Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
mt 3 Wegee pre Nee | SIX ATTACKS BY 8 r, ut falied to gain ground, War Office snucunced to-day The fe ettil In progress ik southeast of Viadimir: Veiyn fico eiatement is as follows “army Group of Field Mar shel von Hindenbure—The situa- tion generally is unchanged “army Group of Prince Lao- pola of Mavaria~The Russians Dave renewed their attacks in this region, GBince yesterday afternoon they have attacked six fumes in vain with two army corps on the front of Bkrobova and Vygoda, to the east of Goro- @ische, Further attacks are in progress. “The attacking waves of two Givisions ebbed back and forth Geveral times before our Share itions to the northwest of jovochy, The losses of the senemy were the heaviest. “Army Group of Gen. von. Lin- @ingen—Russian attacks north- @ast of Bviniuchy at first gained Hussians have resumed their - - ms hey = end suet | RE RUSSIAN GAINS vigorously counter-ajtacked by he Germans, The German War Of- “Dartheas: of Beuchoe cad of foreral mer palate ow erties Chet ed the one heceed fommunieation trenches ” Vet wee Mriiek tvs ring — etteetiog 66 Retwral cower the permane:’ conets voted fone monthe of t — come SSIANS BEATEN BACK, BERLIN REP Army Group Under Prince Leopold Checks Great Onrush—Von Linsingen Tries to Regain Lost Ground. frownd = Cowmter-at progress “Astro Hungeriae (rope Rear Postomyty repuleed (he Russians from thelr edyanced positions “Malken tre Northwest nt north of Vodens taere were poor 4 on mis in the fore. und of the, Hulgarian post (ine. ‘The loseen of the enemy were considerable” ——pe in Houthern Vol. offiotal if th in the autrien "ot Kreve an enemy aeroplane wae bit by our artillery fire, It fell within the my lines. wetin the dist rihenst southeast of Baranovicht ¢ were artillery duels counters between advance gual We points “In the region of the River Blonevka and the River Boldu- Tovka our advance continues suc. covatully, “The advance of our Caucasian army continues, One of our pa- trols captured thirty-one Turkisb officera on the Byvasaki road.” _ RUSSIAN TROOPS IN FRANCE PENETRATE GERMAN TRENCHES Drive Out the Foe With Hand Grenades, Says the Paris, War Office — Germans Attack at Many Points. PARIS, July '30.—Russiaas recon- Mottring at Auberive, in the Cham- - Pagne, cays the French official etate- it iasued this afternoon, pene- the German trenches and them with ‘hand grenades. Russians took some prisoners. A Gei.nan attempt to attack near Lihone, north of Chaulnes, was ar rested by French infantry fire. On the right bank of the Meuse, in the Verdun region, German @rations to attack Thiaumont works were stopped by artillery fre, Two German aeroplanes were : ot down in the Bomme region. DENIES SHE BOUGHT AEROPLANE HITS AUTOS, BLALOCK'S SILK SHIRTS BOY KILLED; WOMAN HURT ‘Mrs. Irwin Decides to Fight Suil/Army Officer Loses Control of for Alienation Brought a by Wife. Mrs. Grace Irwin, who ts being @ped for $100,000 by Mre, Jennie ‘Woctelaw Blalock on the charse that sho aliénated the affections of James W. Hialock, a Pacific coast turfman, was allowed to-day by Jus- tice Clark in the Supre Court to Feopen the default and Aight the case. Mre. Irwin also submitted papers @utlining her defense. As to the spe- cific charge that Mrs, Irwin had giv- a Wialock $1,100 w which to buy “Brighouse,” Mre. “The truth about Brighouse ts that Mr. Dialock told me that the horse @owld be bought for $1,100, and that I relied upon his advice and gave him $1,100 with which to buy the ores. He afterward told me that no had shipped te animal to my stables én Ban Francisco. Brighouse was left @& the post the very first race he ran under my colori ‘Mra. Irwin aleo 4 ever bowkht Blalock Automobiles and late suppers when in oo SAILING TO-DAY. Neabelia, Santiago Guiana, Barvados ‘at eum was far below ite real value. § Machine Which Swoops Into Line of Cars and Overturns Four. ; ONTARIO, Cal, July 38.—#eocond Lieutenant #, H. Wheeler of the Army Aviation School at North Isl- and, lost control of his aeroplane here to-day and crashed into @ line of sutomobiles, killing Harold Btoebde, four years old, and seriously injuring Mre, C. A. Btoede, the boy's mother, 1 inju al. Lieut, Wheeler waa not whose Eu MEXICAN BOARD NAMED? though his machine was WASHINGTON, Juyl 28.-—It te re- Ported this afternoon that President Wileon has selected for the American members of the joint commission to investigate the whole subject uf Mea- loan-America! relations: Supreme Rides ald i by . at the jure. 2 ane ie White —— SAW ALLIED CRUISER LEAVING U. S. PORT NORFOLK, Va., July 24.—Corrobor- }} ation of the statement of the battle. ship Louisiana's officers that they saw an allied cruiser within the Vir- Ginta Capes last Tuesday morning game to-day from Commander Loula Bhane of the United Btates o tify the cru but he a ber leav- 2 P.M, ing the Capes about 3 pe have beoe oss = Oo bom AND IN THE CAUCASUS PETROGRAD, July % (via Lone Russian troops continued 0 generation in thie war of whi advance againat the Teutons in tho hardly believed heresif capable, Posed | region of the River Bionevka and the | has dragged her dilatory Bngtish ally | overturning four, | ThE SVSHINY WORL KAISER APPEALS TO WIS PEOPLE 10 “tron Hurricane” ts Raging Against His Army, He Tells Them. DENOUNC Ss “War After War" Coming, Even With Victory, | He Predicts. LONDON, Jay Memd letter from | Kaleer Wilhelm passionately appeal jing to the German people to stand | Arm ond unwavering no matter how the tide of battle flows, hes been printed tn sii the German pepere, The | letter was ctroulated by the semi- | emote! Wolff News Agency. Dated from the front in the west, the letter aye in part “The battle te reg ell jevious Imagination Rejuve. | nates, perfectly equipped with on | they want, Mussia’s arm broken against ovr onet, This has cased uation tw italy. France hae experienced ENGLISH inte joining the offensive on the nt | Homme, and whatever inward worth the/ the Britieh army hes it now hes an abundance of artillery. “The tron hurricane rages egal our brave German men at the Bomme, Negroes ani men come upon us in weve after wave, in ever fresh storma, wild and eullen. Mverything te at atake. The we cold haberdashers on the Thames yearn for our holiest things. The beaith and life of our ‘women and our childrea are menaced. oven neutrale must bear hunger. Only the deptha of the ocean now are open tous. Ghowld we be victorious there la threatening a ‘war after the war’ whe Dest onergiva and power of ti by ite joy ia the utmost to : Hi E : 3 jz 4 is il i i HT ' i Not oii are alive to the jremendous seriousness of the times. our people at home the same peo- as at the beginning of the war? writer feacs net. Let us remem- ber that thie fa no ordinary rupture of ordinary life It ta the hour of destiny for our Fatherland, the hour which will influence us for centuries, ‘We must unite in opposition to the entire world. We must all co-operate in the struggle. “Any man or woman who hangs his or her head or suffers despondency to enter hie soul is guilty now of treason. Rvery word of complaint or discour- agement ie @ erime against our fathers, our sone and our brothers, Lat us show the greatness of the German nation, Do not jeopardise everything by petty squabbling, It is no time for internecine strife, But it fe time for holding towether, In this hour the best blood of the nation, mature men and budding youths, » presenting their breasts to the tron = z35 hail of the English, Russian and African hordes, Everything ts at atake.” This te in strange contradiction to repeated assertions from German sources that the British offensive has reached ite high water mark. It ia take! onclusively that Germany tes thoroughly alarmed, ——— TARANTULA FAMILY ATTACKED HARTIGAN Commissioner Nearly Lost Life After He Was Bitten Five Weeks Ago-Virus Saved Him. Commissioner of Weights and Measures Joseph Hartigan is back at hie desk again after rly taking the count In a battle with # family of tarantulas Ave weeks ago. Commis- sioner Hartigan stuck his right arm into a barrel at the East River Wa house Company's plant to see if the | Dottom was where a bottom should be, A father and mother tare and their four lusty offspring—later captured and preserved under giaes— made a concerted attack on the Com- missioner’s hand, with the reeult that be 1d to be mont to the Ai Private hospital for treatme: For # time it was thought he would lowe the arm, which swelled until it looked more like @ leg, but by an in- Jection of & virus concocted from the Polson of a cobra and a copperhead snake the tarantula venom waa offset BE FIRM IN CRISIS huge beyond | oe po o6asSbORRSSSOS055550005006E0585545s504+0000008 = MARY HEADS BROKEN AS BRONX CAR STRIKERS BATTLE WITH POLICE (Continued from Firat Page.) gamated Association of Btreet Rail. who came to this city to Manage the strike, repudiated to-day any intention to involve New York way men, City In @ general railroad strike, Mahon said the atrike of the Weat- ehester and Union lines would ex- tend to the Third Avenue lines, un- der the same ownership and man- agement, if the employees of the ‘Third Avenue thia week voted to join their brethren in Aghting for tho right to union membership. There was no plan of campaign within his know- ledge affecting the elevated, subway and eurface lines of the Interborough and Brooklyn Rapid Transit syste! COLLISION COSTS LIFE OF ONE A double collision shortly after Midnight cost one strikebreaker his fe and brought injury to several persona, including two polloemen, None of the cars carried passengers. The man killed was B, Oxenhorn, twenty-three years old, an elevator operator working as motorman for a etrikebreaking agency, He lived at No, 664 Blake Avenue, Brooklyn, The Joseph Duggan, twenty-seven years old, of No. 60 Wadoworth Avenue, attached | |\Chilian Heiress Seeks Divorce From Former Yale Quarterback EEE EEE EERE EEEEE ODETTE TEEPE EEEOREO EH ipav tL CPE EEP OEE ETE OOOH already in the Brong, Sherift O'Brien Increased his etatt of deputies to 600, There are at loant 600 atrikebreakers of the strong arm type. The opposing force consists of more than 1,000 striking etreet car men and j thelr ayinpathin and a sort of ae eret service operating und e aie rection of the union jeaders, The latter claim that public sympathy ts with the etrikers, Kdward A. Maher, Jr, son of tee Vice-president and general mana, of the Union Railways, and the | tor's spokesman and understudy with full authority, was angrily emphatic in his demand for uniformed polloe- men on the cars, which has been con- intently refused by Commissioner Woods, “L do not know wi leaders have in mind, jose Visible authority of law in the pe of policemen in uniform ta not on these cara as a warning it hoodlumiem, assault and de- ion of property, no one knows what will happe: he Mr. Maher said tho placing of plain clothes men on the care was useless in the prevention of raids of strike sympathizers on non-union car crews, Mr, Maher charged last night's accel. denta were duo to secret “bleeding” of the compressed air brake tanks by motormen who had etruck. Letting the pressure leak away caus brakes to be made useless and le it Impossible me runaway cars on ® Geen, he said. . Maher sald he came upon two little children egos 4 the tracks on Webster Avenue with axle Tease out of a freshly opened can. ie found, he sald, the youngsters did not know they were endangering | the lives of passengers but had been rot at the work by grown men who ‘were strangers to them. MAHER CHARGES DENIED BY LEADER OF STRIKE, A general cuontradiciton of all the statements mate by Mr, Maher was issued by W. D. Mahon, Presideng of the Amalgamated Association, and HOW TOROMANE AS PRETTY WIFE Two Women, | tresses, Named in Action Against Gridiron Hero. Famous Yale Quarterback Won Young Chilian Heiress From Several Suitors. Komance bas never received « ruder jolt then the announcement tnat Jack de Baulles, enshrined in ihe hearta of Yale men as one of their ereatent baseball ” ere and all afotnd athletes, scion of ® fine ol4 Pennsylvania family and relnted to families of note in various porte of the country, and the beautt- married four years ego after @ most spectacular courtship, have r the parting of the matrimonial waye “The loveliest girl in all world” te the way the dashing ex-football ater referred to his seventoon-year- old bride when he brought her to New York on the honeymoon follo’ ing thelr marriage in Paris in Friends and relatives of the popul college hero who saw her then for the firet time promptly and enthusl- aotloally indorsed bis glowing etate- mont, With Dia ability and social post- tlon and her beauty and unlimited money, together with the fact they were equally interested in outdoor sports, the union was regarded gon- erally the Ideal outcome of a ro- mance that made most fiction love stories geom tame by comparison. It didn't @eem possible they could do anything elee but “1 bapplly ever after.” According to the papers in the suit for divorce which Mra, de Saulles has begun against her husband, he found two women who, if not up to her standard of loveliness, were at least lovely and interesting enough to make him forget his marriage vows, While the names of the women are not me! tioned, rumor has it that both are well known Broadway actresses. Not until the divorce papers were filed 4id any but the most intimate friends of the couple know they had separated some months ago; that de Saulles was living at the Yale Club, while his wife and their child, a boy of four, had taken apartments at @ hotel. John Lorget de Saulles—his friends and admirers have never called him anything but “Jack"—is now about forty years old. He ts the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. de Saulles of South Bethlehem, Pa., a nephew of John G. Heckscher, and a oa in of former Mayor George B. McClellan, W. B. Fits id, Chief Organiser. was graduated from Yale in 1901, the West One Hundred and Bev- | xi> Manone: ablished quartera at| leaving behind him an athletic record, enty-seventh c.reet Station; the Continental Hotel, Broadway and| especially in the football field, which contusions of the body, Forty-first Street, and Mr, Fitzgerald | as earned him ao eae affection Patrolman William Durrant, |remained in commund at Courtlandt | @mong the followers of mi. He twenty-four years old, of No, 2333 Loring Avenue, tho Bronx, at tached to the same precinct; con- tuations of the face and body. Charles Nelson, twenty-three years old, of No, 161 Weat Thirty- sixth Gtreet, a waiter acting as motorman; brulscs and con- tusiona, Abraham Meyers, add: un- known, strike guard; internal in- Juries, George Murray, thirty-five years old, chauffeur, acting No, 8558 Fulton ute and bruises, Unidentified man;.one leg am- putated, A car manned by atrikebreakers and carrying guards was returning to the West Farms barns, towing a car that had been abandoned after an attack by strikers earlier in the night, It was going at @ high rate of speed down the incline, and at Tremont) Avenue and Boston Road the first car Jumped the track and struck an ele- vated pillar of the subway. The mo- torman was wedged in the wreckage | and some of the others, including the | policemen, were thrown through the | windows, One version is that the motorman lout his head at the top of the hill when strikers and sympathizers| jeored him, and put on full speed. Another ia the airbrakes had been tampered with and failed him, THREE EMPTY CARS DASH DOWN HILL INTO THE WRECK. While Fordham Hospital surgeons and oltizsens were working over the injured, they heard a warning shout and looked up to see thr mpty, Ughted care dashing down the Tre- mont Avenue hill at full speed toward them and the wreckage of (he other care. @nd recovery began. {a EMPIRE CITY RESULTS, ther), ole. eat a kimi ond: Btorm ; Metemans, $10 to Vand ut hind Timer-1.08, Gertrude and Marie also D RACK 2 For three-year-olls with 6600 added, 12 tallg =—Jeene Jr, ll (Leaver), 1 3 3 aint outs firet ablonovucy, 11 "Mada tear) iyiate 38. 4 am, Late yesterday @! .:noon another ear of the company waa wrecked on One Hundred and Thirty-eighth Street, near Willow Avenue, and all seven of its occupants were painfully or seriously injured. ‘The car ran over up-ended planks placed in the carway, the police be- eve, by atrikers, The ripped through the flooring and de- railed the car, some of the injured persons having nacrow escapes from | death, Dawn found both aides ready for the planks | Hall in the Bronx, Mahon said: iracy sportation facilities w York as a means of forcing motormen and conductors to join our | union, Nor have we imported gun- ‘men, Nor are we using domeatic ae men, as is Mr. Maher, according to the oficial reports of the police.” Later in the day President Mahon eaid he had been visited by com- | mit from one of the Brookl: id two Manhattan lines who