EVENING LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JtJtfE 7, 1916. Us. RUSSIANS TAKE ,000 TEUTONS IN GREAT DRIVE Vienna Admits AilstnahS .Were Compelled to With draw Before Onslaught VIOLENT BATTLE RAGES LONDON, Juno 7. The Russian War Office last nlsht reported that 'tho now Offensive) Along the JBO-mtlo front of the! Austro-Hunsarlann has thus far resulted, In tho capture of 480 ofTlccTS and 26,000 tnen, 27 Runs and 80 tnachlhc suns. Vienna officially admits ' tfirtt tho Aus trlans were cqmpellod to. withdraw their lines north of Okna to positions "prepared a little mora than three miles to tho south." This means that tho first effective Impress of the now Russian drlvo has been made at tho tactically and politically moBt vital point of the front under attack, just north of the Bukowlna-Bcssarabla border If tho Russian success Is follow cd up, Czernowltz, tho Bukonlna capltol. Is onco moro seriously threatened, and an Invasion of tho Qatlclan crownland would bo far townrd achieving tho chief political nlm of tho now offensive, the entry of Rumania on tho Allies side. The suddenness of the blow struck by tho Russians has swept the Austrlans off their feet, and tho advance of the Cz.ir's legions Is dev eloping with astonishing swift ticsa. With the condition of the roads almost perfect and with the Russian sup plies of ammunition plentiful, It Is expected iy military critics that tho new offensive will bo extremely hard for tho Austriani to check. OFFENSIVE GROWING. Tho Interest of tho military critics of Europe Is now centred on the armies of the Czar. Tho Russian offensive has now been in operation for a week,' each day growing In length of line attack and In frequency of Infantry rushes. Tho Czar has more than 1,000.000 men massed along the line from the Prlpet marshes to the Pruth In tho Besinraulan region, critics believe, while tho Austrian defenders arc but half that number For several days prior to tho Russian offensive tho official Austrian report bristled with announcements of successes In their drlvo In the Aslago-Arslero region, ou tho Italian front. No reports of successes hero have betn made In the last few days, In dicative that the Austrlans already may have withdrawn troops to bolster up tho line against the Czar. Tho movement is under the able leader ship of General BniBslIoff, who conducted the brilliant campaign In tho Carpathians in 1314. and who Is generally conceded to be one of the best strategists of tho Russian staff. Tho forces opposing the Russian advance are estimated at 40 Austrian Infantrjr divi sions and from 10 to IS Austrian cAvalry divisions, assisted by, at the most, two divisions of Germans. This brings tho total Teutonic forces operating on this front up to 600,000 men. No details of the Russian attack are yet at hand, but It was preceded, as usual, by a vigorous artillery bombardment, after which the Russians moved forward along the whole line, capturing first-line Aus trian positions. The Initiative belongs en tirely to tho Russians. Tho Austrlans, evi dently taken by surprise, fell back without being ablo to start a counter-offensive. THB OFFICIAL REPORT. The Russian. official statement follows: Wo captured 480 officers, 25,000 men, 27 guns and SO machlno guns The Austrian War Office report follows: The battle on tho northeast frpnt continued on the whole front of 218 miles with undiminished btubbornness. North, of Okna, after stiff and fluctuat ing battles, we withdraw our shattered first positions to the line prepared five . kilometers to tho south. Near Jarlowlec, on tho lower Strypa, the enemy today attached after artil lery preparation. He was everywhere 1 repulsed, at somo places by hand fight 1 Ing. !At the same time a strong Russian attack west of Trembowla (south of Tarnopol) broke down under our gun fire. West-northwest of Tarnopol there was bitter fighting. Whereyer tho enemy gained advantages ho was driven out. ' On one front occupied by one bat talion there were 360 Russian corpses. Near Sopanow (southeast of Dubno) there were numerous attacks by tho enemy, with unimportant results. Between Mlynow, on the Ikwa, and the regions northwest of Olyko, where the Russians are continually becoming stronger, there is bitter lighting. LIVE WIRE IMPERILS MANY Current Carrier Breaks at 12th and Sansom Streets Several persons narrowly escaped dpath cr Injury thla morning when a trolley wire broke and dangled aa they passed 12th and Eansom streets. Reserve and mounted policemen diverted traHlo around the ends of the wire, which snapped dangerously in the street. Line men repaired the wire. TraRlc was blocked tor about 20 minutes. Widow and Son to Wed Father and Girl SJEVT YORK. June 7. An unusual dou- , tie wedding ceremony will be performed at Corona, L. L, today, when a widow and 1 her Bon marry a widower and his daughter both at the same altar. The widow is Sirs. Ellen Xi. Colford, She will wed John A. Pallua. Joseph N. Colford, the widow's son, is to marry his .future stepfather's daugh ter, Mlea Josephine Pallus,, mi i i i ' To stop dandruff and loss of hair Shampoo with hot water rubblrfcr thoroughly Into the scalp the jich creamy lathe' ol Retinol Soap so 3f to softcr andstjmulate the scalp, to remove the dead slln and IU and to wr(c the, .soothing, healing Keslnol balsams welt Into the roots of the halrftTUnse fn gdually cooler water, "the jfinal ' water being cold Dry the ?r thoroughly, wkhoat artificial heat. This SHjipie, agreeable method ateicwt atwayi Stops dandruff and Mfe wfcfaft w tp3 the faair !, Jfekk'Stwl lustrous, lanigi jaifi m iiKtwir nwyigwi- to tatr. I miMsss'1 - jto-w -J. U. S. OFFICIALS SEE WORK OF SPIES IN HAMPSHIRE LOSS Success of Germans In Sea Fight Also Laid to Snmo Source "WASHINGTON, June 7. German Secret Service efficiency is today pointed to by Department of Justice officials an the cause of tho sinking of tho British cfulser Hamp shire, with Iord Kltchnef nnd his staff on board, and as tho reason the Gerrhan high seas fleet attacked the British vossels with such .disastrous results tot the enemy oft JUtlahd on May 31. These two events hiivo resulted in American Secret Service otTIclrtM laying plans for n careful study of tho Secret Intelligence systems of the European belligerents, It was learned here today, GERMANS REPORT LOSS 0FPRINCESS ROYAL AND BIRMINGHAM BY BRITISH Two More Enemy Warshipa Added by Teutons to Those Sunk in North Sen Battle ADMIT GREAT DAMAGE BERLIN, June 7. "Grcnt Britain's supremacy of the seas lias been shat tered," declared Emperor William in an address to the sailors of the high seas fleet at Williclmshavcn. He added that the victory which the German navy won in the Jutland battle is causing the English to fear further disaster. LONDON, June 7. A. J. Balfour, First Lord of the Admiralty, in a speech before tho Imperial Council of Com merce today declared that the Ad miralty had not withheld news of any British losses in the naval battle off Jutland. He paid glowing tribute to the late Lord Kitchener. BERLIN, Juno 7. The following ofllctal statement was Is sued last night regarding the British losses In the battle In tho North Sea- English prisoners picked up by tho Fifth Torpcdoboat riotllla during the sea fight In Skngcrrak state that the battle cruiser Princess Itoynl was heav ily listing, when tho Queen Mary sank In tho course of an encounter with a Gcrmnn reconnaissance group almost simultaneously with the British cruiser Birmingham Ninety miles cut of the Tyno, after tho battle in the Skagerrak, a German submarine observed a vessel of tho Iron Duko class heavily listing, with appar ently much water In the forepart, set ting her course toward the Kngllsh coast Owing to her unfavorable posi tion toward tho enemy vessel and be cause of the heavy sea the submarine was unnblo to fire The British loss In lives In tho battle Is estimated at more than 7000. It is also stated that five supcrdrcad noughts of the Queen Elizabeth class aro reported to have participated In this part of tho engagement. Other prisoners captured by the Third Torpedoboat Flotilla stated Independently of each other, In a written declaration, that they with certainty observed tho sinking of tho Warsplto tho Princess Itoyal, tho Turbulent. Nestor nnd Acata It Is admitted frankly that tho damage J.o the German fleet Is by no means light . i , i . L i . r 1 GEN. SIR WM. ROBERTSON Chiof of tho Imperial General Staff, who is the most likely per son to succeed Kitchener as British Secretary of State for War, BRITISH EMPIRE MOURNS DEATH OF KITCHENER ROOSEVELT PRAISES WORK OF KITCHENER IN AFRICA OYSTER BAY, N. Y, June 7 Colonel Roosevelt last night said- "Six years ago I passed through thf Sudan and was more deeply Impressed than I can well express by the extraordinary benefits secured to the natives of tho coun try by Lord .Kitchener's conquest administration GIRL "DOPE FIENDS" FREED Phiindelphians, Accused as Shoplifters in Reading, Furnish Bail READING, Pa, Juno 7. After spending 10 daya In Jail here following their arrest on tho charges of shoplifting, Mary Smith and Anna Brown, both of Philadelphia, were released today on 1300 pall furnished by John C. Dougherty, hotel man of that city. During tneir imprisonment the. women kept 'the other Jail Inmates In an almost constant furore by their pleadings for drugs to which they are addicted. Souvenir post cards, oranges and other things sent them by outside friends were found "loaded with dope. Continued from I'nire One especially tho Times, which lini been ono of his severest critics "In the discharge of his duty Kitchener died a soldier's death " says the Times "Tho splendid forces that he raised have begun long slnco to prove on tho firing line tho care and thoroughness with which they wero created Tho mnn to whom wo owo them had nothing loft to do In llfo which could steel them for the conflict so surely as his soldier's death " It Is believed that tho total death list In tho destruction of tho Hampshire will bo nearly 700, as tho sea waB so rough that the small boats launched nfter tho explosion could not live Among the victims were the following who wero ac companying tho War Secretnry Colonel O. A Fitzgerald, military secretary to Lord Kitchener: Brigadier Gcnernl Ellis Shaw, of the Ministry of Munitions; Sir Frcdorlclc Donaldson, of tho Ordnanco De partment; Lieutenant It. D MacPhorson, of General Ellcrshaw's staff; Lieutenant Robertson, nldo do camp to Sir Frederick Donaldson and Hugh O'Bclrnc, of the Foreign Ofllcc ' Following tho order Issued by King Gcorgo tho whole British army has. gone Into mourning and will remain In mourning for a week. Ever slnco Monday night, when tho tragedy occurred, tho Admiralty has been making search off tho Orkney Islands for tho bodies of Kitchener nnd his staff Patrol boats havo scoured the coast and searching parties have combed the beach. GREAT MUNITION EXPERT LOST WITH KITCHENER Lost along with Lord Kitchener was ono of Great Britain's grcntest munition ex perts This wns Sir Hay Frederick Don aldson, who had been technical adviser to AN EXCI'M.ENT TONIU TOR LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S UAIIt Registered in U. S and Canada . HAIR TONIC NEVEK 1'AILS Nourishes and strengthens tho follicles and thus promotes the growth of tho nun. jiviittiM inu dvuiij vl unneaunv ui,uiuuiul(uiih iiau se cretions C3les a rich gloss, is highly per fumed and frco from oil, makes tho hair light and Huffy Send 10c for trial size. Applications at all first -class Barber Shops. BALDPATE CO., Irpt. O) 467 W. 34th St., Now York Sold by all drueitlsti, or send 11 OU. ii I I , ' i r (fn wedding " Silver. PHILADELPHIA The recipient appreciates that in quality and style tliere is a. difference, . V ' - - I. . . I BUY NOW w& k v The best prepared cp on the market . rff Sold b$ cdldvcdmy m e ., the Minister of Munitions slnco 1918. lie was born July 7, 1866, nnd was the second son of the late Sir Stuart Alexander Don aldson, who was the first Premier of New South Wales. Ilia mother was tho daugh ter of the late Frederick Cowper, of Carle ton Hall, Penrith and Uhthank, Cumber land. Sir Frederick married Sellna, the youngest daughter of the late Colonel F. M Ucresford Educated at Eton, Trinity College, Cambridge, Edinburgh nnd Zurich, hj had over Blnco been prominently Identi fied with Iron nnd steal projects, engineer ing nnd ordnnnco problems. Between 1887 nnd 1891 ho wns Identified with work on the Manchester Canal, and for tho net six years was chief engineer of tho London India docks. In 1898 ho jis made Deputy Director General, and In tho next yh.r chief mechanical engineer of ordnanco factories at Woolwich, of which he had been superintendent slnco 1903. Lieutenant Colonel Oswald Arthur Gerald Fitzgerald had been personal military sec retary to the Secretary of State for War slncd the outbreak of hostilities. When Lord Kitchener was chosen War Minister he drslgnnted Llcutennnt Colonel Fitz gerald as his personal military secretary. Lieutenant Colonel Fitzgerald was a son of tho late IJlr Charles Fitzgerald, and was educated at Wellington College.! Ho re ceived his first commission ns n member of tHo Indian staff corps In 1895 He served 6n tho northwestern frontier of Indin In 1397 nnd 1898, and won a medal with two clasps Ho was n military secre tary to Lord Kitchener as commandcr-ln-chief In India from 1907 to 1908, and when Lord Kitchener wns sent on n mission to .fnpnn, Australia and New Zealand In 1909 Lieutenant Colonel Fitzgerald went nlong on his Btnlt. On his Toturn ho wns for a j car" stationed at tho stafT college, and In 1911 ho served as secretary to Lord Kitch ener when the latter commanded tho troops nt tho coronation of King George V In 1912 Lloutcnant Colonel Fitzgerald was Urlttsh Military Attacho to Egypt, serving as such until he was ngaln ap pointed Kitchener's porronat military sec retary lirlgadlcr General Arthur Ellorshaw, who was born In 18G9, entered tho army In 1888, nnd served In northwestern frontier of India In 1897 nnd 1898 and In South Africa In 1900, whero ho waa severely wounded In battle. In 1903 ho was sta tioned nt Aden, nnd for his servlco In the European war ho had won tho D S O General Ellcrshnw was In tho United States two months ago in connection with procurement of military BUppllcs for Rus sia. ' ' Hugh Jnmes O'Holrne, who wns also ac- companj Ing Lord Kitchener, had been serv ing as councilor of tho British Embassy nt Petrogrnd slnco 1900. GREAT TYROL BATTLE STILL RAGING ON AMID Italians Succeed in Regaining Sdme of tho Lost Ground on the Slopes of Monte Cengio ALL ATTACKS REPULSED ROME, Juno 7. The great battle along tho Tyrol frontier continues to rage with out cessation and with undiminished fury, according to last night's ofnelai bulletin. Violent snowstorms In tho mountains havo served as cover for Austrian surprlso at tacks, nnd nlong the whole lino tho Aus trlans aro pounding nt tho Italian do fenscs nt every point nt which there Is an npparont opportunity to break through. Alt tholr attacks, however, tho bulletin declares, havo been repulsed, and on Monto Ccnglo, tho pivotal point of tho whole battle, the Italians are reported to havo regained somo of tho lost ground. In the Adlgo Valley Sunday night, tho report says, we repulsed a surprlso attnek, during a snowstorm, on our positions In the Upper Vallarsa (east of tho Adlgo) and Pasublo sectors (on tho frontier enst of tho Adlgo) Yester day, after Intcnso artillery preparations, enemy columns advnnced to attack Conl Zugna (hn Importnnt mountain peak midway between the Adlge nnd Vnl larsa), but wero thrown back In dis order under our steady nnd effective flro On tho Poslna-Astlco front (running east from Monte Pasublo to a point north of Arslcro) Sunday night, during a storm, tho enemy again launched great masses of Infantry, supported by violent artillery flro of all calibres, against our lines between Monto Glovo nnd Monto Brnzone. Our nrtlllery nnd Infantry completely repulsed tho attack with heavy enemy losses. Tho same night, by a fortunato counter-attack, wo succeeded In gain ing ground on the western slopes of Monto Cengio (Monto Cengio Is nbout a mile and a half east of Arslcro nnd commands tho railroad both to that town and to Aslago) On tho Aslago riatcau Sunday night and Monday morning the enemy main tained his violent nrtlllery and ma chine gun flro on our posltlom nlopg tho Cnmpotnula Valley (northeast of Aslago), and in the afternoon made persistent nltacks agalnsct our posi tions, which were all vigorously re pulsed. On tho Upper Cordevole tin tho Dolomites, 60 miles northeast of Asla go) an enemy column on the march wns dispersed by one of our batteries On tho Isonzo wo continue our raids on tho enemy lines Enemy airmen threw bombs on Ala Oust north of the frontier, on tho Adlge) and Verona. Three persons were wounded and somo material dnnv age'b'one BEATTY CRAVES NEW FIGHT WITH KAISER'S WARSHIPS "Big Kick" Still Loft in British Cruisers Fleet, Admiral Writes LONDON, Juno 6, near Admiral Sir Hodworth Meux, who wns elected to tho scat In tho Houso of Commons left vacant by Admiral Lord Charles Beresford when tho latter was created a baron, and who has. become n spokesman for tho navy, read at a public meeting yesterday the following letter from Vlco AdmlrnI Sir David Beatty, who com manded the battlo cruiser squadron In the North Sea right: , "We drew tho enemy Into tho jaws of our fleet I have no rcgicts, except for tho gal lant Uvea lost, for tho pals that havo gone nnd who died gloriously It would havo warmed your heart to havo seen how tho gallant Hood brought his squadron Into action. Would to God ho had been more successful In tho general result "Wo will bo ready for them next time. Please God It will come soon Tho battlo cruiser fleet Is alive, and has n very big kick In her." WAITE TO APPEAL CASE Physician's Plea Will Not Bo Argued Until Autumn NEW YORK, June 7. Notice of appeal from tho death sentenco Imposed on Arthur Warren Walto for tho murder of his father-in-law was filed today. Tho nppeal probably will not bo argued until next autumn Wnlte objected to signing tho notice and his lawyer had to nrguo with him for thrco hours. George Ber nard Shaw, before the Irish Revolt, wrote a d wnimsicai de scription of the arjJ vantages and attrac tions ot summer! travel in his own island, It is called "Ireland's! Opportunity" and ap. pears this week in si 'i oilier TUB NATIONAL WBSKLT Collier's headquarters during th Republican L.onvciuion at Chlcadj will bo 1020 Westminster Bulldty H . III Turks Hold 200 British Officers 1 LONDON, June 7 The War Omc Issued a list of 200 officers taken tirlsontrt by tho Turks at Kut-cl-Amara, lncludlwf In addition to General Townshend, u generals, fourteen colonels, tWcntr'tiitf majors and sixty captains. j DUAL AT DIKE AT 1 0an$Gom's NEW RESTAURANT - FOR GENTLEMEN 1221 CHESTNUT STREET I Downstalrt U a moit dellRhlful place to meet imf' frlz-nUs and enjoy good ati f H oiiuiii.iu t riiiuiiiiu IH w Coolct tattrna place in tht city W us I M Wh i & Vfgs YSSSS 2ffe? June Brides And Sweet Girl Graduates will hail with delight such s. princely gift as a Grand Piano. It conveys, more than anything else, an impression of distinction. Did you ever notice the richly artistic effect produced in a home by a Grand Piano, with its superb lines and stamp of refinement? Add to it the soft glow of a beautiful lamp, a vase of flowers and you have a different, a purely individual atmosphere. 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