,W 1 ' U fi r VraClT "Tt ,v;;ttw -1.-1 XEDGER-PHIi;Al)iilJPHf A UEDA;y, JULY 16; 1918, - .' YA : V- -. 1 " . ,. ft-t'ia Viij y EVENING PtJBEICT (JS - - .- ..V WhY ALLIED HELP CAN ESTABLISH STABLE RULE IN SIBERIA-SPECIAL CABLES FROM FRONTS wii : .. f ?Sv4' ?ei.J Ri.'!! iJ i f&r?Sji U$$S ' viaw TlX PATH'S RIM t fc ntinm tt ntnrn r . Mi! m'nJnn TlnJUr ATnil'c fnrrn. RTi"""" ""'V " yjvipondent bays People Will Accept ax ULY REPRESENTATIVE! jtl I feAHiedUAid Is Impcrathc, SJ&eVcr, to Establish Gov How- KB nient Firnilv 'iKlfrlhl Cnhlit In V.t ttnina Pni Fir- 't.fAarr I 'I-----.'!"...'..- " ..... t, . ........ .....j... J CorrisM, ion by nt Vort Tlmr? io. ' &&&: ' Tnmlon, July 16 & SlThe 'Dallv Malls Harbin correspond-- Fg 'K doscrlbing uencral uorv,aui? s-n- KB 4 ernment. savs i Is a thorough! rep-' esentaflve Siberian Government. In cluded In It are the most prominent figures In the commeictal Industrial and agricultural life of tho Siberia i conti nejit.f If premises to be acceptable to iiifn"e-tenth3 of the ..Siberian populitlon. "the correspondent savs He adds '''General Honath, who Is temporarllv .premier, made his imputation in the 'JRusso-Japancse war as organizer of troop transport across the Siberian Railway. He was left-hind man of Alex leff when the latter was Viceroy of tho Far Cast. At present lie .s head of the Chinese Uastern Railway and general! i ' recognized the most representative Uii- I i sSn jn Manchuria , JtJVostrotln wasoiiombcr for Knle In -the third and Tourth Dumas He is fi- I moUs for bis .relation with ome of Hansen's expeditions VTasklng. vlio also wis In the third ftfUl, fourth Dumas, ts a cadet, with ffreat Influence anions the Trans-Balkan Cossacks. He was a member of the sort-llved Semenoff Goermnent -when hefad the humorous experience of sce-Irjr- his only other colleaguo except he rrtenoff arrested for starting committees among the Cossacks H'Tstrugoff formerl Ice minister of communications In the Kercnsk CIov- piment, accomplished from the rallwaj o. mission through ameria Putiloft 1 1 UVt .. .0 I. li..o1 nm n tlllbolln (1ni. F." "WP "V icil-iiiuu ..-- .. ....... ff. In tho old regime he was dlrec- tor of the Rusio-Aslatic Bank, and gen- erally renuted to influence the finances K.V, if 1i riiHeea l.n.fPHl Tt.allwn. Oil ES Who'so board he sits Two SorlnliM In (lorernment V'General KlUg was formerly mllltarj jcovernoc of Vladivostok, one of the dtfenders of Port Arthur, and latterlv associated with Kornlloff and Alexleff In their various counter-reolutlonar movements, K-Okorokoff and Kurskl are the onlv Bpeiallfcts In the Government They rep- rwent'two extensive co-operative move- ffejnfentsjn -western Siberia . far uffi "Provisionally a member of the new-1 "&. Government, Admiral Coltchal.. who for- 2$, ,mrly .commanded the Black Sea fleet, ' H5S1 l now commandant of the Harbin Rus- ' ?is& Man ferces The new Government has Kfeitila In Its favor: That It represents alt nolltlral elements, cadets. Liberals 9.i..kd Socialists. Only such a coalition Kjf-Ooernment could hope to succeed Bv.ltu Silt n.nli, unrtlaHetli, it .mmiin, la KmS 'liw at Nlkolsk. negotiating with the frjSJtiCiiecho-Slovaks by proclaiming Itself. jiV flbme opposition Is expected, but it Is Kir. not of a character to carry much at ,ght-" ?if l? vn,..ii. inn vtl rcnn.f Aln a later message, dated July 3, the - " eorresDondent sav s Jif'The absolute ne.essitv that exists fer Allied Intervention In Siberia is r clearly demonstrated try the opera bouffe ,T.n m 4 l n, t A .... A.. . n nrtttlm HlnllH. Kvi ing to represent the unfortunate Siheri- KB ans The newer or tnese two uovern- 5S ' ments is Horvaths. wnicn is now at IIkolsk. It includes men of action and solid representatives of Siberian inter ests and, therefore, in my opinion, is much more llkelv to make good in SI- ,berla and to receive Allied approval than imAUe it difficult to hold the Rhelnis h.a tbe older Government, which has trans- nenti wnIch. hv the was has no moie 1 ferred Its parliament from a railway military value than an other salient, tmr In Harbin to Vladivostok laml a Ereat 'advance on the i m in the . i "jrorxune. wnicn nas an amuinB way tk shaping events, m contrived that tiji InttAr finvernment of autonomous W Siberia.