The evening world. Newspaper, August 1, 1918, Page 2

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aicateaientiaes = f * that great fires are raging everywhere in the territory held by the enemy. ,announcement shows. Activity was also displayed by the enemy a " ments. Some enemy infantry had dig. in behind the wires, but the lines were for the most part manned by machine gunners. The German artillery reply consisted chiefly of shelly from the 77s and 105s. The machine guns, with the heavier pieces indicated, weie active in an effort to prevent an Allied advance, GERMAN ATTACK NEAR RHEIMS | REPULSED BY THE FRENCH; © BASE AT FISMES UNDER FIRE There Are Many Indications That the Enemy Is Planning Further “Stragetic Retreat.” [FRENCH REPORT] PARIS, Aug. 1.—The Germans this morning attacked the French positions in the region of Bligny, southwest of Rheims. The attack was repulsed, says the official statement to-day from the War Office. Several enemy raids in the Four de Paris region and along the right} bank of the Meuse were unsuccessful. The French inflicted losses and took prisoners. In the fighting on the Soissons-Rheims front July 15 to July 34 the Germans used forty-five divisions, according to the Echo de Paris. Many of these divisions were used several times, being brought back into the fight after a rest of only one or two days. There are increasing indications that the German Higa Command tras decided upon another “strategic retreat” to a new position cither along the Vesle or the Aisne. French aviators, flying far behind the enemy lines, reported to-day The foe is evidently destroying all the material he cannot carry away. OFFICIAL BRITISH REPORT. LONDON, Aug. 1.—The German guns were active last night in the Somme region in the vicinity of Villers-Bretonneux, to-day’s War Office tiNlery further north near Bucquoy and in Flanders in the Merris-Meteren sector. BERLIN STILL TALKS OF VICTORY AND CLAIMS 24,000 PRISONERS For Home Consumption, Communique Tells of “Sanguinary Losses” of French and Americans. [GERMAN REPORT] BPERLIN (via London), Aug. 1.—The official statement from general | headquarters last night says: Quiet reigned throughout the day along the battle front. The day communication follows: ‘There has been very lively reconnoitring activity in Flanders. As the result of a renewed enemy attack on Merris, the place remained in his hands. North of Albert and south of the Somme there were strong artillery duels in the carly morning. Tardenois there was no activity on the part of the enemy's infantry | manner as to spare the Allied re-| TePresented on the west front, but yesterday after their defeat of Monday. A violent partial attack was |scrves, The Allies have advanced, "C al8o beating the best Prus- reputsed before Saponay (northwest of Fere-en-Tardenots) eighteen anc three-quarter miles| 48 troops. They have heard Between Fere-en-Tardenois and the Bois Meuniere the French and | since the start of the counter-offen-| ‘hat the Sidi Prive ay altel Americans again attacked, deeply echeloned, toward midday. Their | *!\° ela Se at a offensive attacks broke down with sanguinary losses. Also in the wood Itself ‘Tho General, who received the] inset the British was post- assaults of the enemy, six times renewed, broke down. American correspondents at his head-| SEN UN O oe this and other Our infantry frequently pursued the defeated enemy and obtained pana aes oe ae >| pet factors. | Gren poemeesion of the trent territory of thelr lines Si RSAIIAC hain neca ances Eastward of Fereen-Tardenots the enemy tn the evening and dure | such troops, He said he used ene | GERMANY NOW WILLING ing the night renewed his costly attacks without success. Partial | Americans the same as he did the | enemy attacks near Romigny (southeast of Villeen-Tardenois) broke best Fre troops, a fact of highest 10 EXCHANGE CAPTIVES | down. During the last few days we have captured more than 4,000 prison- ere. This increased the number taken since July 15 to more than 24,000, Yesterday we shot down nineteen airplanes. leeteteint coer Ourea and the commander of the importance oring to destroy before THE EVENING WORLD, peeanct por as " ayy House ey o VERE The shaded section shows the Allied gains in the Marne salient. ‘The darker portions show the wedge smashed into the sallent by the who hold the very apex of the Allied battle front in the great offensive. Arbove are eee of ALLIES DRIVE ON WITHOUT CALLING UP THEIR RE RESERVES} Gen. de Goutte, in Shen 1 dashing advance of the Along Ourcq, $ cans Make ° This Possible. WITH THE IN FRAN (United Press), to the Wednesday “Paying hij Americans fighting be Marne, Gen. French to the Allies. ‘The Germans, the the Americans AMERICAN ARMIES he said, are endeav- Allied reserves are able throw a serious weight into the American troops, THURSDAY, - ALLIED AR TILLERY DEM OLISHES NEW GERMAN WIRE DEFEN SES S WEDGE DRIVEN BY AMERICANS INTO GERMAN LINES AUGUST fe baceny Lome, Vv. Catat endeavor to make a stand again: the German Crown Prince, the Kaiser, von Hindenburg, von Luden- dorff and von Mackensen, gazing above the river upon which they may north toward the Vesle and Aisne, 1, 1918, gene cdadl ‘4 Pourcy FOREST OF THE MOONTAIN OF st Gen. Fooh’s continued advance ‘ “HEART BOWED DOWN’ Report Gre in aged Over Presence of icans and Scarcity of Sup) ITH THE BRITISH AR- MINS IN PRANCE, Aug (United Press).—"The Heart Bowed Down” ts the Ger- ys Ameri- man tune nowadays. German officers and men taken prisoner near Merris, Morlan- court and east of Amiens are de- pressed as a result of the ¢ » July 31 gh tribute] staggering reply to Ludendorff. tween the Prisoners admit supplies are de Goutte,| !ow and ammunition is not plen- Army in| 'ful They are beginning to hea Government “Assents to A to ened ence on Terms, THE GERMAN TUNE SINCE GROWN PRINCE'S DEFEAT Great Depression Prince's failure and Gen, Foch's Invitation to Arrange Confer- Amer- plies. ‘rown r that merican KUEHLMANN AND HOLLWEG ARE RUMORED IN HOLLAND London Mail Sees Possible Revival of Peace Offensive Following Lansdowne’s New Move. LONDON, Aug. 1.—Forcign Minister von Kuehimann and former Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg are rumored to have appeared in Holland, the Mail an- nounced to-day. ‘The newspaper pointed out this may possibly mean a renewal of the German peace offensive, in con- nection with the new open letter of Lord Lansdowne. The morning papers are unanimously unsympathetic with Lansdowne's att tude. ‘The Daily News, anti-Govern- ment, does not comment, but she North- cliffe press severely denounelp the let- ter “Lansdowne’s new epistie will do nothing but mischief," the Mail said. When Lansdowne has persuaded the Kaiser and Hindenburg to return to Germany and pay for the damage they have done, then peace can be talked ibout. The Allies and the British stand) firmly by Wilson, saying, “The agony must not be gone through again.’ oe 30,000 KRUPP WORKERS ARE CALLED TO COLORS | Germans Placing Every Man That} Can Be Spared on the Battle Line, THE HAGUE, Aug. 1—Germany is calling up every man that oan be spared, according to information ob- tained from that country through vari- ous sources. Of 200,000 employees of Krupps, be- tween 20,000 and 40,000 are said to have been called to the colors. FEDERAL LAWYER GIVES BLOOD TO SAVE A FRIEND Sacrifice by Assistant U. S. Attorney Smith of Brooklyn Achieves the Result Desired. To save the life of a friend who had to undergo an operation for appendict- tis, Assistant United States Attorney Vine H. Smith of Brooklyn went to Montclair, N. J., last Monday and gave In transfusion twenty-two ounces of his blood. His sacrifice was not in vain. for the friend, whose name Br. Smith refused to divulge, {8 recovering. The (ransfusion was necessary because the | sufferer was what surgeons call “a bleeder.” Mr, Smith ts forty-three years old and the friend forty-two, They were graduated from Harvard in 1898. RAIDS NEAR NAVY YARD. Restaurants and Cabarets Invaded Fifty detectives from Manhattan and Brooklyn raided a number of | restaurants, cabarets and lunchrooms Washington and other the Navy Yard last in Sands, streets near night The raiding party divided into squads of three and four and entered Ue, but with American assistance, KING GEORGE WELCOMES | WOLFF BUREAU GOES ON vrs “nave amon |.vonsmns 89" fo." acm upset Hindenburg’s plans for a drive {Government has given a favorable NEW AMERICAN TROOPS | KILLING OFF AMERIGANS |" ="= => ig ars ou wi 2%, ste with troops already in the line can Severna} $e OITRAED & confer- Reports Only 30 Left Out of One} to throw German reserve divisions badge Drier tare 5 Cee aie siinal into the line to check the Franco. |e Pxe . “Ali Gain Heart and Spirit Battalion and 100 Casualties Arericanipiehi Te le eatianiang ae sterdam, quoting a Berlin despatch. Through Your Company,” He in Another. M4 least nine divisions (108.000 men) | auoue 2,000 Held Here Pets >, Pits AMSTERDAM, Aug L—The semi have been withdrawn from. othe Writes Fresh Contingent. official Wolff Bure Hy of Berlin is sti) parts of the front and thre b 43 — Ameriss, hae aerm nye ONDON, Aug. 1.—Fresh Amer- | sending out reports of h onsen ine | tore : ne reams eCard IL by Py “res! mer- be ‘eports of heav losses IN) wwe ne Mw and beims. 0 ec " si je { Mieted on American troops fighting on| 4 yea i ; ber of Americans reported held ican contingents, landing at Standing before a great map, Geo 68: the Marne front. ‘alana Gated . in Germany or missing is 680, several British ts, were ers | de De . 5 on ee Wednesday and received here says Ge Goutte explained the af tlOur army is holding at Forts Mc- handed the following message | An American prisoner captured on| German plan of the last Marne at- | pherson and Oglethorpe, Georgia, and from King George to-day: | July said that of the Pret Battalion of | CK. Which was to widen the front) a: wort Dougias, Ariz, about 3,000 “The people of the British Isles | the ai@th Regiment after a German at- ait oe fiver, thls, erepasinng » Germans, some of whom are interned welcome you on your way to take | ae meek tk ne enh Shictry 7 ne | Paris, ‘The French and Americans |as aliens, Only recently the Depart- your stand beside the armies of |!) only thirty were left, UA; | prevented a serious advance beyond | ment of Labor turned over to the a Many nations fighting the great | time. The Second Hatta f the| the Marne, then completely seram- | army, 3,123 German civilians Whe had battle for human freedom seme Pagaan! 0 ward to the} bied Hindenburs’s plans by counter, | peep etd at Hot Springs, ord rp igang OMA FSC i ut t of Mcumere|attacking between Solasona and sind Allie vt eart anc had 300. casu. Puatenn <> spirit through your company. 1 | rman resistance has now stiffened | FELL FROM WINDOW: KILLED, wish I could ohake the hand of |U BOAT SIGNALS FROM SPAIN, | north of the Ourea, and bitter Aight every one of you and bid you | under way on the Fotet oyee, Repairing Awn- | ; re Re Fee regio In Meur godspeed. Govern ment mereent Monee “le texathenay Gb Oleaea) the tng, Planges from Fourth Floor, oon > | eld trong positions which were ‘Thomas Croney, No. 411 West 48th AUSTRIANS STIFFEN LINE| SANTANDE Spa Aus 1--In-| difficult to take by direct attack, The |/6treet, a houseman at the Sherman | ventggmtion has disclosed that the Ger-| effort since crossing the Ourcq has} s, and w 471 ee ~- iquare Hotel, Broadway an st Street Heavy Reinforcements Throws | a" Submart at po ie car iat - a be pnt: nt m out there by }ret from a window on the fourth story Into Albania, " power, hax be n| Ma moveme Jot the hotel while fixing an awning to- with other U boats at) LONDON, Aug. !.—Since the Tartans en as Aa ae pe day and was instantly killed, Croney's captured Berat, Austria hus become| “’Gommander | Aisa ah | BRITAIN ASKS $3,500,000,000. |, narrowly missed striking | Mrs. greatly alarmed over the progress of the | seen slgnull while| Mary aVn Nostrand of Passaic ; N. J Meter ccaeisthae tn Albania, benoraine (A Vouar Law Expects Onty One More| ho Was passing on the Shermas Ie aha. covvesnondent of Us Tiave. ai | ae enatlis Credit This Year, Tine thock ‘end'was revived ins s * a r * sunk and crew i. i _ : Avriona under date of July %. and her| killed by a pmarine LONDON Aug. l=<In asking for a considerably reinforced army there vote of credit of £70),000,000 ($3,500,000,000) epee, lt king a big effort to pr tthe ital} AIR VICTORIES COME FAST, | in (he House of Commons to-day, An $250,000 PI PLOT CHARGED. jan advance. Austrian troops have been nee drew Honar Law, the Chancellor of the gathered from of the Northern | Items, Beran Wins ‘Three in ‘Ten mena » said hat the largeness Of | Hartford Man Victim of Alleg: aikan Zor m the f lactic inks the amount was not due st Blackmail Attempt, duty on the Alor «rin and Ser expen e. but to the fact that ‘d meountalns. h PAIS, Aug. | (Havas Ag y) ment was about to adjourn He hoped. ROSTON, Aug. 1—Samuel Dacuaszi hi trinns have an army | sub-Ldeut, yau bh gained ve} he said, that not more thin ont more lo¢ Revere d bro! corps under Gen. von P Bub-Liew ‘ ou has gained f he sald. tal not more, (nun ant more lof Revere, was arrested and brought mt Additional aerial victories, three of | Of'the financial. year here for arraignment to-day on a Rivers, The Piety has been extremely | which were won in ten minutes each, | Phe voto asked is the largest in the Teer enieay ih check nthe newspapers report. lis total te| history of the counter. It la intended ltempt te defraud Pocane Jot of Hart w tw n | nty-nin: v ford, Conn, by threats of bodily harm ——- | aaliinattn, Sadon hae increased his] ¢ A of © Juntess he ived $250,000 TANKER REPORT tring of vietories to thirty-etght ay Dacuaal pleaded not guilty and was ED SINKING, | i ss GERMANS MEATLESS SOON, [helm #1000 bond for a further meen ota Bread | ears Cor co Varrier| for Fear D : - ie ae aM % | poscow, Aug | (vis Amsterdam), | Wiest of eatrietten ier Week Starts Hishoy Walsh Appointa Hix Alden, PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 1-Informa: | he Delogates for Internal o ep TRENTON, N. dy Aus, Jmidlanop lee wan pecaived here to-day that | Affairs have appealed to the Provin AMSTERDAM, Aug. L—The flour ra-|Walsh to-day announced the appoint cargo carrier wax in collision with a and Dintriet Commitiegs declar- pe ah GOPmen? we by he seleed to}ment of Mgr von a es as Vices ‘ hi 13 ng that Mosec Metromtad have | 20 Oxrammes on Aux, 1% according to a |General of the Diogese of Trenton and q, Laker off the Atlantic coast Idet night} been without bread for fourdaya. ‘The | despatch from Berlin. The Arat meats [the Rev. Morris M."Rpellane as bie, svc ey Tig Katies ol tas je was | Provinciat riet mittwes | leas week also will begin Aug. 19 Asa retary. The bishop also announced tha * ‘hive colticion tanker | are ed @ the substitute seven pounds of potatoes will apnointment of all other officials of th » ui : capiti be supplied. diocese listed Im the Catholic directory. places simultaneously, About women, sixteen years and were arrested. Followed by than 200 sailors, they were jtaken (o the Adams Street Station, where their records were taken | From there they went afoot and in the fifty | older, more charge of using the mails im an at-| patrol wagons to the Board of Health buildings, where they were exam- ined and those free from disease were released, A number were held. —_ n Queen Thanks Subjects He for Greetings, WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—Queen Eliza- beth of Belgium has sent to the Belgian ENTIRE GERMAN EMPIRE IS VAST WAR HOSPITAL, SAYS WOUNDED FLYER Aviator Asserts Kaiser Has Forced His People to Pay Staggering Price for Boasted “Victory.” PARIS, Aug. 1. GHRMAN aviator in a French hospital, after be- ing shot down badly wound- ed, told a kind-hearted nurse who asked him for the truth about the situation in Germany: “This is the honest truth: Ger- now one vast hospital.” tor added that the hos- pital in which he was being given such fine treatment reminded him of his own country, which has paid sueh a staggering price in the present campaign. SEVEN DRUG ADDICTS SWIM AWAY FROM RIKER’S ISLAND One Lands at Astoria and Is Caught, General Alarm Out for Others, A general alarm has been sent out for CZECHO-SLOVAKS. TAKE EKATERINBURG, WHERE Moscow Terror” Against the Bourgeoisie, AMSTDRDAM, Aug. 1.—The Town of Ekaterinburg, in the Provinco of Perm, near the Siberian border, has Bolsheviki in “Mass |been taken by the Czecho-Slovaks, according to the newspaper Isvestia of Moscow. new development the Czecho-Slovak danger is growing Hke an avalanche, and that movement is extending, (Ekaterinburg, on the Asiatic side of the Ural Mountains, is the Place where the former Czar is reported to have been executed.) MOSCOW, Wednesday, July 31 (via Berlin to Amsterdam, Aug. 1).