The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 25, 1915, Image 2

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    HEWS OFJE WEEK
CONDENSATIONS OF GREATER OR
LESSER IMPORTANCE.
II BOILING DOWN OF EVENTS
National, Political, Personal and Other
Matters In Brief Form for All
Classes of Readers.
WAR NEWS.
% Colonel Heussler, a Swiss military
statistician, calculates the total losses
in killed in the present European war
at 5,000,000.
* • •
Three Austrian aeroplanes recently
dropped bombs upon the principal
square in Verona, Italy, killing thirty
persons and seriously injuring thirty
more.
• • •
Eugene Bonneton, well known as a
painter of scenes of Old Paris, whose
Port St. Nicholas is on exhibition at
San Francisco exposition, has been
killed in action in the Argonne.
• * •
Field Marshal von Mackensen will
take command of the Turks' Darda
nelles operations when he arrives in
Constantinople, advices frcm the
Turkish capital state. It is predicted
that this will be soon.
* * *
It Is reported that virtually the en
tire food supply of Germany is ex
pected soon to pass under govern
mental control, to secure an equitable
distribution of supplies at fair prices
among the entire population, rich and
poor.
• * *
Greece has intimated that it will
disarm the allied troops in the Bal
kans if tiiey are forced to retreat into
Greece from Serbia and Bulgaria. As
a result, the allies are demanding
that Greece give them a plain state
ment of her attitude.
» • *
A "finish fight” in the European
war will mean utter ruin for Great
Britain as well as for Germany,
which is prepared to fight six years,
said C. F. Trevelyan, liberal, in the
house of commons during discussion
of conduct of the war.
* * *
The hospital ship Anglia, with
about 300 wounded men aboard, in
addition to the crew, nurses and at.
ter.dants, bound from France for Do
ver, England, struck a mine in mid
channel, and sank. Nearly 100 men,
most of them seriously wounded, lost
their lives.
GENERAL.
Thirty-one men were killed under
ground by a coal dust explosion in the
coal mine of the Northwestern Im
provement company at Ravensdale,
Wash.
* * *
A fuel oil tank with a capacity of
2,000,000 gallons Is to be constructed
by the U. S. Navy department on the
shore at Fortmouth, near Newport,
R. I., as a source of supply for battle
ships and other naval vessels.
* * *
Dr. Josephine Baker, director of the
child hygiene board of health of New
York, is authority for the statement
thut the lives of more than 20,000 in
fants have been saved in New York
alone since the bureau began its work
eight years ago.
* * *
District Attorney R. H. Jackson, at
Pittsburgh, swore out warrants
against forty-five persons accused of
violating the election laws in the pri
mary election on September 21.
Within a short time twenty-five ar
rests had been made.
• • •
Destruction of birds, according to
Col. G. C. Shields, president of the
League of American Sportsmen, costs
the United States 51.000,000,000 a
year. Col. Shields made the asser
■0 tion in an address before the Chicago
chapter of the Daughters of the Amer
ican Revolution.
* * *
That the value of the poultry In
terests in the United States now ap
proximates 1,000,000,000, or more
than enough to buy out several of the
live stock industries, was the state
ment made by E. B. Thompson of
Amema, N. Y.f in an address which
opened the convention at San Fran
cisco of the American Poultry asso
ciation
• • *
The Bollinger baby, a defective
mite, whose mother, on professional
advice, decided it should not undergo
an operation which probably would
save its life, died at the German-Am
erican hospital in Chicago.
• • *
Twenty-one thousand dollars is ap
propriated annually by the Oklahoma
legislature for the prevention of ac
cidents in factories and shops, and
$3 "•,000 is appropriated for the prop
agation of “rabbits and things,”
Harry Myers told the “safety first”
meeting at Oklahoma City.
* * •
Laying of the four-ton cornerstone
of the new state capitol of Oklahoma
at Oklahoma City, on the eighth anni
versary of Oklahoma’s statehood, was
attended by elaborate exercises and
the full Masonic ritual.
* * *
Socialists of Texas, in session at
Waco, adopted a platform which con
tains the recommendation that the
manufacture or sale of liquor in Tex
as be made a felony. The federal gov
ernment was urged to manufacture
liquo*- to be sold to the consumer at
cost.
* * *
Exports from the port of Philadel
phia during the month of October
■were greater than those of any other
month in the records of the'Philadel
phia customs house, according to fig
ures available.
Booker T. Washington, foremost
teaeher and leader of the negro race,
died at his home at Tuskegee, Ala
bama, near the Tuskegee Institute, of
which he was founder and president
* ♦ ♦
Three physicians who examined Al
fred Jennings, a cattleman of Ells
worth county, Kansas, who is ill with
a disease which has been pronounced
; foot and mouth disease, have confirm
ed the original diagnosis.
• • *
More than $1,500,000 was saved
shippers and railroad companies dur
ing the first six months of 1915 by
efficient and careful packing, marking
and handling of freight shipments, ac
cording to reports made at the semi
annual meeting of the American Rail
i way association at its closing session
! at Chicago.
« * *
Governor John B. Kendrick of Wyo
ming appointed a committee to rep
! resent Wyoming in a conference with
a similar committee representing Ne
j braska to determine whether it will
i be or will not be feasible to construct
! a 600-mile pipe line from Casper to
! Omaha to transport Wyoming oil to
| the Nebraska metropolis.
• • •
i Two thousand six hundred and sev
i enty-seven persons walked down the
• sawdust trail in eight Billy Sunday
meetings held in Syracuse, N. Y.,
1 Sunday, November 14. Following the
I tabernacle service Sunday issued a
statement saying ‘‘this is the first
time since Saint Peter preached at
Pentecost 1,900 years ago that so
j many persons have been converted to
Christianity in one day.”
SPORTING.
Mike Gibbons and ‘‘Young” Ahern,
middleweights will meet in a ten
round contest at Milwaukee the first
week of December for a purse of
$10,000.
*• * *
j Hal Boy, race horse formerly own
ed by Ed Peterson of Omaha, again
won a big stake at the San Francisco
exposition harness meet, taking first
place in a $20,000 pace.
• • •
More than 50,000 people, the great
est crowd that ever witnessed a Yale
Princeton football game, saw Yale
sweep the Princeton Tigers to a
heart-breaking defeat at New Haven
by a score of 13 to 7.
* * *
Jack Ness, first baseman of the Oak
land, Cal., club. Coast league, and
holder of the world's record for hits
made in consecutive games, has sign
ed a contract for next year with the
Chicago American league club.
* * *
Nebraska university’s football team
won the Missouri valley conference
championship once more by swamping
Kansas, 33 to 0, on their own campus
at Lawrence. The victory was a
clean-cut demonstration of superior
ity by the Nebraska men.
* * *
Frank C. Zehrung of Lincoln, Neb.,
member of a theatrical syndicate that
controls the Brandeis of Omaha and
theaters in St. Joseph, Wichita, To
peka and Lincoln, has been elected
president of the Western league to
succeed "Tip” O’Neill, according to
a message received at Lincoln.
• * *
Charley White of Chicago, who was
defeated two months ago by Milburn
Saylor of Indianapolis, turned on his
conqueror at Boston and knocked
him out a minute and a half after the
bout started. After being floored for
a couut of seven, Saylor struggled to
his feet only to go down again for
the full count.
WASHINGTON.
The Navy department announces
that Commander Arthur MacArthur
of the battleship Nebraska has been
assigned to command the mineship
Sau Francisco.
* • *
A formal order was issued by the
Postoffice department directing post
masters hereafter to refuse to accept
parcel post packages for Germany,
Austria and Hungary.
* * *
Democratic members of the ways
and means committee, it was an
nounced will meet November 29, to
take up the organization of the new
house of representatives.
* * *
Tentative plans are being consider
ed, Secretary Daniels announces, for
two 36,000-ton battleships to be in
cluded in the first year’s part of the
five-year building program congress
will be asked to approve. There are
no warships so large afloat anywhere
in the world now.
* * *
Information is wanted by Secretary
Redfield as to the whereabouts of six
teen members of the former crew of
the American steamer Kroonland of
the Red Slar line, to whom medals
awarded by congress for their heroism
in rescuing eighty-nine persons from
the barge steamer Voltuno, in the
North Atlantic ocean, in October,
1913, remain to be presented.
* » «
More than $100,000 is now held by
the Federal Reserve board in its gold
settlement fund to the credit of the
reserve banks and reserve agents.
The fund has now been in existence
six months.
* * *
No belligerent power will be asked
by the United States to grant as a
favor assurance of Immunity from
seizure for ships flying the American
flag. This was matte plain by State
department officials in resppnse to in
quiries.
