The evening world. Newspaper, August 1, 1916, Page 1

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WEATHER—Pair; olightty cooler, SS PRICE Ons 1" Cirew jon Rooka Open to Al ] 1916, 14 PAGES PRIOR ous ; onnt. crete ie Tessa YORK, TUS DAY, AUGUST 1, OznT. UNION READY TO STOP ALL SURFACE CARS; _ MAYOR’S PEACE CONFERENCE BREAKS UP TIONS TAKE MUNITIONS {DEATH RECORD [Strike Breaker With Policeman FROM BIG GALICIAN crTies: | “ELS! Pure As His Guard on a Bronx Car | WITH 59 IN DAY HY INABITANTS ARE INFLIGHT xs Epidemic’s Previous High Mark, Rome and Copenhagen Report Pre-|yn5 SapLy NEEDED. parations for Evacuating Lemberg | and Kovel—Petrograd Claims Big Gains Toward Both Strongholds. ae! he Austro-Hun- LONDON, Aug. 1—Telograms from Vienna say that the ria Mar | new record for the number of Rave made all preparations for the evacuation of Lemberg, the| 1 wing aue to infantile paralysis in gapital, says a despatch from Copenhagen to the Exchange Tele-|(;..ter New York. Fitty-five fa- Campany. Large quantities of goods have been removed from the) talities were recorded by the Board of Health, The Previous record was forty-four deaths, made last’ Satur- day. the imhapitants of Lemberg heve ‘already left the place. ‘There were 159 new casca to-day. " be &n Increase of 37 over yesterday's fig- LONDON, Aug. 1.-—-Gen, Count von Bothmer's army is sede? to be ‘res. This is four below the record of enveloped by the Russisns jn Galigia, says @ despatch from Rome 145 cases in one day, established om 5 - Wes ‘Wireless Press. j duly 12. Following are the tables of 4 i | 4@he enveloping movement around to-day’s deaths and cases compared ) 4 One Check of $5,000 to Help Buy Braces for Children on Road to Recovery. City Commission, | for Public Safety, Decides to Brush Aside Law Technicalities, The first day of August established ro eno suet pep! PREMATURE WALK-OUT ON Nuisance and All Must Be Not Be Able to Hold Men in Check Jersey City, after hearing « report ot] ANOTHER BRONX WRECK Mastic action at a meeting this! the officials of the Third Avenue system and their eae employees, Commisalotier “Brensinger, with the] stoods Squarely behind the men who are ‘handling coowesree! SUBWAY AND “L FEARED Removed at Once. —Whitridge, in London, Again a conference of city, Hudson County AS E E : ULT OF STR aives being shipped into Jeraey City Lannion) oity}4Nd a cabled statement from. Present r ah cotisent of County Prosecutor! absence, the traction situation brought about by the strike of the FASE GY GES ‘STRKE AT GRAVEST STAGE: RAILROADS ONE DAY Explosives Declared a Public PoLice TO Back oRDER|Union Leaders Declare They May Says He Will Not Arbitrate. 5 va s storage, teok| With failure of Mayor Mitchel’s efforts this afternoon to reconcile Resolutions were offered by City spouting Kovel a prédeeding step dy with those of yosterday: aban in the city a public nule-| Avenue employees reached its gravest stage to-day. A ‘“ DEATHS. h of oxiating Mr. Whitridge, interviewed in London by a rej tative of Mibe.dimcut’snartnen of th BIG UBMARIN Feder eaten and ‘ entre Th ¢ tho Boroughs. To-day. Yesterday. Federal statutes, and therefore au-| Evening World, SSCi prise when told that the entire Third Ave-’ tated the aiseutt fortes el Prooklyn . » a 20 alain ‘Comralinalotie of Public ie World, expressed: sur a that ¢ A Manhattan nue system was tied up. He said he would not return to this { the Austrian troops Safety Frank Hague to “use all avail- i he Planner eS wack west | Bronx . 