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: ‘ bes % a si ’ Also Pierce German Trenches on Marne Front—| /soktlers who had been buried in a dugout by enemyyshell fire and: was! ee a a the Channel ports to the junction wit the, French amd American troops southeast of Amiens. The enemy is trying hard to penetsate (he Allied: air defenses but 1s relentlessly driven badk or shot down. ea r ———— FRENCH ADVANCE THEIR LINES NORTHWEST OF MONTDIDIER Prisoners Taken in Both Raids. | [FRENCH REPORT] PARIS, June 28,—The text of the War Office statement’ to-day is 25) follows: fish airmen Wood and capiured 100 prisoners. tae “Between the Marne and the Ourcg asiocal operation was carried out jpg, south ef Damwnard.and the Freach tookawenty-two, prisoners, Thernight} ‘wascatm on the restof the front.” , OFPECIAL BRITISH REPORT. q LONDON, June 28.—Following is thetreport issued to-day by th - War Office: “With the “Our day Woedoesday and “Nerthwest of Montdidier the Brenchaadvanced their/limes imeSenecat bothers were driven down out of con- improvement weather more photographic and ar- | (, tiery observation work was accom. | plished than has been possible for some time,” the statement said. bombing of BRITISH AVIATORS BOLSHEVIK! JOM BRINGDOWNNINE | GERMANY IN PACT GERMAN PLANES TO CRUSH POLAND \Drop More Than 30 Tons of Russian Government Pledged +Bombs at Saarbrucken, Lud- | to Recognize Teuton Suprem- | | weigshafen and Other Points. | ‘a | Sairplancs were brought down by Brit two acy and Oppose Allies, | LONDON, June 28.—Beven German| LONDON, June 2%.—Germany and the Russian Bolshevik Government, in a secret convention regarding the future of Poland, have ‘virtually it was offictally announced to- | agreed to co-operate in crushing Polish Two British machines are miss- | P@tlonalist aspirations. Details of {the treaty have been printed in the the machines | dropped fourteen and ao half tons of explosives on enemy railway stations, “A raid attempted by the enemy Wednesday night againstione of UN gramunition dumps, transports and posts in the neighborhood of Moyenneville, south “with fess, & party of-our troops carried outa successful daytigtt raid casualties. “During the night our own and the enemy's astillory was active the neigtiborhood of Rossignol Wood, southeast of Gommecourt. Casual4 gsarprucken ties were inflicted wpom the enemy in this neighbrhood by-our patrols.” | Boichen. AMERICAN TROOPS HALT ATTEMPTED RAIDS IN VOSGES Pershing Announces Awarding of Distinguish * Service Cross to Private, Killed in Action. [AMERICAN REPORT] * WASHINGTON, June 28.—The following communique from: Gen. Pershing was made public to-day “Section A—aside from the repulse of hostile parties which al- tempted to raid our pasitions in the Vosges there is nothing to report, “Section B—Tht Commander in Chief has awarded the Distmguished | chemical returned dromea age wan the factories and railway sidings of Arras, was repulsed? billets, and on the docks at Bruges. “On the night of June 26-27 opera- tions continued and sixteen tons of <terday near Mevigourt. i captured a few prisoners without suffering yomns were dropped on various tar- | gets, Our airplanes attacked the works at Ludwoigshafen, | t | and the airdrome at| on an June Several bombs fell [active furnace at Saarbrucken, | Bolchen two hangars were set on fire All our machines returned safely. “Ong of our machines which was) ang revolutionary clubs in Poland yesterday reported missing has since | through agitators known to the Ger- FOUR KILLED, ELEVEN INJ IN SAARBRUCKEN RAID. AMSTHRDAM, persons were killed and according to; day, At “The enemy bombed one of our alr uring the night. No ne to our airpl dam URED Service Cross to Private Joseph Leitzan, Field Artillery, deceased, for the | VESSFL IS SUNK following act of guftantry: “At Coullemelle, France, on April 27, 1948, under a heavy bombardment, volumiarity went to the assistance of other killed while engaged'in this heroic action.’” | GERMANS TAKEN BY AMERICANS - REVEAL PLANS OF HINDENBURG Big Drive Expected to Be Against the British) Line Above Montdidier on the American Front. WITH THE AMERICAN ARMIES IN FRANCE, June 28.