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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 1

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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VVARPATC3 Again Is Hit ByYaqui Band in Sonora State. Indians Devastate All Prop'erty, Of Americans, Says Wireless Report. Cavalry Is Sent To Find Mine Men, Said To Have Made Their Escape From Captors in Mexico Former Carranzistas May Help Villa. I mcllL DMMTCB TO HI SWOT SS, aaatlaa. Meade, July a.

Ir nlh to Baa Diego. CaD. Yaeal Indiana, taking advantage of the WIIMrmwil of exicaa ft Sewthara genera, ai reported Bar to have arsssag tae Tsesl Mtnw and Ivar4 tha lands at AaMvteaa settlers and tha BJcbardeaa Cwilnrttaa Company. aTeTaattne; all ferty except company Bee 4. Barter, st Esaeraaaa, wkcn Mexican garrt-M hi ulitilxl The only Americana left la tha Taojal Velley ara J.

K. Lawyer, r. C. Hctehel. Uaa Aathaar, Fra4 limn, Oaa Mfbua, B.

Brass. Karl Felster aad aua aaaud Prim vbfmi. mw.Trw to tb atreeiasa. Barathea. Texas.

Jwty- Tbs bmw eeeger iimwM hara frees lUaairta. with alalia at tha attack en tha pre. tha lateraatlamal Mine Caaa- ar hai aat arrive a a. a. A 4m-tacBaaeat cavalry haa haaa ecat to assistance af tha AaMrteaaa at tha eeens af tha treable.

aacub biwatcb to tss axonnaa, San Antonio, Texaa, July I. Three Americana, employees of the International Mines Company, who escaped from Mexican captors yesterday, had not yet arrived at Boqulllas this afternoon when Captain James E. Abbott, of the Sixth Cavalry, reported to Colonel Joseph Gaaton at Marfa. Colonel Oaaton transmitted this report General Punston. Abbott states the Americans telephoned from the company alne.

seven miles below the Rio Grande. Beemer-s store last avenlok that they escaped, but were expecting mora trouble and ware leaving for Deemer, ar Boqulllaa on the American side. Their failure to arrlv leads to the fear they may have been attacked br Haxlcana again. Captured By Mexican. Austin 8waaey, Roy Bwasey and V.

Ol McKnlght are the three Americana. Captain Abbott' report state only that were attacked and captured by 'ned Mexicans. Whether the Mexicans Carranaa soldiers or not was not to Abbott He say. nothing, of having crossed the river and "nmltted Oopwdation on the company' roperty at what Is known at th Texas ermlnaL" Captain Abbott wUh Carram officer. In effort to hai.

had become of "nine employee. Austin Swasey and "Kaight were In the party of Amer- when captured at the mine after 9" "Print, raid and who mads a "fCttlar ecmp overpowering their and makln. h. tH Infantry paseed WSITSTJID 07f rotJETH PAQS. PAGES TO DAY GlNCIWMATI ENQUIBEK WEATHER Partly cloudy Monday and Tueatlav.

Temporatar jewterdajr: Maximum, I 88; niinlmura, tit. Btall4 Weather JUpan am Fiih I uul VOL. LXXIIL NO. 1D2 MONDAY MORNING, JtJLY 10, 1916 PRICE -FIVE CENTS 11 Cfemeo Oiiie HMdlFed! Tom of Dyestaffs aimdl Mail. 12 1 JiiiJji rH3 imeiriicaini Mioif Leads Russian Army.

CqENERAU. DRU33ILOFF General Bntaalloff la in charg of tha Buaaian force that ara drtviig back the Austro-German in Oallcla. WOMAN MAYOR Uwinnti Interference Br Hnaband and Sue For Divorc. sracui. bistatcb To ras bbocibbb, Peoria, July Kato ther first woman Mayor aver elected in Illlnola, baa filed suit for dlvoroe from William T.

tort II re. York charge desertion, trouble starting over tha attempt of both to man- ace the dtjr affair of Kingston Mines, near bare. s. Mrs. Tork waa elected Wayoe of Kfng- ton Hlne In 1114, and was re-elected In 1014.

8be prealdee over a board cora- prlsed of six men. Kingston Is a mining town of several hundred and before the election of Mrs. Tork was noted for th various encounters staged In tha village's two saloon. The city' affairs are now conducted with law and order. Mrs.

Tork run a general store, runs her own automobile and la wealthy. MUSEUM Boasted By Meremptahj In His Egyptian Palace, Tis Disclosed By Expedition. Son ot Ramesea the Great Was Collector Much Like. Modern Men, American Says. arscul larATca nni xxqcisbs.

Philadelphia, July 9. The Museum of the University of Pennsylvania to-nofht made public a report from Dr. Clarence 8. Fisher, leader of the Eckley B. Coxe, expedition to Egypt, In which he tells of what appears to be the discovery that Meremptah had.

In his palace at Memphis an archalologlcal museum something like those of the present day. Meremptah was the son of Rameses the Great and by many la Identified aa the Pharaod of the oppression aa described In the Book of Exodua. The palace was discovered early In the present year, the report said. It waa large and elaborately decorated but at some time was destroyed by fire, trace, of which are abundant. Th palace was about 180 feet long and 100 feet wide and contained about SO room.

Tha throne room waa a magnR flcenf chamber about 80 by feet In describing this room, tha museum announcement stated that "it la probabls that this throne room. If not tha same one, Is similar to roe one in wnicn Moses and Aaron confronted the Pbaroar, demanding that th people of Israel be permitted to go. Th authori ties (n Egypt admit that a great discovery has been made. In the throne room wer found gold orn amenta, scarabs, vessels for various purposes and vases. The moat Interest ing find, tha report stated, waa a eellee-tleo of relic partly of, the stone age and partly of the Sixth Dynasty (about 4,900 B.

C), which Indicated that Meremptah was a collector much like modern nam or nations. The stone Implements include knives, raaor, sickles and arrow bead. TO SHREDS BY TRACT. ararui. DnriTca to ran saemaaa.

Lclpslc, Ohio, July Curt Moffltt, 6 years old. retired wealthy farmer of Hancock County, was killed here to-night by a passenger train. Bis wife and daughter. Mra Bud George, wer badly mjureo. Moffltt waa torn to shred, dying VILLAGES In East Fall As RnssianArmy Pushes Ahead.

Towns Near Kovel Taken By Slavs. French- Advance in Som me Region To a Point Near German Base. Poincare's Forces Are Within Two Miles of Peronne Progress Also Is Reported fly the British. arariAt. CABLS TO tss BHQCTSBB.

London, July B.two heavy blows were delivered against the Teutonic battle front In the East yesterday by the Rus sians. The first was the capture of two Important villages in the drive on Kovel. The second was the capture of Delatyn. an Important railway Junction through which General von Bothmer has supplied his armies at Btanlslau and Tarnopol, protecting I berg. Several days age Russian troops cut tha Delatyn railway.

west of Kolomea. but not until yesterday did tbey occupy the Junction city. Heavy fighting continues between the fltokhod and the Btyr Rivers. Petro-grad officially announces to-dsy that the Teutons are retiring In great disorder on the lower Stokod, where the Csar's troops took 12,000 unwounded prisoner, including 800 officers, between July and T. Forty-live guns of heavy and small caliber, and 40 machlns guns alao were captured.

German Eold Imperiled. By the capture of the villages of Goule- vltchl and Kacheva the Russians have further Imperiled the German hold on KoveL In the event Kovel falls, military Xpert, declare the Germans wHI be forced to retire on the entire front northeast of Baranovichi, In order to straighten out their lines. If Germany is to hold the invaded parts of Poland and Lithuania It la essential for her to keep Baranovlshl and Kovel. Tha fall of Kovel would force tha retirement of General voa Lislngea from th. Lutak salient The loss of Kovel, It Is also atated.

might even result In a general German retirement from the point all th way to Riga on the Baltic. A Renter dispatch from Petrograd state that Russians have cross, a the Stokod at L'gli. which is about half way between the railways to Kovel from Rovno and Barany. Admit Bueslan Advance. Vienna officially admits th Russian have made progress southeast of Kolomea, advancing to Mlkulicsyn, south of Delatyn.

