The evening world. Newspaper, June 17, 1918, Page 2

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planned to descend from the mountain area and also reach the city af Treviso from the Piave River. HAD TO MEET COUNTER ATTACK AT ONCE. The enemy’s bombardment was frustrated by the form dable fire from the Italian artillery, which destroyed lines and shelters and madc full hits on massed troops. The Italians drenched hi ments with gas. When the enemy infantry advanced into t'e front line zones they found that resistance had been prepared for by the Italian ma- chine guns and had to meet a counter attack from the Italian supporting troops. This resulted in the loss of a great part of the advantage he had gained and he left prisoners and machine guns in the hands of tne Italians. Altogether 3,000 prisoners, including 89 officers, were taken by the Nalians and their Allies in the first day of the struggle which was to hhave been a great success for the Austrians but,which resulted in a dismal failure. AUSTRIANS ARE DRIVEN BACK AFTER CROSSING PIAVE RIVER Suffer Heavy Losses in Men and Machine Gun in Monte Moschin Salient—No Interest in War, Say Prisoners. | WITH THE ITALIAN ARMY, Sunday, June 16 (Associated Press). —Austrian troops which forced the Piave River have been driven back. The fighting along the river is most intense, Nowhere else along the} front of attack has the struggle been so severe as on the Piave line. One of the most brilliant of the Italian actions was the defense of the | Monte Moschin salient protecting the important Brenta positions, Here the Austrians suffered heavy losses. Many of their machine guns were captured. The prisoners are ragged and ill-fed. Many of them are undersized | One of them remarked to the correspondent that he had no} youiiis. interest in the war. The feeling of the Italians is buoyant. At Italian army headquarters satisfaction is felt over the situation on every part of the front. The General commanding the artillery corps in the Monte Grappa region expressed this feeling to the correspondent. “Now send us only four divisions of Americans,” the General added. “We will first shake hands and then travel together into Austria.” The severity of the fighting on Monte Grappa may be understood from the fact that the Italian artillery fired 70,000 shells in twe!ve hours, In their attempt to cross the Piave in great force Saturday the Aus- trians had the city of Treviso as their objective. In getting across the Piave the Austrians paid a tremendous sacrifice before the machine gun » fire of the Italian defenders of the western bank. An order f ind in the pockets of prisoners was to the effect that the Austrians were to be at Preganziol, south of Treviso, on Saturday night. AUSTRIANS LOST FIVE TO ONE. LONDON, June 17.—“The Austrians lost five men to our one,” the War Office declared to-day in a report on Italian front operations. “The enemy used twenty-nine divisions (348,000 men) between the Asiago Plateau and the Piave of the fifty-eight divisions (696,000 men) employed on the whole baitle front. British airmen have stroyed seven bridges.” PRISONERS AND MACHINE GUNS CAPTURED BY FRENCH TROOPS Attempted Surprise Attacks by Germans Re- pulsedin Cavieres Wood and in the Vosges. [FRENCH REPORT] PARIS, June 17.—The French troops have improved their positions north arid northwest of Hautebraye, between the Oise and the Aisne. The text of the statement follows: “Between the Oise and the Aisne the French succeeded in varry- ing out early to-day a local operation which resulted in improvement of the French positions north and northwest of Hautebraye. The French took 100 prisoners and captured several machine guns. “In the Cavieres Wood and in the Vosges our troops repulsed enemy surprise attacks. There is nothing to report from the rest of the front.’ OFFICIAL BRITISH REPORT. LONDON, June 17.—Raiding operations and a brief enemy bom- bardment in the Albert region were reported by Field Marshal Haig to- day. The text is as follows: “East of Arras we made a successful raid and ‘took a few prisoners. An attempted enemy raid in the neighborhood of Givenchy was re- pulsed yesterday morning. The enemy bombarded us northwest of Albert for a short period last night.” ALL ITALIAN PARTIES HARMONIOUS FOR PROSECUTION OF TCE WAR Orlando in’Speech to the Deputies Says Czecho- Slovoks Are Fighting Side by Side With Italians. 17,.—Har- | front is t WASHINGTON, attacked. In France the Scicdans ontieciama warking @ature | mAs jis developed into @ movement | J Which will lead to the occupation of a | Gay's sesei: he Italian Chamber | | oh Lb " mn : sid = 88 es | Mich in food and resources. Deputies, at whic June | For our pant, therefore, let us advance leader, Turati, declared all political | to Verona.’ " Hines must be obliterated until vic-| There are no American combatant | tory was achieved at the front, was|‘00PS in Italy now, with the excep- apy a tion of “observing missions,” Seere the subject of an official radiog! tary Baker said to-day. In reply to to-day from Rome. Questions he aid no announcement | remier Orlando's com- would be made of America's decision | Folnte of P Nd in the de. |, abd troups to Italy, of the com mnicniae, vere outlined in the de- | poition of such an expedition or of its gpatch as follows: strength or commander “until the “That Italy's solidarity with the | force had safely landed.” opprewsed nationalities of Austria was evidenced by the Czecho-Blovak battalions now fighting side by side with the Italian soldiers, Also by the urgent appeal of the Jugo-Slavs of Roumania to be allowed to join Haly in fighting the common enemy. |WOMEN HURT IN CAR CRASH Trolley in Jersey Auto 017, , F were seriously injured | “Second, that the enemy's order of ht when a Hudson River trolley the day to the Austrian offfvers, which |ecur crashed into an auto at Leonia hes fallen into the hands of the Italian |The injured are Mrs. Thomas Loman of command, says; Bergenfield, injured on, the head; Mins yy Se Susle Orer, hef sister, lacoration of the ‘All of the forces and resources Of (right ur, und Miss Jule. Geyer of ‘the Austrian monarch are now, for the : aten Island whose right hand was ractures fires time, being employed entirely PAI Were unconsctous when taken to > (mainst one enemy. The entire Italian ithe Englewood Hospital, x battle emplace- |" | more Dry Doeks and Shipbuilding Com- THREE GERMAN RDS REPULSED BY AMERICANS 600 Shock Troops Beaten in Hand-to-Hand Fighting | in Toul Sector. | WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN_ | FRANCE, June 17 (By the Associated Press).—Three enemy attacks have ‘been repulsed by the Americans in| different parts of the battle front on| two mornings. } The first, south of Thiaucourt, in! | the Tout sector, Saturday, waa broken 1p by machine gunners. A worse one ‘esterday morning, also in the Toul sector, at Xivry, was beaten back. The third was against the new posi- tions taken by Pershiog’s men in Al- sace, chine guns blocked the blow, The fighting at Xivry early yester- day morning was obstinate, About 600 German shock troops attacked jthe American first line positions. | | Some of the enemy got into the vil-| |lage, but were soon driven out. In other points the Germans were badly beaten. The attack beam after an ex- tremely violent bombardment of the; front line, American batteries andj villages far in the rear. The Ger- mang advanced swiftly, but were met by a heavy fire. Those who pene- trated Xivry were forced speedily to withdraw, and elsewhere the enomy was completely repulsed in hard fighting lasting more thah two hours. The Germans hoped to enter the village and carry off a large number of prisoners, but the alertness of the American artillery observers com- pletely overturned the enemy plan. Examination of the Germans cap- tured in the fight disclosed that the enemy planned the raid @ week in ad- vance. The original enemy plan was for the attacking party to divide into three