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‘ THE EVENING WORLD, WEUNE ent SULY 7, (1915. ” ITALIANS: BREAK DOWN GORIZIA DEFENSES FROM ALL SIDS) 2 * gowns! since the news of her hus-| with the order and the next day the] periments, Therefore the shortage la : Band's attack upon Mr. Morgan} company received a money order for | “bout 50 sticks, | geached her. Upon receipt of Holt's | 919.50, UeHD ONLY His OWN MONRY, ATTACKS ON LAND, by Istter she wont to her father for ad-/ Part of the order was delivered at HOLT SAID. Vice and togefher they called on Mr. | Central Park on July 24, but the dy-| The question of where Holt got the oy Coctren |Se. ie trett ee cetivered until July | xmpaign was in’ a measure, cleared FROM SFA AND AIR _.. From the fact that Mr. Cockre! . If Holt put an infernal machine | () } } pare ie * communicated with Major Pullman, | aboard a finer ho must have accom Health of Naseae’ Gronpcike wear H Chiet of Police of Washington, it 1 | plished the job between June 2% and] ance depending, course, on whether % asoumed that the letter was mailed | July 2, and during that period all his| Holt told him the truth, Sald Mr. a2 fm Washington. In that case it must | his time seema to be accounted for. | Smith At “have been mailed last Friday night | However Ott save that on July 1 hel yy jer, Ud me that at the end of ‘At about the time Holt was starting for New York to try to kill Mr. ‘Morgan. Immediately on receipt of Major Pullman's message Commissioner Woods communicated with the Cunard and American Lines and also with other steamship companies, and soon the wireless warnings were flashing Across the Atlantic. Major Pullman yaleo communicated with the Navy Department in Washington, and in- Mtructions were sent from the big ‘Wireless plant at Arlington to all ves- Sele of war in the vicinity of the pointe “Where the Philadoiphia and Saxonia | gfe due to reach to-day to proceed to "that spot at full sped. The commanders of the Saxonia and ‘Philadelphia were instructed to get in touch with each other and steer for ach other without delay, so that in ‘the event of disaster happening to one the other might be near at hand to | Fender assistance. PHILADELPHIA REPORTS SHE'S SAFE. A reply sent from the Philadelphia by Capt. Mills was received by the American line shortly before 11 g’olock to-day reading: “Everything on board identified.” This is taken by ine American line oMelals to mean that the ship has been searched for explosives and nothing of a eus- picious nature was found. The apprehension of the police and the steamship authorities was height- @ped to-day by the discovery that at least fifty sticks of dynamite de- _ Hivered to Holt at Syoasett, L. I, on June 29 are missing. found in another trunk, the where- abouts of which the detectives have @ clue, but the hope of such a din- "every 1s lessened by the fact that pretty nearly all that is loft of what Holt bought for bor’ making pur- poses is accounted for in the trunk found by the police in the West | Phirty-clghth Street warehouse, ex- - @ept the approximately fifty aticke of dynamite. Another feature that 1s worrying ‘the police is how Holt could possibly Wave placed an infernal machine on a ship. So far as the inquiry ed Getectives has gone, he waa in 7 OF around his bungalow at Central 7 L. L, which he was using as a yb factory, from June 29 to July _ & All bis movements from the morn- of July 1 to the moment of his at- on Mri Morgan have been ac- for. “This fact, taken in connection with Holt’s uncertainty as to which ship Was the object of the attack is taken * > te indicate that there was another Petwon interested with him in hia aa @fupade against the shipment of war Munitions to Europe—perhaps sey- @ral persons. In fact the authorities have beld the impression all along _ that Holt was but a part of a con- _ tor OF EXPLOSIVES HE PUR- CHASED, Hott teft Ithaca on June & He J ad purchases there @ bottle of murl- poet id at the Christiance Dudley in State Street. The next 3 of him is picked up when he ‘Fented « bungalow from a man - Bamed Ott at Central P: LL _ On June 21 Holt ordered by tele- from ¢ Aetna Explosives y, No, 2 Reotor Street, 200 of dynamite, weighing half a 100 fulminating caps, CATSKILLS for Vacationists! saw Holt leaving the bungalow early in the morning carrying a quit case. saved up from his «al fees about $400, He $600 of that to pay her expenses to and tutors gave his wife Thoy may be! The records of all express company agents in Central and Northern Long Island are being searched to-day. Holt received 200 sticks of ay mite, He used three in the bomb which wrought destruction in Waah- ington and three were found in his pontesston when he was arrested at the Morgan house in Gien Cove, There were 184 sticks in the truck found in the West Thirty-elgnth Street warehouse* last night. This {accounts for 140 of the 200 aticks |leaving a shortage of 60 sticks, Holt | told*Capt. Tunney that he used a few that the $170 balance paid all his ex- penses and bought his explosives and revolvers, He was a frugal liver and spent very little himself.” Dynamite costs from 10 to 26 cents a stick, The quality bought by Holt is of the highest class and costs 26 cents a stick. Therefore the 200 sticks he bought cost him $50. In addition he paid for other explosives. The police information that he obtained all hin explosives for $19.50 was bi one payment he made for that The payment was a balance due. All ‘of Holt’s known expenditures from June 8 to July 2, added to his living expenses, ad fares and the rent of the bungal tal Park, sticks In his experiments at Central Park. Capt, Tunney can find no evi- dence that more than 10 sticks of dynamite were exploded in the ex- L. 1, at 10.45 o'clock last night by ide. An autopsy performed by th Ryan, an old-time baseball piteh- er, who lives at Lynbrook, and who for twenty years has been an attend- ant in the Nassau County Courts, was his sole guard during the night. He was assigned to that duty by Alan Pinkerton, whom Sheriff Pettit called in when the Sheriff went West for his first vacation in two years. “r been with Holt for four nights,” said Ryan to-day. “Every night before last night he had been suspicious, childish and cranky, All I was afraid of was he might hang himself. “The day guard told me he had tried to cut himself with a piece of tin, That didn’t happen while I was on duty. What I was afraid of was that he might use his shirt as a rope and hang himself. Keeping that thought in mind, I had a knife in my pocket, intending to use it in cutting him down if he ever went that far, “Last night he was friendly, He "kidded’ me, He said it must be hard to ait up looking at him all night, and that he wasn't good to look at. “I went on duty at 8 P. M. The door of bis cell wasn't locked; it was kept unlocked under ord from the boss, who wanted everything so Holt could be reached right away if he tried to kill himself. I was sitting in a chair in the corridor. Holt looked up at me kind of frantic about 9 o'clock and sald: “My God! If I could only get some sleep. If I could I could ox- plain myself right, and when people asked me questions I could tell them what was right. Just one night's good ; sleep would fix me so I could make! people understand why 1 did it. I want to make that statement to- morrow. I prom! it. Can't you keep things quiet for me to-night? “I said, ‘Go ahead and take your sleep. There won't be any one to bother you to-night.’ He lay down with his face toward me and closed his eyes. An hour after that ho opened his eyes and began to laugh. He said: “Bay, there was a funny little man with white whiskers in here this aft- ernoon, He said he was Carlos Mac- Donald, a specialist on insanity, I had a lot of fun with him, When they try to prove me insane they are on the wrong track. I am sore about thie ammunition business and I am going to show them go. If 1 can get some sleep no specialist hired by a millionaire is going to keep me from proving 1 am right,” Then he shut his eyes and pretty soon he began to snore. “About 10.40 o'clock there was a noise down around the end of the corridor, Thinking what Holt said about sleep, believing he was rest- ing and wanting him to have his rest out, |] was on my toes in a min- ute, I went to the corner of the cor- ridor and turned quick, There wasn't @ sound then, I don't know what the noise was. I expect some fellow was ig d &@ nightmare. “While | was standing there won- dering what it was 1 heard a noise the direction of Holt's coll. It bi | like @ revolver shot. Plgrt away thought he had shot himself. thought, ‘If I interfere with bim us aa shoot me.’ I pulled my own gua Hog to hia cell, He was gone. I ran down the corridor lookin for him, and I tripped and fell body. What he did was to run till he reached @ grating twenty- four feet high. Then hoe shinned up it and dive That's all there was to it, He fooled me, He made me believe he was asleep, and I wanted to have him have his sleep out.” Jail Keeper Tells How Holt Feigned Sleep and Killed Himself Frank Holt committed suicide in the Nassau County Jail at Mineola,| leaping head foremost to the stone paved corridor, twenty feet below. The man was dead when Jeremiah Ryan, his guard, reached his) early to-day, showed that death had been caused by @ compound frac- ture of the skull and cerebral hemorrh: L. L, would amount, it is estimated, to about the $170 told the District Attorney he had spent. climbing an iron grating and thea @ jail physician, Guy F. Cleghorn, issued the following statement: “Holt met his death by plunging from the bars of his cell. He fell eighteen feet, His keeper, Ryan, was in charge of him, His orders from me were never to take his eyes off the prisoner. He was told that if he wanted anything he should rap on the bars with a club and that his sum- mons would be answered by another keeper, “In running along the corridor to see what the disturbance was Ryan disobeyed my positive orders.” eee CAMBRIDGE MEN No one else recalls seeing Holt leave ent on| Mos! iG Q Sa MC a Ane | 0 joo inoline @ theory| With the $200 remaining he came to ove Since S is that Holt made a bomb and shipped | Now York me wire i he ed a e ” Bo rereecemnbliee 8 New York | uve he had about $00, Me claimed War Office. SUFFER HEAVY LOSSES. “Most of Our Assailants Never Left Battlefield,” Says Official Report. PANIS, July 7.—The French War) Department this afternoon gave ow the following statement of recent operations in the Dardanelles: “In the Dardanelles, on the 5th of July, the Turks delivered a general attack, the most Important they have undertaken since their efforts in the early days of Moy. Their purpose was to drive us into the sea. “At 4 o'clock in the morning a very inten artillery fire was opened on our first lines, as well as on the zone | behind these lines occupied by French and British troops, The enemy sub- sequently endeavored to deliver sev- eral infantry attacks, but not one| Was successful in coming as far as our trenches, “Decimated by our! artillery fire and mowed down by our rifles and our machine guns, most of | our assailants never left the teld of| battle. “During th tion batteries of the enemy on the Asiatic Coast fired with- out Interruption, A Turkigh cruiser, steaming between Maidos and Chanak also took part in the engagement, On several occasions aviators of the enemy bombarded our lines. “At the end of the day a group of about fifteen British and French aviators flew over the Turkish aero- drome at Chanak, threw down sev- eral bombs and were successful in striking the principal hangar with a) bomb.” IDENTIFIED HOLT ASERIG MUENTER Sure Nests “Xia Assailant Was Harvard Professor Who Slew Wife. Two witnesses from Cambridge, Mass, to-day positively identified the body of Frank Holt in the Mineola morgue as the body of Erich Muenter, ® graduate student teacher tn Har- vard University, accused of murder- ing his wife nine years ago. The wit- nesses are 8. T. Smith, State Police Officer of Massachusetts, and Theo- dore W. Hillier, a chauffeur, who lived for nine months in the same house with Muenter tn Cambridge. Hillier lived on the top floor of No. 207 Oxford Street, a thr family house, while Muenter and his wife lived on the ground floor, He saw Muenter going in and out of the house nearly every day for nino months and