The Syracuse Journal, Volume 7, Number 29, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 November 1914 — Page 1

Largest circulation in Kosciusko County outside of Warsaw. Mr. Advertiser, take notice and govern yourself accordingly.

VOL. VII.

CRACOW ABLAZE UNDER ROSS GUNS Fall of Silesia Capital Is Expected at Any Time. GERMAN RANKS PAY HIGH TOLL 100,000 Men in Four Days Is Teuton Loss in Flanders—lnvaders Feeling Strain—Battle Continues Despite Blizzard—Baltic Fleet Clears For Action. With the. fighting .from Nieuport through Dixmude and on the Ypres almost entirely confined to cannon' ading, the German and allied armies on the Aisne and in the Ar' i gonne are showing greater activity. In the Argonne the wrman trenches were blown up by mines planted by the French. A naval tattle is believed imminent in the Baltic Sea. Unofficial advices received from Copenhagen declare the Ge nan fleet in those waters is about to be engaged by the Rus' sians. The Russian fleet has left Helsingfors. The Squadron was steering southeast. The Nieuwe Rotterdam Courant quotes a letter from a Galician priest stat' * Ing that 40,000 Austrians have been buried in one day in a grave six and i one half feet wide and a little more than four miles long. The bodies, the letter says, were laid next to each other in three layers. These men were killed, it i s stated, during a battle lasting only a few days. The 1 British cruiser Glasgow, which > took part in the naval battle off Coronel, Chile, on Nov. 1, has ar' | rived at Rio Janeiro. The prince of Wales has achieved his ambition to go to the front. He has left London to join Uhe headquarters staff in France. The prince wished to go to the front at the outbreak of the war, but Lord Kitchener would not allow him to do so. VENICE — A portion of the City of Cracow is in flames and the inhabitants have fled panic stricken befoie the advancing Russian army. Advices byway of Trieste say the investment of Cracow began Saturday.’ . The Russian force, advancing upon the Austrian stronghold from the north, opened the bombardment as soon as their big tguns were brought up from Miechow. The northern section of the city was soon in flames. Capture l s Expected. Violent assaults upon all defenses are now being made by the Russians. The force advancing from the east, -which has now passed Tarnow is moving rapidly, and the capture of Cracow is expected momentarily. For the Russians the fall of Cracow means the key to industrial districts of Silesia, striking a vital economic blow at Germany. Germans Lose 100,000 in Four Days. LONDON — The German losses during the last four days'fighting in Flanders are estimated at 100,000 by ; the correspondent of the Daily Mail at : Dunkirk. Desp' e the blizzard which hag pre- I ■vailetl, fighting has continued. The | Ger r.ans directed a fierce attack upon > C ■ allied lines near Ypres. This was repulsed and the allies in turn assum- ; ed the offensive. Casualties in the al- , lied ranks were heavy, but favorable . progress was made. Weather Conditions Terrible. j All reports from the scene of fight- j lug in northern France indicate that > the weather conditions for the last few i days have been terrible. Heavy rain, > falling continuously for thirty-six 1 hours, has turned all the roads into ! quagmires, while the trenejies -are ; flooded and the lowlands everywhere arc largely covered by water. Everything possible is being done to make the troops comfortable to prevent their being flooded out of the trenches and to avoid caves-ins. The trenches are being shored and braced and the bottoms covered with brush and straw. Meanwhile the artillery battle continues. A correspondent at Sluis, Netherlands, say s artillery fire was again audible yesterday and the Germans are renewing their efforts to cross the Yser near Nieuport. Dixmude Entirely Destroyed. 1 Dixmude, including the villages in its environs, has been entirely destroyed. The Germans, in the opinion of officers at the front, are beginlng to show signs of the terrific strain they have undergone for a month past in . Flanders and these that General Joffre’s plan of hqMmg the line and permitting the German pest to wear itself out in vain but costly assaults will soon bear fruit. Kaiser Takes 23,000 Russ. BERLIN — The war office announces: “In the battle of the last few days in continuation of our successes at Wloclawek, in Russian Poland. on the Vistula, thirty miles northwest of Plock, we have made 23,000 prisoners and captured more than twenty machine guns." The Russians near Koprukeui, in --*<*•*— w

The Syracuse Journal.