—At a plenary session of the Executive Main | Committee the Moscow Council and the labor organizations, in which 2,000 members participated, Premier Lenine and War Minister Trotzky spoke and the following resolutions were passed: “The Socialist Fatherland is in dan- ger; the chief tasks at present are the repulse of the Czecho-Slovaks and the obtaining of grain; the bour- geoisic must be placed under control and mass terror put into practice against them. “The general watchword must be death or victory, with mass expedi- tions for bread, mass military organ- ization, the arming of workmen and the exertion of all strength to fight against the counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie.” jo Separation of a Eathon: AMSTERDAM, Aug. 1.—The Russian Government has agreed that Livonia and Esthonia shall be separated from Russia as a result of negotiations be- tween Germany and the Soviet Govern- ment, says the Berlin correspondent of the Strasburg Post. Courland also will be separated from the administrative territory of the German Commander-in- chief in the east and will be united with Ressia Agrees u Livonia thonia. Minteter Morris Coming From Mockholm for Conference. LONDON, Aug. 1.—American Mints- ter Morris is here from Stockholm, con- ferring with Ambassador Page and British oMcials regarding Russia a Finland, He_ will soon, fo 10. France, from where he will sail for the United States for a further conference with the State Department. QUTWITTED BY GIRL, POSING ‘COP’ HIDES IN A CHIMNEY Flee After Miss Thompson Demands Credentials of an Intruder in Quest of Burglars. Miss Anna Thompson. employed the Metropolitan Insurance Company Manhattan, was awakened ot o'clock this morning by the sound of some one coming through the skylight of her home at No. 137 Bergen Street, Brooklyn. She opened her door and by six of seven men who escaped at ? o'clock this morning from Rikers and, in the Bast River. The seventh man landed at North Beach after a half-mile swim, only to walk right into the arms of the police. The seven were drug addicts committed for cure to the new retreat being established by the city on Riker’s Istan@. They kicked throush a door in the temporary quar- ters they occupied and dived into the river. The only one caught told the Astoria police his name was George Wilson. The police believe him to be Richard Astrello, twenty-five, of No. 278 Bast 157th Street. The other six are Grover Deiser, twenty-five, No. 59 Prospect Avenue, the Bronx; Henry Miller, twenty-elwht, No. 1798 Sterling Place, Bronx; Edward Hamilton, forty-one, no address; Jacob Loder, twenty-five, No, 217 Christopher Street: John Burke, twenty-seven, No. 536 Kast 149th Street, and Joba O'Con- nor, twenty-three, No. 315 West 118th Street. ———— TYPHOID DROVE OUT KING Fever Reported tm Reyal House- » of Balgarta, AMSTERDAM, Aug. 1.—A_ serious epidemic of typhoid has broken out in Bulgarie, according to travellers from that country, The army medical service is said to have collapsed and fabulous salaries have been offered doctors from other countries. The departure from the country of King Ferdinand {s alleged to have been due to two cases of typhoid in the royal household. Se : Former Jersey Conmressman’s Son Killed tm France. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—Leut George B, McCoy, reported dead from wounds in to-day’s casualty list, w s the son of Chief Justice Walter I verely wou jengineer employed State Highway Comm! nd with the First New York Cavalry on the Mexican border. Canadian Cacsalty Let. OTTAWA, Aug. 1.—The following American names appear in to-day’s werseas casualty list: Wi » Los Angeles, Cal Kenmore, ‘itchburg, Mass. Amertes: HELP ; WANTED—MALE. rh MINK ERS "ten whe cap dirert es wel) UT Rok dion on roy fomwed werk sim ions “ideal Minister here @ telegram asking him to to Belxians in this country her Loiui apprcolation for ihe sentiments loyel reward expressed on the occa jon of ber birthday, Late experience, age ant or A renin World, called out: “Who's there?” “T'm a policeman.” said a well-dressed young man, shoving a flashlight into 1 face, “and I'm looking for burglars “Let me see your credentials,” Miss Thompson. ‘The intruder handed his registration card to Miss Thompson. While she was trying to strike a leht to examine the card the “policeman” fled up the ladder and out through the skylight. Miss Thompson cave an alarm and neighbors joined the police in a search for the intruder, Covered with sdot. he was found cringing in @ hallway on the third floor of a nearby house. He had evidently taken refuge at first in a chimney. His registration