The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 14, 1918, Page 1

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W. S. 5. PLEDGE NIGHT EDITION cu naan, rang y rnin hi wth ONE CENT IN SEATTLE lead; day. ‘er Year, al . hop lira SUE ae ane vase ee : THE GREATEST DAILY CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST CF oes eee Entered Second Class Matter May 3, 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wa sh. under the Act of Congress March 8, 1879. on . —__—_—— VOLUME 20. NO. 170 SEATTL E, WASH., SATURDAY, S SPTEMBER 14, 1918. Weather Forecast: modem » douthwenterty winds. me TAKE 100 TOWNS | FRENCH LAUNCH NEW THRUST TOWARD LAON. | Eye-Witness Tells Story | vans oe ~T YANKS BAG ADVANCE 2 of Famous U. S. Victory; oe gieay. [) Aeiet 15,000 HUN MILES AND GERMANY FEARS lie vesrenionsi Flare of ne of! Deailly Chemicals MARCH PRAISES | PRISONERS N AB ] 8 Poilu Comrades Get 7,000 Sudden Sweep Liberates Shoots Out for Miles Towards Huns i ATTACK ON ORE | as Yanks Attack—Guns Roar Vast HEROIC FEAT OF More in Mihiel More Towns From 4 | WINES BYU.S,) Challenge—Lurid Flames Lighten YANKEE TROOPS | vd one gg gl Enter St. Mibiel siccalinidatoe Dispatch From ( Cen D." PERSHING SENDS REPORT IN REACH OF VALLEY By United Press Leased Wire || ( ited Press Correspondent.) ob Direct to The Star cc ER i. hay. "United Press Leased wiret fay United Press Leased Wie | WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 | Direct to The Star Wh Direct to The Star | pillior jolla fo € ear's 11) % -_ od —— PARIS, Sept. 14.—It is unquestion- | | DISPATCH FROM FRED Ss. FERGUSON billion i rs : next yee a GSTS AN | OND cent. 14 = Siri aaik sta preatines (By United Press Leased Wire, Direct to The Star) Mead tld ecaseaa apical ARMIES IN FRANCE, Sept. 14. | mJ—In an attack launched at & jel attac e Strassbui : avg! gress by the war departmen " 28 1} NCE, | : sta ae : per ir offensive the Ameri- | & m. today Alsne and Post announced several days ag9/ WITH THE AMERICANS ON THE METZ| Chit ot statt March tet this be hls map shows the new American front across the top of the St. | Cane conquered, more than 190 | astride the Allette, the Freueh li eto known today in hotly disposing of | Mihiel salient, which was wiped out in ours by Pershing’s furious lactic oak Thus the American success cannot | FRONT, Sept. 14.—Having defeated and routed the joer vtimations that America will attack, The new front places the Americans within shelling distance of | [ausre Miles Of terrigrs Soke | ite tront, taking sven be explained away as a surprise even | -~ ‘ in whe ne s the - ct |P pay the Metz forts, in the direction of the arrow. Another arrow points in | towns and 1,800 p Germans at all points in what once was the famous St a and villages. es: Store the pulitc is in ’ : : + | not go thru with the war the direction of the rich Briey and Longwy ore fields, which the Germans cording to battle front alepasaliia sistently told the Americans are) Mihiel salient, America’s victorious First army today “Such a claim,” he said, “is pre-| deseperately fear the Americans will attack. The black line was the front PARIS, Sept. 14 —(11:30) this afternoon. Feared from these Barsuma ° "| faced the enemy along a new line, in some piaces 12| posterous im its fainity.” Me de- before the Pershing drive. The French, stk. . ¢ . clare s country is 4 g. more | Soot oan ee nro re ee mmm RIS | Ble .)—The French alone 4 ? Wherever the Acnericans swept miles north of their old one. jclared this country ts asking more ja. m.)—T | the western end of the Chemin fotward, be r Z , | men and more millions to smash on |} ‘ took 7,000 prisoners in the} des Dames, have captured Alle — MIR TGc ts cit be ome ce Gon Secretary Baker, Gen. Pershing and Gen, Petain en-| 7) On : ; PER HIN is CALLING P | fmany’s most bitter pills that the Hun | tered St. Mihiel shortly after the enemy had fled from it.) )\..uesing the American St. Mihiel { maut, just north of the highway — high command did not spare its| The inhabitants greeted them with enthusiasm. They said \St. Mihiel operations, includ-| jeding toward the Chemin des _ ing 5,000 Austrians, making| Dames. Farther south they have victory, he paid strong tribute to the | seized Sancy. {epee in the effort to halt the Amer-/the Germans had carried off a large number of men and| spirit, enthusiasm and dash of the “Send us men, guns, and supplies quickly and we’ll@ total of more than 20,000) 6, 11.4 northern bank of the i American staff and men. ee Py oe ‘ Alene, Undoubtedly the Germans tearea) boys aged 16 to 45 ‘These elements, he said, are “hot; Win this war in 1919. prisoners taken by the Amer-| advancing eastward the French have Jess for Metz than for the Briey and | Numbers of Germans have been caught behind the " h, the Echo] feached the western edge of Vailly. Longwy ore basins, from which, with| American lines, and the work of mopping up the salient| “Tr, This is Gen, Pershing’s thrilling message to Americans |icans and Frenc Mont Des Singes also has fallen. The new line created by wiping out | | Dea owe snd the annexed porlis in progress, the salient will be the basis of tur|on this side of France. He wants our help—and he shall/de Paris announced today. ier- — ; ‘ This attack 1s in the direction of onl penpeyipess rig wales The task of wiping out the salient, which had existed| ieee crmen tine, get it. Gen. Pershing has reported) 1.0, *¢rom the south and. be "" "Vast Ore Region for four years, was actually achieved in 27 hours. The! “““- PtmteNew Drive His eh is to win the war next year—and that shall 13,300 already counted. | American troops have been fl These districts give the enemy a German defense was so caved in that the Americans ad-|. The seneral pointed out that the| between the Aisne and the Vesle. total line has been shortened 22 miles by| be our goal, esa The French, astride the Ailette, are these aig tena Bota pave one vanced hours ahead of their time table everywhere. the st. MIME “operation, and added brs gO? we are going to answer LONDON, Sept. 14.—/in a position to flank the Chemin. 7,000,000 tons. Lacking occupation Quiet Before Storm —— —| that this leaves a much better base vi f eo 4% ’ : ‘ 7 f vk (1:06 p. m.)—Americans in des Dames positions from the west of the Briey basin,-Germany could| The night before the American at-| woods in the rear, which were drown. | for “further offensive.” Whether Here’s for victorious peace in 1919—for we at home (ie Sis MihieD bathe: have and endanger Laon, not have fought so long. Possession | tack there was little to indicate a big | in clouds of white smoke t erations will be continued) WITT, do our part. We in Seattle WILL wipe out that “"¢ Mine! ba Astride the Ailette, the allied front. of Briey, Longwy and Thionville is offensive was about to start. As the Suddenly our doughboys began fir: ately or develop later he did absolutely necessary to Germany if sun went down and night fell over ing into the smoke cloud. They drop: its troops are to be kept in the field.| the towns, woods, fields, roads and ped to the ground in skirmish order, If any of these districts are placed | the sharp outlines of Montsec, noth- and so went forward by degrees. A Teferred to th under allied gun fire, Germany will ing save increased streams of speed-|few returned, carrying comrades, | Which said thy 4 i ici J i el 5,000 prisoners, ad-|runs close to the Hindenburg line, _ $2,000,000 War Savings deficit. e will meet our next taken 15, : sgh. - pr emingg Hb. gs cit. We t our next) ics from the front sajd to-|TB* Tiver crosses that line 12 m Help coca benay | Liberty Loan quota, heavy as it is bound to be. We will day. More prisoners are ex- south and slightly east of La - r The most important town an withdraws ANG all these things and more—for pected as the territory won| diately before the allies in be crippled by just feat Se # ing army vehicles over busy: roads, Others ran on into the smoke cloud meregiee Sheba jes bier gree Pershing is calling on us—and we're going to be just|by the Americans is not yet gion is Anizy-Le-Chateau, behind the For this reason they madiy flung | all moving toward the front, indicat- and disappeared in the woods. did not cover, however, the fac Hee ue Ree Speeal Sat aise oa | Mian . ’ indenburg line, and less than three troops into the breach in an effort to ed other than the usual quiet hou Fleet Attacks over 13,000 prisoners, the battle|as good soldiers, in our way, as the brave Yanks me we ere ay Ge nens ; sae nifles beyond the sane fron 3 arrest at any cost the thrust at their| The American preparations had) ; strength of an entire German divis-| «ovary there.” were caught in the pocket. | 4” move forward. there would | cherished mine fields. been well protected in the darkness yn our left, nearer to Montsec, the jon, had been capture: iets threaten to flank St. Gobain and” Foch’s first objective was appar-|and clouds. The evening turned to| #!##es revealed six American tanks) Units participating in the drive | ~ ee The American offensive having |Coucy forests, which form powerful ently only the pinching off of the sal-|a drizzling, rainy night. Thru hours |CTaWling steadily forward from’ have not yet been reported achieved in hours its purpose of | defenses for Laon. fent. Beyond the base of this pocket | of watching, it was impossible to dis- | “~'*" ‘one along the road, the oth: Reviewing the military Speretens | | capturing the St. Mihiel salient, Mar-! In the last American thrust south — there is a very powerfully defended | tinguish a single outline in the inky | “| pss the fields. Doughboys sur- | of the week, March pointed out that | shal Foch today started a new drive of the Aisne, the river was reached , along the Aisne and west of the/ along part of the front, but at the HITS COLO DEBS SENTENCE Chemin des Dames. extreme right, northwest of Rheims, French forces attacked at 4 a. m.|the German line still dro) down 3 inde ack cloud # for $1 o } " Ps knows his game, and the allies know | brightening the landscape, flashing|, Skimming under black clouds,| Aw for the St. Mibiel situation, he Gains of two mi pture of 1,800 from the Vesle, extending across the he wiil play it masterfully. ‘All's well.” ging low, came an airplane dash-| said this salient was the first to be} DENVER, Sept. 14.—The murder CLEVELAND, Sept. 14.—Eugene prisoners and se re of several/ plateau country between those — —-Wks— Several times squirmy German|!"& back and forth dangerously close | established, the last to go and the! o¢ officer Luther McCahill, in this | V. Debs, four times candidate for the | towns was reported in London early | streams. rench line. | to the ground. Several others fol-| narrowest one in the residency on the socialist ticket 1a M S d W. S. S| outposts shot up frantic bunches of | city, early today, was declared by |? . | today. ust Spee flares, anticipating attacks which did | Wed. There was not a single hos-| March declared he had messages Hive officials to be the work of the| convicted here for making dis The new battle is in the area north asion 35,000 | Police officials to e o Ww. 8. tile machine with an ambition to showing that on one ¢ 36 utterances, was today entenced to and e: » fig! act matictstten: ; and east of § . The fighting | Cash Sales Here : | Gun Hurts Challenge shoot at the American fliers Americans were landed in one day | bandit gang, the members of which the penitentiary for 10 years front is roughly shaped like the let- Up to August 31 of 1918, Seatt Pp ter “L.” On the line which runs At some points tanks were distin. | and 11,000 the next. On another oc- ‘ . 6 1 , ly of three counts. The sent “ " 38.2: Suddenly, at 1 a, m, thru the : iother Oc-| Killed a detective and seriously | of thri seni savers” have bought $4,919,128.2 y eo Ameri-| S¥lshable, often leading the infantry, | casion 15 shiploads of Americans ar-| wounded another in Colorado Springs | concurrent south and slightly 4 thas ‘wtaennd ac enentul kness, a sin = and s y t from below worth of War ings Stamps ac-| fan gun behind Seicheprey, the first | “M0thing out wires and pushing | rived da nd 12 ships were |jate yest Debs is to serve at Moundsville, W Fere to the Aisne, the French are cording to the figures issued bY American battle field in France, | ‘®T¥ defenses, but apparently en- cleared and homeward bound the The state-wide man hunt which | Va striking against the Hindenburg de. County Chairman C. H. Clarke, Sat. countering strong German positions | next day He allowed t | urday morning. This is $3 861 flashed a challenge to the kaiser followed the Colorado Springs shoot was bail, pending a’ fenses, flanking St. Gobain and Cou- : fter the barrage had swept the ter-| Gen. Pershing’s staff, with the gen- | Lin th t of three men hearing of his appeal, only upon con: ! chy e CI os | é This was followed by flashes along |“ ¥ : i gen-| {in resulted in the arrest of three n 1 r forest and the Chemin des Seert of the quota for the year and) |” is line. The flashes