The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1918, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1918. A PAGE OF AMERICAN WAR NEWS FOUR NEW YORK SOLDIERS __ AMERICAN ee sla ON THE FRENCH FRONT | CHEERS OF 2.298 (EIGHT HORSES ARE. AMONG THE DEAD IN LATEST. ORAFTEESEFECT, SHOT FROM UNDER ARMY CASUALTY LIST OF 62 VICTORY ONMARNE! AMERICAN OFFICER Gepres ion Marking Eastern | Telephone Cpneehies Man Gur s R Bay, N. Y. vir 5 P. J. Sullivan of Manhattan} Bey; Fin toe Nie ven Embarkations Absent as Men When Crew Is Knocked Start for Camp. | Out by Shell. Killed in Action—G. S. Alberts | Privates Tommaso Scime, Lesandre of Brooklyn Died of Wounds. de Rocca, Italy; Alex Sherewifsk', Jewett City, Conn; Andrew J. Te- The victory on the Marne was re-| LONDON, July 22—How an Amerte fected in New York to-day by the |¢4n battery on the bank of the Marae sel! 1 the Germans for seventy-two 1 newly | j, cheering of two tho! TOTAL LOSSES 12,779} ssi Witla 22. iptor ia camp. It wan reflected even more by Pendent at I.cnch Headquarter, & ce. i Wp! thousands of the relatives and friends YOUN® Lieutenant, after telephome Of This Number 10,893 Were PRISONERS —PREVIOUSLY RE- of these men. In every way it was Seas udiealiene baveeen (er eae nybody has seen since the United 1,886 Were Marines, N.Y. Conn. horses shot under him in making stx+ teen trips, and on the last journey rank L, Johnson, Middletown, 8 began to create the deciding army of the war - | mnonnill 7 if was wounded in the knees, The core WASHINGTON, . — The! Two thousand ts @ round figure— | respondent says: voy 3. | Amertean Congrenamen Off to Italian the exact number called for to-day! #1 spent md terday (Saturday) om army casualty list to-day numbers Front To-Night. in Greater New Yotk was 1 ie teak te {Rl oan Provd sixty-two, divided as follows: Killed] ROME, Saturd July 21.—Amert- "4 . y were the first instalment of @ American troops. Tney were the | force of 10,813 who will entrain be- ficers and men of a battery of Al a nd since lean 738 which had been in pa tween Bow and: Prieey. Anes on a bare, exposed plateau above the the same thing is going on tn other river about a thousand yards from parts of the country it it clear that| the German bridges during the entire fm action, nine; died of wounds,|°S® Tepresentatives visiting Europe were received to-day by Ambassador fourteen; died of disease, seven; died| Page and were entertained by Col. of accident and other causes, three; | H. C. Buckey, military attache at the Embassy, They wili leave fi . wounded severely, : y fave for the vy. twelve; missing 18 | riatian front on Monday night. The this in a great “growing week” for; Week. They were aroused by terrifie The total losses for the American| Tillman, T. H. Caraway, C. C. Dowell, FIRST PHOTOGRAPH OF AMERICAN HEAVY ASREAETY ON THE FRENCH FRONT number of to-day's in- he Americana were under ® forces abroad in now 12,779, of which| Gyenaiern s" no atm We M ‘ LEC. itauh ERT 4 ie stalment entrained at the Cartton | heavy hell ire themselves during 16408 are tn the army and 1496 in| Crancier, 3B. Shompson, G. a. This 1s one of the first photographs to arrive in this country ably now in action bombing the German lines in the coum | Avenue yard of the Long Island Rail. | {te whale time, but they never res the Marine Corps. The summary of|and D. H. Kincheloe. — showing American heavy artillery on the French front. These guns ter attack road, There were 1,479 of them, each | +p, atenu is ploughed up by he Americans, who in a serious action en and horses, but ver silenced. of the bombard- hone wire in the by German shells ery was left without means of communication with the © depression, the sorrow afd) American infantry in the river wale T E T P ATTA K B TANKS anxicty that have necessarily