:- NIGHT EXTRA VOL. HI.-NO. 42 KOENIG IN COMMAND German Craft Brings Another Cargo of Valuable Dye- v stuffs NEW LONDON, Conn., Nov. 1 After t)urrtttn& rough October tales, the German Buuacn ireignier ueuiscmanu uockcu hcic- early today on her second American voy e Twenty-one days oiit from Bremen, she tturomea jhrough the Long Island Sound oyer nwuor shortly after midnight, wun hV-r crew of twenty-five, happy and heatthy, Mjl htr va.jued cargo of rare medicines and dye IntactL An InaicUtton tliat tho underseas boat eifeHed W depart seon was given when Jtifcderlck Hlnsch, of tho Eastern ftMjijef Company, declined to seal the WrAiss outfit on the craft at the demand 'fit Ljutenknt C. E. Brlggs, of tho United "M, NaSry, The Eastern Fonvardlng CoieeMy owns the submarine. ,J Scott lug bearing Captain Hlnsch, of Tt Deuttoto Oxean Rhederel, Deutschland ntrs, sheeted 'Vlllkommen" to his friend, ptaln Koenlg. the smiling skipper from Iutringla.JThe tug cast her a line and re ciiuttM triumphantly Into the inner Mbor. J ! Health and customs officers, notified only brief time before her arrival, watved United Stats regulations on the word of Pfcaptaln Kotnlg that the crew was healthy I j.na anawed ber to pass quarantine without awaiting ror town. HAD ROUGH VOYAGE Up past ilecpy Groton, opposite New London, the Deutschland docked In the State pier, fas fenced In by a boarded screen find tnsfcrrcd her men to tho .North German, LlSd liner Wlllehad, alongside. nV ne Wjye'hsSjj-hadwalted long the coming 01 a suDsea freignier, ana memoers 01 ner crew were "dtspondent over unmistakable evidence thsit the Bremen, another freighter. ha4.perishcd. So there was Joy when Captain Koenlg and his sturdy crew et foot abpird the "mother ship." which Was recently 'Charged from London with v, being o German submarine wireless station. S Aar.tafh VA-mlv anrf rntnln TTInanh iallrart but Utile to the few watchers who knew o the''' Deutschland -r!val. The trip was un entful," said Captain Koenlg, with a merr twlnklekjn his eye. "Tes, wp did have some bad weather In fact, extremely bad wather for two davs. ;5 J! ana 'ess xtremo the remainder of tha voy- ago unifi we were mree uaya oil America. Then, he said, the October gales abated, and the vessel rode calmly. "We had trouble at Bremen, colliding JiJ,.. with andther vessel," ho continued. "That V"s .''Jald us, up ten days for repairs. We're glad to see America again." :. Koenfg'a papers read "bound for Balti more, or any other Atlantic seaport," but the best available Information was that he be lieved his .chances of running the Allied oast patrol to be better by heading Into Net? London AnillES SAME CREW Reaching" the three-mile limit, the crew rwaa overjoyed, for they knew then that , their danger was past. Then the vessel i . i , 11U mLkD&ELLblLU in it Indiana Campaign Will End To- (k night, wten Candidate I ," Jjeavtse cv xunv r nA, . :,W ' KAJWVIIXB, H. Nov, 1, Predicting i '. awn' eiaetion. iharlea II Huarhea left Lgjearty . today for another day's trip gh Indie, fhlch will wind up his m in'iw Mfdie Yfjtax. At 9 o'clock His epaciaf train will leave Terra t for New Yolc Tray's schedulf cajled .for speeches at Divan, Linton, iloomlngton. Brazil and rnre Haute, ThJ candidate planned to wwjay on fake prosperity and Demo. Incompetency rfTesf on FirV'McCormlck v "We Put It OuV'Willcox 1 CM .TIC WCiw vnm; Vr rANCB C. McCOHMICK, chair Mil of the pemoeretio Commit . ivuv saia: . FWb will ,! rru- tif-. . it Wilson sentiment.1' .Chairman WMcox, of the Jtepub qm Committee) when told oJ this, Te liave put out the fire." :the weather m f'O, PkiUtdelp, is wut tvti vihiky-.Fah' "wiv, Htffht; t. S4 TttVAipil a nAV 9,,,. 4;W1 .m.naVS sotitlu: lii a.m. mCLAWAKK KHH.IW iMXHmtL LtM mttm Mtut jiiBiinLinK: jrr 41 TNANCIAL EDITIO y . t. , .; it uentnn v3STRA7 . AjV Xr k.71 . X- fe&get HIGMT EXTRA DEUTSCHLAND AGAIN DASHES INTO U.S. PORT Subsea Liner Slips Under , Fleet and Docks at New London PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, NOVELBER 1, 11)10 Cortmonr, 11, sr MiPcsito LtponCour.NT PRICE ON OrfMT RJ' W' SSDR I B 7T kw JalllllllllllllllllM .vf-3'4i-JBgm.WSL 1 ' fMMif nni 1 t IiiiBfH..IIIIIIIH.H JANE BONNER AND ASSAILANT Curiously enough, he picture of John Murtha, who stabbed the young girl, shows him in a reverent ifose as a altarboy. v BONNER'S DAUGHTER STABBED BY BOY AT HALLOWEEN FROLIC Acquaintance, Teased by Merry makers, Wields Knife Girl Victim Calls It "an Accident" EXPECTED TO RE,CXYJEI. BU Jane Bonner, fifteen-year-old daughter of Nell Bonner, president of the Retail Liquor Dealers' Association, Is In the Polyclinic Hospital with a kntfa wound, and John Murtha, also fifteen years old, of 2S14 Kim ball street, was released In lho custody of George S. Stewart, an attorney at the House of Detention today as an aftormath of Hal loween revelry. The girl was stabbed In the abdomen while In front of her home, 2015 Carpenter street?" last nleht while a crowd of juvenile mum mers and impersonators Bayly oelebrated. She will recover. Murtha will have a hearing when the girl Is able to leave the hospital. "Don't blame the little boy," she told physicians at the hospital today. "It was an accident." The girl's father told the police lie would not prosecute. "My daughter told me that perhaps she was as much to blame as the boy,".' said Mr. Bonner. "Tho crowd she was In knew Mur tha, but ho did not recognize them, because of their costumes. When they closed In on htm he warned them that he would f tab them." Murtha, who has a eood reputation and Is an altar boy In St, Anthony's Catholic Church, had been paying a visit to a friend In the neighborhood when a crowd of youth ful mummers and' Impersonators accosted him. Jane Bonner was In the throng of fantastically garbed boys and girls mas querading as Murtha took refuge on a step. As. the weird, throng of mummers ap proached he drew out his penknife, the police eay. Jane Bonner was nearest him In the jostling crowd. Some one, pushed her against tha knife, which was at Mur tha's side, according" to the police. Frightened by the scream of the wounded girl, Murtha fled. He was arrested at Twenty-thlrd street and Washington ave nue by the police of the Twentieth and Fltxwater streets station. ABUSED FPU KOT PRAYING . Woman Says Husband Who Seeks Di vorce Banged Her Head for Refusal In the divorce suit of Otis Harrington, 304 Warren avenue, Camden, agalnstyAnna May Harrington, which Is being heard today, by Master in, Chancery Grey, In Camden, the woman testified that when she refused to pray with her husband ho would bang her head against the bed. "I am not Christian," I(e testified, "and dbn't believe la prayer I used to tell my husband that he would do better to pray w.Jth Jils son, who was learning to smoke and swear .and shoot, crap." Mr. Harrington some time ago sued her .huabxnd fori Mparata maintenance, and he aMwered )vlth a counter-suit for divorce, naming a ,'eorMpondeot a grocery clerk ittWiHlWward William, lt wasteUd that ub wrote bar bus bnd,'aklng h(m to dtvonoa bar so,ie could get'a goo4fathr or Dp ehlWrap, There are flva, running in ag r-wn flftn ummjHw to thlrtoen yaar. v qr)MM Krfa-' Eight KliM BMB, .Nov. 1.--U-WM inoouaort y tVU Ytkn thft mm Werwatl--. Ud cn raoerft tW 0uy 14 riw.evt wa wmwmw Mmr. w priaata and a w-NMftT-, w mmmm mmntr, who If ar-nu OLD-TIME REPUBLICAN MAJORITY PREDICTED BY CONGRESSMAN VARE AN OLD-TIME Republican majority in Philadelphia for Hughes and Fair banks and for tho Republican State ticket was predicted today by Congressman William S. Varc, in calling upon Phlladclphians to support Hughes. Congressman Varo's statement lollows: "Reports from all sections of tho city indicate an old-time itcpuuucan majority for Charles E. Hughes and tho cntlro Republican ticket next Tuesday. The peoplo of the city havo come to realize that tho pros perity of today is duo to the Euro Ecan war. They also have been rought to consider tho effect of Democratic rule at tho close of tho Great War. "During the last two years tho rapidly increasing Republican vote in Philadelphia has been such as to indicate what has materialized this year. Tho registration is the great est sincda tho passago of tho per sonal registration law, as is the en rollment for the Republican party. "Patriotic Americans are desirous of hnving a porson to head tho nation who will give us peace with honor, prosperity without war and protection for our workingmen. With this in view it behooves nil to vote for Charles E. Huchcs for President." WILLIAM S. VARE C HaaaaaaHPaaaaaB....... IB !9k SRi.llllllllllH.lllllllllllllllt naK 'aK'i' WVLL' ft wtM!:.lalW ataVaUaKaHaaaaaH OIL RING'S $10,000 REWARD MAY GO TO CAMDEN COPS Capture of Confessed Slayer of Cleveland Lawyer Brings Hope HICH MEN SEEK SOLUTION A fund of $10,000, the contributors of which were John D. Bockefeljer, Myron T. Herrlck, former Ambassador to France, and William Nelson Cromwell, will be given to the police pension fund of Camden, If Wood II. Brown, a. twenty-flve-year-old negro, Is convicted of the mysterious murder of WHUara. L. Bice, millionaire lawyer and politician, of Cleveland, who was ono of the best known citizens of tha Buckeyo State. Brown has confessed that he Is the much sought assassin who shot and stabbed Rice to death while tho latter was walking along ono of the. avenues of Euclid Heights, a fashionable suburb of Cleveland, six years ago. Detectives left Cleveland "toflay for Camden. Brown's description of how he left tho body on a road and placed It In such a position as to give the Impression that death was due to an automobile accident has convinced tho police of Cleveland that he la telling the truth. CAPTURED AS HOLD-UP MAN The fund of $10,000 was raised a few days after Rice was murdered. At that time it was stipulated by tho contributors that the fund should exist until Rice's mur derer was caught Brown's capture was made by a Camden policeman. He was ar rested for attempting to hold up a Jitney driver near Hammonton, N, J., last Monday, An hour after being placed In a. cell ha Identified himself as tha murderer of Rice with these words. "I am the nigger who killed Rice, the law yer, of Cleveland." Members of the police force In Camden are forbidden to accept rewards for cap tures of criminals. All rewards must be turned over to the pension fund. The murder of Rice, which occurred al most In froYit of tho homo of former Am bassador Herrlck, not only baffled ths entire police force of Cleveland, but mysti fied hundreds of private detectives and criminologists. The motive for the murder could never be established. " Though Brown was willing to discuss the NO COAL FAMINE NOR PRICE BOOST THREATENS CITY Shippers, Dealers and Water Bureau Chief Give Re assuring Word LOWEST EATES IN EAST City Need Not Fear Coal Famine, Dealers Declare "TMIERE is no sign of a coal famine. Wo are getting enough to supply our customers. There is somo holding back at the mines, but it has not caused us to cut down in our deliveries. "Local prices for domestic sizes range from $G a ton for pea to $8.25 for nut, with 25 cents off for cash. On the basis of present conditions there will be no change during the winter. "Philadelphia is getting its coal cheaper than any other eastern city." J. Ernest Rieliards, president George D. Newton Coal Company. "There is nothing alarming in tho coal situation as it affects Phila delphia. "We are able to tako care of tho demands of this city. "Thero is somo shortage of cars, .but wc arc getting enough to tako care of our trade." George C. Coughlin, city and southern sales agent, Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company. Philadelphia householders need not shiver at the prospect of $20 coal this winter. Nor Is 'the $10.75 price now asked by tha New York coal dealer likely to be adopted by the retailer here. Inquiry among pro ducers, shippers and handlers of anthracite In this city was met today with the declara tion that the visible supply of hard coal renders the situation by no means alarm ing and that there was no reason to ap prehend a coal famine or further advance In price to the consumer. Car shortage and scarcity of labor at the mines was admitted, but persons whose word Is regarded an authoritative said they believed this factor had about reached Its limit and for the remainder of the winter the anthracite situation was likely to re main unchanged. Enough coal waa being Continued on Tare Two, Column Four Contlnurd on rase Six, Column One CHIC LAUNDRYW0MAN DEFENDS RIGHT TO RUB IN N0RRIST0WN COURT i """ " Super-Washwoman of Ardmore Haled Before Judge for Operating Plant in Ex clusive Section "J-'. :" NEIGHBORS JOIN IN SUIT " '"" By M'LISS Yorf can wash your own dirty linen In publlo and get away with it, but It's when you try to wash other people's that the rub comes. The rub in this Instance has resolved Itself Into controversy which has been waged for tha last two days In Judge gwurU's 9urt in Norristown between Miss Qeorgeanna Cuthbert, ex-stenographer, now a superlaundress of 11$ Sibley avenue, Ard more, and MIh Maria Lueson, of 101 Thompson avenue, the sama towhln. The latter is suing to prevent the former from operating a ne.w laundry erected In the rear of the house at 108 Thompson street, pur chased last 'spring, Thre Is a provision In the Ardmore ordinance that offensive bus! Masses cannot be stigagad In. la washing stfeoalveT A declatea vrtll ba randkred to morrow, In tha xiaantlma tha Quaan of tha Suds, who la an ar4at sjvagata of tha ''back- to tha tub'' nwyatat, baoauaa hitting tha keya of a typiairttar pl4 bar only albt Iron man" a uaak, wbaraas dolour tha family- vwk, for fly exmmms naU lur HI I wast. w tar afiwMtU Mrain mmimt lUilMI twa k.mwiti - msmmmiaam,w. OLD JOHN BARLEYCORN BURIED AS BELLS TOLL GLADNESS OF VIRGINIA "Dry" Law Effective and Brew eries Are Turned Into Indus trial Plants One Quart to a Person RUSES ALREADY DEVISED RICHMOND. Va Nov. 1. Virginia to day rides the water wagon the eighteenth State to Join the procession. Amid the tolling of church bells and while Halloween banshees filled the midnight air, tha Old Dominion, at the witching hour, for. mally laid old John Barleycorn to rest. ImmqjEe stores of wine and liquor were purchased throughout the Htate before the ban fell, to relieve the Jong drought to come, Special trains, heavily laden, were run Into all sections of tho State, while country folk hustled along with suitcases to fortify pri vate stocks. More than, 800 saloons In widely scat tered parts of tha State were put out of business. Local option has prevailed In most of lha counties; fW 'a .number of years, but