The Guardian is Read Daily by 421100 Sworn Furnished Advertisers. af-'-`-`~"`~" ' 'Af' "A"'_""" " ' ` '_' ' " ` ' ` "'A"` ` ' ' T ' ""' ` ' ' ' ’_'- ' ;j"f"~`~f~"'-"' ’-`~‘-'-Tff-‘~‘=~'-'-fe-::_-:_-_~:_~_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_»_~_-_-_-_-_-_-_;¢_¢-_-_;-_-_-_-_-_-_-: _e-_-_-_-t-_-_f_-_-_';;.':::;i; _ff-‘-'-'-‘~'-‘-'-1'-1*:-‘> -';7='--‘,¢f.¢.j.-1--f.;»v-wr~'-2:?.'r.‘-‘r-*.1*-1'.;-2.'-'Y'J-‘-'-'-`-‘-'-‘f-‘-‘-'~'-T; -'-'r-‘-1-;,'-7-27-*-`-T-'-if-j-‘f-‘-`-1'-‘-1*-'-1*-1*r--=-2-‘fff-'-'-'-1-ff-'rf-7°*-‘-1'-121'-'-‘-'-'-`-'-‘-i-`{- ~ - ~ fy - - - - - - ~ -1 - - - -3 I - ~ --»`»~"»-Mlcbnnl-Na I |:>A|.|..v I i C illiiow G iilnli ,,§,,,,.,., .§T..I¢lL....-;I»f;i`1»»1 t ` cnsntorrarown, I TUESDAY, ivovamssn 16, 1915 wi,ky_(n¢w lvagrg pany) 1ss1 - O .(58.50 Par Your (delivered) in advlnol $2.50 r_ year-by mall in advalooo FEARED THE enscuu siiuiinori IN GREEN SITUATION IISSUMES IIN ACUTE STIIG Events oi Tremendous Importance King Constantine Musik Now lletine liis Attitude Toward Entente- Allies.” Serbian Situation Continues Satis- l.ooked tor byhuropean Chan- _ _ _ I iaetory. Heavy Fighting Resumed on Western celllirfles this Week. Attitude o Greece Must be Defined. Rumors oi 'treachery Must be Clearedup. Forced and She is Ready to Enter Balkan Struggle. IItiIy’S Iltiilii PARIS, Nov. 15.-The _European man methods and meted out to Greece . chancellories expect. this week events condigu punishment with their fleet. of tremendous importance which will The Journal prints an Athens dispatch clarify notably Greece's plans and stating that a powerful Anglo-Frencli ltnly‘s intention. For the present public interest tin no comfort in the lates mats d p _ - news from Athens and Saloniki, and man diplomats protested to King Con- lean strongly to pessimism regarding stantlue last week against -Greece’s o King ConstAntlne's attitude. The Allies’ good will towards Greece | the Allies from landing troops hinges on whether she will disavow_ Greek soil. The German minister said the threat of one of her new ministers that the Kaiser was ready to Iinance to disarm the Serbian, French and Greece if thc king would act in this British troops who, in forthcoming sense. King Constantine replied: battles may be thrust back across the "Greece will remain neutral until Greek border. S Athens correspondents warn the ceases to respect herrights. Snloniki French Government that the Greek is a free port and the landings con- cabinat has considered this qiiestion stitute no violation of our neutrality." and that the Allies will do well to as- _ Italy is confidently expected this same that THE DECISION HAS week to supply a reason why King GONE AGAINST THEM. lt seems Constantine hould keep the sword 'probable that the Venizeiist party wil a ar an electoral strike and refuse it ultimately against Bulgaria. decl e to go 'to the polls on December 19. Ninety Venlzelist deputies under 44 ING IN THE BALKANS, is the an- years of age and liable for military nouncement made to-day by Figaro service have been refused a month’s and the Petit Parislen. “The only leave for the electoral campaign by' question is whether she will strike the Minister ,of War. , From the viewpoint of the Allies an- ' other piece of .bad news is that re- Events have forced Italys hand, cording the visit the other day to King is declared. by disclosing that both Constantine of a German military Austria and Bulgaria are driving for commission, consisting of the son o [1 . General Von Buelow, Baron Von Fai- Once permanently installed in Al- kenhausen and Colonel Von Erbseiner, bania, Austria could render Ita-lian who were conveyed by a Greek gun- boat to Athens. That the Venlzelist intinence ha received its death blow through' the the bottling up of the Italian fleet n dlssol tion of arliament is the gen- Y. u