The evening world. Newspaper, June 4, 1918, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘ re! i y Secretary Lansing and joseph Hainilt "Reading, the Byiush Ambarsador, of Porte ico, American coast had reached the Navy Department up to noon to-di Sec retary of the Navy Daniels {s quoted from Washington. He also said his department bas no information concerning the re ported capture of one of the raiders. The Department, the Secretary said, has positive evidence that one U dost is operating, but only the evjdence of a surviving captain that two were offshore. Other navy officlels expressed the belief that three sub marines had been engaged. ' Daniels said he had told the 1 Committee yesterday that the navy had believed an occasional submarine might get through to this country. But, he added, one or two or more may be now engaged {n an effort tr! draw the American fire from the European side, The Secretary was ra to discuss the subject of possible U boat communication with the American shore. Adequate measures for the protection of the coast and the pursult at| the German undersea raiders were going forward at top speed to-day. Aero- planes and hydroplanes armed with depth bombs are acting as auxiliaries, of the large fleet of patrol ships. A hospital ship is waiting at Stapleton, with a corps of doctors and nurses, to minister to any wounded that may | be brought In from the arena of the German ‘activith Forty naval airplanes swept over the sea between Cape May and Fire Island, patrolling as far as sixty miles out, In a search for submarine victims, There was no early trace of three boatloads of survivors re- ported drifting off Beach Haven, N. J, yesterday, but it is believed these may have been the men of the Texel, who landed at Atlantic City early today, A report that the American tanker Saranac was coming into City Island under tow after being crippled by a German submarine was found later to be true only im part. The Saranac was driven ashore off Halifax some time ago and, under temporary repairs, made its rae down to this port with tugs towing. The, port of New York has been reopened, It was snnseaned at head- quarters of the Third Naval District to-day. The Clyde Line received word to-day that their passenger vessel Huron, from Jacksonville, Fla, to New York, bad put into a coast port as a matter \ of precaution. “WAY HAE “BOT” COLUER CYCLOP. tration were reported from Washington safe jn port before noon to-day. FIGHTING THREE YEARS, ~ SUBMARINE DRIVEN OFF EAST ORANGE MAN DIES | FROM CHARLESTON WATERS N LATEST GE GERMAN DRIVE Mallory Liner fap as Sighting U| Boat and Seeing the Chase Sister Gets Word of Death of Lieut. | i ba, THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1918. KIEL CELEBRATED WHEN THE U BOATS STARTED FOR AMERICA NEW TYPE OF U BOAT RAIDER HOLDING UP_ STEAMSHIP: PERSHING REPORTS rin Fron RILEY Roy R. Mason, Gainesville, Meyer, neading, O loon, Brighton, Mass.; rence E. Newton, Cincinnatt, 0, tern James N. Mu c Emm tJ, r, Minneapolis, Minn. 4 Stree Newark, N. J. Carmenile R. Puopolo, Avon, Mast PREVIOUSLY REPORTED MIs8- ING, NOW REPORTED DEAD: Lieut. Leopoldo Arnaud of New | waterive, int Joseph. Bundtords 7 Skowhegan, Me York City Among the PREVIOUSLY REPORTED MIS8- Severely Wounded. ING, NOW REPORTED KILLED IN ACTION. WASHINGTON, June 4—Forty| Mechanic Joseph U. Pratt, Bristol, . “onn, names were included in to-day’s cas- | PREVIOUSLY REPORTED SLIGHT~ |ualty list, divided as follows: Three| LY WOUNDED, CORRECTED Killed in action, two dead from TO MISSING IN ACTION, Wounds, siz dead from disease, nine. | ,,bfivate Charles Cropper, New, teen dead from’ accident and other VIOUSLY REPORTED KILLED causes, eight wounded severely, one} IN ACTION, NOW REPORTED wounded slightly and oné prisoner. AS WOUNDED IN ACTION KILLED IN ACTION. Private Frank W. Ferraro, Middle-, town, Conn, Privates Lon Meadors, Krupp, Ky.; Sekai aaah Howard 1. Milton, Hartford, Conn. \L|EUT, ARNAUD FOUGHT Nelson A. Pluff, New Haven, Conn, pieo or wounos. | WITH RAINBOW DIVISION; MA ee ae GABLES “DON” “DONT WORRY” NAVY OFFICIALS SAID MAY 27: FLYERS waEOKED = mss sey “NO U BOATS ON THIS SIDE;”’ 4 BOATS SUNK MAY 25 AND 26 Patrol Boat Rescues Two U, S. | sere. Theodore A. saciid ‘ rh fis how ut, Leo eae Aviators Ten Miles Off N n May 21 a Submarine Fired Torpedo at the! Cheyenne Off Delaware Breakwater — F. C. Williams of the Royal Field Artillery. AN ATLANTIC ¥ Mallory ner Sabine, from Tampa t er being in the thickest of the |New York, with forty passengers, peer | rai ‘! in here to-day and reported she met o| fighting at the front three years) wimarine yesterday between Charles Lieut. Fred C, Williams of the Royal) ton and Frying Pan Shoal Orange, N. J. was killed in the 1 pat 4 fallen | to sea Baki Seance Nadav Hed bef ater The Merchants and Miners’ steamer 7 + | Nantucket also arrived here to-day, aap eparae Neuere ae A] ba hdaall ing been warned that enemy sub: Clinton Street, Bast Oran | marines were in the vicinity of the Williams, who was instructor of | igntship Battery A, Field Artillery, now the net seeeton Tan was never ene MANY KILLED AND HURT tee ens sitvough bow IN FRENCH MUNITIONS BLAST the, Pont, although he wa gassed ascouple of months ago and ‘was laid up for several weeks. His) plant at Baussens Blows Up and commander, believing he had done! ‘ enough fighting, gave him a higher Much Damage Is Done, Says rank upon his recovery from the gas Havas Despatch. and assigned him to training Brit-) pynis june 4.—Much damage ish artillery recruits. — After & done by @ violent explosion yesterday In couple of weeks of this work Will- 4 piant in which war materials were jams said it was too inactive for him being manufactured at Baussens, in and pleaded to be allowed to go back | Southern France, noar Aries, a Havas to the front, His outfit had been | despatch from Marseilles reports practically wiped out many times, he). 7he Pie of persons killed or in- recently wrote home, Williams formerly was in the Reg- 0 hint estes Raton Arar: soreee eC LEMON HURON, WITH six years in the Philippine! mccrvcn sume, scct— NINETY PASSENGERS, SAFE caught fire at sea, and did good work in quieting the large number of Ship From Jacksonville to New | horses that were being sent to Eng- | “ere (e iy Seal land on the ship. His conduct won York Puts Into Po rt to Escape commendation from the ship's com- ibmarines. mander, ANATLANTIC PORT, June 4 --The HELD A GERMAN PRISONER, |Yorw sth 0 yatsonsers anda heave °% kt hy asi jcargo, put into Atl tlc port last Detention of Private Lehane of /night to escape the submarine menace ved to-d Y 0 eink naed Weems pnd arrived to-day at the Clyde Docks Washington, | The vas Private Jeremiah Lehane of No. 921 | to their destinations ne 6) rat 16th Avenue, Brooklyn, a member of the Ml Infantry, is a prisoner in Ger-| HIGHER POSTAL RATE. according to # letter from “a eut received by hit #ister, | Great Britain Makes Charge of Hx- Milas Katherine Lehane The nome of tra Cen camp is not known 4 Postmaster Patten invites apectal at- ne was notified by the Red tention to the following extract from a Cross that two 10-pound pacia ofl comminication received from the Post food, tobacco. soap and other necessities | Omice D. will be sent to him each week. Lehane| This T heen advised by enlisted & monih after the United Btates| the Posta ration of Great declared war on Germany, He was|B the hy June $1918, | married two days before he sailed fo store mmahea i France last A tes chat delivery in th a ten will be in- ——- creased to one and a half pence (id) or the frat ounce or fraction thereof U. S. WOUNDED AT NICE, Jeng cnn penny for each additional ounce or fraction theres Sea BOYS HELD AS ROBBERS. Opened Store With False Key and Took Cash, Is srer 4—The firat wounded American soldiers who had deen amalgamated with French troops . arrived at Nice yesterday Angelo Gillo, fourteen years ofd, of They were sent to the American Hos. » 32 Col Street, and Joseph Re- pital here vere, fifteen years old, of No, 141 Atlan =e ge Pe jc Avenue, Hrooklyn, were arrested SHELL HITS THE COUISIANA.|:o-009"onanged with wnteriie ‘hw re cery store of Matilo Ladoletta on Sack~ Mistaken =f Man Kt , June 4A warship} had about $100 h of engaged recently in target practice mis- | Packed up ready to be taken away took the battleship Louisiana for @ Lar- wet and exploded a shell aboard her, killing one man, the Navy Department announced to-day Detective's Son Ab Died of Exp ——<»————— Colombia Reported FP ww Platt-| death from exposure subsea ‘am Monopoly. sinking of the Preaident Lincoln ; , Asa member of the 68th WASHINGTON; June 4.—Reports) qrijiiery young Wilhelm sulle that the Colombian Congress Is holding) President Lincoln May 10 | tracted pneumonia on the vovase across & special session for the purpose of in-| tracted pneumonia ¢ etituting a Government platinum mo-| started back on the shid to-day and caused considerable concern} eynoure while in un oven Doat, Serxt fn Government departments that have|Wiihelm resides ut No. 410 East 240th een scouring the earth in search of | Street platinum for war needs. big tle 5 Porto Rice Judwe’ on ¢ Arbitratio ext WASHINGTON, Jahe 4.—The arbitra- * tion treaty between the United States n@ Great Britain, originally made in M for u period of five been ext H He steamer Carolina, sunk by Relatives res an Juan “3 Possibility Commented On mark of U Boat Commander. Warnings Frequent Thereafter. (Associated Press Despatch Reprinted From The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, May 27.—Navy Department officials said to-night that there was nothing to indicate the presence of enemy submarines They thought the British ship which re- ported at Newport News firing at a submarine 150 miles off the Vir- ginia Capes probably had sighted a bit of wreckage or some other floating object. T, June 4 The After Re- NANTUCKET, Mass., June 4.—Two | srountain, Ga. bow Division and appe in the |American aviators, Ensign lean | BikD OF ACCIDENTS AND beats lad to-day as “severely echianic 0. re \ ‘ bi Mechanic Harrington, were | OTHER CAUSES. | He is the son of Leopold O, Are brought to port to-day by the patrol] yieuts, John In Mitchell, Mit-|4ud, Secretary of the sh Cham. boat Sadie, which had rescued them! waukee, Wis; Richard Blodgett,| Pe" of Commer who is now in from Lightship.| WASHINGTON, June 4.—Did_ the | adrift ten miles southeast of Sankaty | _ Sersts Philip Lyons, Hartford, Field Artillery, ‘a resident of East| Another vessel came to the rescue of | German st | tho liner and chased the submarine out! american shipping off the Jersey coast OH thiR side ior the Avsatis; Head at tho cast end of the tsland. The machine sank soon after the | Joseph Henderson, Dayton, 0.; An-| t¢ | destroy the missing collier Cyclops, or two © | did they capture her at sea, put aboard @ prize crew and send her to Germany That enemy submarines have been lying in wait a few miles out to sea off the Delaware Capes since May 21 is @ certainty. date the master of the British tanker Chey ware Breakwater and told that a submarine had fired a torpedo at his The wireless naval station got his call for help. A destroyer hunted for the submarine without result. The schooner Edna was sunk off Cape Charles, Va, May 253 the schooner Hattle Dunn was sunk at about the same spot on the same day. The schooner Isabel B. Wiley was sunk at the same point May 26, and the steamship Winneeonne was sunk off Cape May May 26. A ship from the West Indies arrived here on May 30 and reported it had been held three days in San Juan, Porto Rico, because of a warning of submarines along the coast. A ship from Bermuda, arriving yesterday, reported a forty-eight- hour delay at its point of departure for the same cause. U.S, SEAMAN, CAPTIVE OF U BOAT EIGHT DAYS, WHO TELLS OF BIG RAIDER Out of the mysterious disappearanc of the American collier, forced by engine trouble to| Corpl. Ernest W. Anderson, Fargo, | ond Kattalion of the 23d United | abignt on the water yesterday, pre-| N. D. es Infant He has been in the |sumabiy while out looking for Ger-| Privates Mike Yacuro, No, 563| @'™y five and Is serving a, | man submarines, West 2d Street, Fulton, N. Y. second enlist Sergt. Walker q ‘The aviators were nearly exhausted| Alfonso Des Impelarse, Detroit,| 4% born in J) City tyenty-three now missing enne arrived at the Dela- | three months exactly telilin than teins raltod ty (he pace with them and were roughly tossed] deiphia, F ing remark of one of the submarine | commanders to Capt. steamer Texel, ship 180 miles from shore. Lowry of the that the U boats had| Amorican side of the ° for two months. i It is possible, though not probable, experts say, with her great cargo of Manganese and some 30 souls might have been “spurlous versenkt” after she loft she had put tn for fuel. the sea ae | South Waterboro, Me. with his mother, Mrs. Bridget Walker, ena whore on aires {at No, Grand Street, Je City. President of nnion | om Annourices ‘It Miss.; Mark H. Hanna, Ingram, Pa; | No. “sunk without a arbados, where ! ee ; . Island years agi Will Be Sent by Mail From Paul Rogas, Aulos, Chill, and 4 je ent y ¢ Cadet Roger §. Dix $r, Boston,) 94,1)" cited. ty tie Chicago. Mass. December He (3) pele, Galle ‘homeward, some time | after March 4, when she cleared from Barbados, was met at night by sub- marines, possibly by prearrangement, time when only | Waa black bread and tea without milk » saw lots of good food around us, but didn’t get the chance to taste any. WASHIN June 4.8. J. Konen- WOUNDED SEVERELY. galled for France in April. kamp, I ‘of the ymmerctal Lieuts. Leopoldo Arnaud, No. 552) seibiate Telegraphers’ Union, announced late | Riverside Drive, New York, RIBOT’S STEPSON KILLED, to-day that he would call g strike of} Robert V. K. Harris, “Winsted, teleraphers after he reaches Chicago,|Conn.; Thomas B. Riley, McDowell,| Major tn French Army and Mother henee e will go to-morrow ‘The | y> Vv | In a Ch wzoan. Tt was our stores from mans enjoyed it, | The next morning we were |handed out small slices of the black e it had some cheap Also coffee without sugar. Noon came. and | which probably will take three days for ita delivery onenkamp made the announcement after conferences with Dresident of the Armé { Labor, and members deck was to be reckoned with If the Germans met the ship by j arrangement {t would have been easy rmed crew belbw to quar- of her men were | ters where mixture of chopped pork eiher she then could have b through the de to Germany or hidden way port only “Aboard the Edna I had two dis- charges from the English c I stepped foot aboard |the sub I destroyed them Germans had known my status, good | I had picked up a few ¢ ling into Germ nmere were sent from here) adds to the mystery STD BE BLOCADED BY FLEET OF U BOATS, ONS ads v5 (Continued from First Page.) ked the STRIKE OF 35, 000 ENDS. |prisoneRs (PREVIOUSLY RE- | Per town | 9 o'clock enorme PORTED MISSING). pessoal sor loe eee Textile MIN Operatives Accept Com-| Lieuts. Benjamin P. Burpee, Man-| British «irmen were shot down, it 1s eremiae-Of8 chester, N. H.; Bernard J, Gallagher, @szcrted man words while ‘ports years before get interested in wnat the crew were saying, I learned they had sailed from Kiel six weeks ago. cruising around Cuba, Islands and the | they were sighted off Cape | I overheard one sailor tell they out for a six months’ cruise and had provisions and NEW BEDFORD, Mass, June 4—The | Waseca, Minn. e of 35,000 textile mill operatives, | reesburg, Va. LEGAL NOTICE. called here yesterday, was settled to-day an ote i gt. Robert Walker, No, 212 Grand | iF io URT OF COMMO, AS NO. 8 by the unions which voted to accept the | ott Jensey City, N. J. WE COU Me pitta Dub tae They had been the Bohana Weat Indies before eompromi: wage inc GERMAN CREW TALKS ABOUT INCIDENTS IN AMERICA, Many of the crew lish and often talked about incidents Philadelphia and other yorman storekee lived in America for eight yeurs. one bitte he Lig aay sl an enlistment hited States Edne, which the German commander hauled down Telling of his experiences on the | ~ day he was torpedoed, Roker eaid: ‘A shell whistled near us. i {t must be an English patrol boat!" said a member of the crew as he saw the submarine’s ensign . Dantels, ae So Rancath ‘itppo unt in, Lan Mas Go ative: Rusvell 4 Dadsen ntondale, Pa 3)? Sinia 4—An air raid alarm |Edward J. Doher wton Centre, spoke good Eng- ENOCH, ROKER iad lla was Kou ofMfclal I} save there {a nothing to report. in Baltimore, [to pile up supplies and luggage on deck | y to loading it aboard the| cited and told us we minutes to get ay made {t in five. the boat and taken to the | U BOAT 350 FEET LONG AND HAD ONE CONNING TOWER, day with their long range guns, Wilfred Marquies, Fall River,! elem ¢ ASKS $147,999,000 MORE. , but when anything was sighted Baker The captain was | were ploughing 5 es fg] tt Street with « false key... According ploughing ale ‘ermet! to Policeman Kelly, the boya broke open the money drawer, took the cash and this time all hands were on We hoisted the American en- |f Just then the German flag un- | tower 1 was so surprised when I) t have ben 850) ares conning | {och guns. | Engl iad We| lighthouse. cight or ten tiles a tle for Army, WASHINGTON, June 4.-Se Baker to-day asked Congress to © Army Bill a supplementary ap-| ria ¢ $147,999,000 for the use She had two one forward and the oher aft knew she was an enemy I threw my |were ordered to xo below into « small | sup caught It we were near the engines. bly hot, phew! joners from American We got (here: the Dire r@ the Lincoin officer of the|” Detective Bermeant © wep Withelm the Division of Lost Property at “ }} T™ 5 due to hazy weather, | Of |had that one pipe, oe nesldent was due id Police Headquarters to-day received information that his son Warner met t to the pipe overboard. five years I've It was terrl- We found other pris- ships there when BELMONT PARK WINNERS. wae crackling overh tenant and another officer » in a small boat, “What's the matter with you fel- * he shouted in perfect Eng them showed m. photographs of thetr |! cmp.) sweethearts, Philadelphia HOLGRTARNS at two of the members taken with lron| onses pinned to thelr breasts, day morning the chief enginec si Te America ga © Piper 4 tot ack Stuart (pp. (i sb fo 1. 