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German armies moved forward once f more. 2 | Brest-Litovsk Treaty. | This brought about a renewal of 1] J | the peace ucgotiations, and at Brist- “ ] | Litovsk the Bolsheviki were given fo under nd that Germany would rec- 1 | ognize the kingdomm of Poland, the 3 { republic of Ukraine, the independece First Page) of Finland. and ih parale govern ment tatns of Lithuznia sthouia 3 | ! § March. 83.811; 244,345; June | and Livoni Turkey, as an ally of Bere were 14,641 (104 fPrance, hringin Wmerican troop up to 1.0i° fighting Anie orahly against : men | i b man of- i Vienna long the front. . nations to northward in e famous St. | Lumania Capitulates Americans, | With the greats the line tory rman he Mouse, 13 trians ¢ % with her gov- it in the fight- | ernmc v icharest to fse of the < d ' tassian Bolshe alg Chateau- | 1 d Ruma- heir line | ' critical situa- the utmost | tion. Ruman vops during Fei- Bslaught. North ruary and Marn B utollE jericans helped | sirabi: £ New Republic MR T fle ‘Germans in | of Ukraine, | S el fle; and in the | b forces und obliged to BCanticny and tlast, on May 6. Ruma- given proof of y of peace with the jon called upon this treaiy Rumania lost tne ! bffensives during | | of Dobrudja, on the south first of these came the Danube, which she had re- b and the second, 1 ’ the Balkan war, and - March 21. The = ratification of her estern | Il France. while [ 1 s, conomic ncessions also flods or from a few . made under pressure from the Becks, have 1tonic \nwu-.l l -Trrxi;‘"uf‘.ff.‘.‘,,i» ; el e T e | ERN o nn‘:\'(:f:\t.Ilrn,'o:f::("mh W natan (b e s el engincer of tho American Expeditionary forces. He wWas at one time in command of the finet Italy in June | 1917 and March 1, 1918, may be <all- | e i Dickman, has been especially upon as merely an-|ed the period of pcace tentatives. It prominent in the recent fighting. against the western [ is true that before the end of the sum- Bt . ey | mer Pope Benedict made an appeal to | S — Czecho-Slovak prisoners of war who armed them 00 the me & of March > | With such stubborn resistance that {armies claimed the capture of more !selves and inflicted rmans besen their attack from the | progress was impossible. Siowly the |than 180,000 Ttalians. In the German | Bolshevik A vicinity of Arras. on the north, to La | Austrians were driven back toward |offensives in France this vear about: been > g Fere. on the south. and centering | the river, and then the Piave, swollen | 190,000 Jorench, British, American and ustrian troops, released from the their heaviest columns against the | by rains in the mountains ¥ Russian front, were taken to France \l:‘m Wi o0 on \1:;“.\\‘ 29, :»(\y.‘ e R s et o e s L and Italy to swell the masses of men | President announced that the German | ("0 F RN hurled against the Allles in the | Sovernment as constituted could not Western theater of operations. As believed and that the United States was ready to enter into negotiations when the German people showed they comparative certainty Piave, but on the west bank met|October and November the 'Teutonic «ives perhaps never | negotations, the basis for pourparlers e offensives perhaps never & On the morning of March 21, the | with T was to be la chec as know ure. The N the warring nations to enter into peace 8 launched was known with | ure 'he Austrians crossed the |ents. During the drive into Italy last !hvon built up around | fave Deen begun had it mnot | being the restoration of Belgium and P¥or the collapse of Russia dur- | Serbia and the return 1o Germany of "he past winter. German and | her lost colonies Chis appeal, made August 13, was answered by Presi- defeats on t new government set up there under General Hof® {vath, president of the Chinese Bdat- complet- | Portuguese were reported to have been | orn Railroad Japanese, British and of Austria’s hopes. |taken prisoners American marines have heen in the i After suffering terrible losses the | -Added to these losses are the casual- | city of Viadivostok for months. Staggering bhefore the impact of the | Austrians reireated to the ecastern |ties in killed an wounded. No definite blow, the British army fell back rap- | bank of the Piave from the Montello |fizures have been issued by Germany idly. For eight days thc Germans [ plateau to the Adriatic. and Austria, but it has been reported | Countries which are not engaged in poured through the old Allied line in on what apppears to be good «uthorjty anglicve sl erad (Rauring iyt anlekoril tolcrushithel inriteh G Minor Operations, that in the fightung from March 21 |{welve months. Switzerland and Hel- velalwede: Botvhen thew 2aiine Among the year's operations of [tll June 1¢ the Germans lost more being adjacent to Germany, ROV, SHfe e ekt (e s than 500,000 men. The French and |have beeu threatened by the Central comparatively British losses were considerably | Powers a number of times in mat- Neuarals, over this list én run in. Horsfall’s Suits in troops’ i 4 nels, Tweeds. dre fi nl,‘:,‘,‘“ 1 fundamental influence on the course long as Russia remained in the fight she held great number of Teutonic the and her with- | desired peace and when they spoke wal from the war exercised a | through any authority which would be representative of them, The German nswer to the Pope's to the south. Then came a period of eSS LLroitince WL Seaction and LRelarmans. ciriettor | thel Britleht diives in® Palestine " and Ay ; of its development pleal Worsteds, : o ‘;‘ oo appeal reached the Vatican on Sep- ored as soft as a kit- lluationia B AL0 tember 21 11 expressed hope that ten’s car. The year opened with the fortunes | supther warfare could be averted The { of war apparently favoring the En-|ihrough the good offices of the Iope, | {ending more than ffty miles before 4 tente. The British had forced back | hut decined to enter into any engage- | they were halted Luke Horsfall the Germans to the famous Hinden- | yent to meet what the Allies had de- Y burg line. The French had estab- | clarca Co., | Lt =y lished themselves firmly along the 23 ASYLUM ST, des Dames. north o 3 : HARTFORD. Ch mmmw Dames, north of th Gorman efforts to secure a peace | swept the British back throush Ar- | announced. Since the Alsne echoes of Verdun —Wwere | pjoph would leave to Germany all the | mentieres, hut did not break their still ringing the knell of German hopes in that sector of the battle area, The Italians were holding their lines along the Isonze. The rejuvenated Russian “regiment of July First” had e smaller, as the allies were fighting |ters relative to economic concessions. stop. They had drive vhead for | Mesopotamia; the Turkish advance in | from entrenched positions. | Holland especially, has been beset Gifice AN sy o 5 s s with difficulties, and resent thirty-five miles. along a front the Caucasus; the French and Ttalian Financial Aspects. » sllies ?‘ ”.”:. Hh 5 b offensive in Albania; and the fighting . . $ S bl DGk T ex- in the German African colonics The United States has floated three | porting supplies fo Germany . ik el e T Tl e St Jerusalem was captured by the | 87¢4t Liberty loans. The praceeds of | Norway has signed an agreement’ & to be ther minimum war aims. | hefore Amiens than a new offensive | British on December 10, and short. | these loans have agsregated $10,788,- | with the United States by which eom- German Peace Offcer. was begun in Flanlers, on April 2. Tt | |y afterward the fall of Jericho was |2£1.:900. The total war cost to the mercial relations mav be carried on.¥ taking of Jo. | United States, according to latast|Sweden has been dealing openly with richo the Brilish forces in Palestine | 2'2!1able flgures, is $13,800,000,000. | Germany and has be threatened fruits of her victory gained through | lines. The British, with the French | have not been active on the offensive, | Since the nation entered the war it has | with a virtual bovcott by Great Brit- Russia’s collapse, and with Belgium | Who were rushed up to the front, General Maude led the Britisn | €Xtended credits to the allies aggre-|ain. Both nations have lost severely and large portions of France to be | stopped the (iermans after thev had | troops into Ragdad on Mareh 11, and | B2HNE used as pawns at the council table, | reached the hills southwest of Ypres. | shortly began with the address of Count | There, on Ap 9, the Germans suf Czernin, then Austrian foreign min- | fered a terrible defeat that Thalted $6.091,590,000 through the depredations of German The total cost of the war to Eng- |submarines. land up to December 15, 1917, wis Denmark is in a serious plight also ¥ until the mtense hent of sume | P1aced at £6,242,000,000, while French{and it has bean reported that thers defenses in Kulkowina and Galicia ister, at Brest-Litovsk. on December | their offcnsive in that quarter. Hite i tcdl bhorations vates of credit are somewhat smaller. | is great suffering among the peopls Through August and September. | 26. The keynote of the address was Foch in Supreme Command, The Tu (fter the o j atlatestinenonts ehytotat o fithefOers otk inaticounty 1917 there came 2 5 4 S nan war loans approximated $31,000,- . A 1917 here cam rumore ihat | general peace without annexations Tl dstl o e Far ol the | BussiBtook B dvanta e o nktneiaar | et wazloan slapRroxlmated (8 S 000 New Belligerents Russia was exhausted by the war, and | und indemnities ,000. : sector toward Amiens fne Allied Na- | Mmoralized condition of the Russian Th froe—United States gov- | Guict settled down along the lmes| On January President Wilson, | sons took & vitally important step, | forces to advance through the Cau- Internal Disorder enment securities and other valuable | from the gates of the Carpathians to | addressing congress, said that the nd beautiful presents at free special | the Baltic. Stories were heard of | United States must know for whom rawing Sunday afternoon at Victory | fraternization of German and < [ the German rulers were speaking. ark, corner West Main and Newfleld | £ian troops but assurances came from | The address was a complement to an | fterward died from cholera ) ! { His forces pushed further up the carried the war far into the Austrian ee new countries have declared war on Germany during the vear They nanied General Ferdinand Foch sus and obtain possession of the There have bean numerous reporte 1y are (‘osta Rica. Guatemala and | hero of the first battle of the Marne, | "¢310ns subsequenty ceded them by | of disorders in countries engaged in | Hayt The Argentine, although near generalissimo of the Allled Forces on | the treaty rest-Litovsk war. Riots and bloodshed have bheen s break because of the machinations the western front. which includes al! The i Italian drive in | reparted from Germany and Austria |of von Xburg, the German ambas- the line in Ttaly as well as in France. | -\lbani J 6 and is still | many times during the past spring and | sador at Buenos Ayres, has taken no Tiven the Murman coast, in northern |in proz summer and there is little doubt that |step in that direction. Mexico has re- Russia, has heen held to be under his During the vear RBritish forces in [the Slavic races of Austria are seeth- command Africa drove German forces before {ing with discontent . oo o ikt tne them in German Bast Africa and in Ireland came to the center of the IN AERO SERVIC mans attacked once more, this time | German Southwest Africu and finally {stage in this connection carly in May, on the Aisne river. and in seven days compelled th te disperse or sur- |when a pro-German plot was detected | 114 returned from Washington they reached the Marne at Chateau- | rends This took from Germany the | but nipped in the bud, with the ar-| aoyo 1o eniisted in the naval avia- =4 Thierry, making a penetration of | lust of the vast colonial possessions |rest of seventy-eight leaders of thef, onC1 088 €P/Stes S ety coming t th held by her when the w nn Fein., = S e e about iwenty-cight mile; At IS toq | TEPOTE to the Standard Aircraft Cor ) “Four Principles” Enunciated. : oviers clheckat a4 the £ y 5 tee Gisnfrectinnioe s taro o0 e fard Jolly Three dance tonight, Grange | front and concentrating them for a ux e JIGHALEY Marne they wer ecked nd Submarine War poration at Elizabeth, N, J. He expects | T sse replies o e T r pe . blow was broker against the British in South Africa all, Berlin.—advt | drive against some part of the line in | TO these replies there was rejoinder | impetus of the hlow was brok 5 T L s s B E o Bhel tradafenien o ih el naval IAVINE Having completed a four week 1 the western theater. Then came in- | ¥ FPresident Wilson, who, on Feb- e dly devispass U RS B AT B s i I i e SRR corps Their efforts to negotiate ar. ourse at the Palmer School of Pen. | timations that the blow was aimed | FU8rY 1l again addvessing congress | organization of their forces. the Gor- |3 e :- s o) rangements to make experimental 8 5 Palmer S en- | @ as ¢ o 3 S e iy i itk an T he g the | ings as compared with the mber o One e 2 : g - EwiEiro e s s LR T | Lam low |H\\h.('x m\} G G be | mans e ! “‘}‘[‘,{y“{, chosshEg e s I N e Monarch Died. flights with their new machine were s returned s | The storm bhroke »oretto ow R t G S R U DO (EC, & e s s S During the year one ruler of a bel- | not entirely succegst just at this k. .:;:s:mrzthu. 'r:Q::_. ned to he rllum(; Ot i “‘m"r'\' which peace n be sade. Bricfly, | on the souithern side of the salient { The operations of the Britist m n Stanley street. She is a member o ctc 26 and almos mmediately he High school faculty. the wiole Italian line was thrown into the Sultan of Turkey was announced | rangements later o dis Touring throug! A in Jnune subsequent reports intimating s Goodness of Aunt Delia’s Bread.— | disorder. Touring through the pa T i onslanght. ‘This offens ran for five | while a great mine i cominlotes it (8 G SRIGH SN NI Do BR A e avt | where in some instances disaffected i o o M ¥ s e 3 L2 een murdered MUTCHINSON NOW A MAJOR. Taiian oorsa 1ol St R o Peoples and provinces are not to | days and was stopped north of Com ay by the British nay onverted i 1 jmans and Austrians made progress, 1 \ venue. As there are only seven cholce | Petrograd that Russia would stand |address made on January 5 by David ts left, phone vour Saturday appoint- | true to her allies. Lloyd George. the British premier. d e il ¢ To these addresses reply was made ent to either 1801 or 838.—advt i Fall Offensive in Ttaly. : e Aol . B8 e i oy e e ™ by Imperial Chancellor von Hertling T yerma and A x| of Germany. anc ‘ou Cze: The f New Haven are the proud parents o s e et i oGRGesmany fandicoun G oinin flihg mained neutral a daughter, born yvesterday morn-| commands had no illusions as to latter was pacifle ar onciliatory in 5 tone, while the former, alluding to =3 Both are former residents of | further Russian belligerency. ‘I‘hr-rr[_,h‘ good German sword,” showed his city, Mrs. Neumann being beforo | came to the Allies reports that the\ he was speaking for the militarists of er marriage, Miss Katherine J. Beck Central Empires were taking the |the Germanic |‘m\\r'< of Washington street pick of their force from the Russian Aaron G. Cohen and Nals J, Nelson - 5 e | ligerent country died. The death of | time, but they hope to make the ar these principles were | driven into the Allied line during the | American destroyers have spread te T - Final settlement must be based on | March offensive. as the stage of their yror among the “wasps of the Miss Edith Bayer of East Main St as received her call, after enlisting n the girls’ land army a few weeks ®6 and 1s now engaged in active gur- fen work in New Milford, where she | xpects to remain for the next be bartered about like chattels. pisgne afier losses which were de- { virtually the whole North sea into an Assistance For Russis (Guy Hutchinson. who was connect SHieh Tt dlie 0 L e Every territorial secttlement must | scribed as unprecedented had been in- {area closed against boat actvities m ”’”x»‘ m:\v ‘14::! i :‘I‘;‘lwfl-::yflr:np‘la;' | nance department Washington, Ma- Hutchinson is the old Yala rterback ‘ ] Since the collapse of Russia, the i be for the benefit and in the eras oted upon the German The harbors « srugge and Os 2 2 By wise generalship, the Ttalian line fomt h 2y interest | flicted upon t 1 Allicd nations have sought to find a way to assist the people who are being Y cxploited by the Germans. French s T e Rl G e shall be met with the utmost satisfac- | forces and then thev again i ‘-\‘r'v“ \ipping. were eithe ued entirely or | Byjtish and American forces have Roeks [ Piave. almost within sight of the | 10D consistent with the future peace. | This time the line of attack was ‘lmv made vi \ s as submarine | heen landed on the Murman or Ko — . Pay water rent before 3ist and | domes of Venice. FHere the Italian Pope Benedict, in a pastoral letter | Chateau-Thicrry casiward, arounc yases ar ilpleali sl S GE A i s 12 FOOT CORN. have not actively intervened however. A couple of stalks of fodder corn. ssued at ster, made another ap- [ the north of IRheims and then down | e ave interest [army reformed its columus =auel LA mAdegano thethinns it thes noxehi ofEl L . being there only to protest Allied prop- | cach over 12 feet in height. were left consoli- > and from peal for concord among the peoples | the Vesle river (o Prunay and i g . of the world, but it brought forth no | that village eastwar to rM“ Flsee -Boats in American Waters, erty which had been ianded At the °at the fire headquarters on Commer- i German s wrines visited Ameri- | port of Kola before Russia withdrew | cfal street this morning The corn can waters in June and sank at least | from the Entente Alliance was raised at the New Britain Town i B N i Srom June until July 15 the Ger end flrom whicl man sub ines Was it Aravaliivorl the iTson oMl T oM GG USROS R CRg e prom AL e : e paused at the Tagliamento and then Al l-deflined national aspirations mans v 3 > Gherry Ice Cream. Deliciously dif- | dated its positions by withdrawing erent. Trv it today and tomorrow at | from the Rhaetian mountains to the wngible results t the Pope's Mhis attack at the close o xelrod’s Pharmacy, 236 Park stroot, | ASiago plateau and, assisted by the | \AN& : 2 oI This L . rest, prayers for peace offerad | developed into one of the most am s é % French reinforcements brought (o | PeSt: b1 v Legof develog T Swedish Bethany Sunday sc! o1} ok “at ur ug [ S ih Grerm KOS The Swedish Bethany Sunday school | Trenth relnforcements b [ Guthoii ehien o e B (R O 2 : ten ships. (he field of the U-boat op-{ In Siberia there is a well-defined ; farm and is the finest seen in this vi- i 11 nnl:i a summer festival this eve- | world on St. Peter's day, June 28 German forces crossed t Marn hein=dit 10 New Jersey | anti-Bolshevik movement which has cinity this season ng at 7:30 o'clock, at the church edi- | Russian Collapsc. . fige, for pupils and teachers as well | pionps 1y the meanwhile had been | froM Paris that Emperor Charles of | ma round gainst American bs parents of the pupils. Tce cream | , Austrin had wrirten letters to Prince |{roops mnear Chateau-Thierry ind All be served during the evening, | Woving swiftly in Russia. On No- | givtas of Bourbon relative. [n | could not advance rapidly farther | 488 SN 0 troops to Europe | At the services 1in the Swedish | Vember 1, while the offensive against |these communications the Austrlan | east. They did. however, forge ahead Degt R w~“~r";r’} P [Bethany church tomori. v Ttaly was under way Alexander I° | monarch conceded the claim of | on the north side of the Marne and = ] ! 3 e ot el e l R d L Re e sl e (eiliial T L RO R gl Tl e e e ; The Reveren o 6, with a loss of 212 men. ¢ rencher, a ° hinted that peacc overtures would be | tain of Rheims. Tt appeared for a will the preacher, as th announced that Lussian was worn out pedihati LORDCH Hial L Next week i the last week to pay | shoulder the burden thenceforward - MR 3 Ihee the vear eleven hospital e s = Z \ came elations | over a wide front, but were unable tc In April therc m cvelutions | over a wide front. St ; Anie. Capes o casterly ha & Bermudas o only Ut tes transport t : the Austrian Foreign Minister Mow, which still in progress, Am- =t @ our personal tax.—advt Seven days later Kerensky was de- blow, ¥ = et Rt b4 &y s removed from office erican and French troops attackud | sl ) Dy su Mrs, William M. Barle of Lafayette | posed by the Bolsheviki he fall T e o n hov lon | thoaltest andimos rant case of the o Ve ap card ves rda anc light of Kerensky as e signa &, 2 e o, 3eles vielatior o he Geneva Conventio: T A treet, re nhl(T!, a YIT“ h” 11 r\rh)(,m.m o ](“L-“ o o ky was the signal |y 500 of peace have been delivered | the Ajsne west of Soissons and Beleau |\ tlon ! e it S NDA V NIN rom her son Daniel, who left here on | for Germany and Austria to o D e e e o ctilor Chusan Delns il desirncdonlion tish l ] . I ; ]‘, (; Thursday with the selected men for | into peace ne P pes otiations with 5 2 s 2 i s Lol e amer [landovery Castie. rying P Richard von Kuehlmann, the foreizn ' Thierry cudden a pow camp Devens, stating that he had ar- | On November 30 the Bolsheviki an- X Thiery Minister, and the other by Imperial | was the that the Germans ‘anadian and doctors. This 7. lived sately in Springfield. Before bo- | nounced that Russia was out of the | 5 Chancellor von Ilertling The for back rapidly until their reserves could ple called ir he servic -, Earle | war and proposec t all the Allies 5 4 t persons on board being ng called into the service, Mr. Earle v and proposed that all the Alli mer's sensational admission that the | he hurried up I ns on 1 ng sword by itself couid not bring peace The rapid ships have been sunk by submarines, was stock clerk at the Amercan Pa- | Join in negotiations for an armistice per Goods Company's factory in Ken- Russian and German representa singtor tives met at Brest-Litovsk on Decem- resulted in his resignation. and von | nowever, so menuced the 3 4 reported sunk & = g - Hertling's address voiced the senti- | forces rarther south that on July snce August 7. is more than 4 be and terms of peace were ex- " . Afdaughter was born this morning | 0 % “0L HCNHS e wiin | ment that as long as the Allles were | the enemy began a retreat across the | 250.000 ton 5 to Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Chase of | ;" 00 A0 “:’““1\ ‘;" ""‘nw”w intent upon “destroying Germany,” | Maprne, On Sunday, July ) Against this destruction of shipping RVest Main street te )“:R‘.” w’x i ;<m !x ‘:‘ u.qu ® | the war must go on Freneh and Americans ‘m i the Allles have combined (:4 r ship- the meantime, a new republic had | The Enemy Ofensives. MM=Thiercy anc b gl bos Hosid e L L S A e B B e or tons or s nened vt oot | @ Hupgerford Court, Opposite Y. W. C. A, The medical adviso board ex amined 356 men vesterday and of this number 29 were accepted for active | i & v Since t time the Alli e | into service has not been published was Ukraine, a territor extending | the Germans were massing torces on ince tha g niilitary service | along the Rumanian und Galiclan | the (Western front. Reports came Vincent Beally of 141 Lafayette | frontier from the Black Sew, north- | that large units were training behind the effect that more ships are being gtreet told the police today that his | ward to Cholm, in ancient Poland. |the lines and that new and more ter- he effect that 5 E%vaas 01d daughter was astaulted by | With this republic, the Gentral Em- |rible ensines of war than had been |2nd Rheims. THere are MNdieations | built than are being sunk, On July 4 : Ml'S. Martha StebblflS, COfltra}tO SOIOlSt ined slowly hut steadilv. not ouly | Official announcements have heen m— — sonth of Sofssons, but 2lso north of | ;made in the recent past, however, to the Marne und between that river 2 boy Uving in their neighborhood. | pires made peace late in Januas known before were to be used In Ger- ,‘S‘,'A 2 ('.N,Zl“.'\‘,yqj‘rx-”\-. e boosy vanse : PR Complaint that boys are stealing | The failure of the Bolshevik au- | man effort to break the Allied lines, | o Sl American shipyar ) A" Welcome things from the Corbin Box shop on | thorities to reach any agreement with crush their armies and force them to : Italians f el Losses in Battle Church strest was made to the po- |the Germans resuited in the renewal | make peace. The drive was well ad- l On June 15, the Austrians began | 1 fighting _has _entailed Mée last night. . of hostilities on February 1§, and the | vertisedl and even the place where it drive against Ttaly. It was a fail- | 5 most of the hellige