The evening world. Newspaper, July 11, 1916, Page 2

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EE ' » Gaye dave (ehen more than | pre enere Morning of (he Premed pw) Phoury to © point east of Chenols ating a4 trenches ot German poriiions war lene ott Minutes and Merde ad thirty-Ove, The Germans nied MOTs stubbornly a! Ha hee t . We lore than (we bh “y and Oil ie otrong deters ve fort Neations Were te the hands of the Pre ‘The Pare War Om «rat otere fe hae been aecert that south of ‘the Bomme the Premed in (he lant (we Om the Verdun front the Germ dauncle! attack at 4 * © from ise ba n ports of Poor Train Service and Insufticient Pood WASHING , devre i ove ary Waker to-day ' " "On the left bank of the Meuse), Houne t wre Coat Gere were severe ery engage . the Mente in the sectors of Avocourt aod! wing Chattancourt. To ‘he rieht of the at heew Fiver the bombardment of our p poorly n tone from Fleury to & point e@ for the ampe improp Chencie was redoubied in intensity. erty equipped : “At 4 o'clock thie morning the! The action wae taken on © Germans delivered an atiack OVET | jution of Hepreaentative Moore 0 * the whole front thus bombarded sylvania, The vote wee un | Mast of Fumin Wood and Chenois| Another resolution proposed by » enemy gained & foothold in| Representative Gardner of Masmachy need t leetts was adopted calling on Maker F retely was ejected ent advine the House how many mem- © ter attacks Elsewhere our curtain | bere the militia of Ariaona, Texas © Of Gre and our machine guns broke! and New Mexico failed to respond | © wp the attacks of the enemy. The the President's for border nervice | © Bombardment continues in this)and how many men. after reporting 1 F region. were excuged from wervice “West of Pont-au-Mousson a sur. * prise attack delivered by the enemy agsinst one of our trenches weat of : Mortmare Wood was broken up com- © “la Lorraine. after spirited artillery % ® preparations, the Germans attacked the salient in our line east of Reillon, | © and succeeded in venotrating wor. © 200 metres. © “In the vicinity of Vero the enemy # attempicd by the explosion of four He was checked by ou) back, leavii We ove the German mines. the Vonges, south of Luase, an of the enemy was broken up srenades. North of For and a support cleared out. We brought back some prisoners” Buses Now Make FAR Side Stop Stand on the far corner when you want a bus. Wait until it crosses the street and then it 2 will ewing in close to the curb, i Be eo that you can step aboard “> © & This is the new, and obviously wise, ruling of the Board of » Aldermen in connection with @opping regulations for the b fe Ak the Conductor for a Map ond route schedule peer has wile) fies you aok I. & Mons Of our first line over a front of CARGO SUBMARINE REALLY A WARSHIP, ALLIES TELL U.S: (Continued from First Page.) mines to destroy one of our trenches, | ing war fleets and ero lantic ve, the newspaper Rua declared to- day. ing the At. Every Berlin newspaper voted a large part of tts umne to the arrival of the Deut jand at Baltimore and its edi. torial columna to praising the sub- marine’s crew, The Vossische Zeitung said that sov- eral similar abips are being conatruct- ed to begin commercial relations with feutral countries, thereby breaking the Hritiah blockade. One of the ship» is named the Bremen, All are of about 2,000 tons, The Deutachland war built at Kiel, work being started on hor hortly after & company was formed Nov. 8, 1918, —_—— COUNT VON BERNSTORFF SAYS DEUTSCHLAND IS A PRIVATE SHIP. Count Johann von Bernstorff cor- dially greeted the reporters at the Kits Carlton to-day, Me had spent hours im reading the contents of three sacks of mail brought over in the undersea e boat Deutschiand “Gentlemen, the Deutachland is ab- solutely @ private venture of the North German Lioyd and private German Interests,” “1 want to that there ts ho official connection with the Ger- man Government Of course as a Gi man 1am indeed proud of the accom. nt of the boat plishny “We h had no mail for a lohe time, as you know, Conditions pre Vented its coming in. So naturally 1 iy with it” Deutechland carry mail vany n't know, e will” YOU BOING to nee but my information the Deutsch. | st certainly will leave here to-morrow morning and wet down to Mallimore and see shall go in an unofficial capacity merely as a German proud of the ai and CARRYING OF FIREARMS IN IRELAND FORBIDDEN Order Affects Ulster Men as Well as Nationalist Volunteers, House of Lords Is Told LONDON, July hiblting = the of firearms throughout all Ireland has just been issued, Lord Lansdowne announced in | House of Lords this afternoon | the onier affects Ulster as well as | Nationalist Volunteers Gen. Chamberlain, Ch | Constabulary, hi rs carrying An order pro f the Irish It will arrive here within ten] | | don).—-Another commercial sub marine, the Bremen. the same company that built the | Deutechiand, now in an American | port, already hae left harbor, ac- |cording to the Berlin Voaniache | Zeitung BERLIN (via wire Savage Figt 4 Parrel Keb | els Ketreating From Jiminez, Is Report to Gen. Trevino, The main eu | cording Moa J today by Gen Jw Garcia. wander Varral, said | the he suffering heavy | retreated Mombr lien, @ few miles #0 vn on that if they deciding battle probably jor to morrow ermment’a cavalry mingo Arrieta almost with wn could by | munition obtain joo me bandits who garrison at Ji y the A mensage tro the bandits’ | drive off the Parral garrison WASHINGTON reported of the Villa campaten be fought late to-@ay ae the de facto Gov. under Gena Ho and Mati ' ned. \« and July 1 the tacked rr Hamos i* » atriking distance Gen, Gareia gave no det of the fighting, which he described as “very He sald, however, it was intention was to The number of troops engaged ie] a bigh dl | not etated. ‘The Parral garrison has previously been estimated at about The Villa ce ane ralitos lant in de y here 0 divisions, ward toward the Texas other pm Andr Gareta, Car- AMATERDAM, July 11 (via Lon. /Tanea Consul at El Paso, said that troops of the de facto Government in sufficient numbers to destroy the ban- ult Gen ry dondo and th plan whic! ul a PETROC siloft haw of the Russian 266,000 men, 6, and 866 machin Mirma, 114 (Garn fo a turd. Ty od 188 (Keating), 6 won, Brothe to la (Murphy). hir dT te 9 to EMPIRE or YONKERS, N triew for tomer lows HIST MACK. Trwe year ote toe ine Philip M Neve she will re j from a ny | perience | France her son, | with her A will propore rather than infor | veraations botwoen Ambassador Arre Department | American ofciais will accede to > any RAD, doe Time, 421 and Chivalry also ran. ie a EMPIRE CITY ENTRIES, row'e races 8 expec’ 1 4 fol we State ures rae ul Kk » July at offensive, 620 officers, to 4 and 0 er) 12 tod, O. Vo Photo, M Meala lnc 6 Swish TY y RACK July 1 ") her Vos. “Rena ed BARA, Cal. Lydig of Ne She ed Capt ) ynstructed by dits had followed them tn close pur- ‘arranza has been notified that uy walt the ry Lansing from his here that mal joint pal con 271 ,000 NUSTRO-GERMANS CAPTURED BY RUSSIANS Gen, Bru tured more than 271,000 Austro-Germanse since the beginning it was of ficially announces this afternoo Up to Monday the captures to Nea 312 guns ity sece 1 cms A ad ead. > ran Dixon Park TRACK The en | as fol rr) ta Netter, July 11 w York ty reported better to-day, and her physician | | announced there ts every re to be. fering ox soldiers tn Lydig, and are here 6 | there ts widespread | the failure of cote to reach the camp. BAKER ASKED TO DEFEAT FOR VILLA (2 MORE REGIMENTS | ANSWERCHARGESOF FORCES IN ATTACK | REACH NEW YORK'S NEGLECT TO TROOPS ON CARRANZA MEN CAMP ON BORDER F wo Thirds of State's Quota of Troops Now In the Kio Grande Valley. By Martin Green. (Special Gta Correopondent of The Evening World.) MALLEN, Ter July 1 - The ar 1 of Heventy fourt lofantry Huffalo and the Twenty third of Brooklyn at Ph ¥ brovaht twot ie jof the New k militia forces int this district ‘The Mixty ninth, Mee and Third Hemimente are yet to complete the full quota, Major Gen. O'ityan to-day je thought re. * cruits can be trained here as well at ‘« the entire alloty New York State should pot be bur. | “i to Texas and put inte camp rou. | tine without further nee with fifty targets of 1 brigade encamped here was selected to-day by Major Gen O'Ryan, Tt ts in the resaca de Mio! Grande, or old river bed, a mile south | of the , and the men will shoot in the direction of Mex but the targets will be four milea from the river and Mexico will be protected by loves. Ra have been selected at Mis- sion for the Firat brigade and at Pharr for the Third brigade also, each ra to be supplied with fifty targets, As soon as possible an artillery range will be located somewhere in the vicinity of McAllen. @oon the sound of rifle firing and the boom pf! heavy guns will be echoing along the lower Rio Grande valley. BROOKLYN REGIMENT GOES INTO CAMP.AT PHARR. The Twenty-third Regiment of! Brooklyn went into camp at Pharr) this afternoon, The second section was delayed, and on this account there waa a shortage of tent shelter to-night, Col, Norton reporta his 1,090 men in good health after seven | days on the road. The Seventy-fourth, a collection of | Nuffalo boys, had their camp about | completed at noo under the vigorous direction of Col, ‘Thurston. The camp Vharr is shape physically than that at McAl- len or Mission, Shower baths had been erected before the Seventy-fourth and Twenty-third arrived and the Six- ty-ninth will come into a completely equipped camp. Major Frank M. Waterbury has been appointed ordinance officer in the sixth division, and will have charge of the installing of the rifle ranges. A requisition has been mado upon Gen, Funston at Ban Antonio for range equipment Although the officera are making every effort to interest the troops In np life there ls a lot of homesick- ness and a lot of grumbling, Hun- dreds of the boy» are suffering from the effects of the ainallpox vaccination and typhus tnoculation, and in the Seventy-first and Twelfth Regiments lamenting over in better Many of the soldiers are buying thelr own cots at $8.60 each rather than sleep on the ground, and camp stool peddlers are doing a rushing business selling fragile senate for fitty conts each, Owing to the unrettabil- ity of the tee plant at McAllen the War Department has undertaken to build an ice plant for the soldiers with a capacity of ten tons a day, SIGNAL CORPS GIVES PROOF OF ITS EFFICIENCY, Pians for the building and proposed equipment bave been drawn by Privates Snyder and Hepburn of D Company, Seventh Infantry, who are qualified engines The ma- chinery will be rushed to McAllen, and if possible the camp will soon be ndent on the tee question, ni Corps, under Major W. L. Hallahan, proved Itself an efMfctent organisation by getting out dotails to make maps of the camp and the aur- rounding country within three hours after thelr arrival yesterday. Major Hallahan has begun work on field telephone service, by which the three | camps of Infantry and the camps of the artillery and cavalry at McAllen will be connected, In the matter of temperature ye | terday was the best day the soldiers | have experienced since coming into Texas, Clouds hid the sun until the Jearly afternoon, when there was a | dre nehing downpour, In comparison | with what has been dealt out in the ‘drivers who ha THE EVENING WORLD, TUBSDAY, JULY 11, SEVENTH NEW YORK REGIMENT ON PARADE IN THE DIVISION CAMP AT M'ALLEN, TEX., IN THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY If" The New Vo ” are imbibing the fennel help ber WY what they wee wad ty | Fhe ¥ wee thousande of Mexicans iy in security and comfort . de uf the the 4 bh thou ie of ouldiers ecient Hiate re vant town pulles ioe, ® Protects Mexican interests ae AW whieh no Amer. sn i safe from saganmination, and even Me rly are Jeopardy, The contrast cannot fail to atrike by The New York @oldiers may eo beck without firing @ shot at @ Mex jean, but will carry with them ideas of life on the ne an ealeulated New Y ARMY MUL A private with a broken lex, with umonta, W lat Ban Antonio yeater on “The camp surgeons are treating | dozens of soldiers who have been | kicked by mules and horses In the Twentieth and Seventy- first Regiments are numerous truck been educated on | ew York and might | be considered qualified to handle | anything that walks on four feet They are helpless when It comes to handling wild army mules and the lk of mules brought down from N York haven't done a lick of work an yet. Col, Gordon Jobnpton, the command- er of the Twelfth, took up his new duties yesterday afternoon, He has his work cut out for him, for the ‘Twelfth will stand @ lot of handiing, ‘but Gen, Wood picked him out of the whole army for the task, and he looks # an though competent to put that expocted of him. The fth has ben turbule the streets of nt regiment all the men ne discipline rightly #pplied Private Barrett of Company A, Sev- enty-firat Regiinont, who was missing | at roll call yesterday morning, wan- dered into camp late in the afternoon our’ EVEN THE| Of Camp Whitr ~| NEW YORK TRUCK DRIVERS. news from 4 A and fie, + t o had pore oo 4 that re ffieere will replace Conley « » One of tb may be tationed at Port 9 LEWIS TELLS SME ¥, stationed at Fort Totlen. I ft é ’ Coniey War Depar Matthews ‘ ilo Believe Was y receive | Employers and Workers Get) Porme.tin Retaliation for Exe the salutes of sand men os ‘ they wallowed through kle deep, Together on Evening clusion of Asiaties Here, mud to Greenhaven, ‘The rew | World Plan, ange ETS went away silent and morun : WASHINGTON, July 11 tenates There woe little amy lewis of [inels today introduced @ of the Bixty-ninth niaht. The) With both sides in a more NO | rewodu «Secretary Lansing men were too excited tthe near. | fry mood than at ine during ' t te whether the uf getaway i nical ven weeks of ¢ rugele, rey w snee Im not squad tents had ber sentatives vational t ' pen door? ta day afternoon Hes’ Garment Valor and | ning and reauit in disaster to Amerte the night under , Empl Assoclation went int gieaing to the stare Cau tape . the ‘ete bis @ Imervets Pounded werons the hills and mwates | Ovnferen ne Hote} A th iw known today that the au the ir aftern out Ff which 16) nite tes Governme the campfires and sang ® eagerly 1 by upward ot 60,000] UMitet Bt Government |‘ aireaey ' + haw begun quiet Inquiries abroad Fee, them dealing ' een® | workers and the public in general that wait over The sea was pat | wording the treaty. It tw the undere The most important matter to b e pines they had ; to ian win standing (hat it contains important ( nd after taps hin meeting wil } » Was a deal of Whispering of (he 4d discharge” clause, mod eret prov tab eg te it te ber these and ity myateries that the United States is chiefly cons Tenth Regiment, which was Lie ean ane 4 ‘ , left to-day for the rifle range we een local publishers an ‘ : 4 Kektil, bas been ordered to remain| Typographical Union No, 6, and sug-| #8! declared he had excetlony and the Forty-seventh of Hrook- | gested to the warring elements in the | Peasens to believe the Russo-Japane Poekskill, Is under orders le Hance was inte 4 to curb finitely = 800 RECRUITS READY TO LEAVE FOR TEXAS out the will take them to the border are more than 800 of them. bring thelr respective commands up to war strength or tuke the places of men who have been dis- charged from service because their families at home ure in distress. In numbers varying from three to one hundred aud forty-seven these re- crults will go to the Seventh, Twelfta, Fourteenth, Twenty-third und Seven- ty-fourth Hegiments, the First Cuv- al Squadrop A and the First and There ‘They wt and aurrondered to, his commanding | oMcer, He dec!sred that he had no! intention of deserting. Although McAllen is dry on Sun- day, Barrett had found something to drink which confused his senso of direction and when he atarted to | camp found himself in another town, He was sent to the guard house and it is likely his punishment will not be heavy. Hesston, the other Seventy-firat pri- vate, wan caught down at San Benito and will be