i AEs ee 4 freshman race in 9:29 3-5, with Cornell tr rere Hr second. % | 25. ‘Obituary: O'Donovan Rossa (Jere- & miah O'Dcniovan), Ir:sh patriot leader, oe in New York city, aged 84. ge 30. Personal: Genevieve Clark, daughter fe of Speaker Champ Clark, married at ge Bowling Green, :Io., to James M. * Thomson, a New Orleans journalist. * i \ JULY. . il v 2. Obituary: Gen. Porfiriv Diaz, forme ; oe president . of Mexico after several - | terms and deposed by Madero, in on Affai il I Paris; aged 85. 3. Attempted Assassination: J. P. Mot- xt Record of Shipwrecks, Fires, | rein > meres a He gan, the banker, shot at Glen Cove, o i N. Y.,, by Frank Holt, a German col- # Storms and Accidents | A a Do ’ lee professor. 3 S = Obituary: St. Clair McKelway, editor : and the Year’s p an It 4 of the Brooklyn Fagle, in Brooklyn, & aneous lte N. Y.; aged 70. $b Necrology. ou ns. 7. Storm: Tornado wrought havoe in * § SO @ddetedoleiesfoioiotolofodededededefofodededol the middle west. Cincinnati suffered sjefefeietolofooioioioinineioiioieilelel db @ 0 | most; dead reported at upward of 40, s with many missing. JANUARY. Bn oy To am Ban | 1 Nowml Rights Semany/ fepiis bo 4 : 1! rom Spain. the second note of the United States, 1. Exposition: Panama-Caiifornia expo- Obituary: Eben Plympton, old time ac- promising to safeguard Americans sition "ened at San Diego. tor, in New York city; aged 62. under their own flag. Obituary: J. M. Wright, civil war | 13. Obituary: W. R. Nelson, editor Kan- | j4 Neutral Rights: The United States veteran and military annalist, in sas City Star, in that city; aged 74. government notified Great Britain that Washington. Stock - Boom: Bethlehem Steel jumped this country would not recognize pro- nancial: to 155 in the New York Stock Ex- Financial: London Stock Exchange | 8 . Ne o C. ceedings under British orders in coun- reopened. | Shengs where 87,300 shares were cil as valid. ; 5 ealt in. aw Harry K. Thaw B ee od Ur Si Dery 1. Spotting: Big league baseball season Thaw Se ey jury in New York ui hoy Boy ae: 2000 fine for @ 45 Obituary: Ex-Gov. U. A. Woodbury 15. yd: Fiood in Ohio caused loss of Gen. J. I. Rinaker, veteran ex-congress- of Vermont, at Burlingten; aged 77. $2,000,000; 5 persons drowned... man: aged 86 : 18. Mexico: Villa's army defeated by | 4g Sporting: Norman S. Taber of Bo ston Personal: President Wilson's daughter Obregon’s forces at Celaya. made a new world's 1 mile run record Mrs Sayre gave birth to a son n Obituary: Nelson W. Aldrich, former at Cambridge. Time, 4:12 3-5. the White House senator from Rhode Island, in NeW | 9 Anniversary: Southold, N. Y., began 6. Obituary: R. W. Shurtleff, civil war York oity; aged B. {he 20th anniversary celebration of its "Veteran ‘and tioted artist, in. New 21. Munitions Export: President Wilson settlement (1640). York: aged i officially notified Germany that this [og Neutral Protest: can mote 7. Mexico: Carranza's forces defeated country would not stop the exporta- to Germany on the tor RoepotionE of eu- " Villa's troops at Pueblo: Villa lost 700 Hons of arms-and smmupition. trals received in Berlin. It refuses to killed. ’ | %. Obituary: Frederick W. Seward, son compromise with Germany on. neutral 10. Obituary: Marshall P. Wilder, hu- of Secretary of State ¥ aoa. rights and declares that further en- ! o b 8 and who was wounded in defending croachments will’ be considered ‘“de- Horst and author, at St. Paul, Minn; his father when attacked on April 14, liberately unfridndly.” : » . 