Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, March 26, 1915, Night Extra, Page 4, Image 4

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    4
EVENING LEPGER-PHILADELPfllA, T?ttTT)AV. MABOH 26, 191-
i
h'
r
SLAVMiVESPAVE
l WAY FOR SWEEPING
? HUNGARY INVASION
Heights Commanding Lup
kow Pass Captured Foo
Rolled Back to BaligrotL
Another Force Intrench
ed Beyond Dukla Pass.
Czernowitz Reported Evacuated
W Austrlnna After Three
Days' Battle on Pruth Kiver.
Kniscr's Guns Pound at Oa
Sowitz Fortress.
In tho Russian move for a now In
vasion of Hungary, LupUow Pass and
tho llcskid Crests seem to bo the chief
Bccno of advance. IVtrograd circum
stantially reports storming heights and
forcing defiles In this campaign.
Czernowitz lias born evacuated by the
Austrian garrison which reoccuplcd the
Bukowlna capital early In tho year, ac
cording to advices received by tho Rus
sian War OJIlce. A preat battlo for
thrco days on the Pruth resulted In tho
retreat of tho Auatrlans toward Hun
gary. Admission Is mode by I'etroKrml
military authorities that tho German
bombardment of Ossowltz continues
heavy and that hostllo attacks arc rre
quont and lively at Augustowo and
Ormolcff.
Tho French arc again attempting to
drive a wedge In the German lines In
on effort to cut off St. Mlhlel, accord
ing to dispatches from Herlln. Tho
French attacks have been repulsed,
nays tho German official report, whllo
In tho Vosges, at Hartmannswcller
Kopf, a battle has been raging for four
days.
SUBMARINE DESTROYS
ANOTHER BRITISH SHIP
Claim of Sinking of U-29
Quickly Followed by News of
Another Disaster.
ADDOLIRATA'S HERO
Salvatore Knsconi today became
the husband of tho Italian belle
whom ho kidnaped n few days
ago nnd took to Chester in n
tnxienb.
RUSSIANS SEIZE HEIGHT
IN HUNGARY ADVANCE
Dominate Lupkow Pass and Hold
Ground Beyond Dukla.
In tho Lupkow Pass region a Slav army
has paved tho wny for a new dash Into
Hungary by seizing a commanding posi
tion near the heights dominating the pass
Itself. A large body of the encmy'B
troops that threatened Itusslan railway
communications with Przomysl has been
rolled back In the direction of Ballgrod.
The way Is thus cleared for the speedy
transportation of tho Slavs who besieged
Przemysl to the iAipkow and Uszok re
gions, whero a battlo of tremendous Im
portance) Is now being waged. The Aus
trian prisoners In the fighting near Lup
kow already number more than 7000.
A Russian army that passed through
one of tho gaps of tho Dukla Pass and
Intrenched Itself on tho Hungarian plain
oast of Bartfa Is awaiting reinforcements
before advancing. These troops have
taken up positions on a low range of
hills In expectation of a determined at
tempt by tho Austro-Germans near
Stropko to drive them north of the
mountains.
SUBMARINE CREW
PROBABLY CRUSHED
Continued from Page One
that alt on tho F-i had perished and. tliaUff fan
the submarine could never be dMwn'tol'fcon:
tho surface. I
The nppcaranco of fuel oil, which cov
ered the surface of the water where tho
F-H wont down, two miles off tho harbor,
Beemed to Indicate this morning that tho
work of rescue would provo fruitless, as
there was only oxygen on board to keep
tho crew allvo 21 hours. The submarine
having been submerged slnco 9 o'clock
yesterday morning, every minute lost In
tuo worK or rescuo now adds to tho
Chances against tho Imprisoned men.
The naval tug Navajo and several
launches spent the whole night In their
search, dragging a large circle with the
spot, two miles outside the harbor, whero
tho F-4 went down, ns the centre. None
of these vessels had reported early today
and tho apprehension In this city in
creased. Absenco of signals from the subma
rine emergency bells was regarded as a
further alarming circumstance. It was
fpared that the submarine's tanks have
burst, suffocating tho chew with sul
phuric fumes.
HAVE AIR FOR 3t HOURS.
Itear Admiral Charles B. Moore, com
manding the Honolulu Naval Station, at
midnight ordered overy available vessel
out for the search. Admiral Moore said
there was some hope that, even if yet
submerged, the men on the submarine
might still be saved
The oxygen tanks had air, he said, for
Zt hours' submersion, and In addition
emergency tanks sufficient for several
days more unless some accident had burst
the tanks. The F-4 had been engaged In
practice maneuvers with the F-l, F-2
and F-3.
Lieutenant Ede, the commander of tho
F-l, was born In Nevada July 4, 1S87, and
was appointed to the United States Naval
Academy from that State on July 5, 1DU5
The F-4 belonged to the first submarine
division of the torpedo flotilla of the
Pacific Heel. This division has been sta
tioned at Honolulu, with tho Alert as
tender.
The F-4 was formerly known as the
Skate before the navy adopted the new
alphabetical nomenclature for submarine
craft She was authorized by Congress
In 1903, was of the Holland type and was
built by the Moran Company, at Seattle,
in 1912. at a cost of jaw.000, She was
launched on January 8, 1312, and was put
ipto commission August 5 of that year.
The F-4 was submerged 24 hours at her
builders' trial, and could remain under
water that length of time without Incon
venience to the crew. The vessel is 112
feet long, 16 feet 10 Inches deep and IS
feet 3 inches beam. Submerged the vessel
displaces 400 tons of water. She Was de
signed for a cruising radius of 2)00 miles
BIUl Ja fitted with four torpedo tubes,
M. L. MOORE, OF GERMANTOWN,
ON BOARD SUBMARINE F-4
The, only Philadelphia!! on board tho
"United mates submarine F-4 is Horace
L, Moore, of Germantown. He Is a gun
ner's mate of the prat class. He enlisted
at Washington on September IT, 1313. He
bad eight years' service. Moore's next
of kin la Horace H. Moore, of Spring
Lafe. N. J
MST OF MEN ON BOARD
SUBMARINE IN DISTRESS
Th following men were on board the
submarine F-4 on March T. according to
ba Navy Department.
George T Ashcroft, gunner's mate, first
class; enlisted, at San Francisco April 29,
JM; four years prior service; home. Lo
J.yie. next of kin Nellie 1. Ashcroft,
Mfttfaar, MU Nowtonutrett. Lob Angeles.'
Clark O. Bueit. gunner's mate, second
via, nlitd at Portland, Oregon. May
S, um. Ihitm yiUto' prior service, home
-?. Wk.; sest of JUa, Amanda,
soivro, sBfttiwr, Twu, sm South s
to!.
4
"MY HERO!" CRIES GIRL,
PROUD TO WED MAN
Continued frnm l'liue Ont
chewed on the toothpick n moment mid
then snlil:
"Sure."
Tho couple started out without the
marrlago certificate.
"Hey," shouted the Magistrate, "wait
for a receipt."
John Ilunny, the fat motion picturo
actor, nat beside Magistrate Carson dur
ing the cercmonv.
Addolorntn had a new dress, but Sal
vntoro wore the suit In which ho had
slept all night. It was crumpled and
disordered, but ho never noticed It, and
what others may have noticed matlo no
difference.
Addolornta was courted by Fasronl. He
proposed and was accepted Then gossip
ing stories began to spread through Llttlo
Italy. The gosKlp was that Fasconl was a
mairlcd man Fasconl was forbidden to
enter tho Meiclorn household. Then tho
"kidnapping" followed.
While the girl was recovering from
shock she was furnished with proof that
Fasconl was not a married man. She
wept for Joy "American gendarmes"
were urging her to prosecute Fasconl, she
said.
"No, I won't send my Salvotorc to
prison. Ho Is my hero. I lovo him and
love the ground he walks on. Ho has
proven himself to be n brave man by
defying the laws. My Salvatore musn't
go to prison. I om siiro that the Ameri
can nation will never permit a hero u go
to prison. My Salvatore Is forgiven."
The Inst lovo missive left Fasconl's
coll nt 7:45 o'clock this morning. It was
written in Italian. An Interpreter, who
wns permitted to translate It, gave out
tho following.-
"My Fnlr Addoloratn.
"I am hero In an American prison being
punished because I proved my love to
jou you tho fairest girl who ever lived
Ir. Abruzzl. Good and kind gentlemen
havo told mo that you have forgiven me
I am so happy to hear the good news.
The chief of tho prison tells me that you
call me "Your Hero." Yes, I am Addo
lorata's hero and you are my queen.
"You must forget the past. Think of
tho future when you and I will no longer
be questioned by the Amerlcnn police
My fair Addolorata, I would be prepared
to remnln hero a thousand years rather
loso jou. Remember tboso dun-
ns In far-off beautiful Italy, where
great men wero placed for being truo
'and kind? Sure you do. becauso your
mother told you about them wben you
sat In her lap when jou were a little girl
In Abruzzl. I would be prepared to perlMi
In tho.e dungeons If I knew that some
body else and not I should marry you.
"You call mo 'your hero,' You have
told the truth. What I did was simply
what any other truo suitor for the hand
of a good girl would do in our country.
I nm more than happy to know that you
have forgiven. I am hero nlono In a dark
cell. What care I? I know that my
Addollrata lov&s me. Be sure and come
to tho court. Speak up and tell the great
Judgo that I am 'your hero.'
"Your loving Hero Salvatore."
LONDON, March 28.
Within four hours after Admiralty of
flrlnls had declared that, with the re
ported sinking of the U-29, Oormany's
J submarine losses would tesutt in nti
I abandonment of the underwater warfare
against Knallsh shipping, news renchea
i-eie todaj of tho destruction of another
Hiltish merchant ship In the English
I'hnnnet, favorite hunting ground of the
i Kaiser's submarines.
, The latest victim of the submarine cam
I palgn in the "bread war" was the Del
1 mlra. n vessel of 2211 tons. She was lor
i pedoed anil sunk In tho English Chan
nel yesterday afternoon by a German
. Hubmarlno
All the members of tho crew were saved
and landed nt Portsmouth today. They
had no complaint to make as to tho
tieatnient given them by the German
commander.
The sailors of the Dclmlra were allowed
ir. minutes to leave their vossel. They
took to the boats, nnd theso wero towed
by the submailne until another ship
wns sighted. This latter Bhlp was too
nenr Portsmouth for tho Germans to
venture nn attack, and they throw off
the tow lines. The sailors rowed to tho
easel and were taken Into Portsmouth
today.
The British press accepted today with
out question the report that the U-29. no
torious German sea raider, has been sunk
mitl that lii addition to the one German
submarine reported destroyed by tho air
raid on Hobokcn another was damaged
bevond repair. Admiralty officials re
fused to amplify last night's statement
that they had reason to believe that tho
U-29 had been destroyed.
Tho Wilson liner Tycho nrrlvod at Hull
today, after narrowly escaping destruc
tion by tho German submarine U-6 off
the coast of Kent. The U-B was headed
for tho Tycho when she was sighted by
n lookout on the steamer. Tho Tycho's
captain ordered that his vessel take nn
othor course. In tho hope that thus It
could avoid torpedoes, and Immediately
sent up distress signals. Theso were
seen by BrltlBh destroyers near the coost,
nnd thoy sped out to assist the Tycho.
The U-S abandoned the pursuit of the
Tycho when the destroyers appeared, and
dashed out Into the North Sea. It was
pursued by three destroyers, but suc
ceeded In making Its escape.
soma of the Turkish batteries, as they
made no reply,
Tho bombardment by the British ships
lasted Only 15 minutes. As a result of
their flro the mine sweepers wero able to
continue nt work all day "Wednesday with
satisfactory results, but they retired Wed
nesday night becauso of a new storm that
suddenly broke.
Philadelphia Missionaries Safe
Soveral prominent missionaries from
this city and vicinity are among those
persona caught In Persia, with war on
all sides of thorn. Many of their Phila
delphia friends have been anxious for
their safety, but n telegiam from the
Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions,
New York, received by the Evening
LEDonn this afternoon Indicates that no
anxiety need be felt for tho American
mlsslonailes, because all classes havo !
great respect for them. j
This mesfage from the Board of For
eign Missions, giving the names of the '
missionaries from this Bectlon, follows
"No seilous npprclicnsloli for bersonnl
safety of Amerlcnn missionaries 1n Porsla,
ns all classes greatly respect them, Hugo
Muller and Mrs. Mullcr, M. D., of
Urumlah College, are son nnd daughter
of the Jlullcr nnd McComb families of
liaddonflcld. Mrs. Coehrnn, matron of
Urumlah Hospital, wns formerly In the
University of Pennsylvania settlement, In
West Philadelphia. Hobort LaDarrc,
heading relief In Tlflls, wns pastor In
Doylestown. W. S. Vnnncmnn, M. D
heading Tabriz relief, came from Philadelphia."
pPHHBSHu
COMRADE liEN ZEELNEU
Younpcst Civil War soldier, who
is celcbrntiiiff GGth birthday In
Allcntown.
FIVE PERSONS RESCUED
FROM BURNING HOMES
TAUBES ATTACK NORSE SHIP
Five Hundred Darts Hurled at Noutral
Vessel.
LONDON. March Hi.
Another German aeroplane attack upon
a neutral ship was reported today In a
dlspntch from South Shields. The cap
tain of tho Norwegian steamship Diana
stated on his arrival there that several
Gorman airships, apparently headed for
Calais, dropped fully SCO darts on his ves
sel Though many struck his ship, ho said,
membeis of his crew escaped injury.
Policeman Discovers Flames
and Rouses Sleeping Family
and Neighbors.
Flames wero sweeping across a bed
room In which five persons wero sleeping
when they were rescued, nlmost suffo
cated. In a flro In Camden nt midnight.
They escaped In their night garments, as
did n man and wife living In the adjoining
house,
Tho family which narrowly escaped
death consists of William Ingham, his
wife and their children, Emily, 13 years:
Alfred, 12, nnd Joseph, 0. They llvo In
a frame dwelling at 38 South 21th street.
Tho other house which burned, at 40
North 21th street, Is occupied by John
Dallas.
Policeman Newton saw flnnics shooting
out of the third floor of both houses. He
battered open tho front doors nnd found
tho Ingham house filled with smoke. In
tho bedroom on the second floor It had
nearly suffocnted the sleeping family.
Damage to both houses Is estimated at
$S0O.
YOUNGEST VETERAN OF CIVIL
WAR CO YEARS OLD TODAY
Comrade Zollncr, . of Allcntown,
Shouldered Musket nt Ago of 13.
ALLDNTOWN, Pn., March 26.-Com-rado
Hon Zcllncr, one of tho youngest
veterans ot the Civil War In all America,
Ih today celebrating his CClh birthday
anniversary.
Born March 2B, 1S49. Coinrado Zellner
wns only 13 years 3 months and 13 days
old when he enlisted In the 167th Pennsyl
vania Rculment on July 9, 1S62. Although
there wero a fow younger soldiers In tho
Civil War, It In claimed by friends of
Comrade Zellnor thnt ho wns tho very
youngest soldier to go out cnrr.vlmr a
musket, tho younger ones being drummer
boys.
0GIAL'
-v n?
slits
i
ba
OTJJ
HOLLAND INCENSED
BY SINKING OF MEDEA
i
Dutch Send Sharp Protest to
Berlin on Ship Torpedoed in
English Channel.
THE HAGUE, March 24.
Tho sinking of the Dutch steamship
Medea by a German submarine off Beachy
Head, England, caused the Netherlands
Government to forward a sharp protest
to Berlin today.
The Dutch people are nroused by the
act and newspapers of Amsterdam today
declared the sinking of the Medea was
an unfriendly net for which tho German
Government must lvo full satisfaction.
"The sinking of the Medea," says the
Telograaf, "will deeply agitate tho whole
people, especially under present circum
stances. It will be considered an un
friendly net."
The British Admiralty, In Its official
report to the Dutch Government, says the
Medea was sunk by tho U-28. Tho report
says:
"Tho ship was Hying tho Dutch flag
and had n Dutch crew aboard. Her name,
Medea, Amsterdam, was painted In large
letters on her sides. Tho ship's papers
wero taken by the Germans, who refused
to return them."
Tho Medea wns carrying a cargo of
oranges and was bound from Salonlca to
London.
ZEPPELIN RAIDS SLAV FORT
PETnOGRAD, March 26. A Zeppelin
attacked tho Russian fortress of Lomsn,
on tho Narew Rlvor, yesterday, tho War
Offlco announced today. ' Fourtoon
bombs were dropped from tho dirigible.
Nino civilians In tho city of Lomsa
wero wounded.
Blbck V. S. Pian to Protect Ki
LONDON. March iA tu - J:,..Bf
ertiment has refused ih k "u r
United Btalea that an American L H
ofneer b permitted to take uU6 . ?SH
port of Kirkwall, In Scotland?" lH
on American cargo id.(.i . P?ral
there. The reason for the Wft,.. ul
a similar request hn k- .. .'"S
nthorn Interested In t,t, ... nl W
th Otkneys. ' b Qet'nM fa
StANDlOfl
Graham
Crackers
Bovb nnd rlrlo tbrl,,. .i . . m
eand, of Some . 31
part of their children',, dai ly tgfil
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BuybhcuUMtJly,
NATIONAL
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Alway look for that Nm
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ny ;l
E
"41
A 1
TURKS WANT PEACE,
REPORT IN BERLIN
30 mine
the Dar-
Cniitliiurd from Piute One
tcrdny were accompanied by
swecpcri,. These remained In
dnnelles during tho night.
A later dispatch from Tenedos states
th.it the British battleships Triumph,
Queen Kllzabeth nnd Agamemnon and the
cruiser Cornwall participated In the op
erations conducted to protect the mine
sweepers In the strait.
The mine sweepers begun their work
Tuesday afternoon and remained In the
strait that night. About 10 o'clock
Wednesday morning the Turkish artillery
on Krenko Height opened fire, followed j
few minutes later by fort Kalld-Bahr.
After the Turks had fired five shells the
Triumph. Queen Elizabeth, Agamemnon
and Cornwell opened a bombardment, fir
ing 20 rounds. This flro was very ac
curate, as It Is believed to have Bllenced
NEGRO CHAUFFEUR INDICTED
Frederick Ttlggs, negro chauffeur for
H, B. Hnuford, of G.T3 Cooper street! Cam
don, today was indicted for manslaugh
ter. Ho ran down and killed Bertha
Wehrlc, 20 years old, ot 511 North Front
street, at Front and Cooper streets, on
tho evening of January 12. The Negro's
defenso was that tho night was stormy
and the machine skidded when ho ap
plied tho brnkes. Miss Wehrlr, who was
a stenographer employed by tho Victor
Talking Mnclilno Company, wns tho
daughter of John II. Wehrlc, a baker.
Any time, any clime,
indoors or out when
hunger nips, the
answer is
With Fruits
Frails are thoroughly enjoyable
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After that, "do" California mid tho
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very time you
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