The evening world. Newspaper, March 26, 1917, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, ‘MONDAY, MARCH night from pneumonta, tion and pleurisy, On succeeding days the resulting deaths reached 160, Others were still dying to-day from similar affections, This was true not only of Chauny, but of other concentration centres as HUNDREDS STARVE d Tergnier, refugees lung conges- a suid to-day aa the destruction of houses and prop- Se erty continued for three weeks be- fore the retreat was Meantime the population was massed in the poorest districts of the cities, Often twenty or thirty persons were forced to occupy a single room— oa heat and almost without Re Women, Children and Aged actually begun, Men Succumb to Hard- ship and Exposure. ular crews of destroyers syste By Henry Wood. matically burned and dynamited | (United Prone Staff Correspondent.) houses in other parts of the city. . BN + 3 ¢ Moving carried off to Germ 28 IN said WITH THE FRENCH ARMIF furniture and valuable THE PATHWAY OF THE GERMAN —_ Some officers—from Gen. von Fleck ‘ down—carried off furniture from RETREAT, March 26.—More than 30 booing, which they personally occu- Women, children and aged men are Pied, burning what remained. Some officers apologized to the population, known to ‘have succumbed to th® Geciaring they were forced to carry ardship, the exposure, the brutality, out the Kaiser's orders. the starvation, which the Germans) The city of Ham was left so de- void of all furniture, | was told by imposed upon the French civil popu- Jation immediately preceding and dur- ing the retreat. one refugee, that at departure, when wished to write a fin the moment of n, von. Fleck 1 order, he was tearned offic: obliged to send officers and men Tn Chauny alone I tearned oMeially phieed fo send, officers and. men to-day the victims number 150. found in the City Hall after half an were buried—coffiniess—in a corner of hour's search the village. Deaths are still occurring , Ham, Ike Roye, was blown up dur- ing the night. The : 4 i explosions and daily among tho refugees now under shocks terrified the French civilians: French care. They did not know the wholesale Along the roads | ing from Ham,! destruction was planned and they ; A id La | had not been permitted to see th Gulscard, Chauny, Tergnier and 14) preparations... When the detonatl Fere to Noyon, where on Tuesday I| shook the city they w personally met only refugees fle gether in a panic. n afoot from the German bomt strictly forbidden to leave the houses > in which they were packed before ment, I encountered to-day long au- 7 packed befor Morning. ‘Then when dawn came and they did emerge, they found the Ger mans gone. The inining of Roye, Ham and other ntinued three weeks 1 >. were finally touch hers worked at night to avold observation tomobile convoys. After taking mu- nitions and supplies to front points where fighting 1s going on, these au- tomobiles were returning laden with refugees too sick or too exhausted to proceed afoot These were mostly the | towns fore th off, German mi oni of, allied aviator aged. Many he vandalism of the troops were dying from hardship, exposure ched such disgusting degrees that and starvation—tut as they declared, | ®% 0° acon saeeae ee eee at ah dyiug happily, knowing their villa told, in eas to the Fren were redeemed and surviving loved | inhabitants, that were sickened ones freed from German domination | by them, but obliged to carry out e the ref with | YO0 Hindenburg’s orders Every one of the refugees with} During their two-year occupancy whom I talked declared the greatest! the Germans requisitioned eontinu- mortality resulted from a barbarous| ally from the elvil population, glving | 7 nspe 0. c e Ger- os nabh reecipts, Hh yefore aystem of inspection which the Ger-| ng, officers forced civilians to mans employed immediately preced-| surrender these claims. Moreover, ing tho retreat. The civil population| they forba¢ 1y of the French fr retaining either gold or All they could keep was 300 francs of paper money (approximately $60). No one in the occupled section suc- ceeded in saving any more than this sum. Nor could they save thelr prop of the entire