The evening world. Newspaper, June 20, 1916, Page 1

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{ Che “ Cirenlation Books Open to All.’ Circulation Books [ “Circulation Books Open to All.” | coprrient, 1016, ae ‘ONE CENT. The (The New York World). Press Publishing NEW YORK, “TUESDAY, JUNE 20, “1916, 18 PAGES “y UNSTON CALLS FOR TROOPS “SOON AS POSSIBLE” WEATHER—Fair to-night and Wednesday. 0 rio. FINAL to Al = CENT. ‘PRICE “ONE ARMY STAYS, WILSON DECLARES; ‘MEXICO WARNED NOT TO ATTACK ! N.Y. TROOPS START FOR CAMP THO COMPANIES OF THE 220 ~ARE FIRST TO GET UNDER WAY $$$ ——_____— | Hundreds of the Guardsmen Sleep). All Night in Armories—Recruit-' ing Is Boosted in the Enthusiasm, —Batteries Go to Field. | | ~ Twenty-four hours from the receipt of President Wilson's mobilization order New York's National Guardsmen are on the move to the encampment &t Beekman. -Companies B and D of the Twenty-second Corps of Engineers left their armory at Fort Washington Avenue and One Hundred and Sixty-eighth , Street to-day to proceed to Peekskill and thence to the mobilization grounds at Camp Whitman. They will be followed to-morrow morning by the Sixty- ninth Regiment and the six other companter of engineers, and the work of Preparing the camp for occupancy by 16,000 guardsmen from all over the BVCERANFORES INDRIVEATKOVEL o'clock this afternoon and went through a short drill pending the ar- rival of Company B which appeared shortly afterward. Both bodies then took the subway to the Grand Cen- tral Station and entrained on three coaches for Peekskill, The train to} whieh their special cars were at. | 4 ia the one | ing the Grand Central at 2.03 o'clock, CARDINAL WILL REVIEW THE 69TH ON WAY. The Sixty-ninth Regiment of Infan- : 4 ee, A try, about one thousand strong, in- | Berlin Son Ce Cazar’s Troops cluding twelve companies, a machine! Haye Suffered Big Losses fun corps and hospital corps, will > march from the armory at Lexington Along the Styr. Avenue and Twenty-sixth Street, to- a morrow morning at 8.80 o'clock, and! pieRLIN, June 40. Repulse of | will be reviewed in front of St. I rick’s Cathedral, Fifty-second Stre and Fifth Averue, at 8.45 o'clock by Cardinal Farley, It will then proceed to Fifty-seventh Street and then west to Tenth Avenue, where it will en-| train in the New York Central yards. | Major Gen. O'Ryan, commander of the State troops, made a visit to the city thie afternoon for a consulta- | tion with Col, Sternberger, Chief |pattie front Gorman troops attacker | Quartermaster, and Col. Stotesbury, Adjutant General at Division Head- quarters in the Municipal Bullding. His chief object was to facilitate the hiring of motor trucks for the move ment of regimental equipments nec Nie camp and to learn more In detail) 0 santas ort (eel cnnuitian (ae! ia unlteran do -| Turia and Kissolin enemy rosistance crulting and preparedness to go into| broke down under German attacks. camp. South of Turlja a Russian attack was | He said that Col. Cornelius Vander: | reputsed hi bilt, inspectay on his staff, would to- ——— night inspect the Bixty- ninth Regi | 80,000 AUSTRIANS ment, which 1s to leave for camp at CUT OFF IN FLIGHT daybreak to-morrow, strong Russian attacks southeast of | Logishin, north of the Pripet marshes, | was reported by the War Office this | afternoon. The Slavs suffered heavy losses. Other Ruaslan attacks along | the River Styr and near Kolki wero | unsuccessful, On the northern end of the Russia ME successfully south of Smorgon in the region of Tanoc capturing 144] Russians, four machine guns and four mine-throwers In the regions of Kovel, Col, Sternberger made several ap- FROM CZERNOWITZ. pointments this afternoon for the pur- passes ee of completing his staff. He| PETROGRAD, June 20 naa | picked his men from the active and|troops have occupled the village of | | reserve lists and now has a very com: | zadova, Filboka, the | potent corps of assistant The firet appointment was that of Col Arthur F. Townsend, retired, who, up to three months ago, held tho position now filled by Col, Stern- Stroginotz and War Office announced to-night PETROGRAD, thousand Austri June 20.