in such a vital spot that the vessel was sinking even as the flare of the ex¬ NEW BRITISH LINE NEAR CAMBRAI. plosion died out. Night was at hand. There was no time to make provision MAP SHOWING FARTHEST BRITISH ADVANCE AND GROUND WON BACK REPORTS ON LOSS against the cold and the sea as the BY GERMANS, AND WHERE IIVNS ARE RUSHING FORCES UNDER HIN- OHIOINTHEGRIP MAYPIANM1Y crew leaped to the life rafts. Many DENBURG TO RESIST ENGLISH ATTACKS. probably had died with Gunner Hood in the explosion or the steam bursts that undoubtedly followed it. The three additional names of enlisted ilMlQUtCM men of the Jones' crew Included in yes¬ I > INTENSECOLD IN DEFEATi HAVE ONFRENCHFRONT OFU.SMROYER »v.vvjs£LaH%Na!r V 1918ELECHONS terday's messages as survivors show HMULLES | the difficulty of the task of determin¬ ing quickly Just how many lives were to Admiral Sims Gives Additional lost. They were not on the muster roll Fuel With to Consider Move Storm Italian on Artillery Activity Confined of the ship last received at the Navy Shortage Reported Suffragists Bridgehead Department. Probably Admiral Sims is the Cambrai and Details.Lieut. Kalk Dies having difficulty in determining just Temperature 2 to 8 De¬ if Amendment Fails of Pas¬ Sile River, Take 200 Pris¬ Ypres who were aboard. Lieut. Kalk was an additional officer, perhaps assigned only Areas. of Exposure. for the trip. It will take checking up grees Below Zero. sage at This Session. oners, Says Berlin. at the base to make up this new addi¬ tion to the Navy's roll of honorable dead. dkrK\Hg Th^re has been no marked Infantry 10THCCAM By the Associated Press. By th# Associated Press. | December 30.. activity on the front in , and COLUMBUS, Ohio, BERLIN, December 10..Hungarian artillery action has been confined to SOON WILL TAKE UP With temperatures ranging from two to in the Piave delta below zero in all sections of the infantry yesterday the Cambrai and arena. Outpost ANNEjJ* eight Ypres the stormed the Italian bridgehead on the and raids have occurred on SALARY INCREASES state, Ohio today experienced cold¬ encounters east of and the Cambrai front and near Dens. A est December weather since 1S80, when Sile river, Caposile, took pris¬ the to 12 be¬ German effort to enter the French lines ? Continued from First Page.) cantaing., mercury dropped degrees oner more than 200 Italians, it was an¬ near Bezonvaux, region, has low zero. # nounced the German war and three officially by been by the French with con¬ bill Introduced by Representative Mar¬ Three deaths at Cleveland repulsed tin B. Madden of Illinois "to regulate' duo to office. siderable casualties to the enemy. \% at Springfield were reported, the payment of salaries of post office the excessive cold. The coal shortage The statement reads: th» Associated Prrs*. clerks in first and second class post Pjr was in most cities of the state, "Italian front: In the Piave delta PARIS, December 10..Violent artil¬ offices and letter carriers in the city 'ERMWUtRS acute delivery service." The bill introduced many people having been unable to get lery figrhting- occurred last night on the Halver Steenerson of honveds stormed the Italian bridgehead by Representative coal. at all, due to the car short¬ Verdun front east of the Mouse. Minnesota, which provides an equipment any on the Sile, east of Caposile, and took for the rural carriers, will ixvRmrouRT age. Great suffering was "The artillery lighting was violent allowance reported more than 200 prisoners." for a time In Alsace, and also on the next come up for consideration, and among the tenement districts of the right bank of the , in the region then any new legislation that has been cities. of Chambrettes." Fays official re¬ proposed. and today's and the other Railroad, traction, telegraph tele- Allied Forces Take Places port. ".\n enemy raid against our small Representative Hell phone -jervice was demoralized, trains posts south of Corbenv was repulsed." members of the subcommittee said to¬ running hours late. day that they hope to be able to make The Scioto traction line, be¬ in Trendies on Northern December 10.."A raid un- b valley LONDON, a report which will care in a general tween* Columbus and Chillioothe. sus- dertaken by the Germans last night way for the increases needed in the Italian Latins Rest southwest of Da Bassee was driven off Ipended operations altogether both yes¬ Front, Post Office Department. The members and today, many Camp reachm>T o*jr lines." was today's of this subcommittee are favorable to terday causing ITALIAN HEADQUARTERS I* ofta ial communication. "Another Sherman soldiers, home on furloughs, party granting increases. VlLUl to their leaves. NORTHERN ITALY, December 7..It . of the which attacked one of overstay enemy, Representative