Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 242, Hammond, Lake County, 10 April 1918 — Page 1

FAIR

WEATHER

THE

AKE

COUNTY

TIMES

BUY A BOND

VOL. X1I NO. 1M2.

HAMMOND, INDIANA.

WEDNESDAY,, APRIL 10, 1918.

Delivered by TIMES carrier", 30o pel month; on streets and at ntwutisSli 2 per copy; tack numbers 3o per copy.

ONE DEAD, ONE DYING, 2 HURT IN AUTO ACCIDENT

111

FRIDAY TO

LOSES HER I BE FOR THE

BOYSCOUTS

CONTROL i

Drives Gar at Fast Clip Into Telegraph Pole With Disastrous Results,

Splendid Meetings Arranged for Tonight and Rest of Week for Liberty Hall Dedication; Make No Other Dates for the Week.

One woman v.-as killed, another man

was porhr.os iataiiy mjureu aim cw

E.

or noon. THE BEAD. MRS. GHACB r.KNDER,

street. Chicago. SERIOTJSLT ISJTJKED. JOSEPH !..MJr, SI 2 1 Muskegon

m;e. Chicago: fractured skull; tak-r-i to South Chicago Hospit Hi.

With four splendid ratHc-tic demon-

o;h:rs suii'troil severe bruise? in an auto"; stration clays for Liberty week in Hamr.tvbtlo accident ua Indianapolis boule-1 nioncj go0 by successfully, tonight is : ird. north of Hammond, yesterday an-!.Vlljes- pay. ancs the people of Hammond

are to be given a treat in the opportunity to hear one of the most distinguishOth ed Bt-lgians in the United States. M. j Albert C. Monlaret. Belgian consul-gen-jeral to America, ve-j People should not miss this meeting

because they n'l hear first-hand the story of the war from the lips of a rep-

The accident ocurrt-J shortly after 12 j resentative of a nationality that is more o'clock yesterday noon. Mrs. Bender was directly concerned perhaps than any urlving" the larire liulck six limousine ' other. lr. II. E. Shnrrer had a hard Clr. t js -reported that she lost con I time to get him to come to Hammond trol of the machine and it crashed into! and it is only proper that so honored a strt-et car pole with considerable im-;a guest should get a welcome in propor-1,-ct. tion. It is reported that the ni3chine was! Almost at the last minute Ex-Gov.

traveling at a rate of about thirty mires Sam Kalston sent word to Hammond this ! an hour. Mrs. Bender was crushed be- j mcrnins that he was not coming on j twetn the scoring apparatus and died Friday night and the general commit-j

while being rushed to the hospital. toe. on arrangements began to pian lor Joseph Latige. who rode in the front a. substitute program. .-tt with her. suffer-d a fractured skull.j Friday will be Boy Scout and Camp Hi condition is serious. James K. Mac! j.-tc Girls" night and a novel and inter-

Xitrny. president of the Acme Steel ; csting program is being arranged. An. Goods Go.. R. H. Norton, secretary or; attempt will be made to have fully as; ih" Acme Steel t;.x.ds Co.. and Ralph ILjbig an evening as last night. Chairman;

Kilner. Ill West "Washington street. Sharrcr left this morning to gei an irawere also occupants of the machine. 1 portant Boy Scout speaker and the prac-

- - ...... .! .;1 ...... ..... m. - 1 1.-..-. if tlie ra;nlne criven !

in tront or use car was practically, uun'nw n..v..

PROPER ATTITUDE.

"I don't give a damn, for a church member who doesn't hate sin," shouted Billy Sunday in a Chicago sermon recently. "And I don't give a damn for an American who doesn't hate the kaiser and all he stands for." We repeat the quotation. We endorse the sentiment because we believe that Americans have not inculcated in themselves the proper spirit of hatred for the baby-killing Huns; they have not fostered real, heartfelt anger at the rape of Belgium; they have not taken this barbarous war to their owe hearts. The point is that unless we promptly back up our government in its calls for loans, thes atrocities will be at our own doorsteps before we know it. Then what kind of Americans are we if we fail to give our full measure of dollars while our sons are giving their full measure of blood, for OUR country?

