The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1918, Page 1

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)

TWO MORE SHIPS SUNK,13 INALL; _ NAVY BREAKS UP A MINE FIELD St a are A EET RNR “If le Happens In New York The ‘ Circulation Books Open to All. | ‘a Coprriget, re dk) by The Press Publishing NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, he New York World). lt’s In The Evening World’’ Wid SC ——_—_———— PRICE TWO ‘CENTS. SS FIRST PHOTOGRAPHS i SINKING OF STEAMSHIP HERBERT L. PRATT BY (Copyright, 1918, by the Intesnational Film Service.) A FRENCH TANKS AID INFANTRY ‘\Two AMERICAN WOMEN | ORGANIZE FIELD HOSPITAL AT MARNE BATTLE FRONT IN AMPROVING THEI LINES; "=~ --- BROUGHT T0 BROOKLYN TELL AMERICAN FRANCE, American dan extra at one place near IN U,S.GUNS KILL 1000 CERIN Weer sss STORIES OF HEROISM AT SEA ———___ +4 = U Boat Victims Were 20 Hours in| Open Boatsand Storm Threatened | to Sink Them— Wireless Operator| Stuck to Post. ce SIArUb Daitik fronts cAinE Jor more than 600 wounded when the Germans Unable to Make Headway titer ‘soaps. tuiea on Any Part of Marne Battlefield SHIP re SAFE GONDUCT | and Also Fail in Attacks on the} IS SEIZED BY GERMANS | British Before Amiens. zi p | U Boat Takes Vessel With Cargo PARIS, June 5.—The Ge wl of Herring to Swinemunde na inued local attacks last ¢ ; A complete story of German piracy on the seas, of perils in oper | and during the nigh the Marne front. The War Ottice to- . iu z Sie boats when helpless civilian e it the mercy of st and of tire! announced failure of attacks on the French lines at Carlepont Wood, | w Elk heroism of common folk ting death was brougt NE w York| Dommiers Corey and in tl r of Chezy, all on the western rt Ha by 250 passengers 4 the aD Carolina, destroyed | q to r by a German submarine « vast last Sund i ag ye ie Hittin f ¢ in action { French Infat ry, 4 ‘ y De The eon tvs ee } os i i seal | ezic ts) rs) OTEY CUOFr n 1 u ds- had picked up "hla | *» sisted by tania rectitied the French line on the borders of the forest ofa wih ahi \¥ vers ft Barn Tlebt AEROPLANES ARMED hours at ud: the «7/000 PUT 10 DEATH Heath Villers-Cotterets. German troops this im ater veto WITH BOMBS AND GUNS ict b tie HUNTING FOR U BOATS southwest of Morlanc f east of Amier Although the voyed t Patrol B enemy was supp Ny i a fire he was repulsed and left] IN FINNISH PRISON CAMPS rs ad i . 1 S Start Fre A Sta prisoners in the | f the British lgarmane resent Six New Demands 1 Porto 1 I 1 V Shaped Formations to The intervention of American for las been most . ( g ‘ isis ‘ Scour Sea for I feat in throwing the e ck 1 h of Neuilly-la- F" vy t proven that the Allied ire irst quality hn . , bi Y f The situation is much better, Villa been lost and aii with the gains about equal ue gs All the military write 1 terday’s events in the batt g nu area empha le slacke by nemy, and that A 1 te in the case of March off ett Germans came y 1 to a halt on the ninth da ¢ enem it of breath fr \ exertions and without, in this ca ving been able to eross th i f or to force a road t re fr ne " KI The critics expec the struggle will be resumed with even} _ SURVIVORS TELL OF PERILS It us | Pres plent Stans Uraent Deflctenvy STORM AT SEA (Continued on Fourth Page.) gt y t ACING ESULTS, Page 2 ENTRIES, Page 11 MOKE ' Check room for bageage and oarce.s ope day and Right, Money erders and teveilers sows for Wa waar, Seria 4 i ‘Balore tbe happy and bait Byatericg ery Liptida4 “Circulation Books Open to All.”’ 1918, These Figures Do Not Include Six- WEATHER—Partly cloudy to-morrow. 20 PAGES “PRIOR, “TWO. CENTS. = = —- — SST. GERMAN iano OFF DELAWARE COAST | ~ ee ee : —_ : ¢ —— = | | 12 SURVIVORS OF MENGEL, “BLOWN UP BY A SUBMARINE OF CAROLINA'S MISSING; SIX OF GREW ALSO LOST! teen Known to Have Been Drowned, Carolina — ten | six of the Py accounted for up to 4 day, according to an official state pe ttmne eh a a and Porto Rico Steam » Com . ; pain rule ek Seven Known Dead on Carolina’s i clude any of | ° : : ® were drowned w | List,Twenty-seven Still Are Miss- | SEA nEN ican | ing—Thirteen Ships Now Toll of | was the num- credited to of the ber of fatalities overturned motor life: the U Boats Off U.S. Coast. Two more ships have been added to-day to the list of victims of the German submarines, making a total of thirteen lost. They are the auxiliary schooner Samuel G. Mengel, bound from Pensacola, Fla., to New York, and sunk by bombs 210 clared positively lost from the boat, He » uid ‘hese ed up an important point. For the Germans who *?*|boarded the Mengel boasted that they had sunk seven ships on Sunday ne ‘American soldier to be nghting Poe | r Musonden L pal miles southeast of this port on Monday afternoon; and the ‘stey._ | Schooner Desauss, discovered early to-day floating stem up off the ‘and 4 Delaware Capes. A great hole by the bow led to the belief the | boat had been torpedoed. UE es | Th ) trace of the Desau i Wit ¢ arrival in Brooklyn of 250 v f the ler Cay lina’s pa and crew, the any still 5 a tally of t ina seven are known ot wned during a storm which overwhelmed their liteboat early Mon. Re from Lewes, Del., tha e U boats which raided co, Sunday and Monday have strewn the Delaware re tg a ueene | Bay yund the Delaware Capes with nines, Ten — inines have been found, and Gove t mine sweer we searching FIGHTING CHIEF RECREATION. ois OF THE AMERIGAN SOLDIERS tv os vic sere explode be remaining were r ed int Nay flicials a Wa m that the Pe s were of German manufactur strewn Speaking of | by the raiding U boats Entertainment for Them Naval ofticials believe the tank ship, Herbert L. Pratt, sunk off the 4 agniticent | Delaware Capes, but later raised and towed to a port, was the victim of te th w= 4 floating m i . e mprising the crew of the 4 yught to an Atlantic port to-day by .

Other pages from this issue: