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WEATHER
r.*rK r'<', n" xsr ro MU TH
mll Report on Ttvae 10
^a?B**--^ First- tn l.i
First to Last?the Truth: News ? Editorials ? Advertisements
IflVU 4
Srilmne
CIRCULATION
Over 100,000" Daily
Net Faid, Non-Returnable
Vol. IAXVI No. 25,550
?Coprrlght 101 fl?
The Tribune V?.n ]
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1916-SIX PARTS?FD TY-EIGHT PAGES
a> *
PRICE EIVE CENTS
FALKENHAYN
BEATEN BACK
IN 3 BATTLES
20OO Teutons Taken;
Invaders Gain Only
on Campulung
MACKENSEN NEAR
BESSARABIAN LINE
Dobrudja Victors Meet
Little Resistance?Rus
sians Lose Heights
London, Oct. 28.?The resistance to
iBfkeabayn, gtriking for the railways j
w Bachareat, h*a BtUraa** In vig-1
croui eonnter attacks to-day the Ru-;
uaniana drove the invader back at!
.everal points along the TranaylYanlan
Ogt, taklng ?? prisoners. Only;
aouth of Predeal, where they are mov
ing od Campulung, xvere tho Teuton
forces ab'.e to make prcgress.
Meanwhile Mackensen is pushing
Borthxxard toward the Bessarabian lin?
a bu offens-.ve in the Dobrudja. Be?
fore overxx-helming tupenority of hia
artillery and the quickness with which
tho Tflnton troops are following up
their advantage, the Russians and Ru
raaniar.s have been forced to yield more .
jround. until now they are sixty miles'
north of the Cerr.avoda-Constanza
flUrBiy. But Mackensen has made no'
itTort yet to force the Danube and
beg.r. tha BTaareh on Bucharest. That
Usk, it leemBa hs* been allotted tol
Falker.hayr..
Umpulung's Fall Reported
Along the whole Transylvanian fron
Haf the battla Ifl increasingr .n fury.
At its Bortb*!* extremity, near the
Bukowioa line, the Teutons have taken
the offensive. In a series of heavy
amults to-day, along a front of nearly :
three miles east of Dorna Vatra, they !
hurled back the Russians, taking moro j
than 500 prisoners.
A Petrograd dispateh to "The London j
DtilyaChronicle" says the Germans'
have reached Campulung, which is j
ta-enty Ballflfl inside the Rumanian:
frontier ar.d eighty miles northwest of
Bucharest, being the end of a 1*
to the capital. This report is r.ot con- j
tnned by the Berlin official statement.
Falkenhayn is Bndinf increasing dli-j
?s as he strives to push into!
Human iii- tflsrltory. In the Trotus
Val'.ey ? Mo.davia) the Rumanians rc-;
captured Piscul, and in the I'zul Val
ley they repalnod 'he enemy and took;
1,100 men, wttb. a large quantity of war j
Ktterial.
Strike I'owcrful Rlow
lfaM greatest Rumanian success was
Bjflg on the western end of the Wal
laehian .::.<-. In the Jiul Valley, where
the faarader had elaarod the Vulcan
**BflB, I | Ferdinand's troops rallied ,
ard rrtrnck back. In a strong counter j
< y forced the Teutons to
eaptarlaf MM prisoners and ;
guns. The enemy,'
? dead on
tha battlefield.
BBBCkenaea is meeting little resist?
ance. The Aliied command, it is be
liered, is w.lling to fall back steadily
teward the Bessarabian line. Their i
ekief concern is to elude enveloping i
BCTes. Some Rumanian troops, it is :
Wam-'d, succeeded in cro?sir,g the !
Baaabe on pontoons when Cernavoda
Ml King PerdiBBad'l gen*>rals are
yrepared to ofTer stubborn resistance
n ar.y German effort to cross the river.
!?. ia estimated by Rumanian mili?
tary aaaetala that the losses of the
Gerraana ia 'I ran?ylvania have
id a total of 80,000.
Winter Will Aid Alliea
Thfl .-nar.ian forces are
because when winter
. be ail BKainst
tha a re* on the Transyl
are satisfted to
BOfl to hold the Dobrudja
*a long as they can prevent Falken- .
hart froai p i I ai aewtku
B*8?c ?
t?*a w..i i? dan/cerous BBleae he man
t*? to en ibe.
Oa ? front rain is
"'?eariaf- thfl or,. ria- OBB. Late Bl
ttAtoB ilready La, lt is B*ll*v*d that j
- for tha Ai..ed forces
epfratir.tt from .-ialonica to play tha
?Bief r 2 the presaure ,
Ta? ? , Halk
1
?
?air*. . last week.
BBd B# | arrt**d when
Barra .
?*C'e?. ? turxeas.
la worth
?BBer- front
?*.-i? b.f ; of the
?*?roa'>, ot o atar H II
-
*?* BBjajaat ? te ha pro
?' ' .
War Office Versions
of Balkan Battles
? Jo-duy* o3\
?""W ra*
? ' Dragoalavela we
?*/*l ? pri?
t"**a*U?*4*j* a* oaoa 8. (?luaao 4
Germans Use New Bomb,
Gas and Maehine Gun
Spirit of the Kaiser's Armies Still Unbroken and Each
Side Believes the End of the War Is
Far Ahead
By ARTHUR S. DRAPER.
[By Cable to The Tribune.]
London, Oct. 28.?In the British base
hospital in France lies a young
wounded German prisoner, who before
the war worked as a forwarding clerk
in Hamburg. He upeaks good English
ar.d wants to go to America aftrr the
w;ir, but he must stay in Hamburg to
support his mother.
Much nearcr the front ia a British
officer who knows more about the Ger?
man army and the internal eonditions
of that cour.try than any man in the
British ?rmy. On . recent trip to the
Western front I talked with both of
these nen and got practically the same
impressions from both concerning Ger
many's military situation.
A piece of shrapnel knocked out the
German at Courcellette. He has lost
the sight of one eye, but the British
surgeons expect to save the other. He
has a trcmendous respect for the
Canadians, having faccd them at Yprcs
and again at Courcellette, whero he
was made a British prisoner. But even
that and the injuries to his eye and
hand had not broken his spirit.
Germany Not Yet Beaten
The British officer was a powerful,
red-faced Scotchman. He talked of
German divisions as if they were chess
men on a board in front of him. He
emphasized the fact that Germany was
not yet beaten "by a long shot." He
seemed to fear that his confidence
would cause an excess of optimism,
a feeling that everything would
soon be over, that there only re
mained the triumphant parade through
London and the rush of sightseers to
tho battlefields. But he impressed me
the aame as the young German
prisoner; he appreciated the fact that
the spirit of the German army was still
FLIERS BOMB KILLS
MAN IN KAISERSTRAIN
Locomotive Engineer Slain,
Zurich Is Informed
Paris, Oct. 28.?A bomb dropped by
an avia'tor of the Entente Allies has
killed the englneer driving the train
of Emperor William of Germany, Bfl-I
cording to Information received fl*
Zurich, Switzcrland.
Emperor William recently was re-1
ported to be at Bapaume, on the Somme
front, personally overaeeing the pre- i
liminariea for a counter offer.sive, for ,
which the German troopa there were !
said to have received strong reir.force- .
ments.
Apparently during this visit he de
livered a brief speech to the German
troops. thanking them for th.. "heroic
manner" in which tflfl* had fought for
four months.
On Mor.day last the Emperor was in
Berlin on a brief visit. Hia movements
BiBCfl ther. have not been reported.
_-???-'
MODERN DIOGENES
HELD AS JAIL BREAHER
Man Whose Honesty Won Job
Escaped When Arrested as Thief
John Carmody, whose startling hon
esty got him a Job with the Wflllfl
Fargo Express Company aeven years
ago, was arrested ln Jersey City yea?
terday, charged with atealing from his
employers, and waa sent to Englewood,
N. J., vhere he ia wanted for breaking
When John, whose home is at 62
Gardcn Street, Hoboken, was a f.fteen
year-old messenger boy he refused a
br be to dtliver a cable message to two
men who atopped him ln the street.,
Instead, hc we-.t to the police, the two
men were tonoietadU swindlera and
The company which cm-.loycd Joh,.
Raved about |M,000 by hia incorrupti
bility.
As a reward the expresa company
t00k him on aa thaeuat. Arrested Ifl ,
rwiewood on a charge of rcaddrcs- [
lag packagea to hirnself or coi ifflflV
tTfltflfl. the impeccable John walked
out of the -ttation house while the chief j
was absent._ _
CHINESE SAVES THREE
IN OYSTER BAY FIRE
Laundryman Provides Ladder
When Slairs Are in Flames
[fla Tri'tr.ph U. Trif MMBB '
Oj tfl! i-.iT/, N. V.. Oflt.fl ? !-vr*
0f thr. WflM nave-1 hfro by
I (),,?,, T.undryman,
when fire iflfltroyflaj thfl r-harmaey of
W. C Bra-Jley flfltd damag'-d the apart?
ment of MflTtifl Hflflflfll to-day.
t'/hong, fl drj ii aero". tflfl
frorn thfl <-r\ig atore, discovered
tihfl Iflfl Bfl?t '-' B*clflflh tflifl mornir.g.
fgfld a heavy ladder
,r'l | ni 'I ffllflfld BfltlflJIflfl
?bflflfl thfl bia/.ing
Hflflnan, hia wife
,' iir
?,)<J ^i- ' ' ''Ti ari'l tftflflfl
partly flflfliflflia by smoke.
The only .'airway wa? || flames. The
laufi'lryrnari first rarned little Marie
down tat \aa\aat He *i?-xt bote tbe
two boys to aafety, after which be
keli'td to raa.ua Mra. ilaauaja.
unbroken, that there waa a tremendous
amount of fighting still to be done?
and he wanted the world to see the
situation in the same light.
I talked with a good many Britiah
officers in France, and the higher in
rank they were ihe more they made
me feel that the end was a good way
off. But, unaniinously, they saw only
one ending. I gained the idea that
something in the nature of a decisive
battle was imminent -that everything
so far had been nerely a preliminary.
To meet this larger attack the Ger?
mans are prepared with new instru
ments of warfare. Of these I heard
during my visit.
The development of the maehine gun
during tho war has been a revelation.
Germany has recently put into the field
an instrument th.it commands the re?
spect of all the Allied ordnance offi?
cers because of tbe rapidity of its lire.
There is no doubt that the Germans are
banking heavily on this feature for
future use.
German Bomb Improved
Another recent German lnnovation is
a bemb, the shape and size of an egg>
which has two advantages over the
BritiEh bombs. It outrangea the latter
and a man can carry forty of the
bombs without inconvenience. On the
other hand. its power of destruction ls
much less than that of the British
bomb.
The Germans are now using a special
gas in their attacks which has a nevere
effect on the he.irt, causing death if
the victims attempt any violent excr
cise immediately after inhaling it, but
having no injurious effects if the vic
lim rcmains quiet.
At present th'*re are 123 German
I oiiHnueil on paje 6, colamn 8
BLACKLIST LEGAL,
BRITAIN ANSWERS
Refuses to Modify Princi
ple?U. S. Will Send An?
other Note
[From Dt* Tribune Burrau ]
Washington, Oct. 28. Great Britain,
in a note received at the State Depart?
ment to-day, refuses f> modify the
principle under which she claims the
right to blacklist Ameriean firms, but
promises relief to Ameriean firms un
justly Injflfled by its application.
State Department officials refused to
publish the note or discuss it. but it
was learned that it fails to meet the
Ameriean demands, which will be re- ?
iterated in a note to be-sent as soon,
after election as practicable.
The note completes the list of Amer?
iean grievances against the Allies. An
i.nswcr to the blockadc demands was
fld early last summer, and the
mail seizure protests were answer.'!
two weeks ago, both notes rejectingthe
Ameriean position. AlthouKh in every
case the Ameriean government insisted
thflt the Alliea recognize the full neu
tral rights of the United States, no ac?
tion has been taken, and officials say .
none will be until the elections are ;
over.
The Ameriean blacklist protest waa j
sent July 28. It contended that the
Brtish government had no right to i
blacklist. Ameriean firms under any
pretext and demanded a ces"=ation of'
the practice, which was declared to be
"inconsistent with that true justice,1
rincere amity and Impartial fairness
which should chaiacienze the dealing*.
of friendly governments with one an?
other."
The British contention is that the '
blacklist BflflflflflrflB ?re a matter ofcon
cern to Great Britain only. British
firms are forbidden to trade with the
enemy, whether resident in enemy or
BflfltTfll territory, and B Hat of enemy
persons and firms residing in neutral
t'-rntory is publishcd for the guidance
of British trailers.
The point at issue in the controversy
is whether the nationality or the domi
cile of the owner of goods gives chnr
i.i?*' r as neutral or belligerent. I're
viously Great Hritain and tho l.'niterl
States have agreed that domicile was
deciflive, iflflflrdlflflfl of nationality.
The Cflntinflntfll Kuropean position
has been that nationality was decisive.
In the previous negotiations over tflfl
bl cklist (ireat Britain took a position
BfltWflflfl the two theories.
C. C. PAULDING HOME
IN IRVINGTON ROBBED
Second Story Men Get $5,000
Worth of Loot
While C. <'? Pflflssftflg and hia famiiy
were at dinner in their home at Ards
ley Park, near Irvington, last night,
burglnrs entered the second story and
?tfllfl more than $.'i.')00 worth of JflflJ
elrv and fltfcflf valuable*.
Mr. Pflflldiflg himself, a nephew of
ChflUBCfl*/ M- D"l"-w and counxi'! to the
N'l-w Vork Cflntral Railroad) dlaeflT.red
.',,- had bflflfl raaaackad. Hii
,iin IihiI ulso Bflflfl atrippi I
of itH ralitflblfli
S'iw ni thfl farnilv heard any ii"i*'
to indicfltfl thfl robbflrjr, and tha poliji
of Irvington, who flrflra Iraaflsfldlfltfllf
lummonad) wttt Bflflbla tfl nad ?
tracfla *t thfl barrlflri Thla la tl
latflfll al ? aflrifli ol bnrr?1fliifli in a> i
;,.-ar Irvington during tha last few
WflBJJBs
VILLA POWER
LAD) TO U. S.
BY CARRANZA
Asserts Wilson Lets
Arms Go Into
Mexico
CABRERA BACKS
CHIEF'S ATTACK
Blames Washington for
Chaotic Border
Conditions
Mexico City, Mex., Oct, 28.? That the
Villista movement in Chihuahua has
been able to continue because of facil
ities given the enemies of the Consti
tutionalist government in the United
States, was the declaration of General
Carranza in a statement he gave to the
press to-day.
General Carranzi added that his'
government would eventually suppress '
the rebel movement la Chihuaha. He
also denied reports that the Constitu- >
tionalist forces had been defe.ited by j
rebel bands in various sections of
Southern Mexico.
U. S. Border Officials
Supine," Says Cabrera
lafraB Iaa Tii; aaa Baraaa ]
Washinjrton, Oct. tt Hlamc for thfl
present chaotic conditions in Northern j
Me.xico and along the border was placed ;
squarely on the Wilson Administration j
by Luis Cabrera, chairman of the Me\i
BBB Commission to the I'nited .States, j
now conferring with the American com-j
niissinners at Atlantic City, in a i-'ati -
ment made public here to-day.
Following closely on the heels of;
Secretary Baker's charge that for po?
litieal purposes "enemies of the Ad
ministration's policy toward Mexicc" I
were planning an attaek on I'ershing's
column, or a raid over the border. Mr.
Cabrera'8 statement asserts that the ,
"supineness" of the officials of the A i
ministration has permitted large sh'p- |
ments of arms to go to Villa, Zapata
and other bandita, from whom such an
attaek miirht be expected.
Mr. Cabrera further asserts that a
broad interpretation of the imm'.prr.
tion laws, as is the case at Bllfl Islard,
?'would go a long WBJ toward correc -
inj? the border disturbances and allay
much of the unrest which at present
pervades that region."
The Mexican delegate to the peace
conference, it was learned here to
night, was driven to the unusual course
of making a public appeal to the people
of the South, through the press, only
after his vigorous rcpresentations at
the peace conference had been calmly
ignored by Secretary Lane and others j
representing the Administration. It ia J
known that his protests voice the feel-;
inp of Carranza, and virtually the same
protests have been made time and a>rain
to the State Departmer.t by Ambassador
DoaifB*t* Arredondo.
Teit of Cabrera's Statement
Mr. Cabrera's statement follows:
"A broad interpretation of the Fed- ,
eral laws of the I'nited States dealinK j
with neutrality and regulating immi
gration, with a stric', consistent and
efficient administration oi these laws'
by the executives to \ om their admin?
istration is delegated, would go a long
way toward conecting the border dis
turbances and allay much of the unrest
which at present perviuies that region.
"In the I'nited States are many Mexi
SlB* and groups of Mexicans inimical
to the Carranza government Plottingj
and schemings without end are engaged
in, not alone by the extreme conserva
tives, who are striving to bring on in
tervention, with the hope that the Con
stitutionalist government shall be de
stroyed with the aid of American
armics. but also there are Kroups of
extr*nely radical malcontcnts. whose
hope is tha deatTBCtlon of the ( arranza
covcrnment, in order that ncense ban
ditry and rapiBfl may continue and mul
tiply, until human rights and property
rieht's are all destroyed.
"The conservative^. reactionaries, are
takinc advanURo of the situatior.
created by the ultra-radicals. The ira
Continued on pa*e 2. rolumn ft
LODGE OFFERS
PROOF WILSON
TRBTOHEDGE
Henry Breckinridge
Told Lusitania
Note Facts
WAR SECR TARY
BLOCKED MOVE
Threatened Exposure of
Plan to Scuttle on
U-Boat Issue
[By Te>iTjph to TT.? Trttuafl ]
Somerville, Mass., Oct. 28.?Senator
l.odge, at a Republican rally, to-night
offered proof of his charges that Presi?
dent Wilson had drafted an appendix
to the tirst Lusitania note which nulli
fied its strong words, and that the post
script had been withdrawn when two or
three members of the Cabinet threat?
ened to rcsign.
The proof offered is a conversation
with Henry Breckinridge, former As
sistant Secretary of War, reported to
the Senator by Dr. Charles Hervey Bai- !
Ifljr, a profc-s-iir in Tufts Medical !
School. Boston. The talk took place on
July II last, when Dr. Bailey and Mr.
Breckinridge wero riding on a train
from San Francisco to Omaha. The
Senator read a letter from Dr. Bailey.;
According to the letter, Mr. Breckin?
ridge said that the postscript was kept
a secret from all of the Cabinet except
V.r. Bryan. Mr. Bryan let thfl cat out
flf the bag, and word of it rearhed Mr. '
Garnson. The Secretary of War and
two or three other members of the
Cabinet went to the President and
thlflfltflflfld to rcsign and to make the
matter public if the poi-tscript was not
removed.
Cannot Support Wilson
Mr. Breckinridge, who resigned when
Mr. (iarrison quit the Cabinet, told Dr.
Bailey, according to the letter, that
r.elther he nor any patriotic Ameriean
eould support Wilson, but that he was
a Demoerat at heart and would not
work actively for Hughes.
Senator l.odge pointed out that the
first Lusitania note warned (iermany
that the I'nited Btfltflfl would "omit no
word or act to hold it to strict ac
countability" for Arnerican livea lost
by the torpedoing of merchant ships.
Then he read Dr. BaiUy's letter, which
was flddrflflflfld tfl GlflftflB D. Cushing,
Iflflfl! rhtirman of the Hughi.4 National
College League. Tho letter follow*
"As >ou reque.-ted, I am submitting
to you lierewith, in writing, a report of
a conversation between cx-Assistant
Secretary of War Breckinridge and my
self. Leaving San Francisco on July
15, 1916, I rode from that city Bfl far :i>
dmaha with Mr. Breckinridge. Dur?
ing the trip I asked Mr. Bit-'-kinridge if
hfl *A"uld be willing to answer certain
question-; with IflfflTd to the conduct
of our national affairs during his cort
nection with the present Admii
tion.
Dumba Story Correct
"Keceiving an flftrflUltlTfl reply, I
asked him, among other things, as to
the truth of the publishcd report that,
following tho so-called strict accounta
bility note, Secretary Bryan had in?
formed Ambassador Dumba that the
Central F'owers need not take tha DOtfl
too senously, aa it wa* written for po?
litical effect and home consuir.ption
unly. He said that in all essential de
tails I had stated the matter correctly, .
which led h;m of his own accord to tell
rc.e the following: (This is not, of .
course, a verbatim report, but simply a
brief outline of the story as told ma
hv Mr. Breckenridge.)
"He stated that following the com
pletion of the 'omit no word or act'
note tfl the satisfaction of the Cabinet
Mr. WiNon, without the knowledge of
any member of his Cabinet except Sec?
retary Bryan, himself wrote a post
script which ho sent with the note to
the Btfltfl Department for codification.
"Mr. Breckinridge stated that both
Mr. Carrison and he had seen this post
rontlnnrd on pa?f 4, roliimn I
One, Two and Three
When The Tribune Institute was conceived it was
planned to allow it one page in The Sunday Tribune.
Not enough?immediately it jumped to two pages.
Lately it has been taking three. Sometimes we wish
there were more?they could be used to advantage
every Sunday.
This morning it speaks of things as varied as the
passing of the old-style ?housecleaning" and the war
orphans of France. The wide field that it covers is the
reason f,or its growth. The thorough research that is
behind it is the seeret of its value. Turn now to Part
IV, Pages 6. 7 and 8.
arhe ^umiaa STribmu
Firit fo Latt?tht Trath
n/?Ut?Editonalt?AdvertittmenU
Mtmber of lh? Au<1H BBBBBa of ChBBBflllBB*
" Remedy Wrong Now or Quit Talking,"
Roosevelt Challenge to Wilson
* In his Brooklyn tpeech last night Colonel Roosevelt repUed
to Fresident Wilson's Ctncinnati dictum on the impossdnhfy
of preserving American neutrality in ihe nrxt mV M the follow?
ing words:
Don't talk as to what will bc done in thr future when you
do not dare in the present to act BJ vou s.-iy we should act in the
future. What do you mean about the position of neutrals being
intol.r.iMc in the "future1 If that position ifl intolerable now.
remedy the xvrong btow <>r else ojoH talking about Um fact that m
Um fotuw vou xxill applv some remedy you do not dare to specify.
You sav that hereafter nobody shall be neutral as respects
the disturbance of the world's peace for an object wh.ch thr
world's opinion cannot sanction. What do you mean by this,
Mr. Wilson? Why do you delay action to the future when you
had the Hague Conventions to warrant action in the present
when Belgium's neutrality was invaded, her cities spoiled. her
men and women slaughte.ed .'
Vou say that hereafter America must exrrt her whole force,
moral and physiral. througliout the round globe if the furda
mental rights of humanity are inxaded. Do \oii not know that
it is aliject cowardice to say that fhis must be done hereafter
when you do not dare do it now.'
.Vk the American missionarirs who have been eyewitnesses
of the slaughter of the Armenians and of the Svrian (."hristians
wh.it th,- fact* are in Turkey to-day. The last extrcmities of
outrage, torture and murder have been perpetratcd on these
wrrtchnl men and women. They have DCCU butclured by scores
of thousands. Do you rcgard the outraging of women, butchery
of children and murder of lmsbands, *MNU and fathers as an in
rasion of the fnndVunental rights of humanity? If so, why <!>>
you not now see that this country lends its xvhole force. moral
and phxsieal. to the assertion of these fundamental rights?
II" vou mean what you say as to the future. then you must
mean precis.lv and exactly that this Ifl your duty in the present.
Do it now. Mr. President lt is iheer hypoerisy to chatter ten
daya before election as to what ought. to be done in the future
when throughont your whole term ot' ofnoe you have failed in thr
present to do what you now sav ifl our duty.
DUAL BRIDE WON
BY HUSBAND NO. 2
Jurors See Bigamy by
Girl as Mere Error
in Judgment
With her belief that the law i. net
alwaya the law "erifted by a grand jury
which refused to indict her for bigamy,
although she admitted having two hus
bands. Mrs. Aimcs Donelan-David went
from tho County Court House in Rich
mond, Staten Island, yesterday to the
house in Wflflt Brighton to the husband
who is not her husband.
I* wns there that she was arrested fl
week ago, when her legal husband,
Michael Donclan, returned from an ab
.ence of several months to find her
m.trried to Leonard David. Donelan
was virtually the only witness for the
prosecution at the grand jury proceed-'
mgs. David made a dramatic plca for
th" rfllflfllfl of his "wife."
Husband No. 2 Pleads
"I don't know the law," he said, "but
I kn<w thifl woman is my wife and that j
[ love her. The law cannot take her ,
from me. She may be indicted, con
vtcted and sentenced to ten years in
pnson, but when she lfl nleased she
will find that I have waited for her
and that my home is hers. I intend to
protect her for the rest of her llffl.
The story of the legal marnage and
why it was no marnage and of the
iMegal marriage and why it bound her
to David was told by the prisoner her?
self. She is twenty years old.
She waa stu.iying in the nursea
rtool connflCtfld ??th B-Jfl-riflW Hospital
when ahe met Donelan. an orderly in
the hospital. That was twelve months
**% was very voung then." she said.
lon^n'swaVarapiacourtship. and
on Tcember 7, Itlk thflf **\**^
ried by Monaignor < barlflfl A. assid>
in it Veter's . hurch. She declared ,t
V,?, uni. before she Knew what it
:;;:^Xl^y and tolack clothea.
Part Soon After Wedding
After a few weeks ihfl left him. The
"t hflflfflr ar.d homelessness
loome.i .-t.il Bflfllflr when she was alone
MUed .t. bflt she BflOB lli'-7'7,,,llhtnh0a
ih,re were fflW mcuns of livu.ihood
one, to a vountr flOflaBB whose onlv
?ra'nin? eonaiated of a tow wefu hfl a
hosDital What aha diaes-flrfld doriflfl
th? e few WCflkfl Ot flflfldOB Iflflt al.
emphflaaTio tfl aai atotomont v?terd.v*
??1 was verv voung "WflB. .,
During thifl period she met DaMd.
a young flhoi.k.*.*pcr. who trifld to help
her Her WCflfll *? **] ,hc
?f the world made BflT BttBfliciOUa
. attempts. He pl-dfld w.th her
to marry him. , , ,
A^palled by the word aha had difl*
,.,,,,'red. she persuad.'d herse.f that
?hfl had thfl nght to marry again 1 :ie.
?rVt-fl married on Apnl n by thfl Bflfl.
| Herrower, of the Chureh ot thfl
fUeenaion, in West Bngnton.
ThflB em.e Mrs. Davui's real tnal.
She had BOt told her new husband o.
tha old one. It had tfl hflr
that Donelan had Bflflflfld out of hor
Ma but thfl words of the c.crgyman
who married her tfl David had .fl3d.nl*,
brought him back. He haunted her
thoughtfl and a* a climax she fell lfl
love with the man the logic ot her new
?r< rld had pirfloadfld h?r to marry.
With her arorid crumbling about her
:. **********
it t?- ' *?m , '
te'ctlVCI sent bv Dotlfllflfl called at thfl
Manor Rofld, a WOOM Of
day while she was gettmg sup
Bflt ttOij. .
Both clergymen were witnes.es be?
fore the grand jury. Mr. Herreu.-r.
Mkcd what he thought of the tangle,
red thst Mra. David had done
right The grand jury. a reritablfl
twonty-three-fold Solomon, bhaieJ. his
beUflJEt u_?
HUGHES IN DANGER;
CAR STALLS ON TRACK
His Own Train Stopped Only 20
Feet Away at Oswego
[Frorn a Sfaff CrrMponilm' af Ttie MBflM 1
Watertown, M. Y.. Oct. .IS.?Mr. and
Mrs. Charles LS, Hughes were for a mo?
ment in actual danger here to-day when
the, automobile in which they were
heading a procession xvas stalled on the
railway track down which the Hughes
special waa toming.
The Republican candidate had fin
ished his addrrss and was returning to
the Oswego station, whe.-e hi* train was
to meet him. In the machine with him
and hi.* wife were Mrs. John I). Hig
gins, wife of the Mayor of Oswego ar.d
? classmate of Mrs. Hughes at Wells
College. Bad Caarlea W. Farnham, man
a^er of the tour.
A culvert hid the stalled machine
from the train. The other cars behind'
it made it impossible to back it off.
While Seeret Service men aml members
of the feceptiofl committee tuggid -it
the car E. C. Cook, transportation man-j
Bater of the tour, run down the track
and managed to lifaal the l.eavy train.1
lt came to h Btaadatill only twenty feet
from the machine.
_-a-??
HUGHES CASH AT 7 TO 5
ON STATE NOT TAKEN
Commissioner with $10,000 to
Bet Seeks All Day
LTred Schumm, the Brooklyn betting
commissioner, has received $10,000 with
instructions to bet it at odds of 7 to 5
that Hughes will carry New Vork State.
All day jr*atorda*f Schumm sought in
xain for takfll*.
Ha aBCCOedad, however, in placing
other beta $2,000 Baa vafferod against
|4O0 that Calder would defeat ate
Combs for United Statea Senator, $600
even monev that Wilson would carry
KiBffl fountv BBd |ljBO0 to $1,000 that
Whitman would ba th" next Governor.
R0QUEF0RT CHEESE
A WAR BRIDEIN FRANCE
Rises 1,000 Per Cent?Govern?
ment to Fix Maxirnum Price
Paris, Oet. 28. The Freneh Senate
! a raeaini* last night authoriz
ir.g the Mtni--.tr of !he laterlor to t'.x
the limits of retail selling prices ot
butt?-r and chee.se. These products are
now bringing frorn M tfl IM per cent
more than thi y did 8 war.
Gruyere ehoflflfl ia up 400 per cent,
Roque'fort has reached almost 1.000 per
eeata and Swiaa eheeae, aelliag in Swit
zerland at 28, cents a pound. has been
sell ing ia France for ?>0 cents. The
Miaiater of the Interor is authorized
to tix u maximum price for theaa pro
vi->ions. and, lf necessary, requisition
them for distribution by the govern?
ment.
STIER LEAVES $5,000
TO WIFE HE DIVORCED
His Widow, Her Sister, Will Re
ceive S30.000
When Pasl Stier's will was filed for
probete yesterday an odd demestie
omplication in the life of the late
Sheriff of Queens, who was *hot and
k:!h-.| by a lunatic last Monday. came
fo hirht. To Kertha Stier. his widow,
the Sheriff 1? ft 130,000 n li*?u of dower
rights. At the same time there was n
beqoeat of 16,000 to Ann? Stier, her
sister, his tirst wife, whom he had
divoi ea l
Since the divorre, according to
frienda, Btier aad the arife *h*n
t oa luid baaa ehaBfod to that of aia
terin-law, had beCOBBa reCOBCtled. The
three often were aoefl together.
The reflMaa of th- eetate,after 11,500
ha* been BOBt to Stier's father in Ger
itinny, goes to his two children Klsif.
seventeen. and George, twelve. Kach
is to receive $ 10.'111n oomk from th- ao ?
eumulated ir.com.' BB rcaching major
ity. No estimato of tha value of the
aatate araa girea.
ROOSEVELT DENOUNCES
WILSON'S "HYPOCRISY
SELF-INDICTED
BY CINCINNATI
TALK, HE SAYS
Colonel DeclaresPres
identMakesU.S.Eat
Bread of Shame
CALLS PERSONALLY
FOR AN ANSWER
"Selfish Neutrality" Stirs
Crowd to Cheers in
Brooklyn
Theodore Roosevelt celebrated Wil?
son Day at the Brooklyn Ac-tjflemy of
Music last night. Hfl paid trihute to
the President on the day Bflt aside
for that purpose l?y the Democratic
party with the most hittcr attack
r.gainst his policies and his actions
that he has delivered since he entered
the campaign.
Taking as his text the speech de?
livered in Cincinnati last Thursday
by the Chief Executive, in which Mr.
Wilson declared that the United
States must participate in the next
war, the Colonel delivered a scorch
ing arraignment of the President's
foreign policy. He was sarcastic.
Hfl was hitter. He apostrophized the
present occupant of the Wlnte House
as though he were a prosecuting at?
torney and tho Derrrocratic candidate
were a prisoner seated on the plat?
form with him.
Crowd Yella Approval
As he drove home aceusation after
accusation, the crowd which Jammed
the auditorium to the doora yelled en
couragement. They had begun to yell
when he made his entry at the back of
the atage between two huge banners
emblazoncd with portraita of Hughea.
For minute after minute, while W.
C'ameron Forbes, former Governor Gen?
eral of the Philippines and president
of the Hughes National Alliance,
worked and perspired in an effort to
quiet them, the turmoil continued ao
loud and enthusiastic that it seemed an
echo of the Progreasive Convention at
(,'hicago.
It waa when the Colonel turned and
spoke to the President as though he
stood before him that the climax of
his address came. He branded Mr. Wil?
son as a hypocrite for his talk of future
wars. He mocked at a man who would
talk of his duty in the future "when
throughout your whole term of oftiee
you have failed to do in the present
what you aay is our duty.'
He called to the attention of tha
President, still addressing him pcrsoji
ally, the violation of Belgium's neu?
trality, the rflflflflflflfflfl in Armenia. He
drew to his attention "the outraging
of women, butchering of children and
murder of husbands," and asked the
Chief Kxecutive if he did not regard
these as "an invasion of the funda
mental rights of humanity."
Assails Mexican Policy
The crowd yelled louder and louder
as he built up his case against the
Pr?iflflflt. The;. cheered riercely when
he branded our Mexican policy as weak
and inadequate.
Mr. Forbes, in infroducing thfl
speaker. put the audienc: through .
eatflChiflfll of faith.
"Does any one here believe that the
disaster at Carrizal would have oc
curred," he asked, atepping to the
front of the platform, "if Theodore
Roosevelt had been Preaident?"
"No!" the answer came, like an ex
plosion. and was followed by another
burst of cheenng,
"Does any one believe that the Lnai
tania would have been aunk if Theo?
dore Roosevelt had been President?"
was the next question.
Ihe "No" which came in reply was
t-ven louder and more violent.
Would Ha*e Barred Notea
"And he wouldn't have written any
. me one in the gallery
yelled.
The Colonel was then ir.troduced aa
B man "flrhfl ha> not been too proud to
fight for his country."
Mr. Roosevelt was grinning as hfl
came to the front of the platform. He
was plninly enioying the noiae, and it
inspired him. He sailed into the Presi?
dent with vigor as aoon aa he eould
make hia voice heard above the ap
plause. The grin became broader as
he roused cheer after cheer by his at?
tack. Now and again he paused to let
it ihe away, his teeth shining in the
light and hia eyes narrowed by hia
nghtiflflj aflaslfl.
Hav?? Eaten Bread of Sham.
Colonel Roosevelt'a apeech in full
follows:
"To-dav so our Democratic frienda
tells us, ia Wilson Dav. If ao, It ahould
be appointed a day of f.sting and hu
miliatioa for th. peosl. of tha Lrutafl,

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