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SIRI IAI IR EI he DE AIEEE ae « DEATH IS NEAR GING TOFRONT BENNO GERMANS i. ‘ “* hae weed cpg Hie Inemy Invisible and Send be > ' ba . ed - ae : ( keasional Shell at wee Cem ° woe wrested Neuve Chapelle © tent of toder'e gig te Ae ree came (BAGS GUARD TRENCHES tr e the offene a vroeress Observer Tells How It peatertays ful spite thee urne of artillery took vere! omer eting severe cam the eommy In addition to the ant ried nue cowfully stations and junctions at the following places) ‘Tourcoing Roubaix, Ingeimuneter canal, tention, Ie importance is due to the fact that ite pomsession would give Germans an important hold on that ede OF the canal and would compel the nities to readjust 1 That the porsibie o fighting along the Yee is causing anxiety in England is indicated by the demand of the press thin morning that the Government expedite the ending of a new army to France, A strong German offensive ts under Miniei wey Gino at Bt, Thue, the two points why n offens ive consed before Christmas—on the Yeer and at St. Mibiel—have been chosen for the rem ities in the spring. It remaina to be neon, however, whether these pointe have been eelected ae feints while the main onslaught i@ made clee- where. —— FRENCH RECAPTURE HILL ON THE MEUSE WHICH THEY HAD LOST. PARIS, Apri 27 [Associated Press). —The oficial statement given out to- Gay by the French War Office says: “We have consolidated our positions and continue to make progress to the north of Ypres and also on the heights of the Meuse.” “The summit of Hartmans-Woeller- Kopf, which was taken from us yester- day morning, .was recaptured by our venin; ‘th 5 We ties took ome Wheosrs eee —— ALLIES DRIVE TURKS FROM TOWN OF ENDS Inhabitants Sald to Have Been Or- dered to Leave Place in 24 Hours, ATHENS, April 27.—It ta reported here that the Allies occupied Enos during Bunday, the Turke withdraw- tag dato the interior, The Inhabi- tant have been ordered to leave within twenty-four hours. Advices from Balonica aay that the allied troops have landed at various en the Guif of Suros and that bardment of the Dardanelles tions continues both from the @uit of Baros and from inside the otraite. THIAL OF THREE MEN, ACCUSED AS GERMAN SPIES, IS POSTPONED. LONDON, April 27.—The hearing of the case againm Kuepferle, Hahn and Muller, three alleged German spien, chatged with sending military Infor. mation to Germany, hus been post- pened. True billie were returned by the Grand Jury in the old Bailey Police Court last week and rhe came was to 0 dal have come up to-day. ur tbe hearing been set. ashes 2 GREECE ARRANGES LOAN; WILL GET $7,000,000 OF AMERICAN CAPITAL. LONDON, April 27.—The Exchange Athens corres- papers in th city state that the Greek Government has negotiated with American capital- ists for a loan of $7,000,000, Don’t let it go too far fo Approach First Line of Defense Detiowins the second of the stores ¢ Bhepherd eortes, the fret of which appeared yeaterday Wiham OU thepherd te the only Amencan tepresenting an tndt vidual American prese oryaniea ftom now at the Hirttieh front under Motel eredentiate A third story by him wl appear to-morrow. By William | (Oeqereight 1918, by the 1 tm ret Beviawn.) WITH THE HAITINU ARMY LN | NORTHERN VRANCK, April 16 (by | Mall to New York)—A mile back from Neuve Chapelle we got out of our Gutomobile. On our left wae a farmhouse with the roof blown off; on our right 4 Wayside abrine, the floor covered with stra nm Which | | aoldiors mlaep at the foot of the altar. An English Colonel takes the three of ua in tow, “We'll go in twon,” he aald, “Keep your distance apart. They never abell vupl but if they ee four of Ur together they might try to drop @ shell on ua.” Wo plunge along through the mud of the road. “They shelled this building we're passing half an hour ago,” says the Colonel. The building in question bas been shelled duily for many days; ite roof js almost gone, 1 hear # man whistling in the building. hat's the cook,” says the Colonel. “He's gone into the kitchen, where there's a eink, to Wash his dishes.” Bure enough, there stands the cook, in khaki, You can eee him through « ebell hole in the brick wall. He's