John A. Moon of Ten¬ and Cincinnati were the cold- will bo cheer in sr news to the allied our posts east of Kleim Zillebeke, was chairman of the House commlt- Dayton nessee. points in Ohio* each registering 8 world allied now repulsed with loss to the assailants." tee on post offices and post roads, said jest that reinforcements below zero. Toledo and Cleveland reg- MHS. LOUS today that as soon as the subcommit¬ istered 2 below and Columbus 7 below, BROW.MOW, are occupying trenches in the battered tee is ready to make its report to the and Ludendorff The cold was accompanied by a cutting | J*re«iden» Suffrage Federation of the positions held by the Italian troops, Hindenburg full committee prompt action will be wind. l>l*«rlet of Colombia. taken, so that it may be presented to now relieved for a needed respite. Are on Cambrai tho earliest mo- The state fuel administration was Front, Congress at possible making every effort to supply coal to Action by the National American The British position is around the Advices ment. points reported without fuel. .W oman Suffrage Association to put the heights of Montello, on the upper Strassburg Say Be strength of 2.000,000 Piave, where the batteries on the GENEVA, December 9..Both Field Madden Bill to Considered. of Fuel at Toledo. organized political Shortage women into the 1918 congressional heights are already in action and Marshal von Hindenburg and Gen. von The Madden bill, which will receive tire at the tomorrow, TOLEDO, Ohio, December 10..To¬ elections if the federal suffrage amend¬ rifle answers the steady sniping ludendorff are on the Cambrai front, consideration meeting ledo consumers have made such heavy from across the river. The French provides in a ireneral way for 2j per ment fails of passage at this session according to a dispatch from Strass- to The 5NNECOURT demands for coal since the zero weath- position ca.nnot as yet be indicated, cent increase postal employes. CUISLKIN er that the of Congress, is an important question but it is an burg. traffic the members of the subcommittee do not began Saturday supply will in equally important sec¬ Railway through increase will be al- be exhausted bv tonight, dealers pre- to be considered at the fort.vninth annual tor Rhine towns has been for feel that any such Due to congested lowed, but they are unanimous in be¬ scale of diet. the heavy demand, the convention of the association, which The formalities of transfer have been several days. It is reported from this that at least a continuance of miles natural gas supply also is inadequate. in progress for the past week and now lieving Thousands of homes were began today in this city with an execu- to the of the r» and 10 per cent graded increase practically ;ire definitely accomplished, when the source, owing- flow troops to .^ ROAD3 unheated yestewJay and today. Dealers tive council meeting. Italians saluted the British and and artillery being rushed through to will be recommended and possibly up A.T gAlVROAD' flag ...... ¦UNt RtGlNmTsiS CF - say there will not be any coal to fill the Tommies cheered the men in this front. No civilians are 10 and IT. per cent graded Increase. ¦ OR.1S/E. hOV SO Among the most optimistic as to the gray per¬ The Madden bill embraces three IBIRISKII-HLIGHT OF BWIXiSH ADVANCE.- the demands unless more arrives before rate of tho amendment is Mrs. Carrrie as they went for their well earned rest. mitted to travel along the Rhine, and PRS5ENT tomorrow No relief from the the German frontier remains propositions, as follows: MKSSSD BaTTlC l'NE. morning. Chapman <"att, national president, who This transfer if significant. First, it closed. 1. To the salaries zero temperature is in sight, the pre¬ is visible evidence of allied not Whereas the Italian victory excited Section reclassify for r-annot believe, she says, that the unity, of letter carriers in the city delivery From the New York American. dictions being continued cold. mother of democracy" will allow Itself alone in conferences, but on the fight¬ little enthusiasm in Germany, the clerks in first There is considerable coal in the rail¬ lines. It is success at Cambrai. the semi-official service and post office to l.o outstripped by Kurope ir the ing evidence also of unity and second class post offices by dividing Ar dotted line on the left side of the map »how» the front before Gen. llynjc"s road yards in cars, but the snow and movement toward the enfranchisement on the western front, whether in Ital¬ olfT Bureau states, is causing the cold have delayed its movement to greatest joy. them into six grades, as follows: First surprise drive. The broken line on the rigrht indicates the crest of the of women. ian Venetia or French Flanders. Sec¬ grade, salary. $1,000; second grade, sal¬ ISritKh advance. The heavy black line marks the battle front at present. places of unloading. Lake traffic is at ond. it is the infusion of new blood, ary. J 1,100: 'third grade, salary. 