The evening world. Newspaper, June 10, 1916, Page 3

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AUSTRIANS FRONT BROKEN IN GALICIA: ARMY CUT IN TWO Russians Announce Capture of | 5,597 More Prisoners in Drive. LOSSES STILL MOUNT. Slavs Redapture 3,000 Square Miles of Territory in Five Days’ Advance. PETROGRAD, June 10.—Five days of the furious offensive of Gen. A. A. | Brusiloff's mighty Russian army has crumpled the Austro-German lines| from the Kovel-sarny Railway line to Bukowina, smashed through the point where the Austrians and Ger- | mang joined their forces, exposed the right wing of the Germans and the) left wing of the Austrians to flank attacks, and rendered them both al- most powerless for further resistances according to officials of the Russian War office. © The War Office announced to-day that, continuing thelr successes in Volhynia and Gali the Russians ‘uve captured ninety-seven officers | and 6,500 men, in addition to the total previously announced. Eleven more cannon have been taken. The Austrian front from Buezacs to} the Dniester River, in Gallet ported to have been broken complete- y. The Russians have crossed the “ota Lipa River oward the Gnita Lipa, twelve miles » the west Thousands of Austrian prisoners vave arrived at porary prison camp has been estab- shed A general retirement of the Teutons inay be forced, although the Germans, withdrawing men from other fronts, are burling great forces in behind the \ustrians in what, to date, has been vain effort to check the Russian «dvance. Military men here declare both the German and Austrian armies are in grave danger of being cut off in the rear by huge Russian forces that are is re. and are advancing tovno, where a tem- pouring through the wedge made by | Brusiloff in the first five days’ fight- ing, and that their commanders must | ise rare skill if they hope to ex- and their im- guns. In the offensive which started Mon- ay, Brusilof€ has reconquered 4,000 squares miles of territory whicao it took the Teutons weeks to capture, Petrograd to-day places the Aus- trian casualties in th drive @ ny- Shere f .000 to 800,000 and. b: wetual count 7,548 men and 1,328 fticers have been made prisoners Many of these were taken when the Russians exploded s! pnel in such density behind the Austro-G es that the men could not re it in the Austrian fi the defenses are high, wh tg wire entanglements are thick -_—S GERMANS ADVANCE ON VERDUN FRONT; CAPTURE 500 MEN. BERLIN, The Fren June 10 (via London) h have been driven out of several positions northeast of Verdun| n the course of stubborn fighting, the War Office announced to-day South of Fort Vaux a French field work was stormed and more than 500 prisoners and twenty-two machine euns were taken The official statement follows “Western front “On the west bank of the Meuse we continued effectively to shell enemy batteries and trenches “East of the river we are continu. ing the attack, In stubborn fight- ing the enemy was driven out of sev- cral postions on a high ridge south- west of Fort Douaumont, in Chapetre nd on Fumin Rid. an ehase Prussian infantry a strong enemy field work which fell int r hands with more 1 n 500 men and 22 machine guns, The total number of prisoners taken since May 8 is 28 officers and more than 1,500 men. Hartmansweilerkopf Capper a German patrol took several prisoners from enemy rn and Balkan fronts: is nothing to report from “HEALS & PREVENTS SKIN SORENESS ONE BOX PROVES IT 25¢ | \ | | | | | | | THE EVENIFG WORLD, SATURDAY, | Latest Photograph of Associate Justice Hughes, Presidential Candidate, and His Family, Justice HUGHES AND EIS WIFE AND CHILDREN, © BACHRACH instead of a siren J such' counsel in his address to the commerce therefor that such a plea Whom he entertained on Class Day. Moved by all thi considerations, | — | || Tealled on Dean Johnson in his study at th xander Hamilton Institute of which he is President. Keen and lean and delightfully humorous, his mouth widened in a quigzical smile when I asked him if he really that the man who is to make the world must be ma home, EASY GOING MAN NEEDS TO BE Je miserable at | }many American men are successful in business, Perhaps the avera | American wife is the new Xanti At least she often proves herself a |19k |daughter of the horse-leech, ext pee ng greedy hands n already nev “But men need to be waked up." asserted Dean Johnson. 1 “Unless a man has some one to put an edge on him, some spur to prick the sides of his intent, he goes to sleep. Now a man's wife is in a position to keep him alert and alive, to urge him forward, to goad him by her criticism into doing a little more than his best. gant,” Dean Johnson added hastily. “I |comfortable, But then T have no am- bition to be great. One of the emanct- pations and consolations of middle age 1s losing tho desire to be a tremendous success, very young man has that pu however, And I was talking to yo men the other evening, | wanted par- ticularly to impress them with the im portance of dominating their environ ment, with the belief that no matter eu how disagreeable and disheartening libe thelr surroundings might be succes# | sald. | but ne doesn’t know it at tt man marries 4 the curve of her To Win ‘Success, Wed a Scold, Not a Siren; Says College Dean ® i Sugary Cleopatra Won’t Doat All as Spouse of Man'' Who Must Be Stirred Up to Do Big Things, Is Opinion of Prof. Johnson of New York Uni- versity — Socrates Would Been Heard Of if Married to the | Seductive Egyptienne. “The point | particularly wish to make is that no men need be ged if he finds that his wife isn't the being of sweetness and light he thought ne married. ! can't pass the excuse of the fail- ure who whines: done anything in the world if 1 had married the wife has, been ever Have right woman, Nobody ‘but a weakling igvevartodtiremituesets by mere fact that he is not—or con is not—understood at By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. If you wish to succeed, marry Nantippe, ph French Johnson, dean of New York University, has just uttered raduating class of School of Commerce, Accounts and Financ e, the college in the To Dean Johnson, man who abe Vier nould belongs the signal honor of trated what probably contained in any graduation 3 nenon dé investigation to walk | sides, June is the month of as well as of commencements, and o depend on his picking warned of his danger seductive damsel Napoleon of finance is going a termagant wife, he s before he marries the "IRISH ae ; that WAKED UP. crat “Perhaps,” 1 added, “that's why so! did br his brain « drove where : | The husband and crying, ‘More! | iy THE SOMBRE SHADOWS OF | Nit [HUSBANDHOOD. — ITALIAN TRANSPORT SUNK BY U-BOAT: LIFE LOSS HEAVY, “On the other hand men have had | preciated of a scold, even of a nagger, is Were sither sacide an nagaere? of history that Lin- Carlyle was the ra Health? life in loving her. man in this city—I won't mention Women don't go to sleep as men great do, | do believe that the husband were more likely to be heard from than is a matter is the man who marries a Cleo- con's patra, a woman whose only di mand is that he shall spend his te “I wouldn't want to marry a terma- his nam: ers, was attack whose wife nags him perpetually. y Was atta And | have known a number of prefer being petted and loved and made — other distinguished men married | moments after ‘empt help was rer > Texas Militia OM to ba i Real ee Wee, 19 449 Bottles & Splite—All Dealere HELEN HAMILTON, missioner Celebra ted the Ramapo Hills. LUNCHEON IN Form Guard of Honor at Church Doors. Special to The Evening World) TUXEDO PARK, N.Y, dune 16. Commission daughter of Mr. a umilton, were m rie jutes before t o'clock tt in St. Luke's Chapel in the Ramap at ten min descendent of Alexander Hamilton When the ceremony had been per | Rhinelander, Bishop of T |the Commissioner and his br passed down an aisle of twenty-threr Po Inspe N who lined the canopy leading fr the chapel door to the roadway | inspectors had stood th 4 as the Commissi tered before the wedding After the ceremony there was a re the hi cireular tent b rs from ner en eset upon the lawn The reception was held in exclusively with blue flowers, aJpan firepl lery, which is more than ¢ the eastern end of the gal St. Luke's ¢ eminence over jand the misty blue Ramapo Hills, wa decorated with peonies and m other white flowers, For half an houy “he | before the arrival of the bride and the |Oridegroom motor cars began rolling of {Up the steep overway the |cleared, but the air was heavy with etient | mist. but itter- | Mrs Among the first to Pierpont Morgan, widow of J. 1 J. | Morg | Mrs. | Morgan Besides these came Mrs, BE. H. Har }riman, Mr. and Mrs, Brancis Lynde | Mrs. J.C. Peabody, i } Stetson, Mr. Mayor and Mrs, Mitchel, who | motored up from New York, Mr. 4 Mrs, Morton Paton, Prof, and |N. FB. Osborne, Charles Lanier A. Hartwell, Dwigh ioMrs. He hn Dyneley Mrs. Rogers Derby, Mr. and Mrs, ¢ the Mis Bacon, W. KR. Mr. and Mrs. J n Law » Commissioner Woods ar motor ¢ iter a Cor rawn hay hackneys with ros cheek straps, the coachman and foo! man adorned with great white peoni with ribbon streamers, brought t | bride, her father a moment bell and Miss Hamilton had Arthur Woc Then the f fifty motor ¢ ton louse for the reception and br sts assembled ther edding t y WAS ery Pin the oaken dinin uh miniature t semaphores were ere ide the bridesgr ar home, although the all their blue their chestful 1 that earlie With Commiss Woods at the side se who sat with them ind moth the bride, Miss Elizabeth Hamil her sister, and her cousins, Mis Satterlee and Misi nt a athe If it's poor, mab If it’s nic, Good for body, bone, and brain eee Miss Josephine Onvort MORGAN'S NICE, KO RS WS i ADMITS ~ PEACE NEVE WASHINGTON, Twenty-three Police sever! | “Every Picture Arthur Woods jand Miss Helen Morgan Hamilton, do Mra, William | afternoon | | Hills, near ‘Table Rock, the country | Jhome of the Hamiltons, ‘The bride is Ja niece of J. 1. Morgan and a direct formed by the Right Rev. Philip nnaylvania, York, | | lute with | nm and wedding breakfast at | eof the Hamiltons, a large, long gallery, which was decorated almost rig, cornfiowers and larkspur, A | » blazed in the