had a@ very clear recol- lection of his appearance. When Hillier saw the body of Holt In the Mor the features battered in the eiruggle in Mr. Morgan's home had resumed almost their natural form and the swellings and discolorations about bis eyes and mouth had dis- appeared. “There's no doubt in my mind that that ts the body of Erich Muenter,” said Hillier, after making a long and careful inspection, Btate Police Officer Smith brought with him the police record of Muen- ter’s measurements and description taken by the Bertilion system, They tallied exactly with the details in the case of Holt, ‘Are you sure this man is Muenter?” District Attorney Smith asked the Sta @ Police Officer, nh certain,” Smith replied, “I even turned up his upper lip and found in the upper jaw the gold- crowned tooth that M' ter had.” Hillier added another bit of corrob- oration, "The people in the jail," he said, “tell me that when Holt was inter: | eated or excited he had a way of spreading out his fagers and running them back through his hair, That is exactly what Muenter used to do, Tam certain this man was Meunter.” CHICAGO, July T.1 of Frank Holt, the assaila: JP. won jan, as Erich Muenter, the Har- r who disappeared in death of his wife by Gould of the University of Chi- At the undertaking establishment where Holt's body was taken a tele- am was received to- day from Dr. | F. Sensabaugh of Dallas, T Holt's father-in-law, inquiring if t body was ready for shipment to Dallas, District Attorney mith paid that he had ng to the body being rer joved qo for burial, ccord~ ingly @ tel ara was sent Dr. Sensa baugh adv! could be made at once, body during the autopsy. After an investigation of the cir- The brain was removed from the| transacting businoss. cumstances surrounding Holt's death] siclans 1 Wilham Hulse, warden of the dail, 52. —>—_— MORGAN TRANSACTS SOME BUSINESS WITH OFFICE OVER PHONE: 3. P. summer home at Glen Cove ison, is made here by Prof. Chester Morgan telephoned from his! demented,” this BERLIN (via wireless to Sayville, L. L), July 7.—The French armored cruiser Jeanne d'Aro has again bom- poster the open Turkish town of Al- drette because the authorities re- | fase to haul down the German flag over the German Consulate, it was) offictally announced to-day. A despatoh from Constantinople to the Overseas News Agency announ- cing the sinking of the French auxili- ary cruiser Carthage off Cape Helles at the Up of the Gallipoli Peninsula, by a German submarine, says that the vessel carried war material valued at more than $200,000, The French Minister of Marine on July 6 announced that the steamer Carthage had been torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine ong July 4, Sixty-six members of the crew were saved. Six others were missing. | ——_—. | FRENCH LOSS IN WAR 1,400,000 TO JUNE 1 Of These, 400,000 Are Reported! Killed, 700,000 Wounded and 300,000 Captured. | LONDON, July 7.—French casual- ties totalled 1,400,000 from the begin- | ning of the war until June 1, 1916, cording to an appeal issued to-day by the French Relief Society. Of this number 400,000 were re- | ported killed, 700,000 wounded and 300,000 taken prisoners, FRENCH TRANSPORT SUNK IN DARDANELLES Constantinople Informs Berlin Ger- man Submarine Performed Feat July 4th. CONSTANTINOPLE, July 6 (via Berlin by wireless to London, July 7), peso official statement issued to-day “in th Darden HH | marine on July 4 transport steamer off Sedd-ul © repulsed on thi aly of July |forward strong divisions eguinst our | forward strong divisions inst 1 right win _ Lal _ Eee BELIEVES INFLUENCE BEHIND, HOLT DROVE HIM TO SUICIDE ACT. (Speclal to The Prening Wostd,) CAMBRIDGE, Mass, July T%— Mayor Timothy W. Good thinks that some powerful influence must have been at work to bring about the eul- cide of Frank Holt—or Prof, Muente: aa, he Is belived to have been, "Lam convinced that Muenter was | sald Mayor Good to-day, “Tam also convinced that some pow- Marge F neh ing him that chipoent morning and was tn communication for some time with his partnors, He eaid felt much improved. Prévious to thi word was received