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st * te to . a6 an fae is. a AY se Bite 2 eae was now under control of a ¥)° ‘desh's Hall. tore, at Twenty-sixth Street and Ave- nue C, in the heart of Bayonne, in wtead. Another meeting was scheduled for 5 o'clock this afternoon, at which time it was supponed there would be &@ feport from the mediators from ‘Washington, who have been confe: ring all day with ol! company off: ‘And the local suthoritica Robert 8 Hudspeth, of the Publi Prosecutor's Office, is investigating the killing of the three strikers, with & view to placing the responsibility for It. He took five men with him to the Tidewater plant to take am- davits. MEDIATORS REACH BAYONNE. John A. Moffitt of New Jersey and James A. Bmyth of Pennsylvania, the mediators sent by the Department of Bayonne if necessary, in lieu of the State troops. This he said he would do if order were not maintained. Sheriff Kinkead told the committes to take word back to the strikers that his deputies had been given orders to arrest any man who fired a shot to- Gay, either from inside or from out~ side of the ol! plants. This, it was believed, would have a quicting effect on the striking workmen, CNIPING GOES ON THROUGH NIGHT. The men have not forgotten thet three of their number have been killed, and the intermittent sniping whic) continued al; last night seemed 0 “erage an attempt at revenge on tne part of the ttrikers to-day Labor at Washington, reached Ray- onne,at noon to-day and at once held & conference with the City Commis- sioners, Sheriff Kinkead and a com- mittee from the oll plant strikers. ‘The mediators next got in touch with officials of the companies. At time everything was quiet the plants. & talk with George B. Hen- , @uperintendent of the Stand- Oil Company's plant, Smyth and itt returned to the City Hall, where they will meet a committee of Strikers this afternoon. The strikers! held a meeting in Mydosh'’s Hail at )2 o'clock this afternoon to resume the Giscusdion which was interrupted by “hots from the guards at the samo ‘hour yesterday. ‘The strikers will take up the ques- tion of waiting for their pay until the tenseness of the situation is re- Jeremiah Baly, the Bo- their is for peaceful methods, 1s endeavor- ing t convince the men that it in not wisest to insist on their wag ‘at present, but he is having great ~epand in making the strikers view ihe matter from that angie. PRESENCE OF TROOPS UNNEC- BOSARY. Adj. Gen, Wiibur F. Sadler jr. re- ported to Gov. Fielder to-day that the Jocal authorities and that the Chester Edwards, head of the ship ping department of the Tidewater Plant and #on of one of the com- pany’s prominent offictals, admitted to-day that five of the armed guards Inside the wails had been wounded in yesterday's fighting. One of them is in St, Francis'’s Hospital, Jersey City, and the other four have been went bh to New York. The threo dead linos established to- day are at the main entrance to the Tidewater plant, on Fast Twenty- second Street; at the Jersey Central! Railway entrance to the Standard Oi) Plant and at the Lehigh Valley Rall- way entrance to the same property. There are @ hundred deputies at the Tidewater entrance, fifty inside the Plant and Afty more at each of other A skirmish between guards at the Tide Water plant and strikers at 2 A. M. to-day was the most exciting incident during a night of suspense im the war sone. Many shots were fired, but no one was reported hurt. An hour earlier a doctor was cailed to attend a guard who had been ahot, but it was sald the guard did it him. eelt by accident. Barly this morning a truck with two police officials and two city em- ployees stopped in front of the Tide Water plant to move some sewer pipe placed on the tracks by strikers, but @ horde of strikers who had been watching, instead of asleep as sup- of experienced policemen from neighboring towns made it un- -Mecessary for the militia to be Ordered to the scene of the riots. ‘The Governor remarked that if the ‘Gpitators