a. '- - v- ,. Probably rain -P and Sunday,. mmm li tonig"1 T-lder in mm FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE 1 "-vi-J. jLMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA:, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, -1 9 1 8. pRlCEi FIVE; - T EATI Kil .... ,i . SHIP CONTtNU v ' 7 MB is ...r I- Hi 1 Ml 1 RONT ON ii TAffl) 6 Latest Available Figures place the rtmcuum vw- ualtiesat HJ ... MfSSONS VIVORS' BUREAU GIVES LUWrK riuuKt Reports Place the Ameri- Loss at IUI No 1 - 1 . Change on the r ight ing Fronts lie TO-LEAVE POROGRAD . . ' The Rumanian Minister Ar rives at Haparanda,"; De spite Bolsheviki Orders can . xl x .JJ!l!...i lth but scant nope mat aaiuuuuiu jrs of the torpedoed liner hjjjj W1U "c xuixxxvx xr tj show that 147 American soi ls lost their lives Tuesday -night the Northern coast of Ireland. Irish Admiraly figures give the to casualties as 166, the losses among i crew and passengers being 19. rawlers have traveled over". -the ters where the Tuscania went Kb and have cruised along the i coast without finding any trace ii xl il 3 jjy men omer iuau muse au cauj er than those already reported res- Jjcania will be found latest complia- he Tuscanias survivors teau in an irisii pun, btes the American missing at 101. ciil reports on the circumstances fromding the sin king, of ;,the liner i German submarine have not yet k received at Washington.' to Irish seaport towns the Ameri- have been received- ,, wholes Jsrtedly by the populace and every In? nossible has been done'fbfetheir Wort. Two large detachments ? of f Thge men are on their way to a.Con- titration camp in northern Ireland pence, after a period of rest, they E go to their original destination, Lpite the U-boat's efforts. lipproximately 100 Ameriem. sol- m are in hospitals in Irish' towns. 0n the fighting fronts there r -has h no marked change ' in the sitna- n. American gunners and rifle a have checked momentarily at it, the activities of German snip- along the American sector in race. The artillery also contin p its harrassing bombardment jof ie wrman positions and have made Mork of German patrols so dan- rous that American patrols have en enabled to wort: unchallenged In f nan's Land. ... - me bntish and French soldiers pe repulsed German raiding parties several points. While artillerv bom pments are in progress on the , Lambrai front, northeast of pun and in the Vosges. Bad aer prevails on most of the Jan front and there has been no &ntr there except that by .the artil- situation ID the rPSIPTlninn nt Vi Tr vwer cabinet. i nnt pIo a inn rnn.v. . , - xcv-civeu in JSwit.7firia.Tifi anva PPror Charlps lp .. v,. vv, . u,vwx . r - '"iguauon. OUR MORE DAYS FOR REGISTERING ALIENS UaoV.;-x- . iZ. Vn' eb- 9- Four days ex- ui me time in which. Ger an ar a . . nim Ty allens must agister 't?Utvthe country- was aniounc rm ""'"J ucucioi Jrl eg- ' Ane extpnein-r. xl i. fedL agisters from today to ,T ' -..xj xuo atiui- "I RBTlprQl n.n i . . . . rr am ne aesirea to give 4u x H 1CU sumcient ume in 10 Cnmnltr urlxv. ii.- -r j j x. tarnation rwwlVi h -x i rciHi I -Mr iflTl . OT ixor- Pa enemw . KentnfB T8 were eended, De- Ktl ,cials pww;todr. to Fmer "liucui ui many western Psov could not reach town LI, 0n account of bad roads - i-uuusandS of nrmona nhn L :?n out first naturalization ta. hflS i ? doubt Aether they were 'liTl ave voted ln State elec- Ht;.. Q n3-Ve COnsif.ftTVr! fhsmosWoa i?f DenarT y must register un- pois -"""i. oi justice regola- 'HANIC KILLED IN AIRPLANE WRECK Y Sw50rth' Tas, Feb. 9. Walter psc i..,. ' inecnanir; nt niraviMaM-' I led a t. . x. xxvx. rch R" uu, eutenant Joseph F. K twu?ly Jured- yesterday, ii.ioi aim an nA x. cwennTi T icu xuu ieeu ir hTa vsch Probably ...will wt jaome is in Boston, jieu- Stockholm, ' ' Feb.', 