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aattinane eres re tay and Molt began to write, tying |se0 Holt was refused. It is under- Boon after the keoper |stood that the young woman, de- Ae Holt was close to the |tective sent here by some i and no longer writing. Boston who has a mysterious ‘Holt bad removed the sraser and [in case. container into a/GETS LOVING MESSAGE FROM wiFE. tfal if Holt can be ar- raigned in court to-morrow for am had mised the artery, but was/ination on the chafge of assault from & vein. The keeper] which has been preferred against him. Dr. Cleghorn, the jail physician, | Uniess there is a marked Improv OF PLANS BEFORE Secs Se SHOOTING MORGAN > dad FORCIBLY FED. ‘aignment for days to come. Holt Would Keep Morgan Family an. . | Tecelved the following telegram from District Attorney Smith, Dr. Cleg. Confin nti! his wife to-day: { Thor, Bheritt Pettit and other official een ee et unsel here, Advined It Ended War. ATT HOLT WROTE WIFE in terest Wings in Flight, Says Berlin. to reat and wait, You must do same. Loving grectingn hourly, Beautiful! tribute to you In both evening papers. Tam caring for details of our finances, I will come when you need te. Don't | be afraid. Rest. } (Bigned) HIS HISTORY CLOUDED. . “LEONA” ; ho wa ie ear tees Wife Sure He Isn't Muenter—| — points the Germans Are & Jury for shooting Mr. Morgan: In-| Knows Nothing of Him Checked. stead, they expect him to be sent to the hospital for the criminal insane Before 1908. at Matteawan. It is understood that this ‘disposition of the case will be - it to Mr. Morgan, should it | By L, 1), July 6—"The Russian line near datistactory orga DALLAS, Tex, July 6—A_ letter | yey, Ski baal Sosdion tu her” oa a develop that Holt is a paranolo, as | », Frank Holt, written after the Attorney sent & fepre- | by Guy F. Cleghorn, Nassau County isto ghey oo vt 4 Bs washide ‘cton, |* debateh received here this after- to this city thie afternoon | 541; physician, believes. but before he ahot Mr. Morgan, was| 200" “One part le being driven edet- r¥ op psig hae! Egat J wari and the other toward Lublin and Sr. Carlos ¥. MaoDonalé and) pr Cleghorn, who has seen Holt , Flint, the alleniete, to visit | several times since hie arrest, do- received here to-day by Holt's wife, Ivangorod, Warsaw is now threatened 7 Tho letter referred to the bomb in-| ny ime Austro-German advance.” report condition, Mr. | yy aren chiro ls Go doubt in bis mind! gent. It also advieed Mra. Holt]. sschensen'a troops are hotly pure desirous of having the opin- - 2 the prigoner Is suffering from Parn- | nat ne wan then going to the Moran | ming the Russians south of Lublin, mn of experts as to the atate of Holt’s| noe, y4 before resorting to forcible! «16 i insane,” said the doctor, NOM? to keen the Morgan lard . The Slav commanders are hurling ped custody until Morgan should 80 0) their best troops against the Austro- “and the only place for him ia Mat- K Sh ‘Mr. Morgan's condition continues! teawan, ‘The intestinal and stomach | Purope and end the wa Hoi Armana in vain efforte to stop the encourage his family and phy- Through @ local attorney Mra. Holt) push through Southeastern Poland. troubles he is having are often pres- pe ‘He telephoned to hie OMce| ont in canes of mental disturbance, *clared to-day that | was “Impor| mn morale of the Russian troops is sible, absurd and inconceivable” that badly shattered. This is. best indl- He is highly nervous, There can bo no doubt as to his condition.” her husband could have’ been ruse cated by the enormous number of WANTS TO DIE, ASKS WIFE TO! Muenter, the Harvard instructor w! 4 prisoners being taken by Mackensen, disappeared in 1906 after his wife had!” etween the Pruth and. Dniester FORGIVE HIM. Should ft develop that Holt is not been killed by poison. the Slave have made desperate but To all inquiries aa to why she Ad) vain attempts to break through the Mentally sound, and acted on his own | Fesponalbility, Mr, Morgan will aid| not Marted for New York, Oscar) ,usino.German front, Russian pris- oners report that naval guns and Any effort to place him in Matteawan, Sensebaugh, a brother of Mrs. Holt, ft In delleved. Yesterday Holt wrote has stated that “some complications) neavy nowitsers from Slav fortresses 4 letter to his wife and childrén, ad- | st the outset prevented,” and has Fe-|1144 heen qismounted and hurried to dressed to “My Dears," and reading; fused to elucidate further, Her at-/ 11, tring tine in ap attempt to check “Life is not worth living now, {!torney’s explanation 1s a “TO | a Auaite-Civmane. want to dis, I hops you will bring | Holt Is too weak to travel.” afternoon’ ro: up my dear babies in the love and | It ta admitted that the Senacbaugh Wai Gale "Tiporea | teal oe fear of God, and that you will for- family is in the dark as to Holt's troops operating in North Poland sive me for ail the sorrow and heart. | life prior to 1908. The best Account 44 ang captured a atrongly forti- aches I have caused you. I hope some) that they can give is that the MAN | 9g forest, taking 500 prisoners, but Boe ay HOt cease of wnat Tia, | |e bore In Wieconsin, wanted I, Gave no now details of the battle south Holt indicated hie intention to re veraity; wae abroad for some time, Llores g rdhdng pp Artsgaty Pore veal gomething at his artaignment fo-| and then went to Mexico at some) pi, vest of the Suwalki-Kalvaria road. pareve tune note he wrote on a se: date unknown to them; came out in man, ' it was onld to-day, Mr. will board his big yacht Cor- : ves engaged by the Morgan Mr. Morgan particularly Ienow if Holt had accom- ahd W. Pulls; A008—two yeara after Mrs. Muent PETROG! aie Superintendent of Police in| died—and attended the Polytechnic terrific bom! rf ate eae Washington. The note read: © .9ge at Fort Worth, where he met} oo. ones Gen. Mackensen has won a “Major Pullman: You will know all| and married his present wife. temporary victory in the first stages Wednesday. 1 like you; you are a|. From that time to date there js no of the great battle uth of Lublin, gentleman. F. HOLT.” |.mystery in Holt's life, but prior to) 11, war omice admitted to-day. Holt will) not be allowed to talk 99| 1908 all Is appazently a blank. When]! 9 OT puke mae much hereafter, and it has been de-| pressed for an explanation of Mre, Wieprs River, the Russians have been cided to pérmit no more Now York|{lolt's lack of knowledge of her} Wier! ¥ jo front. All husband's cartier history, the at-| forced to retire on detectives to question him at present. torney stated that both ahe and her|day Sunday the Austro-Germans A man giving the name of “C. Hen-| husband had been students, concerned | snened the Slav trenches, hurling Gricke” (the na given by Holt] only with thoir atudies and researches, hundreds of thor du of predeotiion When he bought 4 revolver in Jersey | 494 had had no tim attention to jusan: an the events of; and blowing out whole sections of City July 2), received last week and] their tives earthworks. When these positions the week before at Syosset, L. 1, 120) CHICAGO, ls 5 M.| were no longer tenable the Russian: Pounds of dynamite, 100 fost of fusa,| Krombs, brother of tho dead wife of ” 100 fulminating caps and 100 foup.| Prof. Erich Muenter, convinced him-|Fetired upon new defensive positions toot “exploders.” mit aay Hers, that renal Lon leas than 20 miles from Lublin, who tod, * organ, |a len " hi Agent George D. Carnes of the Byos-| with the long missing professor and desbiga nad cased patie Myf Rus. set station has records of the ship.| dectded to go East and help push the 7 he Tiae- monte which were made by the Aetna| Prosecution of Muenter for wife sians. Between the Wieprs River and ex ide ha rs murder, the Bug all Austro-German attacks ploal pany. After looking| There is not the slightest doubt | were beaten back with heavy losses. t several photographs of Frank Holt,| t the man who attempted to sees [In one narrow sector between Krylot anid he ainate Mr..Morgan and placed a bom! Carnes “was pretty sure Holt in the Capitol os b Cerne ed is tl and Sokal, fifty miles north of Lem- same person who mu my the Russians took several hun- ter,” sald Krembs. “I belleve Mu dred prisoners. encore way in a Ford reread yond od i Poy to Mineola an a witness at ROBERT ROSENTHAL ON TRIAL IN LONDON bagheve | Massachusetts authoritiés, It AS SPY FOR GERMANS. tity of Holt might Be cleared up by pay whom the station agent jy ¢) id not Reva ved The county author. | ti are to-day making a search for the dynamite. looking for certain scars on his body,| LONDON, July 6—The court mar- Hag Fo opel oe Bolts fone tial of Robert Rosenthal, who is ac- wg strongly to at he In rita mera RAs Said the pro. | cused of naval espionage, and who ‘However, there were soars| When arrested had @ passport issued body left by re \d| by the American Embassy in Berlin, for a chronic mi 1Y | was opened to-day in London, Major the ot ap nnal on Holt If they) Gen, Baron Cheylesmore, whose wife ‘Refore I ever saw the photographa | !