r. * PRINCE OF WALES England Future Ruler Is on the Way to the Front. I Photo by American Press Association. Transcaucasia, lost 8,000 men in killed and wounded. The Turks took 500 Russian prisoners and captured 10,000 rifles and large quantities of ammunition.. The Turks are advancing on Batoum. According to reports reaching here fiom Constantinople, Abbas Hilmi, the Khedive of EgyjX will heave the Turkish capital shortly to assume command of. the Turkish operations against Egypt. He will be accompanied by a suite of fifty persons. The khedive has been in Constantinople since the outbreak of hostilities. Dispatches from Constantinople a month ago said the British government had ordered him not to return to Egypt. CHICAGO STOCK URDS OPEN Cattle Are Again Pouring in After Federal Quarantine. CHICAGO —- After ten days of comparative idleness, the stock yards arc receiving shipments of cattle and hogs for immediate slaughter. The railroads have been notified the ten ; day quarantine has been lifted. All - the packing plants, newly scrubbed ; and di infected, have received the fedI oral government’s official O. K. Local stockmen who thought the quarantine on Illinois cattle should be more,severe made a final effort to : obtain a more stringent ruling from . the state veterinarian, but their re- . quest was refused by Dr. O. E. DySson The cattlemen, represented by T. W. Jerrems and S. B. Stafford, . wanted affidavits of immunity from i state veterinarians as well as from the shippers themselves. I Au s trian Loss 900,000. LONDON, ENG. — A letter from Budapest says the Austrian losses in the campaign against Servia up to Nov. 1 reached a total of 149,596 officers and men. In Galicia and East Hungary the losses reached a total of 754,528. In the first three months of the war Austria’s losses totaled more than 900,000 men, about 27 per cent of the army engaged. British Bomb Kills Fifteen. LONDON, ENG. — A German newspaper published in Brussels declares that a British aviator flying over j Courtrai, Belgium, dropped a bomb I upon the town, killing fifteen persons. Courtra'i is in West Flanders, twentysix miles southwest of Ghent and near the French border. Protest Mining of Sea. STOCKHOLM — Sweden, Denmark and Norway made a formal protest to the belligerant nations in re gard to the action of the latter in placing mines in the North sea and the Baltic. It is asserted that this Impeding neutral commerce and navigation. Russ Tax Capture 1 Towns. LONDON, ENG. — A Copenhagen dispatch to the Daily Mail say-, it is learned from Berlin that the Russians are imposing fines on the conqmred East Prussian towns corresponding to the German fines imposed on Belgian towns.

