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Se RR LUFBERY JUMPED 800 YARDS FROM BURNING AIRPLANE Che “ Circulation Books Open to All. tooks Open to All.’’| Press Publishing wrk World). “If It Happens In New York It’s In The Evening World’’ Copyright, 1038, by © Co, (The New (92 KILLED AND INJURED IN RAID ON nnn enrrrrrnnrennennnnny penn, Y GERMANS ON BRITISH FRONT BIG LOSS NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 20, 1918. ~ AMERICANS IN OPEN BATTLE: LEAVE TRENCHES FOR TRAINING IN HAND-TO-HAND FIGHTING Evening World Correspondent De-, scribes Vim With Which U. S.'s Troops WelcomeChance for Face- :; to-Face Conflict With Germans.|, By Martin Green. (Staft Correspondent of The Evening World.) AT AN AMERICAN FRONT IN FRANC change NETS $4,764,120 PLANE ABLAZE, o This City Star Thumb and Pur With a Rush Gasoline Tank. 000 in noon! WITH ‘TUE FRANC ated Press) AMERICAN M Major » April 16. of surroundings and Refreshed by @ perlod of rest and by a contemplation of the prospect of getting into a real, face-to-face, Man- Mix fashion battle with the Germans, the United Statee soldiers who have been | * nh uy th Kat turned over by Gen. Pershing to the French Army for work in the devel °° i ound of Unie to’ nt . ment of the great battle on the western front put in a gingery day, (Ul) pe nipre edi t . op) " 1 poratl : of results, it 1s astonishing how novelty assists in putting vim Into Lae! milter, the vest repr e en-|& Work of troops getting ready for battle, Practically all the work here ts‘! re of the various teams. | novel to men who have known nothing but trench fighting. There 1s SoUnLSP RRR Ui ste | @ exhilarating freedom of movement about manoeuvres in training for opes F. Bul t hele warfare, rest ia 81.04 F The Germans have forced the change which the troops with whom i ‘OW Workers. M ¢ am now quartered are enjoying, The German attacks have brought tnto ; o : ipa the war the sort of fighting we read about in bistorles of bygone etruggies tine were N oP. Morga between armies. Unless there shall come a deadlock, compelling each etde *'4887%; No. 10. 1 heim 1 ) XN M { v . to dig in on new lines, the great German arive will succeed or fall tn the gog¢oa0) a 1 i rs, EH. betes kind of action we see depicted in great palutings of battles or in moving $281 637 pictures of rehearsed military encounters. Jude r unced o § , . oP q * aes behalf of # Steel Cor GLAMOUR OF WAR IS IN OPEN FIGHTING. Drain ia Hel senMe nee The open road, the open fields, the enemy fn sight, the sky obscured | 900,000, of which one-half will be . by the smoke of bursting shells, rea! charges under fluttering battle flags, | Credited to New York ? a t a Df all res) markin the shock of combat with a foe standing up on even terms—these aro| wor, tre nruat fora : {actors which lend glamour and romance to fighting and appeal to fighting | to be devoted to easing ‘ ‘ men. . Jot the world il rouse ‘ We haven't come to the point of bursting shells and the shock of|{nterest th reat travel : combat as yet, but we are trying the charges and the widespread move-| TE! cross regiater 4 ments which military experience has shown to be part of attack or defense two most fr b-Pe4 where trenches are abandoned, and our men are absorbing their leasons |” t ‘ ‘ eagerly and joyously. lr of e It should be remembered tn Cee | ross voff: Here Is the tdea | wnt an convection that these soldiers have ny Two herolc-size models of the| a dix been face to face with death many O'LEARY NOW A FUGITIVE: \c ‘t : mounted on nich rab as times, and they have reached that | | wheels, too : © to-day atltacking. Lufbory jumped f state of comparative indifference to HIS BAIL BOND IL BOND FORFEITED Broadway and n Btreet and at} yin ts danger which distinguishes soldiers |Fitth Avenue and Eighth Street, ree | UUPMINS Machine when so yardy é : al: 7 ¢ above th und. He ad seventeen} in action. They have bad their bap- | fyi: “ ” spectively, The floats supporting the | * ui tiem of fire and they will go into| ~~ OF of Bull” Fails to Respond |tweive-foot crosses also were ten-| victories to his credit the fray devoid of the natural and in Federa! Court When His anted by t-faced girls in the| Lufbery's body fell | flowe inevitable caution which paveansiesh Case Is Called for Trial, |spotiess white gowns and colfs of the! garden, while his airpian green troops in their first enco Seba Red Cross field nurse ing, dropped to the ground 100 yard ah O'Leary became a fugi- with an enemy, tive fre ne Tho two great crosses will move|away. By the time the first Amer Our manoeuvring area comprises — m Justice to-day, When his| each day further and further up these | cans