1885, at Montrose, N. Y.; aged 83. A 12. Obituary: Mrs. John Wood, once nof- * gg Freat Record: April heat record of 51 Steamer Disasters Lake Sxcurdon ed actress on the English-American steamer Eastland went down at her apd: 9 degrees In New York city. dock in Chicago; out of 2,408 passen- giage, in England; seed =. Cruiser Interned; Ggrman raiding cruls- gers and 80 crew 981 were drowned or 18. Parthougio Earthquake in, eval ‘er Kronprinz Wilhelm was interned at missing . Avezzano being the principal sufferer | Newport News, Va. till the end of | gz Haiti: Political revolt aginst pom About 30,000 deaths. % Fire: Public library of St. Paul de- excoution of 1g) politieal (p yO 17. Socialism: Socialists of European neu- stroyed by fire; loss $375,000 Guillaume took. refuge in ul Franc tral states met in London for a peace Peace Congress: International peace Jegation. conference. {congress met at The Hague. Obituary: Gen. A. M. Stoessel, noted Panama Canal: Name of Culebra cut, = he Frengh a ule Sus in the defense of Port Arthur in 1884-5, in the Panama canal, changed to Gall- de 4 President Gu lat me an a akiot a" 3 Petrogiea; Seat 67. di : & lard cut. ose death. co: en oque nzales & Fire: Colon, Panama, swept by fire; hasen DE a of - oi. | los $2500.00 in the business district, B. Halu: Haitian Ee andorh 2 United co by the conven A i wiers buildings were destroyed. Prince to aid in protecting foreigners AG ; : sith i I oe red, EH Rogie 0 | . MAY. from the mob, W. A. C 1 Shipwreck! British steamer Penarth 5s a | PIOSONC wre ren author and SL. AY i A; Croffu, journar Wreoied one Norfolk coast; 21 sail- very | Wagner, Harry Fogel, Erna m3, | ton: Te T " g rs drown g 19. Obituary Col. J. A. Joyce, feflersben a | Dennis Tedrow, Lee and Ciay Meese, Miss “Bess “Engle nus” peen u Yetergn, nor 2 Ri LA Wag ohe - { Maythorn and Mary Horchler and. treatment in a Pittsburg hospi ngton; aged ©». G. B. rothingha A “ noted light opera star, at Burlingtd health. Grace Martz. throat trouble. ” Y41 aged 5 song) President GaE Of the The “Four Piece” Orchestra consist Mr. Peter Nathan “has been 21. co: is res 3 es AR A 5 2 3 and his cabinet abandoned Mex}yersdale | 108 of wo Harding, drum, S i ven sick the past two weeks. ~-a8 nu eapital vited to | 00d, violin John Tressler, slide trom Drs. Legge and Robinson wei — favaged the Pq me. The | bone and James Swank, piano gave Sl tor the |dances in Mays Hallgbver the holidays : installed | Season on Frida aturday, Tuesday WZITV IOS os our yo 11: end Wednestfimain. Toy Wl a Place Neuwil soil Snyder | tinue to gi® dances on Friday and P ac 03 Jos) smn EP Snyder finish his €o . Soa [IA Y[¥ice Presi. 3 ts. J La i ~rs Invocation The Menhorn barber shop under the be; Secretary Evo p. | Management of Clarence Menhorn has “as ~Liewis Knepp; been greatly tmprovad by installin® & Haiti: United States forces 1 ernér; Sentinel, electric massage, 10 3137 le i MS { Obituary: Gen. B. F. Tracy, lawy, y and {Pickt, Delbert MeKen i Gal. burst | soldier, former secretary of navy, In New York city; aged 85. v Te ery Roosevelt won his defense 10. Mexico: United States battleships rs et suit against charge of libel made by ~~ Louisiana and New Hampshire sailed y i — 0" = \ William Barnes. t for Vera Cruz Mex: to quell abt- “The United %. Japan-China: Japan and China signed foreign demonstrations. x. Le fotos to the German treaties to carry out Japan's demands. The War: United States declined to put 34 __..~at and also to Great Britain Neutrality: President Wilson proclaim- an embargo on the sale of munitions TD, watmE its position rezarding new ed United States neutrality in the war to belligerents and reed to accept German war zone und thie use of the between Italy and Austria-Hungary. . pay from Germany for the sinking of United States flag by Great Britain. JUN ‘ the ship Frye. 312. Obituary: James Creclman, noted NE. 11. Mexico: Gen. Carranza resented Pres- journalist, died in Berlin; aged 53. 