jatrong desire among their associates to organise, Mr. Mahon eaid he told the committees to come to him again jafter the Third Avenue employees jhad decided to-morrow night what course they meant to take, About forty of the 150 cars of the Kingebridge division were moving over the lines to-day, though under circumstances which kept passengers out of them, Three wrecked cars were taken into the Kingsbridge barns at noon; they had been stoned by strikers, w wero aided by the obstructing tace tice of the driver ef a moving van. A sport that strikers had Hundred reet Crosstown Iti ce and St, vietnity this afternoon, been forced up to the trolley way construction and the rosultt break In the wires had suc stranded. --- GREATEST YEAR FOR gregated —$4,334,000,000 Closing Period on June 30, WASHINGTON, July 28.—Fore! trade of the United Btates closed @ balance of $2,136,000,000 tn favor American exporters, nounced, and $2,198,000,000, The trade balance was double ¢ eonfiict to-day, Six hundred reserve Were added te the forcag orts exceeded waar by 61,600,000,000, lestroyed blocks of trolley wires on the and Thirty-cighth between Rrown Ann's Avenue, Caused a ft mobilization of police in tho The police learned a truck highs |loaded with empty packing case had & bump in the roadway due to sub- exsively dragged down the connections over the whole space, leaving twelve cars Tho strikers were exonerated. They U, $. EXPORT TRADE Government Reports Show It Ag- at greatest year in history June 80, with The year's ox- imports were valued at| of lsat year and four sot at Sh oe cea ry was badly injured in his last year in esi as @ result of his daring foot- “pcloviog Dis graduation he went to South America and in railroad construction. After a few years in that count he came back to New York, re ne here until the latter part of 1910, when he went to Chili as representative of the South ‘American Concessions pradicas, 88 ores laation backed by Ameri capital. In January, 1911, while in Valpar- do Saulles was presented to » Blanca de Errasuis, bis mother-in-law. ‘be. In addition to boing noted for her beauty in many capitals of the world, Mme. de Er- famed as having the fc st fortune in South America. ates were scattered through- out i, Uraguay and Argentina aud her residence and gardens Vina del Mar, the Newport of Chill, were one of the show places of the country. Deo Saulles got an invitation to visit tho de Errasuiz villa at Vina del Mar, There he met Senorita Blanquita, a charming girl of aixteen—she la now but twenty-two years old—just bags from finishing schoo! in Euro; iminedvately eet out to win her with the samo impetuous energy that had carried Kim over the enemy's goal ho Uwe and again. Senorita Blanquita liked his style of courtship. Half a dozen native suitors, howe’ t. by | The upshot of de Saulies had to ers, which it la alleged he did with swords, fiste or any weapons they happened to choose, He vanquished them all, and just as he figured on claiming his reward Senorita Blan- quita's mother, saying her daughter ne gathered tn large numbers along the} was too young to be married, took street and commented gl Hy on the] her to Paris, Jack stood the separ- confusion caused by the accident. ation a few month: mn rushed hen je followed, ee CHINESE PHYSICIANS OFFER NOVEL PLAN TO CURB PARALYSIS. to Parie, Their marri: Gau F, Lee, a venerable Chinaman living at No, 61 Bayard Street, called on the Board of Health this afternoon and said that the Chinese physicians of New York were ankious to help in the fight upon infantile paralysis, “We haven't looked into these New he eald, “but in China 8 like infantile par- Some of those cases cure gn ite ot alys! | hy ta eo juice from a certain | ports aggromated $4.334,000,000, tha| PY taking the julae from certaln Department of Commerce to-day an- body. ‘This causes a big which we rub with a chicken Thereupon the poison feather, rr ere in the ewelling and the paral: hat | SUES DE SAULLES gn | Said to Be Ac- Menke conferred |COMPLAINT IS SEALED. *' ' shed | PAILS CRE BELIEVED FOUND; 134 NEW CASES ere We & weale of time today with Hive medicine are coming from ll parte of the country to New York, probabiy at the end of nent week, for © Conference on infantile paraipers At the suggestion of Hesith Com. Missioner Emerson, the Hoard of Ke. mate has aypropristed 02,000 for thie meeting, The lint of delegetes te be invited Is now being prepared. Of interest in thie connection te « Warning just tesued by the Depart. ment of Agriculture in Washington, emphasising the fact that as yet there le bo known cure for infantile paralysis, The public te warned th we to control any so-called remedy which ip manufactured and sold withia the borders of @ single Bate, —— DOWLING LAYS PLAGUE 16 ot ll points of eniry te Fe reauiaione ore es Weshbere Wire at Lengweed Magee Veents Veermer. BOFTON, duty wean te burn of New York, detestes ot Rersarteviie, NOE oe CES TS, CEE The suggestion was fe cently made that — make it # point to look after their husbands’ eyes. But there is a duty on se; t0d side, too; haeeaies lathers should satisfy ithe selves that no member of family requiring glasses is ing without them. And—that when they errs on tna they get proper & it is difficult to oqrreaiete what a handicap it to be without glasses when they arg. new own eye, TO FLUSHING SYSTEM wight is pe ~ e Pan tbe know! : ADOPTED BY THE CITY pe Po re the capa to examine eyes Soman a “4 Pete moan a anteate glasses that will give you the to-day that he belleved the condition ——" of comfort and sate hew fushing syatem adopted during | ‘There is no obligation whethe- the Mitchel administration, is re- sponsible to @ great extent for the epidemic of infantile paralyain, “What wo need more than medical diagnosticiana from all over the coun- strong-armed men with shovels to rid) thousands of receiving basins of germ- laden refuse. Every receiving basin in the thickly populated boroughs of this city is @ hole of the very worst type. Probably never in the history of the city have the sewers been in such condition, “I am firmly of the opinion that the present system of flushing the strests and washing refuse into the seware ig responsible for this condi- enough to 'y off tho sur! ret- use the flushing system would be all right. But tho task Is too great for the underground —_ many of! whicb are antiqua’ “TE contend that ‘Borough Presl- dent Marke of Manhattan hasn't the money with which to clean the re- ceiving basing it fs his duty to Aight before this body until he at" —— LONG BEACH PUTS BAN ON CHILDREN UNDER 16 TILL EPIDEMIC WANES. No child of sixteen years or under ‘will be permitted to enter Long Beach until the infantile paralysis epidemic disappears, and none of the scores of boys employed at the resort will be allowed to continue their daily prac- tice of returning to their homes in other parts of Long Island after work hours under resolutions adopted by ary My ey arial at tine has bee nly & quarantine has been Ef n Lo it Beach because ae TRallaed that bu pend upon the patronage of VACATION TIME ISHERE: 4 King eannet buy Fresh, Pure Candy in used to LOFT'S,—for what _N York Jeresyite or suburbanite len't?. Take the tip and er or NOT our Oculist ( tered He kissed) poi ge = glasses are needed. Harris Glasses are priced at from 8% upward. | if the sewers were ample! go j {open Sarurdey Fn 00! Si EXCURSION MAUGH CHUNK NEXT SUNDAY Ly. W, 24 81 84.60 Brice Aves frcy Cro it Broad St., Newark, 6.15 em. WARD COAL NO SMOKE | COMPORE. OI1€D. MARTINE,—Suddenly, July 27, 102 RANDOLPH B. MARTINE JR., eon Randoloh BG. Martine and Lucretis Martine and beloved husband of ‘Soll R. Martine, — ig Notice of funeral hereafter, . hese are the gloriousday when nats Ste ae » noise an ly and t that -) end the posnyoscndln of a en ee toe, that yeu ountry, . , Brogigait er, WEEK-END COMBINATION siti Each combination contains a select assortment of our Coles brated Sweets, there are six combinations, all different: Each Thea put uy he are ‘on sale for Fi ION No. 4 contains fhe followin, and waiting for you at all LOFT STORES, and Sai evmvare only. COMBINAS ea ais” tor chee July a fae pas ath ne ee aa 34c aoe Ne eas. 230 avnecr et Daily BKLYN He was sent to a clinic 4 AY) rooigyn ‘weight tnolu ae } CREOLE TE Bla, rtece ee a mea ete plunged URE RARURCNY, rae ND ab wat ae aye 22, WARSAY STATE] 266 WEST 1257 Ghoses 11. 80pm. 8 Weer 7H ts day ia Mi ee, Closest in, oe the container In esse onse”