had reached the spot t t roughly, about 160 square miles, Thu |©4#e was called in the Federal Co reots, each block of thelr prox. | the famous fiver 1t r men are travelling light, and as thoy the editor of “Bul Indicted § the progress In mille the French the Ha seen n French rations are not eating |the Hepionage Act for seditio 4 i anbarah\ 4b Ata Whereslt ne Goveran WiiH h so heavily as they do when ys rs - ces, was missing, His atte nA 8 At and grea anit ch he French | 9. i 5 b plenty of U. 8. A, chow, The Xteneg|Thomas B. Folder, told Judge For ‘ : 1 the | wild flowers ration is ample, oh Pa ien SGtles he hadn't seen O'Leary in several wee! am Ba ‘ appear| Lu wa foeny Pe Pe ert if food we feed His family had heard nothing from him, {®t the * t onsen | tnilit " tomed to the | © complaint the attorney sald and with x move th to | cu i k our soldiers, ‘There 1s ho comp iy te ¢ say nan v1 about the new ration, but there 18 @) Judge Foster fortelted © yin bai | fe SE aH este la ec Jot of good natured joshing of $2,500 and tamed a bench warrant |!take ‘ | w hw . ing the men that In- fF his arrest, Within a short time| A block a million! Watch the| hine guns with w ' Notices advising Ue ve part of the. ‘he Naval and Military Kence Bu-|red crossca & 4 fateh pit ppa asmuch as they 10 art OF aur and the Departn hast ; sie shila | oer ould be put on partment Justica| words for New York this week Lufbery French Army they would } 2 soon| Were Seeking the Irish agitator in al Another u feature will register | those receive French rations were posted & {| nation-wide search ’ 4 see ases ai) kale t ta the billets had been selected 204 |" An investigation into certain influ e drive in tho eurt bE the routine of camp life had Deen/ences friendly to O'Leary was consid. |< every afternoon belly in| thumb. Appirently the » taken up. The French soldiers’ bev-|ered by Federal officials to-day ax| the city churches will toll the num punctured of the gas erage is the army wine-pinard, and]ono of the next steps in the Govern. | ber of milllr ed that day toward |0f his mach fe has been strongly intimated by|mext’s prosecution of the case the city's $2 quota, One-half] The German machine , i aay of our troops that fnasmuch a3| Mra, O'Leary was on her husband’s| minute intervals between the strokes | h* antl-aireraft fire nevera they have been put on 4 ration of | bond, ae Seeuily being a house she| will give a pportun to count] afte ow u errace, which green plants forms @ Bey nein Jumel Terrace, the Bronx. |each resounding ta million. | # losion of proportion they ought to £9 | Compressed a ons by white | the ' F Right here arises the question of lease thaltals dollars coile It » g men according to pou SIGNED BY THE PRESIDENT The ure located | German ' ey are campal 2 ren e Chy Ha af yst invariably sunk iD Jerald Square, the valleys, Our cook, an old beeen Registration Day Is Set for J 5 ainpany, the Public | Wa y xome 1 0 wonfan, protests against boiling the fa us Circle and before|city of Toul. The A nf water for drinking purposes. She says} yy the Adjutant leare on die wlertiand ss pag \ General. gest days of the weo, | headed for the fighting > an “01 ed on Sixth Wage) en Josef Hor.| the enemy on his return <Conuibuee 66 ESS Hee | WASHINGTON, May 20.—The Pres ree Hor. | 40 n his f | den o-day signed the bi 4 ef!t plano recita al and the fp THE WORLD TRAVEL BUREAT, af . ay it 4 bill providing aa eclink Rata ; wade biter Hetary bs » n me 3 Telenhone Bevkman 4000 jective service velt upon t esson of t A The Adjutant-General's office hi trom tur beaxese and versie oven day and ounced enrollment dey would be June 5 aigtt, Mower orders and travelers Ciel f Third Page.) had been regarde HE INFARLY PLEDGES JUMPS 00 YARDS — umpaign to pa tise $25,000,- Machine Gun Bullet i ierces His Raoul 4 ay ? 11 PLANES One Bomb Makes Hole Five versons were kil ofr raid Six na were injured in the} provinces, ‘The casualties are divided | Jas follows London and Metropolitan Dis trict--Killed: Men, 17: women, 14) | children, 23; total, 15 Provinces: Injured: Men, 2; wom- n, 3; child, 1; total, 6 Considerable damage to property has been reported The Whitsuntide Holidays prob-] ably were responsible for the safety | of scores of girla housed in dormitor- | # recently constructed by a large partment .pprentices towns who went home for the holi- days, per floors of the building, which Is half a block long. The main room on |the floor below was dar fow girls who took refuge in the base- |ment when the first alarm was given | were uninjured | wan wounded slight! deep and fifteen long In crete This bomb Sritish ihetonsti Bombed for Iwo Hours by Germans