-should he on the scene when 4hA f.litt rjjiirftrf VlnrilvnRtnk anil.'. 1M Atklnff advantage of this piece of good (fABtf '"-" "" ""sccucu ... fc..u.wj, t...,l. L&r seople to recognize them The result i-.iiiaklne readv to nroclalm Itself, the rival f' eraranlzation already asserts that It has been accepted by the people who rait- . ,- TViU Vlnft nf lhlncr Is llkelv In rn i', t - "v . ."""." :c" ...r liSL "iOn to aooms aay unless ine Allies fir- atn In and choose between several as- f"-w. emblles who claim to be truly repre sentatives of he hapless population. Whichever government finally gains tho tipper' hand leaves the Important Issue j Unaffected This Issue Is, that no gov ernment In Siberia can hope tq remain Sf solidly In being unless temporarily at i INS. "least It Is based on effective Allied v upport, giving It the necessary power (o enaure.- WH- HIGH COMMAND SATISFIED r , 9 ' - t t ;; Situation Reveals No Surprises in 1 Attack, Is French Comment f f ? ; Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger WSf y.l CopvriDht. 108, Ilk j; f London. July : , bu .Vru) York Times Co. 16. Last night it was Ascertained that the French high com mand was verv much nleased and hlghlv . rfatfnfled with the situation on the west front, No surnrlses were revealed in the fx erman method of attack, the enemy re ylnr jart-hia ojsual plan of heavy bom- trdment and massed onslaughts witn iAtorm trooos. I W It Is learned that recently there has fefieen "resortment" of Allied armies on &tl western front, the object being to J. concentrate the troops of each nation in rt.i I. .... ........ ...Y.I..Y. In ............. Ia.. .. UV. ,rfl KVI1 ic, rr , ,,,,,,, ,,, (uiincvuui, ,,, -eneral March's statement that three merlcan army corps have been constl- ited In France. Is taken to Indicate that .l iheistage of brigading Americans with ;fhe. French and British has now been 1.V, .........I ry Late Information shpws that while American participation In the fighting t Chateau-Thierry was episodical, it i , was, a glorious episode. m v ' -. H PLAN PRISONER EXCHANGE ya- '" C:.,.l ..I Tl.o TTn.... With Reservation by Germany eeial Cable to Evening Public Ledger CororisM. 191S. by Xeu York TimM Co. Ihe Hague, July 16. Tour corre. ndent Is authorized to state that an reement has been signed at tne ague, wltU a reserxe Dy me uerman Iwates, to effect an exchange ot com- tant and civilian prisoners of war -nerally on the lines recently reached the French and German uovernmems. 'i proposed that the effects of this ancs are to apply to British ana in prisoners oi war ami ciyiukuv d In Holland and Switzerland. agreement also deals witn an tinn nf rondftlona of rjrlsoners ,rbtfcln the British, -empire and Va,g - -- r SURPRISE LACKING' IN NEW ATTACK Allies Had Anticipated As sault Last and West ol nncivns FRENCH GUNS FIRE FIRST trniaus May Also Launch Big Offensive Against Brit ish Front n o. ii. phrris t t t special (..able to l.iciung I nunc i.raerr Corvriaht 101S, by tv. lorfcr.mrsfo With the rreiirh Armies, Jtll 16 uawn jtohuo .,,c ........... German diown Prince attacked fiom the Marne near Chateau Tliienv to the hand-slnped plateau of Mi" slges In pastel n Clinnipacne is a front of more than Kt ThN miles but up to noon there had been no di rect inf-ntrv assault upon the salient of Rhelms, so that the tightlni; fiont maj prolsionall be counted as llft miles in lensth The nttick both cist and west o Rhelrosi was anticipated both on pin cral principles .ird fiom sisns such as the eplosion of unespri ti lars ammunition duniAs In the 1'rtn h puns Indeed at the last the f.erman nti lery preparation was actual! nntk nnfH ,,. ,hn nemh batteiies whit I ,. .....uimm l(Mn to hniass the enenii positions i little befoie midnight So fni the seciest blow lus been delivered on the Marne mldwaj be tweeu Chateau lhieii and Uoi man where about Mew and Kosso th alle broadens to take In a small tributarj the Dhu3 and hci therefore, the passage of the Mil ne would be less dllllcult thin bctwe i the lulls of its nirrowei coui'-t Tanks Aid (reriii.ms lolent righting began hue eul i i the moinlng i:nst of Hheims between M ,... I.lllu ion nl' '"'" . ""- "" n'?l ""': thi? ueiman m" by a huge number of tanks was suppoitid The news un to the moment is th it 'in this large bector the attack Ins been generally airebted and iuj&ome nlaces broken The battleline as it stood ,esterdi moinlng, lepiebcnted a great aiitt of conditions l'ollowing it fiom west to east wo have, (list, fifteen miles of beautiful loops of the Mai ne nlle reached again aftei nearly foui jeais bj the Germans just more than a month ago. The passage of sulIi an obstacle could not but be costly, and on so small a front riskj . since until It has been consideiabhe advanced the pontoon budges, b vvhli.li all com municatlons iiuibt come ate undei artillery (Ire Supposing the blidge heads to be secuied, theie Is a difficult countiy to fight thiough. with no vital objective neai. On this side, theie fore there has been no teason for alarm Next, there is the Dormans-Rhehm sector of lneclad hills. Hie the Marne must be ciossed, and on that I condition theie Is the double objective I of the rich but now evacuated city ot Kpernay and of the cutting ulf of the salient of Rhelms East of Rheims the Picnch ate strongly posted- on the hills and in the old trench bvstem which has wit nessed no first class action since the French offensive of Septembei. ion It is a wild, spatteied countryside of chalk downs, the defenses of vvhirh have been strengthened of late and Its defenders know It like the palms of their hands Chalons, twenty miles south of the front at Auberlvc i3 the only Important town that offers a concrete objective A great advance in this direction would perilous maze of massive hills would affett the French positions in the Ar- 1 ,i. nrmnn hit-n mmmami onipr- ., . .....i - . ..u .,-- i. lter for our sanant allies, for it Is con- iCentration. not aispersion, ot enoit on ,h -nBrrl. . n.,rt that wh hive in f, ir It Is only bv concentration on one of two supreme and limited objectives that full effect could be given to 'initiative and mass maneuver I know It Ifc said tint the boehe will try here and there and develop the line on which he has the ejuickest success The time has gone when that sort of tentative strength can avail him He may make one or more pockets." but they will not give him a decision by Oc tober, and w Ith the French armies as they are. In the vry beht fettle u will not bring him perceptibly nearer to a victorious decision I Surprint- ot Repeated 1 The surprise of St Quentin and the Chemln-des Dames h.ib not been ic- peated. -ine -weainer nus iiul utreu rry 1 1- j vorable to the enemy and for this re.i- 50" ,'t ?af ee" 'n?uint .,',?t "V ;V"1B w omu na,e MUlir nwir un.-. jl f,-.- The south winds that prevailed forbade the use ot petison gas in us easifsi luim, lest they blow back upon the assailants the fumes of their own shells The attack is believed to have been already twice postponed At last there could be no longer delay Wo have it on the good authority of the Frankfurter Zeltung that Ludendorff promised the I party leaders In the Reichstag a decision In the west before the end of October Everything points to this being the last stake of the Hohenzollerns it was generally thought that the -c ..i. rnn, .nta feci the first him. riCU-tl ,. ......... . . The question that remained was whether , " -nually large attack or a greater one. 