The evening world. Newspaper, March 26, 1918, Page 12

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(10s tat 49 enn care ~ ONE DUTCH SHIP SAILS TO-MORROW ~ WMT GRENS OF 77 1,800 Officers and Sailors of | Seized Vessels Are Em- barking To-Day. This is embarkation day for the crews of seventy-seven Dutch ships in American waters, Eighteen hun the officers and in New York, érea@ men, compr rallors, are gat many of them hav tant Atinntic ports w' During t eka while the ships were held idie in American ports the officers and men | received | pay from the Federal Government. | But the pay stopped to-day | Naval officers of the United States | now are on boar all the Dutch ships, inventories have been made and the can flag has been hoisted vessel over » pathetic and some amusing | cidents accompanied the change of | flags, On one ship the Dutch flag | was wired to the mast,«and the Dutch | Captain told the American naval off. | cer it was up to him. Then it was found that the pole was greased, But ! presently a Naval Reserve boy who used to work for the telephone com. pany went straight up the pole andj down came the flag. n vccasion of the seized fe captain, a sixty broke down | came di n 8 went up. t a home to fist fight y e flag changing cer 1 a Dutch #hip in the North But the situation was smoothed by the tact of the United States Navy man in charge. Most of the seized ships are re- ported in good condition, and it is said that some of them could be y next Monday if ity But some of © into ary dock 1 the removal of cized ships are nted with the war grey of | , and the camouflage artists are busy. FALL OF PREMIER LENINE 1S DECLARED IMMINENT ssion of Socialists and Those | Who Repudiated Peace Treaty | Now Looked For. BERNE, March 26.—The fall of Nikolai Lenine, Premier in Russia's Nolshevik Government, is imminent, ording to the Frankfurter Zeitung, | cension of Socialists and those pudiated th 1 treaty with Germany is considered inevitable, the paper sald. 6 wan the strongest of the ki in favor of signing the y which made peace between any and Russia. Leon Trotsky, J evik Foreign Minister, who con- of which have been received | | THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAROH 26, 1918. HOW UNCLE SAM HOUSES HIS INTERNED GERMAN PRISONERS IWERR PRISON CART GA. BO LAE | ensued, according to the stories of | ¢ye-witness None of German torpedoes | found a mark, but the Morris, emerg- ing from an enomy § | off a German | type and tc |600 yards, | in the enemy ve | mediately Meanwhil | pled and |The crew damage ¢ thelr tor the screen, cut er of a large l her at a range of was an explosion and she sank im- what ng n, her helm havir er, the Botha boat cleanly amid- Jenemy boats | been put hard rammed another half. Swinging around, the Botha at- tempted to repeat the ramming ¥N . S THORP manoeuvre on the next German eee VSON CAMP NS OLE ies | the situation. The call, therefore, ts for American soldiers. ALLIES WL HAL ERPPLEDINFIGHT, DRNEOF GERMANS, SAYS GEN. WOOD Predicts Enemy May Find Themselves Worse Off Than British Soon, ort ¢ German drive, Gen IMC RO EO he pwe ae « ve, ie & Woe id he was confident it would A, MEZA Jbe halted by the British, The ad- NY vanc e was to be expected in " | | such a | He p 1 that the Germans who |have thrust themselves forward into |the British line may find themselves Jin a worsg position than the British before long, more or less cut off as -RANDOWN GERMAN ish, he |, have hesitated to sHRW| Details of Sinking of Three | their reser to attacks - AW. Ais kirk Made Public, What You, enough to commit themselves to this drive. Gen. Pershing’s army, Gen. Wood sald, 1s @ splendid body of men, but | far too small, It 1s splendidly trained | and ite morale ts admirable. But it| destroyer squadrons off Dunkirk last has no fighting planes of its own. The | Thursday the British destroyer Botha Americans must rely upon the French out a for these. | Pershing’s army not only has not a fighting airplane of its own, he sald, but it has not a single piece of heavy ordi.ance made tn this country. 80; Early last Thursday morning the far as the latter Is concerned, he sald,’ British destroyers Botha and Morris it did not matter so much for the LONDON, March gagement between Allied and enemy 26.—In the en- WASHINGTON, March 26.