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b ) ot . ’ \ “If lt Happens In New York it’s In The Evening World’’ The “ Circulation Books Open to All.”’ | Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Pre. (The New York World), PRICE ‘TWO CENTS. NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 13, GERMANS HURLED BACK OVER THE MATZ; it ~“ rd. | | “Cirenlation Books Open to All. »| 1918, 20 PAGES PRICE Two CENTS. NEW MARNE BATTLE WON BY AMERICANS | 7000 AUSTRIANS DRAFT LAW CHANGE in ae nef BELIEVED LOST MAY TAKE IN ALL INNAVAL ATTACK FROM 18 UPTO 49 BELIEVED 10 GARRY COPPER * Probably the Submar ine Which "GERMAN HEAVY GUNS HEAVY GUNS Looted Norwegian Vessel Off U. S. Cgast. te ee Two Italian Motorboats Brave Dozen War Vessels to Tor- pedo Dreadnoughts. Var Department Expected To Ask Alteration To Meet British Treaty. SILENCED IN ACTION ee Wednesday, June 13 (by WASHINGTON, June 15. Commander Wa That the Deparuhent will vek changes in ae ae, BY ALLIED AIR RAIDERS Ri whose remarkable exploit in drat. law, s clude all men —_— Unprecedented Feat of the War Ac- ‘ . ; . y i by Light B graphic story of the encounter in of well informed Con- Passengers on Nieuw Amster- complished by Light Bom- which he took part and during which uy dam Saw Another U Boat bardment Squadrons, another Austrian battleship was eens aeeMe " place ¢ « ft the same sis as on the Other Side. Shep Ra Ag rye areliapatinnen gelesrsapeseds iat ot Britain and feclltate the ops a eee dune 18 (via er motor boat in charge of Com- eration of the inter-Ailied draft trea- Passengers the Holland-| 4» ine rote of the mander Millazo. It ix porsible that tes, is expected to be launched in America liner Nicuw Amsterdam re vice in the tighting is daily in- ., 2,000 sailors were lost during the en- st Feb a Pyrat ggg one ft ported to-day that on ‘Tuesday, wh ensing During yesterday's *| counter dditeetion an ns 10@ miles east of New York, Chor bombardment “Lam sorry for the sailors who lost ;yrin the count « fo LS ship passed a German submarine run War2 Pee an ‘ching their lives” Commander Rizzo said in easons Ming on the surface at full 1d) German heavy qun batteries in | beginning his story, “but tam glad |? pletion ¢ headed eastward on the transathentic nd allencing them by that we got the dreadnoughts. Why Clase 1 course, Killing or seattering the gunners hey had ventured out of E Harbor, fr going into defe classifications : > Ir no one knows, but it was certainly “less draft lim ¢ broadened. The German ra ps . oats: them to do 66, Provost Marshal (ie oF the Dutch ship, inasmu he Dalmatian asse sald Nopre ter hud proc ou bath f wun but silencing c 4 under permission of the Imperial y Batiation bv tok) an ike tsaal of the House Military Commi day Government; nor did mak iy is a new achieve Premuda. {T had just finish : 1 1 ment w patr 1 Duld soon be Mombers Fo effort at concealment for ¢ ame ae € r patrol a —— light. had turned for my bage whe said that vatit reason, " " iway, | saw ag reaty with ¢ ress of the subma peared tke ak nrough the early | on the Un i“ 9} States io raise the draft age support the belief sh e 1 first it was some boat! Uhder the proposed plan, as Con that one of the enemy + = ’ ir 4 ty eye | i ee w discovered me and was, 8! 2 !, not a raving held up the Norw Cl rows Hat- pie ¢ the men thus ed liable for ser n Tower and Flat- | giving 1 determ hat the ship Vindeggen and tra cl Mat : w . back and, ice would be put into the army, Mil the Norwegian's ow ‘ ba ; ee tary service, it i# st would not eighty tons of pretious copper |r g0 § nd Loops the Loop. After turning back T sald to my |? beyond a ‘i in us the ehivery blasts eddyin vewa of ten Sh 'iboat twenty-one, under sent p would put for rman port. E ‘i ' adying | two crews ol 2 neha but the listing er hty tons of uhout Madison Square min-| “‘Felygws, the Ita ucout boat ne listing ons of ¢ eighteen 1 “ ? » oes everybody | have been walting for two years and | eighteen and f “ n Germany at this time is th ih Italian Navy haw been try. | Vide. first, a vast reser lo be of greater value to the Get ; destroy Austrian ships for|™eo for training, who ¥ War Staff than any fur deproda Are you willing to risk | tantly avuilable for m of an He . | they became