The evening world. Newspaper, June 30, 1915, Page 1

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” ee PRICE ONE c ee ae . SUNK ENT a The Press Pablishin; ee Uae York World). xf NEW YORK, WEDNE BDAY, | JUNE 80, 1! 1916. 14 PAGES _ PRICE ONE CENT. She Describes Him Just Mr. and Mrs. James W. : Osborne Did. a HIS LANDLADY’S STORY. | Lived With Her as C. Bacon but She Knew Him Also as Oliver. Oliver Osborne has not come into ‘Seourt yet, but evidence of his exist- ‘ence and of his industrious love- “making habit was given in court to- day by two witnesses whose testl- mony was not shaken. Mrs. Stuart Denham, with whom he | ‘lodged in East Sixtieth Street, and Miss Blanche Ungar, in Bloomingdale's, the upon whom he forced his attentions over w and to whom he wrote and carried! two letters, told their experiences with him. The faint, shadowy, vanishing Oliver became a real person, with a Jocal habitation and a name. The proceedings, be it remembered, are the trial of David and Maxwell Blade and Detective Albert J. Me- Cullough for conspiracy to induce perjury in Rae Tanzer's $50,000 breach ot promise sult against James W Osborne, whom she accused of wrong- fing her. There is a possibility that Oliver may yet become a witness for the Government in the caso, It was earned this afternoon that the elusive Oliver was in town, The news of his rival reached the Federal author!- ities and they were so impressed by it that they immediately sent out eret Service men to look for him. “I will not discuss the rumor at I,” said Assistant District Attorney “Roger B, Wood. “If tt were true Swould not discuss it for fear Oliver Wight run away again, Anyhow, I @m content that the Government has “abundantly proved not only the exist- ence of Oliver Osborne, but the fact that he made love to two other girls in the same manner Rue Tanzer says © he used toward her.” Among those present were Rae Tan- wor, whoue activities with Oliver Os- borne gave rise to all this trouble and many criminal prosecutions, accom- panied by a new cavalier; Miss Kais- er, otherwise Mrs. Charles Jones, to her on the second day; Miss Kat er’s friend, Kitty Caulfield, and four other charming young women. Miss Blanche Ungar, employed as f stenographer at Bloomingdale's last | October, was a new witness to the} “existence of Oliver Osborne. She said her window looked across to Oliver <OsborBe’s room and she described its ‘occupant as a man weighing about! 185 pourtds, 6 feet 10 inches tall and ‘clean shaven. He wore no glasses nd was'slightly bald headed in front Q. Did you ever receive letters from that gentleman? A. Yer. Q. I show you two letters and ask you whether you received them from that gentleman? A, Yes, | received them some time in 1914. Mr, Wood read one letter, It was OLIVER OSBORNE WAS ROMEO TOHER MISS BLANCHE UNG SAYS, SHOWING THO LETTERS a stenographer | at Who swore Oliver proposed marriage | PALANQUIN HOME FIRST IN OPENIN Field of 20 Reduced to by Scratches and Fav- orite Wins, AQUEDUCT RAC _-RAGEAT AQUEDUCT 14) "HOSIERY DISPLAY OF BRIDE ONL” SHOCKS PRINCESS ankind!”’ Is Protest; “Style,” | Says Actre: | CRITIC GOES TO COURT. Magistrate Has Feminine Ad- vice While Considering Delicate Question. | One of the first weighty matters |which came up for settlement before | Magistrate ‘Koenig, newly appointed “Disgrace to American Wom-! GERMAN DR VE AIMED TQ SEPARATE CZAR'S Report Says jtreat from the Vistula River and t $o———— (Czar’s Forces Keep Up Stiff Rear| Guard Fighting, and Petrograd Prose: cution I Invaders Lose Heavily in Advance. | BERLIN, June 30 (via London).—The Russians have begun a re- he district of Zamosz, southwest of Jand just assigned to the ‘Tombs | Lublin, in Russian Poland, according to the official statement issued to- j Court to-day, was the mooted point | day by the German army headquarters staft. Jas to just how much of a wom- ; RACK, June/an's lower limb she is justified in ¥0.— There. was-nothing much In the] sis piaviag ‘to ‘the public view, the way of features on to-day's racing . ‘ card here, yet a crowd of 5,000 people | Prevailing mode of short skirts be- | came out to the track. A strong ing taken duly into consideration. breeze blew up the streteh, making| Mrs. Jeanne Morris, an actress in fast time out of the tio | Rn the Yiddish Theatre, pretty, plump the shapely limb which started ,| discussion. She was riding down on the the Ath Webiam dooker Se Avenue Elevated with her husband, 2 Hiker ON (Mek Samuel, to-day, talking about the fur- 3 te, Mie 18 ry niture they had Just bought for thetr rn Hace, Anta Malgre G Koeain | new home at No, 114 Lewis Street, fd Ati, ‘Matter! Mipersition, sing) WEN Terobia ‘Eyraciack!, who says f Vunbar, Mili Atroam, Perthiock, - |ishe is a Mexican Indian princess, but The fleld of twenty-one named for| just now is employed as Janitr the opening event was reduced to| No. 805 East Fifty-fifth Street, lea fourteen by scratches. Palanquin} over and told her th was the favorite. After n delay at| grace to American womankind.” The the post, due to the crazy antics of| display of flesh-colored silk hosiery Dengro, the fleld was sent away.| was what had called for the obser Palanquin immediately jumped to the] vation. front, clear of Interference, and stayed| ‘The Indian Princess was promptly there all the way, Hiker came strong|told to mind her own business, and through the stretch and was up in|informed that if she didn’t like the time to nip the pl money away | looks of Mrs, Morris's leg she needn't from San Vega, The rest were all|look at it. The middle-aged censor strung out, |of public morals continued her tirade SECOND RACE against the bride all the way to the For fine persia: wpling: $800 fied pitt] Brooklyn Bridge, where Mrs, Morris fo anf jan jchiace driving, Winer, °B & | blow @ police whistle and attracted a Trainer, W. Hl. Kareick “| couple of thousand people and two race throughout, to finish third, THIRD RACH Canarsig Selling Stakes ie On baa 4 nd 4 Helen Marie Seratctied Startling, ‘Tialan, Three starters reduced the fleld ir | the Canarsie Selling Stakes to five starters and of these Helmont's Fern, [rock was a 3 to 5 favo: He was, ; but only after a stiring whiping fin ish with the Quincy Stables’ Suc ) At that, only a neck separate: | pair at the nd. It was realiy only two-horse_ for Variety, which ‘nished third s beaten off | HAMILTON LTON RESULTS. HAMILTON. Onta 2 #400" w raw Sialw Matrix; aud Dir, “sulliva rs Barton tandie wine) te 1 0 1z (O'Copior), even, 1 te Jive Galety, 10 (Luge, V1 5, thin.’ ‘Time 4.06, Dorthy Web avd Morpeth also ren, for two-year-old: value FIRST RAOK welllings nix O14 policemen, Potrolman Jones of the Traffic Squad told Morris arrest the woman himself wished, but that personally he if he would Distant Shore, a legitimate eve , 5 : money shot, wag a3 to 1 hot in the | nave nothing to do with the matter, second race, in the face of a strong| Morris took the Princess to court, tip on All Smiles, — Distant Shore|and after hearing what it was all went to the front at the start, stayed| about, Magistrate Koenig took the trailed th to the stretch, then| to @ conflict of ideas as to what con- moved up fast, but never could cateh| stituted propriety Distant Shore, Alhena_ran an even n| ‘The Magistrate's wife and his sister, Sadie, were on the bench with him | and listened with great interest when he remarked; “This garrulous old lady," referring to the Princess, “is evidently not used to the styles of the day, What you and I," meaning the courtroom spec- tators gonerally, “might consider all right, she considers improper, and she simply took occasion to say so, think she has been punished enough by being brought into court,” with that the matter was dropped, Mrs s left the courtroom still protesting that the way "th } Woman,” had absurd her was * thing florce, and something ought to be done about It FIND LOST WITNESS IN LUSITANIA "GUN" GASE a} Hurdenberg is understood to have \ Thira | he could | and | said in Pittsburgh to-day that he was] now willing (to testify against Stahl. paper correspondents sent to Bowling in retreat, except at certain points From the west bank | Lipa River. | Along the entire Galician battle front the Russians continue steadily southwest of Lemberg on the Gnila Austro-German guns have begun a heavy bombardment of the enemy’s positions. Heft wing is sweeping the Slavs no! own frontie: ‘The statement follows ila Lipa are “Our attacks on the progressing. ast and northest of Lemberg the situation is unchanged. “Between the Bug and the Vistula Rivers the German and Austro-Hun- |warian troops have reached the dis- | tricts of Belz, ind the northwest border of the for- est plantations in the Tanew section. Also on @ line formed by the banks of the Vistula and in the district of Zawich, the east of Zarow, the enemy has commenced a retreat. “An enemy areoplane was forced to descend behind our lines. The oceupants of the machine were made prisoners.” LONDON, June 20.—Gen, von Lin- singen, having again forced the Rus- sians to retreat, this time across the Gila Lipa River, is striking for the Odessa-Lomberg railroad at Tarnapol in a final effort to force a wedge be- tween the Russian southern and main armies, Rear-guard fighting of a desperate nature is going on con- tinuously, the Czar’s troops aiming to Komanow and Zamose The Austro-German drive now and only three weeks # bride, owns right wing from the armies operating east of Lemberg. threatens to cut off ihe Russian | Mackensen’s riheast of Lemberg back upon their ¢ inflict a& much damage as possible in their retreat | ‘The three rman armies are to separate tho Russian forces and }make an advance on Warsaw more j feasible. Military experts here fear | the capture of Warsaw or of the stra- tegic railroads running into it will give the rmans so strong a de fensive position In Poland that they Will be able to withdraw a great part of their huge force and start a new | offensive in the west, The Teutonic allies in their advance over the Gullclan border into Russian Poland In the region of Tomaszow have captured that Polls town, ac: cording to an Austrian official state- ment. The Petrograd statement says: “The ad of strong enemy forces along the entire front between |the sources of the River Viepra, in the Government of Lublin, and the | Western Bug continues, and here, on rearguard positions in the region of ‘Tomaszow our troops on June 27 and [28 repulsed several desperate German attacks.” Mrs, Clark Organizes Auto Relief Party While Family Is Asleep. BOWLING GREEN, Mo., June 30.— On the morning of the wedding of her |daughter Mra, Champ Clark, wits of ‘the Speaker of the National House of | Representatives, jumped out of at the news of the derailment of a aring guests to the wedding, and without waking her husband or train b with ois mother and a dozer news. Clark Wedding Guests | Imperilled by Wreck Green to report the wedding, com- posed the relief party, Four cars of the Chicago and Al- | ton passenger train en route from Kansas City to Chicago left the raile at Curryville, six miles west of Bowl- ing Green, Among the guests to the | Clark-Thomson wedding on the train were two brothera of Mra, Clark, George and Joel Bennett, and the lat- ter's wife. None of the passengers wae injured, though all were badly shaken up, The accident occurred about mid- olght and an bour later a railway man went to the Clark home and aa- nounced the train had been wrecked, A string of automobiles, headed oy one carrying Bennett and Mrs, Clark, raced to Curryville and brought to Bowling Green some of the stalled | wedding guesta, Mins Genevieve Clark is to be mar- fon, publisher of tem, My of tl the New Orleans Thomson and a majority brida WASHINGTON, Juno 6,—-Word|any member of the bridal party, or- was received at the Department of | ganized @ relief automobile party and pansies tale hoody mat [is aqents i) went to the scene of the accident ittsbt nad found Heinz Harden- : burg of Cincinnatl, one of the wit- Bonnett Clark, her son, @ clerk at nesse the Government depnded upon| the Speaker's table in the House of to impeach the statement of Gustav | Representatives, waa the only other | ried to-day to James Mellhany Thom- Stal who made an amdavit that he! member of the Clark family to jad Seon guns on the Lusitania, pihianianwaa tia amndunet wa. party reached Bowling ——— Continued on Second Page.) RETREATING ARMIES | Mills, THAW CLOSES CASE “STATE SUBPOENAS MRS, EVELYN THAW Alienist Asserts Thaw Believes Wife Is After His Large Fortune. ;WILL CALL MOTHER. a Complete Record of Slayer’s Doings in Insane Asylum. - (Special to The Evening World.) MALONE, N. Y., a Nesbit Thaw has been with @ subpoena to appear as a wit- ness for the State in the trial of her husband, Harry Thaw, to prove his wanity. ‘The subpoena was served at the ance ‘of Deputy Attorney General Frank A. Cook, the State's chief at- torney against Thaw. Mrs, Thaw wan staying at Upper | Chateaugay Lake witb her son, Rus- | | well, and her danciug partner, Jack Clifford, at the latter's camp. She will appear in court on July 6. Harry K. Thaw has completed the first stage of his present fight to se- cure his release from Matteawan, j*winging closer together, all