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BIG GUN ~—HAND TO HANDIN {AMERICAN CHARGE —FRSTUNADED RD. ON LORRANE LN Bombardment by U. S. Guns as Intense as Any He Saw at Verdun, Many German Troops With- draw From First Line During Preliminary Bombardment. WITH THD AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, Monday. March 11 (by the Associated Prens).—That the fr raid undertaken by an unaided At ITHIN ‘ity yards of the point of departure Lincoln Byre, the correapondent of The World. aaw the American troops go over the top in the at- lean force in the Toul sector wi tack on German positions in Lor- that raine. His is the first and only te shown by the fact tha wee = oy ” mca trom the tuectltness story of the combat enemy withdrew many men from the because he was the only non-com- batont privileged to see dt, His graphite atory of the preliminary bombardment, which he describes as equalling anything he saw at Verdun, and the drive of Ameri- can soldiers across No Man's Land front line when the bombardment in- @ieated that a raid might fo! raiders reported that Amer fire had created destruction German position and had torn gaps in the enemy bed entangle- the w ments. The Gorman botterte » follows: into action, but accompliched noth- By Lincoln Eyre. ing toward disturbing the progress rere, 1918. Pea Pubiatae Oly of the raid, Phe Wom: Yoong } The Americans entered the enemy) HEADQUARTPRS OF THR trenches behind one side of a “box” AMERICAN FORCES ON THE barrage which moved forward in LORRAINE FRONT, March 10.—-We \. front of them. ‘They found numerous ‘ ; Germa@is hiding in the dugouts, In DV taken our revenge, In by far the hand-to-hand fighting which fol- the most important offensive action undertaken lowed a number of the enemy were by the American expe- killed and wounded and left In the ditionary forces, our infantry occupy- trenches, ing trenches in Lorraine for training Going fer beyond their objective, purposes co-operated with Irench the raiders penetrated the German lipe 300 yards, A few fights devel- oped on the way, but the Germans wwere driven away. ‘The Americans failed to find most of the Germans who had beon withdrawn hurriedly from the front line, although they searched for them. In the hand-to-h Americans used their tole and rifles. During the raid the American machine guns placed a bar- rage in the enemy back areas in order to prevent a counter attack. The Americans fought so fast and did their work wo quickly that the medical men who accompanied them had little to do. Every American who left the front line returned, On their way back the Americans encountered a German listening post shock battalions to drive home two attacks at widely separated points in this sector yesterday afternoon, The rst and most important on- slaught, which was preceded by four hours of the most powerful bombard- ment ever vomited from American guns, Was carried out by men drawn largely from the unit which was sub- jected to the terrific German barrago laid on thelr trencbes on the morning of March 6, The Americans exacted retaliation in the same part of the line, too, and it Is safe te say that their losses tive days ago wore noth- the pis nd fighting automatic suffered yesterday. Our second attack was made by ele- ments belonging to another regiment of the same contingent, together with thelr French Instructors, Later I learned this gun had been | Sixty-ninth Regiment Armory e less time in position in plain aig’ 4 + koalas hse ie ey ee WORLD MAN SEES THE BOUT dheny tae Svelnciea And hada fee fe Rs peinlhe ate than ; ney everything that came its way | tion at Pelham Bay to take part in the in the post were silenced. F | AT CLOSE QUARTERS. 1 eebept gome gas shells, and nobody | Military and Naval Meet at Madison The Americans reached Lele Theda 1 saw the whole show at closer | paid any attontion to gaa, once masks! souare Garden on Friday, Saturday lines without one German abell Bava’ cuarters than any correspondent has | wore on sds Mantay db 0) dhe banents ot) the @alien Anywhere near them, for . ffalr of th ‘Ten yards away in our barbed wire 1 inday for the benefit of th Wasall over #0 quickly the German hitherto enjoyed in an affair of this) | Ten yards away in OW Pt sting. Women's Overseas Hospitals, batteries did not have « good cha kind with the American Army. I ob-| German tr ic" precision the Rocha! ‘This was New York's