The evening world. Newspaper, August 1, 1918, Page 1

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“If It Happens In New York It’s In The Evening World’’ tnt « _ PRICE TWO CENTS. sori we LS Che Circulation Books Open to All.” 1018, by The Presa Publishing New York World), | 101. _ MORGAN PARTHER Board of fates Placed iv Control; Rollo Ogden 1 } EVENING POST 7 GAFFNEV’S AMAZING ESCAPE 6 KILLED: 5 HURT WLAN, COMBINATION OF GOOD LUCK AND POLICE BLUNDERING NEW YORK, THURSD Guards WEATHER—Fair To-Night and Friday; Warmer Friday, * AY, AUGUST 1, 1918. ® ‘BY FALLING WALLS IN PEEKSKILL FIRE) Volunteers Meet Death Fighi- —"s Remains Editor. WALLARD'S STATEMENT. ped From 19 Policemen With AP parent Ease. IN TWO HOMES. Says He Has Contemplated REFUGE Sale of Newspaper for the ] a - b A subsidiary of thy jeischma is i ls { Last Six Months, Fled From Last With New|: a idiary of the mann Except Prisoners Killed } < ‘ | + Manufacturing Company, collapsed at e 1 Clothing Outtit Just Be- |; 2 o'clock this morning in a fire chat] VONDON, Wodneaday, July ‘The Now York Evening Host 1 ‘ ; : | Yesterda y of sheer, hard ee Gar? © t fore Police Arrived. ‘ destroyed the building and contents, | \°sterday was a da = |KAISER ADMITS U. U. S. POWER. deen eold to Thomas . n-and-out fighting on the American 1, P. Morgan & ¢ prding to an The st@ehoure is on the southern i corre. | Boats However, U Bomts Will Stem Pp. n & Co, accords a ‘ont, telegraphs Reuter's =e en an | How a conv slayer, clad boundary of Peekskill. The dead are, 1fTP% era “Vital Forces. ac h terwear, unarmed and| ¢ Dr. C. R. F. Greene, aged forty. | *Pondent on the front north of the} AMSTERDAM, Aug. 1.—"American dag by Oswald Garrison Villard, t only in his unde ne * RM. SS 08 SOFT = Marne, He says that the final cap- | Fmies and numertoal superiority do ad his! Cello with nineteen policemen and detec nine, Peekskill, Fire Department | 4h “ not frighten us," the Kaiser declared ane: Sener Mr. Villard gave tives hot on his trail managed to elude | Pranseoes ture of Seringes by the Americas | in @ proclamation to the German ermy heldere. Recently M ue all pursucrs, clothe himself, and final-| 3 George L. Caascles, aged thirty. | ¥44 4n especially creditable achieve- sritpe the ‘one. nm Paina ana Gees a famont and his associates an : : a 8 bi dociator i MBSE CDE * ty. Mr. Lamont 1¥ bUry himself in some secret hiding five, former President of Cort- | ment man history teaches that as well as option on the property a Se Sevend the of the keenest landt Hook: and Lasaue Compaiy “The Americans after three days of | tie Soares: which the campaign has announced that the fh \ pursuer is the full story The ning| 3 No, 1, Peekskill jto-and-fro fighting through villages | Tn a Soousdediin with my army ‘ol o he property in ¢ nd . * d learne ubtlety and were deter. 4 control of the property in ihe Manet | World earned to-day of the of| PGT AL aoaerareseeuni had learned subtlet were deter} sands my navy, in unshakable will to of the presen an ; Winseal Gather ater his baile with (oe zi | mined to have a real fight to a finish. | win tho victory in the struggle with s consisting of Thee ‘ “i fe . a: Clarence J. Lockwood, aged | qney consequently withdrew as if re- | opponents who are often superior and. @, Veil, President of the American) the police in’ and around an apa \s twenty-four, foreman of Cortlandt | tiring from Seringes, and the Ger- | despite the united efforts of the great | Telephone and Telegraph Company: ment on West 118th Street early yes Hook anditaader Combany |mans crept. down from the high | @st naval powers of the world, my sub Henry &. Pritchett President of the terday merning. | 3 round, convineed they had their op. TRAFINGS) OFS STO OF: AUICHORR.. THEY Are Foundation th ad . J. RK. Silleck, Lieutenant of | Ge , | tenaciously attacking and fighting the Carnegie seeeacting, und Bitery| TBO completo revelations of Gaff.) 4 Cortlandt Hook and Ladder Com. | Ponents beaten, Additional German | vital forces which are streaming across oe sean the Atlantic |Rey’e strategy indicate that not only |? . troops came pouring in until the | the ea to the enemy.” pet eaeete ae the pres-| Was luck with him, but in | Uae? |town was occupied as it never had| The Kaiser further said Monthly. Dr. Rollo Ogden r stance rank blundering on the part] John Torpy, lieutenant of Centen-| heen befor “You are in the midst of the hardest ent editor, is to remain in ¢ of the police and in t nd case] + nial Hose Company No. 4 | the new occupants began to | stray Pic desperate efforts of the | the editorial 1 1 h eration of the new system of] ] The ed are Will Kelly, No.| organize their defenses they found| enemy will, aa hitherto, be foiled by Lamont maid he had been Ind) the oporati th ° | injured are William Kelly, No oming |2OUF bravery. Of that 1 am certain ‘ ah he purchase wuse of a| Scattering detectives in every station} 223 Decatur Avenue, right log frac-| that bullets appeared to be coming | ang, with me, the entire Fatherland,” to make the pu Evening Post,| house instead of having them in| 4 Raho aac Gar = No. $0 Hud. |'? {7m three sides of the village, and | - = personal interest in tht lew, the|Teadiness In branch bureaus \é A 3 REESE ATI OR E: Md-lit was not long before they discov. | «4 ” formed when his brother-inslaw, 1M"|"“After the daring Tombs breaker | son Avenue, shock; Raymond O'Pon- |croq that the Americans, white with-/"GARRY ON MAGNET, Jate Hammond Lamont, wi tite ,| had wriggled through the cordon of | ey, still a fugitive | nell, No, 6316 Smith Street, right knee|drawing from the front of the town, managing editor, He believes Tis OT acto ind uniformed men abour| With the entire police force seaur- | fractured; Harry Hart, No. 14 Wells | had commenced an encircling move- REAL HUNGER KILLER, journal with the sound traditions of) sie Stroct house and was| [ne tho city for kim, ob dat | Street, fractured ribs. ment on both aides, thus forming @ ' the Evening Post is an nstitution Sai sprinting bareheaded ana] the me Mrs. * Tynan Dr, Greene a prominent phy-|ring almost completely around it DRAWS GERMANS CASH value to the public if conducted with) | ough the rain—a whita| the follow outfit clothing, |sician here and for several yoars he| “Then came tragic fighting. The «pendence, With re- f | which he is supposed to be still |had been devoting elf largely to! py : q { to sur vigor and independen: eee | kbost in his underwear—east on 120th Pp ad been devoting himself largely to) Prussian Guard had voted not to 8 an gard to the appointment of the three) Street near Morningside Avenue, a| Wearing ; laboratory work. He Is survived by| render, and their opponents were just| Its Mystic Powers Cheap at 300 trustees, Mr, Lamont said that It wit) ont eecurred in the amail| | Brown coat, dark striped [his wife and three children, Casscles | as anxious to see the thing through.| Marks, for It Is Made of Genuine impossible for him to devote his per- |" partment occupied by an Itatian| trousers and straw hat, was employed by the Standard Oil) 1, was an ‘air of small arms, but Bacon. conduct of the | 9P: =: loth Company at Montrose. He 1s = . sarees sonal attention to t 0 the ool the vicinity of Manhattan | s ig a the Americans proved to be better that th {runthen tad | Seay sh the Yisinl hy OF SORRALiAD married and bad three children. Bar- i : TOCKHOLM, July M1 (Cor- ' paper and that the Avenue and 12st Street, A shots, and slowly picked off men here accamted the trust with a sense Of)" Q. 11. ton a o'clock the head of moré was a bookkeeper in the ATM | a thine respondence of the Associated t lll Madea tata saver strong Coal Yards, and was married, |)" Press on ma fn turning over the Evening Post! °° O°’. door, He opened it to Lockwood was engineer of the filter| nd slowly their encircling] ¢Mcacy guaranteed,” was adver- i te Mr, Lamont, Mr, Villard paid a abe {a youth, rain-soaked and with| > plant of the Peekskill water works corit tha cata Aw the | ted recently in German news- | , “amon a ace uin-soaked and a] ae aha = ren to: ring ¢ about the village. As the 4 : “nye ‘0 ss Bi tribute to associate worke no outer hin, tanding there| Firemen Cling to Ladders Close to Ailes ve a onrpentar’ amount of | Tins drew closer and the defenders Las ate an py ior es y stated that he had contempla panttr nd scarcely able to speak. ‘lames to Protect Adjoining t ts be ps Hs ange amount O| saw their doom approaching, they re o ms declared to have tine for six months, during which) «1 have had a row with my father," grain, suaked by water, expi He thnce fa hat atill the Ameri. | BY8tic Powers enabling Itt posses. \ | soci 4 received many offers for} ing youth stammered, “I knocked Property. and burst the walls of the brick|« sae teringig. Hike a} S28 More easily to endure the food : time he had 5 Menke oid 3 ikaw fae ectacular fire tn the} building, which stood on the bank of |©4n# came on unta i privations of the country the prope a statement be said: | yin dawn and I'm afraid if hecatches| A smoky and spectacul torm or the unavoidable stroke of| °” , | mae t satisfaction in relin- | 1 kill me. 1 jumped out of the | *x-story paper and twine manufactory | the Hudson: hsp The price was 300 marks and the ishing the owners f the Evening | window and ran here, Please let me | of W i ae eS The fr: rm was turned in at| “When the Americans reached the| DUY¢r ¥48 privileged to inspect the RE eee sins ears of con-| 4 until he goes to work | 2 Lstayette Street, sh after noon }11,35 o'clock last night. It was fol- | ‘ rong magnet before paying. ‘Those who Post, after thirty rats at ny ee pene y drew a crowd wands and|iowed quickly by second and third | Precincts of the villa he 4 ‘re ) gent in orders received a package sa SAAR undards ita] he fugitive out of the night totd | ote, a ine wna tnt r alarms, which brought out the five | ceased, and with one wild yell they) pearing the inseription: "Contents: “tastigh journs Suinal ainoa’ AROL sa tlaGalble talo that the lellan ge ela aaneernn Ne rourth | Peekskill companies, all motorized. |closed with the foe. The fleree B=) ooo Carry-on Mugnot.” ub! ice 1801} such a plausible tale that the ia 7 acovered on the fourth oar sudde ave ‘ . tradition of put the new lee him in. At 7 o'clock, when the : et, Bake Nearly 300 flremen responded, includ. | roar suddenly save place | ee It Is not on record that any one wan Se mane 1 | ; -— — | Deputy ed it had|img many prominent citizens lence as man grappled DAD) refused to pay for it, for the ownership. Tam om "4 i : (Continued on Sixth Page) \gecead anialy nm minuten| The crash came without warning |OMly the clash of ARAL Ven cattt pasved'to be ten nouuan that a’plan of tru: Heat ADAG Rh we === | after Chief Ke the #round |and the killed and injured were buried |the Broans of the str ld Be} of Thuringian bacon. The in- devised by my et) to Mr. the top thre © bis building |under piles of bricks. Soores of firv- | heard. genious “inventor” now is being vinlard, in 1881, should spree a | were afire men and neve hundred spectator. The issue wis never doubt for! sought by the police. “ vening | Th ardest we wa ne t nen oO! A rf an a t this kind of f ne Lamont. The od | A R d J | f. } ‘The hardest 1 y men Of wurrowed through the hot bricks to| 4 tA et coat ave wnt te. hoe fron te ecor uly for Engines No : who were! ger out the men. ‘The avarch of th can 43 more "9% 1 COTTON CROP FALLS OFF xr own minds unhamperec nike |toreed to cling to f n nar Sill i an Guardsman 1 speak their own | World Advertising | |r terms stort i tne wry toen'nr] ns evotinues and & check iy bein aorinman. sue 8 eee by the ownership ; |tho flame amd dense smoke and provent | Made of the fire comps for a few Genina Forecast 1,704,000 Hales Leas Than “No newspi his country has a Jthe fire from leaping the wet | Four of the injured men were taken Month Apo. more deve of workers or one | | The total value of the stock In the |}to the Peekskill Hospital, WASHINGTON, Au 1—Loss of more patrioti¢ loyal to our Ameri. | ny et at a half million dollars. The fire was under vontrol thi 3 06,000 bales in th spective cot can lmbtitutions the democratic | re and water will be great. | mo Re ton crop, due principally to drought| ' them, and I ' n the roof with men | 16 n the west art of the cotton belt nciples which nm, and £ . : . k pu | ; rete that they are to continue to | | WORLD ADS. LAST MONTH Sy. Lieut. Pred Marshal n he ni | expecially Kas, was shown Ui] t aa ve Heerution x I a artme Agricul manage the prope | gratefully 2 1 6 9 6 1 He wa Ib piled prod A tornea | bgawiedey baw 7 art ’ ite ee es : ie Livaient £80-pound ‘bales com. | them that am bie to is ve more than the same month ‘ 1 we with 15,425,000 bale an] aper wit wi ut Ni ; 1 Sey i syed and with last year, 22 MORE SHIPS “ORDERED > supp Ba r Heavy Gales roy Shipa in Val- its prestige untart 1 8 143,081 more than the Herald WARHIA i Contrast “i 1] cacciee Wiceas a human 4 128,632 more than the American | | for A | redirites eager | VALPARAISO, Chile, Aug. 1.—Durine owt has its faults & “5 ¥ . ane © awarded ia “ w ke if ' 4 4 a “ ale last nig. era) smal since 1881 it has 1 | | 116,669 more than the Times var anna y Fleet Cc Bosten Man Crashed by Auto He : ie Heavy ale leh “aavaral ama se the personal fortunes or ——— a= tion, 4 i‘ Boird ann Devised, » i y obeys ee an stean " arr’ Lapp shaty dual, and it has , . ligay, Pourteem of the one BOSTON, Aug, }—Francis BE. 4 ee of a hah aarti be The win ars yt here tige of any ind arom A World Ad. Gels Home Circula- |wiit be built by the Ames Shipbuilding | #9, Inventor of the Stanley stew ne ently in the line of this m i 2 EE IE ook A RE RS bo oth mbition than te e lmabite was killed w hin own invens day. which ended everywhere : ina tern then eile hada ena and Gets Resu miainy, seauie, and the uihes cad , eity, the State, and the Natioa! tion Best Resuits/ Long Beach shipbuilding Cou tion, a gawertyl tour ath it geri ured) Very foc the Allon. although t there was Secaplug destruction amelnab] Corey tear or favor." a Beach, Cal, reat gain of ground,” Unarmed and Unclad, He stip- FUGITIVE SLAYER | WHOSE WIT OUTMATCHED | CORD ing Blaze That Destroys | Feed Co, Warehouse, PEEKSKILL, N.Y volunteer firemen of Peekskill Ang. 1—Six were injured seriousl, 16 PAGES PRICE TWO CENTS. : +ALLIES MAKE NEW ADVANCE { ON A FRONT TEN MILES LONG FRANCO-AMERICANS CAPTURE HILL, WOOD AND TOWN OF CRAMOISELLE AMERICANS TOOK SERINGES IN FINISH FIGHT, MAN TO MAN, AGAINST PRUSSIAN GUARD | No. 6 of the I nomic Feed Company, One Wild Yel! Followed by Silence as Foes Met in Death Grapple—Every German -+-— Advance To-Day at Saponay, Arcy Wood, Around Cierges, in the Ardre Valley, in the Woods Near Goussancourt and on the Road From Bligny to Rheims. WITH THE FRENCH ARMIES IN THE FIELD, Aug. 1 (United Press).—Gen. Mangin’s army attacked between Fere-en- | Tardenois and Plessier-Huleu this morning (a front of nearly ten miles), taking Hill 205, east of Grand Rozoy, from where Fismes is visible, and capturing Cramoiselle (four miles northwest of Fere-en-Tardenois). At the hour of cabling, the attack was still progressing. Other troops took Meuniere Wood, in the salient southeast of Cierges. Throughout the French front the Germans are again using their artillery heavily, especially in the neighborhood of Rheims and Montdidier. They also unsuccessfully attempted surprise at- tacks along the right bank of the Meuse (Verdun front) and the | Chaume Wood, seeking to feel out the Allied front. | PARIS REPORTS ADVANCE ON WIDE FRONT, PARIS, Aug. 1, 4 P. M. (United Press).—New advances by the Americans and French were reported over a large part of the Rheims-Soissons battlefront to-day. The Allied forces went forward in the Saponay region, be- tween QOulchy-le-Chateau and Fere-en-Tardenois, in the Arcy Wood district, near Cierges, and made considerable progress to- ward the Rheims road in the neighborhood of Bligny. South of the Courmont-Fismes Road the Americans hurled back the Germans into the woods near Goussancourt. On the right flank of the salient the Americans are making progress toward the Ardre Valley, in the region of Ville-en-Tar- denois. AMERICANS PUSH THEIR LINE WELL BEYOND SERGY AT APEX OF WEDGE NORTH OF OURCQ Now Only a Mileand a Quarter From Chamery, Where Quentin Roosevelt Fell—Over- come Stiff Resistance. j AMERICAN ARMY ON THE AISNE-MARMNI (Associated Press),—The Franco-American force WITH THE FRONT, Aug. the main battlefront continued yesterday ‘the the line. yond Sergy to within two kilometres (a mile and a quarter) of Ch process of strai th They scored advances in this effort, Americans pu: amery. This town marks the spot where Lieut. Quentin Roosevelt tell to his death recently with his airplane. progress against The Allied forces effected their rm German resistance. (Tis attack was on @ six-mile front at the apex of the wedge ward of the Ourcq. It is a flanking move driven by the Allies north which may compel the Germans to retire on the imporfant sector east of Fere-en-Tardenois toward Rheims.) The American and French troops launched an attack Wednesday ] afternoon from Seringes to Cierges, on t tre of the Marne front, for 1 hing traightening the barbed wire entan- have placed through the hills, forests and oe. be fiero ins uci a ney gas having white flame and smoke, <aft Allies vrougnt into action their heavy artillery, their aviators and patrols having reported mile after mile of barbed wire standing along the ~The Saar guns sen. nila ot a he purpose ot glements which the Gerr opens! oe | Snorer SASS

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