The evening world. Newspaper, April 21, 1917, Page 2

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foodstuffs, the Field Marshal de- clares: “I am therefore quite unable to see how the food situation oan be made the ground for strikes by workers while our present position on the western front, which must be fought out there, demands an undiminished production of war supplies of all kinda, This is the first task and takes precedence over all others. “Every strike, however small, may be the means of, an. unjustifiable weakening of our defensive force and is an inexousable orime against the fighting forces, especially the men in the trenches who bleed In conse- | quence.” A Reuter despatch from Amsterdam says that von Hindenburg concludes | ROOSEVELT GIVES HIS REASONS FOR His Division Would Only Supplement It, He Says. Col, Roosevelt his message by asking Gen, Groener to see that all means are employed | epatch of arms and munitions, and) also to have the necessdry explanation given the armament workers to that{ end which, “in my opinion, appears the principal condition for attaining | at those who have been service, He reiterated {ce coupled with a plea that our great aim.” ce Retases to Arbitente the Strike: {HAGEN, April 21,—-Accord- | ing to the Berlin Vorwaerts, tho strike | continues everywhere in Berlin, and Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollwe reply to a deputation of workers from the Deutsche Waffen- und Munitions- Fabrik of Berlin, headed by Hugo Haase, President of the Central Com- mittee of the new Independent Soclal- ist Democratic Party, Was a declinatioa to assume the task of arbitrator. ‘twenty thousand workers in four fac- | tories in Greater Berlin therefore de- | cided to continue their strike, 10,000 GERMAN CHILDREN this compulsory system VOLUNTEER CORPS Firmly for Universal Service— struck back to-day} An army of Boy using his| to continue the production and de- | plan for raising a division of troops | agnt in the trenches can get started,” | as an argument against obligatory | was the appeal of Assistant Secretary | strongly his demand for universal obligatory serv- while was being THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1917. Si LUSSIER? WRUNG ean - NIVELLE OUT-GENERALS HINDENBURG; CHOOSES BA TTLEFIELD BOYS PLANTING CROPS ALL OVER AMERICA | Two hous and Little § Scouts March! Past White House on Way to | 4 City Farm. WASHINGTON, April 21.—Two thousands khaki-clad boy scouts, car- | Fying raken, hoes and apades, paraded | | past the White House to-day on thetr | ~ inf oa way to the 300-acre plot near the! Potomac River loaned by the Govern. | d by the boy rden Scouts “to tient | In furrows and who may thus win| the war before those who would | ment, to be cultty: as | a big verotablo of Agriculture Vrooman to the! Scouts. “The only kind of bulleta we can shoot during the next few months are rend bullet Vrooman said, made operative a volunteer force be| “Let's go to it” | font abroad, Bach week-end during the season “I do not want to be put In the|the boys will camp out near the gar- | | dens and cultivate their cropa with position of saying to my fellow « trymen, ‘Go to the war," he declared. ‘“I want to be in the ponition of say- ing ‘Come to the war; with you,’ T am goin) “T wish wo already had universal! military training in this when the war broke out, disregarded Lord Roberts’ have universal military service was very wrong in doing that “Put {t would have been a capit mistake if whon oun. country. But we are as Great Britain was) She had advice to She al the war broke out the ald of a tractor donated by al AS FIGHT 10 SAVE HIM WAS WAS KEPT UP States, U. S, WILL HOIST FLAGS OF FRANCE AND BRITAIN Foreign Banner to Float for First Time Over Public Buildings at Washington, Continued Pag sho had declined to send a small] WASHINGTON, April 21-For the : tet rom 7 Steet TO BE FED IN DENMARK 'fattiery expedition ‘at ‘once to Mel-| gry une in town fince ot ot |wlum, and had refused to accept vol-| ign nation aro to fly from a public | Proceedings word thet ‘The Evening ora from Ci h World had been told by telephone aint © Pay Expenses Unteers from Canada and Australia—| yutiding in Washington. : Physician Offers to Pay Expenses |... tne plea that she then intended French and British flags will he |{f°M the Warden's office that Van There for Six Months [to do nothing except In accordance | gispiayed on elther sido of the Ameri. | 4" Corput was to ‘tbe clectrocuted After War, jwith the theory of obligatory mill-| oan tiag over the entrance to the | “DY Minute" was communicated to | tary service, rab ‘ ‘ | the lawyers and by them to the jus. COPENHAGEN, April 21.—A Ber | my ; State, War and Navy Department | i044 With all my heart T approve of the | puiiding. while the British and | : lin despatch says that @ Danish! president's plan for universal obliga French War Commissions are in| Justice Jenks left the benoh a ra physician has offered 1,000,000 kroner to the Berlin Municipal Council with which to send about 10,000 Berlin children to Denmark, The children will be kept in the northern kingdom for the duration of the war and six months thereafter, tory service—both for the present w: © hurried to the telephone in hia cham- | Washington. Flagstaffs for the pur and as our permanent policy. THIS) pow arc being croated to-day \hers, He came back swiftly and, plan will give ua the army we must) gynchronizing with “America Day" | “Peking rapidly and with evident have eighteen months hence, But wo}, pondon, the British Embassy here | CORE. sald: ought to treat as a necessary supple- | ew the Stars and Stripes yosterday |" T%* Hime ie very shart. Evory ment to this plan the utilizing of vol- Junteera who would not be reache |under the obligatory plan—who will moment 4s precious for further discus There is no time in. We are as, ~-the first flew from the time a foreign flag ever mbassy. |before the Junior Naval Scouts’ Battalion Passing City Hall jn Review in Course of March to the Custom House, 6444844 04-0440464-04 see PER ORODEG 1G 60-4 00-0-0:0-86-009.00-4% soaee HAIG WINS HOT BATTLE ALONG CAMBRAI FRONT; GAINS MADE BY FRENCH (Continued from First Page.) forces on in thelr greatest victory in general offensive since the war began It was the same strategic superior- ity that enabled the French to force the Germans’ acceptance of the ground previously chosen by the French 3 the site of the battle of the Marne. In tho same fashion, tho | French forced the Germans to accept the site of the present battle of the |Aisne—on ground carefully selected by the French strategists from sus to Auberiv Ilindenburg’s ‘strategic was for the purpose of French to accept battle which the German stat Hindenburg strategy has now failed. pis~ retreat” forcing tho} on ground | had chosen line. Th did not choose Hindenburg's line as @ French That | Rhelma the night was marked by violent artillery actions, We made progress In grenade fighting, par- ticularly to the south of Juvin- court and east of Courey. “In the Champagne we inflicted losses on enemy troopa which made an attack on Mont Haut, west of Maisons de Champagne, French detachments penetrated the German lines and brought back forty prisoners. “The night was relatively calm over the remainder of the front Despatches from the front indicate heavy German losses at every point. | BERLIN. WAR OFFICE REPORTS ARTILLERY © BATTLE WITH FRENCH Repeats the ‘Daily Chain Claim That “the Enemy Attacks Failed” —Fight- | i : | ing Near Arras, | BERLIN, April 21 (via London)— \"Yesterday afternoon,” says the offi- {etal statement issued to-day by t German ‘army headquarters |‘wtrong artillery firing was com- ;menced on the whole River Aisne ? €ogeceeeeeoess staff, | 3300 JUNIOR NAVAL :/SCOUTSANDGUARDS _/ PARADE AND DRILL One Set de VGiuies Youngsters “Cap- | tures” Custom House While Second Marches to City Hall. | | Withffags flying and bands play- | ing eighteen hundred members of the | American Junior Naval and Marine | Scouts marctied through City Hall Park and down Broadway to