The evening world. Newspaper, May 1, 1918, Page 2

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~~. THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1918. GERMAN r MASSIN G RESERVES FOR NEW ATTA CK ‘IN FLANDERS . omni troops before continuing their drive for the hill p iy Kemmel region. , A-few more hours will suffice for their reorganization and another assault may be expected immediately. The seriousness of the German intentions here have been evinced in numerous ways, says the correspon- dent. On Monday, for example, they pushed at least one field gun for- ward to within 700 yards of the battle line and other guns were brought | close up. Heavy artillery firing continued at various parts of the battle lin during the night, and there were the usual outpost actions, The back areas between Ypres’ and Hazebrouck were ‘jneavily spelled by the Ger-| *'? mans. An enemy attempt yesterday afternoon to cut the barbed wire Advance Arrows Directing Missing in New List at Wieltje was dispersed by artillery fire, Way Magically Appeared From Pershing Emperor William appears to have been an interested and active —_— | sai visitor in the Flanders region yesterday. According to prisoners he has} WITH THE FRENCH ARMIES IN | WASHINGTON, May 1.—Today's been making his usual flamboyant speeches to troops, and he stated the, TP PUELD, April § (United Press). | army casualty list, containing seven other day that the Germans were trying to separate the French and Hardly baa the Germans begun ty-two names, showed eight killed in A ' their offensive a o'cloc , ri British armies, adding characteristically that the Germans were going ‘"°" offensive at 8 o'clock in th action: three dead bf disease: one pe rm tan 2) morning of March 21 th len 1 to “put the British back on the English Channel, where they belonged.” | 5 4 ” " , se dead of wounds; two missing; one ied sbeesd Mindat bausilttad 1 dead of accident; one dead of otha | Headquarters wos sent out and tn causes; five wounded severely, and | whole French front The list follows : | Ae if by magic, there appeared at KILLED IN ACTION every crossroads behind the French Arvid A. Cederholm front and along every route of travel rpls. John I Giles, George huge green placards bearing simply a Gritzbach . big black arrow Privates James O. y, Parl R Apart From Capture of Kemmel Hill the tie green piacara meant that the Clark, Clarence B, Coo, Clinton W > . . is Germana had chosen for their fleld of De Forest, James oyee Enemy Has Gained Nothing and Has irenlPe: Ihe, Sector (GF. HU. GUAR DIED OF DISEASE Lost Four Pitched Battles. The black arrows’ marked every foot | Privates Louls Loraine Barnett, of the way that the Frenoh reserves | Charles H. Bolden, Benjamin Hill LONDON, May 1 (via Ottawa).— [of which that of Monday was the most) mu low to arrive in tho quickest DIED FROM WOUNDS As the detalles of Monday's fighting | @"suinary of the past fortn ett possible time at the point of contact. Private Lyndon L, Casey. ae Cenetved, cvclivatny the Poot that | indeed apart from the cauture of; Had the Germans obosen any other | DIED OF ACCIDENT : Kemmol Hill, it has been one com- sector for their attack, this mechan- Private John Pesa. it was the worst day the Germans! plete failure, including four derpet- gm would have worked Just the same DIED OF OTHER CAUSES. have experienced since the opening | ate cats in pitched battles. These A different colored placard would | Private Howard A, Mowery of tho great offensive, the English | Were on La Basseo Canal, on the have Indicated the sector where the | WOUNDED SEVERELY. ‘ bs Belgian front, at Villers-Bretonneux Germans had opened battle Corp! Iter G. Ci n pers, hitherto retice Aen pened battle rpis, Walter G. Caul, John aia tae & Ieent in view | ana now on the Bailleul-Ypres front As a result of this minute propar- } Murray the fluctuations of the battle, NOW| The culminating effect of this has ation, every man destined long in ad- | Privates Raphael Carbo, John J comment on the operations in a tone| been to immenuely Increase the con- vance to meet the Germans at what- Cook, Robert B. Remington of confidence they have not hitherto] fidence of the Anglo-French troops ever point they might choose for | | WOUNDED SLIGHTLY distlayed. Whomn the correspondent describes au Ir offensive was able to arrive Nat 1 C. Reed, It is pointed out that the public in| NOW feeling that they have got the there in the shortest possible time, by Be D. Brown, Danie apt to reckon victory in terms of of-| Measure of the new enny divisions. the quickest way Caplet, Leon T. Colman, Bernard ¥ fensive success, but a defensive victory | Other strokes will undéubtedly come The war long ago demonstrated \ nghas mes 1, De » Jo Uke that on Monday may contribute | befo the German reserves are ex- that victory in a modern battle de eph A. Dixon, John C. Fleming, equally toward the ultimate object of | huusted, but confidence is felt that pends largely on transportation. This | a PDD OODDDH.HI HHH IGOGS6444.GHO64.HH.HHOHHOS4 we aot Charles J, Frey, Carroll W. Gleason, the campaign, namely, destruction of | Wherever the Germans try they will time the French General Staff knew . : Pact aah i ats 8 df Se ee ee ee ee, | Riera ROP | Vat wh Ae RESPE TAR BE ACCEL Seen [HL LEO ATIRG TALde GOP UAE the) SSur raOnidw Ih ad vbAge thas ths tew| British aud Freuch soldiers are here seen after a combined attack on thelr arms behind, ‘The Tommies and pollus are picking up the scattered psf ee a Le alllaasta ahaite this viewpoint the German despite }attack of fewer than a hundred ™4ns planned to attack and tho | German trench in n th@ Somme. The enemy ed, many of them leaving | rifles. Smith. thetr spectacular successes, can be 1¢-| thousand Germans has been broken Problem of — transportation was | ] eee eer a Mechanics Arthur F. Prescott, garded as having had the worst of the|in a sheer trial of strength on ground Selved in advance, The distribution | Francis D, Quig fos Jt rouat niet be forgotten, that ¢ y | ted line, there ls a growing hope that 4etail, In the four months which the | PR Privates Alfred John Appleyard, sustained a series of disastrous losses | Ypres will not be abandoned. General Staff had to prepare ite 4 | , SAYS SPAIN Angelo Ballandelli, Harold V. Boggs, trurtyportation facilities, it worked | hie John H. Breen, Luigi Cerullo, Chester | out to the last minyte the exact time | IT gwar to Governm nt | J. Cooper, Napoleon Buhamel, Daniel pound of munitions and supplies, About Trea H. Fisher, Willlam 8. T0 WORK FOR GERMAN could reach—by horse, automgbile or aie Bacal u d Americ wd H, Garrity, Thomas Gate Mieke aiiaon: panerees ay Shakar ie CERO EEN ne t . pw, James W. Hyatt, Harold REACHING FRANCE ’ eee ens a a | Blinding Fumes Used at St. Quentin and Dye ' war ‘on, Alfred J, Justice, ‘Thomas ent came, it was o z ; rae A ts oplao nas G. Lawton, William a sae . st tage touch a button, as It were, and the in Shells Protected Kaiser's Forces— - Mike Paternostro, Deported Men and Boys Sent Back! General staff knew the moment at ott, Lester J. Roteh as Unfit Replaced by Fresh | which y man and every gun Allies Now Have Remedy. “arried Back to Safety When | baa ATT esa aby val woul 2 ie po of co! n T ji 7 r : Ke i ober Recruits. MOUIA