from the Sky, SHOT DOWN Feet Deep and Fifteen Long in Pavement. Te ~ | Thirty and 156 injured in| | LONDON, May 2 seven | London area during last night's of them are from nearby store, Many brought | A bomb destroyed the two up- god, Dut the except for one, who Another bomb tore a hole five feet a solia con pavement, wrenching doors r hinges three blocks away {ings recent a new war om t 1 near ® 4 to how as the A te b oping wirubbery and shaking for blocks ar shattering e raid wos th rf | 1 ke Ne before wo ‘ mtinued ey of fl | Britiat 1 f was the sid since Mar and ¢ of fell bef fennen | f lx t r ns & ovr y tinued on Second Page tas ft 4 ( { Pag ———__—_—__—-} “Circulation Books Open to All! | 18 PAGES WEATHER—Showors; Tuesday clearing. % “PRICE. TWO CENTS. LONDON U BOAT THAT SENT OWN THE LUSITANIA DISABLED; INTERNED IN CARTAGENA U-39 Also Is Submarine That tacked U. S. Tanker Petro- lite in 1915, M’ DRID, Sunday The German av 1 offlctal de 39, says an spatch from Cartagena, entered that port last night in a damaged condition, The U-89 is in a seriously dam- aged condition as the result of a battle, Anothe submarine ac companied the U boat as far as the entrance to the 5 ‘and then disappeared The U-89 15 220 feet carries a crew of thirty m interned subma guarded by th Extramadura Spanish crulser Tho U 89, according to German advices, is the jaring that torpedoed the Lusitania off Kin sale on May 7, 1918, A despate trom Munich, Bavarla, re In Switzerland on May 8, sald that {t wan the U 39 that sank the British liner, On March 11, 1916, {t waa reported in Washington that it was the U 39 which at- tacked the American tanker Pox trolite off the coust of Egypt in December, 1915. It in povatble that the old U 39 may be out of service by this time and that her number has been anew boat. J, A. FARRELL IS ASKED TO JOIN SHIPPING BOARD President of U.S, Steel Corporation Offered Post of Dire of Oper nub 1 taken by WASHINGTON, Mf eA he would present Director made Impre Cha Aurees to Varley With thew WASHINGTON, Ma T i Government An proposals to with Uk 1 Deg REDROSSDRNE. LUFBERYKLLED: HAIG’S LINE UNDER BOMBARDMENT ALONG A FRONT wo 37 MULED, 155 INURED, vow MANY BUILDINGS WRECKED IN GREATEST RAID ON LONDON OF TEN MILES +—__— Victory of Australian Troops East of Amicns Renders More Difficult the Development of a New Offen- sive by von Hindenburg. LONDON, May 20.—Following a successful raid yesterday by the British troops on the Albert front in which a few prisoners were taken, Gen. Haig reports to-day that German artillery h. increased its activity between Albert and Bucquoy, ten miles to the northward. Following is the text of the War Office statement: “We captured a few prisoners yesterday as a result of a su- cessful raid carried our in the Albert sector. A raid attempted by | the enenty north of Hinges was repulsed with heavy loss to the hostile raiding party. “The hostile artillery activity increased considerably last night on the Albert-Bucquoy front.” Australian troops captured the village of Ville-sur-Ancre, north of the Somme, in a surprise attack faking 360 prisoners and twenty machine guns. The Australian casualties were light. Regarding this operation, the German War Office said that “British local attacks on the south bank of the Ancre sanguinarily collapsed.” Every gain made by the Australians defending Amiens adds to the German difficulties. The captured village lies twelve miles east of Amiens, Saturday night, and because of its location on the Ancre is of great value, since an ad- vance beyond it by the Germans would assist them in clear down the Ancre Valley toward its confluence with the Somme. Three German ralds upon American positions have been repulsed with losses to the enemy, Gen, Pershing reports, OFFICIAL FRENCH REPORT. PARIS, May 20.—Active artillery before Amiens, Is reported in to-day’s g the way fighting near Hangard, on the front official statement Northwest of Rheims a French detachment penetrated to the third German line, taking prisoners, U.S. FLYERS WING TWO GERMANS; DOUGLAS SHOOTS ONE OF THEM Pershing Pays High Tribute to Colored Sentries Who Fought on After Being Wounded. [AMERICAN REPORT] WASHINGTON, May 20.—Gen. Pershing nmunique today br » far, of the va {sa f American blood 1 1 It al 1 Y » the spirit f which Ws no ra I unique reads as y ARTE AM I Mi > 1918 trom t t bot tat al Our i i 2 of brave wo Ame lored it fore & May 15, vand Pr te « a 4 1 y 1 fe alter fle jammed and fur ! 1 4 ime There i i e proba econd ( was severely cut. A { ive | shot Atrenti {rawr é fact tha r i 1 and tin) fi i 1 despite 4 er f i be gi edit f f ning, t eir bravery: the car in tourmen, Three —