51.200; following the Herman counter attacks and the consequent realignment of a standstill. Answered, She new life, new spirit at a timely mo¬ fourth salary. $1,300; fifth grade, forces. Most Arguments Says. ment. grade, the llrlti*h of the grround bequeathed to the Germans is n Snowbound and Out of Coal. JUDGE HUGHES TO CALL CLIFFORD V. DE FOREST. salarv, $1,400, and sixth grade, salary, uaxte of charred, reeking ruin*. Field Marithal von Hindenburgr and Cien. "For- fifty years we have been allaying Protected by their own artillery fire Chief radio electrician, who la reported $1,500. von l.cudendorff are both reported at this front. fears, meeting objections, arguing, educat¬ and. whenever possible, under cover of 2. Provides a CLEVELAND, Ohio, December I ft.. ON saved. HI* wife Uvea at 46 V afreet Section systematic snowbound j no no night, the French forces have gradual¬ PRESIDENT WILSON for the Cleveland, and without until today there remain fears, ly taken over their northwest. method governing promotions fuel, was offered little relief from the ing. allotted positions of employes. Promotions are to be objections in connection with the question on the Italian front and now face the cold weather today. With the official °f that have not been Additional details of the of made at the beginning of the quarter according to L,. A. Snead of the national thermometer five I *'nrn,;'n 'ufTrage Austro-Germans in full strength. of Two Men Will Be First sinking one year of service in the fuel and this has re¬ registering degrees me. and answered," she savs, "The New The French are Meeting following administration, below zero this morning, the lowest f"' positions among the the United States destroyer Jacob Jones next lower grade. Should an employe sulted In a tie-up of shipments to ",ay sa,d to have most important along the entire ItaJ- Since Before Last Presidential not measure up to the standard re¬ In addition to order temperature in December for three 7lm|miKn carrie<1 the question ian front. Down to the last a Washington. the years. the natural r tiaSC' i' trooper the by German submarine have been re¬ quired of him. or be guilty of infrac¬ to the railroads to speed up shipments gas pressure !-,o of !L'ethe stage of argument. It is as a newcomers appreciate this fact, and. Election. the rules and throughout the city was steadily grow- |°ut ,l,e federal amend- ceived at the Navy Department from tion of postal regulations, by keeping ears off the sidings, the na¬ iner lower. The death toll 'rsue tl,?t while they anticipate frequent and he can be denied promotion. If the rec¬ was to¬ of the storm EJLJ.V now be dealt with by Con- fierce battles, to tional administration prepared this stood at three. All rail¬ - they expect be able to Vice Admiral Sims, but the report does ord of an employe does not warrant his day to requisition additional govern¬ morning giess hold off any forces that oppose thera or he to be his road and interurban traffic is badly de¬ \Vith the arrival of nearly 100 mem- Charles K. Hughes will call on Presi- not reduce tho list of casualties. promotion, is notified by ment coal supplies to supply urgent attempt to break through. Only postmaster in writing of the reasons, cases here. layed. of (he executive council and of The arrival of the dent "Wilson It -was announced French trooiw at today. 44 of the 110 or more officers and men and he is to be given an opportunity John L. Weaver, District fuel admin¬ Deaths Due to Cold. most of Hi." state congressional chair¬ the actual front and their gradual as- at the White House that Mr. Hughes to submit an answer in writing. Final istrator, was indignant when the men, arrangements were completed for sumption of one section of the line after aboard are known to have survived, in¬ today one of the events of would see the President at 4 o'clock, action on all recommendations must be report was brought to him of a promi¬ YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio. December 10.. principal conven¬ another has had an indescribably stir- one man upon by the Post Office Depart¬ Four dead, three probably fatally froz¬ tion week or.e not previously an¬ on the but no intimation was given as to the cluding unidentified picked up passed nent dealer here who is catering to ring effect Italian troops, who ment officials. Officials Consider Curtailment new business by coal on a en. thousands suffering from want of nounced. It consists of a series of for days past have been of his or and carried off the that supplying fraternizing