brought back and placed on trial on a charge of desertion, bate Field Artillery. le ve been issued al for the First Battalion of the Twor ty-second Regiment Engineers, the Third Infantry and the headquarturs staff of the Field Artillery Brigade to proceed to the border as soon as possible, It was sald at Governor's Island to-day that no orders for the de- parture of the Forty-seventh Reg ment, now at Peekskill, had been re. ceived. It was hinced no sucti might come, and the Fort enth brought back here as the nucleus of & new division to be formed to take the place of that ordered to Mexican | duty, GEN. WOOD AMENDS ORDER; COL. CONLEY WILL GO TO TEXAS (Continued from First Page.) lan is looked upon by many officers @s an attempt to Federalize the N tional Guard. Lieut. Col, Phelan gave up his business to obey the call of his regiment, He was about to sail tor Europe when the call came, The reason assigned for discharg- ing the two officera was given as physical disability, In the case of Col, Conley the surgeons are said to have found that he was suffering from heart tremors, Lieut, Col, Phe- lan had told the surgeons of an in- testinal trouble he suffered from as a boy, and construes his discharge as due to this, Col, Conley entered the Guard aa a Second Lieutenant in the Ninth Reg- iment in 1900. He went to the Sixty- ninth as a First Lieutenant in 1904, and became Colonel of the regiment on May 7, 1910, Lieut, Col. Phelan entered Company G of the Sixty-ninth | in 1895 and rose to a Lieutenant Col- oneley in 1914, The news calling for discharge of Conley and Phelan greatly distracted the work of the regiment, and it ts! not likely that the command will | leave Greenhaven for the bordor un- | Ul 6 or T o'clock to-night, | The men, who arose singing at| reveille this morning, are completely inpirited, They resent the sudden- hess of the order taking their Colo- | nels away from them and say Col. Conley should have been given more warning. The order come by telephone trom Major Gen, Wood at Governor's Island to Capt. Robinson, the United States) mustering officer here, Capt, Robinson | told Col. Conley of the order as ho, was about to lead his regiment to the | troop trains at Greenhaven | Had a bomb exploded in the camp | of the Sixty-ninth no greater shock could have been produced, Col. Con ley and Lieut. Col, Phelan were dazed It was allogether unexpected, and the Way of weather the day was almost cool, Thia unusual condition was @ lita | waver, not only to the men but to the only reason given Was that they were | physically unfit, | An Sttenyt vas made to ke Pp Ae ee ne ee Se meena ——— 23D IS EXPECTED TO REACH BROWNSVILLE ABOUT NOON TO-DAY. BLOOMINGTON, Tex. July 11— ithin a few hours the Twenty. third Regiment of Brooklyn will be at Brownsville, Col, Norton report that the men are in good health. The only serious illness on the trip was that of dSergt, Hobson, who was left in Chicago with pneumonia, The mounted orderlies of the regi- ment who went out for a little ex- ercive at Bay City got it from a real Western broncho or two, which they later unofficially reported to be far different from anything they had en- countered in the East, It waa in Bay City that a towns. man Was heard to say: York boys sure have white but they are the healthiest bunch I've seen pasa through here #0 far," The Twenty-third is due in Browns. ville before noon to-day, SQUADRON A GREETED ALONG THEIR WAY BY ENTHUSIASTIC CROWDS. DENISON, Tex, three sections July 11. — The of Sauadron A are speeding toward the border to-day with automobiles, Special for To-morrow, Wedni day, July 12th. PINEAPPLE FRUIT MINS BA— The ay Ping 84 BARCLAY STRZET Closes 6 30 pm, Hat. 10 pm #9 CORTLANDT STREET Closes 11 p.m. batly PARK ROWANASSAU ST. Clowee 11 pm 11 80pm. 400 BROOME. STRE Closes T p.m.) Bat 98 EAST 230 Closes 10 p 478 FULTON 87. 7 30 11 EAST 42D STREET, Get, v . th and TO JOIN REGIMENTS | The recruits in armortes through. | city have orders to-day that | upon this claw rders | would either be kept at Peekskill or! “These New | sking, | | { Untermy: | tinued jin tourist sleepers given og Cloves 11,80 P. present controversy by The Evening eee rd American trade in the Orient and that ho alde wants @ clear under. | tt had been entered into In retaliation standing of the moaning of this pro-| for The clauses in the pending imme vision and th ly part of the dis-/@ration bill which neck to exclude cussion will ba devoted to its con. | Asiation from the Ualted States, aderation, Bettloment ef the ton) ‘There In a clear tendency, which & drawn out contest Is believed to hinge | saw When T represented the Senate at the most salient fea. | t! (y-at-Sea Council in London,” ture of which provides for a board of | sald Lowls, “to divide the world into review to consider be- [three major parts England and tween employers and employees. « to control Europe in trade and Fourteen me zations will tak nbers of both organi. part in the con ence, Morris Hilquitt, counsel for the unfon, and Benjamin Schlesinger, vr nt of the organization, are to present the principal atguments for the men, and William Kiein, counsel, | | and EK. J. Wile, head of the employ- | be told plainly later that we sat allent ers’ organization, for the manufac. | While the compact was in its formas { | turers, tive state, and that we have forfeited Samuel Untermyer, who has al- our right to complain ready conttributed $1,000 to the his treaty seeks to exclude Ame union's fund, cheered the men thin! pricans f alerries Gece Astin trea morning by sending them another, A'm LT have no doubt it is a Fee check for $2,500, and announcing that he would ive them a similar amount | weekly during the duration of the! strike, | Jacob H. Schiff has pledeed him- | self to contribute a like sum every | ke OA r accompanying Mr, contribution said the lawyer believea the men were enti- tled to public support for their con- Willingness to arbitrate and peaceful methods they had) we for pursued during the trouble. > the M’GRAW SIGNS MASCOT | TO A REGULAR CONTRACT, | » Waite rica Hoyt, “the moat envied boy in| who, though only seventeen, | ried by the Giants for two) a mascot, has been signed to| & regular contract by MeGraw and will soon be farmed out to some Int Honal League club ext gave promise of so much natural ability, and pitched xo much like Christy Mathewson, th the Giants have kept an option on his Aces, them at North St, Louis. The welcome given the troopers by St, Louts will be long remembered, At the last minute the Racauet and Athletic Clubs entertained them and sent @ large quantity of cigars and cigarettes, At Mokane. Mo. during a halt hour wait, the men sw rt to 100 citizens who gathered about the cars, and at the conclusion the | town girls responded with several At sons, Kan, tho men got 4 good breakfast and found that shopkeepers had not boosted prices. In Muskogee, Okla. the troopers were entertained by citizens 206 BROADWAY floses 7 pom; Bat, 10 p.m, AU STREET BO pm ska 10 pm. TOT je7H STREGY Bop m. Balle 23 WEST 34TH STREET Closes 7 pom NOTH ST. & 30. Closes 11.80 p' m. Sat 187 MARKET en 1180p. —Baturd Madison Aves, Closes 1 A, M. Dally. ao Asia, sxtern Hemisphere: “This treaty gives concrete basis to that tendeney “If we do not Ww now taliatory measure.” — SKIN ERUPTIONS BELL-ANS Absolutely Remover Indigestion. One package (provesit, 25cat all druggists. re , | Billeusnesa ES Nervouspems, Russia to divide to control the and erica a, Ja and Av ascertain the facts and protest tf sMary, we will ALWAYS USE HEALS & SOOTHES CHILDRENS SKIN ONE BQX PROVES If ATTRACTIV Py THE COMPLEXION ee 4 drugeiste. Sick Headacho, Indigestion, All lost oF found articles adel’! Yertised in The World will be listed at The World's Informae tion Bureau, Pulitzer Bullding cade, Wark Kow; World's Uptown Office, northwest core | Ber 38th St.’ and Broadwi World's Harlem — Offies West 125th Bt, and World's | Washinge Brooklyn Office, 303 {or St, Brooklyn, foe 00. following the print adv ertivoment M4

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