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

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al * of tthe rh tiver back onto the plateau above the river valley, where they now seeking to advance to the westward, ¢ This is accepted as an indication that the Germans are no! Strong force on the Marne. The fact that the Germans were forced to turn eastward along the . Marne toward Verneuil instead of being able to move westward, augurs well for the Allies. Has Flinched in U Boat WASHINGTON, June 1.—Members of the Senate Military Com- ANYIETY IN IN LONDON Cl SS sont’ Com} piegne ASSERTS 5 PREMIER Perit ¢ mittee at their weekly conference to-day with War Department officials e aes PIERRE 3 | Oxbow, § ‘ were told by Gen. March, Acting Chief of Staff, the opinion here is that bAancouptses — ; | ah ahd Poni the Germans have reached their present iobjective—the Marne—and that Cuaneticeaits Paper Paper Is Espec a Relations With Ex Entente Wili| Society held a me they probably now will dig in and prepare for a later drive, perhaps! ally Optimistic — England ec. wre ev Wlees Remain Unaltered, Says | Albert erie Hotnt anAitarines é on Paris, | Turns to America. trdias Senlis per | Count Terauchi, | of the Battle of Jutland, Field ag sami euknricey® | | Marshal Haig sent this telegram: PARIS, June 1.—Th t te * LONDON, June 1—There is Iittle “We ice In your gallant ¢ : ERMANS ARE DRIVEN BACK i eae ae ana MORT FONTAINE Bult NEUILLY a | deeds, As on the seas, you never jfos, says a Havas Agency Review wharcus® @ Bien) tintiy present possibility of an alllance Be-) havy galled us, vo on the land to-day, still view the situation as [@e WPINEWONVILEE tween Germany and Japan, Premier) our army will not fall yo IN B G seriotiey Wik ConindNy the SIGAM 18s sap i Count Terayehi told the Tokio corres-| Admiral Viscount Jellicoe, ad- | creasingly reassuring ‘The most im- Ep pondent of the Daily Mail in an inter-| 4ressing the meeting, paid a havbtane cova ed ae dierors ® eVINAY view, | m tribute to the work of the : portant development is regarded as : | mercantile marine, and said no Enemy Makes No Further Progress at Any |i, onemss ifunie to, erate ANGENSOLLES Chat “L feel very earnestly that under) sailor flinched in the. face or F TWIBIE el ier Point and Is Held North of Marne. } westward ad push toward Pafin, . yertus We UJ the present circumstances such a con-| (/-boat perils. Never was a ship thus, it is considered, revealing his VAUCHAMPS s tingency as a German-Japanese allt- | played for want of a crew. [FRENCH REPORT] strategic intentions unmistakably MON MPR AIL Ecuny® | |tnce is Impossible.” the Japangse € was no parallel in the his : bat , , es P At prerent the most important part remier said. At the same time) tory of the sea for such murder PARIS, June 1.—Following is the text of to-day’s War Office report: | of the nattiefela {a that with Noyon, ~ ®PTMARAINS Count Terauchi emphasized his be-| but the Britivh sailor was un “The pressure of the Germans continued late yesterday and througiy!or the region to the south of it, on TV _eBANNE Net that Japan’s relations with the) conquer Each tee be any 2 5, . al " | the one end, and the district north of Enténte would continue unaltered. was torpedoed he went to the night with renewed violence on the front between Soissons and Cha) Ghatean Whideey, oa cia Saas - Girt ‘The Promise eaid the Japanese pees | aeain . : % j " S01 + line ‘ © othe ° wre ee je attached the utmost importance to he Marquis of Crewe, who erry. e region of Soissons and on the line of Chaudua | the other. It is here that the Ge ple attac ¢ teau Thierry. In the gio sl Hin FGA S6WARL BRIE AUTATAL UR international loyalty and that he was! presided at the meeting, referred En Vierzy the French, making counter-attacks with indefatigable energy, | qiviaed attention “HIGH P PRAISE GIVEN MRS ROSE STOKES GETS )Convinced nothing would lead them to| to the demands for reprisais for ey i. ‘ 4 : | sin against this principle. He added) German atrocities, A : se Ds, W g gr everywhere an The newspaper L/Homme Libre, 10 RIGA ROOP . | D » i - ‘ Jy)» pushed back masses of enemy troops, winning gr vund every ¢ | shashlav. Cramananent : AME! | N T Ss hat the Japanese, so far as his ob- | If we were so to act, entirely : : : Pr lemenceau's organ, Is op- | ' ; , taking several hundred prisoners. South of Soissons the Germans were | timistic over the situation, It saya BY BRITISH STAFF [servation went, wero as loyal to Gre: t | within our right," he sald, “the thrown back on the Crise River. Chaudun was taken and lost several] the enemy plan to draw the Allies| jBritatn now as before the war and| enemy vena he to de oh - ‘i i French after de « {toward the south and to push on that, whatever might be the opinion} © ual or larger number of ou times, and remained in the hands of the French after desperate fighting WiniWird cle hecwith koustin ke SOA SaRE ERE eli | of the individual, the Japanese as a| ™en, against whom no offens¢ i “The battle was violent also in the region of Chouy and Neuilly (i) ¢ay as the firat part of it wan con- | Canial Stale IK; ita athe whole could never under existing cir- | be be ult 1 A it ne 4 ; : 7 IL i Sta : j : be. BUPposed t parbarities the centre of the western side of the salient). The French broke up| cerned. ‘rhe remainder of the plan| THE LOTHES ment to-day on the war | nani imagine themselves pro- | 1 bide Ans t : Be ie - 8 bein, complete defeater a jer . Ce he : | . ‘ % “sf Gernian attacks and maintained their lines: immediately to the east of |!" being completely defeated, and situation had this to say of the .| TRPRATTRATURS TENdGe oe | gotten when the time comes to x attacks 4 everything gives reason to believe the | peasioass (Continued from First Page.) |. /2Pan‘s future iu just ax dependent | Snnbidee the. GONAIKGNA dor" ehee these local enemy will be totally blocked. No review of the past week lezen the victory of the Entente as IST ane be Wi ees i ° “Along the northern bank of the Marne the Germans pushed ad-] In greeting a delegation of Social- Bycltan oad Riedie Russian Reports would be complete without men- ; 5 : {Great Britain's future. Japan has| aiviakt . + corde: ( sau Thierry as|'st Deputies, Premier Clemenceau . tion of the fine exploit of the |@"d economic Justice acclaimed as of/ striven to do her duty by her allies vanced bodies from the north and east borders of Chateau Thierry as} Voiced his absolute confidence in the! Americans Are Left Hungry Kevapinan troops in the capture # highest social value in times of|in suéb directions as guarding the In- GEN, FOCH CONFIDENT far as Verneuil. linsue of the present operation, He and Penniless. | of Cantigny, It was an extreme- | peace, becomes an anti-social thing|dian and Pacifle Oceans and sending “On the French right there was sharp fighting on the road between | ¢ the Deputies details which made | ant rete ly well conducted operation and, 4 a crime in time of war. warships to the Mediterranean. | HE WILL STOP GERMANS ‘ ‘sala * sal here was no] 4Nn excellent Impression. mabe cele mr in view of the fact that the | “There are many things I have in| “We are convinced that our future Dormans and Rheims (the eastern side of the salient). There Premier Clomenceau, in his ca-| WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN| troops wero untried, it is notable | iy heart to say, but some how I*tee!|depends upon the outcome of this| NOW AS HE DID IN 191 change northwest and north of Rheims. | pacity of War Minister, has issued) FRANCE, Friday, May $1 (Associated| that they not only captured thuir | that time and events will speak more| war and we realize that if the Ger- jan order suspending until further|Press).—A Russian prisoner who re-| Objective but held it. eloquently for me than | am able to| man power in the Far East cannot ae noth 1 furloughs and leaves of! cently ed from Ger “It is always much more dith- eak for myself—I am ready for sen-| be broken Japan’s future will be seri- | py; ui t * ? LONDON, June 1.—The gravity of |" Statement at Moscow,| position than to capture it, and Following the pronouncement of| fo ask if Japan entered the war| 0 Question, “One Must En- the news from the webtern front is em-| Which te now avaliable here, to the) the performance of the Amerl- | sentence, Mr. Stedman gook stops for! solely because of the Anglo-Japanese tertain No Doubt.’ ON THE AMIENS BA Phasized In this morning's newspapers effect that ho saw American prisonera| Cans hows ay iad A hish an appeal of the case to the United | Alliance, There was the further con- fs which comment anxtously on the situn-|of war in a camp at Tuchel, West ac beecy beheo Leaiey “quar, {States Circuit Court of Appeais and| sideration that the outcome of the | ARIS, June 1.—The lor tion, although they express hopetulness | Pruswia, and that they asked him to| {ties | Judge Van Valkenburgh granted the | War would affect Japan's future. | pps amass lars ~~ ‘ : F an to the final outcome. The Dally lie: it bo known that they were bein > defendant sixty days in which to file | Had we merely been content to carry bis siping vas ; He ero being t | gharalnaleae f és Haig’s Troops Make Successful Raids in the) xiwy says tie sat pant fiven Wat) treated brutally, ‘The prisoner =) AMERICAN FLYER & Dill of exceptions. Pending this | out the terms of the Angio-Japaneso | {he Allied Generalissimo int 4 Same Neighborhood and West of Albert. night by @ military authority to the line, were hungry and penniless. Mra. Stokes will be at erty on bail, | Alliance there might have been fustis | @™e in ” Associated Press Ni wren tne wus | When the Americans arrived at the IN OWN GERM In pronouncing sentence the court| fication for criticism from certain do- EEA SCKRIo Che waver bald’ 4 tion was depicted as a very anxious) ; * BR 6S 0 6 Rl AN nald | mestic quarters that under the terms, '#!t® ce es ; [BRITISH REPORT] ‘ one, Is disquieting since it must be ac- Hila pLisrila i Paited basal hada P FAR MI FL “I believe this is part of a system-|of the Alliance we were not called | aa x i Mies LONDON, June 1.—Following is the text of to-day's seport from) cepted ax retlable F usiiiseeiis They were particularly anxious to LANE N ST. Hl atic programme to create discontent | Upon to send ships to the Mediterra- ik Uiiinie ngalr eels penis: the War Office HN MERGE nor Wisntare atlieine have the Americans’ shoes. They vith the wary Sou tie 48d that penne | RED danger in 1918? “ staveat spulse i st of Villers Bretonneux, | “tuation 38 1 ne wise bast ret: \told the prisoners they should not Thé Battle Was One of a Series on any terma may bo brought abput| Count Terauchi after further em-| oF ed: A hostile raid was repulsed last night east of Villers Bret The Daily Telegraph sees great pos & Foch replied: & nos : reba h the atratewic situation, | Wear expensive clothing and shoes on the Toul Front This with Germany and the interests of |Phasizing the importance of et "When one remembers how + i al fighting has taken place to our advantage at Aveluy Wood, north] sipitities iP oe stra net a | mille word andvinae thelk cise: ‘0 the nation at large sacrifieed for the| AngloJapanese Alliance said: \ fatepad acess eae ' Anne d stress . pe e years 4 3 lof Albert. A few prisoners have been taken by our troops in these en-|Asterting t Tew dayn are not dimin. {erty Would be taken care of until Morning. realization of social and econorale have every faith in the final vin-| One must entertain nc doubt ‘ Of the jase few daya are Bot GImINs | ici return to America, ‘The Rus-| Wired THM AMERICAN ARscY In| Views of:certain groupe. dication of the principle for which in | h the m counters. ishing, it add: t would appear wa MGR OTIC CCH Tien “LR “Revolution, if deemed necessary,|COMmon we all are fighting.” with the means we have at oq. i F sloped considerable activity early this|that a second battle of the Marne, of |"@9" sald that every one knows FRANCE, June 1 (Associated Proms.) oa g rth. + disposal to-d ‘ “The hostile artillery developed considerable activity early jthat 4 dba vendo at thalimenne Another German airplane was is almed at, expected, and precti- pear eka Pistho Ai morning in the Villers Bretonneux and Hebuterne sectors, and has been far gr ae Lada canaeChasy tains tr A Consul, the Russtlan was not hrougat down this morning by an cally Invited. ‘The lamentable situa- ARIS AGAIN BOMBED; I L r ney ing the night south and west of Lens and in the neighborhood | «ponte peaheae 6 differsh whether he was a Swiss or a Ta here Ak ainiel sf tacike § bs ‘-tlon already brought. about in Rus active during the nig ferent clreumstances, Th aed) Visited the. cannon Blaine i t ROR ce te the substantia ‘object here ONE RAID IS A FAILURE sivenchy.” however, Is o the advantage | "74 we camp. © northwest of Toul. ’ of Givenchy.” Lt me mila t mt BAvantase | vag made to him by the Americans, MiEhin dublr Wae/ona ot & wetland at | MAY HAVE FLED CAPTORS. of the Allies as the . E 4 wave: “Never | 24 their clothes were returned, bat acrias combata that occurred this C S A UP ; ‘ - Saeenetacsiee The Dally Expres saya: “Never! an tho Conmul seldom visited the rorning. ‘The enemy machine brought AR TRIKE MAY Y TIE [German Airmen Over the City! .i ilizan; Reported Meath GERMANS CONSTANTLY IN A Since the outbreak of the war tian the| 11) “8 Germana hadi opportunity |dowalueman falling atter the attene Sik TOWNS NEAR ALBANY. Twice During the Night— iam Colligan, Reported Missing ; situation been rs : Acings OF lig practise Many injustices, jcan had poured a stream of bullets | Driven Off First Time. in Action, Again on Duty, War have the possibilities been graver:! “he Russian said that eight Ameri. |!8to the opposing plane | ime. Deen anata THEIR FOR yet the country remains unperturbed | cans who were captured several pie Ire Threaten to Go Out To-Mor-|, PAR: June 1—German airmen at- | pa nnounces almost indifferent We have become | months ago reached the ca amp at mi LIEUT, CASGRAIN, AMERICAN ie ireatel * de fs tempted two alr raids on Paris last, BY ding between the Mnes of twa! } a customed «othe ple task day and, being very hungry, ay row Unless United Traction |night, ‘The firat was a failure, but on War Department telegrams and two pri that su ed for a v jays and Troops From Nearly Fifty Divisions, Totaling “ REASSURINGVIEW ISTAKENINPARIS; 7 UUST e ISTREES. * DENIS resent Line of Great Battle Above the Marne; Two Towns Retaken by French on Western Salient eLAON Re VERNEUI ny) THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE i, 1918, /FREN 'CH <a ON WESTERN SIDE OF MARNE BATTLE SALIE GERMAN-IAPANESE PACT IMPOSSIBLE, *SISSONNE RUYERES soeeray GORBENY then comes to the end, for bread, They were tola bread was distributed only in the morning. They "AVIATOR, CAUGHT BY GERMANS. with the ob- Company Yields. | the second occasion bombs were dropped y Fe on the capital. Ject unattained. We have persuaded | werg. placed in a hut with Rugslans ALBANY, June t.—Street railway | slang, | ; ; fi telal statement lerued early to- ourselves this must always happen.| ster tein ‘ _ ' service In all the cities and towns ad-| An offiel er being forced to stand in a) Force, ‘0 c tr ;, | : | 675,000 Men, Have Already Been The argument is false. “This faith t8| square, where Germans were. gly | Forced to Ground in No Man's) joining Albany and Schenectady wilt be| day eald: Identified Among Them. not based on reason.” an opportunity to insult them } Land, Enemy Takes Him tied up by @ strike to-morrow morning | “Enemy airplanes having crossed the | Confidence im American help 18! he huts in which the Americans | Prisoner. unless the United Tieliway. Company {tine (8 the dlreetion of Faris, the starr | 2 WITH THE FRENCH ARMY IN @—————————————~ | hown in tho comment of aeverallare living, the Husslian salde are | : i [and the Schnoctady Raliway Company | was given last night et 10.53 o'clock and | FRANCE, June 1 (Associated Press). |tended weatward. ‘The: Allied artil+ newspapers. ‘The Daily ‘Mall enumer |damp, cold and unfit for habltation.| WITH THE Ast BRICAN AMY un erent suee Germans cats elt apts eee ET Fed cceceditiia, No babe ial oe 4 “ zi ‘so chara sy | Some of the Americans became i], | FRAY Friday, May (Associated | for Increased s. ‘ y BY LJfhe enemy 1s inoreasing the num-|lery is making splendid @ractice on jates the strong points In favor of the | nwo of them who were ina hospital |Preas.)—The American alrmen made| ‘The trolleymen struck in Schenectady |Parte. ‘All clear’ was given et 41.67 e ed in the battle, |{he German troops, Allies, including “the rapid arrival of} had an opportunity there to. taik | prisoner Thursday by the Germans was) to-day, completely tying up the opera-| o'clock. ber of troops engaged in th os P | > American troops, which will apeedily | with the Huasian, and it was through | Lieut, Wilfred V. Casgrain of Detroit, | tion of local and interurban lines in the| *'Presh sounde of motors having bee ‘The genera! idea, when the offensive restore Allies’ preponderance in| them that obtained the informa. | ol ete, bs t es n ; tnat WOMAN FOUND IN WATER Miers." Tho. Tinea aie looks to {tion on which this statement I bas-d.| pegpatcnen trom ihe American tront|“! reported by lookout posts, the alarm was beggn, appears to have been that) num si |, Despatches from the American front] Hepresentatives of the employees oflamain sounded at 1185. ocieke en ‘i EAC Ee CRRIA ome ce the day when the arrival of Ameri- | Thursday renorted that during an nerlal] the United ‘Traction Company, which | nit teats uy ieag ot, ey clocks and omy a MAY BE MISSING TEAGHER ‘f-o%, Si'eSA eepRURRE EXPLOSION Ds wists Suc, i, aay ere 4 St a front of only 2,000 yards, Sing apy pubis Jehines and a German squadron. an | yy : N 5 | rowel 0 et, Cohoes, Green Island and Troy, ed in tl sion,” that time the line of battle has been 7 ; jet |imm tance” Ht says, “eEHo whole ution FOLLOWS BIG AIR RAID |Americrn mscnine tna een forced to! Tormaity. notified oMelale of the com-| The longrange botnborieent of Zartel ctended, and in order to maintain |Paper With Name Leads to Bellef) iO thin, tie'brmy an i haw mover land in No Man's Land and Its pilot had jany this noon that a atrike would begin | continued this moruing. : gy ? and Aaron erngaunel Body Is That of Miss been behind any movement yet, and Fe ae ante the handy ot the ny rae to-morrow morning. ‘The notice was piensa the density of the attackin, ¢ it lw nation of 100,000,000 freemen.” | Powder M ,|took place on the sec northwest of | mies f , we der Magazine Believed to Have s ; , ° | Kiven after pany oMcials had re further units have been brought Dorothy Hemming, | _ DR ETOSHEN EY Bore ci aul, where the aerial activity has beon| 003 45 grant an increase of ten cents BELMONT PARK WINNERS. | Z 0 jomb « pronounce< _ from the rear and thrown Into the] The wody of « young woman ve-| SWEEP SCHOOLS OF GERMAN ) is an hour. ‘The men are recelving 20| pingp NAGH~aN Heved to be Mins thy Mo Hen i ‘i —>—_—— a — Threp-year-olds fight. r , a tg b aie 1 te mM u | Allied Flyers, cents an an : - ; relling; $700 added; one wate —Lady 6 time and place of the return] ming the Hrookiyn schoo! teacher) TRRNTAM BOARD ADNISES z ‘KILLS TWo GERMANS, A penare) maseaurion tc firets Tell y 3 to 6, 04 papi ar ates ee to be pus, {Who disappeared from Harrison, N.Y, AMSTERDAM, June 1 long, | arayateambe in the votnity wit tevecaens (errrnGh 208 Ci aFiguen), 3 to 6, out low by the Alliew seams to be puz- | Y ripe | . | wa H ° + No é ° ; ; Wh {inst Suiuiday, Was taken fr h dy AANA) ates wae ii meleriaily Wi A Art| pnd oul feats Nominee ‘ sling the German commanders, who] Tr arin tawer Mill Pond, Glen Cove, : ater Bina; diet aut paccns: Ginbeimn)i te are endeavoring to secure strong |tsta-gay. Two achoolboye, Laugh. | Belief That | Ev ery Local New lease ragat Thursday night. At a tracts 114 (Davies), 15 to 1, 3 to 1, out, b points for pivots. | Holland and Herbert Kabacmik York Board Will Follow A.M. Friday there was a tremendous oe third, Time—1.404 Babette also ‘The task of strengthening the ro-| first saw the body and called a patrol Nau lesa Rulin eras, ab4 the soncuuion wie ton |. CAN ADIAN MeapguanrEn 2RS ON ran, ii : 4 Jerse be “|THE BRITIS! *RONT, June % > prepieanssd Hiring divisions of the Allies, where man ee ‘ sided d 8 by the entire neighborhood | Ee EOE ocier dune t (Be TEMPERATURE Ts 84) LOUISVILLE ENTRIES. ‘necessary, was placed in the hands| On the shore a short distance away| TRENTON, June 1.—A moat awe: Plazies rose high in the air, end it | Ch Mea gereel eae e of the local reserves. It has been |hal been washed up a black leather! ing recommendation for the exclu-|y. au mened thaten powder maregine |i a ceedingly well under |PUrse containing small change, @ 8r | sion of everything German from the | !% SUPP : ane talion crawled through the wire en-| TT § TOUISVILLE, Ky., June 1.—The en- eprried: cut sxoeedion! ‘ Jcery lat and a slip of paper bearing | Public Schools of New Jersey was| Wa exploded, accordmgs to a Flush- |tanglements recently and worked his| Promises Are Made That"Ideal Con-| tries for Monday's raves ure aa follows the most dimoult circumstances, toy ee aL Hemming.” Tt in| ouee Schools of New Jersey was) i cspatch to the Telegraaf, way around a German post in the ditions Will Prevail for Sun. FUT, RACE Claim $700) tv | ig cormidatle nature of the Gere ee eee eee eater fall oF 4 Aainubosiogd of a Ware aiedbie ansicel| i a s maiden lon: Tay fl Aste | suppos | Stato Hoard of Education at a meet ‘ ea Mates fo hr, Mtectinates eh oranaioe: man effort may be gathered from the | juin ped board from a ferry boatling in the State House, It te be pill box, He shot a German. there. | day Pleasure Seekers, WOE: SO rwine skmn UO” Brwaette Wo Im): | absolute identification of nearly fifty | between Sea Clik and Glen Cove Vad aVaey Inca) Hcara’ os waucatinn PLANT MAKING WAR WIRE A sentry rushed up and the Canadian! 5, we, aimont” « partect summer|titi Lanier {itt Loe Meme, tee ies | of their divisions (about 675,000 men). | George Henderson 0 41 Bast) will quickly follow the recommenda TROYED BY FIR killed him : Ano her ir an who ae tho report of the Weather Bus [ioity Wea Alne sigbie=-tbulidone my.) 112 | ‘There certainly are a number of other | 10th Street, Brooklyn OF Mia) gion, board has not power to approached was frights Om ay OY | coal 30 o'clock this afternoon. The |, SBCOND RACE $900; three-year divisions in immediate support Hemming, left SOTaee: fee . . | esis i or pOF pies ” a ini Jtemperfkture was then 84 degrees and |° Bate Tnow Henaee, 190 | where she was last seen, to search for - Se ORAAGIAA Tham annouR tare | n | versie IN i The divisions taking part in the of> | *" | Suspicious Blaze Causes $80,000] otner German and took him pr the humidity 6 w ith fust 12 lite i ty Bringarat, 1 ; ua ye which have been added most earn alatan vas | eeeeaty a flit the, purpntt | more of the gentle southwest wind that "Claiming: $800: three-year fensive which ha a ‘ Joseph Hemming, a at TT Damage in Munitions Plant Und heavy f a ROI Te ulawinat pantedtion In wekitan oe ward ng gixteent fecently belong to the ‘volunteers |ciared that Dorothy wan overworked ; Neate Noo rushed back to the Canadian lines, would have been reaches, ‘The Ae 1 om wi gaged in|and anxious to get away from eve in East Newark, ' bie are ‘ ditions would have been reac ee army. All of them wer engaged in| and anxious to get away from every in East Newar' | bringing | plive with him ftom Pha Wace Grea AVEC e o'clock | 109 gid Carman the March battle and afterward we 4 harassed because of the lack of f | Fire of suspicious origin wrecked the _> |thia. morning when the thermomote a Vitra RACE Highland | sent to the rear to be fitted out and /and eaid that her mental c Par aflertay City, whith ‘Bron out at | son Wire Works in John Street, registered 68 degrees, To-morrow, it in| lon fey Hane bt i ry to receive special training | Wan igo0d, though she wae In poor) the stay meeting, was patched up Fat Newark, N. J, at 3.80 A. M. to. CALL 5,500 JERSEY MEN, |rceistore) OO ene anne Bunday, | Wao ed Hiatt a ont jae — | 4 destroying wire for the United Eres every boc y ento } 104) mt’ Counterblast By pushing on to the northern bank | — Gay Oeniroving wire for the Dalia | oe aciasie n everybody may enfoy the parks Payee a atti compte ef the Marie the Germane have! 1) © sav SEIZE CLOTHS, NEW YORK SHIP AGROUND, |‘ | pout $50,000 Can't Be Pille A heavy fog blowing in from the! alate (Atk —Minwences:, $800; two sem. b fan-like je Be e —-_ ved at abou Q a : early thi morning caused con- Vratow. Il) St. Hanan, 101. Hengy mroumht the point of their fanclike Gaal The plant, @ two-story bullding, was| TRENTON, No, dine 1.—New Jer- ion in the harbor and delayed Rainn, Men larke TK Tanpelit. 1a * movement to a sharp salient. They)! way industries Board Appoints cs et ee ot operated at night, and according to|rey was to-day called upon by the War ferry traffic during the rush hour Nit ai Been igen | evidently are anxious to develop the Tectiis Lamiatalraiay, | ore In Kom, hut te Ko | Thomas Gleeson, the president, there| Department to draft 5,000 white men —_— —_— fa Mie i ane Advance thus gained by pressing) wasinnaron, J 1 cPounlbis i s. dune 1—The | had been no fire about the butiding. ‘t » for Camp Dix du the Cadet Aviator Killed Doing a Nowe Y>) 18) Pym 0!) pike westward from Charteves to Chateau me 7 : gual een patern team: | names spread ao rapidly the Kast New. five days beginning June 24, and S00 Dive. 106" Sargon mf ; Rinteanas ane thal ‘ nie & mperated, “whieh lett men sent a hurry call to. the | col during a similar period) MONTGOMBRY, Ala, June 1—! Sevexti nice, Thierry | silk goods was indicated to-day with New York for Moston last night with |ark Aremen , . , 1 ng a sim ' ) y ; ‘ 1 Whe correspondent watched the|the appointment of John Scott, Chicago, '200’ passengers, ran aground. ‘in, Bus. | Harriaon depart ment, which rent ald ; g June 19. George H. Lacoske, a cadet aviator, " ne 5 : Ax “Textile Adminiatrator” of the War #4"d' Hay during a fox eatly ‘to-day | Much of the ruined wire was packed |” if local boards are unable to fil wag killed at Taylor Field yoaterday Ween ie BeutineE 1B enemy's movements in this vicinity ile ASD arg Howted later without assistance | ready for shipment to Europe, Tho| heir allotments from Class 1, the order when ha plane went into a nose dive, Too) Tod! "ine Shooter, Industries Board, Some of the passengers Ww D AS: ioe a which weer plainly visible in the|°").'” aa plelis ‘alan Ast ry train con- Valuable Jooma of the plant were prac-'«jrects them to select farmers who can It fell about 200 feet. He was s\n Fadl claimed, brices on ail othe a wae ot Buseard’s Bay to make i preant F briMant sunshine. Ali their efforts! forecast, nections for (his city. ruined, be spared, twenty-four years old. Weather lowe; track faa, a ‘ t , é ( mH s'¥ \ 2 \ | France since November, ‘T saw a German Major, prisoner, wh he was utterly sick of the war, andl this was Germany's last stand," was another paragraph tr the second 1 ter Tell ‘Heine’ that I have had the pleasure of killing two of his countrymen and hope to kill some r Mrs, Kane said the ‘Heine’ mentioned was of German birth, who has lived for seventeen years in America and is antie German in this war Bombing of Cities Causes Inere: ing Alarm Among Inhabitants, Washington Is Toll. WASHINGTON, June 1 Allied raids on German towns a demoral ing the German people. Advices to the State Department y said that the eff the po, or ARMY WILL NOT FAIL, SAYS HAIG IN MESSAGE TO SAILORS OF BRITAIN Jellicoe Declares No glish vate letters, Mrs, Rene Kane of No. 3 43d Street, Brooklyn, has built a strangd war story, not yet by any means com- plete, about her bro:her, William Coll gan, Company D, 6th Engineers, in The fir telegram from Washingto lin April said that Colligan was reporte: missing in action on March 29. The sec~ ond telegram, received yesterday, ly recorded the fact that Colligan ree ported for duty again on April 16 Was {t a case of capture and escape? Tt took the letters that came in the in terval between telegrams to show even a little of what had happened. The first letter, dated April that Colligan had been in the trenches and was feeling fine, The second, dated) May 4, said Colligan had been “slightly wounded” by a shell that struck nea. him, that for two days he had been un able to speak and for twelve days hadl been “in a Httle hospital behind th linea." From this Mrs. Kane believes that thi original “missing” report was caused b: her brother's getting into.a strange hosed pital where hin pre ported to his regiment. meres ), anid © Was not re GERMANS DEMORALIZED BY THE ALLIED AIR RAID ofore O.Eo. ROBERT, —CHRISTIN Services at CAMP OHURCH, Broadway, 12 naga. ROP Lu 66th st. Moi

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