1. Convention: United Confederate Vet- ident Wilson's attempt to restore pedce Fanny Crosby, blind hymn writer erans met at Richmond. in’ Mexico. died in Bridgeport, Conn. 2 Mexico: President Wilson warned the General Carranza was notifled that a 18. Obituary: Ellen Mary McClellan; wid- -Mexican revolutionists to make peace. - ed Intervention In Mexico by he ow of Gen. Georze B. McClellan, not- . Baggage Law: New United States bag- | United States would not be approved ed leader in the civil war. at Nice, | gage law went into effect. ! wa the A,B. C. wers. France. . 8. Personal: Gen. Bennett H. Young re- : Teague re: Heavy shipment lot 18. Obituary: Frank James, last of James elected commander in chief United | an reasure, imcluding "$19,000,000 brothers, noted in the civil war and Confederate Veterans. } in gold, arrived at New York. later as desperate men, died near Ex- | Trust Victory: United States petition 13. Volcanoes: Vesuvius, Stromboli and ¢Blsior Springs, ‘Mo.; aged 74. to dissolve the United Btates Steel . Etna, the Italian volcanoes, became 2. Obituary; Frank Fuller, war gover- corporation denied by court of appeals. active. | "" nor of Utah under Lincoln, in New | & Spores Walter J. spi. won his; Haiti: Halll elected Dartiguenave prep- Kou! city; aged 88 etropolitan champion- | dent : aosition: Panama- Pacific internation- hip, defeating LH Anderson 2 up 1H Obituary: John W. Harper, no . 1 Sxnosiviofat San Francisco formal-, the foun shen .: Sy Ne Y. ' publisher, in New York: aged 84. ! 7 opened. > | Mexico: The; United: States 4 ’ MARCH PL of sim a x “wi an’ Guatetasis, Soi o poem y : ; ntly, ap = gine Accident: ‘Mine s3iGaion 4! a Fy an Lansing. appointed ». ne Jattion ak is pe Hinto ‘state ar . jot Obituary Choate: 3. Fifcian pect so uct 4 ep h ra > Fomor nse: 4 Geor| a poison com- | © wsérvists assaulted police cemen who Set ry writer, fi Yo cl id i L 1 repo mst commuting | tected Germs from the 3 hid Em 5: Os Be: seilte of rani. lieged murderer. | Obituary: Gen. Black, ma law- oo Groniine ». e Casé: Germamy announced that yer and civil war Cranach, tn Ch leage: ot & oe : Joy pik of the king of the United aged. RN. var nausitiof, men or muppiies to . Fy a orm cans Soo v TR, Jey or y ship ould be referr to a pos | acon th” ana of fr i bn, HII 4 court apd not settled ‘Undehine tars ether points on the comst: inysd 4. Political: The 38tatyciiied congrese | as this country had demanded. LE at $30,000,000 a deaths TAR) the o | Teo B ha lite s w io on the Lu- ? i Ina ARS Hn was publishéd in the ! im taken from prison to escape from ihe asyium at United States and also delivered to at Milledgeville and hanged near Ma: , Bead. 9:3 83 government in Beriin. It rlstta, home of hie alleged victim, » fry ictal: wccuitied on Shake Obituary . B L. Molineux, noted | Convention: ational Educational a. £ comsiracy - ‘glyil, war officer, in New York city; a he ar BtDeliahd Sal 2 : t o ar: nu Avg, Disaster: Lincoln Be Beaches: ‘18 fi af: Molly Bjurstedt won or 2 Sm board to atu isi nerd America oP, . ia tonal tennis champlensh! v o dams case. i EE acifie io @#r sia: score, 46 6—2% = Mexlc rranza’s geperslg announc- isco. . persons killed and 50 od t tt they would support his objec- jary: Samuel Bowles, editor and 23 m which swept over Wir tion: to engage in a peace erence. Pla of ‘the Spiietad Repu c- i g orm Minnesota The he Yar: Great Britain decigred cotton t Springfield, M 18. Obftuary: Col. ’C. E. Woodruff, U. 8. traband. A » Obithary: ee “Frond A Rams. Ai, noted surgeon and anthropologist, | 36. Toe” rable Case: Berlin informed historian: and. wublicist, in ‘Washing- in New Rochelle, N. Y.; aged 6. Washington that, the killing of Amer- ton; 9»: NH. Peace League: New peace league or- foans on board of the-Arabic was not 84 Obituary: Mary Anna Jacksoh, wid- genized in Philadelphia. intentional: ow of Gen. T. J. (Stonewald Jackson, Indian Troubles: Yaqui Indians declar- Convention: Conference of. governors at Charlotte; No C.; aged 84. ed war on the United States. Fleet met in Boston. #. Ship Disaster: United States subma- ordered’ to sail for lower California | 238. Obituary: Jolin D. Long, former secs rine F-4 sank off Honolulu while mak- to protect Americans. retary of navy, &t Hingham, Mass; ing & submerged run. All on board | 18: Sporting: Jerome D. Travers, noted aged 77. drowned amateur, won title of open golf cham- Obituary: Paul Armstroag, playwright, 2. Fire: Fire in the business district of pionship of the United States, defeat- in New York; aged 48. Spokane caused loss of nearly $500,000. ing McNamara, at Baltusrol, N. J. 80. Convention: Spanish American war #8. Neutral Protest: The United States Thaw Case: Harry K. Thaw granted a veterans met at Scranten, Pa. protested against the British order in fury trial to test his sanity. Cold Wave: Frost in the middle west. council barring neutral trade with . Naval: The Arizona battleship, big- | 8. U. 8. Submarine: United States F-4, Germany. gest United States superdreadnaught, which sank off Honolulu March 2, Jaunched at Brooklyn navy yard. was raised. APRIL. 3. Earthquake: Earthquake in southern SEPTEMBER t California caused loss of $1,000,000. . 4 Wr Duehine! aun ost #4. Frye Case: United States sent a note 4. Pire: Loss of $2,000,000 by flames on ple drowned. to Germany asking for a reconsider- the grain pier in Newport News, Va. Pugili 7 Willard defeated Jack ation of the Frye case, refusing to ac- Sporting: Amateur golf championship 5 gllism: Jess Willar - cleate 2 cept Germany’s contention that it was of the United States won by Robert Johnson at Havar<, Cuba, i a case for a prize court. A. Gardner of Chicago, who defeated 6. Neutral Protest: U miteft Set of chal British Blockade: Great Britain an- John G. Anderson of Mount Vernon, lenged Great Britain's right $9 bar ne nounced to the United State®that its N. Y.,, 6 up and 4 to play, at Detroit. nocent neutral ships from belligeren blockade against neutral trade with 7. British Gold: $66,000,000 in British gold ports. gt Germany would continue. reached New York via express ship- Obituary: Curtis Cuild, statesman and | g Mexico: Carranza troops eccupied ment. diplomat, jn Boston: aged 55 Ln Mexico City. Sporting: William M. Johnston won the %.. Cruiser Interned: German cruiser Obituary: Rafael Joseffy, celebrated national tennis singles championship Prince Eitel F riedrich interned at pianist, in New York city; aged 63. at Forest Hills, N. Y., defeating Mau- Newport News, Va.. till the end of the Sporting: Yale defeated Harvard in the rice E. McLoughlin, with a score of War, varsity races at New Haven, winning 1-6, w 7-5, 10-8. Obituary: F. Hopkinson Smith, author all varsity, freshman and second var- 8. Conv@#tion: American Bankers’ ass0- and artist, in New York city; aged 76. sity events. ciation met at Seattle, Wash. 9. Mexico: Villa's fore defeated at | ‘sy Mexico: Gen. Huerta arrested at New- | 9. Heat Wave: Temperature $0 In New 1's army. man, N. M., by United States mar- York: hottest Sept. 9 since 1884. son, journal- shals on charge of conspiracy. Obituary: Albert G. Spalding, baseball New York Tribune, 28 Sporting: €ornell Fon the varsity veteran and sporting goods manufac- ed 84. race at P Y., with Le~ turer, at Point Loma, Cal.; aged @. . I 20:36 3-5: | #8 Personal: Naval advisory board ep- 1-5, with Penn- pointed, with Thomas A. Edison, chair- 1se won the men. 15. 28. 21. 28. 2. 28. 