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T ‘ ‘NEW YORK SERGEANT, TWO NEW YORK SOLDIERS AMONG DEAD IN CASUALTY LIST OF 23 FROM FRONT — * ~ — ‘ ™ 8. D. Private Keogh Killed in Action! WOUNDED SEVERELY. and Sergt. Herold Died | Lieut. A, Mortimer Van Ostrand, rete | Lewiston, Idaho, | of Wounds Privates Roy E. Lambert, Roseville, | paaedidisesioy Cal; Carl A. Olsen, Hartington, Neb. | MISSING IN ACTION. | IISEASE TOLL IS TWO. | Léout. Leonidas B, Faulk, Monroe, | ato Harold Deite | La | Pp No, 568 n , j | Court St Bi kh Brooklyn Boys Reported Miss-| Cqurt Streut Brooklyn. oie, Bae j i ait j as h, N. Y. ee Action in Names "Private Martin B. Hallinan, No, 250 Cabled by Pershing. Schenectady Avenus, Brooklyn. Private Willis E.’ Snowman, Blue | | Hill, Me. WASHINGTON. —The army| PRISONER—PREVIOUSLY RE- casualty list to-day contained twen-| held MISSING. ty-three names, divided as follows: | wrest? Yohn Is Whalen, Boston, | | Killed in action, five; died of Now fi senate Reported Missing | —Now Reported Discharge ot | wounds, seven; died of accident and] Division tor Duty nee © Depot other causes, one; died of discase,| Private Robert S. Niver, No, 101 Hudson Street, Hartford, Conn. two; wounded severcly, three; miss-| ‘The list given out yesterday was as | ing in action, five. follows: July i, Nyack, N. NEW YORK SERGEANT, Pr tes Christopher Martin, Butte, Mont.; Fred Clinker, Terry, Mont.; Roswell Steeves, Derby, Conn.; George L. Zornes, Kehoe, Ky. DIED OF WOUNDS. Sergt. John J. Herold jr, No. 426 A. If, Ashton, 8. 1. ON, C.J, Philadelphia, Pa. Hart, Mic Butte mmond, Ire tes Franciseo di Cresco, Sora, Priv Italy; John Dulala, Barcoon, Russia; Ihrooklyn. | F Kotlyn, Cleveland, 0.: Gott-|TONETTI. A. Millsboro, Pa. | Sergt. John J. Herold jr. of No. 420 Joveph Kotlyn, Midamnar MS he: WHAVER. V t Wayne. Ind, | . fred Schwemmer, North Milwaukee, [WILLIAM . Yoder, Kan. West 40th Street, who is reported in| ‘Wis; Frank § yder, Moadow- DI brook, W. Va. DIED OF DISEASE. ELSTON, T. H., Oswego, Ore. Sergt. John W. Raczer, San An- tonto, Tex. Private Orazio Zona, Sants Sabba, Italy DIED OF ACCIDENT AND OTHER CAUSES. Private Loute Lernstetter, Fedora, |to-day's distinction of be REVILACQUA. ber, 1 Trinity, Place, New N._D. 10 Years MARTIN, Jy, Mount Corroels, Pas i 1, RR, Lamar, Ala nton, Ind. France in March, in the He was atta ment, ( Our Ten Year Guarantee in) !!!)4!) writing is proof positive of the DRURY, A suecess and durability of Salter) Coot Dentistry. | UPTON ‘ULEY, Examinations by our Registered | WKAINUUA Dentiss at all our offices free of dt 1 charge 1 Sets of Teeth Sup | Gold Crown, 22k.......0.. $3 up | Mi Sliver Fillings ...........50¢ up Gold Fillings + $1 up r 491 Fulton St, opp. A. & 8. B’klyn, Hours, §30—7.90. Sunday, 9— BRANCH OFFICE ) Mich. Gor, 524 St. & Sth Av., B. Bklyn. 4 f Cor, Coluinbia & Car , Brooklyn, | WHIT pe 140 Newark Avenue, Jersey City, N. J HOOPER, P., I mpany sisters, a broth father, John Herold Ant old, 8 stati tot y, who is twen idan LLAVAN THOWLA | Avent I VANCE teen, repor to the Uni when sixtoe ughton Lake, Glenavo., Sask, | Keough jo N ACTIOS ry and tr nant »htained a trans M47 Albany St., unswick, No J Privates Bai heard of her avening W 1 had been rece TWO THINGS TO MAKE YOU HAPP 100 * SHIPS LAUNCHED JULY His Fathe in Fit Condition, Schenectady Avenue, Bi port June 8, enlisted « Syracuse, He sailed for March 15 and there was tran the ter, {8 in the Aviation and another, E on June §, AND THE That you can get al! you want, OTHER 1S~ and eat all you like of that really fine candy—Nut Tootsie Rolls, father dated M “Have arrived § looking up W: him, th 2, Mart fe and s will go tot so that I may write a you telling of my adyentur. be one. Has Eu not, tell him to get busy,” Hallinan's mother is dead graduat The Sweets Company, 416-422 West 45th St., N. ¥. before he enlisted, 21 YEARS OLD, WHO DIED OF WOUNDS IN ACTION PPORSDHES DS 3-348 athletic gam: ceremonies were held at some of the army posts. 2Sd2- | about and made him keep his head} | down in the trenohes ana in the dug- © follows! KILLED IN ACTION. ‘The RILLABTIR ore lanaat | puny pout a missing now i ACEBON. 8, © ; 7 | have been slightly gasse Private James J. Keogh, No. 286 JACKSON, Taeuines Springs, Col. | @@ain on bce Al West 19th Street, New York. coo H., River: | |the British Armies in Fran swoon aoe. EAD OF WOUNDS, WAS BUT 20 WHEN DRAFTED ranks of the Amer fore - keeping with tho British apir | F 3646 8% of fair * days of my youth a anked me, sayin West 40th Street, New York. “WOUN ba! Corpl, Leon A. Baribault, Spring- Some Herold Gave His Age as 24 When} field, Mass. chino, Italy. He Accepted Position No. 31S Melrose Hospital for Insane. | strongly binds the great Al | tions together Ity list as having died | of wounds received In action, had the vg but twenty years ny, [Old and yet was drafted last Soptem-| you and our brave I father refused to allow his| son to enlist without his permission |when war broke out and |Herold accepted a position with the| ot Broadway, |State Hospital for Insane, |his age as twenty-one. He registered | myself June, 1917, and was immediately placed in Class 1, Ha was sent to Yaphank In December and went to being made a corporal and sergeant. 308th Re , When he died June from wounds. He was alw anxious to get into the service, ac. rding to bis sisters. For years a boy he had been a Boy Scout, Anthony urvive ed in Troop M, 15th Ca Private James Joseph Keough, nine- | Ninth Coast Ar- at Fort St r to the 18th Infan- try Company F, and was sent to Ar He was ' 119 Smith Stree rth Amboy, N. MACHIRA, J, Hay more than a year whon killed i : BRIAON a Relatives of the dead man could no: seute . ineat \ given, N i 72 OAL Berean eeecide ne be located at the address given, N j CORRECT West lth Street. A sister, Miss : Keough, who was located working i a candy store in Barclay Street, nee he went to France s. Jay Farrell, } lin making America’s holiday f twelve ce! who i a's Liverpo: BOY MISSING W ACTION TRUSTED 0 GOD 10 BRING HIM BACK SAFE FROM FRONT Private Hallinan of Brooklyn Wrote rin May He Was Private Martin J, Hallinan of No. ‘ooklyn, in action in France on to the Twenty-third Infan Ninth Infantry, One brother, V rvice in France o was draft nd sent to Camp Upton now @ sergeant, In a letter n said ter. 1 would love he likes this life as Ido, We are all in fit edhdition and front any day. I hope and trust God will bring me back to safety, | ng letter to if it 1s to] OU e enlisted yet? r Canadian 4 from Public School | Murine © and was a conductor on the B AMERICAN GUNNERS) 47" CELEBRATE FOURTH BY DOUBLING FIRE rench Heap Flowers on the Graves of Heroic Yankee | Dead. | WITH THE AMERICAN FORCHS IN FRANCE, July 6 (Associated Press).—French villages where there are Americans presented a truly Amen appearance —_yesterday, Frenéh soldiers and civilians joining the Americans in celebrating the Fourth and making it the holiday of both nations, Many villages were enlivened by > participated in by American soldiers, while impressive Old women and children living near | American cemeteries fairy buried the graves of America’s heroic dead with | fresh flowers. | The Germans knew it was Ameri- | great day, from the artillery, m: chine gun and rifle firing, which wi increased on the American fronts. It) gave the enemy something to think outs, IOTOs. BY In a message to Field Marshal Sir; Qmtod san?” Douglas Haig, Commander in Ch: rf Pershing saic dence Day gree Armies in Fra ee extended by its “The firm unity of pur that, on the Fourth of July this year, so ed na- | sas a new dcc-| 2 da new guarantee that the | ed principles of liberty shall not but shall be extended to all| “With the most earnest good wishes from myself and entire command to sh brothers In arms, | remain, always in great re- spect and high esteem, Yours very sincerely, “JOHN PERSHING.* The message was sent in reply to this telegram from | Hai Year Gen, Pershin, nd the whole army and Flanders I beg you to accept for yourself and the troops of your com- | % mand my warmest greetings o4| 3 American Independence Du : urth of July this vear soldiers | of America, Fra reat Britain will spend side by side for the first time jn history in defense of the great principle of ‘i which is the inhe and the most! on of their several hi Brit Americ: nd Mrench won for elves. fall to how s but for the not 0 3 world, |o “With the heartiest good wishes for) © re 1 vour gallant army, |? ours very sincerel ILATG Marshal,* fol-| - emier Lloyd | Gen, Pe lowing ines clal satistacti that vours | versary of t pendence. T have pleasure that the are uniting with our ors to celebrate the ual} and sell rth with un-| ab x f 2 mant- pathy and inter. | which will remain a | Rewspapers &6 | pedotn, in a special me ‘on of the Fourth of July, says, part |was mined overy Ca “Thanks to American assistance, we! The Cologne ! rng the ship shall surmount th rils of the and come gloriousy from the of 8o,Jong a war 1. Pershing, replying to address * in the Municipal Hall of a certain | eommar “ity. anid t the action of. France TOS 08 the of in. | eeltung thi one, and re nstituled “a new deciaratios Jependence and a solemn oath that| produce details of liberty for which } been shedding her b which Amer has bh hers, will surely trium the world.” conduct as the ve — | FIELD NAMED FOR BOLLING. New York Colonel Killed in France Is Honored, WASHINGTON, July flying field in this which serves of the Ne are armed.” the terminal re alee vont BOY OF 17 CONTRACTOR | Streng Yorn, wno wasted inaction in! FOR BRITISH GOVERNMENT rae Vrance during the German drive last nent | Y He os Pres Jong Inland (ity Man ialarcal who is a With Can with eleve OPTAWA, Ont The fotlow-| on his pa |ing Americans are oned in tond wal Seu Scott anc earning $7 hip & >. ‘Du ‘ tu y ner joined the Date Total July There have marine casualties to date Lt WASHIN' ings in m been 1,41 tcan 2 pours tsepen- WON FRENCH WAR GROSS; cosas ty" SENT DECORATION TO HIS Et WEARS WAR x Fe American, Arn ~- GERMAN PRESS JUSTIFIES eames ole sat | SINKING OF HOSPITAL SHIP." "27th me alt Torpedoed, It Was Most Prob-| full of enthusiasm for the work te. |° Rightly ‘ Editor of Atroc ‘in the history of our| AMSTERDAM, of the lot the assertion er tried to oblit }and regards sel car such @ large “A Shameless! war | BY AMERIGAN FORCES... The army |done, as most overses ONDON ment. | spondence s The young ter ned a partnership tom. nuts a army last ye cott then Invested manufacture Mra, Charles Deiters of No, 668 Court ris total includes two lists which have Plane parts and soon Street, Brooklyn, bas recelved word, not yet been issu@ to the press, > for the obtained Government work, ¢ HE ‘EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1918, A PAGE OF AMERICAN WAR NEWS- ital Ship That May Be Armed Since Germans Sank Canadian Mercy Vessel precedent y: a OFFICER | can inde luncheon ¢ the J ber of Commereo. Ambassador Sharp, for, remarking his presence, 6) 1 ratulate Aim. te the great meri Is no great Asint | teacher ver got. It bi : ; Heking w Bravery in Trench Raid. The most pr lous possession Mins our childré Jen of No, 1 West 70th Street has is a J day. Cross was won by her Corp! Join Fu n owing a ratd on Wanted to Become Mac through modesty or fear of the cen ship, he has given only riptions of t to Miss I nt in let 1. He simply stated The United ‘ nan ' were killed op | tehalenl training, ‘Those betwe 5 we ak for t ar Cro: ry ea of tw and thirty have an 4 i 1 t War cs were | & arded in recognition of the Ameri-| oppertunity now of o cans’ braver He sent his Cross to| sions, A fal appeal for su Mixs Leyden a n received it, | cruita has ent out from the hea A pr Will be ser ut “twenty more like} quarters ¥ war| Men who are graduates of a 4 technical s Leyden are| must have comr to you before Furey's letters to Mis . wecond cln machinixts’ 1 ing done Ame n soldiers One | naive course of study and those who jin France land you." he wrote ast mon ’ 1. Hie! District, alao took ocensio r, was / ic mon of draft with another nd is now v to be married after the || tmited Service Contingent to Go| Weer > ) ksonville, Fla, J 1 ©: BARTHOU IMPRESSED | 3TON, July n of vice men from New York and ( t to act as clerks, The turned from a visit to the American York on July for Camp front, * ina ment to the J . acksony a Math \ \ ' ft - Mate etin ecticut the © date for Tam a Meigs, Washing , J have 1 heard - were ¢ 1 Taft Leaves Lahor i mande r mer Kest ta On The ph WASHID hu | sand nent wa 1 ‘ an iae shee s mpreased me |Jebor Moard ut mer Pr ; aie 33 Taft, one of the joint chairme raj TWAS O85 Sk tidovaed kone to Murray 1 anada he headquarte be very miner and has nominated Fre Js Robert | thing ts organized thodical und! s yudson 119 as his alt was | rapid work nthe board du 8 absen machine ee a r boy Big Shipment of Vi S Soldiers to Sapervine Panama nuface for ¢ Elections. AMSTERDAM, Ju Seven thoue| PANAMA, Jul It was ann t Jed among Hungary, Austria and [that American soldiers would supe ned a |Germany, have been shipped from|the elections for the Panama, Nation of air. |Tillls, according t&a report from Buda-| Assembly on Sunday, ‘This a Twenty-six freight cars of the taken at the request of both the st wool, it l# added, already have cal parties, to insure a chance ved in Budapest, to vote, ‘LORD DERBY THANKS U.S. FOR “SPANKING” BRITAIN AND TEACHING HER LESSON Declares Revolution Showed Eng- land How to Treat Her Colonies, | and Now They Fight for Her. ARIS, July 5.—Lord Derby, the British Ambassador France, broke a British sterday by attondt ration in honor of Am dence. He was at the ‘FIRST AMERIGAN CAPRONI 8. We know now why . ., i} “You will thank me ter for Corpl. John Furey of New| thin rsay now that Leunts York Was Decorated for thank America for the beat done us both a lot of good. Wea — grateful to you because that licking taught us how to treat it is the reason why we now have Australia neh War Cross, and Canada, and even South which she wears always pinned to her Africa, fighting beside us to- Soytunutes | MAW NEEDS ENGINEERS; iw 3 Grated by. ance fo! is ; age de-| Mates and Take Training | States Navy needs men of aining: commis 3 Maat Md Street 1 In steam wering. Applicants are @Mrolied as ts that the navy is not re. All whi tters from thelr local ‘boards can rom Alaska will entrain toward 1h t thia month for Fort Wi FIREMEN HONOR = ® BOY MASCOT WHO DIED IN FRANCE | Engine Co, No. 9 Half Masts Flag for Abraham Brown— “Grew Up” in Fire House. ea . The name “A. Brown” appears In the casualty | printed to-day aa having been killed by accident im France, He was Abraham Brown, gon of Mrs, Abraham Brown of No. 64 East Broadway, and for many years was the mascot of Engine Company, No. 9, in Kast Broadway. The flag on the tower is at half staff to-day im his honor, for all of the firemen had known him since he was a curly ed boy, and he p ally grew the fire houre. was cighteen years old and ber of the 28th Infantry. He joined the colors more than a year Ago. In the first American drive his repiment captured a town from the rans. His brother, David, is in 104th Field Artillery. Private Joseph J. Thowlatch, men- th | Hloned as severely wounded, was born in Italy, but came to this country when four years old, His mother Hives at No. 961 Firat Avenue He ia iin an artillery regiment, Nothing could be learned at the ad- dreasos given of George Ashe, No. 72 |Trinity Place, killed in an accident, | and Jos: h Sammartine, No. 315 Mel- rose Street, Brooklyn. IN GREAT SPEED FLIGHT Airplane With Three Liberty Motors Makes Extraordinary Test at Mineola, The firet American built Caproni battleplane made its first flight yea- terday at Mineola, With an Italian pilot, It circled over the Long Island aviation field at nearly 120 miles ap | bour ‘The three Liberty motors that | propel ft thrummed loudly in the ears of & distinguished company of Allied aviation experts who gathered for the fight. , Lieut, Gino of the Italian Royal limying Corps was the pilot. The jmpeed his three Liberty Motors at- | taineds was said to be extraordinary |for such a heavy machine, though it carried a light load, Watching the fight were John D. Ryan, Director of the Bureau of Air- Jcraft Production; W. CG. Potter, ah trenghbe’dn Maye, dnther| Nel With 1 Education| member of the Aircraft Board; Com- inists’ man Briggs of the British air for Major Falebi, an Italian ex- pert; Major Tappi, ead of tho Italian = Aviation Mission; bene D'Annunzio and Lieut, Belloni, Fr renentatives of Caproni in the United, States, and the aviation commans Jers at Mineola, ‘U.S. ARMY DROPS GROSS AS BADGE OF CHAPLAIN. Will Use Shep sherd” sc r00k to Ob.’ viate Any Objection From Jewish Rabbis at Front. WASHINGTON, July 6.—To obviate any controversy that might arise by reason of Jewish chaplains objecting to wearing the cross as ir . the War Department has deel shepherd's crook as th adopt the regulation mark oo army chaplains. ‘The shepherd's crook Was the insignia used until 1298 by cMaplains in the army, but at ¢ time the crows was d mined to be the most symbolic decoration of the army's ‘The Department will announce soon the and design of the new insignia Shoe value is measured by comfort as well as quality and style. That is why the reputa- tion of Hurley Shoes looms so large. In black, white and tan Cordovan shades. COMBINATION A, AC Made over a special last Has C forepart, B instep and A heel, Grips the foot firmly. Cannot gap at ankle or slip at heel. Corset fitting at instep. Ab- solute comfort in forepart. Our beautiful shades of Cordovan Shoes are made possible by using only the best leathers, being treated by the Hurleyized secret process, which in- creases the life of the leather, re- ing its rich lustre to the end. BS 1434 Broadway 1357 Broadway LITT Broadway 215 Broadway 183) Ercedony 341 Meath St. Plier