increas-|@!" ated eral, planned the St. Mihiel opera-| and one woman companion. At dawn dition that he return to his home at mes, and also flanking the Ger- Ge CHE ceric ef sath ether cp U, 8. Balloons Aid tion, It was announced today the hunt for another bandit | Terre Haute, Ind., and remain there|mans along the north bank of the country—line after line of trenches, | blackness. All up and down the ec. Thi é ing toward Mont- in the north the British and, French | and beyond that ting after ring of fighting line no gun sounded. ‘Then |": his was but a small gi"npse of are nowhere more than five miles fortifications all about Metz. Foch|a solitary American flare shot up,| UF first tank attack from the Hindenburg line. y $574,861.75 short of the quo first eight months of the campaign i bak a Gone a W. 8. 8B. resume: pothills Se-| until his case is passed upon, ° and down the front, near and far, un-|_ Into the sky half a dozen American was resumed in the foothills near 1 r Aisne Clarke reports that pledges for | *” b Ww. r4 at , | . | til, at 1:10 a. m.. the spectacle look-| balloons shot up almost directly . . dalla, BS On the east and west line the ef. ee atch F stamps have speeded up materially | abov f 3 , iles Is Gain P f lice, state constabu f 1 1 he Aisne pa rom “— , ats s Star | ed like a continuous winking of light-|@bove the front line trenches, They ‘osses of police, sta 7 H ‘ort apparently is to cross the Aisne pele cela ae ye gttialahian sig ning along the horizon, so amazingly | had be 5 acomans urt and dislodge the G ans from pla- Lowell Mellett noved forward in the nig! Cee | 1 foresters and armed citiz n mov rward in the night of Pershing s Men ary resters an started its campaign. 1 battles with v arry out battlefield observations, fought four pitch ould follow the blaz- | to ¢ * |fast as the eye in Trolley Crash. ts: positions wni ill retain United Press Correspondent, Ls f tae cha cannon direct the artillery and watch Ger in St. Mihiel Push)“ members of the gang. Several! a. cosc, sept. 14 Two persons between the Aisne and Vesle a Y Soldi More flashes, less dazzling and|™man movements nomuon f officers were slightly wounded by| TACOMA, Sept. 14." Two persons) “In the last ope son this east) WITH THE BRITISH ankee Soldiers more distant, marked the steady ex-| One American airplane circled “ONDON, Sept. 14.—(1:45 p. m.}— | pullets. stay \ Juries and west line Americans in North of the here today, as a result of an accident IN FRANCE, Sept. 14.—(10:40 a, r = es : obliterated St. Mihiel y Sherrill, arrested with n articipated. ° . plosions on the German side of the|Gironville so closely it was possible Roy Sherrill, arres ved Bt Alas as numbers participated. In an attack with liquid fire Died With Faces lines. In front of Moriteec a huge|to see it was equipped with a new ene aes remy is zee natin Hie Lewis de Morris, an ac = easy ci conte on| If big advances should be made,| west of Gouzeaucourt, at 1:45 a im 4 Bd bitients: sotoe, ; ine, sald advices m France today. | dalia, early as shot in both | ©r@s! sd olley On| this attack would take the fo! of 2 " light broke out, telling that shells | Liberty motor plane, after do- : lalia, early was Sere tee nee this attack we ake the form of a/ today the Germans compelled a Brite Toward Germany had struck an ammunition dump. Its |!" its part, left y deluge of | 1" the region of Chatillon (on the | jegs. Dale captured near | Jefferson ave. last night gigantic pincer movement agai®st| ish withdrawal to the support lines, Mrs. W, B. Collier, a passenger on the smaller car, was severely injured about the back, and A. Larsen was taken from the wreck scious and seriously hurt. Three oth line running northwest from the hinge of the pocket), the German etreated couple of miles. French ind American patrols are keeping in close touch. The maximum depth of the American penetration is reported at 13 miles. PARIS, France, Sept. 14, Chaplains of two Yankee regi alia later nk Lewis, gang, was arrested at Twelve hundred dol in gold vas found in the gang's Denver head flare illumi out, creeping up the blown-up wire, trenches, dufouts and | Valley into the Apremont hills, as the ments that stormed the slope () strong points no longer strong French infantry need to keep above the Ourcq river came wear Flames Leap Skyward ce with ans and help ‘ ‘ \ fi ; ated a vast expanse of | *rtillery brol H lly back at sundown from i Another dump burst into a blaze| Surround Montsec \| { ¢ Laon, as the ault is on by the! Southwest of Gouzeaucourt, @ west and south of that stronghold. counter-attac ‘ound a heavy bar In what was once the St. Mihiel| rage failed, leaving many dead before salient, the Americans today are) the British wires. A British outpost Piears bade cutana Gedines ciuaaine up les patio i coe Who | southwest of Tergnier was forced to Defective brakes are said te have | Were nipped off in the precipitate re- | withdraw se uncon task of burying their dead. Th urate| German flares continued to shoot quarters, were two men spiritually uplifted, ouds of |frantically before the American in. ee ssie Clayton,” wife of Lewis,|_ ¢ treat. Prisoners taken by the Amer-| At one point, the Germans have | and their eyes were shining 48 (| battle smoke above reflect fantry pressure. Along the whole pill their 9-month-old baby, and the used thevcraah, |icans and French total more than 20,-| been fighting hard, not withdrawing. they made their brief but eloquent (| tions of red and yellow glow, line our artillery persistently bom * s s wife's parents » detained at the} : | 000, and more are being brought in,| This is east of Havrincourt and on report. fire spead over the German positions. | barded the enemy, moving forward Five Men Killed in Denver jail, 14,000 More Nurses jac ording to reports. | the further slope of Trescault wood, “In all that battlefield,” they loose toward |@8 the infantry advanced. Chicago Smashup The bandits shot Chief of Detec Needed by San. | They took 70 villages and 210| where the New Zealanders were at under the pounding of the a American artillerymen, — ¢ Our batteries turn said, “we found, without a single )| Montsec, brightly silhouetting its Americans, driving across the| oricaqo, ge; ites on | eves John W. Rowand and wounded square miles of territory |death grips with the famous Jaeg- exe . that EVERY ONE OF )) crater. heights of the Meuse from the west, ai CARt. A ve men! Detective Riley, in Colorado Springs, WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—More American artillery has now started| ers. The battle swayed back and THOSE BOYS DIED CROUCH. {| Up and down the 35 miles of front |Cut thru the pocket seven miles to| Were Killed and 50 injured today) Mocanill’s body was found in a sub-| than 14,000 additional nurses will be|a bombardment of the Hindenburg | forth in a bitter wind and rain. ING FORWARD—DIED WITH }) the continuous fire raced, dimming | Visneulles, where they met other |When a Chicago & Western Indiana] uy of Denver required to meet the needs of the|line beyond the base of the late sal-| When I visited the New Zealand: HIS FACE TOWARD GER- slightly, then flaring ‘brilliantly | American forces, smashing in from | freleht Laet backed Into a street be WwW. 8. army alone between now and Janu- | ient, where the Germans apparently | ers Friday the tide was going theif we , again. ‘The German batteries replied |the south, thus completing the clos: | hei ey) fs ssing, near th ary 1, Brig. Gen. Charles Richard, | have taken refuge. way. ‘They had regained the obe 5 SS SIS ae but feebly, apparently out-barraged |/"& of the sack aime tigyaes * ry Struve, Ankeny, acting surgeon general, today ann-| Readjustment of German positions | jectives taken and lost on Thursday att cowed, Our front now runs thru Noroy, The zero hour came. Its first sur-|Jaulny, Xammes, St. Benoit, Hatte | prise was an enormous flare, miles | Ville, Hannonville and Herbuville |1ong, which darted into the German| Al! the territory within that line ts Fae OO nounced, in denying the report that|in front of the Hindenburg line are| afternoon, taken in the night and | Boole, Nettleton, nursing needs of the army have been | in progress north of the scene of the| partly lost again Friday. Their ‘Oldest Officer of | Purchase the P..-[,| met. 1” less than a year, he said, 50,-| American victory. At Chatillon the| first rush Thursday was compara: 000 nurses will be required to meet |enemy withdrew two miles in this re-| tively easy, 600 prisoners surrender- ! | under control of the Americans | » Post-Intelligencer has again | the demand, adjustment ing. | positions . ° eguiars The Post-Intellig has aga g | e@ nswer 0 | This was life-extinguishing chem “Going Strong” {changed hands, and formal an S. 8B. ardy the French have made| Friday was different. The Jaegers \) |icals, shot off simultaneously, and » number of prisoners and guns Ends Long Career | nouncement of this fact is to be made Mihiel Cueseniion strong local attacks against | were supported on the west by Prus+ Q » (| shortly. George Boole, of the West the British, all being repuls | sians, who fought desperately with © nate, j|ernHardware and Metal Co., and “Cleanest of War’! . W. 8. 8. their Officers beside thas er recruiting soldiers in Seattle }|Clarke Nettleton, lumberman, are to] paps, sept. 14-—Parix newspa:| L RHEIMS CATHEDRA One of the latter, when captured, rs, folded up the Ameri be the ive managers of the prop-| ners today hailed the St. Mihiel bat IS, Sept. 14.—The Germans | sneeringly ked ‘Where's that and closed the office {jerty. Frederick 1 PUVA EXOML litacaa Ghaice the oat cleanaut ana ntinuing to bombard Rheims | big American push week on orders from the war {/dent of the Seattle National bank, | jcntexecuted operations of the war,|cuedtal ‘The north tower threat-| It was a pleasure to enlighten him, rtment. It was Maj, Bou jand R, V. Ankeny, cashier, handled | “ararcel Hutin military eritic of the | CT” °° *! ee W. 8. 8. — telle, New drhft quotas | the financ! jal ngements. ho de Paris, declared the operation forth, will supply America's man. }{ It is understood the property has r Bian ice huclicg \Negro Minstrels 4 power, Thif last se of a busy )| been sold for a price well over a mil. Urge tu eetieaclo nal one 12 hours,’ Foch Inspected U.S | hid Tobacco F; i oldest United State in the regular servic produced huge smoke clouds, Gas | taken as Pershing's troops swept on was sent inst the enemy concen. | increased with great rapidity. All | tration, points our objectives: wi ttained accord } Suddenly an officer shouted, excit-|ing to schedule. ae > / ) ) ) , ) ° ledly: ‘Red flares! See! They are| “We're going strong,” was the re-|) ill be found on Pages| *". aa certain already famous |) | red flar ; ’ ( port from ¢ 8 and 9; also to many| Red flares were shooting up from | division regarding the p s of its q y * | the trenches, yet they could not com-| ttack shortly after other momentous qQues-| rare with the sheets of flame. opened tions, such as help, the Red flares mean the Americans rom the start of the drive it was | are attacking,” said the officer. |evident the prisoners would number |) career is just one of the inte: lion dollars. W. BB. i house or room you want |*T? “tine oye Go Forward thousands. 2 Na Poatuites aoarn| (ta ieRr || W. 8. 8. LI dG N Men Before Battle Fourteen dollars and sixteen cents a t t and th to you| At daylight, thru glasses, I saw the} When 5,000 to 7,000 had al Liberty Weekly, which opens at is 7 4 aes | Lloy' eorge INOW | PARIS, Sept. 14.—Refore the was turned over to The Stars “ 4 o rent a je aun y : been counted, reports came into SE bany Buntass “Other inte OPEN 12 NATIONAL CAFES Americans launched their attack at in Prencettol by , Pe . doughboys in a mass advancing on ; " |) the Liberty Sunday ther inter. Im roved, Re rt n heir attack al ys in France Tobacco Fund" by T. are thinking of buying.| Riinecourt, following a barrage and | headquarters from ail directions, tell-|{ esting happenings in Seattle are (Special to The Star by N. E. A.) Pp) POFT the st. Miniel salient they were in-|W. Redmond and Charles Pape, two Read about it. taking the town easily, evidently |!™& Of Broups of 200, 300 and 500/) depicted in the film, which also LONDON, Sept. 13.—The nationa!| LONDON, Sept. 14. — Premier|spected by Marshal Foch, it was | musical negroes, who displayed 8 without fighting. more on thelr way to the rear. |} shows how Seattle men earn $50 {| restaurant has proved such a success | Lloyd George's temperature has fall-| learned today. He enthusiastically | ability to sing and play in front Then we saw them apparently| (Pershing’s last official report gave |) a day. that four more are to be opened in/en, and his progress is favorable, his| approved the steps that had been | the postoftice and pressing thru Lahayville, toward (Continued en Page Ten) London and eight in the provinces. doctor announcedgtoday. taken in preparation for the b

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