The evening world. Newspaper, September 17, 1918, Page 2

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aphs under tate conditions, One American group made ten patrois in ty-four hours and engaged in eleven combats in that time. The American pursuit planes proper were of French manufacture, ut the greatest interest was in the work of the De Havilands. These splen- id machines cannot dive and manoeuvre as well as the pursuit planes, but larrying guns forward and in the rear, diving is not so essential, and the Havilands engaged in many battles with stiking success, The speed of these planes, with their powerful Liberty engines, en bled them to overtake even the fast Fokkers of the massed German pursuit squadrons. Three of our De Havilands spotted two speedy Fok- $7 347,000,000 MORE IS ASKED ers, which fled but were overtaken by the heavier machines, and one War Department Submits * Of them was shot down in flames, while the other dived and escaped. Estimate for Increased Pro- In aerial fighting Sunday French aviators destroyed twelve German | sramme to Congress. airplanes and set on fire sixteen captive balloons, says the statement on 8 i Bee Bren aviation activities issued by the War Office last night. Sunday night) wasHincTon, sopt. 17—Con- | hombing squadrons dropped forty-six tons of bombs.on military targets behind the German lines from Laon to Metz, BRITISH GAIN NBAR ST. QUENTIN. LONDON, Sept. 17.—Last night witnessed a further closing in ot the British lines northwest of St. Quentin. Field Marshal Haig in his) report to-day announced that the British had made progress in this crea in the direction of' Le: Verduier. AMSTERDAM, Sept. 17.—Bulgarian regiments have arrived at areas was asked by tho War Depart- | ment to-day to provide §7,847,000,000 | in addition te previous catimates for carrying out the enlarged American military programme for the coming year, ‘The new estimates if uneut by Con- gress will bring total appropriation for the fiscal year of 1918-1919 to 43 more than thirty and @ haif bil- E Maubeuge té co-operate with the German troops on the western front, | lion dollars. pecording to the Ect Belge. 8 The estimates are divided as fol- 3 te | lows: : | For pay of the army, $791,619,952.16. | > ‘ | Fer subsistence, including food, " ¥ $268,410,082,94, For transportation, $1,277,854,801 ence {| For clothing, §178,702,831.81, AMERICAN. | dasta. We have advanced more than} For chemical warfare, $198,704,000, 4 WASHINGTON, Sept. 17.—Gen. | ht kilometres, Wor ordnance, §3,685,874,660, includ- 4 ’ communique tor Monday | “UP to the present the French and | ng $500,000 provided for in a proylous A lp fl |@erbian troupe have taken more than | Contract authorization: | | > en. Crowder's f “Sectisca A—Asfleatsom local com | 000 prisoners roe more reer Lehi office and for draft work throughout ee q|¥-four guns Our casualties have | the country, $28,617,80 eats, in wittch we tookepetsoners, and | | nn quite amall. For gir service, $178,768, further increase of artillery and yhich in additi = ran ia nothing to| "A Jugo-Slay division has reachad| Which ig jn addition (o more thas ay. fiviation activity, these Kosiak (5,085 feet and northeast of | *\°% previously appropriated 7 report from the St. Mitte! salient. Gobel), the most important poaition|i{y,t0® Teewler Army Appropriation r * » the ry 1 a t “Gection B—There és anthing 10 Fe- | 1 this rogion. Our advance con-| ‘The chemical apropriation is car- Ae in thin section.’ Gnues. ried for the first time ag a separate J BRITISH. USTRIAN . item. The medical department has | A bid A . always had charge of these expendi- Dewar alse utah toa ga ta|. VHONNA, Monday, Sept, 16 (via! tures 4 ‘ar Office wtatement reads dss : © new estimate ix based upon ie London).