RGIAY ES DOInG PP Oo BbaGt Information which has reached the United States discloses the fact that the Tommies Are Forced en are i Leroy F. Webber, The correspondent visited the | ases O} Wirren, James ‘Zambone, ONDON, May 1 (via Ottawa), |Noyon. battlefront during the first |the rout of the Fifth British Army at St. Quentin, which was mainly r¢ to Retreat. y 1 Zapolsky, i} bd days ol ¢ a rm and sa bu cur Teames Ra Twenty-five thousand Hel. | 4y# of the German attack aniisey, [sponsible for the great advance of the Germans in their spring offensive MISSING IN ACTION, en Call Themselves Bud-| rian men and boys have been t antantry, convoys of milc | was duo to tho use of mustard gas on a wholly unprecedented scale, This] WITH TH wRW 1) sha 00d Mil ere n bare enn dies” ‘ A compelled to work o flitar utomobiles and trains of! 5 1 1 r tr ba dies and ATR AVAOUL SUS): pert ete cing” runt ot kong rolling up-to the front | 48 has been used, for a long time in minor operations, but, because of its | FUANDENS, May 1 (United Press) ate es erior: ys Their General. | German nentriea, behind the Ger= | ,qM@, most, inatter-of-fact,* unhur- | peculiar qualities, it could not be used in a general offe us It Was no as a ‘ ndiplo- | New York Canadien Casale ried, unworried, mechanical manner Sanday, Gen. ae Ant. —_—— man lines in the regions of Va- 4 sible to goncelve ne , | }e88 dangerous to the attackers than to the attacked . bd agus eee OTTAWA, May 1—Tho names of lenclennes ant euge alone t was precisely this preparation tha for time yester 1 d By Joseph W. Grigg. pai sing an bai beh M% | allowed the French troopa, with cnly| Mustard gas is non-odorous, It re-P——————— = 1 ace! the ¢ vei stlylie. Meera nll ala ull Courrieht, 1918, Jy The Prem Publishing Co according to Reute ad. : 1 minimum number of men engaged, | 7 in the vicinity of the shell ex hiiine: throuahe ent Gements y unable to push on. Canadian ¢ List: : (The! New York Work The mortality in the camp of the | fall quietly into the breach mad | piogion often for ter reat 7 The correspondent heard upon un-!a d ort on cat Killed In 1—G, Dooley Blue. WITH THP AMERICAN ARMY IN] doported Belgians, it reports, is | between tho British and French ling : BABE NT WY OE CN ae OF \ habt . t t mse t pty Jn ‘ v t g | mpeachable authority th bable Wounded—J. T. Grayson. New Yorl FRANCE, May 1.—America’s khaki| terrible. The numbers sent back | {Md while covering the retreat o and it produces the same effect on} The ; : Re ae format ! 4 Haskell Boston, SMuas.: Rul ie ‘4 ? J He n | the British to ald in checking the|the skin as poison ivy, although t thous have been f German - . nell, Oh J, Clmine Lee- tide now flows into France in a vol Resa replaced by fresh n advance Jefect sometimes does not begin ww dar t 7 rman: : ed thet the Sp Bribes it As VOL RIAEE MOH Rte HH ume not heretofore approximated, The | _Teerults | show for six or cight hours. If it get ey a babies 4 fMculty in gett t the f ‘ we United States fs literally “dumping an VIENNA REPORTS- ATTACK jin the eyes it produces blind ssid Piel) ea Bassador Gerare : ty pena Into France,” to uso the words |%™ !