P onn opinion, hut it. nrontins thereb the king should proceed to order his roads converge on the Kossoyo plain army to attack the Allies after the where the Serbian army is likely to Venizellst Government had summoned make its most desperate stand. _ if Meanwhile the italian cruiser Pied- them to Snloniki, be not surprised the Allies for once resorted to Ger is stantly under steam at Malta. switched from Roumania, though only The only piece of reassuring news temporarily. Statesmen and dlplo- from Greece comes from a Switzer- battleship squadron is being held con- t land di lomatic source Anstro Ger- continued failure forcibly to prevent n one or the other of the belli erents I sheathed unless he intends to dr w ITALY IS ON THE EVE OF ACT- from Albania and Montenegro or sal-. oiiikl.” it f the Alba ian coast possession of Trieste vnluless from a strategic viewpoint, since the presence s of Austrian at Vaiona would mean the Adriatic. From the ports of Sali- t ta Quaranta, Durttzzo and Valona good mont has just arrived off Saiotiikl. III] MISIISEIII IIIISPIIII SHIPS, LONDON, Nov. 15.-A statement WINNIPEG, Nov. 14.-Hon.) Dr issued yesterday by the Admiralty Montague, who was Minister of 1 uhig says: sent out on the night of Noveinb the conditions prescribed by the Gen eva and the Hague conventIons." IIISISIIIIIIIS SIIIIIM UN acorn was uno to anonlexy- This WHS ......._‘¢- iirst att 8 ' LIVERPOOL, Nov. 15.-(SD6_Clul)-' the summer at his cottage on the Lake Two steamers were blown ashore 8l\d of the Woods. houses were unroofed on the isle o Man during a severe storm over th British Isles Friday night. voNm-:Nolan ans. ' _ b 16.-Mari- Too LATE FOR tinrI`gRgtIr’<;Iii(g' wII!i‘d;el;1n§rKales, West- OIIASSIFI CATION 6|-ly and Northwesterly. decreasins Bl . .@1- ONE tion for Cash "ln G rman wireless message for a year and a lull! l>1‘€Vl0l-is 10 "S n e er forced resignation, and had been in 12, it was conjectured that British poor health for some time. died Wllll hospital ships are being used for con- veying troops, munltloiis and 0tller“in the Royal Alexandria Hotel about War material. This is absoIutoly|l\alf-past two Saturday afternoon. A false. British hospital ships always maid who was working In the room at have, and always will be used under the time states that the doctor sat fair and Y 1 d was word each inner- THE WEATHER-'Tx 91;' gty .lam in this column. cloudy with heavy 5 °W . orders. Mini- and rain. , d V.,_u___-_-___-_-___-_-_-_-_-_-_ _ _-_-_-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ -_ IIIIEIII IIIIIH III HIIII. IIH. MIIIIIIISIII Works in the Robliii atiministratlo tragic sutldenness at his apartments ~ down on u chair after Mrs and Miss Montague had left him to go out and do some shopping, and n _few moments later he fell from the chair without uttering a word or sound, and appar- ently expired iiistatttly. A physician was summoned, and after making an examination of the body. decluritd that the second stroke deceased had suffer- ed dnring the past three months, the aok havin occurred late in f ,____.__..-_--- 9 THE WEATHER, . 'I‘EMPERA'.I‘UR.E. TIDE, MOON. ETC. (Special to The Guardian) night; local snow flurries, but mostly colder. The highest temperature recordleo yesterday was 42 degrees aboveiae H. at nino o'clock yoltordiv mf" “F at registered 87 d68r69! 85079 “°\'°' nino lost nicht 42 domes =\>°"°- TI" coldest theegiireergious nllllf W” 31 5°' grees abov - 'rho uno win be .lush untill* as 6.54 and tomorrow at 7.895 Ii W8” d thigh tomoxogvmmoming at __7-0 BD TII|‘~l,:;d:\In sets this afternoon at 4.28 and tomorrow 'at 4.26: lt Nl" ¢°m°" row morning at 7.08 and 'l`llurl¢ll¥ ll mos. .- I n tar-of the moon W onTs`fztI;tIn ?rI;v. mn at 'Los i>- m~ There wNi be al gall ingot! 