The evening world. Newspaper, February 5, 1916, Page 2

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STEAM S hae) ee ‘Lusitania poking will bring an tm- mediate erisie ti German-American relations. ther informal exchanges be- tween Washington and Heritn are before Germany nawer to Le last Ht is realized here tha: ihe situe- ton hus grown aiute serious, In din- eigen ihe pose)bilities of a break, thé German public recalis the recent utterances of Prosident Wilson on his tour. The President's remarks were given wide publicity here and were generally interpreted as a warning to many of an in- tention to deal firmly with the Berlin press is inclined the situation pessimirtically. id to-day that some of the atomente In the newspapers Koelnische Volkazeltung, an of the Catholic party, says that if Mr. Wilson is correctly reported as demanding that Germany recognize that the sinking of the Lusitania was ‘egal and unjustified by the theory of reprisals, then there can be only one answer—a flat refusal. The Kreuz Zeitung says: Chancellor will have to ask what America means b, again suddeniy vessions, however great on our part, ur be met only by firm resulu- BERLIN PAPER BOASTS OF LUSITANIA SINKING Restrains Comment on Case Say- ing: “Perhaps Better Opportunity Will Soon Be Offered.” BERLIN, Fob. 6—Tho Germania recalls the fact that Feb. 4 was the anniversary of tho issuance of the German proclamation establishing a war zone about the British Isles. It Says the most important consequence was destruction of the Lusitania, 7 ie case, #0 far from being nett has reached an especially point,” it continues, "We cannot understand what moved America to take her present stop. It t most certain that the sinking ot the Lusitania was absolutely within the provisions of tho German prociamation, and. therefore, there cam be no talk of illegality unless our war round about Great ain is to be deprived of tte basis.” frains from further comment, saying: “Perhaps a better soon be offered.” SECRET GASOLINE TUBE FED FUEL TO SUBMARINE Italians in Disguise Discover a Masked Marvel Leading to Kaiser's Summer Palace at Corfu. ATHENS, Feb. 5.—A pneumatic “tube, two feet in diameter, has been digopvered Jeading from the store. vices asoline. flowed down | a tube into the tunks of Austro- | submarines operating tn the | Italian naval officers first suspected | hat Corfu was being used by the. Germans 45 a secret submarine base without the knowledge of the Greek Government. ised as fishermen they cru about the island in a small for several weeks, ob- serving the movements of submarines and making reports to allied squad- rons. RID STOMACH OF ACIDS, SOURNESS, GAS. INDIGESTION “Pape’s Diapepsin” makes upset stomachs feel fine at once. Acidity, heartburn, belching, pain and dyspepsia just vanish. Time it In five tes all stomach distress go. No indigestion, heart- burn, sourness or belching of |g acid or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or * headache, Pape's Dispepsin is noted for fits speed in regulating upset stomachs. Mt is the surest, quickest and most ly in the whole mil s) ven now eat fear—they ape’s Diapepsin will save them stomach misery heir favorite foods without know for your get» large 's Diapepsin put your tomach right, » on being miserable — life is tc you are long, your stay Fot like ane enje vithout dread. of fiion in the stemack "s Diapepsiun belougs in your home. anyway. Should the fam- * hing mt agree nm, or in eg attack of ndigestion, dyspepria, sstritis or stomach derang. i at daytime or ht, it is handy to give the surest relief known. Advt AN lost vertived Meted at X nil artloles ade World Will be id's Tnforma~ * dy ertioment, “the | | | | NINE NEW RAIDERS 450 6 | BUILT BY GERMANS. CHARGING ACROSS YOUNG BOWDOINS TOHARRY SHPPNG, THEFROZENDWINA SUE FOR IVORGE Members of Prize Crew on Russian Guns Broke the Ice Son of Morgan Partner and Appam Say Moewe Was First Out. ANOTHER IS AT LARGE. Vessels Passed Through the British War Fleet and Re- ceived Salutes. The identity of the mysterious Ger man commerce raider which sank seven Britiah steamora and sent their crews into Norfolk on the captured Elder-Dempster liner Appam waa cleared to-day by tho officers of the ships which were hunk, They arrived here last night on the Old Dominion Miner Jefferson, en route to England, Tho raider ts the Moewe, These officers inspected her from stem to stern. Lut she is not the little geodetic survey steamer of that name. Sho ts a new freight steamship, mounting Didden guns, One of he sailors con- fided to Mra, Francis Puller, wife of the Commissioner Genéral of Ashantt, that the raider is one of a fleet of nine similar vessela fitted out to prey on British commerce. Two of them have made their escape through the cordon of British war veascls in the North Sea. Mra, Fuller said she talked with this German seaman on the Appam several times and that he confided to her ono day about the nine craft, saying that the captor of the Appam made her way to sea on New Year's Day and, with a Swedish flag flying, passed and saluted three British war vessels of the North Sea Fleet. ‘The British officers described her as @ new freighter that apparently had been selected for hurried converting into @ cruiser, because all her fittings had not been Installed, and she could be equipped easily with guns without any ripping away, She may have been the Ponga, a new German ship, they said, as she was tho same eize and had a lifeboat with the name Ponga on its bow. They described her as about a 6,600- ton vessel, with a large coal capacity, as well as fittings for fruit carrying, #o that she was designed for roving, and would have been classed as a tramp. She had one funnel and two masts. There was no warship con- struction about her except the sup- ports for the gun bases, which had been riveted roughly into her frames, She carried five fifteen centimetre guns, or about six-inch ones, Four were installed forward, two on either wido and one aft, Those forward were set low on the deck and hidden by wooden shields that lifted up beside them like t: doors and with a cover on them appeared like nothing more harmful than a well stowed forward jleck load of freight. The one aft wai covered by @ small false deck hous that could be lifted off and folded up like a portable hous Her holds © filled with coal and supplies enough for her to remain at sea as long as two months without replenishing. None of her foodstuffs was given to the Appam, though, and there was a shortage of food on the British liner. There was no suffer- ing, but during the last four days on the voyage across the Atlantic from the Canaries to Norfolk those aboard her had nothing but rice and cheese to cat, Lieut. Berg ate this with the even permitted Capt. Harrison of the Appam to retain his seat at the cen- le in the saloon, When he first went on board the Appam, Lieut. Berg summoned every er of fighting age to her saloon and invited them to sign an agree- ment not to do any fighting for Britain with an alternative of being sont over to the raider, Every man of them signed it. iin Helease of the pam, WASHINGTON, Feb, Bir Cecil prlug-Rice, the British Ambassador, has submitted to the State Depart- ment a formal demand for the release of the Appam to its British owners. Secretary Lansing indicated to-as Britain Dem a the department's belief that the Prussian treaty of 1828 would govern t ¢ decivion would not status of the prize maing the quew of how cuy to apply the treaty to the App Germ Apply tor ne-! Jenne. NEW twenty Berg's Appam p NEWPORT teen the aided Lieut. bringing the have ns crew in Hampton Collector -Thir- prize into nted of the Port Hamilton a written state. ment to r disposition. ‘Tho statement was held ay confidential warded to Wasbin fx underste It were civilians, a not jou baving THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1916. DE WED ERMANS and Enemy Troops Are Drowned, GERMANS IN AIR RAID. Berlin Reports Repulse of a British Attack Near La Bassee Canal. AMSTERDAM, Feb. 5.—Four dred dnd fifty Germans, attacking Dvinsk from the frozen Dwina, were drowned when the ice was smashed I by heavy Russian fire, according to a despatch received here to-day. BERLIN, via Wireless to Sayville, L. 1, Feb. 6.