the board.

Mink was sentenced in 1903 to serve ninety-nine years and also to serve a life sentence, the sentences not to run Mine Bureau Director Dies. Denver, July 13. Joseph Austin Holmes, director of the federal bureau of mines at Washington and a widely known geologist, died at his home here of tuberculosis. W. O.

W. Convene In St. Paul. St. Taul, July 13.

With several thousand out-of-town members in attendance, the biennial joint convention of the Woodmen of the World and the Woodmen's Circle, the women's auxiliary order, began an eleven-day session here today. Governor Hammond and Mayor Towers delivered addresses of welcome at tho opening meeting. Officers will be elected tomorrow. counsel for the prosecution, and Judge John H. Holt, for the defense, were to be heard, and attorneys expressed an opinion that a ruling on the motion would not be made until late In the day.

It will be remembered that beet sugar was an outcome of the Napoleonic wars." Mr. Bowker said coal in the United States was one of the greatest sources of nitrogen and he estimated that the 1913 production of the first coal-producing states was sufficient to produce thirty pounds of nitrogen for each acre of improved land in the United States. He urged steps to recover the nitrogen from consumed coal. LAUDS PEACE PATRIOTISM BRYAN, IN COMMENT ON GERMAN NOTE, URGES CARE BY OCEAN TRAVELERS. FRENCH DECK SHAFTS IN LOST PROVINCES concurrently.

These sentences were passed by Judge Harry Higby after Mink had pleaded guilty to slaying his step-mother and a neighbor, In what was described In court as a fit of jealousy. RUSSIA FEARS ROUMANIA CZAR'S TROOPS DIG TRENCHES PARALLELING BORDER AS DEFENSIVE HELP. Separation of Passenger and Ammunition Transportation Advocated as Safety Measure. Hermosa Beach, July 13. Wil Quigley's Body Lies In State.

Chicago, July 13. Escorted by more than loo priests, the body of Archbishop James Edward Quigley, who died in Rochester, X. on Saturday, arrived here today for burial. A guard of honor of more than 6000 laymen and S00 priests made up the cortege as it proceeded to the cathedral of Holy Name, where morning services were held. Bells on every Catholic institution in Chicago tolled for ten minutes after the funeral party arrive The body will lie In state at the tome of the late prelate too'ay.

The Public will be permitted to view the remains tomorrow. Burial will take Place on Thursday. ly established by the Germans at Vig-neulles les Hattonchatel. This station served the region of the Calonne trenches and that of the forest of Apremont. Very Important stores of every kind, and particularly ammunition, were concentrated there.

Onr aviators dropped on these objectives 100 bombs of sizes. The bombardment started several fires. All our machines returned, although they had been violently cannonaded." French Heed Warning. July 13. Loss of the Souchez cemetery and adjacent trenches by the French, which was Indicated In the French official statement of yesterday, while regrettable, does not affect the principal defenses In this region, according to French military writers.

It is a warning, however, says Colonel Rousset, in the Petit Pa-risien, that will not be neglected. The Germans are visibly redoubling efforts to capture the French fortress of Verdun. After failure of their; plans in the forest of Argonne, theyj are trying by attacks in the Woevre district to obtain the most accessible parts of the citadel by attempting to establish batteries with the idea of reaching the city. The outer works, however, in the opinion of the French military officers, are solidly guarded and are equipped with all means for reply. liam J.

Bryan, who is spending a brief vacation here with his son, issued a Paris, July 12. Attaches of the municipal council, who decorate tha Strassburg monument, in' Place do la Concord, with wreaths of crape each year on July 14, the anniversary of the fall of the Bastile, will decorate the Lille monument in a similar way this year. Strassburg 13 the capital of Alsace-Lorraine, the province which was taken from France by Germany after the war of 1870. Lille is the capital of the department of French Flandera which was occupied by the Germans Oct. 19, 1914.

Austria Promises to Conquer Bessarabia, Presenting It to Rou-' mania, If Aid Is Given. Experiment with Torpedo Nets. Washington, July 13. For experimental purposes, the navy department has purchased several "torpedo nets made of wire, to hang around battleships and protect them from torpedo attack. Secretary Daniels said today these were of the same type as those employed by European navies.