would keep quiet from now ‘om the demands of the atrikers would ployers with "XO Afrpet the ringleaders in and their seeming inck of inside the walls it the strikers in ‘were thought to have been In practios by freshly arrived guards and no one was reported to have been Hilt, but the Gring served to stir up the strikers unnecessarily and Sberift | Kinkead took steps to stop it. He also made « group of guards who were parading in plain view of the strikerr, with rifles over their arms, ge back out of sight Whe ‘this was done a group of strikers who had been hurling rocks toward the Plant retreated quietly and discon- tinued their offensive tactics. The Bheriff then established new “dead lines which make it impossible for any one to approach closer than avers Diocks from the oi! plants. ‘The Hrat report about the dynamite Mr toes teas er S00 was raised among the workmen last night » and that @ committee wos sent to New York with instructions to Rur- chase a supply of dynamite and also ® supply of cartridges of a calibre to Mt the rifles which the strikers are understood to have stored in My- ‘This committee, said the rumor, will return to-night, pre- | demands, pbont bane longshoremen | pared to use the dynamite undor| Af out and sixty firemen, Both the Sever oe tarkaeen, Pie okie cP taste aes Mah, *irentee. of these lines are tied up CONFERENCE LOOKING TO/at the piers. PEACE. we. ymond contends that thi Sheriff Kinkead and Commissioner of Public Safety Wilson met a com- ~mittee of strikers composed of Jore- wilah J. Buly, Albert G. Zelide Alexander Androjeski in Police Hoa: ‘quarters at 10.80 o'clock to-day ana teok the first steps looking toward a Pogeible adjustment of the exiatii ulty, Wilson informed the men ‘that he had been empowered by Gov. ‘Fielder to select from one to two bi dred police officers from nearby tow: in New Jersey and bring them ~ POSLAM DOES WONDERS FOR SON AND SCALP pethging Bastore Ibs Berta’ Tach aed Itching Feet. ne tore BS ory nines goremene out of Sealds, Bites, eat Fonenlae. Gene] +58 “Tin ‘inpere the hygienle ea, Sakae ula in Ta awa Bek” Laberes lgher | path tenet, Reitratton” posed, rushed them and they refused | to touch the pipe. —_—o— GARMENT WORKERS QUIT IN INDEPENDENT PLANTS 10,000 Go Out, but 60 of 300 Manufacturers Have Signed Agreements. Ten thousand workers on children's clothing in three hundred independent shops !n Manhattan ad Brooklyn struck to-day to sequre agreements similar to those signed by the Cloth- Manufacturers’ Association, The strikers demand 16 per cent. wage in- creases and recognition of the union. The fact that cach of the bun- dred factories will require rate conference is the princi; ulty | in the settling of the present strike. | Business agents of the union assert! sixty already have signed the agreements, An invitation wa: tended to the others to mest sentatives of the union at the Square Hotel this afternoon, —~—- STATE TRIES TO STOP | LONGSHOREMEN’S STRIKE Pay Men Rates of Trans- Atlantic Lines, Michael J. Reagan of the State! ment of Labor, together with aix! representatives of the atriking long. horemen, conferred to-day with H. . Raymond, President of the Clyde) Bteamship Company, in an attempt to reach an agroement on the men's itwise lines cannot the same noale of wage shoremen as the tranan fford to pay he long: ¢ lines, Pstatrsnioay POLICE QUELL STRIKE ROW. Reserves Charge as Garment Strikers Fight Workers, ‘The reserves of the Hamburg Avenue Btation, Brooklyn, wei mnt to the clothing factory of Charles Inger at No. 174 Jefferson Street to-day on a fe call, They found a hundred . wl some strikers: vy. when. the police ‘he a een ares arew. Zenit of No. 399 Street, Ps net Me ot No. 102 © tral eo an josepiy 5 hire ft Ni HCH IBbin detect ware reamed, Nt te lenders of the rioters ‘and were Foated. 200,000 toegtieh wi Higher Wage Fight MANCHESTER, England, July 23.— Two hundred thousand cotton mili workers in Poncheeter tricy won an import at it for rious | award, ‘eranting. & 6 per cent. for the period of the war ee COTTON SHIP TEXAS UNLOADS HER CARGO AT BRITISH ORDERS. LONDON, Monday, July 19 (delayed by Censor),—The Swedish steamship Texas, from Galveston on June 18 for 10 dead-line stations, oh | losses to the enemy. ‘by @ brilliant counter attack and | have occupied ail the positions that Coastwise Lines Say They Cannot) Board of Arbitrationsof the Depurt- | © THE EVENING WORLD, ik ey GERMANS CONTROL 3 RAILROADS' TO WARSAW, BERLIN CLAIMS 10 GERMAN DRIVES HALTED. |" ON THE LUBLIN LINE, SAYS fF RUSSIAN MINISTER OF WAR Great Battle Is te Is Being Fought Between the Vistula and the Bug Rivers, BERLIN VERY HOPEFUL. Germans Report That the Rus- sians Are on the Defensive and End Is Near. PETROGRAD, July 23.—Clen Pollv- anoff, Russian Minister of War, in a statement issued to-day, declared the Auntro-Germans were being held i Jong the entire front of the Vietula and as far as Bukowina,” said Gen, Polivanoft, “the Austro-Germen armies have been stopped by our troops. Between the Vistula and the Bug a great battle is now about to be fought “After thelr defeat at Krasnik, the Germans brought up reinforcements to their left wing, and on July 17 and 18 again attempted to break our lines near Wilkqaz in order to re Lublin (ninety-three miles southeast of Warsaw). There, ten German »:- tacks were repulsed with enormous “In the centre, on the Krasnontaw- Ibdebno front, the Germans, further reinforced by reserves, are carrying out violent but fruitless attacks. The battle on this front has reached én extreme pitch of violence and continues to develop. “The most notable success of the Russian troops is reported opposite the right wing of the enemy, where we have repulsed the German forces were im the hands of the enemy dur- ing the preceding week. “On the right flank of thin great battle, separated by the Vistula, our | troops backed up’ against the lvan- | gorod fortress (fifty-nine miles south- east of Warsaw) have the enemy un- der fire, while on the left flank our troops are en 4 with the Aus- trians, who are being used as a cov- ering force in the neighborhood of —ee FALL OF WARSAW IMMINENT, SAYS THE BERLIN REPORT BERLIN, via The Hague, July 23.— Warsaw's fall appeared imminent to- day, Official despatches reported that German troops now hold all three railways entering from the weet and that the clty is nearly hulf surrounded by the German ring at distance of leas than Kumors that the main body of Ru sian troops already has evacuate Warsaw und that the Germans were | Preparing to enter the Polish capital wi circulated hers rly to-day, but gained no great credence. Military ritics believe tha’ desperate batil in the jungle of defenses before Wai saw will precede the capture, unless the German advance from the south- east attains unexpected momentum, Unie: Von Hindenburg’s forces | meet with some unexpected reverse, the Kusslan evacuation cannot be long delayed. It ls believed that the Grand Duke Nichol: will repeat Ivanoff's tactics at Praemysl ing behind a garrison strong enough to prevent a rapid pursuit and at the same time capable of inflicting considerable losses on the victorious Germans. While one German army continu the envelopment of Ivangorod, the right wing of forces approaching the the south and south less than two miles from the Vistula "This fank Is pressing forward to the river with the evident n of forcing a crossing enst sk, & movement that would e the almost immediate evacua- tion of Warsaw. Despatches tndioate that the Ger- ™ re not wasting ammunition in a alee of Novo Georgiewsk, protect- ine Warsaw from the northwest. In stead, the Germans are approachins: city south of the Vistula and southeast of Novo Georgiewsk, keep. ing just out of range of the great gins of the fortress, Russian officials are becoming dally more exasperated because the allies aining innetive on the Franco. nders front while the Slay armies y tremendous German pres: rding to private advices re- hore to-day Russian military organ, Russkt Invalid, in inspired article, ts re. ported to have bitterly attacked Rus- sla's allie eee STEAMSHIP BLOWN UP BY A TURKISH MINE IN THE SUEZ CANAL. BERLIN, July 23 (by wireless to Sayville).