The evening world. Newspaper, July 10, 1916, Page 1

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Ce eo ee eet a ALL £OITION “Price ONE CENT. {WILL ASK CONGRESS TO GIVE $100,000 10 OF INFANTILE PARALYSIS, FIGHT PLAGUE pee won Want Power to Comman- ' deer Private Physicians. pewer peatuis vere MEXICO MUST BE New Cases Increasing, Espe- dally in Brooklyn—Closing Several “Movie” Shows. _ Mealth Service honda to-day decided} to ak Congress for a $100,000 appro- | (pflation and permission to draft phy- Ww fantile paralysis epidomio raging in f New York and other cities, The Sonate to-day unanimously iy 7 pra@opted the O'Gorman resolution ) authorising tho uso of tho hospital and Vinapection facilities at Kills Island to ‘ @heok the infantile paralysis opidomic ta Now York. De, William C. Ruckor, Assistant Surgeon General, to-day recommended Mat each person suspected of being @ carrier of tho diseaso bo placed ) qmder observation and thut all railway pabeonger oars leaving New York, there is an apidemic of tho ‘Gipease, be thoroughly cloaned, f Fourteen deaths was yosterduy's Eh @oli in the infantile paralysis epidemic fa Greater New York. This was falling off of five from tho figures of fe day before, The deaths occur- Mug tn the twenty-four hours which ended at 10 o'clock this morning wore G@igtributed as follows: Brooklyn, nine, OM ae against fourteen the day before; Mf Manhattan, threo, the same as the jous day’s figure; Richmond, one, the same as the day before, and te Bronx, one. Queens reported no @eaths yesterday. ‘The. total of deaths since the ept.~ @emio started has now reached 238, Brooklyn experienced a slight ine in new cases yesterday, to- a figures showing sixty-elyht in Yast twenty-four hours, There beon sixty-six reported in the Previous day's fiqures, Manhattan, qm the contrary, showed thirty new as against elght in the pre. list, Queens fell from eight @ses to one to-day, Richmond has four new cases, an incre » of one, and there ure no new cuses in the} ‘This makes a total of 103 new cases fm all boroughs, as compared with ty-elght in the twenty-four hours previous. The grand total of cases Feported to date is 1,089. Health Commissioner Emerson sald iding our own in ysis, but ent dim- until we can r fmution of deaths for a period of veeks I y! n th the epi- jemic ts under cx Woe are reach- ing the cases rapidly, we have plenty of hospital accommodations for them, 1d we have informed the Red Cross to-day that its services so kindly offered will not ‘ st License ¢ yediay announced tw moving pict abla Street, Hr At and De nuton Ay r movie sh sf’ enpe = en Second Page) ) @alans from civil life to lift tho in-| 4 Bireet. All | these places RESPECTED WILSON { WASHINGTON, July 10.—Pudiio, President “Makes "Dediaration for Benefit of ‘Those Who Would “Butt In.” GIVES PEACE MESSAGE, SS IF i At Salesmen’s Congress He Hits. ; Men of Provincial Minds— Tells of Business Future. DETROIT, July 10.-President Wil- son to-day answered Col. Roosevelt's spirit of militancy with a message of peace. Speaking to 3,600 persons who packed Arcadia Hall—hundreds of whom were dolegates to the World’ Salosmanship Congress—tho President | said that fighting results in hatreds that ruin opportunities for progress in| trade and civillzation, ‘Tho anme persons who heard Roose- velt's “call to arm to-day rocked the peace, “The long way to get together is to fight,” sald the President. .“Some| men say they want to help Mexico, They want to overwhelm her with force, That is the long way, as well as the wrong way. “By thie you establish hatrede.| } Then when you try togo in as friends and helpmates you find the doors barred ae if with eteel. Mexico feels that we do not wish to help her, but to possess her. This is due to | the manner in which some have tried to exploit her possessions, So fa | am concerned | will not help these | men, We must respect our own sov- respect that of | Mexico. My belief is like the Vir, ereignty—but we mi Bill of Righte—every people h | right to manage her own affairs, | say thie for the benefit of those whi | would butt in, struggle is ited a nent Wilson stand for the liberti goo nd in 90 doing attempt to convert jem to the principles of America." w demands “These are days things,” the President fi (Continued on Second Page.) <n VEL BUREAU, Vt’ afatidiug © ye Guy ima, Sfterward regaincd the lowt pusitions _ Cove [* Circulation ‘Books Open to All.” 1G: by The Pecos Pubtiehing tbe New Sore Warts), [Circulation Hooks Open to All.” : 12 PAGES PRICE ONE CENT, SUBMARINE CAPTAIN'S STORY } OF THRILLING TRIP ACROSS > SEA DEUTSCHLAND FOUR DAYS NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY First Photo of German Submarine Liner That Crossed the Ocean---Her Commander ee Poe eo Cee oro Cr ee er Po eo Core OP Cor Poe eo reer oy eee ere. cee }|Capt.Koenig in Interview andFormal © oe eee eee ee t Says He Was Not Driven Out of His af reverresresetert= == » Sel nad lain at the bottom of the English Channel one whole night; how » |he and his crew played the gramaphone beneath the waves; how they had drunk champagne and ate the best of foods; how they had openly, { sailed 3,800 miles, submerging only a few times for a few hours and doing only ninety miles under the surface during the entire trip. two months ago, | with cheers for FRENGH AND BRITSH CANS | ARE ADMITTED BY BERLIN Peronne ‘oes te Within Rs inge of |oy Unter attacks, the German War | ‘ Small Field Guns of the Entente Allies. 