* * *
The twelve federal reserve banks
earned $221,954 during October, while
their current expenses during that
period were $134,017, according to a
statement issued by the federal re
serve board.
* • •
Definite steps toward determining
the place of business men’s training
camps in the National defense pro
gram were taken at the War depart
ment when a special board of officers
was appointed to consider the subject
and make recommendations to Secre
tary Garrison.
i
The cornerstone of the new $15,000
school house at Dunbar was laid last
week.
Deshler is asking to have a com
pany of the national guard Installed
there.
At a special election held at David
City a $00,000 bond Issue for a new
high school carried.
The new Swedish Free church at
Oakland was dedicated recently. The
edirice cost $8,500.
William Schellack of Hastings,
while enjoying a hearty laugh with
some friends, dropped dead.
The annual meeting of the state
bottlers’ association will be held at
Lincoln January 26 and 27.
Two full carloads of poultry, con
taining 212 coops, was shipped from
Falls City to New York points last
week.
An artificial ice plant is being talk
ed of for Plainview, to be run in con
nection with the electric and water'
works plant.
Nebraska Wesleyan won the col
legiate football championship of the
state by defeating Doane college at
Crete, 7 to 0.
The Kearney Commercial club has
voted in favor of municipal concerts
in that city on Sunday afternoons dur
ing the winter months.
Fire, thought to have been started
from sparks from an engine, destroyed
the Union Pacific depot at North
Platte, entailing a loss estimated at
$50,000.
ltev. J. H. Dirks, who has been pas
tor of the stone church, several miles
northwest of Stella, for over forty
years, has decided to retire from the
ministry.
A most successful union revival
meeting just closed at Guide Rock
after a five weeks’ campaign during
which time eighty-nine persons claim
ed conversion.
Four carloads of walnut logs, to be
used in the manufacture of gun stocks
for the European armies, were loaded
at Sprague and shipped to Kansas
City last week.
As the outcome of several prelimi
nary meetings, a half-hundred Omaha
singers have organized a male chorus
to be composed of 200 of the best
singers in the city.
A committee selected by the Kear
ney Commercial club lias been assign
ed to look into the matter of the feas
ibility of the location of another al
falfa meal mill in that-city.
John M. Linden of Madison. Wis.,
is conducting a very successful re
vival at Gothenburg. Meetings are
held in a warehouse whioh seats 1,500
people. It is crowded nightly.
Ministers of Fremont have decided
to hold fifty union prayer meetings
and preaching services during Decem
ber in preparation for the Fremont re
vivals which are to open January 2.
Plans are being made for the build
ing of a community house at Adams,
whch will provide an auditorium, li
brary, reading rooms and a rest room
for men and women of the community.
For rescuing a man from certain
death by crawling on the pilot of a
freight engine and pushing the man
from the track, R. L. Young, a Fre
mont brakeman, is expected to be
awarded with a Carnegie hero medal.
UUIU5 ill CL uig lUll J -
ing car miraculously escaped death
when their automobile plunged over a
150-foot embankment on Breakneck
hill, near Lisco, crashing to pieces at
the bottom. All were injured, but
none fatally.
The campaign for members of the
Beatrice Y. W. C. A. is on. Committees
haie so far secured a large number of
plejges for membership and also se
cured subscriptions amounting to
about $1,000 toward the expenses of
the organization.
While digging a post hole at his
home in Ewing Alex Napier unearthed
an old Indian rifle at a depth of from
two to three feet. The rifle stock was
entirely decayed away, but the barrel,
aside from the rust, was intact and
gave evidence of havng been in the
ground for many years.
The prospects for a new $150,000
hotel in Fremont have been brighten,
ed considerably by the announcement
of the Eno project that they have al
ready secured subscriptions for
$50,000. If $100,000 is subscribed an
effort will be made to bond the build
ing for $50,000 additional.
Lux Brothers, living four miles
west of North Bend, lost four good
horses and have three more that are
very sick from overeating of wheat.
Tins loss was caused by a rat which
ate a bole through the bin. The
wheat ran out and the horses found it
before the owner did.
A movement is being talked of at
the South Omaha Stock Yards ex
change to have the legislature set
aside certain months- of the year as
an open season for dogs that have
been in the habit of damaging sheep
and stock in dfferent parts of the
state.
Forty-six Protestant churches, rep
resenting 75 per cent of the Omaha
churches affiliated with the Billy Sun
day campaign, reported to the Omaha
ministerial union membership acces
sions of approximately 2,G32 since
the campaign closed.