Women G

onsecrale Themselves

to the Cause of

Liberty

Thousands of Marchers Despite Raw Night Fill Streets and Liberty Hall As Proof of Their Devotion to Their Country In Hammond Last Night.

ah

yyu H

mrnp

nnnna

HUSTLING VALIANTLY

(By F. A. Parry, Editor Times.) nothing to sacrifice except their bodies ski, who has gone to fight the foe, at Hammond's most magnificent civic a bullet or a bayonet stab and it is over, his request took all his savings, $550, ....... ,, ,Ht nn ,1ut the women, this war for them Is to and bought Liberty Bonds with It. "It demonstration was staged last nignt on .. .... u ,, , be a continuous and a never-ending re- I don t come back, mother, he said as streets lined with watchers huddled nunciatiorithelr their brothers, he kissed her good-bye. "you give those three and four deep for blocks and tneir men folks. The days to come de- bonds to charity." "Well, she marched

blocks. pend entirely on the women of the land i Thi trtir-.tr nn.l that thfnff thev -ix-1 U Knr.

Tii mminf panorama over tnesc -

marchers stormed Liberty Hall and filled it with their spirit they endowed it.

Gary Gets Good News,

and Ho&art Forge Ahead Other Places Increase Their Totals.

last night. God bless her! That's Poland for you. THEY NEEDED NO HELP.

war. They will be glad to save here and They marshalled their own parade.

save there. They will make this sacri- did those women, and they did it well.

render cheerfully that we may win this

consecrated it to womanhood and left flce an,, tnat sacrifice, day after day. They could and would have marched behind something of their presence that our t,oy3 over there may get what them into battle just as nobly. God

which today makes Liberty Hall sua lney necd

more sacred. It is to be henceforth a woman's war, selves. Adown Hohman street they

It was a pageant of women, potential we know it. you know It and they know swept the whole flag-bedecked host of Joan of Arcs and Molly ritchers a lt at iast. them, our wives, our mothers, our siswilling, earnest, determined, splendid THET WEaj: xHEKE BY THOUSANDS t,rs- our sweethearts and our daughters.

BfLLETI.V. Twenty out of t"mt.v.eTtn teams of the city sales division of Gary reported ut 1 o'clock today announcing a total sr.Ie of 29,10O north of Liberty Bonds, a gala of $-17,000 our yesterday. The H J. t E. railroad of Gory, not Included In the city or industrial reports announced subscriptions amount-

helps women because they help them- i lng to $72,150 this afternoon. The

From 6:30 to 11 last night fully five

In one

reck-..l.

and Camp Fire Girls will j

-bit a i:r.nrrr r.on todat

GUY YOUNG BUYS 37 IN

Boy Scouts

I feature the evening. j The. Boy Scout movement is growing i bv leaps and bounds In Hammond and

j every father and mother in the cit

i should plan to be at Liberty hall on Fri ' day night.

r 1. ItliimP

HHUIVILIS

U I HUL I mi. 1 nfarrxiain!

i Hill L 1 I ill I"

IvlLLlil.Oi

1 -tgeant. Tcr BTintTTTWft IN THAT PARADE.

u, ore no loud hurrahs, no bom- thousand women participated

bast. There were hundreds of women way and another In the function of Ltl

h..i- ninp hearts are in France: who erty

from seventeen to twenty-five years ago

or more, perhaps, went through the supreme agony of motherhood to give sons to the world. We men who know women know they suffer In silence and last night they suffered and marched. They wore the shining light of zeal for a good cause in their faces. THE SPECTACLE WAS IMPRESSrVB. I think there has been nothing so pothetic and touching in all these dedication drives as the patter of all those little bootheels on the craggy pave of Hohman street last night. There Is a loud clatter taJhe . tramp of marching

Hall dedication week christened

Patriotic Women's Night. It seemed as

If Heaven Itself had vowed women

should suffer, for the weather was cruel.

It was a raw- night. Po you

women cared? They did not. They have consecrated themsel-es. Th"y Stood silently on the various corners for fully an hour to be on time for the parade to form and we are ashamed to sny that It was because of the late arrival of a male portion of the parade only that caused Its lateness In starting.

Men, weren't you proud of them? You

ought to be. Through the hart of the: town they went, giving fresh lnspira- ; tion to the hearts of the men who have'

lareest ulnBle subscription was made by W. J. Kelly, a western oil magnate end partner of A. G. tirestory of the Calumet Supply Co. of Gary. The subscription was for $li5,0OO.

BfULETIK f.SpE'-T.M. To The Time' 1 T" T TWT1 A 1 T f ritalnMftll

to scheme and plan to carry on the fight. , rrank w Schmidt reports that Dyer silencing utterly the skeptic and the has ffone 0Ter the tQp with 61 8ub8Crl1).

pitiruny cneap nu-w its wno sun rial-

era and S16.60O. Dyer's first ouota was

think the CU,e the right f woman to share ln thei $15,000, but Mr. McAdoo now wants the

counsels or tne nation. towa to 525,0O0, which It Intends to PROGRAM WAS MAONXPICENT. do, under the new basis Dyer wiL' Then they swarmed Into Liberty Hall Ornish at least lc0 individual subsciip. and jammed It to the roof trees. They. tions ran their own meeting and we are here;

to say they ran it well, did those women. It wasn't a woman's program, it was a man's. They can feed our stomachs and they can and last night did feed our

minds.

I Tomorrow- night is American Alliance j night. It will be a tremendous night, j

MOO

Tins important and influential organi- 1 I zation will put on a great program. Hre j : it is: " ; i S :00 r. m. ! j "The Star Spangled Fanner" j i By Audience t With Orchestra Accompaniment

I Ltd.!

j. Feminine Cohorts Throng

Liberty Hall Last Night and Entertain a Monster

Crowd in Patriotic Fash- j ion Throughout. !

W. HAMMOND'S BRAVE SHOWING

In that crowd of marchers was an- passion and made us all feel that we other one of those magnificent delega- were after all born of women and must tion from West Hammond. Many of look to them for all that ie good In this

men, but that was absent and ln Its them were Polish mothers, from poor rav- world. place w as the almost silent tread of aged Poland, their country ground under Xo more earnest and no more lnsplritwoman on mission bent. the iron heel of the Beast America fights lng meeting was ever held in the county. It was a processional of angels of today. There were half a dozen ort No more overwhelming tribute could be mercj; It was a crusade for liberty: It women ln that delegation who ought to given to those who made the meeting was feminine self-ahnesation for the have been in bed. They were over 70. possible, who thought it out and carried cause of a holy war and a good-bye to Do you think they Cared for the bitter it through indomitably to its final pause passivity for as long as the war shall cold and the merciless wind? They put than to say

last on the part of our women. many men to shame for they were only XT IS WOMAN'S WAR NOW. too happy to march with their sisters. For it is now their war more than ever They wanted Hammond to know what and in the days to come It is to be even Poland thinks of Germany. Tea we more than ever their war. Men have know now. The mother of Alex Supln-

Lake county is forging rapidly ahead in her Liberty Lean sales. , Gary is the only city which seems ta

Those women spoke with a holyl have the hookworm so far but good news

Well done, women; Hammond has at last settled down into the long grim haul that counts. Watch the fruit that blossoms from that meeting.

came today that the TJ. S. Steel Corporation Is going to take a big block of the bonds and sell them on ca?y payments to its workers, thereby increasing Gary's total several hundred thousand dollars. Aetna Zs Organized.

i Aetna began organizing today. No i fears are entertained that Gary won't j subscribe its !-hare but there is so far

outside of cert.u'n circles lamentable lack of enthusiasm. The Gary Clearing House Association reported official totals for Gary up to last night as bring J1GT.290 with l.S.'ij subscribers. This is for city tales division only. The Gary mill have so far

