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Advance. ———- »«For, Three Days and Nights | Austrians Withstand Terrible Big-Gun Fire. BERLIN, July 27.—Tho battle be- , tween the Italians and Austrians , along the Isonzo River ts describod by the correspondent in the Tyrol of the Lokal Angeliger as the “mightiest and most frightful of the world war.” lasted The great struggio has week, the correspondent s: any decision having been ‘Ths principal Italian onslaught has , been directed against the ple “The conflict, which 1s being directed from captive balloons, lasted days without any intetruption after only a few hours’ pause was resumed. The Austrian army, which eis composed of soldiers of nearly all the «nationalities In the Dual archy..endure the terrible fire bravely, » and when the Italians gain a position | correspondent adds: they are soon thrown out of it. “Italian aviators aro continually seeking to destroy the railways at the ~ rear of the Austrian lines, espectally around Nabresina, but thus far they » have done no great damage.’ GENEVA, July 27.—-The Tribune prints the following regarding opera- tions in the Italian war theatre: “The Austrians fight with utter con- tempt for death and the losses on both sides are frightful, but those of the Austrians appear heavier, Italian artillery mowing them down tn “On the Careo plateau the Italians are advancing in the direction of Goriszia. “On Mont * carried several of the énemy's po: "Yoh. “at Podgora the Italians repulsed all Austrian attacks, notwithstanding the extreme violence with which they were delivered.” ———— POLICEMAN FINDS MAN IN BED WITH REVOLVER Shooting in Brooklyn Followed by Arrest of Young Italian Accusec. Policeman George Hagerty of the ation, Brooklyn, at «0 o'clock last night, heard two shots saw @ man turn from Cole Street into Columbia Street on the run and «lip into the hallway of No, 366 Columbia Btreet. He decided to explore house, as there have been fifteen mur- ders in that neighborhood in the last Hamilton Avenue year and nobody caught. Hagerty found in bed, apparently asleep, Orizio Ghiuria, who lay there fully dressed, it is charged, with a .32- calibre revolver, from which two cham- bers had been emptied, in his pocket. Hagerty took Ghiuria to the Lon Island College Hospital, where Salva- tore Trapalina identified him as having shot him in Cole Street. Dr, Laub said ‘Trapalina would probably die. Trapalina, nineteen, lives at No, 314 Van Brunt Street. Ghiui @ love affair. turned .to the inclosure, wered the negro, who declared that he would “get the nurs A little later Hicks sprang at Muhl- er, selzed him by the throat and in bauer aggie which followed was get- the etru, ting the better of him when cry for help attracted the attention of | one of the guards, Frank Judson of New York. bullet through his heart The Brooklyn police “ were asked to ai of $3,000 worth lost or stolen by Mri of the Hotel St. Georg: Detectiv eithopping tour. _ CALLED MIGHTIEST ~ INGE WAR BEGAN “Correspondent Tells of Fright- . fal Losses as Italian Troops _ ARTILLERY DUEL FIERCE. u, Where the artillery fire ox- ceeds in intensity that of the battles at Tarnow and Gorlice, in Galicia. Tho published by lives at Sullivan and Conover Streets, ‘The cause of the shooting was not dis- closed, but the police think it was over —<»—_——_. SMALLPOX PATIENT IS KILLED BY HIS GUARD MIDDLETOWN, N. Y., July 27.— William Hicks, negro prisoner, who | developed smallpox in Goshen Jail two weeks ago and was removed to an isolation camp at Orange Farm, a short distance from the county alms- house, was shot and killed last e ning while attacking his nurse, Theo- dore Muhibauer of New York. Hicks, who was known as “'Snow- ball,” escaped from the camp this afternoon, but was caught and re- know and whe ani iy shoul: @ Judson fired on the negro, putting a ‘Her $8,000 tn Jewels Gone. will easily be it in the recovery tf jewelry A. T. Richards According to Capt. Coughlin, head of the Sixth if Br nch, the property had Sicha" or was taken from Mra, | in the te ndbag while she was on ’ ” WASH THE Gagys MOUTH s’ ovr with ¢ COTTON Charles G. Kerley, Who Has Devoted His Life to the Study cf Children’s Diseases, Tells ‘What Mothers Should Know,” and Gives Advice Based on Common Perils That Beset Babies in the Summer Months. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Do not kiss the baby or allow your friends to do so. Do not fail to secure the best milk you can afford to buy Do not allow flies to reat on feeding bottle or nipple. Do not fail to wash the hande before preparing the| food. nipple. or off the ice. pared, for BIES, BABIES, EVERYWHERE meh THIS DOCTOR'S HOUSE. It's almost impossible for anybody except a baby or a baby's mother to see Dr. Kerley in his home, at No. 132 West Eighty-first Street. long hall is lined with pletur happy-looking cured youngsters; the consulting room, | hall, is filled with other youngsters in the process of being cured, Yet when tho tall, keen-eyed man/ with the quiet voice and the fine fore- head had a word for me it was this: “Hundreds of babies are dying un- necessarily in New York, dying be-| cause their mothers do not know or observe the simple laws of baby hy-} ot at the end of the mothers who don’t » want to know that \ Ds. Kerley’s clear, concise and prac- tical book was written, “The bab s actual require- he continued, breast or bot- once daily, nde regularity in foed- nde, rape bath di fresh air, able cloth- id become all things {Mo gain, but make up for tt In the utumn,.” ROMISCUOUS Do not neglect to cleanse properly the bottle and| (hy ot Do not allow the milk bottle to remain wnoovered | Do not fail to keep the food on tce after it ts pre- Baby's hand econ finds ite way te Dé not feed the baby at irregular intervals. Do not fail to protect the baby from fli mosquitoes by switadle mosquito netting. Do not give the baby a pactfer. Do not neglect the daily care of the mouth Do not excite the baby during or immediately after feeding Do not raise the baby without supporting the head. Do not neglect to powder all folds of the skin. Do not neglect to keep the icedor clean and filled with ice. There's a neat list of don’ every baby's motier to cut out and the crib this summe! They aro supplivd to her, with all the explanations for them and much | other useful information, in “What Every Mother Should Know,” a lit: erally life-saving Httle book written by Dr. Charles Gilmore Kerley and Paul B. Hoeber, Dr. Kerley is one of the most eminent authorities on the diseases of children to be found in this country. At pres- ent holding the professional chair in this subject at the New York Poly- clinic Medical School and Hospital, he has visited, as attending or con: sulting physician, nearly every insti- tution in Greater New York where children are received during his quar- ter century in the medical proftes- readily acquired by infants and young children,” concluded Dr. Kerley. “Good habits consist in the child taking his food at regular intervals, in sleeping at the appointed time: in resting quietly and amusing him- self when awake. Bad habits consist in demanding food betwe: lar feeding hours, in ale: cornera are best at indefinite times, in requiring con- They should be oe a a stiff bottle brush, borax water, two teas borax to the placing the teeth, deforming the Jaw and face. The prompt correction all bad habits ts very important." cold water and kept there “Only a nipple that may be easily) turned should be used. After using, scrubbed with a stiff brush and borax water, two teaspoonfuls of borax to the pint of water. The nipples should be boiled for a few minutes once a ay. “With bottles and utensils previ- ously cleaned, the next step is for! the mother to wash her hands with) The next duty is to the fleld of They should never be al- lowed to rest on any feeding utensil. With hands clean and ute! bottles clean, the milk, wateh, sugar and lime water or barley water are mixed according to instructions which the mother may have received from the physician or nurse. “During the hot months it is usually advisable to heat the using. Bringing it to the boiling point and maintaining it at this tempera- ture for five minutes is all that is is sufficient to kill bacteria or whatever germ life may be present; at the same time the milk is less lable to sour in the event of the ice becoming scanty.” THINGS FOR MOTHERS TO RE- MEMBER IN HOT WEATHER, se are some other weather hints offered by Dr. Ker- Touchard Enters Plea, and Many soap and water. drive away files from milk before The; the plea, told Judge Rosalsky that the young man had been led into dis- honesty by the debts incurred during | with hand grenades, the illness of his wife, who died a) year ago. There were twenty persons | present to ask for leniency on account of his previous good reputation, Judge Rosalsky said he was much | ease. impressed by their pleas and allowed Touchard to go on his former bail of | Jey? “Infants are very likely to be overciad, particularly during the When the weath is very hot, two or three spong- ings @ day will help the baby to bear the heated term. hot weather, Howard Carroll of to-day found the bo son, Ira, hanging from a swing in th yard. The child's neck had been counte: caught in a noose formed by the rope and he had strangled to death. i runs from the faucet. Five min- utes is sufficiently long for the Prickly heat will bly relieved by adding poonful of bicarbona' da to @ quart of water sponging the entire body . Kerley spoke of the im- portance of fresh air for the baby, and described the “indoor airing” for a stormy day, when baby in his coat, “You agree with most physicians, that he baby whenever it 1s po! the mother shoul ible BOTTLE-FED BABIES SUSCEPT- IBLE TO INTESTINAL TROUBLES. |{y three months ld he requires trom “Babies at the breast very seldom twenty to suffer from summer diarrhoea. to four thousand infants under year of age die in Greater New ¥ to be nursed. |. “ie cow's milk supplies a | means of feeding by the use of which | we are best able to imitate the milk ade A-raw (certi- | afternoon answers, infant feeding, As eenth d the milk should be/ one nap dally at midda; “It la a part of baby’s business to ain in weight, and this is care of the bottles. bonnet and carriage rost In a room with all the windows “How much sleep should he have?” “A great deal is required by young |babies,” he replied, “Until the child twenty-two hours’ From the sixth to the twelft! one|month the child should sleep trom | ork|6 P, M. to 6 A. M. without interrup- from intestinal diseases every yeur,|tion other than for feeding or nurs- se are nearly all bottle fed. ‘Three | daily. It|ing at 10 P, M. At the sixth month n how important it/there should be 4 two-hour nap in morning and one-hour nap in year of age one and one-half hour nap in one-hour nap in Krom the eight- twenty-fourth morning and box on the jee, not |in the compartment below, where bles and meat arc kept, “Too much care cannot be ex- 01 ing that all well bables eventually t do, A definite weekly gain, THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1915. Hung On Crib and Heeded, They May Save Infant Lives Baayr c—_I ANO * Dow over Dress ‘The Bay IN WARM WEATHER Your WANDS BEFORE PREPARING NIPPLES some time before it can be discussed fully In the other governmental de- |partments. But in all probability we MNS spd tat GERMANY FIRM, ‘Man Thought Murdered Is Alive; BUT DOESNT WANT ABREAK WITH. Under Secretary Zimmerman! Says the Empire Will Do Nothing to Cause It. By Carl W. Ackerman. (Copyright, 1916, by the Cnited Prom.) (Copyright to Great Britais.) BERLIN (via The Hague), July 27.— | "Germany, in her repiy to tho Amert- can note, must stand firm!" Under Secretary for Foreign Af-| fairs Zimmerman to-day read me that excerpt from a letter, one of the many be and other officials have re-| cetved from German citizens, indicat- |ing that the people will not sanction | the giving up of Germany's subma- rine warfare. “Firmness and cour- tesy are needed,” the letter continued. | “Exactly,” said Under Secretary Zimmerman, tapping the desk before | him to emphasize his remark. | | "Do the future relations between | Germany and America look as dark! ‘as some declare?” he was asked. | | “No,” was the quick response. “In jthis day and age it !s possible for two |areat nations to differ without com- ling to a break. Germany will never |do anything to bring that about, You can assure the American people of that.” | “Is an adjustment of the German. | American controversy still possible?” I asked. “We hope s0(" responded the Under Secretary. “We tried our best in our Jast note, but your Government did not accept our proposals, What we shall do next is, of course, undecided, | We have not yet discusse.: the note here in the Foreign Office. It will be shall answer in the manner the NG AND) GOOD AND BAD HABITS. | writer of this letter calls for when he “Why that taboo on kissing? jays: ‘Bo firm! We can never give up submarine warfare. The people “Never kiss a baby on his mouth or allow your friends to it, Kiesing the taby on the hands is almost as bad, for the baby’s hand soon finds its way to cold, grip, diphtheria, tubercu- losis and other diseases very serious in nature ma s- would never santtion that.’ Under Secretary Zimmerman asked if public opinion in the United States ‘ would sanction the last American ——— note, 1 answered that I believed It would, “Well, you can ase that the pople mitted to'a child through kissing. |Prench Retaliate With ATtil-| nore will back us up," he remarked. “Good and bad habits are very the regu- Urge Clemency for Famous | Indoor Tennis Player, H George Gordon Battle, who entered | (Spee LANCASTER, uly y of her little} ks on Westende and Middlekirk. PARIS, July ing poorly jin several weeks, ¢ -For the firet time coast were reported do- | spatches to-day The Germans shelled ne dropped five bombs on Dunkir ing no damage, In retaliation French heavy Westende and 4 the Germans, Gustav Fitzhugh Touchard, na- considerable e tlonal indoor tennis champion, | pleaded guilty to-day before Judge) Rosalsky in General Sessions to the} theft of $144 worth of golf balls from | bis employers, Abercrombie & Fitch, | sporting goods dealers at No, 63 West Thirty-sixth Street. i con- run into tinues: “In the Artois district, on Township! the stone quarries, ks but without success How soon Germany will send her reply cannot at present be deter- mined, Under Secretary Zimmerman said. “There {e no hurry,” he added. “Your President undoubtedly is the figure of great importance in Amer- tillery duels along | ica, but we In Germany have faced atant attention when awake, Suck-|the sand dunes of the Belgian sea-|sreater problems than this, A nation ing the thumb and finger and the use of a pacifier are bad habits, di: at war has its daily crisis.” Despite the warning contained in the latest Ameriean note, officials Nid ities Pitan i irnes, be-| here still declare it unwise for Ameri- . ind the French lines with thelr! cany to travel In ships of belligerent | for the murder of Frank Klug, Oost-Dunkirk, a famous seaside re- . ee from Nieuport, 3 GUILTY OF THEFTS! cuts wm, a ora WRECKERS CAUSE CRASH = fi swe OF NEW YORK TRAIN for baa shih Cars Filled With Passengers Hurled bombarded py! Against Freight When Switch eral hours witht | = Misplac: The German ar- Te Miplacod, tillery replied and throughout yester-| WORCESTER, Maas, July 27,—A|be a quick trial, by which Georgie day and last night the roar of big | switch evidently misplaced by wreck- \guns was heard all @long the sea- ers caused a passenger train bound coast. points to New York to of freight cars on a Fireman nm, who was from M aiding here Arlo Meigs of New Hi Particularly slightly hurt, was the only person to the sector of Souchez, last night saw gustain any injury. Three freight artillery exchanges and engagements cars were destroyed by the crash and @ fire that followed. The train arrived over the Boston Argonne two German ef-' and Maine Railroad and had just forts to attack near Layon and Binar- atarted south over the New York, New ville-la-Harazee were h Haven and Hartford tracks when the accident occurred, After a slight de- |lay the train proceeded, The engineer n the Vosges we succeeded yes-| asserted that the switch was found $2,000 pending his sentence next week, | terday evening in extending and con-| to be locked open, indicating an at- a solidating our positions on the crest ‘of the Lingekopf, and in occupying a ssses* WHY HE RESIGNED PULPIT © yesterday bombarded Mount Schlucht.” News Oddities tempt to wreck the train, ie Hackensack Preacher Posi- tively Affirms Innocence of His Wife’s Charges. | Having aned the pastorate of Christ Episcopal Church, Hackensack, last week, owing to his wife's intention GUN CLUBS, popular on British ships, fire at towed sticks for peri-|to sue him for divorce, basing the ac- scopes and kites for usroplanes. |tion on a letter alleged to be his, recall- | ing a “good time” he had recently with @ youne woman in South WITH SAIL SET AND NOT A SOUL ABOARD, the sloop May tacked Conn. the Rey, A. Peter Tulp expla! hi aimlessly around the Erie Basin until captured by w tug his course in a letter whic men have just received, he resigned In order to MACHINE TO INCREASE THE SOUND OF A KISS has been in- | #8, & Private citizen rithe: vented by a Pennsylvania man with three kissable daughters, but he says ow he hag the evidence what he needs ia a machine telling hi Mrs, Tulp has not named the young Pyetenrery enim what to he int, Out of consid HIS DAY OF REST.--On bis day off William Anderson, | blundered into stable, was bit clothes at Hackensack was gasvline by applying a match. hospital. the P| ITALIANS could have better control of thely aeroplanes, American | iy ‘they didn, Wk eo mob WEb thelr banda, MELROSE NOON Ht SP TER A LO NL NON NONLIN ROR B NS LE IETS OE TT by watchdog, kicked by Juhnny is in | Bate uncenecious Salurday. than as Priest, and positively>afMrms his inn tence of his wife's charges, woman in her compl jon for the young woman's moth or She ls willing to make a charge against © Angeles, |Jane Doe If the Chancellor will permit mall do so, Tuip ts on a vacation In 'S, aa- Onteora Park in the Catskill saulted by twelve Chinamen, who thought him a thief; fell fy A seven. | Tuip said to-day she would foot fence trying to escape, and was arrested as a plain drunk ip rislestiion Grocintiatey sake Set he T ¢ three children, TOOK A POSTCARD THIRTY-FOUR YEARS to go from New Hamp- ¥. ¥,, to Clifton, N, J., notifying man of a shipment of lumbe: e m Imprevi ton, N.Y, to 0 ntifying pment of lumber. Pike wk Ri pore ak NO / Rages County, who has been In the clubhouse PLAYMATES proved that what Johnny De Vincentes had on his }at the Belmont track wi FRANK et “MURDERED” MAN ‘EASTLAND VICTIMS, APPEARS: “SLAYER” IF WARNED, MIGHT ISIN STATE PRISON) HAVE SAVED LIVES Return of Supposed » Victim After Year Will Not Save Convict, However, ‘d'm glad to be alive, I waa the moat surprised man on earth when my friends told me they had sent up a man for murdering me.”