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'Y and Special Correspondents. GLAMOR AND ROMANCE OF WAR | MORE NEW EXCEPT FOR THE AIR FIGHTING | ENDED BY WORLD’S CONFLICT Soldier of To-Day Is a Disciplined Manual Laborer Who Does More Hard and Distasteful Work Than He Ever | Dreamed of Doing in Civil Life at Home—But He Is al Greater Patriot Than the Warrior of Old, for Latter Was Purely and Simply a Romantic Fighter Who Did! Nothing but Fight and Was Never Tired Out by the Acid Test of Back-Breaking Work Performed for Love of Country. ; | | ) FRANK MEADE By Martin Green. ae ee - Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) of disappointment in the United the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Pvening World.) [bag on this subject—say along in (CORRESPONDENTS: CAMP WITH | the summer—tt must be remembered id (Bpeci Copyright, 1915, by AMERICAN FORCES IN FRANCE, | that the Amertoan Army ts working MARCH 18. with and to @ considerable extent, AR, as it is conducted to-di 1s little more than disciplinary | under the guidance of French Army W manual labor. The movement, the romance, the thrills of war-|°Mlcers, and however strongly our fare that we have read about in our histories have given way to| Military authorities may be inclined routine, system and monotony. This statement has been made many times, |)» ‘b? Proketiv the pare ais oan but dt will bear repeating, because the oftener it is re) 04 inetinots arising trom the age-old peated the more potent will be its influence in impress-| experience of a vest pocket people, all ing mankind with a great Truth—namely, that war ts a!o¢ one blood. 3 foolish waste of lives, money and energy. Bverybody, has a faint sort of an idea along tha’ line: only those who get into actual contact with warfare can realize) *s8mbled such @ conglomeration of that dt {8 simply organized disorder, synchronized diasi-|®!¢ments of the human race as is pation, | packed in and behind the British jand French lines. The only classes missing, in the field of my observa- tion ara Eskimos and Conscientious Nover in any war has there been The soldier of the p: who was essentially a fighting | ° man and spent all his time fighting, as been displaced,| Opjectors, and there are aad because of modern tnvention and development, by the| some Eskimos fighting cry soldier who spends about one-fifth of bis time fighting} Germans. Veritably the whole world, or waiting for the other fellow to start a fight and four-fifths of his time| civilized, half olvilized and otherw oetween making ready to fight and toiling laboriously at a multiplicity of! is represented in the fight against The probably | against the! Sot Toe OLLIVAN CORR dd PRIVATE JOHN BRAWLEY PRIVATE, STEPHEN HICKEY OLLIVAN, _THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1918.7 THE EVENING WORLD in Reporting the War Has the News Service of the Associated Press, the United Press No Other Evening Paper in New York Has a New Service So Complete YORK BOYS ON HONOR LIST OF 165TH REGIMENT’S WOUNDED | LAWR Gorn W. DP NEACEY. - ed Civilians . 7 All other catses a Total deaths 1,683 Wounded Captured Missing . we Grand tot The foliowit ensunlty lates for pul Robert M., © DEMING. N, Thomas By, iteu' LEY, Janes 1. y.. private, Sitabtiy Wounded. ‘oneph, private, SIGY, Joneph T, private, (NOH, Stanley W., private, M'INNIN, William, vate, MKENNY, Everett N., private. M'KED Daniel J., private, Walter L., Lge Lymay f., private, SOLE, Joseph. private, SOT. « ALTON MANE, John P., private, MANNING, John rivate, MERKLE, ‘William, aw |e a private. ie Oe PRTMIZEO, Joueph, Sivas ? IN ARMY IN FRANGE! 23 NOW REACHES 3:311 TETREA on pooans M., priva' WASHKEWICH, Nikolls, priva! YOUNG, Raymond G,, privat Latest Rolls Given Out in Washington Bring Number of Dead to 1,632. | Yet as XS. Shoemaker Vint at Ritle, he World’s Best Pure, appetiz- ing, delicious. Guaranteed to satisfy or your ZBSKI, Michael, privat WASITIN' ‘, April 12.—The com- | siete lst of {can casualties In money back, n. Pershing's overs expedition- | ary force, aa now given out by the|/ War Department, shows a total of | 11 names. no latest list, day, given out late yester- ontained 234 nes for April 10 asks made necessary by the fact that another soldier is off somewhere | German autocracy and brutality id 11, ‘These ists show twenty | Oghting. All the soldiers in Belgium and ance are not fighting. There tm’t | conclusion that if we are to whip the American soldier !s mixing with all these elements, which are, in the nat- urel course of events, in discord as to | official notification has been sent a» ’ ) but fifteen years old and saw service at the Mexican border, Although no j yet to the boy's home, it 1s believed | seventeen dead of disease. \he ts the one mentione in the | three men killed In action, three dead dent and ‘he wound- of wounds, six killed by a ed number 178 and the missing seven. Austin, Nichols & Cos | Ge ust t 5 anotties, bat ax | Private Amos H. Dow, Cot <.| "rhe summary of the American casu- | U N BEA pm top them along the battle tine, | “AS We must whip him tm the air, | relations between one another, but are in nineteen yeara old and tiv ities abroad thus far is as follows: | “ te roan) Much con 6 now in accord as to relations with the | |788 McDonough Street. He enlisted in|" Vintog in action oa | PREPARED POY, LOW Os eee ee ote te Nel a eck ok Go Caet eek ee eee | eens and a Eromeniy vemnata (Hi) the 284 at the outset of the and], Titel oe prisower Pa ever seen a German soldier except the eek nan, I haven't seen enough of} ancora along those lines for a long | was transferred to hin present regi- Killed by accident... 18) MUSTARD ; yet to do him justice, At this ment. Dow was employed by the (erman who has been captured, and] wiitine tne american fyi in| “me to come. | Metropolitan Trust Compan Died of disease. S67 ery tow German soldiers alive have| france, attached on is heen The villages behind our lines in the 7 | ,,btlvate Raymond F. Gorman of the Tost Leben ik *THE WORLDS SEST~+ ever secn a free soldier of the Allied| Army, are in the position of brass | TOU! and Laneville sectors remind one same company lives at No cific Street. He enlisted in the ith Nataee of Macy Bepened Wend laapeten tae a pea ot Here—Held Important Sector, Says Re- enlistment he was employed by the turned Y. M. C. A. Worker. of the streets of All Nations at the International exhibitions, which have been hold in Buffalo, St. Louls, Chi- cago and other Amorican cities. ‘The roads between these villages are alive | es, Modern warfare, as it is ex-|band visiting a strange city to give @ concert and finding that the 1ustru ments have deen left at home. Our soldiers are con mplified on the western front, con- sts of each side digging into the d and,trying to blow the otver E, W. Bliss Company in Brooklyn. RIP A _Dsaturday’s Specials, — oo SAB ‘Thomas A. Feeley lived at No. 202 | ° 3 Misses’ & Juniors’ Seventh Street aad also entistod in |b (@ | fy pelled to do a he ta cly either side digs| they aro not fitted to thelt geographi- | Men, yellow men, copper colored men| The valor of the Rainbow Diviston, | No. 164 Garflold Place, Brooklyn. Mr. |“ Compl. Henry D, Hawkhurst 18 tine= Hy e \ the har it Is for the other side|C@! eAvironment. France is a vest; nd men of nondescript colors, hailing atul esp chully the 166th Infantry stad Ported s yy! _ fae ar rennaee teon years old and lived with his cous: | ee Se sls an pocket repudlic and the pocket ts full from the four corner: of the earth. 