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! I I FOrt"fifth YCa,W'N0, 293: PRICE: FIVE CENTS. . IPGDEN CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 12, 1915. Entered a. Second Cla8 Matter at th c ?o.toff,ce, Ogden, Utah

; Italian Troops Storm Trenches

jljj on Carso Front and Defeat Austrians

! MAIN BODY OF SERBIAN ARMY

REPORTED CUT OFFBY INVADERS

'r

5 l Grave Fears for Troop Felt by Allies Serbians Not Heard

i From for Five Days Severe Defeat Inflicted on Bulgars

; by French and Veles Capture Is Confirmed Ger-

I I mans and French Continue Severe Bombard-

j ,.' ment in Loos Region French Repulse

i I L German Batteries.

1 1

JJ .J Rome, Nov. 12, via Paris, 4:40 a. m. Further advances

jg j for the Italians on the Carso front where several important

j& j trenches in the vicinity of San Martino del Carso were stormed,

I are reported in the official statement by Italian army head-

(I quarters issued today.

II Milan, Nov. 12, via Paris, 4:45 a. m. An agreement

J was reached at a meeting of the Italian cabinet last night, ac-

jJJJlf cording to a telegram received by the Secolo from Rome, re-

Mi garding the course Italy should take in the Balkan expedition,

fc the dispatch adds, and the number of men Italy will send to the

J ", front.

W Milan, Nov. 12, via Paris, 4:45 a. m. There is grave

'A reason to fear that the main body of the Serbian army which

ft i has been fighting the Germans and the Bulgarians' right wing,

m I has been cut off between Kralievo and Nish say dispatches re-

jj f ceived here from the Secolo's correspondent. It is possible,

ih the dispatches say, that as the southern Serbian army is holding

'2j at Katchanik, the retreating columns may escape the tenacles

ik I of the invaders, but it is considered significant that no news

I as been received from the retreating Serbian army for five

1 days.

S -4

-k i London, Nov. 12, 9-52 a. m. A Reu-'

ter dispatch from Athens says a Salon

ikl telegram to the Pntrls states that

the French have inflicted a severe de

feat on the Bulgarians near Veles

Innd that the fall of that town is con

sidered imminent

Veles is about 27 miles southeast

of Uskub on the railroad to Saloniki.

A successful French cavalry raid,

which reached the environs of the

city, led to an erroneous report that

it had been captured Wednesday.

Paris, Nov. 12, 2.30 p. m. A spir

ited bombardment has continued in

the sector of Loos, both sides taking

part, according to announcement by

the French war office this afternoon.

In the Artois district, French artil

lery has silenced certain German bat

teries. '

The text follows:

'There was an active bombardment

yesterday in which both sides took

part in the sectors of Loos and of

tho Fosse Calonne. In the region of

Bus in the Artois district our artil

lery reduced to silence certain enemy

batteries, which were firing on our

troops.

"Along tho remainder of the front

the fighting with mines has contin

ued with success.

"In tho Argonne district at Hill No

1225 we delivered a counter-attack by

means of a small mine against certain

works whore tho Germans were show

ing much activity. To the north of

Fllroy tho explosion of another sucli

mine was successful in wrecking cer

tain gallerleB pushed forward by the

enemy and in preventing the continu

ance of this work."

Montenegrins Punish Austrians.

Paris, Nov. 12, 2:40 a. m. The Mon

tenegrin consul general here has re

ceived Iho following consular dis

patch: , ...

"During the figbting on our Saloniki

front Tuesday the enemy suffered se

rious loss. We took fifty prisoners

and two machine guns. During the

night or tho eighth-ninth, tho Austri

ans tried to surprise us near Gra

hovo, but were repulsed. On the

tenth there was artillery fighting

along the Sanjak -front. The cn

emv's infantry attacked us at vari

ous" points, but without offect. We

took more than 100 prisoners.

"An artillery duel is in progress

on the Herzegovina front On the

other fronts there is no change In

the situation.

"n Austrian aeroplane fell into our

lines and the officer and non-commissioned

officer aboard the machine

were taken prisoners."

Peppino Garibaldi Promoted.

Milan. Nov. 12. via Paris. 4:45 a. m.