1 able physical force at his command” | unless his subordinates asked him to do so, and added that his company ward from Brody. etiesd : to bar all explosive ammunition NAR would not arbitrate with the union. seat Goner von initio Save. oo- arr} xe ey imaroade and” munition |. T2# Anmouncement by General Organiser PYtagerald that the orgaats of zation of the employees of the mn Mnes—the lines which, with the Third Avenue system, operate practically all the surface lines in Man- gtrcyed the railways behind the Aus- shippers to remove their present hold- trian army, The Germans are with- ings from the city Mmits within START QUT TO-DAY) - | hattan—had been completed, and that their demands would be presented ee ietuenty sth Me cuss O ny twenty-four hours on pain of com bay iy fan’ munition depots, says —_-— Manhattas ssoes 48 “ aarp feared. tvup of the Weenaportevioe creer ee Lik Mince: ee Mieuian frees, Rome’ vate AUER for the Und lpresa .. * : sTRIKe BREAKER AND D POLICE ‘The resolution was passed by alfeared tie-up of the transportation system of the Greater City nearer Press, The city of Viadi- s Ready for the Undersea) on,” Bie 1 BRONX Ca vote of four to one, Commissioner! than ever. Volynaki, in Volhynia, ts eaid to} | iner’s Dash—Von Hatzfeldt | ricnmona 9 ° sa iegdien-Pavannaal hn 1a Sen moar eb yr pagageiores RRR) mappa acuted by (ia Deen comy:::../ WP rerpoanan, Aug. 1 (via Lon- @on).—Russlan troops at the bend ¢ @e Btokhod River, in the region of the village of Velickikuchary, forced Mr, Byrne thought the commission | gay intention of ordering @ general | Rajiways men are the Sixth, Beveath, GERMANS LOST CHANCE | vushi wrasse ont of om aveal| ave fut ud hat many subway, ant Nag Langton Macon TO CRUSH THE BRITISH) =: x= war mimect « tamer and me) reatons i sant ve Impoasibie t|tines, moat at which run slmeet the he would see the technicalities of the Says “Very Soon.” Feta aa to anne? ae|SOFFRE SEES VICTORY IN THIRD YEAR OF WAR BALTIMORE, Aug. ments were made, {t was sald, by “a official connected with the company 1.—Arrange- | Total number of cases to date. 4,123 Dr. Charles F. Bolduan, head of the Bureau of Public Health Education, entire length of the city, serving the When asked if the organization of| shopping, commercial and residen. the Austro-Germans back and fought yak way through to a point west of operating the Deutschland, for the! this line, it was officially announced | submarine to leave this afternoon of | Wy the Russian War Dopartment to- | this evening, ‘Ail ‘Teutonic counter-attacks in the Owen Coleman, the pilot who Bovel and Lutek regions, the state- brought the subsea freighter safely eens were repulsed by the Rua-| into port, will take her out again. Plans of the promoters call for him ‘qx the resion of Tohekhuvdudentc | *° pilot her down the bay before fealles southeast of Monaster-| night, This was learned authorita- fn Galicia, the Rursian troops tively early to-day, and It was un- the swollen Rone eee derstood that Coleman was then at pan i the bien, ond eee ie ie ciealen He. Peelee ens toh wt gelved Reh of the rivi Bhortly after the information con- AT igetved their new positions) cerning the pilot became known the more ‘than 1,000 Austro- Timmins and the smaller launch Efco ‘Caucassian front pursuit of | started out toward mid-channel car- im the direction of Mosul|rying a drag, apparently to pick up Soe Any imines or obstructions, The drag was cast at the Deutschiand’s berth, but brought up instead of mincs a ton of mud and @ dozen hardshell eraba, IS BERLIN'S CLAIM The revenue cutter Apache lay in the Patapsco a short distance below )BURLIN, Aug. 1 (via London).—|the Deutachiand, apparently ready to the eastern front the German off'-| soe that she had fair play on her way @tatement says that the Russians! out to the high seas, ‘exhausting themselves against) while promoters of the United German line on the Stokhod River} states-Germany subsea freighter line | Ber, in fruitioss attacks. refused to be spectfic to-day as to War Office said Gen, von Lin-| now long the submarine Bremen had @agen during July captured 70 of-| heen out, information here was that} Sore, s0.008 men and 54 machiné/ «he sailed eighteen days ago, One Teutonic retirement on the| Ory. though, had it that she had at from Kiselin, west of| never sailed, Fotnward to the point where| WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—Prince ny Railroad crosses the! yon Hatafeldt, Counsellor of the Beas ce spenonmet of the | German Embassy sald to-day after a ‘Ab the result of a Russian attack ¢| #RUITLESS ATTACKS EXHAUST RUSSIANS, course of the Btokhod is re-|cail at the State Departinent thu. ae | here without