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a 3 yok PRESSROOM AND MAILING DEPARTMENT WIDE OPEN TO ADVERTISERS . THE WEATRER | Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday; probably . showers tonight in e® | treme south portion. | TWELVE PAGES VOL XXXVII, NO. 174. AND CLENS FALLS, N. Y,, TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 25, 1916. Fe r cour ~ MESSEN GE TWELVE PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS 1 i, «w-_.__- agedy - Occurs - in Norks Tunnel Under Con- struction in Lake Erie. TY FEET BELOW ing Arrival of Workmen. 'the ten-foot water works tunnel nght have escaped slowly ebbed { 'nmission send oxygen helmits »tect the rescue workers. fiwith a helmet. % in the disaster, 11 total 23. 'at 8 o'clock last night Assistant Su- rintendent Harry Vokes led a gang { eleven men to work in a heading I feet below the surface of the la d 1,700 feet shoreward from the wa- ~works crib. Dver an hour later there was an w perished. 'A rescue party of seven, led by John 'hnson, a crib superintendent, was 'ercome by gas. Johnson and two ilers were rescued. A second rescue party of i 'ad were still in the tunnel. tief Rowe is in personal charge leventh street pier. (ore ure TT Water BOTTOM OF THE LAKE ven of Eleven Rescuers Suc- cumb to Fumes in Vain Bf. fort to Aid Entombed Work. ! 'men-Work Held up Pend- ELEVELAND, Ohio, July 25.-With re than a score of men entombed ding from the shore of Lake Erie 3the west side crib, hope that any /. - But no effort was spared in the gk of rescue. Director of Utilities telegraphed to Columbus, ask- j; that the government mine relief pas fills the tunnel and evefty man tering it risks his life unless protect» City officials believe that the death the worst ever fered in a Cleveland municipal task, aston in which Vokes and his entire elevelt an led by Superintendent Van Dusen, tempted to enter the gas era at 2! 'lock this morning, but Van Dusen '~{d all but three of his men perishs'. ( lAt 9 o'clock this morning all of the Mayor Davis is on the scene and e twenty-five policemen who were ding back the crowds at the W CLEVELAND, Ohio, July 25.-Nine- ien men are known to be dead and a injured as a result of an explos- This is the glant German submarine which Giant Submarine Carried Letter From Kaiser to Spanish Kin aps xes: u carried a letter from Kaiso r Wilhelm to Ki out through the North Sea and the English Channel eluding the whole Briti sh fleet just as the Deutschland did. This photograph shows the vessel in port in Spain alongside the interned German steamer Roma. The submarine carried the interned sailors medical s upplies. < =. CARRANZA TROOPS | cl MNSMECERS Cavalrymen Jog Out of juarez; in Response to Orders by Gonzales. -- COMPLAINT BY BELL ‘l CTT O { Orders Given to United States '- Troops to \Shoot Back\ if { Fired Upon by the 1 | Mexicans. I , i (By Wallace E. Smith, 1 N S Staff! Corre: pondent ) | EL. PASO, Texas, Juls 2% ~-Half a ex TRIE TREAMTES to- to Correspondent.) WASHINGTON, July 25.-Nearl every existing trade treaty betwee saults upon te, rgihts which now has culminated i than eighty cerns and business men. State depar ment officials made this plain today i rejecting the suggestions, contained i X- trade with. {seriousness of the situation quiries addressed to the foreign offic of est proud: scope of the British investigation. tinue to press for action on the ma hold-ups at both London HAVE BEEN BROKEN BY GREAT BRITANN (By John Edwin Nevin, I, N. S. Staff Great Britain and the United States, was violated by that nation in her as- American - commercial the creation of a blacklist of more American business con: the cable messafies from London, that England has a perfect right to say who her subjects shall and shall not It is now plain that the extreme is not realized in London. The series of in- on behaif of the United States by Am- basseador Page there have gone an- swored. And, according to statements made to the department here by the British ambassador, Sir Cecil Spring: Rice, he has as yet been unable to get any complete information as to the Meanwhile this government will con- and Paris. The mail detention is a very vital part SENATE LIKELY TO ACT ON MARITIME RESQLUTICN Calls Upon President Wilson to Act in Behalf of Sir Roger Casement. WASHINGTON, July 25.