Peppino Garibaldi and men. in his

command took a prominent part In

the storming of the Col di Lana, says

, a dispatch from Beluno to the Cor

0LW riere Dolla Sera. It was Garibaldi

22p who hoisted the Italian colors on the

flf summit, according to these advices.

M and he was promoted to the rank or

H colonel the next day for distinguished

M service.

fl Greece Declared Friendly to Bulgaria.

' . Berlin, Nov. 12. bv wireless to Say-

jH ville N J. "According to a dispatch

M , tp the Cologne Gazette from Sofia.

H says the Overseas News agency, M.

Skouloudis, tho new Greek premier.

M has assured M. Passarow, Bulgarian

minister nt Athens, of the premiers

f sincere deBlrc to maintain friendly re

V ' lations betwoen Greece and Bulgaria.

H; Greece, the premier told the minister,

j the dispatch adds, was not planulug

BBj to attack Bulgaria."

SpS Saloniki, Greece, Nor. 11, via Paris.

Nov. 12, 2:35 a. m. There was noth

ing to report today on the entente al

lied front. The reported uprising of

tho Albanians against the Serbians

is discredited in well informed circles.

Teutons Pursuing Serbs.

Berlin, Nov 12. by wireless to Say

vllle. Pursuit of the Serbian army

in a southerly direction continues, ac

cording to German officinl report, is

sued today. The advance of tho Ger

mans in the Raislna valley, southwest

of Krusevac, has reached the town of

Kupci. Further eastward Ribairo

and Ribairske Banya have been

reached.

Yesterday more than 1,700 Serbi

ans were taken prisoners and 11 can

non were captured.

The statement adds that the first

mountain ridge south of Kralievo had

been crossed.

Clan MacAlister Survivors Landed.

London, Nov 12, 12:4S p. m. Thirty-eight

Lascars and seven Europeans,

part of the crew of the British steam

ship Clan MacAlister, were landed to

day. The Clan MacAlister, a vessel

of 4.S35 tons, was sunk November 10.

Butter Export Forbidden.

London, Nov. 12, 9.15 a. m Begin

ning November 15, butter will be add

ed to the list of articles whose ex

portation is forbidden by the Swedish

government, according to a Reuter

dispatch from Stockholm. This will

make an embargo on the export of

food products virtually complete.

Three Belgians Executed.

Amsterdam, Nov. 12, via London,

1203 p. m. The execution of three

Belgians found guilty by a German

court martial of communicating news

of troop movements to the allies is

announced by the Echo Beige which

says a fourth Belgian was sentenced

to 12 years imprisonment.

Artillery Combats Reports.

Constantinople, Nov. 11, via London.

Nov. 12. 5:05 a. ra. The following of

ficial statement was Issued today at

the Turkish war office:

"There were artillery combats on

three sectors of the Dardanelles front

with patrol skirmishes near Anafarta.

Near Ari Burnu, our artillery silenced

enemy artillery at the mouth of the

KoraDere. Near Seddul Bahr. an

encmv mine, exploding on the left

wing,' killed a portion of the English

troops."

Review of War Situation.

London, Nov. 12, 12.25 p. m. All

doubts as to what road Greece would

choose out of the muddle caused by

tho divergent views of her political

leaders and as to how the policies

of the Skouloudis cabinet could be

rendered compatible with tho opini

ons of the adverse majority In the

chamber today were dispelled by a

public dissolution of tho chamber of

deputies.

Publication of the decree apparent

ly was received in Athens with calm,

despite the fact that all elements

hoped to avoid elections at the pres

ent difficult moment The Greek

government, it appears, considered

dissolution the only possible means

of securing for itself full and unre

stricted liberty of action.

Greece's Future Action.

Greek officials in London and at

other points continue to assert that

Greece's future actions depend solely

upon military and political considera

tions. As soon as Greece is convinc

ed beyond doubt that tho allies have

produced enough troops to make pos

sible a successful offensive against

Bulgaria and to remove the danger

with which Greece would be con

fronted if she entered tho war Inade

quately assisted, Greece will, so say

her representatives In Europe, imme

diately range herself on the side of

tho allies and under all the military

co-operation of which she Is capable.

Today's news from the Balkans

makes it appear there Is a distinct

possibility that the Anglo-French and

Serbian forces may succeed in gaining

a part of the Nish railway as far as

Uskup.

