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ae a LEAR 3 THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1918. , - Hare PERMANY CAN HAVE PEACE SxcRMmBAEDSES, —GOINTO RUSSIA AUSTRIAN LOSS RIVERBOAT SINKS. 22s" yor aft on the wpper deck durity ate hus adopted a resolution by TO-MORROW, SAYS GEORGE, BY WAR COUNCIL PLAN, IN KILLED 50,000; | IN’ THE ILLINOIS; |: "sss: ccc Giesenonse ACCEPTING WILSON'S TERMS ro British Premier in Speech to Ameri- struggling and clutehing each other.| Johnson of California, Republican, can Troops Says Kaiser Has Gone (oars soc Many jumped overboard. I saw some characterized the present service as Asserted Immediate Military | Rear Guard Service Inadequate Panic Among 563 Passengers|", tem €° down. Others sw «| “shameful” and sald that Meanspettas From Folly to Folly, and Still Refuses to See Truth. verybody fighting around, crying, until boats picked| tion of mail to the front now requires and Economic Aid Is Asked— | to Save Baggage, Says Mes- | When Columbia Turns Over |tnem up. Soon 1 found myseit ina] a month Say. Wilson Has Report. sage From Rome. —51 Bodies Recovered. asters Heir Deda Coroner Clary of Pekin, who swore in a jury to investigate the disaster, WASHINGTON, July € (United) WASHINGTON, July 6—Austrian| PEORIA, IIL, July 6—Nearly 100) early to-day said that It was iinpc Press).—Immediate intervention {m losses in the recent unsuccessful of- | Persons were unaccounted for early| sible to make accurate estimate of Russia, both military and economic, fensive against Italy and during the , 0-day following the sinking of the the hehe ier a believed it would has been urgently recommended bY Italian counteroffensive are estimated |¢xcuraign steamer Columbia in the Mscilt a tole SY Bien bers of the crew that scores of per- the inter-Allied War Council and Gen. at betwen 200,000 and 250,000, in-clud- | Minos River between Poorla and) oo. were below decks when the sient Foch The council #eport is in the ing at least 50,000 killed, in an official , Pekin, Ill, shortly after midnight. boat struck. If that is true, he said, | Government Inspector In Rochester even hands of President Wilson—has been despatch to-day from Rome, based! Fiftyapne bodies had been re-|few of them probably escaped FRUIT-A-TIVES. WITH AMERICAN ARMY ON THE BRITISH since July Sand Allied diptomats upon testimony of numerous prisgn- | Covered Up to noon, SENET ae te Ht Lge hed : members of a Pekin » al lub, believe he will concur in it. jers, The message says the Austrians) Five hundred and sixty-three pas-| 5 meward bound on a river excursion, | Should he refuse, the possibility ts persist in beating the ground about! sengers and a crew of thirty were! and when she held out to-day ‘that Great Britain, Positions captured by the latiians aboard the vessel, which was return-|log scores of pas: France, Italy and Japan may “go it Neg &@ strong but inoffectual artillery |ing from Pekin, Scores of survivors, |0" deck alone,” upon the recommendations of «prisoners taken at Monte Grap- "me of them injured, are Seing cared the War Counoil, pa,” the report says, “state that the for at Pekin, A dense fog lay over BRITISH GAS CASUALTIES. gum caw Aust had no idea they could be m a and American Marines have landed twenty minutes, ‘The enemy loses deck excursion steamer, 150 feet tong. FRONT, Friday, July 5 (Associated Press).—Until Germany ac- cepts the conditions laid down by President Wilson she cannot have peace, and she can have peace to-morrow if she accepts them. David Lloyd George, the British Premier, gave this message to the American troops training on the British front after he had struck a submerged gers were dancing seen them at review to-day. Officer Who Managed Draft Thinks were very heavy. His service ee At Viadivostok, It devaioped to-d87.iwas badly disorganized and the tt was owned by the H. F, Mehl Bas). tos ; 7 The British Prime Minister stood in an automobile in the centre of 18,000 Citizensfon Boards De- | Ostensibly they went ashore folloWing troop feel the Ang ght . bee Pr Deeb seedieincs od of Pearia, and wai : i ie Ww a — A A serve Recognition, Too. the battle between the Bolsheviki and tivity state that the Austrians force Under charter to the Southside Social 0 hich 140 Were the sun-bronzed Americans who have recently landed in France. Beside § 7 a “ | r C Slovaks Sunday, to protect the @ majority of the war prisoners to Club of Pekin. Officers. him Vis Mil the British Secret: f State for War, and WASHINGTON, July 6.—Major Gen, Cxech-Slovaks ar OP work on the second line under our : were Viscount Milner, tne British Secretary of State fo at, a0 Enoch H. Crowder, Judge Advocate Allied consulates, fire.” With the excursionists dancing on] LONDON, July 6.—Dritish z e William Morris Hughes, the Australian Premier. Mr. Lloyd George said: General and Provost Marshal al,', With them are 2,500 Dalmatian 23239 ——— the upper deck to the strains of a published in official Lis 2 MR. R. B. aay f - =: he week totalled 6, divided as| 89 North Union Rochester, N. Y. ‘ ine tae has set a precedent in army circles by troops, formerly prisoners of war in band, the Columbia ran on a eand|the week totalled » divided 30 . 5 “General, ire to congratulate you on being in command of follows “ » lone ¥ n eral, 1 desi er May 1 SU declining promotion to Lieutenant Gen- Russia and now under the Italian bank. She was promptly backed off, mm Killed. Wounded, atissing, Total, | ie bes Hii ae Dae : ry arty such a fine body of men. When I see them Iam glad they are On eral, offered him by Congress as a re- fing, awaiting orders from Gen, Foch but immediately began to list. Later | orgicors. 44 Tiouble Which’ a arr Me into 4 ‘ our side, not on the other. We are anxious that many more thou. | ¥@r4 for his services’ as “father of the This Allied gathering has provoked reports indicated she hed struck &/\ten 869 3 | Bladder Trouble x Daily: neryrtier: od Inelective draft. Crowder based _ . submerged log and a hole had been|potar ,, 3 7 6 espace : A ye { sands come across the ocean, The fact that you are here at allisa ) td hae ie faa Ge ayy ese’ Much enthusiasm in Eastern Siberia. torn amidships. Panic stricken, the | z |1 am safe in saying I tried over 50 y : |his refusal on the fa hat he did not Ruesian townspeople in and near excursionista rushed to the port side |, These figures show a considerabe fall- | different remedies without relief. ‘ 'o# source of great joy to ail of us. ae honor any more than any : ‘ ir 1 wi k . » Viadivostok decorated their houses of the boat in spite of the efforts of K 4 > I saw a testimonial of, I think, a ‘ “At the same time, It Is a source of great disappointment to es 5 H h 15,000 cltinens ta work with Allied flags and staged enthusi- the crew to keep the deck load evenly | June t f ‘| Montreal man about ‘Fruit-n-tives’ ' i the Kalser, who never quite expected you. Ho was assured by his ; i \ A leet is of the sel catia ealabeationh,.tiereablan sky, ala Less than fiv minut . af-|days in June thes and concluded to make one more haga ' = ter she had struck the bar the Colum. 0 ¢ tes r ted ¢ trial By the time the sample bor ‘ f advisers that America was so pacific there was no danger of her | lia associates say this modesty ie This reception, coupled with dee bia overturned in mid-channel and |i?s, May w 5 an average of| | jintiad 1 Teaud ie § getting in, Of course, a mistake was committted. He has gone | h do r - a ex sited SE al etl pil pee GR ar de Core sank Dozens of men and women supe : leave Wantr aha Weds icine fiatshed ” | reme fairne! Gen. Crowder said and the tnter-Allied Council, led diploe 2 Tone )s—— | leaped into the water and others were eae . from folly to folly. His next illusion was that even if yon des ning “the promotion: mata here to-day to take the position | OFOP 33 1-2 Tons of Bombs— leaped into the water and others were] DIES IN CIRCUS TRAIN CRASH, | 5? box, there was « grand improve. elared war you could not get here, His advisers said that all the At the risk of being regarded as un- that America must yield. Report Four Machines Many were between decks and, it was| i ee ment far beyond my expectations, ateful to the proposers of thin pro. ‘Mat A , heedva . v1 One Killed When Cars Wit New| ‘To make a long. story st 1 ships would be sunk and there would be no means remaining to vision, L cannot bring myself to be satis: RINE) bem eee cums one Missing believed, went down with the boat York Limited tn Ohio, ae ta Paik, bring you across the sea. fled that my own conscientiously per-|oMcial sald, “the President has its bal Shricks of survivors who were! yor, 6 : believe ‘Fruit-a-tites’ or Fruit Liver i adi formed share in discharging that duty decision, We may come in or stay 5 Sates paddling about the wreck were heard |\ijjed was the toll of a raiiroad scoters | Liblets the best Stomach, Liver and ' » “But you are here, not a part of a force of a few thousands, [should become the #ubject of recogni- oUt. But the majority must rule.” LONDON, July 6 y-thre® i) the village of Wesley, oppostte|this morning when Rarnum @ Pailey:, | Bladder Medicine the world has ever but a part of a force of hundreds of thousands, to fight for justice [to ene ae th far greater share! Details of the Bolshevik-Czech bat- German airplanes and a t n were | where the accident occurred. Severai| Circus Train No. Se ee Rede Cabie caaras | te SE Viewivostok indicate iNat'the) nut out of action by British alrmen |small boats put of from the shore) end of to pick them up. Calis for help were | ¢240, 1. sent by telephone to Peoria and Pekin |° The man k nd launches started for the wreck from those points, A special train {wo cars, ‘ashed into he Evie Railroad New York nited at Girard, four miles west | | " | produced R. B. O'FLYNN. Government Concrete Inspector. remains without public and dis- | defeat of the Reds was decisive ) | and the freedom of the world. Arty ; Reece | “Chateau-Thierry opened the Kaiser's eyes to another mistake, | Unauiahed acknowledgment in the ree- fortnight ago the Czechs, acting at Yesterday ar © day ore, the ords of Congress.” hes i i the behest of the Allies, issued an British Air Ministry announced t a y vi at Cr i: At his request the provisto : Yesterday in P aris 1 saw your comrades who fought at Chateau Pies gl ail Laibrae lag wai ultimatum to the Red Guards to cease|day. Four British machines we Thierry carrying their flag. And they carried it high, proud of the |{tricken trom the. $12,000,000,000 Arms arming German prisoners of wat. The joyt. More than thirty-three tons of fact they had not lowered it on the battlefields of Europe. The French — | Apprepriation bill, Joeman | Wee Uaneeeen at vee | bombs were dropped on enemy ob was Thoma Mur 50c a box, 6 for #2.50, trial size 25e. At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N, ¥.— Generals 1 have talked to have expressed delight with the fighting RY [DSLR OBy Caunene arom aoe unre) & aa : Nivhede eee ‘ the Czechs attacked, ix hundred | Jectives. , « qualities of Americans. So the Naiser's advisers and the Kaiser Bolshevik’ sailors immediately sur-| “Our airplanes co-operated in the| >. realize they have made another mistake. rendered, The rest of the garrison) successful attack of July 4, south of | nv ‘ the Semme, both by heavily bomb- ae | hours’ bombardment forced them to Des rn “We are grateful that you are here to fight, but of course you took refuge ina block house. Two nd bombing from a low are not fighting only for America, not only for France, which has capitulate, those not surrendering re- | ‘2 the German positions throughout can suffered more than any nation in the world has ever suffered—you ting to the west along the tra: the previous night and by machine : i * n Railroad, Most of those | &unfire are fighting for the liberties of the world. In your faces alone we | who escaped are believed to have| #ltitude on enemy troops and trans- have a source of great hope. We sce there determination to win and | been Germans. port during the actual operation, the we are confident. According to advices received here | Statement said. 7 “On other parte of the front recon- “President Wilson yesterday made it clear what we aro fight. | both Great Britain and France ex- | } gy Anant el AURA es reisances and a co-operation Ing for. If the Kalser and his advisers will accept the conditions | Tree eee Tal ite aeseneaiiaita y rricd out. Eleven German The World’s 191 8 | voleed by the President they can have peace with Amerlea, peace Castigion Fone Former Big Ger-| Jmachines wore destroyed and ten } : f i } { Hi | j t ; be represented by the Dalmatians! were driven dowh out of contro "4 wits France, peace with Great Britain, to-morrow. lemmanitiner | Wore driven down out: of control, On dl Ne ej 4+ Tore | while the Cz “Slovaks will repre-| hostile balloon was shot down in “But he has given no indication of an Intention to do som Be-* cincinnati, Tor sent the Balkans, Just what part| flames. Four of our machines en- cause he will not do so is the very re: ed ¥> battle are 88 rails 1 in tt ttle area are missing. are fighting. | pedoed Last Monday Night. | Japan and China wilt play has not | Gi S61 im the batue area are missing, | What are we here for? Not because we covet a single yard —_——— been learned, This will be announced | the front returned safely. bs WASHINGTON, Jul 6.—The | after the President gives his decision| “Thirty-three and a half tons of of German soil. Not because we desire to dispossess Germany bad “Jas to the attitude of the United|bombs were dropped during the day e tt of her inheritance. ; Not because we desire to deprive the German SOHO | ANDY e OnADOEY COTE | pias Shion (uatirapenia or people of their legitimate rights. We are fighting for the great ton, homeward bound, after landing | yipjomatic officials, however, are machines heavily principles laid down by President Wilson. several thousand soldiers in France, inclined to believe that Japan's army| way station at Co’ 00,000 and China's potentia ,| Was difficult, owi was torpedoed and sunk in the war | °f 900,000 and China’a potential army | WS | n also “I am delighted to have seen,these men hear near * the greatest battle the world has ever known, We great American has said, ‘At Armageddon fig § successfully at the field of be us eine lait Monday cient, Aig ae she | even? ‘ million w od tol tac mation was attacked Serre rte r ese eer ety 1@ dest advantage. over Saarbrucken by hostile al stand here, a si : ile air hier # i ets asa oid are raiaaiog; bat ibe commalndses| Diplomats here not advised of the| planes, one of which was brought § for the Lord.’” al he officers, have been) inter-Atlied councils plans, now sec|@WN in flames, and another was As Mr. Lloyd George con A 3 ed a - ‘ ¢ RRA DO ©) driven down. All our machines re- Lloy ge concluded, the countryside resounded with} ded at a French port. No mem-| wny President Wilson failed to men-| Anven dow chines ri three cheers in regulatioh American style. Previous to the review the| °et® of the army oF passengers were | tion Russia in hls Mount Vernon + A Vacation Necessity sein pogo tg zany American and British troops training : The ‘Covington was formerly the fouls be prepared iene een EDWARD GRIFFITH DIES | - which wan laid up at Bonton and] the. President urwea tim to" say| SUDDENLY IN HOTEL PLAZA DONT Dont Stifer with | MMaV 0 070 lS eo ad eee Loos0 False [ecth HIS HELLO ¢ OL DINDE |ts oS ene santas ‘eae U.S, MARINES LANDED teiny atthe iol Pant hem | : ° Young French Doesn't Get Usual opine, ee fireman! No. | AFTER VLADIVOSTOK FIGHT, stomach. od al sad Bigger, Brighter Seman eretd the verere ot loon, wubb, tt Allowance, But Isn't M4 Winthrop Street, Lynn. Mase. The funeral services, wil be held at | BOSTON, July 6.—When Paward| FORD, Ambrose C., fireman, No. 32] was long a vestryman of that church, | | Vernon Street, Somerville | He was born Sept. 29, 1874, in this city, | 15,000 Czecho-Slovaks in Control | He was an annuai pairun aod at the Horse show. “DR. WERNET’S POWDER Pi ny, the you For False Teeth fona, of New York and interviewed to-day in his luxurious | LYNCH, Willlam Henry, §r., fireman, soviet Force: suite at the Copley Plaza, he expressed | NO. 1260 Brown Avenue, Manchester, of Cily—Soviet Forces Lost ‘ his determination to support his tele N.H 51 Killed in Clash, Commerce, pone kirl-bride, even if he had to adopt | PAYNE, Albert §., seaman, No. 35| ,., 5 va | Lambs’ Club tho desperate expedient of going to| Bennett Avenue, West New Brighton, | TOKIO, July 5. The Caocho-Siov | er of the Chamber of pe a) wntown Aasociation Larehmont Yacht Club and Atlantic Yacht Club, and a charter | Sleepy Hollow Club. teeth and mouth ina | Work, He even threatened to become a| _ Staten Island, N.Y, SORGRR TEINIOD SHAY OMRUAIRG VIE Clean, eaithy con: member of t . oy 0s Lewspaper reporter, | SILVERNAIL, Lioyd H., seaman, Bain | Vostok have established there a com His mother, Mrs. Laey A if b il, ‘iio, “Suitaion TE ect tieeevactant elastic | Sea ter snissariat for Biberia. hin siete, Mts. Th eat aa ix ages 0, utomoodiie fur said when he had ad-| The Navy Department's announce-| Fifteen thousand Czechs entered |Bntihe aumive him bid mitt received his usual| mnt to-day of the torpedoing said] yiquivost Saturda aay weekly from ‘home. "Is ta cia Ladlyoats BORUSAY: | SARINREG |. | oan a moms yy But I] none of the officers and men landed Soviet headquarters and occupied the| Felice tent, 3 2 Army our aps Pear make ny to | Was “sorlously injured.” Apparently| xational Bank, municipal offices, the 1 igence Barean, J some of them were hurt, but the Police Lieut. George Busby, who has ’ d next month at numbe: probabl - t iver 1 railway station and selsed a quantity been on the ree twenty-two years. ii intare bis, brid probably was not given In) + ammunition, Resistance wes has been granted leave of absence until ght he Czechs lost three killed} the end of the year to ims which ga i, Sims which gave first news of the) ee eG | duties of sinking of the transport, i SURGES: CAsURi RD OF the | Haienene DEMANDS | END OF RIOTS, Tho Covington was struck at 917 |S0¥iet forces were 51 killed and 159] means that th ounde charge of in clock on Monday night while pro- | ¥°Unded: kreat work in putting ri t "T the despatch from Vice Admiral}, tenboard until young French induced al her to elope with chin Hundreds of Announcements of Hotels, Boarding Houses, Kiande rs and Resorts for the Summer Vacationist. apollc Mayor and lee Chief. transports convoyed by destroyers, froopa ani merean Marines were | ST. PAUL, Minn, July 6.—<toy. g, a,| The Submarine was not sighted, The landed to maintain order. Hust | A. Burnquist has notified Mayor Thomac| fanaport remaingd afloat until Tues- Ltt sore wertmade Hts [feet ne Reeien Gee” || LOD PRICE FIVE CENTS~—2y Mait Ten Cent Louis | other vessel and two tugs to tow her Minneapolis that unless| to port, but she was too badly dam.| [ONDVON, July 6.—Gen, Dietrichs 3 o gay os inckient| aed to keep afloat who was director of military opera-| For Sale at All World Offices and Your Nearest Liggett Drug otore, . ike 1 ped im - _- tions on the Russian southwestern emake, hem from) Mra, Nathan Straus ae @ Demon-| ‘The General subsequently was Chiof ‘ i Al “Lost and Founa” Y. strator, of Bia tc Gan. Duihonin, ihe Hun. dress ‘The World Summer Resort Bureau,”’ World Building, N, Y. ‘@dvertised in The World or _- Mre Nathan Straus will give free dem- . to “Los! Sallor Reeovers Drowned Chmata Rody | onstrations of the Nathan Straus meth- | “4 ‘ommander in Chief, and es- y, of Congress af|e Physicians and former Public Van Lear and Chief of Police Officials, Ask your doctor or druggist || Harthill about it Street rio to a news: mediately of F 103, World Building, will be listed ha body of Willlam Pai 4 of p H aie caped from the Bolsheviki after it ne body o liam P. Clark, od of pasteurizing milk every ‘Tuesday for inirty days, These lists can be Chae Atincenn ca nthe afternoon at 29) at Mrs. Oliver Harri-|Dukhonin was murdered at Mohilev So ¢ tt mittee kitchens at No, | ast December, geen at any of The World's Offic a0 at * 4 Found” advertisemen Dome, WAR recovered to-day at the Gan ee it At nar oh Eh Wante. Al recht ee neontered today as th at id Suvet for the remainder of |front when the campaign planned by Riverine “Asencio can Robbing Dry Docks, Uric Basin, near immer. Next Alexieff resulted in the conquest of will be @ gireotly to The World. terday after having fa Galicia in 1915, is the commander of n overboard e of wheat s' tutes and in the 1000 Beekman, New York, oF from his ship. Joseph Wars, a com- r fi the Czecho-Slovak troops now in, con- ym Office, 4100 Stains rade. of Clark, dived and brought the teh ah wie wn Wednesday afters {Pol at Viadivostok, says the ‘Tokio poy, after grapplers had fail aus correspondent of the Times under date sie WEA, Biker creprlers | Nortuke” | 2ercetie. "ay Bulls eal chaseblne lot gues he” e