The evening world. Newspaper, May 23, 1918, Page 2

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0 EE AMERI( CAN FLYER FIGHTS THREE GERMAN PLANESIN 20 MINUTES BBV S. CASUALTIES LISTED IN REPORT SENT BY PERSHING 14 Killed in te AstionaSergp Cairola of Fort Lee Among 12 Dead of Wounds. WASHINGTON, May 2%3.—Eighty- six cesualties listed by the War De- partment to-day included fourteen | tont, Houston,~Pa.; George B. Bolt, killed in action, twelve dead of Woodbine, Ia.; Ross H. Brown, Lock- wounds, eloven of disease, thirty-nine eba, Okla.; Ray G. Cochran, Rankin, Pa.; Peter Connors, Manchester, N. wounded severely, and nine wounded Glightly; one missing in action. Lieut. James Palache of Farming- tom, Conn., died of wounds; Lieut. Jobn T. McGuire, St. Louis, and Lieut Hugh L. Sutherland, Benoit, Miss., were severely wounded. A eummary of casualties reported te date follows: DEATHS. Killed in action . Died of wounds . Lost at sea Killed by accident . as and other cau Killed or prisone: Died of disease . Civilians Total Wounded Captured Missing . Grand total ... To-day's list follow KILLED IN ACTION, Bergt. Clem Hobbs, Red Oak, Ia. Corpis. John C. ater, Greenfield, ~llL; Charles J. Guartha, Springfield, Mass.; James G. B. Lighthall, Cohoos, N. ¥.; Harvey T. Rimel, Pacific Juno- tion, Ia. Private William Brogan, St. Louts. George J. Browne, No. 642% 18th Avenue, Brooklyn. Joseph Coyne, Brighton, Edward S. Harkins, Salem, Max L. Hubbell, Atlantic, Ia. Edward H. LaMont, No. 202 Nep- perhan Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. John Maciejkowicz, No. 300 Met- ropolitan Avenue, Brooklyn. Albert Tragweki, No. 48 Entwistle Avenue, Nutley, N. J. Kopim Vorasoka, Volins! DIED OF WOUNDS. Lieut, James Palache, Main Btreet, Farmington, Conn.; Sergt. Walter L. Brown, El Paso, Tex. Bergt. Raymond J. Cairola, Fort Russia, Lee, N. J. Corpis. Miles Douglas, Rockford, Mich; William C, Greifzu, Colwyn, Pa. Privates John Adams, Sterling, 0.; ‘Teddy C. Brewer, Greenfield, Ind. John W. Burns, Chicago; Benj, L.| Carter, Rutland, Vt.; William Clark, | ‘Titusville, Pa.; Fred Winfleld How- ard, Chotek, W. Finis EB, Schooling, Clark, Mo. DIED OF DISEASE. Bergt. Prescott W. Gould, Newton) Upper Falls, Mas | Cook, Ernest L. Foncannon, Faulk- ton, 8, D. ‘Wagoner, Marion, N. Y. Privates, Warren Coleman, Wash- ington, D. C.; James Cotheran, Brad- ley, 8. C.; John W. Jones, Box 66, Spartanburg, 8, C.; Walter Hunter, Bryant Clark, East Joseph Flynn, Charles G. Thompson, apparently, mann, Glennie, Mich.; Hardy ‘T. Palmer, Hillsdale, Ore ibd lalad WOUNDED, nants John T. Maguire, St tea ‘Hugh 1. Sutherland, Benoit, | 9o¢0404% Miss. Sergeanta Harold W. Brown, M4 ar atte Ralph D. Linville, a apne ; Albert E. Raddatz, No. 22 8 ies Meriden, Conn.; william ©. Williamson, Blanchard, La. Corpl. tear F. Murphy, Washington, dD.) earl id Silvermans, No. Williams Street, Brooklyn. Mechanic, Stanislaw Baranski, 27 Maple Street, ville, N. Je Mack Anderson, Inman, &. C.; ‘Thos, | Chester 0, Bertolino, Los An Bittner, Indianapolis, le Dominick Be- Hy; N. C.; Jesse 8, Deaki: Bt. Joseph, Street, Hartford, Conn. Ernest T. De Ceoccio, No. 41 Wilson Street, Hartford, Conn.; Raymond W. Gambeian, Boston; Dwight Garrett, No, 21 Tomlinson Street, Ansonia, Conn,; Gust L. Guilickson, Minneapo- lis; Frank Kearney, Boston. Casey Kooistra, No. 198 Kentucky Avenue, Paterson, N. J. John W. Lafferty, No. 443 Btreet, Brooklyn. Elijah Lawson, Gimlet, Ky. Patrick G. MoHugh, No. 306 Fifth Btrect, Brooklyn. George E. Mellor, Sotero C. Navarro, Cal.; Edward L, O'Hagan, Lowell, Mass. George Raborn, Tacoma, Wash.; Fred Allen Renick, St. Louls; Claudo Rose, Cherryvale, Kan.; George E. Tomm, Delavan, Ill; Joe Younghawk, Wibwoods, N. D. John J. O'Keefe, Lowell, Mass. SLIGHTLY WOUNDED. Sergt. William F. Lewis, Millpoint, w.y Corpls. Cornelius J, Brown, Boston; Arthur Richardson, Chicago Privates Bruce Cochran, Grafton, N D.; Martin Elenbass, Lucas, Mich.; Philadelphia; James Mittineague, Minn.; Atkinson, N. Dorchester, joooker Lowell, Masa; West Berkeley, U. Hartford, H.; Michael J. Glynn, Mass, MISSING IN ACTION. Private Rocco Summa, Mill Street, Waterbury, Conn. —— TWO BROOKLYN BOYS KILLED IN ACTION; TWO OTHERS WOUNDED Browne Had Served in Naval Re- serve Before Being Drafted for Army. “It ts the fortune of war," sald Mrs. William Browne, No, 6420 Eight- whe received a War Department tele- gram announcing that her son, George J. Browne, had been killed in action in France on May 1, “My boy has served from the be. ginning,” she said, “At first he was an ensign in the Naval Reserves and they had him dolng censor work on cablegrams, for he was an expert telegraph operator.” But he was needed more In Franco, for he was drafted last November and soon went to France and was attached to the signal sec. tion headquarters. In his last lotter {nome he said he was “having the time of his life.” Jobn Maciejkowica, reported killed * Box 76, Laurens, 8. C.; mil F. Kraft, St. Paul; Frank Charlies Mastenbrook, in action, lived with a brother, Charles, at No, 300 Metropolitan Av ‘Grand Haven, Mich; Harold H. Neu- nue, Williamsburg, until he enlisted)! pl you use i 10 Good Condensed Milk, like Lion Brand, makes it taste better—because it out the full flavor of all those other good your recipes. uu get that Contest Pamphlet yet, at one of our ee peat Stores? Or did you write for it? Gives full details of How to Win a $150 Liberty Bond or one of 47 other prizes. WISCONSIN CONDENSED MILK CO. 91 Hudson Street Do all your cooking with mills in its wasteless form NMILK Condensed or Evoporated 16. tn our Good bones ate “W. —. this, and many . lic ious rec (pes. a oe VE “Lf iii, M4) brings n a1 No. Middletown Conn. Private Mario Abbruzzi, Bernarde- | Dolphus N. Cooper, Jacksonville, Mo.; Andrew Deardi, No, 73 Fairmont 390060006000000055505 7 94446904866 This picture shows a shell-proof, as-proof dugout of one of tho ad- THE EVENING _WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY. 23, 1918, FROM THE WARLE “CO CEN Tan uRwalmotonsne vane Harlem ‘Artillerymen in Sheltered Position Behind the American Lines in F £144 b4 444 POODOERG 44-4044 OVOOO O44 0090044004 GOO HEE EHE 4 batteries, These aiulleny men | said they were from Harlem, and, | new quarters quite commodious. 1918. ee ee vance HANGARD BATTLE WON BY SOLDIERS rOtOOOOUe Ten Latin-American Republics Represented in French Foreign Legion That Took Part. ed in the French Foreign when on March 26, \fensive, it ‘retook British attack on the left, which re- | neux, wiped out the progress the Gor- mans made in against Amtens, In this battle of all nations—the de- taila of which only became known ‘when tho Legion was replaced by American units, and was withdrawn for repose—ten Central and South 4 | American countries were represented. Tho Legion 1s now largely recruited 3 | trom these Latin-American countries. > The nations in this category which already have declared war against {Germany thug have been enabled to contribute immediate military help. SEGIRR OF NEW-YORK” FROM 57 NATIONS WITH THE FRENCH FORCHS IN| FIELD, May 92 (United Press). —Fifty-seven nations were represent- Legion in one of the bloodiest battles of the German of- Hangard Wood. This action, with the simultaneous {sulted in reoapturing Villers-Breton- thelr eecond drive Four Months With 165th (69th) in France Personal Story of Fighting and Dying on the Battlefields and in the Trenches. By First Lieut. George H. Benz of Co. I. FIRST INSTALMENT IN Saturday's EVENING WORLD NEXT GREAT DRIVES WILL BE AGAINST YPRES AND AMIENS aimee Offensive in Italy Will Follow if These Fail, Says Bridges, British General. WASHINGTON, May 23.—The of Mackensen"—Germany's third and perhaps final great drivo tho front—will be AMERICAN COLONEL IN THE ENGINEER CORPS GETS BRITISH 0. S. 0. MERICAN HEADQUART- A ERS ON THE BRITISH FRONT, May 22. (Associated Press).—Colonel J. N. Hodg of the American Engineer Corps, has been awarded the British Distin- guished Service Order in recogni- tion of his services during the perlod from March 27 to April 4. Colonel Hodges is one of the first American officers to receive the D. 8S. O, Ftom March 27 to April 3 was the period during which the British were stemming the tide of the German offensive begun on March The latest “storm on western ee 0:90400 i ‘ ‘ blished United States Army List Soldiers from Argent! Brazit,! launched about June 1, according to] bub! Se y Stal ter Hartem flats, they found thelr crite, Yenoruela, Bolivia, Colombla,|the pfediction today of Gon. W. A.| {n’the Wire Ecker: © uptaln with the 28d Infantry of Brooklyn a year ago and went to France w Rainbow Division in November, Was twenty-three years old and hac come from Poland to this country ix years before he bec a soldier. The brother whom Maciojkowicz had supported and was forced to leave alone ts dying of consumption and under the care of neighbors, Jobn W. Lafferty, mentionod as seri- ously wounded, 1s a volunteer, 41 years old, formerly of No, 413 Bleecker Street, Brooklyn, where he lived with his brother, Vincent, In Detroit last heh he enlisted and went to France n June, The War Department tele- gram says he was wounded on April 29. Patrick J. McHugh, No, 308 Fifth Street, Brooklyn, was a machinist at the Morse Dry Docks until last No- vanber, when he was drafted. He sailed for France in January, sent home a letter saying that he was “in the trenches and feeling fine,” and nothing more was heard from him until to-day, when a War Depart- ment telegram came to his sister, Mrs. Mary Brown, with whom he formerly lived, saying that he had been seriously wounded in action. Sergt. David Silverman, whose name appears among the severely wounded enlisted in the regular army eight eenth Avenue, Brooklyn, to-day when | years ago, when he was eighteen years | old, He served with Pershing on the Mexican border and went to Mrance with the first contingent of the Amert- can Expeditionary Force. His brothe Louis was drafted last September. Si verman’s parents live at No, 2001 Rer- gon Street, Brooklyn. —_—_—s FORT LEE BOY, WEARING FRENCH WAR CROSS, KILLED Won Honor for Distinguished Bravery—Wounded 12 Times Before Germans Got Him. ‘The army surgeons thought at first that Raymond J. Cairola of Fort Lee, N J., had no businsss in the army. But he got there in spite of two bad ankles, and before the Germans could kill him they pad to wound him twelve times. Also, when ho fell for the last time, some- where in France, a French Cross of War went down with him The War Department telegrams telling of the death of Calrola was received by bis parente yesterday at thelr home in Whitman Street, Fort Lee In 1916 Catrota, a local baseball star, broke both ankles in sliding for the home plate with # winning run for his team. The ankles mended, but they showed the fractures, and when, just after the nited States entered the war, Cairola was examined in a New York recruiting ¢, the surgeons shook thelr heads. “Think I'm a cripple, do you?" said the boy. “Look.” He turned a series of handsprings, and hey accepted him. | When ho got to rance and. there fighting fh No Man's Land, ‘be ran through a barrage to rescue ‘an officer who, had been wounded und isolated. ‘Th ran back through same barra irs ing the officer with kim. That waa when he won the Cross of War Calrola’s brother, Alfred, ‘although Jabove draft age, enlisted in the aviation service and is understood to be som where in France N.Y, BOY KILLED AT FRONT, NEWS KEPT FROM MOTHER Mrs. La Mont Too Il to Be Told | of Son’s Death in Action news was kept alac ieston Avs Company. . BRITISH AVIATORS BOMB GERMAN BASES ON RHINE Great Damage Caused Mannheim, Liege Railway and in German Lorraine. at LONDON, tions May 23.—Railway sta- in German Lorraine and the quitted themselves with traditional lineancs heroism, Gergt. Gelas, who, was wounded four times during the| etal capture of Mort Hommo in August, received two new and severe, | awed from which he ts now re- |covering. Capt. Robines received o jsttation for his gallantry. | lowing the Legion's capture of mia Wood and portions of the Villers Bretonneux plateau, the Ger- | mans launched seven successive | | counter- attacks without forcing the legionatres to flinch, despite the Iat- ters’ extremely heavy losses, Yet PARIS ATTACKED TWICE BY AIRMEN: DEAD, I; NIU INJURED 2 cape—Of Baby's Narrow ie fe One Reached Capital. ee mes for the purpose of crawling out on the shell-swept battlefield to 1 vor PARIS, May the bodies of their dead. All of the Paris last night, consisting of two dis-| bodies were thus found and carried 2 An alr attack on railway near Liege, Bolgium, and a chloride factory at Mannheim, on the Rhine, were bombed Tuesday night and Wednesday by British aviators. Three fires were caused at Mann- heim and largo conflagrations near jLiexe. The statement says: | “Reconnolssances and bombing by {our airplanes continued uninterrupt- edly Tuesday. Some 1,200 bombs were dropped on various targets, including four of the enemy's large airdromes near Ghent and Tournal and billets in the neighborhood of Armentieres and Bray. “A great deal of fighting again took place around our bombing machines. | Bixteen German airplanes w de- stroyed and two driven down out of control. Two observation balloons also wore destroyed. Three of our alrplanee aro missing. ‘During the night both ours and the enemy's bombing airplanes were ac- tive. Over twelve tons of bombs were dropped on airdromes used by the enemy's night-flying machines and on billets at ray and Bapaune. All our machines returned. Two German machines were brought down by gun-| fire behind our lines. “Two tons of bombs were dropped on a chloride factory at Mannheim, causing three large fires, and anothe: | two tons on railway stations at Thionville and Karthaus. One of our machines failed to return, “At dawn Wednesday two forma- | tions set out on a long distance raid to bombard the important railway! triangle at Liege. All the machines reached their objectives and dropped twenty-two heavy bombs. Those dropped by the first formation caused three very large fires, which we burning flercely three-quarters of an hour jater when the second formation flew over Liege. Other macnines dropped twelve heavy bombs on the railway stations at Metz All machines returned.” ‘As the British air forces develop, ‘# the Dally Mail, “wo shall be abie to reach every city of Western and} Central. Germany and compel the enemy to weaken his front greatly by detaching r forces for defonse at home, orman Staff is well aware of this risk, which will increase greatly when the American air forces | ia ave arrived in strength later this r. The fast growing strength of | Allies in the alr will be used with | | ihe nereasing vigor and Will play a very rge part in bringing the war hone to german nation $5,000,000 Shipbuilding | Brooklyn, Ms yah celia With the filing of a deed yesterday in France. in the Regicter's office, Brooklyn, by Faward H. La Mont's mother hua not {the Lowell Palmer estate to the yet been told that her boy was killed {n Greenpoint Improvement Company, it action in France on May 7, although | Wa suid thnt 1,730 foct of Greenpoint War Depectoent telegram stating | Water front involved in the transac. 8 Wer Uy ‘NK \ ton is to be used for the ton of the fact was delivered last night at the | $5,000,000 shipyard, ‘The property La Mont home, No. 252 Nepperhana| transferred ts adjacent to the Green- Avenue, Yonke It was the father, | point terminal of the State Barge La Mont, who recelved the | Canal a@ he kept it from the| _>- whe has been Ml for sey- | Us § Representative Rome fo Italy Day, Government tinct raids by about thirty airplanes, | off. vi a ” | As a result of this battle, the Le- Wasi snnounced: officially: torday: gion, which already has six citations The casualties, so far as reported, | entitling each member to wear the {red “fourragere" of the Legion of | Honor, is assured a seventh. No other ‘French unit has ever attained such {an_honor, n and in-| Only three men from the United Jured a dozen people. A shell from a| States still remain in the peeon al 75-millimetro ” defense gun fell | are expert machine gunners and eac through @ roof and landed beside a| "8% the French War Cross. They are one dead and twelve injured, The explosion of one of the rald- er’s bombs killed a won are now awaiting transfer to the Am- | Uruguay, Peru, Cuba and Mexico ac-| ‘ “4 | when the battle was over and tho | Thirty-Two Planes Only | region was ordered withdrawn, every | | man insisted on remaining overnight | Bridges, Chief of the British Military | AMERICAN GUNNERS DESTROY EIGHT OUT OF | Mission here. Should Mackensen fail to break the Allied line at his objective—in the Ypres salient and around Amiens—an | Austro-German offensive against It- aly probably will follow, Gen. Bridges declared, He expressed confidence in Gen. Foch's ability to stem the in- | vaders in all events. “The enemy has now on the western battle line 1,500,000 bayonets, The drive probably will come about June 1, It may break before that or it may jbe delayed—but it's coming,” sald Gen. Bridges. “We expect the enemy jto make his greatest effort around |¥Ypres and northward of Bethune, in the vicinity af Hazebrouck, while a subsidiary drive on a smaller scale is expected at Amigns.” “Germany is insisting that Austria start activities against Italy. Should a stalemato be reached again in the west, German troops undoubtedly will be diverted for an Italian drive. (Continued from First Page.) in touch with the French population in the raided arca are freely offering aid and comfort to the distressed. That somo of the American hospitals have not been damaged ts no fault of the enemy, but is due to good for- tune, as the Germans are apparently dropping their bombs with any consideration of military objectives, The area under bombardment from the alr is that between the American front and Paris, and nightly the ai Should a determined effort to crush Italy be made by Germany, the Allies would find it !mperativg to again strengthen thelr lines. keeping up an almost barrage, The marked increase in the enemy aerial activity has raised the ques- continuous cradle in which there was a sleeping |erican Army. . tion whether it may not be a prelude infant, The missile fatled to explode| Among the other nationalities | J 152 EXECUTED IN FINLAND, to new action by the enemy infantry, and the baby was not harmed, which particinated In th great battle Whether or not this be the case, t " $ are Canadians, Filipinos, Japanese, American troops holding the line are Tho first enemy squadron falled 4'menians, Russians, Luxemburgers, | SAYS FUGITIVE SOCIALIST coming restless and eager for a to reach the city, belng turned back by! Spanish, Italians and Swiss, The | chance to get at the enemy, One hears an aerial barrage. There were no vic- tims from this attack. The second raid was mado tn sev- eral relays of machines anole met with another violent aerial rage, this attack resulted in a artes! r of bombs being dropped in the Paris three latter comprise many contin- gents In the Legion. and Czechs recently were transferred to their own separate armies and now are fighting on the French front. <= ; BRITISH FLYERS FIRED | preliminary vote an amendment threw down One death and twelve injured persons have been | 419 appropriation in the Food Produc reported. tion bill until President Wilson {ssue “A number of bombs were Nigel Proclamation prohibiting, HY use Jon the euburbs, causing some vice | £04 in the manufacture of intoxicants tims.” | | FISH MERCHANTS ORGANIZE On Tuesday night German aviators All of the Poles was approve#t refusing any of the $11,846,- | \frequently the conviction expressed | Wholesale Deaths Jeaths Reported Inflicted| 8" ust itisn lace tna tee areas near equal the Germans will be given Under German and White Jan unwelcome surprise. | * | Already the American resourceful- Guard Regime. | ness on patrol has caused the Ger- | |mans considerable alarm, accordi LONDON, May 23.—Under the White | to prisoners, who readily admit that ird and German regime in Finland | the Americans have few equals in this |c | area, | AUSTRIAN BASE IN RAID : 1.162 pertons were exeruted up to May |atyle of Aghting, In addition to the acrial attack on ‘ according to a Finnish Socialist who Paris, another raid was carried out | has eocaped to Sweden and whose tne! ALEXIERR "REPORTED SHOT. last night. Tt seems to have been di- | Bombing Party ‘ity Rteurtied From Cate| terview with, the Foikets Dagbiad tn oe rected against the railroad tracks | x ae namitted from Copenhagen by tho) ayisrERDAM, May 23.—Gen. Alex north and northeast of Paris. The taro Safely Despite Fierce |x storys te Weber reir lier, former Russian Commander-in ca ae _— According to the exile 516 were exe- d recently one of the leaders raiders dropped a large number of Attacks. cuted in Tammerfors, 148 in TTornen, #80 | "the movement against the Bolshevik bombs, but did not cause serious | WASHINGTON, May 23.—British avi- |in Varkom and 380 in Vasa. Prisoners | was shot on Feb. 26 at Novo Tcherkask, damage. Jators who bombarded the Austrian |taken by the German and Finnish Gov. |capital of the Keiritory OF the Bon Cae: The following ofMfclal announce-|aerial station and the submarine base | ernment forces, he says, were treated poke, BY Ala\ee whieh fa published be ment was piven out: lat Cattaro on May 20 fired one butid-|so badly that many were Starved to|thy Vossiche Ze tung ot er! in This “Several bodies of enemy aircraft | {ne near the Jetty and also eet fire to| death. pole ae bas Mean killed eaving successively made for Paris, Our|th® barracks, ald a despatch to-day he met death at the same time. | Rome. lookout post# opened a very violent | {Om 6,075 RIVETS IN A DAY | ny received last Sunday trom | “Notwithstanding the intense artillery Jagd Gespatcn ree’ Corniloft's arm: of fire an pees | 3 of curtain of fire and our aeroplanes |qre and the attack of enemy destroy: NEW WORLD'S RECORD 3 Moscow sala A beon defeated by” the took the alr ers," ald the despatch, “the British |Bolsheviki. near Yekaterinodar, and Rol “A certain numter of bombs were|acroplanes all re-entercd their base that the General had been killed thrown on Paris and! the Paris dis- | safely." a “he © . SAN FRANCISCO, May 23.—Two | trict, The “all clear” signal was given beaters. gre aay world records in. riveting were | o.eo. at 3.30 o'clock “pRys” WIN IN SECOND claimed to-day by Workers employed | oL.AS$.—On Wednesday, May 22. 1018 “The German airplanes taking part inthe local plant of the Bethlehem | WARREN G. F. CLASS, beloved bus- ¥ Shipbul.ding Corporation, Limited, band of atinnte cia in the raid numbered about thirty. TEST VOTE IN HOUSE ‘Pimpany officials. announced one to 1ate residence They were met by a powerful bar- crew of four men had driven 6,075 Brockiva. es rivets in a day, while another record rage fire from our artillery posts act. rivets Maimed ‘for. @ Worker who Friday at 2 P. M, Interment Green ing in conjunction with our defense} WASHINGTON, May 23.—"Dry"| reamed 6,667 rivet holes in one day, wood Cemetery. qt yng, fifty-four of our machi es | forces in the House to-day won a| - taking the air, Only one enemy ma- | second skirmish in favor of national} chine reached the capital where jt | Prohibition during the war when on a Special Feature for To-Morrow Friday, May 24th, Italian-America Da Alm to Eitm | p ) aris, pre * mute yront ts fittin: attempted to raid Paris, but were esenemie Compotitl ITALIAN, STYLE CREAM CHOC or ATH AD ARVTOP TInt, and Mittin kept away from the city by the ‘Aa (asesclalion ca peneeeed and anit Ss. pot enti rt r tian 39C| | French de 8. One of the raiders qgh merchants of New York City has i Seiten PouND WOX »roL ‘ Three pe ee was brought down, Threo persons|seen formed, it was announced to-day oo ee—ro—oOoOoroToOe wero Billed, and Bhd a wounded 1n | from the office of the Louls Meyer Trad- Special for To-Morrow, Friday, May 24 the o! OF EBS Cl ing Company. About fifteen of th . ISSES—Can vou nleture a more plensl tooth, twenty-five merchants of the city COANUT Ma mel eo rity ie Cr eT nd the “ah ome long to the association, and Louis Mey- Jer has been elected President JAMAICA WINNERS, The objects of the association are to MIRST RACH——Three-year-olds and | Promote harmonious relations upward! purse $600; five and. a half [the members, to eo-operate In t furlon, N imp.) stration ‘of the food rem ati Cnapp unfair and uneconon cknapp)s ut ineconon 17 5, ‘third. ‘ *s stater, Charlotte, who | poste, W ; ‘ estimates of $414,050, to be @pent by thi ously. iil with pneumonia ROMP, Wednesday, May 22.~ igtess to-day by Secretary Bake mt geined an infantry nent to Holt of New York, who will repr Bger mtg wate submittal last June and went to France about |sent the U: States in t br SLB ORE: | Were + \ \three months ago. He was twenty-two ition of the. ar of Italy's on dy Hook would get §2 " t f the anniversary of I en years old, a native of New York City. |trance into the War, arrived here today $80,000 would bo spent on He has a brother working for thé Rem-| lie was welcomed at the etation by © ‘recial, Honolulu and the rema br en ‘and Scorpil ala ‘ram for Panama Canal defenses, — re “chatven H Usesamut Kinuee wien with Fouls, worth Attractive Thursday Offerings: PART AYR—These i bie bars” of delicious teh Caramel ¢ rolled. in covered. with our World our bina he eee “$414,050 FOR OR ENGINEERS fell dtinge Decision, a rr PE RAS—A E easier Posie Diss alas | Baker Wants 278,260 Spent on PCED OR cie oe ay tall WASHINGT( May 23,—-Additional productions bi 1 ‘ot Hy nlenstn, DEND TIN Stores: New Yorks Brooklyn, Newark, @ specified weight includes the container, Without German troops, Austria/over this district {s humming with , probably will refuse to start any-|@nemy motors, while the American thing.” and French anti-aireraft guns are TEN GERMAN BATTERIES . RE. one a he wes ‘

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