'would follow against the British army. .whether. In fact, the grand command would dare to keep both of Its object- Ives, which may be summarized in two words Paris and Abbeville. SOUTH AMERICAN MAY FLY London Paper, Renewing SoO.OOO Prize Offer, Hints Possibility Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger ConrtoM, lit, by Xtw York Times Co London, July 16 The Dally Mall says It Is rumored that there Is a pos sibility of a South American airman attempting to fly across the Atlantic this year The paper believes a flight from New Foundland to Ireland or from New Foundland by way of the Azores to England Is now just as feasible as any of tho long-distance flights that have been accomplished since the war began In order to stimulate production of more powerful engines and more suit able aircraft, the Daily Mall again of fers Its UO.dOO (50,000) prize for the flight across the Atlantic from any point In the United States, Canada or New Foundland to any point In Great Britain or Ireland, or vice versa, In seventy-two continuous hours. The offer, which was first made on April 1. 1813, .-was suspended on the, fluUireltoX.lMJtar. V BEFORE AND AFTER 1 L.'ffii!iaiHiHflHHHBHiHVKlHHIHaHMaHHHiBnHiHI!Ki 1 zs -"VuJtvjc: ?:BaiHrk.BnjH?j'am m t.C AWfcr&j&kfLmmmtmmmmm59. 4 . ' i' 'J i i i. Vk AHflBiwBt I TcbtjKfitaasssen pj n ji 1 1 r njTBKirnnFir Jtyii ii'ViTiTliliTBMliii r r nrnffite i T rTFTliSi'TPi m rM t ii e n lM?irTmr3rsr. K ! i a Ik r r h"-i iim-i' lilt photographs -liow llic reult of a two (lav.' lmnilinrdnienl liy IlritMi lug puis of the town of omit lieLe, where the Germans had put up a supply station. Ihe llriti-h got the range of the tros-ro.nl- where huge v areliou-es and railro.id Irarkf, wilh train-, were localeil, ami liomhdrilcil lliein vvilli surli tlcadlv act unit v 111 it liicy were rompletclv lilottcil out. Shells were fired over dil portions of the town at the rale of 800 per mump- throughout two davs and a night until everj fool of ground was deva-tdted FRENCH GUNS READY WHEJV FOE ATTACKED Opened Bombardment Fully an Hour Before Germans Started Hv WLTKR DURVNTY Spmnl Cable to hi cnitip Public Ledger ( ortjrtglit 1l hi V? V or TiirsCe With the 1 renrli Irnif", Julv 18 After the uual tiemendnus bomb ird iit" nt th ' rnniis itt.uked it dawn eeter,dav on two wide set tors between Chateau-Tliltriv and the eastern Cham pagne V-s fnic(Ht m mv dispatches a week co Ihe moist violent efti rt was tll- .!. I .... ,. . .11 . liecterl atnni fhe Marne front from ' hitt m-Thien in west of Rheims No issault on the i athedral City was at t mptetl The latest Information seems to In- di ate that the eastern portion of the offensive from tin region ef Fort de la I unpello to the blood-stained land of Mc-Kices 111,4 a check This army Is ininnnnded 1 nm of the most famous (f Inn h colonial generals . lhaviti fighting nceti! red to the west-, w ml t.pt(tall between Fossov and Pm mm- vvlieitt tho Germ ins rndeav -oitil to peneti it the plateau, and south of Hie Marne l. ihe valley of the Sur niebti iiviilt-r along which runs a light rillrmd ft ,im Mezy to Montinlra.il At Hie jiinitinn point (f the Surinflln and in, vnni. the bills south of the ilvet in- lf-s than 200 feet high, and uio dominated bv the COO-foot plateau on the opposite bank, where a hend ot thr rlvti give- the enemy a semicircle of converging the 1 renrh llatterlfs Mere Itradv It was an obvious gateway for an offenniVH op ration across the Maine, with the object of getting command of higher ground east .and west, shallow, i ,llmg valleys uid tiec-cl.id slopes Mike tin lonthills of the Uerkshlres, only more cultivated as a New Ungland olHtei described it li .pitc the remarkable calm lecently pi evading on tho Marne front, the I remh were not caught unawares For some time past the French batteries, to the strength and number of which the coi respondent i an beai witness, have been forming big munitions dumps at points where no enemy guns registered For fullv an hour before the German boinhaidment opened the defenders loos ened i ti rufic (uuiiter-prearatlon every gun tiew working madly to beat the ovon-Mnntdidjer record of firing enough -hells fnr thlrtv hours at ordi nary sped in four and one-half hours between 11pm and dawn At midnight Sunday I was sitting at a point some seventy miles south of the Marne with the Intention of writing an account of a French Units 14th of July Everybody's Favorite A New England Shore "Hot-Weather" Dinner We have the reputation of serving the tet Shore Dinners in town "tastin is believin'O New England Shore Dinner, $2.00 Olives Pickle Bftt Kaaianea Clam Broth Btexoed Clama (drawn butt9r) t. Ball Lobtter or Bolt Shelltd Crab Fried Chicken f8oulftr Btvle) Corn on the Coo French Fried Potatott Combination Salad Cantalouve Pie or tea Cream rrn Demitattt H 5-rf A BOMBARDMENT rmoa'imtaaaiaffiiSiatiMifa celebration in which Anieik.ms pir ticlpaled I had been much btrui k by the confident demeanor and spontaneous gayety of the poilus who might at any moment he lecalled to the tiling line to meet the greatest bhock in the viol Ids hlbtoiy. The pioud cry of the Roman gladiators to Caesar, Moilturl te Silu t lmus," suggested Itself as a fitting salute of the soldiers of Trance to theii country on this eve of battle .Suddenly I paused Through the open window, overlooking meadows and wood lands as peaceful as a scene In the heart of the United States, oanie a sound faint, distant, yet Insistent. "Put-a-put-put-put." and then, louder, put put ' Its meaning was uiunlstak ahlei It was the cannonade of the sec ond and perhaps the greatest bittle of the Marne The long nerve racking de My was over The supreme Geiman of fensive had begun at last I Thiough the houis that followed the 'thud of the far-nff hammers beat tvei I more hteidllv Paris he ml it, too anil , , UMIIV her sleep to list, n In tountlessi 1 homes that ominous echo evoked a pi ly I er that 'our bov' at leist be spued And now for the first time rr Idlers of America are meeting the full weight ' of the 'German onslaught beside soldiers nf Frame Their anxiety Is our anx iety , their confidence is our confidence Whatever happens and the struggle will be fierce, for Germain Is despei He we can put full ttust in tho Allied armies and their leader Thflr courage will not falter, and in the heaits of the nations behind them no less unfllnch ing, nothing else mUteis I ltlnnte vlc toiy is certain PARIS UNALARMED BY ATTACK I Ti , , r,..... ,.i:.. W7 : I I Rought Lannoiiadiiig Was Air Barrage; Watch Gun Flaelios Special Cable to Eiening Public Ledgar Copyright. IfltS. by 'ew 1 orL Times Co rarlx, July 16 The beginning of the fifth German offensive, a calendar month to a day after the enemy drive on Com plegne was brought to a standstill on June 15, was not made known ofllclallv In Paris until the appearance ot a hrlef Government communique at 1 o clock yesterday afternoon The news was re ceived with satisfaction That something exceptional was hap pening was obvious from the sound of the tremendously heavy bombardment which had been eaHily audible In every part of Paris and the suburbs for fifty miles around since a little before mid night. The violence of the cannonading may be gathered from the fact that -a majority of the people in Paris believed that the noise came irom ine oarrage file of the antl aircraft guns, and won dered why no alarm was glvtn, Even tually the northeastern hoilznn was no ticed to be aglow with a pale fiame-col-ofed light, and hundreds of people climb ed the slopes of Mont Martre to watch the flashing of the guns engaged In a duel which proved today to be over 12S miles away ,.,.., The morning papers breathed not a syllable of the conflict that had begun, except that one unfortunate critic ven tured the opinion that the Germans would not be likely to attack during the unsettled weather which has prevailed tor the last three days 3 'PtNkir OVER Twelfth and Arch Sts. CLAUDE M. MOHR, Mgr, (fiilronos on Utk Rt.) I BY BRITISH GUNS TIBETANS IN REVOLT; CHINA SENDS TROOPS But It's Too Hot lo Fight, Gen eral Says. Explaining Un official Armistice Special Cable to Et eiung Public Ledger Covjriohi 101$ by Xric 1 ork Timrn Co IVKln. July K The ( liinest Government leains tint Tibetans have tevolted Instructions have been given lo the Tuchun of K.ansu .and the ganlfon mmmlssinner ot Sztehum to disptteh tioops fm the sup pression nf the rcwdt The unofficial irmlstice In Ilmnn Is explained bv Gon er il Vi u Pd Fu as due to the fact that the summer is ton hot to permit of fight ing lie declares th it this Is no Inter ference with the Government's military plans The Independent of General Feng Villi Slang is still denied but the Gov ernment has given orders that he be w ati bed At the request of th( Japanese Gov ernment, the Chinere Cabinet Ins opened Kalcan Kwel-Sm Taonan Hulu-Tao. Tolun and Chl-Fu .Vo as com mercial ports A loan agreement has been signed for .10 0,00 fino ven based on the sfcurltv of the forests and mines in KIr-In and Hei-I.ung-KI ing China is to organtre a company for the development of these resources The Government has signed another agreement with the Japanese for the construction of a ralhvav fiom Tsl-Nan. In Phan-Tung to Sieun-i:h, In Chih-I.l where it will join the Pekln and Han kow Railway. The amount of the loan Is ?;n00 000 The length of the road is 116 miles and the capital and material and engineers are to ne supplied by Japan It is reported that the Government has concluded negotiations whereby snono.000 gold yen are advanced by the Bank of Chosen for circulation In Pekln In older to ledeem to Chinese bank's notes Further antl-Bolshevlk successes arc reported In Siberia IflPONICfl Gardens la'puiMifaiwiiiiii'iiiiiiii'i'Mii Real Roof Garden weather at latt, and a real Roof on which to enjoy it 21 stories above the street. No hot air reaches you there unlets you yourself make it! Battile Day will be celebrated in the evening. U'l'll M'Jllli HOTEL ADELPHI, CHESTNUT at 13m. j irarcny; far, xmywl mm 1 1 ' i mtaW i 1 LH I I pfm RUSSIA ON VERGE OF BRIGHTER ERA Helping Herself Out of Labyrinth, Czccho-Slo- vaks Leading Way SEE HOPE FOR FUTURE Kindred People, in Struggle for Freedom, May Be Sav ing of Slav Brothers Ih HAROLD WILLIAMS . Special Cnbln to Eiening Public Ledger Copttttaht 11, by Vein 1 ork Timts Co. London, July 16 Russia Is helping herself In finding a wav out of the labyrinth by verv curious and wonderful ways of her own Bolshevism is a mood That mood, having wrought Intolerable confusion and disaster, Is now passing, and Rus sia, more recognizable, more Intelligible lo the Allies, Is beginning to take shape. i It Is hs If that amazing eountrv were determined to demonstrate that the help which the Miles have been planning to I give her will not be ghen In vain Those who have pleaded foi military aid to Ruhsl t have always argued that, once a rallying point w,ere given, the ac tive fotces of the nation would begin to gather and assert themselves By a strange fo'tuity, that rallying point has appeared from within In the shape of the f'zeiho-fclovak foice The Czecho slovaks are not Russians, hut a kindred ix ople The Czechs are the Slav Inhabi tants nf Iloheml i, and the Slovaks are men of the Mine stock stie.iklnc vh- tuallv the hame language, who inhabit the mountainous northwestern pirt ot Hungaiy, liemi i Just on the fringe of Bo- struggle nf n tentlirv Cm centurv this people, which In brighter davs gave to the world aVhn lluss hns been struggling to free itself from the grip of the Germans and Hun- j aailans The great onmitunlty came n the present wai (Vedi and Slovak foldhrs of the Austrian aimv surrcndei ed In thousands to the Russians, not to sne their lives but to spend them In fighting in the open on the side of the Miles against their German and Hun garian oppiessors and foi the estab lishment of an Independent Czecho Slovak St ite in the hem of Europe The Russian Government fo-med them Into nn nrmv corps and these 'turdv lighters distinguished themselves nobly In the last offensive of the Russian irmv Thev remained at the front as long ns there was a front, and when the Russian armv ceased fighting they woio withdrawn to Kiev I'ndei the Bolshevist levolutlon and the Brest-T.ltovsk peace thev maintained