—Italian patrola were nang gor having nearly 4,000,000 pulsed in the Mori and Monte Cimones sectors, according to an oMcial state- ment issued at the Wir Office to-day. In the Setti Communi (Seven Com- mMUACH) several Italian thrusts failed, the statement adda, but in the Hrenta Valley the enemy pressed an advance post back slightly. In 4he Albania coastal region the Itallang have vainly attempted to re- cover ground won from thom during the past two da) BULGARIAN. SOFTA, Bulgaria, Sunday, Sept. 15. —The Bulgarian War Office state- ment to-day says: “nemy battalions attacked our Positions north of Gradeshnitsa at several points, but were repulsed with heavy losses. Several French Prisoners remained in our handa, “Further east after excessive vio- lent artillery preparation ¥Franco- Serbian divisions attacked carly this | Morning our positions on the Sokol- Dopropolje-Vetrenik line, After an obstinate struggle they succeeded in| occupying these points, suffering heavy losses, “In order to avoid the sacrifice of A rican soldiers in France next mmer and another million in train- ing at home, The inercases asked for to-day in- dicate the possibility of a change in the pending $8,000,000,000 war revenue when it reaches the Benate, Con- sumption taxes seem most likely to be inserted for raising additional revenue, NEW YORKERS WIN SERVICE GROSSES sallant Soldiers Win Awards for Valor From Gen. Pershing, War Department Announces, WASHINGTON, Bept. 17. — Gen. Pershing has awarded Distinguished Service Crosses for “extraordinary heroism in action” during enemy raids on American positions in Al- walce to Corpl. Kisworth Otterrill, in- fantry, Rahway, N. J., and Private John Zyche, infantry, Brooklyn, the War Department to-day announced, rare Distinguished Service Cross been awarded posthumously to Private John MoGeary, infantry, No. 883 18th Avenue, Brooklyn, for’ gal- jantry displayed in attempting to “Our troops made - progress: yester- dy in the direction of Le Werguier, rthwest of St. Quentin, ‘We improved our positions: alight- yesterday and ring the night weat of Hultuch (between Lens “La Bassee) and northeust of Obapelic (Flanders fron' FRENCH. ARIS, Sept. 17.—Wollowing is to- bad ‘ cok St. Hilaire-le-Grand and it Sansnom, also north of Hbelm repulsed several surprise attacks. PASTORN THEATRE, Sept. 15.— ‘This morning, after violent artillery, paration, French and Serbian attacked enemy organizations } the mountainous region of Dobro- Je. The whole first positions of the over « front of eleven kilo- tras was carried in apite of the ties of the ground. A number prisoners and pleces of artillery sr re a i i our troops we withdrew our units| ue & wounded comrade, {fell into the hands of the Allies. The | in ag ction to positions further nie aed ion continues to develop favor. | berth. , . On other parts of the front GERMAN. | SPIES' WAY OF SIGNALLING “a has been Hvely artillery activ- BERLIN (via London), Sept. 11.— Following is the report issued to-day by the War Office: “In the Gotes Lorraine, near &t Hilaire (three miles east of Freanes), and west of Jonville (three miles east of St. Hilaire), we conducted successful enterprises,” the statement U BOATS REPORTED FOUND U. S. Authorities Announce Discov- ery After Arrest of Alleged Ger- man Agents in Florida. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, Sept. “Gerblan and French aviators par- pated in the battle and efficiently the infantry, bombarding the emmy nes of communication.” SERBIAN. | LONDON, Sept. 17.—An official 4 report Federal authorities here declared to-da an from the Macedonia | sald. na ; t, dated Monday, says: “Partial attacks by the enemy | ‘at they have discloved secret methods Against Haumont (midway between| #°¢ >¥ German spies to communicate “Our offensive continues with com - | success. The front pierced has widened to include the re- ‘mainder of the village of Grade- nitea and extends over a front of ore than twenty kilometres. | with submarines operating off the At- lantic coast. This, announcement was made following the arrest of Charles Fink and Louis Strauss, two alleged rman agents, in a secluded point on the beach about twemy miles from Fresnes and Pont-a-Mousson) and northeast of TMhiaucourt (eight miles west and north of Pont-a-Mousson) were repulsed. Artillery fighting was limited to destructive fire. FORU'S ARMY aoe aad 5 ‘THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1918. lu: S. Soldiers Bringing in German Prisoners; Some of Their Captives Have. Been Wounded BRITISH AGAIN ADVANCE THEIR LINE TOWARD ‘ST. QUEN VTIN SERBS AND FRENCH GAIN FIVE MILES ON BALKAN FRONT Take 3,000 Prisoners and Guns in Advance of 12 y AMERICANS FIGHT: BOLSHEVIK TROOPS NEAR ARCHANGEL Allied Forces Victors in Clash —812 Executions in Petro- Miles Wide. grad in Week. ene 6 LONDON, Sept. 17.—Serbian and PETROGRAD, Saturday, Sept. 4 French troops continued their offen- (via Amsterdam, Sept. 17).—Amert- sive in Macedonia and have prog- ressed more than five miles, accord: can, British and French detachments that such a conference as Austria- Hungary suggested in its peace note would be useless, Foreign Secretary Balfoyr expressed hig opposition to the return to Germany of her naval bases in yarigus party of the world. (The text of this portion of Mi Balfour's speech, received te-da: shows that the Foreign Secretary went somewhat further in his discus- sion of the subject of Germany's coio- nies than the first reports of the ad- dress indigated). | STNG ES AO SMTIRG ADORE WITH THE GERMAN SHELLS; | | THEY ALTO LOE WH ON'S RECTION OF mpage yon | AUSTRIA PEACE NOTE Fired North of Marne Were (Continued from F Useless. WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, Sept. 6 (Associated Press) at Page.) —American artillery officers esti- mated recently that at certain stages of the German retreat north of the Marne from 60 to 70 per cent. of the shells fired by the enemy failed to “Germany,” said Mr, Balfour, “is| going to insist upon the return of| her colonies, Here, again, is a point! upon which there can be no misun-| tion where she cannot strike again, She has appealed to the lust of con- quest, the dread arbitrament of arms. By that she must abide. She shall t derstanding. Germany stands on one explode. One night after the Germans | nor now resert te talk and bargain crossed the Vesie the enemy fired Life Li side and we on the other. |? Tes for a decision. “I say it is impossible to conceive seventy-two shells of large calibre | °°) \ ~ h This Ge Wcodea' Chane White AiseHinAa We mean to” put her in physical] that any conyersations can bridge} ti ; 4 to b tered, | bonds. We mean to make the world| Over @ difference so deep, or to re-| Troops were suppose 9 be quartered, pe store to the power of Germany those} and artillery experts of one of the| Safe for all free, law-abiding, decent] unhappy populations she misused, or | divisions eng d reported that only | people, so that they may live their) give back to Germany control over | four of these shells had exploded. livés in peace, unthreatened and un-| those naval bases which can give) None of the American officers sug-| alarmed. For this wo fight. We | her control of the moans of communi- | gested that the German shelis were . Ww cation, not only between the British | deteriorating generally, There had| Shall not ask more. We shall never! kmpire, but between the civiliged| accept less, nations of the world.” been day after day of rain during the retreat, and it was believed quite pos- | sible that in the withdrawal the Ger- mans had not been able to take the usual precautions against dampness, Praising President Wilson's Balu- more speech, which called for “force and more force’ against the enemy, the Senator compared it with what ho “President Wilson speaks for the | Allies," declared Lord Northcliffe, writing in the Evening Newg to-day Felative to the American reply to the Austrian peace proposal. the result being that many projectiles |iermed "stuff" written by Immigra-|, “The only question here Ia how the | from some of the big guns fulled to . : s 1 refusal should be couched. A small, do anything. more than. strike the | 08 Commiasioner Howe which