first glimpse te get into bec bhi} brig sey rs served the devastating effects of our projectiles were creeping to and fro of her new sons of Neptune who six were tnide Wie enemy lines artillery fire during the four-hour|along our lines, feeling with €xplo- Footie ago didn't know port from teen minutes sive fingers for idiot Yankees, Occa- * L ow > baggy |bombardment from an observation | ion ie ait of our parapet caved starboard, the quarter deck from AMERICAN ARTILLERY post behind the lines, lfnbut’on the whole the damage done quartered oak, or how to properly | Then from a position fifty yards | was alight, I found the officer com shiver their timbers “ ‘“ she 5 ye attacking party and ob- , our boys go over the top and vanish | 1 onsive conception of how the drive forms and reefers, belts and Khaki + a ag ne wae lin the black mists left by the shells. | was to be staged. leggings, with rifles on their should London Mentions Raid st of | I was the only non-combatant priv-| EAGERLY WATCHES FOR THE ers and bayonets in their belts, they L ile,” Which Is in Toul ‘leged to witness these things and) MINUTE SETFOR THE ADVANCE. went down the avenue with the uneville, en as |describe them by cable immediately | His command, together with the swing of old salty of the ocean Sector. Mflorward. Save only for tha membors| French, formed the right column Of!” ae vorute sailor Bove have been t Jawsault, Several hundred yards away aul E LONDON, March 12.—An Ameri- | of the attacking parties themselves Wie the left a second column was to, Sccustom to turning ¢ at 6o’elek can raid east of Luneville yesterday obtained as close a view as any par-/ start, and the two were to convergs in the morning, but to-day the bucle completely established that the Ger- | ticipant of this first and highly suc-/at a given, point Ay By Me rman | busted” reveiile an hour earlier and mans had evacuated their positions cessful programme of ©0-0rdinated | er ea I Poker? H mt and 2610 WAM) Hetore 7 o'clock the Inde had started after two days’ of American artil- | offensive action by the American) the only sign the commanding officer OM their six-mile hike for the subway lery fire. troops. | sho of the approach of “the big at 177th Street - | The minute hand of my wateh was | time” we his frequent glances at his) afr shonts had thoughtfully Thie evidently te the first unaided) | wade oft the hour of 1 when it be-|"N TEL eon pretty hard on the! Vided one train of ten cars, so American raid reported yesterday, » 1, Wirst one shell chewed up the! men," he said simply. “We have been young tars « ard exercise all v donne nee g aan ae a carth over there against the forent, | out here sin 4 an ck this morning | the way down to Sith Street, clinging a ay 0f Toul which would DrIDE ‘en threa, then ten, After that there | NOM Alenoan the Germung have kept t© the hooks and rolling about as if H wih tame lo nas “eis was no counting them. |attor us the way they are doing now. | they were at sea. juneville, ENOUGH U. 8, ORDNANCE TO Wo BRee tet at eres acta wha | Debarking at Columbus Circle, they plode w by + i c € ond ww o Stre BLOW UP GIBRALTAR. then were talking, smoking and jaugh- | M&rched over Broxdway to S7tir Street Mi R " BI LE T0 RULE a Jing when they frat cot here, but now |!" columns of fours, then debouched ‘ Arriving a few minutes later at! 18 Mare junt sitting tight and grit-|into Fifth Avenue in columns of com ALL U. S, TROOPS IN BRITAIN regimental headquarters, I was toid | ting thelr teeth, Well, they will 8oon | panies, the band playing “America For © go UP @ certain road to tho bat-4 cheer up. ceded, ili i to KO Up a certa i a 3 ip hig ‘Al Wir voungaters lying squatting | Ver Not many were astir at 10/ lion combat post & Bocho shell) | ene nay, looked klds, most | o'clock in the morning, but the crowds Recently Relieved as Acting Chief of ron within 600 yards of me, Hut there | Oe "thom © haggard and drawn {quickly gathered and followed t S : . ; seemed to be enough American ord 4 whivering tty sons of Nept ‘vehae © Staff by Advent of Major jens vee cares Aincbstia tae antwhat's the matter, Jim—cald?” the | MAtty sens of Neptune with rs and | Gen, March. (panes: ee thes : Captain asked a nineteen-year-old | SHOUts. and the windows and doors of my i !yoad to blow down the rock of Gibral- | GaP ioral shops and hotels were filled as the WASHINGTON, March 12-—Atajor|tar, and every gun was being fired) "Gucas I got cold foot, Captain, march progressed a caw timlnaltawaa th ia entieth C ne boy replied, trying hard to grin i Panes en. John Biddic, ntly relleved by | the way the Twentieth Century ta) the may Dit of St,” the Captain ob- The boys didn't average the height Major Gen. Peyton C. Mareh aw Acting | un | served; “that's Just 4 rattling of sand | of the soldiers trom Camp Upton. In Chief of Staff, is to command all The din seemed to eat Into one's|in your craw.” comparison they appeared undersized American troops in England, it jo{brain. Bang! whine: boom! bang!