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~ German Positions Violently Bombarded on Line to Souchez. ‘ IN VOSGES. ‘Germans Are Reported Re- pulsed East of Meizeral. PARIS, June 20.—Capture of Ger- Man trenches north of the Chateau , of Curloul marked new progress for the French in the renewal of the great Struggle north of Arras, Official despatches to-day reported “Ylolont bombardment of the German positions all along the sector from = THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUN JUNE Wat E 30, 1915, FREN CH FORGE AHEAD AT ARRAS WITH HEAVY BOMBARDMEN T CH MAKE NEW GAINS GERMANY ALLOWS | ~ IN DRIVE NORTH OF ARRAS SOCIALIST PARTY TOASK FOR PEACE Board Calls on Government to Legislate “in name of Hu- manity and Culture.” The official statement to-day saya: “There were no qnemy operations of great importance yesterday in the! neignborhood of Arras. “An advance made by the enemy In ‘the Labyrinth, north of Ecurie, was! repulsed. “In the Meuse Hills, west of Les Eparg the enemy has been at-~ tempting since the evening of June 2 fo recapiire the ponitions which we! jad tn Their efforts were in| . > FRENC: vain. Ye: ‘day they undertook four BLAME ON THE FR NCH, flerce att all of which were re- Pulsed with heavy losses," DARDANELLES TRENCHES STORMED BY BRITISH Two Lines Taken to the East of Sdghir Dere by Gen, Ham- ilton's Forces. LONDON, June 30 Says German Leaders Were Too Weak to Stem the Tide. BERLIN (via wireless to Sayville, L. L,) Tune 80.—The governiffr board of the German’ Socialist Party, in a | manifesto passed by the censor, to- | day called upon the German Govern- ment “in the name of humanity and A British off. | clal statement Issued to-day dealing German armies are converging for a drive on Warsaw, whose fall is WAR NEWS IN BRIEF. ¢ Germans have captured Tomaszow in Poland. Three great feared in London. The French claim new gains under terrific bombardments in the sec- tor between Arras and Souchez. | Four drafts of Germany's reply to the second American note are | ready and thé Kaiser will decide on the one that is to be sent either late this week or early next, Berlin reports. The general impression in Ger- many Ys that the United States ‘will be appeased. Allied warships are again shelling the Dardanelles ports, this time’ with important success, according to an Italian correspondent in Constan- tinople. Russia has ereated a Board of Munitions, empowered to spend un-| limited sums and given wnrestricted power over private industries, in| order to overcome the scarcity of ammunition, ‘The Governing Board of the German Socialist Partyin a manifest passed by the censor to-day called upon the German Government “i the name of humanity and culture” to begin peace negotiations. German submarines to-day sank two Norwegian sailing ships. The crews were saved. Eight Germans were found on one. CLARK WEDDING GUESTS IN WRECK; kept irregular hours. He Jeft her house, Mrs. Dennain said, aoout 10 o'clock in the evening of Mareh ly and said he was going on a vacation | tor two or three weeks, He paid for his room up to April 16, and Mrs. venham promised to keep, the room | pate was what caused GERMAN RAIDERS AWAIT MUNITION SHIPS FROM HERE Reasofi Why Wireless Censor- ship at Sayville, L. 1. Was Tightened. WASHINGTON, June 30.—An ex- pected new German submarine cam- the, recent ightening of the American Wireless |censorsbip, it was learnéd here to- j day. The objects of the undersea boats’ attack, it was sald, will be the British and French carge steamships which are about to begin carrying muni- tions from Gravesend Bay, N. Y., the) Delaware ‘River and other Atlantic ports to Saint Nasaire, Havre and Bordeaux, France, Though quanti’les of munitions have already been sent from the) United States to the allies, mostly, INDICT 26 FOR RIOTING AT GOV. SLATON’S HOME Georgia Judge, Attacking Mob Via- lence, ssails Foes of His State. ATLANTA, Ga, June 30.