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"If It Happens In New York It’s In The Evening World’’ CITI iu Wy, — PRICE ‘Two ‘CENTS. Coprrisht, ” 5, I “Circulation Books 3 Open to All.’? | 99 by The Press Publishing New York Work _NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 4, "1918, “18 PAGES “Saran TWO CENTS. IN QURCQ VALLEY: French War Office Announces Mag-! Halt Drives Above It. om of the Marne and won sig , . In its report to-day the French War Office nal successes at two points on the line, Americans have stopped the German adyar Wood on the s Thierry, and in a dashing counter-attack have thrown the enemy back. At Jaulgonne, northeast of Chateau-Thierry mans, a German battalion which ha over the river by flicted on the Germans haJ ¢ The battle the Ourcq. uptured Pernant. lost a little ground west of Saconin and Missy. taken the town of Sailly-la-Poterie in the Oureq Valley. Between Oise and the Aisne the Germans were prevented from making Progress. The Associated Press correspondent Germans were unable to secure further gains in their efforts to rea Villers-Cotterets yesterday in while around Chateau Thierry proved) the situation Recapture by the French of Mont Choisy achievement. It is one of the main defenses of the road to Paris, += HOW AMERICANS ARE FIGHTING IN THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE ad crossed the Marne was driven b. Americans and French troops , and 100 prisoners were taken, A bridge which th nstructed was blown up contin an t violence between the Aisne Furthe: The Germans have The Germans ¢ r south.the Frenc alse the an Evening World Mar Man Watches Terrific Strug gle From a Hill Overlooking Chateau Thierry—Reserve Army Brought Up. By Martin Green. (Special Cable Despatch to The New York Evening World.) Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Erening World) PARIS, June 4.—tmagine leaving New York after lunch on Sur day afternoon, drivi 4 motor to Greenwich, Conn., witnessing pa ut critical battle between American troops an ed foe bent on veaching the metropoli York for dinner Ye ector of Such a trip ii rk now menaced as Paris is. ise on Sunday and saw for the se nificent Counter Attack by U. Ss. Troops at Neuilly Wood—Ger-| mans Take Towns Below Aisne— ™ PARIS, June 4.—American troops have Been thrown into the baitle announces that the @"¢ every n e westward near Neuilly 1th bank of the Ourcg, seven miles west of Chatea- ex and half way to Dor- Heavy losses were in- der at noon tc with the French Army says the} h| of a struggle of a most severe nature, counter-attacks by the Allies have im-| DESCRIBED BY MARTIN GREEN the battietront between the De AMERICANS HALT GERMANS ALL LIGHTS ORDERED OUT ELPDRIVE IN GITY AND AT BEACHES ENEMY BACK ACROSS MARNE — TO-NIGHT BY POLICE EDICT | (@ftice Buildings and Dwelling Houses Must Pull Down Window Blinds LIGHTS CITY EXEMPT. | hattan Will Be Gloomier Than Last Winter. | New York will to-night be dark notice, ther This is understood to mean that the clty is to be shrouded y y as Paris and London are and for the same reasons. Police Commissioner Enright, after a conference with civil and military authorities, ed the following or- day a | | White Light District of Man- ht hereafter until fur-) UBOAT BLOCKADE OF ALLU.S. NEAR, SAYS 151 MATE oe Raiders Left Kiel Seven Weeks | Ago With Plenty of Supplies and Got Big Send-Off. Germany hag established @ perman- ent submarine blockade of the Ameri- can coast and within a short time a fleet of U boats capable of operating against every important Atlantic port will be here, according to the mate of the submarine U 151. ° "To all Commands All display | lights, advertising signs or spectal The mate, who served five years as + i boatswain in the United States Navy, Huminations throughout the city, In- Md ciuding tho seashore, will discon- | ™4de this statement to Enoch Rocker {1 tinued until further notice, ‘This will ty Us vftice buildings and dwelling- )| not Include « nts. “In 1} nouses where lights ¢ y 9 used, shades will be drawn wherever It 18 possible to do 80. “Notify all con “RICHARD erned NI immediately. joner."* to all sta- s were made has- is regarded as a great! tily for its immediate enforcoment, The pleasure resorts at Coney Island, Rock- Sheepshead Bay and Staten Isl- | and the White away, Jand wif be 1 $9, | district of Manha than It was in the fuel an will be gloomter aving days last winter, U, 5. TANK AND caw REPORTED CAPTURED Three of ers Said by Germans to Have Been in Battle ) These Land Crut During the vance three large AMSTERDAM recent flehting tn south from the A f Ameri@in tanks attacked German forces .| And one of the tanks was captured un- | damaged and 4 Aur an crew made {| prisoner clarea He heuermann one of the Be lin ¢ nondents at the i) front, as quoted in a Wolff Bureau de spateh, | KILLED IN MARNE BATTLE , Com- we | have been in France the mag- Reported tem of t erves stopped a German n 1 initially el irresistible, This tinw can troops are ding the French, a Although Pari been bombarded day and night for a week & Virtica nothing seemed farther trom the city than a battle, Sunday was brilliant with sunshine. tre { laughing, ga dressed throngs. The ent loors essing the ceasele A Cc panorama movement és to the front. Halt a mi MESULTS, Page 2 (Continued om Fourth Page.) ENTRIES, Page 11 boatswatin of the schooner Edna. After the Edna was destroyed, Rocker and others of the crew were imprisoned {n the submarine more than a week. This German mate, who refused to tell his name, told Roker that he had ars and ngaged to a girl in Philadelphia whose photograph he showed. lived in New York eig' the United States coast are being drafted from among satlors formerly American ports, | BLOCKADING FLEET LEFT KIEL SEVEN WEEKS AGO. The fleet left present Kiel ting a tremendous send-off German get Photo- graphs of this celebration were dis seven weeks ago Played. ‘The voyage from Germany to this country was made by way of the West Indies, within sight of the Ba- bamas (near where Cyclops mysteriously dinars ared) and up the coast near Cape Hatte U boats in this patrol are 825 fe long and carry five-inch guns ‘The submarines at present off this coast are only an advance guard Each has a crew of thirty-five men, exclusive of officers From his own observations, w aboard the 1 boat, Re saw t |the vessel carried tools ked U-t The Germans took ten da from the Edna, but the prisoners were fed blac canned hash and very bad jam hunc cases of oll were removed from the Edna to the submersible, GERMANS KEEP AMERICAN FLAG AS A SOUVENIR, The Americans carried their phono graph with them and traded rec rmans, who were wil hing except "My Cour a’ sup Ame bread, One try" | Officers of the navy uniforms, |leather jumpers pub wor but th They v OW rried sou lyvenirs from the ships sunk r ar Men for the submarine blockade of| in the merchant marine, familiar with | , Dlockading | MINE PICKED UP OFF U.S. COAST; ALL ON CAROLINA MAY BE SAFE CAROLINA LIFEBOAT, RIDDLED WITH SHOT, BROUGHT TON. Y. SEVEN U. S. SAILORS KILLED, IS REPORT, IN BATTLE WITH | U BOAT OFF CAPE CHARLES Firing All Day Off Cape Henlopen, Officially | Reported, Believed to Be Combat With Craft That Sank Herbert L. Pratt. NORFOLK, V ‘Navy Sweeper Finds Mine Off Del-, aware Capes Near Spot Where U Boat Sunk the Tanker Pratt— 291 Carolina Survivors Known Landed. , \Steamer Lands Survivors of Other Attacks, Indicating Sinkings Not Yet Reported—New York Pert Is Reopened by Federal Order. ~ ‘a, June 4.—Au unconfirmed report brought in by fisher: | men to-day, sald seven American saflors were killed in a battle alleged to | have occurred yesterday fifteen miles off Cape Charley Lightship batween | two American war vessels and a German submarine, | According to this unverified report the sailors were killed by @ shot | from one of the American vessels directed at the U boat. | Officers of the Fifth Naval District decline to deny or affirm the report! * | Capes picked up a floating mine, according to a report made to the commandant of the Fourth Naval District. This is in the territory wherein the tank was sunk yesterday. The movements of shipping are being carefully regulated. The Port cf New York was reopened by official sanction this atternoon. Much my steamer Herbert L. Pr ty has been thrown around the arrival here, near noon, ot twenty sailors, most of them only partially clad, who were brought in by a coastwise boat plying through the waters wherein the German sub- marines have been operating. Depart- immedi- Nav 1 officers of the Intellig, ace eof mith al office f the Intellige jet met them at the whart and hurried them in automobiles in the Customs House, w y were from the Car ried could not be lea Ab for the Carolina's survivors, am Barbour, Whether th t yet r here they na or from od were questioned, me ship destroyed no e age sent this afternoon by Capt, who commanded the sunken vessel, to Frankia D, Mooney, dent of the steamship line, the lost ship. Presi- brought the first cheering word directly from The message read ‘Tam aboard the Eva B. Doug! (a schooner), off Barnegat Light | have 150 passengers and ninety-four of the crew with me. sunk Sunday night by a German submarine. “Send tug to tow vessel to Ne York. Motor launch and It Two hundred and ninety-one of the passengers and crew of and refused even to discuss it. mshi H . Firtng continued all this morning off Cape Henlopen in what 1s be- the steamship Carolina, shelled by a German submarine off the | Pratt and United States naval scout vessels, it was oMfctally stated here at or within hail of shore up to 3 o'clock this afternoon. noon to-day Sixty survivors of the vessel, which was sunk by the Ger- seven iniles off shore began at six o’cloct last night—several hours after mans, according to the report made by her captain, have not yet \the Pratt had —and f 1a he Fratt Bad tees sunh—ted continued wasll Marhtene, | been accounted for, but it is believed that two vessels reported WARSHIP SAID TO HAVE LANDED | | carrying the last of the Carolina's roster. CAPTURED GERMAN SUBMARINE | At 3.30 o'clock a report from a watering resort on the Jersey | reached that city. This may account for the remaining eighty of the Carolina complement not yet reported landed. Reported on Waterfront That Prisoners, In- | received to-day, a navy mine sweeper operating off the Delaware | cluding the Captain, Are in Custody of Com- There was a persistent rumor along the waterfront to-day, which bad only circumstantial and Indirect confirmation, that at’6,30 o'clock last night and erew of a captured German submarine aboard, and that the submarine itself, with a prize crew aboard her, followed shortly and dropped anchor The patrol vessel ts reported to have proceeded to the Brooklyn Navy Yard and there discharged {ts prisoners into the custody of the Commandant | ‘The Navy Departinent does not Intend at this time to make anz| \official announcement !f a U boat {s captured or sunk lest it pro | * CITY OF COLUMBUS IN | PORT; oa Line Heved to be a battle between the U boat that sank the tanker Herbert L, J@r#ey coast on Sunday evening, had been brought either ashore Earller reports to-day from Delaware Breakwater stated that a fight yes 4 this afternoon to be entering an Atlantic port with survivors are | coast said that three boatloads of the Carolina survivors had just | While no more reports of attacks by submarines have been mandant—S ubmarine Said to Be Captive, War vessel of the submarine patrol arrived off Stapleton with the captain | off Quarantine, the yard, tary advantage to the en fears were I Carolina Was The grave Savannah steamer City of Columbus, concerning . | whee safety expreased rday, has arrived at an Atlantic Passengers restless and many | poorly clad rt, according to @ message carly to-day from Vineyard Haven, Mass, at No. 5 with elghty passengers sep- The City of Cc had been at anchor for some time before nor {arated from other boats. Have not been seen, All with me saved Jeutity was discovered. The vessel entered tie harbor shortly after the! ; ee a ; BARBOUR, arrival of a ship operated by the Merchants and Miners’ Transportation | The metorbost rr red to by Capt. Barbour unquestionably is the sompany, and the fact that no mes was immediately sent ashore wee | OU Picked up by the Danish steamer Brysvol off Cape May at 4 o'clock | yesterday aft stor ernoon, The boat was splintered with bullets, y of the Carolina's having been fired upon taken to mean that the vee well aboard, proving the There was noth- el merely had sought refuge and that all was| wireless " hae + but three oars—<« Ned i Du The City of Columbus sighted sbinarine, but caught a wireless warn. aed mo {t but th ‘ ar one filled with bullet boles—-a man’s cap and Ing of their presence and put Into the nearest port several tins of biscults, siti As the tally of the Carolina's passengers now stands nineteen wero ianded at a point in Delaware early this morning—sixteen men, two women and an engineer f were reported with Capt the crew; 1 rd th s have passengers and 94 of the crew schooner Eva B, Douglas off been landed farther dowa U Boats Here for Two Months, Admitted to Captain of Texel Atlantic City, Uarnegat Light and two just vine a | the Jersey coa | A boat from the Carolina came resort this afternoon ashore in the centre of a Jersey coast It carried twenty-eight passengers, many of them the crew APT, LOWERY of the former Dutch ship Texel, sunk by a German submarine Sunday afternoon an | | | e| | IC J arrived bere with his crew in open women, and seven of boats last night, to-day quoted the commander of the submarine as Another co gent of men forced to abandon their ship was reported them being the United States a | saying to bin toda a messag n Vineyard Haven, Mass, to h been landed at (Continued on Second Page.) — | “T hate Ike h to do this, but we have boen ordered to get into. | an Atlantle port are the captalu and crew of the schooner Jacod ! IMPORTANT 1 JuNR, "action return hoo WE HAVE BEEN WERE OVER TWO |M. Haskell, brought ashore by the steamahip Grecian Guard your health wi ther Joha'’e jiONTHS,’ No new reports of winkings or attacks by the German U boats ef tb? Medicine, Pure tonle avk * ALS IARIMM ben bd eed ard aaane = ‘ Sede: