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Tet = AMERICAN PATROL IN PICARDY ROUTS STRONG GERMAN FORCE THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 21, Se Secdilics, vay bandolier, bayonet, tag clothing, shoes and accessories. addition, there will be an ample re- serve supply of ammuntion, clothing, equipment and food. The artillery eeds of the American Army will be plied temporarily through pur- chase—not loans—from the Allies, French selling us light field bat- and the British heavier em- placed siege guns. BIG GUN MANUFACTURE REACH- ING QUANTITY BAS! American manufacture of mobile and heavy artillery is reaching the quantity basis, and American guns in great numbers will reach France early next year. Lack of shipping factliti the firing line now. Military men here say that the numbers of British troops now on the western front are much smaller than generally supposed in view of the tremendous fighting that has been going on, Great Britain supposedly has 7,500,000 men in its military es- tablishment, but the proportion actu- ally engaged on tho western firing line is smaller than in other armies, it was sald. GERMAN PLANE NOT LOST IF PART OF IT IS SAVED, That's How They Cut Down Fig- ures on Air Losses for the People at Home. WITH THE FRANCE, Monday, May 20 (by the As- sociated Press).—Accordii infor- mation obtained from a captured Ger- man ofMcer, the published monthly fig- ures of German aerial losses are in- tended merely for the people at home and for neutrals and are not accepted by German aviators. As an illustration of the German methods, it 1s learned that a machine shot down within the German lines, of which even only parts are salvaged, is not counted as a loss. AVIATOR HALL ALIVE IN GERMAN HOSPITAL, | American Downed Behind Enemy Lines Wounded, But Not Dangerously. WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN LORRAL May 20,—Capt. James Norman Hall, aviator, of Colfax, Ia., | who was brought down behind the German lines May 7%, 1s alive in a German hospital, it was learned to- day, He is wounded, but not dan- geromsly. BELGIAN AVIATOR DESTROYS THIRTEEN AERIAL GRAFT Brings Down Tenth Plane and Sets | Fire to Three War Balloons, Says Official Report. WASHINGTON, May 21.—Belgian wa operations were detailed in a telegram received yesterday at the Belgian Lega- ton ae follows “Adit. Demeuleester has brought down his tenth afrplane, In five days this aviator also set fire to three war bal- loons. “During the night of May 15 Germans Gropped bombs on the hospitals at Hoog- atade and at Calais. “The usual artillery combats continue along the entire front. We defeated an attempt to approach one of our positions west of Langemarck.” oo SRS U, S. FLYER IN BRITISH CORPS KILLED IN ENGLAND Second Lieutenant Mortimer Crane! of Philadelphia Dies in Accident, LONDON, May 21.—Second Lieutenant Mortimer Crane of the British Fyjnx Corps h » killed while fying tn Great Britain and was buried Monday. He was @ son of T. J. Crane of Phila- delphia, Young Crane joined the America army when the United States ente the war, but wishing to get into active service ‘he obtained a discharge and joined the British army Poss hac 15 AIRPLANES BURNED IN FIRE AT FACTORY Big Supply of Spruce and Linen | Also Destroyed in San _ Francisco, BAN FRANCISCO, Cal, May 21 Fifteen airplanes in various stages is holding them back from | AMERICAN ARMY IN| “:|FRENCH PIERCE THIRD LINE ON THE FRONT NEAR RHEIMS), Germans Open Violent Artillery Fire on Pe-' tain’s Positions Near Hangard and on Avre. | [FRENCH REPORT] | PARIS, May 21.—The French War Office bulletin last night follows: | “There were violent artillery actions in the region of Hangard and south of the Avre. French patrols operating west of Castel captured prisoners. | “Northwest of Rheims, near Bermericourt, French detachments pen- etrated as far as the third German trenches, carrying out destructive operations on the enemy's defensive works, They captured prisoners, one of whom was an officer, and valuable war material. “The Germans attempted incursions against the French line in the | Vauclerc-Chevalier Wood fe toalbti without result.” 3 BERLIN SAYS FRENCH ATTACKS AGAINST MONT KEMMEL FAIL |Admit British Have Taken Ville-Sur-Ancre in Charge, but Claim Repulses. [GERMAN REPORT] BERLIN (via London), May 21.