district to be evacuated r money was concentrated in great All were ordered to present selves at a fixed date for a final | census of identification | | | camps them- erty, except the very ground, which | Although the temperature ranged| was the only thing the Germans were from zero to 9 degreos below in the| unabl destroy or carry off. id »| At Roye the Germans spared the | oncentration centres, every q perme, Canneny aun every) American Relief Commission head one was forced to gather In an open) quarters, which was able to keep square, The sick were carried on|habies alive with condensed milk un- @tretchers; the exhausted and help-|til the French came. | Nein lene Helo fore the retreat the Frene’ less were borno by their less helpless |sgtm jimited to 300 grams of bread friends. |datty, Frotn 6 o'clock in the morning—the| In the vicinity of Ham the Germans hour eet for the Inspection—these fil- | destroyed all grow! rops, runni 1 e fin cara |harrows over the sprouting fields: ill-nourtshed refugees were | MATOS OVEN Nie we reater impression ed to wait in this freezing cold—| along the devastated path of the Ger without shelter, without food—for| man re than the absolute lack of five or six hours before the German | animal aaa ers ce | During a twenty mile wal 4 not aad ebiabeg | see a cow, a horse, a pig, a chicken At Chauny, where 6,000 womens) op q rabbit. Every living nal_had children and d men underwent heen killed, eaten of car off by such an ordeal, three died in the open | the Germans ; tons street before the inspection was con ven in the forests-——denui ed by the cluded, TI died the following nans ruined all trees—T sing All had h for food WRINKLES this Impression of & soourged country are the miles of the valleys of the Wrinkles come to almost ¢ sae isis. aha warione carialas woman at some time and there is] al! dammed up and their waters flood- nothing aside from some serious dis-|ing — th country, creating — great euse for which the average woman | desolate areas, fireless, sickeningly feels a greater horror and repug-| waveless and dead, | ag nance. It is woman's privilege to be) eee Tg produced Psst beautiful, and most women are any a eemush peng rar us to have a complexion that i nt ata and sm clewr, smooth, fresh and youthful rs, than the hewing of thetr looking tds by the Germans, Orchards But this much to be desired condi | they know, require from twenty | te hity years to grow, It will take the tion can only he brought about by | fifty yeurs to Rrow. Ot Tit tion to intelligent attention to the needs of the skin, Wrinkles disfigure, and a dry, sallow, rough skin spoils any woman's good looks. ‘To those whose replaced FIRE IN TERMINAL P. 0. skin has reached this condition we suggest the application of Usit, a| Postmen Didn't Quit Work While pure nut-oil, liquid preparation (not) Firemen Wo: Under Them, ‘a cream or paste) made from an| Fire did $200 damage at 7 A. M. to- Feyptian formula, said to have been! in t vault and carpenter in use for centuries by famous heau-| department in’ th nent of the ti away back to Cleopatra's time. | Penneyly peter Te sat om ep, at Usit seems to be the only thing that | TRO se ote een ae ete earted ‘by will feed the hungry, dry skin back tancous combustion and is the | to youthful smoothness, freshness and|ond in the fireproof vault in nino} plumpness, and drive away all the |" coh panee andl other | disfiguring wrinkles that come 80) the building 4 - quickly when the skin is not properly | emple 1 the parcel po A few applications of Usit prove | Quit poste while firemen w its worth, and continued use for a/ on the blaze reasonable time brings results that a . 15th, New Negro Regiment, Re- are no less surprising than pleasing r It is necessary to apply it only at : viewed by Col, Hayward night when retiring. Any first-class) Nine hundred and sixty negroes, drug store or department store ca suprising the newly organized Fit-] upply it, Ut i plendid skin food, te ow Y intaniee. we by daintily perfuined and guaranteed to | viewed yesterday by their Colonel, contain hothing that will cause hair-, Public Service Commi r William growth, and a fine treatment also for Hayw ard, and his staff. The regiment eee ‘ y fo! has not yet been recognized by the freckles, black-heads and many forms Federal Government. Within © few of eczema. —Advt weeks it is hoped to strength 100 per cent. increase the TS Ludwe Ur 8) #200 Hines Gor 100 | ‘Machi tome early for best sore day unl 10°F. Mf; Satur day Liiva, (PIANO CO it. near 6th SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS that has stood the test of time. ENTY-THREE YEARS before the old City Hall on Wall Street was abandoned, Carstairs Rye had established the foundation for a quality-reputation NIGHOLAS WEEPS IN PRISON PALACE; CLOSELY GU GUARDED Rumors ot Hie Plan to Escape Make the Sentries More Watchful. — | 5 (Via} TSARSKOE-SELO, March 2 London, March 26).—Penetrating to- | day into and under the vast prison- palace of Nicholas Romanoff, the de- posed Emperor, the correspondent of the Associated Press to-day obtained from the jatlor the first trustworthy statement of the former Emperor's condition and later visited the dese- erated grave of Gregory Rasputin, Russia's real autocrat for a decade, Since the visit paid by the corre- Spondent to the palace last weok | severer ave been taken to These grew out attempted flight, me sures guard the prisoner of rumors of an monarchist conspiracies against the rary government and pressure by extremist The guards have 1 increased and a special representative of the Council of Dep uties put ame Behind the kitchen entrance of the palace-prison stands a complex sys- tem of low buildings built around a courtyan and ending tn a series of subterranean and sem{-subterranean galleries running the whole way under tempe forces. ie them. 'U. S. Marines Shipping Property of German Raiders From Philadelphia Navy Yard to Southern Points 26, 1917. | t 1 “Rosenberg” came to afternoon to tell Inspector Cray that asked for and after doing what he could for the gether?” 187 - WOMEN AND ‘CHILDREN STARVED IN RUINS GERMANS: LEFT MAN LIKE “BENNY” quoted, says he doubts whether > ses Hilair was strangied. The report that she was atrangied with a cloth or piece of cord was made by Dr. Otto Schultze, medical assistant to the District Attorney, The police say they will stand on Dr. Schultee’s finding, oe - HARD UP. Coal heavers, says an indig- nant pedagogical authority, now gets as much as college profes: sors. RAVED T0 POLICE OF RILAIR MURDER Treated for Col- 5 GE TEA DARKENS lapse in Brooklyn After Trag- | | HAIR 10 ANY SHADE edy, Then Disappeared. of the Don’t stay Gray! Here’s an Brooklyn, an Old-time Recipe that Anybody ean Apply. ‘The use of Sage and Sulphur for re- storing faded, gray hair to its natural, Police Lieutenant Bose. alph Avenue or, Wolf, station, of the Police Bushwick Hospital Headquarters this At 6.15 o'clock on the Sunday night nm the Sunday Dish" color dates back to grandmother's following the murder of Mra, Elste time, She used it to keep her hair Lee Hilair in the Hotel Martinique, beautifully dark, glossy and attract- a man resembling Benjamin Stern. (Te, Whenever her halt took on that a peed hd dull, faded or streaked appearance, ‘erg, who is under arrest suspected this simple mixture was applied with jof the crime, came to the station wonderful effect. house talking of the murder and on But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a 60-cent bottle of “Wyeth's e and Sulphur Com. pound” you will get this famous old Preparation, improved by the addition of other ingredients, which can be de pended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggist he verge of nervous collapse He tment Dr. Wolf was called to attend him, | man Dr. Wolf asked him “Don't I know you? Didn't you and wo to Erasmus High School to The man replied In the affirmative’ eays it darkens the hair so naturally and Dr. Wolf asked him hia name and evenly that nobody can tell it has “Samuel Rosenberg,” was the ye. | been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning ‘ma salesman and live Tompking A at No, Dr. Wolf regarded the man intently haces rete i the gray hair disappears, and aft ce. ‘The . en- Ur COT ANY BAG TOG RAK anot pplication or two it becomes AieAlod babel eG G. “Haven't you a brother Renny?” | beautifully’ dark and. glosey. i ads u n arched portico into | The patient answered this again Wyeth's e and Sulphur Com- a small, un vurtyard surrounded | ak: ——e in the affirmative, but later Dr, Wolf pound is a delightful toilet requisite by one-story buildirgs. At the second ———— — . on told the police that he was sure the fF those who desire a more youthful entrance were four sentries of the! MOVING EFFECTS of 'INTERNED GERMAN SAILORS from PHILADELPHIA man was not Samuel Rosenbere. but SPPearance. It is not intended for the First Tirailleur Regiment — z stat Benjamin Sternberg he poles £0ré mitigation or prevention of dig Inside the second entry, a small bail | Persia frontier on tiers, t rontie| the east. To ers, an ili-painted | the northwest lie the mountains and | mp burning hangs | the vilayet of Diarbekti | nden desk at which| The Rritish are advancing toward | names of ali|the Mosul district from the south, Palace ts dirt moving up the Tigris from Bagdad, while Russlan forces In two or more | sive, |columns have been pushing westward the|from the Kermanshah und Sakkiz crowded with s¢ ikon with re over a dingy w soldiers notd entering. All this part of the holas, Household of Nic Capt mandant, zebue, told the palace com about the former Em Crews of Kai r’s Ships at Philadel A TRle cent ae tere Col PETROGRAD, March 26 (via Lon-| A, British patrol boat, made, he peror and his family in their impris tite dacRacbe th Phi ate oe capture approached ore! onment, politically calling Nicholas ia to Be Put Under Hon, March 26.)—The superstitious | vegsel which was being held up by a “former Emperor,” ‘whereas all the Guard in South. belief that the health and even the| submarine, The U boat dived, but soldiers sald brusquely “Nicholas Ko ‘ Mfo of Grand Duke Alexis, the young|not soon enough to escape a jarring manoff.” PHILADE 6. —The| helr apparent, depended on the prea. | shock from a submarine bomb. ‘Then fe former Emperor is not under] seven hundred mi crews of | Clr eee se pre, | it came to the surface and the crew detention, but is in all respects x-|the German auxiliary cruisers K ence of Gregory Rasputin, the Mystle | scrambled on deck, hands aloft. They oner and is treated accordingly,” said| pring Wilhelm and Pring Kitel Monk—a notion which is generally] were captured Capt. Kotzebue, “He is in perfectly| rich, interned at the Philade known to have accounted for Raspu-| “We didn't volunteer for submarine good health and in fatrly Yard since last October, started to tin's tremendous influence over the| service, but were ordered into 4 When he is with his own entourage he | unde ea dh cisaeinen. feel kanparlal fain ine slained in the} thelr spokesman explainec e're bea tite of crying: He tecno longer lore crite eccr ee, Ci ere | actos ce ran ene ee ls sick of It; it was more than we could allowed in the park, but twice daily, Fort glethorpe and ort MePherson,| following extraordinary manner by from 11 to 8 o'clock, he 1s permitted to] Georgia, where they will be kept u Tussty Slov PPE walk for recreation in the railed gar. | further orders from Washington. putin, according to the news- TR R TING Jen between the east and west wings| Tie first section of fourteen cars left] yap atin Cin. Banta snedal th f the palace. Outs railing shortly before 9 o' and other # that he intermediate guard,” parte’ later was able to fortify this superstition seme The ships were transferred to the With the help of Madame Virubova, RUSSIANS CHECK GERMAN Philadelphia Navy Yard from the Woae Pris hey as sl eu ea Will Visit Every Port to Gather in Norfolk Yard last fall because t admact, ‘Sourt physica: Uh oe the NavVecu71 a th aeiae Gene a the Empress was absolutely con- | Men for the Navy—700 sith . ti ‘Tl vinced that the Ife of her son de- | Craft Offered. place. With the announcement of yer gels nH pended on the mo yenover | Germany's purpose to wage « ruth. | Pe? Weihehionty ieee heat) LAKE BLUFF, UL, March 26.~A rine wartare the men were | DUtln. was absent for any length o 7 Me ette te ciate ‘ ; narine warfare the men were : motor boat recrutt otilla to Drive Made After Gas Waves Were Ito the Navy Yard, and when |time from the court Madame Virubo- | Motor Nod tectl ina MMA At Loosened Is Repelled, Sa; ik in relations caine further | va, according to the Monk's story as every port on the & oosened Is Repelled, Say restrictions were put In for¢ yen by the newspaper, obtained gather men for the navy 4s being or Petrograd Chafing under the confine me the poircnous pe wderp f ‘om she phyaie- ganized by Capt. W. A. Moffett, com Germans restless, race|fan and contrived to place them in|BMN ON oY i Cee aval PETROGRAD, March 26 (Via Lon- | has been fou he two sa who | food brought to Alexis, man dant at the Great Lakes Naval don).—After the discharge of four |@scaped last week The result was that during Raspu-| Training Station —— tin's absences the cin Waves the Germ tard - delicate health of] ‘The flotilla will consist of craft of- se waves the Germans yesterday ’ the young heir apparent grew stead 4 Government by boat and attempted to make an advance near| GREAT NECK’S RED CROSS. |iiy worse, until Itasputin. wan sum- | fered to the Kovernaieltt by toms See Postavy, on the northern part of the | moned back to the court, when the) ringing from diminutive catboats to Russian front below Dvinsk. The Baker in Charge of| powders wore stopped and Alex's be-| high-powered yachts, have been of- War Office announces that the ( wed Activities, One Ly ae toh i tered mans Were repelled A Red Cross temporary headau Rasputin always announced that) ON ership of the boat would not be gs 9 ga Neck, L. I. At @ meeting at that place | WOuld fall Ml. T Prophesy came) eeiting service, but the owner true with startling accuracy, being ; ‘are enalgn and Service, represented by Mrs, Arthur|Mme. Virubova administering a rew would be placed on the nav 8. Dwight, turned Red Cross activi-|other powder to t little Grand | enrolls 2 ‘a ACROSS PERSIAN BORDER ties over to Mrs, James 1. Baker. |Duke in the hope continuing the pisaieniacnl Rats More than seventy members have en-| tradition of Rasputin'’s influence over LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD . ‘ rolled. Mrs. James Braden t# Chair-|the {mpertal family and preparing | Expected Soon to Make Junction | man mbership Committee ta, |the way for a successor to him nald ts Chairn Mra, Gi have Funds and eof ull sup- With British Advancing North of Bagdad Lang nates y Scouts of LONDON, March 26,—Russian de- ah ey for @ holt oF Treen Five Others ght After Miee|U. S. Supreme Court Holds Its into pajamas Russell Tella Story. : smpetes Wit tachments in Persia, pursuing, the lase in frat ald te already in| . aie _ 1 ie | Fleet Competes With Turks, have crossed the border inte nm under Dr. Kenyon of the| Peter Ryan, twenty-two 9 old, of} Independent Line the Turkish vilayst of Mosul, accord Cross Association, Home dietet.| No, 602 West Fifty-ffth Street, who| dependent Li g to an official announcement as|Tee ‘ote Balinpe, ing Jane He, Of | said he was a check boy at the Metro-! WASHINGTON, March 26.--In the| suppacdal ih Heul ‘teh froi, |League for Women's Service, Mtan Club, and Patri Kea first case brought under the Panama tas np gud be i —_—_———_— wenty years old, a F ot Gana) aot. vecuiring vatltoada to dine etrogra His Spree Cost Nearly 85.9 Fiftyen ‘a t te the Minden Veaple Feel n} “ The Turkish v of M ‘ ro a : spran sy decided that an area ¢ 000 jare i 4 ‘ V Kailroad must re ind @ populat timated at 450,000. rding to a police} ating Kussell of mat It takes in the region north of the 4 that he had at Jimau G 3 Steamship vilayet of Bagdad and west of the| mer pres Com Tran tation Line perating ves- Persian border, the Bagdad vilayet mbo . Much of sels between Luffalo and Chicago and > 4 ent in caf in New York ese bs bounding it in part on the south and England ‘itis, was taken to Milwaukee 4 oy to-day. to's chores, "T made al The finding of the court im that the good during last w Leb V c atiroad boats oom i gh is reported to have | t We rewarded with with thi > ely lake steam: | complaine en a $50 coat of being cold ath fs — Vacht) Clabh eCutchoon Nea Miby Mocater Denis {LAWYER GUILTY AS FORGER.! Jaughter of the late James Mot Sop pe Gattty~| William F Fifth Avenue linen merchant peepee honre