All accounts received here of the

recent fighting in the neighborhood of

Veles state that tho Bulgarians are

in full retreat after enormoUB losses

and that the freshly arriving allied

troops are expected to push the ad

vantage already attained to a success

ful conclusion. In this case the Bul

garians probably will have to aban

don the Uskup-Kutanovii line, and

the whole southern portion of the

railroad would revert to entente al

lied hands.

The fall of Teles In contral Serbia

after a severe defeat inflicted upon

the Bulgarians by the French is con

firmed, according to a Saloniki des

patch. A report received on "Wed

nesday that Veles had fallen Into

French hands was the next day shown

to be unfounded.

What the loss of life was in the

sinking of tho Italian liner Ancona

by a submarine in tho Mediterranean

has not been definitely determined.

According to a despatch late last

night from Tunis to a Rome news

paper only 223 persons, passengers

and crew, out of a total of 428 on

board tho Ancona, were saved which

would make 203 to be accounted for.

Consula advices to Washington have

indicated that 347 were saved out of

496 said to be on board, leaving 149

unaccounted for.

Berlin has no official advices re

garding the Ancona, it is declared

there.

The Manchester Guardian Interprets

the new recruiting announcement,

over which there is considerable dis

cussion, to mean actual compulsion for

unmarried men.

"To tilk of voluntary enlistment to

a man who is told that if he does not

enlist voluntarily he will be enlisted

all the same," the newspaper says,

"Is to insult his intelligence as well

as to command his person. The sys

tem which tho press bureau state

ment appears to contemplate is not a

voluntary system at all so far as un

married men arc concerned."

On Important Mission.

Paris, Nov. 11, 11:20 p. m Denis

Cochin, minister without portfolio in

the Briand cabinet, has been sent by

the government on a special mission

to tho Orient. He was accompanied

by his secretary, Charles de Lastey

re. Uis brother. Colonel Cochin, who

recently was wounded, left tonight

for Saloniki.

M. Cochin was for many years vice

president of tho Chamber of Deputies

Committee on Foreign Relations, and

is a close student of European poli

tics, upon which he frequently has

spoken In tho Chamber

AUSTRIAN CONSUL

MAKES CHARGES

Consul General Von Nuber

and Count Von Bernstorff

Said to Be Conducting

Treacherous Propoganda.

U. S. TO INVESTIGATE

Austrian Embassy Denounces

Dr. Goricar's Published

Statement as Untrue in

Every Particular.

Washington, Nov. 12. Published

charges, attributed to Dr. Joseph Gori

car, former Austro-Hungarlan consul

at San Francisco, that Austrian con

suls in tho United States, working

under the direction of Consul General

von Nuber and Count von Bernstorff,

the German ambassador, are active

In propaganda for destruction of mu

nitions factories and fomenting strikes

among the workers, will be referred

by tho state department to tho de

partment of justice for investigation.

The Austrian einbasy here denounc

ed Goricar's published statement as

untrue in every particular, and an

nounced it would trj' to -find some

way to prosecute him for It Gorlcar.

the embassy said, left his post on

leave and failed to return.

Lansing Has Information.

Secretary Lansing today declined to

comment on the charges. The depart

ment of justice has a good deal of in

formation on hand regarding the ac

tivities of Consul General von Nuber,

which it gathered while Investigating

his connection with tho case of Dr.

Dumba, the recalled Austrian ambas

sador, but so far has nothing definite

on the charges attributed to Dr. Gorl

car. In substance Goricar is accredit

ed with making the statement that he

resigned hl8 post after fifteen years

In the Austrian consular service be

cause he declined to perform the work

of a spy. He charges that while con

sul at San Francisco Commander Max

imilian Burstyn, tho Austrian naval at

tache at Washington, ordered him to

gather plans of the fortifications of

San Francisco harbor and along the

Pacific coast nnd to get, especially,

details of the works at Bremerton

navy yard. When he ro fused, Goricar

is accredited with saying, he was

transferred to Berlin, where, after five

months ho was ordered to proceed to

Vienna which ho feared to do, be

cause -of his pro-SIavic affiliations, so

he fled to Rome where he resigned

last December.

German Ambassador Promoting

Propaganda.

Goricar's story contends that tho

German ambassador working with

von Nuber, is in touch with the Aus

trian consuls at Cleveland, St. Louis,

Pittsburg; St. Paul, Chicago and Phila

delphia who spread propaganda

among the foreign workers in the

munition factories and such activity,

Goricar alleges, extends even to con

trolling the foreigners through fra

ternal and secret organizations. The

alleged extent of the activities of the

Austrian consuls and the so-called

spy system aro described at length in

Goricar's published statement Gori

car's record shows he first came to

this country in 1909 and was consul

at Pittsburg, Denver, and finally San

Francisco, where ho served three

years.

Austrian Embassy Statement

The Austro-Hungarian embassy is

sued the following statement:

"Ex-Consul Dr. Goricar, formerly at

San Francisco, has been on leave of

absence since tho time of the out

break of tho war and has been temp

orarily attached for a time to the

Austro-Hungarian consulate general

in Berlin. Germany. There, very soon

afterward, ho obtained knowledge that

the Austro-Hungarian authorities had

received Information about his secret

connections with the enemies of

Austria-Hungary, and evidently fear

ing detection he suddenly left his

post without permission and disap

peared. Later on it was learned that

he had gone to Italy and was staying

in Rome, from where he tendered his

resignation, thereby preventing his dis

missal. "While he was in Rome it was as

certained that he was in close rela

tion with tho Russian and Serbian

agents, obviously with the purpose of

going to tho United States to use his

knowledge of the centers of Slavic

immigration coming from the mon

archy in the service of the Pan-Slavic

proaganda, and with the Inteution of

disseminating disloyalty among our

emigrants against their country of

birth.

Serbian Slavs Enlisted.

"The Vustro-Hungarian embassy

has beoiP-informed that quite a num

ber of Serbian Slavs from the mon

archy have been enlisted by the agents

of the allies, and have left this coun

try to fight against the Austro-Hungarian

army. It Is very probable that

Dr. Goricar's suverslve acts contribute

to the regrettable acts of treason,

which certainly without changing the

outcome of the war would be of the

gravost outcome for those who may

be made prisoners of war.

"The Austro-Hungarian embassy

was Informed several months ago of

Dr. Goricar's agitatory propaganda,

carried on In this country, but it has

refrained until now from taking count

er measures, being aware of ths dis

grace brought about by the fact that

a former consular officer has broken

In such the faith and allegiance to

his fatherland.

"In view, however, of his state

ments to the press which contain the

strongest accusations against the rep

resentatives of Austria-Hungary, the

embassy must emphatically declare

the accusations as false and absolute

ly baseless. Otherwise silence would

be taken as acknowledgment and

would create the belief that our con

sulates actually aro engaged in ac

tivities in violation of the laws of this

country "

AMERICAN SENT

TO LONDON JAIL

John Wesley De Kay Held

on Charge of Fraud in France

Bail Not Allowed.

I.ondon, Nov. 12, 325 p. m John

Wesley De Kay of New York, was

remanded in the Bow street police

court today on the charge, it is al

leged by the police, of fraud in

France In connection with tho supply

of rifles to the Belgian government.

Ball was not allowed.

John Wesley De Kay was born near

New Hampton. Iowa. Is an author,

and a member of several New York

and Boston clubs. For some time he

headed tho Mexican National Pack

ing company, which was operated un

der concessions by a former govern

ment of Mexico. In the spring ot

1914 he went to Europe on a mission

to purchase arms and ammunition for

tho government of Provisional Presi

dent Huorta.

oo

BRITISH STEAMER

RHINELAND SUNK

London. Nov. 12. 10:10 n. in. The

British steamship Rhinoland has been

sunk. Up to tho present only one

survivor has been landed.

Tho Rhlnelahd was of 1.501 tons

gross and was built in 1903. She

was 254 feet Ion;, 35 feet beam and

21 feet deep. She wa3 owned in

Liverpool by the Liverpool and Ham

burg Steamship company

SERBS HOLDING

BULGARS AT BAY

Fifteen Thousand Invaders

Held Back in Babuna Defile

Withdrawal of Bul

garians Expected.

CITIZENS RETURNING

Suffering in Interior of Serbia

Increasing Thousands of

People Driven Out.

Saloniki, Nov. 10. Via Paris, Nov.

12, 1:50 a. m. Five thousand Serbi

ans still are holding 15,000 Bulgarians

at bay between Isvor and Abdi Pasha

Hahn in tho Babuna defile, but tho

Serbs now control the heights ot Kos

jac and occupy the whole lino of

mountains making, in tho opinion of

military men hero, tho withdrawal of

the Bulgarians vnly a question ot

time.

The people who left Monastir In a

panic at tho approach of the Invaders,

are now returning. Prilep and Mona

stir aro resuming their normal ap

pearance. Suffering in tho Interior of Serbia

is said to be great owing to tho lack

of food and shelter. Thousands of

refugees from the north 'have "been

driven out 'by tho advancing Austro-Gcrmans.

oo

NOBEL PRIZES

ARE AWARDED

German Professor and Theo

dore William Richards of

Harvard Given Honors.

London, Nov. 12, 0:20 a. m. The

Nobel prize for physics for 1914, says

a Reuter despatch from Stockholm,

has been awarded to Prof. Max von

Laus, of Frankfort-on-Maiu, for his

discovery of the diffraction of rays

In crystals The chemistry prize for

the same year, has been awarded to

Prof. Theodore William Richards, of

Harvard university fqr fixing the

atomic- weights of dimical elements.

The prizes for 1915 will be awarded

today.

Cambridge, Mass.. Nov. 12. Pro

fessor Theodore William Richards of

Harvard University, to whom tho

Nobel prize for 1014 has been awarded

for fixing tho atomic weights of chem

ical elements, is director of the Gibbs

Memorial Laboratory at Harvard He

is an investigator in physical and in

organic chemistry and the author of

papers concerning the significance of

changing atomic volume. With as

sistants, he has revised tho atomic

woights of oxygen, copper, iron,

nickel, calcium, sodium and many

other elements.

oo

COLOMBIA BUYS

BIG HYDROPLANE

Boat to Be Used to Carry Mail

and Government Officials

Down Magdalena River.

New York, Nov 12. The Yolanda

II. a hydroplane, drawing five inches

of water, and driven upwards of forty

miles an hour by two air propellors

Is here awaiting shipment to Bogota,

Colombia, where she will be used fo

carry the malls and government offi

cials down the Magdalena river be

tween the capital and the coast 600

miles.

Tho boat was built at the direction

of Gonzolo Mejia, a Colombian, and

her light draft Is made necessary by

the shallow waters of the Magdalena

river

ji

COLORADO LIQUOR

LAW HEARING

Right of Denver to Issue Li

censes After January First,

1916, Being Argued.

Denver, Colo, Nov. 12 The state

and city of Denver will present no

further arguments to the supreme

court In the caso involving Colorado's

prohibition legislation, according to

an announcement made today nt the

attorney general's office. The change

in plans was made nubile shortly be

fore the hour for tho court to con

vene. Arguments presented by counsel for

the state contended that the state Is

supreme, in all matters of legislation

and that a city has no more right to

act independently of state liquor leg

islation than to fix murder penalties.

Counsel for the city argued that cities

governed under charter have "special

rights" in the regulation of the liquor

traffic. The caso now Is before tho

court, briefs previously having been

filed.

The court took original jurisdiction

In the case to determine whether the

city authorities of Denver possessed

the right to issue saloon licenses ex

tending boyond January 1. 1916, the

date Colorado's constitutional and

statutory prohibition enactments be

come effective.

A decision is looked for in Decem

ber. Denver, Colo., Nov. 12. Arguments

were to bo resumed today before the

state supreme court involving the

right of the city of Denver to issue

liquor licenses after Colorado's newly

enacted prohibition legislation be

comes operative January 1, 191C.

In addition the court now has be

fore it an appeal involving the va

lidity of the referendum petition on

the penalty provision of the prohibi

tion bill. This appeal Is based upon

twenty-two assignments of error In

the district court ruling which upheld

the so-called "safety" clauso In the

bill. Should this appeal bo granted w

the penalty provision of the prohibl-"

tion law would bo Inoperative until

after a referendum vote of the people

at the next state election in Novem

ber. 1916.

oo

PARIS LAWYER

IS DIVORCED

Eugene Plumon and Opera

Singer, Maggie Teyte,

Granted Separation by

Civil Tribunal.