69th New York), was further shown | POrvice sete reat Wg ‘erie em- | jn, Mi: Jeasle Fe 6x8 +o blow him out. Accordingly the blow. | ?° : : socdagibe loaticn eye jon stato’ oboken. Greene Avenue, Ho enlisted w v- » rapes ee ety : ana {Or People. ‘The United Statea ts an| All of them are conne cted with the is y by ene ns me tear n 0 Among those reported missing oe | nteen years old ia the Mth and saw V. S ial s out proc quires move Jovercoat pocket republic with people | British ond Armior, and in|cent casualty lists, More tha ompany K are Privates Charles A.! service In Mexico. wre preparation as the diff scattered around the a; here|our own 1 » Indians and |of those wounded between March 21 |W na, No. a John Bt ety WwW ar Private Charles R. Kroonke lives at ery specia at reases, The prodigious t : land April 6 were of that regiment. O¢| Wick, N. Y., and Michael Holmes, No.| No, 461 Rogers Avenue with his pare eases Tad oradi gions teeks Sf 18005 | and (there negroes; also in our army we have and Aa hp aep quaacin inacestrtedd YER EET ar iets gnta. He enlisted in the 394 and waa| $ hich are being accomplished by ie) France may be compared to a| Japanese, who have been caught in|these more than 120 wore |FOUR WHO WENT TO WAR To. | transferred, | laters on both sides a ne Ume 4Fe | sramo of balls arranged for the open- | the selective draft, but I do not be-|of Company K, and more than 40 of| GiThRR ARE WOUADR | ,irivate Otto Ol te eighteen and it neoncelvable to persor 6 1G ¥ ved yaren a 0 ( oi a aelta thon, We haow the| 28 of & samo of Kelley pool. ‘The! Iteve there are any Japanese in any |Company M, | aoe eee Mi Wer vanue ite lh a arecuate| “Oe ee ee eee inet as hard as| Dalls are compactly arranged accord- | other army among the fighting force Tho New York boys, according to] | Four Now York boys who went 10/67 public school No. 118, and bef mans Lead ie a Seen gre ing to numbers and colors and strips, although there are many a ¥. M,C. A, worker just back from | win together, a's of them in company enlisting in the 14th was employed Saturday only—a most remarkable re are because th ave to re : 1 wero given an {important 6¢ 7 ‘ was la baker teak See A jer-| 224 No matter how much you sildo) officers here and in England as mil 8 lin which so many of Com value-giving in smartest Spring Suits for ’ want to hold up their end, Tho Ger-| 114 grame around on the table the tary and naval observe tor of the western front, and held It) men were added to the casualty Het, | Private Patri ok Bryan 1s thirty-five th ladi ban 3 bd nang and the Allies are fighting the j0)0 Jit) ‘ 9 , on for six weeks, Their famo had| Sergt. Peter J. Crotty, No, 366|¥*rs old and made his hom ql ne young ladies—taken from our own f warfare on the western; 3''8 not chango thelr positions.| ‘The Turks are allies of (Germany, 10th Avenue, and Corpl, John J, Gib. |# cousin, Daniel J. Buckley, at No. . same kind o} |The United States is more like altut there aro Turka in the Allied |Peached the German troops, who, to) oie Aone et eee a vith Bergt,|¢4 Freeman Street. Formerly @ florist, assortments of fashionable, well-selected ete -— table in a game of Kelly pool after! armies, a well as Armenians, Hin-|#how thelr love for the Irish, detor-|mhomag’ Gleason. and ‘Private U,| Meniisted in the 6th Inst summer, models, . the break, with Dalls scattered all Dp , mined to give them @ warm time, This} Quinn, made up this quartet, . 2 ‘9 11 modern armies are armies of hf Ns scattered all! qus, Bzyptians, Sovth Africans, , up tt a ur, the son of Leo Honnard of the uborers, mechanics, clerks, stenog-|Ver the surface and moving with | Chinese, Senegniese, South Sea Island. |™4Y “ocount for the high percentage “ues ag AE hen he went irench Mission in Now York, and Model Illustrated Is of a 8, 5 5 , Sene Sea Is! A saa oO wa rehind him his . {o. 112 Herriman Stree o| ”; ; aphers, office boys who shave dally very shot. Compared with orderly, ene, South Americans (in the foreign RE camels i 5 joa | Nd flve children, His wife Tien Lived At No. 248 Berrtinas Azer Be Fine Poiret Twill in ‘ 3 i “ ‘ ded | | 5 and executives of varying serelty pee tie Sa ured SUT | legions), Filipinos, East Indians, West papece da *) Meet OF repel pige ii tro months ago cantly. © letter before sailing for Franco in October Smart Cut-Away Model wer, After the novelty. of | re Americans hold alle- | Meeoare, Fortuguess of | Tenipeno 65) e¢ the | on m_ Gibbor ni married, ; pad and new surroundings nas lance, is more or less chgotio. Meine AY sae lea ow |‘"eas house” district, around 28th) Franca, in the regular army, he had} private Harry S, Graham. twenty- Navy, Tan, Rookie, etc. sf : mixe ls ‘alla "a found his brother Mich. the soldier finda bimselt |Strect and Second and ‘Thind Ave- whom he three, of No, 677 Lorimer + reet, en- They are billeted all over France con- had not geen for ten years listed in the svorn off, Say Steer sn higsrint) Kaas gaore: thas. he A full score of successful models —in every ve peadqg erage if a he Hee BIAS of paonia havelbeen| tgucua te the Date. Tipe. ane fifty in the regiment, most of them) p rf hl Bo oa old fst a vas MOU wor revised effect and color—the materials at home at a see een teak | one, the eame things in the same | every village or camp assigned tol), isag her, and most of discharged at tho wish of his wife, han In are simply wonderful at the price. Silk he is @ epectalized man, or ask |way in France for generations—for | them, American soldiers, billeted in| io Go nany M When the United States got into the}eent de Pant Ae he would never dream of taking UP/ages, Not that the French lack in- the vicinity, or on «pecial duty, are) on On Company M, big war, howeve waived her ob-| Private George P. Crouch ts twenty- Peau de Cygne lining. fn civil lite if he has failed to make |{tlative in peace or war, but the in-| frequent visitors. |NONE FROM “GAS HOUSE” DI8-/ jections Bo ene See oe moore Oe i" : nten Ave: K . himself valuable as a specialist. That |itiative ts on the order of a delayed | TRICT KILLED, Ui toee, Now Meme: MOG OIe ee raie in the.eid HieUenOG bel Charge for Alterations a all there is to modern war, all thé | pass in football. It takes a genius of! At the battle front the other day.1| “They haven't killed any of our fel- | °° nas of two other New York| was in the theatrical profession | soldier can expect of the future 1s the nigh order to initiate a new move-|ran against twin brothers who are yet" sald a resident of the’ boys who were friends and neighbors | Private Samuel G. MoConaughy : ransient glory of being a hero in his}mont in France, and because the |nevhows of a member of the ataff of | district to-day. “I couldn't count the| at home and probably ure nelghbory jis twenty-five and led at the oere) Al the Fashion 4 home town, The modern soldier) genius must necessarily be of high | The Hvening World. In the course of|(ermans they must have killed. 1 Tan “hiwiey: No, 401 Hast. a#th | Hanson Place, where his fathar Is am @ detter and more patriotic man) order the Initiative is generally suc- conversation I acked one of the twins | didn't go that far in school That !8| cireet, and Private Stephen Hickey,| ployment director, A bre r, Na New Shop n the soldier of time past, who|cessful—as witness the taxicub, omnt- | how long he and his brother had heen|the way the district feels about !t, | No, 317 East 38th Street, both mem-|thantel, is a member of the Offic ved in the exhilaration of combat all | pug were Baten: gt Cie? pleasure-motor shifting of stationed at the position they were] Yesterday's lists from Cen, Persh-| bers of Company K . | aeeey Ronee 8r Chae per sek. Meee | ‘ - the time, ‘The modern soldier, "0/the French Army from Paris jeep occupying, which was anything but al ing, reporting 234 casualties, show | °, corpora 2 manele X. om MORES OF | sore tect te jdeeitel en Le ae re ‘ Nineteen West 34th Street natter what his ideas of war may bé| battle line when the Hoche was al-| calm, peaceful position, “Let me see,"| the American units that have been 10| day's lists as slightly wounded. He | listed in the 284 Kegiment last June, a ———_ hen he gues into the game, speedily | most tn sight of the Place Concorde |said the lad, “Now, was It Dimanche| the thick of the fighting aro from) enilsted in the 165th last June, hie and was transferred. | Bi fc lida . | eo rs’ VES XS SP inds that he has ned up for &/in 1914 we came in or Lund!—damn it all,|New York and Wisconsin, Yester-| lived with his widowed mother, Mrs. | fhe aocay he wus in tho photographic | veriod of drudgery, and it 4s all to his) nal there I go talking French again,” day's lists were mainly of Wisconsin| Annie McNamara, at No. 65 Layton | 00° | Avenue, Staten Island, } two other | SECOND JAMES SHIELDS IN THE | 7 ,onor and his manhood that he ed | Wheat with writing about poo! b: — trvape. | OF sixty Sieh: named as se- | brothers, John and Thom also are CASUALTIES. TORnlateD Bi fpes é verely wounded Bu) e serving Uncle Sam. John ts - 7 > sorl-| ¢ x0t complain 4 things I have balled myself all BRITISH FLYERS DOWN th Machine ‘Gun’ Battalion, made |rerving Uncle Sam. J bn is 6 mem; James P. Sh serie | e If T have been understood | up, but what I want to aay Is thi ely of the old Second Wis-!q@nomas is In the navy In France, is Miner ne 0 e mn 1 S a dia al aaetaade | We, supposedly a phleematic people, EIGHT GERMAN PLANES infantry.” There were com | "Surg Lim glad my hoy was only | Shields of No ia Oo oat en ene oan e warfare haa (ere actually as impulsive aa an in- oly tow Now er i) alightly wounded,” aaid Mra, Me-| [ie is the second toll] ee a =< = | bv el eatad ts cray vs pardon |cendiary bomb--and often about as —_—_——- ot Lively oe a Sap let maly Going | apoeer 18 § ce re ‘bal oe een eliminated crave the pardon | ‘ iy | ys bse perhaps rest known !s\ my duty to my country by having| City boy of th 6 name haing f the reader, There is a branch of |44ngerous to ourselves and our sur- | 41. Drop More Than Ton of Bombs ut. Patrick J, Dowling, wi 1| my three boys serve for a just ¢ en wounded a f —FROM— x h embraces glamour, |TCUR¢Ings—whtle the supposedly im. |°*” 4 ! Stati 1 three sisters at No. 170 West| ‘private Salvatore Maresco nields was emp! ae 4 Leal palar sp paren French are supremely delib- on the Railway Station at es Stre aa rears | HOned In a recent casualty list ax having | sylania Railroad . | >in TA and caloulating. Luxemburg. deut. Dowling 1s thirty-on# years) heen killed in action, waa a Brooklyn |to the time of his « n is no drudg “ab a 4 u " e jold and was born in Dublin, coming boy. He lived at No, 1 Oth Streat,| Hngineers last © ‘ lactis From my room [ look out on a British aviators | to this country ten years ago. He t LONDON, Ap and enlisted in the 4 Infantry last | France in Novemt new ra of an establishment which 4 than 6 ton of bombe on | served Sve years in the Regular Army 6, later being transferred A yer Bet np , ¥ xt livers a manufactured product over |47PP°d " ipl in Sn working up to the rank of second) i¢sth, Mentioned as wounded are a father has been nutifi¢ he W | » range of territory. I happened | the railway atation at Luxemburg yea- | Lioutenant, but resigned at the term!