The evening world. Newspaper, June 18, 1918, Page 2

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i { t ewer es ' ene ne NE EL Bite 2 OOTY SE IE REET THE BvENING WORLD, £U BBDAY, JUNE 16, 1918, ~ _ FOOD THE LURE OF EMPEROR TO INDUCE AUSTRIANS TO FIGHT as quality is concerned, these constitute the whole of ihe enzmy’s really | \ British, French and U. S. Soldiers efficient troops. The Austrians also have at least 7,500 guns of all calibres and their entire aviation forces in use, together with an abundance of war \4 material. \4 Yet they have only progressed at two points, where their gains are wery slight compared with the objectives assigned to them, . —_—- + FIGHTING LIMITED, VIENNA SAYS; : CLAIMS 12,000 PRISONERS Enemy Admits Italians Are Striking Back, but Declare’ Positions Are Still Being Held. [AUSTRIAN REPORT] VIENNA, June 18.—The Austrian War Office last night issued the “Fighting activity on tho Venetian mountain front was considerably Mmited yesterday, owing to the weather. Notwithstanding vidlent attacks ‘weat of the Brenta River, our Alpine regiments maintained the mountain positions they had taken on the previous day. “In the high region of Montello our divisions advanced to the west- | ward, fighting their way. “On both sides of the Oderzo-Troviso railway strong Italian counter | @ttacks broke down. ‘ ' | “Our forces wrested from the enemy more ground west of San Dona ; ‘and captured Capo Sile. “The number of prisoners brought in on the southwestern front has been increased to 12,000.” GLORY AND GOOD FOOD AWAIT, AUSTRIAN RULER TOLD ARMY “Abundant Spoils” Also Held Out as Incentive! to Go Into Battle—Prisoners Call It “Hunger Offensive.” | ITALIAN ARMY HEADQUAR- THIRG, June 18 (Associated Pross).— On Austrian prisoners have been found copies of a speech delivered by Emperor Charles shortly before the offensive was begun. “Before you is the enemy,” said the Emperor. “There glory awaits you, ‘and also honor, good food, abundant spoils, final peace. With the help of God, make the supreme sacrifice for your King, for liberty and for your beautiful fatherland.” ‘The “hunger offensive,” as the Aus- trian prisoners describe it, is being carried on with the greatest severity on the Piave front, where it in ep- parent the Austrians have massed large bodies of troops. In the moun- tain rqgions to the north the fighting for the present is Hmited to local at- tacks and counter-attacks, | The enemy ts making desperate ef- forts to retain the positions he ob- tained during the initial stage of the | offensive on the western bank of the | Piave at the points where he still has | & footing acros the river. ‘These op- | erations are costing him heavily. Nervesa zone, where the river) emerges from the Alps to the plain, and in the region of Fagarr, miaway| between the Alps and the sea. ‘There is no question that the spirit of the Italian troops is excellent. Nevertheless the general situation is regarded as sotious, in view of the fact that the Austrians, #o it is stated, have brought into action all their available forces in the hope of break- ing through the Italian lines and scor- ing such @ decisive victory as to put Italy out of the war. | THOUSANDS OF AUSTRIAN DEAD STREW THE BATTLEFIELDS Three Austro-Hungarian Field Armies Oper-| ating; Only One Allied Aviator Lost—Forty- four Enemy Machines Brought Down. ‘ PARIS, June 18.—An official report mulate along the Piave, but the ob- Get Ch ummy Over Coney ’sHotCorn 646-44, bane PRISONERS TAKEN BY FRENCH IN COMBAT SOUTH OF AISNE SEVEN OFFICERS. USTED Germans Also Captured in Patrol Engage- ments Between the Ourcq and Marne Rivers. [FRENCH REPORT] PARIS, June 18.—In a local operation south of ihe Aisne !ast night Fierce fighting is taking place in the | the French took 100 prisoners. It is announced officially that between the j Ourog and the Marne prisoners were taken in patrol encounters. The text of the War Office statement is as follows: “South of the Aisne the French carried out su tions south of Ambleny and east of Montgobert, taking 100 prisoners, in- cluding two officers, “Between the Ourcq and the Marne French patrols took prisoners. Elsewhere the night was calm.” esa LESS Oe eran Haig’s Troops Repulse Raiders in the Somme GERMAN ARTILLERY ACTIVE ON THE FRONT BELOW ALBERT Salient and Make Raids Themselves. [BRITISH REPORT] LONDON, June 18.