the | Custom House, where they deployed ' for battle at noon to-day, and after ja few strategic moves were In full) posseasion of the building, The pa |rade and exhibition of tactics were te the value of military | boys too young for the and the sturdy young- | de an excellent showing. As early as 9 o'clock the boys be- | gan marching toward the mobillza- |tlon centre at Columbus Park, Bax- |ter and Mutberry Streets, and in the park inclosure they drilled in sight of {thousands of Italian residents of the | section while waiting for the start of | |the parade, When they finally start. | jed out lowed them and these were quickly | ) office red and organized into a recruit ‘battalion, training for army or navy, sters ms the City reviewed by Dowling of the and Theodore retary to Mayor Mitchel pt step and oe headed by | Catholic Protectory Band and| the band of Publie School No, 21, th | boys marched past with “oyes right’ Hall Passing the young. President Board of usseau, In per- | sters were | Frank lL. Aldermen true | hundreds of small boys fol- |. You've got to feed the American et the Ao an beans if you want to see him fap his wings and hear him scream.’ The boys whooped and “Whee-ee-e for Scoug 5 They yplauded almost ag much a cablegram from Herbert C. Hoover, iuirman of the National Food Com- mission, urging them to devote their energies to increasing the bean out- put. The Scouts yelled — themselves hoarse again when Mr, Weat read a letter from Theodore Roosevelt, en dorsing Mr. Hoover's , “althougi, of course,” he wrot ‘it is even more important that we should seng ows. soldiers to the firing line, and. tt te only thus that we can display the American spirit There wax a similar lotger fron President of the Colin H. Livingston, Hoy Scouts, and a cablegram: from Sir Ribert Baden-Powell in Londoay “Delightéd that brother Scouts 1” America helping food producta. Hal Fullerton, who took io sores of Long Island waste i and ralsed four’ iiondred kinds of ¥ bles, and whose proud title ts Grub Scout, kept the youngsters jumping out of their seats as he showed them moving pictures of {i fine work boys can do in farmin, showed on the screen and the repeated etter him the Boy Praye Now I get me up to work I pray t Lord I may not shirk, If | should die before the night, I pray the Lord my work's ali On the way out each boy got a Dam of beans to plant alpen CHICAGO WON'T BAR OF KAISER’S “FAIR €ffort to Have Page Removed from School Spelling Book Fails, CHICAGO, April 21—A movement started some time ago to cause the removal from a spelling book used in the Chitago public schools of a page eulogizing Emperor Willlam of Germany failed at a mgeting of the Hoard of Education at which a hear- ing on the question was held, Parts of the textbook deseribing the Emperer as retaining possession ot lte the jee }of “that chivalrous sense of fair play At Wall Street the turned} which is the nearest thing 20 re- Gores’ to Broad. and ‘passed through Hielon that he hates “meanness and M } | favoritism” and) continues in) his the crowded curb market, All | “¢undamental bent toward ct |through the financial district they/ciean, manly and above board,” drew w enthusiastically che ed. The} attacks from several, Superintendent Shoop said a new marines in thelr khaki uniforms were o textbook Is in preparation which will first in line, headed by Col. 1. W Gd ees | Irving and Commodore L. {They were followed by Trimm. the Naval ortly take the question, place of the-one in | — ris ae familiar with this case by no F Scouts in their white sallor uniforms, | $ § ER apne Seer ey Suorel ee: | not and ought not to be asked to vol- the lourned courage” “* “*line main point of their offensive front and algo in the Champagne, On) gna in the rear came the recruit cue) WOMEN OF WESTCHEST e : Likewise all the wanton destruc-|the Chemin des Dames and in the ’ unteer in the regular army or the Na- EIGHT MORE NORWEGIANS The Justices retired for a fi min: wan In tho pathway of the German | Champagne enemy attacks