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eee » United States, REPRISAL WARNING BNEN BY LANSING IN RINTELEN CASE Reminds Germany, in Refus- ing to Free Plotter, There Are Many Germans Here. June 8.—The! in rejecting the Ger- Man Government's efforts to obtain the release of Capt. Franz von Rint- @ien through threats of frightfuincsa @gainst Americans, has taken a fiual And definite etand, @ay from official statements. | WASHINGTON, it was evident to- Tt leaves Germany at « clear dis- edvantage, for few Americans in Germany as war prison- there are very érs or otherwise, while there are hun- dreds of thousands of C American control who would be sup- Jeet to reprisals if Germany under- took to practice any of the barbarisws of kultur on Americans Von Rigtclen has already been sen- fenced to four and a half years for! his part in German spy and is now in the Tombs {n New York awaiting a fourth trial. One report ts that ho is the Duke Adolph of Meck- lendurg-Schwerin, a relative of the mans wader plots here, | Kaiser. Another ts that he bears @ much closer relationship to the Fia- peror. Germany proposed to exchange for Rintelen Scigfried Paul fon- don, who has been identified as an American citizen, naturalized in 1887, a merchant and interpreter, who was arrested as a spy on the Russo German front two years before this country got into the war. The State Department dug into its naturaliation archives and found that x Clear your skin = a siucn face a business asset ‘That skin-trouble may be more than | asource of suffering and embarrassment | =it may be holding you back in the OTT yo pte re ter er eg | she contemplates | beliigerent to another. | ment of the United Sta! | nied the allegation. eee x THE EVENING WORLD Fugitive O’Leary and 5 Others he was born in Leipzig fifty-alx gears | Germany, Berlin, after reciting tts fail- ure to Induce this country to release| Capt. Rintelen, calmly states shat “some. appropriate measures of reprisal” to bring the American Government to @ proper sense of what was due a friend of) the All, Highest. “It would, however,” man Government, “prefer to avoid! the contingency that jaken | and made to suffer because the Gov-| ernment of the United States was! apparently not sufficiently cognizant, of its international obligations toward | a German subject.” Seoretary Lansing’s reply to this | startling suggestion will live as al classic example of the diplomatic way of telling an enemy Government that it had better not “start any- thing.” After emphatically announc- ing that there would be no exchange of Rintelen for London the Secretaiy goes on: "The threat of the German Gov- ernment to retaliate by making Americans in Germany suffer clearly implies that the Government pro- poses to adopt the principle that re- pfisals occasloning physical suffer- | ing aro legitimate and necessary tn | order to enforce demands from one The Govern. 8 acknowl: | edges no such principle and would suggest that it would be wise for the German Government to consider that if it acts upon that principle it will! inevitably be understood to invite | similar reciprocal action on the part! of the United States with respect to the great numbers of German sub-| jects in this country. It is assumed that the German Government’ before acting will give due reflection and due welght to this consideration.” eee RINTELEN AWAITING FOURTH TRIAL HERE Spy Already mee Three Ti imes | —Denied Kinship to the Kaiser. Franz von Rfatelen, who ts an intl- mate friend of the Kaiser and some- | what resembles him, {s in the Tombs} awaiting a fourth trial in the Fed- eral Courts, charged with conspiracy | to sink neutral vessels leaving this port. Von Rintelen occupies a cell on the| first tler of the Tombs in the section | net aside for Mederal prisoners, He has been regarded as a docile prisoner. During von Rintelen’s last trial im this city he was asked if the report was true that he was a blood relative of the Kaiser. Ho laughed and de- He sald he felt complimented by such a report and would do everything he could to help Germany win the war. RiGat iia Neck ae | says the Ger-| Countess Mame 1K on Vicremea: June §. business world, keeping you out of better pe for which a good appearance | (a requ! ih Why ‘‘take achance’ "when | | Resinol Ointment heals skin-eruptions rece ah I. Gample free, L 4-R. Kewinol, Bal Md. sand are homeless as the result fire at Stamboul, the WOMAN KILLED BY GAS. Mohammed. ‘ALEERT PADL F PADL F “Rick, | Wind Mews Out Plame Ate she! — __ > 8 | section of Constantinople, which de- Lurge the extreme penaty tn the Calls at Police ¢ soirt to Bid Him Bag Geen ca Bea; sore at No. 297 Fifth Avenua|Vastated tho wholo castern part o} 8 of those arrested yesterday, The si Gannin tor Gvsrssine by ka Auman @han ae Fae . Her Haag Anca round gia the Sultan Selim quarter, according | Ity may be death by hanging or | tunnedite wed after muttine winot er cote | ht Elizabeth. Cullock, who. detected | t the semi-official Norddeutsche All- years In prison, Two of the Has Driven, fen on tho stove to boll, Mien Iaydia | rhe she erie. ve | comelne Zeitung of Berlin, Though) accused, Jeremiah O'Leary and John} yoxox, sass, June ®m ob; aluty-twolyeare old: wid found co alo ned the wind a8 iu Idings on both sides were burned,| 7, Ryan, a Buffalo lawyer, are fugl- |Gywnna Vanderbilt and her fiane My din @ little chamber adjoin! ned to bed he in that district was} tives, and it was suggested they may |r All Other New York Newspapers THE correspondents on tl It does not depend purchased from London newspapers. how work of its own men. such services, TUOHY .. GIBSON ccccssess LINCOLN EYRE. Col. Repington’s tributions rega rding proachable, THE WORLD in that Empire. its readers a series o of Germany’s condi will soon be heard WORLD, THE WORLD has the exclusive American rights to the work of Lieut. Col. Charles Rep- ington, the foremost military critic of Europe. during the past few weeks have been unquestion- ably the most valuable and authoritative con- received in America. of the general situation in Europe are unap- America—or in the world, which has succeeded in reaching into Germany since the United States entered the war and learning the actual, present-day conditions with- As a result of this effort, requiring months of time and thousands of dollars, THE WORLD has recently given to from Cyril Brown, famed as a war correspond- ent_in Europe, which revealed every phase in the News of the War NEW YORK WORLD has its own weeks THE WORLD has received far more cabled news concerning the American troops in France from its correspondents, Lincoln Ieyre and Joseph W. Grigg, than has any other ew York morning newspaper. Mr. [Eyre cabled the first account of American troops under fire. he battle fronts of France. for its news upon services It has to supplement the During the last ten ever, The World’s Own Correspondents at the War Centres: +...» England KENAMORE ose France COOK ...... .... France CYRIL BROWN, Pens arance . England GRIGG....... ... France BASKERVILLE ...... Italy Holland and Sweden .... France ATTER. heise DOSCH-FLEUROT. . . Russia THE WORLD is the only newspaper in America which has had its own correspondent in Russia since the revolution began. Arno Dosch-Fleurot has witnessed the whole Russian drama from its very beginning. His cabled account of the overthrow of the Czar and the birth of the revolution was the only narrative cabled direct to any newspaper in America. Since that time TH WORLD'S direct service from Russia has been unequalled. Of Mr. Dosch-F'leurot the impartial New York Evening Post recently said: “Easily the best of all newspaper men in Russia during the whole period.” THE WORL D is publishing the most im- portant despatches coming out of Washington. With unequalled sources of information Herbert Bayard Swope is regularly giving THE WORLD'S readers the best presentation of the developments of the war from the National Capital. Mr. Swope is an international au- thority and the value of his work is not