CARRANZA SOON TO STEP ASIDE Imported Ready to Retire In Behalf ot Gutierrez. VILLA AGREES TO QUIT COUNTRY Provisional Head Chosen by Mexican Convention Prepares to Take Reina and Assures Bryan Foreign Interests Will Be Protected—Villa Asks Neutral Board For Vera Cruz. WASHINGTON D. C.— Administratior officials are delighted at the receipt of a dispatch at the state department announcing that Carranza had declared his willingness to resign the provisional presidency of Mexico. This canie from the state department’s special agent, Mr. Canova, at Aguas Calientes and was based on a dispatch received by General Gutierrez, who was elected president of Mexico by the Aguas Calientes convention. The belief that a renewal of internal warfare in Mexico at his time has been averted was strengthened by unofficial reports reaching Washington declaring that General Villa had consented to resign hi s military command and leave Mexico in the interests of peace. Gutierrez Telegraphs Bryan. Another development here in connection with the Mexican situation wat the receipt by Secretary Bryan of a message from General Gutierrez formally announcing his election to the presidency and his intention to sei up a government in Mexico City soon. He gave the president assurances that the government which he heads will afford full protection to foreign life and property in Mexico. Should Carranza and Villa act in accordance with the intentions attributed to them there is little doubt entertained here but that the Gutierrez government will soon be a reality and it is regarded as more than probable that the Gutierrez government will be the one to take over Vera Cruz from the custody of the. United States on the evacuation of that port next week. The dispatch from Canova announced by Mr. Bryan sent under date of 7 o’clock Sunday night from Aguas Cal’entes was as follows: “Everything is arranged satisfactorily. Carrarza has telegraphed Gutierrez his willingness to retire.” It is presumed here that Carranza will leave Mexico upon relinquishing his claims to supreme power in the gevernment. Will Protect Foreigners. General Gutierrez’s communications tr Secretary Bryan consisted of two notes. One announced his accession to the provisional presidency and the other gave assurances of his intention to afford all due protection to foreign life and property in Mexico. The messages were transmitted through Agent Canova at Aguas Calicntes. In the second message he reviews briefly the crisis which the republic has undergone in the last few years, the efforts made to establish a government acceptable to ail and says: “I will strive to adopt the policy of the government to the needs of the country with respect to legitimate rights of the nationals, set up the reforms that the revolution demands ant' scrupulously guarantee the life and property of foreigners who have come under the protection of our hos pitallty and laws, to co-operate with us in the aggrandizement of the naff n. “The new government in my charge will move to Mexico City and achieve th< complete pacification of the country. for besides having reason, right ant. public opinion on its side, it will trj to meet the just demands of all the inhabitants of the land, though without swerving from the, performance of its duties.” Villa Asks Neutral Vere Cruz Board. EL PASO — General Villa, in dispatch received here, urges the relinquishment of Vera Cruz by the United States to a neutral commission. He suggested that the United States before withdrawing its troops might secure from Provisional President Gutierrez and General Carranza promises not to occupy the port until one faction or the other were in complete control. In the meantime, a neutral commission would administer the affairs of the port, including the collection of import duties and would be bound to turn over the funds to which ever party ultimately came intc control of the government. Quere taro is to be the provisional capital of Mexico pending the retirement of Venustiano Carranza according to ad i vices received here. General Eulalio i Gutierrez will leave for Queretaro in 1 a day or two. 1 Francisco Villa and Venustiano Carranza have both agreed to leave Mexico each conditional upon the ab- ! solute retirement of the other, according to advices received here by iE. C. Llorente, appointed by the Aguas Calientes conference as its ’ agent at Washington.

SYRACUSE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1914

INDIANA STATE NEWS Vii.tiin of Duel May Live. SHELBYVILLE, IND. — V. S. Marlin, who was shot by Thomas Shaw in a revolver duel, may live, surgeons say. The grand jury was called, but its action has not been made public. Aa a result of the shooting, which began when .Marlin surprised an alleged clandestine meeting of Shaw, Mrs. Marlin. Willis Brannin and Mrs, Eliza McDonald, all but Brannin are held under bond. Investigation shows that Brannin wfs struck by a bullet and the bone at his right elbow was slivered and that holes were made in Mrs. Marlin’s clothing by a ball that grazed her right hip. Woman Fires at Husband. MARION, IND. — Mrs. Emma France, twenty-three years old, armed with a 22 calibre revolver, fired five shots without effect at her husband, Monroe Frahce, twenty-seven years old, from whom she bad been separated some time. The husband had followed the wife to the Fred Smith restaurant in Johnstown, believing that his wife war with another man. A fight ensued and they spun around and arevnd in a desperate grapple. The woman was taken to jail and slated for shooting with intent to kill. To Help Home Idle to Jobs. ANDERSON, IND. —• The Council of Women has sent representatives to the Chamber of Commerce for the purpose of taking the first steps toward a bureau for the unemployed of Anderson. The bureau will find positions for residents of this city only. The plan is to have factory managers, business men and the unemployed co-operate with the agency. The agency will make no charge for services. It is planned to have the Chamber of Commerce and the Wornen’s Council share the expense. Smith Su't to Be Defaulted. KOKOMO, IND. — Cal Smith was granted a divorce from Edith Smith. Shortly before the decree was granted the charge of child desertion pending against Mrs. Smith was dismissed. It is understooi that Smith’s suit against the Rev. C. M. Harness oi Muncie, former pastor of the Harrison Street Christian church, in which he asks $10,00(1 fte alienation of his wife’s affections, will be detauicea this week. Markley Is Found Guilty. EVANSVILLE, IND. — William Markley, twenty-two years old, was found guilty by a jury of manslaughter in connection with the killing of Herman Kinman. July 28. He stabbed Kinman to death when, he testified, he learned Kinman, who was married, planned to elope with Mrs. Markley. The prisoner was sentenced to two to twenty-one years in the state prison. Light Plant Head Electrocuted. FORT WAYNE, IND. — Oscar O. Newhard, forty-six, superintendent of the city lighting plant at Uniondale, near here, was shocked to death when he came in contact with a conducting rod on the switchboard. He died in the presence of his wife and daughter. Choose Indianapolis Church. BLOOMINGTON. IND. — Before adjournment here the Woman’s Home Missionary society of the Indiana Methodist conference elected new officers and decided upon the Meridian Street M. E, church of Indianapolis as the place of holding the next meeting. “Live Wire” Kills Lineman. TERRE HAUTE, IND. — W. P. Smith, thirtytwo years old, a telephone lineman, struck a “live” wire and was thrown from a pole to the ground. Death was instantaneous. A widow and six children survive him. Western Union Manager Dies. EVANSVILLE, IND. — W. V. Duke, aged sixty-five, for twentyseven years manager of the local office of the Western Union Telegraph company, died suddenly here. He was a native of Kentucky. Mrs. Mary Peltier Dead. FORT WAYNE, IND. — Word has been received here of the death of Mrs. Mary Peltier, formerly of tais city, in California, at the age of ninety years. Her husband, now deed, was born in the old fort here Slone Jury Disagrees. MUNCIE, IND. — After being in session for twenty-four hours the jury in the case of Patton Slone, charged with the murder of Revel Hcpper, disagreed and was discharged. Child Strangles. LOGANSPORT, IND. -- The five months old son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Enyart was strangled to death when his head caught in a hole in a spread as he fell out of bed. Dr. Willaim H. Smith Dies. RUSHVILLE, IND. — Dr. Wil. Ham H. Smith, eighty years old, died at his home here after a short illness of heart disease. Dr. Smith had been