strict neutrality In Internal itusslan tils putes and shut theli ears to calls from either side Their one desire was to fight the Germans and demonstrate their right to independence rars ot Itiisulan Turmoil Then in Mav thev began to move east ward In the hope of somehow, some time, getting out of Russia and taking their places on the western front They were weary of the Russian turmoil, and wanted to fight The Bolshevlkl did a verv fnnllsh thing Ynev tried to check their ppdssage eastward and to disarm them The Czeiho Slovaks wete compelled to fight the Bolshevlkl 1 hev struck hard Sn that the ill disciplined lll-traln- , ed regiments of the Red armv. which I h id nrver calculated on strlous fight ing, fled before them In a mirvellpuslv short time the'Czecho Slovaks, who weie qulcklv- re-enforced hv lurking and scat It red Russian antagonists of the Bol shevlkl, rescued control of several towns on the Volga and In the Urals and of nearly the whole of the Siberian rail way. The Bolshevist commander-in-chief, a plucky adventurer called Muravleff, find Ing It impossible to suppress the Czecho slovak movement, thought that the movement was opportune to turn on his masters, but his Red armv would not follow- him, and he shot hlmseir General Defeetlon ear Dtitoff, the Ural Cossack leader, and appatentlv General Alexleff nnd his force have linked up with the Czeeho-SIovaks, and the main bodv of the Social Revo lutlonarlos, with the Committee of the T!h dance on httmef, hat or cap, meana "US Marina" TZ' -'-rv 'ym !., rr,.&,Ka 6y!rrsr''j ,lA 2&ki ' w. Ot1 VA-Ji v-j: .; - ' sv 11 rublle Sqosre. rtllket-Bsrr 37 U. S. VjnjWi iKfy--"7 Constituent Assembly, are In the move ment. The latest news Is that the Crecho-Slovaks have seized the old Tar tar city of Kazan, the key to the lower Volga, Success succeeds, and once the strong spell of the Bolshevik power la broken, acncral defection may be an ticipated. While this movement was growing In the east, while starvation, disease and unemployment made rapid headway In the towns, and chaotic, quarrel some land-grabbing was tho rule of life In the villages, a remarkable thing hap pened In Moscow Count Mlrbach, the German ambassador, was murdered In Moscow, and the murderers were not so- called counter-revolutionaries, but men who until recentlv were the closest allies of the Bolshevlkl The Jew Blumklp and the Russian Alexandrovlch, who killed Count Mlrbach, were Left Social Revolutionaries, members of that ex treme faction which split off from the main Kerenskl-Tchernoff section of the Social Revolutionaries and Joined heart and soul In the Bolshevik campaign For several months after Inst Novem ber there was no essential difference be tween them and the Bolshevik! Being primarily a peasant party they brought peasant Soviets, by strange manipula tion, Into the Bolshevik movement Thev Induced I.enlne, a Marxist, to accept their agrarian program Several of their leaders held portfolios In tho Bolshevik Government. Members of the party were active In all committees and sovlets, but they began to part company with the Bolshevlkl over the Brest-Iatovsk peace Authors of Trotukv's Formula Thev were the authors of the famous formula proclaimed bv Trotsky, ".No peace and no war," and after the con clusion of that peace theli commissaries resigned from the Government and at tempted to organize what they called a revolutionary war against all Imperial ists The break was not Herlous at first, but has been rteadlly growing Tho Left "Social Revolutionaries mock at Lenlne's theory of a peaceful Interval for social reform Their Ideal Is one of perpetual and highly romantic levolutlon, and they like the Allies no better than they like the Germans Among all the strange and hetero geneous movements, Rusla is trvlng to find herself. In the Ukraine, the Cadets have retired from Kkoiopadsky's Gov ernment, probably peremptorily recalled by Mllukoff, who seems to have emerged tWWWW. 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