The evening world. Newspaper, July 27, 1915, Page 2

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1 T VON HINDENBURG CHECKED NEAR WARSAW ‘ = 27>] B16 LINER BALTIC. [WAR NEWS IN BRIEF The British Army and the British Navy have lost from the beginning CHASED BY J BOAT: of the war to July 20, nearly one year, a total of 330,995 men in killed, y| Wounded and missing. Of these 9,106 were in the navy and the others BUT SHE ESCAPES in the army. The total of officers kifled, in the army and the navy, is 14,312. _— trial ‘upon the motion for a (for Becker. ) © Practically not one word of the pro- poured new cvidence, says the brief, is ‘any value, The great mass of it “th Hearsay and irrelevant; nor is it Giscevered, for it was as well to the defendant at the time of @econd trial as it is now, Such portions of the new evidence ss “ghight come within the broad defin!- RUSSIAN ARMIES | The German advance on Warsaw continues to<lay to be the most HALT HINDENBURG'S of newly discovered evidence is: |important development in the field of war. It is being conducted with JE Mot competent or material, 2 —— i Reports That the <2"), and the Russian resitance has brought furous fighting slong a “4 SE 6 Cruutativs 10, j Hee Force That Crossed the Narew = | wide front. Sees, Teeretore se somliation fet] Driven Back From Ozh | Great Doubt Has Been Lifted From Heart of France| submarine Was Apparently | 4 Russian official report admits that the Germans are attcng the Sidilines which wee not Raven to ths to Otsaki. —What the British Army and Navy Have Accom- | Seni Tey Beith Venn eee reer ee ee ot weue neta ea CRE plished for Allies—Kaiser’s People Will Re- | that Justice Ford must con- SUEA vasidhi to Goat seven bes Turnwell Was Boardéd by Ger-! The casualties in the fighting on the Italo-Austrian frontier have fet. KAISER WILL BE KNOWN mans and Crew Took to terly been very heavy, according to a news despatch received by the GREAT BATTLE IS ON. “ TatamenG use’ greene have been either repulsed or unsuccessful in their attacks. member Him as “William the Great.”’ ‘The reason te that never be- Petrograd Claims Numerous ; Oosnren, on Becker's counsel, Petrograd announces the destruction in the Black Sea of forty sailing vessels laden with coal for Germany. in the history of th has AVE a al nearer Red tne a| Reverses to German Troops GREAT DOUBT REMOVED |WHAT BRITISH 8. BY JOFFRB’S VICTORY.| DONEON LAND AND SBA, AS WILLIAM THE GREAT. Tribune of Geneva. het case for review to Ruarser shar osayitel be Near Bug River. P r By Ed. L, Keen By Carl W. Ackerman Boats, but Later Returned. ‘An American oil steamer, the Maverick, has been held up in the Java Ry SXAMINING wrrnase. “ cure Prose Gtatt Correspondent.) | (United Press Staff Correspondent.) | (United Press Staff Correspondent.) Sea by a Dutch warship as a suspect. | MEP, Cochran made the point yester-| PRTROGRAD, July 9—Ven tn- Second Story. Second Story. Second Story. | LONDON, July 31. — After deine PARIS, July S1—7Tee Great Doudt | LONDON, July s1—Atter a year at] BERLIN, July 27—The Kelser will | (Petonve, bY ® Sibenuatn. ween BRITISH WILL SEND haa been ites from the heart of W4F the British Empire bas something | go down tn history as William the «Brita chin the Ba Mo arrived Ol STRIKE PA o Jena than three-quarters of ® million | Groat, if the evonta of the fret year) = British bin the Bulle arsed) U.S. ANOTHER NOTE The ceomptishment of thie was the |tF0Pe 1a the field; ite allies have of rhe war appeal as vividly to the|enfely at Idverpool 90 10 new witnesses—Murphy, « New York. When the passengers| ‘all | “Dproximately ten million. imaginations of future Germans as ABRUPTLY CLOSED cross-examine him in| OMlce ammounced in an official atate.| srandest go seta be.| ‘The British front in the weetern| they do to the generation that is Hv-|Teached London they were ail gree for two hours. This, Becker's | ment early to-day. year ago this week. In history | ‘hestre is about forty miles in lengtB; ) ing through the present world con- | the submarine story. Only one, Sir Edward Grey Asks Lansing te th bag ever, Arthur Plaskidd of New York, contend, was @ gross inva- feat haew victory |*h¢ lines of the other allies east and| nict. ’ Publ cme deny bd the Mi had west, including Serbia and Montene-| Frederick the Great held Europe at | S#serted that he wppoesfiyes ol Delay ication of One Not only Gi4 this victory prabably|#F0, cover some aixteen hundred |pay, and saved Prussia through seven | “I was on deck about 7 clock Ue Sent Yesterday. Gecide the fate of France geographi- miles. As the ratio of troops @m-| years of atrifo, His descendant, who! Friday evening, he sald. 