The seedling mile of the Lincoln
highway just completed at Kearney,
will be named “Watson boulevard” in
honor of H. D. Watson, who in the
past years planted thousands of elms
along this highway which are now
making abundant shade and beautify
ing the stretch of road.
The town of Humphrey now has
three hanks. The Fanners’ State
bank is the name of the third institu
tion, which opened for business a few
days ago.
Editors Af foreign language newspa
pers of the state held a meeting at
Lincoln recently and formed an or
ganization known as the Nebraska
Foreign Press association. Its pur
poses, the editors made plain, are to
he the same as those of the larger or
ganization—the boosting of this great
state, the heralding to the world of
the opportunities that exist here.
Plans for the new German Lutheran
church at Staplehuret have been com
pleted.
The National Association of Hotel
Clerks will hold their annual conven
tion in Omaha, beginning December 7.
Steps have been taken by citizens
at Wausa for the formation of a far
mers’ and merchants’ club.
A movement lias been launched in
Fremont to revive the firemens’ tour
nament, formerly very popular in Ne
braska.
The annual convention of the Ne
braska State Irrigation association
-will be held at Bridgeport on Decem
ber 7, S and 9.
Omaha won the contest for the next
meeting of the Nebraska Christian un
ion at the state convention recently
held In Norfolk.
Wausa citizens expect to form a
community club to which all people
in the vicinity will be invited to in
terest themselves.
In an election at Table Rock for
the selection of a candidate for post
mater, Charles H. Carmichael re
ceived the most votes.
Two blocks of bithulithic paving
has been completed at Columbus, it
being the first paving of streets with
that process in the state.
Employes of the Dempster factory
at Beatrice, who have been working
on a five-day, nine-hour basis for sev
eral months, have returned to a six
day basis.
William Renneccus, residing eight
miles east of Madison, blew off the top
of his head with a shotgun. No motive
is assigned and the coroner’s inquest
found death due to suicide.
Ten thousand people attended the
big barbecue given by the merchants
of Superior recently. Business men of
the city say It was the greatest gath
ering in Superior’s history.
It is predicted that the tabernacle
at Seward will have to be enlarged as
the Hamilton evangelistic meetings
progress. Good crowds were in attend
ance at each session of the beginning
week.
The athletic beard of the Beatrice
high school has decided upon Friday
evening. December 3, as the date for
the annual football banquet, which
will be held at the Commercial club
rooms.
The membership of the Episcopal
church at Beatrice is planning on the
erection of a parslt house to have two
stories and to be used for church en
tertainments and other public gather
ings. The plans call for an outlay of
about $15,000.
A new steel bridge one-quarter mile
long has just been completed over the
Platte river near Gibbon. This makes
a permanent structure in place of the
former wooden affair, and affords
much greater safety than was en
joyed with the old bridge.
Loomis' third annual farmers’ in
stitute live stock and poultry show
will be held on December 2 and 3.
With good crops this season and a
larger premium list than usual it is j
expected that this year’s exhibit will
eclipse any previously held.
The first opening of the “saw dust
trail” at Hamilton Union evangelistic
tabernacle at Hastings resulted in 134
converts from an audience aggregat
ing 7,200 people. The “trail” was
opened at the end 6f the second week
in the six weeks' campaign.
upon tne urgent request ot his pas- j
tor, John Sheeley, Hastings saloon j
keeper, agreed to allow a relgious
service held in his place of business, j
Miss Cartright of the Hamilton evan
gelistic party lead the meeting, assist
ed by other women and church work
ers.
A party of four hunters who just re
turned to Greeley, report the discov
ery of two new lakes northwest of
Bartlett, in Wheeler county. Resi
dents of that section cannot account
for the appearance of the lakes, as
they attained a depth of twenty or
thirty feet and are not receding.
Formation of the Master Builders’
organization of the state was accom
plished in Lincoln recently by half a
hundred of the leading construction
men and contractors of the state.
Leaders in the movement plan to get
these interests together for the good
of the business and for the betterment
of building conditons.
In the election for the north drain
age district organized along the
Platte river in the northern boundary
of Kearney county, on the estimate
made the board of directors and engi
neers and the incurring of the liabil
ity, the ballot for the project was al
most unanimous, 6.43S acre votes
being cast for. and only 280-acre votes
against the project. The ditch will
be more than a mile long
Joseph Hathaway, a farmer, living
near Murray, came near losing his
life from being trampled and kicked
by a maddened horse. Mr. Hath
away had been butchering and his
clothing was plentifully spattered
with blood, and upon going into the
barn, where his team was standing,
after dark, one of the horses became
excited, presumably from the smell
of the Mood and in kicking and strik
ing knocked Mr. Hathaway under its
feet, where it trampled him in a vic
ious manner.