The Austrian, dalm, however, that they have forced a passage across the Moidava River, near Bneasa, in southern Bukowina, It la reported! that at a recant council of Austrian and German Marshala that Von Hlndenburg announced It would be Impossible to launch a new offensive on a larga seal unless the Teuton! linos ara stiffened with at least tSO.OOt fresh troop. The Roumanian Government haa refused to participate In a confeneno of the Daaubiaa Power called by Germany, according to a dispatch from Berne. French troops south of tha Somme, by a sudden thrust this morning on a front af two and a half miles, drove forward into the German lines between the river and BaHoy-en-SanUrre for a at It si sa test point, of a mils and a quarter. COH TIN ED OH JTOUBTH 7 AGE. I i J.

in 4 vim ixzw 7Z Aa-aiai av srs mil a' jm aaBamsBBBaajl' vw MBBBBBBBBBBsBaaai A German anpanmbmarina, th Deutschland, reached Hampton Eoad yesterday and proceeded up Chesapeake Bay to Baltimore. Th ts1, mora than 300 feet long, i th first freight submarln to cros th Atlantic Ocean. A typ of thi aubmarln i shown in th illustration GermansAstonished at Recuperative Power Displayed By Russians During Drive in East Berlin, July The eyes of Germans were turned to-day toward the Eastern rather than the Western front The weight of the first onslaught In tha West Is believed to have been fully estimated and. in spite of whatever surprises Brit ish strategy may still have in store, public and expert opinion here is confident of the outcome. It I believed that the 8lth army and reaervea havV the situation well In hand on the Somme front and that nothing can interfere with the progress of the Verdun campaign.

In the East; however, a great grneral offensive he burst forth all along the line from Riga to Roumanla. Wave after wave of Russian flesh end steel Is rolling again the Teuton dyke which stretches across the Ruaalsn provinces. Thrust follows thrust In constant succession, and, no sooner do the Germans succeed In walling the advance at one threatened point that another menaore. The most striking results thus far VICTIMS Hurled High in the Air Whfi Train CraHuM 1st AiU, Kill ing Six Persons Lives Far Children Snuffed Oat. srsriu.

Disrivca total sxemsss. Sunbury. July Six persons were killed, four Instantly, when a special train on the Pennsylvania Railroad, carrying Shrinera from Baltimore to Buffalo, struck an automobile at a grade croaalng, four mile west of here, today. The dead: Riiaa D. Borer.

88 years old. wealthy lumberman: Gordon E. Neldlg. 82 year. eld, son-in-law, and the- four children of Nsldlg, Msry, 14; Charles, Domer ind Cloy.

4. The latter two died at a ho.pltal here late to-night Un Neldi. who was to have a ride with the others, complained of feeling 111 and thus escaped tha fate of ousDana. children and father. According to th train craw the party, hi a small tar, swung off th road directly In front" of the bkr locomotive, and In an Instant th victims wsre hurled high la tbe air.

Nedlg was the 'cousin of Washington NeMlg, who. with his family of seven, wa killed In a grade crossing accident nine yaare ago. GERMAN CASUALTY LISTS Be port 757,327 Soldier Killed and 1,918.637 Wounded. srsout, cabls to tbs mocnss. London, July The Official Press Bureau to-night gave out a statement saying that the German official casualltlee.

Including all th German nationalities, up to th end of June, in killed and deaod of wound or disease, number piia-enera and missing. M1I71; wounded, tHi- 07. These flgure do not Include tha naval nor th oolonlal casualties. i i sjj Si manifested have been seen In the leadership and distribution of th foroes of the Central Powers, rather than In the actual movement of th. contending armies.

With the exception of General Pflanser, commanding a small group at th. ex treme southern end of the line, the Austro-tlungarian units everywhere are Interwalled by Germans, who have furnished reserves to bolster up particularly threatened points. 4 At the very outset of the Russian offensive. General Pflanser detached dH virions to relieve the hard-pressed Archduke Joseph Ferdinand, and his operations now are mainly directed to the defence of the Carpathian forests snd the psases Into flie Hungarian plain. It Is betraying no secret to say that the German leaders have been astonished at the recuperative noorrs of the Russians anil their freely flowing reservoirs of both men snd munitions.

Time after time It seemed as If the Russians must be nrarlng their last resource. In shells and reserves, time snd ssaln correspond Submarine Armed. 'Tis Said; Carries Message To Wilson srSCUL DIKTAT TO TBS SNgt'llBS. Norfolk, 'Varr July a message from Emperor William Jo President Wllon. running the.

saunllej. of t-4 numerable dangers from mines, sea-sweepers and enemy warthlps, and bringing a cargo of dyeatuffK. chemical and mall, the German undersea merchantman Deutschland quietly slipped Into Chesapeake' Bay early this morning. It was ths completion of a 4.0UD-mlIe sea voysge, the long.at and most hal- ardous ver attempted by any submarine. Three hours later, led by the Thomas F.

Timmlns. ths great submersible began the last leg of ber voyage up the Chesapeake Bay. She Is due to arrive at Baltimore early In the morning. On the heels of ths Deutschland. and following In ber waks with sll ths speed thst can bs coaxed from her powerful boilers.

Is the coast guard cutter Onondaga, with Collector Norman Hamilton, of Norfolk, aboard. Whether Mr. Hamilton has orders la not known. Some believe that the On BOMBS Dropped on British Coast By Hostile Aeroplanes Anti-Aircraft Guns Engage Raiders. sraoiu.

casls to tbs ssgtmus. London. July 10. Hostile aeroplanes have dropped bombs on the English coast, but so far a I known did no damage. An official statement Issued this morning say: "Shortly before midnight Sunday, enemy aeroplanes visited the Southeast coast of England.

From the Information available, about tve bomb Vere dropped. No damage la reported so far. guns engaged the raiding machines. No further details have been received." i -i 1 ents at Austrian headquarters reported that th. Rusnlan troop were losing their vim and striking power, only to chronicle a day or twa later a new with fresh troops, freely supported by artillery.

Notwithstanding the various Russian galna, which, whsn marked on the map of the Eastern front, make a comparatively small showing for such a colossal expenditure of blood and Iron, no un easiness Is manifested here. The general offensive on All front simultaneously has compelled the Germans to discontinue their favorite railroad strategy, but the strategic defense, which the Germans have deliberately chosen on the Eastern and general Western fronts, has so far proved adequate to hold up the Entente allies' offensive snd ha not Interfered with the' continuance of the German a' sault against Verdun. To such an extent is this true that tha Germans still reisln the strategic Inltla tlve and show no Indication of relaxing their grip on the great French fortress. ondaga undertook the chase at his request. The Deutcbsland carrlea mounted in the conning tower two email' guns of about three-Inch No torpedo tubes are visible.

She Is capable of submerging In less than 1 minutes. On the surfaca of the water th submersible haa a speed of from I to knots an hour more than the average merchant steamer. According to Captain Frederick Cocke, a Norfolk pilot, and the first American to board the Deutch- land, the crew wore regulation uniforms of German merchant seamen. No flag was displayed when the boat first appeared off the capes. Later, whsn Inside ths bay, ths German merchantman ensign wis raised.

Captain Cocks ssld the commander of the Deutschland was very frank In stating hi mission to the United that of instituting an undersea mar- CONTINUED ON SECOND PAGE. ANARCHIST Attempts To Assassinate Argentine President, But Shot Ooes Wild Assailant Is Arrested. SPSCUL CASLB TO TBS BKqulSBB. Buenos Aires. July 9.

An attempt to aasasslnste President ds LaPlsxa was made to-dsy by a self-styled anarchist. The President was standing on a balcony of the" Government building reviewing some troops when a man In ths crowd of spectators suddenly drew a revolver and fired at him. The shot went wild and the would-be assassin was arrested. PORTSMOUTH TOTJTH DBOWITS. STBCIAL DleTATCB TO TBS BKQVIBaB.

Portsmouth, Ohio, July 11 years old, was drowned la ths Ohio River to-day. He was tbe first bathing victim of ths season h.r. Long Journey Completed In Sixteen Days, Although U-Boat Goes 800 Miles Out of Course. Largest Undersea Craft Afloat Chaised For 30 Hours BEnemy Warships. Vessel Is 315 Feet Long and Carries Crew Drawn From Teutonic Merchant Fleet Ship Was Submerged During Entire Voyage Through the North Sea Defenseless Submarine Able To Go 20 Feet Under the Water and Still Watch For Enemy Through Periscope.

srscut. sisr.Ton tbb asueissa. Baltimore, July German merchant supersubmarln Deutschland ha arrived In Chesapeake Bay. Long expeoted, ridiculed, fabulous aa th sea serpent or tha Flying Dutchman, sti became a realty to the watcher off Cape Henry at exactly 1:20 'clock this and is now slowly making her way through a network of Inquisitive hip and through th mases of red tap of the quarantine and custom officials award her dock at th pier of th East ern Forwarding Company, Locust Point, Baltimore, where shs will arrive early tomorrow. Th Deutschland mad th trip In six teen day.

Sh is ths largest aubmarln (float Th. largest German war models are lea than aon feet long. But this submarine ot commerce Is 81(1 feat long, exactly one third Hi. length of ths largest merchant vessels afloat the Vaterland and the Im-perator. Carrie No Passenger.