macked | ley below, whom it had to support. . A young Lieutenant volunteered — absolutely absent to-day here ‘ he rode down to the river ‘Total 10,893 The summary of losses in the} Nothing You Read Can Adequately Picture ON BIRTHDAY EVE \Three U. S. Soldiers Capture German Boat |, Na ere ee ig Sune batscoidea | RRA Orlin s inkan nes Pallcred neem miasion of those who w \ Marine Corps is as follows: teen times between the battery and Army casualties to date follows: Killed in action (including 291 lost at sea). ‘en bands made —_—— carrying a fla music continuously while the men vs; OFFICER IN MARNE BATTLE PARENTS OFFLYER AMERICANS WIPE OUT CAVALRY (2 <000 800000 Gafanng tn action Ciaciading GERMANS IN FIRST ADVANCE. Prisoners) ......... 610 above abo! | y womer | fags and handkerehie aS ne o stop the ¢ ma The mission of eo river a * de 0! ithe « | It,” Former Evening World Reporter Writes ——+ Cross Marne and Later Lead Raiding Party |.i Ss ien to-day tu not tovatop him [ineyy re, entad chen Sosna eae Cakarea sae Fear of Americans Now in Heart of Boche.” David Schwartz Who Died in Back and Take Many Prisoners. Dut to drive/Himn, HAL Wad toe ate enseitiwan nitcin tne-Knoen. ae oe . | wat ; A | ing of the crowd, soldiers and clv 4 Miasing : 78 | How the Sth and 6th Marines, who recently were thrown into the wedge English Hospital, Would Have | wirt rie AMERICAN ARMIES] Regaining consciousness after treat a eee e eee nc eens ae exodus. & ~ Beal vsesecss cccccsseckiag |i” the French lines defore Chateau-Thierry, checked the German advance Been of Age To-Day. IN FRANCE, July 21 (United Press). ule the two soldiers lay recounting cheeriness and color that were almost ; To-day's army casualty list follows: over the Marne in June is told in a personal note from an officer in the - American troops, facing their first | "* a ker Jor what protected| The trains moved promptly on KILLED IN ACTION. | 5th who formerly was on The Evening World staf. Since that battle the| Private David Schwartz of the 628th4cavalry charge of the war, almost / Mes hedule-—none of ths contuslon the Lieut. Leonard C. Hoskins, Las Ve- 5, a ges N. M. Privates George Koni. | ** OM Sth have d mefer, Linn, Kan.; Joseph Maciejew. fantry (regulars, Syracuse brigade) captured Vaur and Belleay Wood in| one years old tc ski, Berlin, Wi No is and brought us through alive, Uinarked carlier departures, Uncle constantly in action, and with the 9th and 28d In-| Aero Squad would able forve of have been twenty-| wiped out a formida ve of Ger- said one Sam haa learned how to do this sort Pur : fet scket of his [Of thing. here were two troop y had he lived, His|man horsemen east of Rheims and| Fumbling inside the pocket of te SERINE OP: BIRGER: Gale. GAOL thé y blouse, the othe replie 3 KE Street, | defeated what apparently was an am- |‘) 3 \, p men starting ‘ar Av John Nowtny, Wau- | the initial stages of the present offensive. As part of the 2d Division (reg- | family Legally peered Dubiin, | wars), under Major Gen. Omar Bundy, this officer's regiment has been in| had made all preparations for a little | bitious attempt to cut the Allied lines! 19 pulled out a tiny, soiled Stara lat oh bog z tA s, Raquette Lake, levery dig fight in which Americans have engaged. The note follows: party ot the young folks in the neigh-|and rea alons far as is|ind Stripes \ joth oe erie Wemsa Com Quiahty Private Patrick J. Sullivan, No. 56 “June 17, 1918 ir] t vening ut la nigh Known, t the t n it arm er nds itl yw elegra n o ed fro: he Wa 5 East 87th Street, New York. ‘My Dear -: CORRPA DAS ena TeCe yee Sym t T/enemy has emr Privates Marvin D. Teague, Gas-| “It's all over now It’s quiet, and we are notching our guns and check: an § h hospital, resulting from a|the counter-offensive began 50 ASUALTIES IN AID Ot New. gateey.. They ake Hound for >; George Y } - : vesdiith: pec amp Meade There were 819! If you want the cleanest of white Reeleoi NO Ol iceoray Ji Verkouias:| 30 co, s'vous ochalie aocolutad Cori Mine tonyiandl thareckce aitey tol useuorate vor ctke Tatsecen, uel), mediately atlecwaral ise same [iT ODEO RAl jCamp Mende, Md. There were 818 ’ Plamarion, Greece. Teeth, Clean, Whi and Brilliant, of. them tecth and healthy gums free from DIED FROM WOUNDS. scatter around the office. The fear of the Americans is in the hearts of | house of gladness was turned into one] American unit broke up a combined ON THE VOSGES SALIENT r The scene at the Liberty Hireet diseas the easiest and quickest way . . | the women and baby killers, and the end is on the horizon of mournin AG pegs a ent Ory re st Lg ast’ with to get both is to use a tooth paste so Corpls. J. J. Bergman, Bancroft, Ia; | M ; attack ¢ nfantry and tank hat at the Carlton Avenue * yard. effective and perfect that the most H. R. Laughlin, Yamhill, Ore. “I know you have read of what the Marines did, but nothing you read David hy t son of a Phe -Amnseicane helav an importan f i ‘There were no cheering crowds, and astonishing results usually come in & | Cook G. 8. Alberts, No. 418 Ridge- ,can adequately picture it. The youth and freshness of the American troops f™mily 0! peine two! sector on a alight riae, behind a chatk | SIX Officers and Sixteen Men Com: | the men themacives, Instead of co rosie HInk wood Avenue, Brooklyn. places them in the first rank of soldiers here, and the repeated ‘Bon soldat," Ya" his senior, Iti b » | colored r which were the| mended for Conspicuous Brav- | and elevated trains, “Tnere were quiet) And the cost is so little. Just go to Privates L. F. Beckerle, St. Louis; |‘Bon soldat’ of the veteran poilus is our greatest compliment. I feel per: Tabor He went away with the atcn (BORON neh OE ery in Another Raid leave-takings among fr is and rela. any drug or department store and get D, Blotto, Germantown, Philadelphia, | gonally very humble alongelde the boys of nineteen and twenty who tore| ‘ft late last year and sailed tne Sa eee Reh tes It Ri tives, Then the men boarded the boat . iarye tube of Senreco tooth paste Pa; H. ¥ n, Wis; into the Prussian Guards and sent them scattering ageebcell hae Res i dg | Americans they| WITH THB AMBRICAN ARMY IN| Si” © T Notionipuwillvibuinake:vaurckast ee cents AA a od nett “The Boches were coming with seven-league boots when Gen. Harbord | which said that he was in a hospita y ) has a remark-| FRANCE, Sunday, July 21—American| americans on clean and white, but it will at once re- eer et a Ne Maren Fiat- | threw a line of Americans across the front and ordered us to hold but we Aveda rela ; hosting dragee Jou tnenralac inte. shea gatmsa| Fed ee move any filmy ‘coating, check the Pa; J. Rugg, Casselton, N. D.; R. D. det the devils,’ yelled Capt. Blanchfield (now dead), CARE WOR GACT TURE AR ORE SOD IANS eae att | tiicted 1M casualties on the enemy and| American names appear in to-duy's | acidity of the mout Sparks, Gimlet, Ky.; EB, Szyperski, “A minute later the Boche tore out of the woods, a machine gun to, liter he was dead Bun erouai a nnder Pack | sustained virtually none themaelven Died—R, Walters, Chicoxo. |" It ts used by thousends of Dentists every ten of them. A rain of good American lead from good American} William Milton Kaplan, a private in| 1° Fgere ON OE CASES ry an prisoners declare they had and its sensational sale in the Middle Private T. Villotte, East Ruther- |riflemen met them. We saw them stop. Surprised? Why, they never {Company D, 307th I ed AES UT Res been receiving bad food and poor Spat aac get Uinoat hencmaen ay eported as missing with his pa ast of = Chateau-'Thierr bree on. ren you visi . ford, N. J. dreamed