—Valu-| able information concerning Germany's future military plans has been given to Intelligence Officers of the American Expeditionary Force by | German prisoners captured in Tuesday night's battle for Belleau Wood. | Field Marshal von Hindenburg’s next offensive—the greatest of the! whole war and the one on which he banks everything to win a “victory | When the q by the sword” for Germany—is scheduled to begin in August. The dre is expected to centre against the British line, with the apex of the German attacking wedge in the Montdidier-Noyon sector, where masses of American troops are in the line. “~The prisoners assert Hindenburg will throw all his man-power into the drive. Every reserve is being trained for the offensive. German soi- dlers have been told the attack will end the war. ‘There being to jueerly and to submarines | erad the food situation is desperate, 120 miles south of locland in latitude |q despatch by way of Copemhagen 61-30 north, 17-46 west The mother ship was built of two tanks 100 feet long fer lowering and raising submarines out of the water for urgeat repal work, agcording Capt "1 ‘Dae prinaners assort the plan for the offensive is known as “Himden-| seen an American boat. ‘Dars's Pien.” and that 00 secret is being made of the preparations be- ‘hind the German lines. ‘The Germans declared July would bring winor offcasives, one of which would have for its object the captare of Rheims, te erésr te strengthen the Gorman Line, °"" it is assorted by the captives that Hindenburg bas Mfty picked di- MAIL TUBES TO STAY BY ORDER OF CONGRESS BY RELEF SHP Craft Capable of Repairing | Raiders at Sea Found Aban- doned Off Iceland. AN ATLANTIC PORT, Jane 28.— | Flour Sells for $150 a Barrel and Capt. Holmes of the Belgian ship Gothiand, arriving here to-~ reported having sighted und sunk a derelict mother boat relief y constructed |!2 Suppressing them, Holmes, constructed boat) tremely serious and the supply of was sighted he said he continued in! grain far below the minimum, his course and passed close to her. | Indication of aboanl, he ordered a boat lowered and went aboard with members of his lite orew A thorough search was made, put the identity of the ship could not be emtablished. Tiere were papers, how- ever, that indiouted she might have Weistons of reserves prepared for the attack, They say the Gorman High | Correction of Error in House Vote Cammand hopes to smash the British and French Armies defore the American strength can become the decisive factor in the war. All balicrs the war will ead in three months. and declare the Americans cannot win ft. Agures 7 adopted WOMEN AND CLOTHES IN WAR TIME By MRS. VERNON CASTLE Widow of the famous dancer and daring aviator, most copied of any living woman in the matter of et et be ee: in ual taste as practised by French women, and tells of Mrs. Castle's disapproval of conventional mourning and SERIES BEGINS IN The Evening World To-Morrow} * toa, Philadel, tons under and returo driving WASHINGTON, June 2%. of an error to-day in yesterday's House vote on the pneumatic showed that advooates of the tube sys tem bad won by the vote of 150 to 149 ‘Tre vote as showed that they had lost by the sam: announced postal Correction tubes yesterday ction is final, the Senate having the report Wednesday vides that ooatracts for continuing the tubes ta New York City, Brooklyn, Bos- | !a#t week at the offices of the Board It pro- Chicago and Bt. Louis reliway etations. eae WAR ON GREECE URGED, Belgeria Wants Deciaration by Central AMSTERDAM, June 25.