apprehension—| had talked on the long distance tele- | fact, as in a certain way & hope-| phone with Baltimore and that the oes cet iad. [departure of the merchant submarine | abut fwenty. cight miles long, | Deutsehland was imminent, st with the approximate| “Maybe to-day; I don't know, hut ot the former front. | very soon.” said the Prince, He ely a oree ine of dofendink Ot cmployment | for protection of the Deutachiand when she leaves were adequate, added that he felt the arrangements | speaking for Commissioner Emerson, said the Health Department was not alarmed over the increase in the last few days. The number of cases and deaths on Tuesdays always is large, he pointed out, because many ph; clans are in the habit of postponing until Tuesday their reports for Sat- urday and Sunday, “We are satisfied with the prevent- ive measures that are being taken throughout the city,” he said. “We also are iefied with the treatment boing given in hospitals under_the jurisdiction of the Health Depart- ment.” what is needed above all thin, added Dr. Bolduan, is money wit? which to buy braces and other appll- ances for children recovering fron the effects of paralysis. Louls J. Horo- wits of the Thompson-Starrett Con- struction Company responded to thi need to-day, contributing $5,000 for convalescent children in the Ortho- pedic Dispensary of Mount Sinai Hos. pital, Up to the present time $1,639 has been turned over to the Health De- partment by sympathetic New York. crs, among them Mrs. Daniel Guegen- helm, who has given $500, “In connection with convalescent children, an analysis of the infantile paralysis situation is interesting,” sald Dr, Bolduan, “About 20 per cent, of the victims die. Of the 80 per cont. who recover 40 per cent, have some form of paralysis, One-half of this 40 per cent, will need permanent sup- port for their limbs, This means |that of 6,000 cases where recoveries take place 1,000 children will need braces, To supply those children $15,000 Is needed. Asked regarding the blood serum which is being used by the Health Department In treating paralysis, Dr, Holdaun said that so 1 had been learned regarding its effecta that no predictions could be made. A baby boy, the first infantile In Message to Troops He Says They Have Defeated Germans at All Points, PARIS, Aug. 1—Fronch troops to- day, on the second anniversary of the war, received messages of chee: and congratulation from Gen. Joffre, Pre- mier Asquith of England and Preat- dent Poincare of France, uniting In declaring that Germany's knell had been sounded. Gen, Joffre sald: "Your third year of war now be- gins. You have defeated all the plans of our enemies; you have beaten them lopped their ad- vance along the Yser; you defeated them in Artois and Champagne whilst they were seeking victory on the Russian plains, Finally, your victorious reaistance during five months’ battle has broken German efforts at Verdun, “Thanks to your resistance, our al- Mes are able to forse the arms of which our enemies to-day feel the weight on all fronts. The moment approaches when under our cominon impetus the German amilitary will give way ¢ complet A strange young man mecenled Miay Tilly Bayer, seventeen, of No. 272 theater Street, Brooklyn, as she was on her way to work this morning and when she ran to escape his attentions he opened a pocket knife and hurled it at her, inflicting @ wound on her art The attack took place at Pitkin Avenue and Sackman Street, Dr, Reynolds of St, Mary's Hospital treated the girl's wound and she went on her way. The police of the Rrownaville Station are searching for the man, —>——_—___ Nine-Year-Old Kills Little Sister Play- LORETT roff, aged thre ie adininistered by he ter Meryck whi the children were playing “doctor.” Mra, Dyroff died everal months ago and the childieu | were alone Frederic Dyroff, t Miperintendent 1l—Annie Dy- ‘ad from poison the hou | wae Had Only Week’s Supply of Muni- tions at One Time, Says Lloyd George, PARIS, Aug. 1.