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Bulletin Service Flag VOL. LIX—NO. 186 £ POPULATION 29,919 WORLD WILL BE THRILLED WHEN RESULTS ARE KNOWN The Allies Pursumg Germans All Along the Great Battle Line and Thousands Overtaken RACE FOR NORTHERN BANK OF THE AISNE RIVER NORWICH, CONN., MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1918 TEN PAGI‘E—-—W COIS Cabled Paragraphs I Russian Revolutionist Coming. Paris, Aug. 4—Vladimir Bourtzeff. the Russian revolutionist, who is op- posed to the Bolshevik leaders in that country, has arrived here from Lon- | don. "He will leave soon gor the) United States. ; Aliies Penetrate Alto. ' Vienna, Aug. 4.—(British Admiral- ty per Wireless Press.)—The follow- ing statement was issued from the war office today: “The enemy pene- trated into portions of omr positions on Dosso Alto. The enemy: has reoccupied the Fieri-Berat llne .in Albania.” O Grand Duke Exscuted, ‘Aus. 4—(Havas Agency). Tbree Russian, grand dukes, one of whom seems to be Nicholas Nicholaie- vitch, former commander-in-chief of ‘The Town of Fismes Taken I@y Americans Have Been Reapei‘r SUPPORTED BY FRENCH TROOPS, LATE SUNDAY AFTERNOON HEAVY ARTILLERY FIGHT| A Few Americans Entered the Town| Saturday Afternoon, Remaining Over Night, But Were Driven Out By Gas | | Fruits of Victory GEN. BRIEFLY AND POIN DEFEATED ON MARNE Driven in Confusion Beyond the Line | of the Vesle—Enemy Stem the Onslaught of American, PIRSHING TELLS STORY |thrift stamp: TEDLY Unable t Condensed Tei egrams Franklin D. Roosevelt, Assistant Secretary of ihe Navy, is in Paris. I During the month of July Govern-| ment munts turned out: 7100000 coins.! | The total sale of war saving and| for the month of July 42, totalled $211 41 Copper preduction of the Anaconda | ning Co. for the month of July 104; ! taled ,400 000 pounds. The House of Commons voted unani- | mously to adopt the $3.500,600,000 | credit asked by Bonar Law. i A report in Basel, Switzerland, savs | that a revolt has broken-out in Turk-| !estan against the Bolsheviki. i | | o PRICE _TWO CENTS Ludendorff States Matters Untrue em——— SAYS THE STAKE AT ISSUE I3 NOT WORTH THE COST ‘SAVING THE SOLDIERS? i{He Says Germans Are Fully Masters of Situation and Will Remain So— Does Not Underestimate the “Am- | £ | Shells and Shrapnel, Early Sunday | GE,‘;‘F'{ 33:2?;7.”5:5?:53 '»h;r: ‘fy\';ge‘f- mann his come to Hoiland, to stay. French, British and ltalian Troops Germans Racing to Put fl\.e Aisne Between Themselves and Pursuers to Escape Further Life Losses and Prisoners— the Rassian armies, have been exe- cuted by 'the Boisheviki, according to Moscow advices to tha Payerische Zeitung .of Munich, cricans and African It Auxiliary”— —Now the Town Swarms With Am- i erican and French Soldiers. Fighting Side By Side For Liberty— | Americans Take 8430 Prisoners. | Declares It was Planned %o Leave The Harrison liner, of Toxas, which | was reported lost in the middle of the Atlantic July 14, was the Instructor. | Abandoned Ground to the Enemyl INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER 1 \rmy the ington, Aug. o ! Amsterds 5 RAWEUE cora o rmy on . Aug Rochester railways are asking for| -Amsterdim enemy . 4, 10 p. m, e Aisne-AMar -|a seven-cent fare because of the recent 1deq u: o et French and Have Taken the I tant To When Peace is Declared Company T fuil fruits of " on Saturday, |increase in wages ziven to their men. | éarly as the evening of : 5 MR R B taken late to : “when the encmy who met his s brok> off operatic It is of Fismes, Germany’s Great Supply Depot — Allied ust Relax Its Power. p{Toops.. supported by the en the Marne en{ Lieut. Eddie Rickenbacker, formeri S & Washington, Aug., 4—Under an|Vesls at several pomis o ihe east, Gl B r.«p.)rrz‘."d““'Q:‘:fl”[;‘!’-dfnf’mf’hrfl? (e prencn Gov fTroops Have Negotiated the Passage of the Aisne to the |asrcement between the goveinmment | ward, and the fine has heen extended |his communidue for veserdon 1 e et i e and the International Harvester com- est of Rheims te La Neuvillette. 1 ; the vz ot pany, federal court decrees declarine the so-called harvester trust to Le Germans are Northern Bank and Harass the Enemy—Salient Towns res; sharply m Muizon to Chamy e captured - Provost Marshal General Crowder| General I udendorff, —first quarter- _ 12rve 0] uns. has issued a call for 1,084 registrants:Master general of the German arm vnlawful combination ana ordering i s mes was taken a s of vic d : ) < Wl a3 iken '8 5 vie- H Gnslie S ~jmade this statement to 2 gathering of Blaze the Way For Allies After the Huns — Germans | dissolution, are to be carried iuto ef- |iilery fisht hat bes in the SRR O e Pl e B e | e e R e ;eecntdi:;tg o.nceih The company’s jof the afternoon. A few Americans gloriously co-American H eived by Tield Marshal oIy . in the supreme court since ! ntere Atnriay an ! 3 s v Battled For Their Lives at Velse River and Lost—The | 1515, i5 o be dismised and oo, m-np,.\l .]nlnrx:m':‘hl:n[lm:)w Satuplay aledou i To increase ‘(he supETy shaciscanh CERaae ikl Hpsel ocrd issued providing for the sale of o ) The lefeat cn the \IH \*‘ A B e D i Refi ing fene Foc] L ; J ¢ n th ye Lt e ot re- | Referring to General Foch, General Cathedral City S2ved--Germans Thoroughly Vanquished {ain machipery lines controlied Dy e Shrapnel |in confusion bevond the line. of the | vant outpac e o\ 10U R RIE | indortt continned: r with its plants in town | Vesle, 5 | “His plan was undonbtedly to i i d Sy 4 ST R e i & %fllrmffleld, Ofln?}.l and, Auburn. XN. V. i little | “The enemv in spite o suffering the| The Post Office Department an- |07 the entire arc of our fron: south S Gl B e severest losses roved incapable | nounced that 1,141 letters for Egypt|©of the ¢ a breai through on he depart- 2 AR % 2 0 o d ' o2 ‘L b B! (By The Associated Press) ired forces of the German crown|ment of justice. - ’ GERMANS ATTEMPTED b ey oneusht were lost in the Mediterranean by the | (1 i The German retreat continues un-[Prince. : The harvester suit wa o READ WHEKT HARVEST| 5ithe Freneh: Britian and Wallan vet |55 0r & steamship. abated, with the allies everywhere in Americans’ Share in Increase. Minnesota in 1912 by t In the course of the operati Th f 15 Ameri hot pursuit, It was not clear weather General [Which for the first time in In the Country From Which They| 5400 prisoners and 133 suns have heen ool Sneag o] Apparently the situation now has re- | Pershing’s message reporting that §,- |cution of alleged combi 2 L OUTERY ARENE g oY ed on the C were ga; il solved itself into a race for the north- ern bank of the Aisne river by the anad i, one and three n casualty list. Ten illed in action, one 1a)nu'n1 by our men 400 prisoners and 133 guns had been There is not straint of trade, captured by the Americans alcne in lution of a combi Have Been Driven Out. nere wounded, T 3 : 2 o section. which we de not under- Germans, who have been evicted from | ciuded those taken in'yesterday’s swift | Srounds mainly of With the Amertcan Army on the % o o S strategic’ positions along the Vesle |rush to Fismes or only thoss f the |power. The case [Soissons Rhcims ¥rom, Saturday.| AMERICAN OFFICERS SHOW aE S dokarnment s gomditetaksiovor] G oroon Ofbe ninetenth river, in the center of the line and di- | preceding period of the counter-offen- |More important an = o i S e ELErS bfithe rectly east of Rheims, which seeming- |sjve. It was regarded as probable, |Pending in the suj SPEED IN TRANsPORTAT!ON St w“ in- ol b ly renders necessary that they put tHe | however, that the captures made yes. |disposed of in this m have been home by German v s for e U Aisne between themselvep and their | terday were still to be reported. Other | country entered the w i soldfers. The Irench and Americans | 38,000 Soldiers Forwarded. Behind | et 3 o i pursuers as quickly as po¥sible in or- | reports indicate large captures of both [ Under the terms oo during the'r advance of the last few| Lines in Five Days. P B L i e der to escape further large 10sses of |men and guns in the rush to tha Vesle, | the company have discovered systematic | i S e e L eaCh M2 Y ciwchwords ¥ ithol men made prisoner. Flank Attack Projected. vesting machine ! had heen laid by the Germans| T1ondon Aug. 4-—"Os Eazl'sh | i i the. L ~U‘-';"l O EC iaktic of war. We are n Thousands of Germans Captured. 5 2 the trade names for reaping fthe barvest in the coun- | railroads in a cotntry stranee to them | o e BRI s e cenfident " = § The German retiremcnt southeast | pion” and “Milwaukee. " t try from which they have heen driv-| der unfamiliar conditions the X ent - . : _ Just how large this bag of captives |of Montdidier may be significant. To |4ll machiners and. o e : i E e sn gy Ensign P. J. Barnes, of the American; Fi°ld Marshal Yon Hindenburg a'so is at present cannot be reckoned, butlsome officers it appeared possible that |and its planis in Sprinz Ohio,and | The territory stretching northward Pl e naval air forces in Europe set a rec- | “i‘ated on how economieally the tro- unofficial advices from Paris assert|General Foch would hurl his victorious | Auburn, N. Y. where the first two|from the Marne virtual £ O e ord by remaining in the a hours | ?7 Germany had been uscd. He that when the figures are made public | ;rmies which already have crossed the |lines are manafactired. Feearse of S |7 records today surpas and 30 minutes in a “bump, circumstance and supply cdn- they swill {Btill the allled-world. Gen- | Aiso” near ‘Sotssony. warih. and cost| et are, manufactured o i s R e that has been done in the sf i | ions decided our raeasures, and eral Pershing in his communication | fuom’that point toward the line of the | ig the zovernment is in- | wheat ’| s the Weekly Despatch in 4estid- | The Duchess of Marlborough has| ™" iransferred the fiehting to favor- tz‘ns the Amencanlflalrme ;d“e m‘\]?; Gise. Should the German disorganiza. |clined o, bé more Temient. with ~ the | ng pncs. bek i ”r"rfl“m; \m been accepted as a progressive candi- ground wher~ the troops cou'd e R T tion prove serious enouzh to permit | company and will mive it unti 21| carly in June and besan ripening early | 1 A e oL Be T Divhan but it must be After hard fighting the Americans L rh atack onettin g e pones Tan Dann dickire e Sty o AL Tnlv 7, nineteen trains with a neace and French have succeeded in taking ‘ted against the Picardy front|ment. Should this mot he done by versphere, 1{n.lh;~ Jerman. :-l:ml\;\ ) cosches carried 10 B Al T iniversalicit ns | , Tho eorr dents daclare that Vo ";"g. the Gem&néethe 1mpor::;‘u:xn with hopes that the Aisne-Marne re- |that time, however. ths property will S ‘_ibm(_-d“ s e en hive haey | blamed for the defeat on the western | iindenhu the hest of health. of Fismes, once Germany’s great am-|quits could be duplicaled. Standi : : 2 ; g ibutas = ¢ thousa {front. It is reported Field Marshal | = munition and supply depot, midway on | azain ‘slong the Oise and with w1 | Anotner toeein the 9w =l DI E i These and_ transported from one|yon Mackensen will succeed him. | GERMANS PAID THE PRICE the railway between Soissons and|; S far § nother term in the ement gs have a capacity of nearly two|town in less than five how Seven- S B Selihe, WHlEIo T esstint a.nimsors bioroes avallable 1o continue on | provides that after December 21, 1019, | pounds. In man places the allies found | teen' tho cere cleared from a| . The G s o S TO GET BEHIND THE AISNE s, s the offensive, the Frenc t it ot be pormi t , ’ s t 5 e General Motors Corporation e ber of places along the Vesié river the |on” the Germans in (his whole mreat | have mare. than one renreseniacive in | omaied 2nd addressed to soldiers | port of d=barkation pne afiernoon fe- | ontained a large inierest im the Doch- | Bonfires of Ensmy War Material Il French have crossed the stream, driy-|aren from the sout le a British | ea, . 1 T e Bl o3 P L ~jgently and 7.000 or oltowed theljer Die Castings Co.. operating plants ing the enemy northeastward. " East|agvance from the Aot A e o o qu{:)mmtt: pelled to leave them hehind owing to| nest morning. The entice ot hod been | in' New York, Newark and. Toledo | lyminates Battie Fromt; i of Soisons allied troops have nego- | would form the north jaw of the trap. | the situation’ and. - metitive] thelr churried retreat. | moved to'a rest camp bathed fed en- ey . e e tiated the passage of the Aisne to the 180 e o ST Prisoners say that these‘sagks were | fortained, froshened wp genera’l andi The president of Switzerland will Are The Germns suc- | northern bank of that stream. where | CONCESSIONS GRANTED e AfpaRs ASrl- jshipned- the"sOiliors by the arme | dumped down..behind the. linés five| open the conference between comm R i B D e they are in a position to harass the cultural” machinery © 5OVern- | which also had arranged to collect the days later sionéra: of ‘Ainerich and Germany oal| -t ccnd: the Aisne from Soissons enemy as he endeavors to straishten BETHLEHEM STEEL MEN.|ment reserves “‘f . ""‘: lr‘“;- filled sacks and forward them to Ger- e s s S e Conde »-]vvrv.nsw- where the Vesls th that — n of, 18 months after the war toimany. g = xchaige) soners to be | qows into the larger . g::m’:?g gm:s::!?::?lw i Dissatisfaction Among Employes Seri- ichfurther b"‘"“" in the ‘1"“":;‘"; T';\OHS,’\nda of acres of wheat were THEODORE ':'LSMiAOTUET ‘:COLNL‘.'SION e s lost heavil' a'ong the Vesle from the T STBS By T 36 i = o5 . | Secretary Daniels to eli te adver- 5 . = e Gettans =48 ce:l::rnt;\r::‘a‘l,fe::g; Washington, Aug. 4—The national JSorArecalifo iRt ddo- ments In the absence of reapers. The |He Delivered a Stirring Patriotic Ad-|Becretary Danicls 1o eliminate ad \l:’nrg} the en my wa ome elements of their forces have|War labor board, through its joint| Chicago, Aug. 4-—According to a thrashed with flails and the dress at Bar Harhor. oF Aenathite of Avieticahiuaskals et o the flames Shocssied reaching the northern|Chairmen, W. H. Taft and Frank P.|Statement given out here by Harvester carefully stacked for future . £ American waters or foreign. i long the Bank of theateme &nd getting num- | Walsh, today announced its decisoon is proposed fol- | The allies however, nipped the| Bar Harbor. Maine, Aus. 4—Form. : h ptedinp nEshas thy 3 i s ’. e e appea -1 Germa 1 nplati 3 aide: Roosevelt cama t of i 5 ATy ReT them. Al through the salient towns |S anc ediately te the In i rvest, sa e si i ¢ 'a|mis star. announced he would not take | : s erma fields have 3 e R e ; S & 3 ship because it -.v‘m\ fair 4 r;eeen ‘gf,agrrxg xfivfi'r'ae'i"\fi efirevem the | Cision in many respects is one of the |tion in a new l‘*’r”"‘:f-mon to be called wheit which tha Germans did not har- | every \vamr\-‘ Am‘( .-i:*::‘n ‘L\Tm’-r ‘“f’h’u fln:“n;‘l"’lfi;"é to : w\,, Vasta 5 o st important e history n arves 2 vest or whic ev failed tr stroy | hi ¥ s and | 129 R w recent hea allied troops garnering the ripened [ IMOSt important in the history of the Honall i ¥ Sle coneny |ivest gry which thev tailed_to’ desiroy| hilaor mattr Foat dirianes £Hents ind 2 en recent heave rains, constitute erom Noay the stating that it CEE e siome | during thelr retreat. matives: flocked o o S| Bocause of the German control of |7 1% obstacle {ojsk rm: Jhe Rheims is Rescued. shbes at the dissat- ¥ 2 | = e 8 < {Finland, the inhabitants of the Alandj po o e ; sfe among o the decision of the federal court, T'yrus | A n tform under the |1 ; the Ger have heel red to fly The fighting along the Vesle river | coCUoh STONE (he emploves of the | 41° cGormick, president of the R GERNONSSNITE DIV e oMl the na. |Islands " in the Baliic Sea have blown T e b PR o B was of a sanguinary character as l0Ng | () efrect upon the production of war onal Harvester compa FROM GERMAN FRONT | \ins¥, Germanv draped | UP.fortifications on the islands to pre- | { artillery. as it lasted. With the river at freshet 1) &/.200 THO0, TEC Procuction of war Th. [atenational i 1o raed the audience Lo | ent them from becoming a menace to s S o ;’""'t’g“fhe“""‘bh“’ks‘°m‘°{daé§l css of (he expeditionary’ forces”|pany under the pressure of wa | May Mark Beginning of Strategic De- had into the winning of | SWeden: : Soissons they stood wi ir bacl i By the terms of the decision, the |di‘ions has agceed to dismiss its appe: feat as Predicted. I anst, menace gave batlle for their lives. A majorily | workers are given the right to organs |in the government suit now pending i —— atthe coisisot citiitzation # . Dre Karl Helfferich, thednew Gerof the of the retreating of them were killed and the remainder |, 53 "t pargain collectively, and |the supreme court of the Tondon. Aus. 4. — On the British t 35 For all men and women:| a0 -~ assa g S Tes T the across the -river were made prisoner. One of the MOSt | revision or complete elimination of | States.” front the Germans have withdrawna be- America *to decide whether they |30ested the Bolsheviki Government 10} .,. “Germans, hampered by their T e ation by the|the bonus sysiem now in operation at _ fxeen Montdidier and Moreuil, & dis- | shit holt their heads vsher: whether 0P I BETER, T O0HRE (00 ¢ saioment, wil have to make a des- e T e ‘:,‘5 ordered.” The decision grants the re- SINKS THREE SCHOONERS | of the Avre river. ou Wil e o make||: iGen. PersHing eabled Secrptary Bakll e suv criass v Eoliio 3 % ral city | Vision of piecework and the estab- by o o —_— zood. There will be no excuse for f: z il e = - | ENEM LOSELY FOLLOWED s al : : ] ; 3 e 5 2 ? that there is much s ifixygly(;%;mmg‘:fi:amed" %l lishment of a designated, guaranteed |Off the Nova Scotia Coast Saturday| The retirement of the Germans be- | ure accepted o Dar of justie it by Rl O BY BRITISH SOLDIERS : S minimum hourly wage rate for about ASternoon. Brows Safe tween Montdidier and Moreu® is over| <Po not he a dead weirht in the] L 5 s e TS Germans Thoroughly Vanquished. | 5000 machine shop. workers in con. o front of ‘approsimately ten mies. | hoge. Use al your sireneth, The iace | STISTICAn troons, are seattered i) . . Ceveiderad Highly Satis- With the Germans now thoroughly |formity with one of the scales now . Aug. 4—Three Amer-| On tha souihern half of this front the | for men of fighting aze is on the | |Eesh g sing sations | Situa srcidered Hie s vanquished thus far on the Soissons- |being applied by the war and navy |jcan fish:ng schooners were sunk by |American contineents have been sta-|ing The place for msn who { 3 LS factory tc the Winrirg e. Rheims salient, eyes are being turned | departments, applies the basic eight |German submarines off Seal Isiand, | ticned for same time. Along the north-| not able to fight is to m» '®| The Interstate Commerce Commi Tontior bl 10 the regions in the northwest on both | hour day with payment of the time and | Yarmouth county, on the Nova Scotid | crn half of (he line French. on two | for =ome one else to fon’ ruled that! free transportAtion ot | nrmon oo ATley e sides of Amiens. Here the French and |a half for all overtime and double time | coast, vesterday. The crews landed on | occasians have driven into the Ger-|mgthors wives and siste Gy o e nenaer W arounn ritish are keeping up their hard pres- |on Sundays and holidays, ang provides | the Nova Scotian coast today man lines so that their front before e to bear vour bur e ! sure against the armies of Crown|for just overtime payment to piece- Th mander of one submarine |the present German withdrawal began| iy and to make it easy for the boys| 3 lowinz the ener he com 3 arir 1l beg: v and nak ployes of offices of other common car- t the G ow evac- Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria and have | workers; calls upon the company to|told an American skipper that he h: ran along the hills dominating the|over there. e S i ehl at. | ¥ et now forced them on two highly important |pay men and women alike when per- | sunk more American schooners hail ver from Castel to Aubvillers. Lt S, S S it :I“l!‘.‘e“\i(]]"‘/) sastern. bank o 1”‘r; Avre. sectors to retreat. Southeast of Armenfi forming the same work and to allot|from Boston and Gloucester [I'rid: withdrawal taken in conjunc- | THE ENEMY'S ATT!TUDE Under an order by the Chief of Ord- "v'"‘” "r;} o ”"‘v ):»\_';‘;- ’”‘;“f ('hr:‘“:!: on the old Montdidier sector the Ger- | women no tasks disproportionate to|afternoon. He did not give the names ith the German retirement = Eo nancs lecry celinitE R teh Do K T S mans have fallen back across the Avre | their strength. of the vessels or mention what became | < the Ancre from Dornincourt to B B ERCOING A B S e ‘e’i‘cg‘l‘::";‘& Lers river over a wide front, while northeast _— of the crews. hout fourteen miles to the A ) e Lol t . I he situation is gener: 5 Will Go o nsive the arsenals and proving ds will hs of Amiens, in the reglon of Albert, a|THE DESTROYER MAHAN The names of the schooners sunk mavk thel bestuming ofiie| t1es Will iGo len! the Offensivaiin ithe 1 Ausenslsiand oying smorusivglin ; similar rexmgv:deAmovemfl{ll: h(a;! been LAUNCHED AT FORE RIVER | Saturday afternoon are the Rob Roy. strategic retreat’ which may Albert Scctor. IR S o sen et s s_e;_y ‘?Sfé?,d" Bihels thut lzn)::r made across the Ancre. s Captain Freeman Crowell: Annie 1. |nate Tecn planned to forestall a Brit- — 2 i S 5 her s a_per- official communication in admitting the : ey 3 Perry, Captain James Goodman, an which Tondon despatches| With the British Armv in France | vice. manent stand on of the withdrawal near Albert declares the |Named After the Rear Admiral and | ye Muriel Captain B, Nickersen. Thc |1 Qicated was imminent in this|Aug. 4-——=(By The Assoc Press). e Aisne, but that they will retr-al fo the manoeuvre was carried out without Christened by His Niece, crews came ashore in dories today at The Germans onp of the | AUSTRALIA’S CONTRIBUTION Chemin des Dames ridg2, which is one interference by the British. — 7 ‘Woods Harbor, Shelburne, Lockport,} - British front apparentiy are changing TO FIGHTING FRONT of the strongest positions rv‘sahn«l-f Just what bearing these new of- ForeaRlav:lerW’\:rdiun:feath‘end'%;thal;h‘e}; REACHED ANCRE RIVER |00V o nt in tha Albert sector | 321000 Men and Fully Equipped Fly- | their creat accumulation of stores and fensives will have on the fighting {ront | sy ipbuilding Corporation. The vescel | CANADA HAS SENT With E | to the east bank of the Ancre. While| ina Squadron, and More to Come. | munitio N to which the Germans ultlmately Ye-|; " .03 afer the lats Rear Admiral [y SharpCon et B nny, this is not especially i in i The allies captured th> Chemin des A o ;hfi, Aimme reson |Alfred T. Mahan and was ehristenca | 430,000 TROOES ABROAD . Along the Line. self, it indicates a ch Vancouver, B. C., Auz. 4—Up to|Dames once and may do so azain. L et g Bl by his niece, Miss Ellen K. Mal o s L e ot e e on ¢ date Australia has sent 321,000 men to kieies SE allied troops be able to press back the | "pygene Grac S erion; Mopan. | The Spirit of the People Remains Un-| 1,.40n Aug. 4—Today's official (1o has placed himeelf m 4 Do the fizhting front, according to a|NEW ENGLAND DRAFT ARE line for any gta;‘erl:xhi%ax‘swe‘fld diclo- | Bethlehem Sh bmm,n,, Corporation, aleenably Shaken. cment reads: “Our patrols have|where he will be unable to car special to the Vancouver World from NOT ALL SATISFACTORY :f mtul‘mlflm al €G man line in the|2nd Rear Admiral Spencer S. Wood, red the Ancre river between Der- | ,n offensive action for at least some | Syiney, N. S. W. The despatch reads: —- cate the entire Ger commandant of the First Naval Dis.| Seatfle, Wahn, Aug. 4With a pop- and Hamel and are in con-jtie time. n a speech before the Miilion club| Nearly 1900 Drafted Men Disqualified south. e trict, were present. ulation of approximately §000.000 per- th the enemy on this Hne. At the same time, however. he has|in this city, Mr. Pearce said that up to t C: D tivity o the Tiatian <l e sons, including foreign residents, esti- hostile artillery showed some|made himself more comfortable by |date Australia had sent 321,000 men atamp acvsne mated by Colonel Ernest J. Chalmers, | activity during the night in the sectors where at several points the Italians| THE GERMANS STOPPED locating on drier ground. where, un- 5 BEnL 3 tho aeciis to the fighting front. and would con-| A .. Mfass, Ang. 4—The need of tack: e Canadian chief press censor, who is in | north of Bettune and south of Ypres” |loss disturbed, he may remain indefi- | tinue sending every man it could until| W% [ E0F S0 h, o LR, TRER O e i ol AMERICANS AND FRENCH | Seattle today, Canada has sent 430,000 - — nitely, and where he would be able | the war was won. He was proud that | JOre (el PERI®(n W T trians. i troops overseas to French and Bel- The distance between 'De‘;“?mwin better to defend himself. - the Australians had been fuily cloth- o e e 7 gian battle fromts, he said. and Hamel is approximately six ed and equipped with Australian ma- L e e o R e | O L e ana nad| YACOBH. |SCHIFE|DONATES terials, The commonwealth, he 2150 0l 1001 at nearly 1900 of the fast e” said Colone | s DEALT TO GERMAN ARMIES been most_terri s rom London tha pointed out, had done what no oth- er dominion had done—'sent a proper- ly equipped flving squadron to .the front.” Chalbers, “the spirit of the people of Canada remains unshaken.” Removal of misunderstandings- between Canada and the United States, he said. throuzh carried out a local retirement to the east hank of the Ancre in the region of Albert over a front of three or four rontingent of drafted men arriving here in July had proved to be disqualified for physical reasons. $25,000 TO HEBREW CAUSE Helps to Finance For Development of latest reports received here the Amer- icans yesterday made a spirited at- ate Victory Has Been So Great That Can. not Be Gauged Yet, tempt to capture Fismes, while the a 5 ; The exact number rejected by the 1 . The PBritish official statement Palestine. — i€ e il e IO French attacked Braisnes. It is be- | comradship in am\sé::sd repaid the | indicates that the_d(‘,enfmn' vg]thdraw- .| crREDIT EDUCATION SnInBEr abcEntod wes [l2.074 mhe men . Aug, 4=—F1 - lieved the Germans stopped both at- | cost of the war to Canada. al was over a wider front than was| New York, Auz. i—Announcemen 11 e New Enslandintah (h:‘ ?}:hr’;finér;‘i‘gs lseué'c‘ud?r'gfn uglra.; tempts. The French, however, cap~ = shown in the London despatch of Sat-| that Jacob H. Schiff had donated NATIONAL UNIVERSITY “e‘;'c’:;“("}‘;’;‘o:e‘ IS]‘;““W mgland states Alsne-Marne salient have been dealt |tured Jonchery, on the south bank of | gyip TG BE LAUNCHED urday. $25000 to the Hebrew University » smashing blow came tonight from |the Vtsle. Of those accepted, 99.37 per took out war insurance policies. cont, Is to Be Instituted in New York City in Near Future, With Degrees. whose cornerstone was laid recently on the Mount of Olives in Palestine, was made known here today by the Zionist Organizaation of America. The university is among the first pro- jects for the Hebrew reconstruction of Palestine. a1l quarters, Losses in men, guns and \ar material sustained by the enemy i is indicated ,are so great that the ull scope of the victory cannot yet lie gauged. General Pershing’s official report covering yesterday’s operations for the HOOVER“IS WELCOMED BY MARSHAL JOFFRE TODAY AT HOG ISLAND Fifty More Will Follow Before the Year Ends. Philadelphia, Aug. #—Hog Island, In Attempt to Capture Fismes and Braisnes on Saturday. “London, Aug. 4.—According to the THE CRUISER SAN DIEGO WAS SUNK BY A MINE Placed by the German Submarine That New York, Aug. 4—One of the first branches of a national university of credit education, recently founded by the National Association of Credit GENERAL ILIEOOU COMMANDS TRANSYLVANIA LEGION He Was Romanian Representative to ‘lnternzfioml Conference Last Year. Programe to Revictual the Allies is Fully Explained. 4 o T et i me i form' of 5| Men, will be opened at the School of Burned Canadian Vessel. the world's greatest shipyard. plans fo| Paris, Ang. 4—(Havas Acgency.) The gift came in the f 5 En v b s first time cast aside military reserve = send its first cargo carrler down the! Marshal Joffre received Herbert C.|000 shares of the Jewish Colonial| Commerce, Accounts and Finance of el and declared “the full fruits of vic- | Paris, Aug. 4—General Tliesonu,|ways into the Delaware river tomor- | Hoover, the American food adminis- | Trust. the financial instrument of the fory” had been realized, Iven as his|former chief of the Roumanian gener- New York University this fall, Dean A Canadian Port, Aug. 4—The Joseph S. Johnson announced today. United States cruiser San Diego was The national university wiil not be|sunk off. Fire Island last month by a conducted as an independent institu-|mine laid by the German submarine tion, but will organize and standard- | U-36 hich capturd and burned the ize higher courses in the practice and Cansdmn schooner Dornfonstein in the theory of credits in existing universi- | Bay of Fundy last FriGay, according ies and colleges. to statements made by members of Commercia: degrees will he confer-|the crew of the submersible to sailors red upon graduates who commete the [ from the sailme ship who were taken amhonzed course. on board the ‘submarine. row. In a few weeks a second will fol- | trator, low and then there will b> launchinzs | lined the program of the United States right along. Fifty vessels are expected|fo revictual the allies, and assured to go overboard from the vard by the | Marshal Jofire that the utmost aid first of the vear. would be given to France. The ship to be launched tomorrow, a Marshal Joffre said he always had 7500 ton vessel, has been named the|been confident that help would be Quistconck, by Mrs. Wilson, who has|fully and generously given France, selected names for all of the 180 ships|and this, he belived, was better than a to be built at this yard great victery. this morning. Mr. Hoover out- | Zionist organization for the develop- i ment of Palestine. Tts capital is $10,- 000,000 with shares valued at $5. Prayer for Alfies. Paris, Aug. 4—Public prayer for victory for the allies was said today throughout France on ihe occasion of the fourth anniversary of the declara- tion of war. message was being given out, however; new reports from France showed that further adwances been realized tcday and the enemy’s flanks had been turned. It seemed certain, on the face of these reports, ®iat he could not halt even at the Aisne uniess he masses many more reserves to relieve pres- sure against the beaten and disorgan- al staff, has been assigned to the com-| mand of a Transylvanian legion on the ‘French front. He has been in France since last November as Rumanian rep- resentative in the inter-allied con- ference. Wise men make proverbs for fools to laugh. & ®