—The German artillery was more active than} usual last night along the Ancre River, south of Albert and west of Serre, ement issued by the War Office to-day “A hostile raiding party was repulsed by us last night southeast of | Other prisoners and a} according to the Villers-Bretonneux, We secured few prisoners. cvessful local opera- LOSS BY GERMANS _|KAISER STAMPS IN LATEST DRIVE "MADE IN GERMANY" TOTALLED 80,000, ON ALL MORALITY an | Killed, Wounded or Captured Between Montdidier and Noy- | on, Says Andre Tardieu. mete Fighting Anglo-Saxon Idolatry of Mammon, He Solemnly Proclaims. | PARIS, June 12—Kighty thousand (Germans were killed, wounded or made prisoner during the offensive between Montdidier and Noyon, Capt. Andre Tardieu, who accompanied Premier Clamanncas ta the front on | Sunday, told Marcel Hutin, editor of the Echo de Paris, upon his return | AMSTERDAM, June 18—The war !s not @ matter of a strategic campaign, but « struggle of two world views wrestling with one another, Emperor celebration of the anniversary of his Accession at German Main Headquar- ters. “Either German principles of right, freedom, honor and morality must be “This is a figure which shoul OARS Ty ha ahled, “Oe AMORALON even Ludendorff reflect," he said. | principies, with their idolatry of mam. “One cannot insist enough upon the; mon, must be victorious. exceptional importance of the results|. The Anglo-Saxons, he asserted, obtained by the counter-attacks of |Simed at making the peoples of the world work as slaves for the Angto- divisions under Gen. Mangin against | S00 Tie ate, and such & matter the right flank of Gen, von Hutier’s | conid not be decided in days or weeks, armies,” he continued, “This mag-/| or even in a year. nificent operation has nailed the en-| ‘The Emperor emphasized that from emy to the spot and completcly|the first he had realized the trials of b|checked the advance toward Com-| war would be great. The first out- | piegne. German officers who were | preak of enthusiasm had not deceived | made prisoner do not attempt to hide | him, Great Britain's intervention had P| their chagrin at their inability to} meant a world struggle, whether he reach Compiegne, which they admit desired it or not. was their objective.” He said he was thankful that Field | Premier Clemenceau contented him- Marshal von Hindenburg and Gen. | self by remarking: “I am completely | Ludendorft had been placed at his side fmatistied.” as counsellors. Drinking to the health of the army and its leaders, the Em- peror said: “The German people and army in- BY COURTS MARTIAL "sw ius te Sa |1ook up to you with gratitude, Every | _... | man out there knows what he is fight- | Capt. Spang Canheins of Selling | ing for, the enemy himself admits that, | Empty. Flour Sacks; Four and in consequence we shall gain vic- | to Paris. eee 0 030064 missal of seven officers from the service | as @ result of courts martial was an- nounced by the War Department to-day, | ‘¥-Six years of profitable but hard The officers are: Capt. Frederick C. Spang, master Reserve Corps; Vivian B, Waddell, Corps; Second Lieut. 3 be regarded as successful in a poiiti- cal respect and bad brought dis- appointments.” His interests had been centred in} the work connected with the develop- Quarter- First Lieut. Reserve B. Adams, Carroll D. Signal Re- Infantry Paul | 309th Infantry; First Lieut | Winslow, aviation section, | serve Corps; Second Lieut. Stanley H, Yeager, Infantry Reserve Corps; Second Lieut. Carroll D, Martin, 80th Field Ar- tillery; Second Lieut. Charles B. Up- son, 359th Infantry. Capt. Spang was found guilty at Camp Travis, Texas, of selling thou- | Sands of empty flour sacks, the property of the United States, to Gan Antonio finns. Winslow, Adams, found guilty of |bad been entrusted tc aim, he sald. Now, in time of war. he could not better celebrate the dav than under | and his faithful, highty gifted Gene- rals and General Staff. The Emperor continued: Yeager and Mart war comrades gradually passed away, ing intoxicat on duty. Up and Waddel| | 24 4s the German horizon gradually | were dismissed for conduct unbecoming | darkened many a German, and not an office. AMERICANS SPOIL PLANS OF GERMAN STRATEGISTS right m@n at our side, not been disappointed, “In Your Excellency and in you, Gen, Ludendorff, Heaven bestowed upon the German Empire and the William declared on Saturday at the, The Emperor referred to the period | of peace which he described as “twen-. | work, though they could not always ment of the army and the effort to maintain it at the level at which 7 BOMBED FROM THE AR the same roof with the Field Marshal | “In peace time in the preparation of my army for war my grandfather's) re ed netw the jeast I, hoped with assurance that | the God would in this danger place the|in the Chasse Basin, Our hupe hav |tion, a WOMAN'S TIP JAILS THREE, ONE HAVING Two Trunks Full of War Work Blue-Prints Found in Prisoner’s Room. What is believed to have been a Plot to steal plans of machine guns, rifles, cannon and other ordnance be- ing manufactured in the United States, transport them to Mexico and then dispose of them to the German Government was broken up here to- day, it was stated, in thé arrest of three men, who had blueprints taken from factories in several sections of the country. They had worked in factories at Hartford, Conn.; Detroit and in New Jersey, Two trunks full ‘of plans and blueprints were found in the rooms of one of the prisoners. Gustav L. Lindquist, alias George Colbie, a draughtsman, and Leo Burt, an engineer, living at No. 76 West Mth Street,"were charged with espion- age, and Ernest Frank, alias Franz Strohmier, with being an alien enemy and having @ revolver in his posses- sion. | Lindquist, who was born in Minne- sota, it is charged, ran away with a young married woman of Hartford, and deserted her in Detroit, She fol- lowed him to Bridgeport, New York and Worcester, Mass, She was brought here this afternoon from the latter place and told the police he had said to her he was going to take his plans to Mexico and from there to Berlin. HEAVY GUN PLAN LOST BRIDAL RING AND OWNER’S TEARS ncaa Great Crowd Gathers. and Gang Works Three Hours to Recover Gold Circlet, She was not pretty, nor very young, nor particularly well dressed, but Broadway was hers to command this morning—from the traffic cops t® am able representative of the American Navy. All she did was cry. Just sat on the curdstone at 38th Street and let Bot tears fall into the gutter. First one man stopped and then another and then a group and then a crowd, Finally came Chief Petty Officer L. R. Darling who had sense enough to inquire what the trouble waa Trouble enough. She had dropped her wedding ring and she was sure it had rolled into the sewer. ‘Well, then, let's get it,” Darling. ‘The traffic cops came and sympa- thised and cleared a circle around the manhole. The crowd grew until it reached almost from wall to wall, be« cause the story had been passed about. From a block away Darling re~ cruited a gang of sewer workers with buckets and told them that America expected every man to do his duty. They cheered. And they went to work, Bucketful after bucketful was spilled on the Broadway pavement and the contents examined minutely. Strohmier, the police say, confessed complicity in the plang of the others. It was indirectly through the woman in the case that the men were aad? tory—the victory of the German/caught. She told her story to three; Others of Intoxication. | standpoint, That ts whet is in ques-| women living in the house where WASHINGTON, June 18.—The dis-) tion.” Burt roomed, and they informed the| police. Word was sent to Worcester | ast night to apprehend the woman, and when Chief Hannibal Hamlin went to her home he found there her husband, who is said to be a deserter |from the army. | The blueprint of the Browning gun |was for one of the latest type of | water-cooled machines, “TEEBRUGGE AND OSTEND Great Damage Done by 24 Tons of | Explosives, Says Admir- | alty Report. 18.—Extensive dam- British seaplanes in n June 13 and June | 16, acording to an official statement is- sued by the Admiralty to-day “Good results were says | statement, “and hits were observed | the railway sta- the docks, the Leopold Basin, the | erick battery and the lock gates at | |Ostend, Fire was started in buildings | at the junction of the canal and the| Leopold Basin. | LONDON, age was done June by obtaine \Fr | woman had to go hom They worked for an hour, and t¢ to take care of her baby, She was still crying, but Darling got a slip of paper with |her address—Mrs, Crepeau, No, 447 | West 40th Street. Under Darling’s command the men | kept on working for two hours more. At last the ring wi found. Darling took it home to her in a taxicab. VIENNA DENIES REPORT THAT BERLIN ORDERED DRIVE Austrian Headquarters Said to Be Located North of Asiago Plateau. GENEVA, June 18.—Vienna newspe- ‘pers deny that Berlin ordered the Italian offensive. They declare that the Austrian staff displayed great foresight in its preparations for the drive and should have the entire credit. ‘The newspapers reveal that Austrian headquarters is located just north of the Asiago plateau Y. M. C. A. HUT FOR HOBOKEN Former Gov. Fielder n Permis- sion to Build in Hudson Square Park. James F. Fielder, former Governor of New Jersey, and now Chairman of the Building Committee of the National War Council of the Y. M. C. A. to-day BLOCK BROADWAY \ yy’ , } ded by the | Jectives which th t i G Al and staff h Bursts were also observed on the| received permiasion from the Hoboken femued in Rome and forwarded by the ar iat SReeay WSs tO: 7eRcn ; : pes tis ¢ z ival in Euro ith |German Army staff men who are! Mole at Zeabrugge ear the lock | city authorities to build a $54,000 ¥, ? Havas Agency says only one Allied | “'e yet far away.” machine gun were taken by us in successful raids southwest of Albert Amival: tp Buroe Interteres With |culled upon in these great times Pad we weathedy ‘ante eere soon on{G. A, ‘hut’, in Hudson. Square Faw French troops have played a mag-| ir the neighborhood of Moyenneville (on the northern side of the Somme| Programme of Writers for In- | iead the German peopie in arms in| the northeast quay, alongside the west | Hobniven, 4 In taking for, the perm ; aviator bas been lost during te | vicont part in stemming the Austrian | - lient) and in patrol encounters east of the Nieppe Forest (on th fluencing Public Opinion. | the ‘night toliver and with its help to| basin om the northera floating wet Chief port, of. embarkation” for the t i t Austrian offensive, while forty-four | offensive, according to the Italian alient) and in pa counte ppe Forest (on the west- BETON ECU Rn iE ie Keaeee P tO) dock, on the east side of the dock and| American army. is to be ; enemy machines have been, brought 4 . Command, says a despatch from |e side of the Flanders battle area). as|Temoved at the oscil between the north and east quays, * | “ oti ; |to the State Department to-day says | well be ak the: BOUEN end. ob ihe. pant ‘ down. Rome, Despate heavy attacks the | The hostile artillery was more active than usual last night in the| that the Berliner Tageblatt in ite tenue| WINS ALDERMANIC SEAT, | Phi. ant Sviiwey at ‘Thourout wea olzO “In artillery and airplanes Austria r tost but four men, while they) Ancre Valley and south of Albert. also hit “| accomplished numerous unusual feats, It also showed some activity west of including the capture of 163 Austrians by twelve Grenadiers. of June 10 quoted a German General as saying that the American military ae- tivity was very embarrassing to Ger Dempsey, Democrat Republican, on Re bombs | TILSON—Suddenly, Jone 16, FRODER. ¢-| ICK R. TILSON, beloved wop of James and Ida Tilson, early twenty-four tons of were dropped. and all the machines turned with the exception of one. is using all her available resourci says the official note. ‘Not less than Serre.” an By a majority vote the Board of Al-| “Bombs were dropped on an enemy| “Services at bis late residencé, 2376 ‘ litary strat and military writers, esse e e 4 7,800 cannon of all calibres have been| ‘That the French are holding now | ee |e 1 Ma not colocide with the German {dermen this afternoon declared that| vessel. During the same period, not-| watton av.. Bronx, Tuesday, June 28, brought into action. Three Austro-| positions ix indicated, the despatch | wvogramime for influencing opinion at|lderman W. W. Colne's seat in that| Aerial fleet was active in home waters | ® ®. M. Interment Greenwood, Hungarian armies under the com-|adds, by the ytatement that their ar. | Moms, boty belongs rightfully to John 1.|in anti-submarine escorting and in air- |TURNER.—CHARLES TURNER, ar. . ° trol. Hostile. sub ex were c cLL'S FONERA mand of Field Marshal Borcevic aro] tillery 01 the Asiago Plateau w ee Dempasy, i aces i GER gcigimare ayer eee | euunen, FP esse te edi: » engaged in fighting desperately with| master of the Austrian batts Colne, a Republican, who was a candi airships, which also attacked err iithey taken, 4 mtteries and | | date for re-election from the Forty-| mines and destroyed them.» All _ == — ; epormous military m decimated the Austrian infantry |siath District, Brooklyn, last November, | neutral shipping was also conveyed by PERSONALS. i : “Ordered to advance at any cost,| when attacked BY FALL IN MISSISSIPPI sia ayparetiy saccosatul on the face of | te serial dest ‘ | without thought of blood wacrifices,) ‘That the Austrians, after three hae rns and received a certificate = > # sie Paaticrebane me st oi; ae. BiB the Austro-Hungarian regiments|days of furious fighting, hav: Mt election. Since then he has retained | 1800 State Grammar School Gradn- CARL H) SCHULTS, ; i readily obey. Thousands of corpses| gained any really jr pacy os Migg apd Machine Plunges 100 Feet to Earth| hs, seat in ghe board: ndampney. 8 pee acd a eres mocra NY, N. ¥., June 18.—Gov, Whit- ‘ { etrew the ROLUAgIeS ovarigokine ose confirms the newspapers in their and Officer and His Companion on Prieta and Elections recanvassed | 11 “made known to-day that approxi-| LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. mountainous ja aceu-| opinion that the offensive has faited. * Meet Instant Death, The vote on the unseating of Coine|mately 1,500 graduates of grammar | LOST -Large eather orig e : vias _— >————__— was 38 for and 13 against. The seven | schools of the State have been inducted to ommer Paner rt ae ATE 43 iP yaaa the captors t p CLARKSDALE, Miss. June 18.—| Socialists asked to be excused from|into Federal rallllary through | room 1106_ 2 nd b 4 “aptors to verify whether he is lane 3 ee F , ‘ voting. special training schools and that the op- I i GERMANS PRY INTO IIikely ta crete: a castul peice cee National Guardsmen From|Bonar Law Asks $2,500,000,- Laie BE pte haere Py —$<——— portunity. waa still open for others’ to lost, cacy «ud , 3 s ’ of in- 4 ri rp paces py Serr 1 p ackaon, | have the benefits of sp: instruction. 1 . ‘ jforuation, in which cage there iaem.| Wisconsin and Michigan 000 Credit lo Run Govern- | y4isa,, were killed when the airplane | JAMAICA WINNERS, - — - . |Ployed for him a special censor w a : pe ut s —— . ® special censor who Fighting in Alsace ment Through Augu in which they were flying from Park Peay ie engi ; : f / st. | vinst RABE ST way ear-0188: eth. | ———————— cle Fred and others live. | aaa Bhelby, Miss. fell from a height of 106 (Kelsay), 9 to 8 an ; GTON, June 18. ationa! | : : 3 1 iat Sis first; Dancing Garnival, 103 yet Matching correspondence prt- |W ASHINGTON National! LONDON, June —18.—-Chancellor) j99 geet here yesterday (Willa)! 6to 1, 2 to 1 and even, second: | ate codes, if the © Used » soon |(uard troops from Wisconsin and | pona ’ ‘odue) ote Dr, Rae, 107 (Mergler), 8 to}, 3'to 1 and seceaieg es Oe ee Mich : the f American sol 3 : ny en “y ME y bh in : se Wie ein ime, 4.04 hi Frm ie 4 chigan are (he first American sol- leredit for €500,000,000 ($2,500,000,000) 1D | Hail Embargoes Modified to Facitt-|Armant, Umbala, Frank Shannon, Un- clally trained spies are so w ittle. Bessie, Miss Leola, | purge tally trained spice are sont to ldiers to Aight on Gerina the House of Commons this afternoon tate Wool Movement, MN ate coke Surplice, Piuvic Dee ace nn Prisoners, Often these | ‘This official announcement by the |declared that the Govemment’s daily| WASHINGTON, June 18. —M also ran, | Tene Mah, | "Pies are Aisatians pr Germans wh« t t railroad embargoes where nece -Three-year-olds and ;, Ij i >] War Department to-day revealed the [expenditure for the curren er | tlon of ral Three-y J ong rend ana inriaana who |war Dupartment to-dsy rovtaled the Jaspenditure for the current quartr | ‘ln of ralraed cnbareins whore ne Taree yourlds | Special for Wednesday, June 19th PARIS, June 18.—Families in Allied | pecially used for F 1 Naira ting In | in £6,848,000 ($3 000) rticularly to Philudetphia, Baltimore yke), 17 to 10, 7 to 10, 1 Tag : = ers sed for French lower class | Aixace. Mr. Bonar Law said that the pres- | BY aN aie 7 at, Wood Violet, ‘(Walls), ARSORTIA WALD GOODIE —Known inmost, con{eetic and eariuale countries, whether in Burope or| prisoners, whose confidence is won Wisconsin-Michigun troopslent vote, whioh would bring the total] o™ York and New un inaniufad wo te 1 second: Lighding ge ty presenti ia se ae ee c oops Jent vote, which would bring the to ring oan us announced to-day | (inp.), 91 ¢ ‘ i tot, bnfectia America, cannot be too careful in| »Y the sj disparagement of the} make up the 32d Divi Wiley \ett war. credit to @TAGOONOW, would he Lacriniolpr