tall, wide | ity feet | long and twenty feet wide. Mr. and Mrs. Woods stood under o shallow bower of green and blue to receive is on an rain had arrive were Morgan, and Misses Jane and Frances M un, their daughters, | fund Mr. and Mrs, Junious Spencer | every well man likes to do. enjoys doing anything. |i dangerous Bright’s dis: | | disordered, get Doan’s Kidney Pills. | wei ik kidneys, recommended so strongly by people you know that you ‘an use it with real contidence. These Are All = |Greater New York Cases Chas. L. Lawrence, Dr. and | P. Swan, Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Wood Sehuyler, Mr. and Mrs, Charles Steele, Mr ane Mrs, Robert | Seull and | Dr | the authenticity of an Interview with |him on peace published by # Munich newspaper two weeks ago, but de- 8 nouncing as spurious a somewhat similar atat ent credited to him by the Berlin Evening National Zeitung jof June 3 It had been assumed by the Depart- [ment that both of thess publications | were unauthorized, but they were lely copied, attracting much unfav~ arable mment in England, and last week Secretary Lansing directed Mr. eer a to report whether he had ven any such Interviews The ’ eretary would not comment | to-day on the Ambassador's reply wanising and President Wilson confer before a decision js |e ashed, as to what action, if any, | shall be taken. June 10 (via London). — Friedrich yon Westarp, Conserva- tive leader in the Reichstag, has ac Every Little Task a Painful Effort HIS time of the year there are many odd jobs about the home that But no man or woman with a ‘‘bad Every little task is a painful effort. Now there’s surely something wrong when every day brings morning | lameness. sharp pains when bending or lifting and a dull, tired state. | Likely it’s kidney weakness. Don’t neglect it. | first, but delay may encourage gravel, dropsy, crippling rheumatism or ase. If your back aches and the kidneys are This is a successful remedy for E, 136th St. (Bronx) elf and the chapel ty-two]much that my energy and strength Kidney | was xapped and I could hardly drag Hy this time there were nearly weakened my kidneys and my back was so lame during the day I could pick up anything wkfast for the bridal | table being decorated with Here and there along Another dizzy dito turn or move, The kidney secre- pains | ¢ in-my hips and thighs caused much | py, buttons and | may have sins and dizzy spells and toned np my health.” _Broadway (Brooklyn) . 1145 Broad: | My back ached so Amanda ‘Thomp! way, says myself around. [ was miserable and my back ached day and night. Ift sat down, I could hardly get up, and when IT lay down I found it difficult were too frequent in passage boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills made me well and L haven't had any trouble from my kidneys since ixteenth St. (Newark) 59 Sixteenth] Oscar R. Palmer, city fireman, 719 back was giving a good deal of discomfort, Severe, dome and [had ng all the tame sioner's «© Harvard Wrancia N.| dizzy spells annoy a heavy, drowsy » Doan's Kidney al nnd they ‘rid mc (Statement given May #s, LASTING BENEFIT. Schw all said The cure Doan's Kidney Pills ills gave me hes beon lusting. Willow Ave, (Hoboken) | Willow Ave., says I suffered from kidn that time 1 was in ve consulted. two doctors, but got no relief. ions from my: kid- heya were bani nlored. 1 began using Doan's Aney ls on a friend's advice and two boxes en- tirely rid me of the trouble.’ (State: ment given July 8, 1913. On April 13, 1916, Mr. Palmer © years ago ey trouble, At y bad shape, I lutely gave me years ago hus been a permanent cepted the statement of the Ambassador, Juniwa W, interview regarding prospetts of which the Ambassador wae have given to « representative of the tung, was a fabrication, vence, Count Westarp hae atement withdrawing rftl- cisms on the American policy whieh he made in the Reichstag, and which were based on the alleged interview, The Overseas News Agency yest quoted Ambassador e that Count Westarp had asked hit time ago to permit the National purtous ie” Germany Announces 4 Totaled 114.500 Tom 19 (hy wireless to Say~ May fiftysalx v sels flying the fag XGstro-Hungarian. submarines It’s easily corrected at _Dwight St. Palbot, 58 Dwight Si “For a long time T suffered from severe pains in my back and my kidneys were too frequent in action. My rest was broken at night and I puldn't bend over or lift without great pain or suffering. got so diazy that if walking outdoors I had to grab a tree or telegraph pole Doun's Kidney Pills greatly benefit. and [recommend them in the Findlay ‘Ave. (Bronx) nes + Findlay back got so lame just to take a walk. If I caught cold it went straight to kidneys and put them out of order, bringing on more severe pains across my back, which kep! T used Doan's and they put my kidneys in good came strong and T use Doan's that it pained 1 kidneys normal Kidney Pills now and then as a pre- keep my kidneys in fine conditic ‘DOAN’S Kidney Pill Every Druggist has Doan’ 8, 50c a a Box, Foster-Milburn Co. Buffalo, N. Y., Mfrs.

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