finC - imtmi VOL. IH NO. 144 PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1917 PRICE TWO CINT8 COMIIflltT, 1017. ki tut Fciuo Lxdor Court! NIGHT AT NOOK BLANKETS (M TRUE, SAYS PRESIDENT, QUICK NEWS OF BERLIN'S WAR PLOT R tfv iQ f A- GREAT BAPAUp BATTLE RAGING Indications Are Germans Are Evacuating Big fJW Somme Stronghold . BRITISH WIN 13-MILE LINE Capture Three More Villages - and Pound Retreating Teutons w LONDON, March I. Sharp fighting. signaling tlio beginning f the final battle for Ilia CSerman strong hold of Bapaumc, Is now In progress on the western outskirts of the town, from which the British nro only one mile distant. Following capturo of the vlllago of Thll- loy, only a mile from Bapaumc, British troops began pushing forward. They wcro Immediately engaged by thejjGermans and fighting was spreading when the last re ports were filed. Brief dispatches received here today brought little satisfaction to the London public, eager for news of tho fall of Ba paume. It was Impossible to .detcrrnlne whether a grand assault has been begun ,by the British or whether the blows struck thus far mark only tho early stages of the battle. '' The brilliant successes obtained by the British yesterday, when tho villages of Gommecourt, Thllloy and Pulsc-au-Mont were captured, wcio won with but slight , losses, It was learned today. Gommecourt, scene of bloody battling at tho beginning ef the great Somme offensive, passed Into British hands without n fight. Tho Ger mans retired and British troops' entered the illagc without opposition. Tho front on which tho British have advanced has now been Increased today to approximately thirteen miles. Goinme- eourt Is approximately the most north- -westcrly point of the line, and from thcro down to a position about mldw'ay between Ouedccourt and Bcaulcncourt the new ad- Tanced front of the British zigzags In find eut. Evidence accumulates that the- evacu ation of Bapaume is under way. Informa tion from the front today said the Ger- -mans had methodically destroyed all high towers In the city, plainly In order to pre vent their utilization by the British as ob servation posts when Bapaumo falls Into their hands. GERMAN RETREAT LIKE THAT AFTER MARNE WITH THn BIUTlSIt ARMIES AFIKLD, March 1. Slowly and steadily the German retirement continues south of Arras. Indi cations are lacking of any recoil movement. The .retirement may yet resemble at Itait In some respects that following the battle of the Marnc. Then tho Germans were beaten, and their armies were re treating after being severely trounced In 'battle. Now they apparently aim to forestall an Bltlmate retreat after what might piove a very costly defense of the old lines by taking up new positions previously ar ranged, like those north? of tho Alsne, there- Continued on l'ate fire. Column One RENNFr savs nrciunrnATS 1 PLAN EXTRA SESSION . .AllfPf3 Mflmbnro tf That Pnrfv TInVfi Been Notified to Be on Hand ; ., March G ,'- 'WASHINGTON, March 1, Representa tive Bennct, of New Yoik. Interrupted de bate this afternoon to announce to the Houita that yn lii,l l.fln,, InfnmiAil tli.it tVin G Democrats were planning for an extra ses sion to be convened next Tuesday1, Bennet ald he made the' announcement because ho thought all members had a right to be In formed that an extra session was being Planned. , Bennet read what he said was a Notifica tion bearing the signature of Representative 1511, Democratic whip, and Representatives Garner and Adair, tp all Democratic mem-b'ers-elect of the Sixty-fifth Congress. This announcement declared that an extra ses sion would be called 'for March 0, and urged all Democratic members to be present at that time. On account of the tie-up of the House, with 2IG Democrats and 215 Republicans, with the balance of power In the 'hands of five other members, the announcement cre ated lntene interest Injthe House. German Consulate Robbed EL PASO, March 1, The German con sulate at Juares was robbed last night and U Government papers belonging Jo Consul Max Weber were .taken. It was announced today. . THE WEATHER l'dKKC'ABT . for Philadelphia and vicinUu-CIoudu ffi and unsettled tonlaht. telth lowest tern- KWure alouf thtrtv dcarcc- PrM If iprobabli fair: aentlc .irind ,.),. .narthrnut I.KNUTI1 OK )).rf i. ratlin iif i.v I-m'S'S' I !oon "' Hl.m,' ;:5I p.m. I Moon souths T.