sir. y; IJlMUTO.i'.HMlIJ',' . I r,Jhm rm?,w t. nwnHiTikLr''' Tin ir rMsm i .ry-- . . -r r-'w & 4,Mi mim- :imm saw LEb&ER-PHlLXDEtTPHlA, - TUESDAY, '5 . A V. EVENING Iffll MRFUL TOLL BEING PAID BY GERMANS REVEALED IN SPECIAL CABLE DISPA TCHES FROM FRONT SVm v DRIVE FOUND FRENCH READY I Yon Hutier's A d vancc .w Made at Terrific Cost in Men 9 m " SUNS CUT DOWN ENEMY m& B? j&Gerrnans, Find Way to Paris Blocked by Strongly Resisting Forces Dy G. II. TERMS &3pectal Cable lo Evening Public Ledger &$& Copyright, Hip, bv Sew YorU Times Co. ZSSfi With the Frmrh Armies June u. if- There has bcerr very little movement m. tt. fA. nf n.n.rtil vnn Hutier's L Vrmi? tnr flv.. nr nv ppks Atltl V t tills Ji , I .. .. .. lnHlf 41.A iliras, oy us nifiory, imb-cmiiiicih.j ' armj" of offensive, the Woneer nnd model nf ti.. .. inrfli-j. Kv lrtentlv. too, the tiA A . . t-..t V... i.a fwn crrent tjorrldors of the Olse and the Marne - ..! .1.. lHi..m.Ui. . allnve nt til AiSllC i&KiSM IO IHictiiiWH"" ,..,w - LE. ft.rt th nurrn must lin supported from ISSL the north, it only to cover the rlKht ! -..!. .. ...- ..!.,., -., Interfere riWlth the now of Allien, reserves. SSSWlSunday's assault uas. therefore, to be ,v.,H'ri1,.,j ,i uvnppted Whether 83 It was hurried becnuse of the rapid ar fffipltt rest of Von Boehm's army before the 53TO IDresL or Vlliers-l-oiiereis r niictiic. VMU "It weeks was sumclent time for "isis't Ut'iiaratlon Between .uomaiuitr nu.. EV'Xoyon. e can only Judge when we see wnai exiension la kcu w ... ....w... Its front was only twenty miles, as compared with a front of, thirty miles In tlie attack on the Chemls-des-Dames and fifty miles In the first phase of the offensive on March 21, and so far It is only on the central half of this smaller front that any considerable impression has been made on the French lines. y ., ..nea ti'iiaiAir ni.iv liAe ben wyt"the exact design, there had not been this &v: ffln ih same extreme scruple to con- S?A.'' oeal troon movements, and for Some days MtSJrh; ast the exceptional tralllc of convoys. Kj-the suspicious activity of the enemy Kp?',; batteries In the correction of ranees and ttr-'r' i,.. .ion. iiiiil clven warnlnc of what l&f" was afoot. EM. ' r..i, r.min.r. Were Ready t ,, - rtOne conseauence was that, when the K-' German infantry advanced Sunday morn- it. tee. It had to meet a -volume 01 nre l'wy different ffom that which answered vf the surprises of St. Quentln and the w? Aisne neignis. rium;u i"'""-'" 'lliBOrOUgniy Siuaieu mc hi"i' www... mtm and were au reaay ia upiukc .! - v. ritnlif tlint crmv Poat jm w ""r"j :cr",-- r waves appeared, rrom mo ihimniif.. 5 therefore, the German losses hac been tstttuvhr than on the earlier occasions, nd this must affect the development of thei action. - .. . .1 ....... tnhi t hi nn SKf-M-. in otner respects mc m... ...... ljjlutler maneuver appears to have been E& repeated, shock battalions carryitiB light ali. ...kin. m,n onH iiianhlnp rifles concen- i-iilratlnK upon local breaches IP our line iJSsnd leaving the task of eTcanlnB up i2?iVSianas OI remataiifo iw ... H...... Ads. while .they pressca on rapiuiy w '-Wplolt the first auctess. It will prou S'Sly be found that the operation was SS?un with abont fifteen divisions in me fea jmnrntlmatelv 1B0.0Q0 men, KivinR &i? -density of one division to a mile 'and Ljiii xnira. , ,, ?v iPaoH with n force superior In all iJSJ. ftns Ions resistance of the first line Is miC Impossible, but It Is significant that at SS,' nvtvlr Rundav mornlnc tnat IS, aiier fi 'four hours of a terrible storm of gas and STtxploslve shells, followed uy lour iiours Pt'KS t hand-to-hand strugBie, our .imes i" ' were stilt In a large part of the field S3 r fshtlng within wnat is caiiea me iuiic lm4v Af ndvnnced nosts. and only the centre Sii-v Taad fallen back on the zone of prln WjR' ln,i rc.ldsnro Plpmonf Hill. o erlook- 4. .t inv TaMlrnv. uhnKP ranture two months ? .o I described at that time, was still holding out at that hour, although the fmnfl had lain Itnmptllll fel V hPtieath It ijl.The villages of he Fretoy and Courcelles ix." were lost during the mornhig, but were 'hji; recovered by counter-attacks in which SJ.