-Buigaria is @emanding that Germany and Austria. Hungary Geclare war on Greece, the Kreus Zeitung —_—_—___ Avrendutans Reported Driv: tes, the Totersia phia, be renewed UH) March 4 next, and ts meantime te Commission is authorised to oF abolish them the te the automabile method of mail from ost OMices to the Armenian forces at Erivan on Caucasus from have advanced and bor newspaper The Nation's Voice of, racow, Galicia, according to a de- spatch to the Times from Milan. The Bolshevik Government pledged itself @0 recognize Austro-German hegemony in Poland and to aid in defending {t against the former alites | of Russia, ' The Cracow paper describes the) treaty as a “scandalous document, | showing the treachery of the Boishe- vikt and the baseness of the Ger- "4 Lito | mana, It gives the gist of the eight] A- M©CLINSTOGER. articles of the agreement, as follow: Firet—The Polish conducted by German: Second—The Russian Government pledges itself not to interfere with the Organization of Poland. ! Third—The may keep in touch with democratic policy shall be! y. man Information Bureau, Fourth—The sending of agitators! iq circulation, says the Echo Belge,|Camp Dix be | that an epidemic of typhoid is raging sleeping draught might haye indicated to Germany and Austria shall ‘suspended by the Russian Govern ment \ Fifth—Russia shall exercise strict | Sixth—Russta shall consider viola- tion of the frontiors of Lithuania and, the Ukraine by Polish troops as a declaration of war on Germany and Austria-Hungary and sham aid in crushing such troops, Seventh — Russia shall prevent | Russian citizens from investing thelr own, or French, British or American capital in any industrial ondertaking jin Poland. hth—Russia pledges itself to recognize the eventual new state of | things to be created by Germany and | | Austria in Poland and to defea@ it) against Russia's former Allies, BOLSHEVIKI USE GUNS ON PETROGRAD FOOD RIOTERS Nation Faces Menacing Hunger Situation, WASHINGTON, June 28.—In Pet- reports. Riots occur every day and the Bolsheviki employ machine guns Flour from which black bread is made is selling for $150 a barrel in | Moscow, State Department advices to-day report the food situation ex- pl ss Bb dliaabali |U, S. DRUG AUCTION HALTED On the petition of former Comptrel- ler Herman A. Metz, Judge Jullus M. Mayer to-day stopped United States Marshal Thomas D. McCarthy from selling at auction 1,247 tubes of \neo- salvarsan, Metz, who is President of the Farb- werke Hoecheste Company of No. 122 Hudson Street, contends that wu capyraes trade name he controls sole sale privileges in North and South America ‘of neosalvarsan, e order staying the sale until July 12 was made returnable on July 3, and then the legal aspects of the controversy will be passed on_by Judge Mayer, The drug was smuggied into the country by an Australian millionaire nemed Lammers. Mets asks that it be turned over to his company at the mar- ket price, which has risen fram §2.'50 to $26 @ tube owing to the ban on im- portations | — | PUPILS EAGER TO WORK. Closing ef Schoel, Man: Apply for Per A daily average of 200 children, boys | and girls, between the ages of fourteen snd sixteen, have applied during the jof Health for working permits, With the closing of school to-day the number r licants was greatly tnereased and children lined the front of the health office, r turn, mated that 500 certifioat would be issued to-day. The child) are first submitted to a physical ex amination by Josephine Baker «nd then permits are issued by Regis- ter of Records Dr, William H. Guilfoy. i—a_an NEW HOSPITAL IN ENGLAND. stream of kat of Barem Astor's Daughter for American OMvers. LONDON, June 28.—A new branch of American Red Cross work in Great Britain was tnaugurated by the open- ing to-day at Lingfield, Surrey, south of lomion, of a conve! American officers, American Red Convalescent No. 1." It ts located in the coun Mrs. H. Hi. Spender-Clay, ot Baron William Waldorf As- donated It to the Red Cross, building will accommatate 100 Twelve convalescent Amert- nts, ‘“"HE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1918. O MAKE FIRST ATTACKS IN NEW DRIVE wages an FEE. WOUNDED OFFICER 24SAILORS ADRIFT We cumaren SUE ENDS HS LIFE AS EIGHT DAYS AFTER RUMORS OF TYPHOID IN GERMAN CAMPS Northern France Said to Be Affected. AMSTERDAM, June 3%—Rumors are among the German soldiers in northern France. veral units are reported to have had virtually their entire nerson: 28.