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eompletely Pe metres in free! of | mee BD peeont Nene te the weet Ow the feme ren Outinred heavy lemme Thee ‘ het atten’ 5 cane "in the Che . tensive French « forsee wes taken by us onne wight worth ante comets . ftaine sone oe punier-eltecks The | [yri¢ i} n & oy ee puffered heovy lomeee ‘ ’ mecbine « . tnrewers f . Report k " and ™ or y betties took pace Ae hb mht atte 1th SK DEFI j tn Le Petre wood © oie Gangyinary losees ——— “Pines (heir unsuccrset: #4 has of April 16 (he Peer All Have a Dd t Task more treat pie te atiack ia / positions on Martmans W hope Pu ay ©) [Thi io in denial of the French , teen nn ; , April 87 t . . “ . . . Frened and Mritiey have headwey wih t lar Preach assert they have re.| tons, The Paris War om captured = Hartmans We Kopt heed | pture of h which took away f the Ast 6 1 the 26th of April in reavty ide i bave been made since tne pin he Bagh to recapture | bulae of 1 the summit o rroon of Apri! canes, doom 26. Therefe: © in OUT inetance the Turks. have been able t Sthe tritigh report saye that the| ‘ve them back French, advancing on | ft wing The territory troope of the British, hove recaptu the are moving few vinege of Het Bas, in Flanders 1 charactercomprising Killa and valleys Leer eeerday, Furthermore, the /Within which are scores uf maskrd de Pritich Feport states that the German |fenaes #0 thoroughly concealed that rewarding the capture of four thy atrmen cannot pick them up, and! Britieh guna is not correct ie Mik himes thea hee wns “It ie a pity for the British army ; ; administration that It le #0 badly in. | Comes when the troops are Ared upon formed by itx subordinates, although | The tawk here will be a shart ( te easily understood that the regu- bul the War Office and (ie Admiralty be Qaree that it in being well carried out ined b 1 by Gen. Sir tan Harmtiten h tro t th Kcrording to | BERLIN, April 28 (vw wiretess) the inscription they bear, the cap. Advices from Cu Yle drelare ad rae beet yeiit to bah Second | that the attempt of the Anglo. Fre Jandon Garison Artillery and Sec $ RAUL Ls LnCTRaR VEG ts rial Landon Territorial Division. They are | oops to ad Againat the Turkish 12.8 centimeter guna, which will make | Posltions on the peninsula of Gallipott thelr presence on our side clearly | has failed Th nomy bas been known to our opponents tn the ne future.” — PRENCH CLAIM GAINS AT YPRES AND ON SEIGHTS OF THE MEUSE. PARIS, April 24.—The French War | Office thin afternoon gave the) following report: | “To the north of Ypres we have con- tinued to make progress, This in par- tieularly so on our left, where we took six machine guns, two bomb throwere and much war material, at the same time making several hun- out dred prisoners, including a number of officere, “The losses of the enemy wei heavy. At single point on ¢ front, not far from the canal, counted more than six hundred bod of German soldiers. “On the Seige of the Mouse, along the front of Les Kparges-Saint Remy, the trench of Calonne, we continued to gain ind, advancing about one kilometre (two-thirds of a mile) in- | flicting very heavy losses on the | enemy and destroying @ German bat- tery.’ | —_ ati-Hanging mill JUNEAU, Alaska, April 28. 4. F. A. Strong bas vetoed the ant! Gov tly by the jature. In his veto mes. Ly wy Fecen| te Nemtalature ‘ tf public to-day the Governor | the present law leaving It'to. the | a on of ibe afr to dectare whether ra should hanged or life was sufficiently ber ustained the volo. im Turkish ci fooled on Turkish can purchase a doubl THE AMERICAN so far the Turkish the You'll Recognize the Quality Ifyou are a smoker of high-class Bretton, you cannot be the distinctive flavor, aroma and mildness of high- tobaccos. Just fa and you willimmediately recognize their supreme Turkish quality. Jord Salishu 100% Pure Turkish Cigarettes You will naturally wonder how you cigarettes for 15 cents. The explanation is simple— and revolu- a handy, i inexpensive O tr 15¢ | pelied to retire to the protection of the great feet in the Guif of 8, of warships cruising | In the fighting War Office says been with the “advantage has Turkish forces and # number of oris oners have been taken The allied fleet has failed in its at. tempt to bombard the Turkish fort! fications at short range and returned after one of their warships had been severely damaged by the tire of the land forts, Additional Turkish troops are being sent td the front to aid in repulsing any attack on the land forts ‘cchtometetiijpemenanaaee THREE NUNS KILLED WHEN ORPHANAGE IS SHELLED, SAYS PARIS PARIS, April 2%.—Three hundre! refugees from Poperinghe, eight miler weat of Ypres, which bas come unde: the fire of German artillery, nave ar- rived in this city on special tral Most of them are inmates of un or- phanage and a bome for the agel conducted by Franciscan Sisters When the bombardment of Poper- inghe was begun on Sunday, the Sis by the enemy tore declare, the inatitutions were not spared, altbough they were flying the Three nuns were the Red Orose flag. killed while superintending moval of their the inmat leaf. You know pay Turkish rd Salisbury le quantity of 100% no Premiums, no TOBACCO Co, THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, French Armored Cruiser Sunk by Torpedo _ From Austrian Submarine in the Adriatic eae e ee Doe oe eee perience, but more largely to see if | could come to some of the advantage of hi which breaking with the organia organization, would jon and at the same time doing whi ents of the State demanded Q Why did you wish break with th 1 disruptine And. affirmative action at avoid a ore th ow Leould bh neatly necondly, to ena’ done tft Al. ld prevent wrong being broke with them, but I couldn't get affirmative right done if 1 broke with the reanization.” LAWYER IVINS OBJECTS TO HIS GESTURES. As Toosevelt concluded the sentence [tui voice hod risen to high atrained His body was ere hed ike ive-Dghter's His arma were beat- ling up and down like Maile pounding wut the emphasis of every word, He had stretched forward as far as powsi- ‘hie out of hin choir toward the jury nox 1 object to the geaticulations of thin witness,” erled Mr Tving "IE wont him to testify without gestieu- lation He couldn't do it," responded Mr, Howers and there was a generat | laugh in the court rom, Justice An- drewe emiled and then rapped for order. “You, he can, if the court compels him," insisted Mr, Ivins Gesticulation ix as important to [the Jury as the spoken words and | I want this witness to apeak without the gestures, It may not be possible for him to control hia vocal inflec- tions, but hi n testify without mak- ing the gestures, The Court gave a gentle warning. The Colonel turned toward Judge Andrews with a stare of utter inno- cence as if to ask what he bad done that was wrong. He was as child- sa babe, Then he turned to the Jury and with an alr of humility re- sumed his explanations, Only for # nent he subdued and then broke with even greater vehe- ke mo was out j did not want to break with the or- ganization “Because,” he exclaimed, “the or- ganization controlled both houses of Legislature. They controlled it ao that unless 1 got popular feeling tre- mendously aroused 1 could not get aftfemative action through the Legis- Control of the Senate would prevented me from fretting any of my nominations confirmed unless in similar fashion [ could arouse public sentiment euMiciently to over- come the objection, ONLY A FEW BENATORS NOT CONTROLLED. hore were certain Senators like Stranuhan and Higging to whom 1 could go directly, knowing that there was no one behind them who could control them, But after full inves- tigation 1 became convinced that the organization controlled the majority of the Senate and that if I wished to discuss appointments that were apt to come to an issue It was desirable for me to go where the real power was and talk with Mr, Platt, There- fore T must consult with him if I | wished to get aMrmative action. “1 wasn't content to have a merely negatively good administration There were a number of positive re- sults | Wished in legislation and ap- | pointments, It would have been neg- ‘ative if 1 had marked time instead of | getting affirmative action for good.” | “Did you see Mr. Platt before you | lature. have were nominated for Governor?” "Yes, after [ had informed that he had made up his mind to nom. inate me." “Did you take your nomination without pledge of any kind to Platt or the organizatio: “Absolutely, sir.’ READ ROOSEVELT'S SPEECHES OF CAMPAIGN OF 1914, 101 been ings from the Colonel's speechea in the State campaign of 1914, support. ing Davenport, the Progressive can- didate, He was swatting Barnes with dis right and Murphy with bis left in Bowers essayed by questiong to get thee mence when his lawyer asked why hej) The proceedings opened with read: | eee Petter eee oer WAY HE CONSULTED THE BOSS thowe days, but the effort didn't seem | to particularly impress the voters, ao- cording to election returns However, the Colonel had joy over hie speeches to-day Vor the moment he wasn't bored, hut had @ “perfectly bully tine iy jing over those battling ta Mr iP ns Who WAN cross-examining, | slackened the cheek rein and conened so that the Colonel ab bes curb bit wt ran away with him ip explana ne to the jury and repeating lines Jor hin apeechen In one of them, up-State that y the © lot fly a mide awipe a | Gov Whitman, saying he was ‘one Jot the moat eMicient instruments in jaid of Tammany Hall in his attempt |to nave MoCall.” The Court ordered | this stricken out Mr. Ivine read extracts from sev. ral apeches in which Mr. Roosevelt used language almost identical with that in his formal statement on which the Barnes libel suit is based. In various forma of picturesque Buage the Colonel during the 1914 campaign, proclaimed the alliance of Barnes and Murphy in bi-partisan combination of inyisible government Mr. Ivins said his object In reading these speeches was to show that after | the libel action had been brought the | Colonel continued using the language mplained of, recklessly reiterating the denunciations instead of seeking to present facta justifying his charges. Suddenly dropping the New York apeechen, Mr. Ivins swung back to levents In Roosevelt's terms as Preal- dent, and read from his speech de- houncing muckrakers with the plan |ot showing that the Colonel in his as- saults on Barnes was doing the very things that he had condemned. One of the extracts from the “muckrak ere” was “the lar is no whit better than the thief. Gross and reckless assaults op character cr a morbid und victous public aentiment. “Did you say that?” demanded Mr. Ivins, “Tr di replied the Colonei, with decided emphasis. “What,” asked Mr. Ivins, ‘was your aalary as President of the United States?” A, $50,000. Q. First or second term? A. Both, Q. Did Congress appropriate $25,000 for your travelling expenses? Mr. Bowers objected and was sus- tained. Mr. Ivins argued that he wanted to teat the good faith of the witness and show that although $50,000 was the President's salary, he ap- proved the bill which gave him $25,000 for travelling expenses. “And,” sald the attorney, “this wit- ness has charged the existence of in- visible government. I want to test his good fad “That ts al sald Mr. Ivins, and croas-examination by the torney closed. The Colonel's own lawyern then the witness took fa band for re- ry COUNSEL HAD DECEIVED T. A. ‘Thore was a long controversy about the Clapp Senate Committee investi- gation of 1904 contributions from which the Barnes side had questioned the Colonel about Steel Trust, New Haven Railroad and other contribu- tore. Mr. Bowers argued that the Barnes side had deceived the Col- onel, leading him to believe that testi- mony given by certain witnesses was the final report of the Clapp Com. mittee, He contended that the dam- aging testimony read about corpora- tion contributions was not true. It had been controverted by other Witnesses, Ho maintained that the testimony read was not the commit- tee's final conclusions, Mr. Ivins re- plied that his good faith had been impugned by bis good friend Bowers, | which he vigorously denied, | “Mr, Roosevelt volunteered the statement that the contributions were three millions,” said Mr. Iving, “He | waid that he knew more about it than | the committee did.” Col, Roosevellt had testified yester- day following testimony read from the Clapp Committee proceedings that the 1904 contributions were three millions, or one-half the McKinley contributions. He wanted now to Withdraw that atatemeat and get on the record that the contributions were only two millions, The Court ruled in favor of Mr. Ivins and then Mr sem eeee jand jt seeeeree : ROOSEVELT RUNS WILD; RASS CHS ~ONT2-MILEFRONT, BERLIN'S CLAIM Capture ot sane and Guns in Northern Poland Also Re ported by Germans, BERLIN, via London peo [An rociated Press] The following re t was made today by the Herlin r Otter “We took posseasion of Hussaa positions extendiny a fron 10 kilometres (12) mile , th t and east of Suv “To the north of Preasnysx (north ern Poland) two officers and 470 Kus slanw were taken prisoners yesterday three machine guna were cap- tured.” > | IRISH DELEGATION GOING TO PARIS TO SEE FRENCH PRESIDENT. | PARIS, April tion led by ‘TP. O'Connor in ph John Redmond, who ts ill, will r here on Friday and have an audi with the President. ‘They are to tell the Presid ont why the Irish National ists are standing allies On Saturday the delegation ix to be the sts of honor at a bai Viviant 4 others a : to make most important An trish deleg by the he object of the Irish visit Is to a Franco-Irish delegation to the nited Sta to try to convert [rish- men there with pro-German views to the viewpoint of the allies sensed WEALTHY SCOTSMEN GO INTO FACTORIES TO MAKE SHELLS. GLASGOW, Scotland, April 28.-One hundred members of the Glasgow of- ficers’ training corps will begin to- ight a self-imposed task of making shells, in response to the appeal for unlimited amounta of ammunition The volunteers belong to the best families. of Glasgow, and most of them will Ko to the shell factory in ' r oWn automobiles: ‘They have undertaken to work six hour shifts after a preliminary course of training = = from the Colonel correction of the statement @, Do you understand that the National Committee receipts in were $1,900,000? A. Yos. Q. And that the expenditures were $1,800,000? A. Yes. HE WAS MISTAKEN IN SAYING THREE MILLION, Q Your testimony that the cam- paign fund of 1904 was three millions wae an error? A. Mr. Cortelyou told me that he had received or expended I can’t ted whieh--in the campaign of 1904 about half what was received or expended when Mr. McKinley was iret elected President in 16, 1 was aken inQuesing the words three milliona in comMection with the cam- paign of 1904, in telling of call Platt, the Colonel said “Mr. Platt and 1 did not discuss the form of the franchise tax bills. In substance he said he objected to the principle of taxing the franchises of these big corporations. 1 advocated such taxation, Later he agreed with me that it would be better to have central taxation by tho State rather than taxation by the localities, Sen- ator Platt said often he believed no legislation should be passed. 1 dif- fered with him. 1 told him Tt would take the Ford bill if I uldn't get the kind of bill I wanted At the afternoon session Col. Roose- velt continued his explanations of past relations with the bosses. Re- 1yod on Senator forring to the Republican organiza-| attitude toward corporation butors in the Platt days, Col. elt said Platt said to me that the big corporations had very extearive in- lerests their directors were morally bound to look after interests of their investors, especially widows and orphans; that these corporations did contribute to both parties ‘They did not as a matter of politics but of business. They were not c erced but their interest had to be taken care of by conservative men and protected from onslaughts of fan- | atios and dishonest men. , only heir interest was in zations and sntributed to both. othe breakfasts with Mr, Platt lonel said here Was nothing secret. I in- sisted that every meeting of Mr, Platt and myself should be known to the pivae wherever It was 19158.