The Intermountain Light and Power
company has a force of men at work
on the streets of Chadron, putting in
the mains for the steam heating of
the business part of that city.
Fire destroyed the stock and fix
tures of the Anselmo Mercantile com
pany cf that place. Shortly after the
fire was discovered and while the
firement were working to subdue tho
flames, another fire was discovered in
the Taylor meat market, one block
from the first one! This was soon
subdued and the loss was confined to
fixtures, amounting to $500.
The Missouri Pacific railroad in
federal court at Lincoln filed a $50,000
bond thus making immediately effect
ive the fede*al injunction granted it
against enforcement of Nebraska 2
cent a mile fare law.
An organization is being perfected
in Buffalo county of a stock breeders’
association which will be composed of
stock raisers who are actively en
gaged in the business in the county.
The purpose of the association is to
encourage the breeding of a higher
grade of animals than the average
farmer now handles.
•
#
1ST LEAVE STATE
LAW DEFIERS TO BE DRIVEN OUT
OF UTAH, SAYS GOV. SPRY.
WILL USE MILITIA.IF NEEDED
Declares if Officers Do Not Fulfill
Command, He Will Do it Himself.
Public Favors Move.
Salt Lake, Utah. — Joseph Hill
strom’s execution, which took place
here November 19, for the murder of
J. J- Morrison and Morrison’s son,
January 10, 1914, was followed by
Governor Spry’s announcement that
he would “clear the state of the law
less element that now infested it.”
“Every law-breaker, every man who
defies law and order, every man who
is opposed to law and order—call
themselves what they will—will be
driven out of the state,” he said. “1
am going to see that the work is
started at once. If the city officers
and others whose duty it is, do not
do so, I will do it myself. I am going
to see that inflammatory street speak
ing is stopped and at once, let them
call it by "free speech’ or any other
naru ethey wish.”
The governor said he did not be
lieve it would be necessary to use the
state militia, but that the militia
would be used if necessary to clean
the state of the men who have been
writing threatening letters and mak
ing incendiary speeches. It is known
that a considerable amount of evi
dence has been collected by the state
in the last five months, and the gover
nor said very emphatically that he in
tended to adopt drastic measures to
end the condition of alarm that has
existed here as a result of the agita
tion of the Hilstrom case. Local pub
lic sentiment appears to be strongly
in favor of the governor’s attitude.
Villa Denounces U. S.
Nogales, Ariz.—A proclamation at
tributed to Villa which was posted in
Nogales refers to President Wilson
as an “evangelistic professor of philo
sophy,” and declares that Mexico can
not be pacified by Carranza because
the people will not accept a govern
ment forced upon them by the United
States. “The proclamation is ad
dressed to my compatriots and the
people of the United States,” and
reads in part:
"The tyranny of the northern re
public places me in a position in
which it is necessary to make known
the facts. We went to the Washing
ton peace conference in good faith
and with the noble hope of terminat
ing the war and finding an honorable
and lasting peace. The Mexican peo
ple cannot be consolidated by the
Carranza government, because they
will not accept a government forced
upon them by Woodrow Wilson. Car
ranza practically delivered the entire
republic into the hands of the Yan
kees.”
Doctor Is Vindicated.
Chicago, 111.—Six physicians, com
posing a coroner's jury, held that Dr.
H. J. Haiselden, who permitted an in
fant, Allan John Bollinger, to die
when an operation might have saved
him to a life of unhappiness as a de
fective, was morally and ethically jus
tified in refusing to perform the oper
ation which his conscience did not
sanction. An implied disapproval of
a course wherein a physician might
determine if it was or was not desir
able for a patient to live was con
tained in the concluding paragraphs
of the verdict:
“We believe that the physician's
highest duty is to relieve suffering
and to save or prolong life.”
The jury was composed of some of
the best known physicians in Chi
cago. Dr. Haiselden in his testimony
said he did not reach his final decision
not to operate until he had consulted
fifteen practicing physicians, fourteen
of whom approved his course of let
ting the little life expire, he said.
The mother of the child, wife of a
well-to-do workman, mother of three
other children, all physically and men
tally normal, also agreed that the
baby would be better off dead, he de
clared.
“I did not operate, first, because of
the deformity of the child and sec
ond because of the seriousness of the
case,” he said. "I did not urge the
parents to follow my advice. I simp
ply gave my opinion as a consulting
surgeon. I was morally certain the
child would be a defective.”
Troops to Use Death Gas.
Paris.—The senate army committee,
presided over by Georges Clemenceau,
has passed a resolution urging the un
restricted use of asphyxiating gas by
French troops.
Neck Piece Gives Woman Anthrax.
New York.—Miss Sophia Rosen, 17,
the third anthrax victim in this city
within the last few months, died here.
The girl is believed to have contracted
the disease, which is common among
animals, by the wearing a fur neck
piece.
Mayors to Aid Preparedness.
New York.—Mayors of about forty
cities from Maine to California have
followed the example of Mayor Mitch
el of this city, and have appointed
committees to co-operate.
Ships Liquor As Red Ink.
fit. Louis, Mo.—Because it shipped
liquor as “red ink” as a favor to its
customers in dry territory, a whole
sale leather firm of this city has been
required by the Internal Revenue de.
partment to take out a wholesale liq
uor dealers’ license, it was learned.
Bank Robbed of $40,000.
Buenos Aires.—It is asserted that
the local branch of the National City
bank of New York has been robbed of
a large sum of money. The police say
$40,000 was taken.
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gebadjt ba!te, UeSfiib unb Kopriilii
(Sele§) ju neljmen unb eme bulgari
fdje IiiPifimt fo 3U Dernidjten, mie
einftenS bft beutfdben §eere oon ben
S3elgiern fed Siitticb unb Slntmerpen
oom ©rbbrben gefegt murben. ©pater
melbet ,,£*100*", bap roeber bie Sul
garen m-*d> bie Serben in ber Stabt
UeSfiib mcreit, fonbern bap eine '-Our
gergarbe unbefannter Siatioualitdt
bie Drbn/ng in ber ©tabt aufredjt
erbalte. £n eir.er anbern 'Ulelbuug
teilt „§ara$" mit, bap 3roifd)en ben
fran3ofifd)-m Iruppen bes @eneral3
SaiIIoui> unb ben Sulgaren in ber
9tdlje ben Kribolaf, mcljr al§ 70 Ki
lometer fiiblidj bon Ue&fiib unb 25
Kilometer bon Sftip, ein ©efedjt ftatt
gefunben babe, iie Sulgaren ber
fdjmanben ber Slgentur sufolge ange
Jicfjts bee maeferen graii3ofen fofort
mnb auf 9atnmermiebcrfel)cn.
£ie Sicife ^offrea uadj Sonbon
3eigt, bap man im Sager ber 2lHi*
ierten bm Srnft ber Sage eingefetjen
fjat unb ernftlicfj Slnftalten modjt,
energifdj ftnsugreifen. 'Ulan fdjeint
ber SXnfictjt 311 fein, bap gelbmarfdjall
bon SRaefenfen marten mill, bi£ bie
SlQiierten eine grope Slrmce in ©a
lonifi gclaitbct Ijaben unb nac^ 'Jtor
ben fdjtded. ©ie biirfen fid) in bie
fer Sesietfong fd)mer enttdufdjt fe
tjen. id mit abfoluter ©idjerpeit
anaunrxjnifii, oag oie toiuaenjen-m:
nice in geutigenber Stdrfe an ber
griedjifdjen Orenje Dertrcten fein
mirb, men;. bie SIHiierten enblidj 3ur
„8teiiuug £erbieng" fertig finb. 2ie
ndrblidje .y.ilite Slliferbieng befinbct
fid) tatjadjud) fdjon in ben $dnben
ber beutfdren ©erbiinbeicn unb im
©iiben juven bie ©ulgaren cinen
meiien i^albfrci§ um bag ganse alt
fcrbifdje 2tfnb, um guljluug mit bet
©ifegtab . SIrmee 311 gemimten unb fo
bie ©erbcn gdti3lid) einsufdjlieftett.
Sie nadiften 2age fdjon miiffen sei
gen, ob biejer ©djad)3U9 gelingen
mirb ober nidjt.
Ucber bie Stdrfe ber gegeniiber
ftebenbeu Streitfrdfte Ijerrfdjen bie
berfdjiebenften Slnfidjten. SJlan gebt
febotb nidjt su rceit aus bem SBege,
memt man bie ©tadenfcn-Slrmee mit
250.000 2Jfann unb bie ber ©ulga
ren mit 350,000 ©fami cinfdja&t.
Su biefen femmen bic 2iirfcn, beren
@roB nadj bett Derfdjicbcnften 9fad|*
ridjten untertregs ift, mit etma 200,
000 ©farm, fobaft eine ©tinimal
ftarfc Don 800,000 SDfann auf beut
fd^er ©eite 3u finben ift.
2Ba£ baben bie SIHiierten jeftt unb
in ber 3y-funft bagegen 3U {often?
Slug ber faft ganslidjen Untatigfeit
ber anglo-fransofifdjen SIrmee in ©a
lonifi, mie an ber gricdjifdjen ©rett3e
im Storbcn gcfjt unmiberleglidj f)et
Dor, baft bie SIrmee nidjt ftarf fein
fann, foitf* battp fie gegen bic im
©iiben nidjt iiberftarfen ©ulgaren
Iangft bie Cffenfioe ergriffen. 2ie
3UDerIdffigften CueEen fdjaften bie
Stdrfe ber franadfifdjen SIrmee auf
20.000 ©farm, bie ber Serben auf
150,000, rooju bie 13,000 ©riten ge
redjnet merben miiffen. 2a» miirbe
ciner ©efamtftdrfe Don 183,000
©fann glcidjfommen. 11m ben Un
terfebieb aroifdjen biefer Sabi unb ber
ber beutfdjrn ©erbiinbeien augjuglei
djen, miiftten bie SIQiiericn alfo noth
eine SIrmee Don minbefteng 600,000
©fann auffteQen unb nadj ©alonifi
bringen. Sitbem niuft mit ber 2at
fadje geredjnet merben, baft bie ©cr
ben in menigen 2agen nidjt mefjr auf
iljrer alien .^obe fein merben unb
bieHeidjt gdnjlidj auger ©efcdjt ge
feftt ftnb. ©elbft bem fcftmdrmerifcf)
ften ©rifenDerebrer muft eg bei einem
©ergleid) ber Sablett einleudjten, baft
bie ©adje ber SIHiierten auf fefjr fan
bigem ©oben ftebt unb tatfddjtidj
fdjon al8 Seljlfdjlag beaeidjnet met
ben muft, efte ber eigentltdje ®ampf
begonnen bat. Slufterbem finb aHe
ftraiegtfdjen ©orteile, mie Sinfteit
lidjfeit beg SfommanboB, eine fefte,
unerfcfiiitterlidje SafiS auf bem geft
lanbe, mie giifilung unter ben ein
gelneu Slrniecteileu, unbebingt auf
ber ©cite ber beutfdjen Serbiinbeten,
Sortcile, bie allein meprere Strine*
forps inert finb.
£ie SlufgaPe ber Iiarbanellcn
itampagne, non ber man Por einigen
lagen ernfllid) fprad}, urn im Sal
fan frdftigcr eingreifen gu fdnnen,
ift gubem fiir ©nglanb cin boppel*
fd)ueibigc§ ©cptocrt, ba ipre SRiicfgiige
auS ber $albiufel ©adipoiiS nicpt
nur ipre fcpon fiarf erfcpiitterte 8tu
toritdt bci ber mopammcbcnifcpen
SBelt pofitiP untergraben, fonbem Me
bort ftcpenbe tiirfifcpe Stance glcicfi
faHS fiir anbere firiegSfd}aupIape,
aucp gegen bie Sriten, Dertoenbbar
madpcn tourbe.
Sroteftncte cnblidj an Gnglaub abije
fdjicfi.
SBafpington Stmerifa’S fang
ertoogener Srotcft gegen bie Scpinbe
rung beS £>anbel3 groifdpen ben Set.
Staaten unb ©uropa feitenS ©ng- v
lanbS ift mittelS ©pegial • Soten 1
nacp ©nglanb gefanbt roorben unb
pom Sotfcpafter Sage bem britifcpen
SluStoartigen Mmte eingepanbigi
toorben.
©§ tourbe befanni, bap bie SRoie,
toelcpe ca. 10,000 SBorte lang ift unb
crfcfiopfenb bie Slrgumenre ber ante
rifanifdpen SRegierung Pegiiglicp atter
SPafen ber Sepinberutig beS ueutra
len IpanbelS bepanbelt, Pom Stafi
benten SBilfon Por einigen £agen
nacp Sonbon aPgefcpicft tourbe. Sllep.
anber SB. Jlirf, ber britte ©efretar
ber amerifanifdpen Sotfcpaft in Ser
lin, roelcpcr mit Sofumenten bei
SotfcpaftcrS ©crarb in SBafpington
eingetroffen tear, tourbe mit ber
llcberbriugitug ber Sroteftnote auf
feiner SRiicfreije nadp Serlin Peauf
tragt.
Sie SEatfacfie, bap bie SRote ttfige
faitbt tourbe, ift Xagelang gepeimge
palten toorben unb bie Seamten beS
©taatSbepartmentS erpielten SefepI,
feine irgenbtoie geftaltcte Slnfiiitbi
gung baoon gu macfien. ©S toirb gu
gegebcn, bap fie eine SBiebetfiolung
ber Strgumente in ber SRote oom 30.
Star3 entpalt, bie befanntlicp eitten
Sroteft gegen ben britifd)en ©rber-in*
©ouncil Pilbete, eS tourbe aber feiner
lei Sfnbeutung gcgeben, toelcpe Stap
napmen getroffen tocrben toiirben,
falls ©nglanb feitte Srafiifett iticpt
mobifiaiert.
£te Ceiftungcn ber SReicfibpoft.
Ueber ben Untfang ber berjeitigen
SlrPeitSleiftung ber beutfdpen 9teicfi§
poft ergiebt eine Peim Stiefoerfepr
porgenommene SaMung, bop ein
fdjlieplicfi beS SriefderfefirS nacp bem
gelbe gegentoartig im SeicfiSpoftge
biet tdglicfi iiber 25 2RiHioneu Srief
fenbungen aufgeliefert toerbcn. Sin
lefiten griebenSjafire 1913 maifite bie
SageSauflieferung im SReicfiSpoftge
biet 17 2RiHionen Srieffenbungen
aus. SDie jefcige XageSauflieferung
ift bafier gegen 1913 urn 52 Srogent
groper. Sei Setoertung biefer be
beutenben fieiftungen barf nicfit
auper Sefracfit gelaffen toerben, bap
ben ficimifdfien Softbetricben burdfi
ben Jhrieg brei 3epntel ifirer Seam
ten unb faft bie §alfte aUer Unter
beamtcn, baS finb toeit iiber 80,000
2Rann, entgogen finb, tmb bap bie
SReicfiSpoft bafiir mit nitfitbeamteten
SlusfiilfSfraften arbeitet, bie erflar
licfiertoeife ofter toecfifeln unb beren
tecfinifdfie ©etoanbtfieit ber Se
rufSperfonalS nacfiftept.
Pi&iani gcljt, Priaitb fnnunt.
Paris. Premier 9tene Ptoiani
leidjte fcine Pemiffion ein, morauf
ba§ gauge Piinifterium bem PeifpicI
folgte.
Jlriftibc Prianb, ein So3iaIift unb
ftiiber premier, mur&e ben prafi
bent Poincare bie Premierfdjaft an
geboten, meld)e er aud) annnbtn unb
fofort an bie Pcubilbung ehmS Sabi*
ncttS ging.
Per StbgangPibiani'S ftefjt in eng
ftem 3ufammenbanb mit ter Palfait
politif, nadjbem Pelcalfe am 14. Cf
tober mit bent PetfpicI borangegan
gen mar.
ftabiuettSfrifi# in $uf?Ianb.
S o n b o n. SBie aui) ©t. Peters
burg gemelbct mirb, batSergiuS ©a
gattoff, ber Ptinifter beS Steufjereu,
bemiffioniert unb Premier ^an
(Borempfin foEt gum dangler mit um
faffenber S3oHmad)t ernannt merben.
(Piefe meuigen SBorie befagen
mcbr, al§ maS ber englifdje Senfor
burdjgebcn laffen moUte. ftabinettS
frifiS in Srantreid), gnglarb unb
nun and) Pufjlanb, geigt, mober ber
PJinb mcl)t.)
fionboner Pielbung: „PaS beutfdje
Polf benft abfolut nid)t baran, baft
eS befiegt merben fonnte." —
marum foUte eS aud)?
etmaS gum Cadjen: ein italieni
fd>er Preborgelmann, ber bie „2BadE)t
am SRbein" fpielt — uub nidjt ein
mat bcrijaftet tourbe.