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a | NO HME TA ROT are oe CAROLINA SURVIVORS TELL OF BRAVE DEEDS AFTER DISASTER AND SUBMARINE SURV VORS CROWDING HER DECK and four on Monday—the day of their visit to the Mengel. This, with ‘the Mengel, completed a tally of twelve ships, and the schooner Desauss was the thirteenth. | The procedure of the Germans with the Mengel was the same as in the’ other cases of ships destroyed. A signal to heave to was given, plefity of time allowed for the crew to take to their boat and the ship thea junk by bombs. 4 schooner’s crew were adrift until 7 A. M. Tuesday, when the Pafis sighted the boat and. picked up the survivors. * a 250 CAROLINA SURVIVORS BROUGHT TO BROOKLYN; TELL THEIR STORIES (13 SHIPS ON OFFICIAL LIST OF THOSE KNOWN TO BE SUNK BY U BOATS HIB is the official let of the dh known toll of ships taken by the German submarines since thelr operations along the coast, as given out by Secretary of the Navy Daniels at Washin, ton, with the addition of the Schooner Samuel G, Mengel, re- ported lost to-day: (Continued from First Page.) experiences with a head held high and a spirit already rejuvenated by the preseat promise of a final escape | from perils. Others shivered a bit in the recital and cast many a mental backward look to that moment when the crash of bursting shrapne} brovght them face to face with the stern reality of war. ‘The Brooklyn pier was guarded by men from the regular army and by polige reserves all night. Relatives and friends, some of whom had been waiting for hours, were turned back. ‘There were in waiting ambulances Schooner Edna, 325 ton from most of the Brooklyn hospitals} bombed. and 100 automobiles from the Wom- Schooner Hattie Dun, 436 tons; en's Motor Corps, ‘bombed. Capt: Barbour of the Carolina and Schooner Happaug, about 1,600 Dr, Stockwell, surgeon of the ship,| tons Schooner Edward H. Cole, 1,791 tons; bombed, ‘were taken off the schooner at Quar- antine early to-day by a patrol ves- sel and consequently did not land in Schooner Isabel Wiley, 1776 Brooklyn. tons; bombed. First Lieutenant J. P. O'Toole of Schooner Jacob Haskell, 1,778 Porto Rico took two photographs,| tons; bombed. one of the submarine and one of Winneconne, 1,869 tons; torpe~ the Carolina as she sank. He found| doed. on reaching Brooklyn that they had Steamship Carolina, sunk by been stolen or lost from his pocket.) sunfire. PASSENGERS NOT ALARMED AT Schooner Edward R. Baird Jr, TH RST SHOT. bombed. Steamship Herbert 1, Pratt, 7,200 tons; raised and towed to port, Steamship Texel; “1 was in the dining saloon,” he said, at 6:15 P. M. Sunday when I heard a snot. The passengers were not alarmed, thinkmg it wag an bombed. American patrol destro; Schooner Samuel G, Mengel, I reached the deck after 915 tons; bombed, and another followed. The shots were Schooner Desauiss found with torpedoed hull. es to the front, where he had already three months of acfoas the bow, over the top of the ship, one to the stern and one that fell short. By that time every one realized that a U boat had overtaken us, Captain Barbour finally ordered the wireless to ston and ordered the ‘abandon ship’ signal hoisted, “There were about forty Germans on the deck of ied submarine, all ickers, Nene peared to be 250 or 800 feet pe RR and’ carried Phot Bg -oyg) guns, the barrels being about thirty hy long. © German ordered every one into the boats. When everybody was off, ‘the U boat circled the ship and fired six shots into the Carolina, placing them apparently so they would }, quickly sink her.” < Arthur Curtin of No, 71% Greene Avenue, proshiva, | & fruit commission merchant at 245 Washington Btreet, New York, was returning from Porto Rico, He said: & nolss that proved to be a Were soon ordered to don servers and got away in te ‘Two of the boats later became. scya- | ¥ from us, Sunday night there | sent was a terri! torm and Monday at Ddbgias picked us up.” Bome of the otber refu; L. P. Fries, No, 1617 Btreet, Westchester; Robe: bert Btafford, a brother of Btate Senator Stafford of Louisiana, was met by his niece, Mra. J. F. Matthies of 4 take . to her home at Cran- Robart 4s Lebkioker, a quarter. master of the Carolina, and former reporter on the Philadelphia Inquirer, was in Bas oe in which were vines when the U boat appeared, | t was exactly at ay night when we received a wire- less saying that the Isabelle Wiley was being attacked by a submarine. We were headed north at that time, Dut changed to due west, “I was standing on the bridge there at 6.18 o'clock when I made |out a submarine two points off our ard beam. Two shots were cross our bows as a warning and then two more came. oe were ordered to take r verington submarine started to | el. I only had time to get my sextant and a book on navi- gation, I had to leave $300 of my own money behind, ‘The boats with the crew and pas- sengers tried to stick together, but two boats were missed during the storm. I thought everybody had been saved.” TWO LITTLE GIRLS HEROINES OF CAROLINA, Jane and Carolyne Parte> +! eight years old, were... ines of the Carolina. With mother and step-father, Mitchell, they were passengers on the steamer. When the U bout showed up their mother sent them to their cabin to Dut on warmer clothing, but instead of obeying orders they res- my T. Gonzales of No cued their dolls, << they went to Jas Avenue, New York, said the pas- the life! at and showed men how to seagers had just finished a fire drill |penave in time of denser Carolina at 6 o'clock and wero) we were drossing for dinner,” sald preparing to sit down to dinner when |iitie gane, “when tnamma came to essa the PonsibUlte of nezetag |U* and told us to hurry and put on YF hoate, but did not think it was like- goings a Something was Wy, and nobody paid any attention to |S v1 Maroon, We just had on the shot ere was another sho! and when a third was heard the stew ee nice on the boat. We saw our arin been sighted of it 0 ‘ould 10 bai o A ors at Gadiota te the leave them, and we' didn't wait to put and got there in perfect orde on any clothes, We took our baby Mr, Gonzales. “We dolls in our arms and went to the marine, which apeared to be about whero mamma was waiting 200 feet long. e distinctly saw about thirty men on the upper part of the 1 boat. Members of the German erew boarded our ship, and in fluent English told us it was going to be sunk. “We put out lashed together, There were Reserve Corps; No. 149 East 224 Street, Ernest Cox, Washington, D. C.; Licut. J. Boyd, Syracuse, N. Y., who was called home by the death of his mother. SURVIVORS IN BEDRAGGLED FINERY ON LANDING. ‘The survivors were wet, bedraggiod and hungry when they landed, They had been dressed in finery in prepira- tion for # night of apyety when thoy put out in the b nd their eve- ning clothes, ballroom gowns and slik ings, now tattered and drenched, made a pitiful pictur fo Pe 280 Bt. Nicho- and uero- their Arthur B. 1 was much distressed when she saw the kiddies atill in their light dresses, but it was too late to send them back to the cabin, 60 she Just hugged them to her and them all night “When we sat down in the boat, resumed Jane, “we turned around and looked at the horrid U boat, There |was a sailor on board and he saw us, |He told the other sailors and pointed Then he and the others b |to wave their caps and hands to us, We turned up our noses at them and turned our backs to them, We wouldn't wave to the Germans. They weren't nice to make us get out of | our nice steamer, We were awful glad to get on the schooner next morning, but we don't want to go on} any more steamers, The litle heroines, with their parents, were encountered in a lim- ousine on their way to Staten Island. Jane demurred at going aboard the ferry boat, was assured there were boats in the bay tn eight lifeboa and pulled aw twenty-eight men, in- cluding Capt. Barbour, and two wom- en fn my . At 7.56 o'clock w could still