aiming | shortly after 3 o'clock, when the re- direct examination of Dr. Charles K, the Philadelphia altenist, was completed, B, Stanchfeld, Thaw's chief counsel, announced that "Thaw had rested hin case, Deputy Attorney General Becker immediately opened for the State by beginning the reading of the “case’ book" of Matteawan Asylum, con- taining the complete medical and mental record of Thaw during his many years in the institution, It was expected this reading would occupy the entire afternoon, but Deputy Attorney General Frank K. Cook, in charge of the State's case, announced that if the reading were completed before adjoyrnment he would call Mra, Mary Copley Thaw, ‘Thaw’s mothér, to thé witness stand, John Continued on Second Page.) —————— NIEUW AMSTERDAM IN COLLISION AT SEA} Only Slightly Damaged and is Rid- ing at Anchor in the Downs— Eighth Collision there in 3 Days: DEAL, England, June 30.—The Hol- land-America line steamship Nieuw Amsterdam, with @ large number of passen, on board bound from New York for Rotterdam, was run into in a fog by an unknown steamer while anchored in the Downs to-day. The port quarter of the liner wae dam- aged but she is riding safely at an- chor. This makes the olghth collision in the Downe within the past three days. > NO BOXING AT SING SING. ALBANY, N. ¥,, June 30.—There will be no bosing conlyat at Sing Sing bri- son July 4, as plinned by the Mutual Welfare League, Superintendent John B. Riley to-day overruled Warden Os- borne and ordered the proposed bout cancelled, asserting it would not be conductive to good conduct, was to go to the win- © principals colored, EN AMERICANS LOST ON LINER BY A GERMAN SUBMARINE ARMENIAN TORPEDOED 09 OF HER CREW LOST, MANY ARE INJURED Leyland Liner Had Sailed From - Newport News—Ameri Were Members of Ship's here to-day. ‘Consul twenty-nine lives were lost. |ten Americans are missing. Ala. American, London. the port of Liverpool NEUTRAL VESSEL, A GERMANS ONHER, SUNKBY BY GERMANS Hits Tae Ke Takes Kaiser’s Sub- jects Aboard—Three Ships Torpedoed. LONDON, June 30.—The Norwegian ehip Cambuskenneth, which safled from Portland, Ore,, Feb. 9 for Liver- pool or Manchester, was sunk to-day by the German submarine U-39. Thirteen members of the crew were landed, Hight other sailors, being Ger- man subjects, were taken aboard the submarine. The Norwegian steamehip Gjeso of 1,094 tons gross aleo was sunk by a German submarine to-day, The crew was landed at North Shields, The vessel was sent to the bottom by a torpedo, ‘The Norwegian bark Kotka was torpedoed and sunk to-day off the West Cork coast. Her crew of eleven was saved, BPRLIN, June 90 (By wireless to Sayville, L. 1.).--Reports current in Boriin that a» British submarine had torpedoed and sunk a Germap sub- 4 WASHINGTON, June 30.—The Leyland Liner Armenian was torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine U-38 at 8.08 P. M., June 28, twenty miles northwest of Trewose Head, Cornwall, England, according to a dispatch received rmstrong at Bristol, who made the report, says The names of the missing Americans are: | W. WILLIAMSON, address unknown. | J. M. MONROE, New Orleans. B. M. GRANBERRY, Washington Street, Montgomery, S. R. SUTTON, Carterville, Va. HARRY STONE, New York. —— BROWN, a.cattle ship carpenter, Harrisburg, Pa. R..H. BROOKS or WEST, chief foreman, naturalized The Armenian sailed from Newport News for Avonmouth on June 17, in charge of Capt. Trickey, carrying a cargo of horses. The Armenian was one of the largest of the great fleet of liners owned by F. Leyland & Co., Limited, of Liverpool. She displaced 8,845 tons, was 512 feet long and had a 59-foot beam. She was built in 1895 at Belfast and is under British registry from ns Lost e Crew. Ten persons were injured and marine wae given official denial to-day, The Norw: Qjeso was built at ‘ronmforn jom in 1913. @he rg Say feet long, 36 fect beam and deep. The ‘ship Cambuskenneth was a three-master of 1,925 gross and was built in Glasgow in 1898, ———_—__—_ AQUEDUCT ENTRIES. AQUEDUCT RACE TRACK, N. ¥. June 30.—The entries for to-morrow's races aro as follow: FIRST RACE—¥or twogesrolde; maidens; five furtonge. ety 2 112; han ih 1; *Moonstone, “Good Counsel, 108 Nolli, 132; ‘Tatiana, ioe Sun God, 118; *Belle of the Kitchen, 108; Costu, 107; Maitou, 101, SKOOND KACK—Wor thevoguaraite and w ie, Wor tires. Tata Sue

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