—Four | vigilance over Polish national groups | ®%! affected with thin dinease twelve in-|s0 as to prevent them from enlisting | | jured in the Allied air raid over in the Russian Territorial Army. | | Smarbrucken, Tuesday, aa Bertin despatch t piace 1U BOAT ‘MOTHER condition, together with the Josses sustained by the enemy tn the | Said, according to this! last offensive, | account, to be responstble for the delay im resuming the offensive It was reported yesterday that mai German troops were suffering from in- fluenza. THIRTY U.S AMBULANCE UNITS ARRIVE IN ITAL Received by a Deputy on Behalf of the Government — Arouse Great Enthusiasm. ROME, Thursday, Juné 27.—Thirty ambulance unite of the United States Army have arrived in Italy ‘They were received by Deputy Romeo Gailenga-Stuart on behalf of the Gov- ernment and by Col. M, K. Buckley, American military attache, for the American Embassy, Other notables und representatives of the focal authorities also were present to greet the arrivals, whore appearance created a scene of enthusiasm. FRENCH ACE WOUKDED; HIS BOMB THROWER KILLED Lieut. Mezergues, Who Resumed Flights After Escaping From German Prison, Seriously Injured, PARIS, June 28.—Lieut. Mezergues, one of the leading French aces, who escaped from prison in Germany and resumed his flights, has been sertous- ly wounded in a fight with an enemy airplane, the Havas Agency reports The bomb thrower on Mesergues's mathine was killed in the encounter, Semeneeaitlpecnntnonens GERMAN TROOPS FENCED IN, Klectrified Barbed Wire Keeps Deserters From Switseriand, PARIS, June #8.—Three darbed-wire fences, one of which is charged with electricity, have preved ineffectual in Niadering German soldiers from desert- ing across tnto Switseriand, says « Havas despatch from Basle ‘The German military authorities have attempted to remedy the evil by can- celling all leaves of absence and special privileges for soldiers hailing from Al-~ sace-Lorraine, - a EN 25 YEARS FOR SOLDIER. = Camp AYHR, Mass., —A_ twenty- five-year prison sentence was an- nounced by the military authorities to- day in the ease of Robert J. McGowan ‘of Manchester, N. H., a soldier who es- from the guard house at Cam oe, in April after hia trial by court martial for being absent withour leave, larceny and & ‘using to obey orders. ree. Ho ts still at ee = Dennis J. Gal ‘ity of being absent without found guilty ot Jeave, was given three Ph sated = naaial REPORT MUNITION SHIP SUNK nm Torpedoed Without Cas- tes, Gulf Port Hears, PORT, June 28.—Private ad- vices have been received here to the ef- | fect that the British steamship AUanGan | been torpedoed and sunk, There has bean, torgatoed and cord, There no date or place of the disaster are e ‘Tne ship was laden with munitions, —_—— 1,000,000 Americans France July 4, Saye Tardies, PARIS, June 3. —Andre “ \CO~ erice - d to It to-day frows ‘& million American soldiers = in tee hy Huly 2.—Andre Tardieu, | - POLE GETALARM Lieut. McClintock Had Over- stayed His Leave of Absence | From Camp Dix. | | First Lieut. Alexander MoClintock | of Lexington, Ky., who once received the Distinguished Service Medal from the hand of King George and tater won tls silver bar and two stripes for honorable wounds fighting with Gen. Pershing, shot and killed him- |welt to-day in his room at the Mur- ray Hil Baths, No. 113 West 4% Street. ‘Though the hero of two years’ ‘fighting in France left not @ scrap of explanation for his act, the fact ; that he feared dimgrace was ovi- denced by an alarm received at Head- quarters earlier in the day from the | Military authorities at Camp Dix, N. |J., stating that the lieutenant had overstayed his leave from camp and should be apprehended. Two emptied dotties of veronal, a | sleeping drug, found on a chair beside ‘his bed, added their bit to the untold story of what had prompted Lieut. Russian Government [Entire Personnel of Some Units in McClintock to end his career with a|of the terrible voyage. bullet, alone and in a strange city. | Because of wounds he had been in- | valided home from France to take up tho duties with the depot brigade at The emptied bottles of that to escape the torture of old hurts which permitted no sleep the! fighting wan had run away to bury| himself in the city’s tures to forget- fulnese. The Lieutenant registered at the baths Wednesday night and slept } on Tharsday. He spent all day awa: from the baths yesterday and turned again late last nigh!. After taking his bat) he retired to bis room. ' About noo to-day Leopold behmidt, an levator doy, remem- , bored Lieut. MoClintock had not !come down from his room and went io investigate the reason. He found | the soldier dead in bed, still garbed | lin his bath rove. A &8-calthre re- | ‘volver, not of jclenched in his right hand. There! | was a bullet wound through his tem- | ple, The West 30th Street Police Bta- | tion immediately communicated with Headquarters when the dead man | was identified by the register and the Camp Dix authorities were notified j of his suicide, | McClintock left his home in Lexing ton, Ky., in November, 1915, and went to Canada, where he enlisted as a private in the 87th Infantry Battalion © go overseas. He goon got into the thick of the fighting and was pro- moted to the rank of Sergeant. | In September, 1 he was sent | with a party of ty men to bomb jthe German trenches under a heavy | gun fire. He brought in two com- | rades who had fallen beside him, It was while he lay wounded in London that King George came and pinned the Distinguished Service Medal on his breast. Later he was invalided to this country and honorably discharged, whereupon he joined the American Army a “RICH ESTATE” IS 34 CENTS. The body of August Kivac, who died @ tuberculosis in the Kings County Hospital two days ago, lies in the Kings County Morgue to-day and will be buried in the Potters Field. Relatives of Kivac came to New York after recetving pews of his death, and made preparations for am ciaborate burial service. Kivae was reported to have boarded a large sum of money during bis life, end his relatives are said to have made formal claim to this ort; Pryesterday the Public Administrator of the army type, was) s SINKING OF DWINSK Survivors of Torpedoed Troop | Ship Sailed 600 Miles on Two Biscuits a Day. SHELBURND, N. 8, June 28.— ‘Twenty-four members of the crew of the troopship Dwinsk, ander charter to the American Government, whieh was torpedoed without warning by a German submarine fune 18, reached here to-day aboard a Gloucester fish- ing schooner, The men, exhausted by exposure and lack of food, were picked up on the morning of June 26 after being | adrift eight days, and with only a day's provisions in stock. | Crammed into one lifeboat of the seven with which the Dwinsk was equipped, these men had drifted and | ailed 600 miles, during which time they ed a Robinson Crusoe, swiss Family Robinson existence on a bis- | cult and ® small quantity of water | each morning and evening. | Their boatswain's mate, Phillip Lar- | ballestier, who like his twenty-three | companions is British, told the story | The submarine launched its torpedo | early in the forenoon of June 18, he| said, without giving the slightest | warning. Tho men piled into the seven boats as the undersea craft | started to shell the stricken vessel, | which was fast sinking. kep all during when night came they separated, h another day the bout carrying the boat- and his companions was out of Sight of the others, Three | mes Auring their long trip north | and east they saw vessels pass them | by without halting to pick them They were too far awa r ling When picked up by the fishing| vessel Wednesday off S+ Island | they were down to the very last of their shio's biscuits and water. of twenty-four steamship Dwinsk at e landing rs from the s urne, N. S. to-day, definitely ace for all but tw atloads | tthe crew. Three boatloads, con- |taining sixty-seven survivors, had been previo: reported missing. Seven boats in all left the vessel when she was torpedoed. Two were picked up by a steamer, which brought their occupants to New York, another boatioad was rescued and brought to Hampton Puads, Va., and a fourth to Bermuda by a sail- ng vessel A report was received yesterday} f the landing of seventeen surviv- ors of a torpedoed steamer at Ber- nuda, but the message dia not give the namo of the ship The Dwinsk was a troop ship turning to the United had no soldiers aboard -> INDIANA “DRY” LAW Sup re- States, UPHELD. Closing of The Indi- law was up- e Court here today. The decision was four to one | ‘The State has been “dry” last when the “bone dry" prohibition took effect fl MS—One of ct f° is rtety ot Every wlece in the Special. Brooklyn announced that Kivac's es- | Jate consisted of only 34 cents and a furniture. Plans for ban: pieces of | —_>— (QUITS RESERVE BOARD POST. W, Parker Willis Tenders FR | tiem as Secretary. WASHINGTON, June 28.