see the Carolina, and a} few minutes after that we saw her blow up and then sink “We rowed all Sunday night, and foward morning @ storm came up. We to separate the boats to keep them from being dashed to pieces | against one another, and then we had to fight with the oars to keep them from crashing together, Onc man broke #ix oars at this work had a terible night, but at 11 o'clock Monday morning we were piskee up by the schooner Eva B. las, which took 155 passengers | famd 90 of the crew aboard. A wire Jean nt from off Barnegat » and on Monday afternoon @ rol boat picked us up.” One survivor was Louls Danell, a| member of the 47th Artillery, of the Frosch Army. was on his way where he spent 4| Among those looking for lost_rel- —s be The French Consulate in |atives at the offices of the New York New York to arrange [e returning ‘gad Porto Rico Steamship Company, but no U ferry boat. Mr. Mitchell ts a planter of Porto Rico and his city residence ts 416 West 118th Street, | trol of the New York and Richmond So the machine Anaily boarded the | No. | ane THE HE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1918, RESCUE SHIP EVA B. DOUGL AS 0000000406004 14-0004 03-0000000000000 © 9OO4-16-44 041 O41 OO4 oO E LS 199994004. 99.45459OOOOO4-9% (Photographed Especially $9O000-0406--6-0-6-066506 for ws Evening World.) oo owners of the Carolina, at No, 11 Broadway, was Miss Marie Cucueto, who had been haunting the Brooklyn pier since Monday moraing in vain search for her sister, Provintia, a Passenger not accounted for. The girl's family had to drag her away from the plier last night, but at home she refused to eat or sleep. This morning she encountered some of the Carolina's crew at the offices and they told her they belleved her sister had been drowned. She fainted and it was half an hour before a doctor succeeded in bringing her to. SURPRISE THEIR MOTHER. ‘Won't mother be terribly surprised to see ust ‘Two girls, eleven and seventeen yen old, in their stocking feet, without ha skirts wrinkled and stiff climbed into a t Be this morning headed for home, No. 207 West 69th’ Street, there to sur- piige, thelr mother with the news they ad been on the Carolina, cast about in a lifeboat, heard ai etal | Jot" of shell« wi schooner they pointed en know they w but th grandmother's ore were Alicia and Consuelo y left to visit their rela- Gai . | Ive in Bare several months ago, but decided they would slip back to New York without letting their mother know one word about it. They took passage on the Carolina. “It was neribing the was alot o get Into lifeboats. order yd ‘ fect It aid era in’ perte ‘ In re MWe aidn'e ‘mind em as it fe'was reals ‘When we had been in the boats for a little while. the schooner Eva B. Douglas picked us up. Of | course mamma won't be worrled be- cause she didn't know we were on board. Won't she be surprised! MAY ASK NATION TO TAKE Can’t Furnish Light at Present Rate Because of Increased Cost of Production, Says President. Steps may be taken to have the Gov- ernment or municipality take over con- as Company, At a smeeting of the Staten Island Civic League at Richmond Bor- ough Hall last night, William L. Welsh, President of the Gas Company, pointed out that in the last four months the in- crease in production cost had amounted to $41,000 over the samo period a year ago. Under the law the company could only charge $1 a thousand for eas, while the cost of production was more than that amount now and would bo $1.25 a thousand in a few months. Mr, Welsh declared that two months ego he had applied to the Public Ser- vice Commission to tssue $250,000 in bonds for improvements, but shold the Commission grant the request the com- pany would find it hard to float the bonds because it had no collateral to offer. It was intimated that the com- Pany was physically unable to supply Gs at the present charge, and some re- Hef, either Government or municipal would have to be given to it, ae SEAMANSHIP SAVED. LIVES, Captain of the President Linco! Lauded by Sin WASHINGTON, June 5.