The evening world. Newspaper, November 16, 1915, Page 2

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‘ammunition tower and were forcibly prevented from doing so by the Greeks. (dater the French authorities apotosized, “pretending” the affair was a mistake. VIENNA (via Berlin and Sayville wireless), Nov. 16—Having driven the ‘ ins across the River Lim, the Austrians have gained the heights southwest of the stream and are press- ing thelr advantage, necording to an ,oMetal statement this afternoon. Lim, at the point evidently re- to, flows through Austrian ter- ten miles north of the Montenegrin border. “herrea snitory dom as Against Allies. BERLIN, Nov. 16 (by wireless to _ Sayville).—"“According to a statement attributed to Premier Bratiano of Roumania,” says the Overseas News ni iticlans promised the Entente Pow- ers that oumania would aide with them in the war and that the Go ment of Roumania would ultimately demand less of them than was being vemanded at the time. “M. Bratiano, in the quoted inter- view, stigmatized the members of this group as venturers without con- science,’ He announced that he pos- sessed documents showing their ‘trea- son to Roumania.” “a Roumanian newspaper adds that | ‘Take Jonescu, former Roumanian Min- ister of the Interior, was one of the political group in question.” Conserip= LONDON, Nov. 16.—Premier Asquith fa still hopeful that the Ne cotter g A dea recruiting in the United King- Som al ooecoed, The Premier ph ster= f that AMERICAN PHYSICIAN A RUSSIAN GENERAL Or. Newton of Washington ed Surgeon of the * "Sixth Army Corps. PETROGRAD (via London), Nov. 16.—Dr. Philip Newton of Washington, who to Russia in cha: of a Red Cross unit, has been appointed oer the Russian Sixth Army the rank of General. > ‘BERMAN STEAMER SUNK; GREW PROBABLY LOST Empty Lifeboat of Hermania Found von Swédish Coast After Attack by British Submarine. ' COPENHAGEN, Nov. 16.—It 1s be- Maved here that the German steamer Hermania has been destroyed by a ewctarten See a r. em) rom has dd the SNA ad Lulea River, Nort Hermania is not stticiahy WINER GRETIC SAFE WL PORT AT NAPLES MAPLES (via Paris), Név. 16—Tho steamship Cretic from New York and Boston hab arrived here safely. There J magelmnery Reggio) anf on board after they of the sinking of the took all autior Captain po ey 5 oon oapmerines by storm raged le she crossing the Mediterranean. Cretic met no warships and the steamer sighted was the Verona, ship of the Ancona, coming GIT OUT MEATS IF KONEYS ARE ~TROUBLNG YOU Uric Acid at in meat excites and Irritates Bladder. Noted Authority says we must flush Kidneys with Salts if Back hurts. are of meat eaters and is with uric acid, says a » who wants us to ibe constantly on guard against kidney become from the overwork; th ~~ the eliminative tiasuce clog ent jatel ny I ll ad full of sediment, or der is irri- lessness, heumatis ‘had weather, gt from your tharmte four ounces of Jad Salt ; take a im a glass of water before i each morning and in a few famouse i tae from th te longer a source of irritation, thi coding Mt ‘and bladder disorders Salts and cannot a delight effervescent nobody can make small group of Roumanian | ‘ern. | Ca Semen . WAR'S END HANGS NOTE TO AUSTRIA BIG ITALIAN GUNS ON AMMUNITION, | TODEMAND SAFETY BATTER GORIZIA SAYS VON KLUGK) OF NEUTRAL LIVES, AUSTRIANS ADMIT “Will Last as Long as America Sends Supplies to Allies.” | WHY HIS DRIVE FAILED. | Hints It Was Because Russian | Offensive Called Off Troops Near Paris, By Carl W. Ackerman. BERLIN, Oct. 27 (United Press cor- respondence).