| A, moment oF to ie Fie leeeat | but they were broad shouldered, and, understood |whinet boomt One forgot thers had | {ey dugont a few yards back. our| Wit! the regulation jackio wing and r hee time when the atmospnere | parcage slackened. I uever beheld go] regular step, pir straight nes Fda eraers to-d show ms an jwan not quivering with this Bahel of abrupt a iy nerve at 8 in ony group | thrilled the onlookers, Ovation afte * ent of two officer aides on | WA" biden Ferdun dur- |of men. Aw if shocked by the same] ovation greeted the marching hinatati: Mador Gen. ( ke T. Bare, |omnnen, T have b at Verdun dur- [Of Mat icy eprung up. shook theme | vation greeted the marct sailors. Jatt has been in command in England, | Me some Of the biggest mes tn that | selves and looked eagerly at the Ca and if the welcome found responsive Sass La virax i espe id vari bt rattles and can testify that | tain, most of them with bright smiles, thritis there wasn't a look or a nod ing engineers 1 y artillery, |¢Y he artillery frengy at Verdun, a et long to wait now, | to betray the have been train tiah camps. |e% that (here were higher calibre | 2°" see The navat wade w ke itn it ts known ) Gen | pi tiles in the alr and a wider headquarter th Sixty-nintt Gen. Biddle war appuin t t of our battertes. | Itweon Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixt rade ie 1 p wo Eur ‘ stain ving’ all thé time 1’ apantl . charg . announced torday member ¢ Suprem Cour ieadlane nro eons i : t another feature of the Jutte eT acuuhed Gil tort te oe heat aw may way through ghee on Stockholm Reports That All Agri- that another t ate a late : mill o imbled toward jt across the be y ne appearance roop K oO} ie place as Acting th the at-|sehris of a house dashed to the, Cultural Leaders Except One j Squadron A of the New York Stae fam Graves ie now acting as eceisge, [around half an hour before by @ Jack : Have Been Slain Police, comprising alxty enen un to Gen, March. Johnson, a n alrplane loomed! spocKHOLM, March 11 Red} Also, there will take part the Ma- ©, hovering blackly againat the | 4 contingents in Hols sare be. [Tine Corps, Nationa iard, Red ' euvens. It wax not more than | coming more violent in their activities, | CROSS Junior © Brenet orn Food at 1,000 feet up, 1 Judwed, deapite volu- (according to a dvapateh to tho Tid. |oery Women's Motor Corps and th minou n around {te sinia-|ningen from Vasa, Pinland wings Suddenly its machine gun They are proceed rm 1 - very best | iy Hs machine BU | anger” nase the decors, “eugene SUNDAY WANTS TO SHOOT. po hexdaun he bilan: ; heir victims from the r Says Bobby heindq i ut a path MRBOAA CAbamablnutlig iets Bvangelint Woold Fight Germans| x . F erey and landed propriotors. as Well as Dewil Rich Thick 8 wked why in Dante Itural ¢ ere ox. | CHICAGO, Mareh 12.—Dilly Sunday. ' Flakes Toasted Frépoh ma * did net get busy have been killed,”* the evangelist, sald to-day that a The answer came almost immediate- Seyi A New Way i soon ad his Chicago engagement te 1 t 1 ‘ ” tele M 7 ¥. For aloft Uny atoms of white| BIG Saratome Motels May He Army comictad hw will 0 to Branco to inat the kk ‘aine 1 3 b eel the aky na nw nine WASHINGT sancty| <s vera, (Visit the trenches € ghting en al a De urge hetels tn Saratoga Y.. may be “E know several officers who are te formation, Nelow suon used by the army as hospitals, over there and they have invited me behind ectora bu They have been i ted medical to come,” said Mr ay. “Ef they'l ter observation craft, moving majes- oilivers and @ wole t hele jet ou al uho ao f hota at the 3 teally toward the tront Tagg were use made. Boches, a eee a ee ete tne BATTLES CONTINUE BETWEEN BRITISH AND GE! AMERICANS FOURHT!WORLD MAN SEES |4.200 in New Naval Brigade, City’s Own, | Surprise Fifth Avenue in First Appearance Here) | ing compared to what the Germans | ROT ET OOP SESOOEOOOO4 * > noe @ 200000000080000 ra —— -$ so low I could plainly discern tne| tricolor cireles on thelr wings. One French scout swerved ewiftly down toward the Boohe. but that once recklese worthy saw what was coming and skidded off toward his own lines, to reappear no more. Later I heard an unoffictal report that he| had been brought down crossing the trenches. I spent half an hour on ao with the battalion commander and a more tranquil and less exetted soul could not have been found in al) the world than he appeared to be, THROUGH COMMUNICATION TRENCHES TO THE FRONT LINE. The zero hour (moment of attack) was fast approaching, and with a youthful (deleted) as guide I started out through the communication trenches to the front line. By this time the German barrage on our firing trenches had increased so that it was impossible to iil Ger- man ahell-bursts from Amc. ican shell- bursts, or the reports of our .ons from olther. Our preparatory bom-| bardment, mind you, had been going on without the suggestion of a break fi three bours, for It was then about 4PM Just before entering the bayou T caught sight of one of our neventy- fives right out In the open not more than 800 yards from No Man's Land |The crow were silhouetted against the sun, They looked like ebony demons, | tilling the smoking breech with shells. As quickly as a gun could fire, which jis twenty shots to the minute, the Janyard was pulled. “Gee, but it’ hot,” one of them exclaimed. “It's PAD IAAIDEDD SE RODSEEE 4-5 POCO EP OOO He EVENING WORLD, another }lot hotter for the Boche returned with a grin. The First | Brigade, 1,200 strong, with Licut. M. McCulloch at their head, marhed | ms the Ne Regiment of 1,200 JACKIES TAKE STHAVE. BY STORM NVSURPRISE DEBUT |City Wildly Acct Naval Brigade in March to Armory for Meet. the Naval across Twenty-sixth Street to C: down Fifth Avenue this morning and the kuse | Members of LAX, wARUiH 12 POOOALOV94F-445 164 4 Ht 4 1-40404100OO0O04H1 4408850040 8 OOEPRIDEG DEPOOQE-D-IRODIAI. 1918 ote 99-536! be odes Hoo88 23 2,500,000 MEN IN ARMY WITH SECOND DRAFT; ONLY 272,000 IN 1898 chting Strength to Be Nearly Ten That During the War With Spain. lime: ASHI TON, March W When the “second draft has been answered, 800,000 strong, the United States Army ulars, National Guard troops, enlisted men and reserves will number approximately 2,- 500,000 men. During the war with Spain the United States Army, at Its maxi. mum strength, aggregated officers and men DEFENDS HER AMERICANS, 000 WINS $20 A WEEK ALIMONY; Former School Teacher Refutes Husband's Charge of Pro-Ger- manism and Gets Separation, Mrs. of Hunt Colles public sehool defended her tice Platzek Anna Kramer Hatton, graduate and former New York teacher, so successfully Americanism before Jus- n the Supreme Court thin morning t she was granted $20 a week alimony and a legal ration f r husband, Dr, Thomas M. Hat- ton, a dentist at No. 200 Broadway, who chard that the trouble between them was due to her pro-Germantam Mra, Hatton admitted she believed Americans should have been warned not by the a view ge rmans, but prot ed this was 1 Americans could hold. She Corporations Have Sought Federal Action. WASHINGTON, M ment control probab! ch Govern- will be extended hortly to the leading express compan- tom omMecbal the Ratlroad Ad y intimated to-day at ministration, The com within =e 22 SOLDIERS OVERCOME. rack Traim Stricken in Newark Armory. NEWARK, N, J., Mareh 12. Twenty Quartermanter's Supply ‘Train service were overcome by gasoline exhaust fumes herg to-day, but recovered aufficlently to continue with the train xcopt one min, He ls Stanley b. Mo Y. & private, sears old, who mw nh thie Ct thi nare were 162 men under Capt, W, L, Knowlton with the train when. It | patted in tase on ite way. ftom fr " ic port. The men : ) the armory oft ' ! neville Avenue and morning the. m hid tach. truck re some Little fe ting ut of the armory bulld ti Lquting the interval the Big room fiilbd With gae and fumes panies that would be nffected are the| Adams, American, Woella-Bargo, South ern, Great Northern, Northern, Cana jan and Western Most express companies’ earnings last ear were far vw record of the| yeut 1 some, notably the Adams, recorded an actual deficit In the Iattur ‘months. HOt operptio ind componnatl n the Danis of the virage carnings for the last. three yeara i8 souKHt by moat companies & probably will be reached ' | WITH THE GERMANS sey eae Made “Strong Opposition,” Says Copenhagen Despatch —Germans Near Odessa. COPPNHAGGEN, March 12.