° ‘TESTIFIES HE SAW SLADE GIVE MONEY TO HOTEL CLERK Tanzer Case, Cy i ( OrRNE OUT ' tel elerk, inte the invee that followed the Tang , f Safford for perjury examination by United ' States Attorney Wood, Darling, w been @ prisoner in the ‘Tomb “ine hin tin Vennaylvania, wey eral d ttlee « M before Un Howrhton on nid he went to the hays be fore wr was arraigned Comminsio! s charge of using mats te defraud Ovaty Jtold David and Maxwell uld find Safford In company with Alyert Jo MeCullough von,” sald Darling David Shade's Safford had been Aipha Inn there vad moved te | When | David Slade, 1d. 3. Ha nin wutomot stopping bat Greenwood L. found him at Greene | | wood Lake, Mr Jo showed him a picture of Mr. Osborne and asked | him if he could identify him as the we ft we accompanied a woman to nsington, in Plainfleld, last | Oete Safford sald he wasn't sure, [but that he looked very much like !t | ade asked him to come to New | ve a witness at Miss Tan zer's hearing, but Safford said he w broke and would have to have money | for expenses. 8I gave me $2." | Darling then stepped down from the | witness stand and iilustrated what | happened when he, Safford and Mc- Cullough came into Commissioner | Houghton’s court room for the hear- ing. ‘The trial of the case had been adjourned from Judge Hough's room on the third floor to the one the Com- miastoner used for the hearing on the | second | © paid him $10 and | “L stood right here,” said Darling, behind Safford and MeCullough. | Mr. Osborne sat about where he is now, beside his wife, Safford step- ped up to W. J. Kitchen, proprietor of the Kensington, and remarked: ‘It looks very much like the man.’ Kitchen replied, ‘It is not, and then McCullough led Safford from the room. “While we were standing in the hall Maxwell Slade came along and ked Safford if Osborne was the an he saw at the Kensing! Safford said he wasn't sure, ‘The Government contends Safford's identification of Osborne from the witness stand, a few mo- ments after this alleged conversation, was bought and paid for perjury. Reading from an amMdav@ Darling made while employed by the Slades, Benjamin Slade got the witness to admit he swore to having heard Kitchen say to Safford in Commis- , and positive sioner Houghton's room that Os- horne was not the man who had been at the hotel and hearing Saf- ford ph “Bill, you know it is” Kitchen then replied, the witness ad- mitted: “Oh, you're in with the Slade gang.” After the hearing, Darling testified, Safford got $14 more from David Slade and engaged a taxi to take Darling, McCullough and himself to the Erie station, where they took a train for Paterson. They missed the train they intended to catch next day for Green- wood Lake, he said, and Safford got another taxi for the trip to the lake and back to New York, David Slade, he declared, paid the bill when Safford presented It at dinner that evening In Siade's home. ‘That night Safford and the witness went to the Hotel Ennis, where both mie} SALAD DRESSIN ‘Mayonnaise De Luxe” 4 As delicious as home-made , , Mressing—and always ready to |g serve. At your grocer's, if FrancisH. Leggett &Co., | | ‘ femiatered onder aamumed names on@) net, weet efters ere i ot te New York © | he - e a © post o@ feeumed we ri ™ sgh |Smended the bene ewe miort nore |formaliy withdrew . « Ww |het e@uity 6 tor \" and . and this Eee and entered & pies of guilty t wor ' os -esaminat ed Jene Dusters Attorue * read ands otters Mine Tene Aw f« ' puriisned | fer tence for a that he 1 he tried t rhe with | ean tigaie thie unueuel core gave to. | W paused 00 he wus sbout to t 1 Hows net | Weave the " mh from the lapel * ‘ f hie coat @ button of the Myet Hinde read from the transcript of |Mhrine and laid it on the be bearing Osborne's testimony that | frre od to Mine Te , ba mynet Mason . rardiog (he letters ° euid Som not Ot frow son read & paragray *°% + he witness said he he Whites pair iitte wife, who bad eat ad soon her “or communicated Wit! Tt sd is shame, hurting \o me ' ber, dir or indirectly,” ia bie life the oart hey fel) into ene Q Did you wo temtity? here are There were teare to A | have already told you Whiten eye G Answer yes or no, Mr. Osborne Ae A 1 refuse to; 1 don't propose to ‘ co ye 4 miviead that jury if 1 sa am. reubors r Pieaded guilty, and Mr. A The witness wae warned by Judge! raid Henny Moore will econ plead Hough (hat he must answer questions| guilty, too vinit » Oot, 16, th Mins Rae ‘Tans | zor and request a seat behind a post? A re, any tine an who « od herself Mae Tanger tnd Shaniey’a io 1 never visited Shante ory any other restaurant with Kae Tan wer “ILEDHOLD-UP.” ISTHE CONFESSION OF $6,000 MANAGER (Continued from First Page.) | the Mamury factory Ifst June. ‘Then h ett & Wilhelm Company, in sbureh w Inst Aus ust mes I. Clinnen, who oalls himself a public accountant, twenty- three years old, was arrested for this, hut on the trial White testified that nnen was Inching with him tn the nt Club at the time the erime {was committed, ‘The jury believed the respectable sales manager and ac- quitted Clinnen, But the stolen money did not last long among the four men who took it, and White urged them to leave town. One of them, Robert 8. Rob- erts, telegraphed White from San Francisco, berging him to send som money. Thereupon the District Aty) torney's detectives, who had suspect- ed White from the beginning, went to the Coast, found Roberts and got him to turn State's evidence. Tt was not until a month ago that | the case against White was complete, | and when he was arrested he threat- | ened to punish those who put this blemish on his reputation. He gave bail, and he declared he would have no trouble in proving bis innocence. But the evidence given by other em- Ployees of the Masury house yeater- day showed that White was busy about the door of the factory, a place he had no call to visit, just before Heeh and Barlow, the firm's mes- sengens, caine from the bank with a bag containing $2,082 for the payroll. EMPLOYEES TOLD OF WHITE'S STRANGE ACTION. Roberts testified that he and Citn- nen actually took the money from the youths, and that they knew the time had come to close in when White came to the front door and gave a signal, Alao, Beeh identified Roberts and told how White had followed him upstairs and hustled him and Bar- POSLAM QUICK TO SOOTHE AND COMFORT SKIN Poslam will show y: you quickly, even overnight, how greatly it will benefi | your ailing skin, Itching stops a+ soon as it is spread on the skin. The burning surface is comforted and paci- fied. Weatin is rapid, improvement being noted day by day. Eczema is controlled hy Poslam end all its ugly manifestations driven ' Pimples, ‘Acne, Barbers’ Itch, Sealp- Scule, Rashes and all surface disorders yield to Poalam as to nothing Its work of healing has been succesy ntly stubborn cases. All druggista sell Poslam. For free sample write to Emergency Labora- tories, 8 West #5th St., New York. Poslam Soap for toilet and batb, medicated with Poslam, £5 cents and 15 yeglass The Most for Least Money! Registered physicians examine your eyes without charge and the most scientific methods are used to supply glosses that help the sight. Our moderate pricessur prise many. Perfect Fitting Glasses as Lew oe $2.50 ‘Q6hulich Sons Established 53 Yeare. New York: 184 B’way, at John Se. 223 Sixth Ne 15th St. 380 Sisth Av., 22d St. 101 T’aseau.at Ann St. 17 West 42d Street. Brockiyn: 496 Fulton St.. cor. Bend St SLE oOIlco. COWL.—suddenly, on Monday. April 9 ARTHUR HEARN COWL, of Great Nook. Funeral private. DURSO.—LOUIS DURSO, who died Mea- day morning, Aprtl 26, at his heme, 31 Bpence: Brooklyn, Dorn fifty-three years ago in Italy was @ member ‘of the Madona Della Pitro Boctety, the Order of Sons of Italy, the Metropelitan Protective Soclety of the D. 8. C., and @ member of Bt. Lucia, in Kent ‘The funeral will be hela Thureday, 9 A. M., from hie late home, thence to the Church of St. Lucia, where « requiem mass will be sald. terment at ft. John's Cemetery d by his widow, Grace, four soni doug and low into the office, so that they could not give an alarm as the robbers ran away. Moreover the visitors’ book of the Elka Club in New York, was put tn KANE.—On April 28, 1015, at her reat- dence, 440 West 884 ot, KLIZABETH, beloved mother ef George C. Kane. 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