New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 13, 1918, Page 5

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1918 by Aaron J. Colmor, of the New York HISEUVEREI] IN RA[iS Port Alien Bnemy Dureau, he said Light Killed in Action and Six Dic | “To mell with the American Army. Rk gl g termany will have you all beaten in 2 R e i years. You have no good ofticers and > One—Twenty Slightly Wounded. you can do nothing.” - : % ashington, March 13.—The 1 He was committed to the Tombs p casualty list issued by the War de ment. i L5 . S . men killed in action, one dead from | el involving several women in enemy e 5 severely wounded in action, and Cap. | plotting elicited no comment from 5 Ay i g tain Kdward Steller and 20 mien | New York, March 13.—In a dilapi- | federal investigators vesterday. There | g > ’ Ein | slightly wounded. is no doubt that something is in the | 5 G ® Severely Wounded. wind, but very few details can be pub- 3 rivate Joe Tylus. lished at this time. John Lord O'Brian, | £ 8 - Russell A. Yarnall. to register in the alien enemy cen- | who is in char of all spy huntin . 5 i Wounded Slightly. ed looking German arrested in a dilapidated lodging house for failure turned to Washington yesterday ap- i parently satistied With his conferences | tormer Uhlan officer and steward of | i, Charles IL De Woody, superin- | © big Vaterland long wanted as a | tondent of the department’s New spy suspect His tattered clothes and ! jpye ting oflics and members s apparently impoverished state | he United States attorney’s staff. were all camouflage sotten up to de- TWo women ro under surveillanco eive the officers whom he knew to | pere. Thus far theroe is no evidence on his trail S5 ving n : even of 1l | 2 f 5 ESnToetorSn conding fo Roberthr | ealErlo iR Or it e Drivate James C. Hanson ephenson, assistant United States | an American of social slanding in W : ; e A b 1ttorney, to whom he was turned < Y ; he ‘ 3 S o S | & i3 l'”\ S 3 s New York, the other is supposed to Priv Tic AW, Janssen. cver for investigation, remaincd on | ho Turkish. Both aro living in up- . Private William O. Lindsey. the Vaterland eightcen montt (el | town hotels. At least one of them 1 I Private A. Mahc the ship had been interned ¢ | has a suite for which the government ! Private George C. Mattox. lfoboken pier. arly in 1 When | g paying, tho woman having been per- 3 Private Maurice Proctor. Germany was mobilizing her _spies | o, o0 B8 ©o8 A ful thing Private David M. Reid. liere, he mysteriously left the ship. O i e Ay e e where > | Private Clinton A. Rhoads. ome time later Schroeder was dis- spring hals are usually the most| priyate George Sharp. covered by agents of the department The deaths of Privates Thomas G ~of Jjustice worki as bartender, and operatives were instructed to eep a check of his movements and his associat because of certain matters that had aroused the sus- picions of the authorities. e discovered the attentions which re being paid him at that time, nd suddenly left his job, telling no | dark, about 40 years old, speaks 2 s vife where he was going. Again the | Erench fluently and is believed to he Rl Federal authorities found him work- | the Turkish woman mentioned in tho -k > s a waiter in an uptown restau- | case. L b R ant. Having no tangible evidence on She was taken {o Haan's restaurant e hich to cause his arrest, they still | for lunch yesterday and then: bacl allowed him to remain at liberty, set- [ for another tallk with Mr. De Woody e renits L iR Y The result of these conferences w Again the German's suspicions were | not revealed. It is understood that aroused and again he vanished. His | the role supposed to have been played name. wa on the official blacklist | by this woman was comparatively un- | which is kept in the sanctum of the | important, but that if she tells what Department of Justice, and he w: she knows about the operatic wAuly checked as dangerous alien | others the government will be con- | enemy, but Schroeder himself was not | siderably the wiser. The task of tho to be found. investigators is larzely verification of Yesterday two policemen in search | what they have heard. No arrests of Germans who had neglceted to Teg- | are indicated in the immediate future. ister and be finger-printed in acco: ‘William Wallace, Jr., head of the ince with the federal arder visited a|alien enemy bureau, received an or- lodging hause on the East Side. One| ger from Washington yesterday ap- tood at the door while the other pro- | proving his action in ordering the ceeded to scarch the German lodgers | jnternment of Wilhelm Korthaus, who *for their federal cards, was arrested in a room on West End There was one man who produced |, onye, where he had been watching none and who when spoken to feigned | qnin movements with binoculars. ignorance of the English language. R e b ol T e ) Sergeant William P. Rees. 5 Corporal Frederick Massey. i S Bugler Milton H. Folk. ‘L SAVRE ¥ : J Private Herbert Beaver ¢ 2 i | vs the Federal authoritics discover- [ for the Department of Justice, re-| % : i Sergeant Joseph Petrush. 