@ any American touriats ever | temporary, at least—and in the lur of the trench w poking after tis ) se co ‘ Promicr Lloyd George recently used |jarge tips. ! : he Germans devised a means rbsequent attacks, but Hritish eports on ‘conait leaner ‘. anos in the in the House of Commons. ‘o-day 1} In the Old World settings there the Ravenel Eine rt R ted ae this gas in larg cale ope ‘ nd British have been re Mae (erdad anounced a had an opportunity to see and speak |Dardy products of American training | Several Enem hrusts Repulsed | tions and protecting themselves. The | prepared Hindenbu ag | bab YOUNG NEW vinK BANKER a Se Ath cacy Ge soldiers of our Na-|CMmPs Are making ready to continue on the Piave,” Says Official | shells were partly filled with dye-| achieved no such results as he did in| ‘h® Hed Croan Gives 10,000,000 Franen to 4 ‘ivel training before being ordered to tho Statement stuff which marked the craters anil vult upon the Fifth Army, | "0 IS WOUNDED IN FRANCE Aid Brench Wounded, tional Army who in a compara ‘Y | front line ‘to share in the fighting sda ‘ enabled the advancing German troops | wh V r and = overs y Sceententil PARIS, May 1—T American Re few days have shaken the mud of|which they sre so anxious to do,| VIENNA, April $0 (via London) —|t9 avoid the places where gas shells| whelined I t oy pcbioarn Pe aie eae their own country from their feet and| Their white bread astonishes the na.| creased fighting ac vit nthe | had fallen, ‘The Fifth Army was borr 1 th at the great | British ry ery burg Gra me a3 ra which {9 d have accumuiated an abandance of|tives, especially the children, for | }talia front ta reporte ie ie omieial | barded with mustard , and when | confide the Gerane had ja their|® child which \ 1 Hy List fre recting t e , d 5 teh |pome “of the “4 * rom the Austro-Hungarias Liga ay pee a r cat { its French counterpart, Towns which po me 4 small youngsters when Sem eetane . ij \the effects began to be apparent rm eh Was bdaadcnoan(t t, | a a hey i until now had not seen any American | OTered white read by these Buddies Jave,” the report says,|4fmy was overwhelmed, losing guns.| the conviction that this gas would do f } France, and Le se troops are royally welcoming their|4!d not know what it was, They ene t porulaet {food supplies, thousands of pri ts w yefore the Allies » The on American allies. bee byte when war bread wat) PoNpoN, Ma rang en and opening @ huge gap In th any mean ercom : ag 1 | = idn't know what to do when one | “dopted in this country to know what] note nection w fMotal » —.|™ fit tho: rie ray took my hand and kissed it,” |>Fead looked Ike when white f A Hiseatan te us . LW KINSEY enon ¢ Old towns whieh never had an ~ BESS -revident of | Hen N M'KLN vaid a big doghboy. “Gee, these peo- | AMY | quarters rep * eased activity on H President of HENRY NELSON M'KL in the Be cane ancenciati 4 jReed for traiMe regulations because | tio Italian man pi Boiceh thigral atk Vike Ae aS ae 7 G08 any oF this Nise sewn : 47 | ousant vehicles now find efficient mpe Austrian A P Ny 0: 1 hea OMcers’ Training Camp at Viattabure, eee enna fifteen children admiringly scrutiniz~| A iercan military police directing| the comune Maly on a grand scale \and also of the uttiilery oMcers S a i alka ys emiling Buddy, whi the | Airecting | ‘Tho comm ave rout at times 1 ; aye rgy een fete a te n oud and ing a smiling Budd i American Army motorcycles throu; ¢ tended to éxert pressure on | Chane It Cannot Stand | Ri en ter LANSING 10 Jat Fort Monroe, Vin Be , Philadelphia, Thureday etter name men of th Na dons any a "their crooked thoroughfares Noate| i Mgt rage | begin “an attack! Git | ieroareskive | Violation of ELL ATTITUDE ee Mie reg esr sae sie . 