object call whether the meet¬ by submarine large scale, and at the same time neg¬ coal and gas pressure too low for cook¬ £aCh State delesation with both French and British. ing was arranged at the instance of the struck the blow. his customers. This dealer on ing, are the results to date of the ter¬ ik congres^ Provision for Demotions. of to Churches lecting rific blizzzard which has been President or Mr. Hughes. Later added to the Supplies Saturday, it Is reported, sold nine tons raging reports list of Provisions are made for em¬ a through the Mahoning since Sat¬ First Tomorrow. Today's between the two reducing of coal to motion picture house and valley Meeting meeting dead Lieut. Frederick Kalk of this city, from a to a lower told a line of customers who were wait¬ urday noon. Temperatures dropped to CROSS-EXAMINATION OF men will be the first time haTe ployes higher grade and Theaters. ten below last Is!ahd women, for exam- they whose name did not appear In the whenever necessary for purposes of ing for bushel supplies that he had night. .i!he IT,hotl'?assemble tomorrow morning seen each other since before the last nothing for them. Mr. Weaver said .t.V* GASTON B. MEANS ENDS first official roster of the ship's com¬ Should an employe be the in the office of Senator Colt, to meef presidential election. discipline. all the facts in the case would be re¬ the entire Rhode Island In pany. victim of personal or political or other ported to the national fuel administra¬ delegation Mr. a Accumulation of Individual requests 1,200 KNOWN" DEAD. Congress and ask their support for the Hughes ha^ case before the Su¬ When friends of the family here first he shall have the to a tor and the dealer meet the fate preme Court of the United States here, prejudice, right from families for coal to meet urgent may suffrage amendment. The senior sen¬ CONCORD. N. C., December 10..The his inquired at the Navy Department re¬ hearing by a board, to be designated by of a northeast Washington hoarder, ator from every state has been a«ked first since he retired from the the United States Civil Service Com¬ temporary needs today marked a whose were cut off from cross-examination of Gaston B. Means, bench more than a Lieut. Kalk they were In¬ supplies 2,000 UNACCOUNTED to hold a hearing in his office 411 the year ago. Friends garding mission for that purpose, and the deci¬ strange contrast with official reports of wholesale sources in the District. which was begun by John T. said his call at the White House was formed that he was among the sur¬ this board is to be hearings, except that for Rhode Island Doollng sion of final. the arrival in of a normal will be held Everv Friday was ended only incidental and to pay his respects. vivors, but later it developed that, after Should an employe fail of promotion Washington No Coal for the Poor. FOR IN EXPLOSION Wednesday morning afternoon, today by three days' supply of fuel within the 1 be armed with its own Solicitor Clement within an hour after being rescued from the sea, Kalk died because of unsatisfactory service, he For the first time In the of ';l'ra,louParticular arguments, but chief of me promoted at the of last twenty-four hours. history the defendant resumed the stand. Pro¬ r of exposure. News of his death was may beginning the Associated Charities there was no these in every case will be the political DR. MOHLER NOW HEADS any quarter thereafter on evidence Although officials in th»» office of the coal on hand to the from (Continued from First opportunity, and likewise the ceedings today were marked smooth¬ sent to his mother. Mrs. Flora Stanton record has been keep poor Page.) jwlitieti by that his satisfactory District fuel administration were ad¬ freezing. Heretofore officials of the disadvantage, that exists for the re- ness and in Kalk of the Balfour apartments, who during the intervening period. This organization have calmness, contrast to the ANIMAL INDUSTRY BUREAU vised by the railroads that 109 cars of been able to get by Martin to leave the city at the storminess of last week end. is visiting friends in Omaha, Neb. provision will encourage employes to small quantities to relieve distress, but once because of the serious lack of ac¬ BrrM?,1."betwee" give better service, in case it is found anthracite coal reached the capital yes¬ all sources were closed to them to¬ commodations and the shortage of food On redirect examination the defend¬ Stanton. necesary to deny them promotion on terday and that eighteen cars of bitu¬ day, according to W. S. Ufford, director supplies. congression'al^conference^at*Poli"s^The" ant was allowed, over Dr. John P.. Mohler. assistant chief Grandson of Gen. Thaddeus of the charities. objection of the »f account of unsatisfactory