The evening world. Newspaper, July 8, 1918, Page 3

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a sy A PAGE HETY NEW. , '{ ARE REPORTED BY PERSHING. TOTAL Six Killed in Action and Thir- teen Dead of Wounds in To-Day’s List. 29 SEVERELY WOUNDED. Losses in the Marine Corps to Date 1,518, Including 498 Deaths, WASHINGTON, July 8—The army casualty list to-day contained fifty Killed tn vction, six; died of wounds, thirteen; names divided follows: died of accident and other causes, wounded severely, A summary of the army cz to date follows: Killed in action..... Died of wounds.. two; ualties: nd other Died of acciden causes 491 Died of disease. + 1,322 Wounded in action 5,229 (neluding Missing in action HOCH) Vises ssisscvcccsune Total A summary of los: Corps is as follows Deaths oo «428 Wounded . ‘ 949 Captured or missing 51 ‘Total .. ee + eee coves 2,618 To-day’s list follows: KILLED IN ACTION, Cook Walter L, Crouch, Elmdale, Kan. Privates Gust Ham- amck, Mich.; Bennie W. East, Mag- nolia, Miss; Albert Hage, Franklin, La.; Lloyd H Wibaux, Mont; Marvin G. W Augusta, Ga, DIED FROM WOUNDS. Sergt. Guido Castiglione, St. Paul, Brazil i 1918, by the Prem Pubtiahing Co. « 8 (United Press).—It Sergt. Ray A; Wood, Highlands, | Sifeet. Bristol, Conn. Varenee it, |Said he was well. The telegram from | Tu! New York tvening Wordh. tO | PRANCE, July nig A N. J | Riedie, No. 210 Divinity Strect, Bris.|the War Department jd that he | (By Arrangement With the London any one still doubts how i Cook Carmine Ienco, Central Rut-|tol, Conn; Carlisle Tieman,’ Day-|died on June 14. Booth leaves a te | : vag dale ats ry | Americans are fighting for the United | 11d, Vi ton, Ky | mothe , re 6 a ieee ANY, aered) WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES IN| 2) sce ce ue ban ChInKN HO Gan GEA land, Vt. ie eases | cidade ceraia it) Rayacien orto ciel zo her, three rotate (Ae two sis-| Entire Companies Volunteered ae Sa nection | States Jeos Krueger thinks he can ¢ Privates Elmer A, Chatham, Bath, | iis Geath in France on June 27, after| ters. One of the brothers, Clifford, SHS 47 [PR July n connection | him Me.; Michael Gill, Hamtramck, Mich; /nearly three years of service with the |is in the Marine Corps at Paris is!-| —Sergeant Climbed Tree and | wit the fighting July 4 in Hamel] 4°, n amateur reporter Kruee | Miller, Alton, dik, George D.| ford: Ne Ju boy fo be Killed in action fa [22d & C. Booth’s father died severni! «Goi? Machine Gunner, | Viliage one hears atorles of lores as he Hamel beroes J, Miller, Alton, IL; George D.| ford, noe : teat years ago. He was a well own er interviewed th as . war.’ He was the twenty-four | Ye! : eliotn captures of prisoners by individuals, a th O'Laughlin, Stuart, Iowa -old son of Mr. and Mrs, C! builder in Montclair, : when they returned and obtained the | Private Joseph H. Schultz, No. 71| s, Reynolds of No. 26 East Newell Ave-| The \p: of Priv: WITH THE AMERICANS ON|for the village was full of dugouts following stories: | Howard Street, Newark, N. J. |nue, Ruthe: He enlisted in No | weinrich, i severely wou MARNE, July 8 (United Press). | into which the Germans retreated on Private Thomas C. Seder, Ravens- croft, Tenn. Private Arthur L. Sinnell, Babylon, N.Y, Privates Willlam H. Taylor, Alder- sbot, D.; Alexander E. Vautrain, New Orleans. DIED OF ACCIDENT AND OTHER CAUSES. Private James H. Booth, Montclair, N. J. Private Harry V. Harker, Salisbury, Md. WOUNDED SEVERELY, Sergts. Jobn E. Crow, Raleigh, N C.; Steve O. Stubblefield, Rosenberg, Yex.; William W. White, Houghton, Mich Corpl Anderson, Rox bu Co Brantley, Georgetown, S Duncan, Old Orchard, Me; James E, Fitz- | TWO THINGS TO MAKE THATS TH way Na FOR ARMY NOW 9,169 THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 8, 1918 OF AMERICAN WAR NEWS CASUALTIES 0446-03006 $64O0464-0460065 ® o | wilson, New London, |R. Loel, Chillicothe,” 0, | Stevens, Gerry, N. Y. Privates Willis Ba Theodore Com anto Frenci, East Boston, Mass. Jessie E, Hays, Hansford, Te: | Clarence M. Heskett, Centre, N. Da George T. Holifield, Brockport, Ill. Ira R. Holsapple, Glendive, Mont. | Privates Charles A, Khoury, No, 116 | Wilson Street, Torrington, Conn.; | ‘ |Fred Krech, Portage, Wis; William T. McGraw, Los Angeles; Raphael | | Paone, No. 19 Grand Street, Middle- | | town, Conn.; William J. Pugh, Scran- | |ton, Pa ranklin Rose, Coates. | ville, Pa.; Joseph Stillitano, Haver | hill, Mass.; Vincent Super, Ray City | Mich.; John Tolleson, Waldron, Ark.; | Edward H. Townsend, Danville, Ala; | « |Laird A. Wray, Seatue; Adoiph L.| | Young, Philadelphia. Private Frederick M. Young, Etm-| hurst, N.Y. . | | PRISONERS— PREVIOUSLY RE-| tlett, Pottsville, Hamilton, 0.; | . | PORTED MISSING. | s Corpls. Fred W. Chutty, No. 146 ster Street, New Haven, Conn.; Franklin J, Damon, Brookline, Ma: Corpl. Joseph Sabatini, No, 111-2 Sackman Street, Brooklyn. Joseph M. McNamara, No. 389 Grand Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Privates Leon 8. Bernard, Hopkin- ton, Mass.; Richard A. Brightman, Fall River, Edward Clark, Collinsville, ; James F. Col man, No. 79 Pine Street, New Haven, Conn.; Herbert Collings, No, 19 Hili- | side Stre walk, Conn.; Harold | ¥, Dolan, No, 35 Valley Street, New Haven, Conn, | mn Privates Mott, Web- | Wounds, ran away from home in Feb e, Caribou, | ruary to enlist in the infantry. H Norman C. Newman §. ( eis Nave teal RATT | was eighteen years old and a stu et, aven, Co ? - Charles D. Kenny, East Rock Road,|4ent at the Montclair High Scho . Conn.; Harry M. Lufkin, | He was sent to Fort Slocum, From | dence, R. L | _ Private Bernard T. Lynch, No. 545 | there he went to France two montt Jago, In the last letter received 1 | Forty-sixth St Brooklyn. babel Brey siesti erect) Rreouly) n, No, 50| his mother, Mrs. Amic B. Booth, of | j Thompson Street, New Haven, Conn.;|No. 45 North Willow Street, Mont- dward A ° jen, No. 20 Purde@ | clair, which was dated June 5, Bristol, Conn.; James E. Pito- i h a reinforcing com- ; d) THE | vember, 1915, wi | f i in yesterday's list living at No. ny for the Princess Patrica Cana- American troops who aided the] the approach of the British tanks andj aK dant ht Infantry and was wounded | Woodworth Avenue, Ridgewood, re- | mearct leaning Att bod. wehian Vikeant alge pel hee grenades, With one hoe got two Ger. | a year later in Flanders. On his recove | ceived notification of his injury from] French in clearing Hill 204, ys American went alone) 1, machine gunners, with the second ‘. ‘ ful of And lk so felng ascgned to the Royal Aviation | tte War Department. He is twenty- |dominates Chateau-Thierry from the} into a dugout and knew in the dark- he cleaned out a section of a trench,| a heaping cupful of sugar. And raw mil st e Royal Aviatioi : in Bre y t ‘ Mo . i | Geen: tae Ferumned to eerie imtirencs | ye dear geld. and has lived in Brook: | west, were swimming and playing| ness that men were around him. He|\'» «tira ended a German whe tried ta| high these days—that’s another good saving. | ‘ : yD a ueens all h z @ at- x acl called to zB 3 ese [last January and was a member of | tended public echools Nos 81 asd 48 | baseball when the French cc mmander | Ca Bons thee) ie euereges Fr, but 10 | wing him with a rifle, He brought back | ; , eile ee ne and was graduated from the Jatter.!was notified to take a few of them /P a SEAL eee rates the other two. | A heaping cupful of sugar. Desserts, puddings, cakes, pies, | early pril. In all his lett PADIS: YO}s a +h - a ling “ermans guarding a machine gun, He| milk, They are delicious economies and very wholesome ’ ' his peo Weinrich said he liked s ed from ea hooting he dark while 4 scuffling ).veiea an empty rifle at them. They| indeed, REPORTED DEAD OF WOUNDS jase Us and was TAVINE 0. O88 The attacking force fought in a eh ane rate eee a se urrendered, two of them crying like | hanks to the se in his ¢ nod ands on the je of the hill for] Presently cries of “Kamerad!” went |” j : . 4 Pr re | 1! pany of three od chums, Will. | Wood and on the ‘i realy band:tec | HBr/AOA when a lent was rodent |OlUGh and begging tor aaa Write for our new recipe book, “The Milky Way.” It Hele iam Schroed Frank Leykam and three hours. It was largely hand-to- : Arthur unk, @ former haber- jow to save your money on many good dishes. 51 test HAD RUN AWAY 10 ENLIST Edward Frere, raat we oh hand work. Some of the eas) hineaces hia Hono blots Bad | gasher, tolht A Gkktin CHnAAG WIth pene x y y 8 ———ae Upton A cousin, “Albert Welnklautr, |2&¢ climbed trees to escape the bar-| killed five men and nine others, un-| 11) nang shot off. He unbuckled his : shine : Upton. A cousin, Albert Welnklaud,!/02." and had pulled machine guns| Wounded, were ready to surrender ciaravasy wit heuediub tha atiserte WISCONSIN CONDENSED MILK CO.; Weinrich, Listed With Wounded, |is at Fort Slocum. up with them, With these they] | Prisoners taken here mostly have °" Und; and: acts ateetaheribearer (6 ® Wrote Recently He Was Happy poured a heavy fire into the Franco-| been of a good physical type, larger ; | 1 Hudson St., New York With Ch. i CANADIANIGASUARTVLISTs [pore ere teas hinee and ore: | than the Rrusilane: utsceletenrs ba AL Ear “pea ith Chums. eeeeeecerey AUST Sa Ns ee UB oes are most offensive. One diberately ves Leds ruer, mpo naan alan vel 1 ‘ie ™ Dead New aces sb atest: a“! in a department store, follo MONTCLAIR, J, July 8— | RESRUITA Noe son ey | An American sergeant who had ex-| Struck an officer who was speaking : pedi the top with. eeverad bale! James H, Booth, reported in to-day's| er 5 Ge oa ts eared ReLinEE eGo [Welln ah thargemnos! eoureara Hel eek ; n le | " ilk rene: as having died ot| OTTAWA, Ont, July &.—The follow. |i rates ina tece thew |Might have been shot, but instead (Of hot tea. Shrapnel occasionally bi Do all your cooking with m: K Americans appear in to-day's Cana-/man machine gunner in a tr the officer who wae hit, and a much| the buckets, but he kept on. — | down his rifle, cl he tree ‘| Q an casualty list: Di W. C. Duncan, Roche: N. ‘the German with hi atchell, Brooklyn. and pitched the b ~P. McDermott. New Yo: Brooklyn; R. B J. Matthew YOU HAPPY=: Snow, North Billerca, M Staten Island. down 1b, ese TROOPS ON WAY TO TREN AMERICANS CALLED. FROM BALL GAME TOAID THE FRENCH... Nene tecavie sock wens ws NEWEST AMERICAN AGE CHES ON BRITISH FRONT 488 OOd08 LETTERS FROM WA VITINS AHEAD OF CASUALTY NOTES |Relatives of New Yorkers Get | First News of Their Wound- | ing by Mail. | | Pop S ee pee ee $523 ne After nincty days tn the front line trenches, First Lieut. Thomas H. Lee, twenty-seven, of No, 116 West 121st Street, was wounded by shrapnel. His father, Thomas J Lee, who was notified by the War Department j Lieut. Lee had been wounded June >| 11, has learned it is only a slight | wound in the hip. Following the telegram Mr. Lee re- ceived a letter from a friend of bin son, who wrote that Lieut. Lee wi doing nicely and was going to visit Paris. He is a Fordham University sao ee graduate. He had law offices at No. 45 Broadway. | “Don't worry, mother. I'll come around all right and will go back at jem again,” wrote Hugh Murtha to » | bis mother, Mrs. Anna Murtha of No. cerecary é +-.06-64-00000@ | 178 Jackson Avenue, Jersey City, | This official photograph, taken on the British western front in | alas BUIAGaSiGaT ef lee rerifes Uie'g France, shows a company of American soldiers passing their British | Yue) Bayncusm oF her sons Ml rps comrades resting by the roadside, Their joyful spirit is reflected in 8. She had already learned from him, their light, springy step and the gay badinage they are engaged in | however, that a German bullet had with the resting Tommies. | hit him in the side. Lieut. Joseph A. Synnott, mentioned in the casualty list among those who died in