—Another German éf- fensive on the western front, toward Paris, is not out of the question. A year ago Gen. von Kluck’s army was threatening the French capital. To-day this army is still the nearest to Paris, but the German offensive centres in the Balkans. Later it may be at the Suez Canal or in Egypt. By spring, perhaps, it will have returned to the well-ploughed battle line in France and Belgium. I talked with Gen, von Kluck to-day concerning the whole war situation. He was at his Wilmersdorf villa. His walk was firm, his thinking clear and spontaneous. From appearances he has recovered fully from the seven shrapnel wounds he received six months ago, “General,” T asked, “how long will the war last?” We were walking in his garden and he stopped to reply: ‘As long as England is able to fight and as long as America sends ammu- nition the war will continue, The un- successful French and English offen- sive this month was a question of ammunition. This war has developed into an ammunition contest. It is the world’s markets against the Central Powers.” ‘Can the western line be broken?" ‘You see in the papers every da: aid the General, “that the allies are trying to break our lines, but they don't succeed, During their first October offensive they lost 180,000 men, ‘We lost about a fifth as many. Do you think any army can afford such losses to win a mile of land?” The General's five-year-old grand- daughter accompanied us on our walk. She clutched her grandfather's hand and frequently interrupted the con- Versation with remarks concerning the General's pot black dog, Teddy, “That is our popular name for one of our ex-Presidents,” 1 remarked as I heard the chief say it. said the “I thought he was a great man, He was a good President, wasn't he? But to-day I can't under- stand why he takes such a deter- mined stand against Germany. Surely no other American President or statesman ever tried so hard to make his country go to war. “Tam glad he has not succeeded. I have many very good friends in America~many I do not know, At the beginning of the war I received hundreds of letters from America. And still they come, I know person- ally a few of your army officers, They are fine men, This week I had a | ter from one of them asking me for a photograph and a statement for some army publication. I sent both and hope they reach him.” Here we were interrupted by an orderly, who, saluting, said the little girl was wanted in the house, “Goodby, my darling,” said General, adding to me: “She is the daughter of my son who was killed in France Jan, 28, “Does the Serbian campaign bring the war any nearer to an end?” J asked presently, “The war's duration depends on how long the English are able to fight and on American ammunition,” repeated the General, “There is no doubt that American ammunition is prolonging it. And now the allies are raising an enormous loan in the United States, 1 see no end to the Aghthi yet “Shall you return to the front,” 1 inquired. “That depends on said the General, But it is my impression that it de- ends on whether or not the G ‘taft deoides on another dri Paris, “Why,” I asked, “did the Germans fail to capture Paris?” “The French maintain,” said von Klueck, “that it was Joffre's strategy. When the war is over we can discuss that, but not during the war.” “One of Marshal von Hindenberg’s officers told me,” I remarked, “that it was because the Russian invasion of East Prussia called so many men from the west.” ‘The General's reply I am not per- mitted to give, but I left with the idea that this, in his opinion, was the correct explanation. Gen. von Kluck does not look his sixty-nine years and reminds one of Gen, Wood. He fought in 1866 against Austria and in the Franco-Prussian ‘War was twice wounded, FROM TORPEDOED SHIP. jain and 25 of Wacousta La CANBA, Crete (via Paris), Nov, 16,— Two hats from the Norwegian steamer Wacousta, which was sunk by a sub- marine, have arrived at Suda Bay, on the weatern coast of Crete, with Capt. ‘Tsensen and twenty-five sullors, the His Majesty,” A, despatch from London on Sunday said the Wacousta, & vessel of 1,988 a little occasionally clean and active —~ tons, had been sunk while on the way from Novy Scotia for Vludivagtol, ‘and that ber'trew bad been saved, Entire Question of Submarine Warfare Will Be Brought to a Head in Message. WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—-Al- though the State Department has be- fore it two widely conflicting reports on the shelling and sinking of the Italian liner Ancona by an Austrian submarine, it is believed in official circles here that the entire question of submarine warfare and the obli- fations of a submarine commander to see that neutrals are in a place of safety before destroying a prize, will be the subject of an urgent note from the State Department to the Austrian Foreign Office, Count Macohi di Cellere, Italian Ambassador, has handed Secretary Lansing an official statement from Rome, denouncing the sinking as an “unparalleled atrocity,” and declaring the submarine fired without giving any warning whatever. It adds that the liner was shelled and passengers killed after the vessel had stopped. The Austrian official report, though not yet officially delivered to thi State Department, affirms that the Ancona sought to escape and halted only when ropeated shots had been fired. It also asserts that the pas- sengers and crew were given fifty minutes to take to the boats and that loss of life was due to a panic among the crew, a ee GERMAN CENSORSHIP IS PARTLY LIFTED . Order Given for Publication in Full of Reports Made By Allies, WASHINGTON, Nov. 16—Count von Bernstorff announced to-day that he had been informed that German censors had been instructed to insist upon the publication in full in Ger- many of War reports issued by tho allies, An announcement at tho Em- bassy quoting the instructions of the German Chief Bureau Of Censorship said: “Cases have occurred where such news—unfavorable to us—is eliminat- ed from the reports at the ler of the censors, The latter procedure does not correspond with the opinion held by the army headquarters that t! abridged quotation of the enemies’ re- ports is required i times, excep- tions only to be made with papers in case of which financial reasons or technical difficulties in printing de- mand consideration, “We have the less reason to fear the unabridged publication of reports | circulated by our enemies as our own war reports are strictly according to the truth, giving everybody the op- portunity of forming @ correct con- ception of the situation. ‘The fear that the official reports published by the enemy might someuimes cause un- easiness counterbalanced by the consideration that facts can neve: be concealed for a length of time and that lies are always recognized as such in the end.” JAPANESE SHIP TAKEN BY A FRENCH WARSHIP Believed to Have Been Carrying Arms to Mutineers in India. PEKING, China, Nov. 16. — The French Minister, A. R. Conty, was advised to-day that the Japanese steamship Iro had been taken Into Saigon Bay, French Cochin China, by a French cruiser on suspicion of be- ing engaged in carrying arms to mutineers in India. On board the Iro was # man with- out a passport, who represented him- self as an American, Later he ad- mitted he was a German, He is be- lieved to be a former German Consul in China, The Iro left Shanghai on Nov. 2, ostensibly for Bombay, to be sold by her Japanese owners, When the French cruiser approached the Iro packing cases were thrown overboard, An frregularity in the Iro’s papers was discovered and also a shortage in her cargo. SHAH IS IN FLIGHT FROM PERSIAN CAPITAL Members of the Cabinet Accompany Him—Cossacks in Control at Teheran, PETROGRAD, Nov. 16.—Fearful that plotting and counter piotting by the Germanic and entente allies will end in bloodshed in Teheran, the Shan has left the Persian capital with his Ministers. A Teheran despatch received to-day says the Persian ruler’s departure, virtually a flight, ocourred Monday. It t9 mot stated what city was his destination, but it was understood several days ago that he would seek refuge in Ispahan, Cossacks are in control in Teheran. The Germans and Turks were preparing to flee, Russian and British diplomats in Persia, it is expected, will practically take over the Persian Government, it they did not do so simultaneously with the Shah's departure, i | Many Persons Reported Killed, 300 Houses and ,Numer- ous Churches Damaged. | | VIENNA (via Berlin and Sayville wireless), Nov. 16.—Gorizia suffered heavily by the Italian bombardment, The War Office admitted as much to-day, | Fifty-eight wounded soldiers and | fty non-combatants were killed in the town Monday and 300 houses were | maged. | | Shells struck the tomb of Count de |Chambord, the French Legitimist | Prince, sometimes styled “King Henry | who died in exile in Austria | The sacristy of the Goriia Cathedral | %as demolished. The Churchof Monte | |Santo was burned to the ground, as | Was one-half of the convent of the | Ursuline nuns. | | Various other churches were dam- | 4ged or destroyed and many art Pictures in the treasures were lost. Franciscan Church of Castignavizza were riddled with shrapnel shot. Two bombs fell among groups of children, jcausing the death of eight of them: After heavy artillery ¢ 9% the Italians broke through t Aus- trian line on the north slope of San Michele the same da: but wi speedily ejected, Fighting continues on the Dobardo Plateau. but on the Isonfo front Italian attacks are slackening, apparently owing to bad weather, LOYALTY TO HUSBAND STRONG IN THIS WIFE EVEN IN LAW SUIT Mrs. Hershel Refuses to Let Questions Be “Asked That Might Have Unkind Answers, Although George Gershel, a wealthy cloak and suit manufacturer of Fifth Avenue, put witch hazel in his wife's | food and in the milk she drank and struck her and told her she was hand- some enough to attract the attention of any man, she still loves him. So Mre. Anna Elizabeth Gershel told a jury in Justice Ford's part of the Supreme Court, where her suit for $10,000 damages against her brother- in-law, Benjamin Gershel, went to trial to-day, The brother-in-law, she | alleges, struck ber while visiting her jin her home. | Throughout a grilling cross-exami- nation by Attorney David C, Myers, counsel for the defendant, Mrs. Ger |shel insisted that her love for her | husband was still as strong as ever. At one stage of the proceedings she refused to testify further, declaring that she would not blacken her hus- band’s character, although she is su- ing him for @ separation, “And your husband put witch hazel in your milk and struck you, called you bad names, and told you to go out on the street, is that right?" asked Mr. Myers, “Yes,” replied the witness in tears. “And you still love a man who has done all that?” “I certainly do,” she replied. “We wives say and do a good many things we don't mean. We marry men for better or for worse and we get the latter, but still most of us love our husbands.” Mr, Meyers produced a record of the United States District Court showing that Mrs Gershel had been convicted and sentenced to five years | for sending obscene letters to mem- | bers of her husband's family. | “Why did you send these letters?” asked Mr, Myers, “Because Mr, Gershel's family had begun to fight me and I just fought |them back,” the witness’ responded. “IT was convicted, yes, but they did | things to me worse than I had done to them. I used the only weapon at @ woman's command. CHURCHILL LEAVES FOR FRONT TO-MORROW | | Soon to High Position in Cabinet, LONDON, Nov. | Churchill ts completing preparations for crossing the Channel to-morrow om his way to the British fighting front. Last week he was one of the | most bitterly criticised public men In | England, To-day he is perhaps the most popular, as a mere subordinate | officer in a line regiment, | | His speech in the House of Com-| | mons is generally accepted as a vin- dication of his record. He did no, wood to others in high government | positions, on whom he unloaded re- | sponsibility for mistakes, Baron | Fisher, whom he virtually accused of failing to co-operate with him loyally, | was perhaps the worst of the sul terers, | ‘The press generally predicts Churchill's return to a high Cabinet | post in the near future, London Expects He Will Return} ,, 16, — Winston |; | © of Columbus, Savann, THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1915. WIFE OF “OSCAR'S” SON WHO SEEKS FREEDOM ON CRUELTY CHARGES. 9999-99 9999OO04-0 08H O044H i » to. CRUEL, ASSERTS WIFE OF “OSCAR'S” SON IN SUING FOR DIVORCE: Young Mrs, Tschirky Leaves Her Husband on Eve of Her Sister’s Wedding. Seldom has as strange a situation confronted a family as that which Mr, and Mrs. Frederick Gerken of No, 62 West Seventy-fifth Street are facing to-day. On the eve of the marriage of their youngest daughter, Irene, to Joseph L, Egan, son of Dr. and Mrs, J. M. F. Egan of No. 46 West One Hundred and Twentieth Street, thelr oldest daughter, Mrs. Leopold Tschirky, who was Miss Florence Gerken, has closed her home at Bethlehem, P: brought suit for divorce against her husband and has come to live in the Gerken home. Mrs. Tschirky, who was scieduled to be the principal attendant at her sister's wedding, which takes place next Tuesday, charges ner busband with “cruel and inhuman treatment.” He is the son of “Oscar,” famous the country over as the chef of tne Wal- dort. Young Tschirky has been em- ployed in thé Bethlehem Steel Works, occupying a position obtained for him by B. H. Gary, Chairman of the Board of Directors of tho United States Steel Corporation. Although cruelty is charged by Mrs. Techirky, her father-in-law says the real trouble was that his young wife objected to living in Bethlehem, that she left there last July, taking the baby Oscar IL, with her, and then sent her husband a note saying she would not go back to him, “That is absolutely untrue,” said| Mr. Gerken to-day, when seen at hi home by a reporter for The Evening | World. “It is unjust to make any| such statement. My daughter is not that type of woman. She is of the type that would follow her husband | anywhere, provided his treatment of | her\was decent, But she believes he has swept aside all sense of duty.” “Does that mean another woman figures in the case?” Mr. Gerken wi asked, “I have nothing to say,” was the re- ply. “I am not going to make an at- tack upon this misled young man. It remains for him to be permitted to work out his own salvation without | molestation. My daughter will not return to live with him." “Then there is no chance of recon- cihation “Absolutely none.” pate ate SS ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. Continental Oil Co., quarterly dividend of $3, payable Dec. 14 to stock of record} Nov. 26, New York Transit @ share, pay ‘0., dividend of $4 » Jan, 15'to stock of rec- | ord Dec, 24 | Copper metal sold at 19 cents per pound for prompt deliver: Butte & Superior Coppore Co. report te juarter ended Sept, $0: earnings, 654,686, equal to $10 against $7.74 earned in the} pe previous quarter Erle Railroad 1s ness in its history. ceeded $6,500,000, ws the biggest busi-| October's gross ex- and at present the} company is doing’ business at the rate of $80,000,000 annually hlehem Steel Co.'s loss by fire of | machine shop 1s given as, 800 guns has been shop was used for | Atlantic Coast Line Rafiroad—Regular ‘annual dividend of 2% per cent, on stock payable Jan. 10 to stock 6.27 per cent. was earned ion for year ended June 80, r hg on com lar Refining Co.—Re; ds of er ce Republic Iron and Steel—Quarterly dividend of 1% per cent, on preferred stock and an extra 1 per cent, on u count of deferred dividends payable Jan 1 to stock of record Dec. 15. ———_—_— j NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE, Open, Low. Last Dee. 11.68 11.55 11.5: Ja 17: 11.7. March . . 11.96 11 May. e 12.11 12.1 July : 12:28 1215 126 Oct . 1 118 Lea 8a Market closed heavy, 8 to 18 points up. —— Stampalia, Naples Patria, Marseilles WILLIAMS UNDER FIRE FOR HIS DELAY IN GAS DECISION —_—~——- > Public Service Commissioner | Says He Has Finally Con- cluded Brooklyn Case. GAS BILLS THE SAME. Says They Do Not Vary No Matter What the Legal Rate May Be. Leaving the McCall stock holdings for the present, the Thompson Investi- gating Committee to-day began an aquiry into Commissioner Williams activities in the commission. Special effort was made to throw light on the causes that have held back for five years relief to gas consumers in the southern part of Brooklyn from exces- sive rates for gas. The Evening World has fought persistently to bring about an 80-cent gas rate for all of Greater New York, but the Kings County Lighting Company, serving certain sections of Brooklyn has enjoyed a special exemption that permited a charge of 95 cents per thousand cuble | feet. For five years the demands of the consumers have been before the Pub- lic Service Commission, but always the day of decision has been post- poned and the old excessive rate con- tinued in force. The case has been pending before Commissioner George V. 8. Williams, He was summoned as @ witness to-day and the probe of in- vestigation turned upon’ the record of proceedings. Williams mado this amasing state- ment as to gas rates: “My experience with gas is that the bills are pretty much the same no matter what the rate is.” The Witness said that he had at last come to a decision in this gas rate case and had written an opinion, but it was not yet ready to be made Public because the other commission- ers had not fully examined it. The case was on the commission calendar to-day for action, but went over be- cause of objection by Commissioner Cram, who said he had not had a chance to go over the case, I. WOULDN'T DISCLOSE WHAT HIS | cs: ‘ OPINION WAS, The committee asked him whether this case had not been started in 1910 and whether any opinion had been yet rendered. “Yes, sir,” answered Wiliams; “T have concluded the hearings and haye written out an opinion, which I have in my pocket.” Williams decined to state what 4s his decision, whether the price of gas q in Brooklyn will be reduced or main- tained at its present Tate. Without further questioning by the investiga tors, he volunteered a long explana- tion ow how he had come to write the opinion, although the case was not originally his. He said it had been taken over by him when Com- missioner Hayward, who had it in charge, requested some relief from |} the large number of cases on his oal- endar, Then Chairman McCaul had assigned the gas case to the witness, The committee to-day instructed its accountants, Perley Morse & Co., to follow the trail of the eighty-five additional shares of Kings County tric Light and Power Company stock owned by Chairman E, E. Mg- Call of the Public Service Commis- sion, as disclosed exclusively by The | I Evening World yesterday. Record of this stock was found in the books of E. E. Chapman & Co., T brokers, where McCall formerly car- Bs ried an account, and was transferred by them to Waterman, Anthony & Co., another firm of brokers now out of business, The eighty-five shares were an additional block to the 287 shares which McCall said he gave to his wife . Merton E. Lewis, Deputy Attorney General and counsel to the investigat- ing committee, will devote his atten- tion for the next few days to prepar- ing for the prosecution of the charges against McCall if the Chairman elects to stand trial before the Governor This is a new departure from the procedure when previous charges against McCall and his associates y “Don't judge Prein, jor by any other Yl Yy SALAD DRESSING Governor last sprini from the writteg teport of the in. vestigating committee and McCall had nothing to, do but make his reply. This time, however, the committee is determined to be represented by counsel at the hearings before the Governor and to press its case by cross-examination gnd argument. In- stead of perfunct hearings with nobody but the defendant having anything to the session in the executive chamber will be more like @ hard-fought case in court. The Thompson committee turned its attention at to-day’s session to Public Service Commissioner George V. 8. Williams and began its inves- tigation of his conduct in office in re- lation to delays in the long-pending rate cases of gas and electric rates in Brooklyn, Williams was put on the stand and questioned about the demand of residents of South Brook- lyn for reduction in prices charged by the Kings County Lighting Co. for gas to 80 cents, the same as the rest of the city. This case hasbeen drag- ging for five years, ’ neers WALL STREET There was more or less hesitation at the opening, but traders took the "buying side. Copper issues were strong and active. Guggenheim opened 5,500 shares from 76 to 76 1-2, compared with 743-4 at close on Mon- day, and never stopped until 79 3-8 was touched, O}l stocks responded to rise in the product and made rapid gains from one to two points, Utah Copper