—Ger- man troops defeated “strong oppo- sition,” composed mostly of Czech de- | serters from the Austrian army, at Bochmatseh, sixty miles northeast of Kieff, according to despatches re- celved here to-day The despatches also said German troops hav of Odessa arrived within nine miles Under the terms of the preliminary peace treaty with the Central Pow- ers, Roumania waa to assist them to advance to Odessa, the chief Russian port of the Black Sea and the outlet for the richest grain district in Rus- | sia, Odessa also bas been the head- quarters for the Russian Black Sea Floet. > RUSSIANS ARE READY TO AGAIN MOVE CAPITAL two privates of the United States Army * to sail on vessels likely to be torpedoed| United States Consul Cables That Government Will Leave M | also admitted she said the Home De-| if Germans Advance. fonse League was reerutted from men . sn " . | who wanted to guard thelr own homes,| WASHINGTON March = 12.-—~The} and that “social ambition actuated| Ru#san Revolutionary Government tn) volunteers to the National Guard, | Prepared to move from Moscow to some “But,” Mrs, Kramer sad, “now that{ Point farther east if the German armies we are tn It we must win, Iam an| continue to advance into Rus : , ‘absolutely loyal American in every way.” A message to the State Department ee | to-day from Ame: Summers |at Movcow, dated Mare 8, said the ay. and arrangements would be made to go to some othor city if it cume necessary A cablegram from Ambassador Francis at Vologda which said noth- | Earnings Nearly All Decreased and| ing of any intention to move the American Embassy staff farther east apparently disposed of reports that the Ambasasdor was preparing to leave the —_~»—_—_ CAPTURE TWO FOE PLANES.) Britteh Air Squadron Seize Enemy) in Poll Fiteht, AMSTERDAM, (by mail How « British air squadron eaptured | two German alrplunes in full flight near | Ghent, Belgium, la told tn a telegram | from the Duteh-Helglan frontier The British alrmen, being In heavy numerical superiority, surrounded thelr pponent#, ‘The Germans saw there was ap UJ to an Inevitable eath the two German pilots hung out white flags and meekly flew away to-| ward the British lines, aurrounded by a flock of British planes. | a PORT GERMANS, 1 Send Them Army Transport, MANILA, March 12—The Govern nt will deport by the next transport leaving Manila 160 Germans, some of them promfnent residents and all of them now either unemployed or con- sider ous person > min Halttc Fleet Have Disappeared, WILL DE Maniia Ww Away on Crews of R LONDON, March 12—The Russian RB floct is lying at Helaingfors, Fin- lend, the Petrograd correspondent Mes cables, but the crews hay 1 nniy a watch being left for oa The dreadioughts wi ’ for Kronstadt. All moveable articles from the cruisers { Dar ng in the Neva f % been Carried away by sailors od C7FCH DESERTERS. “WW HARD BATTLE. JAPANESE HOLDUP FINAL DECISION ON SIBERIAN POLICY Motono Says the Allies Have a 2) GERMAN TRENGHES RAIDED BY 80TH AND FRENCH TROOPS idon Reports Continued Ar- tous situation.” Another teh ved ff Tokio through the same channe that Foreign Minister Motono, ing to a question in the Diet, stated om y roply- desp rec Not Requested the Send- | tillery Action Neat® Ar- ing of Troops. | mentieres and Ypres. | LONDON, March 12.—Jupo has LONDON, Mare 12, Australian jor yet come to a decision regarding | trooy ‘ edt out ful raids Gi the despatch of troops to Siberm,| during night le posta | Premier. Terauchi declared in reply ind northeast of Messines,” saya ‘ing to a question in the House of | to-d *# Wart Office r ort A num- Representatives, according to a Reu-|ber of Germans we killed and a ter spatcl m Shangha arrying wp ' were t is. Our Tokio advices under date of March 9. | Ca*uallies were light The Governmont, said the Premier The artillery was active on beth would take the utmost and pre- | during the night southeast of caution in dealing with “this momen- | Armentic res and east and northeast of Ypr PARIS, March 12.