action, is @ brother of Miss Molly Synnott and a cousin of Major jartin J, Synnott of Montclair, N. J, He has been awarded the War Cross (posthumously), He had been in the Marine Corps seventeen years, Mrs, Anna Weaver of No. 28 At- lantic ‘Street, Newark, received a telephone message from Mary M Keon of Charlestown, Mass., yester- day that her three nephews, who were with a Canadian regiment, were 6406606. | CAPTURED GERMAN HEROS SHOWA OFICER SHOOTS BY AMERICANS OF “AULS.SERCEANT GERMAN BLOOD avails stem —_~— Murray J. O’Hanley, sons of x O’Hanley of Cape Breton, M. Douglas, Mrs. Weaver said, had beam wounded eleven times in three rvice, Joseph Ascenzi, twenty-one, ing in action, formerly lived with father, James, at No, 262 North r Street, Brooklyn. Private John J. Sheridan, killed fi” action, was a draft man trained at Camp Dix and lived with his in Newark, He was twenty- years old. . Private David Doctor, thirty, killed” in action, lived with a sister at Nou) 276 Vermont Street, Brooklyn, ' was born in Russia and pad lived this country eight years. In a letter he said he had a “hunch” B® would never come back. Mrs. A. B. Booth of No. 45 N Willow Street, Montclair, has notified her son, James’ N. died in battle with a Regular seco! regiment. He wi in the con; tingent that joined Gen, Pershing. Private Jeremiah Sheehan, wounded, lived with bis father, w longshoreman, at No, 345 West 1 Street. He went over with the 1 * formerly the 69th New York. Louls Winters, severely wounded) * lived with his parents at Oceanside, | 1. I, and after being trained at j Upton was shifted to a Regular } regiment. ss Lieut. K. Kenneth Rutherford jr. wounded in action, is the brother Mrs. Abner Keeney Clarke of No. 188, Alta Avenue, Park Hill, Yonkers, and is reputed to be the first Americati officer to lead American troops ia Alsace-Lorraine. He was born Ip, Waddington, N. Y., where his paren still live, and won his commission the first officers’ training camp a@t Plattsburg. ‘ Word has been received by Dr. C. A. Lange of No. 67 Brooklyn, that h . He is a grad- uate of Brooklyn High School and Polytechnic Institute, Corpl. Elwood L. Colby, killed th’ action, was not known around No, 100 West 57th Street, the address given. The building is being razed, It was also impossible to locate the home of Dennis Falvey, formerly at No, 2749 Elghth Avenue, a private ip the Engineer Corps, who died of disease, Specialty Se tics, open to-day for specialty experts. | Killed in action a week ago, The Men Guard-| soldiers were Douglas J., Jona P. and American Officer Whips With| One Captured Sip His Fists a Prussian Soldier | jng Machine Gun—Another for Striking Him. Killed Two With Grenade. er | By Perry Robinson WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES IN | Private Bernard Schallinger had five A corporal whose name cannot be | mentioned, because he Is a casualty, | was bit in the shoulder by shrapnel, | but kept on fighting, because, he sald, he was determined to “get a Heinie.’ Ho got one just before he dropped from loss of blood, _ | Smaller man, turned in and hammered | the Prussian with his fists until the latter literally squealed, It appears a German officer, after [having surrendered, shot an Ameri- can sergeant with a pistol, and in that part of the attack thereafter ji was bad for any German to cor | within rea in American soldier, | : One of wordinary Sights Of] Americans and Ansace Rescae Cap- Arthur Coleman twenty, four, a mae Official Confirmation of Bringing] the battle was to see Australian sol-| Glia (Caeeneaa (ecoaclae ait | | Coast Ruardslationed at tie aarke cl Down Two itional Planes | fiers » Whitt age 3a WITH THE BRITISH ARMY IN Manhattan, whose home is at Gives Meissner That H j ri ee pwhiy FRANCE, Sunday, July 7 (Associated ce Y. H., broke his neck e tae it | Precs),—<In the German countercate | O . B terday at South Beach WITH ‘THE AMBKICAND UN THE] atta Prous). 1 3 ugh. He Jumped from alstannu, July 8 (United F ) 1 use a tank 200 yards| tack against the new positions gained | tit Os 1 Aire boay wes taken in. charge by Capt, | Lieut. Meissner Br i h c d found a|by the Australians and Americans | Carden, Captain of the Port, and was newest A an a Two add a un The men} around Hamel two Americans and emoved o Schaefer's Morgue, Stapie nal German \ al con rr d > he e ustr ans © cap ed y| [ERAS PE oe tenes anemia | § Pricey dad 1 Hi the tanks! fve Australians were captured by of marines was placed over It | Poy signa i ‘ ‘ jt rT Volu were culled | ’ ape |i, MiSUb eORGRle, Oheers Ps , 1 some of for, and an American party brought b P 7 “ on f m wer ., Kaa t ond , oa apltured men and a German |TWO NEGRO SOLDIERS rata AY? y ‘ wh twelve Australians | good health and good | “ n 1, It had 4 T tory of this incident as told | : 1 1 ne Pw wer n n t wed tren # A ¢ hs by t 2ut Forty German a > iid is a ich hislinae a a i er rape to Flight, 20,000 ROUMANIANS STUDENTS’ CAMPS TO OPEN J all our men at once began|| —-Something for almost ITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN oo ” clling for the chance, Corpl. Ray WITE | FRANCE, Sunday, July 7 (Associated & T Tra roctors Starts on! m 1 Powell was first up, and he , Press).—Henry Johnson and t ree ly 1s ven squad of men for the|| EXECUTIVES T u have a cravin Robinson, colored soldiers from New W July SA sixty da See ee a hat when you hi 8g Bae ee ee a eM ton tc. Bar omied nt ‘ ral OFFICE ASSISTANTS for good candy it is always easy jzant have lanes 6 Hib ae ealinae ras had put down a heavy valet ‘ ¢ Nels ed Hn | tates and O' Na asent nut the corporal led his ; j ERS to get Nut Tootsie Rolls. sector of the French will july 18 ay WAP ROCROTAL AG Mi STENOG H They put to flight in No Man's Land | al Onk ! Vi Fort Sherida ~ one ; PURCHASING EXPERTS a party of Germans estimated to num ' S 2 Ae and ule | urged hotfoot after the re ber forty. The citation comes from v \ Depa 8 treating enemy, The Germans re the French command | ee , ; a 1 uh i students | tired to @ strong point, but the cor- eerie ' , ei |poral with the other Yankees went Henry Jo of f 46 mn, an ae sold ves elted b A Will be 1 ‘ i a Neg Arn o ¢ na them ie ans ad DA h; ‘ L ‘ “Our two boys were retaken along Ronen we Bens rained A 4 t with the five Australians, and the In the & announce fornia f ‘ poral and : party ‘alto captured This Advertiseme c ela " tl lea rance, 4 German ficer. st mean son's com) ) Was named Necdhan ‘ 43 and 45 . he t n riggers decided to b perma ne PARI uly 8.—The Italian journalist |time twelve Australians had circled ee J Roberts. The wo, members of what in “ ets Company, 416-422 West 45th St., N. formerly wan the 15th New York (Col-| lea ie. ador at Hanau ly paroled after cony around and jeined’ the Almesioan pulsed @ large raiding party of Ger-|Koumania, now under the duminativ: 48 been expelled froin | DAPty, with ult that fifty Ger mans > were wounded, of Austria-lluogary, France, It Was announced to-day, mun prisoners were brought back,” Condensed Milk in its wasteless form LION™MILK Condensed or Evaporated To the call for recruits to the Y. M. C. A. Overe seas Army no man over military draft age of conscience by telling himself he won't fit in, The positions to be filled are many and varied APPLY: 347 Madison Avenue, Mr. E. D. Pouch, renade, gas, topography, open war- tion of Major J. R. Rall, the British, a | CAMP UPTON, N. Y., July 8—pe- clalty schools, in which instructions will be given to the officers of the | cantonment in machine gunnery, auto rifle musketry, bayonet, signal work, ‘are, fleld engineering ahd minor tac- of the Reserve Corps, under the direcs gas defense expert. 3 | j Need You’’ character can ease his any real man. HOTEL MANAGERS CONSTRUCTION MEN AUTOMOBILE DRIVERS GARAGE MECHANICS nt Contributed by West 34th Street, N.

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