; ' * * VOL. 10, NO. 61, SEMI-WEEKLY CHARLESTON POLICE ""SS MAKF HVFR Rlin RAII1S Pennj-Hlvanl ........ W.MI WWW IMIIVW \ til 11)1 tl(?l 8yn Gov. Manning Receives Report washing! sylvania He Front Grace. . ing charges ized labor BLIND TIGERS ON THE RLN tr,al reliati0 claretl throi W. Atterbui Chief Cantwoll Details Amount of organizatioi Intoxicating l.hpiois and Gum- insist on tl . Ming Devices Confiscated. and oppose The Columbia Record last night ' which niigl says Governor Manning has received strikes, a communication from John P. "We woi Grace, mayor of Charleston, on the tions with campaign being made against law- Atterbury, lessness in the coast city. The chief about undt of police reports that 4 3 parties and would more places have discontinued selling 11- ization of s quor since the system of raids was employes commenced. Chief Oantwell states entangling that 849 raids have been made, and The obje the following amounts of intoxicat- to the Ord ing liquors have been confiscated and phers, whic delivered to the dispensary or do mission ag stroyed: 5,664 bottles of beer, 779 j witness sai( half-pints of whiskey, 310 quarts of the men rei . hiskey, 5 quarts of wine, 6 gallons Q( the unio of whiskey, one-half barrel of wine railroad off containing 27 gallons, and 66 kegs ^Hei of beer. He also claims that 60 slot tion ftg t,1( machines have been seized and "all jabor disi gambling has been suppressed." wcftild be v In addition to the 4 3 places dis CfcfeU 111 iu oc continuing the sale of intoxicating thJs COliUtr beverages, the chief of police says that all others have been "run to cover," that the "hip pocket blind SLAVS 1 tigers" are prevalent, and tlioy keep TO C only a small ouantity on linnd, their stock being replenished when needed HuKNiim i> from nearby- residences. A continual system of raids, says Chief Cantwell, j , will eventually drive them out of Berlin v business. Because of the campaign corregpond< against lawlessness. Chief Cantwell ^liUaK asks for Ave additional men for the j^U88 police department. ?onje hour ^ Governor Manning, Wednesday 0erman ai] morning, was non-commital when forwartj j asked to comment on the reports re- are en(jeav, ceived from Mayor Grace. - - reinrorcemc The following reports hnve been retreat of ( transmitted from Mayor" Grace of ^ heav Charleston to Governor Manning: \ huge battlel "Charleston. S. C., April 26, 1915. jng up the ( "Hon John P. Grace, Mayor. City. f. f th "Dear Sir: In reply to your re- fhelr 8Uppll quest for the record of this depart- ,, a i i < , The list ment In complying with your order . for the enforcement of the law, I beg 1K 0 to advise that three squads and de- W ^ tectlve department assigned to enforce same have made 84 9 raids con- eaN1"g con fiscating and delivered to the county inter ?r* aa dispensary the following wines, 11- NVOe quors, etc.: 5,664 bottles of beer; cre e * 779 half-pints whiskey, 310 quarts *iat 1 \lp f hntA o whiskey, 5 quarts wine, 6 gallons whiskey and one-half barrel wine prev ous containing 27 gallons. In addition to this 66 kegs beer were confiscate*: and emptied in the sewer; 60 were Mukden, seized and demolished and all gam- anese consi bling has been suppressed; 4 3 places in a genera have dlscontined the illicit sale and Mukden, all others have been driven to cover has increas and now resort to the hip pocket rich harves practice and only keep sufficient stuff brokers. / on the premises to supply the 1m- cept a few mediate Demands, they replenishing cials now h their stock from private residences All class* in the locality under cover, but by odus with s continually raiding them they will suiting or i eventually have?to go out of bust- persons lea ne8s, this department has consoien- the natives ! tlously enforced the law and will con- city remain tinue to so do, even though it over- Japanese taxes the department by drafting positions ir men from the line of protection to soldiers ar< the public in its endeavors to enforce 1 into positio (ho law ?l.nrnfn?n * ...111 ? ? * *' * ?~ "? iuv??:?uiu a win rcupecuuiiy | ui wie rY TM VATTCT able to advance. The staten WFflTC AT only tno P?ints on tl,e Per niliUJV rvHj 1 rvHiA. 1 j Seddul Bahr and Avl Burr ! held by the allies. risoners Declare Battle French nn,i rhh.i, ?? 11 More Terrible Than a Turkish attack on the enci Previous Ones. it Krithia failed and the T ia London, May 5.?The 1,500 dead behind alter ?nt of the Zeltung Am pulse. One British oorrc g/aphs that the situation says the tip of the peninsula lans in Galieia is growing entire western side are un ly, as line after line of trol of the allies, id Austrian troops push Petrograd declares the ie says that the Russians victory over the Turks in th oring vainly to bring up SUSt announced yesterday, >nts and halt the panicky portant and decisive, heir columns. ^ force of 30,000 Turks x y artillery has made the tacked in the Dilman-Khoi field a horrible sight, tear- ig saiti to have been repul ground, demolishing posi- heavy losses and in disorde > Russians and scattering Another neutral steamer les. ? - ? - more uriusn vessels nave be of Russian dead, accord- -p^g DtuRgh vessel Cathay w correspondent, is very up in the North Sea, but he; i German losses are inslg- gera an{j crew, numbering ong lines of prisoners are (,apG(j. The British victlmi stantly on trains for the schooner and a trawler. I also are the German ?? "?? Prisoners are THOROUGHLV FBI th the unanimous state-1 he battle was more terrl- i ny they had experienced slK*c'a* Measures Are Adc the Defense of Venic On the Italian Frontier, ipanese Fleeing. day. May 5, via Paris, I - . Though negotiations betw< via Peking, May 6.?Jap- . , . . Tt , , . ? . . and Austria continue, Italy s ilar orders have resulted ' . preparations are being c ,1 flight of Japanese from , , . . . .. with as much energy as thi The value of a gold yen ed 30 silver rents and a country cxpecte<1 to part1' , . , war tomorrow, t was reaped by exchange til Japanese civilians ex- the carabineers and bankers and railway offl- toIU8 guards attached to t ave left. nave been called to the col is of Chinese view the ex- military leaves of absence h itolid indifference, not in- suppressed, nolesting in any way the The frontier on the Aust v'.ng the city. Although has been strongly fortified. are aeepny periurneu, tne pusses are protected witn < s quiet. ments and wire entangleme troops occupy strategic Crete has been used in ma: i Mukden, whilo Chines? 'n erecting barricades. 3 reported to be moving Special measures have be< n south of the city. Many ed for the defense of Venio lents in that district are art treasures. The naval at th. \ believe long range guns of It , bre are sufficient to deal 1 rolininn Dies at Ijiw hostile fleet. To afford p School. against aerial attacks, ant 1111, N. C., May 5.? An- guns have been set up at Iraydon of Greenwood, S. points around the city, itudent at the University j in addition to the troops rolina, dropped dead here j (rated on the Austrian froi i practicing baseball. He | other Italian army has bee rs old and was graduated bled near Rrindisi, on the labama Polytechnic Insti- This is interpreted as a ( i. He formerly played on Italy foresees the possibilit baseball team and at one tlon in the near east. nanager of the football ______ t institution. Japanese Koady for SI i nunKovt, via reiting, May ee club, Freundschafts' Japanese barracks here ht lohn's hotel, Charleston prepared for a siege. Folio le hotel. consul's advice many Japan 3urs respectfully, left the city, although the JE8 R. CANTWELL. appear wholly indifTerent. "Chief of Police.*' prominent native residents tortained at dinner last CALDER, some of the leading Japar rk Police Department." zens. itStCI* CM FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1915. N ICAN WHIP THE GERMANS TURN ONLY BY BIGGER FORCES lin K A Do * rv - >i rtu- uiiciisive a oi^n oi MHiCrisis. tary Desperation. IKELY. BY BRITISH EYEWITNESS. isity of Writer Points Out That It Only torial Proves the Determination of the Foe. atch last London, May 5.?The British ofllid Berlin c,a' eyewitness in a long account of lis in the' f'ie enKaKement of the last few duyi in the Ypres region, records that the md Aus- (jerjnans have continued the use of been a asphyxiating t-ases but with less suea peace- cess than on the first occasion. sain in rp|JO narrative says the French lized the jmve mai|e continual advances east ial terti- (jie ypres canal, south of IMlkem, | the result of which was to remove liflcaut a | the wedge occupied by the Germans or to the the French line between the canal minister, | an dthe Ypres-Langemarck road, not (lis-, During these advances many German ers say prisoners were taken. \ar must While the French continued their advance in this section it is asserted igress by that the Germans attacked the Britles were isli south of Neuve Chapelle and at Turkisn l."!l Now 60, in both cases using said the gases. leninsula In the latter attacks, however. >n, being owing to a change in the wind, the and un- fumes were blown back towards the nent said Germans, who are believed to have ilnsula? suffered. Similar tactics are said to iu?were have been adopted by the Germans !n their attack of Ypres last Suntches say day. ampiuent PRECURSOR OF ATTACK, urks left "About 5 o'clock in the evening." their re- ft? eyewitness says, "a dense cloud spondent of suffocating vapors was launched l and the j from their trenches along the whola der con- j ont held by the French right and I y our left from the Ypres-LangeRusslan marc^ road to a considerable dise Cauca- tanoe east of St. Julien. The fumes WQ8 jm_ did not carry much beyond our front trenches, but these were to a great extent rendered untenable and a revhich at- . , j treat was ordered. region SOoner had this started than bcc w i f^e enemy opened a violent bombardment with asphyxiating shells and and two shrapnel on our trenches and on our sen sunk, infantry as they were withdrawing, as blown "Curious situations then arose ber passen- tween us and the enemy, the poison 4 3, es- belt, the upper stratum shredded i were a jnto tilln wreaths of vapor as it was shaken by the wind and the lower - and denser part sinking into all in1PARED. equalities of the ground and rolling lowly down the trenches. Shells ?pte only settled down again as thickly as Wednes- before. lay 6 WORKS AGAINST GERMANS. sen Italv "Nevertheless the German infanmilitary try 'ace(' an<* ^ey faced a hail of ompleted s',raPne^ as In some cases ough the w^ere *he Kas *,a(l not reached our cipate in linea our tro?P? held firm and shot through the cloud at the advancing 1 Germans. the cus- ,,Qn tlie extreme ieft our supports uc ?nu) i waited until the wall of vapor reachors All i ed our trenches, when they charged a\e been through It anw met the advancing (Jermans with the bayonet as they rian side swarmed over the parapets. All the "South of St. Julien the densenes3 jntrencli- ; ()f the vapor compelled us to evacunts. Con- ate trenches, but reinforcements ari> placet : rived who charged the enemy before ! they could establish themselves in ?n adopt- position. In every case the assaults c and its | failed completely. Large numbers ithorities J were mown down by our artillery, irge ca'.i- Many who reached the gas cloud with any I could not make their way through rotection 1 It, and in all probability a great i-aircraft number of the wounded perished several from the fumes. "It was not long before all our i concen- trenches were reoccupled. and the utter an- whole line re-established in its orign asaeni- ,nal position. The attack on the \drlatic French met with the same result, lign that SAVRD THE DAY. y of ac- "A great deal has been said of the troops on the left which saved the situation on April 22-23, but the services rendered by the British infan, try farther east were no less re6 ?The ! \ mar*tahle. The area to the north ami whi th? eR8t ?r ^onnebeke, representing a narrow horn of the salient, formed R ^ind ?' bastion. Throughout the nes' fighting this garrison held firm un' overa der a raking artillery fire from all W6I*Q Oil- 1 sides and undei repeated assaults nig t b> , W|1jcj1 wero delivered with so much lese citi-1 (Continued on Page Eight.) ITALIANS UNVEIL SHAFT TO GARIBA 1 Patriotic Speeches at Genoa i Vast Crowds to Wild Pitch Kiithusiasin. Genoa, Iltaly, via Paris, Ma The departure of Garibaldi a: thousand of "Red Shirts" ir 1860 on the expedition which ed in Italy's acquisition of ! was celebrated at Quarto Sant' near here, with a great pa demonstration today. The p< feature of the celebration wi dedication of a monument to baldi. Vast crowds gathered in tin town. They greeted with wi tliusiasm a detachment of ve of the Garibaldi expedition. Kvery province of Italv was seated .although King Victo manuel and his cabinet who h ported to attend were prevents l coming by the seriousness of t tical situation. The Garibaldi veterans heti 'ong parade through the towi ' o veterans reached the Es I in the Plea T'mberto, massed i sang the hymn ot' Garibaldi. After an address by the ma Genoa the monument was ui amid the crashing of bands, th< der of cannon and the clamors vast assemblage. Then Gi d'Annunzio stepped to the f the monument. He previougl declared: "I will not gaze 01 again until she awakens fro ! slumber," and his presence 1 roroninntno ? * I w.wMivfiiica ? ao ruusiuei t'U i grave portent, and his spcet eagerly awaited . d'Annunplo glorified the union of Italy and the deeds o baldi, referring touehinglv to haldi's two grandsons killed Argonne. The spirit of saerit said, had entered tlfe sonl of t ion; it was born again. In th iiiony, in which they were part, he saw the supreme si| saw Garibaldi who would cry row: "Give all you possess; j I to raidiant Italy!" "lilessed are those pure of who shall bring back victory ! shall witness the triumphant of Italy!" he said In his pero j which was frequently and entl tically applauded by the mul and the conclusion at which b all to their feet waving ha chiefs and tossing bats in tl I u hilo V* line Hie VI it IIIJ ti 1II 111 II .survive) braced each other . ! FIERCE FIGHTING IN DARDANEI Two Villages Practically Pes l>y Bombardment and Even lipoli Set on Fire. Constantinople, May 4, vli don. May 5.?Despite the T government's decision to reft correspondents access to the danelles region, exception was in the case of two Germans a Associated Press corresponden party arrived on the night of while the town of Dardanelles :10 hours, was still ablaze. Cri walls and houses met their vi Maidos also was burned, ar terday the town of Gaillipolis \ ablaze?all by indirect fire fr< Gulf of Saros with ignition sir rected by captive balloons an< planes. Incessant and heavy fight ! t tin Oallllnnll ? 1 i Into Chinese Capital. result- : Sicilly, I Elena, SHIPS TAKE ON SUPPLIES. itrlotic ilitical Poking Remains Calm Amid Storm. ISi"1' Cniteil States Saiil to bo Eent,ar' den voting to Mediate. ? little I London. May 6.?"Tlie legation hi en- bore lias notified all Japanese to pre'terars pare to leave the capital within twelve hours," says the Daily Telerepre graph's Peking correspondent, r Em- "Telegrams are pouring In from ail ey- ovrrv part of China foreshadowing [1 from hostilities. An ultimatum by Japan . Jm he po- is expected Thursday by the latest. ! jS "1 learn in the highest quarters ided a that a Chinese surrender i? n?? ..f n. As the question, as the revolutionists pin ml e who honeycomb the country wooll choirs rise immediately with an army, thus precipitating the fall of Yuan Shi yor of Kui's government. 'veiled ..j am authorized to declare that s thun- tj,e Chinese government will make a of the dtreot appeal to Great Britain, Rusabriele sja prance and the United States imoot of mediately an ultimatum is received." J ly had The Times Tokio correspondent, 1 Italy telegraphing under date of Tuesday, A m her saV8 that the general feeling in 1 at the Tokio is that China will submit at as of tjle |ast moment, in view of the hopeh wns lessness of her military condition. 1 new i , #, Battleships Take 011 Supplies. t Gar - Tokio, May 5.?Deliberations over . ("1^' the situation Japan and China conm V tinue. The Emperor will preside to- . j Ice he * " ' morrow at a cabinet council. No official announcement was \ c cere, ,, forthcoming today concerning the * 11\k Ilie 'S h(i situation. A big tleet of warships is ,n' ' taking on supplies at Sasebo; Janantonior ^ province of Shantung are trjve it concentrating at Tsing Tao and those in * * Heart v prcpariug 10 iane . tl)ev refuge in the railway zone, beauty I Tlie Kokumin today says it learns ration from an authoritative source that liusias-1 the Un ited States is endeavoring to titude, me(liate between Japan and China, rought anabinet deliberations have been protie air, I tra?ted. rs em- ofhcial Gazette today publish1 ed an imperial ordinance sanctioning | the application of martial law and military requisition law on the j ?? Kwang-Tung peninsula and the iXjXjO South Manchuria railroad. troyed <1 Gal- Peking Hemains (Juict. Peking, May 5.?The Chinese eapti Lon- 'tal is remarkably quiet in the face urkish ; of what the Peking Gazette calls "the 1 ise all j gravest peril in China's modern his I)ar- j tory." Most of the people of the city i made going about their business as 1 nd the l usual apparently with no knowledge it. The of tlie problem which confronts their May 1,! country. i , after A Japanese cruiser and four torimpled pedo boat destroyers have arrived at ew. Chin Wing Tao, on the gulf of Liao id yes- Tung, about 150 miles east of Pekvas sot ing. evidently for the purpose of reim the moving from China the members of 3 ells (11-1 the Japanese legation. 1 aero- Consular representalves from all parts of the country announce tho ing on departure of Japanese, or the conmtinu contrction at Japanese consulates. i allied There is a substantial opinion in * cam- Peking that Japan may take action illitary in regard to the non-acceptance of res, so her demands by-China without waiterious ing upon the issuance of an ultimaing of Cum. Seddul Warned to Im? Heady, J Hankow. China, May 4.?The Japanese consul general received iuSub" structions from Tokio today direct- ? ing him to order Japanese women hooiu r an{j children to he prepared to lenv?> k b> ,l Hankow for Japan by tomorrow's I e* Ir,'~ steamer. 0 take 1 by a j njnf, Ik-lay of 48 Hours, re she London, May 5.?"A Japanese ultimatum to China," cables the Tokio correspondent of the Central News, "grants a delay of forty.elght The hours." n Oal ;, with Japan's I'ltliiiHtuin Reaches China, estine.l Peking. May C.? Japan's ultimatie first tnm to China reached the Japanese Iveston legation today. It probably was pre:he be- sented to the Chinese government 1 this afternoon. .