sections and to enter Xivray from three different directions. Only one section actually reached the out- wkirts of the village, but only after it had been cut up badly by the Am- erican barrage fire. Of these only a small group got into Xivray where they were quickly surrounded by the Americans and either captured or killed. Eight prisoners, including a lieutenant, remained in the American hands. A majority of the American cas- ualties, which do not include any mis- sing, resulted from the German artil- lery fire. The Germans captured an Amert- can soldier in their attack on Xivray, but he did not remain a prisoner very long. At the edge of the village three Germans came upon a wounded American. He was placed under guard of a German private and started for the enemy lines, Reachb- ing a point near the enemy wire en- tanglements, the American suddenly drew a revolver and forced his sur- prised custodian to march back across No Man's Land into the American lines, After turning his prisoner over to fellow soldiers the wounded man fell unconscious from loss of blood. In the attack south of Thiaucourt at 2 o'clock Saturday morning the enemy lost at least twenty killed. Suoh of the Germans as attempted to proceed toward the American rear Mnes in search of prisoners were driven back or killed in close quartered fighting. One American, when surrounded by a German officer and five privates, re- fused to surrender. Instead, he threw a bomb which killed the officer and wounded the others of the enemy party. An American observation balloon was shot down yesterday morning by @ shell from a German gun. There were no casualties a6 & reoull uf Lhe incident. SHIP LAUNCHED IN 40 DAYS, “South Builders Promise Se! o Keep rk BALTIMORE, June 17.~The steel re- frigerator ship South Pole, of 6,460 tons, was launched at the yards of the Halti- pany to-day, within forty days of the time the veasel’s keel was laid down, haries M. Schwab, head of the Emergency Fleet Corporation, was present and asked the ship workers if they would not stick to their work and |help build ships incessantly,’ the men responded with oheers in the affirmative FRENCH “ACE” MISSING. | Aan t Quetie Has Dow Ten Planes, | PARIS, June 17.--Adjt, Quette, the! rench aviator, who has a record of having downed ten German airplanes, has been mi He was | Oftickally proclattnes on June 4 — | MY COTTON EXCHANGE. | n. High July L Riflemen backed by the ma-) 9 O44 4440) tebe ee} French troops coming down and English troops going up leading French Troops*Returning From Battle Front and English on the Way to Take Their Places 64444-4194 0969 0O9G6-) 0944-424448 4644 04606-0606 | to the battle front. The are taking the places of the French SHELLS FALL AROUND WINTYRE GIRLS AGAIN Sisters From Mount Vernon, Awak- ened by German Attack, Don Masks and Aid Wounded, WITH THE AMERICAN ARMIES IN FRANCE, June 17.—In the German at- tack on Xivray, in the Toul sector, which was repulsed by American troops, the Mcintyre ststers—Irene and Gladys—of Mount Vernon, N. Y., were again under fire. The Salvation Army workers were asleep in a village in the rear areas when they were awakened at midnight by German shells whining overhead. ‘They hastily donned gas maske and of- fered their services at a first ald station When, shortly after daybreak, the wounded began coming through the vil- lage. they cooked breakfast for those who were able to eat. AVIATORS FROM ITALY FLY OVER FRIEDRICHSHAFEN Cross Alps and Photograph New Airplane Factories, Travelling 350 Miles in Four Hours, GENEVA, June 17.