made a new high record when it crossed 77, Cuban-American Sugar advanced 14 points to 136. Crueible Steel and Allis-Chaimers were sold down, but rallied when market became dull on small reces- sion, Further advances occurred in early afternoon in the oll issues, and copper stocks trading slackened and prices held strong. Continued strength in copper stocks was the feature of the afternoon. American Locomotive spurted up to 71%, a rise of 4% points, Utah Cop- per sold at 79%, up 3's. Chino at 56%, up 14. Trading was active in the last hour up to the close. na. With net changes from previous closing, Last, is Sze eek 5. F. Am, Woollen’ ‘ in [+tteeget ti ttte 1! Haldiin ‘Leo, we TESEY SS react Fe. = tele eteee H+ Ey i’ Th or uo ob 18 iss rf Mw an” tity at toe iy ceo! AO Brewed’ Steelooss! fies gt Ray Con. Copper:: Sty Seg Ky Steet Spring..: 47% 455 ae Mg wig 17 108 10 02% 101% Mh Melis 105) US Be Be Sy” ty ima 8 TR hy a3 Sheriff LYNBROOK, L. 1, home of Benjamin Grifenhagen, of Sheriff Grifenbagen of New York County, was gutted by fire early to- day. Mr, Grifenhagen passed his wife and three children to safety from the roof of the front porch in their night clothing. son HOCOLATE COVE! rom the finest Dat Special for Tuesday BLOSSOMS—Dainty, nets wees, ne Hine of tich ‘Sue Cream: igieeady blended with various crush ut hard candy, FOUND. BARCLAY STHRET Cigna HAD oxen: Sa ch ans rank’ RO Closes TH p.m, ROOM EE ST EXTRA SPECIAL FOR ED BAIR DATES—The Ahatli gr a LINKS THE AUSTRIAN EMBASGY WITH STRKE INCLEVELAND FACTORY Dictograph Figures. in Story Told by City Officer, Bearing on Machinists Tie-Up. | CLEVELAND, 0., Nov, 16.—Louts Loeby, a native Hungarian, serving city immigration officer, to-day charged activity by the Austro-Hun- garian Embassy at Washington tn the strike of machinists at the Theo- dor Kundtz factory here. ‘The Kunatz plant has ben manufacturing bodies for automobiles to fill war orders for the entente allies and jas been tied up several weeks by a strike, Loebl’s charges came in connection with his defense before Mayor New- ton D, Baker of informal ¢harites that he had been unduly active ‘in bis connection with the strike, He told the Mayor that one of the chief advisors of the strikers, whom he was convinced was in the pay of the Austro-Hungarian Government, had offered, in his hearing, to “sell out” the strikers for $6,000. He.toK the Mayor he became suspicious that this advisor was disloyal to the Austro-Hungarian Embassy at Wash- ington and desired to “test him out” to see if he would sell out to the other side, ( Loeb! offered in proof of his charges 4 dictograph record taken by a pri- vate detective in an adjoining room in a local hotel when the $6,000 bribe was alleged to have been solicited’ on Oct, 31. A majority of the Kundtz strikers are Austro-Hungarians, Mayor Baler, when asked fora state- ment in the case, said that he was net yet ready to discuss the charges, HARVARD'S SECOND UNIT HEADS FOR WAR ZONE CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Nov. 16— ‘Thirty surgeons and thirty-six nurses, comprising the second Harvard unit, left here to-day for New York and wilt sail from there to-morrow on the steamship Noordam for hospital ser- vice in the war zone. “ind Dr. David Cheever of the Harvard medical school is in charge of, the party which was accompanied to New York by Dr, A, Lawrence Lowell, ident of the university. } WHEN You ¥ BREAK YOURS GLASSES uve you Best quality ma ermal a ‘7m. Singer 100th Sty y 134 Pultos DA Brae See tin WY coe we tstet Drugs, extracts and alco- holic mixtures are useless, \ Nourishment and sunshine are nature's blood-makers and the rich medicinal oil-food in Soott's Emulsion enlivens \ the blood, aids the appetite, strengthens the nerves and HAIR ON FACE, body of under arms joa Li jens and ‘or poisonous. ty deny ves free demonstrations, 12 TUESDAY ONLY The Fruit ured tn theae ‘Special for Wednesday MOLASSES COCOANUT Kiss) superb blending Melting Fondant Cream, 9 lew Ovi Bins fees icy one inte fase! 5 TOUS nok 200 BKOADWA:

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