The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1917, Page 2

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ie. m6 _ action of the soldiers and workmen in Kronstadt in assuming control of the fortréss did not indicate friction be- .. the Provisional Government the soldiers, but merely a inis- ‘understanding. ‘The fortress has been in charge of ‘® committee, and it was assumed here personal differences between Duma representatives and the soldiers and workmen members were responsible tor the latter's determination to as- stm control. MAY CONFISCATE PROPERTY AND MONEY, The Journal of the Workmen and Soldiers delegates announced to-day that confiscation of property and moncy may be necessary owing to the slow progress nade in obtaining sub- scriptions to the Russian Liberty Loan, Sespite these chaotic conditions, there are indications that Russia is awakening to the need of an offen- sive campaign without delay. Dele- gates representing the soldiers in Gen, Brusiloff's army, on the southwostern front havo passed unanimously @ resolution to that effect, The Con- gress of Officers’ Delegates in Petro- grad decided by an overwhelming ma- jority in favor of the Immediate re- sumption of fighting, All the cavalry regiments have sworn to proceed against the Germans and Austrians, COSSACKS DECLARE FOR OF- FENSIVE OPERATIONS. ‘The General Council of the Cossack Forces bas decided to send an address w the Government giving it assur- ance that the Cossacks will assist with all their strength in an offensive vperation because of their conviction that peace cannot be secured except by arma, “The Cossacks do not know what desertion is,” reads the address of the Council. “They never fraternize with the enemy, but watch faithfully in the trenches.” The address expresses regret that the Cossacks are spread over the whole front instead of being grouped together so as to be able to strike @ DI v % British War Council and Minister without portfolio, has arrived here. He was met at the station by Mini ter of Foreign Affairs Tereschtenk: and later was introduced to the other | Ministers. Countess Panin, well-known for) her organization of popular philan- thropies, has been offered the post of Assistant Minister in the new De- partment of Public Welfare. A. L, Konovaloff, who resigned yes- terday as Minister of Commerce and Trade, is quoted to-day by the oficial News Agency as saying in explaining the motives for his resignation that the present Government should make way for @ homogeneous et Government, Despatches Friday night stated tha M, Konovaloff's resignation was du to a complete divergence of views with M. Skobeleff, the Minister of Labor, concerning the economic and financial measures necessary in the present crisi WIND MAY HAVE CAUSED THE MONGOLIA ACCIDENT ae DISCONTENT OVE U BOATS’ FAILURE GROWS IN GERMANY Glooni Also Increases As the Result of the Entry of United States in War. COPENHAGEN, June 2, (via Lon- don).—Private advices from Germany tell of growing dissatisfaction among the people at large with the politi- cal results of the ruthless submarine campaign and the absence of any in- dications that it has brought the desired peace near to hand, During their long campaign for the unrestricted use of submarines the advocates of this measure made very definite promises of immediate re- sults. “Two or three months” was the phrase used everywhere In atroet &nd newspaper arguments in regard to the time it would take to bring England to her knees, ready for peace. Grumblings are now heard that al- though four months have passed England shows no signs of weaken- but on the contrary seems de- termined to prosecute the war more ‘bitterly than ever. Statements that France has been “bled white” and will be foxced to retire from the war have been made so often that they no Jonger attract the slightest credence. The entry of the United Stat and Brazil into the war and the rupture of relations between Germany and the bulk of the neutral world outside Europe now taken seriously and regard- ed with gloom. In the correspondent's last informal conversition with Dr. Alfred Zim-| merman, head of the Foreign Office, | 4 few hours before news of tho rup- ture of relations with the United States was received in Berlin, the Minister, who was on tenterhooks to know what the United States would do, declared impulsively: “If the United States will only keep hands off and let us alone, two) or three months will be enough.” Then he quickly amended his esti- mate. “Say six months,” he said, and! then, “Well, let us not fix any definite} time Dr. Zimmermann then went on with the argument that England and the Entente would quickly be made} amenable to the peace idea if the United States would only refrain from breaking relations or declaring war in consequence of the prociama- tion of the unrestricted submarine campaign. German naval writers for some time have been preparing their read- ers for a possible falling off in the monthly figures of tonnage destroyed | THE EVENING Wo LOOM OVER ENTRY OF U.S. IN oye STP IDY res RLD, SAY ALLIES HAVE FAILED BOAST OF THE KAISER Quotes Hindenburg. In Tele- graphing Empress That Great Offensive Has Ended, BERLIN, June 2 (via London). —The French and British of- fensive on the Western front has come to a@ definite conclu- sion, according to a report from Field Marshal von Hindenburg to Emperor William, The Em- peror has sent the following tele- gram to the Dmpress at Homburg Castle: “According to @ report from Meld Marshal yon Hindenburg, the great British and French spring GERMANS DODGE AIR BATTLES WITH US. ONEVEN TERNS Appearance of am American! Aviator Is Signal for At- tack by Several Machines, PARIS, June 2—German aviators | are concentrating thelr hate on the American flyers in thé Lafayette E cadrille, No machine flying the Stars and Stripes is given a fair chance in WHAT'S A ‘BLIMP? ASK THE MARINES, THEY WILL GET 50 Major Evans Explains They Are Non-Rigid Dirigibles, or Speedy Air Scouts. ‘The ever-fresh vocabulary of the war received an addition this after- noon, at Marine Recruiting Head- quarters, No. 2 Bast Twenty-third offensive has come to @ certain conclusion. Prepared since au- tumn and announced since win- ter, the attack of the British and French Armies, g@upported by powerful masses of artillery and technical resources of all kinds, has failed after seven weeks of hard struggle. God's aid has granted our incomparable troops superhuman force to accomplish these excellent acts and endure successfully the mightiest battles ever seen In the history of war. All our heroes by their deeds command the respect and grati- tude which every German feels. The Lord be praised, Glory for His help, and thanks for such magnificent people in arms.” Emperor William also has sent 4 telegram of congratulations to Emperor Charles on the Austrian resistance to the Italian attack on the Isonzo, front, saying: “In a tenacious struggle the Isonap army defied the mighty and stubborn enemy and caused him to fall, I congratulate you and your brave troops on this #reat euccess. God will be with us further,” SEIZED IN $200,000 THEFT AS HE MEETS A GIRL Richard Asch, Clerk for Moyse & | Holmes, Arrested in Phila- deiphia, Richard Asch, a clerk in the brokerage department of the banking firm of Moyse & Holmes, of No, 26 Beaver Street, was arrested this | afternoon in a railway station in| Philadelphia, charged with manipula- tion of the firm's accounts to the ex- tent of more than $200,000, Detectives Haskins and Kelly were sent to Phila- delphia to arrange for Asch's extradi- tion on a charge of xrand larceny and | | i | i | forgery. : Asch lived at No, 245 West One Hundred and = Thirteenth treat Alded by another clerk, who, accord- ing to the police, has now confessed and is under surveillance, Asch, it is ebarged, ran bogus accounts on the firm's books and falsified customers’ single combat—the enemy tries to overwhelm it with a number of fight- Ing planes, Dr, Edmund Gros, chief organizer of the famous corps, made this statement to-day in volcing an appeal to Amert- cans to give the Escadrille moral and material support. name of “Blimps.” “When an American aviator ap-| “Blimps” are speedy air-scouts and pears in the sky it is a signal for an,|can be stowed aboard ship much enemy attack in force,” he declared. }more handily than a seaplane. Just ‘he American flag and the Indian| what the derivation of the name is Head—the squadron's emblem paint-|no one about Marine Headquarters ed on their planes—have but one; was able to explain. They know, meaning to the enemy and that is | however, that twenty of the new type revenge against America, Mur avia-|of aerial craft have been made by tors aren't given a chance to fight}a pneumatic tire concern at Akron an equal fight—they must fight|0., and that the crew of a “Blimp against several—and they are doing| will consist of two men each, to be it with a bravery that ought to be! detailed from the Marine Corps bar- better known in the United States. |racks at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, “These men are upholding Amer-|the Pensacola, Fla, depot and the ‘# honor with thelr lives—and| League Island Navy’ Yard at Phila- mostly on funds scraped together by | delyhia. interested Americans. | The frst detachment of the “crew “Let the American Government back up the flag and this American! at anchor in Union Square, marched bravery with real support; let thom|on board to-day under command of announced that, according to recent advices, the corps would be equipped with fifty non-rigid dirigibles, which have been experimented with long enough to have earned the nick- i | grant these men a chance to fight the| Sergeant J. F, Boller of the Marine chemy on equal terms. I am sending |( rps, ‘The men will slee» on board, bs ie ese Gn apron Sh encour but will take their meals at a Four- and for funds and comforts for their | teenth Street restaurant, Later on triots. {a com compa: tasary may be established, Ritu Shen chee | iy ‘aspirations of John Mills sley of San Antonio, Tex ie}. - , _ worked his way to Europe on a cattle |! No West One Hundred and steamer, landed with $2 in his pocket, | ‘fwenty-ninth Street, were brought to offered his services at the Pau aviu- jan abrupt termination to-day, when, tlon school, fought with the Lafay- |i, tne midst of his nhysical examina- ette Escadrille at Verdun, and ts now} a ibe Quattetra in a,hospital, his body shattered by ition at naval recruiting ere, an explosive bullet which may make | dc ve arrested him on a charge him an invalid for life—-if he sur-/|of grand larceny, preferred by Mrs. Vives. He needs comforts and the sup- | yfarnarot Stewart peated Nn tlisod ncn ‘As recruiting headquarters ts Fed- eral ground, Mills could not be form- ally placed under arrest until Capt. C. A. Adams had ordered him “dis- charged” from the service. Dr. John A. Harris of New York has turned over his yacht, Surf, to CELLS FOR SLACKERS FIRST, | THEN SERVICE IN ARMY Way No Out for Those Who} the Navy Department a hospital Would Evade Military Service | snip. She was built in England, is by Going to Prison. 200 feet over all and registers 400 ts ‘tons. She was formerly owned by | WASHINGTON, June 2—In an of-|G x, G, Billings. Capt. Corsden ficial announcement to-day Attorney | Wii) command her General Gregory renewed attention to| “mng seventh, Seventeenth and the provision of the Army Draft Law which provides that no man can choose imprisonment as a substitute for registration, but will suffer the} Twentieth Companies of the Marine Corps have returned from Santo Do- mingan stations and have been sont WAR INCREAS Street, when Major Frank E. Evans, | of the Broadway battleship “Recruit,” | ANARCHISTS HELD WITH STUDENTS IN ANTHORAFT PLOT Five Bound Over to .Grand Jury—“Reds,” Defiant, De- nounce Government, ‘Two leaders in the anarchist move- | ment In New York and three students |ot Columbia University were to-day | held under bail for a Federal Grand Jury en charges of conspiring to vio- |late the «military conscription law. | Sneering and contemptuous of the legal proceedings through which they j Were forced to go before United | States Commissioner Hitchcock, the Anarchists—Louis Kramer and Mor- ris Becker—declared they were op- posed to the existing Government of the United States, were against Amer- tcan participation in the war and | would refuse to obey the law for reg- \istration on June 5. “What do I care for the President? |He would be better off if ho were dead,” Detective Sergeant James J. | Pinan testified Kramer had declared at an anti-conscription meeting at jadison Square Garden Thursday night, It was at this meeting that Kramer, Becker and three others were jarrested in the act of distributing |cireulars urging Americans to refuse | to register, . The tWo Anarchists were held in | $7,500 bail each, an increase of $2,500 fover the amount fixed for their ap- | pearance at the hearing to-day. Mrs. | Jennie Deimer of No, 285 Fifth Ave- | nue, Brooklyn, one of the three others | arrested at the Madison Square Garden meeting, was discharged upon the rec- ommendation of Aésistant United States Attorney H. A. Content as hav- |ing been unjustly seized. Louis Stern- berg of No. % Rutgers Street and | Joseph Walker of No. 3 Wost Thir- |teenth Street were held in $1,500 bail | for @ further hearing. Miss Eleanor Wilson Parker, Owen Cattell and Charles Francis Phillips, the three Columbia students, were held in bail of $1,500. The arrest of this trio was entirely separate from that of Kramer and his crowd, but | Miss Parker took every opportunity Jat the hearing of fraternizing with the Anarchist leader. | Prosecutor Content finally in- | }formed her attorney, A, Bertram | Samuels, that further conversations |" between Miss Parker and Kramer tany of the other defendants would result in her re-arrest and increase lof her ball to $20,000. Content ad- vised Samuels to take the girl from] the room. . IN TOSTOPTRADNG H FOOD NECESSARES Amendment in Senate Bill Would Enable Him to Close Corn Exchanges, WASHINGTON, June 2.—By a vote of 37 to 17 the Senate to-day included in the food bill an amendment by Senator Nelson of Minnesota empow- ering the President to shut down Ex- changes and to prohibit speculation in futures which unduly enhance prices of wheat and other food ce- reals, If the warning is not observed the President could close an Exchange during the war, There was considerable opposition, based principally on the contention that such far-reaching legislation gee not be attached to the food Senator Kirby of Arkansas de- mande disposal of the question, which he said had been evaded by Senators. “Let's have a showdown on it now,” he said, “and stop qttbbling. Con- gress ought to stop future trading, an evil recognized by the exchanges themselves in closing it voluntarily. We talk about food conservation until the people are almost frightened to death, We talk about @ food wicta- tor. We should thave no dictator of any kind in this free country. If we stop future trading we will do more to protect the people and conserve food than by any other law we can pass.” _—>___ PRINCE UDINE TELLS HOUSE U.S. WILL END AUTOGRACY America’s Industry, He Says, Will Put a Stop to Barbarous Dream of the German. WASHINGTON, June 2.—Prince Udine and the Italian Mission visited the House to-day and were received with a great demonstration, William Marconi, who has been ill since the Mission here, made his first public appearance, America’s great industry, the Prince told the House amid thunderous ap- plause, would end German autocracy. “You possess a great and magnifi- cent industrial organization,” said the Prince You, than any one else, are 4 position to put an end to the enemy's barbarous dream and me more in to create with your energy much more than he can destroy,” Repeatedly, when the Prince re- ferred to the mutual cfforts of the United States and Italy tn the war he was interrupted with prolonged cheering. “In the name of the soldiers of Italy,” the Prince said, “one of whom : : : ; ; s | 7 OF KIDNAPPED CHILD JUDGE DISAPPEARS! Leaves in Auto After Mystee- 4 fous Call on ’Phone—Has Not Returned. SPRINGFIELD, Mo, June Judge Arch Johnson of the County Criminal Court, who has taken an active part in the efforts ty capture the abductors and recover the kidnapped I-month-old child of Mr. and Mrs, J. H. Keet, hurriedly lett his home shortly after midnight last night, after a mysterious telephone call. His family has had no message from him since he hastily left im bis automobile, presumably to follow up a@ clue, Mr, Keet spent another night of anxious waiting for an expected tele- phone call or message that would tell him where to meet the kidnappers of his child. He kept up bis vigil at his home, ready to go to any point that might be named to exchange a #um of money for the return of the in- fant, but he received no word. Shortly before midnight, after a messenger had called at the Keet home, Mr, Koet drove away jn his automobile. Watchers at the home believed he had left on another trip through the Ozark foothills,-as on the previous nigh t, in an effort to meet the child's abductors at som. out of the way point, but Mr. Kee returned home shortly after 1 o'clock. Ho did not explain his movements. Though the substance of the only message it is known he had received regurding the child's disappearance has supposedly become generally nown, Mr, Keet maintained silence ‘until to-day, when he said, Ld “I believe the efforts of my friends to assist in the apprehension of my boy's captors to be largely responsible for their failure to meet me, collect the money and return my child, Those who are holding the boy prisoner probably were frightened away.” He referred to the long circuitous trip over the muddy, almost tmpassa- ble country roads he took Thursday night when it is supposed he was fol- lowing directions of the one letter re- ceived saying that he would be at some unnamed point, be expected to deposit $6,000, drive on one mile and urn to find his child, Though it was specified that he should travel alone, and Mr, Keet de- sired to follow the instructions in the hope of recovering the lost boy, it is id that ten of his friends in motor cars followed along the route in order to capture the kidnappers, The severe weather that has pre- vailed since the boy was taken away has added to the mother’s anxiety, as she fears the kidnappers could not! properly care for an infant of tour- teen months, even though so disposed. ee BERLIN LIFTS BAN ON JOCKEY Archibald, American, Will Rt e e He BBRLIN, June 2 the American Jocke: ! ‘ » whose license hay i eo new cs nts at Quantico,| Winter Russell, of counsel for the|1 am proud to be; in the name of all . xe sar Recess herbie gaa Wao Tout in mock, speculation, It ie [StH And be compelled to do the Iat-| ¥ bi Ans briet, mobills ction. ‘They | three, Columbia students, asked | those Who are fighting on the moun- [Deen Ieee tide Daren ven Oneal ‘ H - pe. lost 16 Mock speculators wd Gy, TOF ® ‘ i . |tains, on the plains and on the |permit to v Naval Committee Reviewing Re hs ter if he resists, | : vile | that they be discharged. H ted p h ce for the Graaaean 2 aid “ nae | will sail for Europe almost immoili-| that they be discharged. He quoted) treagherous seas, in the name of|Dolman in the race for the Grand Prix rt on Killing of Nurses. CHILI Is PREPARED Detection of the irregularities oc- at hae come to the notion of the) © der command of Col. C. 4./Champ Clark's ant!-conscription | those to whom your words of friend- |{n Hamburg on Sunday. Archibald was Lat | curred on April 21 last when a cus-|department,” said the Attorney Gen- | ately unde speech in the House of Representa- | Ship have brought a message of hope |the only available rider able to, make WASHINGTON, Juno 2.—The Sen- | T0 DEFEND RIGHTS tomer returned as incorrect a state-jeral, “that certain disloyal eltizens | Doyen. fer i proseate- land faith across the ocean I thank [ico seetiar he Cit ine hee - 4 ate Naval Committee to-<ay reviewed | ment rent to him. Asch Immediately |who are themselves beyond the con-| ‘The first marine aspirant to appear | tives as moro violent and antagonistic, {04 fort ihe bottom Gf ary hecet a {eae Face, that he, will tea: Marr Daparteasnts ranart onithe disappeared, It was learned that he | scription age are suggesting to the) at headquarters from the enrollment|to the Government policy than the |”"Marconts speech Was ‘hie fitet_ In é 5c! fo ks been attentive to a young woman | y of the country the x “Recruit” , 6 United States o > prese r . naval gun accident aboard the Amer Hopes to Remain Neutral, but Re- | {Mt been, attentive to a young woman | young fen of Sie country INA It 39 | gtation on upard the Recruit” was) pamphlet cireulated by the students. | the, Vnited Stites on the present tour. can armed merchantman Mongol serves the Right When she went to Philadelphia this|the terms of the Conscription Act| Abraham Leskowita ot No. 524 East | ‘These accused,’ sald Mr. Russell, Asserts AbA Ainarieanh ta tee pant. A Medicine x which cost the lives of two Red Cross 8 {afternoon she was followed and Asch |than to register with the likelthood| Fourteenth Street. When Leskowitz | “are virtually children, fe mlaiinihere Anhone Ainence nurses, and prepared to make @ report to Act. Was arrested as he greeted ner there, |of belng enlisted and compelled to] tearned ho would be sent aboard ship| Moses Splegel, a publisher, of No'|my work would not have succeeded | or e of ite own, as ordered by the Benate.| aa nmiaco, Chile, Ju Presi-| “or serve At the. front. Attention 18/10 socepted, and: sot, sermane 63 Cooper Square, and Special Agent| What I have learned to appreciate q y ‘ ef 10, » June 2.—Presl-| jealled to the at _under section : ‘ fi ; “ ; .|most about Americana can be ex- Bho savy Department's Board of 1n-/ aon. a: gantuentes has seni & wes-|NEW NAMES FOR PRISONS.Jsv0 or this s victed-on| quartered on the “Broadway Battle-| Mathews of the Department of Jus-/ most about Americana ean steed quiry absoived from blame the naval sage to the Chamber of Deputies ex- -———- the c! stration are | ship,” he left Sergeant Boller‘’a office | tice were the Government's witnesses: | ing fair play. You are ready at all crew which fired the Mongolla’s gun ‘ 8 Cx-| he crime Com-|i, a hurry, Recruiting sergeants | Spiegel testified that Phillips and|times to back anything good in the im practice and attributed the acci.| Pressing his satisfaction that Chill upon duly ¥¢ he land. walia |ORUoH contraated gor ihe DRIntine Ol Heed any mariah Mimenten locbaee flent to an unusual deflection of a| had been able to maintain neutralit Sith a new law which with all the Hlublity for military |dashed after him, dur the land-golng | Cattell contracted for the printing of | world od any honest endeavor 10 pro, brass mouthpiece on the powder| but declaring that the republic re-| went into effect May 10, Commis vice resulting therefrom. sailor got away. {50 thews testified that Miss Parker | "lence. What you do is always fair.” F] ereeecalnice eno SERIES | Mathe . 2 E served her right to take any actton|of Correction Lewis to-day x, Hieber } said she 4 Pi a attell x etary Daniels told the Com-) which might be required for the de-|changes in the names of penal institu- ‘CHALONER ASKS HIS MILLION, | **'¢ she aided Phillips and Cate ' the accident probably was t . tions under hia jurisdiction, \{ WHERE TO ENLIST IN ie in writing the pamphlet and that} BERLIN REPORTS SINKING Cramps |- ( saused by, the rebound of the, brase | argh 1h a lle Sa hsctad mua a ranka Tien” be enews aa tee Petitions ¢ to Adjudge Mim! they knew What they were doing and | { cup used to hold the powder in the | Was in part as follows: er's Island, will be known 9 r consequences of } shell, and was perhaps due to a aud-| “When one of the warring nations | Mupicipal Pe a ae a NEWYORK NATIONAL GUARD Competent to Manage Bm | i the possible consequences of | den shift in the wind, Ho said these | expressed its intention to execute] known 1 Branch Workhe John Armstrong Chaloner, through act. ‘ cups have been in use for twenty years, but the Mongolia accident wus the first in naval records, The Bec- retary expressed the opinion that the accident did not result from negll MANHATTAN Infantry—Sixty-ninth Regimeat, Lexington Avenue and I'wenty- sixth Street; Twelfth Kegiment, be known aw the the City of New Tho different sections of the Work- house at Blackw Island will be | known as the Correctional Hospital and | \his attorney, to-day petitioned the Su-| No more deflant a prisoner than |preme Court of New York to adjudge| Kramer has appeared in tho Fede jhim sane and competent to manage his| Building in years. Small in stature, ‘own person and property.’ Chaloner hostile acts against neutral merchant ships, thus destroying the Mberty of maritime communication, we found oGrscives obliged to adopt @ reserved Three Other Vessels Taken Swinemunde for Examination to ’ With a large head covered with thick, ‘ MORNINGKY.—<MICHAEL attitude as, in our opinion, we could] Clearing » of the City of New York 0) d Sixty-eecs Bis si egarded as an insane man in| by German Officials, > sabe EL. June 1, mative gence, either on the part of the #0 | ot have accepted this situation with- |The Penitentiary at Blackwell's Island {J Columbus Avenuo and Sixty-eeos | \is ork nating, escaped from Bloom. 4losely cropped hair, he refused to an- y icials of the Coumiy Limeni Ivalands ey, ge Any one eine the |out doing away with our neutrality Mill he known as the Reception and |{ ond Street; ee Regiment rae le Aaylum in 1900. ‘The courts of SWeF questions on grounds cf “ind!-| AMSTERDAM, June 2.—Sinking of P bor wingh retry: Sie ace oli. c: } an ot| Clasetfication Division for Male Prison: | ), No. 2217 Seventh Avenue; | ingdale Asyly ‘ evnogs t tema | . O51 Bd av. June 3, at BP M, Admiral Earle told the Committee |. 7 Ve Have Bad tho satintaction of} cnsor the Department of Correction ot || (neste Reciaent, Park Ave. | Virginia, however, have declared him|vidual right.” He even refused to|tho Swedish vessels Pauline, Cyres,| gayuom—oaruinen m pasate the Navy now had entirely aban | ne ee ae tee dagernments|!the City of New York |] Seveatyofrat Regiment, ty | to be sane |give his age and address Erik, Therese, Knell and Olga in the| Services at THE FUNURAL OHUROB, ( ened use of the brass ouns in the! confirming the sentiments of cuniot| Seeipemereer es nue. and Balsaesbegesh pire |) ‘The petition, which names Thomas T.| “1 am an anarchist,” ho tostified.|Gulf of Bosnia was announced in} @raadway and 66th at. (Campball'as Betating With Wootbe inet he and cork, | Wich aniinate the republics of ti BELMONT RESULTS. Seventh Regiment, ‘iia Sherman, committec of the property of|“{ am opposed to all forms of society | Berlin despatches to-day, The| Saturday, 10 a, phil are & *|oontinent, We will maintain our de _ and Sixty-stxth lal on a] Chaloner, As defendant, shows that) ang government that are based und|Swedish vessels Gorta, Marta and fermnation to defend our righta and] rinwT RACE—For three-yearolss|| Field Artillery roadway and} cnaloner values jig eatato at consider: | Wot yy force.” Lisain hava. Geen. taien into, Relea RELIGIOUS NOTICES. | to f Nees on our (er-fand up: selling, 768.33 0 ax -cighth Street, ably more than 000, eae FRENCH SUBMARINE ritory to all powers for the free exer. |furlongs, main course. Night BileK,” 121 oa ede cd as Washington _ | “Are you a citizen of tho t co a for examination REGISTRATION DAY. cise of thelr privileges, #0 as to a (Collins), 1 to out and out, firat; | sa . f States?" : wuell Gea tk There will be 1 rt SINKS A BIG U BO: T dimculties which tight oblige. ae wvour. 118 CXnapp!, 7 (oz, ty 9 and || Avento and West One Hundred | 2,000 PRISONERS REGISTER. PARE RURer En | Tho Cyree, Knoll and Gorta are not | qf Pi iat Racha out esis : a second 1 srt 1 ert) < Stree ——— ' & On ss OEMS listed in Lloyd's Regi All the | 482 m Moncey erenin abandon the course chosen ¥ - ; and Sixty-ninth Street 3 F } ister, All t “a iT ee ieee Ae ee ad Supply ‘Trains--National Guard [| tisted in Advance Becanse They| When the question was repeated! other vessels aro small onem, of not (Mite tote eon Circe Attacks Enemy Cratt Al GOVER T > headquarters, Municipal Building. Wou't Be Home June 5, and @ direct answer demanded, he| more t} ) tons, except the Lisste, |" though It Is Escorted by a NMEN IS 10 WARN | DORVAL WINNERS. BRON» | Between 1,690 and 2,000 men who) refused to give it Finally he stated | whi th te ialeamen of ated ae ——— pleat ') | ried ArtilleryeBrankiin Avenue | {live in this city, but wio will not, ho was born in Russia and came to | oy, by Hugo Persson, and regis- Ww N you go on your vaca Torpedo Boat. | OF CLOSING OF U hy PORTS | FIRST RACE--The Rancocas purse Piela:At : cause they cannot be at home next| America in 1894, Contemptuously he | toreq at Landakrna des thls Sums Mae ROME (via Paris), June 2.—The| eae 19500; for three-year-olda: five tur. {J and Hast One Hundred and SISIY> Pn 1a reginter under the Selective | declared he was against conscription, | it abdul dd your faverite paper mailed te . : a | : ss jiongs—Orlando "of — Hava 113 |} sixth Street. 1 were regtetered to-day 4 war, | pe 7 submarine Circe has tor- 8 h 0. Dratt wv. We you every day, oor ons ean «lavas dame sue.| Cree Cause May ‘Not. Be An-| {Now e2.80 feat: ‘thento BROOKLYN They are inmates of citv prisons Recker preceded him on he stana| VILLISTAS LOSE OJINAGA. Evening World, 12c per week ; fi ‘at.| nounce but Likely to Be | Geyke? Infantry—Fourteenth Regiment, Those in charge of the registration | ang gaye similar testimony though in Pp bas pparine 46 11 Wee coming from Cat-| nounced, but Likely to Bs Jona: No, 1402 Kighth Avenue; Twenty | had great dimMeulty in inducing prison lees deflant manner, The police Srrause Treope Reever: the Dally World, 126 per week taro, escorted by a torpedo bout, — | Caused by Mine Strategy third ne, 0 7 4 sive thelr correct nemen ‘They |* eee a mann Police | ‘own Withont a Figh ber Although attacked by airplanes, the : death, Hasty Mabel (ilhd Ramin ents, Mor PRE TAAsOrs 4 ain We ests fier |Pecorda give thely addresses as No.| GAN ANTONIO, Tex., June 2—Car- Sunday World, 6¢ per Sun Circe returned undamaged to its buse,| WASHINGTON, June As apre-|teuster, also ran |} Avenue; Forty-seventh Regiment, |) succeeded in obtaining ‘nee {208 Second Avenue for Kramer and|ranza troops reoccuplid Ojinaga Friday | oui aust pet Sunday —_ 4, caut suainet intaatioreubauiin of rR EEE No Marcy Avenue any Ded. AINA oe Je con. {NO 18 West One Hundred and Sev-|afternoon without « tight with the Vile ||} uagth of dme'see uu’ cat? ef NORMA TALMADGE IN ‘POPPY? 