GENERAL MARCH SEES BIG BLOW IN HUN DELAY Germans Preparing Forces and Filling Up Losses For Next Move By Associated Press Washington, July 6.—The present delay of the Germans in pressing at tacks in France means only that they are preparing new and heavy Mows, General March, chief of staff, iiid to-day in his weekly conference with newspapermen. "It is perfectly evident," hi said, "that this delay is preparatory to a heavy assault in force by the Ger man high command. The present condition of affairs does not mean anything but that they are reor ganizing their troops, filling up toss i s. and preparing to try it again. " With reference to the American program, we have embarked a mil lion men and now we arc going af ter the second million." Another indication of the pressure under which the American program is being rushed to meet the Ger man menace came from the Provost Marsha: General's office to-day when orders were issued to local boards to speed up physical examination of the new class one, men and have them ready for call in August. Statements of the draft program made public In Congress indicated tin- purpose of calling out at least 800,ttOU men during August, though itlisi quent calls during the year were not expected to exceed one half of that figure monthly. The order's sent out to-day, however, coupled with the statement by the chief of staff indicate that hopes are entertained at the War Department 1 hat the present rate of moving troops to Europe can be subsequent ly maintained for several months, j Fleet Workers Will Be Liable to Draft Under New War Dept. Order A revision ofthe orders regarding the status of Emergency Fleet Cor poration workmen is expected by lo cal draft officials from Provost Mar shal-General Crowder. The "E. F. C." degree is the exemption from mili tary service granted employes of the Emergency Fleet Corporation. Local draft officials state such men are classified the same as other regis trants, but their questionnaires are tlien laid aside and they are not called in the successive draft calls, rcgaidless of order number or classi fication. A number of men in Harrisburg are affected by the revision of rules concerning the Emergency Fleet Cor poration workmen. It is pointed out that men employed in shipyards are not the only employes of the Emer gency Shipping Corporation. Many employes in the plants engaged on Government contracts in this city and vicinity are exempted with the "E. F. C." degree. The revision of rules is expected to reduce the number of registrants "E. F. C." degrees. It is ex- that during the first rush of classification many men employed on Emergency Fleet Corporation con tracts throughout the various plants are not engaged at essential branches of the work. These men will lose the degree. None of the essential men will be withdrawn, it Is said, but the ••E. F. C." degree, it is known, will no longer be permitted to shield non essential workmen from military service. County Board No. 2 has twenty iflen hoiding the "E. F. C." degree, "lily a few of these are in Class 1 t'nd some are in Class 5. it was said this niorinng. These men are not called for service according to their order numbers, but are classified in case the "E. F. C." degree is an nulled. City Board No. 3, which gave all the men 3-H classification as essen tial workmen, lias thirty-five men on its lists. The other two city boards have about twenty men each. President Calls Advisers to Confer on Intervention in Siberia; Allies Urgent Wa.-hiiiglon. July 6.—President Wilson called into conference to-day Secretaries Lansing. Baker and Dan iels and Admiral Benson, chief of operations of the Navy. There was no statement of the purpose, but a report spread that the conference had to do with the Russian situation. It is known that the President has heen earnestly urged by representa tives of the allies during the past week to approve American and al lied military intervention in Siberia, and that the subject has been given renewed serious consideration. General March, cliief-of-staff of the Army, joined in the conference soon after two naval officers appear ed at the White House carrying a large map of Russia. Miss Wynn to Visit Camp Colt Miss Bessie Wynn, who has been appearing before Majestic audiences this week, will go to Camp Colt, Gettysburg* to-morrow, where, in the Y. M. C. A. tents, she will sing and talk on her experiences in war torn France for the benefit of the Tank Corps men located at the Get tysburg camp. | HAVE YOUR | ft I Lawn Mower, Hedge | \l >t | and Grass Shears | ? r . . . L II >; Put in Good Shape . I We Can Do It I | The Federal Machine Shop j | Cranberry Street, Between Second apd Court rr r r r r r r r f f r r r r r " 'lll' " M II SATURDAY EVENING, ! Arrives in France With the Keystone Division j CORPORAL D. D. SWAVELT | Corporal David D. Swavely, with i Headquarters Company, One Hundred j and Twelfth Infantry, has arrived in | France, advices to his father, Hiram | Swavely, say. Young Swavely enlist- I ed in April, 1917, and had been in j training at Camp Hancock, Ga. His father is an engineer on the Queen of the Valley express train of the Philadelphia and Reading railway. Deaths and Funerals JACOB ARMSTRONG Jacob Armstrong, 21, died this morning at the Harrisburg Hospital. Funeral services will be held Tues day afternoon at (2 o'clock at the home of his sister, 1420 William street. The Rev. W. Tolliver, pastor | uf the Zion Baptist Church, will of i riciate and burial will be in the Lin j coin Cemetery. MRS. FRED C. HAND Mrs. Jane E. Hand, wife of Fred iC. Hand, of Seranton, died at 2 i | o'clock Wednesday afternoon at the I state Hospital in that city, where' ! she had been since undergoing an i ! operation two months ago. During j I the past two weeks her condition | was so critical that hope of her re covery was abandoned. She had been unconscious for several clays. Death came with her husband and chil dien at her bedside. Mrs. Hand was the daughter of ' the late William and Mary Goucher, !of Philadelphia. She was married ] j to Mr. Hand twenty-nine years ago,) the ceremony taking place in the I | Quaker City. Since that time they j . made their home in Seranton. Al- j though Mr. Hand has been for years j connected with the Department of Labor and Industry and prominent in Harrisburg musical circles. The Seranton Republican says: "Mrs. Hand was a woman of lovely character, intensely devoted to her home life. In her death her hus- I band and children have suffered a great loss. She is survived by her 1 I husband and the Following children: i j Mrs. J. Elmer Williams: Chauneey JC. Hand and Roland R. Hand, H. T. 1 Van Riper, of Seattle, Wash.: also Iby two sisters, Mrs. E. A. Niven. ot Nanticoke, and Miss Emily Gou cher, of Philadelphia; and by two ! brothers. Grant L. and Charles E. i Goucher, of Los Angeles, Cal." Funeral services were held this | afternoon at 2.30 o'clock. BATTLE LULL~" FORECASTS FIGHTING [Continued from First Page.] ! operations, but the belief is held by j some military observers that he | might surprise the German com | mand by striking in forces at a vital ! point. His man power is increasing j and his artillery and aerial forces | predominate over the same services ion the enemy side. In the ;>ast i week British airmen alone Have &c --: counted for 195 German machines, while 52 of their own failed to re | tur*. Fighting activity on the Italian front is becoming more general but is noi very severe at any one point. Near the mouth of the Piave the Italians have gained ground further ! and teken 400 more prisoners. Bc- I tweet the Brenta and the Piave. oil the mountain front, the Italians have I made a slight advance and repulsed ; enemy efforts. Austrian attacks on the Asiago plateau, west of the | Brenta were broken up by the Ital ! ian*. AUSTRIA ADMITS REVERS Vienna, July G.—The battle at the ! mouth of the Piave river, on the ! Italian front, continued yesterday, I the Austrian war office announced to-day. Austrian advance forces j were pressed back to their main body by the Italians. GEN. CROWDER . DECLINES STARS OF HIGHER RANK Modestly Asks That Draft Boards Be Given Becognition Washington, July 6.—Declining promotion in recognition of work well done, because he believed other I persona deserved as much credit as himself. General Crowder, provost marshal, has astounded Washington by his modesty and lack of self seeking. " Upon his request Senate and House conferees yesterday dropped from the Army bill a pro vision for his promotion to the rank of lieutenant general. Senate and House conferees have reached a complete agreement on I the twelve-billion-dollar Army ap | propriation bill. ] "To the draft boards," said Gen eral Crowder, "must go the chief credit for success of the draft by means of superb teamwork," and while deprecating official recogni tion of his own work, he proposed that some public and emphatic rec ognition be granted to the draft boards for "the enormous sacrifices" they have made. The conferees decided to grant more pay to Army nurses and higher tank to medical officers. The bill as it now reads provides for two major generals and two brigadier generals for each division of the Regular Army and one major general and two brigadier generals for each divi sion of the National Army. Secretary of War Baker's plan for the formation of a Pan-American army, to be composed of soldiers of lull the Latin-American countries that have allied themselves with the United States in the war with Ger many, and to be trained with Ameri can troops in the cantonments in this country and brigaded with them in France, was finally dropped from the bill. Despite Mr. Baker's re quest. the War Department, through the general staff, has requested that the plan be eliminated from the bill, according to Senator Chamberlain, of Oregon. Receives Useful Gifts Before Leaving For Camp '^fll CLARENCE DUKES Among the many useful gifts re ceived by Clarence Dukes, 119 King street, before his departure for Camp I Lee, Va., was a handsome wrist watch. presented by Lou Baum. | Dukes received a large number of i gifts. He. has many friends here. MAYOR MITCHEL KILLED IN AIR [Continued from First Page.} j from San Diego. Cal., about three ] weeks ago and Mrs. Mitchel was at j Gerstner Field this morning, but did 1 not witness the accident, j Mrs. Mitchel will accompany the ; body to New York to-night. New York, July 6.—John Purroy Mitchel, killed in an aviation acci i dent to-day. became a flyer for the j army after having been defeated last ; fail for re-election as Mayor of New j York. He had served one term as the I chief executive of the country's big ] gest city, the youngest mayor ever 'elected to that office. On July 19, next, he would have been 39 years I old. 1 Major Mitchel went into the Army service with previous military train ing, having taken the course at Plattsburg while he was mayor. Upon joining the Aviation Corps he was transferred to San Diego. Cal., where after successfully covering the cadet ] training, he became a full-fledged flyer. He frequently was mentioned ! as having shown unusual daring. Was Anti-Tnmmany Mr. Mitchel, running on a fusion anti-Tammany ticket, easily defeated Edward E. McCall for mayor in 1913. He took that office at the age of 34. and was credited during the four year term by many even not his partisans with having administered affairs as one of the city's most suc cessful mayors. He was attacked, I however, by John F. Hylan, who de ! feated him for mayor last fall, for I alleged extravagance in financial ex penditures and unnecessary innova tions particularly in the employment of experts from other cities to assist in the administration of some de partments, notably that of educa tion. There was one attempt on Mltchel's life when a man named Mahoney fired a shot at him nea rthe City Hall four months after his inauguration. Willing to Serve Toward the close of his mayor alty term Major Mitchel frequently expressed reluctance to accept a re nomination. saying: he preferred to enter his country's service. This sentiment was reflected in a conver sation with Frank L. Dowling, then president of the Board of Aldewnen, who to-day quoted Mitchel as say ing: "If I 11p. it doesn't matter when or how. A man could not die more gloriously tlian for Ills country." The flags of the city have been half-masted by order of Mayor Hylan. He announced steps would be taken by the city "to pay every respect to the late mayor." When the body of Mayor Mitchel arrives here it iH planned to place it. attired in the uniform he served his country, Jn a corridor in the City Hall. A public funeral similar to that which was accorded Mayor Gay nor will be held, with the addi tional solemnity of military atmoß nhere. • HAIUUSBURG GiSi& TELEGRAPH j Major John Purroy Mitchell ' v City Gets Ready Big Y.M.C.A. $16,000 Is Needed to Continue Much-Valued Work During Coming Year; Pledges to Be Sought by Committee To secure funds to carry on the work of the Central Y. M. C. A. with j a higher degree of efficiency, a com-1 rnittee of fory-five premonent Har- ] risburgers, with William T. Hildrup j as general chairman, on Tuesday j morning will start a four-day drive! to secure $16,000 for the organiza-j tion. Ten thousand dollars has al- ' ready ben promised for this fund. ; Final plans for the campaign drive, whic hwill close at Friday noon, will be made at a luncheon of j the forty-five committemen in the j Y. M. C. A. on Monday evening at i C o'clock. Money Madly Needed Seven thousand dollars of the fund j is desired by the directors of the or ganisation to pay off the long-stand- j irig debt of $7,000. The remaining i $9,000 will be devoted to covering the expenses of the organization for j the ensuing year and the expenses of i taking some improvements to bene-j fit the Y. M. C. A. and its building. I The campaign will be directed by 1 a finance committee of five members, 1 of which William T. Hildred is the chairman. The other members of; this committee are W. P. Starkey, i J. William Boxvman. Edwin S. Her man and E. Z. Wallower. In addi- 1 tion. five teams of eight men each will canvass the city Eight thousand dollars, one-half of the total desired, has already i been subscribed by the five members! of the finance committee on condi- j tion that the remainder be raised by Harrisburg citizens. Hildrup and J tarkey have each subscribed $2,500 ; of this amount while the other three i members will pay SI,OOO each. In j addition to this, $2,000 has already' been subscribed by Harrisburg citi- | zens, so that Harrisburg has but to | "uijscribe an additional sfi,ooo' to . fill the quota. Need Not Pay at Once Secretary Reeves this afternoon [ emphasized the fact that subscrip- : tions to this fund need not be paid j at once, but at any time during the j calendar year. To emphasize the I need of improvements and additions' IRON TRADE REVIEW TELLS OF HARRISBURG MAN'S WORK Francis ./. Hall Plays Important Part in Production of Steel Badly Needed For Uncle Sam's Ship Production Importance of the services in the distribution of .steel, Francis J. Hall, vice-president of the Central Iron & Steel Company, is told in an article in the Iron Trade Keview of this week's issue. The article in part follows: "Francis J- Hall was the man se lected to represent the manufactur ers of the steel plates on the Ameri can Iron and Steel Institute's sub committee on steel distribution. When the extent of the country's ef fort to establish adequate shipping to meet war times is considered the great importance of the services be ing rendered by Mr. Hall may be accurately measured. "Troop ships, merchant ships, sub marines and submarine destroyers are included in the term 'shipping.' Another large Held is the intense present demand for plate by the rail road car-building industry. Plates likewise are needed .largely in the construction of the famous 'ca'terpil lar' tanks, which again have figured prominently in the war dispatches for many essential purposes. Mr. Hall's responsibilities and activities in seeing that all these demands are filled consequently have been varied and numerous, since his task is that of locating orders for all Govern ment plate needs. "He is one of James B. Bonner's right-hand men at Washington. Mr. Bonner Is vice-chairman of the committee of which James A. Farrell serves as. chairman. Mr. Hall is constantly on the job, visiting plate mills throughout the "country. To day, as a result, he is regarded as one of the country's best Informed men on the plate situation. As vice president of the Central Iron and I Steel Company. Harrisburg, Mr. Hall to the local institution. Secretary iKeeves to-day told how yesterday a total of twenty-two men were unable ( to secure accommodaions in the | dormitories, while on an average of] j six and seven men are turned away j ! each day. First reports of results in the I drive will be heard at a noonday ' luncheon of the committeemen at j the Y. M. C. A. Final reports will j be given on Friday. $200,000 U Pledged in Thrift Stamp Sale With reports from twenty-three of j the thirty-nine county districts in, | County Chairman Frank C. Sites re ' ports a total of $200,000 pledged in | last week's War Savings Stamps | drive for pledges, with the possible total for all districts estimated at i .♦TiO.OOO. The missing districts are iiTl*farming districts. Harrisburg's ex i act figures have not been definitely | ascertained, but officials estimate them at between $12,000 and $20,000. 1 A new system of campaigning is being introduced throughout the coun ty by Assistant County Chairman ' Heathcote. His plan is that of the ! War Savings Society idea and he has organized approximately twenty so ' cieties in the city and as many more in the county. Each society has for j its sole purpose the sale of stamps on a weekly or monthly basis. Of | fleers of the societies collect the pay i ments from members and thus save I the county organization much detail I work. They are are proving a suc ■ cess wherever organized. SIO,OOO Boar Called Greatest Duroc Born KiinMim 'ly. I!. A. Tjong has I added to his pure-bred stock at Eong- I view Farm a SIO,OOO boar. Jack's Orion I King IT. bred by Tra Jackson, Tlppe ! canoe City, Ohio. | mils boar is the greatest Duroc ! ever bred by Mr. Jackson, its sire, I Orion Cherry King, having put twenty I champions and grand champions in j the shows of lfllfi and 1917, while its dam. Jack's King Eady, has been a • producer of the same kind. little thought he was being fitted for one of the big war-time jobs. "He became affiliated with that company on December 1, 1902, and through successive promotions he linully became its vice-president. l'"or a while he served as general sales agent. "While it is not an official state ment, it is generally conceded that Mr. Hall's findings on the plate situ ation had much to do with the elim ination of Chicago as a basing point for that product, just ordered by the President, if not also in shapes and bars. Mr. Hall has attended practically all of the price-fixing conferences between the producers and war industries board and was "resent at the latest, which was held Friday, June 21. "Mr. Bonner leaves plate matters in Mr. Hall's hands and the latter is given practically a free rein in this work. Mr. Hall's duties keep him constantly in touch with the war program and since plates come in for a large measure of considera tion. he sits in on tonnage questions ufTecting plates at the steel section. "He is a native of Harrisburg. having beeij born there April 1, 1878. He has been greatly interested in civic affairs, is manager of that city's hospital and is a trustee of its board of trade. He is a member of the Harrisburg Club, the Coun try Club of Harrisburg, the Ivy Club of Princeton, of which he Is a graduate, and the Masonic frater nity. He also is u member of the American Tron and Steel Institute. "When the Harrisburg company was organized in 1853 its output of Plates was 1,000 tons. Thas hasstead ily Increased until now the annual tonnage is about 200.000 This will .""TrA'Ciae thic roe." YANKEE FLYERS WIN THRILLING SKY BATTLE Figlit Against, Odds of 15 to 8; Send Two to Earth With the American Army in Franco, July 6.—American —Lieutenants Carlisle Rhodes, of Terre Haute, Ind.; S. P. Thompson, Honeoye Falls, N. Y.; Waldo N. Heinrichs, of Granville, Ohio, and John Mitchell, of Manchester, Mass., engaged in a thrilling ailf battle northwest of Chateau Thierry yes terday morning. One German ma chine was shot down during the combat .and it Is believed that Lieu tenant Heinrichs was the American who sent the enemy airplane to earth. The four American aviators were patrolling the lines five or six kilo meters Inside the German front when they encountered six enemy ma chines. The battle began at an alti tude of 4,200 meters and continued ur\til the machines had dropped down to 2,200 meters from the earth. The combat lasted for twenty min utes. An hour later eight American ma chines engaged in a battle with fif teen enemy airplanes at a height of 4,700 meters. The combat swayed backward and forward over the Ger man and American lines near Chat eau Thierry. The German machines were higher thart the Americans, but the latter maneuvered their airplanes admirably in the light. Suddenly one of the enemy airplanes dived toward the earth and went spinning down ward, being chased down by two of the Americans, Lieutenants Ralph A. O'Neill, of Nogales, Ariz., and J. C. Raible, of New York. It is believed that the German air-1 plane was out of control during its plunge. Paris, July 6.—Two American aviators were killed yesterday when the machines in which they were flying at a low altitude fell to the ground in flames. The airmen were Lieutenant William Dudley Robbens and Second Lieutenant John Wil ford, of the American Army. The bodies of the aviators were burned. Washington, July 6.—Thomas Mac- Millan Weddell, an aviation pilot, and Edward Charles Kneip, an ob server, were killad in an aviation ac cident in France, July 1, the Navy Department announced yesterday. Weddell lived at Pensdale, Jll., and Kneip at 168 East End avenue, New York City. U. S. Plans Building of 40,000 Ton Battleships By Associated Press WiiNlitnKton. July 6.—Two of the 40,000-ton battleships authorized by Congress will be constructed at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Secretary Dan iels, it was learned to-day, has ap proved the building of ways at that j yard for this purpose. Mmm77Tmm77T7T777TT7T7r77TT7TT>'?7y?TT7Ty7T7Tm77TTm77T77Tmm7m7T77Tr7Tm' , 7mmm7T777mT7T7'|> | Uncle Sam's Boys I E are now * E mm ' R I —— I E cannot know the thrill of jfl E battle, but you will cer- Hi E tainly want to follow t: them day by day as they E go "over the top" in F Picardy and in Flanders, r at St. Mihiel and at Toul. Therefore - You should cut out the coupon below and send it ~ to the Harrisburg Tele graph with 69 cents so 2 that yOU can get a set of Commander-in-Chief of the Allied Armies Three Valuable and Interesting 1 Guide Maps | I To all the Battle Fronts E They are beautifully printed in 4 colors on high grade paper; size 31x39 inches. H E Spread them out on the table or hang them from the wall, and you can then get a birds- 5 E . eye view 01 the theater of the military operations on each front. You can see instantly i F how the battle line is changing from day to day, and you can form your own judgment E of the strategy of the High Commands. Only in this way can you keep up with the news. 5: A Key to the Maps accompanies each set You will find it a most valuable aid. This unique series of authoritative maps was prepared by the publishers of The E Encyclopaedia Britannica, and sold by them at $2.00 for the three. By special arrange- 3 E :ncnt a limited number can be supplied to Telegraph readers for £ _ , COUPON FOR TELEGRAPH READERS = * I #7l CciltS and * nnnnmuu ir. "nly ■ ]! This Coupon presented at or mailed to any office of the one Coupon HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH 1 ] | with cash, check, money order or stamps for 6# cents ' ! entitles the holder to ONE SET of the GKO(iHAPHICAI. t You will be well repaid if you I AND HISTORICAL WAR MAPS showing the world's wars I 1 J.J ! * rom <oo ° B - C. to 1918. These tye exactly the same Mapa order a set of these splendid I I as arn sold by the Encyclopaedia Britannica tor $2. , . 1> Send all mail orders to our Main Office: maps. Therefore cut out the ;; . .. . r ]! (Write name and addresA very plainly) coupon TO-DAY. ' NAME i ADDRESS . JULY 6, 1918. Arrives Over There With the Keystone Division flMWp*' aMtUnm'nf ■ jSgp GEORGE WEITZEL Word has been received by friends announcing the safe arrival in France of George Weitzel. He is a former member of the Governor's Troop and has a large number of friends here. Austrian Dead 50,000; Total Losses, 250,000 Washington. July 6. Austrian losses in the recent unsuccessful of fensive against Italy and during the Italian counter offensive are esti mated at between 200,000 and 250,- 000, including at least 50,000 killed, in an official dispatch to-day from Home, based upon testimony of nu merous prisoners. The message says the Austrians persist In beating the ground about positions captured by the Italians with a strong but inef fectual artillery fire. It adds: "Seven Italians, who escaped cap tivity, state that the Austrians force a majority of the war prisoners to work on the second line under our fire." Hun Pact With Rumania Stirs Socialist, Cohn, to Bitter Arraignment By Associated Press Amsterdam, July 6.—A bitter at tack on the German peace with Rumania and militarism was made in the debate in the Reichstag Thursday by Dr. Cohn, Independent Socialist, according to the Rhelnlsche West falische Zeitung of Essen. "We reject the Rumanian treaty," he said, "hike the Ukrainian treaty it will not produce a real peace. The Rumanian Jews still lack rights. This treaty is nothing but bartering for petroleum and railways. "The treaty is nothing but dis guised, perhaps undisguised, rob bery—" Here the president called upon Dr. Cohn to observe moderation in his remarks. After further criticism Dr. Cohn exclaimed: "Unless militarism is overcome we cannot obtain a lasting peace." FATEFUL HOUR IN WAR IMMINENT AS HUNS STAY DRIVE Bonar Law Tells Diners Help of United States After Russia Was Vital '■ By Associated Press Ivondon, July 6.—The coming Ger man blow will not be less dangerous because of the time employed in pre paring for it, but It is comforting to know the men responsible for the command of the allied armies are confident of the result. Andrew Bonar Law, Chancellor of the Ex chequer, declared last night at a dinner to the delegates of the par liamentary commercial conference. Hopes Decisive Hun Failure ''lt is impossible to foresee the future," he said, "but I do believe the fateful hour of this war Is upon us and if In another three months our enemies have won no strategic object, then their campaign will have failed and It will, I hope, be a decisive failure." The Germans possessed the most perfect military machine that ever existed, but, the Chancellor said, he believed that when the history of the war was written it would be seen Gefmany had made greater military mistakes than any other power. He instanced the submarine warfare which had brought the Unit ed States into the war. He doubted whether Germany would get as much out of Russia as she expected. Wherever the German soldier had planted his foot the name of Ger many was loathed for generations. The Chancellor spoke gratefully of American help and alluded to the wonderful organization In sending American troops across the Atlan tic. The Germans, he said, could now weigh the advantages and dis advantages of their submarine cam paign through them. Russia in Delirium Mr. Bonar /Law said he trembled to think what would have been the position of the allies after Russia \vent out of the war but for the help of the United States. He had not despaired of Russia, who was like a patient in a delirium. It was impossible from hour to hour to tell what the future might bring there. "I -see no immediate -hope of peace. There is no road to It, I fear, except the rugged road through vic tory. It will be fatal to the world and fatal to the Germans themselves if they are not taught the lesson that war does not pay." KILLED IX WRECK Youngs town, Ohio, July 6.—One man killed was the toll of a rail road accident at 6 o'clock this morn ing when Barnum and Bailey circus train No. 2 crashed Into the rear end of Erie Railroad New York-Chicago i Limited, at Girard, four miles west of here. The man killed was Thomas Kooney, 25, of Murpliysboro, Tenn., a hostler. Kooney was thrown be tween two cars by the impact. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers