An Analyti? cal Labor? atory and Staff is maintained for verifying the manu? facturers' guarantee of Purity, Strength and Freshness of all drugs and chemicals sold in Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores. 43 New York Stores. LONDON BANKERS ASK MORE TIME TO MEET LOAN Urge McKcnna to Extend Period on War Issue Subscriptions. ? ? g British - McKcnna eees f war bl? ? i half inder ! the ? 5 call ? money :han ? war. ? 5 ! ,000 mily num ed, heavy an to pour joint half ?-., and the nately. All t the loan nary sue? va element i bill? banker? took up ? - 1 ne MOMTCLAIR MAN HONORED of the C?n??- ?? ' tish army, ??riant. n in Ficiety ilr, distin ? dispatches ha?? been ittaeii own brigade as lieu .?il distinction. I.ieu ia's home in Mont Watchur.R Avenue. After -o Lr.piar.d with the he mariicl at De? rlei I hia woman to whom U wf. .var. Mrs. ?lidini; the tal. GERMANS REGAl MILE OF TRENC1 ALONG MOSELI Win Back Footing in C Lines in Forest of Le Pr?tre. FRENCH FORCE BACK "LAYBRINTH" DRI\ Repulse Attack at Souche/ Sharp Fighting Continues at Fey en-Haye. London. July !. Fighting to loo the strangle hold the French have b ng on the C.erman salient at Mihiel, the Germans have retaken p of the lines they held east of Key Hay? nn.l west of the Moselle. 1 v? ar Office admits that the K ser's troops, advancing in the west section of the Forest of Le Pr?l have regained a footing in their lines. Berlin cluims that 1,500 met of the enemy's position in the for were stormed and the French driv from the trenches. The capture i'renchmen, including the at officers of one battalion, and the taki gun? and sewn mine throw? are also nssertod. In the region north of Arras IV reports two attacks ?>f the enemy, pi ceded by a violent bombardment, front of Souchez the Germans mov forward, armed with grenades n bombs, but were compelled to withdra The second move, in the "Labyrintl was checked by French I re Commenting on the rnid on Brug? Hclgium, by aviators yesterday, Perl declares that the bombs dropped fell the vicinity of the most valuable mon ments of the town. Northeast Manonville two French aeroplanes we forced to ?lescend. On Saturday, Herl says. Germon airmen ropuis-ed thr niiversnries. Hepulse Attacks ?above Arras. The official communication issued 1 the French War Office to night ? "There has been relative calm nlor the whole front, without infantry a tion. There is nothing to report exec) ery activity on the part of tl enemy at certain points between th Meuse and the Moselle. The region r the Forest of Le Petre has suffered pal ticularly a very violent bomhardr-ier with b . "In the region to the north of Arm two attempts at attack on the part e, ?icniy, preceded each by a violen bombardmen?, were checked by us a about 10 o'clock last night. ?One was directed particular! figainst our positions In front of Sou che?. The Germans came out seven different times from their trenchei armed with grenades and bombs. Wi however, compelled them to withdraw leaving many dei'd on ?.he ground. Th took place at 'The Labyrinth ? * was at once stopped by our fir? In the course of yesterday afternoon and ? g the Germai along a f] about three miles, stretching from Fey en-Haye to the Moselle. T well as in the '?? >n of the Forest of Le Pr< tr? a front of about two-thirds of I . they were successf 1, after a ver; t bombardment, in again gainini a footing in their old lines recent!; by us. But in spite of the vigoi ;r" action they found it imp? to move beyond these lines. Germans Driven Back on Moselle. "Further to the east, on a line run itmes to the .Ile. a Ger ? omplete failuri and the enemy sutfercd verj heavy "There is nothing of impor'.-.? report from the rest of the front." fhe German Army Ileudqu statement sayBi "A Hritish attack north of Ypres, on the rond to Pilkelm, and a French at ? tnck against Souchez, were repulsed in a fanguinary engagement. , "On both sides of the Cour-des-Car . mes, or. the west border of the Forest I of Le Pr?tre, our troops yesterday j morning storme?! a hostile position on I a front of some l.fiOO metres. With heavy losses, the French troops, i I ing obstinately, were obliged to evacu? ate trench after trench. We captured about 1/iDO uninjured French, among ! them the staff of a battalion, tw? I guns, four machine guns and three Weber Se Heilbroner Announce Beginning Today the Annual Sale of Their Entire Stock of Summer Suits Of the Following Grades: All $40, $35, $30, and $27.50 Suits $24.50 Thrse suits are all from the regular Weber and HeO broner stock, with nothing added and nothing taken awav-consisting of Glen Urquharts gripes checks, mixture! and blues and grays-the choice of this sea? son's styles. At this reduction they offer opportum ties seldom presented. So Chane for Alterations Five Clothing Stores: Ncw 241 Broadway 1185 Broadway 44th and Broadway 42nd and Fifth Avenue Now Is the Time to Make Proposals of Peace, Says Jane Addams, Fresh from Battlefields .Mi"-'. Jane Addams, returned from the woman's peace conference at The Hague, [reeled b) Miss Lillian Wald, who cllmiSed ?hoard the St l.nnis in meet her. Intervention Only Gin Stop \X ar, She Relieves, Though People Are Ready to Lay Down Arms. By ELEANOR BOOTH SIMMONS. It was a fierce welcome that the ele? ments (rave M is i Jane Addami when she returned ye terday morning to her ? n:,t'N,t' lan'' 'ro": her errand of peace ? Hague. As ??hr stepped down the lank from the American liner St. Louis the heavens opened and poured down water as if they wore weeping fur , the war and devastation in the coun? tries she had left. With n roar like that of shrapnel, the wind raced up the ram aero the little ki advocates who had come, i ? r, to wi Vddams slked along serenely, carrying, as she Blways the ??hadow of the world's snrp ice, but, as always, facing it ? fulness and courage. "I'o you come hack more hopeful than you wont ?" I asked her when I got a chance for a word. "Did the conference accom) .thing ?if what thought it might ?" "We had no expectation, no idea, of what might he accomplished," she an swered with a lit "We simply ? to be held. >i conference was held which fteen hundre?! women. of them from the warring natioi as something. W ? ces, ?hen we visited the various countries aft seemed to feel, too, thnt it was natural and right that peace talk | shouhl rime from women." "Ho you see the end of the war? [i asked. "No," ?h answered, "how could I? Hut I see that the time has con.?' for intervention, and it is only by Interven? that th? war will be ended. Left to themselves, the warring nations will tight on and on. Peace proposai-? eannot be suggested by any of them without giving the suspirion of weakness to the ?ich makes the suggestion. Fach one of then) still feels that it must succeed, and yet they are snxioui and sorrowful over the heavy t?ill the horror of it. 1 have talked with civil ry authorities in the ,. ?ar, an- ? n before she lar.d . ed. Mis? Lillian I1. Wald, head work GERMANY DENIES LOSS OF WARSHIP Assert?? Mine Layer's Flag Was Not Lowered Before Run? ning Ashore. Berlin (via London), July f>. The ? - ucl on of a i ? u n - true, accoriling to n semi-official state? ment issue?! here. It is also .; that the mine-layer Albatross lowered ? '?rman flag before running ashore . on Swedish territory. The Russians ? are said to hive fired 1,500 shots at the ! Albatross, of which only twenty-five ! were hit?. An eyewitness of the naval battle asserts that nearly the entire stern of one Ruisian warship was shot away. The German sailors of the Albatros? wh were killed in the engagement with a Rusaian cruiser squadron off the Swedish islanil of Gothland were buried to-day with signal honors, in which the Swedish authorities and civilian? par ticipated. Swedish troops came to salute i the procession wended its way from the shore, where the Alha v. as beached, to the Bjoerke ???ry. I he German flag waved over the open grave while the captain ad'lressed the crew who participated in the naval ac German sailor? who bail dieil in the performance of their duty. Revised estimates place the number led at thirty and three more men nr. believed to be dying. Thirty other wounded sailors are now doing well. DECLARES PEACE WAITS ON BELGIUM Fnglish Woman Tells Americans Belgian Wrongs Must First Be Righted. San Francisco, July 5. Mr?. Fthel Snowden, wife of Philip Snowden, Mem? ber of the Pritish Parliament from Hlackburn, told women peace workers any nations here to day that no dvocBte in Great liritain wants peace until the wrongs f Belgium have been right? She spoke to the In?prnational Con . ference of Women Workers to Promote Permanent Pes?e fr?m s rostrum hung with ; ? rid canopied by a. white bai ! in purple '. ar."' "Peace Great Britain," said Mrs. Snowd?: . "realise tl martyred nation theory of obtaining peace i- not practical politics and can? ? d " RUSSIANS REPULSED ON CAUCASUS FRONT Constantinople Reports Good Progress Near Sedriul Bahr on Gallipoii An official state- : by (??neral Headrjuar dsy says: -isian front, near the ?i, three regiment? of the en I emv's cavalry made an attempt against er of the Henry Street Settlement, arose in the ?ret gray dawn and went out in the revenue cutter to board the i ship. With her went Leland R. Robin-; ion, ri ' iternational I'ol hii-n include forty colleges, and Spencer Miller, of the Collegiate Anti-Militarii t League. Will Speak Friday Night. Seventeen peec - were repre? sented by thn little group who waited On the ?lock. Mrs. Henry Villard was one of the tirst watchers to grasp her hand an I kiss her. Mrs. Florence Kelley was there. '! 1 Eastman Hene i'vn Newman, of the Studio Club, ?lo is helping arrange for the meeting Miss Addams will ad at Carnegie Hall Friday night. \\ ith Miss Addam i came Dr. Alice Ham? ilton, of Chicago, who was a delegate to nee. non a? she had made her declaration of baggage, wen? with Miss Wald to the Henry Street Settlement, where she will stay until she gor. to Wa hington. From Wash? ington she will go to R?r Harl or,.where she will have a much ne? ded reat, It ?Vpril 13 ? ? n he sailed away on th?' peace ship V rdam, and since ; .it an exha rence and has chan? cellories of all 'he warring nati"' , .1 icobs, of Hol? land, i, of Ital . hi |, Germany, France and Austi o had an audience with ?1 .. I'ope. "He vas \rry kind." she told me. "lie told me that he realized i'omen bad a great pari to i lay in the r."-?oration , I found that feel? ing everywhere. "I found, too. frienilliness to Ameri? ca, although in Germany there is some tment against the shipment of muni' r by America to the In France there was sons? re oughtn't to have allowed th.- invasion of Belgium. Rut i wheri lates was recognized mo it impoi ? ? ?., and the one from which ? tions for peace may most appro; me." our right wing, but after an engage our cavalry were repulsed. "On the North? rn front, in the liar? es, there has been intermittent infantry and artillery tire mar Avi Rurnu. "In the Southern sector our troops made good progress on July 2, near . .: Bahr ' ?n July 3 we bombarded tillery troops ami air she Is at Seddul Bahr." SPY FIRING PARTY USED NO BLANKS Scots Guards Veterans Dis? pensed with Old Custom in Executing M?ller. Passengers arriving by the American liner St. Louis yesterday told a dra? matic story of the end of the spy Mul i 1er, who was shot in the Tower of Lon ? don on Juno 23. Although tho story is : current throughout London, the censor will not permit a word to be published In the newspapers. Muller's appeal against the sentence of death was heard in camera by five judges June 21 and dismissed the same day. The following evening he was from Brixl I o the Tower of London and handed over to the ? .iy author!I it night he was guarded in his cell ?i letach ? of the Honorable Artillery Com? pany, th?' most famous volunteer regi? ment in Eng Huring the night the Scots Guards were called upon to supply a party. Right men were chosen, all of wounded at the front and were about to return. In their case there was no compunci?n what? ever nbout shooting a (?erman, and ? mality of half the ?quad h.ing given blank cartridges anil ?her half ball cartridges no man knowing what his ritle contained was dispensed with. Miller was led from his cell about a. m. The firing party was al? ready awaiting him at th?' old moa'. ? The chaplain said a short prayer. Mili ras blindfolded, placed in a chair, ?he command "Ready, And within half a minute from his leaving the cell tho German spy was dead. According to British law, an inquest irs later. There it was I that Millier received eight bul Is in h bomb? a? the enemy, and then, charging down out of the trench, used their ? for the first time anil with excellent ?-tTert. .The kukri is a heavy, sharp knife, about three feet in length, curved at the end. It is | arms ami legs with a single ? nf ?he kukri. ) "About dawn the Turks once more attempted to attack over the open, but nearly the whole of these attacking . about half a battalion, were ?hot down, and a final bomb at though commenced, failed utterly. Turk Attack Broken. "Further repor?s from the Austra? lian and New Zealand corns concerning the enemy's attacks on th?' :!!'th and 30th on our right flank ?t?te that th? action wa? commenced with a verj heavy fire, from midnight until 1:8( a. m., to which our men only replie? by a series of cheers. The Turk? thYn launched their attack and cam? right on with bayonet and bomb?. Those who succeeded In getting into o'ir saps were instantly killed. Th? remainder were dealt with by bomb and rill? tin- from the 7th and Hth Light Horse, Hy 2 a. m. the enemy broke, and many were killed while withdraw in g, "Knemy's attack was strongest on his right. The Turks were completely taken aback by the concealed sap con? structed well ahead of our main line, and the ilea?i are lying thickly In front of this. Boms got into the sap, several across it. All these were wiped out by the fire from the main parapet fur? ther bark. "Following the defeat of this attack the enemy attacked at .'I a. m. on our left, and thirty men came over the par? ir front of the right of Quinn's post. These were duly polished off. Knver Pacha (Irdered Assault. "Prisoners brought ?n state that thri'e fresh battalions were