failed, | talion, without uniforms, CALLED FOR WAR CENSUS CHURCHILL WANTS U, S. ‘tional Guard; but who have special Sute consultation and on their return ettont—ailitt lhe ob theen tae “Between Loos and the Arras-Cam-| The American Junior Naval and | fitness for the War ar* who will come | KILLED BY SUBMARINE Justice Jenks read the following |" reat—all the razing of trees, farms | pea; railway line there was a grad,| Murine Scouts were founded by the eer eye FORCE SENT 10 FRANC forward cagerly to serve if they are memorandum: and villagee—done to interfere ud ual increase in the artillery bombard- | jate Admiral George Dewey, who was} Mrs, Vanderlip Asks for Volunteers he Allies’ advance, has now proved| ment.” : Pu $ | to be sont abroad at the earliest pow- | « no motion for s \s Chief Naval Scout until the time of ‘spe Lets hr at theparitest pow | Gieamer Bergengut Is Torpedoed motion for the writ is dented:| 1+ au1y usctess as a military step and| | Chief Naval Sco to Do Work Between May We find the court has not the power, |his death. He was succeeded by Former First Lord of British Ad- completely unjustifiable. ——— ; ‘ 2 2 “The obligutory servico !dea 1s cap- and Sunk and the Norden Is | Any attempt by indirection to stay Retruel neror er itees ja noe: in Admiral Benson, in joint appointment , ie and 25. 4 i | ke thom cae the axeduticr rs attle of the Aisne Is hanieh A, Bedell wid, wha preds {Special to The Evening World.) mirally Believes It Would | {#41 to make thowe serve who ought Captured. [the execution would be fruitless and 4. sis aay, Tt will likely continue with Daniel M p MOUNT VERNON, N. Y., April a. bs . to do something, and wo ought not to| opnisTTANIA, April f1--Kight |" ‘proper attempt to interfere , ley ti Jent to-day, ne " encourage Allies, {tot tt be twisted into preventing thona Se APF Sh HISBE | with an Executive order.” Poeatietae eseeecm suet yes maoeweas| Among others who greeted the/—It waa announced to-day thas the LONDON, April 3 — Winaton| who ardently desire ta serve from |Norwesian citizens lost their lives in|” jut.” eried Mr, Lind, springing to i Teached, according to the Gade |nov at thg Custom House were Mr. | mili "idan dea of oS eatchester Churehill, former First Lord of the|#¢fVing—even although they would|the torpedoing by u German sub-) his feet, “cannot the court instruct [Pression among strategists at the Daniel R. Appleton and severai ather|oon yy gehgili ities Dea tiaity, now himself in khakt,|P° CX°™mPt from serving under the| marine of the Norwegian steamor| the warden that a fuller measure of saa ; sa faeasat Aen | officers of the navy and the National [400 0% ohana ee Raita A n i long the forty odd miles of fight ; 1 direction of th omen's Branch o' obligatory law, Bergengut, announced to-day. Jui may bo attained if time ts | Guard 7 | i ‘ " wants an American expeditionacy| ‘The Colonel was asked how he felt| tt was ales ann os od that the/kiven to take the matter before the 'n& line, there are three general sec-| lente teaiinie te” Orltoe are ne eemcnentee Counce eee tore gent to France as soon as poasi-| toward Germany Norwegian steamer Norden had been | Court of General Sessions on a mo- Hons where the topograph J a the Junior American. Guard. called - SN : “7 rll. € Pr ble—simply for the effect the pres-| “I am utterly against any ‘Hymn of | captured by the Germans and tuken|tion for a new trial Monday matty makes thine naturel padded 1,500 boys to the ranks at Bowling |{,“Ghatrman, Eighty questions. will ence of Americans would have on the| Hate’ {n this country as against any | ig Cuxnaven. | Justice Jenks looked at his cot-|*ons. To the left Is the section from |i. -yae iat. Carry Out Eve-|Green’ up Broadway to the City Halk [D6 asked each “person” over alxteen { Allied forces, nationality,” he exclaimed, “ us ‘lek leagues. They nodded. Solssons to Craonne, tho centre lies |! 4 ~alT ut Eve- Groen up Prosdway.t > the c ity Halls lana under sixty-five, : : | s : Hy Parte : Titian 6 soit etouring through the financial dis- aaniic. “Of course, I can express only my | have our ‘hymn of hate’ against that) Te Norden was of 776 tons, owned) “We will do that," he sald, and between, Cracnne and Rheims, “| ning World’s Suggestion {trict Their oraunization ta distinet Bice i sb faete yee bag 4 ’ personal opinion,” he sald to-day,| system of organized tyranny which|py Fred Olsen of Christiania, hurried back to the telaphene. When the right is between Rheims an With Aid of My from the Junior Naval and Marine|Qonestiy tures All women’ oe as! “but dt seems to me certain that the| has made Germany @ menace to the| rah Lg ho came out he said he hud taiked Auberive ith Aid of Its Expert. Scouts and ts an all military body. | county regardiess of associations @F presence of even a singlo Amertoan | World—as n aequence of Itself becom- | YEQWOMEN KEEP SKIRTS. Pe et Caen and ine Governor! Information obtainable to-day was —7—_-_- | parade was in command of| party inclination to Immediately offer 4 diviaion on the battlefields of France| ing the evil genius of what wan best mae court and asked for @ postponenent that these divisions are likely to UN-| Tn the presence of hundreds of in. | MiJor Willlam H. Elliott, cand the | their eryicee tneplies Oye or Flanders this year would exer-| and noblest in the German character, | Won't Have to Wear Trousers an of the execution until Monday. dergo modiftoations, with tha posst- terested commuters and city folk| Brig. Gen. George R. Dyer of thel{nue the wemen ot ‘he county. wif cise influence and afford encourage- | We are fighting In the spirit of An- ritish Sisters Do. | cornu" wan dead after that van der! pility always of a great extension of] model gardens were planted in Union| New York Natlonal Guard, who 1s unite to accomplish this work we ment out of all proportion to the ac-| ‘reas Hofer and of those Germana| WASHINGTON, April 21.—Alarmed |the front Square this afternoon by direction of | Read of kod Tees Ae au tee offer our complete organization and tual number of men employed,” who led the fight againat the tyranny | yeowomen of the United States To-day the battle 1s raging every-| park Department officials headed by | orn, Peo nese Meda tn® gblendidly | consecrated efforts, : | o€ Napoleonic Brance—when we now |Were restored to equanimity to-day when » GUARDSMAN AND RESCUER | where along the three divisions with | Commissioner Cabot Ward, in pursu-|Dowling, Mr. Rousseau, Public Ber RIND ar cormriad ‘ Two WOMEN JOIN WAI ee att een te MOA | ase cebuneta ailee ail JURY, bacaca Incredible fury. Tho grevt StrUssl®)anoe of suggestions made by The| Yice, Commissioners William Hay- | 910,000,000 Nitrate Mill Approved by VY againat tyrannous militarism, .whin [te wean Srousets after all dat pecs KILLED BY TRAIN ON BRIDGE subdivides itself into numerous | Evening World. F. F Rockwell, con ward and Henry |W. Hodge, Major Senate Committee. would destroy all freedom, . " ‘ a" Wl They may Tae SEI . nso io a de! a WASHINGTON, April 2].—The rese- pa 4 | the sartorial departure of Lritain's y {smaller engagements. hey ng agrioulturist wnd director of | Delaney ‘ AT ALBANY RECRUIT STATION ‘Once we have destroyed that! women, the United States suilor girls Soldier and Man Who Ran U seem meaningless little or big clashes Byetne Works Home Gartea|. Although the Junior American ited ed Senator Sri of Sos tyranny We shall hail the Germans|Wiy wear: Blue skirt, white shirtwaiat | 0Wier and Man Who Ran Up tol{out every ono of them tend to a Leama: suciavibe’ Aub puke tica Guard 19 & national organteation’ the 1 wre One vestige on " as our brothers and we shall eagerly ‘olling eck, blue sailor straw | Varn Him o ang: common objective fixed long before- | *“ ®, eUP e 5 |compantes that marched to-day were | >on 4 Meo; ACT Siem Two wimen To i nant shem (9 tis telework ee ee ean . if i aoe ee |hand On the historic old spot two model | from citien and towne in, Bastern on, Government ahipn, W need be, to were sworn in as yoemen in the pe . sana own at Enfield, \. Hy | Searcely an hour of the day or|sardens are now laid out. One,| New Jersey and the five boroughs | seaboard and thua increase food ws 1 ship of free peoples. United States Naval Reserve for Yoo o | Bt 4H y Five thousand motnern . M : zee i ght does not witness at some point; 20x40 feet, is designed to show thelof this city. Five thousand mothers, |tion was approved to-day by the'Bene ‘United States Navy at the recruiting deneneniieeibiinns: men," blue serge Norfollt Jacket for cool! ENFIELD, N. H., April 2 Joseph | TIEDE phil tees Senulae ad ‘a|cominuter what af excellent yicld can| sisters and other relativos were on| Agriculture Committsa ‘ station here to-day, Mra. Philip W, | #1,400,000 In| weather, blue stockings and black shoes, | Harding of Lowell, Maas, a National| counter-attack. They are always in-|be had with a véricty of twenty-one| hand to greet the young marchers Wober, wifo of a first class quarter- a Bale i Th | They may weer all white in warm! Guardsman, and Ezra Lawrence of|dicated by a sudden rise to terrific] vegetables, and @ emaller one, 20x20, a they feeched ine ee man, les by “ * LED pril 21-—-The steamer | weather if they like. | . ed b 0 | intensity of the ceaseless artillery roll | serves ag @ model for the prospeotive | the Ninth Coast Artillery band. master at the Schenectady recrulting| y1o6406 Wilkinson Wus launched tnee _———— | this town, were killed by s Boston falters fronts of one, two, three or|"olty farmer" who trp but the lm:| After a dress parade that was OFFICERS, ATTENTION ‘we station, will recelve the same rank| iogay, ‘rho Wilkinaon is 600 fect over|Two Hallways and Nolling stock | Maine froigbt train on a bridge near | slong front t ited wpace of a rear yard at his dis-| pronounced a remarkable demonatra- —- . os her husband and be paid $66 @/ ail, tier gross tonnage is 7,700, 7 here to-day, * 7 a F tion of military skill for boya Mr. ; .700, The Selaed by Mexteo, | y Although theso battles are furious | posal, i i . 4 month and expenses, viaael’ sank 61,000 006, WASHINGTON, April 21—The Mex- | Handing, witnesses said, was sitting |in thelr Intensity, only the artillery 18|" Commissioner Ward displayed «| Dowling pinned a medal on fourteen | Ss Miss Nan Clark of Albany will be eta ae ag Pos fean Government has seized the beside the track when a northbound| Usually ‘visible ag the sik of tne lively Interest in the {vadertak NBs |S nlor Gunede whe. Naat euminar { Fated ¢4 a second class yeoman at a| Mt NOTON. Ani Holland |huantepec Hallway and the Vera train came in aight, Lawrence, who/fOOe “sOrvarg under the cover of | onion mots and carly poss’ Tomaines| saved & chauffeur from drowning. And Pull Line of mative ia Dotat ee Baath Nave been | ngs formally notitied the State Dopart-|ira stock nd connecting thncks ue [ved near the bridge, apparently |roregts, ravinos and. valleys or sllps| and other tender plants, howover, | Maher lives on Washington Helghts. EQUIPMENTS Gotive $5 cbisining recruite, ment that it will maintain a strict neu. |the Vera Crug terininul, Ambavsador | ought the Guardsman was agleep|through former German trenches. — | will mot be #et out for another week trality between Germany and the|Fietcher reported to the State De-|and rushed to the structure to warn| The ability of the French to bom-| or ao. United 8: 2,000 BOY SCOUTS SHOUT PLEDGE TO RAISE BEANS [partment to-day, Both were instantly killed, him, bard without mit any point, time, is what permits the certainty of an advance, concentration of fire as t at any sotute Such a French These gardens will be maintained for the instruction of the public, and pereons Interested are invited to call at any time during the business day For Army and Wa National Guard Reserve Corps Officers Austin, Nichols & Co's First Motor Field Battery of the National Guard pour in where they want it, completely |and profit from available instru AT HIPPODROME MEETING RUSSELL arn co, wipes out every defensive device] tion 000, rmedira 0, 8h Of New York, Lined Up Ready for Marching Order'':"i.:'3 Gini fora 3 seyotsin Pb structed by German labor since 1914, ' cece men ners But if the actual fighting battle.