2 at 2 o'clock, Latermens to have adopted instead of Sammies or |th4 iniitration of our khaki fr which the Germana ure en. As a ul rogressive nt Violagior No, 61 Br . Amexes. “Buddy” is supposed to be | means is shown in the fact that alm nt @ flank of the) Movement ick Action Agreement ON TURKE AND RIA iy Dia Be eat HARLES WAITTIBR, shorter term for brother 1 th lat Sist Strect, has been noti at § ut CAMPBELL FUNERA porter te for brother, anc 8 overnight French villages far pov ‘OPEBNHAGEN, Ma ‘ LOSCO ay, A \ | ) Washington Maussenet a H Broadway, 66th et. Thured, Buddies have brought with them their|tne pattleicld find they aro teny cH E DEV S$ HE ling, at a’ tempe ne \ ; | erate Let me give you the serious words | peaceful penetration MRS, CASTLE SELL BONDS °: Al efort ' t ¢elations Comm of a certain General to our army Everybody wants to ¢ " . . yu i r Tor who just now is preparing to do the | French,” said a bronzed privat It's “ ‘ t . " big job of mouldin urmy in this|some language, but we are learning | The p emer ASHI V . sector behind the lines somewhere in {to parlez vous very quickly. These| — | jl It te 5 ve | Roumania ‘ 1 b France. |people are certainly treating us tir Darran at iy er “This National Army of ours hasn't | Why, several ot our fellows who didn't Mba . ans ere A r ‘ ‘ a peer anywhere,” he said. “Our |leave girls, behind th ty| A \ , Us : , , boys are coming to France as fast as | ‘engaged to be marric © and all ’ ible ‘ they can be transported. And many wanted to hear full particulars of the W i are coming in German ships. They | fighting on the American and | “ ' evacua 1 er the have only one desire and that is to | the decoration Monday of the udu) + pmidst severe rf f get at the Germans, and when they |Massabhusetts Regiment with tho J! STOCKHOL M r 1 \ do, the Germans will get the worst | Croix de Guerre sian franchise f . ' : j “Too much cannot be sald about | told an eager group that this cog oud 1 BR etee Mints ‘or Whe Pransh peocin | marched Maat Wiis “te ia: A \ Attractive Offerings for W ‘ednesday, May Ist ple f hy ars th 8 of that good. ol fashio and our boys are proving themselves | Stripes flying wi > ‘ MIDGET STICK turer 1, oll fashions whole- worthy of the falth placed in them,'| “These Heinies haven't A cha ' KILLED FLAG CURSER; FREED snd eee About SO wileks in M is impossible for military rea- | When once we get golng goo,” sud ‘ : sons to state just how many daya | denly shouted one of these fellows y uh Honolulu Jury Acq Captain y a elapsed from the time certain tele- | desired to march right on ap \o o ue ION. oe be _— Bare Ton COE ER” Hae grams were despatched from Wash. | enches Hy f Mth { ; < ? There Is no more Oats TOINO | CHERRIES ington calling for the embarkation ot| 4 What these Gorn f their ht Merch Mr Shr ti \ vs Ky PIMLICO WINNERS te eae that. u Hig. Red. Kine, 1 % merican rations is ¢ n perch ¢ \ duced by + Bireet, certain units and tile arrival of the >| siniling, Bebe Rie ey foe t Manda ‘ who t ' 1 ereamy ”) Marshing (10 W qo unite in a picturesque part of France. |ner bell. Keeping pace ™ hale \ , Md Killed & J. W 4 : and’ our Unexcetied cl covered ‘with Men who saluted some of their of- | flow of troops are al! sssories for | 0,1 i nent, A vf Hy % ef i sone a ve Chocolates ee 4 pital extensions are developing rap- | /)°r', VS Tod to the crowd, Allen wis anded b, ig ) $3.30, th Time 8 FOUND BOX Stores: seen siyabe cur coast ine are yon faly on are the welfare vrandoes of | tno ects, "a! s mad soramniie fo wy » afraped a p2beut bin and one, Herder, Bam. Pickett, Attahe : Brook: Aa V bodyguard ebou nim as] Jak ichass, OCR « igh Ow h the ni vue! where | the army. , ( tainutes she had sold $40,000 worth us lest the court **'Giariess and Candidate siao reah She mpshified WARNS sonteiney, - » PR, hah * TOUCH OF BUTTON SENT FRENCH TO AID BRITISH ARMY Worked Out in System | POILUS AND TOMMIES CLEANING UP AFTER AN ATTACK /n CASUALTIES 5 INPLUDE EIGHT KILLEDINACTION | Two Lieutenants Reported as

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