'e were ee eS then nearing Fastnet. .I saw the sub- a eae cae Tuly 37—@8tr Ba. marine distinctly, about half a mile (Continued from First Page.) wi y cal Secretary Lansing cwable, Wor notwithstanding the |*Ppcars to be some justification for| task, because Frederick had England|®¥8¥ from us, coming in our direc- Soya ree Le gisro Lethe geri Seolidartty” accomplished instantly {B® complainte recently made—quite| with him, and there was then no tion. It must have been seen that —— ase ta preparation another ‘a taneously on Aug. 1, the day | Unofficially, of course—both in France| United States to furnish Germany's moment by the lookout, for our course | around doing nothing for awhile and coe rae tpt councdl order was|and Russia, that England is not dojug | enemies with munitions. Nobody ox- was immodiately changed. I believe }tnen had been given back thoir metal |4nd asl the note defivered he jare of the work. peots the present confilct to run seven|¥@ must have kept that course, sig- | checks and told they were not want-|Yesterday be withheld trom publies~ question as to whether Eng- | years, but if the allies can stand a|**ssing until we almost made Corn- ed. These men had not been guilty |tion pending receipt of the new com- Jand {s fulfilling her obligations| war of that duration #o can Germany | W4ll. of any violence so far as he knew, | munication, Everybody ; #hould be considered in the light of] with the Kaiser at the head of aftairs.| “A few minutes t I noticed the} and he said he was at a loss to un-| Yesterday's note will not be pub- {ner promises. On this basis, has| When the war started the Emperor |*ubmarine I saw a British torpedo | derstand their dismissal. lished to-morrow morning as had been ewift deteat|‘elivered more than was ‘specified | William had fallea into disfavor with | boat destroyer coming from the north.| A group of srikers then went to the | Planned. war.and the | 12 the contract. There were two| many of his people for a number of | She seemed to me to be chasing the |city Hall to see Director of Public] No indication of the nature of the blunders. The | @uses in the secret agreement made| reasons, Some believed he was too submarine. Anyhow, we saw no more | safety Henry Wilson and tried to get fortheoming note was given in Sir sory time ‘ana{With France long before tho war| autocratic, others thought ho was too of the latter. some satisfaction in that quarter. | H4ward's cable and State Department fa 1870 were to. | started: well disposed toward the English, and| D+ Smith of Wiruipeg said that) he nearing for the guards whom |Officials have no intimation. ‘They for war, were badly} Ensiand would take care of the] still others thought he was afraid of most of the passengers were having |gneriff Kinkead arrested has ES: that it te of a eupplemental cally, but tts inftuonce upon the spirit |Ployed 1s one to fourteen and the} now holds the Hohensollern throne, of the country was pesto is :. ratio of mileage is one to forty, there/ has more than equalled Frederick's gE i | ii; fl E i ei li iw g i : i i : i gE i E | é i E eons. the military machine Germany had| “inner when the submarine was sight-| + roe to-morrow morning at 10|nature. The development will further eloped and was too prejudiced in| 4 and therefore scarcely any had the! 140% pefore Recorder Cain in|delay despatch of the American note favor of peace at any price ever to| °Pportunity to see it. to Great Britain on the same eubjeot, Bhe would send an expeditionary force to France of 120,000 men. rhein ‘. Bayonne. Be ‘ ‘ ; That's all there was to it. She bas permit the machine to teat itself. The The Jersey City police officials ani raga, SEE Iatd to the door of one, and ogrried out the first clause to the| early days of the war, when enomy| STEAMER TURNWELL patroimen, whom Sherif Kinkead|QATH OF OFFICIALS STANDS. ferrible mess in otter; abe has sent nearly six times|after enemy took the fleld against) HERE AFTER TUSSLE — |awore in as deputies yeaterday, un- as many men to the firing line as abe |Germany, people talked dispairingly WITH A SUBMARINE. | der pain of arrest in case they failed| Emort of Constitution Maker to | | i g } 3 5 i H i 2 i f i ze se j ; git it i z bargained for, apd abe is still sending | of the Emperor as an incompetent, to report this morning, failed to put believe that if detween the them as fast as théy can be trained, |who had played his cards. badly fe ce appearaness” ks Guest nad Eliminate It Fate, te refuse the ap- | with the Slave ‘Only the other day, the Temps of|and had overestimated Germany’s| Capt. Humby of the British) 01 Jy of them: ALBANY, July 37.—The Leggett pro- it would mot |eetves im the face Paris in an obviously inspired edi- | strength, steamer Turnwell, which arrived to- “Chiet ‘Monahan of the Jersey Lene riper Conngered from the -_ ¢ ase “aot |"'t tas coves eo tral Commesng om rena wuina|"_ Out when victran baran vo e| dey, am Sraaent reper {3 |cay. pane tmored my. mum |teing Sci ‘hey havea rte paid to France by the British press, Won, and when the enemy first here None of his mon responded to my/| to bribe: ised to vote for the trath | mans, evidently made these significant remarks:|and then there was rolled back, the)! 2® encountered @ German aub- fe ry OF prom! oore tacking the Russian Kenapsack upon his back. North fi Lg i ll, I deputized him last night tw/tain measures was killed in the Would bis- rankness should be mutual. If 0| popular opinion of the Kaise; marine thirty-five miles off Tuskar, | ° tory repeat Iteelf? Would 1914 be an-| ine land che support of our Britisa| ‘2 change. People confessed they |The submarine fired several shots ballr py dapnoling lyenat ine se-y Cee eer a Gai 4 other 18707 Waa Francs better Dre-| aiites ie atill only limted, we must not! Bad misjudged him. The bitter criti-|from a rapid-frer at the Turnwoll | He sald be wow Tart norieca:| Gonseet) Moa artainee. tao pared this time? Would she be bet-|rorget that on the seas it is they who! of Hormany’a enemies directed! and the crew of the latter took to | quarter! shpaged *| statement was useless. forge: ol P peets the Kaiser and the comments but he was missing when I got there. ter led? Were her generals equal to bad much the heaviest task. It of neutral nations, added to his popu. | thelr boats, ‘The action of the Jersey City police | Mickie asption the great task ahead? | ae the beginning of the war we were /arity AS Bomne, until now, the Kaiser| The Germans then boarded the in this affair has been cowardly and fhe ground that the The troopers dared not let thelr | apie to complete the equipment of our | 1% the idol of his nation. He is re- | Turnwell, Humby said, exploded sev- he th Shad been operative sin garded as the embodime: German dastardly. I don’t mean the rank and| fas given minds run beyond this point. Indi-! army with # rapidity which was not! virtues, the cepresentacres of Gart| eral bombs in the empty hold and ‘ given satistaction. | f f é ei 33 ually the je—some of them are here now hel; —_—_——— new te Migr ly “y most alae yan soldiers | one of the German staff's least sur-| Man might and bower, eo) Nation | abandoned the steamer to attack the a ik al May Recall Mayor of Atlanta. “5 af in the world, they have the other curse| prives, wo owe it to the fleet whicn has not abused the abso-| British coasting steamer Trafford.| (Special to ‘The Drening Wostd. ) 7 and blessing of civilization, an imagi-| rendered us masters of the seas.” tocratic power he has wield. "The Jersey City police officials, in a TLANTA, Ge. July 27—Pelies ed last August, but has used After sinking the Trafford the sub-|tneir téar of coming here, deliber-|_ A’ cores s #0 they sang and quit think-|q@ne Temps then admits that to this nit) marine crew returned to the Turn-| ately faked a riot at the Eagie Ol! sted Hien autice bees @ ‘ores yey y en ing, y joked with one another, ! capital support on the sea the Britiad | vine Mnanlimoes well, but before they could do any! works there as an excuse to dodge . Deen suspended the Gause meee tau, and the Niemen River, we are| Dever admitting to themselves — let/ Kmpire bas brought ite industrial aad | Sods ‘under ‘conditions subsienina, | further damage to the steamer patrol|me, I shall do all I can to punish jard will be tried Bhareaar closely following the retreating| alone to thelr companions—that the| financial resources, “while ite military |as they are now, Germany will have| 004% of the British fleet appeared | tne Jersey City police for their con- |charses of inefficiency and insu A doubt was there, effort on and bas really surpassed ail saved herself and will have dem: onthe Turnwells crew returned. to | temptible action.” wenich supported” Bes yeoterday Back home the hearts of mothers, | forecasts.” etrat Y | their vessel after having spent four| This is taken to mean that the | social ,, declared they fethere | wiven stare and sweethearts! There probably always will be some houra in open boats. The leaks were | gheritt will ask for indictments Npgeld retaiene coe ee She anes were troubled by ame unexpressed | difference of opinon as to whether it ft ” Plugged up, an al umps!against the Jersey City police 5 mem- icant Wyeatw | Goad lent “86 prove. anoter 187 | was Brush valor or German blndar-|, After Year of gue Garany hag|erwoe te, hi, Teohea, Mord ola [Seed Pate Board” 1@ con! % We captured 419 ius. | They talked smiled and talked cheer-| ing that aaved Paris in the early days | inthe Kaiser. Tho foar of last sume |The. ‘Turnwell then continued to ine fully of a new and irresistible France.|of the war. s’erbups it was the two, has departed and the Germans | Swansea. and opens yh Rosan ‘wan knew, those who remained wait-| Anyhow, Parle was saved, and Brit- thos! hed 4 be et ae nrg unish ga: ope feati ag well as those who went to war, |ishers at least al, ‘@ will give the ~ of the former from that for forty-four years Germany | iion’s share of the, credit to Fleld | veloping a curious Mud of oncten SOME MEAT FOR THE enews, had been living, eating, sleeping, | Marsbal French, bi! generals and mined with eelf-amazement that Grinking, dreaming war, and that this | *ldiers. But even if the salvation ofthe Germans should @o badly have|_™° ‘¥° amall chiltren of Elbridge war had come. What about Francet ee ie etd airy ae ren See marian Frauiae. more | Word DOPE, i ee ee’ beaauae thar 0 ‘Who was Gen. Joffre? Who were the alone faved Calais and the other during Nie Book Peek een te ee tee mit peld for thelr suppers tne other generale? Newspapers had but ereeine porte, OF 3 joa peg inl ¢ po mar opie jon concerain Eng- 00 w year Justice Goff recently 41: be > nd. ie mi ol ie Brith - Fee ee aes fat, Eranco. waa! Colt a greater service than abe bas |pire ‘was magnified quite out of pro: Mrs th eeitar et cae French. |g “big apring drive,” | Dortion to its actual power, the Ger. eT any S08 Gane AW BEE 4° haus pete ae ring mans now are | tute of affal i Bows ‘reuched Parte| upon wniod the military writers had) The past year's tay the Ger. | verauy canen attorneys for Stra Palate are 1 eo for months, was abandoned at|of the co! peeve merite’ of Gere eae hiner oo kee Seieoye en) 40 TURKISH sips. [SeeEzes Hoare cengals, atheists | mane cue fares, min arr, Ea aft tte i i i z : i i 8 i § A H z 3 i i g - F i : E i § ty FE 5 | i Hi g i i EF He i Extra Special for Tuesday Only ASSORTED TAFFIES BIG BOX of chewing delights, in 15 different Frute, Nut and Spice flavors, each in sanitary fin paper. A chewing of ietinstiw charms Es i i if $2 H age 5 ritish civilizations, Ger-| stocks, bonds and other property of with tered 1 . aglorious extra special, T who, it is alleged, cays be ee iawthe German line of highly | ecz, nag revenied er possesion of | OPO", U0 ken Esme apa Se esi of tastructed by Rosenthal the night th anse fortified trenches. In wh Austere patriotiem, of, inventiverons | Pack alimony, fhe murdar to pack bie trunk for « SUNK IN 48 HOURS) = somplinned the Neuve o of anunbroken api under adversity, | x “tncwy ‘waa walt fru Mop fourney, This tend al Ml e hag story at grea me tui wan the Seetion And the Ger. | (very, hew "problem “the war has baying, ait malgnt be jemiarrasaing 1 ‘agreed to leave town. The ether | Petrograd Reports Destruction of , and Ne Mane ‘are sul firmly planted in Lie, |'"Ee Germans are asking what this on He resarved decision i 4g William Wright, former ‘deomed and ‘Then after the second Battle of| past year of warfare has shown the Commissioner of Black Sea Dock and Coal i Xpres, in which the Germans first possess which the world woret nglish to Carriers. peret ‘t hadary 9 te oe ee the|would be the better for the keeping. | "time Of Mackintns Mentions . Which can the world better be rid of 1 to The Breaing Wold, the Britlah public why the "big + | ee the Gh a unter (peta ) PETROGRAD, July 27.—Continutng oaty had become impossible, ‘The British |{ime, the qualiticn the English have |, PLZABETH, N. J.. July $7.—Four to sweep the Black thot ds of and French troops were to make &| shown since last Au, To-morrow’ upply of 20,000 high explosives and | 4,4 Sot know that Gen, Joare the rest of the tlme used shrapnes. |" ond “ef i aeeate) 7” wonder: Result: sqiMfaiice into trenches tar| WILSON GIVES UP GOLF. jt . - | Railroad | plight of the Turks ls growing des- sey, Sntrgs wish “That’s the V ” = is: gitah| is ta ae tare | ats Seat (Rte BT Noses am Dar of Bard Wort tn aN ery Place! j ‘of the quali. | hundred men are on strike at the W. int advance after a preliminary have « A. Clark Wire Works here and have Apelbaum is supposed to have | Sea free of Turkish shipping and cut ty th mbardment for three hours of the Bee She Corenane Dave enews 7 are demanded an Increase of 25 cents per Rose to persuade him to | of supplies en route for Constanti- ‘eacred union” German trenches and the field of wire year of her war against the world, a ter hours. No violence ticlan’s name out of the|nople, the Russian Black Bea feet Rae eae ey bos amy [full Of confidence, with | incre been reported, Reports of out- On et. Lil warships have sunk forty email sail- “But ps, Doubly inauitied tnt, the high ‘explosive projectiles; “in one |{Ai (m the destiny of the fatherland, we. tavostl ‘Tho epcclfied welett tncbedes the container M @1 ing vessels Jaden with coal im the inet galling egal The people co bour the Bri exhausted th ‘ae erficle will tell of vlo~ fot eat ol destroy. 7 trenches that hada't cleared. - A oor. ing coal carriers the Russian Gee per-| A newspaper man witnessed this A change the family nesdeif, y bas made it pecessary to shut down | formed, winning & 4 a ee. oe one | many Turkleh factoriae, and the Fall: |eort of ighih wonder, of Ree ie Mota ‘the, publi through Nw] So to World ads. I turned, ways and muni coal. | Yet this was true. Gen. Bon: reason why the British had failed | “In ‘And of a fine Apartment ‘Travellers arriving at the Russian | of tile: dal aah pine £0 EW> Avenue. frontier aay. ‘mer be " Pole ia the first time to my knowl- the ‘be tah” Libera jt Cantey stad 4 7 1 very quickly learned. Eaprese | SBUt down the Constantinople water | edge that A. great army. the formation of a Coalition Miniatry, - Oh G i works. and fighti sheared Lord Kitohener’s wings ) on It met all > Sight days in succeed! Croated the new Department of Mu- \ our requirements h STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY, | furnish ine eer arene pnatal [piugas with Lioyd George at ite atner, I ait ( bey And suited to a “T.” ; Pe a ee le the Wreech aay Lele uswepavere tastensd tel seins Te om 8 Wat's J yeas one bed 4 ved. EA? f home homefihe : was able to do. Through this viotory ity on Kitchener, “While ele ‘AMERICA'S Stroll home some day with me, \#% ; a New France was born. The Great jue credit for his magnifi-| WILLWMSTAD, Curaces, July 27.— bs bd 1 o.% ork in raising, organising and |e American schooner Sallie C, Marvil G st \ : ] 321 WORLD “TO LET” ADs. Danished. The people were given |training the lergest volunteer army |" een freee ee REATE: 9 LAST SUNDAY~ 2 confidence in the army, the army in| the world has ever seen, they hr Bape samy on Oe iteelf, him with neglecting the one thing Dutch West Indian taland on the \ CIGARETTE MORE THAN pleaicy tipon which “any posable hope. of t. The captain. and crew 723 THE (To-morrow's =rticle wilt tel! about | British success on land could be itirivea “h = SUNDAY HERALD! hol the gate to the sea) Dased—0n entgnete eupply of high condi ng foi ‘ ” 4 pl mevthe Acadaooety ; {om > bya oe Waihoa Bta as t's i. World ‘To Let’’ Ads. Lead Because They Are Best Read ! HAE) 2, —* eralladhl Pg tC load Mek Soaalalinttaaboiatel sid wish Phe TI TOMI Te SRS MEN Te NCEE Bw pi nD RE i

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