0° 3'1"' ay Nov. 21|t at _ P- - _,- rho iongrn of today . nt 'titular Front. (Special to The Guardian) ‘ LONDON, Nov. 15.-Intimation from the Greek Government that any En- been the cause of considerable anxie- ty to the Eutente Powers. Conse- quently Field Marshal Earl Kitche- ner’s near cast visit gains added im- portance. According to belated de- spatches received from Athens, Greece bases her decision on International law while the Entente Ministers con- troops to enter the counry throng the same route should it become nc- cessary for them to do so, the Minis- ters demanding that Greece unequivo- cally deilne the attitude she will ob- serve should such an eifentnallty pre- sent itself. Besides the claims to hos- pitality which the Entente Allies de- the then Premier, Venizelos' invita- tion to them to send a force to Salo- treaty with Serbia which, however, Greece has repudiated, Earl Kitchener or the Entente Ministers are likely to draw the attention of King Constan- that the constitutlonnlism in Greece was guaranteed by France, Russia and Great Britain. That was obtained af- ter Great Britain ceded the Ionian is- lands to that country and the three Powers had agreed to contribute 40,- 000 pounds ($200,000) yearly for the ______._,-_-1l- ` I oi Stale and Governments. the Powers. abatement. personal use of the King. This, it contended, binds the Greek people the Entente Allies should King Con- Totovo, which has changed hands tente Allied troops seeking refuge in stantine overrule the constituti Greek territory will be disarmed has which the followers of Venizelos insist tured Tetovo yesterday, but a report The Germans, on the other hand, pass fo;-they west, tend that the right accorded the are declared to be assuring U19 Greek There has been a revival of ha _ h Government that Greece Wm be pw, ngmmg on the western h.om_ The to Secretary of State Lansing to-day Saloniki permits them to retire by levied against the Elllellw MUGS Germans claim to have captured 300 by me u“II”“ AmI,’”“°d°"' ("’“"L should that country sunoort the Cen- metros or trench, while the French re- M““”“““ “’“°"f- “I” l"°‘""‘ was U-3| powers' phat evidence gf the abt. port me repulse of German attacks the form ofa denouucement cabled lity of Austria and Germany to do against the Labyrinth in Ai-tois, also "'°m Mme "e°I“"“§ that W’"‘°“‘ this are the despatchiug of more sub- - _ marines to tho Mediterranean which The Russians continue mei, open, military rights accompanying 11 rlsht could be used against u fleet throat- sive west or the Riga and sro makin Shing Greek P0118- Meimtlme 7-he an effort to secure control of the ra clarg they have on Gregce in view of fight for Serbia is proceeilillg without way which connect Mita" and w~|ndau_ 195 Y BII E I-he W 91953 i1DD3|`alU5» h a The Austro-Germans and Bulgarians Ge,-mans near Smo,-gen on me milw niki to cnnbio Greece to tnini her claim repeated successes. but it apparent that their progress is slo the Serbians having reached the mountain iortresses in Central Serbi and the roads or want of roads makin tine and his Government to the fact it difficult for the invaders to brins 11 their artillery with which they alway back un their infantry- In the south against the Austrians. The vicnn there is little or no change. In th bians are still holding the Katchani is south-west of Uskn a desperate strug- of D to gle is taking place for possession on several times. The Bulgarians reca he did when .he dissolved the Cham-_received at the Serbian legation to- ber. lt is suggested in some quarters night says the Serbians again hav that King Constantine would be re- occupied the town. The Bulgarians minded that his retention on t he are reported to have great forces throne fo Greece depends on the con- south-west ot’ Veies, where the ho Y D . ' i I t lit ith ‘ ' - ttnuance of tr end y neu ra y w to check the l