service. minous coal otmo in during the last In a second proclamation the mayor .eveni"e convention acl state, to read a and the bureau of animal industry of th« Kalk was the of also is where¬ That dealers are doing all can not on relief to fivmtnities will V:"begin tomorrow with long, what pur¬ Lieut. grandson "A provision inserted there was no let they urged persons missions night Department of Agriculture, was today Gen. Thaddeus Stanton. His father was by clerks and carriers shall be eligible twenty-four iinrs, up to facilitate distribution of supplies stay away from Halifax for the next a large reception at the Willafd The ported to be a complete, itemised an accident the in the flood of requests from con¬ was the opinion today of Administrator two weeks. convention will end Sundavu"uay with" 'tn a= mass statement of and appointed chief of the bureau by Sec¬ killed in during Span¬ for promotion to the higher positions . receipts disbursements ish and Mrs. Kalk and her son Weaver, who said coal demands now Church services were meeting i* n-hM. f"rmer Ambassador retary Houston. war, in the post office in which they are em¬ sumers for relief. suspended yes¬ a. made by Means for Mrs. moved to this city. Young Kalk was the are unusually heavy and supplies are terday. By order of the mayor, Sunday Gerard h- Anr>*iciiHoward Shaw and Mrs King during The bureau was closed thl9 after¬ schools and ployed. By filling supervisory exhausted almost aftrr -Mrs. tatt are to August and part of educated in the public from the ranks of em¬ immediately was not observed as a holiday and the scheduled speak. September, 1915, noon the Western positions the Drastic Step Considered. their arrival. which reached from 1 to 2:30 o'clock to allow was graduated from High it will be an added inductment Shipments stores which supply food, fuel and the first month he was associated with He th<-- Naval ployes Washington and last remained her as business employes to attend the funeral services School. entered Academy for them to take a keen interest in the One drastic step toward fuel con¬ yesterday night clothing open. Workmen manager. One item of in 101- and was graduated four years totaled 5.546 tons, or more than twice wandered about the streets, but traffic was a lor Dr. former and their was in of¬ COMMENDED FOE HEROISM. receipts one-thousand-dollar Melvin. chief, whose suc¬ later. Shortly before the outbreak service prove by efficiency servation contemplation by as much coal as Washington ordinarily conditions were deplorable and slow check received by Mrs. King from cessor I>r. Mohler becomes. with he was and qualifications that they are eligi¬ ficials of the national and the District uses in a day. was made of war Germany pro¬ the progress toward restoring Mrs. J. B. Foraker. jr., and turned over Dr. Mohler moted to junior lieutenant and as¬ ble to fill vacancies that occur was normal even in the business Overboard and to Means. He has been connected with to time in the fuel administrations, and that the conditions, Hay Nye Jumped j explained that this rep¬ the bureau signed to the battleship Florida. Last from time higher posi¬ district, where melting snow had filled resented a loan to Mrs. King from Mrs. of animal industry since he visited his mother in this tions. curtailment of coal supplies to theaters Gets Five Years in Prison. each with Saved Man From 1S9T. August and churches. Absolute cutting off of thoroughfare streams over a Drowning'. Foraker. During the long illness of Dr. city and then was assigned to the "Section 3 provides a method for Jerre was man's shoe tops. This second storm Chief Gunner's Mate The witness declared that from fuel for theaters and churches was re¬ Sullivan, colored, sen¬ Ray Xye has such de¬ Melvin he performed the duties of act¬ destroyer Jacob Jones. transfer of employes one service a appeared to have about filled the cup been commended tailed statements of account were was a in the garded as possibility. tenced today by Justice Stafford, in officially bv Secretarv chief of the as Lieut. S. F. Kalk pace to another. This method of transfer was of public sorrow to overflowing. made out by him throughout his busi¬ ing bureau well as for a of An order sent today to the Penn¬ Criminal Division 1, to serve five Danlels for heroism in jumping over¬ those of chief United States Senate couple years will work for the benefit of the postal sylvania and Baltimore and Ohio rail¬ years The first thought was for 600 persons ness career with Mrs. King, month by pathologist. a decade ago. He was appointed from service, as it will permit an in the penitentiary. Sullivan was con¬ in tents and damaged buildiners which board from the battleship Pennsyl¬ month. In 1507 he was a Millard of that employe roads to stot> sidetracking cars loaded member of the spe¬ Nebraska by Senator to transfer from one service to another, with coal. This will have the effect, it victed of attempting indignities with were not secure against a driving rn:n vania and rescuing a man from drown- cial commission appointed by the Dis- state in February. 1907. and served as a the Relief efforts were redoubled, for the ^ommisaioner3 to provided that postmaster, in the is believed, of having shipments shunt¬ two small white girls last January. He ins-. Ifif. investigate the page until August 5. 1909. to where was committee realized that the problem OF MRS. tnilk of the a interest of good service, recommends ed immediately coal trestles, represented by Attorney Andrew water was covered with debris DEATH SCH0FIELD. supply District. Only last week Mrs. Kalk received can be Wilson. Assistant United States At¬ was growing greater. from her son the transfer to the Post Office Depart¬ unloading quickly accomplished.! as t he result of a collision with a Christmas package post¬ officials. Loaded cars have been allowed by torney Arch.er conducted the prosecu¬ All the survivors of the Norwegian tug-I marked U. S. S. Jacob Jones. ment | steamer Imo, which collided with the boat towing a car float." says the Navy Wife of Assistant of railroads to stand on sidings for days. tion. s Secretary War BERNSTORFFS SON WEDS. Admiral Sims' dispatches gave no French munition ship Mont IJlanc. T, 6 11 m ('m .SI;-'te e n t describing the further details of the escape of Lieut. Favorable Report on Bill Urged. have been made prisoners by the British incident, but. without hesitation Xve 111 Several Months. Commander Bagley and the other sur¬ naval authorities. removing coat and cap. jumped over-1 Mrs. Florence Clark Mrs. the names of sev¬ When this bill was under considera¬ Imo board and, swimming against the cur¬ Scofleld, wife of' Marguerite Burton Thomason vivors, but contained the last session of DECORATED BY FRENCH FOR BRAVERY WITH The survivors have been re¬ John C. Scofield. assistant enteen of the rescued in addition to tion at Congress moved to a British cruiser in the har¬ rent made by the propellers going full secretary of of New Wife of Count announced. more than fifty members appeared be¬ AMBULANCE UNIT. bor and held for the speed astern, reached the drowning war and chief clerk of the War Jersey Young those previously the committee urging a favorable admiralty investi¬ De¬ BERLIN, December fore gation of the collision, which is to be¬ man and Kept him above water until died early this Saturday, 8. via report so that the House could vote on up a tugboat." . partment, morning at London, December 10..The gin today- The number in custody picked by her home, the marriage Secretary Daniels' Statement. it. was not revealed. Xye enlisted in the Navy twenty! Southbrook Courts, 16th here today of Count Christian Gunther Mr. Madden said today that his com¬ * '' and Newton streets, after an Illness of Secretary Daniels Issued this state¬ mittee is convinced that the passage of von BernstorfT, son of the former am¬ will increase the Colision Was Accidental. winnow lKtefeWP°rl' several months. Funeral services are ment; , , the bill efficiency of bassador to the United and Mrs. Information received from because to be held Wednesday States, "Additional the postal service reclassifica¬ It was officially stated that the ar¬ morning at 11 Marguerite Vivian Burton Thomason of Admiral Sims today reveals the fact tion and increases in salaries will keep rest and detention of the survivors Use of Granted Poles. o'clock at the home. Jacob Jones was at men in the service where of Camp Burlington, N. J.. is reported by the that the torpedoed the best many the steamer Imo was not due to the Ise rf the Fort N. V.. Besides her husband. Mrs. Scofleld is 4:12 p.m. on December 6. She began to of them are now resigning to seek more of Niagara. train - discovery evidence of an Berlin newspapers. and sank at 4:29. Men and women enemy mg camp, formerly used for training survived by a son, Capt. Frank C. Sco¬ settle aft finally lucrative employment. IRS*5? plot. Inquiry by government experts j was not seen until this ^ Coast PHILADELPHIA, December 10 Mrs "The submarine encouraged to make their life work ws&sx S has extablished. it was that the ollicers, has been given by the War fleld. Artillery Corps, stationed von BernstorfT is about t after the sank. would he feels sure, better said, thirty-live ' seme time ship The; prove, gov¬ BP collision was accidental. department as a training camp for re- at Fort Washington, and three daugh¬ years old and is described as handsome. submarine then picked up one survivor, ernment employes. ters. one of whom i9 the fche is the adopted J There was, however, fault on the part ruits being enlisted in the rnited wife of Capt. daughter of E J whose identity is not known. The de- He points to the increased cost of food, 1 of the and there James A. Corcoran of the i nomason of X. so rents and other ex¬ "Avirf-':'" navigators were un¬ Quarter¬ J was not far from the Eu¬ necessary V .' .. .. states for the 1'olish in Burlington, Mrs' stroyer clothing, .> '..> .,...... that the army France master Reserve Corps, on at Thomason is of a more ''V' official reports Mont Blanc was duty the secretary lire* in¬ ropean coast as was indicated by the penses, which have than doubled, the side wo thousand men will be trained War Department. surance company in and to the fact that business men Jmmmtm >. taking wrong of the channel. Philadelphia. first dispatches. gen Justice Drysdale, nn expert in ad¬ lere. Congestion of men in the r.i- "Gunner Harry R. Hood was killed erally have been raising salaries, and Bml at in Count Christian Gunther von Bern- miralty law, has been designated by sh cam]) Niagara-on-the-Uake The fullest untilization of the new by the explosion of the torpedo, nepct says: the to anaria. threatened to bring a to Btorff is twenty-six years old. He vis- of kin (mother; Belle Hood, resides'at "The government should be no less con¬ government conduct the in¬ hal't state bar*e canal, which will be opened Stales with his father in its treatment of quiry. This will be public and far- Polish recruiting and the American au- next year from Buffalo to New l'n.U?d 57 Pennsylvania avenue. Atlanta, Ga. siderate its employes were asked York In I* Gov. Whitman to meet in the poaure. Ensign people Premier Robert 1>. :s y i.: interest of bankers, as a junior clerk. He SDent in the roster of officers published yes¬ to look to the government to be a model Borden has an¬ Poland metropolis today. about a year in the banking houst be- terday. His next of kin is his mother, employer, in order that a good example nounced that a preliminary appropria¬ °"man diplomat^ Mrs. Flora S. Kalk, 127 N. 42d street, might be set." tion of $ 1,000.000 has been made by the Service^e.vice. In February, iyi5 th*. irnr, In out the injustice that tho Canadian government for immediate Omaha, Neb. j pointing in conferr«"l ipon additional names of firovernment does to the employes, partic¬ relief Halifax. This fund will b«* Christmasrrh°rutwas him. ani l" "Twenty-seven once in time that year Count Chris-ris survivors have been received, bring¬ ularly of the jKJstal service, in putting placed at the hands of the tian was reported ill in Berlin. them a hard citizens' finance committee. ing the total number saved up to forty-; through specializing course, .w>.£?¦.%;.-y four. Inclusive of the man taken pris- and then not giving them satisfactory How To Have oner by the submarine." wage increases. Representative Madden m WILL DISCUSS THIRD says: "These post office clerks ami letter j ? s DEPARTMENT STORE BURKS. LOAN. carriers, after serving for a number of Names of the Survivors. years, become postal experts, but they Health Plans for a Liberty to have acquired a knowledge and pro¬ fSP House & Herrmann Heavy Losers by Happiness Campaign Following are names of survivors that has no If can eat cabled Admiral Sims, in ficiency commercial value Fire in you bountifully, sleep soundly, work vigor¬ Start Some Time After 1. | by addition to In the business world, because the gov¬ Destructive Wheeling-. February the list previously published: W. December ously, you enjoy life to the limit and those around you Organization plans for a third 'ib Howard l.\ ernment is the only employer of men WHEELING. Ya., 10.. J Quartermaster Chase, of their experience." of a stove last near You radiate health ty loan compalgn to be started some Boatswain's Mates Charlcsworth and peculiar The explosion gas night enjoy being you. happiness. t:me after Louis Gibson. Gunner's He brings out the fact that Con¬ the House & Herrmann February l were discuss-d Harry Mates 1889 a In department*! The secret is of red ) ere today more Charles Chilton and Conrad gress in enacted classification great plenty rich, blood bound¬ by than a hundred Strees, Chief law for the post office establish¬ store, in the heart of Wheeling's Mar- >epre,.nt, lives of local libe-tv loan Yeoman Joseph Arthur Cossairt, <'hief clerks, ing through your veins. For the blood is the stream of Electrician Clifford Vernon J Forest, ing a maximum salary of $1,400. ket street retail district, caused a fire meet'n* wlth Secretary the life. If it is thin, watery, and sluggish, poisons breed and Electricians Cliffton Cranford, Boyd Mar- which destroyed department store j the They win exchange ideas, offer sue- | tell