-A despateh from The Hague to the Overseas News Agency says that, according to reports from Calvo, the British steamship Theresa, | Searchlights on Monte Santo were | dicated that a violent battle is pro- withdrawing his major | ITALIANS SWEEP ACROSS ISONZO IN DESPERATE FIGHT Force a Crossing Under a Mur- derous Fire Only Three ! Miles Above Gorizia. CUT OFF MUNITIONS. Bersaglieri Dig Themselves in at Western Base of Monte Santo. ROME, July 23.—In the face of a murderous fire an Italian detachment aS dug themascives in at base of Monte Santo. patches to-day said they were main- taining their position despite heavy attacks on all sides and were block- ing the transport munitions to the Austrians fighting around Plava, The daring coup of this small body of Hersagiierl is one of the notable exploits of the heavy fighting now pro- ceeding around Gorizia. Though the Italians must Inevitably either retire or face annihilation every hour they withstand the Austrian attacks alds Latest dis- | the Italians in their onslaughts Against the northern defenses of Gorlts, The Bersaglier| crossed the river in svows and on pontoons. They had reached the eastern bank of the Ison- xo before they were discovered, played upon enemy artillery could sweep their ranks effectively the Itallans drove the Austrians from their armored concrete trenches on the high road at the foot of the hills and occupied the! positions. A similar though less daring ex- plolt was performed by Italian troops operating against Tolmino, By a sur- prise attack they crossed the Isonzo and captured trenches held by the Austrians opposite Sella Sotto, All reports received here to-day in- ceeding west of Gorlzia, where Gen. Cadorna is directing @ heavy attuck against the Austrian bridgehead, — LITTLE HOPE NOW THAT BECKER WILL ESCAPE THE CHAIR (Continued from First Page.) ‘ | | that he was willing to hear any evi- | dence submitted to him in Becker's | behalf, but that up to now nothing has been produced to cause him to change his opinion in the case, There seoms no reason to believe he will | Interfere even to the extent of grant- ing a brief reprieve, Jack Rowse in his long statement lagt night said in part: “Becker's long statement does not contain @ new fact. It is nothing more than an attorney's closing argument to @ jury in @ hopeless case, ‘Since he has made me the issue of ‘age, and he put it before the pub- to whether | told the truth or her ho now 4s telling it, 1 am pre- pi 4gain to tell of all my connect- Uons with him. I have only pity for Kecker—not the hatred tnat he has ard shown in the murder We 3 in the graft collections from the gam- | bling Neuses until he beoame intex cated with hi ‘brought upon | prevalted, ae oe cree. eee pe " forced a crossing of the Isonzo, three 3 miles above Gorizia, last night and| @ the western | 4 ey aves. a — | California Girl, Now a Princess, ___Vho May Be Queen of Poland| VOCOOOVOOLOYTS PRINCESS PONIATOW SKI 094464 r) PARIS, July 23.—The name of Prince Po: would be popular in France, eororees owsky has been mentioned |neither side being able to make sat- | frequently as the future King of Poland in case the allies should win. This \isfactory gains, but some foes are already making strong | objections, as his wife js an American (formerly Miss Helen Sperry of Stockton, Cal.), and, they argue, would not do as the Queen of Poland, upon the Polish capital. latest official reports show. . German tide. Railroad line. indicate. face of lack of sufficient ammunition is praised, advances made in Rome are denied in Vienna. fronts in France and Belgium. landed in Tripoli, —<—<—< — te ait tet tt Ba $16,000 a month.” CHICAGO POLICE ASK WHITMAN TO SAVE BECKER'S LIFE wor CHICAGO, July 28. J. Dodd, President of the Chicago Patrol sidnala wae Association, to-day forwarded to GOV. | Worastor of New York! x elghteen-hoie won WAR NEWS IN BRIEF he new American note on submarine warfare was delivered by Ambassador Gerard to the German Foreign Oifice this afternoon. Fighting along the lines in France was in progress at several points during last night, but there were no decisive actions. tried to win back some of the ground they had lost on the heights near | Metzeral. The strength of the outlying defenses of Warsaw appears to them, but before the| checked, for the time at least, the impetuosily The Germans | of the Teutonic drive | 1a yesterday in seizing part of an} have | enemy trench, thus strengthening the! A | front to our advantage, ae SA inter lt incomparab ly with all liquors Driven back upon the fortress of Ivangorod to the southeast of | | Warsaw, the Russian line still is maintained at that point, so far as the From the fortress of Novogeorgievsk, along the line of the Narew to the north the Russians are battling desperately against the’ surging To the southeast the great armies of Field Marshal Von Mack- ensen are still engaged in a mighty thrust for the strategic Lublin-Chelm Both official and unofficial accounts agree that the fighting here is desperate and that the issue has not yet been decided. On nearly all the other fronts the Russians, while fighting hard, are falling backy statements from the various capitals of the belligerents Despatches to Berlin newspapers declare the capture of Lublin and Chelm is considered only a question of a brief time. of the Russian troops and the strong resistance they are showing in the The bravery | The struggle of the Italians for Gorizia is proceeding. Claims of | There have been few recent operations of importance along a It is reported in Rome that Turko-German forces have been BRADY WINS 18-HOLE MEDAL PLAY FOR “PROS. Mer Scores 76 at Yew London, With Barnes ‘Tied for See NEW LONDON, Conn., medal profes- Brady of Country Club (ONE YEAR OF THE GREAT WAR The EVENING WORLD will begin on next Monday, July 26, a series of articles recapitulating the actual hap- penings of the terrific war in which nearly all of Europe is, now engaged. The articles will be written by correspondents who have been in constant touch with the GERMAN, FRENCH and ENGLISH operations and will be entirely without bias. A general review of the actual results of the great struggle to date will be a climax to the series, Re A vm asia ‘| VOSGES HEIGHTS count of Murder of Entire Popus =” N Paris War Office Reports lation of Armenian Town. } PETROGRAD, July 23.—The Novoe Heavy Fighting at Many Points on the Line. ee ee Vremya publishes what purports to be the details of the massacre by the Turks of Armenians which exceeds in number any record In history. In one section of the article it is said that the Turks after massacring wholesale the population of Bitlis collected 9,000 women and children from rounding villages and drove noe the banks of the Tigris, where shot every one of them, ‘Then they Killed another thousand which bad escaped the fir inter, Four battalions, it is said, have been gent to the Mush Valley. with orders to destroy ery one of the be menians in that district. alaughter has already begun, it is reported. All the Armenians in ‘me Diarbekr region have been killed. use of the m: of them was the charge that the Armenians were plotting a pro-Rus- sian revolution. PAIS, July 23.—Hand - to - hand fighting up and down the Vosges slopes in Alsace, with the Germans attempting to storm the French trenches by massed assaults, was re ported in official dispatchas to the War Office this afternoon. | On the crests of the poaks of Lingo $|and Barrenkopf an impetuous Ger- G|man charge threw the enemy into % |the French first line trenches. ‘They |were ejected by French chasseurs and hurled down the mountain side. East] RUDAPBST (via Amsterdam), July of Metzeral and at several points|22—The famous painter Galimbertl along the River Fecht west of Colmar | committed suicide to-day by shooting desperate fighting is proceeding, | himself over_his_wife