8. -Constantine Diamandi, the Rumanian minister to Petrograd, who is now at Hanaranda. says the diplomatic missions of the Allied powers will soon have to leave Petrograd, acording to the Dagblad, or stocknolm. Foreign MinisterJi Trotzky had telegraphed to Tornea ordering; that Diamandi be sent back to Petrograd, but Trotzky orders are not being obeyed in Tornea now. A Bolshevik oonpnissioner who came on the same -. train from Petrograd with Diamandi and the. Russian Bol shevik srepr(B3entative a Tornea, were tried " by. court martial by the White Guards , there and shot. Communication between Stock holm and, Southern Finland and Pet rograd has . ben . broken -since Thur s day night. Whiter Guards, forced by the Red Guards to evacuate Nostad, where thev: cable ends,- destroyed " the wires and the-stations. A Swedishr rescue expedition has reached Stockholm with 450 refugees form Helsingfors,' including the wife ahdaugbtr7.Fand,,s :new min ister to Sweden" and, a number of re leased Austrian aiid , Oerman prison ers. The' expedition also was - com pelled tobring? threes Bolshevik, dele gates s sentWvTOtzky to; .spread tbe ,stiaahiongflQther c liltovsk. . American : Minister ..Aiorns , was r- in formed today that a ; train' has arriv ed at Tornea with Amerioan couriers from Petroerad. Train service be tween -Tornea and Petrograd," is -c ex pected to be resumed v tom5rrbw 16 INQUIRE WTO ITALIAN DEFEAT Horned Feb. 9. -Tbev-Italian defeat of last October on the Izonxo fron; &nd the circumstances attending it are tc be inquired Into by a cotnmttee named taFithe cabinei. " m - This announceme iv in the snspe o x.1 X X? I . Mmm a- note issueo, Dy me omjuhm. Azencyv says-:. that following- the - ink riMhtment of it committer to Inquire into the military events; of the' n of October. 1917. the cabinet flcciu ed that General Ci-Icrna, fottner enter of staff: General Porro, under hief at the seneral statf , and General Jk pcllo shall remain at the disnosal of the Minister of war witnout anyre- ciuction xtL rank f authority. ' Simply for the object of. enabling them to furnish the committee with all the facts likely to be tiseful to it. . GAneral Gaetano Giardlno. Sssistan chief ofi staff to lieneral - Diaz, Jdas been detailed to attend the meetings t the Supreme; WarlCouncil at Ver sailles. ., , . EMPEROR EXPRESSES THANKS TO PEOPLE Large BoNs ipf Troops En gaged But No Permanent Gain Made THE ASSAULTS.HAVE : BEEN VERY COSTLY Thirty -six Men and Three Wo '? men Have Been Taken in Custody In Each Attentat the German Force Suffered ? Defeat, Losing Many Killed and Captured With the French Armies in France, Feb. 9. The armies of the German Crown Prince before Verdun sino February, -have suffered costly de feats in seven vain raids on French positions on both sides of the Meuse. Although large bodies of troops were employed at times, not a single per manent advantage has been gained. On February 2 the Germans maae three separate assaults on the Cau rieres wood, but were hurled back with heavy losses. North of Hill 344 on February 3 five i Gennah columns advanced in a thick fog after a heavy preliminary bombardment and suc ceeded Vin; intering the French front line momentarily. The enemy was driven out in vigor ous hand-toP-hand fighting and again suffered, severely. A Baden" division, nreceded bv shock units,' assaulted the French line at the same place on February 4. They fgained a footing in the trenches for a few minutes and then were chased off after uselessly sacrificing many lives and leaving some prisoners. On February 6, in the vicinity of Fosses woodj 'another attack' was 'inade -at dawn after - a short -and- sharp artil lery preparation, -by Hanoverian troops and - a relief division. They succeeded In reaching 4he -French