twenty-one, and, second tions against American + ts, | dipped, sp glided. ; —_ a great number of men capable of The relutive positions of the Vin- and volplaned around |#"d SOHN | performing other service upon whi n Tower, thence sailed| ‘To a man they 5 the « liveness |pends, such as handli the army deggen when she was overhauled by the Germans last Saturday and of the Norwegian steamer Henrik Lund e@ught and sunk on Mond: conjunction with the p Nieuw Amsterdam when she the submarine on Tuesday, m h Avenue Bulldimg, and) “We atiron Buildin, earing | motors muffied wher to my amaze- y & narrow margin e iment | two battleships | on and kindred matt tor alone gratuito. | | It was pointed out that under Listen’ alone and bis gratuito surrounded by a number of destroy- It was pointed ou tertainment served to satiafy’ the « counted as ten, | Proposed law the question of milita Oral ee t 1 battleship t | Service for Irishmen in this countr According to spectators the fying was | assigned the nd bactloenip to tho! wit be settled, since no matter of the circus variety, Traffic officers ex- | other motor boat I took the : were spec our . aetna liscovered rowd ers, which I lat while identity of the undersea boat sighted | Pesce their appreciation of the Ayers | frst Great Britain does about conscript! by the Holland ship as the coppe “antes. Military men were of the opin-| «7 nsid ne of de.| them in thelr own land they will b almost certain jon that the flyer chose {his particular | Abt rd and fourth | ble to military service here. After towing the crew of the Vin-| neighborhood to ‘ascertain the approxi- | 77°%* a eh ‘ pur Speedy ri f the draf leggen in their be for two days] mate height of oMfce buildings in case a | % these 1 was nor noticed inj treaty with nad and the crew of the Hendrik Lund over|Nikit patrol should be established to| the ti The water was smooth 4 ; and my hatled the |kuard New York. night, the G rb n 100 miles off New Y EQUALS BEEF SANDWICH Powered” I ship. : - th vers in ti Smokes” Furnished Soldiers De-| ine ed by the fourth and Soy PERSHING ADOPTS nounced in Reichstag for | Seeinouer tail te Ane persed ai * WASHINGTON, June 12 —A . to) the a : n Army por faru expioded un. | Wheat flour with ne Care of Sixty-eight Taken Over by | ' en Am js cht Beau te eat ; es : Sins oe Beur -_ pipeline apiglees 1 Reusing gh ores, canteens wr ovum, ve LOCUST VALLEY FLYER Dane at see en KILLED AT TEXAS FIELD me POPE STILL SEEKS PEACE, Vere) i. lov Fa Depiures Miavepresentations Means) Yen Wind Makes Pla oO tog War Attitude, r 1 tad the B | ni tured and several ex GERMANS GAIN BELOW AISNE ~~ AT A COST OF 20,000 TROOPS - SIX GERMAN OFFICERS TAKEN Arnericans Hold Three-Mile Front BY THE AMERICAN SOLDIERS: Against New Attack on Their Foch Victory on the Matz River Halts Compiegne Drive. WITH THE AMERICANS ON THE MARNE, June 13, 4 iP. M. (United Press).—The Americans holding the three-mile June! front between Bouresches and Torcy repulsed two German at- ome of the American artillery tire WaS| tyes in their twelfth day and night of fighting. They took fifty American marines of approximately | Prisoners, including « captain, and captured a number of machine 1 etme a hl baghenvad icp -tich oti “9 ; There were some American victims, chiefly from the heavy bombardment of Bouresches last night. The bombardment, ‘ in which some eight-inch shells were used, was believed to presage an attack in force, but no big infantry attack was made. The pugnacity of those who did attack lasted only a utes before the withering fire poured into them. They fled, leaving the ground strewn with dead. g e United States after the Four hundred mounted Germans were sighted south of Etre- ] pilly (two miles northeast of Bouresches), yesterday evening. An war next, American battery scattered them with heavy losses: A fresh German division of 12,000 men has arrived in front of the Started te Run to Avoid 4 Capture, Having Been Falsely Told by Commanders They Would Be Tortured. THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, ated Press), —The excel WITH 12 (Associa Wednesday, largely responsible for the capture by 400 prisoners which Belleau Phe Germans, who had been told to avoid capture because the Ameri- n¢ Americanunaching gun! barrage was in the fighting in the clearing wood, northwest cans would torture them, s 1 after ners had made the wood ihe fect that Among t so per fH from escape rs, a Major, had pi the German: and four J tied to! few 4 Captain Lieutenants, All lad and some 3 of ore heir uniforms with string. The prisoners said they were glad lo be cap- war to live. All of Germany idded, called for ending the pla fall hegroes opposing them The prisoners were aid, that the Americans had many the tact 60,000 GERMANS IN BATILE SOUTH OF THE AISNE RIVER; ONE-THIRD OF THEM ARE LOST Slight Gains Made in That Sector at Terrific Cost—No New Attacks on Mont- didier Left and Centre. The scarcity of officers in the German Army is shown b sergeant, All the prisone Americans. that one of the at first commande aid this tion for prisoners, aco en 4 common thing no fighting qualites of th prisor were The barn in which the contined psi in the reas of the American lines held more prisoners of war tha United State: iS 5 had in one build Jing at any time in more th an fifty 5 (CRUSHING OF GERMANISM HERE BALANCES GAINS IN THE FIELD, | sitier Lett ana c COLOGNE PAPER TELLS TEUTONS iow sein ne Corman ores ich hove ben avecng Declares Transatlantic Trade Is Doomed and wr wo ot oun in aoa Warns of Far Reaching Com- jnorth bank of the Matz River. The French occupied the heights mercial Disaster. | of Croix-Ricard and Milicocq. Hundreds of prisoners and many irs | machine guns were taken. ASHINGTON, June 13.—In the crughing out of Germanism in the United state he Koelnisches Volkszeitung sees a dis On the Marne front a violant German atick against Bouresches and ple 1 a measure balancing Teutonle military successe Kelleau Wood was broken up by American and French troops, who held \n oficial despaich fiom France to-day commenting on pessimistic | all their newly won positions and intlicted hea the enemy discussion in the German press of events ip the United States, quotes Vi combats continue between the Aisne River and the Villeng e Volkszeltung a ‘ Cotterets Forest he Ger s have progressed far as the e Mr. Wilson ushing thé German elements . ‘ The Germans have prog tas tar as the ravin He will succeed e German pr is already nearly crushed out east of Labersine, north of Cutry I enemy has also obtained a foot of existence in Ar a, The r part of German schools are | hold in Coeuvres and St. Pierre-Hai osed, The Ger sswciations 4 required to strip themselves of The Germans yesterday used five divisions (60,000 men) between all vestiges of Germany 1! is @ complete debacle ‘the Aisne and the Villers-Cotterets Forest,” the Exchange Telegraph cor- Ae be pessimistic to réalize tha o respondent declared to-day Their losses are estimated at 20,000,” quences of our European victories are in a measure balanced by the There were no new cks betwei onididier ar . y um total of the lo we have suffered in Americe. All thix could ¢ we no new attacks between Monididier and the Antheu!l ave bana (foverend which include the western flank and French centre. Yesterday After the war longer be able to enter America last night the French cor heir positions he Hamburg-Aive th German Lloyd line « md As the nature of the ground around Mer Viiere Foch first struck n the black book ards and offices have been sold - ; the probibitio Tieaelitnn (6 (Gashiene ee rhe ack, provides t lent g tions behind the hilis A.uerican pre rm of forbidding Ge b {pbuilding tron i 1 | ine id by which all supplies rds. It wil ‘ German trans ec n 1 he G in vard Compiegne, the Beside: sritimie German esrute op 1B a ons of dolla ok nicke otton ather and hreng 4 claim an ad y peration: emical product wen seized and ullilzed to faor Ainer TIVILLANG EVACUATE COMPIE E. an war materia Civilian evacuation of Compiegne h een completed, it was offi- AMERICAN SHIP WRECKED, co ) tone, Capt. F " innounced to-da Thousands of refugees are arriving on special Siseby URRonce arte Kimamer, (HPA BOR fee a ty soe anpiegne is on the Oise River, about seven miles from the , Hons on Sova seotin Comat 4 SER GM bh “present battle lines, ar he evacuation by civilians is a precautionary ANADIAN ATIA PORT now breaking uj 4 precaut ry 3 2. TRE Aatsivw asasig Ab: She CSCW Of Ge Ware ah dared measure ed