ap- proac hed | by that of any other writer in Wash- ington, cables to THE WORLD the great German offensive Col. Repington’s analyses is the only newspaper in for that matter— f twenty,remarkable articles ition to-day, Mr. Brown from again, through ‘THE | SATURDAY, | JUNE 8, ifty thou. ofa 1918, REALTY BOARD NOT SPONSOR fo re SF hp Accused of Spy and Treason Plot MALONE REFUSES | FOR MILITARY RULE APPEAL Doyle to Make Statement. Mayor Hylan to-day received a t4t ter from Laurence McGuire, President of the Real Hetate Board, denying that that body had at any tim@ au thorized Edward P. Doyle to ask the jGovernor to put New Yérk City un der INDICTED AS SPY Was Named by Court as ment t4 without authorisation of the Real Estate Roard. The Board Governors of the Real Bstate Board has not at any time discussed the subject matter of this statement, and mer Collector of the Port, heard to- | day upon his return from Washing- | ton that Judge Learned Hand of the United States District Court had as- | jsigned him as counsel to representiany pian for a commission govern ‘the Countess Marte de Victorica, un- in the executive or administrative : branches of the city government. The board regrets that (he statement ro- ferred to has been published “and I hasten to #0 Inform you. “Mr Doyle is retained by the Real Eat Board to represent it before the Roard of Estimate and the Legis- Inture and in other ways, and on all der indictment as a German spy, to- gether with Jeremiah O'Leary and he de- clared he would not accept tho ofilee Even the fact jthat the accused German woman hed others charged with treason, | under any conditions, |appealed to the court to select Ma- lone as Vier counsel did not alter his) structiong nd taken. In the matter here ‘referred to he had no instructions whatever.” SEIZED wai MAPS OF U.S, GOAST PORTS Attacked by Crowd for Reading refusal to ser “T am as much Interested as any man of Irish blood in the freedom of Ireland,” ning World reporter questioned him ‘ “put I have never belonged to any Irish society sald Malone when an Eve- as to his appointment, and it always has been my judgmont that all citizens of this country German Newspaper, He Is should give all thelr time and brains Rescued and Jailed, @ to solving the present problems of the} ATLANTIC CITY, Ju -~Jatled United States." Mr. Malone sald that he had re- ceived letters from Attorney General District Attorney Caf- Hull, of the Army In- , thanking him. for done in assisting in here following an attack upon him by angry visitors who saw him reading a German newspaper in a Boardwalk pavilion, Frits Flag allen enemy, Gregory, U fey and Capt work he had which the Government is searching the round-up of the Countess do Vic- | for flashing signals to submarines, It torica, Albert Paul Pkricke, Emil |{s believed these Sashes told the time Kipper, miah O'Leary, John T.!of departure of unarmed vessels from Ryan, Willlam J. Bobinson, Cart| port Rodiger, Huge Schweltzer and Radolf While Flage yas held a prisoner de- Binder, indicted yesterday by a Fed- tectives were sent to his rooms and eral Grand Jury on charges of espion- | among his effects was found evidenco age and treason. His part was only|that he has been active those parts an tcldental one, however, Malone | of the coast off which the attacks on added. | ships by submarines have taken place. “When Government officers held for| Every harbor between Virginia and examination an Irish woman who was | Massachusetts along the coast wus Mime, V id he, “sho |detatied to the smallest pler and refused to talk and insisted she would | wharf in maps and blue prints foun not talk until after she had seen me. |in his roome, The officials communicated with me| He carried a silk handkerchief, the and I went to see the woman, \\eteue bP peal | tod Raat ail the | “E found her belligerent and de-|parts ¢ terminer not to reveal anything #he|ings enu in German, while the |know. I advived her it would bo the |border insld red and black lines | best thing for her to unburden her- Bae other printing tn fine Ger- man type, f completely. Finally she ga a orica’s male REP CRCE RL LAPTG a \MRS, VANDERBILT SPEEDS ond T. Baker, called at the Lee be together, O'Leary has been mys-|Court late yesterday to say goody to! | | terioualy missing for ne weeks, |Edward J. O. Johnaon, her chauffeur ‘The indictment namon Mme. de Vic-| Johnson hed registered for the draft r ade Rodicah. & formen: Slats nmouth, N. J., but failed to meet | Navy, as spies. Tho others are It was this oversight which got him into | | charged with conspiring with the two! iis temporary. difficulty | aa Liged Germans arainst the United States| Mrs. Vanderbilt to seek him o the! rT oi e station, where he had been} our allies hefore and since this y entered the war Il ts charged that Mme. de Vie- 1 and Rodiger, who came to thts under false passports in Jan- 1917, nave received and dia- | tributed large sums of money in tne Since the Kath tn, Soon after his emplover and Mr Baker had wished non the best of luck tn hia army career and expressed the hone mile he would bag a Gorman for « he had covered while driving Mrs derbilt's automobile, he started for mp Devens, Ayer, Masa., in charge of 1 police oMcer, plo arrival they have oe been maintained by the German For- |MURDER CRY, FALSE ALARM. Office through anknown sources. - ~~ 2 a Vre- | Prop. der! Murder! Police!’ screamed six Italian Inborera to-day, over heaps of debris from the partially scrambling . eal far att & military commiasion form of} Ce dunsel for Countess Marie de [government. The Impression was cre- “| Victoria—Tells His Reason, |atet »y Mr. Doyle's statement that he | 4 spoke as representative of the board. | ¥ Mr. MeGutre tn his tether sald | | When Dudley Field Malone, for- { beg to inform you that the state- a It has not suggested of forgiiated | ment of for superceding any official | is belleved by the ‘police |" ° - to be one of the band of spies for tts) ly drawn and the work- | F your boy I is in one of the National Army cantonments, he is safer than before he left you~un- less you keep your home ‘ree from disease-bearing germs. What the army doctors kav: done, YOU ean do, right in your owa home; simp!y and easily, at a cost of only a cent or two a day. Kill the germs ia your home with ACME Chlorinated Lime before they have a’ chance to do their deacly work. Medical men everywhers endorse the use of chlorinated lime in the home, A littl ACME in your garbage pail arres.s fermentation and decay; destroys foul odors, ACME keeps your sink and toilets fresh and clean, On pantry shelves, protects the food and keeps’ away roaches, water-bugs and vermin. The Mendleson » Corporation . New York Getals cent can of ACME today. Insist on ACME. Substitutes may be stale and worthless. Write for tree booklet. sinners proport! OY PURIFIES, UAH. TTIPITI AA A ZZ re) cEAN LINES 5 EAMBOATS 4 vel WHERE TO ote HOW rete GET THERE STEAMBOATS. A Perfect Sunday Outing Take o detienttii satt Wb the" HudscB'te Newburgh, Beacon, Poughkeepsie and Return Requier sunday retvice for _Mighiand Fails, Boncon. Newburgh und Podk)- kee pale STR. BENJ. B. ODELL Time to visit Mount Mea Ia ark with ty amuse Kranklin st. AM: Wad M. Musio, restaurant, lunch ‘oun CENTRAL HUDSON LINE 1 | | | Weekday “and Sunday Trips to. Bia MILES Up. 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Gan Victim, Once & Wan Third Cousin of John D. | Philip Henry Rockofeller, third « ounin | of John D, Rockefeller, found dead from gas shortly before midnight las |nixht in his room at the home of his was daughter, Mes, Edward MeArthur, No. ty-nine. Mr. Rockefeller went to his room for | rly in the evenins and it Is be- a nap ' CAPE CODSCANAL Daviiht tor Sichtseeing Whole Night for Heat, Hier 18) Nt ‘ r BATTERY MAN WANTED, nrage, +84 wing and progressive ‘Dron Steamboat Go OX PAunta Service Until Purther Nott CONEY {SLAND Jule SATURDAY, Dene “a JUNE ¥, 64 SCAN WALUH pias WTKN LANE V AGES | Charnes to. men iiyan . 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