from the ph: attendance. that Mr, or en's condition continued to limgxove, | timely 4 erful influence was behind the whole | WAR NEWS IN BRIEF KING OF ITALY Latest official statements from Vienna claim that the Austrian advance is continuing in at least one «| Russians assert that the force of the Austro-German drive has slackened, Divergent claims come from Vienna and Rome as to the situation Italian headquarters reports heavy losses on the Austro-Italian front. sector of the front south of Wrasaw. SEES HIS TROOPS ‘GERMANS MOVE ON TOWARD WARSAW, BERLIN REPORTS by the Austrians in counter attacks on the Carnic frontier, the repulse of attacks! along the Tyrol-Trentino line and of a determined assault | spon the Italian position on Avostano Peak. The most recent Austrian official statement declares the Italians | have been on the offensive and have been repulsed in attacks at several | He AHL | Scales a Small Plateau ‘Himself With ° an Escort : of “ GERMANS CAPTURE !Penetrate a Line 700 Yards |the River Meysi points, Last night saw a continuance of ‘avy fighting) along the western | The French, in the official rer ort from Paris, claim to have re- front. pulsed German attacks north of » | Cavalry. ee 48 and om the heights of the Meuse. | COMPLIMENTS VICTORS. Near St. Mihiel, at the point where the.Germans have maintained their salient since the early months of the war, German troops were Gorizia’ Attacked From All! successful in penetrating the first line of French defences along a front | of 700 yards. Official announcement was made in Vienna to-day that the sub- scriptions to the second Austro-Hungarian war Idan amounted to $530,- 000,000, FRENCH TRENCHES NEAR ST. MIHIEL | Long, the Paris War Office Admits. PARIS, July 7.—The French War Office this afternoon gave out the following report: _ "In the region to the north of Arras | the bombardment continued all last night. Two German attacks, neither one in force, against the railroad station at Souchez, were repulsed. “On the heights of the Meuse, at about 9 o'clock at night, a fresh German attack directed against our positions on the southerr side of the | raving of Sonvaux was checked by | the fire from our barricades. At the | same time the Germans delivered an attack to the west,of this ravine, but |* here also they were repulsed. “To the southeast of St. Mihiel the’ enemy, after a bombardment of great violence, took the offensive last night along a front stretching from the hill | which commands the right bank of| e, to the south of Allly, as far as’ the locality known aé the Cow's Head (La Tete-a-Vache), in the forest of Apremont. At one single point in the Vaux Fery region they were successful in penetrating our firat Ine along a front of about seven hundred yards. At all other points they were repulsed with heavy losses, “In the eastern part of the Le Pretre Forest we checked a fresh German at- tack, which was preceded by the throwing of flaming liquids ————_—_ WILL ARREST EVELYN THAN AND FORGE HER TO TESTIFY (Continued from First Page.) Friday to appear to-day, which she did. Mrs. Thaw was in New York yes- terday, under the subpoena, but re- peating her declaration that she would not testify against her husband. Although he professed not to know where she was, Mr. Cook, Mrs. Thaw said later, had been in conference with her and Dr, Austin Flint, chief alien- tet for the State, and had personally excused her from attendance on the court upon Dr. Livingston's certifi- cate that she was bordering on nerv- ous prostration and ought not ue be compelled to take the witness DECLARES MR. COOK ACCEPTED ‘ HER EXCUSE. Evelyn last night met reporters tn her home, No. 28 West Eleventh Street, told of her alleged conference with the State's attorney and declared he had excused her. Then she took a | night train back to Chateaugay Lake, although Justice Hendrick, the only person who could have excused her trom obeying the subpoena, had not been consulted, “Mra, Thaw left New York with- out my consent,” said Mr, Cook, “and gent a certificate from Dr. Bernard Livingston, her own physician, to me a few minutes before she departed last night, I still consider her the most important witness the State can call and I intend to fight to have her take the stand and tell her story. “The statement of Evelyn Thaw that I had a conference with her, at which I agreed to release her from case, and that the influence did not want Holt identified ax Muenter and would move heaven and earth to pre- vent this disclosure. Belie 1e, there is some one breathin, ler to-day as the result of Muent un- aking off,” the subpoena on the ground of poor | health is untrue, I did not see her during her twelve-hour stay in this elty.” As soon as the medical certificate was in Mr, Cook's hands he inaued @ |Stanchfleld declared a repregentative | (of Mrs, | State, adding that she came only be- Sides—-Gaps Made in the Defenses. ROME, July 1.—Great been torn in the field defenses sur- rounding Gort#ia by the incessant pounding of Italian shélia. Oficial des- Patches to-day reported that the bom- bardmekt of the ‘Iast four days has damaged the Atistrian works at the Isonzo bridwehead, King Victor, Pmanuel, alone to the subpoena for Dr. Livingston to ap- pear in court this morning. Mrs,. Merrill suddeniy appeared to- ¢ in the court room to the evident surprise of Thaw's attorneys. As the State had given up hope of bringing her to the witness stand her testimony had been read into the record, But at noon sh e to the stand, Thaw did nag tars bia} Eats Pager al tes age aah head nor did he pay particular atten-, nessed the capture of Crosis Peak, Mr. Cook at once moved that her| Meat Selx, by Berangiter!, who took testimony, as read from the record, ,700 prisdt “The be stricken out and her personal ex:| or eonere ia psec amifation take its place, Mr. Stanch. | Plateau, accompanied by an escort of field promptly objected, stating that | cavalry office: ‘ahd watched the all, her (oatimony was in and she | could add nothing to It at this time. | #truRgle from Whee i, only a few n the enemy was Justice Hendrick asked Mr, Cook if) SUndred yards. of the driven ‘ftom the summit the King it cea = that ‘at tho time reading he had not e: " : Ph eset ‘an affirniative reply | oops and congratulated them. Uverruled the objection, A general attack on Gorizia from ane sede nald his assoctate, | all sides was begun early yesterday. Court and asked for an cdscurninent [assailing the Austrian trenches with until he returned. This the Court, feat fury, attempting to break gran‘cd. | through and attack the fortress from SAID WOMAN OFFERED TO RE: | tho north. Italian guns on the Plava MAIN AWAY. heights dominate the country south to afternoon — seasion Gorizia and have dispersed several bodies of enemy reinforcements and ammunition trains, Bombardment of the Gorizia bridgehead is the heaviest artillery action along the Isonzo since the war began. “The Aus » continue to ity. | bute circulars alon Mr. Cook retorted that Mr. Stanch- | by means of balloons,” Gen, Caderna field's statement should not have reported to-day. “The jast circular been made before a jury, but that as the Justice and not the jury was the | ©*4lt# the Austro-German victory at final arbiter of Thaw’s fate he would , Przetnys! anc calls upon the Austrian not ask for a miatrial, soldiers to se ‘the t Justice Hendrick auld he did not | waged by It Leet Badass war e think the atatemgnt should have been give her testimony. He added that | LINER ROTTERDAM In the Mr. Merrill had called on him and offered to have the woman re- main out of the State for a consid- eration, He said this information had been conveyed to the Attorney General and for that reason the wom- a ought not to be permitted to tes- sii the battle front made, and he permitted the woman to the sessions of the covrt in future) would begin at 10 o'clock in the morning and that night sessions HELD UP BY BRITISH would be held. | Mrs, Merrill then repeated the { stories she had told at the former Thaw hearings; how Thaw, under as- sumed names, had beaten disrobed girls in her home, PAID GIRL VICTIMS OF THAW $30,000. Detained for Ten Days at The Downs; Greek Steamship Also Searched. Under cross-examination by Mr. Smith, Mrs, Merrill became “fighting The Holland-America Line steam- mad.” She declared she never had| ship Rotterdam, from Rotterdam to sent any one to Mr. Stanchfleld to de- New York. is due here early Sunday mand money to keep her out of the morning, according to a wireless to- day to representatives of the line. The Rotterdam was held at the Downs by the British authorities for ten days after she had sailed. In addition to cargo there are 507 passengers on board, The steamer Athinal, which arrived to-day from Greek ports, was taken into Gibraltar by @ British patrol, her captain reported, and after an examination of her cargo list fifty bags of fennel seed and ten cases of opium which were originally shipped from Turkey were transferred ashore, tee neni STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. jorade, Galveston. Espagne, Bordeaux Aztec, London... Stampalia, Naples Taunton, Port Antonie. cause the police compelled her to do so, She admitted she thought Thaw was “a nice mad,” but added that he had promised her money and cheated her out of it. Mrs. Merrill declared al 283 been amounts prt paid out reached between $30,00 and $40,000. Mrs. Merrill became very angry un- der cross-examination, especially when asked about a sult she brought five years ago against Lazarus Levy, whisk, she characterized as the sult oor girl, alone in New York, against a fortune of $20,000,01 she was forced by the Court to answer a question whether she had been com- mitted for perjury as @ result of thgt suit and admitted she had been, —>—_——_ TAGGART WILL CHOOSE JUDGE TO TRY HIM Through Counsel He Will Help in Selection—Change of Venue Granted Him. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, July 7.— Seven of the 182 men who are facing charges of election frauds in the reg- istration, primary and election of 1914 vere BALM, 9A.M. 10 A.M, 10 A.M, ALM, pleaded guilty when arraigned in| ON’T FLOOD THE STOMACH WITH ICE WATER and other Criminal Court here to-day. One stuff that brings didcomfort first and dyspepeie after- hundred and thirteen others, includ wards, Can an; sing be Sts ious and reshing ing Thomas Taggart, Democratic Na: Sinzing and bubbit fe mith Purity, ‘ARY SODA, foaming tional Committeeman; Joseph E. Beil, | Mayor of Indianapolis, and Samuel Perrott, Chief of Police, asked for a change of venue from Judge James A, Collins, which was granted. ‘Within five days Judge Collins will present five names from which op- posing attorneys will choose pecial judge, Collin was’ elected on the successful Republican ticket in the election concerning which the leading Democratic politicians were indicted, cmainiadiigpeamentas HALT MONTENEGRINS’ TRAIN. | PORTLAND, Ore, July 7.—A train bearing a party of one hundred and! forty-seven alleged Montaneayio - | crults bound from Globe, Ariz., to Van- couver, B. C., stopped here to-day, and the agent in charge, A. EB. Gurasevich, | was taken to the office of United states | Atorney Clarence L. Reames. Repre- sentatives of the attorney's office statea | however, that the men were not undei a Special for Wednesday. ORIENTAL fed eogbnation of ichest Sat Sie roto new beagle Po CHOCOLATE ¢ ‘of other. eae hn Ecaatle Sina Tevioh | Lublin, Mackensen Restingy South of Lublin—Von Takes 3,850 Russians. Linsingen BERLIN (via wireless to Sayville, L. 1), July 7.—German troops west and southwest of Warsaw have taken the offensive at several points, storm- ing a height held by the Russians south of Bofzymow. The War Office reported this afternoon that the enemy lost heavily. ‘The ‘War Office reported a lull in Gen, Mackensen's operations south of and in southeast Gallela, where Gen. von Linsingen has driven the enemy back upon the Ziota Lipa River. In the fighting from Satur- day night to Monday night Von Linsingen took 4,850 prisoners, New ere y Di David Hamilton, Yourt William Hamilton of No. Street, Ne York City, La Topanemus, near 14 * Perry was drowned in ee yea terda le waa one of rty of tardy. sent there. by ‘the mwich Presbyterian Sunday School. anda dash of lemon? 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