—Allied aviators long distance flying feats on which they cqyered 350 miles in an average of foir hours elapsed time, according to a tele- gram from Milan to the Chronique Italienne of Geneva, From a base south of Idnice, Italy, a party of aviators went over the Tyrol- ese Alps to Innsbruck and then to Fried- richshafen, where photographs wi taken, showing that new airplane tories are being constructed there, The aviators did not drop any bombs BRITISH WEST INDIAN LINER UNMOLESTED BY U BOATS Hugged the Coast, as Soon as It Was Sighted All the Way, Captain Says, One of the best known of British liners plying between a North Atlantic and West India port reached her home destination to-day with eighty-eight passengers, mostly negroe Her captain reports that he skirted the coast as soon as he came within sight of it, since he had warnings of enemy submarines in adjacent waters. He was the first navigator to receive a wireless 8 O 8 from & vessel that was being shelled by a submarine and which was ounk This occurred, the captaio said, May 16, when his vessel was bound scuth’and from that time on he sig- zagged and kem@ a sharp lookout during both the south\and the north passage. ‘The ship brought » Die cares of suRne aad tropical frult VOTE ON "SUFFRAGE, SOON, Women's Leaders to Seek Senate Action Next Week. WASHINGTON, June Suffrage is to be brow the Senate next week u Suffrage leaders miss fire Suffrage forces let it he known to-day that they plan to have a date fixed for a 17.—Woman to a vote in leas plans of final vote, They are confden: that the necessary votes will be infu President Wilson's virtual reque thet Suffrage be _Pansed as & war measure. —>— WAR TAX URGED ON DOGS. Also Levy $2.50 on Cats, WASHINGTON, June 17.—Raising of four or five hundred million dollars by a Federal tax of $2.60 on dogs and cats, with a primary idea of taxing out of existence curs tht prey on livestock, was proposed at the Hquse Ways and Means Committee revenue hearing to-- day, by Hank Reid of Chicago, publisher of the Shepherd's Journal, ——— POTTER ON A:RCRAFT BOARD, August 6.00 September .. 25.40 2.30 Octobe 70 s4.K8 December 4450 January Moe March 40 4 May 3 425 3 24.25 Market closed irregular, up 65 to off 22 polnu. , New Yorker Nomin: dent Wt WASHINGTON, June William G Potter of New York was nominated to- day by President Wilson to be @ mem- ber of the Aircraft Board, a by Presi- at the end of last week performed two, | 80 that they may be stffted to an- other point. COLEARY'S ARREST ILL BRING A ROUND-UP OF IRISH AGITATORS HERE (Continued from First Page.) the Toms on May 3 4, 6 and 18 These dates, it ts aid, are coinci- dental with the disappearance of Jeremiah O'Leary. Alexis O'Leary, a brother of the defendant, testified that he was in the auto, the ride of which was spoken of in the address of Prose- cutor Barnes to the jury. The wit- ness told of his brother Jeremiah's movements during the day and how, when the automobile reached the home of Jeremiah, he, the witness, was told to go home. John drove the machine and Arthur Lyons and Father O'Donnell accompanied the three brothers, Alexis said that he had not seen his brother Jeremiah since the night of the ride. On cross examination Alexis testi- fled that his brothers John and Jere- miah had been estranged for several years before the lattr’s troubl. said that the whole O'Leary family was opposed to Jerry's sentiments and politics and that John had quar- eelied with him on that account. He- fore his flight, he said, Jeremiah had been suffering from carbuncles, kid- ney trouble and had been operated upon for appendicitis, On the night of the auto ride to Jerry's home at No. 14 Junel Street the machine, the witness said, was halted a block away on account of the steep hill leading up to the house. Jeremiah had gone to live with his ‘| parents at No, 1229 Madison Avenue to be relieved from the noise of his own children, the witness said, and he went to confession before the auto ride on Sunday night, May 5, and afterward told Father O'Donnell that he was going away for awhile to pre- pare for his trial, Louis Goldman, a law clerk in the notary office of Jeremiah O'Leary, said that he had witnessed the pass- ing of Jeremiah's power of attorney to John, and that later he had car- ried the bank book of the former from the Colonial Bank to John, The acknowledgment of the paper was not done secretly, the witness said, He was asked if John O'Leary had not made his power of attorney over to Jeremiah, but objection to the question was sustained, Col, Felder, attorney for Jeremiah as well as John, intimated this after- noon that the defense of Jeremiah will be be insanity. He said that no sane man could have acted as he did, and that physical condition was such as to hie induce temporary aberration. United States District Attorney Francis PD, Caffey said that through the War Committee of the bar of the City of New York, of which Henry W. Taft is Chairman, a numiber of| | FIRYP RACK. Gelling. five turionte: lawyers fave volunteered to serve rele vrai ee Thy ye tat: the Government. The services of| | lice DeLancey Nicoll and H. Snowden| \(? "hi epiurada TY Marshall have been accepted, he said, tg A ly ne to prosecute on charges of treason jot he aouuded and espiondge Jeremiah O'Leary, John T, Ryan, Marue K. De Vic Ci fa toria, Carl Rodiger, Willard J. Rob- fey te item, TO, “alla 1 oon ingon, Atbert Fricke and Emil’ kipper.| {ig ‘alg LO Le bin “90 Pron > THIRD RACE Por “mae Sie ollie DISORDERS IN AUSTRIA | Sissi. 38, Bisa Th Roshi jong =) Fa A aa ARE REPORTED GROWNG | . i anes, ae Government Warns That It Has yg er Teed ; ; a he om tat, Aron*o' Discovered Preparations for Tg Pepanan Arwald, TR: an Outbreak. ae geo ee MILAN, June 17,—Proclamations have or there yearlde am been posted throughout Austria an- Somes ik, ‘aay lost” Wood nouncing that the Government has dis. | Th © ‘vilinics at rwoe! 2d (imp). Covered preparations for an outbroak, | }10' dll Simm 111; $ 3, el Whieh wil be winpreseed by forve, | Pains ile rece having failed to fill, the mo Disorders are growing throughout Bo- hemia and the southern Slav states, it in said PARIS, June 17,—Four thousand | Austro-German troops are repressing disorders in the Lemberg district, ac- cording to neutral advices. | Food rioting in Vienna, ip the latter cliy. A He} ‘| upward; gelling; $860 added; one mite Budapest and | Prague is said to be serious, particulary BLAME JERSEY FREEHOLDERS FOR DEATHS IN ASYLUM , Essex County Board Charged With Misconduct in Delaying Boiler Contracts for Overbrook. ‘The trial of the Essex County Board of Freeholders of 1917 on charges of misconduct "in office began in the Quarters Sessions Court in Newark to- day. it is alleged deaths and illness were caused by cold in the Overbrook Insane Asylum last December and early in January when boilers failed to arrive as @ result of delayed Awarding of contracts. Prosecutor J. Henry Harrison an- nounced that Richard F. Mattia of Newark, a former member of the Board, one of the defendants, would testify for the State, Judge Martin granieé Prosecutor Harrison's request that Mattia have @ separate trial ta The men unde indictment are Ern- st P. Ryman, William Pennington, Mexander Clark and Thomas W. Smith of Newark; August L. Lacombe of Irvington, A. H. Harrison of Liv- irgeton and William Cardwell of East Drange. Clark is director of the present boar | FOOD.STRIKE AT NUREMBURS ns Arrange Protest Aw | Reduced Rations, | AMSTERDAM, June 17.—A political strike has been arranged at Nuremburg as a protest against the reduced bread | rations and the postponement and ham- |pering of Prussian Suffrage reform, ac- cording to reports received here. Tho Berliner Tageblatt says that the Soctal Democratic Party and the United Trade Unions of Nuremburg have issued warning against @ strike. pe | HUNGARY SEIZES NEW CROPS All Flour Mills Also Un ment Superviat AMSTERDAM, June, 17.—All new crops have bei ordered requisitioned by the Hungarian Government, accord- ing to a report from Budapest. All flour mills have been put under government supervision, —_——-—-——_ JAMAICA WINNERS. FIRST RAC! | Ger Govern- —Three-year-ol and and a sixteenth, —Sands of Pleasure, 118 (Lyke), 7 to 1, 5 to 2, 7 to 5 first: Magnette, 101 (Tmoise), 20 to 1, 8 to 1, 4 to 1, second; Royce Rools, 101 (iH. Erickson, 7 to 1, 6 tw 3, 6 to 5, thi ‘Time—1,47 34, Trial by Jury, Kohi- noor, Poacher, Kewple, O'Neil, Babette, Hubbub, Pullux, Minto 24, Bar of Phoenix also ran. SECOND ining cad an upward; claiming; a mile ai seventy yards.—Star Fit 105 (Lyke) 6 to 1, 27io'tr € to's, frat: Hew Wit, 110 Gelsey), 3 to 6 to 5 3 to 5. second: Say, 110 dhobiniony 20 tel stot sto a. at Miller, Fir- 1, third, Time, “e ing Lin ea Boru, K ‘ anda: derly, Daryish; Pull Golden Gate, Bur- ingame, Pierre a Feu, also ran, —_—— JAMAICA ENTRIES, RACE TRACK, JAMAICA, L. L., June 1.—The entries are as follows: for to-morrow's races ‘divided ami will be rum as the seo. | Gnd nd with races, me Lvprectice allowance claimed, Weather clesr | track iinet Wed ‘Three Germans at PETERSON GETS COMMAND | OF A FLYING SQUADRON; French War Cross Before Join- ing the American Force. PARIS, June 17.—Capt. David Me- Kelvy Peterson of Honesdale, Pa., have just been appointed to the rank of commander of a squadron of Amer- jean flying machines, Capt. Peterson brought down his) sixth German plane on May 21. He| was born at Honesdale, Pa., in 1894. In 1916 he went to France and joined the Lafayette Escadrilie last year, being later transferred to the American flying force. He has twice won the War Cros: FUND ASKED BY GREEL IS CUT DOWN $848,000 House ( Committee tee Approves Appro-| priation of $1,250,000 for In- formation Committee. WOSHINGTON, June 17.—An appro- priation of $1,250,000 for the Committee on Public Information was approved by the House Appropriations Committee to-day. This is $848,000 less than the amount asked for by George Creel, Chairman of the committee. It is stipulated that money derived from the operation of the motion picture activies of the com- mittee shall be paid into the Treasury to the credit of the appropriation. A report on the activities of the com- mittee shows that since its inception shortly after the entrance of the United States in the war, $1.6 has been spent out of the President's Emergency ‘uni propria- naldent Wil- rsonal war fund, fought by the President to insure cone tinuation of the hall Committee » House also p tion bill turning o KAHN PLEADS FOR WINES, Declares WASHINGTON, June 17.—Represen- tative Julius Kahn of California told the Senate Agriculture Committes to-day that enactment of prohibition lemisiation at this time would bankrupt California wine growers. Anticipating final ratification of the Federal Constituuonal Amerdment. Mr. Kahn said, many now are liquidating their property: have been told," he added, “that banka in California have been asked $10,000,000 in anticipa- ffonvof thie y To pass this legistation sim make every do! lar of this investment a total loss, be- sides making this vintage a total loss.” ALL UKRAINE. NE NEAR REVOLT. Ready to Rinse Agninat Germany, Petrograd Report WASHINGTO: June 17—A de- spateh reaching the State Department to-day from Stockholm quotes a t from Petrograd saying the whole of t Ukraine is on the eve of a revol against Germany, ORDER “COST PLU PLUS” INQUIRY. je Seeks Light on Was P iteering Charges. WASHINGTON, June 17.—Invostiga- tion of huge srofits alleged to have been taken from the Government under “eost plus” contracts for construction and war supplies was ordered to-day by the Senate Judiciary Committee. ———— Japanese Red Cross Mission Coming. LONDON, June 17.—-Prince Tyesato ugawa, at the head of a Japa: Rad iose Mission to Allied counten has left Japan for America, says @ message received here from Tokio. MARR ALSO PROMOTED Honesdale Aviator Twice Won the and Capt. Kenneth Marr of San Francisco KARL ROSNER’S WAR MOVIE; NEW EPISODES SHOWN DAILY In To-Day’s Run Kaiser Wilhelm Is Put in a Real Human Picture by His Press Agent. AMSTERDAM, June 17.