HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1916-11-17, Page 2'ii;ERNSTORFF
DEPARTURE NEAR
S
IS LLE' IN ASIITON
FALL 'AfIllEAT. MID
BY II E WEATHER
The Submarine Issue Believed to Base Reached an Acute and
Perhaps Its Final. Sorge.
., s. cent cases, such as the torpedoing of
tan say in
A despatch from i over, seems the Arabia without warning, are
Withrothe elections cruiser to
probable that the American nation in, violation of the Prussian wale
. e rtwill be th
issue with Ger- ! this country, the next step
a few days will awaken to the fact fare a
that the submarine ate and I dismissal from Washington an AYnbas a -
many hai reanhed its most ac t
ount
its final stage. T1vo import- 'von 1fl �? � eff'�u Trial r�ec 11 of Mr.
perhapsprominently, I. dor, not facts stand out p' Gerard, American Ambassador to Ber-
ilaThey:- Department has received lin. less
'Che State dthat the Prus- President Wilson informed Congress
information indicating ugu
de- crisis that unless Prussian submarines
signs have inaugurated a change in in the midst of the last submarine
ines
their submarine policy and have
tided to adhere no longer to the rulesoconformed
nd o hdmat the he wouldf the feel at o zs
th c •c rel
The Shortage of Seed is Already
Apparent in
Ontario,
A despatch from Guelph ;says: Dr.
C. A. Zavits, O.A.C., had some'. inter-
esting things to say on Wednesday
regarding the s. i grain situation
which will be beneficial to the: farm-
ers of On.ario.
"The remarkably fine weather we'
have been having this Fall.is
greatest thing that ever happened to
the Fall wheat," stated Dr. Zavitz.
"On the plots that we have here, and
they take in quite a large acreage,
the Winter wheat looks almost t as
well as in any average year.
getting a great foundation, and We
showing a good spreading top.
sowed here the second week in Sep-
tember, which we considered rather
late, as we plan always to seed the
first of September. Reports from
other points indicate that the Winter
wheat is benefiting by the mild wea-
ther."
In regard to the seed situation, Dr.
Zavitz was not at all optimistic.
"Good seed is going to be scarce," he
said, "that will especially be ts, atoe true
uecinn
regard to barley,
and alfalfa, and I would advise any
of
fanner who has a good quality
these to be very careful what he does
with them, as there is going toon
fact there is right now, a -pronounced
shortage, in the seed situation in On-
tario.
"There was a lot of grain threshed
out that will not do for seed. Of
late years farmers have been drawing
largely on Essex for' seed coin, but
the crop there has not been up to
the standard of other years,aalthough
t ough
growers there are and wig probably
at-
tention to drying,lpob
produce more seed proportionately
otate
than they did before. What p
there are should make splendid seed,
as there is no rot this year, and the
potatoes were not overly ripened,pur-
poses.
which improires them for seeding p
poses. It is not advisable to import
seed from other provinces or from
s always the
danger
countries, as ethere hich we have
danger of mixed a ,
been trying to eradicate. The great
thing is for the farmers ofai On the
to conserve all the seed g
of international warfare in ter dress
duct of their submarines,
Of promises to the United Sts learned
a h•eh authority it
gelled to sever diplomats
with the German Government entire-
ly. Mr. Wilson never for a minute
ht of this possibility, and
From a had lost sig
to act in
that President Wilson has made up i
his mind not to send any more notes his mind is fullymade up
to Germany on the asuubtnari develop thatsue, � th s regisd if un awful submarine
and that, if .it shot
RUSSIAN ENTRE \BAN PRNO CED
ON HEARST PAP
DRIVEN �AIa
R
S
Germans Seize Positions on a
Front of Over
Two Miles.
Their Circulation in Canada .Is
Prohibited Under
Penalty.
Ottawa says: The
A despatch from London says: A despatch from laced
a against the centre of the Hearst newspapers have been p
Driving g� front, under ban by the Canadian Govern -
Russian line on thev eastern posses -1 ment and their circulation in the Do-
sionof troops have gained p ' prohibited. Penalties pro -
about two and a half miles. The at- vided by the War hMea these pct will
tack, which resulted also in the cap- apply
tore of more than 8,000 prisoners,Itions in his possession after the date
was made by Bavarians, and took I mentioned. Facilities for the Canada
trans -
place inthe districtorf ovchiva, 12 mission of north have also beensto deniedd temInterne-
,
nt rn -
miles north -at of Baranovi ,
the Pinsk ing marshes,aand red e only tional News Service, lately. 1 Hearst organization. The which is
heisolatedRfighting has occurred of the publications
The inesians, Berlin also ne says,
vetrs. i ontwhiche tthe ban of exclusion from
rom
�. machine guns andt 12 mine placed:
The success of etr Gad Wa iOff1Ce, I Canadian
rk Ame ica�rr, New York Sunday
which n the Petrograd 1 American, New York Journal, Boston
which stubborn that the Russainst , American, Boston Sunday American,
after stubborn resistance aglly com-, Chicago Examiner, Chicago Ameri-
A seven onslaughts, were sifinr
all back to their .second :can, San Sunr, San
daycExam ner,eLos ,A_n-
K a ` S '��S VAIITED DRIVE
ENDS IN INGLORIOUS RETREAT
Riess;-Raulnallian Armies Continue to Driveathe Invaders South-
ward in the Dobrudj
Lo
trio
communication from
ndon, Nov. 12,-n hire western
I tsooda yesterday'sThough few details of the bat-
s Were battling on the western d b observers
that
tie in this sector have reached Lon -
p possession of
bank of the Danube for p
Cernavoda bridge, the Russo-Rouman-
lan forces are continuing their steady
advance southward hi the Do hostile
From the west and the north
forces are closing in on Mackensen's
army.
The Russian units west of Cerna-make any
k of the I monitors or over a ne Y
don, it is believe y
the forces transported across the Dan-
ube by Mackensen must soon retire.
Their position grows more dangerous
roux
as the Russo -Roumanian army
oves
toward Cernavoda
forces t the snorth.
by
Evidently
Maciconsen near Dunareav,co either
ted
ct' the J°I
i etidstutes
'Toronto Nov, 14 At1'anli0ba whea2. t --
New
New No 1 Northern $3.05; No.
wheat,
52.01.1; No. 3, da $1.90 No. ,
$1843, tteelc, Bay ports, OW crop trad-
ing 3c above nevi trop.
Manitoba oats No 2 CW. 683< No.
2,do.,674c extra No, 1 l071c;
1 feed, 67' 0 track, 13a.3 ports.
American corn --No. 8 yellow, new,
$108 irntnedlatee shipment tr• aelc, ,rot u.
to.
Onta3�riorotpt.ttl---'Na 0 white 62 to 34o,
nominal , No. 3 do., 61 to bac, nominal,
according to freights outside.
Ontario who8at to ew,$1No. 2 'Winter,
per car lot, $'1.
$1.78 to $1.80, according to frrcials$c1.75
side. Old crop -
No. 1to $1.77 ; No, 2; do•, $1.65 to $1.68 ; No,
8 do, $1.66 to $1.60, according to freights
outside, :,
Peas --No. 2, $2.36 to $2.40, according
to freights outside.
13ar1eY_-Malting. $'1.14 10 $1,16, nomi-
nal ; feed, $1.,66 to $1.09. nominal, ac-
cording to freights outside... CCording to
Buckwheat -$1.20 bid,
freights cittrrde. according
Rye -No. 2, $1,85 to $1,37,
to freight,•. outside. in ate
Manitoba flour -First patents, strove
bake $10.20 •, , Toronto.
g
bakers', .do., '59.50, S
Ontario lou in bags,x traccording `Tnto,
to
sample, $3.25,
prompt shipment. Delivered Mant-
Millfeed-Car lots. bran, nt-
ton$31ii' riots, do cb 3eci, middlings, ton, 531 ;" per bag, 5' No.
do., $36 good feed :lour, p
2, Hay-No.
o., $1O to' $11,3• track, k, oron o. ;
Istraw -Car lots, per ton, 58 to $9,.
jtrack Toronto.
^- Country Produce -..-'Wholesale.
38 to
Butter --Fresh dairy. choice,
solid
o,
prints, 43 to
a 43c. 37 CoBSc;;
Eggs -No. 1 storage, laid, r
selects, 39 to 400 ; new -laid,
voda advanced. to
Danube before they met a sufficiently
heavy enemy fire to compel their re-
tirement toward Dunareav, according
bridge, were too smal_
headway along the railway to Bu-
charest.
DS NOTE \ BIfRNING TOWNS
U.S.
polled to f
line ofn trenches. Elsewhere hsathians ' Francisco
Los Angeles Sunday
ir"7rMle , ;;:a..,..�.W._ax,."" may.--, t �•-
�,ct�i,� frna�ne... rr>�'1�, <c.,ck...� < ;..::,...o.._..,
ctnta Georgian, Atlanta American.
:tag to the official communication. - _�
As "the result of a German counter-1AUSTRALIAN SHIPS
in the region south of Dorna
attack
s r
. • AION AS TEY : , ETIRE
ONDEPORT
German Action in Belgium Vio-
lates the Rules of
Warfare.
A despatch from Washington says:
While the State Department will not
discuss the matter, it became known
on Friday that the United States is
so seriously concerned over Ger-
man's apparent violation of the rules
of civilized warfare by deporting l c,
gressed southward. The own o Extra fine qualitY, 20-lU. tins,
Belgians and Frenchmen from the ova on the Danube, 45 miles north ofHoneY-
sed al-) 130 ; 6 -lb, tins, 121 to130; 10 -Ib, 11 to
civil population that it has made re- chernavoda, has been reoccupied, extr ; fine 111 to 1 c. Comb honeyto
presentations to Berlin. partially de- I extra and heavy weigh oiler d
though the place was p 53 ; select, 52.50 to $2.16 ;
It isfurther learned here that this having set fire to
through Ambassador i stroyed, the enemy Accord- toPotatoes-Ontario.eCL,tper bag,52.10 to
de -
Government, r otested against ; the houses before retreating.$, 25 : ter c per Erase• per bag
Gerard, vigorously p' $1.90 to $- 0 New Brunswick
French girls ; ing to Bucharest semi-official eating' per bag, 52.00 to g2ii0 ;JC975umtlj Prince d-
the deportation of young the Bulgarian forces areDelawares, per bag,$
from Lille by the German military analong their whole front. As the Bul- , ward Island Whites, per hag, 51.85,
directies. The protest was carried,
1_, they are systematically burning the 540.00bagcs-pian,, per ton, $36.0; to
direct dtthe German that
the civil-
: they
withdraw, the statement says, Yr• Il�taToronto.
ported hand-picked, • per
resulted in the promise that the cse
bushel, $4.76 to 56.50 ; Canadian, prunes,
ran population of Lille would be sent�Rouhe Ru villages. d to 54 7r ee $5.00•
back It ' understood that The Rumanian statement shows
United States in re -that the Dobrudja
help t Piovisl
Falling Back Along 40e;
Bulgars Fa W s, 42
Their Whole Linescor-
n car -
in Dabrildaa. age, out of cartons, 47 to
tons, 48 to 601 ;
48c. 22 to 2210 ;
Cheese --t o 230 .l triplets, 23 to Mc.
twins, 221 to 16 to 17c ;
• tur-
A despatch from London says.
Continuing their offensive in Dob- Lave v due lta 13 to 155
rudja, the Russo -Rumanians have fov♦ 1, 1.3 to 14c , ease, Spring, 4 to 16c-
a�k•,�hments of keyys, 26 to 28c ; g poultry -Chickens, zl to 22c;
! T7xessed poultry- ' luclto 18 to 20c ;
driven back advance _--
Field Marshal von Mackensen s
Turco-Bulgar-German forces and pro-
.
fowl, 17 to 1, c , 00 to 54.5.0: tur-
keys,squabs, 30 to dozen, geese, Spring, 1.7 to
keys,
Watra the Russians also were coin- LOAD AT MONTREAL
polled to give up some of the heights ----
which they had captured on the day Ottawa, Nov. 12. -The Australian
previous. The battle here is still in Government, according to a report to
progress, the Trade and Commerce Department,
I'y hnow in its service a fleet of 36'� formation received in the Dep
+ sal mot
t i cargo steamers some of whichIment ti Labor
lee
have. There will be a t
eeea- ever eetheir 'ties
to the future is to.;
COAL MINES DAMAGED
BY EARTH SHO
tion to
One Fatal
i1y Occurred and
Have Been Closed.
A despatch from Ottawa says: In-
art -
as have orof
states that a series. of
t a � already loaded at Montreal for Austra-
�{ "°' violent disturbances in the coal mines
Tian ports. In addition, five large sail-! at Ferilie, B.C., during WednesdayIS
Government
ing ships are being operated under 1 and Thursday, have indefinitely sus-
°°� Government control The earnings I pended operations at No. 1 east mine.
of these ships are said to be saris- `ended the disturbances are seismic
Duke of Devonshire and Party factory. The vessels will be over- or other origin is not yet knowis there.
h was
Reach Halifax on and other One fatality resulted,
a district to
Saturday.
CKS.
Mines
--
to France. is has not cease o,�- glholesalo
the actionofumwoo
gird to Belgium would be pressed as' he an avenue• for Russian Smoked Wrests -Tams, medium, eg s5
earnestly as the previous cases. Pre -1 reach Roumania because of the loss of 25s ; ke heavy, 2:: to ,
to ass
da. The Russians are now »ones l;O 28 to 29c ac hs, plarn, 26 to 27c;
sident Wilson and Secretary Lansing 'Constanza and the Carol Bridge at Tons, 19 to 20c ;, break as
are both deeply concerned in the mat- engin o
I •
sending to Salina, at the mouth of the thaln lcluregr dry coned meats, 1 cent less
ter.,Cured meats -Long clear bacon, 18 to
The depol„tations from Belgium are ,middle estuary. of the Danube, hesbu
complicated by the fact that Germany plies which go thence
throe to Galati: 1&Lai zo Tt clear bellies, 18 to 18/c. tierces,
201 to 201e'r
comp , lina Canal and tubs,.
defends its action. compound, 15i to 16o.
and are distributed over Roumania by cottonseed oil -'tierces, 158c I. '� tubs.
l e of lsc ; . nils. 16 5.
'FARMS TO PRISONERS railroad. The tout is 'longer and
er than the.all-rail font Montreal Mankato
'WILL BE FORW ARDED. slowMo
i which von Mackensen deprived Roue Montreal, Nov 14 -Corn -American
4117 t0 $112 Oats -
N Serious Interference is Expected , Canadian t No 1 feed, 1.1 Ba Y
SECTION WOMEN
KILLED IN BERLIN
Halifax, N.S., Nov. 12. -The Right
Hon. the Duke of Devonshire was for-
mally_ installed as Governor-General
of Canada in the historic council
chamber of the Nova Scotia provin-
cial building here at 3 o'clock Satur-
day afternoon, in the preserfce of re -I after November 20 and other impart-turbance must have been local, no
presentatives of the Dominion Gov- i ant daily newspapers probably will seismis disturbance having been re-
ernmetab the Senate, the navy, the i follow suit, says the Weekly Dispatch, corded on the official instruments
army, the Supreme Court of Canada„ to the cosh of production, it here on Wednesday or Thursday.
Lieutenant-Goverhor of Nova Scotia, i Owing
the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia, the i adds, a number of leading newspapers
Provincial Cabinet, the clergy of Nova 1 are being conducted at very heavy
losses. FORGET DIFFERENCES,
Scotia and prominent citizens. His^,l, _� PRESIDENT ADVISES.
A despatch from Williamstown,
Mass, says: -In a speech here on Fri-
dey night before several thousand
persons, who came from nearby towns
to congratulate him on his re-election,
President Wilson, said: "I want to
say that now the campaign is over we
must think of only one thing, and that
is not of parties, but of the interest of
the great country -we all love. Let as
forget all our differences and unite for
common service. Only in bhat way
can we work for the great nation that
has given us liberty and peace."
PEAK IN ROCKIES
NAMED "KITCHENER.'
hauled in Australia, and used in the
transportation of wheatan
commodities.
LONDON NEWSPAPERS
TO INCREASE PRICE
London, Nov. 12, -The price of the
Times will be increased to 37/z pence
and t ere
extensive damage hi i
property. The other mines suspend-
ed operations completely during
Thursday, but are likely to resume
in a few days. The normal .produc-
tion will be, however, considerably af-
fected. At the Dominion Observatory
here it is stated that the Ferule dis-
� mania. ATo. 2 , yellow, �, No. 3,
e ..- `' nadran rS'ester 1 2, 7-- : rle -
o eriou Sae ; extra With Receipt by Canadians. Manitoba feed, $1.03 ; alting, $1.27 to
130, Flour, Manitoba ting, wheat
patents, firsts. 510.30 ; seconds. 59.80 ;
A despatch from Ottawa says: A NINETEEN string bakers', 0. Writ rollors, patents,
90 to
le
communication from nig. rGin&aage Per -s choice, $s ,5
$9,50 ; do.,bags, $4.40 to $4,55• Rolled
Icy to the Prime Minister l is wit oats e, 59. • $ •; do., bags,54,55 , 30 lbs.,
that satisfactory arrangements will 53.•10. • Bran, 530.00. Shorts, 533.00,
be made through the War Office Berlin, Nov 12. -The Balkan Ex- 540 00. xav c N I'tneMoUllsternca 223 to
whereby parcels sent from Canada to press, which runs Berlin, between
dashed at s full 513 Oo tngCaee3 e 011 ,t2 weo sterns, uttt r
individual prisoners of war iri Ger- tinople and into a party of wo- i "3c ; finest e.tsterus,
b U of
1-Choicest
tc 411 ce3 Lgg lrresh, 63 to
11 beforwarded without de- speed yesterday
many
will
ori
lay. There will be a central super -
Excellency was sworn in by the Hon.
Sir"L ouis Davies, K.C,M•G, The Duke
of Devonshire is6' the third Governor-
General to have been installed at Hali-
fax, the others being the Marquis of
Lorne and Earl Grey. The ship hear-
ing the Duke' of Devonshire, the
Duchess of Devonshire, their two
daughters, Lady Maud Louisa Emma
Cavendish and Lady Blanche Kath-
erine Cavendish, arrived here at noon.
111
120 PERSONS DROWN
FROM VISTULA BARGE.
A depatch from London, says:' -
One hundred and twenty persons have
been drowned through the sinking of a
barge on the Vistula, according to a
Central News despatch from Amster.
dam The disaster occurred at Kam-
ierz, near 'Lublin, in Poland
TING I CITY OF BRUSSELS
OVER THE DEPORTATION ORDER
Thirty Germans Killed or Wounded and Numerous Belgian
Casualties Are Reported.
1 men section hands in a su ur seconds, o
BerlinNineteen women were killed,' 66e. ; selected, 40a ; No, 1 stock, 36e
. 2 stock, 3
Na20 Potatoes -Per barn,
lc.,ts, 52.00 to 52.25,
vision and censorship In London, u i .
it is expected the new regulations There was a heavy fogat the time.
out of the
will not interfere with the receipt by `The women had stepped
the Canadians in Germany of parcels i way of a westbound
train
of aane d Balkan
id not
sent to them as heretofore by their I observe the approach
fiends in Canada. Express.
FRENr11 TROOPS WIN BACK.
AN IMPRTANT IMAGE
A despatch to Reuter's Telegram I eei iona3 Sarksalweekly,
ots hwith
ave ocaurrey
Company, London, from Amsiterdarn,1iatLes Nouvelles prints a Maastricht
gays: I despatch saying that there are per -
"The 'Telegraaf's frontier come- sistent rumors that the deportations
sthat placards were have provoked a revolt at Brussels, in
posted
reports 1of Germans
acted at Antwerp last Satusda�` f the course seriouslylC wolilnded, andtere
hatp killed or
years.onitrg citizens from 1l. to 30
! there were numrous Belgian casual -
to
of ager, to ]lord themselves i
to depart. He adds that 30,000 Bel- I ties. The city of Brussels is closed,
glans already have been removed I and nobody is permitted to enter or
from Antwerp to Gerrnany. They' re- : leave."
British Capture One Thousand Yards of German Trenches North
of Thiepval.Region.
London, Nov. 12, -Renewal of at-
tacks by the allies north of the
Somme has resulted in gains in the
last 24 hours. The French have re-
taken the whole of Saillisel village
after the most stubborn
gting, Onn
Saturday they captured the
part of the village, and the attack was
resumed to -day, and hand-to-hand
fighting continued in the streets of
the village until nearly dusk before
G was killed or made
Winnipeg Grain
Winnipeg, Nov 1.4. -Cash prices :
Wheat, No. 1 Northern,
3 North ern, $1.873;
Northern, $1.025
Na 4, 51.741No. 5, $].60�•610atse
2 C,W., 6230 ; No, 3 C.W.,
xtra
No. 1 feed 61c • No. 1 feed, 6010'; No.
2 feed, 608e. dl 4 , No. 8, 5110
4, 51.04 ;
970.
'United States Market:
i\l.inneapolis, Nov 14. -Wheat, Decem-
ber, 51.941 ; May, 51.948 to 51.948. Cash,
No. 1 hard, 51.981 to 52.011 ; No. 1 Nor-
thern, $1.941 to $1.973 ; No. 2 Northern,
51.883 to $1,9511. Corn -No, 3 yellow, 88
to 90e. Oats -No 8 white, 511 to 518e.
Flour, unchanged. Bran, 526.00 to 527.
Duluth, Nov. 14. -Wheat, No. 1 hard,
$1.9511 • No. 1 Northern, 51.921 to $1.941
No. 2 :Northern, $1.801 to 51,901 ;
Dec-
ember, $1.921. Linseed, otrack,'
ck, 52.77 ;
December, 52.65 ; MaY, 52.745
Live Stook Markets
Toronto, Nov. 14. -Butcher steers.
heavy, 58 to 58,80 ; butchers' cattle
good, ;$7.40 po 57.65 ninle. medium,
56 40 33 to $6.75
56
to $7;
butchers, bulls, choice, $7,10 to 57.35 ;
do„ good bulls, $6.40 to $6,501 do„
rough bulls, 54.50 to 5.00 ; butchers'
, good
5.75, choice, 56.25ediu ,, 55.50dt 5 80t:
55.75o' 56 ; do.,
stockers, canners6 andtcutters, 53.75 to
to $7;
4,40 ; minters, choice, each, $
110.00 ; do., conn, andGoed., each,.100 ; 510
to $60 ; springers, $
ght
ewes, 58.25 to 59,00 ; sheep, heavy, $6
to $7,50 ; calves. good to choice, 1 •to
to ..$11.25,; lambs, choice,c6 ; .50 i
$11.25 ; do., medium, 59.25
; de„
hogs, fed and watered, 510.65
toll,10
weighed off earn 510.90 ;
510.16
Montreal, Nov, 14. --Steers sold at an
increase of 25c. per hundred pounds
over last week. Bog's were down 663 2.
to $7.7 ; good, 5st Steers,
75 i• ce, cows,
choice, $6 to 56.60 ; good, $4,60 to 55 ;
cutters and canners, $3.50 to 55.75 ;
butchers' bulls, 55 to 56 ; canner bulls,
54,35 to 54.75.
PROMISE BY GERMANY
OF MARINA ENQUIRY,
South of the Somme the French and
German activity has consisted to -day
chiefly of heavy artillery fire. Last
night, however, the Kaiser's troops
made a heavy assault on the French
lines at Deniecourt, Some patrols
succeeded in entering advanced posi-
tions, but were immediately driven
out.
British troops, by a strong attack
in the Thiepval region last night,
stormed German trenches over a• front
the last German of 1,000 yards.
prisoner. 1.=.274:r.
.
Newly Explored. Mountains to Com-
memorate Leading Alliied
Generals.
A despatch from Ottawa says: The
Geographic Board has approved of the
name Kitchener being applied to a
high peak in the Rockies at the head-
waters of the North SaskatcheWan
and Athabaska Rivers, hitherto known
as Douglas. Proposals are under coni-
sideration to name a 'newly -explored
series of high peaks on the Alberta,
B.C., boundary, west of the Kananis-
kis Lakes, after leading Generals of
the allied forces.
SUBMARINE S} TEETERS BOMBED
AT OSTEND AND ZEEBRUGGE
British Naval Aeroplanes Dropped Great Weight in Bombs With
Satisfactory Results.
A despatch from London says; I and. on the enemy works. The report
halt struck a blow of the Admiralty reads n a squadron
The British Adm y it of Ger-
of
Friday g
against the increased activity of naval aeroplanes attacked the bar-
man on Friday. A large bor and submarine shelters at Ostend
roan submarines seat weight in
squadron
of aeroplanes raided the and Zeebrugge. .k great
weight in
harbors of Ostend and "leebr'uge and bombs was dropped w
itdropped bombs on the U-boat shelters I results."
A despatch from Washington says:
" erm,any has informed the Americas
Embassy in Berlin that the sinking,
of the British steamerors Marina
lives
October 28, with the will
of six American horse -tenders,
be thoroughly investigated as soon
as submarines operating on that datdate
have reported, according to confi
tial advices received here from Berl