—- The Senate prepared to-day to meet some of the conditions pictured by Major Gen, Leonard Wood, who talked to the Senate Military Affairs Commit- tee for several hours behind closed doors yesterd n warship in half and g part in the took a } the se ight, al- her main steampipe had been d by a stray shell. Gen, Wood, declaring that an Allied ta victory ts a ¢ sation of man power said that the United States should get and the French destroyers Capitaine as their own forces. | English Channel when they heard en- “Phe sooner we get 2,500,000 men|/@™y ships bombarding t coast of to France, the sooner the war will Dunkirk. They fired star shells which close,” said Gen, Wood. Man power, /had the effect of silencing the bom- he sald, would be decisive,’ and the|@tdment and scattering the enemy. United States would have to do its| The destroyers started in pursult full part in this matter. He made]! the German a northwesterly no prediction as to when the war| ‘rection and discovered eventually would end, e making He discussed the reports of the blx ttle fight gun with which the Germans have been shelling Paris, Gen, Wood de- clared that if such a gun had really without delay Expressing high admiration for the National Army, he advocated rushing it to France as fast as possid! giving whatever training Is behind the lines on the and wary other side. cial regulations. The vital need of the Allies on the | western front, he said, is “men and miore men.” He dwelt on the great need of speeding up ship production, Man power is diminishing with the Allies on the western front. The| a (From th It is as well, of the new Bish ee LOOHOLG PER GENT. ; al: similating hefood oy ise r) eae A helpful Remety i fhe stipation wr Meverishness 8 ONCTORIN (g. bered by the Germans, he sald, now | « a Mothers Know That |: French and the British are outnum-|peen constructed, it was more a! eak” than an efficient engine of that Russia has been eliminated fr m 1423 THIRD AVENUE (en ee Ae eo" STREET FURNITURE CashorCredit CPEN EVENINGS TILL 4 U'CLOCK a IDENTIFIED THE VICAR, Village Parson in Old Times Was! INI ANY eer GANGLAND quite as they used rather leass-than a c For Infants and Children, Ritu ths were counted lucky Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of 311 ON I the genuine. TC MT US Wh man ‘ee be?" ENGINE ; Wrile lor Kew tl-Page HUSBAND WAS NoT a OT CAUEL; 12-Page Spring Sale Cireu’ HE ONLY USED A BOARD, ree In in one Of the leading Southern citie A3-R bom Apartment sald Col, G. B, Taylor of New Orleans. 4 Yy Mine net ills fenaitpe ana D245 Kt A5-Room Apartment > uO VALUR AU! Grand Rapite A4-Room Apartment KX fendant was a very wealthy man, but notorious in the community as having a ‘harah disposition, He had been married a. in the long run. For Over Thirty Years YUBREE HANSA TO MTEE PE estifying In in reply. te asserted in a most an employee of ¢ the defendant ha: wife ina kind and o SN SAAS GANG Boring | ‘ Tin id answering Oy A tuk a rd to he He tuk a bo: STR N hia: ONO NOE WO7 jury wasn’t The 3 Dut over the lady her divorce,” ten min oth | and ships, cutting the enemy vessel in|!" disorder in all di | Two German destroyers and two |German torpedo boats were believed | |to have been sunk in the action off | | eluded the effort of the crippled Brit. isher, but only to fall a victim to the French destroyers, Ablaze, the Ger- }man boat lay disabled while the Frenchmen pounded her with torpe- does and gunfire. The Morris lost the rest of the| quarry in the mist and took the lame Botha in tow, while the French de- yers circled around, picking up ers. From the statements of | s it appears that eighteen | ted in the ratd, om the French coast, leaving three of their number behind, they were attacked by a Brit- | ish naval air syuadron, which pelted | them with bombs and scattered them tions, Dunkirk, according to an announce- The enemy craft, however,/ ment made by the British Admiralty Mr. Dealer, Must Appreciate About Coca-Cola’s Restricted Output The reason why you do not get your full supply of Coca- Cola will appeal to your patriotism. war use, Coca-Cola’s output is restricted by the Government. The Coca-Cola Company is proud to do its full part in con- servation, and at the same time is endeavoring to help the in training as soon as possible} French and the Britl@ factories have i. Ity we turn out ‘the fehl, Magon and Bouctier were pa- G . ° A a 6,000,000 men, and that at least}an ample eapacity to eee is i re Oe overnment in preserving in ustry. 2,500,000 should be put into France| &¥8 for the American Army as weil ing the eastern waters o' ne m Please recognize that we are making every effort to suppl you with the utmost quantity in strict accordance with offi- Please appreciate that your difficulties are ours—and ours are multiplied by the number of our friends and dealers throughout the country, whose business it is our object to strengthen and maintain. ner oar ee Holewaser Home quirements of our Government and yours. Implicit! alks ATLANTA, GA. sae ae ot March 21, It was said that \ IN GEORGIA CAMPS | setter. 2 damaged British destroyer hat reached port. 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