-Action by 'the senate on Senator Martine's reso- lution to have the president interfere in behalf of Sir Riger Casement was assured today. After an hour's debate, Senator Stone succeeded in having the measure and all substitutes referred back to the foreign relations com- mittee on his promise to use his influ- ence to have it favorably reported to- morrow. Today's debate was marked by a bitter attack by Senator Martine on British policy. \Great Britain dictates terms to the Tnited States senate,\ he declared. \She has dictated our Panama canal policy, she has rifled our mails, and we are now helplessly awaiting her next move.\ \If Sir Roger Casement is a crimin- al, so then were George Washington, John Hancock and John Adam:,\ de- clared Senator O'Gorman, of New York. Senator Pomerene of Ohio declar ed his sympathies for Sir Roges but urged sending the resolution back to the committee. McCLURE HELD UP BY BRITISH AUTHORITIES y n n t- EH n g il (£11 of gas in a waterworks tunnel of the general British protest and this DlreCt Result Of Ha'VIng ert- {Elder construction between a pumping REOvernment has all along insisted ten Articles of a Pro- i 'ation on land and an intake crib five that under no cireumastances will it } Hes out in Lake Erie late last night. Consent to anv recognition of the German Nature, {'The men were working fifty feet be.| rights of hellilgerpnts 1trioidivprt mai}. i w the bottom of the lake and 120 | Cattving vessels into their territorial - 2 on le a oc f let below the street level. fl'he explos- t waters and then insist that thev hava LONDON. July 25-8. 8. MeClure, i in came as the tunnel workers broke the right of examination and confisea. the American publisher, has been held it prough a gas vein with their picks | tion. oop fae Bn‘tgh authorities at Liver: iad shovels and the fumes ignited In the entire matter of trade inter- pool. He arrived there on board the ; (om electric sparks. | iThe night shift had returned ;ork last night after a three days 'ff because gas fumes had been pvered and tests were made to {char means of safety. me surface detecting gas fumes into the air to attract ight when a rescue party ma Puccumbed to the fumes. y vapor. ' STATES TO BUY -$. waASHINGTON, July Rouse officials today confirmed urchase the Danish West Indies pproximately $25,000,000, hich have been in progress as stated and the signatures of ear 4 it approved by both. To HOLD PORCH PARTY. Gleaners of the Baptist church Alto enjoy a porch party tomorrow [bert Dutton, formerly teacher of é, + artain the Safety of further work. 4 Although suspicious odors had been joticed for several days and work had leen halted the men were permitted h enter the tube without helmets or § At 8 o'clock last evening eleven men j‘escended the shaft. An hour later the *xplosion occurred and workmen on ‘lémpted to signal the men in the tube. 'Leceiving no response they sent rocket life avers on shore. It was almost mid- 'jescent. Of this party of eleven, seven ' After the first rescue party had met Jhe same fate as the original workmen - in the crib, no more men would volun- 'teer to aid in the rescue work until reimets could be procured. There was fonsiderable delay in getting helmets nd not until after day light today was he rescue work taken up by men pro- berly equipped to withstand the dead- [ DANISH WEST INDIES 25.-White eport that the United States will It was stated that the negotiations, early two years, are about complet- The test of the proposed pur- chase treaty has been agreed upon, it \two nations are to be affixed within a} ,_ So soon as the treaty is com- pleted it will he sent to the senate ere and Danish parliament for rati- AllGcation. Officials declared that there AS no doubt that the document will terndoon at the home of Mrs. Powell {J. Smith, 11 Smith streét. Mrs. H. Her- [{ miassa, will be the guest of honor, to lay dis as- liminiary protest and without delay and later supplement continuation of the present delay. MANY GERMANS ARE at- Summary on Result of Fighting. the (By Sdiney B. Cave, I. N. S. Staff Co respondent.) July, 26,223 Germans have been captu ed by the allies. These figures are contained in a fighting issued today. guns. British war office announced the that the for British center. fop stopped. village. the guns. . FORNALD PORTLAND, IN LEAD. Maine, July are af- 1 for United States senator the >\4 thirds of the state. ference by mail and otherwise offici als say that this government has sufi ficient information available for a pre- the president and bis cabinet are being urged by Senators and commercial representa- tives to send this preliminary demand when all of the facts are available. This probably will be done if there is CAPTURED BY ALLIES Figures Contained in Official LONDON, July 25.