-Following ts the report of the Parle War Office issued st night North of the Aisne French troops no request that troops be sent to/ carried out two raids in the rogion Siberia had been received from |of Fresnes and north of Courtecos. apan’s allies, An exchange of views, I) the Champagne the Germans at he sald, wan proceeding. tempted to reach our lines in the The opposition leader favored the Tesion of Hilaire and St, Souplet ending of troops, but expressed the They were repulsed by our counter- fear that the presence of Japanese tn|@ttack, leaving prisoners in our Siberia might drive Russia toward) hands. Germany unless the greatest precau-) “On the left ba Mouse tions were taken. fter a violent b ardment, two at- coi jtacks, In which special assaulting edge to Russia Rea troops participated, was made against Soviets Congress To-Day. © French positions on Le Morte WASHINGTON, March 12.—The in-|Homme., The attackers everywhere terest of the American Goverr were repulsed. On the right bank to-day centres in Moscow, where the |there wa tilery activity at the Bolsheviki Congress of Soviets, which [AUrigres We peed he “re the French ¢ sed a strong de- is recognized as really representing | tachment c rrmans which sougbt to the Russian people, meets to ratify or |reach ou reject the Lenine-Trot Deu Hoeay art ry fighting occurred Je a a ra RY | PEACE in front of La Pompe ind in the treaty with the four Central Powers. | 4 ff Avocourt,’ 8 to-day’s of- ‘There 1s keen hope in official circles | th mmiunication, “In Lorraine that President Wilson's stirrin, we senue dia atone raises ihe Se ss : igs xion of Monce ye enemy suffer peal to the Russian people, t eh vere losses and left ten prisoners, the Congress, will result In the rejec- | including one officer, in our hands.” tion of the treaty and the r ntry ane of the great Muscovite Republic into the war against Prussian despotism, President Wilson does not advise | the delegates to the Congress to re- Ject the peace agreement, but the| transmission of such & message at this critical moment in the struggle of the Russians for democracy, it is felt here, 1s certain to have the effect of str hening the resolution of those who are opposed to bowing the knee to Germany. Anti-Dolshevike Leader's ‘Troops fented in Siberia. HARBIN, Manchuria, March Semenoff, ant!-Bo has retreated into! the advance of for a rd borde servers, according to ré ports 4 by’ the Associate Press correspondent, have found the 12.— Gen the shevi eader in 8! anchuria eria, before Bolshevik the there is a widespread pro-German propaganda, with speechmaking hy Bolshevik orators, among the werk- men, with never a Word of « pro-Ally nature The American Consul at Harbin tv distributed 1 Wilson's sp: 10 coples of resident ches and a similar wuni- ber have been scattered by the Con sul at Viadivosto! All cc erned agree that a more effective ailled pro paganda ig essential WHITE HOUSE PIGEON HERE. Brings Mra, Wilson's Rewrets to Military Meet Committee, The following message from thé Whi House was delivered by carrier pigy tm this city this morning: “Mrs, Wilson is very sorr st can not attend wants mé to tell y good wishes y Baker daurhte ‘ The pine A. M. yonterday tumed over to Mes, I ecutive Chairman’ of ‘committe charge of the Military and Naval m whieh will 14 M 16 und at Madison Square ( Uclcian Troops Rald Germans North f Dixmude. PARIS, Monday, M iIL—"In @ successful raid north of Dixmude we took a number of prisoners,” says to-day's official Belgian report. “Well placed barrages enabled uns to check two enemy attacks ir advanced posts, one north of Dix. ude, the other in the direction of Geo These failures prompted ene to oper heavy artillery especially with gas shell ‘BOARD TO MAKE SURVEY OF U. S, AERO PROGRAMME Snowden Marshall, Formerly, Ped eral Attorney at New York, Among Those Chosen, WASHINGTON, March 12.—Appetni+ nent of a committee to make a survey at the Gov aeronautical pro- v elution to Industrial con- ditions was announces twdey by the War Department will comprise Ssowden Marshall, forn Vnlted States Attorney at New York: Edward Wells of the BDaboock and Wilcox Company, and a third member w ne will be announced later, The department's announcement saya it ls belleved the advice of the commit tee will prove of great ald in pushing development of the American afr ser The committer was appointed tn tne wit etary Baker's policy to keen v to the detsll workings of s Government departments and with the Indu conditions. Involwed war programma, DIED. JOSEPH sv CAMPBEL © VRAIN.~ sr. 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