—"On the firat of | June, 1915," said David Lioyd George, the British Secretary for Wag, in con- versation with Maurice Barres, the French Ac atclan and = noveltat, “the Dultish army had one week's supply of munitions and only 76,000 sbots in the reserve stock at the rear. It had nothing more. “It there had been a great attack, what would have become of us? If Germans had turned upon our sol- diers the forces they then hurled oa the Russians, I don't see how we could have saved ourselves, cat cengiaeeeiemes SOCKS ON THE GIRLS’ TOOTSIES AROUSE TOWN Half Hose and Still Halfer Skirts Create Hope In Charleroi, Pa, There May Be Showers Sunday. CHARLEROI, Pa. Aug. 1.--Arbiters of this town's morals were very busy to-day because of the half-hose tad that has become popular with the young women, Things reached a crisis when several singing tn a church choir sat down after the frat hymn and the socks came well into view. Their hose was half and their skirts were halfer and—the youth are hop- ing for @ y duy next Sunday, patlatel PEt Heh National City Rank to } Branch tu Petrograd, WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—Permis- sion has been granted by the Federal Neserve Board to the National City Bank of New York to open w branch at Petrograd, Russia, and teh sub-branches’ throughout Ru unced to-day —— oo (Continued on Second Page.) after, le of Charles Schwab's poultry farm here, (For Racing Results See Page 2.) law used to expose his wife and chil-| tne green car line employees meant dren to the danger of being blasted | an immediate strike on the New York Railway Company's lines, Organiser Fitagerald said: “Our future attitude will depend en- and sald he would begin to act the] tirely on the company's answer tu our minute the twenty-four hours were| demands, which will include recogni- up. The commission was advised] tion of the union, better pay and bet- that the use of the words “public| ter working conditions.” nuisance” in the resolution freed them] The surface jines which would be from all Mability for overriding ex- | affected by @ atrike of the Into eternity. Commissioner Hi ieally in favor of the was emphat- etion taken isting Mayot Mark Fagan, addressing Commissioner Hague said: ‘“Neces- nity knows fo law. There being no law to protect us we have taken the law in our hands, Commissioner Hague we will give you all the police you need to prevent more ammunition from being brought into thia city and from being stored here, If we do not give you enough police Shorift Rin- kaid will be at your disposal with un- limited deputies,” “IT shall not need them," said Mr Hague, “The explosives now here will go out and no more will come in Leave It to us.” Through the locked doors behind which the earlier conference waa held ono angry oficial was heard crying: “If that {# the law, why then let us go beyond the law, I may to you, Mr. Mayor, and to all of you, that the sentiment of the community and its rratitude will be behind us if we or- ecnize the police and go down there and rip out the tracks over which the | source of destruction of property and loss of life is belng brought to our | waler front. Rip ‘em out! Tear ‘em out! Reviso the laws later—but right now—make these great cities of ours ecfe.” The speech was appliuded and | |} though other voices were raised | |) |eounselling moderation and poll the radicals seemed to dominate Congressman J, J. Kogan said on leaving the meeting: “The lives of (Continued on Second Page.) 249,080 667,491 Home Circulation Gives Best Results! ONE MILLION ADS. IN SEVEN MONTHS! The WORLD Breaks All Records in Advertising ACTUAL FIGURES: 1,011,15 Separate Advertisements Printed in The WORLD from January 1 to July 31, inclusive. : : : More Than The WORLD Printed in the Same Period Last Year, More Than the Herald Printed in the Same Period of 1916. —— ees tial districts, The crosstown lings affected would be those through Bighth, Fourteenth, Twenty. third, Thirty-fourth, Eighty-sizth amd One Hundred and Sixteenth Streets: TWO PERSONS HURT AND CARS WRECKED, Two persons were injured and twe cars of the Union Railway lines part. York|ly wrecked when John Clark, a new

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