Famous Ht Following is the official report of the French War Office: “The night was considerably dis- turbed at several polnts along the front. In Artois, in the neighbor- hood of Souchez, there was violent cannonading and grenade fighting. “Between the Oise and the Aisne, in the region of Quennevierres and on the Plateau of Mouvron, on the right | bank of the Alsne near Soupir and on | the Champagne front several artil- lery actions also were reported. “In the Argonne there was rifle and gun firing in the region of Bagatelle, where one of our companies succeed- | in 4 tently bombarded during the night. “In the region of Arracourt a strong hostile reconnoitring force supported by artillery was turned bi by our infantry and artillery “In the Vosges an attempted attack | against our poaitions southward of! the Faye was easily repulsed. THOMPSON'S had won to the ne positions we east of Metzeral, on the crest of the OFF Linge and Barrenkopf were sub-! jected to a very violont bombardment. | The enemy momentarily succeeded in| ff seat GAEL T penetrating part of our lines, but was| J driven out by an energetic counter- ‘Now in tubes, 25 and 60 attack on our part.’ at ol drnaaiete, Thempeon 23 Body of t Identified, —! OIED. The body of a man who died sud- denly in the Kast Thirty-ninth Street! ORNELIUS, beloved husband Ferry House of Mary Fealey (nee Farr é ress Ye : Funeral from his late residence, 029 tising solicitpr of No. 217 Madison| Woodlawn av., McLean Hetghts, Street. He Was returning from a« fishing trip when stricken. Yonkers, Sunday, July 26, at 2 P. Ml, Interment St, Raymond's, | | | | | Grade e of Week-End Combinations The Big Vacation Packages, 99c | Oo the time of maki lections, t: Pei ih he past sartedl sod chatent aasertonene oft Hal candies, and to save the time of wrapping and tieing, are a number of reasons which explain the mission of our Week- End binations. The: different assortments, each packed in strong container, wrappe: plain paper with « handle at- tached for carrying. No. 3 CONTAINS. H Box , High Grade hocglates, | t-1b,, Box Spanish Almond | Nougat, fam Be Tess, beaten a tee 9¢ permite rite Special Li Saturday Special for Friday ochre MIDSUMMER RWEETS—O js box te made up of cryatalitzed J Menthe Gums: the other Me Covered Charles L. Whitman Barnes of White resolutions adopted by the organ Club and EW Quak tion, asking that the death sen Ridge Country Club second Of Police Eleut. Charl ‘ be prize, being tled at 78 | commuted to life impr: | In the four ball play for amateurs | <r and professionals the p WAS SWISS COMMANDS made by Gilbert Nichols, professional, of || | CHOCOLATE COVERED ALMOST WIPED OUT Wilmington, Del,, and Nelson Whitney, | BELLS The prt of this ewes amateur, of New Ork who made |} ] fs 9 m ot dailetogs § FIGHTING IN FRANCE, |e eighteen holes in 71 tere gnrobed th To-day's events were preliminary to | latent | the champfonship play which comes to- | i BERLIN (vin wireless to Bayville), July Swiss soldiers, Aghting with | the French foreign legion, lost heav- ily in the recent combats around Arras, according to reports from morrow lone who as woll a him ow through twice in his case and once when the gunmen were convicted. 1 stood hours of cross-examination, but Charlie Becker hag not even al- lowed himself to be directly exam- while passing through the Buez Canal, Gothenburg with « Rew $9 of cotton, which was detained at Fae tae July arrived at Grimeby J wi ran upon a Turkish mine and sank. Available shipping several vense! ‘of the name Theresa, al “By pulling fake raids, fright Becker go! the gamblers ‘tened all over town. ti here from Pennsylvania, emer a Geneva to-day. One regiment, made up of 4,600 Swiss soldiers, numbered only 820 after a bloody engagement, Another that consisted of 2,000 Sw’ was re- duced to all the officers being killed, ———_——- ty Reservists Satl. PHILADELPHIA, July 28,—One thou- sand Italian reservists, whe gathered New Jersey, MILK CHOCOLATE Tesent (he essence of Bonet in is a a compra