working and whistiing the English Tommy's lates, tune, “Goodby, Duily, 2tuss Leave You.” TRAMP ALONG IN RANGE OF GERMAN GUNB. We pass three ruined farms, in the yard of one hyacinths are blooming fat the doorway of the roofless house. “Now, over across this farm,” says the Colonel, and we turn off the road and follow @ broad beaten path, This path is going to be written down in Gistory some Lime, It wae beaten down by the feet of the British sul- @iere Who marched to the trenches that night of March 9 and waited unt) the signal was given in the morning to rush the trenches that Gtreteh before the Village of Neuve Frederio Villiera, who has drawn @ketches in sixteen wars and is now on his weventwenth, stops to make a sketch, “Af you don’t mind,” fa the Colo- nel, quietly, “we won't stop here, There's a house ahead of us there, and we can atop behind that,” “Why, are the Germans near here?" Villiers, ry ““tuey're right over behind those trees,” says the officer, But he t hurry us op. liv's used to it, ut it’s hard to follow bis conver- jon, He asks why the American military attaches we withdrawn from Germany. 1 ha to ask hin bis question; I can't keep off the trees a mile away, id it's bard to keep my mind on American military attaches and their problems. ‘That house ahead will hide ys from the trees, and the nothing to keep | me from running for it t that | Colonel ie chutting coolly and | iding along at an ordin Mary walt, | The trouble about this war la that ou never know you are on a battl until some one who kaows about yu ao, The Engh artillery | is boomihg behind us; the shells drill their long, hollow, echo tunnels through the alr, But in the fat- of Commons. THE EVENING WORLD, ZUBSDAY, APRIL 87, 1918. RPCOND 908 IS BORN TOMES Low THOMAS FORMER MISS OPLKICHS * HARD TO REALIZE DECLARE ®.TISH WILL LANU TROOPS 000 Men Said to Be Ready to Strike at Kaiser's Plank LONDON apron laolated to-Aay, eneept b the B a ; eithough (we » preo@uee have arrived «| Kowiiah porte from Moi tant Germany bee closed beth her own terders The German dicated by the deatre te hide the movemen ops The Brit teh aetion Ie not expiainnd WASHINGTON, April tT toa from I tan Informa bh mources ie that Mow jer way plan to land has wu & quarter of @ milion men in Weat Viandere, betwe Ostend the Hovland frontier, after the Britten foot has disposed of the German font defenses. Heriin's statement that the German fleet has recently put to sea and found no enemy, in eiven color by the Feport that th Off the Neigian coast to weep path for the landing of troops. Engiiah aviators, uneunily active tately over the Belgian coast, are be- Heved to have been locating German batteries for bombardment by Hritiah There are no German je along the coast that could cope with the Rema of the battieshipn, ‘The @tatement has been made in the House of Commos hat England has 1,000,000 mon under arma, either at » front or ready to go. Another olatement waa that 760,000 English soldiers were in northern France and Beigiuin, That would leave 260,000 to somewhere between Ostend and the Duteh border, Should euch an undertaki au9- ceed the British would be ine ton to attack the right fank of the Germana, now fighting on the Yaer ‘ani KITCHENER CHARGES 4M. Thomes receiving Congratulations upon birth of @ eon yesterday in their house, No. 12 Mast Mighty-seventh Mtreet, Mother and ehild are doing nicely ‘The chtid te Mr, and Mra, ‘Thowas's second, thelr firet aleo betng « son. He \# @ grandson of Mr. and Mra Charing M. Oelricha and of the late George C. Thomas, of Philadetphin, who was a member of the banking firm there of Drexel & Co. Mra, Thomas, who wan Miss Blanche M Oviricys, waa married to Mr, Thomas {a this clty om Jan. 26, 1910, NADE HS FANCEE THIN SHE AIDED CRUELTY TO BRITONS English War Secretary Tells House of Lords Captured Officers Are Mistreated, LONDON, April 27.—War Secretary Kitchener told the House of Lorde to-day that British prisoners had been Ansulted, maltreated and even shot down by the German captors. He made a atatement to the House on this subject, in which he apoke in part as follows: “I have been forced with reluctance fo accept as indisputably true the maltreatment by the German army of British prisoners. ‘The Hague conven- tion has been flagrantly disregarded by German officers. Our prisoners have bean stripped and maltreated In various ways, and in aome casos the evidence goes to prove that they have been shot in cold Mood. Our offic: even when wounded, have been tomy Ineulted and frequently atruck.' +. CHURCHILL STICKS TO REPRISAL POLICY Tells Commons Prisoners Caught in Submarine Raids Will Have Special Treatment. LONDON, April 27.-—England will not cease reprisals on her prisoners of war who were captured from sunken submarines. First Lord of the Ad- miralty Winston Churchiii made this very plain this evening tn the House “The conditions applied to these Prisoners,” aald Churchill, “will not be changed. They engaged in the wanton Milling of non-combatanta, neutrals and women on the high seas and we around us, broken po dt Sate BePRRS OR RIOR Ran fae then there is not a sign cf human life «: then | have been obliged to separate them eept ourselves, You are not afraid | from more honorable prisoners. “The conditions of their captivity are humane in every respect. The of the English guns behind you; and! German reprisals upon our honorable there's not the siixhtest sign abead prisoners of war will not be allowed of you just now that indicates dan-| to influence our action which has been wer, It takes a guide like the Col-| necessary to publicly brand per- onel, whowe daily pathway to the) petrators of the form of warfare.” twenches lies alon t route, to tell xo about 1 A Tee kas the Fond. | RSBHYXIATING. BOMBS PUT VICTIMS TO SLEEP, BUT DON’T KILL, SAY FRENCH, Irrigation ditches, the hollows, the few trees, as a commuter known his PARIS, April 27 [Associated Presa) The first wounded soldiers who have way to work tn the morning. HOW ENTRANCE TO TRENCH- arrived in Paris from the Yeer speak with ecorn of tho asphyxtating bombs LAND LOOks. used by the Germans. “t) We start off down @ road, We come to 4 portal; huge piles of sandbags form @ gateway and walls of sand. bags stretch to the right and the read. We pass through this On our right We seo that pile of sandbags ahifts and runs par- anab ; a “Their famous bombs killed no- alle) with the roadway, Soldiers are| body," sald one of the wounded sitting at the foot of the bag wails; | °° ” Sumeware rouding, others are cooking | Frenchmen, “They Just put to sleep or Tussing about with little charco, stoves. We turn and walk over toward them across a green, sunlit clearing 8 big as an ordinary front yard, We follow along in the lee of the bag wall, Suddenly we notice that we are walking ina ditch, clothes hang from the earth walls here aud there; a shoe those who breathed the fumos. Then the Germans came up and killed the sleepers. Mortunately holp came and we finished by smashing them.” Chen renerally are of the opin- Jon th ibs can do little harm tn the open alr. IN HIS SUICIDE | (Continued from First Page.) atepe lending from the lawn to the sidewalk. Prosently Cow! left Miss Woeeler and went into the house, saying he would get the letter he had written her from Bermuda and they would read {t over again together. It 1a believed he procured the pistol and tled the ribbon to the trigger while in the house. When he returned he regumed h's @eat beside the young woman, with the pistol under his coat SHOT FIRED WHEN RIBBON WAS PULLED. He handed her the ribbon tn the half darkness, saying: “Emily, I have @ «reat surprise for you—just pull the string and ere.” She laugh- ingly did so but nothing happened. Then according to Mian Wheeler's story to her mother Cowl said: “Turn your back and pull the string again,” Bhe did #o and there was an ex- plosion, Cow! sank to the ground, Bervanta And members of the fam- ily ran out and Dr. Edwin B. Weldin came in an ambulance from the Bridgeport Hospital. Dr. Weldin gaid he found Cowl lying on the sidewalk, with his head on the step and Miss Wheeler in hysterics, Cowl was rushed to the hospital, where he died within an hour and without making @ statement, Health Examiner Coggewell ts of the opinion that when the first jerk on the ribbon, with the gun concealed under the coat, brought no effect, Cowl told Miss Wheeler to turn her back 0 he could bring the revolver out and place it against his temple, Dr. Coggewell, dedares the woman's jork of the rivbon was not sufficient to discharge the gun and he believes when Miss Wheeler pulled the ribbon the second time, Cowl at the same moment pulled the trigger himself. Dr, pi toi eald that no inquest would be held over Cowl's death since the case was regarded as @ suicide and Mias Wheeler would not be con- nected with it, Mr. and Mrs. Clarkson Cowl, the young man’s parents, hurried here from their home in Great Neck, L. 1, early this morning. Mr, Cowl later communicated with hig secretary ot the James A. Hearn & Son depart- ment store in New York, saying that bis son had been suffering from ner- vous prostration and in a Ot of de- spondency committed suicide. Tho father then made arrangements to have the young man's body sent to Great Neck later in the day, — “| HOPE FOR ERA OF PEACE AFTER WAR,” RULER SAID IN MESSAGE TO SULTAN. BERLIN, April 27, via wireless to London (United Press).—The text of the message sent by the Emperor of Austefa to the Sultan on the occasion of the latter's anniversary was as follows: "On this, the anniversary of your a = tdon’t force Nature Fee ee eee Sinover it tant | SUBMARINE CHASES her. That’swhat ff a2 cmp it is jerked out of} BRITISH STEAMER a | sight; you & gruat from bebind ‘APS does. | the cloth: you've discovered your first | DENADY INTO HAVRE, abe s ‘ jtrench dugout, and in doing ao | cae Granen » awakened a aoldier, whowe | ¥ mtn ap cela) Work houra are at ‘nighi-and whose | LONDON, April 27.—The ritish ine ~All Dr sleeping time comes when he can flad! steamer Denady was chased into = OD ee upon you that | Havre by a Gorman submarine, ac you're ip that strange and wierd cording to a despatch received at Land of the Trenches, jtdoyds’ tis afternoun, / accession to the throne, I wish to | ren y sincere wishes for the hap- yourself and the Turkish and to renew the wish that ta of cur armies tn this strug empire | the etc gle forced upon ua by our enemies ball crowned with success and that an peace will follow a vic torlous WALSH HITS BACK: SEVEN MEN ARE KILLED ‘GAVE UP HUSBAND SAY OGKEFELER FALS 10 EPLAN Attacks Kep! I xplodon Also Injures Pleven bar Below Surface at Valhalla ad iD ays He Is Trying to Crush Him *FO! LOWS HIS POLICY.’ ty as Fragmentary and (eet! © The Reming Word | WHITE VLAINE, April TT teres fork Were Killed and eleven others in- Jured when @ doren sticks of dynamite Prematurely Mecharaed ta ine ne the eastern end of Ot Valbelia, to Official in Colorado Strike Ar gument Accuses Magnate of took place at avation one hundred feet telow the eurface of round Vew people in Valhalla know an acct. dent had happened until the fam of the wene Glaring Omissions CHICAGO, Apr 1 Freak PF Waleb, chairman of the United Mater Minion om Industria: ccomgrend the extension of the base of the new returning today from Kaneee CHtY. aqui whieh, when ¢ pleted, will cost lemued the following Matement 1 more than $10,000,000, About twenty reply to the anewer of John D. Rook. | en were working efeller jr, to Mr Walsh's commente | oia an eta accompanying (he correspondence 19 | seniegion esourred, A Wreat thaes 0 the Colorado Fuel and Iron cnse | poets gud earth buried tnany of the “I note that Mr Rockefeller jr de- | een, . pounces me as a liar, The published! Gey of the workmen killed were lettore which aroused Mr. itockefel- | town twonty feet under @ pile ot lor'a Ire are all admitted by him to) pooxs and mangled beyond eieeaie have been written and correctly | ton abe injured ware not near the quoted, #o that bis voluminous news- hole, a” | for that reaeon eacaped th vader aswertivn in ia no eens @ full force of the explosion. Genial of anything given to the proms) mais te the first serioun accident by me, Mr. Kockefeller'a anger and) m4) has occurred at the big dam. reventment obviously grow out of a — ber misconception as to my duties. I waa LOCK uP WEATHER MAN, not appointed to ‘allay’ or amother the causes of industrial unrest, but manitent to tie wera’ ™*") SAYS SEERESS’ LAWYER “I must confess @ certain degree of Maappolntment feller'a statement with Mr. Kocke~ He fails to explain in any Way the amazing confesaton of Mr. lowe that the Colorado Fuel and tron Company ‘leads in fix ing prices and conditions of Labor. He fails to set forth the memor- andum which he declared in his let- tor of June 14, 1914, to his publicity agent, Mr, Lee, ‘could be appropri- ately used in letter from Gov. Ammons to President Wilson.’ “I also hear many expressions of disappointment because young Mr. as Miss Malcolm, Astrologist, Argues Attorney in Court. Hu... urey J, Lynch made a atrik- Ing plea to-day on behalf of Miss Maud Maloolm of Carnegie Hall, who was put under bonds by. Mactatrate House on a charge of fortune-telling “Sho te a real actentist,” urged Mr. Lynch. he has devoted years to the study of the acience of astrology. If she is culpable for making predic- tion based on her astrological deduc- tions, then the weather man should have gone to State's prison long ago for trying to do the same thing. And, at that, her predictions are right oftener than his. “Moreover, her practice of palm- istry is in line with the most enlight- ened practice of palmistry by the State, which depends upon finger- prints for the detection of criminals, It te not fair for the State to avail itaelf of the resources of paimistry and to punish her for ualng the same science.” Decision was reserved. pba ese AMERICAN AMBULANCES Rockefeller did not make public the t of Mr. Lee's let refurred to In his letter of July 3, 1914, with which he was not entirely satisfied, but to which he was to make certain amend- ments for Gov. Ammons. “Also the explanation of Mr, Rocke- feller was fragmentary, to say the least, in that it did not contain the names and locations of the ‘friendly pers’ to which the story of the Lud- low massacre wae to be given as sug- weated in the telegram from Mr. Bow- era on the morning after that un- speakable horror, “IT am glad to note that the Rocke- feller defense to the Ludlow massacre ie that the two women and eloven children who met their deaths upon that awful occasion were not shot, but merely smothered in @ pit, while the bullets from the mine guards of their companies were flying over the mouth of the pit. Entire candor, however, should have moved Mr. Rockefeller to add the addijional detail that his mine guards, in the guise of State militia- ‘tha’ vietiina ‘before ‘and after thes} TOBE SENT TO THE FRONT; see Rocketetier's personal atase ot| $40,000 VANDERBILT GIFT. myself is in line with the customary Rockefeller policy of crushing any in- dividual who opposes him in any way. PARIS, April 27 (Associated Press) ~The American flag, carried on Am- erlcan ambulances, heretofore used SWEDISH STEAMSHIP IS for work in the rear, will soon be seen BLOWN UP IN BALTIC; clone up to the fighting front on TRAWLER IN NORTH SEA. various parts of the weatern baitlo line. Commandant Girard, director of the automobile ambulances of the French STOCKHOLM, April 27 (via Lon- don).—The Swedish steamer Centric, on her way from Stockholm to Hel- slngborn, Sweden, has been sunk by & mine off the Aland Islands. The members of the vessel's crew were saved, The steamer Centric was of 9,900 tonsa net, and 260 feet long. She was built at Port Glasgow in 190%, She left Savannah March 13 for Kirk- wald, where she Pode day mere 27, i bsequent © Gothenburg. OCHTAISY, England: April at ecPRe trawler Recolo was blown up of Mon- the Nor C01 0 Sa¥ices reaching here to~ ve Ambulance Corps in France, to send these ambulances to the vicinity of the trenches, to whom this privilege has been «- corded. Dr. Gros has received two checks of $20,000 each from William K. Vanderbilt of New York, one for the ambulance service and the other for the hospital fund. favors members of the crew ar. it is not known whether lo struck @ ming or was torped s submarine. ce ENGLAND MAY IMPORT LABOR FOR ARMS PLANT; OFFER OF FREE TRIPS, LONDON, April 27.