—Emperor William is pictured by Karl Rosner, the correspondent of the Lokal Anseiger who is attached to the Emperor's suite, as‘acting as a Good Sa two British soldiers on May 28. While descending Mont Hiver His Majesty stopped alongside two unconscious Brit- ish soldiers. He called a medical at- tendant to administer brandy to the |men, to stay and bandage their wounds and to arrange for their transfer to the hospital After supper the Emperor's thoughts turned \o the British lads and Resner repress the monarch as saying? “While waging war we will also treat those wounded in battle so that whea this terrible business is over and men again extend ¢heir hand to one another we may be able to recall with a clear conscience and without remorse every iron and every act of these hard times.” MISSING BOY FOUND DEAD IN AN ELEVATOR SHAFT Lifeless Body of Employee of Silk Company Discovered by Fireman While Oiling Lift. When John Pearson, a fireman, stepped into the elevator shaft of the sixteen-story building at No, 404 Fourth Avenue to oil the elevators this morning he saw a dead body im the shaft. Me called the police and they removed the body of a sixteen-year-old |boy. who later was identified as Emmanuel Magoloffsky, employed as an errand boy by Bramson & Co., sill dealers, on tho fourth floor of *the building. Officials of the company said the boy started to deliver some bundles of silk last Wednesday and had not been seen since. His parents reported his disappearance to the police Thursday morning.* Coroner's phy the result of a ns said death was nt. But the police have not been able to determine how Magoloffsky fell into the shaft, whieh is equipped with an automatic device that closes the doors after the elevator leaves a floor. en GEN. WOOD SENT TO KANSAS. Reassigued to Camp Fanston by Department, WASHINGTON, June 17.—Revoea- tion of orders assigning Major Gen. Leonard Wood to command the West- ern Department and reassignment of the General to Camp Funston, Kan, was announced to-day by the War Departinent. When Gen. Wood recently was with- drawn from the division that he had trained at Camp Funston on the eve of its departure for France is ured y that he be given more active an he would find as a depart- mental commander. There have been intimations that the War Department contemplates giving Gen. Wood some assignment of reat import nd that he goes to Camp Funston only temporarily. DIED. TURNER.—CHARLES TURNER. Services at CAMPHELL'S FUNERAL CHURCH, Tuesday, 12.30 noon. WILFORD—EVA WILFORD, Services at CAMPBELL’S FUNBRAM CHURCH, Time later, _= SE PERSONALS. MILDEBERCER, re ow ule ed pour busted, pow ALICE |. ve the BUT A WHICH MAY ning Sun. For Candy as tions of the boys “Over There, Sun article: “It strikes some proceeding to supply grown Serif they were’ cklliren, but the at! Am k and are kept out of Chocolate Fund was A Rousing Special to Monday, CHOCOLATE govenze 8 sw) RETMRATS irprine by cite so be amon ‘Qf fresh fruit, com- Bian Blac k berriess| berries, Pineanples, "Ape! idee 9 | ernment, at the request of the Poe, has reprieved three Germans sentenced to death, being © of minor importance considered so valuable, you will un touc! in candycraft. Nou kaow the « The*crewde ‘Trade-Mark, BAR OF CHOCOLATE TO A BATTLE-TIRED SOLDIER IS NOT A MERE BIT OF CANDY, VALUABLE FOOD BRACES MEAN VICTORY.” This head- line appeared in large heweg a type in % recent interesting article ublished in the BN. Y the benefit of those who . Eve- or ts ri P| a aula hereles tt tether Eevee peo; mer with little cakes of Chocolate, when you consider that these EMERGENCY RATIONS, as they are called, are is use as long a formed, and why the thousands Cross of pounds we ship each week through the American Red is not enough to meet the demands made upon us."" Start Off the Week— June 17th tet hat det There's no ing, what delichttel eet tooth” when it crushes coutres: When the dav'enl is no diversified Here’ sa Tip Top Special for Tuesday, June 18th makin, our velvety ro? Listen: A centre of dotictows mn Bon Cream, and» tope hy torthie tittle candy: mi teers 19 FOUND Box ATLANTIC CITY STYL SALT WATER TAPTIES Stores: New York. Brooklyn, Newark, telephone directory, act locations | The specified welzht Includes the container. aritan toward’

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