0 trial trips before on the Deutschland. There was no fear in the experie ence, and it seemed no more than taking a trip on the Schleswig or Prin cess Irene, the German Lloyd ships | used to command, “We started from Germany Juno 23,% had bad weather only one day aNd in getting out, if the English do not tray 4,800 miles mile zone. No doubt the “It got rather close inside during) ten cruisers off this port waiting for » rough Weather, but it was all) us, but I could submerge before leave right when the hatches wore off, The} ing the river, Our ability to escape Deutschland can go down 800 feet and| ought to be demonstrated by the stay there for four days if necessary,| fact that we were not seen at any but we did not have to do that time on our voyage here.” This trip was @ practical demon-| “LT have seen.” said the Captain, stration of the ability of a submarine! "statements that we were forced to to pass the British blockade, Woe ex-|go hundreds of miles out of our added, and then continued: “Lift your eyes to the horizon of busi- ness. Let your thoughts run abroad throughout the world and with! thought that you are Americans and and rights of mankind and go out and sell your | British Commander nounced that the | turing the south | Wood, have made further progress Hritish, after cap- ro end of Trones 10.—The Anglo- armies preswed forward on | northward, both aides of the River Somme tn a¢ vero fighting last night despite do- termined German attempts to aterm the great offensive, German War OMce admitted this afternoon The French War OMce announced Somme, and the capture of 800 yarda| § of German trenches in a surprise at. | © Champagne region » Provident sounded a call to rman War Office contradicted thin| * fy 4 men of the world to respond of salesmunship. alculable id. "It ts penetrated the village of Bi. t Barloux was! | than @ mile from the el man War Of-| * ty announced by th e, and other German post- The Berlin oMctal tella of a re- | newal of aerial warfare, It say ery lively aerial ac- Continued op Fourth Page.) Broken Trolley Wire Kills Roy, pken trolley electric wire in In several encounters the Germans No. $638 Hay Thirty-siath was struck by the end of a) shock “No, tage won't be any difficulty Channel, Wed oe WEATHER—Bremore to might ond Vesedey. + FINAL ; att ee = —_- 4 a Preeti Rae slink tein weet. ~ sine IN THE ENGLISH CHANNEL DODGING WARSHIPS OF ALLIES Statement Declares His Boat Is Only First of Many Merchant. Sub- marines Which Will Carry Mails and Freight. Course and That He Will Go Back After Another Cargo—Boat | Can Remain Under the Water for Four Days. BALTIMORE, July 10.—Capt. Paul Koenig's personal story of the Deutschland’s voyage across the ocean was told to newspaper corre- spondents soon after he made public his formal written statement, He » laughed at stories of his being chased far off his course by enemy ves- sels, and declared that during the entire trip the vessel was submerged ,for only about ninety miles. Supplementing the written statement, the Captain told how his ves+ He declared that the Deutschland was only the first of many sub- marines which are to be sent from Germany, and that the Bremen would be the next to come over, Some reports said there would be twenty-five ~ | submarines in the merchant fleet, but Capt. Koenig did not specify any number, Gay V. Steele, Surveyor of the Port of Baltimore, made an official report to Collector Ryan to-day advising that the Deutsch- land was an unarmed merchant vessel, entitled to all the privileges of any other peaceful ship sailing under the flag of a friendly é nation. Upon delivering his ship's papers to the office of the North German |Lloyd Line, Capt. Koenig declared this voyage across the Atlantic had broken England's rule of the seas, “We went down one or two times in the North Sea for a few hours,” said Koenig in relating his story, “but we travelled only ninety jmiles in all under the seas. We were four days in the English Channel, j lying on the bottom a whole night there because the weather was foggy. } Nobody saw us and we sighted no battleships—only cruisers and } destroyers, “It was my first long voyage in a submarine, though | had taken d @ total distance of about) violate the law concerning the three- will be oot great financiAl success from our) course in the Atlantic because ef + \ture, and, in fact, the boat was British warships, That is not ea, Sal paid for by this cargo, We can carry! Why should we go out of our course, | \ 1,000 tons, ough this time we had except to submerge? That is the ns, chiefly dyestuffs, worth| simplest and most effective way to § get out of our course, Besides, it ey $1,000, Tho Captain smiled when asked If/ {is much easier to submerge, % his there would be trouble In getting out| “We came to Hampton Roads be of the Patapsco River, the straight cove-> *

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