—Free tripa to England and return are foreshadowed for akilled workmen in the United States and in the colonies of Great Britain who are willing to Mil the shortage among the armament firms in the British Iales, Francia D. Acland, Financial Secre- tary of the Treasury, the House of Commons t! that the Government was to obtain such help in the production of munitions of war. Free transporta- tion would be arranged, he said, if sultablo labor were disc out displacing the mon fectively engaged in thos pole te WE ee RUSSIANS AGAIN ADVANCE AT UZSOK PASS; AUSTRIA LOSES 20,000 IN TWO DAYS. GENEVA, Switzerland, apf 27, via Paris (Associated Press).-The Rus- sians bave begun another atrong of- fensive around the heights of Ussok Pasa, in the Carpathian Mountains, according to a telegram received by| the ‘Tribune of Geneva, ‘Tho Auatro-German caaualtien there Advertised Opec renc! value for t! countries, AA ERGREEN. WAFERS anes “and white button in the Inst two days, the despatch at, an . says, numbered 20,000 men ee MET ET! | SABA Melting snow has hindered the AT’, oan ay rer advance between Stry and ified welkht includes alamaros i , army, has arranged with Dr. Edmund | Gros, ehlef surgeon of the Amercan | ‘The Americans are the only neutrals | Wai hire Whe wae Were both | wow “How? prise tarry what tbe The trench was being excavated for! win on the d “Do you k ation {De wt the jaw want BY DYNAMITE 100 FEET RATHER THAN QUI DOWN AQEDUGT CU, MARKET GAMBLNG © = = in, you « 1 auld and | was to ferences 6 Aetale Wall Mtreet? know a thing about (t." Mrs. the hole and the Kobertaon anewerod 4 been eet and) Harry told me I couldn't jowe. to have @ proMt of betwee: “Hut from l wee $50,000 FIRING IN THE NORTH SEA HEARD OFF DUTCH COAST: MAY BE NAVAL BATTLE ur A041 $75,000 an w net remuit of my deal trues. 1 belleved him and trusted him of this week and thought Hd wet it of put up , On presenting thie m n daya ate lived at various hotels under w He's Just as Much a Fortune Teller| ‘ nome on one "y to mtart out with; he put up hing but his word.” The witnoss inherited « larce ex. | tate from her firat husband, Charies | Miller, an Onto buate | hie death she married Dr. Robertson, [who had been divorced. Ne #he Was separated from the phy man. A For some ad. you pay $1 less than the sale price of any Bed Daven- port at our three Were are two nh He believed speculation in All Street was unbecoming a wom ; Golden or because she could not be dis Fagilen; value $30, she left his home, For several $18.75 AgsuMed names, Lrying to get ahead = the market. Almost ail the time Mra Kohertson No. 612—Daven-O | in As speculating her account with H Mahogany: value $48.00. Co. ran into ax figures and credit’ more than $540,000 worth of Vinton Pacitic and Steel. But she dtd bot consider is amount very large. “Oh, that's not so large,” she re- marked, in answer to a question asked by the brokers’ lawyers Nonchalance marked her when 6,000 shares of Union Pacific and 4,000 shares of Lehigh Valley were picked out from among The sar testino he items her account and asked about “I can't remember said. must be right.” home | | | | Special Mixed Candies COLLECTION of sweets that will A please the tastes of everyone who craves for variety. 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See how much more is accomplished by a ride ona Fifth enue Bus hone Book (Pa; jescription of all ‘Bus routes, reams 15¢ a AT, vm; m 10) for . A handsome enport by day—a cozy bed at night Daven-O's bought now will be delivered at any later date desired. D. T, Owen Co., INCORPORATED, 34 East 23d Street Open Sat'day Unt 1° * so AA ee DUR90.—On April 1018, DURSO, beloved husband of Gesce im his 634 year, Funeral on Thuredag, April 4. M., from hie late residence, 81 Spen- cor Holemn requiem mag at Bt. Lout’ Churoh, Kent Av. Interment 61. Johu'a Cometery. Relatives and friends Invited to Lous Deree, OUR THE APPROACHES! In four more days the thundering pro- cession of moving vans will let ali know that May 1st, the great Spring Moving Day, is at hand, Will this you moving store or off as “ideal?” This is no time to “put off” solving the important problem of where to Spend the Summer months. Inaction may mean a Summer of home discontent or of business inac- tivity. Be up and doing! . 5,921 WORLD “TO LET” ADs 2,362 More Than the Herald, Tin une and Bren auspicious occasion find into the house, apartment, lee you have dreamed about AST WEEK— See World Ads. To-Day for Big List of Present and May Ist Vacancies! yy