-J the Krencn troops snoea tne nignest WA plrlt. &-it "' Develops Enemy Strenctli Aw A stubborn stand at the beginning of ,ucn a Dame is oi more man local mo ,'jnentary importance, for by compelling i?th enemy to put forward all his trenrth. It enables the Allied command :"tf know what that strength Is and what Jifcis Intentions are and gives valuable $uloance m the use of reserves. 'rV. up to tate sunaay nignt the only re- ,'uit tnai von ttutier could regard as n any degree Justifying the effort made knd the.losses suffered w.ir thA nnntur -f the villages of Hessons-sur-Matz and fiireull-la-Motte, whereas on the French left before Rlbecourt, by Le Fretoy to Utf . . . . .. . '. ro i.iniiieciHncrnuri. inp nnvann 4vpfd from nnp in twn iiiIIac At !, KtWAftntre it rather exceeded three. 3tK5?''V''''ThIs is a poor gain, Judged by prec- (ent, and was bought at an exorbitant rice, but it has a certain tactical and KLviFrtutP8 superior consequence. The Catz valley runs southeastward to the SfOuse; turning the block ir Thlescourt skills, which have hitherto been iha wistlon of the French front on the p'WMt OI llie JlB aim lucing ine lorests Carlepont and L'Algne on the cast of jrls'Uw river. fa.-. ni... a-A VTft.ta nmi. fm. t. ..II... L JKttween the two arms of the German ivance at Fontenoy on the Alsne and ons on the JIatz. If Aon Hutler BUld fiicceed in pushing down the rail- fy.and the high road from Ttessons V ttmpiegne, a aisiance ot ten miles, a T,Alrne corner could hardlv he hIH tmaln course of the Alsne would lie ally in uennau hands and a pretty yet .front would have been gained for fiwide final attempt toward Paris. i a design Is at least possible. Com- Vlllers-Cottercts and Chaleau- ry are all, however, about forty fiom the capital and there are r rmtindfl than that nr nlt9tii.A Br'vfewjng such a program with cnua- ! , , &f: -IA1U! nDnunuT in nhdwav ne Feared If It Does Not Rain Soon i Cable to Evening Public Ledger oht. If It, by Xew York Tlme$ Co. ahacn, June 11. 'According' to a nd from Christiahia. not a drop of .has fallen In the last, two months fway. crops nave aireaay suuerea v from tun drouEiu. ana it mere httH plenty of rain In the next few 9 miiii :.... .. .. w.. . lmarK ana nwearn are in ainiosu une condition, making the situation aerlous and rendering help from countries Impossible. if...:, ' Ptaith Diplomatist Dies June 11. The well-known Untomatist. Frank Ernest Bllle. IrfiRdon yesterday. lU(.'''Who was chamberlain to .c &riitnitm. wiii uurn in CAPTORS LED AMERICANS BACK Gcrmnit Ciinrds Walked Three Prigoncrs Into French Lines t.nmlnn, June 11 - A correspondent' with the American army In Franco tells how the captors of three American sol- dlers on the sector northwest of Chateau-Thierry unwittingly lfd them hack . into the Allied lines owing to the tangled conditions of the fighting front their , Corporal Kidney W. ISogera nnd Pri vates rtajmond Howard nnd Fiank 1' nidgway were captured at Hill 201. Two Germans smiled with them to the rear, but became confused and walked straight Into the French lines nnd them selves were taken prisoner. The Americans reported that German ofllcerp had nups.loned thnm closelv as to when and where they had landed In, llurope. where they were trained and. the Identity of their units. The Ameri cans refused to answer any of the ques tions The Germans served the Ameri can prisoners with a nauseating com pound of flour and wiiter as food, FIGHTING PEOPLE ' OF GERMANY NOW Secretary Lansing, at Union College, Officially Sweeps Away Illusion OLD THEORY SHATTERED Call lo America and Allies for Unceasing War to Com plete yictory nOBERT T. SMALL In To-Jau's rublic I.edocr Washington, June 11. The last shreds of the one-time dominant theory of tho Administra tion here In Washington that the United States Js not nt war with the German people have at last been swept away. It is admitted now that much has gone on In Germany which the world ought to have perceived, but did not There no longer is any doubt thnt the Prussian aim of world dominion has "dazzled, with Its anticipated glories and by Its promise of a boasted racial superiority, the German millions who were to be the instruments of achieve ment." tr,.I,!fls rccsnlzed now that the war must go on. not alone until "the nr- humbtd "',d t br.UtaI "-"'ar- are anhU Vn.n?' al0'.1(; unt" th0 Kalser their mid ry,.chl.eftal,,s ""Pair of tneir ambitions, but "until the riorman People realize that the r insolent iSrds not huveTtr! by d''l" " Are anddo of heavln C0Iand the powers nilnlstiatlon has lecognized that the t1,ev-la,'Ii.I,e0"! V "S"""" "ai.2 ln nf mVC' Timl'cly 1 the teach ngs of the Prussians, that the Her- to be rulers of the universe. TheM over !?H r.and lloncs ale dominant Si ,,i,u erman P-'0Plc and will not faitlXll,re1Ieadeurf, they bll"dly but ralUifully follow huve been crushed deep in irretrievable defeat. Lansing Given Authorily To Secretary of State Lansing was delegated the authority to speak Utrn,,Vle fresldent and' the Admin. ll1"1) m a manner so frank and convincing that there should be no further Illusions about the war It was. indeed, n notable address the Secretary of State delivered at Union College. Schenectady, and the pro nouncement was followed here in Washington as if it had emanated from the White House itself. Jlr. Lansing drew a. pitiless indict ment of Germany, laying bare some new secrets of the despicable intrigue which centered in the German em bassy in "Washington during all the days which preceded our entry Into the war. He admitted that for a time tha United States was duped by the military clique In Berlin, "because dis honesty of this sort seemed to us In conceivable In these days of Interna tional honor and Christian civiliza tion." But the United States will never he caught again, the head of the State Department added, In such a net of duplicity as was spread over the world by the Berlin Government. "We have learned our lesson nnd It has cost us dear." he added. "We will never have to learn it ag'iln." The bitterness with which Secretary Lansing denounced German "kultur," the finality with which ho declared FRAU KRUPP TRIED TO SELL U. S. LONG-RAMEOTNS FOR PANAMA Showed Them to American General Early in 1914, Saying Kaiser Did Not Believe hi Them Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Copyright, till, bvXew York Times Co. l'nrln, June 11. The long-range guns which are now bombarding Paris are not, it seems, a very new Invention. They existed. In an experimentah form at least, before the war and a model was shown to an American general early In 1914 by Frau Bertha Krupp von Br!:!sn herself when she visited Essen on an unofficial mis sion. He had been taken all through the vaBt Krupp works, and was about to retire, when Frau Bertha dismissed all save two confidential members of the firm and with the latter conducted the general to a secret reserve, Here the visitor's attention was at- tracted by two immense cannons with PERHAPS it is pride -perhaps it is conscience 'perhaps it is the habit of 6 8 years - but certainly it is ifood business sense that determines us to keep Cinco unswervingly up to the same standard, no matter how costs p up. OTTO EtSENLOHR flr BROS..INCORPORATED. ESTABLISHED I8SO (Sgr. AMERICAN MARINES IN FRANCE SMASH GERMAN OFFENSIVE AT MARNE TliU photograph, supplied hv the front in the that relations with such Governments as have controlled Germany in the last one hundred and Ilfty years would be Impossible in 'he future, created u lasting Impression here, not only among Government officials, but upon the Allied diplomats as well. The lat ter saw In the Lanslnp: address the final and Iirevocahle dedication of America to ti war which shall not end until the German war lords have been destroyed and (he whole spirit of Prussianism driven from the world. Americans lo no Aroused The speech also represented tho be ginning of a definite program of arousing the Anieriran peon'o to a full realization of what Prussianism has meant to tho world in the past nnd what it thrralcns today. Coming as It docs, at a time when thero has ap peared to bo a softening of the "knock-out" poliov of Gieat Britain, the Secretary of State'n address should rally the Allies anew to tho idea that there can. he no negotiated peace with a Germany which, as It exists today. Is an outcast among the nations and can never be trusted again RUSH AUSTRIANS DAY AND NIGHT TO ITALY Large Quantities of Munitions Also Being Distributed Along Line Itntlan Army HpndiiiRrler, .June 11 Austria Is rushing the railroads be hind' her lines in northern Italy to fullest capacity night nnd day In bringing troops to"the front, distributing tiem to different sectors and moving heavy guns an,d. large quantities of munitions to positions near the hattTellne A' special system of drills to Improve the physical conditions of the Austrian soldiers and give them training for assaulting posi tions has also been put Into effect. It is l;non that the enemy is making strenuous efforts to pievent deserters from reaching the Italian lines, carrying Information of troop dispositions. Heavy rewards have hecn offered for the shoot ing of deserters The enemy, however, is being watched carefully by the Ital ians, who seek to checkmate a threat ened offensive, whether It be on a large scale or Intended, merely to bluff the Italians from sending troops to France or to satisfy Herman demands for an offensive. Behind the Italian lines the aspect of the country is peaceful. Children are seen fishing In the canals and Streams or playing upon the great hlghwavs leading up to the front. ITALIANS HAVE SEA TANK London, June 11. Vienna novvspa- ' . . .. . . .. . pern report mai me Italians used a sea "tank" during their last attack on Pola, Austria's naval base on the Adriatic. The boat was forty feet long, six feet wide and propelled by elec tricity. There Is an endless rotary chain around tho vessel fltted with barbs which cuts nets and other obstacles, like the land tanks. The vessel has two torpedo tubes. extremely long tubes and of relatively small dtlameter. Frau. Bertha Krupp von Bohlen said In excellent Knglish: "Those are guns jou ought to order for' the Panama Canal defense, They carry ninety miles, are guaranteed and cost X210.000 apiece. Of course, thess are only trial guns and cannot Are more than twenty or twenty-five shells with out being repaired. But you can ap preciate the Intlmldatory .results which will be obtained by the nation that first employs such, guns." A question from the American general as to why the German Government had not adopted these guns elicited the fol lowing reply; "Our Emperor does not believe In them But they would suit you 'go-ahead' Americans absolutely to a 'tV Oopvrlsht International Film Service, ITnilcd Slates Marine Publicity Bureau, shows the tvpc of men who drove the Germans back two miles on a six-mile present furious fighting on the Marne, capturing hundreds of prisoners and many marllinc guns ATTACK BY GERMANS BECOMES SLAUGHTER Iron Discipline Sends Men Against Machine Gnus and Artillery By WALTER DURANTY Special Cable In Evening Public Ledger! Coptlight, lllfi, hit .Vfir York Titnrs ( o. W itli thf Krenrh Arnilm, June 11 It is doubtful whether ever hi tills war more desperate lighting has taken place than has been going on during the last twenty-four hours. .lust consider tho rituatlnn: Ger many's picked troops were concent! nteil In numbers, ierhaps superior to thosp of March 21, for n supreme effort, which the lenders hoped would mail: the be ginning of the Allied pnd. The.v knew that this tlme,the Allies wore not to bo caught napping; that the line they -sailed would be strongly held, and that Allied leserves were available clofo at hand. Behind a score of Gorman divisions In the first lino of attack were grouped a gloat majority of Hindenburg's ip seive At all costs the Germans wore to maintain the advance; In a battle like this fnlluic to go forward means defeat in consen nonce, the losses were Ignored complete!. Defenders and prlsoncin alike agioo that never, even at Verdun, was i-eon Rtich a wholesale slaughter. It was only the culmination of Germany h Iron dis cipline that forced the fresh waves for ward against the machine guns and ai tlllery harrages over ground every foot of which had been "registered" by the defenders. As aluavs In a grca' crisis, the French (troops have risen to the occasion. They met the-nttHCkB with a frenzied par oxism of resistance that simply Ignored the thought of retreat. Despite the stories to the contrary, hand-to-hand fighting has been one of the rarest occurrences In this war. Yes terday It was common all along the line. "They fought like dogs, with teeth and nails," says n eyewitness, de scribing tha struggle for Couicelles. which was taken and letaken four times and finally remained In French hands. With Includible difficulty the Germans pushed their way up the self-swept lower slopes of Mont flenaud. the bastion o the Allied lino on the left. Three times the French chaige swept then) back, as Petaln's soldiers broke the enemy waves by sheer force w 1th b.iv onets, clubbed rifles and lists. Well .trained as the Germans are. they cannot compare with the French in physique "They are admirable toldler., but physically weeds," Bald a French officer of the prisoners taken from a storm division of tho German guard. I i.aw some of them a few minutes later, puiy and stunted men. At the moment of cabling, the prin cipal pressure continues to be lu tho renter of the battlefiont, along th rail- loads liom Montdldier and Ituye to ' ',U!l1',el5n,- I MA I Pt'l The German objective is clear. Rv reaching the Olse at Compelgne he hopes to turn the salient formed bv the hill Massif south of Noyonr which greatly hampers co-operation between tho armies of Boehm and Hutler. AUSTRIAN RAIDS REPULSED Rome Reports Five Enemy Air planes Brought Down Rome, June 11 An official statement Issued by the War Office says: Artillery duels were freqtlent from ''onale to the Brenta niver and on the lower Plavc. In Val Lagarlna, Val Area and at Sbonche, I.aglil and Porte Di Salton enemy surprise attacks by large detachments were frustrated Jn a raid on Col del Orso our own and British patrols drove back recon naissance parties at various points and captured arms and material Fou tons of bombs were dropped on enemy depots and communication Junctions. Five hostile airplanes weic brought down. THE services of our Trust;Department in representing tho absent are offered to those who. contemplate travel., "This service includes the management of Real Estate, the collection o income, and the preparation of Income Tax ReturnsA ' SLAUGHTER OF TEUTON HORDES A MASSACRE Attackers Pay Awful Butcher Bill for Unimportant Gain By G. H. PERRIS Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Coiitirlulit, lOlfl, bu .Vcio York Tlmn Co. With the Trench Annlex, Juno 11. "This Is the real battle," said a French staff officer, meaning to contrast the present tierce fighting between forces unequal, hut not crushlngly so, with the attack on the Chemln-des-Daines. Here i tno trench had a stronger line, their reserves were nearer, and they had suf ficient notice to bring their batteries at every point Into efTecllvo action. Effec tive, do I say? At many points It was a massacre of tho columns of