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“If It Happens In BOAT REPORTED SIGHTED 50 MILES OFF FIRE ISLAND _ Fails to Attack British Ship— Heavy Cannonading Heard Off Cape Cod. PLANES HUNT RAIDER. No Warning Given Before Submarines Attacked Barges AN ATLANTIC PORT, July -A British steamer arriving here to-day Reported having sighted a submarine night. When first seen the U boat ‘was astern. dt made no attempt to attack. PROVINCETOWN, Mass. Heavy cannonading was heard Bhore here at 11.45 A. M. to-doy July 2%. off i | dt’s In The Evening World’’ __ PRICE TWO CENTS. ‘tifty miles off Fire Island during the | New York be Circulation Books Open to Al Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing ‘Co, (The New York World). “ PLOT IS EXPOSED TO RAISE GERMAN ARMY OF 150,000 HERE TO INVADE CANAD Sienisch Hild toe Alien, MERCURY 92 AT NOOK: NEW YORK, “MONDAY, JULY 22, ONE MILLION AMERICANS? ACH! TEN MILLION FIGHTING, GERMANS CONVINCED NOW Prisoner Who Was a Baker Here Says Soldiers Have Changed Minds Since Thursday. ITH, THE AMERICAN W ARMY ON THE AISNE FRONT, Sunday, July 21 (Associated Press).—A German prisoner captured by tho Ameri to-day formerly was a baker w York City and Lebanon, “Circulation Books Open to All.”’ 14 PAGES 1918, AMERICANS CUT ~ FRENCH GAIN i} “Object Had Been Attained,’ Says Cologné MSTERDAM, July 22.—"The withdrawal of our troops to the dentially communicated its intention beforehand,” says the Cologne attained. Therefore it did not appear dangerous te retreat locally in HERE’S THE GERMAN EXCUSE FOR RETREATING ACROSS MARNE Gazette—“ Not Dangerous to Go Back | to Save Unnecessary Losses.” A northern bank of the Marne came as no surprise to well- informed circles because the supreme command had confi | Gazette,, and adds: he object whieh the forcing of the Marne had tn view was order to save unnecessary losses.” |coizago to Fumish 99560000 BARBILLON WOOD CAPTURED — said to H PI a Pa. He was asked what the Said to Have Planned to German ers thought about i fo Have Planned ‘o ME WOMAN DIES OF HEAT Semen” = 5 igang : ae Since Thursday, the prisoner 3 | Weather Experts Say It Will Be) said, the Gormans bad concluded ALSO AIMED AT MEXICO. Hotter—Hu y Falls that the announcement that a of | get | million Americans were in France ‘ ; =a Steadily | was false and rumors among the Physician Believed by U. S.| Heres tne way the mercury! Germans on this front are that oar ° | eer th a t ion An i | Officials to Be Unrecognized | climbed to-day | Wehcsinase cakes ee ee Temperature. Humidity. | = SSS SS = Brother of Kaiser. tie Meereia be — [oa ar so §145,000,000 MEAT ORDER Government officials to-day seized 10 A. M 48 rich August Richard von Strentsch, | 1 | peda a | an elderly physteian held as an enemy! 1.39 M 1 degrees 3 | alien, headed a movement to organize, 2 P. M 2 degr 30 Pounds of Bacon and 134,000,000 3 P.M. degrees 20 German reservists in New York State for an invasion of Can The sidewalks were sizzling to-da of Canned Products ay t, fully resume BY THE AMERICAN TROOPS; . note fa CHICAGO, July 2—The Govern Naval vessels havo been off this Von ested a week With the hottest da f (the YORt,| Cte lateat: meat order, ressivad at fort hunting German submarines. ago Saturday and {s now held at the/and the hot Ju since 1885./the stock yards to-day, is eaid by| bits spice shan orsmpset Provincetown harbor is closed to all) Raymond Street Jail. Gove Just the Dicion of O) Sackers to break all records. It calle| ofc said they had reason to be-| breeze fa r, and the Bhips. ¢ ae ie bpd pound pACON mM- s5c . z =; Ge Ss P lev $ an unrecognized brother of| humidity kept going down am the| ‘oF 9-60.00 pounds of bacon and Stubborn Resistance and Use of Gas Shella! The