# @ daughter of the late F. O. French ‘of. Holt 1 thought he might be Muen-| of New York, presided over the cou ter, although for T had believed| Walter on defended Rosen- LD gh, ee Apted visited Holt again this after- Afterwards he sald that tho f resembled Muenter, but he fas lot positive in his Identification. ie sald he intended looking at Holt , Was informed to-day by client that he had been euper- Prot. John Maxwell Crowe, a teach- er at tho University High School of this ott said to-day that the iden- going down to Mineola this to see Holt,” said Mr. Lit- TENEGRIN HELD ON NEUTRALITY CHARGE Army -Officer-Arrested in Arizona and Official of Fortign Office Detained, the jatter dead. CHICAGO, July 6B, Martiovich,| to me. when I was reading Holt’ said to be an oMfcer tm the Montene- statement. ‘That sounds jike Munter,’ grin Army, is under arrest at Bisbeo,| ! thought. Wiotien of boutralty ue escoreine| ITALIAN. CONSULS LEAVING TURKEY ‘to word received to-day by the local Bureau of Investigation of the De- Ambassador Morgenthau, It Is Re- , ported, Will Look After Rartment of Justice, Bavo Gjourash- Italy's Interests, kovich, reported to be Secretary of the Montenegrin Foreign Office, also ts held at Bisbee, where it was said Pe, he was on hie way to senior, * Both men probably will be brought to Chicago, where twenty-three Ser- diane and Montenogrins were taken from @ train on similar charges lat], CONSTANTINOPLE (via Bertin |iS being offered by the Russians- wireiées), July 6,—TItalian Consuls ‘have begun leaving Turkey. The Ital- A British attack by Aeroplane jan Ambassador ts expected to depart | tions in a bay of the North Sea on within a short time. by German airships, according to a Ambassador Morgenthau will look after Italian interests in Turkey, it was underatood to-day, except in Pal- month. eee | POLITICIAN SHOOTS SELF. ¥ tolestine, Spain has been r to 4 him to kill him-}Jook after Italian monasteri and h wi self last night in bie home bt No. 371 ghurebee in Palestine, Because the In Russian Poland the forces of Em Bouth Fifth street, Brooklyn. Ambassador in a Catholic, mother, living at No, 82 Lewls Street, and fifty prisoners near Suwalki. . Manhattan, said he had been Ill, Last Right, she said, he asked those who BRITISH MINISTER were at his house to leave the din- ing room for « moment. No sooner alone than he shot himeeif. |, on captain o was| BERLIN (via wireless to Sayville, jent | L, 1,), July 6—The British Minister to Bulgaria, Sir Bax-Ironside, has been ‘withdrawn because of his undiplo- matic attitude in the negotiations be- tween the allies and Belson, accord- reac tohes that ¢) jut when I got to ¥ office this morning I found a lot telegrams that explained things. HOLT'’S FAMILY (8 STILL tesnor. on Muent’ operatio: dich The hearing was in camera, troops, the retreat extending over attacks at Les Eparges have been the entire front. Asset to the Btate Superint of Blections. of Le Pretre, Swiss to Care German Wer ans. BERLIN, via wireless to i i teestncipienietiraoeee<at ee le a PETROGRAD ADMITS IT. Claim Is Made That at,Other BERLIN (via wireless to Sayville, re th suggestion came|thel, who was guarded in the dock by three soldiers with fixed bayonets, been active against the French near Epinal and in the Vosges and that MILES OF RUSSAN TRENCHES BLOWN UP BY Line Cut in Two and Both GERMAN GUNS 2,000 FALL IN ALL DAY FIGHT OF 18,000 MEXICANS Carranza Forces Defeated Near Monterey Renew Attack on Villa Troops. LARDDO, Tex., July ¢6.