morning {n a private hospital in thi city. after an operation for appendicitis Herbert Ree formerly rn for § vad ben fll only a week. Thel many large hold t t Established 1788 MMocutcheon wars abit. tures | ene! aie yt SPECIAL NOTICES, years old Her father dud t May, in Brooklyn, to an indiet- | --~ Yeare enc. ; uae in ah a ASK FOR and GET —— | n the estate of A de I 'S Safe Conduct for German Officia diate f ‘ : ae r in Chia | Mra. Belmont, J PK a and Bl WASHINGTON, Mar: 26, — The| P. Kellogg, executors of the « United tates Government to-day | imued Renvos in ite The Original granted sa’ conduct for jerman off th eatat papers and Ban Francisco and etl charged against, hin - | Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price. wy ¥ } TWO HELD ON GIRL’S CHARGE | ense.—Advt. the ompkkins Avenue ad MUTINY REDARDUEOAT | cree cad'se exe ene teene veers eee = MAKES IT BRITISH PRIZE | probably having been disposed of by | the crew stand.” MUST GIVE UP SHIPS who had ever heart of Samuel Rosen- berg. These facts will be brought out at eee uni- formly good oranges freely for their flavor health- fulness. Order to-day. unkist Uniformly Good Oranges California Frait Growers Exchange was offered for sale to the writer's em plo} a jeweller, ‘The letter added that the writer believed the police had taken the right man into custody The second lead was a telephone messagn to the Second Branch De- tective Bureau late last night saying that a young man, whose name and | address were given, had told a num- ber of his friends on the Bast Side that on the Thursday afiernoon that Mre. Hilair was murdered he had seon Sternberg near the Hotel Martinique and had shaken hands with him. Detectives were sent at once to the address given on the east e Ve Could | the tnauest late to-day, dingy, ill-lighted and unimp | k of It; More Than V SLAY ; Beyond lateral sturcases | Stand.” Say Crew After Cap- Previously two other leads in the inysterioug part of the Palace, Lead-| district. A junction between _ the tand,” Say Crew er Cap mystery had reached the police, They ing away from between the staircases anes of thee seo nents powers ture of Submarine. also will be followed at the inquest runs an interminable vaulted gallery,| "4s been forecast as a probability 1 is broken by shorter rigit and. lert|and the Russian advance indicated LONDON, March ® (by matl).—| 000 of these leads is @ letter, ap- \transverse galleries. All are win-|t0-day points to its possible consum Mutiny aboard a German U boat, parently from @ young woman, which & oF Bor yateric > , ; ; a bomb, mado fhe diver a prize of discove: pr : | ot by 0 deseribed as aving been | telephones were connected with the Rasputin Held Sway Over the willing prisoners of a patrol boat.| 2) 08) OUT et at woman, ry day in Call Freemans side, but the young man seferred to was not at home, Another visit to his FACE’ POWDER. 1ome will be made to-day Society’ Kagabec women use Free- The police have set aside the let man's. It guards your face again ter found in Room 713 of the Mar semig's wind: Eewale any, 308 of $1 tinique, which was reported to have oe, Tee been signed jorence Grey"—the The name Mra. Hilalr used In registering Perfume Co. at the hotel on the day she was killed Dept, 90 and stated that the writer wished Cinsinaal Cele ition In the dancing room of t There was nothing to indicate that “Florence Grey" had had any thing to do with the letter A county official, who declines to be Tuesday’s Big Special ~ Sale of 1,000 Easter Suits $ 25 New Models 25 Easter Colors To-morrow’s record-breaking offering —the full measure of Bedell value-giving, te comparing with &35 and ) ye 440 suits elsewhere! h Pointed Jacket Suits Straight Silhouettes Modihed Norfolks Big range of men’s po wear Serges, in navy ee blue; Gabardines, Ox- fords, Poiret — Twills, Gunniburls Burellas, Tatfeta Silks, Whip- 1 ! cords, Poplins, Sport Checks and Mixtures— exquisitely lined with V newest Spring silks! No Charge for Alterations Many Speciul Models Which Give a Graceful Appearance to Stouter Lines Al Fashion The New Shop RS Nineteen West 34th Street —— arn aE

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