eA pesto liaal 7 ana. Time. Preston Lynn, Kl: i leading Sheelatin 0 19¢ writing to relatives detained to Ger- | Germans is country under command of Major | cover expenditures until the end of — | german ees, Goes Bieta My bua ad man prison camps. The source of | HIT aati n, William G. Haan, and it is as- | aspunt Seaala, PAIRINGS, Melt ate oe . | gleaning useful information has been BY AUTO, GETS $26,500, | suined that he is still in command The debt due Great Britain from Camp Devem | Navy Department Has Not Heard of and organised with —e in and two. repluc “units ot] ler Allies ix 370,000,000, Mr, Bonar| AYHR, Mass, June 18—Frank 1: U Boat Héing Sunk. no we whi seit’ our edie ‘oid ute characteristic thoroughness by t©| Movie Actress Winn Verdict Agatnat| int division were ‘teamer| Law sath, while the Dominions owe |Paynton of Glendale, N. Y.. a private | WASHINGTON, June 18.—The Navy Ses Waneenta, Sune 1 Si na (ra dud Bute Germans Importer Who Owned Car, |Tuscania when it was sunk off the] gone 900,000 e in the National Army, killed himself by | Department declared to-day it had no | | centers of richest aera Details of this organization pub-| 4 verdict of g26.p00 ¢ : , | coast of Ireland last February. It ha |shooting at Camp Devens to-day. | confirmation of reports brought in by dc Gash he the tndeneadans of Patde- | juries f bi 9 for pe sone ine | been known for seve fuys that An analysis of the expenditures for) yi, returned yesterday after a brief passengers aboard 6 liner, that an Amer, q #n automobile accident was] American troops were opera on | sixty-nine days, endin e d ew hours la ibmarine had sun en Calais prove that even the appar-) won in tl Ae COURT tasday Be | Petes Munna eal war’ oie t aln faye naling June 8. maid | eave and was & few hou tat e- | ican submarine had sunk ep enemy ay ently most innocent news, by moaas | Hmma RA a moving picture} ynits had been the | Bonar Law, showed that while] porting, but no actic i o Navy officials said) go fur as they yer ey a 1 he estimated expenditures for the|templated by the camp authorit know. no UC boat raiders operating on VAN CRYSTAL i of careful deduction, resulis in most | &°'r Iswac N », silk im- | enemy wis the annou per riod RRA ha " aS ONT AAO) GE oe his side have been sunk OFS — The BLOCKS—A little chess | useful Information for the enemy, — | Herter: of No \ Street mitted 1h Ge SOUR Ary, Che ee os ian, SAR ORNS Oe | sail inin sweet of Candy Jewels, Intros | Phrases such as “Your br others | 5 14s Appleton, wh tthe Hotel a an Pathe | AELMAL SmpABAIUFSR DAG ORen | ne period under review, which was, Lawyer Awarded ) im Suit heed Of the i icing (A assortment of have joined the heavy artiilery,”) “Uren & was struck | in the t 400,000, ‘£ 16,160,000, Awainat Cream that ever he inted bloek: i * e ar} GOW" by the Mendelsohn car on last] y, was a 6 t P Regarding loans to great Brital Over the period of sixty-nine days ALBANY, June 18.—Howard Streiler te awhet tooth, re Pi olor j ‘Your brother's regiment is near) Now Year's } Miss Appleton spent | yate J. W ton, who dix. | Allies and Dominions, Mr, Bonar Law {ending with June § there was “a! 4 petroit lawyer, was awarded $20,000 fish, treme sity of delistene ss STE i Aust Jane," “Our overseas friends| ton wecks in the hospital following the | tinction of DeinK firs the | said tt waa impossible to maxe any {diminution of expenses before the on, /* Deirel: lanyen wet cto ale an lasting” il visited Uncle Fred,” are just us en- | acids 1 compelied to make | American forees t ios accurate estimate for ihe Anansial {le or four of the fighting forces | tg texchusette, bs a Jury. in Supreme S40! 39c } fe | datiy reatmen \iman soll he d k over a a . MaAVY, lions and the air. | XM beat d to recover f ) lightening to the enemy as to the | dsjly \la) (OF treatment, | |man wall) Aluace Just north | Year but said that, as a matter of ophis diminution amounted to £15,. | COUrE here, | Sineiter euedt te recover, " N eapuve. Every prisoner is obliged to Gaveran's pirt, was for $100,000 dam= | of the Swiss bordes only a short time! fact, there was & reduction under this 200,000, of which £13.500,000 was on Mu\utnt by’ stockholders of the Ameri+ q @ign the letters he receives, enabliag “* | ago. — head as compared to the extimate for the Admiralty account san Ventilating Company. 5

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