—ix hun- dred Carranza troops were killed in an all-day battle yesterday in a fruit. lems attempt to capture Paredon, a Villa stronghold about thirty miles northwest of Monterey, according to reports reaching here to-day. Bighteen thousand men are said to have been engaged in the fight, with total casualties on both side of 2,000. Carranza reinforcementé renewed the attack to-day, About 8,000 Carranza troops under Gen. Jacinto Trevino advanced yester- day morning along the railroad from Villa Garcia, a village about midway between Monterey and Paredon, Tho advance followed a Sunday truce, dur- ing which both sides buried the dead, which during the two weeks of incos-| sant fighting around Villa Garcia had! fallen 80 thickly as to menace health. The Carranga officers estimated that Villa hed nearly 10,000 men don- centrated near Paredon under Gens. Urbano and Chao, Their purpose was to halt a Carranza advance on Tor- redn about 200 miles west of Mon- terey. , All regular trains out of Monterey have been annulled, being used for transporting military equipment and wounded. The Carranza anthorities received reports that equally large trainioads of wounded had been sent westward from the Villa battle line toward Torreon. WASHINGTON, July 6.—Officials of the’ Washington Government to- day awaited word of the reault of Gen, Pablo Gonzales's renewed attack on Mexico Shy Advices to the Car- ranga agency here said that Gonzaics had begun his attack with reinforce- ments, The Zapata commanders had prepared to offer determined resist- ance. It would not be surprising to Washington officials, however, to learn of the evacuation of the Mexi- oan capital by the Zapata army be- cause of @ shortage of ammunition, | EL PASO, Tex., July 6—Whether bonds would be furnished for Gen. Victoriano Huerto and the five Mex- leans imprisoned with him on charges of conspiracy to violate the United States neutrality laws was under cop- sideration to-day, Counsel for Huerta expressed a readiness to procure bond in reasonable amount if some asaur- ance was given by Federal authori- ties that their clients would not be placed’ under guard or rearrested. ‘It would be useless to arrange bond,” said R, E, Thomason of coun- sel tor Huerta, “if th General is to be harassed by rearrest or close sur- veillance. If we cannot be assured of freedom from auch conditions we will await preliminary hearing next Mon- day and demand trial on that date.” pais Sa BOY HURT BY BOMB. Lighted Unexploded Fireworks and rm GETTING AMMUNITION NOW BY TH SH LOAD England and Canada Rushing Arms There by Way of Archangel. Dr. B. R. Ward.of New Haven, Conn., who arrived here to-day on the steamship United States from Copenhagen, after apending a year jn Russia, sald that the Russians were making extensive preparations in arms and munitions for an early of. fensive against the Germans in Gal- feta. iy The Vologda and Archangel Rall- road, with newly constructed lines reaching from Vologda toward the battle line, Kas been taken over by the Government, for the transporta- tion of munitions of war. Only two Daasenger trains a week were being run when he left Petrograd, he said, and all freight traffic had been sus- pended. Since Archangel was opened to navigation, Dr. Ward asserted, am- munition ladon ships from England and Canada have peen arriving al- most daily. Thousands of soldiers at Archangel are busy day and night transferring munitions to trains, and all ralitoad equinment that can be handled is being operated over the road, the southbound trains being loaded to capacity, “I left Petrograd about the middie of June,” sald Dr, Ward. “Despite the Russian reverses there wa# no in- dication of discouragement. Thou- sands of new troops are already in training and in readiness to be rushed to the front as soon the danger of another shortage of munitions is past. They are simply awaiting ammuni- tion and equipment. “Within ten miles of Petrograd more than 60,000 troops are encamped ready for the word to go into action, and I was reliably informed as many more are in readiness in dozens of other places. “While Russia is not receiving much help from Japan in the form of munitions or men, I know of my own knowledge that hundreds of trained Japanese officers are engaged in drill- ing Russian troops in the use of heavy artillery. At the hotel in Pet- rograd whi I lived there were weventeen Japanese artillery officers, the majority of whom had served in the siege of Port Arthur. They made no secret of their presence or of what they were doing.” BECKER BELIEVES HE WILL DIE AND ~ HE TS PREPARED (Céntinued from First Page.) with his brother, Patrick, whose home at Eastchester had been en- larged to take him in, He did not like restraint and resentc! having a doctor and nur with but he was improving. SULLIVAN'S ATH WAS CLEAR- Ly suiciD “On the last two days of his life Mr, Sullivan was downtown secing signing checks and other- ing to business. His guar- dians were about to take him on a CAMDEN, N. J., July 6.—Roger Steelman, nine years old, while playing about Forest Hill Domb that had fatled to explode dur- ing gd bile of fireworks last WAR NEWS IN BRIEF. It is admitted by the War Office in Petrograd that the Russians have been driven back twenty miles nearer Lublin by von Mackensen’s a front of thirty-eight miles. Berlin claims that the Russian line has been broken in two. At other points a stiffer resistance to the advance toward Warsaw and cruiser against the German posi- the morning of July 4 was repulsed statement given out in Berlin, The German official announcement. of to-day says two French repulsed; that German aviators have jperor William took a Russian position i) The French War Office reports a very active night along virtually British troops have taken some German trenches in HAVE BEEN RECALLED, | Belgium; Arras was bombarded all night long; there has been incessant fighting in the Argonnes and Paris reports that French troops have re- pulsed the enemy on the heights of the Meuse as well as near the Forest The Itallans report the satisfactory development of their offensive | f on the Carnic Plateay and the success of the air attacks on Austrian en- campments in the vicinity of Doberdo, Severe fighting is in progress Oe att: 6 ahora, Heinen, eacanting. pes at. Aue — ae trip to Seattle in connection with sf- faire of the Sullivan-Considine th.- atrical interests there, “After a trip to Coney Island on the afternoon of Aug. 30, tk to-day, found | pa Sullivan was the only one who did not retire. He dressed and slipped out of the house, as he had often done before as a practical joke on his brother, No one was alarmed, since he had always come back and laughed at them. This time, though, he went to hie death. It waa a clear case of suicide.” Bmanuel Blumenstiel of No. 80 \- den Lane, for years attorney for Sul- Hvan, is out of town; but both his Drothers say they knew all about Mr, Bullivan’s affairs and that they never heard of any debt from Rosenthal to Sullivan nor of any alliance between the two. W. Bourke Cockran and Martin T. Manton spent hours to-day planning with Mra. Becker in their office the appeal they will present to Justice lughes to carry Be 's case to the United States Supreme Court on a Father Curry attend- ft the conference, “believes that nothing can come of the appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, though his friends believe otherwise. He bears up well and is still a strong man. .A strange thing about his case is that he believes in capital shment, but a publis) deal if he wi day Becker said to me: ‘I have not & great deal to tell,’ and I believe he jothing to tell. It may, be that IN PERIL, SAYS BERLIN BRITISH CAPTURE A TRENCH: LOSE 3400 IN ONE BRIGADE Berlin and Paris Both Report Terrific Fighting Between La Bassee and Sea. ARRAS “IS UNDER: FIRE. Bombardment at That Point Continued All of Last Night. BERLIN, July 6 (by wireless to Say- ville).—Special despatches from the Western front say that in the battle between Arras and La Bassee the French and British forces suffered fearful losses, one brigade alone los- Ing 3,400 men out of 4,200. “Two French charges near Eparges were repulsed Inst night,” the War Office reported. “The booty of our recent successes in Le Pretre forest has been increased by ono field gun, threo machine guns and other ma- terial.” PARIS, July 6—Over trenches wrecked by French artilléry, a British regiment fought ite way to a brilliant victory sopthwest of Piiliken, this afternoon's communique re- ported, The English dashed forward after the Teuton works had been shelled for an hour and drove the enemy out at the point of the bayonet, Following is the text of the report: “Last night showed muth activity at several points along the front, In Belgium the British troops, supported by our artillery, took possession of some German trenches at @ point to the southwest of Pilliken, on the east bank of the Canal. There was a very spiritea engagement around the rail- road station of Souchez, The sta- tion remained in our hands in a#pite of the repeated efforts of the enemy to take It. “The town of Arras was bombarded all night long. “In the Argonne there was inces- sant fighting last night with bombs and hand grenades. Our artillery on several different occasions was suc- cessful in checking the attacks of the enemy. “On the heights of the Meuse the Germans attacked on two different occasions our positions on the south side of the ravine of Sonvaux, which ig to the east of the trench of Ca: lonne. They were completely re- pulsed, “In the vicinity of Le Pretre For- est the enemy also aewumed the 0 fensiv Two attacks w* made. One spread little by little from the Western side of the forest as far as Fey-en-Haye, while the other was di- rected particularly against that por- tion of the forest which is found to the west of Croix-des-Carnes. Both were checked by the fire of our ar- tilery and our infantry, which in- flicted very, heavy losses*on the enemy.” (SE eS GERMAN COMMANDER AT THE DARDANELLES IS WOUNDED AGAIN. ATHENS, July 6—Gen. Liman von Sanders, German commander at the has been wounded for Dardanelles, the second time, according to des- patches received here to-day. Athens despatches in May reported that von Sanders had been slightly wounded and temporarily suc: in command of the Turkish fore Gallipoli peninsula by Admiral von Usedom, serelenalsieneieenis FORMER AMBASSADOR ENLISTS AS PRIVATE; IS MADE A LIEUTENANT. MILAN, July § via Paris, July 6.—Marquis Cusani-Confaliontert, for- mer Italian Ambassador at Washing. ton, who enlisted as a private, has been promoted to Lieutenant in the Savoy regiment of cavalry. The M: quis has transformed his villa inte a military hospital. Midget Sticks look at those big, tootheome tion of identical sticks to the box. Special for Tuesday. vraata the children ike, better than the hind the vikoes etaeer wned se sorey in glass jare on the shelf. iy the same ‘fs “ Midget Sticks in nine delightful flavor,’ atent 3 BOMB FOR POLICE LAID TO FULFILL (Continued from First Page.) {dently had been carried to the bulld- ing in @ brown canvas valise of un- anual heaviness, The lead pipe ap- peared to have been wrapped in a copy of the Brooklyn Standard Union. Against the basement door the bomb apparently scattered ite force in exploding. It dug @ hole five or six inches deep In the cement upon which it rested; it shattered the woodwork and heavy glass of the door; it smashed to bits the granite it tore great holes in the ceiling under McNally's offices; it tore out and smashed the terra cotta blocks forming the innermost covering to a steam pipe near the door. In speaking about th Mayor Mitchel said to-da: “It ia probably the work of an in- dividual and it is one of the most difficult cases to solve. Iam glad no serious damage was done. There was some property damage but no per- sonal damage.” The Mayor said publicity given to bomb planting Reds renders it dimf- cult to discover the perpetrators. “It is a fact that the publicity given to the bomb found in the Cathedral has made the work of th police in these cases much harder, |. “Of course, such matters re | #e given publicity in this country, it it makes the work of the police in running down the ones responsible very hard.” John Koss, who was arrested néar Police. Headquarters last night, on suspicion, following the bomb explo- sion, Was arraigned before Magistrate McQuade this morning on a ol of vagrancy. He was sent to the workhouse for one month. explosion Purity Premier says— “My salads always have a distinctive, ap- petizing deliciousness because I use G miey SALAD DRESSIN “Mayonnaise DeLuxe” ‘ “although it's like ‘Premier’ Products —the best that money can buys not expensive. Ask your grocer for it."* Write for Recipe Booklet, Francis H. Leggett & Co., Hudson River & 27th St., New Yorks — —_—_——E olgo. 1916, ELIza- lato Christopher Clinton, formerly of the Seventh Ward, Thureday, July 8, at from her late residents. 267 Brooklyn, then Chureh, Interment Calvary, ORAY.—Suddenly, July 6, MARY M., wite of the late George Cray end mother ef George and Mlisabeth Cray, nee McKeever, at her residence, 367 Le- Mary's Church, Winfiel Solemn requiem mass 10 o'clock, ion striped stick candy—the how i used ies. Wall, here ie a collec. old time wholesome- about 60 PER TIN 1 5c Special for Wednesday, Enotes FOUND BOx vors, THREATS OF EDS J | {