—A story of the’ torpedoing of the can transport President Linco! to the navy department to-day by Vice Admiral Sima, says the small loss of life was due to the excellent seamanship of the ship's captain, Twenty-atx lost their lives in the sinking. Admiral's report adds The sub ¢ loft the vielr mediately and returned about 2 for the captain and r vessels engaxed tn r — I detailed Amer! . cabled men The tty r. y Lint Reve: as Draft Delinguet, Among the uniformed men aboard OSWEGO, N.Y. Juno Michael! the Carolina were the following from | | Tacuro, Fulton, ue + Whose death was] the San Juan officers’ training camp. announced by the War Department yer: | rieuta, J, P. O'Toole, Clinton Mas t as a result of an accident in| pp, Cary ro we France, had been sought by Fulton dratt | PP yt 4 Ret, Ms doard authoritias and police for weeks | 4: J. Boyd, Ne Yo; G, Golde | as delinquent deserter smith, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Bernard O. a iy ew York; M. Ortiz, New ne Island Doctor Admits Guitt,| York: G. Nadal, Porto Rico,’ Leslie yr WH a las t New| W. Arthur, Boston; William Rodding, Hyde Park, L. I, recently of Bast New | Meshantteut, } and Winfleld M. York, pleaded multe before Judge | des, Philadelphi | May in? the Brow Kiyn County ‘Gourt - > y to a charge of performing an! Big Incr oar to-day mp ae = Increase in Tate on Canned Coale, nineteen, of No. 43 sand Fro |Bentence will be pro! —_ Se onday NOS LON, June 6. races to-day per $200 to $1.60 per $100. insurance GARCIA GIRLS WANTED TO OVER RICHMOND GAS CO, “SLACKER” DEAD IN FRANCE. =» Man Sought In Boston, Jumped from five cents LIST OF AMERICANS ON CAROLINA WHO jellies Army and Navy Officers and British Captain Among the Survivors, Because the boats in which the Carolina survivors quit ship became widely separated and were being ac- counted for at various points along the coast, officials of the steamship line early to-day were unable to fur- nish a complete ist of those known to be safe, Many of those broweht to this port were native Porto Ricans. A list of residents of the United States known to have been’ among the survivors who arrived here follows: M. R. SPELMAN, United Btates enemy allen property custodian at Porto Rico, and Mrs. Spelman. PAYMASTER D, C. CROWBLL,| United States Navy, Mrs, Crowell and two chidren, CAPT, ROBERT K. WRIGHT of the British Navy, native of German- town, Pa, MR. AND MRS. CHARLES C. THOME, New Orleans, J. A. BRILL, Washington, D. C. E, C. COX, address unknown. MISS FRANCBS R, DICKBY, New York, a Presbyterian missionary to San Juan, CHARLDS N, DAVIS (negro), ad- dress unknown, | R. G. HBLLINGER, address un- known, MR, and MRSgALEXANDER HAY and three childr@n, address unknown, | MRS. RETTA VALADARBES, Chi- cago. DAVID LOUIS, address unknown. ARTHUR B, MITCHELL and MRS, MITCHELL, Staten Island. MISS CAROLINA H, PARKER, Staten Island, MISS JANE B. PARKDR, Staten Island. ASHBL known, EDWARD B. STAFFORD, New Orleans, MISS KATHERINE B, Los Angeles, WILLIAM F, WOODBRIDGE, san Juan, OHARLES B, LOGAN, customs ex- aminer, San Juan, MR, and MRS, EB. A. CHENUTH, Now Orleans, FRANK A, MYERS, Philadelphia. ORVAL P, NICHOLS F. WALL, address un- STERN, » San Juan, ARTHUR COURTIN, Brooklyn, EGBPRT STAFFORD, Now Or- leans, Members of the crew on board the rescue ship included Capt, T, R, D. Barbour, Brooklyn; Second Officer S. M. Daustesen, Brooklyn; E. W, Vogel, wireless operator, Now York City; Harry Werner, wireless operator, Bridgeport, Conn; Third Officer W, J. Ellison, New York City; Ramon Val- nela, New York City; Dr, C, M. Stockwell, New York, the ship's physician, A number of the crew were Porto Ricans, ON, freight rates on c es in nned goods and dried fruit from California to the Kast were approved by the state Commerce 7 per’ hundred Taised to WERE LANDED HERE Tattracting any erage rate pounds 1s STUCK TO HIS WIRELESS POST ON CAROLINA WHILE U BOAT