he de-|timia minority fears a Gat rejection earth with @ thud clared was in flagrant violation to the} will drive Austria back into the arms | One officer suggested that possibly; President's policy of Germany. But the fact is Austria bas never left them,” AUSTRIAN NOTE SENT TO VATICAN ASKING the Germans had been firing old shells rather than no shells at all, the officers realizing that only @ few of them were exploding, but preferring to keep the big guns pounding away merely in an effort to keep up the morale of the men ‘The Senator declared that the Ger- man Emperor has been the fountain head of much propaganda, adding “Of his unattractive qualiti reltgious hypocrisy is the worst, hi eign Minister, on Sept, 14, according | to a Vienna despatch, sent a nove to the Apostolic Nuncio at Vienna, Mgr. | ai Bonzo, ‘ation. House President Wilson's to the Austrian peace note | 1 inseon Am. A. Nef Steal Koundey, Bitling ub dus tee atid Cent He said the Kaiser had ap yuiias The average number of faulty shells | Belgium with a pererets Peape O78) generally is from 2 to 6 per cent. When the President recognized bin ed hai aR | cpmmeencnaipeneennere the Czecho-Blovaks he set his hand) 7 Appiaiio Holy Gee to's sument ext of A al to Holy See to Sup- | TIONS, | to document that meant the 4 CLOSING STOCK QUOTA ! | lution of the Austrian Empire ia port Proposed Conference t € wrevious ry ator ie | With net change from previous cme, | the Senator. Made Public. | . | Senator Thomas of Colorado, Dem- ‘ Beer 5 ] i almers * 1% ocrat, followed Senator Lodge with a AMSTERDAM, Sept. 17.—Baron Al no jeg » 'y | brief speech, declaring that the Presi- Burian, the Austro-Hungarian For Amy ited A ve ca 7 + 4 BY | dent spoke for the Ni i} In the 1% | anawer we x | was raised by Representative Fess of stating that his Govern- { if} Onie, Chairman of the Republican | ment had decided to propose a peace | Raidwin Leo % C conference and urging the Vatican to ss 4 Congressio: mpaign Committee. He declared the note “leaves no | chance for the enemy,to gain my di- plomacy when it could not win on the field.” “The quick reply may jar upon dip- lomatic ears,” he added, “but is justi- fled as q rebuke to the double deal- | ing of our enemy, and a forestalling| | support it | The Austrian note to the Vatican reads as follows: | “After four years of unheard of struggle and gigantic sacrifices the battie which has been devastating | Kurope haw not been able to bring about a decision. Animated by a spirit of reconciliation which already | has been expressed in its note of De- | | Steel Beth" aivel as cits Bums Hr cember 12, 1916, the Austro-Hun- | of either propaganda to weaken the| garian Government has decided to Allies or time to rebulid shattered Approach all belligerent states and ? : : [invite them to pave the way to a enemy lines, Discussion af ‘unbind-| peace which will be honorable for all ing terms’ in the dark, a8 suggested,| parties by a confidential and un- can result in no good, / This reply should be an end to this peace offensive until the enemy is on binding exchange of thoughts. “Pull of gratitude, the Austro-Hun- garian Government hereby remembers that touching appeal which His Holl- Jacksonville, TWO PLANES THAT RAIDED PARIS ARE BROUGHT DOWN Member of French Chamber | "Phe whole of the ridge of Sokol is fn our hands, as well as the ridges | et Truaviska, Rovoveka and Braz- “The artillery duel in the region of Havrincourt (British front), south-| west of Cambral, yesterday incroased | to great intensity. | jerman troops recaptured the east- | ern fringe of the heights to the cast of Vauxnilion, northeast of Soissons, Draft boards have proceed at To Do Its Duty °® They can't without the best lubrication, Divontee them and been instructed | Deputy Antoine Troubat was killed to mail the queg- | so during (he Sunday night airplane raid mnoe Honaires at (he rate of ten per cent, | for ten daye beginning to-morrow jover Paris, it has been announced, i} there will be no lubrication sg Five other persona were killed and | trouble. fifteen others injured in the raid. One XON's , HAVRE DE GRACE WINNERS. | of ine injured was a woman, the | pix 7 mother of six child GRAPHITE RACE x | Bee lh ito Two-year-olda; Ba: its kne hess, the Pope, went to all belliger- | President Wilson's reply to the| ents’ Jast year with the exhortation | \\ Austrian communication speaks for | ipa ease, feck an baderstanding and | all the nations arrayed against the AWAID Babel Rnea che oni! stat Central Powers, in the belief of of-| Father to-day also longs that auffer- ficials to-day. ing mankind will soon again enjoy Dataflow Silver The text of the answer constitutes| the blessings of peace, we confidently of | where the French have gainod a foot- ’ I 3 A | ling." | Deputies Was Killed in 5 RAE | Sunday's Bombing. 'TO RELEASE QUESTIONAIRES. | pais, stonaay, sopt. 16.—Two ALBANY, N.Y, Bept. 17-—Quea-| German airplanes which had par- |1 tionnaires four the new regintrante | tclated in the raid on the region of | |will be released to-morrow, it was | Paris Sunday night were shot down! announced at the office of the Adju- | by anti-aircraft guns. tant General to-day They fell in tho forest of Complegne. hope he will sympathige with our note and support it with the moral influence which is recognized all over the world, Herat - one of the shortest important notes recorded in American diplomatic bis- + ¥ | tory, % R ; me ay “Animated by this thought, I re- B] After stating that “the United) quest Your Excellency to submit. the | {{ | States feels that there is only one! {nclosed text of the note to His Holi- it |reply which it can make to the sug-| ness,” | Sf | gestion of the imperial Austro-Hun- i ,|garlan Government,” President Wil- + © son set forth the position of tne United States Government in a single sentence as follows: “It has repeatedly and with en- tire candor stated the terms upon whioh the United States would consider peace and can and will entertain no proposal for a con- ference upon a matter concern- ing which it has made its posi. ROMP, Sept Sera to-day sounded @ warning in con- neotion with the Austrian proposal of 17.—The Corriers Dela 1u3 39 Ok 0% peace discussions, “Tt 1g necessary to offer sistance to the Austrian pr it ig aimed at embrolli 400 shares Total 8a at a decisive period DIVIDENDS DECLARED. ia “The frst con- ion “ghoul be the ptance of th. il Milkmaid, 117 ¢ 4 tien and purpose so plain,’ of freedom and independ- Automob: S bf tresdory LUBRICANTS fe tiie So ONE MAN AIR CONTROL © he det amd lett answer ote F ery ‘cond; Duch | the United States was accentuated b ow N80.) third | tot he evomptnets of the reply, wnien| ADMIRAL MAYO IN ENGLAND #phpinetive eeating of specially Green Mint,” Twilight 4th, Vive the promp i ply, | aL af 4) Graphite on the p! Christie Holters and Lucky Lady also Prairie tie officials to-day believed will demon- pa : A friction works, It evens ran. ~ Am T & Si fi American 1 Officer's Arriva amet co wr) prac ieen wn a - “aA BS strate fully to the enemy the firm wevasalle Announced more efficiency—less upkeep costs || ilitary Committee Disregards Ad pure of the American people in SDON x Fou use Diton's okevn cont it AQUEDUCT RESULTS. y Bal | NEW YORK COTTON "EXCHANGE. RO ee ene ee cat belone thal or ee rca eae et rere Mayo Ask your dealer for the = ministration Opposition in Open, High, waging the w Jof the United States Navy has arrived Dixon Lubricating Chart rmar RAOK—For three eabseiaa Reporting Bill | Retever. if 4 world more clearly the position of the Ia Rae and, it was officially announced JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE Co, punt tcwaltt eaten sree’ bith “ate | porting Bil. \Saeapes 33:30 United States Government, SLRS Jerver City, New Jorvey inst ts! 108 Tacha Inger), 38,10 | WASHINGTON, Bept. 17. — With | March 43.12 > Reprical fer Demblng of German Established 1827 fio. ie y Wie 4, ‘ong |Amendmenta elimigating the provision Hav. Ht ey GERMAN NAVAL BASES ‘Towns, Says Berl (Mots Bod, | for & new Cabinet officer and limiting | °\n) sed strong, up 42 to 74 BPRLIN, Sept. 17.—As a reprisal third, vaaitaie Finn; | the life af tho proposed department to | poi: nnie|@ yoar after tho war, tho Will of Senator C\> | New of Indiana tg croate & separate for the continued bombing of German towns, says the official statement Is- MUST NOT BE RESTORED, Mihtel, Congrat- ant Found” ertictes r s Toop Bight, ry - “ an) tiged 4 The World or reporte Hi 184 ‘Applaron Wink, Mrathtios | Popartment of Acrdnauticn was ordered | Americans, BALFOUR NOW INSISTS | sued by the German wer Oise to at Aud Found Buren and | favorably reported to-day by the Benate| PARIS, Sept. 17.—Premior Clomen day, twenty-four tons of bombs were Military Committers, It would set up| ceau Sunday visited St. Mihtel, Whilo dropped Sunday night on Paris, Gen, fimate Coming Here, ip Grarineet Mua * heen _popeinieg there he met his son, Capt, Miche! | Impossible Also to Restore Enemy’s —<>—— z N, So) alount, » Ge pn} Oy the President to have oantee -, * ‘ Austrian General Staff Confers at ibis te ymabcr of te Tieilen | over airerate praduetion and operation Gemencea, who was fret to enter) Colonies, Says British For- : st 7 ol by the Army, Navy and Marine Corps, ‘: nd is ROM, Sept. 17.—-An important coun- om ines then tcranind ae sgt Acting Secretary Crowell recently Premier offered his congratulations on elgn Secretary. ol at ‘Austrian headaqui 8 was held Satapliah personal re | vised tue comms Semboubion the epat to the Amerionne fot thete| LANDON Rent 17.—In his crreptie he members off the General with nrg ele Wilaen, rewarded as unnecessary ‘ond “unwise. great “victory, _.. yesterday yolcing his personal view Bia Son vieticat ei — = ing to a Serbian official statement The advancing Allies have occupied an important serigs of. received here. | ridges. The Allied troops have captured more than 3,000 prisoners and twenty-four guns. have been slight The Allies are moving forward on a front of more than tweive and have taken the villages of Gra- twenty miles east of Mon- A Jugoslay division is fighting and has the most important offen- deshnitea, astir. with the Serbs and French reached Koziak, position in the region of the sive ATHENS, Sept. 16 Greek troops have advanc two to three miles'on a 19-mile in the Struma sector, between the Vardar River and Lake Doiran, cap turing several villages, according to a despatch from Salonica to-day, The attack was a complete ithe § 8 and ten men, an losses were while the extremely Bul gar! heavy Sofia Admits © by Allied Troops. SOFIA, Bulgaria, Sunday, (via London) Sept 1 in Macedonia early Sunday Their casualties miles front sur- The Grecks lost only two of- 5] Franco-Serbian troops | in an attack on the Bulgarian lines | morning | are reported ‘by the Prayda to have met the Bolshevik forces in battle on the Archangel! front. The Bolshevik troops: itial success, were repulsed by British after an in- reinforcements and fled in panic. A number of Bolshevik officers, the newspaper says, ‘deserted to the British. STOCKHOLM, Sept. 17.—Wholesale executions are erad, increasing In Petro- according to private telegrams received here by way of Helsingfors. During the last week $12 persons more than 400 proscribed Mat. already been were executed, and others Most made All the rank of coun- lor of state have been imprisoned regardless of their political views. Ten thousand officers are said have been imprisoned in Petrograd. > “MISSING” SOLDIER WRITES. Two Letters Since Date of Supposed ty Tell of Battles, Although Corpl. Henry George Her- roeder jr., of No. 12 Short Street, Mount Vernon, was reported missing in ac- tion on July 0, he hag written two let- are on the of them have hostages. persons of to suceeeded after a ct Barons struggle | ters home since that date, Aug. 9 and in occupying the Sok opropolie | Aug. stating that he was all right and Vetrenik positions, says to-day's * We. Othe had seen exciting times and had been announcement SOLDIER'S WILL GIVES ESTATE SHARE TO FIANCEE Deaf Mute sions for Intended Wife Be- fore Going to War. The will of the late Bertha Dissinger, have every comfort that poasible to givg her fr that she be given suffic insure her from want ways be treated my estate nt money \if she had been wife, Had possible we would have been marrie before my departure for foreigt yice. 1 look upon her as my own, an. I desire thut she shall be treated as such." HAS WALKED 15,000 MILES SO FAR LOOKING FOR “DAD” Fourteen-Year-Old Boy Now Plan ning Trip Abroad to Hunt Soldier Stepfather. Enoch George | POPE'S AID FOR PEAGE | ‘tres which document is merely, a | |notice to the parties conmerned, wa |filed for probate to-day, Margraf, wh | to and that she al she would have bee in several engagements. Corpl. Herroeder is twenty-two years old and was drafted Oct. 8, 1917. A brother, William, is in a training eam in South Carolina Teacher Made Provi-! Salter Bridgework stand» {lived with wis parents at No. 245 East| n¥e-eminent for quality, service 178th Street, was a teacher jn the y ee eee ee te oarae eos | and aurabllity,. Hy ite wae we supply eh =f on Bort Wash-lone or more missing teeth, bu ington Avenue, and was killed in action to two or more teeth in either jaw Aug. 18 lust in France. His only two) All’ unnecessary display, of | ald lood relations are hix parents. He wax|carefully avoided. The size and shad: | bined relation iy Bis par ¢ Phi- [Of the surrounding natural teeth a engaged to Bertha E. Dissinger of Phil- |quplicated perfectly, making detection delphia, who inherits one-fourth of the |impossibie. emtate, She filed the petition, which in Salter, Bridgework tn fuarantend : ast 10 years or more and costs $5 pi: a eer areoR ott tooth and upward nthe event of anything happening) ixamination by our Registered Den to make my urn impossible tt is MY \etste at all our offices free of charge last wish that my flanc ' Dr. Salter Dentist 17 West 34th Street, New York Hours, $90 to 6 491 FULTON ST., opp. A &S, Brookly. Hours, 8,30-7,30, Sunday 9-42, BRANCH OFFICES: 62d St. & Sth Av., Bay Kidge, Ban Columbia & Carroll BKlyn 4 NJ J Cor. Cor. 140 47 Newark Ave rey City, Albany St unawick, NV. 119 Smith Street, Perth Amboy, N. J —_—— Our Mid-Week Special for Ti CHOCOLATE, HOME MAD ot ASSORTED ATE COVER. AND NUT BUTTE ED NUTTED MOGULS CUPS—Dainty litte oll athe ‘het at ee low-shane sweets, hay~ sweet Iy n morsel of de~ ing Jackets of lustrousty flsleua hanya finished, delicately fa~ Marshmaliow, vored, crispy, hard fiavensas candy, and fillings of buried: |] | either luscious crashed Fruits or tasty Nuty Ne | ea 44¢ Dian Nera, ‘The specitioa ar is rapldt Fee, canes, 'gintien see DIED. Charles M. McDonald, fourteen year® | MITCHELL.—On Sunday. Sept. 15. BA old, is so fond of his soldier stepfather | THOLOMEW, beloved son of Barth he has walked 15,000 miles looking for mew and Kate Mitchell him, and to-day 4s preparing to extend) | Funeral Thursday, Heot, 19. from his eearch to the American forces in| late residence, 808 Decatur av., at 9.:10 France Willfam Hollenbach, the stepfather, | MORDAN@=at Camp Hancock, ae lived at No. Weat Bide Avenue! Nitti RIORDAN. beloved son c | Jersey City, when he went with th - Willian and Sarah Riordan, and bri tional Guard to the Texas border, and late Marv F. MeMahon | Charies went to Denver to live with his} ayerii, William Riordan. and grandmother, : st Mary Crimmins The last she family hh Funeral Wednesday. from his late re ch was fro ae 6 Madison ave 16 A. than @ year a | 4 4 has walked to | ser All Baint R, ( oh exas, Oklahoma, Alu —>——_—_—_—_——sSS tates without findi won't let him enlist be f his age,} Z ___ FURS. so he is going to Fra on @ cattle | HANDSOMP SEAL COAT. ai Tougthy belo t Thodel, new $100. 808 West ‘Had avs’ (tes ee sday and Wednesday, Sept. 17-18 ie FL a the in ot te her ot tua ipeludes the container,

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