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ee i HE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAX. JURA 4, 192 ae MASTER AND CREW OF THE EDWARD H. COLE, SUNK BY U BOAT gla ES WHO RESCOED CREWS ORPEDOED SHIPS Smtr eum sen. | WELL TREATED, SAY "3 U.S. SEAMEN, HELD : U BOAT PRISONERS —>—— Aviators Drop Several Tons Bombs, and Photographs Show Great Damage. LONDON 4 Inst night & | nication During the Admiralty following commu- perlod from May 5 ae June 2, Inclusive, bombing raids we Won’t Waste Torpedo on Any-| carried out night and day against’ the . _ . + ‘ollowing military pjec 1 Bruges thing Less Than Tapopship, | tha’the docks at Zeebrugge and Ontend Said Raider Captain. ae Lake ope dil natty! dro} ctives with good r ctrr. sults m great d The U boat commander who sank | age ing works w three schooners told Capt. C. M. | Bruges. Giimore, master of the Edna, that he|, “Three enemy machines were brought down in flames and three driven down had of! and provisions enough to]out of control. Three of our machines last a month, and that he intended are missing Me mAiA On: ile ai f the At-| “IR home waters during the above ts x period numerous anti-submarine and Jantic a month longer, Capt. Gilmore | escort patrols were carried out and long gald to-day reconnaissances were * across the Skipper Gilmore is one of twenty-|North Sea. Submarines were sighted three American seamen from the |and attacked and enemy mines were lo- three schooners who were landed 4° | cated on several occasions. the Battery last night after havi During a North Sea patrol a Zeppe- been prisoners on n German sub. |!" Was sighted and chased by our # be i jplanes, which were unable to get suffi- marine eight days. Their ships were |cientiy near to engage her effectively, whi have #unk on May 2 h shows that |¢ the U boats n operati of our seaplanes is missing.” several days longer than at first be seers {AIRPLANE INVESTIGATORS HASKELL BOMBED N.Y. BOY HERO OF THE TEXCL; STUCK TOPOSTIN HEAVY FIRE: CREW ADRIFT FOR 40. HOURS Patrick Huston Kept at Wheel of Oil Ship While U Boat Showered WHILE HER CREW PUT FOODIN BOAT U Boat Captain Said Goodby As He Ordered Men to Pro- ceed As ‘Ship S Sank, AN ATLANTIC PORT, June 4 Another fs from the} party of sea, victims of a German submariar A : ia Gis tasadbera wiper ad| Shellg Around Him— German day by the steamship Grecian of the Merchants’ and Miners’ Line, The| ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, June 4.— Ing on two pexs five feet from him. It eleven men had been in thelr smali|The commander of German U boat| W4S Slashed to ribbons by shrapnel boat for 19 hours when picked up by | which shelled and then sank the for- | *Plinters eral members of the crew also the , | disclosed the fact that there had been Philadel- Grecian, phia to Boston bound from mer Holland-American freighter d that J enc ‘a "s ere ere " The experiences of the Haskell’® oo soty crew who afrived here early | th re were two raiders operating. to- crow were related by Mate George eee ee ine eee pent on the | Scther. ‘They atated that they saw s H. Gilliatt, whose home is in Revere, ‘0-day, after forty hours s other submarine standing by half # Mish de vaid seas in two open boa’ mile away while the one that got them | “J Was shelling the Texel The strictest’ censorship clamped down on the crew “I hate to this,” he used to command an Ame and I have some good friends amon “The first we knew of the presence of the Germans was at noon Sunday, has been Phey huve “1 won't waste a torpedo on anything less than a troopship,” AT BUFFALO AND DETROIT the U boat commander told them. “Torpedoes are too expensive for ordinary ships.” The story of the eight days on the gubmarine was Id by ¢ it. Glimore and by Capt. ¢ s E. Holbrook, of Production Going Ahead Speedily at Curtiss Plant, Says Sena- tor Thomas. the schooner Hattie Dunn. Both are; BUFFALO, N, Y., June 4.