—Fighty | an troops, retreating | from the region of Czernowits, have| berger. Col, Townsend was sworn in} teen cornered in Bukowina by the| a@ Meutenant colonel. The bther ap-|iightning drive vf the Russian left | pointees are Capt. Hugo Jacckel, ro- | tired, sworn in as captain; Lieut Carl Breed, who served as an aldo in the third brigade at Albany, sworn in as major; First Sergt. Joseph W. | pr wink, | Tho Russinns are pressing the pur- | sult with the utmost vigor. of tho Austrian pability will be A large force tn ut eff and sur- Farrell, who was yesterday promoted | rounded. The others face tho alterna captain, sworn in as aide, and Dr.|tive of retreating ough the Car-| Henry Kettner sworn in aa vet-|pathian passes, abandoning their) guns, or crossing Into Rumania, Gen, Pfla » commanding erinarian. Every armory in Greater New York , Continued on Third Page.) the (Continued en Second Page.) | Sensations in the trial of Rae Tanger | for perjury {noon when Dora Tanzer, sister of the | Court. |W. Osborne and told he RAE TANZER’S SISTER DECLARES JAMES 15 OLIVER “Thaj’s the Man,” She Cries! as the Attorney Enters Court at Perjury Trial. OF HIS iaeelicas 3sLLS Defense Suffers Blow When | Court Bars Testimony of a Conspiracy. The first of the defense's promised materialized this aftter- defendant, positively identified James W. Osborne as the man who courted Rae and encompassed her downfall. Mr Onbétind rushed before United States District Judge Wolverton from the Appellate Division of the Supreme As the doors closed upon him Attorney David Slade asked Dora if he was the frequent called at the | Tanger home in 1914 “Yes, he is the man--that's him,” elt ine Adlinaed rising from the the man who ruined | my Tee lifes" Mr. Osborne glared at the witness | and hurried out of the courtroom, The witness declared Mr. Osborne began calling on Rae at the Tanzer ome in the Bronx on Saturday, Oct. 1914 When my sister came upstairs,” Miss Tanzer testified, “she told me some one was downstairs. I looked |‘ and saw Mr, Osborne standing down below." Three nights in succession, Miss Tanzer declared, Mr. Osborne called At the house ese visits, she sald, continued until November. On one visit the witness let Mr. Osborne into the house “Mr. Osborne satd he was living in Seventy-first Street, but proposed to move into a four-room apartment and take care of Rae," she aaid : The defenso suffered a serious blow when Attorney Slade tried to intro- duce evidence of a conspiracy on the part of Mr. Osborne and United States District Attorney Marshall to save Osborne's face. ‘Twill not permit any evidence of FUNSTON SENDS HURRY CALL cording to Gen, Funston of Coahuila had sent a band of the | Might stones were hurled at the Indians north to attack Del Rio. Ap Amoricu n Conaula Ae ore RA ‘MS HUDSON STEAMER parently the Indians formed a june-| The stoning occurred while | tion with @ Mexican force and the| Consul Rowe was in the building a fbn two bodies are marching wnder one FOR GUARDSMEN TO BORDER a SAN ANTONIO, Tex., June 20.—Gen Funston to-day requested the War Department to send to him, AS SOON AS POSSIBLE, a large par’ of the National Guardsmen to be stationed along the Mexican boundary “from Brownsville to the Pacific Ocean.” Gen, Funston did not make public the exact number requested, but sald he had asked for enough to provide border. “adequate protection” of the He also withheld the names of the stations to which the guards- men would be sent, although admitting that a considerable force would be mobilized at San Antonio as a reserve. WASHINGTON, June 20,—Gen. request for National Guardsmen reached the War Department after noon and resulted in telegraphic requests for information as to when the forces of certain States would be able to move. Orders for entrainment of units ready for service were expected vefore nigut. 1500 NENGANS WVETOATACK ATEASTONN Funston Sends Aid on Report of Menace to City of Del Rio. Funston's BRIG. GEN. FUNSTON. (Cougright American Uren Assoctation ) CARRANZA THREATENS WAR MORE TROOPS ARE SENT: U.S. CONSULATE IS STONED —+4<—-— Special Representative Rodgers Ar-| ranges for Train to Take Fugi- tives to Coast Ports Following Night Attack. . MEXICO CITY, June 20.—"If the United States wishes war they Gen, Greene, commanding tie Eagle Pass patrol district, sent a battalion] Will have to begin it by invading our territory,” Carranza told a of the mine artantay oe aie necerne | Uelegation of men and women schoo! teachers and students who called to Del Rio immediately upon recetpt | of thelr information, Sidley's com-/on him to-day. “We will tolerate the sending of no more punitive expe- Rabat ted Be vada del ditions across our border even on the pretext of hunting bandits and defend the city agninst the Mexicans | assassins,” and Yaquis in case they attack, ac- | The teachers called to leam if there were any new developments in jthe international situation and to offer their services in event of war. During a de wan yesterday SAN ANTONIO, Tex., June 29.-Re- ports were received here early to-day that 1,500 Mexicans and Yaqui Indians are advancing from the south to at~- tack Del Rio, The information war brought by Mexicans to Col. Sibley commanding at De! Rio, and transmit ted to Gen. Funston, Gen, The presence of the Yaquis so near the border is taken as confirmation | of recent reports that the Governor | nonstration which be =i were naried at” ¢hs/400 1N PANIC AS A LINER | only ten minutes after 8) chal Repr ——— <4 2 U.S. Wil UPHOLD RIGHTS ON BOTH SIDES OF BORDER FIRM STATEMENT IN NOTE —————_-<4-2—__ Reply to Demand for Withdrawal of Troops, Handed to Ambassador To- day, Accuses Carranza of Protect- ing Villa Bandits and Declares | Lives of Citizens of the United States Have Been Barbarously ‘Taken; Carranza Soldiers | Have Participated i in Looting. “I Am Reluctant to Be Forced té the Conclusion,” Says Secretary Lan- sing, “That in Spite of Crimes, the De Facto Government Does Not Intend or Desire That These Out- laws Should Be Captured or De- stroyed.” WASHINGTON, June 20.—President Wilson firmly refuses to, withdraw American troops from Mexico. In his note to the De Facto Government he sternly arraigns the whole course of Gen, Carranza which jhas brought the two countries to the verge of war, War or peace rests with Gen, Carranza, The position of the United States is pointedyl set forth in his review of the apparent inability of Car- ranza to prevent border raids and to keep the obligation he owes the world by the preservation of order in his dominions, “It” says the note, “the de facto Government {s ple to ignore this obligation and to belleve that ‘In case of a refusal to ree tire these troops there Is no further recourse than to defend Its terrifory by an appeal to arms, the Government of the United States would surely be lacking In sincerity and friendship {f it did » Rodgers had left the place. | Lenape of the Clyde ‘Line Smashes] command, ast ' 20-Foc c h | a xeharaliootag HO thal nteot| Ne preg eee teat auptind abbut ; ra ed against t )-Foot Hole in the ©, W. | duced," sald Justice Wolverton, forty milea south of Del Rio and) stoning, No American has beer Morse at Her Dock | Declaring that Miss Tanzer was| should arrive opposite that city to- | tested lA brief pante followed the ramming, | cing “framed up," Mr. Chanter|day if the reports brought here are| !athorers, — employers at 6.40 o'clock this morning, of the romised the jury that he would| true, atudanta! nod: thoussnde: iof | Feston Sterinae eee " ‘prick the Oliver Osborne bubbie"| Gen. Funston announced that the|#Md children participated ae [er ©. W. Morse by the Clyde Liner and show that no such man ever ex-|quartermaater’s department at Fort A SAGER: (DATE ANE ON AMONSL ce While’ the Hine erthp isted. At least two handwriting ex-| sam Houston has been ontered by the| Palace ; that between 600] DACKIng Into her dock at Pler No, 2 berta, the lawyer sald, would testity| War Department to purchase 50,000] 1! 's eatiieses as ee in| North River. ‘The Morse waa ripped [that the Oliver Owborne letters and|norses and mules for the Natiunai|*"4 109 Americans) iat jforward by the bow of the Lenape | the James Osborne lettera were writ. | Guard Mezing "Gite ten by one and the same man, Mr. Chanler’s assertion was the first hint as to the result of the handwriting experts’ examination, There was much jubilation among the defendant's friends as Mr. Chan- ler outlined Miss Tanzer's defense. This Was occasioned not only by bis flery denunciation of her accusers, but aiso by the printing to-day of the Congressional Committee report cen everything bap been straightened our |from per main to her hurricane deck on the port side, making # hole about twenty feet high and ten feet wide. ——___ AMERICANS REPORTED An oxodus among the American col- ony bas commenced, and all who are jable to do #o are leaving for Vera {Crum or northern border points.) , The ©. W, Morse had just arrived MASSACRED IN MEXICO): Linn Rodgers, representative of| {fm Albany, and her 400 passen- the United States to the Car-| Ke were ready to Ko ashore, The . |ranza Government, called at the For. | !