| SPUR FT, TOTTEN TRAINING. Messages From Roosevelt and . | front does not reveal the presence of ' nee A troops immediately to the rear, there erg, Thatman & Co. Furn Hoover Cheered by Young Ameri- is everywhere visible a titanic con-| Eimpléyees Un Fa cans Eager to “Do Their Bit.” ’ “ |centration of men, munitions and] To encourage training in advance of 4 ' The World’s Best |material, ‘The valleys, woods and| ne actual ensaliment of President Wile ‘© thousand, Boy Scouts of New | i BECAUSE: jravines are filled with ORY OHY,, Ins son's firet army of 600,000, Lindenberg,| York filled the Hippodrome with \ The choicest coffee grown. ee eer apiles trucks, cannonee| Thalman & Co, announce’ to tetr/ whoops and yolls to-day as they Always uniform. Makes the [| Jail either advancing or awaiting the| employees yesterday that every one! promised to raiso beans. They wiil| riche! smoothest and most de- | word to dash to the front, There fa|of them who enrolled in the Fort) raise corn and potatoes, too, but | licious drink. You'll like it bet- movement everywhere. —_—— Totten Training Ci which meets . beans will be every Baturday afternoon, would be pro |"? ter than what you now use, their principal contri- | Guaranteed to please you per- on to the support of the men on vided with a complete uniform, includ: | P fectly or you can take it back HEAVY GERMAN LOSSES ing military shoes, and transportation |tho firing line, ‘They aro going to| and get your money. torand from Bayside Le 1 Twenty-six ant beans in back yards and in va- DIED. ORDER FROM YOUR GROCER, | OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCED an ® ace aan ‘aaa nt lote, BERRT.—aAt his home, 465 Clinton a jg AL idl | | sioned Reserve Corp! ames E. West, Chief Scout, told | Brooklyn, Thureday morning, Apri 18 tain of infanth : , | : , ‘ INF H R P T Hy yout ase captain in| the boya that the new Scout motto| 22!7 WHAIAM BERMI, aged 68 years, } sters’ Col é Funeral services at his lute residence, bid Qugrterms © Committes of the clase| Wa% “Every boy feed a soldier,” and| aaturday, April 91, at & P.M, Xinay of which T. T. Lane of No, 105 Broad-| asked them if they would ragpond| omtt flowers, Interment prety Active Fighting West of the Aisne, | way i# Chairman and Gordon Gordon to the request of the Georetary of Ag- | : in charge of transportation, hag ar ’ tA Fast of Craonne and in the fanged to have tn eomtn rom Man; |riculture that they ralao crops, "Yes, met jayaide and tranaported |...) ena « | Champagne. {o'and from the fort fren The a sirl” came the answer from the boya|/ an: 1945 op feanf aniielon oie tn a anlvo that rattled all the win- | dows, Chief Scout Commissioner Dan Board told the boys he was a Quaker | verilsed in Zhe World will be listed ab The World's Informas tion Bureau, Pulitaer Bulld! tn oha: | PARIS, April 21.—Following ts the| of Sharge ot text of to-day’s statement from the] Vi#lon of D iahat ee jiad Waa eh Oh aL. id tne . |] Arcade, Park Row, World atte vow War Office: _ ‘Ten Days and didn't believe in fighting Uptown Office, northwest core ~ a: North of the Atsne the artii- Robert Hawkes, twenty-six yoars old, | “But they've put a chip on ou ner ASth St, and Wroadway, lery fighting was active in tha | of No. 166 McDonough Street, Brooklyn, | shoulder and knocked it off,’ he said, erie’: Barlen other, me regione of Nanteutl-le-oese ana [vs sentenced to ten days in he Works | "and wo are forced into thy war. “Te Brooklyn Office, 202 Washing ’ t ‘aumer in in, we've got to win, ‘The men in 4 Murtedise, We took 100 more yates ‘venue “Cou! “dep agin A Ate ing pepe al HLS fight on empty ps We gg di 8 ae Prisoners yesterday on this part {holl with the army an @tomacha, It ts up to you hoys to get advertisement, f of the front, Ista atc r+ hy A rl ne Si) grub for them, And the best grub * "Bast of Craonns and north of Brooklyn. \ \& the easiest to ra is beans.

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