—In charging the Fulton County Grand Jury to investigate the case of the twenty-six men arrested last week by militiamen in the vicinity of former Gov. Slaton’s suburban home, Judge Benjamin H. Hill to-day deciared that sounds the retreat of and constitutional “mob violence free government rights.” “The people of this county had much toe bear in the last years,” said Hill; “mueh arouse their indignation, They have had fake and mountobank detectives imported and efforts made to impeach the verdict of a jury ®y perjury. Our courts have been caricatured by p pers outside the State. In Georgia very few journals have raised their | voice in defense of the courts.” have two to Judge The Grand Jury immediately re turned indictménts charging riot! | against the twenty-six men. The of- neanor, punishable fense is a | by imprisor | fine not ex: RUSSIA WILL FIGHT TILL FOE IS CRUSHED Premier Goremykin in Manifesto’ Answers German Rumors of Peace. PETROGRAD, June 80.—"With the help of God, Russia will continue the fight until her enemies are com- pletely crushed, Unti! that time peace Is impossible.” Premier Goremykin made this em- phatic statement in a manifesto issued to-day, The document fol- lows the remarkable conference of the Czar and his Ministers, behind the great battle front in Galicia, where the Russian armies are re- treating before the Austro-German drive, It is generally construed here as an answer to statements of tho German press that Russia is weary of the war and ready to sue for peace. “On all sides we find assurances that cannot be shaken In a brilliant future for Russian arms,” it con- tinues, “Let us strengthen our heart and our resolution to carry on the struggle with divine help until our triumph is completed. eae VICTOR OF LEMBERG GETS HIGH HONOR FROM THE AUSTRIAN EMPEROR. ig J om tiationas, | 4 Atrem to Souchex. The official com-| with the operations in the Darda- bes Hd Becca. eat iats aaeact that | for, him until ne came ba | it is said, in passenger ships, the regu- DANIELS WILL EXPEL Munique HWidicated the beginning of| nelles announces that two lines Of | noir friends in. other belligerent bien gone two trhkike, aultoase | and lar freight service was not scheduled | ° VIENNA (wv fn infantry engagement all along the| ‘Turkish trenches have beon captured -ochea Lent On Friday, March ay | to begin untit July 1, The firat veswols . (via Berlin wireless), countries will take the same ateps, n jay, March : MIDSHIPMEN) tune 20—raron conrad von Hostzen to the east of Saghir Dere and that ihe gtatement declared. They were called for by ‘an express. | Of the fleet, the Visigoth, Westergate, sate alee ze ‘The official statement says: three tines have been stormed to’ the| tne manifesto made public to-day man between o'clock that|Strathdene, Strathaven and Down- dorff, Chief of the General Staff, has “In the region to the North of | wot of that place ’ laauisedl Ge ecakernenlt recently pat evening. ‘The ed @ written | shire, were reported to-day just fin-| been advanced to the newly created (Arms last night saw a violent’ can-} phe oMcial atatemont says: lobed Id the aawenape®” Vorwnerts (Continued from First Page.) Ceara ee the Grand Comat ee the) ishing soading in Gravesend Bay.|Declares All Have Been Warned| rank of Colonel General by Emperor Monade, together with some infantry! phe plan of operation Sane:80 |) cranes f | Mrs, Denham Jet the man take the|Uthers are taking op cargoes else- i bles leancibabandehe heb irirosaac ® i as, ‘ip athe, Noetla, the plan of operations on June 2814 placed the blame for the failure of oe fg the | Where. and None Will Be on the conquest of Lemberg. ip 18 “Ghateau of Curleul we made slight] ¥2" {2 throw forward the left of Gen. | early peace efforts on the French and| coon jast night on a train preceding} Mra. Denham told about letters that |, 1nformation | from Seandinayiun | Snared. the second officer to recetve this title, (progress; to the South, at the Cab.