firing appeared heaviest off &! the Kaiser meroury went up, a saving graco| (00 pounds of canned moate for the Fail Ss llied D A int between Coast Guard Stations heparin ant él me : PORTA army. ails to Stop Allie rive Across point between Coast Guard Station. a Dep i m rom sunstr 1 prostration. | ‘The cost wilt ran between $140,000,000 Pp Nos, 38 and 39. Residents of Cahoon's| Correspondence sho The predic Was that the mer-| and §145,000,000, it is said, of which $130,- | Marne and Northward. Hollow, Nauset and Wellfleet all re- | €xt¢ from Nove cury would go still higher and put] 000,000 will go to growers of livestock. | hearing the sions Apri ds yesterday's hot day in the shade. | Deliveries are to be completed by Jun. | LONDON, July 22.—American troops yesterday crossed the River oxplosions reser those of| The re felzed exposed @ plot! The day isn't the hottest for July by|% WW | “depth bombs were heard shortly after| with many ramifications against the | soveral ¢ con, Le year and the| | Mame between Chirteves and Gland, east of Chateau-Thierry, and cap- BOSTON, July 22—All the facilities | from an American citizen and others | corded $9. | jtured the Wood of Burbillon, according to authoritative announcement | District were brought into play to-day | from the woman were said to have! prof c n al Company | f in @ search of New England waters) been of the most inertminating na-| at N Avenuc, Williams. | Me (Gland is two miles east of Chateau-TlMerry aod Charteves 1s five for the German submarine which at-| ture. burg, A ney was over-|Crowded Car aie TSC ONS oe aie riine ip the: Marne) tacked and j barges and) Germans to the number of 150,000 | come lied before the arrival of Wallabout Basin Bridge at Hewes | = ' ‘, { ed a tug yesterday off Cape Cod] were to have been gathered into a) Dr. Levy of the Greenpoint Hospital. Sveti Iachi venue. The capture of barbillon Wood means that the Americans have ad- within view of the Orleans shore. Pa-| fighting force and were to have been! Mrs, Delaney lived at No. 84 Debo Street and Washington Avenue. | a ae 1 ; i ' trol vessels, larger war ¢ airplanes, | drawn from New Yc City as well voise Avenue, Her husband is an in-| wight persons were slightly injured | vanced between three and four miles from their old position on the hydroplanes and submarines joined in| as al! parts of the State. They were. valid to-day when a crosstown car, north-| Marne. the hunt | to have gone into Canada and carry| Dorothy McGill, four years old, of young, jumped the rails on the Walla ough the port of Bosto: not ¢: th 4h 5 th aa eps Das " : On every front the Germans are resisting desperately and are mak- ee bf pork ee Ade a na guerilla warfare with the idea | No. 754 Manha Avenue waa OVCr|rout Basin Bridge at Hewes Street and| 3 ting desp y k pee OTSA RA EMER BD Sapte boli SO: OTLB) FO) BES Bi TOA VES we Greenpoint) Va anington Avenue, Brooklyn aii|ing violent counter attacks, Nevertheless, the French troops yesterday protected craft w warned of the er own , to cease sending , Hospital. | i danger of leaving the harbor. The | ¢-ao, Others ove © by the heat were treated by physicians from the} made progress along the River Mame to a maximum de th of eight | troops uers overcome by the heat to : 4 i g submarine as headed south when| yon also planned mii-| gay were Willamsburg Hosupital and sent to last geen yesterday, but naval authori-ltary action in Mexico, according to Robert Glofter, fifteen, a schoolboy, | their homes. tes expressed the nion that the/the papers seized. He to have | of No, 1316 St. Job Place, dropped | The bridge had just been set in place te Germans stubbornly resisted the French crossing of the river, boat might bob up again off the New| aided wiess bands that have! unconscious at Flatbush and Atlantic| WNe8 the ear tried to cross, When it} use : : England coast been making war on the United! aves aie A to Brcoklen tes, ares place where the tracks join} but the French succeeded in getting two elements over at Mezy and prrtbien| i Avenues, Removed to Broo! OS- lit it Jumped and threw those on the f 2 SUBMARINE: REBORTED. SINT Sta Part of the plan was the pita) pene clatacmn ateaeataas Courcelles, which are constructing foot bridges under heavy fire. The ED ON § ‘ Mexic: John Alphonson, forty-two, a car- "1 on owded at the time. } a Reports to the headquarters of the|tiery for As a fort santar Geen Oh dbit hice Ja the wietom a ee tat the time. | Germans are using gas shells in large numbers. First Naval Distr here indicated]in the German Army von Strentsch mashed and the upper part of the car Between tt fia h, 7 amaghed an of car} ween the Oureq and the Aisne Germans ag r ing the presence of the submarine in this/apparently considered himsetf fitted was lifted from the trucks. 1 e the Fmans again are making Vicinity since Saturday, Capt. Orrin | tor this work : j violent counter attacks, t > French are maintaining their lines. The| Bartlett of Plymouth reported that] Another part of the plot was an : A | i beGt dusk in lurcay night ue sighted ||attecct ; nttey-six, of MARNE VICTORY AT SEA, TOO. | object of the enemy counter attack probably is to expedite the withdrawal] K Satu n r b uttemp! fell ascen -* | f pe of a submarine four]the Governmer n of I jn | Destroyer Sinks U Boat as Germans | of his { roops from the pocke tween Soissons and Rheims. Meanwhi e| port of Ply h jton nvest ated Brooklyn | Cross River. | of the attack yesterday |Strentsch’s activit : , me | LONDON, July same day | German troops on the southern end of the pocket must be experiencing near Orleans was the fact that the /by officers of the Naval Intelligence | "T7001." gheriaan, twenty-seven, a|the Germans were wcross the| great difficulty in get upplie | submersible opened fire without | Bureau : . lolaric, living 834 Wost fist | 8" rday), a ¢ a “warning, In all other roported cases| One lotter, dated Oct 15. 1916, | 16re ly st the doth F; ne was by the British Southwest of Rh ta heavy fighting and the French! attack upon an American coastwise | reads: ne Canad at Bridge. | Vinee eyhad ee FER AVE eT Marne, the Admiralty announces to-tay. | belly . Kk leice haeh Gekas far NED 6 ¢ net Station and removed | od |! ave made progre Between the Ourcq and the Marne Rivers the - a * t t y Hospital Three 1 young girl and|are in fear of Germans in this vicin , Kl liranah Westardaw jack 400i urikor two boys were among the thirty-two| ity. Bridgeburg is about twenty-dive McQuade, fifty-eight years | DAMAGED U BOATS AT EL.) I perso reed to take to small boats | miles from here baad ‘ ee Rawant Filled With Dia- John Botovich, an Austrian, a mem-|spondent was writing from a place nd was removed to st 22,1 mile olnn ' Ber of the lusts crew, had hiw right| near Buffalo, Inaam Bridie pital ed with submarine 230 GERMAN FOE CHANTED 300 CZECHS arm almost blown off by a plece of | burg just ac Niagara e h breeze tempi o ad # shell. He probably will lose the River, abou rom But ming Al at ON WAY 10 EXECUTION | Capt. Charles Ainsiee of one f Brid big aie fact Decree Issued on J 19, Legat ne Be4 were jammed at an earl . barges was wounded in both terminal ¢ ution Hae oatam ey! AIR RAID ON PARIS FOILED. PEN Eee shrapnel and John Vitz, also a me which he United & one 4 et a AGE ers Taken Austrian n ber of the tug crew had a and ( Sk were aianliste German Machine Driven Off ta Daz-| tesla ij y W It s 4 blown off, The k » An t - * Pai ‘ | light Att | wast - alians Def than an hour and wa ressed U er 1 ARIS, Ju 1 ane | decin * i Capt End shore w ® 1 ie. remion aay ut “ : 1 t The tug w 1 \ “ ; ‘ sion: [driven off by the French anti-a.rera own i bed i ‘ rm | : -_ “ “ veeiection Gombiny, 7a ces : ne) Dates After : a a of three empty bar 1 « A THE WORLD TRAVEL BUREAL Cc I N | at 7 “es Arvaie, Pulltaer (World) Rullding. ify Sa iB Continued on h Pag HA i 63-03 Park How, N.Y. City e an Im 1 tia Bs oot of von & he plot Pectre estan W000," ESULTS, Page 2 ellor who ha F are of gladly mere aaae | wt ceo Check room for bagenge and parcels open leicians at adauarters, hay ree ae : ; UELDING FOOD, | aight, “Money qrdere and ‘waveliens’ cheap ENTRIES, Page 6 ‘overed f his indisposiion and has| Cbanted as they wer re Weds ES yes Garena, (Continued on Second Page) omen” 4 Lai uly. bis duties. l executions, ny Weather—Fair; ¢ continued warm to- p-night and to-morrow to-morrow CALL FOR AID BY CROWN PRINCE: 8-MILE RETREAT ABOVE MARNE RAILROAD; NEAR SOISSONS ey Fighting Grows Heavier Each Hour, but Heavy Concentration of Troops Fails to Stop Progress of the Allies—Number of Unwound- ed Prisoners Greater Than Total Allied Casualties. WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY ON THE AISNE FRONT, July 22 (Associated Press).—The Germans are clinging desper- ately to the line south of Soissons in an effort to protect their flanks. The Americans, fighting on this front, have completed | . the cutting of the narrow guage railway to Chateau-Thierry. PARIS, July 22.—Pushing in south of Soissons, the French have crossed the Soissons-Chateau-Thierry Road, north of Ville- montoire, opposite Buzancy, the Temps announc {Villemontoire is five and a half miles south of Soissons. Buzancy is about a mile and a half northeast of Villemontoire, on the easterly side of the Soissons-Chateau-Thierry road.) The Allied advance is approaching this road still further to |the north. On the front to the west of Soissons the situation has remained stationary. The Germans are offering desperate re- sistance to the Allies in the entire Soissons area, as the grave con- sequences to them of a withdrawal from the town are apparent, and the struggle is continuing with great severity. CROWN PRINCE GETS AID FROM THE NORTH. WITH THE FRENCH ARMY IN FRANCE, July 22 (Asso ciated Press).—Frederick William, the German Imperial Crown Prince, has been obliged to call for help from his cousin, Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria. German divisions from the army in the north have been hurried down to protect the western flank ot the defeated army which has been driven back over the Marne and ejected from Chateau-Thierry by Franco-American troops. (Despatches from London show that American troops have advanced three or four miles from the Marne and that the French advanced to a maximum d. of eight miles.] The region immediately south of Soissons forms the key of the German position, and here the enemy has concentrated heavy forces for the purpose of holding back the advancing tide of the | Allies. The latter continue their progress, although the fighting is becoming heavier each hour. They have taken many prisoners, the number being more than has been announced, and new batches of captives are arriving. The number of unwounded prisoners alone far exceeds the total casu- alties of the Allied troops since the victorious advance began. ancaement fame AMERICANS DRIVE AHEAD OVER HALF MILE AN HOUR NORTH OF THE MARNE RIVER U.S, Guns Are Firing On Soissons and Oulchy- Le-Chateau Has Been Reached—Allied Artilery 4 Also Across Marne. VITH T AN VN ARM N PRAN 2 (United Press).—The America ince f the Marne, and are beyond Bezwst Germain (five “sive northeast of Chateau-Thiesry) as