assault and there Is unanimity as well among the prisoners as among our own com batants that tho ranks of the enomv have boon torn and plowed with shot and shell. Never, perhaps, has the Ger White Footwear Specials Early and careful buying has brought us a marvelous stock of white pumps and oxfords in Snobuck and white canvas, at this very special price. .85 Other white footwear for women, beautifully made and finished, in white kid. white buck, white duck and other materials, in a variety of styles. AU Unmatchable Values 919-921 MARKET STREET 60th and Chestnut Sts. 4028-30 Lancaster Ave. Branch Stores Open Every Evening YOUR AGENT A$k for our fold "ColUdion of InanuT Philadelphia Trust Company 415 Chestnut Street . 1415 Chestnut Street Philadelphia man army paid so dearly for an advance which novvhaip exceeds five miles. This Is the ebsential fart which gov erns all tint follows; for If, as the Ger man official pi ess says with a measure of truth, the German objective Is not a city or a port, hut the complete de struction of the Allied nimles, so our objective Is not to hold a ceitaln geo graphical area, hut to punish the ad vance so that the enemy forces will be exhausted, while ours are being con stantly lecrulted from oversea for the laht stioko that will give us the victory. The smallneRs of tho enemy's gains In this fourth phase of tho grand battle Is merely the sign that Von Hutier found acioss h's path an adversary prepared as far as was humanly possible, deter mined and able to contest every yard of ground. Thus tho village of Courcelles, only two miles from the old front, was lost, lotnkon, lost again, recovered and le mnlns In the hands of the Fiench. Thus Plemont, a position insignificant as com pared with the Alsne heights, although enelicled and covered with fire, was be ing defended till Sunday evening. Since then no carrier pigeon has come In. and It must be presumed that the heroic handful of men who held this point were overcome. Their countrymen will not fuiget them. Generally tho analysis ot the Gorman aim contained in a previous dispatch is lonflrmed. It Is possible that the num ber of German divisions nt once engaged In the first line was nearer twenty than llftrcn. and It was certain from the artil lery counter-proposition that no surprise was to be obtained. WB SS.S5 White Silk Hosiery Pure thread silk, with lisle top and -sole. Special $1.15 Other white silk hose, 51.50.J2, $2.25. SS.85 2746-48 Germantown Ave. 5604-06 Germantown Ave. Market Street Store Open Saturday Evg, CONSIDER PARIS ANOTHER VERDUN Military Writers Believe Million Germans Could Not Capture City - .,,, FIND NO PANIC THERE "" "" Speciat Cable to Evening Public Ledger Cowriaht, 191!, hy .Veto York Timti Co. PsrK June 11. Day by daj the fcellns of; confidence thnt the Allied' armies can defend Paris against any effort the Germans may malic Is Brcwlnc In volume. It Is curious to those of us who were here all through the critical period of 19H, when the Germany army sot to within fifteen miles of the city walls, and the refugees poured In from all points five or. six miles .out, to note that nt present. In spite of tho recent Important progress repeatedly made by the enemy, there Is an entire absence of those signs of panic which characterized- tho week or ten days immediately before the battle of the Marne. It Is fully realized now that any ques tion of the surrender of the city Is not to be thought of. Under the vigorous hancJof Clemenceau, all necessary prepa rations are being made to make Paris the kernel of the resistance of the Allied armies, and there are no signs whatever of Hny fear as to what the result will be. "Paris defended." says ono writer, "would bo for the German army a gi gantic Verdun. Before the Paris front a German army, were It to consist of 1.000,000 men. could exhaust Itself even more than before Verdun The city can be defended with a minimum los for us. while the enemy would pay dearly for every foot gained. Paris, If crlrectly at tacked, might, in a rew weeks, prove the tomb of the German army, while the Allied effectives are growing every mln .i rawfaim IWesnosficrof method of n r A.L-. .1 inenen are all In the old days, well-dressed men shunned, light' I weight- summer suits, made of duck, crash, etc.. I because they were so poorly m grace to them. E3 The modern Palm Beach suit has revolutionized, summer apparel for men it gives elegance" wttrTcomr' fort, enabling men to be perfectly well dressed, and at the same timd, not to be burdened with heat-producing . garments. Palm Beach cloth satisfactorily solves the summer ' dress problem if you start using it you will wonder why it was not done before. , Tropical-weight coat and trouser suits made of Palm Beach cloth, Summer worst eds, Breez-weve, mohair, silk, linen, $10 to $30 Flannel Trousers ; plain white or striped, $6.50, $9, $10, $12 and $14. yaOnvJcl REGISTERED U.S. THE GENUINE CLOTH MFD. BY GOODALL WORSTED CO. This label means the Genuine. It's "your safeguard against imitation. Jacob Reed's Sons 1424.1426 CHESTNUT STREET iiiMiininiitiNutiirinnnitiiiiiinaiirrnrntiininciiiJi'liiritia.jtrn POrVfA ofiht SPORTMQ MHfC EIGHT The definition of accumulated knowl edge and applied skill acceptably; uniting art and mechanical excellence.'1 ' One of the most beautiful cars two power ranges that give an entirely new expression to driving satisfac- , tion and riding luxury less gasoline than many sixes or fours 10,000 to 12,000 tire mileage price $2550., Immediate deliveries on touring cars. GIRARD AUTOMOBILE CO; 2314-16-18 Chestnut St. ute. If Germany realizes that the Allies will do all that possibly can bo done to Vj save rarls from humiliation she wl(l not dare to attempt tho effort." , ; The rent I'arisien notes mat l'nris is$ well defended by forests, nnd remarks that this ,1s the only kind ot around. .3 which sfill preserves Its Importance. P The German offensive In April. It says, died cut when It reached Nleppo forest". hh.I rnplannnl Wftnf) 41.A fnf.f pm ..rail , v.n.,v.w... ;. , ,... .w. .. . . helKhts or jviont ue unoicy ana ine vii- ft lors-Cotterets forest have so far proved' Impassable obstacles In the latest Ger-: man advance. if- A ioresi, says me same paper, -now : constitutes the only sufficiently extensive ;"l . and Impenetrable camouflaRe. especially M at this season, for the movement and as- t Kpmhlnire of troons which cannot be ren- dercd nugatory by aerial reconnatsance. ' l The wide stretches of forest country which lie between the present front and v- l,n (.onUol ,-nMaf Ifllt A tliA mm MtAi.f til k ";..:' i. ... ,u ' ..' ' v'ji iiuivi;iiuii uhn'i.ok nir cticiiijr i.uiiltllB,? I from tne norm anu nortneasi," y Fast Air Trip From Paris to London ParU, June 11. Helaldy and Lorite-j'J nat. well-known French aviators, titv? Ti with n Sean ane carrying 660 pounds otr.M cargo from Parli to London In Lwo'l Hours and rorty-nve minutes, according l i to official announcement. The return d journey wns made In ten minutes, less, 2 A regular aerial mall service between the J two capitals Is expected soon. MICHELL'S Grape Bags protect grapes, from insect sting and rot. They last a whole season. Vtr 100 Ter 1000 , 2-lb. size, 50c; $4.50' 3-lb. " 60c; $5.00 4-lb. " 65c; $5.50 Now In the time to attach them. You can stilt plant in the gar den Peas, Beans, Corn, etc., and set out Vegetable Plants af most kinds. Get our catalog free. Michcll'sffra. tdShes you need made and had no shape or ' i i PATENT OFFICE r.r,xnn;ir.irn!ii:irnn'irjiriim:!;Hriiiati!!ifl.ui):iua;ni!Uiuu;ituirii3Wfmws(J )( iiy teSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBW LOAflHt, AjMMf "&? ''IS '3V& ,! TWO'POWEK'RANU &- Z.Z vu.y ' H" 14' & 'til l A !? -rt m wm& W.j 'lu ibj, wnin Mar at.O. 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