| Sif [an Hamilton's line, southeast of | poigian Socialists the one which was deratiod, came to her house addressed to Oliver |e) NV ote mhagalng its bei on pared, the Archduke Frederick being the ret Rouge, a German attack was rea} Xrithia, and to establish « now line) wphe French and Belgian Socialist! Hundreds of guests from other | Oxborne dubs RUbmaNNeE At Wellbeliie ASHINGTON, June %& facing the east on the kround gained, | pagers stubbornly demanded the de-| States, many of them prominent in| "One came in October or Novem: | shaven with @ view to demoralizing WASH , a captusing insuecensiGn two lines of | a the mant-| the Politteal and social I ber addressed to Oliver Osborne,” she | tis trate tary Daniels and Rear “En the Vowges Gorman troops en- ‘ vy jatetction of Germany,” este the ms tion, are in Bowling Gre: ‘Not here’ on it and ame, Fullam, Superintendent of the N “Aeavored, at about 2 o'clock to deliver | TUFKIMh trenches east of Saghir Dere | gosto, “In spite of seme peacefull ihe ‘wedding, whieh Is to occur lat cS poe oe | Advices from this country to the ‘BR tread atiuck against, our positions }and five lines to the west . he 1 asses and the| to-day i ui had askew! me tocend te | German Admiralty concerning these| Academy, conferred fe the East of Meiszcral. ‘This move. “All and more hoped for f ee she, aot “To the people of this State Speake “ ‘o send it | vessels’ sailings, it was recognized, | investigation into charges of hazing ‘. _ ped for from the |jeaders of tho Socialist parties In ‘ peaker | bi _ would be in violation of American irreg- “Ment was easily checked.’ operations haw been gained.” those countries appear firmly resolved | Clark issued & blanket invitation,and| ‘This corroborates Mins Kaiser's | noutrality, It was said that the re-| Drought out at the inquiry into Irreg: PARIS, Juno 90.—A Havas Agency|{, sontinue the war wntil Germany so great was the throng of Mis-) testimony that she wrote to her false. | cent decision to place more censor. | Ularities in examinations, now in that’s what you nk ' og FRENCH REPULSED AT “LABYRINTH” AND AT MEUSE, SAYS BERLIN, BERLIN, June 30 (via London).— oo oe detonate despatch from Athens says the ex- haustion of the Turks facing the Net that the Turkish position at ails will soon be taken by as- vance made by the French, it is added, 6,000 Turks were found dead in the trenches on the front taken. Recent fighting in the Dardanelles 8 resulted in an appreciable ad- vance by the allies, the despatch de- elares, the French troops under the leadership of General Gouraur, com- nrander of the French expeditionary force. particularly distingulshing themselves. ——_—__. FORMER AMERICAN RESIDENT ON TRIAL AS SPY IN LONDON LONDON, June 30.—Abdon Jappo, who arrived in England from New York a month ago, has been re- manded for trial on a charge of es pionage, He stated that for the Bat nine years he has lived in the ited pe and worked as « switeh- board rator in Boston, Detrai; Toledo, 3 inneapolis, St. Paul and other cities. grocer near— Acase 0 eee Rheingold Beer an $d cos Sie EDEN French forces on the Gallipoll Penin- | sula is evident and leads to the be-| is completely defeated.” The manifesto reviewed the efforts | of the German Socialist leaders to prevent war and expressed regret that these efforts “were too weak to stem the tide of the world conflagra- tion.” “But the party has loyally kept its word to stand by the German people and the Fatherland,” the statement added. “The fate of East Prussia at the hands of the Russians showed what threatened o disunited Ger- many.” ‘The German Socialists, the state- ment said, repeatedly attempted to renew their connections with Soclal- | ists in other countries, and met with some encouragement from English | Socialists, but their efforts were de- feated by the French and Belgia The manifesto reiterated previous atements that the Socialist party in Germany Is opposed to a war for purposes of annexation, and declares | it would be proper if one of Ger- many's enemies should first make peace proffers. he publication of this proc mation was resolved upon earlier, said the nanifesto, “but a postp ment was made necessary on account of Italy's entrance into the war.” Tho Socialist leader Kolb pub-| lished a pamphlet to-day calling upon German Socialists “to cease their fight | on so-called “German