employed in th.? mam ??'tack, which was made by i" ? r of Knver I'acha ?the Turkish War Minister), who, as they definitely assert, was present in the i trenches on June 29 This is contirme?! by the Statement of an intelligent Ar? menian prisones captured on that date. According to him. stringent orders were recently issued that no further attacks vire t., be made, because if the Turks remained on the defensive the British would be forced to attack and would suffer severely, as the Turks hitherto had suffer? ?1. But Knver Pacha, when , he arrived in the northern section, overrode the instructions and orders . were received by the prisoner's regi? ment that the Australians were to be ! driven into the sea. "On July 2, after a heavy bombnrd ment of our advanced positions by high explosives ard shrapnel, lasting half an hour, the enemy infantry advanced, but were driven back to the main nullah, about a mile from our fron?, by the accurate shooting of the Scor? pion and by our rifle ami machine gun "About 7 p. m. the Turkish artiltery ? recomm? need ?he bombardment, un? der cover of which two battalions . ?1 from the nullah to the north :' our most advanced trench and commenced an attack across the open, ?h.g in two regular lines. "A ' .-tive shrap? nel fire from th" lOtn Battery, Royal Field Artillery, caused great execution among the attacking force?. Gurkha supports then advanced, and, there be? ing insufficient room in the trench ?s, up a position on some excavated Hii'h in 'he rear, from which a deadly rifle tire was poured into the advancing "The Turkish officrs could be seen en'leavoring to get their men forward, in disorder after sutYenng heavy casualties. The ground in front of our tranche? in every direction can II covered with Turkish dead Pa sent out at night report that *he valleys and ravine are also full of There cm be no possible doubt ea have been very heavy. "After checking and counter checking port? from all sources, I put down between June 2* and July 2 at 5,150 killed and 15,000 wounded. "Shoot All Who Surrender." "Following is an extract from capt i ure I divisional order?: 1 "'There i; nothing that causes us Starting with a regu? lar army of 80,000, Kitch? ener has poured millions into France. Frederick Palmer tells what "K. of K." created out of the raw and how he did it, in "Kitchener and His Burdens" in this week's Colliers THE NATIONAL WC11LT more sorrow, increases the courage of the enemy and encourages him to at? tack more freely, causing us great losses, than the losing of the?? trenches. Henceforth commander surrender these trenches, from what? ever side the attack may come, before the last man is killed will b* punished in the same way as if they had fl?.'d, Kspecially will the commanders of units told off to guard a certain front be punished, if, instead of thinking about their work, supporting their units and giving information to the higher command, they only take action after a regrettable incident has taken, place. " 'I hope this will not occur again. I give notice that if it does I shall carry out the punishment. I do not desire to see a blot made on the courage ?if Sttf men by those who escape from tha trenches to avoid the rifle and n. gun fire of the enemy. Hencef?mr I shall hold responsible all officer - do not shoot with their revolvers all privates who try to escape from the .trenches on any pretext. "'(Signed) Colonel Rifaat, com? mander of the 11th Division.'" HARWICH "RAID" FAILS. German 'Planes Drop Their Bombs Into the Sea. London, July 8, The Rnti?h Ad? miralty announce.-, relative to the Ber? lin report of an air raid on Harwich, that the following are the facts of the incident- which otherwise "is hardly worth recording " "On Saturday forenoon a German seaplane and aeroplane appeared off Harwich, flying very high. Our s;r craft immediately started in pursuit and drove them off. The hostile air? craft then dropped their bomh the sea and made their "?cape, flying at a great height." Broadway and Ninth Street, New York To-day's Important Events 900 Taffeta Dresses for Women Specially Priced $10.75 Second floor, Old Building. Very Wide Embroidered Flouncings ?38c to $1.25 Yard First floor, Old Building. Real Shantung Pongee, 38c to 95c Yard Silk Rotunda, Main floor, Old Building. White Cotton Fabrics, 15c Yard Special Sale, Tuesday, on Main Aisle, Main floor, Old Build Half-Yearly Under-Price Sale of a/ Famous French Wilton Rugs Fourth Gallery, New Buil.i Curtains Quarter to Half Less Third Gallery, New Building. Cretonne Cushions, $1 and $1.50 Were $1.75 to $?100 Third Gallery, New Building. Midsummer Bedspreads, Price-Lowered Third Gallery, New Building. The Genuine COWAN Work Table ? the Martha Washington ? at $10 [th Gallery, * ling.