Ths boat carried no passenger. Hwr cargo consist of dyaatuffs a hundred tons of them, and many ton of mall This keep here very low in the water when riding on the surface. Her draft when sh was sighted waa 17 feet, and It was largely because of ber-depth that he did not try to eom to land when ubmarged. She I commanded by Csptaln Kalrl and has a crew of men. Both Captain and crew are drawn from the German merchant Beet and not from the navy.

The craft la unarmed and I being treated by the United States officials like any other merchant ship. It la aald that she submerged whenever she saw a V.Mel, on the chsne that It might be a wrhlp. Th English Government was not among those who regarded the trana-Atlantlc submersible as a Joke, and the report is that tha Deutschland was chased for 80 hours br French and English warships. She sub; merged and eluded them by traveling out of her course M0 miles. Hold Record Tor dstancs.

Because she was forced to make this detour she has the record for submarine distance travel. Tha longest trip previously made by any submarln waa the 8,910 mile from Kiel to Constantinople mad by the U-boat that sank th British battl ship Majestic. It la aid that the Deutsrhland traveled 4.180 miles, 1.800 of this being under water. She ran through the North Sea sub merged practically all the time. 8be was forced to submerge for a time when shs got two thirds of tha way across when she sighted a Dutch merchant veasel In her path.

And some BOO ml lee off the Virginia coast shs was frightened out to. sg sgala for a distance of some 200 miles by. enemy warships. But on her return she was able to com to th surface 100 mile from land and waa not forced to submerge again. The Deutschland waa mat off Cap Henry by the tug Thomas F.

Tlmmona, of the Eastsra Forwarding Company. Sh had been awaited at tha Cane for th last 11 and a raw day ago Captain V. Hlnsch, Marin Superintendent of the "Ocean Transportation Company," as tha nw merchant aubmarln line I called, went on board th Tlmmona. Ha I now directing tha piloting of th Deutschland up tha bay. "Blockad Amount To Nothing." hav proved." be told member ef th Virginia Pilot Association, "that th English Mocked amounts to nothing.

There will be mere submarines from Germany. They will be making regular trip Just Ilk the big liners from England In a few weeks. We wilt have them oamlng In at New Tork and other American porta." This boat Is In excellent condition. She had only two mishap, and these delayed her but slightly. She had trouble with her motor and h.r under-water lights, but ah carried extra supplies and the trouble waa quickly repaired.

The man who first sigh tad th Deutnh- land on her arrival in thi country was James M. Fesmlrs, who runs tha motor -tug Ef oo of th North German-Lloyd. Captain Hlnsch, wanting a particulsrly efficient crew for the Tlmmona when he started ber on her wateh off the Cape 18 day ago, picked Fesmlre, and to-day ha shown that ha doesn't regret it. by giving Fesmlre a bonus for his good sight. Fa.

mire la a young fallow, 28 year old. with keen brown eye and tanned skin. rW were lying In Lynn Haven Bay last night." be ssld. "My friend. Fred erick Hayes, and were keeping watrk on the Tlmmons.

wer standing to-gethsr aft, looking out to sea, when saw some lights. I thought I did, anyway, but the next minute I wasn't aura. 1 had made them out through my glasses, which wars good, and I said to Hayes, 'What's thatT "Arranged To Tool Warships." 'Her light rose ana above) tha other, first vary bright and then the next min ute they would be dimmed. They are ar ranged to fool enemy warships and they certainly do it They fooled me so mwca that at first I did not dare report her to Captain Hlnsch for fear of being wrong. "I thought she might be a big liner.

I first got sight of ber at 1:30. but tt waa half aa hour later before I told Hlnsch. When he heard about It, he was th happiest man In tha world. 'Full steam he shouted. And John Sellg that's our ang1naer--osrtalnly did steam up.

Sh made straight for us, too recognising our tight and ht two hours ah wss alongside. "Thar were six man I could see, two forward, two after and two on the brldga. They ware dressed in tha regular dark blue of the German merchant ships, and the officer had white cap. Just aa ths Eltel Fried rich and the rest. 'It' Captain shouted 1 commander.

Captain Xaliig, through megaphone. Kalrig hi a small, sto man. Hlnsch a giant, yon knox -came to the rail, and they talked In r-maa. All of us in ths crew bung.

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About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,581,676
Years Available:
1841-2024