militarism," Kolb declared that the war has given rise to new conditions and that the | Socialists should realize that national Unity demands that they cease their attacks upon the military system, ——_—»———_ SAYS GERMANY HAD LACK OF MUNITIONS AT WAR’S BEGINNING. BERLIN, June 30 (By Wireless Telegraphy to Sayville, N. YO. Among the news items prepared by the Overseas News Agency for dis- tribution abroad is the following: “The assertion made by David Lioyd George, the British Minister of Munitions, that Germany, while pre- paring for war by buying and manu- facturing ammunition, was friendly and meek toward all the powers, es-| pecially Great Britain, and only throwing off her mask after complet- ing her war preparations, is officially refuted by the German Government as a baseless defamation. The best proof to the contrary is the fact that! Germany soon after the beginning of the war suffered from a lack of ammunition which, however, quickly was removed by tho efficiency of German industry. | POSLAM KEEPS THE SKIN FREE FROM ERUPTIONS Often when Poslam is a) uptional spot, that is the see of the disorder, and the » wext morning. | plied to an you will in is clear self in the treat- rouble, Its merits ‘ated by trial over- * gare beautifully dd adolescent night. Complexion Gyared, Blackhoada Pimples removed. Nothing equals Pos- characteristics James W. Osborne des | BOSTON, June 30.—Nathan Straus | weribed, Mies Ungar calmly anewerea |o% New York to-day donated to the 38 i 4 | Ziontat cause his steani yacht Sicillan, valued 00. Tie presentation | lam for Eczema, Itching stops mee. All eruptional troubles qre controlled and driven away. wae oy gist sells Poslam. For free cy Labora- te to Emerge as West 25th St., Mew York, Volt cand Oaths aS i s08 ae sourlans that took him at his word | fleeting Oliver at this address at this that Bowling Green could scarcely | time. hold them. iz metime later,” Mrs, Denham To provide quarters for the hun- inued, “a boy came with a note dreds whom the townspeople could not entertain sleeping cars were side~ eaued to Oliver Osborn: it back. ‘Then a regiat for Oliver Osborne. Q. Why? A. Bee: had been using the name of Oliver Osborne. 1 left the er on h table, Next day Mr, Bacon gave thi letter to me. It was open. He h written on it “opened by mistake. He gave It to me, and I gave it to the postman. Later, another letter for Oliver Osborne came by measenger boy, I gave it to Mr. Bacon, Q. Any other? A. Yes; a note was brought by a boy some time after Christmas, That came from Bloom- ingdale’s store. I gave it to the boy and told him to e it back. I sent od letter came 1 signed for it.” se Mr. Bacon tracked in the railroad yards, The wedding will tal “Honey Shuc _ Rev, place on the the Clark Robert 8. Boyd of Louts- rousin of the bride, will of- lawn of * home. ville, fictate, Wedding presents poured tuto Clark home. President Wilson sent two allver compotes. ‘The Missourl Congressional delegation sont a silver flower basket three feet high. A dia- mond necklace came from Congress. The newsboys of New Orleans sent % silver tablet, a facsimile of the firs: paige of the Item, Among the wedding guests were the Henry Watterson, editor of the Louis-! Mrs, Denham was turned over to ville? Courier-Journal; Norman E.! Assistant United States Attorney Mack of Buffalo, Republican Con-) Wood for redirect examination. Krewsional Leader Mann and Col.! Q. How did you know that Mr. | George Harvey. Scores of members | of Congress and Missouri State offi- Bacon used the name Oliver Osborn A. Two girls came to my house and Clals are here. Senators Koed and asked for Oliver Osborne, | jtone came on 2 special train a Q. Any other way you learned Ba- Gov, Major Missouri joined them. | con ed himself Oliver Osborne? — A. Yos. A girl came over from | Bloomingdale's and asked for him, Q. av as his room facing Blooming- | dale A. Yes, he had the front parlor. William N, Darling, a printer, told | of leading the jes to Franklin D, Safford, the hot who thought the photograph of James W. Osborne was the picture of the man who