1 ed yesterday Charles Schroeder, Private Henry B. Brown. Private James 1. Urns. Private Thomas Cardello. Private Clyde A. Gowin she is, for she has been watched every i 3 E charming and the most simple. This i moment isince Ther arrival Sin BRtHis ({55 oo i Bl e tin oy own and . e | ; y & short time ago bR e i ek et aaem JOSHD F ra e nel bR an A T dld Shi dayfforieeveralidnys an seant ISisiine s o an i dime mioton et o | coex el il aiin o (LY Goorse o) o “ ' s actinercrlthondss ditment tlsvetce fociiRn e e il s o e L Hovey e ol M UL andiGiecraais | hasfencorted onologithatwoman tolihe kil S e ebeniens b Sle | Samfond BRISHo RSl Listed aaliia v ing Gl 61 e e Wity o) oiinll Gt s R e S e B e e Row building where long interviews : : 3 Bl skresuliin s firomiaceldonts with her have taken place. She is| ™= day of the case of George Zador, an CANDIDATE FOR \ustrian who was arrested on a prosi- dential warrant in Trenton, N. J., and SEAT IN SENATE [ whe has been in prison for several weeks. GROUND GUNS WEAK -, . AGAINST AVIATORS Thursday and Friday British and German Airmen Not‘fi Halted by Barrage Fire A cordial invitation is extended to 7 | : all, to view our extraordinary display of e et . A new spring millinery. that neither guns nor defensive planes : can alw stop a raider who know i ! : his business and is equipped with a g { % first-class machine gun,” writes an we We Featllre aeronautical expert commenting in the ¢ % 3 ivening Standard on the recent air raids on London. SE S SR v - “The intensive battle bar i k ; a1 : e Flanders is crossed and recross g et a1 i l incessantly by airplanes. Our on Mannheim and other German ‘ i N towns show that the emomy cannot . : ) ar o a i s fro reachi tr [ [¢ -~ L s o ey . : o ] Our models are correct in Sty]e and cate that Germans can penetrate the T o et LR B _t quality, and are reproductions of the chairman of the National Woman's | in the conditions gaverning the raids i & party, who has announced her can- | as compared with those existing le s s & didacy for the semate seat recently a year ago. Of the many ai : t th f Sh e t made vacant by the death of the late | planes which may now approach Lon- Al § €8 €si ners 1n € 1a 1on cen €rs Senator Newlands. Miss Martin was | don, very few, indeed, get through. 3 graduated from the University of | The massed fleet raid has given away 5 § o . PE ’7 Nevada and from Leland Stanford | to attacks by single machines or very | t d O NING DA S and has studied in Cambridge. She | small groups. Never again are we! H : ; ViSi urin our is now in Washington. likely to have the humiliating spee- | e E: 5 s tacle of a big formation of enemy ma- | § B g i S " t t } d t h l b t i our capital. e 17000 We are pleased to announce that small groups. We cannot make light | of this development, ali the same, for POUN the Germans have formed the hahit G i ; ) 5 : e of rumning ihelr raids'in o kind or | (B4} ; 3y we are agents for the famous VENUS, Indian file, group after group comii Russe“’s over to England, and each endeavor- 3 5 b S BEST Y A CUPID, SENTNER models. Hats of over London “The single or small group of raid- Creamery mhmeam i R N ew.sl Mg individuality, style and quality. barrage is jumped over by a daring b : e pilot, and, so intense is the sky s e 5 2 . —————— and so defective is visibility at night that great fleets of pursucrs often fail to bring him down. — . L] [J The only store in New “But our airplanes are growing i 8 5 1 Britain selling a PREMIUM mare skiliful in breaking up the fleets, P Butter. The only store in and with further experience, aided by A 2 ¥ . New Britain selling a Strictly more liberal use of very fast ma- > ¥Fancy FRESH MADE Cream- chines, we should be able to give every . : . . . ery Butter 52 wecks in the solo raider a terrific chase from the 223 P/l St t N B t year.. " this chasing we require the best brain work, coupled with the lavish supply of the best machines. TUntil this sys- tem is carricd to perfection wo mus continue our gunnery barruge. “The object of this fire is not so ° much to hit the raider as to drive A him very high, as thereby we force 301 MAIN STRF him to come rather lightly loaded with | bombs, and, in addition, his accuracy

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