The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1916, Page 2

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. lations will net be discontinued on Note once an » over it very carefully again to-day. necessary. | If it should be decided not to make @ formal reply a statement may be made by Secretary Lansing, calling the attention to the easential point In mote—that Germany has ordered sub- marine attacks confined to vessels of N war. This is the essence of the say, and) Kaiser's reply, officials Jeaves no actual issue with Germany. ‘The issue will remain closed, of- fiolals believed. They feel Germany will not reopen it by resuming war- fare against merchantmen. Every care will be taken, they be- eve, % prevent submarine eom- manders violating the order and they @anger of violation only in the that German submarine com- ft trol, But Germany having once quit her gubmarine warfare against mer- @bant ships, no high official here re- garde tt within the range of prob- ability that she will order it resumed. BRITISH TAKE MEXICAN SHIP OWNED BY GERMAN Cruisers Capture Schooner Leanore, Flying Republic's Flag, but Re- ported Property of Vice Consul. ‘WASHINGTON, May 6—Capture by British cruisers of tho schooner Leonore, flying the Mexican flag, but #aid to be owned by the German Vice Consul at Guaymas, was reported to the Navy Department by Admiral ‘Winslow at San Diogo, Cal., to-day. ‘The seizure occurred between Man- Santilo and San Blas on the Mexican coast, No other details were given. BALTIC AND BLACK SEA TO BE LINKED BY CANALS German Project to Offset Commer- dal Offensive of the Allies After the War. COLOGNE, May 6.— A gigantic Project for linking the North Sea and the Baltic with the Black Sea, more than 1,200 miles distant, by a series of eanals connecting navigable rivers Bas received oMcial recognition from the German Government, it was an- ;Mounced to-day. Engineers will be ‘ @irected to make a preliminary sur- vey in conjunction with Austrian, Bulgarian and Turkish engineers. + The plan ts to build canals con- mecting the Rhine and the Danube, with another canal leading across Germany from the Rhine to the North Sea. In this manner the Central Powers will be linked together by a great system of waterways and thus be in @ position to meet more effec- tively the commercial offensive threatened by the allies at the close \of the war. 10,000 STRIKERS BACK TO WORK ON MONDAY Fifty Independent Factories Agree to Eight-Hour Day for Garment Workers. ‘The Settlement Committee was #0 * @ucczastul to-day in handling tho strike of the cloak and suit workers that at least 10,000 strikers will go back to work Monday morning. They'd have gone to-day had it not been that the day is a Jewish holiday, As it was, 6,000 of the strikers visited their places of employment, registered (and celebrated their victory. \, ‘Dhe settlement effected to-day was ; between the employers and employees sof fifty independent 2 per cent aeeainenire British Ambas Trip With Morgan, ANNAPOLIS, Md, May 6.JAccom- panteed by British Ambnasador Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, J. Pierpont Morgan arrived Vere to-day'on his yacht Corsair. ‘They sail to-night for a trip through Southern waters. — The cause 0f falling flair Treatment: Touch spote of dandruff gad itching with Cuticura Ointment. shampoo with Cuticura Soap, Sample Each Free by Mail With . Skin Book. Addi =—'5,U.5,GDESTOWAR going rt There were indications that further @onsideration by the Cabinet would Bot be | ‘are for the most part young| tions, with the Bell Telephone Byn- officers, come of them dificult to con. | tens ‘Bold throughout the orld sy vata | | IN BOER WAR PUT TO 0444444 oe DODD>: TEST WRELESS New Bell System Permits Daniels to Talk to Bat- tleships at Sea. NNSROOG-9-3.009 The United States wont to war, | theoretically, at 4 o'clock this after- | noon, and hostilities will continue un+ til 8 o'clock Monday morning. The conflict, however, is confined to wires and wireless, the state of war being |Imited to the realm of communten- See dane RD. Mox!i- losing Qu With net changes from p tem acting as the principal agent of | the Government. 4 | To test in practical manner the or RRS to ae > aS 4 | plans of co -operation between anmy, @uePonpy ooren heat hd Ps navy and wire systems Which NAV? | 6.44.69046691606064404.90004 | been worked over during the past a — year @ theoretical state of war waa STOCK KET arranged to borin this afternoon, and MARKET BOOMS President Theodore N. Vail of the | Bell system commandeered his mill- AS WAR CLOUDS FADE fons of miles of wire and 600 of his | most skilled employees for uctive 89-| All Shares Soaring Upward, Led jvice in conjunction with army and A ; navy chicfs, by Mexican Petroleum In the Navy Department at Wash- and Brides. ington three large rooms have been! Wall Street and the Stock Exchange fitted up by the wire experts @@ the/had a fino booming market to-day central office of the war system. | during the short two hours of trading. Four kinds of communications will be| Everything on the list went soaring used—namely, long distance tele-| upward to high levels on the belief phone, Morse telegraph, automatic|that the international skies have printing telegraph and wireless tele-| cleared and there is no dangor of a phone, The latter is to be used In| break with Germany. Roports from communicating with the pattieship| Mexico that Villa was near being New Hampshire, representing the! cornered helped 7% fect, which Is cruising at nea off the | (oTi0re" helped oll and mining stocks Southern drill grounds. do some fancy flights. The principal station in New York| The leader of the market v City ts located in the New York Navy | can Petroleum, which rv Yard, connected with Washington by| than ten points up in two days.” Mer- both’ Morse telegraph and printing|cantile Marine shares hounded back telegraph. By means of the printing|to high levels, the proferred reaching telegraph eight messages will be| 9. All the automobile and munition transmitted over one wire at the|Stocks made jumps that elated their same time, four in each direction, |owners. United Staes Steel held strong All the navy yards of the country |and steady around 84, and the standard have been linked up by long distance |Tallroads made gains in keeping with telephone so that Secretary Daniels! thelr more sober conservatism. is to be in instantaneous communica-| The market closed at the highest tion with all coasts of the United| Prices of the day. Among the notice- States from Puget Sound in the ex-| able gains were Maxwell Motor treme Northwest to Pensacola in the|to &: Studebaker, 5%, to Southeast, Mexican Petroleum, 6%, to 107%} ‘The active commanders of this war | Texas Oil, 7%, to 191%; Crucible Steel, game are Capt. W. H. G. Bullard | 3%, to 834%; Westinghouse, 2%, to 61, of the Navy and F. A. Stevenson, | Sales were 677,660 shares in two hours. general superintendent of the plant of the American Telephone and Tele- o graph Company. Secretary Daniels and high officers of the navy are to talk with Capt. a Chandler of the New Hampshire far | Alam, Gold stu out at nea, using for the first time the | Aliishalmen if, new system of wireless telephony. mi. Reet Sugar eet. Car & Foun i —— Ries 1% RIOTERS KILLED IN tt + " SAN DOMINGO STREETS i Bloodshed in Attempt to Over-|4 = ot throw Rule of President +45 i a» ai Jimenez. ¢ is SAN DOMINGO, Dominican Repub- thy ie, May 6.—The hostilities which Tl. broke out here yesterday, the out] : & growth of the attempt to overthrow | Pah the Adiministration of President tag Jimenes, resulting in several persons thy being killed or wounded, were sus: t 1% pended to-day. Members of the Diplomatic Corps are endeavoring to effect an amicable solution of the troubles, The rep lic, outside of San Domingo, remains quiet. Kentiecott Copper... Lackawanna Stool! poR i I KILLED BY STORM OF SHOT. |i: e+ieeettettte + aS +3 +g POUGHKEEPSIE, N. ¥., May 6.— +19 Hundreds of bullets riddled the body of 2 Rafael Mancuso, killing him instantly, Ad | When a furnace used to destroy obsoleté % {ammunition blew up at Bannerman’s | RY nd, in the Hudwon River, Another 19 victim of the sat Cold Spring g to-day in @ critical condition. i 1 It ip the usual practice to place a f quantity of old powder and cartridges in @ specially constructed fireplace, Ww they are exploded a few at a time. It is said something went wr ad the on- Ure charge went © pincorainin nadoacnnly AUTO ROBBER CONFESSES. Prisoner in New Orleans Says He In Awent of Gang Here, (Sportal to The Evesing World.) NEW ORLBANS, Ua., May 6.—Ferdt- nand LeberKnech, allas F. T. Becker, of y City, arrested here to-day, con- 4 he represented a New York’ gang to robbers. He admitted the gang shipped a dogen machines, all of) which he had sold, He watved extradi- }Uon. ‘Phe prisoner is twenty-four years | August | old. October PIMLICO WINNERS, sini points up. FIRST RACE—Two-year-olds —_— four and a half furlongs. —( FALSE ALARM. (Buxton), stralgbt $1 $5.20 first how $2.00, (Forehand), endlet, “Girl Freshmen Remove Paint.” But it refers to a sign the girls Lady 3 id po pge boulde: a Ay, Moll had painted on a college boulder, ran ly won, but was dis- qualified Bay State tven Moone ROSTON, M May 6. Theod [nominee for the Presidency at we Pro Indigestion with gastric v sre Htate Convention duis everything and got no relie nized political party 1n », BELL-ANS—four to six tab! “tie Water after each meal. Yo due to their failure to poll a 3 | Progressives met at Faneuil Hall’ and “© and more, too. vote at the recent State eloo alternates vote for th — Unknown Picked Up in Ea "The body of a man was fou five ye of aKe brown and the wore black tre FOR IND ter and cout, ar und black laced shoes with wray Ae LEADER OF IRISH BRIGADE HARDEN AGAIN DEATH AS IRISH REBEL Nithe machines returned to their base] ANy and Lvct eB. lsc | ee delewutes-at-large, dietrict delexiates aid this statement, with my name and address if you wish. I sa ail Instructed to prescribe BELL-ANS constantly.” | er. “ nthe East River off Blackwell's Island to-day | He was 0 feet & inchs height, Weighed bd about 170 pound 0 i 25c package at every drug store in the U.S. , THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1916. DEFENDS WILSON INBERLM PAPER Declares the President Only Did His Duty in Protesting to Germany. RBRLIN, Friday (via London, May 6).