8. A 10. FE \ Sporting: Haiti: Personal: Convention: Storm Disaster: Sporting: fitorm: Fire: Loas of 1.200 at plant of Beth- lehem’ Bteel wo o Explosion: Pont Peace Mission: Heat Wave: York; hottest Sept. 15 on record. Directum I. made new world’s pacing record of 1:56 for three-quar- ters of a mile without wind shield, at Syracuse, N. Y. Contraband A Trading: court condemned $15,000,000 worth of American goods as contraband forfeit to Great Britain. ten years. Arctic Exploration: ansson, the explorer, heard from after a silence of 17 months. He was in Banks Land and reported finding un- charted land. Mexico: Pan-American conferees on Mexican affairs postponed decision three weeks. Mexico: In an affair between United States troops and Mexican invaders at Progreso, Tex., 1 American and 11 Mexicans were killed. Obituary: Dr. Austin Flint, noted physi- cian and alienist, in New York city: aged 80. Obituary: J. Keir Hardie, noted Eng- lish Socialist, M. P. and lecturer, in Glasgow, Scotland. Explosion: Gasoline and dynamite ex- plosion in the business district of Ard- more, Okla. killed 65 people and in- jured over 100; property loss $500,000. Convention: 49th annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic open- ed in Washington, Convention: Farmers’ National con- gre:s opened at Omaha. President Wilson - welcomed the G. A. R. veterans in Camp Em- ery, Washington. Sporting: The Philadelphia club clinch- ed the National league pennant at Boston by defeating Boston § to 0. Wireless: Wireless phone talk was ac- complished between Arlington, Va. and San Francisco, 3,000 miles. Sons of Veterans’ annual encampment, in Washington. War Anniversary: Semicentennial anni- versary of the Washington grand re- view of 1865 by 20,000 G. A. R. veter- ans. Gulf hurricane struck Louisiana coast; deaths estimated about 550. ’ Wireless: Speech transmitted by wire- less phone from Arlington, Va., to Honolulu, 4,600 miles. Boston became American league champion through the defeat of Detroit by St. Louis, 8 to 2 at De- troit. OCTOBER. Personal: Capt. BE. R. Monfort of Ohio elected commander in chief of the G. A. R. Convention: International Farm con- arc. opened at Denver. Submarine: Germany disavowed the sinking of the liner Arabic and agreed to pay indemnity for loss of Ainerican lives when the ship was torpedoed. Sporting: Harvard defeated Carlisle in football, Gil Anderson won 350 mile auto race for the Astor cup, at Sheepshead Bay. Amerl conferees voted co as the de facto government. nvention: National Woman's Chris- tian Temperance union met at Seat- tle, Wash. Sporting: Boston Americans defea®d the Philadelphia Nationals in the fifth de ries, § to 4 at Philadelphia. ‘Mexico: The United States, Chile, Uruguay, formally recognized Gen. bead of’ the de facto government of Wireless: Wireless telephoning -ac- complished between Arlington, and Paris. Sporting: Cornell defeated Harvard, 10 to 0, at Cambridge, Mass. Princeton defeated Dartmouth, 30 to 7, at Prince- ton. War Blockade: Steamer Hocking, sailing under United States flag, seiz- ed by a British cruiser off the port of New York. NOVEMBER. Obituary: Herman Ridder, German- American editor, in New York; aged 64. Shipwreck: Steamer Santa Claus, off Oregon; 16 deaths. ~ Obituary: P. A. B. Widerier, capital- ist, in Philadelphia; aged 82 Football: Harvard defeated Princeton, 10 to 6. Neutral Protest: United States note to Great Britain declared the British blockade illegal and a curtajiment of tral rights. apan: Dew Yoshihito, formally crowned at Kio ‘Kansas, Nebraska and South hit by a tornado; many deaths. Fosibal) Yale EE aio Princeton by Pr. Solomen Obituary: Schechter, noted . Biblical och schalar and authority, in New, il ~ Harvard defeated Yale, 41 te 6, at Cafibridge, Railroad Accident: 18 persons fa a circus Hain head-en collision n Neutral Rights: Great Britain seized at Saint Luatd the Anrerican steamer Tennessee. 80 workmen killed at the Du powder plant at Upper Hogley, DECEMBER. German War Charges: The United States requested Germany to recall Boy-Ed and Von Papen, attaches of the embassy at Washington. Dr. Karl Buenz and associates found guilty of aiding Germany by false shippers’ manifests. World’s Fair: sition closed; 000; profits $2.0 Del. Panama- Pacific Susndance over expo 17.000, - 1 i s peace mission set out from New York 6. Sixty-fourih conjsress convened. Polftical: Th United States asked Austria te d vow the act of sinking the Italian luc \neola oir Slov. 1. 10. Personal: Pov ma and Von Panen re- called by Germany aw requested by the United States on Dec. 2 11. China: The coun-il of state reported that the recent election declared for a 18. : Marriage of President Wood- row Wilson to Mrs. Edith Bolling Galt. 19. Political: Election of deputies’ in Greecc 28. Personal: Admiral George Dewey's 78th birday celebrated. 27. Conventions: American Society of In ternational Law and Pan-American Scientific congress in W #8. Convention: American goclation meets in Washington Temperature 8 in New British prize | The United States recognized the new Ha-tian government of Pres- | ident Dartiguenave and concluded a treaty establishing a protectorate for : i Vilhjalmur Stef- 29 to 7, at Cambridge. Va., Turkey: 4 = 18. War Zone: %. The Dardanelles: L B CURGPEAN WIR | © FIELD AND IN Campaign Against Russia on Its Eastward Sweep---Con- quest of Warsaw and Other Fortresses. JANUARY. : ; Battleship Sunk: British battleship Formidable sunk in the English chan- | nel by German submarine or a mine; over 600 drowned. France: Germans attacked by the al- | lies at Soissons, France. France: High water in the Aisne compelled the allies to retreat. France: Allies withdrew south of the Aisne at Soissons, losing 5,000. prison- ers and many gun France: Allies tured La Bassse, in France. Cruiser Sunk: In a German naval at- tack on the English coast the German cruiser Bluecher was sunk, with about 700 of her crew. British cruiser Lion disabled. Submarines: German submarines at- tacked British ships in the Irish sea, 800 miles from .the nearest German naval base on the Belgian coast. FEBRUARY. Cruiser Lost: British cruiser Clan MacNaughton, with crew of 230 men, lost while cruising off the British | coast. i Turks, estimated at 12,000, at- tacked British guards along Suez ca- nal south of Ismailia, Egypt. Naval War Zone: German admiralty declared a war zone in the English | channel on and after. Feb. 18. | Bast Prussia: Germans, hy forced march, turned the Russian flank at Johannisburg, in East Prussia, and forced the enémy to retreat hurried- ly to Russian territory. Austrian Front: Austrians reoccupied ~Czernowitz, Bukovina, which the Rus- slans captured early in the war. The German war zone de- cree went into effect, warning neu- trals of danger in the English channel. Ship Evelyn Sunk: American mer- chant ship Evelyn mysteriously sunk in the British war zone in the Irish sea. Poland: Germans stormed and cap- tured Przasnysz, Poland, an impor- wc Russian post north of Warsaw. Allied fleet bombard- ed Turkish forts guarding the Darda- nelles strait, sea entrance to Constan- tinople. ‘ MARCH. War Blockade: England announced her intention to stop all ships to and from the seaports of Germany. Submarine: Three British merchant vessels sunk by German submarines off the coast of England. { Cruiser Raider: German auxiliary Prince Eitel Friedrich made port at Newport News, Va., at the end of a ,000 mile sea raid, faving on board. 342 passengers and crew of ‘sunk by her, inciuaing. the ‘Americ n ship W. P. DmBrinat 7 IS hs 1 French 1 Swedish merchant vessels oed by German submarine U-20 in British waters. British auxiliary crufser Bayamo sunk by a mine or German | submarine off the coast of Scotland; about 200 Britons drowned. Naval: German cruiser Dresden, which survived the battle of Falk- land islands, sunk in battle with a British fleet near San Juan Fernan- dez island, off Chi ile. British Blockade: ' Great Britain is- sued a sweeping order In council cut- ting off all outside trade with Ger- many and refused to emter into an agreement with Germany to modify the war zone blo Naval: British battleships Irresistible gnd Ocean and French battleship Bou- | vet sunk by dur! a naval at- tack in the a fing Fall of Przemysl:': — Austrian for- tress of Przemysl in Galicia. surren- dered to the Russian army after a gallant and prolonged defense. APRIL. Naval: British batt =X Lord Nel: son destroyed by Tur! Derda- rielles strait. Aerial Warfare: Sirbine. dropped bombs near on day- light. : : West Front: Germans Cap! the heights of Les Eparges on: Meuse Mne ok. 4 ue i mennsweilerkopf, in jes Ino ey repu Soon Th the allles along tlie Ypres canal with asphyxiating gas a oe this bar- rier to the west side. , Dardanelles: Allied troops landed on shore of the aI dase under fire from the ’ marine: go Gambetta torpedoed by an aa ° Pool on -her hapless voyage. Submarine: American steamer Gulfiight 1 yom Port Arthur, Tex., to Liverpool. England, torpedoed off Scilly islands. De captain was killed; the vessel and the erew saved. Lua tania Sunk: The Lusitania was torpedoed and sunk off Kinsale, Mun- ster coast, Ireland. There were 2,104 persons on board, of whom 1,100, in- cluding about 100 Americans, were * 1 ost. Submarine: British battleship Goliath 14. torpedoed in the Dardanelles with a loss of 509 lives. Italy: The Italian cabinet resigned on account of the war pressure. Galicia: Austro-German recaptured Ja- 2%. Submarines: 28. roslaw, on the west bank of San river, Galicia, forcing the Russians to hur- riedly abandon the Carpathian moun- tains. Italy: The king of Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary, having previous- ly denounced the’ treaty of alliance with the Teutonic powers. Clash of troops on the frontier. Italy: Austrian navy and airships at- tacked Italy’s coast. Italian troops seized Austrian territory. British battleship Triuinph torpedoed in the Dardanelles while supporting a land attack. Submarine: British battleship Majes- tic sunk by a torpedo in the Darda- nelles. JUNE. Przemysl: Germans recaptured Prze- mysl, Galicia, which the Russians had occupied March 22, after a siege of 20 days. Italy: Italians captured Monfalcone, an impc strategic town north- west of Aerial ench airships dropped 130 b 1sruhe, Ger- f uo. T Italy and Bulgaria In the Conflict---Submarine War- . 20. Submarine: Submarine: 14. 19. JE IS IN HE NAVAL ZONES iE RRR EE rhiab Cab) fare and Allied Campaign Against Constantinople. PRPS TF TEI TE TE WA A SRR RR REET many; 200 noncombatants, including summer resort patrons, killed. Submarine: Germany announced the sinking of the famous sybmarine U-29, Capt. Weddigen, by a British mer- chantman flying the Swedish flag. Galicia: Lemberg, Galicia, re oc by Austrians after ten montks’ o pation by Russians. Galicia: Germans captured Halicz, on Dniester river in Galicia, virtually controlling all eastern Galicia. Submarine: British admiralty steam- er Armenian, with Americans in her crew, torpedoed off the British coast; 22 Americans lost. JULY. Poland: Austrians captured Radom, 57 miiles south of Warsaw. Italian cruiser Giuseppe Garibaldi sunk by an Austrian sub- marine in the Adriatic. AUGUST. Italy sent an ultimatum. to Fall of Warsaw: The German army captured Warsaw, the capital of Po- land, after a vigorous campaign which lasted over eight months. . Baltic Sea: ‘' A fleet of German bat- tleships and cruisers attacked the en- trance | to the gulf of Riga, “in the Bal- c sea. A British submarine sank the Turkish battleship Barbarbsse in the sea of Marmora. Submarines: The British transport. Royal Edward was ‘torpedoed and sunk by an enemy submarine in the Aegean sea, with a loss of nearly 1,000 soldiers and sailors. Submarine: A German submarine tor- pedoed the White Star liner Arabic off Cape Clear, Ireland; £9 Americans were among the passengers. Russian Fortress Captured: Névo Geor- Fall of Brest-Litovsk: . 18. Aerial Warfare: 19 8. Bulgaria: “proken 6 Jolles » n gievsk, the second greatest Russian fortress in Poland, with fts garrison, was captured by Gen... ven Beseler's German army. Aerial Warfare: A Russian aeroplane squadron bomb, ed. .Constantinople, killing or es 41’ persons. Aerial Wartare: 62 allied airships flew 100 miles in German territory, drop- ping bombs upon a big munition fac- tory and at several railway junctions in Rhenish Prussia. rvia: Austrian troops crossed the border into Servia. The fo! of Brest-Litovsk fell before the’ as of the German ‘armies. SEPTEMBER. Neutral Rights: German amba notified the i States that diners would not be sunk by without. Ae a 2jhine gre Shine : pot Torn within 2 rpg “French air men’ wile. ed in Baden, Rhenish Lorraine. Zeppelins raided ea : goad: of i Poland: ussians at June and captured 5 ra Bal ns: - i 2 Shahar army. ce: eat drive of the allies. Re 3 seacoast to Verdun. Hoey capture of guns reported and’ 20,600 unwounded prisoners. German front length at La B: Bassee nce, and 3 ‘miles in Champagne! ins: British and French tropps )d on meutral soil. of Greece to support Servia against Austria. and Souchez, Bulgaria vent 3 hour ultimatum’ te Beryja. n Bugarta: Bugera declared war on 18. France: op reign minister of WEEP es ein ther refs fom 3 Bey Baprets to Aerial Warfare: 66 killed and 114 injur- onde y tack, : Great B war on’Buaigarial rm pre Bulsatie: France, Saciaren WAr on . Et by Italy declared war on Bul-- %. garia. Submarine: Germaa cruiser Prins’ Adalbert sunk by British submarine: crew of G57 nearly all lost. Aerial ‘Warfare: Italian airship bom-’ barded Trieste, and the Austrisn ‘air mén bombarded Venice. France: A new French war cabinet wis completed, Aristide Briand, pre- er. Bervia: German troops captured ar- senal town of Kragujevatz, Servia. NOVEMBER. Great railway junction at Nish, Servia, captured by Bulgarians. 7. Submarine: Italian liner Ancona ‘sunk 1 by an Austrian submarine in the Med- iterranean; 208 ‘lives lost, including some Americans. Russian Frontier: Germans abandoned some of the ground in front of Riga. Aerial Warfare: Austrian ' airships bombarded .Verona: 69 vietims, of whom 30 died.. Teutons captured Mitrovitza and Pristina, with control of the vale of Kossovo, in Servia. Italy: Attacks by Ttalian troops along the whole front, especially violent around Goritz, were repulsed. ‘ Servia: Prisrend captured by Bulga- rians, with 17,000 prisoners. DECEMBER. Turkey: British were defeated bY Turks near Bagdad, Mesopotamia. Servia: Germans and Austrian forces captured Monastir, Servia. Allied troops in Greece marching fo relieve Servia forced to retreat to Sa- loniki Last day of volunteering in England; recruiting stations in London crowded with applicants. fecal: Election of deputies in ts ® Eohye ol chofam : Jona 3 erhosterred ined the Conus. Aerial Wastate} ay om f C—O AOR Are the in Harrisbt The bt them that { Such a place for is an offen: a conflagra n mai suggests ti sueh unsig Civic 1 ma Miss Ma ter of Mr. : ey, of Som Milton "Gr ~ George W. 7 ship, were “of Trinity set, by the Miss An of Mr. and . Addison T Colflesh, s« _ Colflesh, o ship, were of the Sor Church by gor. : : Miss Clg Mr. ‘and M ville Towr . and b i and N 4 Mr. and 1 . Hooversvil ersville by day. Miss Ej and Mrs: | Kéim, fon Keim; bot] married a parents b pastor of Chufeh; Miss A Mr. and N JamdsU/P# were mar) Rev. H.. Miss Mr. and’ Harry B. Frank Rh ship, were of the Je by the Re dens, and Mr. and ersville, age of Church b; Miss A Mr. and Shade: to son-of M of Quem red at H tin M. H Miss E 3fr. and ]