-Since the battle of the Somme opened on the first of official summary on the results of the In addition to prisoners the allies have taken 140 guns, about 40 trench mortars and several hundred machine In its official report on the latest operations north of the Somme the today Germans, after being rein- forced. attacked the right flank and also delivered two assaults against the These attacks were Further ground has been gained at Poziers where the Germans have been fighting desperately to hold part of the ' The prisoners taken by the British included two battalion commanders and the booty included two machine 25.- Former Governor Bert M,. Fernald, of Portland, has a lead of 800 votes over Congressman Frank E. Guernsey of Dover, for the Republican nomination | dt the special primaries yesterday, accord- ing to returns tabulated from two- American liner Philadelphia. but was informed by the officials that for the present he would. not be allowed to land. Mr. MeClhuire remains on board the liner pending the resu't of official in- quiries now under way, but it was re- it ported today that he would be allow- ed to come ashore within a few hours. NEW YORK. July 23.-Friends of S S. McClure expressed no surprise to- day when informed of the news that the American had been held up at Liverpool. He was recentlv in Ger- many and subsequently wrote a num- ber of articles of a pro-German na- ture. He sailed on the Philadelphia on July 15, intending to visit England. COURT OF APPEALS WILL HEAR ARGUMENTS Fight to Have Apportionment Act of 1916 Declared Un- constitutional. p- I- R ALBANY. N. Y.. July 25. -The court of appeals will this afternoon bear further arguments in the fight made to have the apportionment act of 1916 declared unconstitutional. The court is to decide on the question: \In case the apportionment should be held void as to senate districts in the county of New York (by reason of the fact that one of more districts con- tain a greater - excess in population over an adjoining district) would this necessarily require that the whole ap- portlonment act should be held void\\ No decision is expected until late to- night. for after the arguments are pre- sented the court will go into consulta- tion and then write its decision. TURKISH ARMIES ARE ROUTED BY RUSSIANS PETROGRAD, July 25.-The Turk ish armies in Armenia have been rout ed by the Russians, according to the following official report issued here today: ies are retreating in disorder. The Russiaths are only ten nilles frou Erg ' ingan.\ * West Park, Ulster enanty 'In the Caucasus the Turkish arm- -k owed 3% v 1 I I hundred] ¢ arrangirta cavairymmen jog! ged out of Juarez todas with orders to | pected of starting the outpost skirm- ish with the Massachusetts infantry.! commandants at Juarez reply to the complaint lodged by Gen. George Bell.| Jr., commander at Fort Bliss. 1 Gen. Bell received information that' SHBWN TBDAY lN some other faction, had - lthpir camp on the \Island\ in the Rio | Gra 6 ) I There has been considerable sniping I ‘iu this district. It is known as well. been making mysterious trips to the spot. . down the renegade band. Its last ap- crease today. The records pearance was in the reported ex- , ieated with Gen. Gonzales terday. , As a result the Carranzitsa cavalry. The plague has now strcken a total |scabbards and extra belts of cart 'ridges. Meanwhile, Gen. Beli has in- fatal. Regulations consti'uting a practic to f . hl from the Méxican side. This the sol- 1 v t f . al federal quarantine of the cits wen dier outfits are quite eager to do and federal work against the plague in' Greater New York, had notice posted WOMAN IS SAVED FROM not be sold for children under 16. IF s I , ormer Federal health certificates are now | German Waiter at the‘ tubes leading to New Jer-ou. Even automobile parties must secure? f Every exit from the cits by rail op | Ritz-Carlton hotel in this cifv, who is; water. except mers of ocean-going ves. | DOW a Petty officer on a German de-\ ALBANY, NY. July 25.