Paris, Nov. 12, 1235 a. m. Eugene

Plumon, a Paris lawyer at present at

tached to the British expeditionary

forces as an Interpreter, has been

granted a divorce from Maggie Teyte,

the British opera singer, by tho civil

tribunal of the Seine

Maggie Teyte has made, several

American tours. She appeared in Par

Is in 1914 with the Boston Opera

company.

oo

TRAINS RUNNING

ON ALASKA ROAD

Seward, Alaska, Nov. 12. Trains

on the government's Alaskan railroad

are now running between Anchorage

and Eagle river, a distance of 20

miles, and between Seward and Mile

34. Lieutenant Mears, of the Alaska

Engineering commission, said today

that wagon roads already are needed

as feeders to, the railroad.

Farmers near Matanuskn raised

good crops ot potatoes nnd other veg

etables this year, but were unahle to

get them to market except with great

difficulty. Lieutenant Mears said

the Matauuska farmers probably

would be able to export potatoes ' in

another year or two.

The steamers Cordova and Admiral

Evans, were impeded in unloading

supplies at Anchorage because of Ice

on

BIG STEEL CONCERN

HAS BEEN SOLD

Philadelphia, Pa.. Nov 12 Henry

Tatnall, vice president of the Penn

sylvania railroad, in charge of 'finance,

announced today that tho Pennsylva

nia company had disposed at private

sale the remainder of the stock it held

in the Cambria Steel company.

While no announcement was made

as to the Identity of the purchaser of

Cambria stock, it was believed in fi

nancial circlestbat it wont to J.

Leonard Reploglerepresentatlve of a

New York syndicate. Mr. Replogle

was formerly vice president and gen

eral manager of the Cambria compa

ny and is now vice president of the

American Vanadium company of New

York.

What the purchase price was is not

publiclv known, but it Is said to be

In tho "neighborhood of $15 000,000.

COURT MARTIAL OF

LIEUT. COL. GOODIER

San Francisco, Nov. 12 The court

martial of Lieutenant Colonel Lewis

E. Goodier, judge advocato of the

western department. U S. Army, was

scheduled to be resumed hero today

, on orders issued yesterday by Brigad

ier General William Sibert president

j of tho court. "Word was received that

First Lieutenant Edgar S. Gorrell, slg-

I nal corps, would bo here early today,

ready to testify for the defense.

Lieutenant Gorrell, who was secre

tary of the aviation school at San

Diego, Calif., was ordered hero to tes

tify concerning conditions generally

at the school and particularly as to

the sending of Captain Townsend F.

Dodd, to Brownsville, Texas.

Captain Dodd testified on the last

day tho court sat that he wa3 sent to

the Mexican border to take command

of tho flying detachment there and

use an aeroplane that had been report

ed officially as unsafe Captain Dodd

was ono of the officers who filed

charges against Captiln Arthur

Cowan.

Lieutenant Colonel Goodier is charg

ed with having Improperly advised ;

Captain Dodd and First Lieutenant

Walter Taliaferro, sine killed in an

aeroplane accident at San Diego, to !

bring the charges against Captaitf

Cowan. Cowan was accused of draw

ing pay as an aviator, though ho was '

unable to fly. J

i

oo (

HEROES WITHOUT MEDALS.

Washington, Nov. 12. Information I

Is wanted by Secretary Rcdfield as to '

the whereaouls of sixteen members of t

the former crew ot tho American !

steamer Kroonland-of the Red Star I

line, to whom medals awarded by

congress for their heroism In rescu- i

Ing SO persons from the barge steam-

er Volturno. In the North Atlantic i

ocean, In October, 1913, remain to i

be presented,

ANCONA CAPTAIN I

MAKES REPORT I

Positively Charges Austrian

Submarine Gave No Warning VM

or Afforded Chance to vB

Escape. 11

LINER STOPPED SHORT IH

All Guns Turned on Liner and 1

Many Killed on Deck and

in Boats. 11

Naples, Nov. 11, via Paris, Nov. 12, IH

12:45 a. m. (Delayed in transmission.) lH

The owners of the Italian liner An H

cona, sunk in the Mediterranean by IH

a submarine, havo received the report ll

of the Ancona's captain In which ho lH

makes the positive charge that the

submarine gave no warning to tho 7H

liner or afforded those on hoard of H

her a chance to escape. IH

The first shot, the captain's report J

declares, was fired when tho subma- fH

rlne was three miles distant. Tho 1

captain immediately stopped, the ship, lH

he says, but this did not appear to fl

satisfy the commander of tho subma- 11

line which continued to shell the liner. 1

Tho captain without delay ordered 1

everybody to take to the boats, upon l

which ho declares, the submarine l

turned all her guns, killing and S

wounding many persons both In the

boats and on the deck of the steam- q

er. Some of tho passengers who were n

thrown into tho water and sought to 'J

save themselves by clutching the sldo il

of the submarine, were pushd away (11

with jeers and Insults, ho asserts. H

Berlin Denies Lack of Warning. H

Berlin, Nov. 12, by wireless to Say- H

ville. "Discussing the case of tho H

Italian steamship Ancona, which was H

sunk, in the Mediterranean by a tor- H

pedo, Berlin newspapers," says tho H

Overseas News Agency, "point out i

that according to the already publish-

ed reliable information the vessel af- l

ter receiving a warning from the sub- 1

marine tried to escape and that the M

submarine therefore was fully justi- 1

fled in using force." 11

The Overseas News Agency contln- mM

ues: 11

"The newspapers further assert 1

that" all the news from foreign sour- I

ces agree that the submarine Hew th HH

Austro-TIungarian flag." 11

oo 11

BRITISH NOT TO 1

HEED U.S. NOTE I

Will Not Relax Methods in

Slightest Degree Not Con- ' H

cerned Over American H

Attitude. H

London, Nov. 12, 12:40 p. m. "Tho IH

American note causes us little con- 51

cern as Englishmen," says the Spec- S

tator, commenting on the recent note G

of the United States to Great Britiin il

relative to interference with Ameri-

can trade. "Its harsh and unsym- !

pathetic tone wilul not us relax in j H

the slightest degree the grip on the SH

throat of Germany which our sea i M

power gives us." M

The Spectator believes the majority H

of Americans would not tolerate see- H

ing Great Britain stabbed in the back. , IH

The weekly continues. H

"When history comes to bo written, M

Americans of the future will feel any- H

thing but pride when they remember 1

the official action ot America during ' 1

the great war." j

The Spectator says tho British have :H

not torpedoed American ships nor H

havo they killed American citizens. l

The British embassy has not been tho

center ot plots and conspiracies yet,

wheu the whole tone of the notes to- f

ward Great Britain and Germany is H

considered, it is much less friendly H

toward Great Britain. IIH

Referring to tho sinking of the Hal- !

ian steamship Ancona, the Spectator JM

says that unless the championship $H

which the executive has assumed re- tl

fers to goods only and does not cover 1

human being's, it ventures to sug- tM

gest that Washington at least repeat (H

the Lusitauia warning. MM

RIGHTS OF WOMEN I

MARRIED TO ALIENS I

Washington, Nov. 12. Citizenship ' M

rights of American women who niarry H

foreigners but who continue to llvo H

in the United States was placed today lM

before the supreme court for decision. H

Emphasis was laid on the importance M

of the case because of the war. H

Mrs. Ethel C. Mackenzie of Callfor- M

nia, wife of Gordon MacKenzie, a f

British subject, who has resided In 11

California over since his marriage. iM

however, was attacking through at- tl

tornoys that attempt to make appll- 11

cable to her the expatriation act pass- Sfl

ed by congress in 1907. Election of- 11

ricials in San Francisco refused to n

permit Mrs. MacKenzie to register on IH

tho ground that sho had become a ffl

British subject by reason of her mar- fl

riage. She resorted to the state courts

or writs to compel the officials to fl

permit her to register, claiming that M

tho act of congress did not apply to M

women remaining in this country and M

that if it did, it was unconstitutional. , M

3hc was denied the writs and appealed JM

to the supremo court H

In the brief submitted to tho court M

In her behalf, it is said that the de- H

:ision Is of vast importance to Amer- H

Lean women because of the European H

ivar, particularly in traveling on tho M

scean. H