—The Sub- from Maine. mrmittee of the Senate Committee t ty Affairs expected to complet 0 poat lasted from y the afternoon of May : 88 of airplane production so far ay ta o'clock last Sunday morning, when they were placed in the boats of the tanker Winneconne and told to make for shore. A coastwise steamer picked all but twelve of them up at 9 o'clock yesterday morning twenty-five miles off Barnegat. ‘Tho twelve in a motor yawl should have landed by th's time on the New Jersey shore, Tho third crew on the came from the schooner Hauppauge Capt. Holbrook told how the sub-! v of the Company Curtiss Aeroplane and is concerned, enato mas of Colorado, speaking ersonally, sald that what had been found so far had been gratifying. They are doing more toward the pro- duction of airplanes than we had reason to expect and there appears to be pros- pect of @ greatly increased produc- | ton,” he sald. submarine) DETROIT, June 4—Five United States ‘enators, members of the committee in- ating aircraft production in sev- marine, with superstructure above gel ae arrived i morning. the water camo within 200 yards ag! ‘Thomas, ¢ ged ore. Charles &, :! flying the signal “Stop | 5™ith, Georgi James A. Reed, M.s He at i : Joseph relinghuysen, New and the flag of the oo immediately” perial German Navy “an officer and three men feet long,” Capt. Hulbrook s and | me that we had ten minutes to got | Jersey, an Harry 5a New, Indians. into our boats. They placed bombs! | es . along the aides of our veuw and blew LONDON, June 4 Employment of oe |women as aviators a intended by the ber up at once | british Government, Ge e H. Roberts, Holbrook and his seven After Capt. | Labor Mintster, declared in a speech at men bad been sent below decks | snetticlt while referring to the imp the submarine, the raider started off} unt part that women are pl n after the Capt. Gilmore pilallty of officers. and men bunks to the hos*| wot Minister sald he vould make very good ae | — thet GAINSBOROUGH WINS THE believed wome fators, cribed the surrendered ricans, hes, been placed under a guard commanded when a shot was fired across our eed under a guard commande bow by the submarine which sank us,|the commanders of American steam by. ace Kelly, whose patre nay. : : comman on big American Sp piloted them into ‘the inlet here Only one man was on deck at the/@rs: I commanded on big They will be taken to New York as time, the rest of us being at dinner, | liners before we started this fuss, soon as the Government wires in- ? r, 80 we will go right structions, When we heard the shot we all) War is war, so we w be hh vir P : Ya | rushed above, and at first could see| through with this little job. pueveral members oft o Te xel's nothing, but a few minutes later} He told this to one of the T s jiammed within three miles ‘of. them Cart. William H. Davis sighted the] oficers as he came up the ship's lud- aout 1 o'clock yesterday ufdersea boat in the distance, jder with a strong armed force atte no, attention to “their dis ess sig whey e r, pro e freighter to nals, A w# ne also paid two visits “An officer and several men came|he had brought the freignte to them and promised to send assist. aboard of us and we were told to| halt by three shots of shrap ; anee. leave the schooner at once. While] Members of the Texel's crew ¢ After a night's rest and their first we were putting a few cans of water|clare that several of the boarding food in forty hours all members of Z : seal | Englis! d the crew were tn fair shape to-day, | and some tins of biscuits in our ty could speak moe Ry: except for lame backs from thelr power boat tho Germans placed] seemed to think it a good joke #m long pull to the beac bombs on our vessel. themsetves because they had 8 The last round of water they had tasted like wine, one in telling of his ex of the crew orders of the sub- priéneces, The “Following the prised the ship, offi | ie Giesiak tarsell. had xel, now operated by the United/ another attack further along the escape from destruction States Shipping Board, as she was|Coast on some ship coming toward oats. After leaving PhMadelphia| speeding along sixty miles out from |New York, One of the junior officers Saturday night, the sound of firing uf] New York on the final leg of her geet he Taata ‘ape May, toge ° | as early Saturday morning Cape May, together with tie receipt] seven.day trip trom Porto: Rico With| when we : y of a wirel warning of the pres- " we heard the guns behind’ us. | ence of submarines, were sufficient In-|% CTS of sugar late Sunday after- We had seen a good sized steamer ducements to turn the Greolan about] noon, was a former commander of | #0me time before, The noise came to seek shelter for the night behind] an American line ship, it was learned | ia hep direction, I guess they got . ner too, Cape May. here to-day from members of the| Many of the crew also belie | runs are ac! ~ AMERICANS MAN ANTHAIRCRAFT Aid French for First Time in This Kind of Warfare— Do Good Work. WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN PICARDY, Juno 3 (Associated Press) —The America last night alded the French for the first time in manning anti-aircraft guns in vil- lages in Picardy and kept up a terrific barrage when enemy aircraft again attempted to bomb hospitals and peaceful homes of civilians, One man airplane is reported to have been brought down In the rear of the American lines. Bombs dropped again 1 several hospitals, The enomy continued to shell villages in which American wick and wounded were were ar alac artillery and machine ve around Cantigny, but all efforts to capture the village have been frustrated. An enemy patrol was fired on early this morning by an American patrol One German was killed and the body brought in. ‘The American artillery continued to harass the enemy; @ fire | was observed in Montdidier, Enemy aireraft have been particu- enemy | done Jin the Luneville | The American losses w said | whelming numbers, larly active in this sector ey have no military damage, but con- tinue nightly raids on villages behind the lines, bombing promiscuously, Fortunately most of the bombs have dropped in fields. | An American combat patrol en- but paid| aged in a desperate fight with a | Billing, editor, who has enemy patrol near Ancerviller, arly to-day ¢ slight. The | man casualties are not known, | larger sector, G Tho Americans endeavored to sur- round and capture the enemy. Dur- ing the fight the Americans found | themselves being surrounded by over- but managed to! fight- extricate themselves and retire GUNS IN PICARDY’ = 1st MATE om THE EM COLE Owr TANK H, L. PRATT BEACHED AFTER ATTACK BY RAIDER OFF HENLOPEN; CREW SAVED Officers and Men Taken to Naval Base and' Kept From Talking. PHILADELPHIA, June 4.—Appar- H jently steaming south after thelr ex. j Bloits off the northern New Jersey H { H coast, the German submarines caught the oll tanker Herbert L. Pratt off Cape Henlopen yesterday afternoon. While the tanker was torpedoed or shelled, she suc in reaching shore and was beached by her captain at Gape Henlope Sinking just off the shore at 4 P. M, the tanker was in such shallow water thatvher mas were not submerged. The crew took to the bouts and vas towed inside the Delaware Break. water by the pilot boat Philadc’ hia, Capt. Robert Chambers havine gone to their rescue when the Pratt sig- nailed that she was attacked by a submarine. | As soon as the crew was landed the sailors and officers were marched to the naval base and were not per- ‘WILSON A INST FURTHER “DRY” LEGISLATION NOW Wants to Wait Until istration yod Admin- Decides It Is Necessary. ‘ON, June 4 1 to-day declared hia op further prohibition legislation until Food necessary tion waa made Administration dee foodstuffs. kn. Hie wn in a letter to Senator Sheppard of Texas A House ndment to the Agri- cultural Appropriation Bill would prevent the enditure of $6,000,000 unless the 7 f grain in the pr iquors, U. S. TO STAND BY TILL END, ARCHBISHOP TELLS BRITAIN June 4.