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-— = ' oy BSVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 18, 1918. | " CROWDS ‘MARCH IN ROME DEMANDING WAR WITH GERMANY Y American Steamship Gulflight as She Looked eoteeon er andine wae moe Piety + OWE POINT 8 GERMANS MAY IN UPON he a aes © belo ' when © A Gerard wm ber . ‘ * s on hast Depar Awbane fer A Means the aving } | eta on the It t HOW WOTE was HANDLED GOING TO BERLIN The neces “ ‘ of in “ com by telegraph from Wa 4 fngton to New York Cabled from New ¥ " ‘Prance Relayed by “Havre to Rom "© Copied by Ambassador n Rome | Tolegraphed from Nome t @nna Relayed by telegraph from @nna to Herlin | Decoded by Ambassador Gerard and presented personally to For eign Minister von Jagow t Transmitted by von Jawow to tr rk to 1 vee, telegraph from | Viv be has j the bure bes The A the ¢ eituet af i ent returned W tone “Sinking of Liner Lusitania Brings Strong STOCKHOLM, Sweden, May 1b—yprove futwl to the future of civitiza-| Mills With Germans on Occurred, Reported in Con- Year Apply tor Their and Przemysl Is No Longer trous to hunna . eentaent awoden ee and disastrous to that . PRalia i P sea phe eroup of prominen Jwolidarity which in of much itil tm the Defensive. trol of Rebels. First Papers. Threatened. gayhoso names are found at end) Hortance, particularly to the amalier a . { sah thin doapatch have requested th | nations of the world | \ — | —aod ' PAsevclated Press to distribute in tho! yp Je signed Hy Svante Arhentun,| PARIS, May 16 -Precedat ty a] LONDON, May 18—A deqpateh trom]. A sudden rush of German, Austrian | Pl ean jay 16.—The centre SUAited Staten an expression of tholt| Prof. finron Adeleverd, Victor Hquist, /Yelent Hombardment Aebting on a] Madrid to Reuters ‘Telegram Com-| and Turkish subjects for naturatiaa. | Of Gen nee ne eee belyebs tment ning what they call | Chief Director of State Prisons; W. [large scale hoon resuined north of | pany says it is reported there that Dr.| tion papers since the sinking of the] thfeatened Prazemyal not only has “pentimonts concerning Sa eet, On GeeuC Aeraliiere, “Firat. | Weta jAlfonse Conta, forwer Premier of Pore | Lunitania hax made the w which sd thes EBDE DUE Bee bern gfipbuman methods of warfare” The | ee in rut, orsny The French have made further | tual, heen assassinated in Lis-| closed to-day Dusleatsone ih THEN acta etecta nom, Boers i@tatement says atedt, Prof. tract Hotm Wrot progreas In thotr off hovemont [en, which city is wald to be in con- history of the naturatixation division | guy Loctitoeiallataia bn itlhind bay . neon! t td < “ \ desperate battle in| trol of Portuguese rebels o oo County Clerk's office. , . AeYThe Swedish people are virtually) ¢. Kobb, Prof, Otto Rosenborg, Prot (yh, ‘ound the Souches su-| pr Costa was a leader of the Den f the County Clerk's office, Tt was) te is admitted that the Russian right @nanimous in supporting the Governs| Gunnar Andersson, Prof. Gerhard dejar mills, with) th rmans being f pelt Cae. mo-\ predicted t by County Clerk] ang tert wings are still falling back | fhient in ite policy of atrict noutrality, | Goer, Prof. Olat Kinbors, Aifred Pes \driven back from the Arrag-Bethune [orate party in Portuwal, | Tn addition) Wiliam # ider that next et upon previously prepared positions. Swedish Protest, | Desperate Battle Around Sugar}! isbon, Where be Asst 50 Per Cent. More Than Last - DERNBURG RELLSES 1 TO TALK ON REPORT : THAT HE IS TO 60 invavere had Dr of roe After Being Torpedoed by Germans Off Scilly Isles ~ GANS BY FRENCH Dern vs at The | | | —_—>— ® large section of them, whether | tre Assit ba bbinghet (Migeachitelyd ly | bo War Office bulletin tn as Majority or not, we eannot say,| thor; Hjamar rhorg, author; ( iM anything but neutral in their|Stjernutedt, Ivan Hedoviat, or, There have been no changes tn ings over the methods of warfare | Royal V ry Ivan Bratt 1. | altuation since bes evening - 18 Paaopied in this terrible war which |quist, Christian Brikeson, seulptor: | thie thgtatin " nilaje water th ‘obiminated in the sinking of the | Ludvig Mobers, Karl Nordstroom, | ditions set forth in our last ¢ *éteamer Lusitania, artist; Nily Krouger, artiat; Arnold | mication. | We have progress ‘"The misconception that war sus- fwon, Karl Bldh, sculptor; Mis PPE Saphir Qed oi) the Jaws of humanity must Alma Sundauist, MoD. Mery exeh. re ~INDRIVE AT LINE NORTH OF ARRAS fol- the the on oa vio “Made by P. Lorillard «Company, the oldest ae 3 | se % a — I oe oe ee a ===. ry ar * == —— — = ull i GREATEST TOBACCO VALUE EVER OFFERED FOR THE MONEY—2% Oz. Size of Package A FRAGRANT SATISFYING SMOKE 3 CENT Package FIRST PHOTOGRAPH WHICH ARRIVED IN THIS CITY TO Day PORTUGAL FACES RUSH OF GERMANS NEW REVOLUTION: | AS NEW CITIZENS EXPREMIER SLAIN, OF UNITED STATES | I. GEN. MACKENSEN HALTEDIN GALICIA RUSSIANS CLAIM |Driven Back at Some Points hie havin 8 Premier, he had served | This movement is said to be in accord H tise as Minister of Finance and Mins] push will continue until the German | with the general staff's strategic | iste Justice. He was the author of] Kaiser's answer to the American note) plans, |the law providing for the separation | iy received here | ‘The Austrian right, north of Kol- of chureh and State and other anti-] Of the 600 foreign subjects wholomen and Czernowitz, is rapidly giv- lerical measures He had been de-Japplied for firat papers during theling way. ‘The enemy's losses in the 1 As AN uncompromising ad-)week 70 per cent. were Germans, | engagements in southeast Galicia are © of armed revolution, and sev-) which is un increase of $0 per cent. now reported to total 40,000, times he had sent Into ex-Jover the number of Germans who ap- TARNOW, Galicia, May UA Ife was imprisoned asx a ring-| plied for papers in the aame week ant howitzer of a new type played ader of the abortive revolution im|iast year. The remaining 30 per important part in assisting the Aus. January of 1908. Previous attempts] cent, is composed of Austrian and [fins to sinash the powerfully forti- ive bake sukde on hia lite fied Russian position at Tarnow. The Turkish subjects, whose applications Another news agency despatch sent] for naturalization papers showed an from Madrid dee ha increase of more than 50 per vent, received in the Spanish eapital inslover the aime period lnat year formation of a grave revolutionary] At the close of business at noon to- movement in Portugal. day 2,807 foreigners had applied for One report is to the effect that al papers since May 1, During the same revolutionary committee is in control} period year 2,037 applications of the situation at Lisbon, were received, A similar increase in This reached applications for second papers was Spanish Ministry of the Interior, Re-|recorded and in this instance 80 per bel is said to have broken out/cent, of those inaking application were at Clombra, Oporto, Lisbon and San- ans, tarem, Fugitives reaching Badajoz] “To my mind this remarkable in- deseribe situation as extremely| crease indicates that the subjects of Telegraph and telephona|Germany and its allies believe that pmunication been severed and| serious trouble will result ‘the troops appear to be powerless to] Germany and the United States,” satd | {control the people. the County Cle ‘The ». News Agency, nothing but German faces in ty office under reserve, but At/arst papers doex not of course entitle says It bellevea the/him to the same protection this Gov- probabiy is correct, ernment would give to a man who A has taken out his second papers, It shows that these men, fearing dim. culties us an outcome of the Lusi- disaster, do not want to live in last information has the Ue menacin from agent gives it out thy same time ‘tnformdtion For slx months past the situation in Portugal appears to have grown|) worse, The life of the Republic of this country ‘without showing that Portugal since its establishment fiveliney screw i sxianc years ago after the assassination