1 meanine oF orders to close any! mileha PAR LAGE A hema abtha Field Artitl No HTL Clete Pieiiered as veonfdential” and not turned /enth Street for Becker, The two/liitas, who hud taken the town earlier | {| sagas? lures 0 elias aa Fou : American ports the Navy Department | yea enw aad Mo? the tate (f ment Avenuc to ‘the prison authorities, joined in testimony tending to exon-| in the week. | 0 yews fervlet_ venelicas aa meena web Ob- ther ew port colony an , @ ta ber ere STEAD —_— RS aniuee snatanel of A message to this offect was received | Appearing st all of the Loew|@ffnged to-day for announceme nt laos isha Dyer of Rhode Island, || FLUSHING AND HPMPSTBAD: || AD BY SENTRY, |<7to Walker and Sternberg, The} A, menses (0 receive aah eet seat and he wi Theatres art at a number of other| {Movs the Committee un Public In- [died at hin home in Newport, Hel, | Infantry—Tenth Regiment, ar- |} SHOT DE + [former declared that he had once| getty Nici n Department. No {| Rearagmytanes dest to Ceahlar Wow prominent theatres this week and|{TMAtion here and through nows-|to-day of pneumonia, He was fifty: | mories 7 _ | served in the United States Army, further partic were given i ne, Se Tee | papers local to the varion ports | five years old, | WESTCHESTER COUNTY: ‘ante Party Would Halt—One sataamnimensieaialiily eis next is the popular Motion Picture}. 5 auch ‘sier Sarin Harry PD, Saxton of Brooklyn, N t rie Ter hy Dontnant ae Killed, Three Injured, Fear Trouble in West Virginia on| German Bank in Germ Co " ms ven such steps are tn contempla 4 H nfantr ent egiment, are favorite, Norma Talmadge, in @ film} (ion, Commanders of naval ¢ at Per cede one nth coernas en t Yonkers, Mount Vernon || KILBOURNE, Wis. June 2.--One| nlty Tak erty Bon play entitled “Poppy.” ‘This play is} have been instructed to notify. the |eall or New Londen, Com died, eer eruite Plait man was killed and three wounded by rane WASHINGTON, June 2. — ‘The ' * and rite tains, , - » founded upon Cynthia Stockley’s; Navy Department whenever it tw! peart uble at the Johns’ sopkins , a National Guardsman on duty at the asury Departinent made public a ; necessary to close a port for any |fioupital to-day IST IN tg Wisconsin River Bridge, when the| Fearful of trouble tncidental to the |rortay trom the Backinann State Bunk | popular novel of that name. Both | , “nit sa lao when it PP ie | v hon Ariving aver the Drdae'in w ours| emiitary remiatracion: sient Mucsaay, a 2 bok nr nk] the pleasing plot of the play and the | open: leo om of West Point Goes to \ r failed to halt at the soldier's| yrcpowell County authorities have| © SERRE: (FOG. SPDINE: ENF pleasant personality of the player bid) It | B Roloted, ou tha ises | e Sixth Engin ommand to-day ide apr ‘ Luiken Staten Disttle: At js 050 of L be ty Joan Bonde, tuir to bring success to the producers, | ro vted ony tha pp uthictan or the) WASHINGTON, Jur WHERE TO BNEIST Fy King Henry, « local merchant, was| Petuested : Seg Poy 4 Stach trai Pera once ad knowledge on the part of the navy Of} pia ¢ ink mi VY AND MARINE Co: j Kat pes yi torney Barnhart to send a force of) Cash jerman oc of Th With to-morrow’s Sunday World an! the presence of cnemy submarines in | Pddle, Super Na a kitled, Joe Ka eee, AMON ANT oot ystiva dapuiten Inte Marae: |composed of all Germans, | ‘The Advertising Awencies, or eam, be rt supplement (separate sheet) will be. the Vicinity of shipping channels. The | Academy a n ‘Battleship Keeruit,") Union | and gt. Loomis, Company D, First, (ventyef u cer 6 little American spoken telephoned directiy to The World. bs s ° ‘ ’ ) | Heved. and t , : in Infantry, were wounded McDowell counties on that day Oe Apoken tp « Call 4000 Beekman, New ® most frequent cause, however, w Squar nd Nos. 24 aid 34 Kast J Wiecon: . waded. ur 1 Ameri ‘ork. oF H given, It will be a picture of Norina| jn apt to relate to the obicting of we | Bem Sixth Re oepeees Meatatrasee, sa N paseed Uivoug Ohe hat of message has been forwarded to Brook!sn Office, 4100 Mat 2. a y relate to the shifting of ot Ig oreaniacd in thie ont ty-third Street, aoed Uroush the tet of message be i. " . H Talmadge in the title rple.—Advt, addition to the mine flelds, ip France : Rafferty, Company Fy cials at Washington, Fe

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