brought Rae nzer to the Kensing: ton, but was willing to go to New | York and make sure if they'd give him $10, Maxwell Slade gave it and took him. ——— CHARGED WITH ATTEMPT ROMEO 10 HER, $0 MISS UNGAR SAYS (Continued from First Page.) My Dear Friend: T tried to write to you some tife ago, but ft does seem I had no success, for it went to the wrong lady. I am just crazy to meet you. Won't you come to dinner with me this Wealthy Man Struck on. Head as} He Was Entering His Room in a Pittsburgh Hotel. June ning and then we ¢an take in PITTSBURGH, 802 some good show. Please don't he |@ Forney, an attorney of V angry. Do come with me, for 1 |to™% D. C, and George MoHeni would Nike to talk over our funny [Walter of the saine city, were fh meeting. ‘Trusting you will make |Without bail here to-day by Mugis- me happy, T am lonesome. trate J. J. Sweeney on charges of outs ainnabel conspiracy, felonious assault and bat- OLIVER OSBORNE, _ {tery and attempt to kill F, 'T, Schnel- Mr. Wood read the other letter, ovi- [4#F Forney'a wealthy fathersin-law, | dently the first one, ‘It was addressed |, Mr. Schneider said that as he en- | peed ap tern wae |tered his room ut the Hotel Ander- | ‘To the Girl Over the Way, Kindness | yon carly last Thursday he was struck of Boy.” It read Jon the head three times, ‘Two men 1 am just crazy to meet you. ran and he followed them, but they Donk Ur the aoe : | got away, Employees: testified that Ly Lis know. |MeHenry was a guest there on the ours, day of the assault, one identifying QO. H. 0. | him as 4 man she had seen working Q. Did you have “a funny meeting’ | At the lock on the door to, Schneider's with that man? A. No, {F09Kh tel fon. “the i | : |_ Immediately after the hearing | Q. Did you go to dinner with yim? |genneider went before Aldert an| A. No. ) George 8, Wilson and wore to war Q. How did you receive those let | rants charging Forney and Metency | \ tere?’ A. He Drought them over. |Win entering the Hotel Anderson . ° with intent to commit murder. ‘The iat he stood at his window and | warrants were served on the pris showed me w blue envelope, ‘Then he | oners in a police studion by a consta le | came over and handed me the same |P!e, who also carried Jail commit. | | ments in default of $24,000. bail for each man, The poligg did not re- linquish their prisonors to: the censta- ble, but arranged to have the com- mitinents effective when the men | were moved to the county Jail envelope with the letter in it, She frst noticed him in September and met him again in Febraury, when she talked to him, and saw him again on March 20, she said, answer- = ing Mr. Littleton, ‘The latter asked whether Oliver Osborne had blue | STRAUS GIVES YACHT. oyes, & straight nose and all the other Teer NRE Mr. Littleton began the morning by cross-examining Mrs. Denham, whose rooming house, No. 161 Ha: Slatioth Street, Oliver Osborne lived for eight months under the name of ©. Bacon, When two letters came to the house addressed to Oliver Os- borne she kept them for him. He told i to give Be two letters back to ee mai aay Oliver Osborne ‘onelusion of the day’ 8 session of the Zionist con: The y visior result kad in | ton. © |to a pr from its sale will | Mund of $100,000 pledy: since the convention opened. | The Federation of American Zion voted to-day to combine with the F brew Teachers’ Associations of the United Stutes and Canada in the organ- ization and maintenance of Hebrew = that the | Jeet A en ships on the wireless was the result of complaints from the allies that Germany Was belng informed of freight steamers sailing for American ports, —_—— ‘THAW CLOSES CASE:. STATE SUBPOENAS MARS. EVELYN THAW —>——_. (Continued from First Page.) If not reached this afternoon, Mra Thaw will be the first witness to be called to-morrow morning, Tho only sensational-incident in to- day's proceedings came when Dr. Mills was under redirect examination by Attorney Smith, one of Mr, Stanchfeld'’s aldes, Asked if Thaw had ever given a motive for Evelyn Thaw’s evident desire to keep him in the madhouse, Dr. Mills said: SAYS EVELYN IS