SENT SHELL AFTER EVERY CALL “Sparks” Vogel Sent Qut S OS Signals Despite German Warnings and Got Away in Last Lifeboat. An elghteen-year-old wireless operator, E. W. Vogel of Paterson, N. J., stuck to his key in the wireless room of the Cdrolina, and sent out the S O S$ until his captain ordered him to stop because the Germans were answering every 8 O S with a shell. When he was no longer permitted to send, the boy, nicknamed “Sparks” Vogel by the crew, remained at the key to Msten, and it was only with the last lifeboat that he left the ship. This 1s Vogel's story of his experience: “I was awakened at 6.35 o'clock Sunday evening, as usual, for supper. ‘The other fellow (Assistant Operator Werner) came running in while I was dressing and yelled, ‘Come up here, quick.’ I rushed into the wireless room and there was an S O S§ from the schooner Isabel B, Wiley. I clamped the receivers to my ears and heard it myself. SO S—Isabel B, Wiley ‘being shelled by armed German submarine —latitude 38.07—longitude 75.10’—that’s what the sounders sald. T told Capt. Barbour he better¢——————___ make quick headway, for, Judging bY goon” wag the strength of the signals, the ‘sub’ which Mrs, | Must be right on top of us. “You're right, Sparks,’ the Skipper said, and he bawled out to change our position, and we began to zig-zag and speed up. | “At about 6 o'clock I was down for | supper and had just ordered my meal when I heard something smack along- | side. jon, the relieving message Clara Vogel, mother of Senior Wireless Operator Edward W. Vogel of the liner Carolina, received to-day, thug putting an end to the anxious wait of soveral days. “I wanted more news from him," said his mother to an Evening World reporter at her home, No, 61 Southern Boulevard, the Bronx, to-day. “but it was just like Eddie, He was prob- ably under orders to say no more." I had a hunch what was going From the timo shore stations and but I went out on deck without more attention than possible, I hurried up to the wireless house and sent the other operator up | top to get our position, He returned shortly, saying some one else was fix- |uring out where wo were, and mean |while I was ‘setting up’ and forth-| f | with shot out our first SOS, [tong Sembeny £05 two years. ad bag ith 5 . | long ankering for the life o: SO S—Steamship Carolina being | nue ODATATER TAY WA Mia ie gunned by German submarine,” I|probably the youngest chief operator |sent out a couple of times, ‘Then I|on any passenger boat. Fa ‘s family long opposed his am- 26e TT, IRAN IRE HOE: FeOMI TLR Gitlone, but’ when ‘once his father Within two minutes Cape May Sta-| awoke in tme middle of the maht and tion had picked us up and queried for | found young Vogel at the key ot his our location. little wireless board, he gave tn and : . ” the hoy has since happily pursued the ‘WE DONT SHoorr Sale THE lcalling, ‘The Vogel family have lived “put just then our German visitor in the Bronx for nine years, (the submarine operator) butted in pn TI and said, ‘You don’t use wireless, wo BELMONT PARK WINNERS. don't shoot,’ Sounds German, doesn’t sonenia it? 0; five furlongs, patrol boats picked up the message, “Am attacked by submarine” was Vo) which flashed from the Carolina by until early to-day, when the ng words came over the 1e, neither Mrs, Vogel, her Frederick or her son Ernest Vogel has been tn the employ of the New York & Porto Rico Steam- ) y, 116 (Byrne), 5 to By he way, I could tell from the evens fitat; orimeneth, ‘ts faintnes of the vibrations that the] (Buxton to 6, 7 to 10 Boche sender was geared to be heard American Ace, not over @ half-mile away. “On order then from my captain, I replied that we wero laying to.|* But I followed that by repeating the 8 O 8 call. ond; 115 ‘(Robins: a), 9 to 5.4 to 5, 2 to 6, third, Time, 69 2-6 Eftare, Charley ‘Thorley, War Smoke, idle Rock, The Trump, The Talker, d Lady, and Terentia also ran, ND RACE—Steeplechase; sell- ing: four-vear-olds and upward; purse, $620.80; about two miles and a quarter. “E forgot to say that the first shot |7;"\4'%, Simon, Haynes). 188, | qraixnt went right across our bow. When I n Horgan), 162, straight 9 to repeated the call for help the Ger-| init" 1449.1. show i to," second; mans sent over another which 2 to 1, show even, third. Time, whizzed some distance from our top. | fy, folee cere 4d, The Carmet and A third went to the rear. and the $$ fourth and last fell short. It seemed | 390,000 Jage-Slava Re as though it was designed to, I guess | for the United WASHINGTON, June 5.—A Jugo- Av army of 800,000 was promised the {ted States to-day if Congress will removing Jugo-Slavs in the enemy allen class, | they intended gnly to scare us, but I} thought they were a bit where they shot. “By this time every one had rushed careless from from the dining room and was trying r was made to tho Senate Foy to find shelter bebind the deck house | Nig “Grketich and Soke oe Oyen or below. Vich, representing Jugo-6lava in Amer= “I Mstened tn again and caught re- |'° peated calls from Cape May and one|Dantets Commends from the Brooklyn Navy Yard asking | Rescuing Mess where we were, I hadn't our bearing] WASHINGTON, June from above yet, but knew approxi. |Brandt, seaman, U. 8 N., mately where we were, Just when It! was rigging up to give this Capt |{i7 baybour ordered me not te “LT went out of th —— * Boy. 6.—Carl A. of Evanston, was commended to-day by Secre- Daniels for gallantry in jumpin, 0 the Loire River, in France, on April and rescuing @ drowning messenger less room | boy. and watched the pas and crew! wee the side boats; then| Private Detective Sent to Jatt. went back to the operating room and nnett C, Carter, @ private detec- tore up a sceret Navy code book |e of Nutley, N. J, recently con- which the enemy might have found | victed of attempted blackmail on Dr. tl usetul. All other papers of any im: | rrog'c aerrineton and Xtra, William portance that I found [ tore up and|4:' 4% J, to-day put in a silver water pitcher and Tidse Davie threw overboard, It sank—'Spurlos ’ imprison- versenkt, you might say, ment and fined $1,00 | “Then’ the captain eame in, and| eee with him T took to a boat—every on: Merit ng to Make New Peace Drive else had left M, June 6—C! VOGEL SENDS MESSAGE TO HIS | stertiing probably will address the Ger- MOTHER HE IS SAFE. | man Relehstag shortly, stating generally the ¢ terms Germany ts now willing “They got our ship, mother, but ept, a Berlin despatch stated to- must of us are safe, I'll be bome' day $7 | defendant has 046406605 no: 999-9-0-06-39 2:3-3-3- FH+9-3-9-9-5-96-9-- 0906-06 OO 8.90604 “stds enol 90060080600-000084-8-06606.66.66006660006660646-666080008) ASKS THAT HYLAN PAY $4000 EXTRA WORLD SUIT COSTS ‘cescpanilins Mr. Taylor Tells Court of Added Expense in Aban- doned Actions. Howard Taylor, counsel for The New York World, presented an am- davit to Supreme Court Justice Crop- sey in Brooklyn to-day asking for an extra allowance of $4,000, to help defray the expenses incurred by The World in preparing to defend two bel suits which were brought against The World by John F. Hylan when he was a candidate for Mayor The suits were dropped last Monday at Hylan's r®quest and at his ex- pense, In his affidavit in support of the claim for the largest extra ance that the law permits, The World said: “Deponent is of the opinion that allow- ounsel for by Hylan in his complaints, and onty a small fraction of the sums that The World had actually spent in prepara. tion, In an opposing affidavit, Frank Moss, counsel for Mayor Hylan, sald that he and his partners had prepared to try the cases and had not been aware that the Mayor would discon- tinue the actions, He said the cases had been prepared in every detail excepting the essential one of per- sonal conferences between Mayor Hylan and counsel, These confer- ences, Mr. Moss sald, had been re- peatedly postponed by the Mayor be- cause of the pressure of publlo duties. He added that the Mayor's letter commenting on the Court's re- fusal to postpone the trial until Oc- tober was not intended as a reflec- tion on the fairness of the Court, Mr, Moss did not mention the court pats, aM t had been no question that ‘they would be pald by Mayor Hylan, But he said th The World w iow t in his opinion ot entitled to a large y renerved decision, DOWLING WIRES. APPEAL FOR PNEUMATIC MAIL TUBES Asks } York Congressman to Have Provision Retained in Post Office Appropriation Bill. Frank L. Dowling, Borough President of Manhattan, to-day wired an appeal to New York Congressmen to have the the plaintiff would have adopted tha Same course that he has now adopted | whenever the cases had been marked ready on the calendar, because tho plaintiff must be as well aware as the been that the facts stated in The World's publications and claimed by the plaintiff to be false were true, “The plaintiff claimed them to be untrue and told the public he had be- | gun the libel actions, He was elected Mayor after that course of action— and possibly on the strength of that | course of actlon—which has now been in effect demonstrated as a false re>- resentation and attitude of his part.” Mr. Taylor's affidavit went on to show that The World had spared no expense in preparing for an adequate cross-examination of Hylan when he the cases should come to trial, Mr. Taylor personally had made trips to Washington, Chicago and Utica, And investigators for The World had honeycombed the State to obtain ma- terial evidence, Mr, Taylor then proceeded: “In a sult involving the personal reputation of the Mayor of New York double the Usual care was necessary for the defense, both with regard to the facts and proof.” Ho added that the amount asked tn the form of an extra allowance was less than 6 per cent. of the sums asked the strength of the UR YOUNG LADY EMP! can be made to get it * At this opportune mom: have a Relative or Friend in the se payment of a small fee, his name will be sent him—: by your subscriptions, ORIENTAL FRUIT PASTE—O, known ish SUGAR CUTS choles collection ot long. pillow ema of hard popular fruit and flavors, A favorite with all lovers of = bard eandy dies. 34 Stores: New York, POUND BOX Cc Brooklyn, Newark, The svecitied weleht includes the container, tion, known as the Candy Girl’ War Fund. to the American Camps, those in the Expeditionary Forces in France if arrangements ‘Over There.” by the boys. in the camps is well known, and they would gladly pay the price for Candy if they could only get it. organized to scatter sweetness to the “Boys under the Colors. to the Fund (Details given by the girls jolutely free of any expense, Special for To-Morrow, Thurs., June 6th pneumatic mail tube provision retained in the Post Offce appropriation bill. President Dowling’s telegram was as follows: in the name of the Borough of Man- hattan and its great commercial and financial interests, I appeal to you to make every effort to have retained in Appropriation Bill now ip provision tor retention of » mail service. now connects stations in thia important. section of the chy. and s would be deplorable, if nt of pneumatic ‘tube service would result not only in harm to business interests, but would in- crease danger from motor vehicles and add to present war, time congestion in principal highways."* HELP WANTED—MALE, Wented, 7" ’ STATIONMEN AND TRAINMEN, Ages 21 to 55, Subway and Elevated Divisions, INTERBOROUGH RAPID TRANSIT CO. Apply Room 1233, 165 Broads ¢ way, 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Daily, Except Sunday, ‘Trade Mark. LOYEES have organized themselves ly to the Boys in the S tonments and Battleships, to The craving for sweets ent, the Candy Girls’ War Fund is If you you may become a subscriber {any LOFT Store) and upon I be added to the list « dy will The fund is fee a vi MAL K REED CHOCOLAT! QCOLATE ft ciouw natural fruits on trial Stra " Cherries” es and Apples, th din celles