—The Archbishop of York, speaking at Middlesbrough on his recent visit to the United States, said that the messago he had tried to take to America was “We are thankful the Provide this Kreat people, dedicated to freedom, sident prev duction nts the use of alcoholic LONDON, beyond words to mitted to communicate with the out- aide world. ahaa EDITOR 1S ACQUITTED OF MAUDE ALLAN'S CHARGE Lord Alfred remit Witness, Calls Judge Liar and Is Ejected From Court Room N. June 4 1 LOND: nberton- non trial on « charge of bel preferred by | |Mise Maud Allan and J. Grein, manager of the Independent Theatre was found not gullty to-day Earlier In the day Lord Alfred Douglas, one of the witnesses, who becaine notorious through his asso- | tion with Oscar Wilde, author of| Salome," called the Judwe a iar and Was ejected from the court room. or —_>— marine officer, we went alongside the| BROOKLYN SEAMAN HERO cers in charge refuse to give out * full| ing Rit the while. It ls believed cer- U boat, where we remained until our THE TEXEL. | Jist of the survivors, declaring that this : CH PEEVED . t the bot Th No.| Will have to come from Washington, | tain that punishment was inflicted Re ee cc eetiiion no]. Patrick Huston, able seaman, \ censorship haa aisy been estab. | upon the enemy by the grenades and | VER DEFENSE OF RHEIMS narine shelled h addition to} 91 gt. Andrew's Place, Brooklyn, Wa’ ished over Coast Guards, who refuse| rifle fire of the Americans, ding the bombs and she sank in} ine nero of the Texel, He had Ail information | ~ _— eae minutes. See eer wer ataieee latte] It was reported that orders had gone} Gem, Pershing’ ‘Tator Dies, fF oa “The German Captain, who spoke} *h Se eee es cottt out to double the Coast Guard from! FARGO, N. Dak., June 4.-—-Mra. Anna | Want to Spare ine City,” and jerma 5 submarine as she flashed to the Sandy Hook to Cape May this morning |@. 4 “seventy-nine years olc 10 , SS a AE good English, treated us nicely, al-! race afty yards off the port bow Ra that Naval heastven from Ga SAH yaniyenine y Id, wi Complain Because French though he had little Ae by A ene started shelling the freighter May are awaiting orders to conv acer ee Won't Give It Up. ¢ Haskell had gone down he told us » crew had the highest the assistance of the guards where a died Ane Fin ae bers of the crew had the t ven for extra precautions are TOR Any Be tt AMSTERDAM, June 4.—The French | to proceed, and bade us a chee! Marton nla Benauat tocday . Mo. ‘where | praise for - allable ed a private sche resistance at Rheims appeara to. be submarine she was circling around, Ai opn rd a crash an he te 4 7 } my watch when I heard a crash L t f Vi L S k Mi cording to a semi-official telegram from apparently waiting for other vessels! ioo.oq up to seo splinters flying a wt o essets Sunk or issing Berlin, ‘The message, which doubtlessly | There were no other ships in sight! oung said William Laufer, of 1s Intended for the ears of the credulous at the time, “The schooner Edward |S70UNd.” Ald ine naa af In U Boat Raids on U.S. Coast ' viernes iin ts sient tents . Cole had been astern of us the|* ‘ lished by the | from Ue German failure there by day before and arparentiy. wae tor.|the marine schooie establlahed by the| SUNK. aintively upbraiding the French. for pedoad before we were utt@tked Malte Ausiee BPRS eer HERBERT 1. PRATT, 6,000 ton tanker with crow of thirty-eight, [rot bandoning the olty, sago and listed as a deck engineer on : ; helms, it 1s asserted, has no tactical “Although we were close to the caps any lt Mela id | Owned by Atl Refining Company of Philadelphia, Torpedoed or |, helm It 14 anrerted, haw no tacts pubniacif ame or num= | ine Peels me as though shells} mined yesterday and beached off Cape Henlopen, Del, while en route |rmraiyeun! value whatever, Th ; ber, She a be Morte then | eee iving rom every. dirt Tampico to Philadelphia, One of crew lost. to shell nuse the French will en cnuetina ott th h. Jas t hit the deck,” sald Pat ha TEXEL, 0 ton steamer with crew of thirty-six. Owned by | evacuate It i message asserts that After putting n the sub- | a e deck : ; caged testes d the defense of the city been left martha Wahanden t Sew Jersey {a close call on the first shot f Dutch corporation, but taken by U, 8. Shipping Board, Sunk without |{he defense of the city “has been lett Coast and, passing Marnegat Light in| submarine. It tore away one side of| warning sixty miles of New York Sunday en route trom West indies adagascar the early evening, mate fast toa Mah | ine pitot pouse not Ave feet f with $2,000,000 cargo of sugar. Crew landed at Atlantic City to-day These troops are reported as being taht, ‘During the night. a thunder| ond there was a regular hail of WINNECONNE, 1,869 ton freight steamer with crew of twenty- @ state of despair because they ha squail up and we were drenched. |and splinters showering him. | eight. Owned by American Trans-Atlantle Company of New York, Deen told. the Germans “would tort te A ent We ata ee the Gemne | Pat ia Irish and he atuck Might t Sunk off Cape May May 26 to mollify them by the statement th weain and soon i Ne. Grecian. | 9. tne wheel, keoping the Texel ; ae negroes are treated by Germany We raised an oar as 4 signal of dig. |*t the wheel, i EDWARD H, COLE, 1,791 ton schooner with crew of eleven, — Pikrors are tt |treas and the st hove f0. Ing right along in her course, Owned by Crowell & Thurlow, Boston, Sunk by bombs fifty miles off None of m ared any the | “The shrapnel crashed al | The American Captains ato at ths| DERBY IN ENGLAND, officers’ table and got cigars and| liquors. | LONDON, June 4.—Galnsboro “Don't get excited, Captain. owned by Lady Douglas, to-day won the your thie. V around bh an | Newmarket Derby, the turf classic of ; England hour aud a ha Capt. ¢ iore said | was uti ved by the German officer w Major Astor's Blink was second, and rowed ‘over ¢ a that. the | Sit W. Tatom's ‘Treclare was third achooner was to be sunk, So Capt Gitmure cevulty pathered up ai'ne| AUTO HITS MANUFACTURER. rsone Jonge do took teem) ha alelahdl 5 "lene Owned Raymond Belmont | with hin ™ . i} Ch fear Arrested, “When 1 got over to the submarine | 7, 4 : | Day 5 y-elght yea YP found Io teft iy now oils wubrella | 1 Wee rae. ynare behind,” the At Caplin went | la run down by an auto- on. “When the Gor rowed back |™ atts Rayman Rel ir y Park thia from blowing up the schooner found ‘fth Ne ana ate that beside the few 3 they had mobile ran up on the 1 WAS removed to picked jp for themselves, they bad | jel} nd Mra, Belmont's brought me my umbrella." vuffeur was arrested M,B. Brewer, Tuird Oflicer of the | = = = Winnecoane, described the tinal cour-| schooners Hauppauge, Isabel B, tesies ex ed by the submarine} Wiley, Hattie Dunn and Edna and ahita e steamer %Vinneconne commander . Robert Lathigic of No. 27 Neptune When we bade goodby to the sub-| Avenue, Kast Boston, Mass. told r marine,” Brewer said, “he treated us! porters to-day he had been con- | ently, for he sent us a supply of|¥inced that “many a truth js spoken Rey. tone Denth. vad’ slag tone |in. deat." Buveral minutes before thel waner sor tn! wks a submarine hailed the Edward H. eans of biack bread. He said the|Cole, of which Lathigie. was. first bread was baked in Apr ate, he had said to Capt. Newcombe, Thirty-four w were la atthe “Het thet's a German submarine. Battery last night, b : a jrorse for their experiences the pilot house, but Pat never | ly aoe I 8 misy, Moe sta nas from Norfolk to Portland, Me, jCAR JUMPS RAIL: FIVE HURT. | ie een een ned ite “NJACOB M, HASKELL. 1,178 ton schooner with crew of ten. Owned *|the engines stopped He CELL, 1, | Acetdent Occurs on W jamaburg | around in the sea awaiting by Crowell! sl Thu oF Bo. in Bonk by shell fire off Barnegat, N. J, | Bridge Pinna, |rival of the U boat sk Sunday, while bound from Boston to Norfolk | ive persons were injured early to-day | boarding party, I ran up to HAUPPAUGE, 1,539 ton schooner with crew of ten |when a Metropolitan Avenue car jumped | found him cussing @ long sp ISABEL B. WILEY, 611 ton schooner with crew of « Owned & misplaced switch on the Williams+| that had stabbed through the ba by Atlas Company of Philadelphia, Sunk between Cape Henlopen and | burg Bridge Plaga at South Fifth and | of his hand well under tho skin Cape Charles May 25 en route from Perth Amboy to Newport News, Roebling Streets, Williamsburg. The) «tie was fighting mad and want! Pe Noarini erry: i k d car was coming down the bridge tneline |, take a crack at the Germane HATTIE W, DUNS, 865 ton schooner with crew of six Owned by and bumped into a Broadway car, | Dunn & Elifott of Thomaston, Me. Sunk between Cape Henlopen and Willlam Rheinhardt, motorman of the | “id not seem to think ace Cape Charles May the face and hands when the windows | neppened to be at the wheel” EDNA, 225 {on schooner, owned by C. A. Small of Machias, Me. | Broke, Others injured by fying lege | a uot jelly laug Sunk off Winter Quarter Shoal Lightship, midway betwoen Cape | 1; John Fromhofer, No. Ist Skillman | the close call he had Henlopen and ( Charles, May 2 pirenpe! Femue loin, No, et Wage Tee at wheel house sure looke CAROLINA, 5,193 ton passenger and freight steamer, Carried 220 | No, 166 East 77th Street, Manhattan, a sieve when I got outside and passengers and crew of 120, Owned byhNew York and Porto Rico ces pera | Geeks! anid es. "Gudea eamship Company Sent wireless calls for help while being shelled but I will get sunare some w 1 nt. yhiay they did t 5 miles off Sandy Hook Sunday evening. 1,038 ton schooner, w Hn route from Porto Rico MISSING, BELIEVED SUNK nine. WASHINGTON, June 4—The death | bo#® Birds for , \ ) New York, of flreman Roy H, Jc U. & Ni. of | HOW serge cont On ab lt |Water Mill, Long Island. in an acel-|COAT SLASHED TO RIBBONS BY . . dent aboard thet $, Housatonic, °° SHRAPNEL SPLINTERS SAMUEL W. HATHAWAY TTY Eh enactments 19 Wh Bary Gas Owned by Crowell & Thurlow of Boston, Huston pointed i 146 PERSONS KILLED IN AIR RAID ON COLOGNE People Thrown Into State of “Most Absolute Panic,” Says Report on Allied Operations, WASHINGTON, June 4.—A_ re Allled a n ¢ death of 146 persona, th raid tologne med tod The ent was inf re injured. the department's advices sald, we thrown fnto a state of “the most abs lute panie."* LONDON, June 4.—The Br ernment has called the attention of the Vatican, Chancellor Bonar Law told the House of Commons, to the fact that « ance and Great Britain agreed request. om by Germa the Vatican, not to bombard on pus Christ ay, the on that day the Germa the not be forgotten similar appeal is Into the struggle for the fr8edom of the world. We ask you to come quickly to our aid and pledge ourselves to hold on until you arrive.” The answer the Archbishop sald he brought back was "We rejoice that we have seen the greatness of this struggle, We are eagor and ready without stint to offer our resources to this sacred cause We will redeem our promises, fulfill our pledges and stand by you until the end,’ TURKISH REGIMENT \ MUTINES AND FLEES Seize Guns When Ordered to Pal- estine—Agitation Increases in the Interior, ATHEN June 4.—An entire Turkish regiment mutinied, seized their guns and fled, when ordered to Palestine, eports received here from the Turkish rior declared to-day. “Autation against Turka in Aldin oO hi es southeast of Smyrna) is inereas- Repres: measures are said to as failed th re -——__— CAR ROWDIES PUNISHED. Two Sent to Workh ing t » request of Mayor Hylan hat rowdyism on trolley cars in the anarsie section should be stopped and the guilty ones severely punished, Magistrate Folwell in the New Jersey Avenuc Brooklyn, to-day een- tenced two men to prisom and fined three othe Rinaldi, twenty-five of No. 92 Whipple Street, Flushing, and Philip Cust twenty of No. 6 Goerek nhattan, were each sentenced Jays’ Imprisonment in the Work= Livingston, twenty= f No. 441 Thirteenth Street, Brook- $1): Joxeph Husband, ad Str CARS COLLIDE: EIGHT HURT. Two Brook! Brook- one of Wo njured tn and ; Streets this afters 4 neers slightly Pa ar in charge ast 11th ue ear failed to South Ninth Gersher, Brooklyn They were taken Wh kn that By ahould dismiss coffee INSTANT PosTUM = Themodern American — Drink that so many now are using,