The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 24, 1914, Image 7

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    First in
Erayffing
First in Quality
First in Results
First in Purity
First in Economy
and for these reasons
Calumet Baking
Powder is first in the
hearts of the millions
of housewives who
use it and know it.
received highest awards
World’. Pur. Food Erpoiiticn,
CLic.ro, lUiooii.
PariiExpoutioii, Franc*, Buck.
1912.
... ——"I I-. —
Fighting the White Plague.
Adequate hospital facilities for the
85,000 residents of Ohio who are suf
fering from tuberculosis has been de
cided upon by the prevention of tuber
culosis and officials of the state board
of health. It is proposed to create 12
hospital districts of from four to six
counties each, wherein campaigns will
be inaugurated for the erection of dis
trict tuberculosis hospitals to be main
tained jointly by the co-operating
counties.
Through the erection of these 12
district hospitals, supplementing the
present sanitaria, anti-tuberculosis
workers believe that the 35,000 vic
tims will be adequately cared for, and
that the people of the state will be
so well protected through this hospi
talization that eventually Ohio’s death
rate of 7,000 per year will be reduced
materially.
Regular Rates.
“Pa, what are literary emoluments?"
“About five dollars a story, son,
and five dollars for a poem.”
Free
This won
derful Kero
sene Vapor
Table Lamp.
200 candle
power for i
cents worth
of kerosene
per hour.
Write us how to secure one FREE.
30 DAYS ONLY
PERFECTION VAPOR LIGHT
COMPANY, FREEPORT, ILL.
DOUGLAS
Over
150
Styles
YOU AVE MONEY BY
WEARING W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES.
For 31 years W. L. Douglas has guaranteed the
•value by having his name and the retail price
stamped on the sole before the shoe3 leave the fac
tory. This protects the wearer against high prices
for inferior shoes of other makes. W. L. Douglas
shoes are always worth what vuu nay for them. If
you could see how carefully w. L. Douglas shoes are
made, and the high grade leathers used, you would t hen
understand why they look better, tit better, hold their
shape and wear longer than other makes for the price.
If the \V\ I.. Douglas shoes are not for sale in your
vicinity, order direct from factory. Shoes sent every
where. Postage free in the L’. S. Write lor Illu»
trail’d Catalog showing how to order by mail.
W. L. DOUGLAS, 210 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
Accordion Send!orPrice usi.
and Kniie SIOUX CITY SKIRTCO.
pip a I inn Sioux City. Iowa
ricSlHly 420 Pierce St.
PINCH OF WAD IS
FELT IN AUSTRIA
Commerce Is Crippled And
Problem of Unemployed Is
Serious—Country, How
ever, Is Quiet.
Vienna, (via Paris), Sept. 21.—Com
merce and industry are paralyzed
throughout the dual monarchy. The
stoppage of export has threatened the
ruin of some of the largest industries,
notably the refining of sugar, millions
of pounds of which are sent annually
to Great Britain, India and other
points. Refiners are endeavoring to
find some means of getting their pro
ducts to England by direct route.
In order to relieve the financial stress
the government has decided to organ
ize a war credit bank with a capital of
$1,200,000 besides a number of loan in
situtions, so that the various indus
trial enterprises may be carried
through the war.
Numerous suggestions for the boy
cotting of goods coming from hostile
countries, notably England, have met
with scanty support in the most in
fluential commercial circles. The
Prague chamber of commerce flatly
refused to enforce such a proposal, say
ing it would bo useless at the present
moment besides being very dangerous
to Austrian commercial interests later.
Outside of Vienna and Budapest
the whole country is lifeless. It is ap
parently denuded of active men and
presents a stiange and oppressive quiet.
The great factories are closed. The
streets of the small towns are deserted
save for a few children here and there.
There are scarcely any workers in the
fields. Women are performing the
heaviest tasks, even to loading of
freight cars.
The trains on most of the lines are
running on restricted schedules and
there are few passengers and there are
solitary soldiers guarding the railway
stations, bridges and tunnels. Troops
are seen rarely, all having gone to tne
front. Red Cross stations have been
set up at the principal depots and
stretchers are ready to receive wound
ed.
The well meant hospitality of the
public in supplying traveling soldiers
with delicacies has had an unfortunate
effect on the peasant soldiers. Un
accustomed to such fare they consume
it greedily and become very ill as a
consenuence.
The Question of caring for the un
employed is assuming serious propor
tions, especially in Vienna and Buda
pest. Many hundreds have been given
work constructing fortifications along
the Danube in the neighborhood of
Vienna. Hundreds more have been
sent from towns into the country to
work in the fields.
The Austrian peasants are showing
great ingenuity in exploiting the
state. They refuse to pay wages to
workers from the city and feed them
miserably, for which they claim $1 a
day from the state for each worker.
The government, however, declines to
yield to such exorbitant demands.
In Vienna funds are being raised
privately to feed the unemployed, but
the demands are fast becoming intol
erable since, besides the unemployed,
the city is crowded with Galician ref
ugees.
Apart from a certain seriousness
exhibited among thinking people, life
in Vienna pursues much the same
course as before the war. Cafes are
filled and some of the theaters are
open. The imperial court opera and
the court theater will be opened soon
for performances four times a week,
the actors having finally agreed to ac
cept reduced salaries for a period of
four months.
Over half the state railway employes
have been called into the army, and,
as a consequence, the railway service
has been greatly reduced. Nine hun
dred new men have been engaged, but
some time must elapse before they will
be competent to run the cars.
A large number of the police also
have rejoined the army, but the city
is perfectly orderly. So far there have
been no demonstrations against the
citizens of hostile countries and there
is no longer an incentive for guarding
the French and British embassies.
Prices are not much above normal,
although an advance which is reported
in the wholesale prices of wheat, bar
ley and rye must soon affect the cost
of flour and bread. The price of pe
troleum is considerably higher. Many
refineries have closed and boring op
erations have ceased. Exports of Ga
lician oil to Germany have increased
because American oil is no longer ar
riving in the usual quantities.
KAISER HAS PICTURE
TAKEN “UNDER FIRE”
Cinematograph Used By Ger
mans To Immortalize Mem
ories of War.
Copenhagen, Sept. 19.—Germany is
making -vigorous efforts in this coun
try to gain favor toward her side of
the war. One of her methods is by
use of the cinematograph.
Representatives of the German
government have arrived here with a
series of film pictures showing the
German army on its best side. The
pictures are said to have been taken
under the kaiser’s personal super
vision.
They show the magnificence of the
German marching and equipment.
The kaiser himself is shown in a
number of "close-up" views. One
picture, labeled, "the kaiser under fire,”
shows him looking through field
glasses, presumably at a distant battle.
Another shows his "war quarters at the
front,” of a series of asbestos "huts”
very comfortably furnished.
The films are to be supplied to mov
ing picture theaters in Denmark, Nor
way, Sweden and other neutral coun
tries at a very low price.
There was also a free distribution of
pamphlets in this city, written in ex
cellent Danish, telling of the splendid
financial condition of Germany and
declaring she was forced into the war.
The pamphlets deny reports of British,
French and Russian victories.
ARREST BANKERS.
San Francisco, Sopt. 19.—By order
of the United States district court. E.
E. Lewis and his son, George Lewis,
former president and cashier respec
tively of the Bank of Commerce, of
Coweta, Okla., will return there under
the care of a United States deputy
marshal to face a charge of embezzle
ment. The two were arrested here last
night.
4 4
4 KAISER NOT DOWN AND 4
4 OUT, SAYS CLEMENCEAU 4
4 4!
4 Bordeaux, Sept. 19.—In an in- 4
4 terview here, Georges Clemen- 4
4 ceau, famous French statesman 4
4 and author, says: 4
4 “It would be madness to 4
4 imagine that Germany is down 4
4 and out. The great part of her 4
4 military resources remains in- 4
4 tact, and her automatic discip- 4
4 line will soon reassert itself. 4
4 "The stakes are too great for 4
4 the kaiser to abandon the 4
4 struggle now. I pay him the 4
4 honor of believing his resist- 4
4 ance will be desperate, but des- 4
4 tiny grips his throat. 4
4 “Grave mistakes were made 4
4 on our side for which we might 4
4 have paid dear, but we repaired 4
4 them in a brilliant manner. We 4
4 must now prepare for still 4
4 greater efforts. The allies must 4
4 create a new independent, civ- 4
4 ilized Europe out of .which 4
4 Germany must be eliminated.” 4
4 4
4444444444444++4♦♦44444444
REOPEN RATE CASE
AT ROARS’ REQUEST
Interstate Commerce Commis
sion May Reverse Itself On
Advance Denial-President
May Have Paved Way.
Washington, D. C„ Sept 21.—'The In
terstate Commerce commission today
decided to reopen the eastern advance
rate case and will begin hearings here
on October 19. A formal order to that
effect was prepared.
The decision of the commission comes
upon the recent application of the
railroads which was made after Presi
dent Wilson had received a representa
tive committee of railroad presidents at
the White House. How far that con
ference may have gone toward pre
paring the way for a reopening of the
case is not known. It was said at the
time that the railroad men asked the
president to appeal to the country to
treat the railroads in a spirit of co
operation and the president responded
by sending a sympathetic letter to
Chairman Frank Trumbull, of the
Chesapeake & Ohio.
The railroads also asked the com
mission to modify its recent decision,
which granted Increases west of Pitts
burgh and denied all increases between
the Great Lakes and the Atlantic sea
board. Under the law the commission
cannot modify that order without
hearings: the decision to reopen the
case brings the whole question up
again for review in which the railroads
will press for the five per cent increases
throughout the territory east of the
Mississippi and north of the Ohio and
Potomac rivers.
Western railroads already are pre
paring applications for increases in
freight rates, so that when the com
mission begins the rehearing it will
have substantially before it applica
tions for increased freight rates from
the Atlantic to the Pacific.
The eastern railroads asked for a
reopening, not upon the showing they
made at the hearings prior to the de
cision, but upon conditions which the
managers say have become apparent
since. The showing of the roads for June
which was not available when the case
was before the commission last time
and the exigencies which have been
thrust upon them by the European war,
with the attendant difficulties of getting
new capital and the falling off in ex
port traffic, were cited as the princi
pal reasons why the case should be
reopened.
Shippers’ organizations, which fought
the increases previously, have given
notice that they will oppose further ad
vances on the rehearing. They will be
represented by counsel and will have
opportunity to oppose new increases as
they did before.
The Increases the railroads ask are
identical with those which were denied.
Although described as 5 per cent ad
vances, the commission's recent deci
sion declared some of them ranged as
high as 35 per cent. The principal
heavy commodities west of Pittsburgh,
Buffalo and Charleston, such as coal
and coke, which constitutes more than
half of the total traffic of the rail
roads, will be affected.
All classes and commodity rates east,
for which the commission denied in
creases entirely, will be affected by the
new case.
The formal order of the commission
follows:
Upon consideration of a petition by re
spondents for modification of orders here
tofore entered in the above entitled cases,
and good rause appearing therefor:
It is ordered that further hearings In
said oases be, and are hereby granted;
said hearings to be limited to presenta
tion of facts disclosed and occurrences
originating subsequently to the date upon
which tlio records previously made In
these cases were closed.
It is further ordered that pending such
rehearing and further order of the com
mission In the above entitled cases, the
commission’s report, findings and orders
heretofore entered therein shall remain
In full force and effect.
It ts further ordered that this proceed
ing be assigned for hearing at the office
of the commission in Washington, D. C..
on the 19th of October, 1914, at 10 o'clock
a. m.
It is further ordered that a copy of this
order be served upon each of the parties
to the above entitled cases.
U.S. SENDS SINEWS
OF WAR TO CANADA
Colt Gun Works is Supplying
Arms And Ammunition To
England.
Toronto, Sept. 19.—That supplies of
quick-firing guns, machine guns and
ammunition for the Canadian artillery
are coming from the United States is
generally understood in well-informed
circles. Sixteen heavily armored mo
tor cars, equipped with machine guns,
contributed by Clifford Kifton, former
minister of (he interior, who is well
known in New York as an exhibitor
at the horse shows, can only be de
scribed as purely United States equip
ment.
The Uritish war office is urging tho
rapid movement to the continent of all
the artillery from Canada, although it
is understood that some of the Cana
dian expeditionary force’s artillery, es
pecially the quick-firers, have already
been shipped direct to England from
the Colt works in Hartford.
I IIL JIULM I LIMLJ
UP Will FOES OF
Filbuster On Waterway Measure
Continues Despite Desperate
Efforts of Opposition—
Burton Holds Floor.
NIGHT MEETS DAY; NO REST
Parliamentary Sharpers Snipe
At Speakers But Burton And
Kenyon Talk On—Scour
City For Quorum.
Washington, D. C„ Sept. 21.—The
day and night fight on the river
and harbor bill In the Senate
showed signs of a break today,
with victory for the filibustering re
publicans, when It became known
that President Wilson favored
abandoning the bill and substitut
ing a new resolution to appropriate
$12,000,000 to $15,000,000 to continue
only those projects under way. The
original bill proposed $93,000,000.
Officials said the president be
lieved the bill should be aban
doned in its present form, because
government revenues, already fall
ing because of the European war,
must be supplemented by a war
tax. The economy measure will ex
tend all along the line, even in
creases In salaries to officials will
be abandoned.
Washington, Sept. 21.—Though a
dreary, continuous session, the Senate
today dragged its weary way In an
effort to break the stubborn filibuster
against the river and harbor bill con
ducted by Senators Burton and Ken
yon and other opponents of the
measure.
It was a red-eyed, bedraggled Sen
ate that sat in solemn silence listen
ing to interminable criticisms of the
measure today. For the Senate was
suffering from the effects of an all
night session. Democratic leaders of
the Senate, ably supported in point of
numbers, had brought to bear every
parliamentary check they could find in
an effort to break the continuous flow
of river and harbor information im
parted by Senator Burton. Matching
parliamentary strategy for strategy,
Senator Burton, however, held the
floor and spoke sometimes to an al
most empty chamber, and whenever
he could to a full attendance brought
by a carefully engineered demand for
a quorum.
Lewis Captured.
several times a roll call failed to
bring enough senators to do business
and a squad of deputy sergeants at
arms, bearing writs of arrest, started
out in taxicabs to bring in the absent
members. Senator Lewis, the demo
cratic whip, was the first brought in.
He was hurried from his bed at the
Army and Navy club by a deputy, aft
er the latter had threatened club at
tendants with arrest because of their
alleged refusal to permit the senator
to be disturbed. Senator Smith, of
Maryland, was located at a theater by
the sergeant at arms and hurried to
the chamber. Senator Weeks, of
Massachusetts, reported to the Senate
some time after a quorum had been
reached and after being informed he
would be arrested and promised the
sergeant at arms to hurry to the Sen
ate in order to avoid being brought in
by the arm.
Senator Burton took the floor short
ly before 6 o’clock last night, after the
democrats had determined on a con
tinuous session. Despite all efforts to
dislodge him, he continued to talk and
shortly after midnight the lack of a
quorum caused the ordering of writs
of arrest. He had an hour and a half
of rest while the majority of the Sen
ate was herded into the chamber, and
then resumed, his voice a trifle husky,
but still strong.
Senators Recline.
The huskiness soon wore off and at
3 o’clock Senator Burton, who, during
his resting spell had discarded his
frock coat for an alpaca house Jacket
and had donned bed room slippers, was
plodding up and down, pointer in hands
before a scries "of charts which he had
placed on the wall of the Senate
chamber.
Half a dozen senators formed the
audience then and one of them, Sen
ator Vardaman, was stretched out on
a couch in the rear of the chamber.
The cloak rooms and nearby com
mittee rooms were filled with slum
bering senators waiting the summons
of the quorum bell. In the interval,
while they waited for the sergeant at
arms to gather in a quorum the cham
ber was almost deserted. Half a dozen
senators gathered about Senator Rob
inson, of Arkansas who told funny stor
ies. Senator Ashhurst who then oc
cupied the chair was forced to call
Senator Williams of Missouri, to or
der for whistling “How Dry I Am” in
the chamber.
GERMANS TO PROTECT
BELGIAN ART OBJECTS
Appoint Commissioner To Pre
vent Burglary And Pillage
In Cities.
Berlin, Sept. 19.—The German gov
ernor of Belgium, General Von Her
Goltz, has appointed Privy Counsellor
I)r. Von Faleke, to decide on ways and
means to protect the Belgium treas
ures of art against burglury nnd pil
lage. Dr. Von Faleke is now making a
tour of Louvain, Namur, Huy, Nivolles,
and Liege, accompanied by a Belgian
art expert, named Orletil, and will take
whatever steps to this end may be
ncessary.
It is announced here that three aero
planes are again over Paris.
The British naval commission has
left Constantinople.
The Russian general, Partos. who or
dered the shooting of all the male In
habitants and the burning of all vil
lages in J3ast Prussia, has been tried
by a German court martial.
The excess Of births over deaths in
France during 1913 was only 10 per
10,000 inhabitants as against 127 for
Germany, 142 for Italy, 105 for Lngland
and 130 for Hungary.
FRENCH AND ENGLISH SAY
BADLY BATTERED DIVISION
UNDER GENERAL VON KLUCK
IS SLOWLY GIVING GROUND
Although Germans Claim To Ha ve Gained Advantages At Some
Points And French At Others, London Declares Oft Re
peated Reports of Success of Enveloping Movement of Brit
ish on Extreme Left Are Founded on Truth And That They
Mark Beginning of End of Bloody Battle of Aisne.
KAISER'S FORGES ARE STRONGLY INTRENCHED .
Reinforcements Also Have Arrived From Lorraine And Belgium
—Both Armies Are Badly Exhausted—Believed Allied Ar
mies Will Make Final Superhuman Effort to Storm;
Emeny’s Trenches With Infantry—All Accounts Confirm'
Unprecedented Losses In Killed And Wounded. 1
London, Sept. 20.—If reliance can be placed on the British ant
French assertions that the right wing of the German armies whicl
stretch across northeastern France is slowly falling back, then th<
battle of the Aisne seems likely to follow the course of the battle oi
the Marne, for there it was the German right which first fell back
across the river.
Along the 150-mile front, the rear of which is scarred with
graves of thousands already killed, two armies, comprising millions
of men, rapidly approaching exhaustion and standing in trenches
deep with water, await an opportunity to drive a wedge through
the opposing line and thus end the terrible strain which must last as
long as Emperor William’s troops hold their now strongly en
trenched positions, and as long as the allied forces can face the mur
derous hail of projectiles from the hidden batteries of their op->
ponents.
Both the British and the French realize that it will take almost
a superhuman effort to win, the strength of the German position)
being emphasized in almost every dispatch from the front.
tnose in nonaon cioseiy xunumue i™
war base their chief hope of the allies
In a possible envelopment of the Ger
man right wing under General Von
Kluck, who heretofore has shown him
self a master of strategy. Renewed ac
tivity on the part of the vllled cavalry
and a significant movement of allied
troops to tho north and west of the
German line of communication together
with a possible advance of fresh allied
troops from the northwest through
Amiens, gives expression of theso
hopes.
Eye witnesses and surgeons testify
to a paradox on the modern battlefield
—tho recurring frequency of hand to
hand fighting, which so many military
men predicted was a thing of the past.
Bayonet wounds and other cumulative
evidence, however, show that the sold
iers have been engaged in a death grip,
during which they resorted to their side
arms and in some cases to their hands.
Another fact which stands out amidst
the varied accounts of the hostilities
Is the utter prodigality with which the
Germans throw forward man after man
In close formation in an attempt to
carry a position. The tremendous losses
they have sustained seem not to have
changed these tactics.
- I
Dispatches received from Paris latej
last night, referring to a lull in the|
struggle, are taken here to refer to tho\
artillery only, and today may see the
most sanguinary Infantry fighting slnca
the start of the battle of the Aisne one
week ago.
Burial of the dead on the battle field
goes on steadily. German prisoners are
being forced to perform this task be-i
hind the allies 'line, where thousands
of their comrades lay Jvfter the French,
and British advance.
A report from German army head
quarters made public in Berlin today,
announces German and Austrian suc
cesses In all theaters of the war. In'
France It is declared a decisive at-j
tack is being made north of Noyon.
Beaumont has been stormed and 2,500
French have been captured; while)
counter attacks of the allies along the,
entire front have been repulsed easily.
Unofficial advices from the Gcrmanl
capital say that members of the gen
eral staff manifest implicit confidence1
In a favorable outcome of the fighting!
In France. Their armies are being re
inforced and their lines of communlcar»:
tion reformed, it Is stated.
Official Statements Given Out
by Both Sides Claim Advantage
Berlin. Sept. 21 (By wireless to Say
vllle L. I.)—The following official
statement from the German headquart
ers was issued today:
‘‘It is reported that a decisive at
tack is being made by the Thirteenth
and Fourth army corps and parts of
other German divisions south of Noyon.
with loss.
“Beaumont has been stormed and 2,
500 French prisoners captured.
"Attacks along the entire battle front
are being easily repulsed.”
“Many guns and prisoners have been
captured, though the number is not
yet available.
“The invasion of the Alpine riflemen
over the Vosges into the Breisach val
ley is repulsed.”
Paris, Sept. 19.—The official state
ment given out In Paris this after
noon says the French have advanced
on the right bank of the Oise; that the
Germans are bringing reinforcements
from Lorraine to the River Aisne; that
the enemy is holding firm on the cen
ter, and that the army of the German
crown prince continues to retreat. The
text of the statement is as follows:
"First on our left wing, on the right
bank of the River Oise, in the direc
tion of Noyon, we have advanced. We
hold all the heights of the right bank
of the Aisne, opposite an enemy who
seems to be reinforcing himself by the
bringing of troops from Lorraine.
“Second, on the center, the Germans
have not moved from the deep trenches
constructed by them. On our right
we occupy Menarqueglise Charlepont
and Outz. on the heights to the north
of the River Aisne. We have advanced
slightly in a few places. The attacks
attempted by the Germans against the
English artillery have been checked at
Troyon between Solssons and CraonneJ
From Craonne to Rhelms we have rej
pulsed the counter attack execute*!
during the night. The enemy tried bun
has not succeeded In taking the offens-j
lve against Rhelms.
“At the center from Rhelms to thej
Argonne mountains, the enemy Is re-.
Inforcing Its situation by Important}
fortifications and taking an attitude!
merely defensive. On the east of thej
Argonne and in the Woevre valley, the
situation is unchanged.
“At the right in Lorraine and Vosgeq
the Germans occupy positions defens
ively organized close to the frontier.
Washington, Sept. 19.—An official
Bordeaux dispatch to the French em
bassy today says:
“The battle continues on the whole
front from the River Oise to the
River Woevre during the ISth, without
any important change In the situation
at any point.
“At the left in the battle of the Oise,
wing the army of the German crown
prince continues its movement of re
treat. Our advance in I.,orraine Is reg
ular.
“Summing up, the two opposing
armies, strongly entrenched, are de-t
llverlng partial attacks along the en-!
tire front without it being possible tq
record any decisive result for one side
or the other."
London, Sept. 19.—The official infor
mation bureau today gave out the fol
lowing statement regarding the situa
tion in France:
“The situation remains unchanged. A
counter attack against the first divi
sion, delivered during the night, was
driven back.
"The weather is bad and it is raining
continuously.”
Exhausted Armies Will Make
Final Supreme Effort To Win
London, Sept. 21.—The battle of the
Aisne, now in its sixth day, and begin
ning as a rear guard action has de
veloped into the supreme conflict of
the French campaign.
The latest official news sets forth
that there has been a lull in the titan
tic nrtillery duel. This is taken to in
dicate that today’s struggle may be
marked by a tremendous advance of
infantry, such as made the battle field
of the Marne a scene of indescribable
horror and desolation.
The news from Berlin concerning the
positioin of the German forces has a
more confident ling. The admission
lias been made that the German army
was short of ammunition, but this
shortage has been rectified and sup
plies and reinforcements are being sent
forward without trouble.
A French officer, who has Just re
turned from tiie battle front is author
ity for the statement that the strain
on both side of the line in France,
promises soon to get beyond human
endurance. He likens the antagonists
to two exhausted pugilists and says
that soon they will be unable to inflict
further punishment on each other. If
this situation develops the only pos
sible way for the allies to prevent a
weary and disheartening winter cam
paign, it is argued here, would be a
successful assault on the German com
munications. Such an assault, it is
admitted by the allies, will not bo an
easy matter. The Belgian army is
harrying the invader, probably prevents
the despatch of any great part of the
Germany army now occupying Belgium
to reinforce their countrymen in France
but the Belgium forces are not strong
enough seriously to interfere with
communications, while the allies must
break through some part of the line
or turn the German right before they
can effectively threaten the communi
cation of the invader.
TAKE AUSTRIAN SHIP.
London, Sept. 19.—The Star has
published a dispatch from Rome say
ing that warships cruising in the,
Adriatic have captured an Austrian
steamer flying the Greek flag loaded,
with arms and ammunition destined;
i for Albania.