of phey abe eins (Gi awenn allemiance eS ead et to our flag and our cause, The taking Hiitical diseonsions cand strife Thee] Out of a first paper is only a prelim. have been frequent reports of Royal. | RAty step In eltizenship, but « neces: ist agitation from Lisbon, but since KON " ‘tho beginning of the European war] (The ierease In applications for IS aetivition of another. nie second papers shows how anxious the ee eet oF Radical na gents|German, Austrian and ‘Turkish sub- Aven more threatening to eh M}jects are to come under the complete ing Gavecnment . he exiat-lrrotection of the United States, We | —————__ are expecting a heavier rush next week.” ed EX-MIDDIES ASKED IF THEY WILL RETURN TO NAVY IF WAR COMES. "HALES FIANCE, AGED 50, TO COURT FOR LARCENY Mrs. Rabel, Aged Sixty, A WASHINGTON, May 16. — The Schurger of Cheating Her in Realty | United States naval authorities are | f _ lowing no time in preparing for a po: Deal and Refusing to Wed. jsible war with Germany, an rns! | Official letters have been sent to , ee pay wealthy WO- | nen who attended the Naval Aca- Meal Kf demy, but did not graduate, asking Vila sehuces Nity, at Nov xza| them if they might report for servic Woodward Avenue, had monetary mo- | {Ree , tives when he asked her last Decem- | ‘The general tone of the letters was: ber to be hin wife. She declares that | “Would your present business ar- after she accepted him he got her to | Fangements permit yo cuses Rabel, a years, living at No, 87 Brooklyn, suspects e t once and return to the service?” buy the building in which she lives, | “‘Navat men who were ®raduated and of which he was the owner, tell- | from Annapolis and who have re- ing her the building waa worth $8,000, | signed are recalled automatically to |when sho says she has found out it | the colors if war is declared, fs not worth more than $6,000. Mra. Ravel had Schurger hated be- | THAW IS DECORATED ine MARRERO YERIRD IN. per an eet FOR BRILLIANT SERVICES Sorter ibe shaleeer ee IN FRENCH AIR CORPS grand larceny, | {| She declares she paid him $3,700 cash {when she bought (he building, being) PARIS, May 15 (Associated Press). under the impression he was about to, William Thaw, of Pittsburgh, who is serving as @ pilot in the French military aviation corps, haa been marry her, but though he wooed her assiduously from July 1, 1814, up to the time of the proposal, she says he | commended in army orders for bril- | still postponed the wedding. Hant services and has received the Jhearing’ being wot. for May’ ise uy | Fecently founded Military Cross, Me furniabed bail of $1,600, ‘ke DOW @ sergeant, k. “LE have xeon almost | | to drop them howitzer is of the the 42-centimetre gun: certainly is not less terribly effective, When the Austrians occupied the Russian positions they found men dead without wounds rather far from the places where the projectiles of | the howitzer exploded. The air pres- | sure from these projectiles swept the! Russian wire entanglements of cas. ings a mile away, The effect of th: shell fre on the nerves of the Rus- slans is described as having been very great. Some of the depressions | made by the shells were Afty feet in| diameter and twenty feet deep, The projectile of the new howitzer |p! is three times the weight of the 30.6. ‘centimetre mortar and is nearly six feet long. It requires an entire rail. me calibre as and ite work between road train to transport the howitzer and its foundation, carriage, mount- ‘tng machinery and ammunition, howitzer can be fired every two min- | utes. —_————. TURKS BRING BACK HOSTAGES OF ALLIES LONDON, May 15.—Fifty and French nationals who ported from Constantinople to the Gallipoli Peninsula by the Turkish authorities have been brought back to the capital through the efforts of United States Am:assador Morgen- thau, according to a Reuter despatch from Athens, British were de- The deportation of British and French citizens to the scene of vio- lent fighting in the Dardanelles re. gion was decreed by Turkey on the ground that shell fire from the allied | fleet was killing, wounding or en- dangering Turkish noncombatants whoxe homes are on the peninsula, | As soon as the order was issued Mr, Morgenthau was requested by the Hritish and French Governments to file a vigorous protest in their be- half. In spite of this action on his part, however, the nationals of these |two countries were placed aboard a |ship and started for Gallipoli, His [later protests evidently have been more successful, (See ke, |OUIMET EVENS SCORE WITH JESSE P. GUILFORD. 1) Amatear Golf Champion Defeats Player Who Beat Him at Pinehurst, BROOKLINE, Mass, May 18.—Fran- cis Oulmet, National Amateur Golf Champion, defeated Jeste P. Guilford, former New Hampshire champion, in the semi-finals for the Country Club's spring cup to-day uilford eliming ted the nat Ider in @ com- Natlon the distanced at nearly every The summar: he Country Club Spring Cup, semt- final round. Francis Ouimet, Woodland, beat J. P, Guilford, Bellevue, 3 up and 2 to p T. M. Clafton, the County Club, beat J. H, Sullivan Jr, Woodland, 6 up and 4 to play, The! SING SING GIVES JOYOUS WELCOME (oo Stooght When bree, le Sa ind Con hee CANE BASEBALL! TALK Sa Those Who Are in the Game “Must Play [ton the Square (Specie! from @ Sta Correspondent 4 The Evening World.) OSSINING, NO OY, May 1 Milly Sunday with bis party whisked up! here from Paterson this morning int five autos to tal to Warden Ooty Me talked to them for an hour no'e |hoye snd ten minutes, made them laugh Jand made them yell and in hell and! Ho performed his cheer for [him Me put the devil yn the lid jumped entered the hall. A lot of the “boys” knew Bill when he used to play ball, There was a ball game scheduled for th fternoon in the prison yard, so 21 talked principally about the devil and baseball, ELLS THEM TO OBSERVE RULES OF GAME. U1," sald Bill, “is the squar- lest game on earth, and it will do you boys good if vou observe the rules of line game.” | Then he men | seb oned a lot of the old- jtimare, old ball tossers, nd each jname was greeted with cheer for old memory's sake, “You've got to play the game square, boys,” he sald, “Any time you don't you're up against it. ‘The man who doesn't play square ig so low that he needs an airship to get to hell.” Hilly's audience shook the roof with their cheers at that. Perhaps they ren't thinking of the same kind of “xquare” that the reverend baliplayer | was, but the sentiment suited thera | and they went to the pastor, They followed his every word. For the most | part nearly all the boys wore a grin | during the sermon or lecture or talk, 2 pay or whatever it i9 that Billy does when he dos it ‘The evangelist shook bis fists and got down on his haunches and his | voice got the squeaks. But that didn't stop Billy. Billy and the Lord | are great friends, he told the convicts, | and he promised to tell Him about | the boys in Sing Sing and have things fixed up for them. \"@0 SQUARE w WHEN YOU GO our.” if cus ‘The boys liked his “ame.” And | they liked Billy and just shouted for | Ma, Hilly was intorrup.sd for three minutes when he sald thla to the boys: “You go ott and go aquare. If you! don't you hurt the f to go square.” | That "square" stuff always made |the hit, There was something about it that got under the skin with those auditors who are where they are be- cause they weren't on the square when they were on the outaide, But they have a different \dea of what | square means, Being square with a man’s pal means more to the men be- hind the walls than all Billy's great talk on being square with the rest of the world. But the word sounded | good and the boys declared that Hilly was all right. "I'm glad to be here,” said Mr, Sunday. Billy's always glad to be wherever he is. “I'm glad to see you smile and to hear you cheer. I feel as much elated to be here #¥ you boys jdo at his moment,’ hat got a laugh. “I'm glad if f can throw a little sunshine into your lives. “I'm going to speak to Md about you fellows.” continued Bill, “rm going to get him to nelp you when the big door swings open and you turn your backs to these old gray walls, when you say goodby to them and to the warden and to the bean soup. MORE CHEERS ABOUT THE PEA | soup, The recollection of the soup was a happy bit. At any rate Bill bad to! low who wants! ve ee Ln | brow or one The Lorde . ' jtuey of to he ° . 4 Hing saying A ** We ' ‘ ' teen or ' ' t " i ‘ They aang Wher ‘ ve i" Th ' ! ‘ wh a " wh « WAD 006 BITES FIVE BEFORE HE IS KILLED 2) iH \ iD A tor , save " t spread terror Washing 1 * Hioer noon to-day when he bor fi fren and finally heed famous acrobatic stunts and alout ac wef A till hin voice almost broke, He “got | wer a Handy ate dune the boys all right, and the only regret 83 b ba tN aw Cine Han ey eEpressed w. t ey couldn't | Ure nd ft y sie Stree Irving th y aarree ayes hat they couldn't |e eieee ven of ae ar ee teins y with him to Paterson or any other! Hundred and. Sixty-tuurth Street, piace outside the walls Julius Sharstein, tw Am When Billy got Uhrough sermonia-{ sterdam Aven Mattiow sodering, ing the boya he introduced Ma, and) 0". 0f a BO Weaat ( ne Hundred and Ma gave Pa a ¢ ill of health. | Phe dog y hae nate rita A She sald that Bill wan all right, that} tore thre kroup ot iden ‘at he wax on tha square, and that sho} Amst tue and One Hundred ght to Know. She had lived wi OY ean \ apping aad him twenty-seven years, she sald, eau Bi 5 REea ce jand sho guessed she knew him better) little John White o Fann dato than the newspapers, and that was| the middle of tiv et and north sbeiyaibben! La jon Amsterdam Avenue pursued by a going some crowd of mon and boys Billy and his party arrived about| With every block the crowd grew half past 9 ‘There were about twen- {and as they came on shouting “mad ty in the five autos, men and women | a i Se hae aad @ ida ware : fi By a Wane ed Into hallway und some girls. Warden Osborne and | little fellows who w ten Assistant Warden Johnson met the! were not fast enough in getting out party at the door and then had the/of the dog's way and he saupped at convicts assembled in the megs room. en hands in im. but did not There were about 1,500 of them in all Aiier the dog was killed seve and Billy had his audience with him! policemen went about looking for the before he aturted, {ehiidren who had been bitten, and He didn't have to awk the bunch if/ all but the Shartetcin child were voter Ke taken to ashington Holghts they were with him, ‘They told bim Hosnital and. treated. Mrs so by their cheers when he and Ma xtein carried her child to the and “Rodey," Herman Rhodeheaver, the family physician and treated th § Houston, publisher and partner of Walter Hines Page, Ambassa~ dor to Great, Brit was chosen to- day as New York's candidate for Preal+ dent of th ted Advertsing Clubs of Ameri twelfth conven- fon “of that pody will be neid in Cnt- on Liver Torpid? Wake It Up With TAPS and Stimulate the Liver to Produce the Necessary Bile which Acts as an Intestinal sae 7 p09 and Laxative. Passes sate Ones.” We only — All Drugsiots. Take a tip—take a TAP lw. L. DOUGLAS | 83.50 94.00 °4.60 & $5.00 Shoes. ‘There are many wovel and pleesing sieesieliss jam~ mer line which you will not find 7fa aay other make. iil y you to ye, oe many sew styles aa ea Ne ARPET J.&).W.WiLUANS TEL, 966 COLUMBUS. et. 1878, ILEANING 3530. Scthst, OIlew. M'CORD.—At Greenwich, Conn, May 18, 1915, ROBERT A. M'CORD, in his 44d year. Funeral serv! at Second Congre tional Chureh enwich, on Sunday, May 16, at 2.30 M. Autos will meet train leaving Grand Central Depot 1.05 P. co! M. Kindly omit flower: nience of family. Interment at AN lost or found articles ade rtised in The W. uiliteer Bulld reade, Park Rowg Worl plows Office, northwest core Ber 38th Bt. and Broadway; Harlem Office, Weat 125th Sty and World’ Breoklyn Oftice, 202 Washin ton tn Breahirn, for 0, doze allo the printing advertisement.