-| umber of other Brooklynites, among | Department of his, wour | _ ; ‘ rting on @viation aotiy- | 24tion of bis service to enter upon 4/ them being: All day Sunday a mother's ‘ | to witness the process of hitching the | te n rer business career. Privaie Joseph Rodnosky of Com- of her sokiier n “over t | an horses to half a dozen tracks at §/!ttes on the dattle front tho offictat| At tho outbreak of the wor botween| pany He formerly lived ae No. 8 Feuat 1 with a vagus prem Joseph W. Stern o'clock this morning and the degin- | statement on Wednesday's aerial opera-|the United States and Germa he Street. Hoe enlisted in the Mth Regl- he was in danger, and y re-eniisted in tho Regular A and ing of the work of loading theltions says that eight enemy airplanes rent last June and was transferred to |name of Corpl. Wallin 9. Neo &Co.,American | ruc! was sent to the Plattsburg Traioing the 165th shortly afterward. found by his mother, Mra, I ° mnies of | trucks, |were accounted for and that reven Brit-|Camp last summer, He graduated, sergt. August F, Hughes of Com- Jahan, No. 212 East sith Street % publishers of re} At £.0 o'clock the loading of three !isn machines aro misting, ‘The state-| With bis present ‘rank ‘and was! pany K lived at No, 1860 #&th Stroet |the slightly wounded. Alr ‘ 2 | of the trucke had been completed. a usstgned to the 165th, then training at! with his parents, He was twenty- | snme time whe received & this music, | Half an hour later the trucks depart ment ree tte fi amp Me Me, Ts 1. eesti one yearn old and enlisted three years |ten March 18 which eatd hor boy of |! alt PATt= | wane weather Wednesday was very| Lie ing {a the fifth officer! ago, He saw gervico at the Mexican eLeen WAM RA ri B | 1 through the courtyard gate, In) yur F soon as|of Co. K to be reported slightly! border, f PROD OE ORT von vane cabled London i American establishment those as posh ‘ound our | Wounded Private John F. Connery of the same ry, and when it comes to . } var waula have haan’ lncdad and aioe Among other men of Company K ré-!rogiment and company lived at No. | pa ry : and = arranged } net i . : Ai 1 Wounded. in yesterday's lists 462 Fourth Avenue. Brooklyn Ele ish ” i“ , d n thelr w 1 fifteen minutes, but ! ¥ ar ; __ (nineteen years old and at the ou ; B “fi for a release for fi ia ae lan ae od vay ‘ Sergt. Bernard I t break of the war en nthe 1th 1 of stuf, Ulishi oif the 3 ys ‘ Lone Nogiment, A brother Is now at Camp | tun out of thin a the publishing 45 Up @ AHL while nothing . ' ila it, Slover tived at No. 61 |30u,wave, to walt ena f f the b s from the show collision with a railroad train on: t! Three ort Btreot and enlisted In the 4th. | ours ,,80 cheer up some more, of one of the best song c have budged the loads on the down in our lines ret Avenue Slover is marr! , - ied d has a ac A aister lives at No d . " _S = Ay “I instead of toast for ' years old. “A aiste Tine on in The Sunday World Magazine breakfast- DoCCY, pare Bayt ‘ Br arenale ENLISTED WHEN ONLY FIFTEEN \nine wien ty i. WITH POST TOASTIES si rnic nti Bea oot Se Ne ie rose mney Greece anger Neeser | NEXT Sunday World | seven 218 ming of rok, vrought down by ¢ 8 drive years old, At the outbreak of the nee, T imaging, must ex- garet Nor He enlisted when = Fee ee TE