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Show iSecond News Section AUTOM OBILES REAL ESTATE A TT TT? TRUCKS it a f i m 9 mum mm mm m w sav m m m mm km bmh TPTCDTT 1 1 CD t m Second Hews Section MINES, MARKETS. CLASSIFIED ADS w ll.- - UJ SAIjT LAICE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MAY 28, 1916. PRIESTS AT BUY! G FROM UNCLE CENSOR USES AMERICAN SHELLS AS PAPER WEIGHTS POLISH JEWS HEROISM OF GREEKS ARE FRONT TOLD b II SA1 Anticlerical Campaign Brings Out Chaplains in Heat of Battle. Self-effaci- Trade Comes to This Country Which Formerly Went to European Nations. ng German Relief Report Shows Distress in Poland. 700,000 GIVE LIVES TO THE CAUSE in VI A. t SHIP LINE TO NEW YORK Incidents Related of Rabbis and Protestants' Coolness Under Other and Wheat, Sugar, Autos Baptism of Fire. to the Cargo Conveyed Port of Athens. PIRAEUS, Greece, May 27. An hour a table- In front of a cafe on the. water - ironi oi port of Athens, is an object lesson In what the United States has become to Oreeco since the outbreak of the European war. Once- the wheat of Greece came from Russia and Roumania by Now two way of the Dardanelles. to the sea huge cargo boats moored wall are discharging American grain waiting Into the holds of a flock of streams. dozen a yellow half in barges Hut the boats themselves are Greek, aides is not American, and on their name the Greek the flag, and the sin-or painted in Roman letters the boat gle word Greece. the hot On tho quays, spread out innoisome-looking of hundreds are sun spring black sacks imthe bearing the laprint of a New York firm and Once the bel "granulated sugar." from Trieste; rugar of Greeceallcame the way from New now It Journeys merchants are Greek Orleans. Four of one of the i.tirrr'ih contents owner stands by, opened sacks. InThe hand. The four rebill of lading tire to a distance to discuss terms. They all talk at once, wavingnotheir one l amia in impassioned gestures, the to what least attention paying the disone "When are others saying. sents, he does not shake his head, but his lifts It sharply upwards, clicking The discussion tongue impatiently. the takes a very long time, but finally four the and Is bargain anri struck, the consignee of the suga to their day's work done, retire over ar, to talk cafe politics neighboring Turkish coffee. Close in the shadow of the wheat Vnlp. a dozen or so men are unpacking a crate. A score of Idlers look on, by little an deeply absorbed as little The machine automobile Is revealed. comes from Detroit, not from France, as would have been the case before the war. Across the harbor a huge, white pasmoored the largest senger vessel is In active service for passensrer vessel these war trip, the Constantine of - 1 pur-r.k-.u- ra trans-Atlant- ic It Is the King the National Greek line, plying between Piraeus and New York, making the trip in a fortnight. She. too, flies the Greek, not the United States flag. sidewalk opposite the Alcng the more reminders of the quavs aretouch between Greece and closeninsr In the United States. Every few steps. front of the wretched shops, are the the glass showcases of mot-lev their money changers, filled with collection of strange monies: BulRoumanian. Turkish. Egypgarian.Russian and Serbian the gold tian. and silver In bowls, the paper hung on on a line, against Mring3 like washing the glass sides of the showcases. In one corner Is always a roll of United States greenbacks to Americans here, homelike and familiar in company with so much oriental coinage. SpIrS will be buying such a roll soon. who belongs to Spiro is a petty officer to be the United used which Kllkis. the Spiro does States battleship Idaho. not live in Greece. He is from Sara-is N. T.. and when his service toga, over' In a month or two he Is going as back to his candy shop In Saratoga fast as the King Constantine can take him. The waiter at the best restaurant of Piraeus is from the United States, too. Ho also Is doing his military service, like though on leave for the present So with most of the Greek army. his heart, he works In a loathing Inwith sawdust covered floor restaurant wall snd a row of barrets ftlong theGreek filled with sweet, aromatic Itquors. until his time Is up and he can return to llnrrisburg. Pa. The few forbidding hotels at Piraeus flacs as well as Greek fir United States Is a mystery. Ameriwhy flags just can tourists In Greece are rare these days of submarines in the Mediterranean. Rut perhaps the manager may have made his apprenticeship in a hotel on Broadway reason enoueh to set cut the United States flag.InIn the mind the United of a Greek who has lived States. The world around there are no more patriotic Americans than those wr.o were born In Greece and no more apparently than those patriotic Greeks who live In the United States. time's. sta-tffci- SEK ed JOBS FOR MAIMED CatiRdn Hunts Work for Ita Disabled ffoldlers. Duck From Kurope. 'inriipeg. Canada, May 27. With a View to Ilr.OinK suuanie uciuauun: for disabled Canadian soldiers wh have returned from Europe, arrange Tents have been made for an Indus .rial survey of Winnipeg and man: other large cities of Canada. At a Joint meeting here of the Re turned Soldiers association, the mil commission and the .n Itary hospitals of trade expansion, I bureau mistrial male teacher to hav as decided tech n tea and industrial the from . schools make the ftirt-ey- men Places are ti who ar dis he found tit oily for of loss but for thos the bv limb, aided who have suffered shattered "nerve hm Are unfit for i Khoj work. Many of th r nr h: ri(!i:i ttttot! h th lack of eil Ufa! on. The officials are tryinst to overcome this by establishing schools at th. various convalescent fe.-im- nr iiomes. Paris, May 27 A campaign by the extreme anticlerical elements of the radical and socialist parties against the presence of priests at the battle fronts In dally contact with soldiers has brought sharply into public notic the work which these priests have done and are doing at the front. It required a special intervention to produce for priests even the "privilege" of going to the front. Prior to May, were provided for of war at that minister The the army. a that in case decree in time provided of war two Catholic priests, a Protestant pastor and a Rabbi should be attached to each group of stretcher-bearer- s of an army corps, and two Catholic chaplains to each division which had no stretcher-bearerThus about 100 priests and half as many Protestants and Israelites were authorized to accompany the army. When war began. Count Albert de Mun, since deceased, obtained from the' minister of war authorization for priests to enlist as chaplains with the of their bishops up to the num Count Paul ber of 250 In addition. Pourtles obtained the same favor for Trotestant pastors, while eighty more sixteen additional rabbis were named. Priest Sacrifice of priests who have number The given their lives on the field of battle has not yet been counted, for besides the chaplains there are several thousand priests incorporated in the auxilor who volunteered for iary service, active service. A great many deaths. however, have been reported among the chaplains under heroic circum isiocn. stances. The rabbi. ADranam was fatally wounded at Saint-Di- e by a moment the a shell at of fragment when he tendered acruclflx to a wound ed soldier who had taken him for a Catholic priest. The Abbe Vlllier, chaplain of the civil hospital of Arras, was killed by a shell while seek to save his patients during a boming bardment of Arras. Chaplain died at the extreme point of positions conquered by the Zouaves with whom he went to the assault. Three chaplains gave up their lives the battle of Champagne: the during Abbe Thlnot struck by a shell while men burled by the exdigging out a plosion of mine; the Abbe Perrot and the Abbe Pouch, who fell, the former while looking after a fallen soldier and to a the latter while giving first aid general of brigade wounded on the field of battle. Chaplain Tells experience. A chaplain from the region of Ver dun gives the following graphic re-- 1 cital of an experience: "We celebrated Faster under the shrapnel, .within 300 yards of the German trenches, and the Credo was saluted by a fusillade. Our trenches had been converted into green bowers with flowers and ivy On Good Friday fourteen garlands. stations had been marked with crosses In the communicating trench for the solemn procession. At half past t. my last penijust as I had confessed tent, a bullet hit him In the neck. The blood spurted out Just as the last words of absolution were uttered, I gave him first aid, and then he turned his brave eyes toward me and murmured: You have cared for the body, now look after the soul.' I offered up a prayer that went with his departing soul, while the blood flowed upon my cross, and at the twelfth station I offered the pure vermilion blood of that brave son of France to Christ and with all my heart I said: 'Our Lord, that blood was generously shed.'" Bishop Rurh, as chaplain of a secof the th tion of stretcher-bearer- s corps, was decorated with the Lesion of Honor and the war cross on the field of battle, and cited In orders as follows: 'Charles Ruch. bishop, effaced himself in spite cf his eminent digpost nity and gave proofs in a modest notaof untiring activity and devotion, bly in the latest combats, visiting the first line trenches, seeking for wounded on the line of fire, and watching at His night In exposed field hospitals. calm courage has acquired for him the affection of everyone." Shell nreak p Service. In a little sector taken from the Germans, where there was a church riddled by shells, the chaplain of the victorious regiment decided to say mass while shells were screeching to A projectile crashed right and left. window the only through remaining Inand smashed the threw the altar tact, chaplain and his assistants to the floor. Fragments of the shell struck the head, while another broke priest In the his right arm at the elbow and another sit the wrist. For the chaplain as well as for the heroism Is the small combatants, change of 'every day existence at the front. His place is wherever there is fighting. He often falls under the shells and bullets, and frequently reaps the same reward for gallant conduct as that of the fighting soldier. The Abbe IFenrocque, simple priest at the begin-nin- e of the war. Is now a knight of the Legion of Honor. He lifted men as they fell under a heavy shelling, with gas projectiles, dressed suffocating their wounds and carried them to shel ter. He was wounded In the head and arm by a shell that exploded three yards away: he stopped only to wipe the blood from his eyes; an instant later a heavy projectwe upheaved a section of the French trenches and buried two officers and six men: Abbe Hcnrocque. while crying for help, dug until he had saved one officer and four of the soldiers. 1913, no chaplains s. ap-Dro- val e. Du-bro- i X uil 'I NUMBER GROWING DAILY 1 225 Villages and Cities Get Assistance and Clothing Is Given by the Ton. Berlin, May 27. Of the normal total of about 2,450,000 Jews in Poland, ;'l X. Lithuania and Courland, some 1,770,000 r still remain, and of this number, about 700,000 are in urgent and continuous want. About 455,000 of these are ii Poland, and 50,000 of this number are persons who are without homes and In particularly distressful circumstances. The number of the needy Is Increasing from month to month. Opportunities to earn money are few, and thous12 ..... ands who are still living 'on their sav' II r ings will, sooner or later, find these "". mt iiTflKiiiiiiolnir trrrr nn ii luminr ninri y "exhausted and become dependent on A bit of sarcasm i3 expressed in this picture, which shows Major Girael, the head of the neutral press in Berlin (he is one of the official censors), at hi9 charity. These estimates appear in the annua desk, on which he uses American made shells, picked up on the western battle fronts, as paper weights. report of the German Hebrew Relief association, which has taken upon it- -; 6elf the work of relieving Its core' districts' baclc ligionists in the occupied of the battle line In Russia and Galicla, The sum of 500,000 marks monthly is required to alleviate the distress of the) most necessitous of the 700,000 suffer-- ; ers, and even this sum, which Is all that the Relief association can devote to the work for the next few months, can do little more than keep them fromr" actual starvation. HEA DQU A IlTEnS, France, 3Iy li There Is a town at the Relief Kitchens Operate. front which Is the center of an Irian wrld. It Is the head- Large Groups Loath to Stand Army Being Reorganized and RIUTISII town of the nlxi eenth or Irish 'division. Irish voices are quarters With this sum 225 cities and villages beard from the doorway of the houses. Flower pots of ah ant rock are on of In Uncertainty Speculative the Young Men Available Are districts are being asoccupied mess sitthe table of officers who gather for their meals In the modest sisted. Ninety relief kitchens are in room or srrooer hllleteoV are of the local where butcher ting they Present Underwriting. Called to Colors. In his office a, sreneral who Is Irlnh to the flncer tin Malkw about his tea halls operation, with twenty-fiv- e and numerous other relief Institutions. troops who were fighting hard against the Germans durine; the Dublin rlotM. If he la nuked If there are any Sinn Feiners anions them he will About 750 tons of clothing, bedding and men tberanel ves. They enlisted In the Irish new refer the to the Inquirer 2T. footwear have been sent to the stricken of Several 27. the London, May ,The closing Sofia, Bulgaria, May nrmy battalions In face of the Influence whjcji produced siau Felnism. districts. The grand lodge of B'nal have of underwiters groups bigger a This Ustlnction of them to of start character gave officers the their of three here recently say. with, largest reat B'rlth In Germany has had a large out business of Lloyd's dropped ' . Served in Other Wars. to share in the relief work, and more the loath stand military hospitals is an Indication of speculation, cently, men with atrlpa of color won, In campaigns in and "racket" of the modern than a half million marks has thus far Sfurdr mlddle-ane- d how far removed Bulgaria Is from the uncertainty India and Sooth Africa while with regular Irish reglmeuts, some of ships and car- been received from America. day underwrltlngs European war. The Salonlkl front has atlll Mergeants, some promoted aervlng to commissions, hnve keen the drill masters ' Up to date nearly 2,250,000 marks goes. of rlrorou youth from Mjo or JUlkrnuy or Clare or Cork. Bat most of been quiet for weeks and the attack been paid out by the Hebrew Rehas eald "You would I think, suppose," the officers In common with most of the men had never been In uniformc on Avlona Is a matter concerning only lief. Association for Poland and LiIs one of the the "that it when the war ocean. are bothering, us. But thuania. Funds available have not A major who Is over six feet and broad In proportion standing atlll mm risks' 'war that The Bulgarian the m ramrod In sufficient to afford relief to some look a If he had been aoldierlns all his life, was a salute, whoHe ordinary 'sea risks are quite as great been army is resting on its arms. - In a few In Waterford. AO, 000 Jews in Courland, where the disa company from the surrounding; counrecruited so now. crews a 'rmer not are factor will bo Ship days several other hospitals trywide and was Riven command. Promotion followed as.lt has for other good. The best sailors are with the tress, moreover, is not so great as in closed and that in charge of the are Those ho of memler beginners. will t captains their other districts. parliament get conbe navy. Then navigation is more com- theThese mission will now unless they are nmonsr the casualties which make room for others to have activities, however, Inare and fewer. an plex. liae. Lights buoys Into verted They say that they thought they could do better work for home rule a of formed but the of work the now are part commons. in at the front than the Ships, moreover, being used stitute for the recovery of damaged Relief as 'association. Quite In not which often important are for trades ' they limbs. Tried to Get Together. even more arduous has been Its built on routes for which they are not and 4rVe wanted to draft the Irishmen who ' were In Enslih and Scotch Nevertheless, the Bulgarian governas an intermediary between the work fitted. ment Is calling to the colors the young battalion Into oura ao vre should have all the Irish at the front under one of the occupied districts and residents "We have the Lutine we A said serve the men due to in the army. stopped ringing could not make the arrangement command," "but great general, world. In this department outside the The forbell old commanders at other would not part with their Irishmen. British batship's bell (the Lloyd's, deal of reorganization Is in progress, no denominational distinctions were a to talions like have of announce to Irish casualties and their sprinkling Mv numbers. among men rung merly with the German and Catholics Jews and of alike ever" trench made, and being shells casga and fiehtlng, a overdue hvLhaddisproved any idea that the Irish were not as sniping and ships arrivals) when troops having resulted they've good at stlcklnir as Is reported, and only ring it now aided. Chief advantage was taken of In many a good lesson to the Bulgarian ualty In a charge. stuck like veterans. Native They've Irish good humor relieves work by relatives and friends in for the arrival of' overdue ships. I this the arrlm officers and general staff. monotony of the trenches. of the Polish sufferers. America A bea of the for there's casualties suppose the record of to discipline inringing been what has also the sreneral undertaken; The Relief association found its work ' some dicated comes blank monotonous. name spaces the of opposite battalions oa the extent Is indicated by the fact that the so we prophet-lethat increasing rapidly, as the news bewould have "How do the underwriters take it? drinkinr St. Patrick's acquisition of German and Austro- came in America that it was because a lot of people have the Idea that heavy known Irish have n weakness for You never ee the' flick of an eyelid, enabled I appealed to the men to be on their the to Ilungarlan motor trucks has with Poland communicate drink, behavior with jrood possible the .result my boy. Most of these underwiters that we did not have m single ease of Intoxication." the Bulgarian government to furlough the it Is now that association, through exhave about. of asmuch facial rangeas 60,000 army drivers and their ox teams to a of about force Gained on Him. compelled employ to a an old sailpression signal loss and wagons. These men and animals to letters persons expedite fifty in the trenches held by the Irish nl.AKn.1 I'p German ing ship's figurehead. They never funds. About eight million marks and went back In their villages to till the has a hole In the storlea shell tore Vrai a soldier explosive who budge. If their feet get cold inside thus far been received from America, parapet set t soil for the spring sowing. the earth that had filled away hoveling the trench one had nnli fairly cot their boots no. knows it. started when another shell struck just behind him leorlnir direct transmission and the Relief Bulgarian officers readily admit that other section We have plums for "Plums! Oh, yes! . and of a trench deal from the him. half learned i have handles as many as one association i great burying crawled Having out they lo and sometimes as well as losses. Last week hundred thousand he saluted bis captain and said: Not Germans and letters monthly from at the present ; rate I can't finish this job "Sir, I have to report that on there, was a little schooner from Bra- and to America. This must a few of them show In appearance and all be without me.' graining; help. They're zil, I think, very much overdue. Think- copied in the association's offices, to as bearing. Though always accepted and things, I took ing of recent weather of secret communia good soldier, the Bulgarian has hard15 per cent premium, make any system a on her for risk to the the cation had acquire impossible. opportunity ly 5 standing to lose per cent if she never dash of his northern brothers In arms. WAR TESTS RED CROSS Military Aid Gives. turned up. Andthe little creature, At present, therefore, there Is a genrelief funds are distribvarious The bless her, turned up safe and good.'.. eral tendency to be as much like the aid of the military auwith the uted on Two soundLutine the bell tings an German and Austrian as possible. This American The thorities. embassies and ed "There's overdue arrived." he has influenced the cut of the Bulalso have done their full consulates "Someone else said, away. hurrying uniform and especialgarian officer's in assisting In carrying the work share is in SOCIETIEyjFFICIENGy luck." formerhis which of cap, ly the shape on. ly had a decided Russian tendency. A slight alleviation of conditions may MEAT TICKETS NUMBERED come Such German and Austrian greetings from the recently secured peruniare as "servus"' and "Mahlzeit" Half Million of emigration from the occuPersons mission U. S. Engaged Precaution Taken to Prevent Rioting pied districts. used and It Is fashionable now Hopeful Signs Noted by versally Many families have alin Hospital and Relief Work to use the German "bitte" please inof the perthemselves availed ready' German Butcher .at Berlin Ambassador Shops. at stead of Its French equivalent, formerof most them with going mission, London, ' May ' 27. The Commune of tickets sent from America, in Belligerent Countries. ly applied so much. in Interview. Relations between members, of the the Griedenau, near Berlin, shas decided to The Hebrew association, a .measure new demands made on it, despite three armies are the best, though in the number all meat "tickets-ahas mainmain the Bulgarian officer takes more to check rioting outside butcher-shopstained and even increased its work in New York. easily to the German officer, principalBerlin, May 27. United States Am- Europe faces May 26 in Problems which according to an Amsterdam dispatch to Palestine. It supports two kinderand bassador James today caring for the the Exchange Telegraph company, gartens, a school for girls, a commerly because the capacity for work Gerard Is convinced organization of the latter has virtual- that peace is in sight, according to an millions of war sufferers make plain which quotes the Berlin Tageblatt. cial school and other educational inthe need of Bed Cross preparedness in Holders of tickets must take their turn stitutions at Jerusalem, besides a liThe ly overpowered the Bulgarian. In a a. calculatMunich. Is interview this paper cold, published Bulgarian generally country, declares Krnest P. Bick-nel- l, at the butcher shop according to num- brary and home for girls. It also Mr. director general of civilian relief ber, and those unable to go on the maintains a boys' and a girls sohool ing Individual, with a very objective from its Berlin correspondent. at Jaffa, and varisort of. mind, somewhat headstrong Gerard is quoted as saying: 'Nothing or the American Red Cross, in a state- specified date, will get no meat for that and a kindergarten in ous when It comes to defending his posi- can shake my confidence-thainstitutions week. Turkey. ment is given out today at Bed Cross peace tion, but ready for all that to take les. its way." headquarters. sons to heart. This has caused , him onThe referred to the set"In the terrible tests of efficiency to look upon the German officer as a tlementambassador of the differences of the of the Red Cross muJk01 teacher of quality. thl"oeitle' States and Germany as preparsubjected by war conditions j Saloniki is held by the entente troops United 45 COST in he ami in the wasteful futility Wilson, reason that an evacua- ing the way, for President or Kurope simply for the acuneentralized of and refreedom much ! uncontrolled greater tion would mean more loss of prestige. said, "has agencies as observed here at with 'the immense lief home." The hostilities in, Europe will have gone on tvro years should the j Mr. Such is the opinion here. The Fnglish tion now to deal says Bicknell. "Is found a solemn warning to problems which will determine the and French have entrenched them- worldfuture American Red war continue to August .1. Attempts to gauge its burden to all the I me an of the vital importance of pre- Cross attitude of nearly selves well, but driving them back the Ticj rAnnjco ' on the globe, within the protection of the works de- countries discuss at this mo- iTI)? (l1,rec?r, general estimates that "It is useless to as progress .on the second anniversary, the direct cost or the struggle fending the port would be a veryIn easy the ambulances and to whether Pres- the relief the hotals, ment question poofficers. will have been in excess of $45,000,000,000. The total military exsay Bulgarian matter, in the belligerent stations, VIlson"s intermediation Is de- countries no less litical circles it is pointed out that Bu- ident than In Red in 500,00 was the rear first In this Instance approximately $17,500,000,000. penditure or r?f.s w,orker8 are employed. In the lgaria Is not Interested in driving the sirablealone probable. one the of and second been the will must have rOSS $28,000,000,000. speak, aVi1 W onned one there at least for the facts year it allies out of More .erv,Ce is that the neufacts 15.000.000 most peoThese the expenditure for carrying on of important the war Balkan That simply represent phase figures present. to his estimate. have interested ple, according concerns but Greece, it is argued. As- trals are probably anas muchpeace not of cities, railallow for the the hostilities. as the been made dependent by the wa'ii opThey do early while the areas pects would be different In case the in bringing about erations, over ways, ships, factories, warehouses, bridges, roads, or agricultural urgently needs contained a population of fought 33 000 000 allied troops set foot upon Macedonian belligerents.forAmerica the reason alone this values. Neither do they allow for the economic loss through the kill- and soil. American government is binder an obto its citizens ,to do and sup- clear. At any rate, I am convinced APATIIV. CIIIME EXHIBIT ligation tories, the decrease in stocks of food, metal, and other materials, the i that serves the cause that my government will leave nothing May 27. Carl Whiting Bish- port everything Teklng, is to undone chief of importance support with all its power derangement of the machinery of distribution, or the cost of pensions, jI op of the University museum of Phila- of peace. A fact movements is from to has peace returned willing mv Pa., whatever really side Thev measure in a common term an expenditure of capital which, to government delphia, Peking in that of exploration after three months Mr. for the promotion of they come. Even although weeks or action to take the governments concerned, will in the end be translated for the most Szechuen province. months may elapse before the thought Bishop was at peace. of Szechuen the provcapital Chengtu. part into permanent additions to their national debt. "I am very optimistic regarding the takes tangible form, nothing can shake ince, and traveled some distance northconfidence of idea the that on made that my is its peace If the war costs $45,000,000,000 it will represent a sum three west from that point to examine old progress already be ended, even among way." and make archaeological studies. the war should ruinswas times greater than the entire capitalization of the railways of the I to the recent crisis in at Suifu three days before its belligerent nations. The wise and He Referring United States, and four times greater than the total deposits of all our by the revolutionists and at moderate words of the German chancapture relations, the ambassathat time the government national banks. It will represent a sum six times greater than that J troops Germany's readiness dor said: regarding had did not apprehend the Yunnanese were cellor "I know from their what hardly probably quarter expended in the Civil war. It will represent forty times the amount near. Mr. Bishop was undisturbed In to make peace in America and the present good relations between the echo his trip down theHeriver from Kuifu tr strongest of the present national debt of the United states, 12 times the cost of j evidence of strengthen the impression that Ger- United States and Germany cculd be serious unrest. says the Panama canal, 500 times the amount of the annual American gold t He says the pub' serious unrest. will take all further steps calm- disturbed. The establishment of good many seems In to Szechuen J have ly and with confidence, relations with Germany is one of the generally .output. Direct cost of the Franco Prussian war in 1870-7- 1 little Interest in the form of governJ most of be will the taken "When another step diploimportant factors was $2,500,000,000, and of the South African was $1,250,000,000. ment, the chief desire being that con- and now matic situation the further the what developconfronting shape ditions he stable and business ment of the peace idea will take is not United States." r. 1 tfesiic At .i-- J - r f.-rf- lr---' 4 i,.f.&:;rA'M:yJ - trmi-w- BULGARSLEARN FROM GERMANY -r- yy.-.ijqtj.-xt- .. QUIT WRITING WAR INSURANCE IRISH REGIMENT AT FRONT WERE NOT DISAFFECTED BY SINN FEIN DUBLIN RIOTS . . : old-timer- Austro-llungarlan- s, s. Aus-tro-Hungar- lan electro-therapeut- ic et Aus-tro-IIungar- Re-equipm- court-martia- l" wall-"everybo- d dy . - " Austro-Hungarian- "w" s. PEACE ON WAY, SAYS GERARD , t . - : WAR'S TOTAL ' BILLIONS XEARS . desti-uctio- . , German-- American . . n |