10. to rand o 1, 1 " Greel | tend, “Approval... Fore Dill | invalid list and : an ya Fede Ur nm i reached the State Department e exact cause of his death ts not pony known, but it. was said he died from pelled to sleep on his side Bight days of ths We were allowed the ship in the rear when running on the | your men busy, You get me the ship's Get @ hustie on.” “The ieutenant jumped aboard, went Jand pulled down the American colors He did have the court By golly, that sounded good to me | tty soon from below we ? decks it was stifling [ don't see how th e two boats with the other members of stood about, MOBILE, Ala, June 4—Mre PJ {ton and daughter, Miss Carlotta on, of Mobile.” were on the open-mouthed. suddenness of the attack ively enough to Uroguay to Buy Urltish-Owned Ratt guess we didn't move IONTEVIDEO, M » German and he i didn't dispute Lim, but belped tasted foud for ye aya of the bub. 4 hud enough.” bond deo Ge \ Corpl, Willlam C, Williamson, Blan- city rar Also in To-Day’s DIED OF DISEASE. i List, Was in Many Battles, AT SEA LOOKING | Lieut, William L, Miller, Saginaw, Says Mother. FOR _ SUBMARINES tite bien Bivdeiclea Hey O.l Hate oc: oa ee Doing splendidly. Mingle, Philadelphia, Pa. This ~ agmeS » years old, of No | Breresford, 8. D. Riverside Drive, notified his Privates James H. Ferguson, Row-| mother he had b wounded In ae- ntucket. ley, Mass; Paul W. Kruse, Brook | tion May 29. He was with the @ain- {Park, Minn.; Sidney Scales, Stone for France last 7ep- s assigned to the 151st their disabled hye 1, Mass. oairplane | West Newt | Spain, nber and 4 |Conn.; Powell Davis, Franklin, Va.;| Field Artillery Clyde A. Simpson, Caddo, Okla;! Serst. mentioned in } tt As a prisone i a member any of the n were taken off. They had | tonio Nardelli, Italy. of the Machine Gun ¢ 1up. They had no food| Mich.; Edwin A. +Gowen, Phila-| Yrs 4z0. He has been in his regt- Lester A. Burbank,| ™ent since last October. He lived + GALL-OUT TI OUT T0- MORROW Francia X. Bashaw, Marquette,| ‘e past, 1 know Ro er has given a Mich; Claude A. Baker, Lawton,| , a o ted de if Okla. Thomas L. Seals, Pritchard, t or ot ca Ai ee As on at Washington Avenue, Long fe call, he said, will Ko out by mail.) “Gorp}, Rolla O. Brown, Moberly,| PARIS, June 4.—Marcel de Monweot, ae French Army, was killed Privates Charlie A. Cooley, Ath-| !! on May 8, tl dompers, |¢n& Ala; Frederick W. Coons, Hart- lexandre Ribot ca Federation | ford, Conn.; Howard McLean, Rugby, Of the ex: eee can D; Walter K. Pearson, Corbin, | Got wae formerly Miss Mary Bunk ge discussed. the poseibil Ky. | ake Roere, WOUNDED SLIGHTLY. | Fonr Killed, Many Hurt, tn Karlee Lieut. Leo T. Kewer, Waverly, | rohe Matd. . | AMSTERDAM, June 4.—Four per= viously wound- ed when hohe Ma a. they rolal mes- PRISONER, sons were kill | Lieut. Paul W. Eaton, Jackson,|¢d and ma ri | Mich. ten British ma a William H, Jenkins, | | otter Ot ted tye redeni| Corporals Patrick F. —Meohan, mz. Ripley |Springtield, Mass; Lee H. Whitehead, ffered & 15 par cent. | Jeffrey, Ky. * operatives “had de- |" privates Homer Akers, Norwood, “aoe as 'Mo.; Edward Bennett, Harrisburg, ga A Bergeron, Turner's Falls, Frank Bretschneider, Chica- Paris, but an | Mass.; Owen Dougherty, Chester, P y to-day | Fred C. Hickman, Leogootee, Ind.; {cart Holst, Allston, Mass., and Ale: n bombarded Paris |ander Krakuszenki, Dobre, Poland rtement Issued ea Germans 4 4» Additional Appreprin- ‘or of a ‘Trade Mark, Special for To-Morrow, Wednesday, June 5th hases for 1919, | T RACE {de three-vear dup; $600; 5 fan (inp) yi Mancha and Hage; four about | ASSORTED JF URC or perhaps more commonly known as Jelly Rings, lection of — toothvome um Jellies. resented in ervatallized Imp, 136 | third. | van, | way. June Stores: New York, Brooklyn Uruguayan t has di i Newark nay Railw jy with the proceeds of an

Other pages from this issue: