BMCHWINVOSGES HEIGHTS AFTER FIVE DAY BLOODY BATTLE Berlin Admits Loss of Hartmannsweiler - Kopf, , in Alsace Raid Upon1 Strassburg and Papumc) by Allies' Airships. French troops have captured the summit of Hartmnnn.iwellor-Koiif, In Alsace, after a terrific ftve-d-iy battle This wast admitted today In nn olllcla) Gorman report. The Germans assert thai their troops still maintain a foot ing on the. edge of the heights. Tho fcYcnch victory gives them possession of one- of tho most Important Strategic positions In the Vosges. Air raids by the r'renoh upon Strass burg, MetK and Pupumo are also ad mitted by Berlin, which mates that no military damngo wns done. Calais was reported ito have been bombarded by German aviators, while Paris asserts that In tho town of Wilier, near Thann, In Alsace, three children were killed by a bomb dropped by a German air ship. Russians In Bukowlna liavo been drlvon back to the Dniester Hlvcr by a renewal of the Austrian offensive, ac cording to today's Vienna report, which officially denies evaluation of CzcrnO- WltZ. mt e .. I rs..1......1.l l Tho Slav base at Zalesczyki Is being shelled. i Russians are reported In control of I Lupkow Pass, whole eterday they ' Btormcd heights dominating this gate way. Previously they occupied u posi tion In Hungnr bevond Duklu lis. Austrlans are concentrating to check the expected Slav avalanche. General KIchhorn Is said to have fallen back in Suwalki Province, Po land, his retirement foiced by the men acing Russian dash ncrosn the East Prussia border Into tho Tilsit sector. Berlin reports repulse of Russian forays in this vicinity. Constantinople reports the defeat of two British columns In the Egyptian campaign, one force having been vlr- i tually wiped out by an Ottoman detach ment against the Suez Canal. On the other hand, London reports that the Turkish campaign against Suez has completely failed. RUSSIAN FORAYS REPULSED IN EAST l'RUSSn. BERLIN SAYS Fresh Offensive Halted in Fighting at Laugszargen. BERLIN, March Z7 Russians who had started from Tnurog gen to loot Tilsit, us they did Memel. were, repulsed near I.augzargen, today's War Office report states. They suffered heavy losses and were driven beyond Jedlorupa. behind the Jura River. Several Russian advances wen; repulsed between the Augustowo forts. The War Om.ce admits that the Russian advance on Memel had a certain connec tion with a general renewed offensive on the part of the Russians, with the object of again threatening East Pr ssln. The offensive against Memel was closely fol lowed by advances from Tauroggen toward Tilsit, past MariampaLand. flnqlly toward Augustowo. AUSTRIANS SHELL FOE'S MILITARY BASE IN B UKOWINA Zaleszczyki, on tho Dniester, Objec tive of .New Teuton Offense. VIENNA. March 27. Austro-German forces In Bukowlna have taken tho offensive against tho Rus sian left wing there and driven It back to the Dniester River, tho Austrian Gen eral Staff reported today. The town of Zuleszcz) kl. 26 miles north west of Czernowltz. which the Russians have used as their base of operations on the Dniester, ( being shelled by the Austrian artillery from tho south bank of the river. Capture of Czernowltz by the Russians Is denied. Austro-German forces operating north east of Czernowltz are ndvunclng toward the fortress of Chotin In tho Russian province of Bessarabia, according to dispatches received from Budapest CHILDREN KILLED BY BOMBS DROPPED BY GERMANS Town of Wilier, in Alsace, Bombarded by Airship. PARIS, March 27. A Geiman aviator bombarded the town of Wilier, northwest of Thann, in Alsace, yesterday, the War Office announced this afternoon. One of the bombs burst In the street, killing three children. Six French aviators dropped bombs upon the German railway station at Metz nnd also bombarded the aeroplane sta tion at Freacaty. A mid was also made upon a Oerman barracks east of Strass burg, This Information was given out In an official statement from Paris. A dozen bembs were dropped at Metz, which caused a panic. Tho aviators es caped, although they were subjected to a heavy gun fire. t CHILDREN'S CORNER CLOUD PASTURES a FLOCK of sheep once lived In a great J XX wide pasture a sunny and roomy ; wide pasture. v ! AU through the summer they gamboled and played, cared for and tended by the ; shepherd. -toit when the cold winter came the Bheep and all the tiny white lambs went away. '"Where did they go?" do you ask. Oh, nobody knows quite where they Wnt they Just went away. They were en no more for many long months, and that Is all anybody knows. Then one day when the sun was over the worst of his sleepiness when he got up early and stayed up late the sheep and tb little lamba came back. Not all t once, uf course; nature never dogs thing o auddemy. First one, then another peeped out from the land of nobodyrknowsTWbers; saw their broad pasture slowing In the un hltte and frolicked put lota view. "Come, let's leave our hiding place and play out In the big field." said one little lansll to hla playmate back in the nobody-fcasws-where land. 'It tvoloi Ilka a nice ple to play let's jalay 'out there In the "put, dot" said another; "I'll go with MJ." "JW:u!l Its iu-ety cold ytt' ald a ManfOTWatf Ap. bu was more wis 3h hrav. ftjd. be otmful' Maybe w-lnti w nut itaiy- wm ri wx msvg nu. LIEt TENANT ALPKED L, EDE Commander of the submarine F-4, who went down with his crew in an accident near Hono lulu. Ho wns 28 years old and entered the Nnvnl Academy from Nevada. HOPE OF SAVING MEN ON SUBMARINES REVIVES Continued from l'ngr tlnr which the lines of t lie Navajo nnd Ma- hHUlU llCre UllimilCU III.! II) iiuuui -,1'u ltd nf .. ,,, ... ,,,,. nf nll .v.. vnl. c.ino In the ocean tied. It Is now be- lleod to he certain that the cli.ilns are J i omul the F-t, drawing her to the sur l face JAPANESE ADMIRAL'S MESSAGE. dmlral Dowa, of Japan, who arrived here last night on his way home from the I'uHed States, expressed his regret to lo cal naval oflleers, and sent the following despatch to Secretary Daniels "Shocked to learn of ac lilent to sub marine F-4. Please accept sincere con dolence for sad accident to your navy. Earnestly hopo the biavc mm in the ship will be rescued." Men and women assembled on the slioro of Honolulu harbor durltu Inst nluht and prayed that tho lives of the two olllcers and 19 sailors In the submarine might bo spared Rear Admlial Moore, comiii.imlaiil ' the naval station here, thinks sc me lives may have been spaied by "one thance in a million." This chalice Is that smn'l special oxygenized emergency compait menti may have saved a few members of the crew fiom the lnrushlng waters. Tho depth to which the vessel sank :s not accepted as the direct cause of the first American submarine disaster. The enormous water pressure at 200 feet, It Is considered probable, crushed In her sides. TORPEDO TUBE EXPLOSION MAY HAVE WRECKED THE F-4 Lieutenant Walters Thinks Floating Buoy Was Fouled. An explosion In the torpedo tube while at practice may have been the cause of the sinking of tho submarine F-4 off Honolulu harbor, according to Lieuten ant Frank Walters, commander of the submarine G-t, which was brought into Cramp's shipyard today. Lieutenant Walters said ho thought the falluro of the floating buoy to rise to tho surface when tho F-1 was unablo to conio -fjep resulted from a fouling of the tackle which releases It. ' "If the F-l wa at torpedo practice the accident may have been caused by the (Rnltion of tho flash In the tube before the outer door released it," he said. "The locking device is usually to be counted upon, but it is my belief that while the submarine wns submerged and the tor pedo was placed In the tube the Ignition occurred when tho locking mechanism of the outer door was not working. Firing tho torpedo under these circumstances would cause an explosion in the tube." R. D Wcyerbacher, assistant naval constructor at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, who was a classmate of Lieutenant Ede, of the F-4, said today: "Lieutenant Ede graduated from tho Class of 1909 at Annapolis. lie was pop ular among the men and well liked. He was a native of Reno. Nevada. He wub always a quiet, studious man." GREATEST ZEPPELIN READY FOR SPRING RAID ON BRITAIN Monster Airship Has Trial Trip From Friedrichshaven Base. ZURICH, Switzerland, March 27. The greatest airship ever built was turned out this week by tho great Jiep pelln factory at Friedrlehshafen. It left Its shed on a trial flight Thursday, maneuvered satisfactorily several thou sand feet above tho lake and disap peared In u northwesterly direction. The new dreadnought, according to the villagers around Friedrlehshafen, Is fully SO per cent, larger than any airship yet designed by Count Zeppelin. That It was built for tho oxpresa purpose of Joining In spring air raids on London and Paris Is tho report. Thirty-five Zeppelins have been turned out at Friedrlehshafen since tho begin ning of the war. Eleven nro supposed to hav been In existence when the war hrnke out, but at least 13 are believed to have been destroyed. In a minute!" said another old sheep In a panic of fear. "Wo don't care about the cold," said, a venturesome lamb, "see the wide pas ture! Feel tho warm sunshine! Don't croak and be afraid any more, spring Is here!" With a laugh and a flirt of hl snowy white tail he Jumped over the fence from nowhere Into the broad Bunny pas ture. And you know how sheep do one leads, and many follow. Soon the pas ture was full of snowy whlto lambs frolicking and shouting "Spring Is com lnc!" "Spring is coming!'1 sane the tkA htr.i ' and he began his search for a nesting rlace. "Spring Is comlns!" crooned h i. and bulbs fn the ground, and they began ' to stretch and grow strong. 1 "Spring is coming!" shouted n little ' gjrl a she skipped along home from I school. j -nave ao you Know?" laughed her mother as she met her at the door "Look up In the sky!" said the little girl, "see all the little Iambs they know spring is coming! They have come back to play In the broad sunny sky'" The mother looked. Suro- enough' The nunny blue sky was full of tiny white clouda which drifted hither and j on like docks of sheep- "You're wrong!" said the mother laughing. "I s the clouds, yes' Ana Avervhnrfv knoui Iho nftian !.. t,n.. white cloudy arrive la the sky spring Isn't otHBjmg-ir here!" CopntAgh JWirwgiar Ingram 4v4a. vvvutWj.im'r-iSUxa Ingram Judta. XUJmMOt SPJUNfi OiXDZH BT. - "f-. : ,'.t...'. I ,,,. , - -im , TiTnr- i,:.,.JSZJlsrS- ' M EVENING EBDCH3R PHIEADBEPHXA', SATtTXlBAY, MAttOH RAIDER PREPARES FOR DASH TO SEA Navy Officials Expect Eitel FHedrich to Make Attempt. U. S. Not to Interfere. WASHINGTON, March 27. Submarine and destroyers now at an chor In Hampton (toads were Bent there. In thp regular course of naval hut-mess mid not to Interfere with the I'rlnz Eltel lVledrleh II wns stated positively nt Hie Viiw Department today. Whenever the Mitels eomtu tinier decides to risk run ning the gantlet. It wns declared, mere Mould he nntlilng to Intel fere with him Should lie deride lo no out he can do so. nml tni 1r tent Inn will be guarded by ihr port i lllrtnlx, ill to do nil thing clso would lie n Hmrntit breach uf nsntralltv. Hepnrt reaching here that the Mitel i ml strum up were sold not to mean Hint Alio was reniH for a dash to sen Her hollers imo been undergoing repair?, and it ni explained that the fires under them imiloulitcdlx were for tho purpose of testing them OHlclnls are now begin ning to believe, however, that nfter all the Ornuin cruiser may Intend to at tempt an orenpe That she "could suc eefully win through the Cnpes nnd on out to the open sea Is doubted here. Latest report were that there were three allied warships outside, one French and two Hiltlh, nnd that any of them would he more than a match for the unnrmored Mitel. STRIKERS DEFY KITCHENER Stoppages of Work Continuo, Despite War Chief's Warning. LONDON. Mnrch 27,-Dcsplte Lord Klti lienor's warning and the agreements between the Government and the trades unions that strikes should cease, stop pages of work still continue Fears are expressed that the disaffection may spread nnd the Government he driven to adopt tho dr'itlr mcauiea which have been threatened In older to Increase In duslilnl production At Iliikenhend the men loading three stoait'shlps quit work nnd announced that they wuuld not resume their labors until Mondny. On the Liverpool side of tho Mern n largo number of dockets nto threatening to strike. At the Dowlals (Wales) Steel Works Government order for materials needed In Prance nnd Hel glum arc being delayed by a strike SPAIN DENIES MAKING PREPARATIONS FOR WAR Will Maintain Absolute Neutrality, Says Premier. MADRID, March 27 - Reports that Spain's military and naval preparations are being undertaken with a view to as sailing Portugal, or of embarking In the European war were denied today by Premier Dato and Marquis dc Lenin, Minister of Foreign Affairs. The Pio mler Dato made the following statement: "The inlllng upon 30,M armed men Is nothing more than puttlmr into force the provisions of laws icrently passed. The men will remain enrolled for three months for necessary training These military opcintlons nie not due to dls agreements with other nations. Abso lutely wutrnllty will bo maintained by Spain with the utmost fidelity." ITALY A WAITING SIGNAL FROM BULGARIA rnnttntierl from 1'ukp One the prey of Russia and her Slavic al lies. In other qtmitcrs, It Is asserted that the negotiations have definitely failed, and that Prince von Buelow has resigned the rolo of mediator. This version goes on to relntc that when the last courier from Vienna arrived he brought Austria's final terms, which were of hitch a character that the Ambassador did not see lit ecn to present them to tho Italian Government. The sltuntlon In the Balkans Is that Bulgaria is expected to Join the Allies nt any time now. On this account the Turks are feverishly fortifying the fron tier as well as Makrlkol, on the Sea of .Marmora, and Lule Burgas, where there j Is a considerable concentration of troops. 1 among whom are 300 German officers nnd j non-commissioned oflleers. Heavv nrtll- 1 lery, which was originally Intended for tho defense of Constantinople, Is being mounted on the frontier, whero nn attack In force is feared preparatory to the forcing of the Dardanelles. Italy and Rumania are consequently preparer! for a simultaneous Invasion of Austria. The success of theso move ments depends In a larce measure upon secrecy nnd rapidity, henco the Italian Foreign Office Is uncommunicative. This letlcenco Is, however, useless, Blnco all plans are well known. Tho correspondent of tho Sun Is inform ed In diplomatic circles that the negotia tions between the Qulrinnl and the Vati can concerning a modus vlvendl In case of war have been satisfactorily conclud ed. Tho Pope, It Is said, has consented to ask all cnvoyB of belligerent Powers, Irrespective of whether they aro Italy's allies or enemies, to leave Rome. Thus only the Spanish Envoy and tho South American diplomats con remain accredit ed to the Holy See during the war They will bo allowed to communicate with their Governments In cipher, but other diplo matic relations will remain In abeyance. A dispatch from Vienna sayBt "It has Just been learned that the German Emperor paid a secret visit to Emperor Francis Joseph last week to urge him to cede Trcntlno and Trieste to Itnly as the price of the latter's neutral ity. Tho conference wns held at the time the Kuiser was scml-olllclally reported to be In consultation with Field Marshal von Illndeuburg on the eastern front. "Considerable uneasiness over the result of tho conference pervades official circles, although the average Austrian, In spite of tho Government's work In fortifying the frontier, takes It for granted that the Trentlno trlanglo Is ulready ceded. He has even invented a little speech about Italy's Intention to mako tourist resorts of the little towns In this region, where prosperity will reign. " 'If wo cede Trieste.' tho Austrlans say, 'wo shall certainly get a piece of Bavaria and a slice of SlleBla, which we always coveted. If we lose Trieste wo shall be paid for It.' " -t ARTIFICIAL LIMBS OrthODacdh' Ilraeu for dtformltiu. Elullo Uucklpgav Abdominal Supporters, eta 1U S3 ioc nBI Bill AND Wfji Sl WORTH 'Qfj T3T a vnri io l ail" I K..-tiJSia.ixti.1xt.txtjtX4.u.JJHr'Mt-LMriUL-MW I II I M ' ' I 'J CHILI OVEUUULES PltOTEST Gorman Minister Demands Release, of Dresden's Crow. SANTIAGO, Chill, March 27. Tho German Minister to Chill has en torcd n strong protest lo tho Government against Interning tho officers and crow of tho German cruiser Dresden, sunk In tho Juan Fernandez Island engagement. Ho asserted that since Urltlsh warship violated Chilian neutrality In attacking tho Dresden, her men should bo permit ted to leave for their homes. The Government flatly denies this claim, agnln pointing out that tho Dres den nlso had violated Chilian neutrality. BATTLESHIPS DESTROY TWO TURKISH FORTS Dnrdnnos nnd Kild-Bahr Crum ble Under Terrific Rain of Shells From Fleet. LONDON, March 27. Destruction of Turkish batteries nt Dardanui and at Kllld-Hahr, on tho Asiatic and European sides of the Dar daticllio, was completed by Sd shells rained upon them by the Urltlsh battlt- f ships Triumph, Queen Elizabeth nnd Agamtnemnon, nccordlng to a dispatch itcelved hero today from Tcnedos. lly putting tho Dnrdnnun nnd Knlld Pahr batteries out of action the British warships have cleared tho way for tho operations of their mine sweepers ns far or the Narro.V). Eight additional warships havo Joined tho nllled licet, for n grand assault Upon the Datdnnelles forts In co-opcratlon with Urltlsh and French land forces, nc coidlng to an Athens dispatch this afternoon. Three British waishlpx, four French nnd one Russian ciulsct constitute tho reinforcements. Immediately following thplr arrival their captains reported to Rear Admiral de Robcck, and a confer ence was held aboatd tho flagship of tho fleet commander. Three" transports havo arrived off the coast of Asia Minor In the last 43 hours. A Paris dispatch received here today said that the guns of Fort Eienkeul, on tho Asiatic shore of the strait, have been silenced by the Queen Elizabeth and her sister ships. A Home dispatch sas that Prlnco Salsli Eddluc, nephew of Ihc Sultan of Turkey; Ahmed Rlza rtey, former Speak er of the Ottoman Parliament; Clmry Poha and other Turkish statesmen nro In Swltzeiland on tholr way to Constan tinople to form a new poacr Cabinet when the Dardanelles ate forced. German Scientists Freed HOME, Mnrch 27 Information has been received hero to the rffect that six Ger man scientists who attended an Interna tional congress In Australia, and wero In terned when hostilities began, have been gi anted permission by the British Gov ernment to leturn to their homes jprvn,3?arnTyrifiT1 Moving" Pictures Taken By Daring- Photographers on the Deadly Battlefields of Europe : Real Action Photographs Showing the Marvelous Results of The Camera On the Firing Line All pictures made with authority of the commanding officers of the warring armies. You See It All The Great Toll of War Daring Aerial Maneuvers Great Offensive Movements and Heroic Stands German army entering Brussels; field guns in action near Antwerp; the armored train at Arvin firing broadsides as it passes (the daring photographer was standing on the cab of the engine, unprotected, while taking this picture) ; the bombardment of Ghent; the 42-centimeter guns in action and latest photos of the Kaiser with his v troops. 3000 feet of these films have just arrived; they are now being shown for the first time in this country along with the other action photos. Be sure YOU see these pictures; there have been some war photos shown before, but these are real action pictures taken. right at the front. Now showing at the Forrest Theatre Twice daily, 2:30 and 8:30 p. m. Admission 25c and 50c. unmn I SUFFER TORTURES ON JOURNEY TO HOSPITAL Must Be Carried on Sol diers' Backs Through Two Miles of Winding Burrows Exposed to Fire of Enemy. Hv PHIL KADEK Copyright. 1B15, by the Pnllefl Prts LONDON, March 27. Ileitis; wounded In our trenches wns gruconlP business. If n wounded man droppd hack to safety he was extra lucky, for everv thing that was done for him during tho tlrt few hours only tested his waning nticngth and was likely to mako his condition worse. , Often a man would not know ho wns wcunded for some time. One chap came limping up tho trench one day complain ing that he had been Bhol In the leg. lie could hardly put his right foot to tho ground. Wo ripped open hit trousor leg nnd rould find no bullet mark.. Then wo dlscoveted that ho had been shot through tho forearm and that the wound was hours old. , , To bo hit feels llko being punched, so many Idlers havo told me When a mnn snnk In our trenches the follows who were not busy usually pntliered around him, whllo some ono ran two miles through tho trenches to get n Red Cuis-i mnn. Within nn hour tho Hod Cross man would come. If the wound was not bid the mnn would remnln In Ihn trenches after tho doctor had soaked It In Iodine, which burns llko lire If the wound was serious tho doctor would do tho best he could In the wny of dicsslng It, nnd then nlte of us or porhnp-! two would be detailed lo take the unlucky man back to safety, lie had to bo car ried throush two miles of trenches. It was Impossible to use n stretcher, owing to tho sharp turnings, and It you carried a man on your back you had to bo care ful at many places to keep his hoad down below tho trench walls us well as vour own. One of our fellows who had been wounded In tho leg and wns being enr lled on tho back of a comrado was shot through the head and killed ono day at ono of tho manv dangerous turnings In our trench svstem. After this two-mile trench Journey was ended the mnn had to be carried along n pathway down n 200-foot cliff Hero ho was safe from bullets or shells, but a warm, clean, hospital bed was atlll mil Bum Cummings' Wt DtUVIH ASqvAStTOH M10.TSAD& KMW CIIUTnrj PHICES: i'l:a. f.-..-,oi i;nn. nr.oo STOVE, S-.snt NUT, 8T.C0 'Phone our nearest iiard. 4 Yards: Main Office, 413 N. 13th ONE For future bookings of C m uig 4 jpeamre um uxenange, 1337 vine at. 27, !E016: lions of miles of distant. Mere ho would be taken Into a poosanl'n houso where tho flrsl-ald men were on Buty, Thcro would bo nothing but straw for him to lie upon. The first-aid men would dash cold water Onto his face, wash his wounds and bind Diem as best they could, , Then tho wounded man would Ho on tho straw until nightfall, for It was necessary to carry him through a fit Ing zone to get hack to tho Infirmary, which wns nnolhcr little houso In a town n mile distant, He would cither be wheeled along tho tow path of the canal on a stretcher mado hy two baby carriages, which wero con nected hy a board, or "Charon" would carry him In an old boat. "Charon" was nn old French peasant with long white whiskers. Ills boat was floored with straw and because ho carried only the most gravely wounded men who often died during the mile journey down the canal tve used to call him "Charon" and we named tho canal tho Styx. At the Infirmary there wero real sur geons, but they were pressed with work nnd they were forced, of noccsslty, to perform their operations hastily. In nn Improvised operation room. If tho wounded man were Btlll alive by this time ho would bo put Into a Red Cross wagon br automobile or somo other sort of a vehicle nnd carried 30 miles to n largo town (which I cannot for obvious reasons name) and here he would bo put on the next Red Cross train nnd started for Paris. His bed In the train might bo a scat In n third, second or first-class coach, or, If ho was lucky, It might be n sheeted bed In a regular Red Cross car. At last Ids train will pull Into Tarls or Into some other distant elty of Franco where there nro big hospitals. Scores of ambulances will bo waiting In the. rail road yards. The ambulance attendants will bo running around, each seeking out the wounded who are to bo assigned to tho hospital which ho represents. To them ho Is only a number, or perhaps a chnlk mnrk on the door of tho car. They will put him on a stretcher, placo him In a huge motor ambulance, porhnps with ono or two olhet men who have been In jured on distant battlofloldB, and tho car will roco through tho streets of the city to the hospital, which onco seemed to tho sufferer so many miles away, nnd where warm, whlto beds, gentle nurses, flowers and no responsibility nwolt him. It Is no wonder that tho wounded men who reach tho hospital wards sink back onto pillows with Blghs of relief and smllo when they catch tho first glimpse o tho whlto nurses. Look back at tho LIMB TROUBLES VAItlCOSn VKINH, UI.CKIt.S, U'enl Anktrs, I'allen Arrhra AltK KVKXliY Sl'IM'nitTKD by Tin: use or tub Corliss Laced Stocking SAMTAHV. ns they may bs wnBhcd or boiled, Comfortable, mnilo to measure. NO KI.ASTIC: artluitable; laces llko n leucine: light and durable KCONO.MIOAL, Gout Sil.BO each, or two for tho same limb, $2.SO, postpaid. Cnlt and bo measured frpc, or wrlto for self-measurement lilnnk Nn. t!. Ulcers & I.ec Bores of long stand ins our specialty. Hrs.O to S dally. I'enna. Corliss Limb Specialty Co. Suite 217, Lnfayrttn Hide, nth A Chestnut Stu.. I'hlla., Ta. CENT this picture, apply to $ Journey ho has taken since thivTTi no was nit in Iho trenched arM i',DnMnl understand hbw a hospital Jn To" get Into a hospital Is on , 1 dlar's dreams, nnd there nrtS'.a In all armies against men woSndin selves. In tho French S hf,h! wounding In known as mH. iVe Iho punishment Is death. In ur ffit S4 an convict, who had hn ,8,lm'n After serving IS years In ord" .o?'"1 htm to enter the army. norir,ii ptrm'l soldier to shoot Mm th?ouh ? &' W In return for the favor he i.n rZ t4 he hand of tho soldier. Whcn Rlut to havo their wounds dressed th. Lc!m- noticed powder marks , tht $???' hands and the truth earn Tout R?th 1' were executed. ""thnitu - (JEIIMANS LEAVING SUWAUl I TO PROTECT TILSIT SECTQp! Dash Into East Prussia Diverts E(JI horn's Troops. J PETItOfjltAD, March M Tho strong Russian threat neia ,11 border of Eaat Prussia in the dlrtclftS of Tilsit had tho desired effect of haMjS Ing General Elehhorn's retreat trM Suwalki. rn Tho expedition to Memel destroi-ta fl depot through which supplies rmv tM token Into Germany. Document, wlrH seized disclosing the organization. Ja imiTISIl BEATEN IN EGYPTIAN! CAMPAIGN, TURKS ASSEM Entire Column Destroyed by Ottol mniVB Near Suez. i CONSTANTINOPLE, Match 57 J Resumption of the Turkish caitiMifn" against Egypt with marked sucmu far tho Ottoman troops at two polnti i officially announced here today. 2 A statement Issued by the War Ofdei reports the destruction of nn ehtlre Brit' Ish column nt Mnlan, near Suez, inj repulse of British troops at SJuacbla. ti the lattor conflict 300 British aofdltn wero killed. , MODKKN PANCINO DANCING LESSONS! Our staff eons!t of two tit and two eentlemen tathr, t,.j perienced and well trained. TtJ progress 1 rapid and correct li tho steps the people are achiilrf1 dancing. Open day and evenlni. 1 The CORTISSOZ School I Phone I.oeint 3PJ- J?" CHESTNUT BT.l Students' Chapter Suf-nX;zi Private and CIobs Instruction. Old Dascl Taught Saturday. Sociable Wednesday, ju-f nernhly Saturday. Two Italia for Rent. j Woo-npr Entranco 17.10 N. Broad Street, Waglici Adult. (.I,,,, jton,, Tuei- iTnoj Private I.esons Day or Evg. Phone DIa. JM.1 RECEPTION EVEnV WED. & SAT. EVOS,' MATINEE EASTEn MONDAY E. Dancti WP.OE KEITH'S THEATRE nALUlOOHj BEGINNERS' CLASS WEDNESDAY EV0. Ilallrnom can be rented Private leiiom. TRIZE WALK HAT. XIOHT. S3P BT. j THE C. ELLWOOD CARPENTER 8TUDI0," 1123 Chestnut. Open dally all the year. Tt bust eervlce In Phlla. Latent tnovemtnu 19 to the minute Telephone. E5f?8 fWr?'rWr?VrWifWWr1 4 1 1 j IMttiatt if f I I aC