of anything like it. We kept pounding and they turned and rt es ‘ ' i , ye aa nata nt tolea a Gane , t fou r n tt t nericans captured Ge r ersand sixteen men have been ou should do at least twice a year, DIED OF DISEASE. nts and four | and si at | Americans captured a German t y . ; chy Bienes raced back for the wood. The German drive got its first shock, l'Nov 64 Saat 118ih Birost HL , nd rowed across the Marne under| commended in French and American isk him about Senreco, It's the most Ree Rae te Me EAS: “We lay in the open, digging in with bayonets andMiring while the | tieiman Kaplan, is In the teal. er of darkness before the Cerman|orders for “conspicuous bravery In the delightful and refreshing tooth paste t e, Okli aaite ca po ruta pilin ? pa we es ") preparation and execution of a raid it is possible to bu Advt Privates Sonn &. Cooper, Vasaviite,| Boche was frantically passing back word that a cog in the wheel had] business, Young Kapl retreat, ‘They hid in bushes during | PF? n the Vosges recently, ‘This raid was preceded by « half hour's artillery Mo.; Joseph F. Fochey, 108. t0th| Slipped. They still never dreamed of Americans, we later learned from | first batch of the d the day, exploring the banks and Street, Hoboken, N. J.; John McCue, | prisoners Upton, and was with covering enemy machine guns.| preparation. Two hundred Americans, Columbus, ©.; Kent Odell, Buena| “Finally, Boche got his wind and started again. For two days we | York's Own" Division en they re-entered the boat and| including thirty-two bandmen aa Vista, Ark.; Albert S. Rex, Phila-| just mowed him away and then the boys got tired of lying there and ‘up| He sailed with his regiment in April pushed their explorations further] stretcher bearers, penetrated $00 yards delphia; David Sahwarts, 74 East!and at ‘em’ they went. They just swept the fields and woons in good open- | “Md the last heard from tim was al The Germans discovered them and] tnte the German trenches and inflicted 119th Street, New York. warfare, and when we smashed into their trenches and machine gun nests | !!%e 0” @ field i, which t ed an intense machine gun fire. | i aria Syctare omplyedneai rane DIED FROM ACCIDENT AND| ai) we could hear was ‘Kamerad, Amerikan, Kamerad!’ bal ATCO hs AED | Amerlos scaped by VINE] troops sent into the line weveral da OTHER CAUSES, “In many places they left so fast that clothing, boots, rifles, machine | ‘“* ® bs ARO PRT BV ER OREC swimming, hulf (he) before to make a raid on the American Privates Paul G, Mente, Heldel-| ens and all sorts of booty taken from French towns was left. Every sol-|°0ro the date of June 25. ‘The mes-| time under tho surtace LAC a aE ee pee ed ad berg, Pa.; Byron DB, Stone, Shrews- bury, Mass. Private Isaac Thomas, No, 411 52d from the War De his family that he h The next night they led a strong] pat 4 the German plan by only a few dier had at least two Boche overcoats for a mattress. < 4 orty-five nd] hours and occupied only forty-fi ir comrades across “In one officer's overcoat, Licut. Blaisdell found a cat-o'-nine-tails, | since Jun: r extended their investigations, @b- . Street, New York. ample evidence of the statements of many prisoners that they were driven | the card that he is a| taining valuable inf tion concert-| mother ef Soldier Missing In SEVERELY WOUNDED. | time and again to fight. prisoner of the German: ng Lisposition of German wn atlcer si Lieut. Reginald D. Grout, No. 200 “Every prisoner expresses astonishment that Americans were in} jeut, Ro D, Grout n After cleaning the south bank of| rs. E Keiser, mother We 'O a Ss” West 86th Street, New York. | France and all said that the German High Command had repeatedly as- 8 a graduate of the Ilattsbur tives, American units croxsed the | William H. Keiser, is ill at Lieuts. Danie! W. Patterson, North- | sured them that the rubmarine had finished America. All were abppy to| TT#ining Camp, and Marne and combed the woods on the | No. 1141 Intervaale Avenue : fed, Vis William N. Walton, Par!) Ssoners and so out of the fighting, ate in 1017. Hig brother, Lieut, Jotn |north bank east of Chateau-Thicrry e r ) Corpl. Raymond A. Tomargo, No, 49| “Not once in the days of fighting that followed did a German stand up Halen hee (ar meaulietnay aneauntee: ian Buffalo Avenue, Brooklyn. |when the Americans got close to him. We've got their number and they h b WHOM lo: Gapragne: wharcatased to cures, Privates George A. Brown, Phila-| know it. I wish I could get over and tell you all about it, I'm so full of aR Le Rha) er immediately, These Germans |} delphia.; Fra M. Farrell, Stamford, | stuff I simply can’t write the thing in a straight-out way ner v n in't get anoth Conn.; ,Wesley 8. Knutson, Curlew, | “You know how I did | worry about a pistol and field glasses. Well, it eted } ( nstance BRAND Hdaho: “ease I Lowvern, St, Louis | wasn’t nocesmary. I now have the best Zelas glasses the Imperial Ger- | atch ane 12 Vf EVAPORATED or CONDENSED man Government could purchase for me, and splendid new Leuger | erate. pistol that I swing at my belt is certainly the finest the Hohenzollerns |.’ J. Sullivan, listed as killed could provide for an American Army officer.” } ‘ H skoly, Russia; Alexander Norvich, Dupki, Russia; Robert 1. sonar | Grey's Chapel, Ala Private John D. Turovich, No. — rae Sule Street, New York, RETURNS AFTER READING | arerauailary roiltng panies Art ee from the War Depart Brings out that Chocolaty Taste in Cocoa-_ In fact it brings out a richer and finer flavor in all dessert dishes such as puddings, burg, Austria. arcl Am only sorry my ot Private Joseph R. Dennen, Prince- TO LEARN SON IS WOUNDED mother said proud ton, N. J. ould do so much more Privates William A. Dickey, Mill —- to have Raymond fo ; Hiram C, Goodman, luka,| Mrs. Mary Tomargo had just re- ; Ira R. Heuston, Lockport, N.Y.|turned to her home on Buffalo Ave- | x07th news wed; it's 1 serious than my proud © ni Privates William M. Kaplan, No.§4| nue, Brooklyn, to-day when the War Meanie’ at rouble,” the buried aid | brother, F “ ve a pies, cakes, etc. Send today for our new Hy BI € ec a ded 1 wit me one Ww 1 me or , ” ast 118th Street, New York; William | Department message was handed to pee ei ‘ I fg) aaa a Recine Book The Milky Way. to r, No, 1141 Intervale Avenue, | her announcing that her son, Corpl the New vark Cott Ex a | The other refused to go & nd fll UN© | eahwunte Jersey ¢ ed Hewtatrants, | ’ New York; John Kuehnle, No. 2104) Raymond A. Tomargo, had been se- | ote n 1s. aga His comp TRENTON, No J, da War ; : Vyse Avenue, New York. verely wounded in Krance, She came | * an Wauatin ladaaies fuperhuman efforts managed to extri- [Department hax mate two calle on WISCONSIN CONDENSED MILK CO., Privates James G. Leslie, North|from St. Mary's Hospital, where she! from the firin ALLY ald in ving t blew cate him If at \a t. Althoug uffer nee ee ‘ men, Sears @i' Hudion St Now Mask Tonawanda, N. Y.; Bartholomew J.) spends three days a week reading to| life is hard, b ated by the entry wo " ing n a badly wounded arm Ay - : ds Moriarty, Buffalo, N. Y.; IMichae| soldiers and sailors who are confined Ht ls one, on pang hes Indu at deag mrade back to tr ihond ; A Pender, Buffalo, N. Y there. Her two daughters spend most | forme, aw Sires Tea q Twice way thoy |i lorad Vamleteen tare tain latte PRivates | Edward M. Pettit, Ove er \of their time at the 23 ly Red enemy as soon © Toealby can.” | nouncemer gat . wer 1 r by exploding + 4 +. Davis's STORY OF THE XAISER Begins To-Day in be The Wiorld rt | ar a ——$ ~ $$$

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