Through the

To '.in? 01 c

purchase by Guj

n thirty-live fot lot

on

o:i fro. t f.-onting May wood park in

" M:.yv. .,(! addition: on of the largest I . ,..i-i,.n Hi- eeou.tn 1 ' ' - peed

11 Hur.ched. ! Vr. Young, v. ho is one of the most i' 1. !!.. builders in Hammond, wii'i j 5 : c c"tmience the construction of; ,i, .-t riclly nnirn bungalows w hich i- c:, pe-l'-i to sell for from J4.000 to; !.;,, o on -a-y term payments. j The it'.v homes that are to be built; !! be T'lc.ceJ directly opposite the new i::rt-r of a million dollar hotel that is'

Liberty Hall was last evening fitting- . dedicated by the women of Hammond !

Poccll t Tirl West Hnmnnn.l tn tlie i ttirv of

I Hon. Eph Inman. Indianapolis. Ind. ; their soldier brothers, lovers and sons' - j Solo "My uv.-n United States" j against the hordes of Fotsdam. !

Mrs. Vaugh Bell I

Reading "In Flanders Fields"

Mrs. William S. Welch

With a parade through the streets

l tinea wun an estimated crowa or lo.U'io

Latest 'Bulletins

Sergeant Van. of the r.elgian Army Medly Patriotic Airs Amerban Federation of Musician? Music I'onated Speech Scis. McKay of the Canadian Army America Audience BUT i Li pert r BOMJ lOt it

j that had no precedent in the history or ! the city. 4.000 women of all stations of

j life marched to the hall and filled it to1 TFt I 'sited Prepb ! capacity. There they joined in the sing-! WASHINGTON, April XOPresitire I ing of patriotic songs and subscribed ; for naval offe,va to upplMnt the ; for Liberty Bonds in the sum or $35 5"0 co'nr battliMr on the west line is ..gain I ; in evidence ln army and nary quarters.

i ne entire proceedings were epocn-

making. The parade from Harrison Park to the hall was marshaled by Mrs.

erected by the Standard Steel Car1

',. fj Leo" poi ar.Iy hotife their best paid ' n.pioyocs until they can pro-.ide them- j s-.l ves witli homes. J

1 iuy lo'jnj is i-nc of tlie more re

- i-.i;:ib!e of the jouiis builders of Ham- I

i. :!. bin!. Is substantial! . con servatively aiiO thvioughly. It is sometiling of a recommendation for a house

to know that Guy Young built it. j With the influx of the new employe; of tin; Standard Steel Car Co. it is al-' ready apparent that nvmy of them are: s-.-ing to h-i home buyers w:;out delay.. Already three new arrivals have invest-! '1 in homes here in the belief that the be it way to avoid high rents, frequent' i ..';r,g da;.s and the i-rcumulatlon of a1 tale of worthless rent receipts is to buy!

p home. Mr. Young has built homes in all sec

nnnrninnni

AittllbM

mm m ft n I " mm

am m n i i i

l ii i i

11 ill

u u ,r

IIUUIIIIVUL. FVFIlhl

I Several amon the nary officials pre

; dieted more ag-gresslve sea action will ,

come before July 1, though they did not foiecait its msg-nltude. Reason for this Tlew Is seen In the

! P. A. Tarry and her assistants. Mrs. T. I

J. Meara and Miss Margaret Turner, all I

I mounted. The Masonic drum and bugle:

corps followed the marshals. Many j fct that America has supplemented the women were in Red Cros3 costumes. The 1 British navy with all types ol craft marchers carried flags and sang as they; which Is taken as significant.

paraue was ngtite.1 Dy

I ri'MTED PRESS CAPT.EGRAM J I LONDON, April 10. Heavy flghtlnfc-

cotninued north of the X.aBassee canal

I lie speakers o

UN

i u. s. of s Anr Rimu

II III 111!

Mil L 1VU.U

PRESSURE

(Continued on page six.)

IT FRONT

! marched. The

red fire. Hundreds of people Jammed

TBl-lletin. PARIS, April JO. The civilian popu-

f the evenlnrr wwro ! ...... , j t-ht Tl.lAllnon of Arras U bolne removed, It

i yesteraay -v - .

Miss Eleanor Barker, an attorney of In-j Mar,nal Halg- reported today. The Brlt-j dianapoiis; Mrs. Clarke Bennett, Chi-' .H holding desDerately along- the!

I was announced toduy.

cago, and Sergeant Nightingale, a vet

, n -r " " Arras, which I situated about three I.v and Z.awe rivers. A counter attac .... ...

eran of the current war. Mrs. W. D. ' ' tno ,0uthem flank resulted ln the OI " - assisted by Mrs. R. B. Powley and other; ,.,,,,, , r' DODra , .

Turner nni.l t! wrtmon n rnnlimant ' w . - - - - pnruru.i. -w

iu vucu&w. . . urrmnn iiii.j r- . . -

workers, introduced the speakers.

Turner paid tl

I for their work.

The American Alliance, having

, 1 . . t C.t,,rla,' oCtef-mi..n t 'l

j rade at the opening o

lions of Hammond but he is convinced

'hat the Maywood addition, attractivclv

j Loan drive, will have its hour in Liberty

'Hall tomorrow evening, starting at

.Itlni-na,, T 1- t-" , l .

I i ' ' . ...... ..ii.,,, ,j . . o t J 11 014

j presented Mayor Brown with a gold star put, on behalf of the city.

i i Having served duriner the earliest

Similar fv-fu-

"On the British front soutn of themtlon bes been made or otner r rcn Komma there waa local fighting. The' towns close to the line Including the

situation is unchanged.'

fl'viTEn Prkss Cablegram. 1 PARIS, April 10. Orest mutual artillery fighting "along a wide front held

a thin line or

bleeding men held ba-k the Huns, Ser-

, ft'1"1- iHiiiiui'; ,,vum imve uren in-

subdivided as it is with what, in time. I . . . . ' eresting without the personality and bv rrench and American troops from

will be a beautiful park running through! '-"earlt ann OI lne iSn army., vjf,0. he thrcw into h!, taik Wth ,h(? onta of Verciun to east of St. ICihIoV' i' for half a mile from Calumet avenue' and Seroant MrKav of the Canadian Canadians of the first expeditionary I was reported by the Trench war office to Columbia avenue, with the $2G0 000 ! army' "e l return to IIammc,nd for the force he w as "gassed, bombed and shot." j today. "Along the left hank of the

uu"-'u"' ',,,r" a- He saw the sergeant-niajor of his com- Meuse there was great mutual artillery meeting in the Masonic Temple several, pany crlI,meJ hy ,he Gcrri)an!ii fighting," the statement said, weeks ago will be remembered. I ... T, , . ... . . KPh Inman of Indianapolis, an orator Brker "'d,i an food It 1. on thi. ..ctor tnat Artca t 0,iaiK. t-. -.-in n.,v- I conservation and her tal was convlnc- troops took over additional trenches to

President P. E. Boone of the Alliance B , . ' . , 1

. . , , . . spoKe lor ii;c i.ioeriy uonq sale, has arranged for music by a ten-piece, ' . . , , I R'r A MBEBTT BOND TOt'AI orchestra and a chorus.

HIT BY EAST

(Continued on page two.) BIER UNO HIGHLAND MAKE GLOWING REPORTS

The smaller towns of Lake county are groin over the top in the third liberty loan. Tyer reported today that St. John township with an allotment of $15,000 has already secured seventy subscribers for a total of $16,500. Joseph Conroy addressed a meeting at Dyer last night. Highland has subscribed more than $7,000 with only half of the countryside heard from. BtT A LIBERTY B"M TODAY GETS IN JURY TODAY. Br I'vitfo Press. CROWN POINT. Ind.. April 10. The state in the Seeley trial rested yesterday morning and the defense testimony was introduced. The entire day was spent with the examination of expert witnesses for the county surveyor who explained most points in the testimonyintroduced by the state. The Jury will et the case todaj".

Liberty Hall has been packed at every meeting since it was opened and the American Alliance hopes to keep up the record. BIT A I.ICECIT BOND TODAY FOUR HURT WHEN AUTO UPSETS HUNTINGTON, IN IV, April 10. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Kllnger, Miss Fern Linsey and John Austin were Injured Monday night when an automobile In which they were riding upset. The two women were pinned under the machine.

CHICAGO DRIVER

Joe Masterson. employed as a laborer and giving his address as Rochester, Ind.. was struck by an automobile driven by Teddy Scheer. driver for the Calumet Garage Company of East Chicago at Sibley street and the Erie tracks yesterday. Masterson was found to be suffering1

from leg.

Mrs. Bennett relieve Trench forces

"Northwest of Rhelms (la the Chemla des Dames sector where American forces are fighting) we took prisoners. "After a number of Oerman attacks ln the region of Hangard where the British and Trench Lines converge five miles south of the Somme at Corbie, we finally retained the village and the cemetery. In the neighborhood of Mareuil Oerman attacks were defeated."

' of Amiens.

Bl'LLETIV. WASHINGTON. April lO. Washington nppreclnted the irrnvlty of the west front situation today as never before. Btri.i.ETlNV rp.v Vnite" Press. WASHINGTON. April 10-The larg-

..t .inn-la American casualty list to

date Issued by the war department to

day contained 283 names divided as foL

lows: Tlve killed In action. Three dead of wounds. Eleven of disease. Ten of accidents. Ten severely wounded. Two hundred forty-five slightly wounded. Two missing ln action.

WASHINGTON, April 10. Charging that government officials have "misrepresented the progress of the aviation

severe injuries about his right program and misled the public" the sen-

He was taken to St. Margaret's ate military affairs committee today de-

hosiptal by the police. It

which was lifted twice before Mrs. learned who was at fault.

Klinger could be released. Klinger.

who. with Austin was thrown clear, suffered gashes on his left leg. Mr. and Mrs. James Lucky and two children, and Mr. and Mrs. George Myers and two children, escaped serious inJury Monday night when an automobile

-BV Y A LIBERTY BOND TODAY CALL FOR ARTISANS

was not manded the aircraft production he taken

out of the signal corps and given to one executive officer appointed by the president. It further recommends that one man

War Review

case. The fact that these men have arrived "at the British front" probably locates them some place north of the Somme as the British and French are supposed to converge at Hangard. All that portion of the front from Hangard to Dixmude in Belgium is held by Halg's troops. "I have seen the Americans who are the forerunners of many more moving to their places in the line cheering and full of ginger. "From the LaBassee canal to southward of Armentieres there was terrific fighting throughout the night. Today on the left sector there Is a momentary lull in Infantry fighting but the artillery is blazing away in full chorus. "Tuesday afternoon and night there was bloody hand to hand fighting around Armentieres and about Givenchy and Bethune. which was the Immediate German objective. The enemy failed in both places. "Ten fresh divisions, about 120,000 men of the best Bavarian troops were hurled repeatedly at the British on the hign ground around Givenchy. Twice they captured the town and twice the British flung them back, wielding bayonets, clubs and fists until the remnants of the German stormers retired beaten. At the bridge-head of the Lys there was similar righting. "At sundown the enemy pressed tts back to LaCroix-du-Back (ore mile north of the river) but the British counter attacked heavily and drove them back. "A big concentration of German guns was freely used ln the fnnr.H ki-

areas as probable preparation for Ger- ! A BIG TIME

nan attacKs between Armentieres and Messines. There are no detail. ...i

ing this activity." BC Y A LIBEBTY BOND TODAY WE FINALLY

Hindenberg's frenzied efforts to split the British lines la Tlanders and roil the northern flank back on the North Sea which would open the way to the channel ports has spread Into Belgium today along a twentymile front. Haig reported the fighting which broke put early yesterday morning continuing while the British positions as far north as the Ypres-Comines canal were under terrific bombardment. The Belgian frontier crosses the battlefront at a sharp bend in the X.ys, about a mile north of Armentlerres. Between the IiaBassee canal and Armentierres, Kalg said, the British are holding the enemy back. The Xiawe river flowing northward converges with the Eys less than amlle west of Estaires. The Iys flows eastward through Aientierres, British troops axe des. perately contesting the crossing at the Estaires and a point three miles northeast. Tight has already broken out near Armentlerres, indicating the Germans are losing no time ln following up their cannonading with infantry assaults. Thus the actual fighting has been carried northward into Belgium, probably as far north as Bloegateeht. The British not only are holding on the southern flank of this front but have captured Givenchy, taking 750 prisoners. BCV A LIDERTI BOND TOPAI

FOR HAMMOND

GET ACTION

Br TTs-ited Prhss WASHINGTON. April 10 The senate today passed the sedition biil which imposes a penalty of twenty years in prison and ten thousand dollar fine on disloyalty and German propaganda. The penalty aplies to any-

H'nited Tress Cablegram (By WILLIAM PHILLIP SIMMS.) WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES IN FRANCE. April 10. The first American infantry, airmen and engineers have arrived at the British front. Gen. Tershing. conferring with Gen.

Foch. put the entire American expedi-; GERMANS RENEW

tionary rorces at ine uispor-ai vi mo allies. Two days later staff correspond-.

ents on the Toul front reported move-j ..,et in the Picardv front. All the roads! riTvrTEn Press Cri.e-.ram.1

one who speaks or writes anything favorinif Germany's cause. BUY A LIBERTY BOND TODAY

THEIR ATTACK

appointed he surrounded with a "corps mcnt ,t was pai(1

or tne Desx irtiii engineers, uoio

April

in which they were riding ran oft the;g with the announcement that this end of a culvert on a road near Warren j number will be made up by a draft and turned over. The women and chil- call on that date if sufficient men have dren escaped from the wreck by tearing! not volunteered was made by the prothe rear curtain, Yost marshal-general this afternoon.

B'f I'MTED PREH8. WASHINGTON. April 10. A call for

12,000 skilled artisans to volunteer for European and American" and to get an

war service between now and

immediate supply of the best types of European aircraft." BUT A LIBERTY BOND T0D4Y ' When fenr benjn ta Krlp You will rearret your failure to boy 1 iberty Ponds,

A section of the naval band from the Great Lakes Training Station will be in Lake county on Saturday, April CO. The band will leave Rensselaer over the Monon at 10:36 a. m., for Hammond and will arrive at 11. oo. Hammond is expected to furnish dinner for the sailor lads. Itinerary for t lie band's stay in Lake, county Is being worked out. There will be 23 musicians. 1 bandmaster, 9 in the drill squad and the state commisisoner, Charles A. Gerard of the state militia. BC Y A LTBEBTT TOXD 7"ODAY MUNITINY IN MILITARY CAMP

Br Fmted Press. AMSTERDAM. April 10. An extensive mutiny occurred Monday in the German military camp at Beverloo. ac-

1 IX)NLm")N, April 10. The Germans re- ! newed their attack this morning from least of Armentieres as :far as Mes-

The arrival of the first of those men jneg flve !nje3 north of Armentieres)

at the British front reported in the General Maurice, director of operations j cording- to reports received here today above dispatch is Just eleven days after announced this afternoon. j from the Belgian front. German solthe movement began. It Is not stated "They entered our lines between tho.diers are said to have fired upon their whether these forces w ill go into action Lvg and the Souve and captured a con- i officers, killinpr three and wounding or whether they will be brigaded but it niderable portion of Ploegspeert wood." j many. Seventeen soldiers have been is assumed that the latter will be the he said. arrested.