Richmond, Norfolk, Portsmouth, New. port News, Lynchburg, Ptleraburg. Roan. ek and Bristol lrt mat prehlbltlon Jt nli)t, Tha action of, Virginia complete, a dry bait, from Washjagkf wutta tfrW on Its'' aaat and fH "bJtiU1 to Naw OrkMUi to tha wmwm. Cfcurofc WKHmmn$ barf ava un4ar. una to rnmtr t the laria - QUICK NEWS CALL HENCHMAN JAILED FOR EXTORTION E. H, Beaumont, henchman of Magistrate "Joe" Call, who vrn recommended for Indictment by the Grand Jury, was convicted today on tho charges of extortion and 'bribery and sentenced to not m than three nor less than two years In the Eastern Penitentiary, Rend- jnont was a successor to "Jnke"' Oilman. WILL HOLD PUBLIC HEARING ON TRANSIT LEASE The first public hearing to discuss the draft of the proposed less between the city and the Tlmadelnhla Rapid Transit Company lot tho oporatlon of the municipality's high-speed system will be hela on Friday of next week at 2 o'clock In the afternoon In Councils" rinnnco Committee Room. One week later the P. R. T. dlrcctois and stockholders will be Invited to a simitar hearing. Both will be held, before the joint Finance and Street Railways Committees of Couucli.. TODAY'S RACING RESULTS First Windsor race, purse SOOO, 3-yenr-olds and up. t milq and 20 yvds, selling Moss Fox, 113, Williams, 94.00, ?3.30, 82.60. won; Dorothy Cnrlln. OG, Collins, 8.40, $4.10, second; Knthleen H 102, Kopplomnn, $2.80, third. Time, 1.43 1-5. Second Windsor race, purse ?000, maiden 2-year-olds. 5 1-2 furlongs Amazonian, 102. Dreyer, S02.70, S17.00, $14.80, won; Miss Tlppcrary, 102, Clnver, S5.20, $3.00, second; Sateora, 102, Stoarns, $74.40, third. Time, 1.08 2-5. First rimllco race, maiden 2-year-olds, 5 1-2 furlongs Lottery. 115. Keogh, S3.20, ?2.00. $2.10, won; Monomy, 115, Robinson. 84.50. !?3.00, second; Swoon, 115, Butwell, S3.00. third. Time, l.OD 4-5. Second Flmlico race, steeplechase, 3-yenr-olds and up, scU'uir, 2 miles Sixty-four, 130, Kennedy, $12.40, 33.20. $2.00, won; Ucw Hnvcn, 102. Crawford, $3.80, $2.40. second; Early Light, 152, Noe, $2.40, third. Time, 4.00. v BUFFALO CROWDS CHEER WILSON RUFEALO, N. Y., Nov. 1. President Wilson was cheered by crowds that lined the streets when he arrived here twenty minutes late and motored to tho Elllcott Club for luncheon. Locomotives In the yards kept up a fearful din as the President's private car was drawn into the station. $15,000,000 CREW-LEVICK MORTGAGE RECORDED HERE, The Commercial Trust Company placed on record today a mortgage of $15,000,000 to cover an issue of six per cent bonds to that amount issued by Crew-Levick Com pany. This Issue was authorized some time ago and 13,000,000 of tho bonds aro already outstanding. 1 7000 OKLAHOMA MINERS ON STRIKE FOR NEW WAGE SCALE McALLISTER, Oklo., Nov, l. Seven thousand Oklahoma coal miners went out on general strike today following failure of the operators to agree to a new wage scale proposed by the employes. Union officials counseled against violence. Seven teen Independent companies signed tho scale and will continue working. AIR FLIGHT AGAIN POSTPONED CHICAGO, Nov. 1. After waiting several hours for favorable weather, Victor Carlstrom today again postponed the start of his aeroplane flight, to New York until tomorrow. 20,000 HARD COAL MINERS QUIT FOR MUNITIONS JOBS SCRANTON, Pa., Nov. 1. Twenty thousand mine workers, mostly young men, have quit the hard coal fields to obtain employment in munition plants and with other manufacturing concerns throughout the country. Because of this the mines are working short-handed. And because ot this handicap and the present, un precedented demand for anthracite there is a shortage at tidewater and other large centers In the East. JAPANESE CAUGHT WITH MAPS OF PACIFIC DEFENSES LOS ANGELES, Nov, 1. Federal oOlclals today are on their way to Ludlow, a desert station on the Santa Fe, to question a highly educated Japanese, who was found to have uups, drawings and pictures of United States fortifications on the Pacific coast on his person. Tho prisoner, who gave his name as 8. Kayama, is held on a technical charge of evading payment of railroad fare. He declines to explain his possession of the maps. PORTUGUESE TROOPS TAKE AFRICAN TOWN LISBON. Nov. 1. Portuguese troops in German East Africa have defeated the German forces, captured Newala and taken a large quantity of guns and other war material, says a War Office announcement. AUSTRIAN CASUALTIES 850,000 THIS YEAR GENEVA, Nov. 1. -The Austrlans havo lost 850,000 men since the beginning of the year, according to authoritative information received here. Of this number 450,000 ore prisoners In the hands of Russians or Italians. When Rumania declared war Austria had forty-six divisions on tho Russian front, thirty-one on the Italian front and two in Serbia and Albania. From these forces she withdrew eighty-eight battalions to send against the Rumanians. This force was later augmented as fighting grew less violent on the Russian front. TWO AMERICAN AVIATORS KILLED BY FALL AT NANCY PARIS, Nov. I. Two American aviators, attached to the French flying corps, have been killed In an aeroplane accident at Nancy, says a dispatch received here today. While in midair the machine upset. The pilot was crushed to death beneath the motor. The observer fell from his seat and was killed by the fall. The dis patch did not give any nnmos. CALIFORNIA TO HAVE SCHOOL FOR OPERA SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 1. A million-dollar fund for tho establishment of a State school of opera for California was started at a dinner given at the Bohemian Club to a number of leading musicians, artists end newspaper men at the invitation of B. P. Hillock, originator of tho scheme. The plan was hailed as the most Im portant move for creative art over attempted in America. U. S. GIVES MUNITIONS CONTRACT IIARRISUURO, Nov, 1, For the second time this month the Harrlsburg Pipe and PIpe-Bendlng Company has received a contract from the United States Govern ment for army and navy shells. The War Department has just awarded t a ton tract for 293,000 three-Inch shells, at a price of $700,09. . fyiJr CUBA ELECTING PRESIDENT? SOLDIERS GUARD POLLS HAVANA. JN'ev, 1,Wlth eoMler e guard everywhere and all the, saloon closed, Cuba Is vottmr tody In tt4 prtwldenthU elaation. The two eapdidataa aro General Marie Manuwl,, a CoHawvallve,--v b la saefetinr r-aletto, and General Zayas, a HearaC, X'lee IraMe Is alo featng emoted, A pewertui rt la Utug made by tb LlUfaW to ralR the power thay loat l 11S. U. S. BANK RESOURCES INCREASE $6.500,&Q,K) WASHINGTON. Koy, t, Orowth of ( th mwtSn' bankteg rtranrts klnt passage of tha federal reserve aot la put at (,., la a irtatawaot bwuad fcsr tw Comptroller of tha Treasury, Tb raeora) ,W 4MWd t b wtUtut a 9m8gA l ilia bjMory tM w ay oUwr coutry. Mw Terk ' i-vOTeTa v ttlM. tM, or Mf Mftt! JN-Wlvaala, Mn,MM If twr Mt; Mm . H .... . U-BOATDIDNftT WARN MARINA, SURVIVORS SAY ...I.-. Five Citizens of U. S; Victims of U-Boat Attack NO MOVE UNTIL ALL FACTS ARE AT HAND Wilson Believes Germany, Has Kept Pledges on Undersea Warfare . WASHINGTON WATCHING Fire Americans Missing in Attack on the Marina BROWN, JOSH, Roanoke, Va. BROWN, ', Charlotte, N. C. HOUSE, , Norfolk, Va. SEDBURY, GEORGE, Fayetteville; N. C. THOMAS, Del. DANIEL, Wilmington, WASHINGTON, Nor. I-Ambassador von Bcrnstorff this afternoon sent a wireless message to the German Foreign Office asking for full infor mation immediately on the sinking of the Marina. WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. Secretary of State Lansing today vigorously de nied that the campaign would .have any effect on the department's action in the Marina case or that there had been any change in the submarine pol icy of cither the President or the department-Mr. Lansing said he made this state ment after it was called to his attention that such a suggestion had been made. CORK, Nov. 1. Depositions from fifteen American survivors, saying that the steam ship Marina was torpedoed' without warn ing with probable loss of several American lives, are being taken hero by United States Cpnsul. Jrost and will be" forwarded to tho State Department at Washington, The' Americans arrived hero with fifteen other survivors of the Marina's crew Ther reported that from three to sir Americans, Including one passenger, probably wera drowned. The Marina was attacked early Saturday while hound from Glasgow to Baltimore. A torpedo struck her amidships, starboard ride. The explosion blew a great hole In the steamship's Bide and seemed to lift her out of the water, survivors' said. She rolled over on one aide as she settled, but remain ed afloat twenty minutes, battered by tha waves, until her boilers exploded, splitting her in two. Captain Drown was the last man to leave the ship. He jumped Just, before the boilers exploded, but missed the boats and was drowned. Some of the survivors say a second tor pedo was fired as the Marina was settling. Others say a second submarine was nearby but took no part in the attack. One .of the Marina's boats was rolled against the .steamship's side by tha heavy seas and crushed. All the occupants wera drowned. The other boats drifted for eighteen hours before rescue steamships sighted them. The survivors suffered ter ribly on account of the cold and wera drenched by spray from great waves that threatened to capsize their boats at any moment. LONDON, Nov. 1. Five Americans are missing and believed to have perished in the sinking of the British steamship Marina, according to the latest dispatches receive here today. They nre: J Daniel Thomas, Wilmington, DeL Josh Brown, Roanoke, Va. Brown. Charlotte, N. C George Sedbury. Fayettevtlle, N, C, House, Norfolk, Va, The United States Consul at Qoeena town has talan the Joint affidavits' of twenty-eight Americans landed at Berehayen and fourteen landed at Crookliaveiy djctar lnir that the Marina was attacked wltiwttt warning. The twenty-eight American survivors were landed at Dublin, They are: Kendall, St, Paul: Blayney and Cullan, Philadelphia; Anderson, Oklahoma; Kria, Springfield, Mass.; Lancaster, Yonkara; Hlley, Brooklyn; Rogers, Ocean Vlar; Wentr, Wyoming; Foley, Salem, Maa,; Clark, Chicago; Boblnaon, North Bajtrniat ; Bang. Charlotte; Schearer, "WashlagtM; Hancock, Barton and Clarke, RlchmeaMlS Janes, Ryan, Sinclair, Kngley, Hamlin, Watt ley. Haskey, Hines and Hunt, all of Jgiaikt more; Devlin, Norfolk, and fyver Lan caster. -. A .!VjmsM,M stiifti & U-BOAT ISSUE BEC0MBS GRAVE, WASHINGTON OFFICIAM AfT WASHINGTON. pov.aWshjSk'AMtiw, loans bellaved to ba .dead . W reset, at' tha sinkings tha SrIUaii staaweUa TlftTfr and, ho 44eiee, yet ta'abaV'thet ibe 0m mas auhraariae 'TeatteaaaM Joe tlaS ataatieaf eaa teens ,j aatajajsaj a ana jr arfp Pvj iJilfclllllaal aVNalMlfraf Oat iaWftiBSat fee Ma. ' a a WJ w F-a. " T "W - ' n u pagpp ea-tiwaly grava OamtW naa aggtg tfce affair, feile tha United MtaJea 4 "amfl" aa4 ennatifar rawsaaatatfvaa the rm new keen utet w ; oawa u 1 ' i m 1 J ,s-aa irmj w