AFTER THAW'S FORTUNE. “Yea; Thaw told me Evelyn wanted him kept there in the belief that long as ho was legally insane, and, therefore, legally incompetent, he could not make @ will disinheriting her of his large estate Under cross-examination by Dep- uty Attorney General Becker, Dr. M conceded that Thaw's family history was neuropathic, but stated positively that Thaw had not inher- ited any form of incurable insanity. He thought Thaw entirely sane. Asked about the pay he had re- | ceived for his services, Dr. Mills said as he had been pald for his expert services in the White Piains hearing, he expeoted to be remunerated for his service in the present instance. Q. Did Thaw ever say anything to | you about @ conspiracy against him? A. He tuld me that at the timo of the murder trial, he believed the doctors wore getting together to ratiroad him to an asylum go there could be no publicity about the acts of Stanford Waite and four or five other men. \. bia you ayk him regarding nal- lucinuiions’ A. He told me that whe he Was on the street he often heard voices of women and girls. bul these were not insane hallucina- tions, because Thaw was, at the time, emoupnalty disturbed, . Did Thaw explain to you why he » the Codiol in his will? A, Yes; it Was \o obuain the prosecution of Stanford White and to stamp out the practioes he believed White indulged a. Then why did he put iu the name of Henry W. Poor? A. He said he had put in the name of Poor because jhe bad heard that Poor and four or hve others were associated with White and ‘had carried on the orgies of which he had spoken, But his main object was to get White. Q. He told you that his main ob- was to reach Stanford White? Yes. But he Was not @ misyion- for an ideal, rhe testimony of Evel then read to the witne stated that Thaw had admitted that Ethel Thomas had been “abused.” Q. Did you ask Thaw if he had been guilty of any of these practices? A. Yes, and he denied any guilt. @. You believed him? A. 1 had no reason to doubt him, Q. In view of the testimony by Evelyn Thaw, do you believe that Thaw told you the truth when he made the denial? A. The testimony does not change my opinion, Q. Did you ever crawl out of a qrnauer rat hole than that? Mr. Stanchfield objected to the nestion an it a a icken out. Sthere are one feeld called upon te 2 be impertinent,’ ne n Thaw was In it she Mr, jecretary progress at Annapolis. Daniels said no clemency extended. “If any one has been hazing,” sald Secretary Daniels, “he will get out of the academy. Congress has made the duty of academy officiais plain in a would be statute prohibiting the _ practic Every midshipman has been admon- can say he ‘didn't 0 no one Oe ASQUITH IS ASKED QUESTION ON PEACE But He Gives as Answer a Refer- ence to What He Has Already Said. LONDON, June %0.—Premier As quith to-day made reply in the House of Commons to the question asked yesterday ag to whether the Govern- ment would state the terms upon which peace would be possible, The Premier said: “It would not be in the public interest to add any- | thing to what I have already publicly stated on this subject.” ‘The question yesterday by David Mason, Liberal i eseeireinee AUTO DRIVER FINED $250. Letters Almost Cost Brooklyn Man was asked Hin Liberty. Drivers of automobiles accused in the Court of Special Sessions of operating their cars while intoxteated will injure rather than help their cases by getting friends to write letters lauding thelr sobriety. This rule was established in Brooklyn to-day when Roy Wilson, real Ave> miss estate of No. 1204 DI nue, was arraigned Tustle 2 Russell, ‘Moss “and O'Keo sentence Upward of fifty letters telling what « careful, sober man Wilson ts were sub- mitted’ to the Court, Justice Russell | aid fNIE those letters tell the truth his offense was all the more reprehensible man who drives an automobile while drunk is a public and the more Intelligent ho ts the inexcusable nt more Iimit, Justice Wilson to jail P for on the quality used. aylight Candy F. tory Special for Wednesday. 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