—The German War Ottice yester- day issued the following report: |region increased considerably in intensity. Violent artillery duels de- | veloped early this morning. On the other battle fronts also fighting | jactivity revived frequently. i “On the southern bank of the Ancre the British attacked in the early | mérning with strong forces, They made their way into Ville-sur-Ancre. | The enemy's attempts to advance further along the Ancre ‘Vv faliey were |successful. Several assaults launched against Morlancourt broke down be- jfore the village with sanguinary losses. “At many points along the front Brilish and French reconnoitring |thrusts were repulsed, We captured prisoners in forefield engagements jand successful raids north of St. Mihiel.” The evening official report from German general headquarters says: “Strong French attacks against Mount Kemmel broke down with {yeeyy, losses.” HNIG'S TROOPS HOLD GAINS AGAINST COUNTER ATTACKS; MANY GUN BATTLES (Continued from First Page.) our line in this sector was closed up and thirty prisoners and six machine guns were captured by us. “Early this morning a hostile counter-attack against the new posi- tions, delivered after a heavy bombardment, was broken up by our “During the night the hostile artillery was active in the Albert sector, about Hebuterne, between the forest of Nieppe and Meteren, and | more active than usual between the Scarpe River and Hill 70, north of Lens. Gethune was heavy.” The Italian War Office reported the repulse of enemy patrols be- tween the Astico and the Adice, and a successful sortie at Cap Sile. On the Albanian front, in Macedonia, French and Italian troops, in a three-day action, drove back the Bulgars on a wide front west of Ko- | ritza, advancing their positions twelve and a half miles, This is the}? | most st_improtant advance on Dus is front in more than a year, | [MONARCH FOR FINLAND DEMANDED BY DICTATOR Svinhufvud Refuses to Be Candi- date for President of a Republic, STOCKHOLM, May 21.—A constitu. 1 mor y is the only form of Finland in the | MASTERS OF U BOATS IN THE MEDITERRANEAN | Italians Have Sunk Many and Re-| gard Situation With Contidence, Says Admiral. VENICE, May 21 [reason to believe we submarine situation tr We have good masters of the |¢ Mediterran- [ernment for “ov th opinion of “In the evening and toward midnight the firing in the Kemmel | 4 pear for trial in the Federal Court The gas shelling reported to have taken place yesterday north of |; 1918. 4 sik Nharinsseba New Yorkers of Old 15th Who Won War Cross 069404094208 440.14 1494659590OOO084095H © PRIVATE HENRY JOHNSON LM eee, Privates Henry Johnson |” Bir Ceteasis cert of Verdun and And Needham Roberts, members of Breventing’ the carrying out of a ‘ " ell-developed plan to assall one of Co a 1415 | = : y Hayward's old 15th | the most important points of who have been decorated | wT ox Regiment sistance on the American front privates have been awarded the War ‘NEGRO RIVETER WINS INTERNATIONAL PRIZE »y the French for routing twenty- Hurley Gives Northeliffe Award to WCE COHALAN first was for transmitted to-day by Chairman Hurl prize riveting of the Shipping Board, to Charles Knight, | Disappearance of Former Edi- joyed at] the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, Sparrow's Point, Md Mr. Hurley also eabled Lord North- cliffe a new challenge for British work men and called on American shipbuilder to beat Knight's record. An increase’ of on a charge of violating the Selective five rivets per gang per hour would mean the building of a stee! freighter of 10,000 tons every ten weeks, he said Mr. Hurley wrote Knight: “Your world’s record feat of driving 4,875 rivets on May 16 hag set for American ship- Interests Grand Jury. In an effort to locate Jeremiah A. O' Lea y, who failed yesterday to ap- Draft Law by means of articles pub- 35 shed in a periodical known as “Bull” | and whose bail bond of $2,500 was de- ; clared forfeited, Assistant United! puttders the fast pace that is so nec \artillery and machine-gun fire. States District Attorney Earl B,jessary for carrying on the war suc- | “We carried out a successful raid last night southeast of Arras and| Barnes this afternoon brought the | cessfully, It co the American way to : ‘ Bite he enemets|Grand Jury. An investigation way| Xcel when the occasion demands and | brought back a few prisoners and a machine gun from the enemy's paves gation "| you GGA SHUG ARROCIREAL ULUENOILIOK KG “he: i plendidly this traditio: spire emu- trenches. Jury. An investigation was ordered. | i trroughout the ehinhuiding in throughout the shipbuilding in The Shipping Board is justly proud of what you have done and it ts a pleasure for me to send you an ap- preciation.”” TANKER WM. ROCKEFELLER *|Tation T ) dustry. The Grand Jury called th first witness, Grover Whalen, Mayo. Hylan’s secretary. Others called were Justice Daniel F, Cohalan of the State Supreme Court; Mrs. Mary O'Leary of No. 1299 Madison Avenue, mother of the fugitive, and a younger brother O'Leary was sald to have been last| seen on May 7 when he called at the| as Navy Department Lacks Details of office of his brother, John O'Leary, Attorney, No, where Casualties on Standard iney discussed to be Oil Vessel. GTON, May 21 asked the prospective talesman in his| Before leaving his brother's office ho is said to have stated that he was going to the Adirondacks on a fishing trip and that before going he would call On his mother, which he failed to do. The reason for the calling of Jus- tice Cohalan and Grover Dhalen, it was said in the United States Dis- trict Attorney's office, was that the former is a cousin of the missing man and Mr, Whalen is a brother-in-law. me che Ca U BOAT LOSS IN APRIL WASHI —Loss of the sea has been officially reported to the Navy Department, Details are lacking, but supplementary report has been promised after the Department estab- shes the casualties involved. The William Rockefeller steamer of 7.157 tons displacement, with a carrying capacity of 5.217 tons of petroleum in bulk. She was built by W. Cramp & Sons at Philadelphia, in 1916. She was 430.5 feet long, had wa and a draft of 33.3 ! ’ o has fu 7 beam of 58.2 feet, lean” Admiral Delbono © the Italian | Judge Svinhufvud, who has just been WAY BELOW AVERAGE ‘ tt | Navy declared in an intery.ew here to- | declared temporary dictator of the Fin- feet. Sho was owned by the Standard day. ish Diet. He says he is convinced Ol Company of Now Jersey, and was 1” "A great many « Simarincs:| (at the only way for Finland to se- | British Tonnage Was Only 220,709, rogistored at Bayonne, NJ, |nave been sunk in these walters ‘The [ctire independence and freedom and a J ‘i 1 At the Standard Oil Company's offices, situation ie regarded with confidence’ {government above narty passions is to} Against 687,576 in March—Al- | No 2% Broudway, tt was said the leas choose a constitutional monarch lied Neutral Losses 84,393 tanker William Rockefeller had been Judge Svinhufvud said he would re Wed Neutra 84, 5 torpedoed, The Navy Department took | SOVIET + MEMBERS SEIZED, | (uss peers ty fagiaete for the | LONDON, May 21.—Allfed and neu-|over the tanker a year ago and com- jeved. that most of the members of |tral merchant ships lost during April| mandeered its crew, but later the crew the Landtax would resign if a Republic | totalled 84,393 tons, the Admiralty an-| were transferred to other vessels. ‘The Supporte Japancee Action In|the Landtag would realign if a Republic . alty an \ | Siberia Arrested. 00 marks were subscribed during tho |Nounced to-day. During the ne | original captain was saved, D, T. War- sriod the loss in British tonnage den of the company declared, but would was LONDON, May 21.—-Several mem- | first week to the Finnish Liberty Loan, | |bers of the Extreme Right wing of —_-—- the Soviet who supported Japanese | Intervention in Siberia have been ar-, TUCKAHOE HERE WITH CARGO, | sted, according to an Exchange | construction and a considerable quantity |eiegraph despatch from Moxcow| Record Ship, Keel Laid 48 Daya of dried spruce and Irish linen were re- qated May 18, The arrests were mad Ago, Makes Maiden Voya ported destroyed here to-day in a Are | utter @ sitting of # convention of th AN ATLANTIC PORT, May 21.--For which swept the plant of the Fowler! soishevik party | ce days after her keel was laid Aeroplane Corporation, The Extreme Right held the view nden, N. J., the steamer Tuckahoe Mrs, Joseph Emanuel, wife of the|that it wan necessary for Russia tola record ship, arrived here to-day with |i owner of the Emanuel Cabinet Works. which was also burned, said letters threatentar to “bomb” the factory had been received. The fire started in a furniture factory und swept a block, destroying several apartment housed. ‘The Mowler cc was working on Government contracts the stock on hand was estimated worth from $250,000 to $1,000,000, pon bt ia Grand Central Palace Bought Aa Da Pont. Purchase of the Grand Centra! Pal- ace by Alfred I, du Pont of Wilming- ton, Del, was announced this morning by Charles C. Dickson, a business as- sociate, at the Hotel Manhattan, The price was not made public. A statement from Mr, du Pont ex- by plained that the building will be used id exhibition room for foreign fh an bitHtows plan to de Valop international trade. , n| lean upon the Allies, especially Japan, |q cargo of coal taken aboard @t a outh n the struggle against Germany in|atianc port t speed wa. Siberia, This wing was outvoted, | areaatan the Babe —————— Jofticers ‘report ne Vensel came through tn fine with her macht TOO BUSY MAKING STEEL. Jory working to ; j 1 dup the har | bor oth het Farrell) Denies ping te WII Become Ship- rd Of fle! ra T ‘obably. will remain. in the | trade | James A. F rell, President of the for some time t was said United Btates Steel Corporation, to-day é Stop U.S. denied he is to become Director of Op Jd on erations of the Shipping Board oe - ‘ hart ; “L have received no such offer and| WASHINGTON, May 21.—- United believe th States Pensioners living in Germany part of thi and Austria who have been drawing h money from the American Govern ment by reason of thelr services in it for patriotic rea: | the Civil W other reasons, | sons if for 1 My whole time and * ae energy are devoted to the work of as- | M&¥ nea wm rances Out Of bee sisting to the utmost of my ability the |Cause of thelr residence in enemy production and delivery of steel for the| territory, Payment of pensions wiil Tincrs Pleot ax s other not he A until peace ia’ den needa,” ‘ d. 709, not vouch for other members of the This is the first bulletin insued since | crew. — * |the announcement of April 4 th, e monthly reports would be substitu ad for weekly announcements los: fF that “time. the total tons JAMAICA WINNERS, gince the beginning of unrestri _—_—__— | marining was given as follows FIRST RACE—Five furlongs; maid ens, Cillies and gelding: Mint 1M; (Taplin), WW to 1, 4 to Quarter en Virago, 111 (Byrne), 7 to 2% to » 2 Zuluka, 11 (Peak), 12 to 1, 5 to Time, 1.02, Leftfielder, Teddy R aver Retreat, Jumper, Marmite, Elfin Queen, ee ob Comfort, Boverinu, Florence Lo and Marchesa also ran, | of the Gross Sales of our lo-day's business Second Race—Three-year-olds and up; | seve ‘one- er cel ‘0 three pe BIG NAVAL BILL REPORTED. clairalia: urea 8800; Ave ands one nai | even and one-half per cont. to three » % isour donation to this great Organization pee bie furlonse, Ideal, 93 (Ca ahan), 8 to 1,)°°nt ; 4 i of Mercy. The more Candy you buy at our 3 to 1, & to 5, won Campbell, 111] The corporation informed the pro- | stores to-day the larger will he our Donati £1,557,000,000 Meanare Placed Befor: ckeon, 6 to 5, 1.to 3 | day ger onation neers at lekson, # toch. 110 2.1 fo 4. second: lourement division that It had no de to the American Red Cro In thename of SPA BEARER en : i 7 |sire to make a war profit and that humanity do your bit for this noble cause! Do W AS na oO» . May 21.—-The Naval) ha, Sebast | the higher figure was asked at the start more—buy Loit’s Candy for the Boys under the Colors and Appropriation Bill for $1,587,000,000, an . Preston’ Lynn and June Bug als0 | a8 an assurance that the company would help the Soldiers, the Sailors and the American Red Cross, nerea of $202,640.000 over the meas- ° | suffer no less. It was found that it re as passed by the House, was re. could produce the goods contracted for ported favorably to the Senate to-day |Con@ress Approves Bank Gifts to a three per cent, commission and | We Announce Our und Will be called up to-morrow, Red Croas, perhaps even lower than that | Special for To-morrow, Wed., May 22d amar tae aus WASHINGTON, May The Senate ; American = Flyer With = Freeeh ‘pi, quthorising national banks to con- | America Casualty CHOCOLATE COVERED NUT CARAMELS Mien * ‘ee tribute to the Red Cross out of funds ih en | i 7) ia A ich,, May 2t 5 r dlvic atockhol OTTAWA, May 21.-—The following available for dividends to stockholders With the Lafayette: Kecadrite SY'MOr |went to the President, hay . | Americans are mentioned tn to-day's Ca- en | C Died of wounds, fighting front in France, ns t the House. Representative nadian casualty list: jin action, according word man of the Banking and € ney Com-|L, F. Burns, Green Sprtic, Ff H died, | Btores: New York, here to-day by his parents The was | mittee, said he had. been informed by | L. 0.4 it ‘ W. G. | hi paar posse 1 Pa ‘ r was de- | offte! e American Red Cre missing, be- » Newark, tin Parle when war was de by tole Oe the American Red Oro "Madden, mi Aty, The specified welaht Includes the contalner 1 d being raised this week ee IS REPORTED AS LOST) re- The PRIVATE NEEDHAM ROBERTS $446 14MOOO06H8 Cross by the Fre’ division und serving, and John. receive the much- of the French Ar well, rr whom For Routing Twenty-four German Raiders OO 44OO8 % 4 ° rf & co 4 > neh Gene the unit is duled to ed gold palm mmander as son is cov! my © WILSON NOMINATES MARCH TO BE A FULL GENERAL ». | Bliss Nimed GOHAN Gen neral by Brevet in| List Sent to the Senate. WASHINGTON, May 21.—President ilson to-day sent to the Senate the lnemibatien of Major Gen. Peyton C American tanker William Rockefeller at] al March, U. 8. A., to Other nomink&tio Uton, to be Senic service), GERMAN MINISTE: MINI AGAINST Surgeon Julius bea ns were a negro, at the request of Lord North- | To be General by Brevet: Gen. _ tas " cliffe, owner of London newspapers, | Taskes Bliss (Major General, re- tor of Bull, Forfeiting Bail, {who ottered £25 for the best score above) tired), Chief of Staff previous records, K t is em Of Internal Revenue, Elwood Ham- or Surgeon (public 0, STERS. AUSTRIAN PACT Hertling and Ku Hands of It ehlmann Washed | and Czernin Made Open Protest. THE HAGUE, M former and Coun and Foreign Minist |Emperor Ciar' posed the recent Austro- r. von Kuehlmann, German Austro: ance affected by Emperor William and according to report fay 21.—Count Czer Hungar t von F n Foreign rtling and neellor respectively, rman er, ° alli- received from Vienna and Rerlin to-day: (25 KILLED IN conve { sion in Czernin the arrangement, Kuehlmann washed affair, after object! tion, in whic! terly ignored them. Heart of Ci lieved Still AMSTERDAM, twenty-five dead great panic. the raid was New York Cu More T that It has dec tded a cont nance Department of 7,000,000 yarda of it was so! May | lists of the casualttes recently inflicted a steel) by Allied air raiders in Cologne, openly opposed while Hertling and their hands of the ing to the military h the militarists ut- NR RAD ON COLOGNE BY ALLIES Twenty-Three Bombs Dropped 'y—Many Bodies Be- in Debris, 2L—Incomplete and forty-seven tn- Jured. It is belleved that many bodies | are still in the debris. Twenty-three bombs were dropped tn the heart of the city, it 18 said, wreck- ing several big buildings and causing a| The Cologne Volks Zeltung says it be- | ropy CLOTH CONCERN REDUCES PROFIT ON U. S, WORK. Allied Silk Trading Corporation of | its Commission Phan Half. WASHINGTON, May —The Allied! Silk Trading Corporation of N rh $ notifled the procurement divis' Orinance Department of the Ar to reduce made with the Ord for manufacture f cartridge cloth ‘ ' | » jit lay ip state In a room of a small! » | frame Building. pub- lished by newspapers tn that city, show al for) its commis- from of Major Lufbery's comrades patrole ing the line high in the air, ang@ oo casionally the dull booming of the distant guns. The first “flying tank®* used by ¢! Germans on the American front, f was learned to-day, killed Lufbery. specimen of the German machine captured on the Somme had shown it to be almost invulnerable to machine gun bullets. When a giant German plane aps peared over the American lines Suns day six Americans went up after it. At a height of 7,500 feet the Amers jeans found confronting them a die plane driven b: and with a wing spread of sixty feet. The pilot sat in a steel house. engines were armored. ners, in protected positions, wore ar« mor, Each had a heavy machine gun, All vital parts of the machine were protected with steel. The pilot had only to run the machine, ‘This explains why the first Amerie can flyers up made no impression om the big airplane with streams of bul« lets, One American, in close,’ sen§ 300 bullets against the “tank” witha out swerving it. Then one of the Americans camé FLYERS DROP ROSES :IFROM PLANES OVER LUFBERY'S COFFIN Funeral of American “Ace,” | Killed by German “Flying | | | two engines Tank,” Is Impressive. The The two gun- WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, May 21 (by the Associ- ated Press),— the body of Major Raoul Lufbery was placed in a gtave near a certain French village, Before Around it were hun- dreds of wreaths of flowers sent by | American comrades, French aviators | who had known him in the French ‘army, and by French army corps. | Atop all the handsome wreaths was | 40wn for more ammunition, and ex« tk itis banck ot wild roses and|Plained they did not seem able to daisies to which was attached a piece | Mutt the enemy plane, Lufbery thea Jot paper saying that it came from | 'celved permission to try his hand | Major Lufbery’s orderly and men.|,.Fit8t he mounted speedily abova tioning many kindnesses, With tears |t®¢ German and started his maching lin his eyes, the orderly came up to | &%™ Then he swept head on at tha \tho casket and reverently placed the |CR¢™Y Suddenly he swerved, it 1@ believed, |had jammed. | He had made another turn and wag headed again for the enemy when suddenly he wheeled, A line of fire darted from his machine, He seemed to stand still a few seconds, and then his machine shot down from a height flowers on It becausa his machine gun | The funeral The three was most impressive. pall bearers, three American and French aviators, carried the | flag-draped coffin to the grave. The Procession was led by an American | band, a company of American infan- | try just from the trench and a com- he of French infantry. Following | °f 6000 feet. the coffin were 200 American and he officers, including all « Major | erahine Lufbery’s companions in the air ser-| wagner wee the American General com- fe : hing, in his report to nding the sector northwest of Toul! “It has now y ed that and a French General commanding Raoul Lufberry was shot dowa an army corps our lines white in combat with The party drew up at the grave|* German two-seated plane jand while the service was being read one American aviator after anothor| “*" Board to Take Up joe Western Disputes, | planed down from the sky, his motor) wagHINGTON, May 2l--Chairman | shut off, until he was just overhead. | watch of the National War Labor Hoard Each threw out great bunches of red|pnnounced to-day that the whole boart roses which floated down on the cof- fin and the bared heads of the o! rs and the caps of the soldiers who were drawn up at attention. | At the se! the Frer ped tewaed and said: “On behalf of my comrades of the , French army I wish to pay respect- | ful fraternal tribute to one of the | heroes of the air, who was victorious eighteen times, a son of the noble and generous Republic which came to our assistance to save the liberty of the world. ssemble In labor diffe! West, particu Ago next Monday * arising in the in Detroit and aga y at Fort s nto U efective visi oO.Ee0. ROEDER.—At her residence, 124 West 55th st., Monday, May 20, GERALDIN® st peacefully; talon Luthery MORGAN, beloved wife of Benjamin F, close by the martyrs to our great vause. Your glorious example will vice and interment private, It te pire in us t rit of sacrifice, ¢ y requested that no flowers be {ti the day when humanity's enemy went. 11 be finally vanquished, Goodby.” BIN.—May 19, JOHN W., deloves The American General under whom husband of Mary Rehvin (nee Cunnings Major Lufbery once served as a prie ham) and father of Willam, Allce, vate soldier, and the chief of the Loretta, Frank, Florence and Jong aerial service, also paid homage to — Noe aye : a ae viator, The firing equa¢ ‘uneral from his late residence, 11 | th Head & bi ies manag West 16th st, Thursday, May 23, n@ j Sted. three! tines Asoka) CHA. CAVE) 9.50. A. Mi thepeh te: Abs. ANAS ja bugler sounded taps and another Church, where a solema mass will be |bugler, hidden in a nearby wood, ccjedrated, Interment Calvary Cometerty Jechoed it. As the sound of the bU- ggINNERW—JAMES SKINNER, giers died away all was silence ©x-| gervices CAMPBELL FUNB@RAM cept for the droning of the machines CHURCH, B'way, 66th et., private, PENNY A POUND PROFIT. " tomer Ge AMERICAN RED CROSS Sounds the Assembly Call for all True Patriots N this Glorious and Noble Cause in which thousands of our patriotic, self-sacrificing American women are engaged on the European Battle Fields, there shouid be no slackers. The Li success, as it certainl, Bond is purely a business proposition between your- self and your Uncle Sam where you have everything to gain and nothing to lose. In the Red Cross D. Be od Uncle Sam actually passes around offerings | that you put into it must come from the heart well the purse. matter how generously you give to this great and noble cause, you can never make the sacrifices that our American women are making for the boys in the serv but your ‘‘bit’’ will help. Ambulances, Medicines, Bandage. Blankets, Linen, Surgical Instruments and Hospital Equipment. That all the American asks you to put up your money for, so that they in turn may adminster aid and ease the sufferings of our American boys who are sacrificing their lives for you. To-day, Tuesday, May 2\st, is Red Cross Day at ail Loft Stores. Decorations, Costumes of the Salesladies, ard dress- ing of the packages will be appropriate for the occasion,