FAKE INSPECTOR IS CAUGHT “Dr W. J. Lemont” Is Accused of Posing as Federal Expert. MiUNCIE, IND. — The man who posed as a federal inspector from the department of agriculture whlje inspecting cattle and sheep at Indianapolis and Richmond. Ind., was arrested here by the local police and lodged in jail. The man's real name is said to be W. J. Skinner, but he has been going under the name of Dr. W. J. Lemont. He has been seeking to sell a “cure” for the foot and mouth disease, it is said. The man gives his home as Bloomington, 111. Lemont sent a telegram to Mrs. W. J. Skinner, Bloomington. 111., believed to be his wife, requesting that she forward him money at once. At Union City, where Skinner ap- ; pcared, it is believed he had been attempting to spread the foot and mouth disease, is the belief expressed by persons with whom he came In ccritact during his stay there. It beiic-ved that his object might be tc increase the sales of a “serum” ho attempted to sell. Skinner, or T.e ment, was not permitted* to inspect the only herd of cattle affected with the disease in this locality. ALLEGED KIDNAPER BEATEN Grandfather of Child Follows Accused Man and Drubs Him. KOKOMO, IND. — An alleged j kidnapping was frustrated at Russia < vllle, in the western part of Howard i county, when the grandfather of the kidnaped child caught the abductor ant' held him until help arrived. The man, who gave his name as Bert Bryant, took seven year old Pauline Hays from her home in ForInd., and drove to Russiaville i where he started to board a car for ■ Kokomo. George Robinson, grandj ftlher of the child, had followed Bryant by interurban and was on the car which the man boarded. Robinson attacked Bryant and beat him before they were separated. The town marshal arrested Bryant. VISITING BOARD APPOINTED i Governor Ralston Chooses Men Who Will Investigate State Institutions. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. — Governor Ralston lias announced the appointment of the legislative visiting com mittee which, as provided by statute, . will investigate the needs of the various and state flees and make recommendations to the general assembly meeting next January. The three members of the committee, composed, as provided by law, of two representatives and one senator. are: Representative Charles H. Bedwell, Democrat, of Sullivan; Rep resentative-elect Charles A. McGona gle. Republican, of Muncie; Senator M illiam A. Yarling, Democrat, ot Shelbyville. i BOY GIVES TOWN BIG SCARE “Foot and Mouth Disease” in Young ster Is Result of Fight. FORT WAYNE, IND. — The “scare’ created here when it was ah ncunced that a youngster in the roll Ing mill district had the foot and mouth disease ended when it was discovered that the sores in his mouth were caused by the loss of two teeth, which had been knocked out in a fight with another boy. Only one case of disease has sP far (been found among the cattle of Allen county and such precautions have been taken that no spread of the dis ;ase is expected. CHIEF’S GRAVE PLAYGROUD Hocsier Children Will Romp Ovei I Kokomoko’s Burial Place. KOKOMO, IND. — By a strangr ! turn of fate the resting place if Kokomoko, last war chief of th* j Miamis, for whom Kokomo war ' mmed, is to be used as a play ground ’or children of the white men whose idvances he so bitterly fought. The plot in which the chief was buried was | Included in the tract that later be j ?ame the city cemetery. The abandoned burial ground now has been given by the city to the 1 park board to be used as a play i ground. CONFESSES STEAIFnG CAKE Woman, Converted, Pays Ten Cents to Relieve Her Conscience. • WABASH, IND. — Declaring that she had been converted by reading the sermon delivered by an evan- ' gelist here during the past month and I admitting that she had stolen two pieces of cake from a lunch basket at a park last summer, a Wabash woman wrote a letter to Mrs. Daniel Showalter, wife of the county auditor, inclosing 10 cents for the cake. The woman said that she could not sleep until the matter was right. Lafayette Business Man Dies. LAFAYETTE, IND.I — Louis Na-' poleon Philbin, fifty-nine years old, for thirty years a leading business man of Lafayette, is ’dead as the resu't of injuries suffered in an automobile accident at Mudlavia last June, It Is believed. The immediate cause of death was a nervous breakdown and a_stroke pf paralyse.

ON THE FRONT Snapshot of French Infantry Starting to Take German Gun. i Photo by American Press Association. A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR. Thursday, Nov. 12.—Over the long battle lines of Europe comparative quiet prevailed today, except in Belgium. where the conflict continues with deadly fury. On the Servian berder sharp fighting Is in progress and the Turks are in action against the Russians, but on the main positions through France, along the East Prussian border and in Galicia there is apparently a lull. Fighting continues with violence on the western end of the line, Paris said, but there are no indications whether the Germans have succeeded in extending their advance. Friday, Nov. 13.—The high tide of battle on the Belgiian field has passed, according to information from French official sources, and German might has failed as yet to win away to the IteWihfW oSe ai&S. that the fighting from the French border to the North sea has become less violent. In Berlin was received a dispatch from Vienna, which , while asserting that Austrian operations in the northeast were developing “without hindrance from the enemy,” also contained the admission that central Galicia had been evacuated by the Austrians Vienna admits that the Russians have crossed the Vistula and occupied Rzeszow, which lies on thb line of the Russian advance toward Cracow. In the Stry Valley, east of Przemysl, however, a Russian defeat is reported by Vienna. Destruction of a German submarine is reported unofficially from Dunkerque. A French torpedo boat, attacked by the submarine, is said to have run it down. Saturday, Nov. 14.—The British superdreadnaught Audacious, a 25,000ton first line battleship, commissioned in 1912, was sunk in the Irish sea by a mine. She carried ten 13.5-inch .guns. All of the crew were saved. Bad weather and exhaustion has caused a slackening of the fighting between the Ypres and the sea. The crack Prussian guards were thrown back with terrific losse in one furious attack on the British positions about i Y pres. I Paris reports the allies north of Ypres have advanced and retaken Dixj- ; mu de. | The Turks are reported to have in- ! vaded the Russian territory of Caiicasia and occupied the Russian bar- ! racks of Kurdabhln. Sunday, Nov. 15.—Berlin reports ‘ that the German right wing in BcjI gium made slight progress and that | the Germans in the Argonne captured i a strong French position. j Paris says the Germans were driven from the only position they held on the left bank of the Yser river. The i only important battles anywhere on ’ the whole front between the North Sea and Alsace in two days took place i in the small area of conflict in Belgium where the Germans appear to be risking their whole campaign in the west by the effort to tear a hole in the allied line that would let them i through to the French coast. I The death of Field Marshal Roberts ' in France from pneumonia has created much sadness throughout England. i Reports from Petrograd say the Russ are advancing along the entire line from Eastern Prussia to Galicia. The official communique reports an engagement with the Germans for the outlet of the lake region, the capture of German howitzers near Soldau and the retreat of the Germans from Rypln. An official statment from Petrograd says that the Russian troops are advancing rapidly toward Danzig, which is their objective point in the campaign in East Prussia. The Austrian army continues its retreat toward Cra j cow. ~

' /-'or Kent— For Sale o- Trade—.ost— Found — Wanlei — lc Per W( rd Krings you dollars in return.

] WILSON HU SES BANKINGSY ITEM President Writes Frosf irity Letj ter to Secretary M Moo, DOES AWAY WITH S SPICION Praise Is Given Many M n for Sa£acity and Wisdom in Modeling New Act—Tariff Is t Support Government Rather Th* i Faovred Beneficiaries. Washington, Nov. IS.- -President « Wilson has sent a ju\>sp« 'ity letter tc Secretary McAdo. ipn ta s follows: “1 warmly appreci.. e yo: r letter of jj-eUerday. for 1 sh; > y ur fee’.inentirely about the si uiiic nee about tlie opening of the fedei d reserve banks for business. “I do not know that a ly special Credit belongs to me for he part I aas privileged to play in the establishment of this new syste < of which we confidently hope so n. ich; in it the labor and knowledge and forethought and practical expt fence and ‘ sagacity of many men ar< embodied t'hc have co-operated wi> i unusnrl wisdom and admirable pu >lic spirit. None of them, I am sm j, will be jealous of the praise for the great piece of legislation upon which the new system rests: they will onlv rejoice unselfishly to see the thing , accomplished upon which they had set their hearts. Does Away With Suspicion. “It has been accomplish d and its i accomplishment is of the * 'epest significance both because of he things - it has done away with a» 1 because o’ the things it has suppl! 1 that the country lacked and had le g needed. It has done away with ag ation and suspicion because. it has • one away with certain fundamental -rongs. H has supplied means of accc nnodatioq *in the business world and an instrumentality by which the i: terests of all without regard to lass may readily be served. “Those who had power, ' hether in business or in politics, w. re almost universally looked upon with sustc distinguish the just fre a the unjust. They in turn seemed o distrust the people and to wish to imit f'eir control. “This was not merely tl > work of irresponsible agitators. 1 ere were real wrongs which cried ut to >' » righted, and fearless men ad called attention to them, dema iing that, they be dealt with by law. We were living under a tariff which had been pi rposely contrived to infer private favors upon those wh were cooperating to keep . the arty that originated it in power. “And the thing stood s< until the Democratic party came ito power last year. The legislation ’ the past year and a half has in ery large . measure done away with th se things. With their correction, sus icion and , ill will pass away. • . Tariff to Support Gov iment. “The tariff hag been rec st with a view to supporting the f vernment 1 rather than supporting tl j favored beneficiaries of the ~ ver ment. A system of banking c 'rency issues has been ere;/ ' ' hich puts ’ credit within the re: of very man • who can show a go' bu less; and 1 the supervision am or ol of the i system is in the hai of responsi5 ble agency of the g rn snt itself, t “This is the moi ig' (leant because of its opp* Ht s. It is f brought to its final co. plishment ■ just as it is most ini' etiv y needed. Th? war which has Involve the whole ■ of the heart of Europe h; made it • necessary that the Un d States ■ should mobilize its our is in the most effective way p blc tnd make ’ hei credit and her us Ine. good for the. service of the v 1 'He orld. “The future is c’ "" id bright I with promise of the l ost ' tings. We shall advise and gd'anc together i with a new spirit, a new e thusiasm, i a new cordiality of sn'i-*te' co-opera-i tion. It is an inspirir: pr- pect. Our > task is henceforth to wor , not for i any single interest, but 1 r all the ' interests of the country a. a united ■ whole.” > ; FIRE LOSS MAY BE $1 300,000 i Grain Elevator Containir. i 800,000 ’ Bushels of Wheat on -ire. Galveston, Tex., Nov. 18.—The • Southern Pacific elevator, ontaining ! more than 800,000 bushels if wheat, ’ vas threatened with clestr cctloa by • I a fire, which started on the roof. All 1 • the fire fighting equipment < ’ the city ! j including a fire boat, was • ailed out. ’ j The probable loss was est mated at 1 $1,0000,000. Launch Incident Not Cor Trmed. Washington, Nov. 18.—It '; reported ( in Athens that the Turkis forts at Smyrna fired on a launch from tbs United States cruiser ' ennesse'. 1 Washington has no report if the inj cident

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