Experiments are now going on with the nets aboard one of the ships on the Atlantic fleet. Similar experiments, made some time ago, produced no very definite results, but navy officials hope to be able to so Improve the nets as to reduce the dangers from statement last night in explanation of what he meant by "unnecessary risk," contained In his statement last Sunday in connection with the last German note. He 6aid: Dr. Flint Thinks Thaw Is Insane. New York, July 13.

Dr. Austin S. Flint, first of the state's alienists to testify in the sanity trial of Harry K. Thaw, was still under cross-examination by Thaw's counsel today. When court adjourned yesterday he was being questioned closely as to his reasons for the belief that Thaw is now insane.

It was expected that several hours would be devoted today to this line of inquiry and to a discussion of the form of paranoia, from which he said Thaw is suffering. Counsel for both sides" hoped that the case would be in the hands of the jury by tomorrow. Meantime, Thaw spends most of his time, while in court, selecting the route of the automobile trip he hopes to take to the Panama-Pacific exposition, if set free. "Any traveler takes an unnecessary risk when he goes into the war zone on a belligerent ship, knowing that it is subject to attack by submarines. A traveler also takes unnecessary risks when he rides on a neutral ship carrying ammunition.

Berlin, July 13. A dispatch to the Tageblatt, from its correspondent at Czernowitz, "The Russians are fortifying their Roumanian border. Many thousands of men are at work digging trenches parallel with the border and building barbed wire entanglements. Operations are being rushed with all speed." The Russian government of Bessarabia borders Roumania on the east. Austria-Hungary is reported to have pledged Roumania to undertake the conquest of Bessarabia and transfer it to the Balkan state In exchange for Roumania's active support in the war.

GOVERNMENT TO CURB STRIKE OF WELSHMEN "I believe that our government Germany Begins Rich Harvest. Berlin, July 13. Harvesting has begun in the western and middle sections of Germany. Reports from. Cologne indicate that the crops of rye, oats, wheat and barley will be especially large.

Sugar beets are said to- be richer in sugar than usual and it Is expected that the fruit harvest wlU be satisfactory. would be justified in separating pas sengers from ammunition, but until this Is done, American travelers would be justified in refusing to take passage on belligerent ships or a neutral ship 1 Completes Swoboda Report. Fans, July 13. Major Jullien, of the paris permanent court martial, has compieted the report he will present that tribunal regarding the case of Raymond Swoboda, who professes to "Jj an American citizen and who was charged with espionage, after having been arrested on suspicion that he was Sponsible for the fire aboard the steamship La Touraine. Inasmuch as ePerts have decided the steamer fire as the result of an accident and "ere is no strong evidence that Swo-tfa is a spy, it Is considered prob-Sle the ewe wlU be dismissed, London, July 13.

The British government has decided to apply the munitions war act to the Wales coal strike, on the ground that the strike is prejudicial to the transport, production and supply of munitions of war. Fact that the government had reached this decision was announced Boys Stone Liberty Bell. Walla Walla, July 13. The first act of vandalism in connection with the 4500-mile trip of the Liberty carrying ammunition. "If patriotism requires a man to Weil-Known Iowa Woman Dies.

Des Moines, July 13. Mrs. Lec-lia Stevens Brown, prominent in club circles, prominent in Iowa, a pioneer Russia, on the other hand, nas ai- risk his life for his country when his ciTvnrt of Rou- bell took place between Pendleton, leuipieu iu and this city. Boys standing on British Loan Is $3,000,000,000. London, July 13.

It was officially announced today that the subscriptions to the great British war loan reached a total of almost $3,000,000 000, mania for the allies by promising tne country is engaged in war, It would seem to be patriotic for a citizen to avoid risks that might involve his a high bank by the track threw rocks at the bell and one hit it squarely, but cession of the Hungarian territory of Tmti Rvivania. which borders Rou- today in the. house of commons by resident, philanthropist and social Walter Runcinian, president of the worker, is dead at her home here. She jjjoard of trade. Jji as 83 years of ajge.

country in war4" apparently did not damage Up manla. oa the west..

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