—H. Willis has offered hia resignation as Sec- Parker duties a3 professor of banking bia “University and to WwriGns om eco- nomic and financial subjects. ——— NEW ARREST IN SLAYING. Third Mae Accused Heeman Nola Detectives have made a third arrest to-day in connection with the murder of Patrolman Joseph Nolan of the West 31th Street Statio killed earty Wednesday ao rom @ house areAhtin Hoane, twenty-one, @ butcher, of No, 404 West S6th Street wi micide. eatigation until No plea was taken. ane denies being tmplicated, but admitted, the police say, he attended @ party in the rooms of Joseph. 1 Rurke the night Nolan was killed | Burke and John Kenrigen are bel | Our Week-End C you have ever missed of candy and waiting preciate the time F 0 Special. COVERED MANSI- MINTS—The name tells the na the composition of ASSORTED HAKD CANDIES—t nauestion- bly the finest, mont di- »\ | | versified assortment of lone tasting Sweets tn America, presenting Crystal Blocks, Sat ettes, Battercups, Bles- coms, Twists, Curls and many ethers = caualiy ll, Hore. Neu, Torts iN ss Brood he. "Sew ark: | Fer exaei lerations ore { Nesalaane ‘atest’ monde, tht PAUK UE Extra Specials and Other Attractive Offerings for Friday and Saturday The wpecified welxht ) GERMANS BURNING: BUNDLES OF DEAD; CANT BURY THEM Oflicers Say Too Many Sol- diers Would Be Required to Dig the Graves, LONDON, June 28,.—The Daily Ex-, press prints a despatch from ite Am-_ sterdam correspondent, who tele of interview with a neutral jowr- nalist who recently vistted Solssons, | and gives this “terrible description of* wh: an he saw.” The German Army's losses near jons are beyond description, Whole regiments were wiped out im no time. I saw masses of German bundied together qelinell, tied with wire and covered with Jime ready for burning. One German officer said to me; ‘How could we bury them? We would need to tm- mobilize a thousand men for that work and we cannot’ “1 was told that there was an out- break of some strange kind of typhoid among the German troops around Amiens, owing to the bad water and the bad tinned food, but I canmot vouch for the fact.” corpses, Mor —_—— ean Who Killed Two Aay- " Dies at Matteawan, BEACON ¥., June 28.—Limate Holliday, Orange County murdereas, who during twenty years imprisonment at Matteawan State Hospital for kill- ing her busband and a neighbor also killed two of her attendants at the hos- pital, died there yesterda: eS NO ROOF Constructed along _ scientil princ ie Hs praise |, strong. ans durable —and is guaranteed not te drop. You can.sing, chew, sneeze and laugh without fear of disledging this plate. The absence of a roof makes it possible for you to taste your food and speak freely. The cost of Salter Plates vary with the material selected. Rub- ber plates may be obtained from £5 upward. Dr: Salter Dentist 491 Fulton St., opp. A. & &., Brooklyn. Hours 8.30-7.30, Sunday, 1% BRANCH OFFICES Cor, 524 St. & th Av., Bay Ridge, Bkiyn, Cor, Columbia & Carroll Sts, ‘ya, 140 Newark Av., Jersey City, N. J. M7 Albany St, New Brunswick, N. J. Amboy, N. J. 119 Smith St. Perth DIED. June 26, 1918. SARAR KISSAM.—On f. widow of Samuel Hamilton At Ror late residence, | . oo Saturday, Juss £ ——_____.. LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS, im aan “Grand Con a2 Patio, ao dertait & arene wilt in yi. het cn PENN POUND PROFIT . | me: lor Friday, June 28th, Only sTecASm NT wets. Folly, Famalty, and ‘ollectis of luscious, home ch. showered. with Come Mates sox LOC ombination No. 6 Sale Friday and Saturday Only ur train or boat while making up an assortment be wrapped up and tied, you wi aving features of our Week End Combination COM. nite 1.29 Meer a © MILK CHOCOLA CKEAMERY CARAMEIS—These bie fQuares of delicious caramel exeeb= “a from the richest jent creamery product CHOCOLA Ao ttED PRCT — Lowe Kanpberrien, uder the container,