-Seven 'and enabled her to return to the teen new cases of infantile paralysis ' ed States on the Scandanivian- Ameri-} hunt the smugglers who have been ac- 'tive in this vicinity and who are sus- m ; men. | SHARP lNGREASE 1 Thus did Gen. Francisco Gonzales, | the smugglers, presumably working in the interests of \Pancho\ Villa or , nde on the outskirts of El Paso that the «automobiles of certain rich Mexicans of Villa tendencies have NEW YORK, July 25.-Infantle Apparently no effort has been made paralysis showed another sharp in (by the ( arranzista rarrison to run deaths and 150 new cases, as compar- {change of shots with the Massachu- ed with 31 deaths and 89 cases veg., S°fts guardsmen. Gen Bell commun. | 'men were ordered out They left with of 3.098 persons in the jresent epl Mausers swinging handily in demic. Of these cases 674 hove proved 'structed the guardsmen and regulars \shoot back\ if they are fired on into effect today. Senior Surgeoh the next sniping attempt is likeiy to Charles E. Banks, in charge of the result in a pitched battle at manv points warning ail pormnfl BECOMING A PRISONER that tickets for inter-state travel wouldl « being issued at the railway stations. | Ritz-Carlton in New York i ferry piers and ticket offices of the Intercedes, | _ N |__ NEW YORK, July 25-The interces- these certificates. sion of a former German waiter at the | L M strover. saved Mrs Dorothea Spencer scl. i= garded. from beroming a prisoner in Germany| outside Greater New York were re.; C20 liner United State» which arrived | ported today to the state department! today. of health, with one- death at- East;- Early last May Mrs Spencer was' Meadow, Nassau county. This brings Called to London by the serious ill the total number of deaths up 26 NOs of her sister and in ber haste, and the number of eases to 254, she did not wait to secure an Ameri- Today'~ case- reported were from \AN Passport After nursing her sis. Greenport. Columbia «ounty; three. tot back to health a sea trip was de- at Poughkeepsie. Putche«s eounti.. \ided upon. Mrs. Spencer and her' Mahopac Falls, Putnam county, took a emall steamer for Copen- Neck, Floral Park. East Meadow and DAg®N. but on the war the ship was. Lake View, Nama county. Bing_'intarnpptpd by a German destrover. || hamton, Broome county. Southold, As Mrs. Spencer had no passport: Suffolk county. two at Beavon, one, \h° was ordered to stand apart as a each at Fishkill and Dutchess June. Prisoner when a young petty officer ' tion, Dutchess coun's, and two at Dabbened to recognize her as an Am- ‘ 'erican woman whom he had frequent- thwpgly waited upon when he was in New: i York before the war. Through the in-! bear | fercession of the former waiter Mrs.! At Hudson tomorrow nish is to he a meeting of physicians of this - vieinify Advices | on c mt=thodsP of Combatting the diseage| was allowed to go and as the ' will be given by Dr. George Draperlg’aei‘gflanir delgirted the young officer , of the Rockefeller Institute and Dr.} \Mailénfs'l hpgntcher' le h Charlton Wallace of the Polyclic hos-) ._ _\ & I? fore g asure of walt- | pital, New York city, | ing upon you before the war and hope | tl‘fin Ithshail Isl-ave.thfi same pleasure; TURKISH CRUISER AND - ! RYUSSIAN SHIP IN FiGHTgCOLORED INFANTRYMEN SHOT BY WHITE PATROL COXSTANTINOPLE, - via Berlin ; Wireless, July 235. -Details of a four-i WASHINGTON, | July - 25 -Three, hour fight between the Turkish cruis-‘members of the Eighth Iilinois in- er- Midilli _ (formerivy - the German |fantry, colored, were shot by a mili-] cruiser Breslau, and five Russian war} tary patrol of white troops from Fort, ships in the Black Seq on July 22 are| Sam Honston last night when trow: contained in the following report of pl; Ofiurfé’gogzl Sasakzznmneagr tgi| the ministry of marine: ort. e e e \The - Turkish cruiser Midi eni partment MEIR}: by General Funston, countered strong Russian sea forces, my} £11191???“ 1“:fo “the “Emmy south of Sesvastapol and “gnarl; a, in}? Ther inoith'c‘as-n a it; Em four hours' engagement with them ‘CP ving the ; I‘_:v\tand P ht The Russianfiquadron was marking) threaéonhmgl o ¢ 11?“ £111 e so mgr; of a battleshin of the !m‘pp.ratm.=a' out o t _\ pact:a ‘rim 9. stfarmrl anf Maria type and four dosno} ers. The, a military evard was sent from For Midill broke through the l‘l‘ne and re-; Sam Houston. The guard patrol fir turned to port undamaged. ed into the crowd, wounding the, three men, Others were struck with, SUBMARINE BREMEN buttes of runs. An investigation is, TO DOCK IN BOSTON being made. f BALTIMORE, Md., July 25.-The submarine Bremen, sister ship of the Deutschland. in port here, will dock in Boston and not Baltimore, as first reported It was learned from an official of the Eastern Forwarding company, agents of the submarine company, that orders were issued to the commander of the Bremen be- fore she left Germany that she should not risk running Into the fleet of allied warships waiting for the Deutschland | outside | the | Virginia capes, but instead should go into i CASEMENT EXECUTION | FIXED FOR AUGUST 3; 1 LONDON, July 35 -Sir Roger Casement's execution has been fixed> for August 3, the Daily Mail stated\ today. Unless granted a royal re- prieve, Casement will be hanged in! the yard at Pentonville prison, Hope for the saving of Casement’sl life by judicial means was practically | abandoned when His appeal from his conviction on the charge of high trea- Boston harbor. gon was rejgéged on July 18, | from a morth < wait \Hoosier Post\ Dead. oe oon ee Co PY s A . a s t. jimacé - James Whitcomb Riley James Whittomb Riley known wherever English is read a~ \The Hoosier Poet.\ died the other day at his home in Indianapolis. Death was due to a stroke of paralysic On Oct. 7. 1815, the entire State of Indiana celebrated Mr. Riley's sixty second birthday. Similar celebration- were held throughout the countiv as a tribute to him. REPUBLICANS TO LAUNCH OFFENSIVE MOVEMENT Scheduled to be Waged in Sen- ate Against Administration's Mexican Policy. WASHINGTON, July 2%.-A new offensive movemen' is to be Iaunch«? by the Republicans in the sena against the administration s Mex. an policy. As g result of letter- to Sen atore from all parts of tre caun'tm, resolutiens~ are on d manding the withdrawal of the Na tiopal Guard from the hordes ind +o prevent Che further southward. Senator Fal. of New Mexico, has furnished the Republicans ammunition for their s president's course in Mexico, returne. rlong the border He broug't cnformation of his observations there ts ad hi Re movement nf w *n wird on the publican colleague in Ctep attack- on the Mexican polit \Why wai the Nuatera' s' aver sent?\ is the burden eft oms efof*e letters recerved Obe erat n ind demand for an explanatior White Hou-e probib s tained in one of \'+ ce *dut or ons in preparation. Senator nd Mich gan, who we-erd « maintainance of the on der, declares there ;- that the admini tration never ed to use the guardsmen tor oc. up Mexico.\ Republican jevder see ent situation abrn lin\ cam; a ter. Thev clarm toe injured aitsefo immes-arably be ea'ang out the Nat onal Gnard while the Dem ocratic leaders rejoice that the pres: dent has been atde to keep hi« pease record clear. The Repy'u ans., how ever. enntend that the country wan's the Mexican que-tor permanent'y set- tled and that the sending of the guard to the border bas done nothing to wards a final solution of the problem. attacks |f the bl eenelus ve gto in' e earing pothe nter mal moras SEARCH FOR BODIES CONTINUED TODAY SENECA FALLS, N. Y., Jul Search was continued today for the bodies of Miss Addie Christopher of Waterloo and John Ruckingham of New Haven, Conn. who are believed to bave been drowned in Cavuga Lake Sunday afternoon. The upturned canoe, pillows and one paddle have been found. The searchers are handicapped in their search by the absence of knowledge of where the canoe capsized. an- The peculiar feature of the trageiv> is that. although the lake was dotted with boats Sunday afternoon. one saw the young couple drown. FRENCH AND RUssIANS HAVE SCoRED suctess BERLIN. July 2%-Successes for the French and Russians are adrured in the official report arssued by the German war office today. English attacks on the Pozeires- Maurepas front. north of the Somme river, broke down. Further south the French gained ground near E~trees. On the eastern front Ruswan at- tacks south of Riga and along the Pvina were repulsed, but the Russians succeeded in penetrating German posi- tions on the Stonowoja front and south of Berestezko. . In those regions General Von Lin- a sengen's forces lost some of their firstJ line trenches, DEUTSCHLAND IS STILL ANGHORED N ALTIMORE HARBOR I ___ Impatiently Awaiting Arrival of ; Her Sister Ship the Bremen.\ READY TO SET SAIL ; AT MOMENTS NOTICE fRumors Say That Second Big \- Submarine Has Turned Up Missing and That Search is Being Made by German Un- der-sea Boats. BALTIMORE. Mr. July 25 -Despité \elaborate final preparations for the re« turn trp of the German super-submar« ine Deurs hland to Germany, the big submersble today still lay at her dock potsed for the lone dive across the At- lantic While the Deutschland wait- ed. impatient to be on her way on her perilous vorace across the enemy in- fe-ted seas sher officers and agents souzh*t in vain for news of the Deut» achland ~ sister ship. Bremen. long | overdue Ge-man representatives in Baltimore are at a lo-s to explain the delay in the arrival of the Bremen, which left- Germany cfas reported, more than three weeks ago. Rumors were abroad today. that the serond tiz submarine was missing and that German war submarines were comb inz \tbe Atlantic searching for her. Loathe to leave Baltimore until some werd of the Bremen had been (captain Paul Koenig, with and crew primed for the a ross the Atlantic still delayed his departure. Piers detail in preparation of the bic for her daredevil re- tuin \:p hai been «ompleted. Onlv &a its to send the Deut« v r.atd careening out of ber slip, and deunte te eyed nro ve el de -h word was neo into the Patapsco fiver to begin the trot ies ot her sourney The big sea- sona tus Timmins. instead of being moored a ous gal at the «lip was back» ed info the dock with a tow line fast to the tern of the Deutschland,. ready to cerk the out into the stream and start down ( hesapeake hav mancack of the husky erew of the Deutschland war aboard ard at Ris post of «dats A submer- < on fest had 'tunsd up the complicate ed machinery of tre hia undersea boat -In tse thirty foot depth of wa- an the oan (Captain Koenig had lov ered hs craft until the deeks were awa-b. and then had brought her to the asain Oat ude the big) ubmarine was strip» fed for sea service Her folding masts were ticked amar in their grooves alonc che haul. and her wireless ser- fils wese facked awa. out of sight. The Dew'schland had been tuned up for net da-n from early last evens ing Threushont a nicht that was a ges gm ep word and rain anxious ob- on tag> in the river passed throuch the sheets of ram, mo- mentarily expecting her- departure. The was silent as a grave, bar te Timmin&. with searchlight slating through the rain. warned ev- erv craft away .and enforced the wa'ningz On one occasion the Tim muns called up a smaller and faster tug, which threatened to run down an lm-‘Pr inquisitive launch. After a wordy battle via mesaphones, through the crain and wind. the launch gave up the , effort to pierce the mystery surround- «ing the Deutschland. and peace was , restored. Through the racking storm the press tugs lav in a semi-circle about the mouth of the Deutschland's alin while the searchlight of the Tim- mins .with ceaseless regularity, in- spocted one after the other __ Dawn brought a lull in the wind, and lessened the downpour of rain, 'but the misty drizzle and the heavy water made condi ions as favorable as could be expected at any time for lthe dash of the Deutschland. MATTERS BEFORE - UDE <- Act ng on a petition filed by Irens T.. Penuth in Warren $211an Surro- gate's court todas. an order was mada directing that thry> bonds of $459,000 each executed bi Irene L. Demuth and the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Marvlind as general guardian of , William L. Demuth, Harry I. Demuth and Robert L. Demuth,. be reduced from $459000 to the sum of $230,000 each Abraham Goldsmith, of New York. appeared as attorney for the | |_ In the matter of the last will and ' testament of the late Jeremiak Dales? ca petition of Nora Daley as é¥eeutrix | was filed. Citation and order of publi- cation, were issued, réturnable Sep- tembel! be teripe=' we p06 => le m“ bos lad U '|:| [i! |’||'|||'|.| T ”TIL” LIfT]I 35 36 37 '3 COLD SPRING, N.Y. 10516 - MADE In U.S.4