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ee ee artillery, although it is Defore being driven out after enduring a stifling barrage of cight hours. AMERICAN FORCES ON THE LORRAINE FRONT, Sept. 12 (Reuter’s).—French and American forces this morning launched an a‘- tack against the German positions on both sides of the St. Mihiel salient. The attack was preceded by a barrage lasting four hours. The attack on the southern side of the St. Mihiel salient was made along a distance of twelve miles, The attack on the western side was on fsa front of eight miles. . The weather is fire. has been successful. There has been a great concentration of Franc» more probable that they are going to fight hard re thar _ PERSHING HAS SPENT MONTHS | ORGANIZING HIS GREAT ARMY Miles of the German Border — Part of Force Within 15 Miles of Metz. The region of the Meuse and the Moselle is on the Toul front, before the important fortress of Metz, in German Lorraine. This és the point where the American concentration has been going on for months. The American line is within two or three miles of the German border | At some points the line actually touches the Lorraine line. The battle | front is approximately fifteen miles from Metz. Metz has been an American objective, according to most tiegries ot | the plans of the Allied high command. At this point, it has been pre- dicted, the Americans might strike the blow that would be aimed at a drive toward the Rhine, this being the shortest route to the great indus- irfal valley. Gen. March announced last week that 93 per cent. of the American rifles in France were concentrated under direct command of Gen. Pershing. | The American objective may be Metz, or it may be the German front} in Lorraine, south of Metz, in the general direction of the Rhine. The «probability at present is that the Americans have as their immediate pur- pose the closing up of tie St. Mihiel salient, which would throw the Ger- inans back on Metz and straighten the Allied front along the German hrentier. , . _ It is known that systematic destruction of the Rhine industries has if jbeen long urged. It has been felt that the best opportunity of giving “Germany an example of the wreck she has wrougat in Belg anc Northern France lay in a campaign across the Rhine from the American concentration point. The drive toward the Hindenburg line has been somewhat stowed the fast few days by German concentrations of unused troops. The American drive therefore may compel Germany to thin out her foices around St. Quentin. BAKER MAY HAVE SEEN START OF DRIVE. : WASHINGTON, Sept. 12.—Secretary of War Baker, now in France, may have witnessed the opening of the American offensive. First news of tne drive was received by President Wilson, Chief of staff March, Congress and other departments from the United Press. According to the latest reports noted here, American divisions known 1; be in the positions from which to-day’s attack has been laurched in- cluded the veteran ist and 2d regular disvisions, which 2 the first American units.to get into action in France; the 89th, Nationa) Aimy, composed of Kansas, Missouri, South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona troops, and the 82d, National Army, composed of Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee troops, with the 37th, National Guard, composed of Ohio troops, further'to the east on the front opp ysite Nancy 'e ig | eer EXPLOSION CLEARS BUILDING | \,,.:" my New York on Anserion partic tion in beso war Wrong Ofls Said To Have Keen Used in Dri An explosion of the sixthfloor of the duilding at Nos, 83 and 85 Greene Street blew out the windows of the Columbia Ribbon and Carbon Company and scat- CHILE NIPS- GERMAN PLOT. Blectrical Bombs Found on an tn- terned Ship. toked glass on pedestrians. SANTIAGO, Chile, Sept. 12 m~ Alarmed tenants were taken out in| Uthoritles of the Chilean port of Pisa- elevators and on fire escapes. Nobody | S48 to-day surprised the Germans) Swas ser ously injured. aboard the interned ship Carla, who ‘The explosion occurred, jt is reported, |*4 Prepared electrical installation to when wrong olls were used in drilling a | Mow up the vessel at any moment. The hole joline tank. Captain of the Carla dented permiasion | to the authorities to board the ship, and} they were forced to bring troops to ex- act obedience, The occurrence LONDON, Sept Sir George Reed, former High Commissioner for Austra ig and member of Parliament for st. cf fe, died in London to-day after a praionsied ‘iintes. . ‘Bir George visited the United States caused a sensation, due to the recent promise of the Ger-| man Minister not to permit, any repeti- tion of attempts to destroy or injure the interned vessels UNITED STATES RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION W. G. McADOO, Director General of Railroads Lehigh Valley Trains The attack was a most daring one, and so far} American artillery and Entente airplanes are operating in large numbers. | AND GETTING READY TO STRIKE: American Line Is at Some Points Within i Field Marshal Haig’s report shows that British troops have captured ,of St. Quentin, They have progressed as far as the western ouiskiris of | utmost effort to defend ourselves| aie bd reed re- |victoriously, not only through the the Bible, “Cast thy Auden ine ike work but aa regurds the thoughts of| Lord and’ He shall sustain thee,” and our people {But seek ye first His kingdom and fe is righteousness and all these Many among You have often asked themselves during this long| dre tempi eon este ante you. | Why did we |thing after forty years of peace? I Jan anawor and which must be an- PA ag DIS: HAIG CAPTURES THREE TOWNS; STRIKES ON THE CAMBRAI FRONT AND ADVANCES IN FLANDERS Makes New Gains in Blow at St. Quentin— Crosses Canal du Nord at New Point | —Gets Nearer La Bassee. | LONDON, Sept. 12.—British forces have effected a crossing of the Canal du Nord to the northwest of the town cf Havrincourt, Field Mar- | shal Haig announced in his official report today. The canal line here | forms the main defense of Cambrai on the southwest. The British pushed to the westerly bank of the canal, east and north of Moeuvres and estab- lished themselves there. (Moeuvres is about five and a half miles almost due west of Cambrai, In that neighborhood Gen. Byng’s forces did some of their hardest fighting during the British drive last year. During the present offensive Haig’s troops have had to overcome the stiffest sort of re sistance there.) the towns of Vermand, Attilly and Vendelles, all on the front northwest Holaon Wood, southeast of Attilly. The Germans offered stifl oppost-| tien in the Havrincourt and Moeuvres sectors, which the British over- came [As the distance between Vendelles to Attilly is about four and a half miles, it is probable that the British advance here was on a front of at least six mil Attilly is on the railroad between St. Quentin and Cambral and possession of it may give Haig control of one of the most important communicating roads in the neighborhood of the Hin- denburg line. Attilly is about five miles a ttle to the north of west of !| St. Quentin, French forces on the south are still nearer this important German base.) Attacking during the night, the British seized the powerfully fortified railway triangle southwest of La Bassee, in Flanders. (This railroad triangle is at the junction of the line running from Bethune to La Bassee, and another line extending southward. Ger- man forces have clung to it throug all the fighting in that sector since the fall of 1914. The triangle is just southeast of Givenchy, which has been held for four years by the British. If Haig can hold this triangle it will give aim fine opportunity of forcing the enemy out of La Bassee.} ‘ The Paris War Office to-day reports only raiding operaticns and artillery activity along the French front. KAISER COMPLAINS FIGHTING ENEMY WON'T TALK PEACE (Continued from First Page.) wishes to maintain its people in the peace for which it clamors. “But the Anglo-Saxon does not yet desire peace. That is how things are. It is proof of his feeling of inferiority that the Anglo-Saxon has recourse to such criminal means. “Everything now depends on our final exertions, Everything is at stake, and because our enemies know it, because they have the greatest respect for the German Army, be- cause they see they cannot overcome our army and navy, they are trying to overcome us by means of internal disintegration a: false rumors. “Believe me, it is not easy for me to bear every day the anxiety and the responsibility for a nation of seventy millions and for more than four years be a spectator to all the difficulties and increasing distress of the people.” The Emperor then referred to the German Empress, “who by God's as- many among you, {t is lasting too long, every German man and every) German woman must, in witnessing! theso incomparably heroic deeds of our army and navy, be aware that We are fighting and struggling for e: istence, and that we must make the mperor then added: “How can we please God and soften His heart? By doing our duty in making our fatherland free; conse- quently it is our duty to hold out with all our strength in the fight against our enemies. “Each one of us has received his war: ‘How did such a thing happen, have to undergo such 4 think it is a question well worthy of swered for the future—for our chil- ' appointed task from on high. You \3 and our grandchildren. at your hammer, you at your lathe “In this world good clashes with| and me upon the throne. We must all, however, bulld on God's assistance. Doubt is the greatest ingratitude to- ward the Lord and now | ask you all simply and honestly—-Have we, then, really ground for doubt? ‘Just look at the four years of war. What immense achievements we have behind us. Half the world stood | against us and our Royal Allies, and now we have peace with Russia and peace with Roumania, Serbia and Montenegro are finished. “Only in the west do we still fight, and is it to be thought that the good God will abandon us there at the last_ moment? “We should be ashamed of the faint- heartedness which oames when one gives credence to rumors. From the facts which you yourselves have exz- perienced forge for yourselves « firm belief im the future of your father- evil. That is how things have been | ordered from on high—the yes and no, the no of the doubting mind against the yes of the creative mind, the no of the pessimist against the yes of the optimist, the no of the unbeliever against the yes of the champion of faith, the yes of heaven againet the no of hell, “You will acknowledge that T am right in describiag this war as the | product of a great negation, And do you ask what negation it is? It is the negation of the German people's right to existence. It is the negation of all our kultur, @ negation of our | achiovereata, of all our work. “The German people was industrious, | meditative, assiduous, imaginative in all domains. It worked with body and soul. But there were people who did |not wish to work but to rest on thelr jlaurels. Those were our enemies, We got close to them through our profit able work and the development of our industry, science and art, through our popular education and goctal legisla- don. Thereby our people throve, and | then came envy.” | ENVY OF ALLIES LED TO FIGHT- ING, KAISER DECLARES.. 'e often at home and at the front, in church and in the open air, have sung ‘Kine feste bung ist ynser Gott,’ So it ts resounded in the blue vault of heaven and in the thunderclouds. The nation from which such a hymo ted must be invincible y request, my demand of you and through you who have proved th mirable and capable, and through you Pennsylvania Station On andafter September 5th all Through Lehigh Valley trains will arrive at and depart from the Pennsylvania station, 7th Avenue and 32nd Street, New York, # : with connecting trains from Hudson mee Terminal. Local trains will arrive at and eo depart from the Pennsylvania’s Ex- change Place station, Jersey City, with con- necting trains from Hudson Terminal. Tickets on sale at all U. S. R.R. Administration ticket offices in New York and Brooklyn, at Pennsylvania | stations in New York and Jersey City, at Hudson Ter- i} minal and at Cortlandt and Desbrosses Street ferries. | LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD nvy induced our enemies to fight, and war came upon us. And now, | when our opponents see that their | hopes have been deceptive and how our mighty generals, after whom again to the entire German people, ig this for me and for my relations to my people my words of Aug. 4, 1914, hold good. I know no party, I’ know only Germans. LD, THURSDA FIRST TOWN TAKEN IN AMERICAN DRIVE IN 45 MINUTES .,, ' place was immediately filled. | was an unexpected rush at any par-) all the workers | selves no ad-| ‘DRAFT REGISTRATION HERE IS EXPECTED 10 EXCEED 1,000,000 MARK Coutlial iu from First Page.) wheeled platform, and male mem- bers of a midget family. In the Bronx the registration ran Uke a well-oiled machine. The police and the Board of Education co- operated with the draft officials. In the lower parts of the district covered by Local Boards Nos. 1, 2, 3 and & Not less than one-fourth of the esti- mated quota had been registered by 11 , o'clock. Local Board No. 2, at No. 2720 Third Avenue, has been made the general headquarters of the district. Here, under direction of Chairman Georgo Mohr, 500 emergency registrars wero kept on tap all day. If a registrar failed to show up at his board his If there ticular board emergency men were piled into a waiting auto and whirled to the spot. The Board of Education had school teachers on hand in three relays. One ehift acted as registrars from 7 o'clock till noon. Another took its! place and remained till 5 o'clock, when relief was given by a third crew, to remain until registration closes at 9 o'clock. Older pupils were used, as were the} police, as interpreters, and the work was pushed along in an amazingly fast time. In Local Board No. 2, for instance, there were twenty-two reg- istrars, and this meant that twenty- two registrations were made in @ bunch. No. 2 is one of the registra- tion places of the lower end of the district which is occupied mainly by tenement dweilers—all workingmen, who registered early. Harlem registered thousands long— before noon. Board No. 157 there were 1,500 en- hour, Other local boards in this dis- trict had numbers of registration Places scattered through their terri- tory, with the result of greater speed in listing the men. In the congested districts—in the Italian quarters in Mulberry Bend and along the lower east side, through Delancey, Ludlow; Allen, Stanton Streets and the neighboring | 4 o'clock this morning. It was the same in the Italian district on the east side in Harlem and itn the Bo- hemian quarters from 70th up to 8th Street on the east side. MANY NATIONS REPRESENTED ON THE EAST SIDE, The most cosmopolitan crowd, per- haps, was that which gathered at the schoolhouse at Mulberry and Hester Streets. Nearly every country on earth was represented and many of these, foreign born, who represented themselves, had taken out, at least, of Chinese and Japanese between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one and thirty-one and forty claimed to have | been born in this country, In Brooklyn the registrants began lining up early, many of them reach- ing the enrolling places before 7 A. M. At Public Schoo! No, 171, Nichols and Railroad Avenues, the headquar- | ters of Board No. 78, there were 240 men waiting when the rolls were opened. It was estimated there are 4,000 in the district to register. jarity about the early registrants was that few of them were young men, most of them being between thirty- two and forty-five. A line several blocks long formed, in front of Local Board No, 25, at KAISER'S TALK CLIMAX OF PEACE OFFENSIVE, Officials Fail to Find Anything New or Striking in Speech to recognized by oMfcials here as being in full swing, A progressive cam-~- paign js clearly indicated to their minds by the apparently casual re- your new workshops are rightly named, have dealt them blow upon blow, ‘hatred springs up. We only | know the honest wrath which deals the enemy the blow, but when he lies prostrate and bleeding we ex- tend to him our hand and see to his | recovery, “Hatred manifests lamong peoples who feel |beaten. If, therefore, hatred exists among o lowes its origin to the fact that their jealculations have been wrong. Every lone who knows the character of the | Anglo-Saxons knows what it means “It is now no time for factions, We must all now combine into a block and, here, the most appropriate word ig to be as hard as steel, and @ block of the German people welded into steel shall ehow its strength to the enemy. “Whoever, therefore, ts determined to obey this summons, whoever has his heart in the right place and who- ever intends to keep faith let him stand up. “Now promise me on behalf of the entire German labor, ‘We intend to itself only themselves such terrible enemies it help us, God.’ Whoever so intends ” ful to fight them—how tenacious they| let him answer ‘yes. as conceived with the double purpose | of Brooklyn to @ charge of theft from p Sach, jiv ut Jare, “We do not know. when the| ‘The assembly loudly chorused “yes,” ‘of placating (he uneasy and restiess |the male, He waa remanded for sen-|/ ver Bench. {Delivery to your home. strugele will end, but one thing we| and the Emperor continued: German socialists and at the same |tence next Tuesday, do know—namely, that We must Might] “I thank you. With this ‘Yes’ 1/ time appéaling to the pacifists in the| ‘There has been no change in the ie STORE NEAREST you |the battle through. fo now to the Field Marshal. Now it|Kntente countries and America in the | steady improvement of Cariinal Parley. for yiiatails of this great sale |. “And now, my friends, let me draw| is for every one of us to fulfil his hope of weakening the hands of the | }t was Auld today, at his summer of oy ae |your attention to something more.| vow of duty and to exert his body Allied Governments in the prosecu- | "ome !n es lobet. 4 iS You, have read what recently hap-| and mind to the utmost for tbe Fath- | tion of the war. weeclad te hae ie tates Cea stns| NEW YORE BROOKLYN: pened in Moscow—the mikhty con-|erland. Every doubt mus ‘ban-| Analysts of the abstract of the Em-| PFuletion fine ne snes Paneraltn| 53 East 34th St. 55 Flatbush Ave, Mamaic isa cc, spiracy against the present govern-| ished from mind and heart. peror’s remakrs r by cable Were fined $100 each in the Coney| —-——- nina a woos eatengs |ment, the Parliamentary-go arned “Our watchword now is—the Ger-! fails to dfsolose any now feature. island Court by Magistrate Geismar) JERSEY CITY NEWARK: - |democratic British nation hi mans’ awarde are There is the same oft-reepated de- | to-day. 134 Newark Av 903 Broad St. «0° |deavored to overthrow. the -ultre=| strong and musoles are nial of responsibility for the con- ——— OFS Are te cuts Hart | democratic government which the | battle against every ini that tinuance of the war and the same’ Every man of eighteen 4 forty» sive | Russian people sidering thi bed begun te con- Lagpinet,.\ anner ew jong it _ Gos sone puns | seekhn oe Sui Assneei mcd marks of Premier von Hertling, a few day ago, followed by the more forma) statement to the visiting German | newspapermen in Vienna by Count! jBurtan, the Austrian Foreign Minis- ter, the remarks of the German Crown Prince and now the speech of Emperor William himselt (working people at Essen. Peace proposals these sources would appear incon- gruous were the officials not firmly to the fight and to hold‘ out to the last, so conyinced of the insincerity of the in 18 recognized | movement, which af warning of the German people that whee wldbewon vl Ube eiiwitalew Le bo dew them. atroy ¢ 4 PTEMBER In the district of Local | rolled before the clerks at Laurel) | Garden had been on the job for an lanes—lines were formed as early as | their first papers. A great number) 6) One pecul- | I$ WASHINGTON VIEW 2: emanating from | York and Bridge Streets, Brooklyn, u ” | early, It was estimated that ™ [had been sapien beiore R | o'clock. The majorit ff the regi | trants were mhechasice employed 1 te Brooklyn Navy Yard, At Local Boards Nos. 86 Ri | No, 461 Rockaway Avenue, Bi id bat had been rej roe *” te M. This is the heart of a Onin section. Most of the men were factory workers. At Local Board No. 66, in Brasmus! uf | FOR ALLIES OR FOE, SAYSLLOVD GEORGE: lin ‘all High School, Church and F | bak Aeaeen Movies, Leb a - Premier, eecuateg Victory on} were registered before 10 o’clock.. Way, Insists This War Most of these were business and pro- 5 | fessional men of thé Flatbush section. | Must Be Last. | Probably the happiest lot of regis- PRA ase tranta was the crowd at the Brook-| MANCHESTER, England, Sept. 12. | lyn Y. M. C. A., No. 56 Hanson Place. ‘Numbered cards —"Nothing but heart failure on the were distributed part of the British nation can prevent | there, and the holders, instead of our achieving a real victory,” said} waiting in line, established them- 5, Ives comfortably in the auditorium | Premier Lloyd George, speaking to- until their numbers were called. Mu- | 4%¥ at Manchester. sic and motion pictures were pro-| “The news is distinctly good—really | vided to keep the men amused while | 800d," said the Premier. ‘We are go- they waited, | ing through a long tunnel and are not | MANY COMMUTERS REGISTER! 4t the end of the journey. There is} BEFORE COMING TO CITY. some steep gradient to climb. It may Reports from suburban communi-!be that the tunnel will be dark, but ties showed that the commuters were /{t will be short now that the worst registering before starting for New| is over.” Satay Lee inad no chances on getting) The Premier said that tho British ck early enough in the evening. | casua at offe |The Evening World's correspondent Rafik Ga nnn ch ee at Yonkers reported that 42,000 men were expected to register in West-) jehester County. New Rochelle made | |@ holiday of it, with bands playing in fact a league already had been everywhere and flags flying. The) begun. The British Empire, he said, registration was quieter but just as | Was a league of free nations and the | Dusy at Mount Vernon and White! aiied countries fighting the battle| | Plains. Jersey City had enrolled al-| for international right, most half of tts 50,000 quota before |jeague of free nations, \ noon, Continuing the Premier said: | Neither the police nor the Depart-| “We shall neither accept for our- ment of Justice agents have foun | sel es nor impose upon our foes a out who posted the placards advising | Brest-Litovsk treaty. |men not to register. All euch cards} “We cannot allow the ‘Bolsheviki' | | had disappeared this morning, how-to force on us a peace so humiliating ever, and it was clear that their ef- as to dishonor the national flag and ie had been negligible, Director! to make a repetition of the horrors Conboy declared, however, that the| Of this war inevitable. When a satis- effect on the persons responsidle will factory peace has been secured be very far from negligible if they {C&M proceed with a clear conscience are caught. to build up a new world, It was announced at draft head-| “The Prussian military power must quarters that members of foreign, 7! only be beaten, but Germany her- military missions in New York would | **!f must know and the German peo- be registered there by Director Con- | Pl¢ must know that their rulers have boy and his assistants, Capt: Asch | UtM@med the laws of humanity and and Capt. Riegeimann. The first to| ‘Mat Prussian strength cannot protect |regiater under this arrangement was | ‘hem from punishment. Charies Monnet of the 171st French | This must be the last war. Don't Infantry. There are three hundred | Jet Us be misled that the establish- members of the French military mis- | Ment of a League of Nations without | in France were one-fifth of what they [were in 1916. Premier Lloyd George said he was all for a league of nations, and that were now a |sion in New York who must register, | POWer Will in itself secure the world Two calls were sent in for reserves, | 28ainst @ catastrophe, A League of |One came from the Bronx and the| Nations with the Prussian military power triumphant would be a league of fox and geese—one fox and many geese. The geese would greatly di minish in numbers,” The only sure foundation | League of nations, the Premier sa was a victory for the Allies, Peace must be of a kind, he added, that | commends itself to the common sense conscience of the nations, As a whole ix must not be dictated by extreme men on either side. In speaking of the prospective Al- lied victory, Mn Lioyd George said “A fact that depressed the Germans was the advent of the Americans other from a Rivington Street booth. The disturbances, if they could be called py that name, were occasioned by the rush to register. passe Ae R. P. CHITTENDEN RESIGNS. Assistant Corporation Counset Six Admintatrations, | R. Perey Chittenden, assistant cor= | poration counsel under six city adminis- trations, resigned to-day and said that furher connection with the office under the present administration ‘would be derimental to me professionally. Mr. Chittenden acted as the Mitchel adminsration disposal plant on Mayor re his promised a reversal tude in the matter for of of plant. HAVRE DE GRACE Wi WINNERS, FIRST RACE—Two-year-olde; five | anda hay Corlonper eet tanentin, 118 (Sande), straight $3. 50, Bhow johnson), Bylvane, ‘Time. Sid a. mn A . place $2.80, show 42.10, second NE big, smashing 110 (Carroll), show $2.70, third 1.08 1-6, Poultney, Fairy Priticess, G. Kenner and Twilight 4th also run. SECOND RAOE—Steeplechase ; eell- ing: four-year-olds and upward; two jmiles.—Otto Floto, 144 (H. Williams), Straight $6.70, place $4.10, show $3.50. won ; Turmoil, 137 (Landy), place $14.50, |show $10, second ; Melos, 134 (Wymark), has millions more It day, Sept. 12th. show $8.80, third, ‘Time, 3.09 2-6 Rhomd, Abdon, J.C. Ewalt, Favorite | ———S| lArucle, Eagle Thistle, Ressie al CHOCOLATE COV and Bob Redfield also ran. pics Sa BELMONT ENTERIES | RACP TRACK BELMONT PARK, Md., Sens. | Se Sas ae eae ee ae ing, feature ts, @ ‘The tine! Swe PTS AH ROW. RIDA Faron BOSTON BROKEN CANDY—A very popd- lar member of our bie hard candy family and @ favorite with the Iit- tle people, These sweet» are presented in the form of big. twisted bere and come in many jeasing and tasty Fruit a; sinter Northampton wll ell % balt min rae ay A Stores: Ni Krupp Workers. ei 29¢ Brooke WASHINGTON, Sept. 12—The relia | KAGE ane German peace offensive is now NON" Dock The specTtied welsh olds: BUY. (ung) ESET" PLAVER PIANOS NEWS BREVITIES. $445 Irving Comander, twenty-three, of No. 174 Grafton Street, Brooklyn, a clerk i the ‘Goney Isiand’ Post. OMe, pleaded Nilty this morning before Judge Chat-| Held-in the United States District Court FREE WITH BVERY PLAYER: {Rolls of Player Music, {A Beau years old inclusive, these roy #5 Be vesccile dcete ch The U. S. A. is about to give it. Our army is now almost 2,000,000 strong. comes your patriotic privilege to register to- ial for To-Morrow, Friday, Sept. 13- RED CREOLE PEPPERMINT PATTIES— have centres of ON Ty spiced Cream flavored with: finest Olt ot ig ‘eweets Attractive Thursday Offerings includes the container. “Putnam” On Convenient Terms There is no finer feature in the ‘his- tra of English industry than thé |r ansport of the Americans across the leer ntic, The Germans did not exe | peet more than two divisions, That wag another miscaldulation. “Hundreds of thousands are there | now, and the Germans know it, ‘They the advance guard of ten million of the finest material in the world FIRST cuss HOTELS EVERYWHERE turnished with HALLS BEDDING The Standard of Quality for 85 yoars <i Managers of laxarlous hotels like The , Griswold realize that a comfortable bed means @ satisfied fuest. 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