The evening world. Newspaper, February 10, 1915, Page 1

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Balm in oe % S Hy FS b ¥ Me fi a 8 ‘As cH ot medio . 4 inkee Flag to Dodge Germ INAT EDITION et fer as ¢ = — “Ctrculation Books Open to All.’’ a tow Wert NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1915. 16 PAGES PRICE ONE CENT. )FIERCEST BAYONET FIGHT IN HISTORY: _ THOUSANDS SLAIN ON CARPATHIA 1) PASSENGERS ON ORDUNA HERE DET ASKED IN [Seer Kiko 2a set and Main Asma } TELLHOW BRITISH SHP FLEW | “irr esp ANERIAN FLAGIN RSH SEA. AUTO IN SM ASHUP oe ale vy tee ATOP LOOKOUT HILL . INPROSPECT PARK f About Fl Daring Party Hurled Out Into a Tree. 4. n Booka Open to All.’ Coprright, 1015, by The Prese Co. (The ‘New York World), % F: rig KASER LOST 250,000 NSXDAYS INPOLAND, Baitish Ensign Came Down Se Before the Cunard Liner | Left the Mersey. 25 LOVE LETTERS READ. Terrific Battle Going On Further © South in Which Carpathian’ Heights Have Been Captured © and Recaptured Time and Again, Breitung’s Daughter Laughs at Hubby Swing Father for $250,000. Mrs, Max Kielst, daughter of E. N. Breitung, millionaire mine and ship owner, sat in the United States Dis- trict Court to-day and laughed at her boy husband, who is muing her father for $250,000 damagen for alleged alien- ‘ ation ‘Of her’ affections after their wo 2 #¢ 7 ““LONDON, Feb. 10, (United Press) —The Petrograd correspon clandestine marriage in New York in y 4 of the London Evening Star estimates that the Germans lost net November, 1918, PANIC AS CAR 50,000 killed and four times that number, of 200,000; ed fin teat COMPANY DENIES IT. HF: ‘Adriatic Starts Across, but Cap- After passengers arriving from Liv- @rp001 aboard the C Line ateam- 4-gtip Orduna to-day had told of the mand Stripes having been holsted \ Trafic Pot:ceman Walter Manley 4 , was surprised to see's big automobile ; } the ship's taffrail on leaving the) carrying -.. men and a woman leave, *Mlorgey River and pelng kept there) ine driveway in Prospect Park this! i through the Irish Sea. General) srernoon and start up the side of q Charles P. Sumner of the}; - At the opening of the court Kieist’ attorney Teed twenty-Ave ardent let- week's battle along the Borzhymow line, ters from Mrs. Juliet Breitung Kleist, some written before their elopement out Tic, the highest point in the’ Canard offices here issued an unquall-| park. When the machine got about half way up the precipitous . te of the hill the driver lost contro! and crashed into an elm tree. The car was wrecked and the oc- cupants were spilled all over the land- scape. Manley expected to find rev- eral of them dead, but they were all unin, :red, save from bruises, when he react... them. , The driver and owner of the car was Frank W. Cabbie, a manufac- turer of novelties, living at No, 537| Washington Avenue, Brooklyn, He! proclaimed with some pride that if he hadn't been out all night, and feeling, therefore, a little woosy, he could have driven the car clean over the hill and down the other side. Manley arrested him on a charge of driving an automobile while intoxi- cated. fied denial of their statements. “The American flag was never raised at the stern of the Orduna,” the statement sald. “It was raised at the foremast head upon leaving Lh to Indicate that the Orduna Wa sailing for an‘ American port ‘, with American passengers and Ameri- can: mail, The American flag re- St the foremast bead until “® /. after the Orduna left Queenstown {aad was raised there again as the ship entered port to-day.” & dozen and more passengers all upon the following facts: . The change of flags was made in the sight of Liverpool's docks and ail - the fiver craft. The Orduna entered @deenstown harbor with the Ameri- ap Mag still flying, supplanted it with the British merchant standard ‘during the two hours she was lying 6M the’ Irish port, then ran up the neutral bunting once more as she was @learing Queenstown. When Capt. Taylor s asked to @enfirm the story told by pas- sengers concerning the use of the American flag he hesitated, then answered: “{ cannot discuss anything con- @erned with the war—positively not a “Did you hoist the American flag pon Admiralty orders?” he was ‘{ caunot and will not discuss any- pertaining to the war,” he ans- His companions sald they were Mra. Pearl Donner of No, 806 Cooper Ave- nue, Ridgewood; John Kelly of No. 980 De Kalb Avenue, Edward Me- Keon of No, 741 Quincy Street, Henry! Riem of No. 349 Irving Avenue and Louis Friedman of No. 200 Manhattan Avenue. They all showed traces of a long joyride, but as they were able to take care of themselves Manley sent them to their homes. Cabble was taken to Flatbush Police Court, SAYS “‘L’” ACCIDENT and some after, “I'm afraid I shall love you to death ‘was one phrase. seemed to awaken no reminiscent Kleist, looked straight ahead, with her little | red mouth tightly compressed, and then, when the fondest phrases | ‘were read, she and her mother looked at each other and “snickered,” “Did you tell her on the day after | your wedding that you had been up| late the night before and had a lot to drink?” Mr, Nicoll asked. nswered Kleist placidly. never had a lot. Ihada few. I never | drank till she showed me.” | “So she tempted you again?” And she showed me how to smoke cigarettes, too.” More laughter in the court. “Then you were a good boy till you when we meet, tenderness in Mrs. “No, “Yes. met. her?” boy, neither.” of Juillet record amine. the advances?” Y m you?” “Yea,” @Wwell, I won't say that— nor a bad ‘When the last of the written sighs had been by the plaintiff's DeLancey Nicoll began to cross ex. “You say Miss Breitung made all I loved her when she loved The bride smiled mockingly, seemed not disturbed, “Sbe first proposed marriage read It PLUNGESINT SUBWAY KIOSK Electric Jumps an, Madi- son Avenue and Forty- second Street. for she Now! “T With a crash which frightened everybody within a block of Madison Avenue and Forty-second Street, a south-bound Madison Avenue car, which had jumped the track on the curve at that point and crossed the street to the south curb, smashed into the subway entrance kiosk there, The big car, filled with yelling and screaming parsengers, was #0 slewed around that it would have plunged down the subway steps had not the wide forward fenders caught in the side frames of the kiosk. The car was rounding the curve at a high rate of speed, usually main- tained by motormen seoking to slip quickly into the heavy traffic line on Forty-second Street. The forward into the attorney, but to PAINT OR EARRINGS FOR KANSAS WOMEN Legislative Bill Also Forbids False Hair and Perfume to All Under 48 Years, TOPEKA, Kan,, Feb. 10.—Kansas women under forty-five years of age who wear earrings or treat their faces with cosmetics “for the pur- pose of creating a false impression” will be gullty of misdemeanors and upon conviction be subject to fines, if a bill introduced in the lower House of the Legislature becomes a law. Face powder, perfume, false hair and bleaching materials for the hair, are among the articles enumerated ++ see sist the women are forbidden to | use. | The bill provides that the women! may not have their ears pierced or wear earrings “at parties or in any O MORE FACE POWDER, ‘BREAK THREATENS DFEATFORWLSON ENINFIBUSTER Norris and Kenyon, Who Have Been Supporting Democrats, Tiring of Fight. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—Two days and two nights’ continuous sea- sion of the Senate seemed to hetc had little effect in wearing out the Republican filibusters against the Ship Purchase bill. serious development was easily the statement of Senator Norris, one of. the Progressivé Republicans whose vote the Democrats counted, that he would favor sidetracking the bill in a few days if there was no action, Norris spoke, too, not only for him- To-day's most on of Feb. following rapidly developed #PETROGRAD, Russia, Feb. 10.—The official report given out | day by the General Staff estimates the dead and wounded In six fighting during their effort last week to break throagh t Warsaw “several tens of thousands,” Details of desperately contested fighting in the Carpathian m tains in which the bayonet charges are described as most without precedent in history, reached Petrograd to-day. According to these reports repeated attacks on the part of German troops were finally repulsed by the Russians, and the German dead la in great numbers in front of the Russian positions. The lomes are d scribed as enormous, and unquestionably the fighting was waged the utmost ferocity by Germans ang Russians alike. {4 German report states that heavy artillery actions ere progress in the Curpathians and that an advance is being made Bukowina, where the important town of Wama has been by the Austro-German forces. [Berlin says the operations are being carried on under aifiew- ties of an almost insurmountable nature, Deep snow ts proving 6 great hindrance, The troops are compelled to keep to the valley roads, The battle apparently ts as far from a decision as at any time since the Austrians, with thetr reinforcements of Germans, ladnohed the attack, The scene of the fighting was at Baligrod, south of Sanok, German troops were present in very considerable numbers, sem{-officially by the Russian staff that the Hungarian forces in pathians have been augmented by 300,000 Germans, and that officers are now directing the Carpathian movement, Concentrating their forces the night 7, the Germans, early the began what into one of the morning, of the heights, ning the Germans, in great nj seemed to be in permane: a on ocoupled altela. It te claimed. SS Then @ general counter attack the Russians resulted in hard SHOWS SIGNALS’ NEED fiercest attacks in the history of the testily and refused to be drawn “Yow courted her?" truck left first and the rear wheels | public place.” | self, but for Senator Kenyon. Sena- Denial bolting Democrats will make a des- perate effort to break the Adminis- tration’s strength, Senator Bankhead planning to move that a postal ap- in gaining a strategic elevation, But from this position they were. almost immediately driven back by a Rus- sian bayonet charge. Attack and farther. ay.y-yee.” wate of before the front end of the tor LaFollette, it was understood, | Carpathian campaign. With thelr|to.nand fighting which left the ORDUNA WAS FIRST OFFENDER " : “And gat va car Was half way across the curb, would stand by the Democrats, | first line almost totally annihilated, | clad hillsides atre v rh +, % gave her marshmallows? | s wo with dead, After, URE OF FLAG | Public Service Commission En-) on Ste." Joveph Ansel of No. 64 East One MRS. W. K. VANDERBILT Indications late this afternoon were | iho Germans pushed forward their|® most stubborn resistance the Gere Bince the Lusitania got into Liver-| inser Points Out Necessity of w¥ou bave heard ber letiors read; Hundred and Nineteenth atrost the SAILS T0 AID SOL JERS} tnrovenout renee eee pet’ | gecond line, under the support or|man regiments nally were delimitely: : fh diy in love with you. How|motorman, leaped back into the car 4 Formore | : riven out. ey (Continued on Second Page.) Protection System. nH by spe A Hebbel Bie em land Joined the ps .igers in thelr = | row, ft wax sald, the Republicans and | heavy artillery, and wero SUpcesstUl |”, Russian oMcer clatma panic stricken rush for the rear door, | you some hidden charm?" “Well, we were together all the time. And when a man is with a girl all the time, he must learn to love to have counted upward of one sand German dead before the positiona on this hill, He this engagement as typleal Chief Electrical Engineer Clifton W. Wilder of the Public Service Com- mission to-day submitted a formal re- port on the Ninth Avenue “L" wreck There was a great splintering of glass when the front vestibule of the car struck the subway entrance, The glass on both sides of the structure Goes on Adriatic to Help American} Ambulance Hospital in MOVIE STAR DIVORCED AN TEN-MINUTE VERDICT Paris, propriation bill, which has been re-| counter attack followdd each a i seninee Whan teh oasa | Hone? pt . | counter attack follo each other| battles which dre ocourriag 5 of bigest eed caucuber of pars| “O14 Mise Jullet teach you to love | Wee Knceked to pisces and flew Atty! | ported to the Senate, be taken up. | jn rapid succession, and toward ove-!the Carpathian Mountains, a4 were burned and a b . feet in every direction, | Among the Adriatic's passengers! ghould this motion prevail, the Ship Grane Wilbur Plays Silent Part in} sengers injured. Mr. Wilder says the| her?" Richard Thompson of No. 308 Third| when the British ship sailed to-day | pyrchawe Bill will be dislodged, whic “Yes. She did.” “pla she hold your hand?” “Yen.” wooden cars were so badly burned and the equipment on the heads of the were three officers of the Imperial | Navy of Japan, They were Com- Avenue and Joseph Hart of No, 214 East Twenty-eighth Street, who were OFFICIAL RUSSIAN REPORT would virtually mean its death as far | an this session is concerned. Court Drama in Which Wife star, in Justice Bianchard’s part of jupreme Court to-day. | Justice Blanchard ordered Wilbur 6 wife $36 a week alimony of the suit, The actor was - th court. | “Ta'k about doctors!” exclaimed Mrs. Witbur as she lett the court- “Somebody once advised me e clan, because seover: Eo.set ‘hous, tive found we tion: “This accident demonstrates, perhaps better than any other accl- dent, the necessity for some form of protective signals on both local and express tracks on all elevated struc- tures.” “Yes.” “Weill,” replied ¢ “now—she asked my I—well—I gave her A roar of laughter spectators, in which ‘= on the cheek: your hand and sald she lovec you?” 1 didn’t say salich.” “You were speechiegs?" “But did you kiss bi ki t! 1" honest youth, | to kiss her, and|there had been a subway explosion, against the front of the United Cigar Store, | Guests at breakfast in the Manhat- jtan Hotel, diagonally opposite, left big \their tables and ran into the halls and to the street in the belief that be ae Traffic on Forty-second Street was thrown Into seething confusion for half an hour before the car could be hauled back on the tracks and pushed a ; e from the | bride Joined. the wit-. ousness, “We are students.” “Do full commanders of ships in| the Jupanese navy go to England as students?” he was asked. | “All Japanese are students,” Com. | mander Yamasak! answered imper- | turbably: Mrs, William K, Vanderbilt was also @ passenger. Mrs. Vanderbilt said she Was going to ald the Ameri- can Ambulance Hospital in Paria. Robert MeCormick, one of the owners of the Chi 2 route for | etrograd, ‘is’ Polask 0. Tribune, was snsers| pose the introduction of the Gore Bill, designed to appease members who have objected to the purchifse of belligerent ships. and Underwood Representatives | Kitchen, Fitzgerald, Adamson, Webb, | Alexander and Flood, Gore bill passed by the House imme- diately that it might be brought be- fore the Benate before the present asesion’s clone, ara Sabie - ég * Sis, sociated Press).—The General Staff of the Russian army to-day gave out The President talked with Leader | the following statement: continues in the vicinity of Bartteld Although no definite decision was | and Bvidnik, The enemy here under- reached, plane were laid to get th®| took active operations, but taey did not thus continue and they finally retired, leaving tne Bande, is the vicinity ay. PETROGRAD, Russia, Feb, 10 (As. “In tho Carpathians the fighting prisoners in ret “* | 4 ER di Wins Freedom. colliding cars so completely damaged lon the further side of the kiosk, were|mander S. Yamasaki, Lieut. Com-| president Wilson tried a flank as to wipe out all evidence. “That in, before you took her hand/ cy, about the face and hands by|mander Y. Otori and Lieut. J. Mori-| movement in the ship bill fight to- | Mrs, Edn: Heermance Wilbur got!” 44 aid not believe defective equip- | she took yours?” |splinters. ‘They narrowly escapea| moto, When the Commander was|4ny He called the Democratic House Germans Make 22 Attacks & ten-minute divorce on charges of ment was responsible for the accident,| “Yes.” \being crushed by the metal roof,|asked what the mission of the three \ ‘ to the White House to pro. fafdelity from Crane Wilbur, movie| ney Te ee nis significant observa.| “What did you say when she took| which was knocked off and feti| abroad might be he said in all sert. | ealere ae In One Day on the (4 Loupow we continued our the enemy, and tm one Gay we. tured 69 officers, 5,900 mem,

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