—A German Zeppelin bombarded the Russian fortifications lat Dvinsk yesterday, the War Office announced this afternoon, in a state- ment reporting only minor operations on all fronts, bun. ON A DARE, Artist Model Bride Have Guardians Named. ' SHE'S CHORUS GIRL NOW Papers Served on Her in Bou- quet, She Answers With Counter Suit. | The picturesque romance of Ray-| mond Winthrop Bowdoin, employed in the office of J. P. Morgan & Co. and fon of James 8, Bowdoin, asso- clate with the Morgan firm, and the | former Beas!o Maloney, artist's model, j hae found tts way into the divorce | | “On tho western front, a weak Eng-| lish advance south of the La Basseo | Canal was repulsed,’ the official | statement added, “French hand) grenade attacks, prepared by mining | operations south of the Somme, broke | down before our artillery fire. { “In the Champagne region and part | of the Argonne, the enemy's artillery | yesterday afternoon shelled our posl- tlons heavily. French mines blast- ing on the Vauquous plateau in the east Argonne only slightly damaged the German saps, German artillery shelled the enemy's positions exten-|Court here. He has filed suit an sively on the Vo front.” she has a cross bill ready. AMSTERDAM, Feb. 6.—The Belgian) He is nineteen and she is twenty, frontier has been completely closed to all travellers, it was announced here | and guardians had to be appointed to-day. " This action is belleved to indicate | {°° Poth Justice Newburger ap important German troop concentra- | Pointed a Mr. Bains, sald to be asso- clated with Choate, Larocque & Mitchell, young Bowdoin’s guardian, tion against the Anglo-French Itnes, preparatory to a heavy offensive, a and Miss Anna R. Maloney, a sister, guardian for the young wife, DUTCH PROTEST SINKING ek OF SHIP BY GERMANS "serves": eum at No, 164 East Elghty-second Street, Demand Explanation and Repara-| Youns Bowdoin is wealthy in his own tion for Torpedoing of Artemis ® a right, partly through an inheritance from a relative, Temple Bowdoin. « by U-Boat. ‘The couple were married “on a dare” = Dec, 2, 1914, in Jersey City, and sep- THE HAGUE, Netherlands, Feb. 6.| arated last June. Young Bowdoin {s —Dutch newspapers, both pro-Ger-| saiq to bo where reporters cannot get man and anti-German, are unanimous in demanding from Germany prompt explanation of and reparation for the torpedoing of the Dutch tank steamer Artemis by a German torpedo-boat in the North Sea, The newspapers call for punishment of the German com- mander who was responsible for what in touch with him. His wife is play- ing in Philadelphia in “Around the Map.” It ts reported the couple parted because the young wife decided to go on the stage against the wishes of her husband, The use of her own name—Bessl!e Bowdotn—did not help | BRITISH OFFICIALS SENT who of tholr wishes with regard to| is described as a violation of law and an unjustifiable act of war against the Netherlands, ‘Tho Vaderland recalls previous Ger- man “errors” and dwells on the danger of further incidents of this nature. Incidentally it asks what the British fleet was doing while a con- splouously colored German torpedo- boat flotilla was calmly cruising tho busiest steamer track between the Hook of Holland and the Noordhinder Lightship. ‘The Nieuwe Courant treats the case as @ breakdoWn of the “vaunted Ger- man organization and discipline.” matters along. This story, however, | does not agree with the wife's ver- sion, told to-day tn Philadelphia, “I was working as a hat model {n/ the Maison Maurice, in Fifth Avenuo, and had been an artist's model when I met my husband,” she said. “He was introduced to me by a friend. WEDDING BREAKFAST: HAM, EGGS AND CHAMPAGNE, | “In the course of time through bim | I met a number of Princeton boys, and one night there must have been | twenty-four of us in a party at Bus-| tanoby’s. “I complained that I wanted to get out into the world and see some-| thing; that I wasn’t succeeding as 1° wished, and one of those college in-| fants—you know the kind—suggested | that Raymond and I get married. I) Jaughed tt off, but as the wine flowed | —o——— FINANCIAL NOTE, The reserve of a Brooklyn bank ta kent on the roof, It is chickens, ducks, a pig, turkey, pigeons, a monkey and a goat. MORGENTHAU FORESEES NO BREAK WITH TURKEY Ambassador, on Way Here, Says: ‘Our Relations With Turks Are Most Friendly. BERLIN (via Amsterdam), Fob, 6, —Ambassador Morgenthau'’s visit to America at this time has no connec- tion with any present Internation) problems, he said to-day. “America’s relations with are moot friendly,” he said. Morgenthau will sail from Copen- hagen next Tuesday for a short vaca- tion, He will go to Washington for a and we finally went to Jersey City, “The whole crowd was with us and acted as witnesses, and when ti ceremony was performed we all came back to Jack’s for breakfast. We had champagne and ham and og; it you can imagine that, and we took the whole twenty-four to Philadel- phia, We came to the Adelphia nere and had @ great time all day, winding up with @ dinner party at night, About 10 o'clock Raymond's fatuer, who bad been chasing us uil day anu found out that we were inarried, ar- rived. “Mr, Bowdoin insisted that we come home with him, but we wanted to round out the day with our wedding party and he consented, The noxt morning we got up early and went to New York and were driven straight to the Bowdoin some, which is at No, 466 West knd avenue Raymond's mother met us, threw her arms about neck and gaid that she thought I was just the dear, sweet daughter.” Later, she said, the Bowdoins told her the marriage must be annulled, and continued: BOWDOINS FITTED UP HOME| FOR THEM, “Raymond winked at me all the! time and | caught bis meaning, We agreed to have the marriage annulled! and then when Raymond's ma and pa went to bed we skidooed and went t ‘onnecticut, “Well, when the Bowdoins eaw that we meant business they brought us back to New York and fitted a splen; | Turkey conference with President Wilaon and Secretary Lansing, Morgenthau remarke nad d that Berlin + his last visit » thought the yany's advan. vanged much sin nt years ago, but change was all to tage, eee TO SEE BELGIAN KING London Fails to Disclose “Special Mission” of Earl Curzon and Sir Douglas Haig. LONDON, Feb. An official com. munication Made public last night saya \ | \e to sell some of her things, and later go to work in the chorus,’ She con- ——— tun ‘tine . | Prince Von Buelow Agata ¢ to | finned: = Virwinia Capes. Swit from Beer “The first that I knew that Ray- Pe LONDON, Feb. S—An Ameterdam| mond was suing was last Thursday NORFOLK, Peb, eA cruiser, pup-|despateh to the Exchange Telegraph {night, His beat friend came to sce yod to be French, was reported Company says that Prince Von Bue. [the show, #at In a box and threw me © off the Virginia Capes former German Chancellor who] Mowers Inside the bouquet were shortly afte yente wut to ) to attend the recent |tueked the papera in the case, and easton Prussian Horrenhes that !s how they were served on m Be renhouws.) “1 hurried over to New York and Vortity She Bystenn, Sumluss ie ett Tongaged Joseph A. Shay, the lawyer PAX tivi ri ii Prince ‘in slits | who defended Becker, you know, and ae a or to re- | told him oll my story, Then ‘I flied ere 1s © BROMO QUININE? Porte Of peace projects, to the | papers myself for divorce, nagilime WOVE'S slevative co box Boe —Adve, JI) health of the Princess two women in New York. did apartment for us up in Morning: | }) | MODEL WED ON DARE SUED FOR A DIVORCE BY SON | OF J. P. MORGAN PARTNER. Qussin Bowoon So See erase COL. HOUSE MEETS PRESIDENT POINCARE President's Envoy Leaves Paris on His Way Home Next Monday. PARIS, Feb. 5.—Pre to-day wcelved Col. E, the American ent Poincare M. House and Ambassador, William G. Sharp, and talked with them for some time, It was Col, House's sec- ond interview with tho President. Mr. and Mrs. rp gave a dinner at the American Embassy last night in honor of Col, House. It was at- tended by Premier Briand and varl- ous members of the diplomatic corps and the American colony Col, House expects to complete his work in Pacis on Monday and leave for home by way of London on the following day ROUMANIA MASSES HALF ILIN NE MY AD THE ALES Significant Troop Movements Along Hungarian and Bul- garian Frontiers Reported. DRIVEN TO TAKE SIDES. Hemmed In by War, Economic Crisis Forces Bucharest Government to Action. | By Henry Wood. | ROME, Feb. 5 (United Press). The “oumanian army is nine-tenths mobilized by the decree issued Thursday, calling to the colors the class of 1896 in advance of their reg- ular schedule, More than half a mill- fon troops are now massed along the Bulgarian and Hungarian frontiers. Private advices received here to-day report that Roumanta ts ready to in- tervene on the side of the allies at the first opportune moment. The Bulgarian Government has ‘closed the entire Roumanian frontier excepting the cities of Operitose and Pebrugia, mistrusting Roumania’s intentions. The Bulgarian newspa- pers declare tt significant that no Roumanien troops are concentrated along the Russian frontter. Heavy artillery from the Roumanian Black Sea forts is being moved to- ward the Hungarian frontier, accord- ing to advices received here. The Roumanians are erecting strong forti- fications along the Bulgarian border, expecting a Bulgarian offensive tn case they attack Hungary. In the past week the Austrian and German newspapers have openly ex- pressed doubts regarding tho future attitude of the Bucharest Govern- ment, Several important elements have tended to hasten Roumantia's alignment with the allies, according to Bucharest advices to-day.. They are these: First, the recent concentration of | Russian troops in Galicta and Buko- wina and the power of the Slav of- fensive along the Bessarabian fron- tler have partly offset the bad effect of Russia's retreat from Galicia last May. The Roumanians are convinced that the Slavs are by no means “down and out.” Second, arrival of Anglo-French re- inforcementa at Salonica has con- vinced Bucharest that an allied of- | fensive would cripple the Bulgars {should the Bulgurs attempt to in- vade Roumania while the main Rou- TTALIAN PREMIER MAY QUIT OFFICE, RUMOR IN BERLIN {Overseas Agency Quotes Sa- | landra’s Speech and Recalls Changes in Other Quarters. U-BOAT ATTACKED BY A BRITISH SHIP ~ WITH DUTCH FLAG | a nen Berlin Makes the Charge That the Melanie Used Cannon and Machine Guns. BERL Bayville: tack by a British auxiliary crulser, fly- ing the Dutch flag, on a German sub- }ma eb. 6 (by wireless to Overscas Nows in Hod the jsteamer to send boats i i vat ¢ sieamer’s papers mi me exaun- ined. This was done after on interval It 4s stated the steamer \,.. a freighter of 2,000 tons, with nothing suspicious about her appearance. Sho flew the Dutch flag and bore the name Melanie, “While walting for the boats the submarine submerged, It approached within about 1,000 metres of the steamship, which opened fire with two cannon of medium type and with machine guns, Th marine pscaped only by subme ‘Furthor details of the at-/| ne are given from an authorative | i IN (By Wireless to Sayville), Feb. 5.—The following was given out for publication to-day by the Over- seas News Agency: “Berlin newspapers give accounts of a speech made in Turin by Premier Salandra of Italy, in which he said: “io strong and united in order to | suport the Government and in orde: to replace the Government with an vther if necessary, We are fighting in the trenches, and fighting in the |trenches exhausts forces, The mo ment may come when It will be neces- sary to retire behind the present front, I state this expressly in order to lenve no room for erroneous inter- pretations. Then we shall retire in order to begin anew, “This moment may come, and the Liberal Monarchist party—the great | party which made Italy and which | must accomplish the work of making Tho ster shag _,,| Italy—tust then have men in reserve Xo stedmor then attempted twice | in order to sacrifice them for the to ram the submarine, flying the ; Dutch flag ail this time. | ORB S Ae Revere “There is no Dutch deenee Me-| ‘The newspapers ask whether the laste, but Gere is a Betish boat of] ees eee eS el ee this nate Of B00GtonRe | cation of the coming resignation of pre : the present Cabinet. They point ow In connection with theso facts i#| that premier Goremykin of Russel recalled a report of tha Havas) viready has retired, and that Theo- Agency on Jan. 28, to the effect that| 16 Dolcasse gave way ax Foreign the French mail boat Piuta, without | Stintster of France, Grand Duke being attacked. opened fire on a sub-| Nicholas ua Russian Commander-in- marine and sank it. Rear Admiral) Chief, and Winston Spencer Churehill Lacaze, French Minister of Marine, |» First Lord of the British Admir- quoted by the Paris press as| sity. The retireme 4 Moving that all French trading ships | indra, the newapapors say, may pos- had been ordered to ram or fire at sibly Come in consequence of eoo. submarines, whether of not at. | Romie difficulties existing in Italy and tacked by them r MARINE WRECK FOUND Great Britain on account of the ques- tlon how to provide Italy with cheap coal Remains of Boat Which Foundered Fifty Years Ago Discovered in Brooklyn Tul Engineers the Public Service Commission have reported the dis- covery of what appears to be the | wreckage of an old ship in the north tube of the Old Slip-Clark Street tun- | nel on the Brooklyn side. Tho wreckage was discovered the heading of the tube, which is now BELL-ANS Absolutely, Removes Indigestion. One package ‘proves it. 25cat all druggists. Biliousness | For Biltousess, Sick Headache, Endigestion. iD Get @ Box To-Night. 100 and 25e Bos. more than one hundred and fifty feet from the bulkhead line, It consisted of some planking, a heavy anchor chain and @ large boulder, which is Speyer aay! nught to have been used as SCRANTON THEATRE BURNED, | "82/22 armies were engaged in Hun- then ba .| gary. anchor. Third, closing of ths Roumanian fron- The theory is that some fi or Lyceum yd Other # tier by Bulgaria and the closing of| more years ago this boat foundered SCRANTON, Pa., Feb. Ly-| Russia 0 count of troop move- Sree ceum Theatre and the Miller Casket ments has practically cut Roume ia | that Soy Bag? aah iis ay anwar Company's Bullding were destroyed, Of from the outside world, making | Vota‘ th tough the bed of the river to and two other structure ness section were badly fire here to-day. The ated at $500,000, Twenty-five girls third floor in the bust- damaged by loss ts estim- working on the Butldiug had narrow let down by enenp were th ropes, others used still nic of the thea- to have of the Casket Company's ers and offered convincing evidence Some of the allies’ financial strength, others} it imperative that she take sides for econoinic reasons, Fourth, England's purchase of 80,- 000 carloads of Roumanian grain, pay- ing $50,000,000 in gold, bas won the support of the Roumanian grain grow- 4 depth of about fifteen feet, at which depth the roof of the tunnel now be- ing constructed here in to be, TINOPLE (via London), i following official stat ont has been Issued: “On the Irak the enemy, attempting to ad- from I . Was repulsed by | AN Bucharest despatches reaching Rome within the past fortnight have reported an unmistakable trend of nm wWere| public opinion toward intervention on counter attack delivered by our caught in the it y tim-/ the side of the alll troops and forced to retreat within bers, but none was seriously Injured. _ Tse his former positions.” — KING GEORGE IS WELL. LONG ISLAND TRAIN British Monarch Makes Ft Ap- pe ce in Pablic for Months, LONDON, Feb. 5.—King ¢ hia first public appearanc suffered injury from s since this young college student insisted, | reviewing the British troops in France last, October. performance of ory of the soldie the war. di'# requiem in mem- ——_——— Again Family, Hicy Dealer, ing to Detectives Tuaine and Caputo, by a raid the ‘orge mado he ident while His Majesty attended a who have fallen tn it He An attempt to revive the polley in- dustry in Harlem was foiled, accord- ht tn the KILLS BANKER AND CHIEF IN SMASHUP (Continued from First Page.) summoned several men hurried to| where the overturned fire engine lay at the side of the tracks and worked | to freo the two men. They had been | killed instantly. —— 3 Days’ Tour Feb. 11. All Necessary Expenses ‘ Washington $7 3 SCLINCOLNS BIRTHDAY Similar Tours Feb, 19 and Later Dates 005 Day Tours Feb. 26th $1 Bt Oars Titer Dates teneme at N Hun- Other members of the engine com- | All Necessary Expenses Seed hutiony Ai *y MF! pany hurrying to the fire on foot ar- him in Hark » \rived at the crossing a few minutes ee ata in eae aitine Ot Rurallo wa Nee te peer i 76, Ty, 5, i : trial. The him| after the accident, The fire, in a|} y'w.'sg5en st, 225 Fitth Ave, New ¥ sion. ——— by the Hritint, euter's corres- nt at The Hague says that mail addreased to the West Indies and for- Warded on (ho steamsbip Uring Fred erik Hendrik ich sailed from Am= sterdam on Jan, 28 has been detained In England NEW ORLEANS ENTRIES, little cottage on Park Avenue, was} put out before the arrival of the fire- | men, ‘The gateman was not placed under arrest, but was detained pend- Ing the result of an investigation which was immediately started, Mr. Higbie was thirty years old| and lived with his wife and two chil- | dren in @ mansion which he inherited a year ago from his uncle, the late fainuel A. Higble, a merclant, He | was interested In all the clvic move- | ments in the town and contributed Brooklyn, or stations foot of W, 24rd 8: A Publicity FAIR GROUNDS, NEW ORLEANS, te ad yt Fi t iT heavily to local charities. Chief Pettit ulvertisements published in ANY La, b.—The eatrien for to-mor-| 071s also of one of the oldest families rate ad 3p es PONT HACE. Tie Trial Pauw: th Suffolk County and had been a| tures and member of the volunteer department | that Earl Curzon, Lord Privy Seal, and| side Heights, Then Raymond said | lati Gon, Sir Dougiss Halk, Commander of | that he was going out West to estab- | jViiuer. {19: ! the British forces on the Continent, lish himself in some business, and bis}? qin) tac tp proceed (Gh 8 ppecia milagion to famtly gave me an allowance.” ni wx fue < if the Belgians, and that Karl Cure] When he came back it was to his ; s | zon Gieady haw left England for that] parents, Mrs, Howdoin sald she had | Green Pits “pie it tae }17 Ht Rack ft Laanadon 4 i F i tice allawance claimed : i tech fast, Tagan A * “KAISER AT COUNCIL se’ Conferred With Leaders on West aie for several year Abr EE ©. What newspaper has a clreula and Sundays, greater than the Her: GETHER? ON ZEPPELIN RAID, Front Before Alr Attack Was Ordered, LONDON, England, Feb. 6—A report from Berlin, via Copenhagen, advertising mediums? The A on the western front for some timo and was in the neighborhood of the Boigian frontier when the attacks on Loos took pluce. | “Admiral von Tirpits and Prince Henry accompanied him, according to the report, and the three were pres- ent at a headquarters counct? where ‘ the detaila of the Zeppelin paid on Pngland were planned, Q. What newspaper prints MORE THAN DOUBLE the number What newspaper should you place FIRST Seven-Time World Ads. Cost Least Per Insertion and Multiply Results! RG Pils ' DIED, 'DUNN.—Died on Feb. (nee Reteh), Ward, Manhattan, Funerat Sunday at 2 P. M. from her Into reridence, 241 Stagg &t., Brooktyn. Interment Lutheran Cemetery, | DRAK in Feb | DRAKE, tn hie 784 y Funeral M., at the Ave. formerly of the Eleventh and 10th st | HARNESS MAKERS, sad- die cutters, machine opera- tors wanted at Smith, Worthington Co, Hartford Conn, . ROYAL BLUE LINE Tours jew Jersey Centrat—BALTIMORE & OHl0—Philadelphia& Reading | Florida 00 Including Railroad, $5 G 20 acing Rairond, Pull Feb, 1 (Atlantic Coast Line) Feb, 15 (Atlantic Coast Line) Feb, 29 (Seaboard Air Line, in- cludes expenses going trip only) information, eal of addrose ticket agente; 2174, 4081 Hrondway, 7 Coruandt Be, ork; 4 Court St, 419 Nostrand Ave, t aud foot of Liberty St, N. ¥, City, Catechism! A OTHER New York newspaper?" tlon In New York City, both nior ald, Times one and Tribune ADDED TO. In your lst of utiltzea

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