-Ol p.ml til nipu..nu t........; ' Eun n., ,.n: IIH .!. . -S! ---"--, 1. , tUnARII KlVWt'TlUB C'HANCIfcH . CHR8TNUT BTRKBT. Lw witfr.i.'JSfl a.m. I' t ji.w ii..f.u.. Hah Wilp .T.ld . .'. I ill-.. : V"I"7:T: T""' gS :S: !"3rTrtf o --, r".",vi'"""j "(' ;.iij p,m. WWATWK M WPK Ml), STONE HALTS SENATE ACTION WITH HINT OF ALLIED SCHEME TO FAN AMERICAN WAR SPIRIT -Foreign Relations Leader Urges Caution in Demand for Light on German Effort to Array Mexico and Japan Against United States RESOLUTION CALLS UPON WILSON TO SUBSTANTIATE PLOT CHARGES WASHINGTON, March 1. SENATOR LODGE'S resolution for full facts of Germany's Mexican Japaneso plot reads: That tho President be requested to inform the Senate whether the note signed Zimmermann, published in tho newspapers of the morning of March 1, inviting Mexico to unite with Germany and Japan in war against the United States, is authentic and in the possession of the Government of the United States, and ft nuthentic to send to the Senate, if not incompatible with the public interest, nil further information in the possession of the United Stntes relative to the activities of the Imperial German Government' in Mexico. Senator La Follcttc suggested that the Administration also be asked to say how long it had been in possession of the Zimmermann plot letter and this request was added to Lodge's original request. WASHINGTON, March 1 Flat denial that his Government participated in any manner in the German plot againsl the United States was made this afternoon by Mexican Charge Ramon de Negri at the Mexican Embassy. WASHINGTON, March 1. Secretary Lansing went to the White House late this afternoon with a large number of documents under his arm and immediately went into conference with President Wilson. He would not indicate the nature of the business in hand. Earlier the President had con ferred with Secretary of War Baker Branches of the American Government this afternoon were divided in their attitude toward the exposure ,o "Germany's, plot to link Mexico and Japan with her in a war against the, United States, in the event the United States would not passively submit to ruthless U-boat warfare. The alignment was thus : President Wilson himself stood' sponsor for the cor rectness of the exposure. ' Senator Stone, chairman of the Foreign Relations Com mittee, supposed spokesman of the President, declared he had information that the plot charges were a part of Allied intrigues to fan the war spirit in America. The Senate debated the Lodge resolution calling upon the President for substantiation of the charges of Berlin plotting. The House cleared decks by special rule and considered the Flood "armed neutrality" bill, patriotic speeches mark ing the debate. President Wilson will not accept the Flood bill, which limits his power to deal with the German, crisis. Instead, he has demanded passage of the Senate measure, which guarantees blanket authority. Developments indicate that United States secret service men intercepted a letter from Ambassador Bernstorff to the German Min ister at Mexico City in which plans for the coalition against the United States were outlined. Assurances are given by the Japanese Ambassador that Japan would' scorn plotting with Germany. Mexico, Secretary Lansing says, will not be involved. ' WAStilNUTUJN, Marcn l. in through Senator Swanson, that he stood sponsor for the revelation of Germany's intriguc.to enlist Japan and Mexico in war against the United States, the Sen ate today, after xcited debate, referred to the Foreign Affairs Committee a resolution calling upon the President to substantiate the charges and produce documentary proof. The Senate committee readily agreed to recommend immediate adoption of the Lodge resolution striking out, however, the La Follette amendment, request ing further information as to when the American Government learned of the Zimmermann note. Senator Hitchcock, of Nebraska, presented the report of the committee this afternoon. ' , Vico President Marshall asked for objection to the Lodge resolution and hearing none declared it adopted. Senator Stone, chairman of the committee, was on his feet instantly protesting. "The Chair has no right to make, such a ruling," he shouted. At the request of other Senators the Vice President withdrew his ruling and Senator .Stone immediately took the floor to press an amendment, which, he said, had been rejected by the committee. He explained that was his reason for asking Senator Hitchcock to report the resolution. ' STONE SCENTS ALLIED CONSPIRACY His amendment requests the President "also to inform the Senate as to whether the information in his possession respecting the letter signed Zimmer mann originated or was derived from any Government or any official of any Government engaged in the present European war and if so inform the Senate as to the facts relating thereto." . "The morning papers' reports state that the letter signed Zimmermann has been in the President's possession ever since he informed Congress of the severance of relations with Germany.' said Stone. "In this delicate situation, wfc must not forget our obligation to guard zeal ously the diplomatic interests, if thero be any, with which the Executive De partment is necessarily charged, I do not know that there are any secrets which 'should be withheld, but out of an abundance of caution it seems to me that jt phould be unwise to open up any Inquiry that would not throw any material light on the question before youl'jX ' "Why not just ask the President where he got hts information V suggested Senator Hardwick, "Thai would be too brbad," answered Senator Stone. "We discussed it in committee and it was declled to be not prudent, .1; wpuld rather not say whyj iiut there was clearly a shod reason why the Exmtlve 'Department should not V there was cl6ar,y . M reason be-Mk1 t0 d 8?,M "'en f it8 spite ot i'resiuent Wilson's message, vhy the Exmte Drtment should n9t - iRtortUT - ' - - , f MANY SUBMARINES PREY OF BRITISH Great Number of U-Boats Sunk and Captured by English FIGURES KEPT SECRET Big Array of German Undersea Boats Displayed in Two Harbors LONDON. Keb 13 (by mall). Knglnml has sunk anil captured a vastly Rrealer number of cSermnn submarines since the Clerman submarine war went Into effect I'ebruary 1 than at any time preceding that decree. It Is known that more than one sub in? rlne supply station lias been discovered and put out of business by Ilrltlsh nanl vessels. i:ldence Is plentiful that the British navy, engaged In tho most colossal shark hunt ever known to the high seas, Is making a successful hunt of It. In other wolds, Kneland is getting Hie German submarines. She Is getting them and she Is "getting" them That Is to say, she Is capturing them and eho Is sink ing' them. How she Is doing It, where mid how many she got thus far the censor does not permit one to tell, but Kngland knows It. and It is safe to bellee that Hermany Is beginning; to know It It In uo other way, Germany Is learning It through tho gre.tt number of the undersea crows that full to return, What proportion of the number of Cler man submarines mastered by the navy may be catalogued as captures and what pro portion as sinkings cannot be given. The personal disposition of'naa! officers Just now Is to sink rather than to capture, but the size of the captive hauls stowed away In one or two Ilrltlsh harbors makes It difficult to believe that more than their number has actually been sent to the bot tom. Headed home for a flesh supply of petrol, It Is declared, many a German sub marine has found It Impossible to get through tho mine fields. Some liae been sunk and some hac slipped away to hide, At more than one supply station ills- coered and put out of business by Ilrltlsh naval vessels, German submarines hae turned up to find all, oupplles vanished, 'sometimes -t& be captured or sunk "them selves by waiting British craft. For reasons of the Admiralty's own, the facts of Ilritleh success ngalitut the sub mailnes are being kept within the Admi ralty. The bame course, was followed, it will be remembered, In tho first days of the first big submarine menace, when, us now, the Admiralty did not allow the de tails of its success to become known until long afterword, confining such publicity as was permitted to general statements of the character hero given. BARBED WIRE DEFENSES FOR DELAWARE CHANNEL Commandant at Fort du Pont Awaits Their Arrival Expected Today or Tomorrow WILMINGTON. Del. Maith 1 -Colonel Harris, commandnnt ut Koit du Pont and in charge of tho defenses of the Delaware, is anxiously awaiting the arrival of more than 200,000 pounds of tele-lnch who netting which the forces under his command will stretch across the rler to prevent hos tile submarines from ascending the stream and attacking shipping and doing damage to munition plants and other industries, or to Philadelphia. The netting Is expected to arrhe today or tomorrow. It will be unloaded from the cars carrying it nnd taken Into the fort reservation, where the troops will put It together In huge sections. These hectlons. then will be loaded on tugs, of which there nro seeral at the foit, and taken down the river to the spot where tho net will be put In place. The understanding Is that the narrow channel between Reedy Island and the arti ficial Islands eastward of It has been chosen. SALOONKEEPER MUST , PAY WOMAN $5000 Widow, Whose Husband Was Killed After Drinking at Bar, Receives Damage Verdict The liability of saloonkeepers for fur nishing "by gift, sale or otherwise" liquor o any person visibly affected by drink was fixed by a Jury before Judge Staples In Court of Common Pleas No. 2 today when a widow was awarded $5000 In dam ages against Cornelius P. Qulnn, a saloon keeper at the southeast corner ot A street and Allegheny avenue. The case estab lished a precedent In Philadelphia County. The award was made to Mrs. Mary Mc Cusker, 2952 Itosehlll street, a widow with five young children. Her husband, Frank A. McCusker, according to the testimony, was a mlllworkcr who took part In labor union movements. He died. It was said, on June 10, lslff, shortly after being In duced by friends to have several- rounds ot drinks In Qui nil's saloon. Congressman John t. K. Scott and Wil liam T. O'Connor, who represented the widow's claim, produced evidence to show that McCusker was found Intoxicated In the saloon by his titlrteen-'year-old daughter sent to look for him, and that he fell In leaving the saloon, striking his bead on the pavement. Ills skull was fractured, Attorney O'Connor, In presenting the case to the Jury, contended that the Indirect cause ot McCusker'H fatal Injury was the fact that while In the saloon he was al lowed to get an ovcrsupply of liquor and that the saloonkeeper was responsible for civil damages. More Marines Land in Cuba WASHINGTON. March 1., Additional United States marines have been, landed in Cuba at several points; It was' officially announced here thla afternoon. The ma ffim"3t ffitSSV resonTt Bdl.V. o'n 'm Kentish rjKS rlSrinJrtt' i on,n.n .. injured i. BASKETBALL SCORES rrnnkfoid High (first halt) .... 18 Catholic High 0 rraiikfouUHRli. 2d (f list half). 0 Control High, 2d 0 Ablngton H gills (fhst half) . . 10 Jenltlntowii High, hills. .'. . . 4 ADDITIONAL RACING RESULTS Thhvl Havana race, 3-ycnv-olds nnd up, & furlongs Encore, Ot), Unvnu 7 to 10. 1 to 3. out, won; Babe. 102, J. Ityan, 20 to 1, 0 to 1, l to 1, second; Mnigaict Ellen, 108, Wlngfield, 5 to 1, 8 to 5, 4 to 5. .third. Time, 1.01 2-r. CALIFORNIAN ASKS REPARATION FROM KAISER &ACKAMENTO, C.il., Mulch 1. Absciiiblytiinii Don Williams, nlfpud (t CFolution In the lower Ilou&e today urging Congress to 'bt;fi lcpnintlon lium Germany for the death of William Evn, u CMlfoiiiinii, on the toipcdocd liner Lacouin. MOTORTRUCK KILLS SCII00L CIIILI) Hauls Cnllani, nine yeais old. of 0 West Wildey street.'war Idllod by an nutomohilo truck at Fiont nnd Allen sticcls while tin child was on his way home fiom the Immaculate Conception Seliooi today. The driver of the machine, John Dougheity. twenty-fivi yeais old, of 251 East Tubculum street, diovu tho boy to the Stet&on Hospital, wheio he was attested. Ho was held without ball by Magistrate Vates to await the action of the Coroner. BARBED WIRE FENCE SURROUNDS ARSENAL SHOPS KOCK ISLAND, 111., March 1. Woik wa& staited today on elec tion of a high licnvy-woven wire fence around all the bhops ot the Hock Iblaud Aibenal hcie. The fence will be topped with bcvcinl strands, of bathed wiie and will bo lclnfoiced by a heavy iucrense in armed guards. , MOBILIZATION OF INDUSTRIAL RESOURCES ASKED WASHINGTON, .Miueli l.-l'iealdeiit Wilson" Council for National Defense today renuesteil tlio Huieuu of KoreiKii nml Domestic Comiueioo to proceed ut once with mobilization ot the nation's Industrial tesouices alons the lines that, have already been luld down. GREEK SAILORS REFUSE TO GO THROUGH BLOCKADE l-'iftcen sailors of the (Si eels steamship Sullamenla, which Is scheduled to sail from this port next Satin day, have said that they will not sail with the vessel because of their fear of submailnes. Their captain has refused to pay them off. They will have a heariiiK under the rulings of the I?.i l-'ollettc seamen's law by a United States Commissioner. SUPREME COURT ASKED TO QUASH ROCKEFELLER SUITS WASHINGTON, March 1. llilefs for John D. Itochefelter nnd his son, John U., Jr., named defendants In the Covei ninent's tiust suit against the frilled States Steel Corporation, were filed in the Supieme Couit this afternoon. The brief holds lower courts found the Rockefellers not to have been active In "Steel Trust" affairs, dhtmled the complaint so far as It applied to them, and that the Supieme Court should do likewise. FOOD RIOTING RESUMED BY NEW YORK WOMEN .NEW YOIIIC, March 1. Serious food ilotliiR broke out In New Yoik today after a lull of two days. An anptry mob of women stormed a pushcart peddler in Williamsburg and lolled a policeman In a muddy gutter. It beeanui necessarj to call out additional police to quell the uprising. One woman was arrested. I'rlces continued to slide down the scale, and onions were obtainable for ?7.50 a barrel and eggs were down to forU centH a dozen, ten cents cheaper than last week's low price, l.lve poultry was four cents off. Thlity meetings of protest against pi Ices are scheduled for tonight. PRESIDENT THANKS SUFFRAGISTS FOR PLEDGE OF AID WASHINGTON, March 1. l'rcsldisit Wilson today expicssed his thanks to the National American Woman Suffrage Association for its offer whole-heartedly to aid the Government In every way possible In eae of war In a letter sent to suf frage headquarteis. TOLLS REMOVED ON WILLOW GROVE PLANK ROAD NOIlllfSTOWN". l'a., March 1. -Montgomerj Cotintv Commissioners announced that, commencing today, tolls would no longer be taxed on tho Oerniantown and Willow Grove plunk load, ns they had paid to the company $27,000 which a jury awarded was due for the filling of the piopertj. These wcte four gates on the Ilve-inllu stietch between Geininntonu and Willow Grove at W. W. Harrison's Grey Tovvert,, at Glenslde, at Weldon mid ut Willow (Siove. SENATE KILLS $100,000 FOOD PROBE FUND WASHINGTON, March 1. -The $100,000 appropilatlon passed by the House for u nation-wide food Investigation by tile Federal Trade Commission today was stricken from the sundry civil bill h ihe Senate Appiopriatlon Committee on grounds of economy. U. S. WAR MOVE SOON, PARIS BELIEVES l'AHIS. Match 1. No Immediate declaration of war because of the l.aconla ' sinking Is expected' by the French piess, but It Is believed President Wilson will' j take tneasiiies which must toon Hud to war. CITY'S PURSE HOLDS ."519,000,000 BALANCE The weekly statement of City Treasurer AVIlllam McCoach shows I hat the receipts amounted to GC9,G"G.G7 and tho payments to $442,233.45, which, with the sum on band lafct week, leuves a b'llance of $19,481,7 1.33 on deposit This does not Include the sinking fund account. MORE THAN $15,000,000 INCOME TAX IN THIS DISTRICT More 'than $15,000,000 is expected to be paid for Income tax In this district accoidlnt? to Ephralm I.ederer. Collector of Internal (levenue. Today is the last day for filing tho Income leturns. More than 28.000 Individuals and 8000 corpora tions must bo heard from before midnight tonight. The flics will be sent to Wash. Ington to bo assessed, and bills will be sent out May 1 and must be paid before June IS. NAVAL MILITIA SEEKING RECRUITS A campaign for youifs men bus been started by tho First Battalion of the Naval Militia of 1'cnnsylvanla. One evening u week Is devoted by the guardsmen Bailors to learning tho rudiments of the naval reserve service. The naval militia men are paid on a basis ot twenty-flvo per cent of the pay of tho men In the regular service This Is given to members who attend half the weekly drills. MAYOR UNGUARDED FIRST TIME SINCE VICE RAID For tho first day since the famous vice laid of last summer Mayor Smith has been without a bodyguard. Acting Uetectlvo George Bens has not been returned! to duty1 as the Mayor's oniclal bodyguard, and the Mayor today walked the corridors of City Hall without a shudow. ' GERMAN PLANE, SHELLS NORTHCLIFE'S HOME TOWN. ... . . i.