Hamp and Terrell Head Wood, Sea¬ Recognized Thirty Years Ago. and gutted two other buildings, with an keep general, health constantly below par. f-e. tions for men Harold William Aagaard. Phillip improvement of orgamza we see that estimated loss of The fire was tin,, work and probably perfect nation Jacob Burger. Gustave Eulitz. jr.; Albert "Thus Congress almost $525,enat of the $1,400 grade for post office clerks, Wheeling. of the""tveek Marchand; Firemen David Roy Carter although nothing has ever been done The loss to the House & Herrmann and is at glide's Patrick Henry Judge. Mess Attendant by Congress since that time to provide Company placed $350,000. The "pepTo-Mai^aiv" 1 Ernest H. Water -i was " Pennington, Tender Ed¬ for the possible promotion of clerks to .' ® S Rellly building, nearby, damaged The Red Blood Builder r.y»£'S1ESE'n'-e's'o^^.^Tirloan ward Heier. Apprentice Seaman Law¬ this grade. >; to the extent of $125,000. Another ad¬ ; committed, banker" and' rence Hansen. owned "This quoted section or the law of V '"¦ joining building, by the West Take Pcpto-Mang&n if your is not to ambi¬ The survivors were in strength equal your following not 1889 has never been repealed, although Virginia Printing Company, publishers if listlessness makes a if are the list of enlisted personnel out: in 1911 of the Wheeling Register, was guited, tion, your you quitter, you generally given Congress adopted the designa¬ run down. Seaman Chester B. Lanen, emergency tions of 'special clerks,' and has incor¬ i\ \ with a loss of approximately $5u,000. address not given. Fireman Howard porated this designation in each suc¬ \ As a flowing river and A. Moyer, mother, Rebecca 421 . rapidly irrigates Moyer, ceeding post office appropriation act, enriches its bordering soil, so does the blood Erie street, Whitehaven, Pa. with possible salaries of $1,300 and ilti Murder Suspect Loses Suit. when in You Fireman Charles A. Mason. Father. $1,400 annum. This of abounding healthy red-blood cells per designation the murder farm Charles Mason, 865 Western avenue. An echo of Gunness and to the special clerks.' as the debate in the at was give strength vigor body. West Lynn, Mass. House at the time of its Indi¬ mystery Laporte, 3nd., heard builds the en¬ Officials here entertain little that adoption Pepto-M&ngan body by hope cates, was intended as a blanket desig¬ today, when federal decrees dismissing riching the blood, by thousands of Cant more survivors will be found alive. The nation for the for each creating Beat variously enumerated suits $30,000 brought new two red-blood cells es^ course bitter cold which probably was the kinds of clerks carried in the the New York Central railroad which, they cause $1,400 against the drive out of Ensign Kalk's death makes it grade In the law of 1889." |UNpejJ| by Mrs. Cora B. Heeran and her mother. through system, poisons and the delicious wheat improbable that others who may have who will Burton, for failure of the carry health to every part of the and floated on or Representative Steenerson. Mrs. Lucinda body. escaped about rafts also discuss Post Office Department sal¬ carrier to protect Its passengers were Warning: There are many imita¬ wreckage through the night could have tions.FriendlyRefuse and flavor of survived such ary increases at the conference tomor¬ affirmed by the Supreme Court. them.accept only the genuine. barley exposure. row, says: "The disposition seems to While traveling from Franklin, Pa., Cuda'a Popto-Mangan. You can tell by the pack¬ be to were re¬ age and bottle. Never sold in bulk. Read the give the postal workers an In¬ _ to New York, both women Stumbled Into TJ-Boat's Path. crease in wages to meet the extraordi¬ prraton Glbaon, n former resident ofAf tBMjbi*7.city, who hM been lenlag with the moved from a train at Syracuse, N. Y., circular wrapped around the bottle. nary conditions which have so heavily MTen. Mrs. Heeran being suspected of being Pepto-Mangan is made by Every element worked against the increased the cost of living. The dis¬ SSL d, Ou""'. Belle Gunness. sought in connection only men of the destroyer. The report Indi¬ position. as far as I can judge, is to ,"_CTo«o^«.jfft\ ,',Yru'^V.'T1..T with the murders. The lower court ex¬ M. J. BREITENBACH CO., cates that the craft stumbled into the consider the question conservatively, empted the railroad from liability, Manufacturing Chemists New York GrapeNats path of the destroyer by unlucky and. as far as possible, grant increases < orp», alnn the Kortra-Htrla *.« *¦» "" "" holding that the Syracuse police super¬ ^ FOOD chance, and tliat the torped# Mil home where they are most needed." force*. seded the trainmen in authority. .y

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