card showed he was James McCullagh, an electrician, of No. 177 Bergen Street. He was held without bail on a charge of burglary. a said Jersey Commaters’ Service Changed te Save Eqa' ent. WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—Re-arrange- ment of the commuters’ service on the Pennsylvania and Philadelphia and Reading Railroads between Philadelphia and Norristown, Readiug em Potts. ville was annouheed _by the Railroad Administration to-day. As a result of the change (which will eliminate ui.ne- cessary parallel service), six loco tives, twenty-three passenger care and five train crews were relieved Cor other work. froin Th TDD TES’ many ole: ELECTRICIAN’S HELPERS, ‘owe men with about two years’ 512 W. 23D ST, It says that with this| the counter-revolutionary | ‘Special for Tomorrow, Friday, August 2d VERED | SWEETMEATS— A follection of fine Chocolate Covered fe ¢ to-morrow in certainty ha: ® treet a wey ea ce . COMBINATION PACKAGE fhe li FICHHORN SLAYER Berlin Near Break With .| Ukraine Over Dictator’s Murder in Kiev, COPENHAGEN, Aug. 1, — F | Marshal Kichhorn, Ukrainia, von assassinat n Kiev, was the victim 6 |4 widespread plot to kill him and fi other leading Germans, and Hetmi Skoropadsky of Ukrainia, accord to advices received here to-day Many rested. revolutio: ists have been German officers in Kiev now guarded heavily. The Het has expressed his regrets to Geri Ambassador Mumm LONDON, Aug. 1.—Germany is templating the recall of Ambass von Mumm from the Ukraine and handing of passports to the J dor of the Ukraine in Bertin pend the clearing up of the situation Kiev, according to an Exchange Te graph despatch from Amsterd under Wednesday's date. Foreign Secretary von Hintze, tl message adds, had a long tatervie' with the Ambassador from t! Ukraine on Wednesday and then ceived the Austrian Ambassador. Wit) the lattet the possibility of sendin military reinforcements to the Ukrain was discussed. nba Serious riots are reported from thy country districts in the Ukraine, ad cording to a Kiev despatch to Fremdenbiatt of Hamburg, the change Telegraph correspondent Copenhagen reports. The peasants now offering organized resistance the “German usurpers,” as they characterized. The murder of von Eichhorn was effected with great boldness, the Ber lin Vossische Zeitung says, The dis! trict in which the Field Marshal re sided and in which the murder tool piace is only a short distance from tha Casino and was guarded by German sentries, the newspaper joints out. After the assassination, the V sische Zeitung continues, Gen. Skoro: padski, the Hetman of the Ukraineg went to the spot and made arrange- ments for proper attentions to th Field Marsha! and his aid. Later th Hletman visited the German Minist and expressed ‘his sincere regret ove: the crime The German press is seizing upon the assassination of von Eichhorn as the spark which will set ablaze again the feeling for a renewed war against Tussia. Newspapers point out thal anti«Bolshevik elements committed the deed, and charge that the En- tente’s band can be seen. They clare the Bolshevik government is tot- tering. The annexationist press, led by Count von Reventlow, is demanding vengeance, declaring British agents are responsible. th Ex The Lokal Anzeiger comments: “The same elements which were ree vponsible for Ambassador von Mire, bach’s death may be connected with von Eichhorn’'s assassination. It may, therefore, be confidently asserted that the Entente had a hand in the bloody business.” Other newspapers say the oceur, rence should be an eye-opener for Ger many, insisting that if German troop cannot Austrian troop be spared, icommanded by Germans, should |sent to Russia, declaring it a mat of life and death for the Cent Powers. AMSTERDAM, Aug. Faikenhausen, Belgium, has been summoned to Im perial Headquarters by the Kaiser, was learned here to-day. It is prob able that this indicates he will be ap pointed to succeed the late Gen. vom Eichhorn at Kiev. Governor Trade Mark oe Par tee be sbeciflenfo® our adeaerto richness. sii a "1 is componed of five jor faveniie desian, oncken. in, tums welected nweets! Assorted Chew= cits Chocolate, Vanilla Assorted Chocolate CHOCOLATE ERED 0OVe BUTTER ra Cho- BOX righ, frag velvety

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