(wmnv. March 1. A German air cst! th WarOn.cc un'VhUt'. bomb araV ttom u German, aeroplaa raid was made today on the, seaside WITHDARKNESS Obscuration of Sunshine Forces Lighting in Central Section CHICKENS ON ROOSTS OUT IN THE SUBURBS City Hall Pigeons in n u n tm ,"M HI ell Strange Visitation, Like That of 1915 WEATHER MAN EXPLAINS Scientific Explanation of Darkness at High Noon A SCIENTIFIC explanation of the " midday darkness is as follows: The snow cooled the lower air I currents. When these came in con tact with the upper air strata a thicl; fop; was formed by a process of con densation. Ordinarily, this would. nave uecn dissipated by the wind, but today tho wind was not of suf ficient strength to push the pall away. The lower cool currents were very thin, causing the point of, condensation to be near the ground, adding to the intensity of the dark ness. Midday darkness settled over the city to day, bringing night at noon. Tho phenomenon, which Is the second Philadelphia ban experienced within two ears, came suddenly, blotting out even the sickly gray light of the heavens. A heavy mist, ftoathig less than a thousand feet about the skysciapeis, covered the central section of the city. Increasing In density as the weakly puffing wind failed and died, Within a few minutes after noon Phila delphia was transformed from a city by' da to a city by night. The unscheduled "night" remained until shortly before 2 o'clock this afternoon, when the fog lifted, daylight, returned and the; lights were turned off. Lights blossomed out In every building In the central business section. Trolloy cars turned on their lights. Headlights glared -a, from autojnoblles. At a word from ChUt ? Mclaughlin, of tho Klectrlcal Bureau, the,,.. street lamps along Broad, Chestnut and fif Walnut streets were Hashed. HALL A BnACON City Hall tower, a beacon In the shroud lug gloom, gleaming with many brilliant bulbs, turned u pallid green by the fog and Intermittent -snowfall. Around the eaves fluttered a few disconsolate pigeons, like wraiths In the unearthly atmosphere. The taste of night, which was at Its height between noon and 1:30 o'clock this afternoon, affected most of the central buslr ness section. While housewives In West Philadelphia, at Klghtecnth tnd Diamond streets and more Outlying districts knitted at their wlndovvs, their husbands downtown sat In Illuminated ofHces. Wondering queries from hundreds of pea bons as what the strange visitation meant kept the Weather Bureau busy. The scientific explanation given by the Weather Bureau was that tho lower air currents, cooled by, the snow, formed vapor upon contact with the upper warm ar strata, This apor remained because t tivo-mlle-an-hour vvhtjl was not sufficient disperse It more rapidly than It formed. BLANKET NEAU EAKTH, The dense clouds no one knows hoiv thick they ver?-settled-down close to the earth, perhaps as low as 600 feet above the ground. They brought darkness more pronounci than that of June 22. 3915, when a similar "night" visited Philadelphia suddenly. So daik did It become that pedestrians, espe cially at Broad and Chestnut streets, were confused In attempting to effect crossing ot the stieets. Chickens Ino th subuibs, as usual, went, to roost. The supeistltlous, connecting the dismal sky with world events, predicted- war or worse disaster for the natldn, Altogether, the damp, dark day enable' f'n,ttlm,,l n,i l'tiri, mfii. folumn Thri" - - - - r ,,.-. a i'ri.-Tf nfTWGTinMS tl e '.4. ON IDAHO MARRIAGE BILL Inclusion of Asiatics in Prohibited' Matrimonial Classes Prompts " Query ' , I1C IISK, Idaho, March 1. The Japanesa Government has made known through Its Ambassador at Washington that It Is In terested In the Atherton anti-Asiatic mar riage bill pending before the State Senate. In a telegram to the Governor Secretary Lansing says: "The Japanese Ambassador informs me that Senator Atherton has proposed an amendment to a pending bill relating to mixed marriages which will Include among. prohibited marriages those between whltiw anu .Mongolians. I uum iuuti piiruia1: a statement of your opinion as to the llkelK; hood of Its enactment." ,r Edge Addresses New Yorkers NISW YOUK, March 1. Governor of New Jersey, and Comptroller Vr sooke at the monthly lunchepn.atn Zk'SKS .iv of the Chamber of Commerc'?ar'i stnt of New York. Ttenorts wcm lash-: mltted from the committee on toptm 90 j merce and the revenue laws, ttomfm Hrij! mlttee on commercial education ffffcil the special committee on nation witt.jfl and naval mllltla. "' v 'J Whisky Smuggler Dka,f,(! IUVINGTON. n Murehn.vm Bonevvan,. of the -bllu4 l" Mhooner EllaabetJi ".Ckirij. Ijinoanter CeUPtr'. Jail of during ap teKjtit MwMt i ? $ and nt; Virginia peirai mm -M J ,.- " -" i wjnw. y.r "& t' .f1 I r 1 '. i yi s m n ?5 ffi rhi
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