—After figuratively taking the pub- lie’s breath away two weeks ago by @ daring article captioned “If I Were} Wilson,” Maxtiniiian Harden yester- day returned to an exhaustive de- fense of President Wilson, hia policy | and the entire American standpoint, In a leader in the ukunft en- titled “The Real Wilson” Herr | Harden praises Prosident Wilson as “a man of high moral and high spir- | itual character, of whom we might | be proud if he were ours.” Herr Harden follows with a briet | character sketch of President Wilson, | in which he calls the President “a brave opponent of evil and abuses,” and alludes to him as “actuated by a | love for his people and possessed of the will to lead them to the heights of his ideals after they had gotten into the swampland, Germany should be ashamdl of people who slander him, because they have read calumny in| newspapers.” “Dare we measure by the standard | of a student's squabble the com-| plaints of a great, free nation, lead by @ man of the weight and im-| portance of President Wilson?” asks the writer, “If President Wilson, after a thorough investigation, is con- vinced that warlike acts of Germany {have broken the laws of humanity, it | Was not only his right, but it was his duty to talk with clearness. He owes | this not only as a duty to himself, but to us.”" { ‘Turning to the position of Chan- rellor von Bethmann-Hollweg in the |r t controversy, Herr Harden 8 a The daring of the Cha not approx ellor must ate that of a submarine en next turns his guns on Herr von Heydebrand, Conserva- tive leader in the Reichstag, because of his attack on America in con- nection with the Sussex note, char- izing the attack as “sorrowful abuse, in which there is not @ glim- mer ‘of statesmanship,” In alluding the Herr von Heyde- brand's assertion that America stood in close connection with England be- fore the war, Herr Harden points out that Germany also did so with) Italy, Russia, Japan, Portugal and} Qngland. Herr von Heydebrand’s as- | sertion that America was at first secretly and then openly on the side of Germany's enemies Herr Harden | claims not to have been proven and he declares that America has :never| violated neutral —— FOURTH ZEPPELIN WINGED IN THREE DAYS: Shooting Down of Super-One by French Fleet Makes a Salonica Spectacle. AMSTERDAM, May 6.—Fishermen engaged off the Dutch island of Ame- land reported to-day that the Zep- pelin L-9 passed yesterday, appar- ently heavily damaged, This is the fourth Zeppelin td come to grief within three days. . LONDON, May 6.—An official state- ment given out here to-day, says that, though severely damaged by H. M. 8. and Phaeton, the Zeppelin wT was destroyed by a British sub- marine, commanded by Lieut. Com- mander F, Feilman, which rescued seven of the Zeppelin's crew and has returned with them, She was at- tacked and slightly injured by a Ger- man cruiser on her return voyage, PARIS, May 6.—A Havas despateh lonica says that the entire on of the town witnessed the tion yesterday morning of the hich was shot ‘eet in the har- patch says that theair- P the newest and larg- est type known as Super-Zeppelins, LONDON, May. 6. officers nd eight men of the of the ppelin destre ler an attempt. raid on Salon: were captured, the Admiralty announced to-da: y 6. ROME, via Parts, Italian hydroaeroplanes fectively bombarded the seaport of Durazzo, says an official statement to-day, All unharmed BERLIN (by wire May 6.—An off s to Sayville), il statement given out at the Austro-Hungarian Ad miralty in Vienna under date of May 8 Austro-Hungarian naval} son May 4 bombarded Av- lona in the morning and Brindist in the afternoon, ‘The Aviona batteries, the port establishments and the aeronautic station were several times effectively hit, > imaone 4 Philadelphia Doctor writes: “Your BELL-ANS for Indigestion do just what you claim , had a bad case of intestinal ertigo. I had taken almost f, until I commenced to take lets in a large glassful of hot u have my permission to use IGESTION £ ‘ Presented by ‘ PATHE in fourteen linked but separate and complete screen dramas, featuring ANNA NILSSON and TOM MOORE These dramas are screen interpretations of life as it might be lived by every man and woman who lives and works and loves; who has hopes and fears and ambitions. You are judge and jury, prosecutor and defense—because the joy and sorrow depicted in each of the dramas either are yours or have touched elbows with you. WHO’S GUILTY? when the money-mad villain’s house of cards falls ? WHO’S GUILTY? when hope is blasted like a withered leaf? WHO’S GUILTY? when the very fabric of faith itself is torn to shreds ? You will be roused to ask at the end of every one of the fourteen gripping dramas WHO’S GUILTY? Written by MRS. WILSON WOODROW. Produced by ARROW FILM CORPORATION for the vam world-famous house of PATHE, pioneer pho- toplay exponents.

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