@nApe Was coming tn from her trip Members of Party Said to Have Been Slain in Mining Town in Uuevo Leon to southern ports and was making for| Pier No, 36, when she crashed int the other steamer, Tho shock @ commotion on the Morse {eign Office last night for the purpose of arranging for a special train to here Wednesday to carry ted leave a | Americans to const porte, a nun suring United States District Attor- BROW ARVICHE Beis % ———— Pe cf aren Becoming hystertoal, | > The hole was above the ater ling, ney R, Snowden Marshall for laxity ReMenene er ee GUARDSMEN’S INSURANCE up,| f°". W. Morse me AGE tne n the conduct of hin office, rumor was current in Monterey that ema least danger. ge H. Keller Mr. Chanler laid eapecial stress on | mor wae current in Mo 1 ARMA) MF nesratien OL We eH ETT Ae eanap: Bee pine ean ae Line BOE iveld Mulalbere baad Clave |e eteaminine cog im Siete ace trance sib ta fleults When He was atteriey for Mies Tan, | Oe een won ne tome in Nuss eateete Reve 1 from the | ners , . The body of William rowns, «| will be b ADAG, § sone ine Lorn The lawyer told how attorney Splel-| ones og Mayor Albert Browne of | ‘The premium, according to George B noved from the wait. berg persuaded Misa: Tanser to withe| si ct wae gonatn tre cin mee Woodward. hid view president of the Graw her identification: of James W:| Riven Gh ten Mesioan cine Coo ie Petropalltan Life fraurance Company, | RE. 00e of tho Lenape's rs Ceherne: Aturwardy IN spite of al outs ce Matamoran ecdays Grover atthe feompanien inthe clty and van-| was hurt, Sevoral of the shy ie | Eretlon dnclasod nati tn Mra Yamen|!# aad to have boon ast seen in| fWiinwoilatna ha inte ca a of tho pre mium on outstanding polleies of mem- ‘hers of th fuard. Ll an t of te id polichew to be teaued probably will be $2, Matamoras Saturday afternoon te| ie believed to have been TDurdereg (For R ing 5 Reais See Paye Two) (Entriee on Page 13,) not frankly Impress upon the de fucto Government that the exe {lon of this threat will lead to the gravest ¢ sequence, “While this Government would dee Ply regret such a result, it cannot recede from its settled determination to maintain its national rights and to perform its full duty in preventing territory of the United States and in removing the peril which Americans along the international boundary have borne so long with patience and forbearanee.” NOTE HANDED TO MEXICAN AMBASSADOR. The note was handed early to-day to Eliseo Arredondo, the Mexican Ambassador Designate here, for transmission to Mexico City. Copies were furnished to all the foreign Embassies and Legations and a summary cabled to Special Agent Rodgers at the Mexican capital for his information, Arredondo a short time later carcelled his engagement to see Secre- tary Lansing at 2.30, No reason tor his action was obtainable at the Stat e Department In addition to refusing to withdraw the troops and maculae that execution of the threat to attack them will be followed by the Bravest consequences, the note serves notice that as long as the Carranaa forces continue thelr present attitude no arms or am. munition, or machinery for thelr manufacture, will he permitted to reach Mexico from the United States, Secretary Baker, busy further invasions of the t the War Department all morning with the {details of the mobilization of the National Guard for border defense duty, went to the White House a tew mi utes before the o:her members for to-day's Cabinet meeting for a private conference with the President. Fear that it would be construea as an act.of war, the War Depart. ment has decided to withdraw its request to Congress for the passage df @ resqjution authorizing the Presiden, to use th ational Guard in Mexico sr ni mens lta

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