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"Uf 1¢ Happens In New. York dt’s In The Evening World’’ “Circulation Books Open to All.’’ PR iinet nee cE TW 0 CENTS. sonnets (he Hew Week Was 1918. NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, NTCHEL FUND PUT. Mt Sms SHE Saved ~ MANY Blt CHECKS sort Rockefeller Gift of $1,000 ish sou One of Latest Tributes to Dead Ex-Mayor. ed from a Span . has been torpedoed by man submarine, e ship flew the Minister's lag been re 4 Arch at Fifth Avenue and 59th} jeep notited of th Street and Statue in City parture a week in advs Hall Park Suggested to-day, helping in the advance of the Major Mitchel Memorial Fund, Five | for $100 and three for $50, mixed in - with a number for $5, $2 and $1, car ried the total 1 ast the $11,000 mark | At noon it stood $11,059.95. Of this | amount $691.87 represents subscrip- tlons received in the morning. Yesterday also was a big the fund. John D. Rockefe ‘graphed from his summer place at Men in Bombing French Lakewood to put him down for $1,000 Prison C; amps. and Henry P. y In to-day’s heads of big professional men, a city magistrate, seventy-four were soldiers, workers and children. night of July git Frank Tilford of Park & Tilford > sent a check for $100, writing: “It gives me great pleasure to in- close herewith my check, to be ap- plied in the tion of so worthy an object as the ere PARIS, July (Havas Agency) regic ind the ion of a substantia! one hour, and fitting memorial to the late Major, TWO French soldiers of the cam John Purroy Mitchel.” guard were wounded City Magistrate Alexander Brough, wrote: having a popular subserip memorial to Major Mitohel. an inspiration to the yout of our city but of our Na aa 4 am giad to subscribe to the fund.” Time to f ein Leave at C. F. Long of No. 42 Broadway also | Lunch sent in $100. | wirh THE BRITISH ARMY “I inclose my check for the Mitchel | rp on for a lis life is 11 ANCE, July 6 (Correspondence Memorial," he wrote, “Let us have a| memorial worthy of our second Nathan | Hale, whose worth and deeds will be | ‘ cherished by rations yet unborn, | #!x that attacked him on when the names of blackguarding| ginning at 9.30 o'clock ‘willles’ and incompetent ‘johnnies'| to junch at the airdro shall have passed assassination of ch can’ of me as it is God; when fid be rewarded ated Ptess),—To rm airplanes out of a oblivion; when | to sit down to an early dinne gns will be a crime Sautin of {ence of an officer of the Royal ty to publi¢ hicanery deth arranging begin at *}and with five German ma of the smaller machines and chased t (Continued on Eleventh Pa, SPECIAL NOTICE REBELS IN GERMAN ARMY The United States Govern- Tested, Germany Had Beer Been Notified of Sail- oe WITNESSES FIGHT ADVICE THENS, Greece, July 17.—It » that a Spanish steamship, on which Minister Do Cega was returning to a TWO PLANS PROPOSED. | The diplomat and his family have The German Government had Minister's de- Wound 74 More of Kaiser’s commercial concerns, Ninety-four Germans were killed and | Jed on the when five} !Quentin Roosevelt Last Seen in Com- bat Ten Miles Inside Enemy Lines pm German aviators bombed a prisoners of Troyes, thirty ench battlefront aerial bombardment lasted for Quentin Roosevelt, youngest son of th? on killed in an air fight, the semi-official Havas, “The World is doing a fino thing in| THEN DINES IN LONDON former President, fell into the enemy lines. », not only | British Aviator Finishes Up Job in| vicinity of Chateau-Thierry machine fall, but did not k 1 Quentin was engaged att til later that the airplane was that of i GRAND GROSS i THE oar CONFERRED ON PERSHING; BLISS ALSO DECORATED : os “ ROOSEVELT TO SPEAK ’ DESPITE SON'S DEATH ...- ssssrrom, en al , {don that evening was the recent expert TO READERS BURN 22 AIRPLANES <:: IN ERUPTION. ment through the War Indus- Two Non-Commissioned Officers Board has called on all Arrested With United States to CUT OFF New Airdrome | allowances for unsold copies LONDON, July 17 , en and after JULY 15, in tion by fire of a new G an aire erder TO SAVE WASTE, Jrome, with tw Therefore newsdealers will near Nivelles, order only what they can work of German actually sell. You are re gave mechntae (re quested to place a standing atch from Amsterdam order with your newsdealer Nivelles ts seventecn miles south of * to insure getting a copy of Brussels. The World, | The Belgians and two German non- |commissioned officers have been ar- Rel The main \venie the dey feeling due to ‘bea bead otal aan, | crater was formed in LWW, miles northwest of Bourges. LIEUT. ROOSEVELT KILLED IN AERIAL FIG prebanly showe: cooler to- ita hy eleudy | to-morrow, c “Circulation Books Open AMERIGAN GENERA 1 to All.’ | ‘i i af ———— 20 PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS. _ TWO-MILE GAIN BELOW MARNE BY AMERICANS AND FRENCH ROOSEVELT’S SON KILLED 1 RST OOWTH “MMM BATTLING GERMAN PLANES; ren cans] OLN ONE OUR MLE FRONT peor RENGH, DRIVES GERMANS TO RIVER; wows estcoe' THEIR CASUALTIES 100, 00 Nation’s Honor, PARIS, July 17.—"We regret being unable on this occasion to follow the counsels of our mas ters, the French, but the Ameri- can fing has been forced to re- tire. This is unendurable and none of our soldiers would un- derstand their not being asked to do whatever is necessary to re-establish a situation which is humiliating to us and ‘unaccept are going to counter attack.” This was a message sent by | American general in command American forces south of the Mart on Monday afternoon after the ( |mans had succeeded in forcl able to our country’s honor. We oe ‘Enemy Has Only Precarious Hold | on Remaining Positions South of | Marne—All Bridges Now Under | Allied Artillery Fire. | LONDON, July 17.—American and French troops, counter- attacking on a four-mile front south of Dormans, have swept the Germans back 3,000 yards (nearly two miles), bringing the enemy in bridges across the river under artillery fire, it was learned from °f ‘an authoritative source this afternoon. Remaining German positions south of the river—which marked their further advance toward Paris in the new drive— Americans back toward en ila ji The Freneh au 1 inf «have thus been reduced to a scant and precarious foothold. the American general that the early | nan success would not have any The enemy yesterday advanced three miles south of the river K jthat it was understood perfec Jafter hard fighting the American jes slowly retired and that it ot expected that they immediate at effect on the fate of the battle; tly tho to Festigny (five miles east and south of Dormans). The Ger- mans’ positions here are menaced by the French and American counter-attack just to the westward. inane h a counter attack, He added r attack could be py k without nd it might ett to give the American troop: a —One Report Says Plane Caught" he ur's rest Fire as It Fell. Except in the Marne Valley the fighting on the Champagne front was only fluctuating in character up to noon. The French already have recaptured about half the territory they lost in the ks ds pe orarate Ns ne min pata ‘” initial rush, in some places reoccupying their original front lines. jeneral ser ne above measage | which ts quoted by the correspondent Despatches from the front estimate the German casualties at | of the Matin » Americans launche their counter-attack and the 1 oon recovered, with Germans for nd measure - TROOPS CHARGE WOMEN and Snuff Thrown kers in Massa- Pepper, Eg Strike July 17 Rioting by a crowd of women oceurr this morning at nt of the We Royiston = Ma when men emg riking weave again at noon, The pol “DRYS” REJECT WHITMAN, State THE WORLD TRAVEL BUREAL Amade. Pulitzer (World) Balding 8.08 Pea Kew NOY Cay Telephone Beekman 4000 f mile taken from the iring = Compar to take the place er) says the Temps to-da “ 100,000. The French and Americans have lost no guns and their an casualties are light. The German estimate of 13,000 prisoners is said to be grossly exaggerated. FOCH BRINGS UP HIS RESERVES vie BYORTS "ON THE MARNE RIVER FRONT; ‘GERMAN ATTACKS BROKEN UP Fresh German Troops Try to Regain Ground » Lost Yesterday, but Make Little Headway. [FRENCH REPORT| PARIS, July 17 On the Marne front our troc the second : action,” walt ilready are ente ne, and per mur general rese Tensive. “Where our troops have assumed the ive, to the north of La Cha- |pelle-Monthodon, we have regained ground | The Germans last night threw new forces into the battle on the front nd {south of the Marne and attacked the 4 St. Agnan (re- f aken yesterda 1¢ French), the War Office announced to-day. The emy eeded in penetrating into Bourdonnerie, The battle is contine ing int WOOK m of this point. Americans are (St. Agnan 1 ne miles east and south of Chateau-Thierry and and a half south of the Marne, La Chapelle-Monthodon is a mile and a half of St. Agnan. These points are to the eastward al Ame can sector ny is three yrtheast of La Chapelle-Monthodon, Nesle Wood lies to the eastward! Marne and Rheims the fighting developed Wood, The Germans attacked in the Vrigny heir assault own completely. h troops from other points on the western front were heck room Be kecee tet tars men day ona} Sent to the present fighting line, says a review issued by the Havas c aight, Money orders and travellers’ cheche sav ™ Agency. Only the troops in the line and their reserve bore and et, Pee Pe or. % i x Spit Sie a: & obs et Dn eee es ee es