—Fraak Klug, who reappeared one year after his supposed murder. “I ought to oo free, I did not kill the man they found, I did not know Klug. I want a chance for freedom.” ick Georgic, who is serving twenty-five year term in State pris- Special to The Kvening World.) MILWAUKER, Wis, July 2%— Frank Klug, for whose murder Nick Georgic was sent to the State prison for twenty-five years, has returned to Milwaukee alive, ignorant of the fact that he was supposed to have been slain. Georgic is still in prison, wondering what will happen to him next, now that his supposed victim is alive. The probability is that there will will be set free on the original charge, rearrested for the murder of John Doe, and then be asked to plead guilty and take a shorter sentence than he received for the murder of Klug. It is necessary, in the administra- tion of justice, even with all the for- malities and red tape thereto at- tached, that Georgic be formally don the charge of murdering Otherwise he could, upon the expiration of his twenty-five year sentence, be rearrested for the mur- der of John Doe and made to serve another term. The strange phase of the affair is the manner in which the Identification of the body of the man who was mur- dered was refused by Mrs, Klug. She sald the man for whose murder Geor- ico was tried was not her husband. he said that she would continue to pey Klug’s insurance premium and re~ fuped to file proof of death under the terms of the policy. ‘The friends of Klug, however, and his own mother identified the body of the murderer's vietim as that of Klug Upon this testimony the original ‘arge of the murder of John Doe was changed, the name of Klug being | substituted, ‘Now the State plans to have Georgic released on the old charge, rearrested and retried on the charge of murdering John Doe. “That's the only way out of the muddle,” declared District Attorney W. C. Zabel. “We can’t let the man the death of the man who was slain. try to get a lower sentence for him the next time,” “Il was just wandering around the countr’ Klug, “and had no idea 1 was supposed to be dead, I thought the family would know I had run away from my family becauge I could not support them and could not stand it to remain and gee them atary I waa in St. Paul, Cincinnati, 6t, Louis, Nanapolis, and worked a short time Tae een place before I moved on, I did not want the police to find me, so I kept moving. Had I known that there had been a man senteneed for | killing me I would have come home.” “L want to be fre J killed no one.” the plea ‘of Georgio, “I never did anything i shall not plead guilty and get sent back to thie stone prison. “Can't they see t he hand of God to prove peetle cat No, I'll never plead pulley His ‘‘Murderer’”’ in State F Ten Minutes Between Says Coroner’s Witness, While divers were still to-day in the hulk of the Eastland eight different tions were under way, the Federal | quiry being under the personal tion of William C. Redfield, tary of Commerce, who arrived last night. The total number and the number of bodies still hull and river are matters of lation, The estimates of the in the great disaster run from Robert Moore, a salesman who been among those on the was the first witness when quest begun to-day by Coroner Deacribing what be saw, “As I went on board I saw quantity of water rushing out of « pipe on the side of the boat. sign of listing t saw at about T was on a rail on the and the refrigerator in the bar ‘There was eight or ten interval between the time the » began listing badly and the time! finally overturned. “There was ample time I have emptied the boat had the ing been given, ‘There was no When the boat went over I thrown into the water and cued with a number of others,’ The witness said that all the were crowded, particularly the deck, and he de there no rush across the deck before boat overturned “There wis no excitement,” witness, “until the list became Secretary Redfield in a issued to-day not only den! steamboat inspectors were t the instance of steamboat as had been charged, but that any one had ever bi attention the condition arrival in_ Chiet morning I met D, N. Hoovws uty Supervising Inspector Ge the Steamboat Inspection Serviee, i Charles H. Weateott, the | pervising Inspector of the Eighth Digs |”) pi Both have been notified pear before the State Grand Jury, instructed them to say to that Jury and to any other proper! stituted authority taht the ment of Commerce and the SI Inspection Service have fear or to conceal; that it dent light thrown y detail of its work and Such an inquiry cannot sharp and keen to please the boat Inspection Service and the serve time for the murder of a man who is not dead, und we must avenge If Georgic will plead guilty, we will Soft ‘ Be LS % Secretary Redfield in his statement rr ap-