haxbetf. wire and in occurrying an ele ment of the French wltionsThey l!feTfte3p5J! Lininiediately usedby;j& Jnchryeav&SL many dead nd a number of captuTcd; - Between Bamognenx and ; Hill 344; OA February 7, another German .as sault was . rpeulsed with still ; more losses. , This sector is comnosed mainly of positions formed of groups or-sneu craters orjranited since the French, gained their great victory last Arumalsr:;in No Man's - Land Give Warning of Ameri- cans Approach Amsterdam, f Feb. fiPrEmperor Wil liam's decree, thiwhich: he thanks, those who addresscongranuatory messa ges to him OH' his recent birthday is published in the Berlin Reichsanzei ger. In it the IGmperor, according to a summary teiegrapnea rrom ; uenm, dwells upm'thevrelatlons of confi dence between;, the Crown and the .'.pec pleTV "his 26) years of peace efforts" and the; progress of the German peo ple. . - ? The lfaver&&&0s$ "the proudestaystofwrman at Ihe outbreaCkof the war," arid Ger many's later rworld historicar . jc cesses.' and haauds the "sehP-sacrl- flces DersenrtTfehdfirthe enormous? I- bor and the achievements or ute . peo ple at bom by hiafcwia God's help, the natlonmay; look' ' forward o a good peace." . OF FINNISH - PEOPLE - London, Feb.9Bbdrding to an Exchange- Teleraphi-'hputch vfrom Cdpenhagen, aapeclal .correspondent of The Berlinske'-.Tidende, ;who suc ceeded in espg ?f ronxt Helslngfors, sends to" hispper;aj-weless report In which? hesiabiRMuaros have made a- frightfu-Blaughter of great ' masseof ; Finnlsueople , ; .The theatre And a1a)rgenumber of nubile buildings Jn Helslngfors have been destxoyedi Thiai Re45Juard A fcorrfcvfir. have be Cunable to Icon-1 ALLEGED GERMAN ? SPY UNDER ARREST Man Admitted That He Rep resented Hun Spy System.; Searching the 1 ,000 Passengers As the 'L Stands-tfae American-Loss is Plac ed at 11 3 NOT BELIEVED THERE WILL BE REDUCTION Department Does Not Expect to Hear; o f Any More Res- Trying to Rec- cues- oncile Reports An Atlantic Port, Feb, 9. With Fed eral agents si ill maintaining silence concerning the reproted charcater otj a German ' spy and Incriminating cvi-! dence on board the Dutch liner ?ieuw! Amsterdam here yesterday, the sensa tional "spy hunt" on board the s learn-j on board the steamer continued with unabated zeal today. Thirty-six men. and three women, first and second- class passengers who were taken from the liner yesterday, were still detain ed under guard and the work of searching - the one thousand sterage pasengers was begun. ' Extraordinary precautions have been taken to protect the steamer and to prevent . any unauthorized person from landing. When the Nieum Am sterdam arrived on Thursday, onl? government officers were allowed to meet her. " ' Friends and relatives-of those on board were not allowed near the ves sel, or her pier. A squad of 100 ma rines and sailors is on guard at the dock while armed launches continu alljt. patrol the waters Jiear the pier. ; Nat only, win every person be sub Jected to an unusually thorough search beforl being permitted to land, it Is saidr-but every case and cask in the cargo will 'be opened. The spy who was reported cauzht ns said to" be .a naturalized America weivo mmsneens jot nwrner. : coverel 1--- ... .. . . .-yi tjf - rxiz.- .. rwiin . uoaerwoTayEtiQigttm reporteu iouna . on his person cording to unofficial trenorts the al leged -spy .has confessed that he,came to. America to establish communica tions between the German spy" system here- and the Teutonic government. Code experts are said to have been auntmohed here from Washmgton t exKauue me seizea paper. v Wahsington, Feb. 9. he War De partment today still was without offi -efal advices to change yesterday's estimate that 113 American soldiers had been lost in the linking of the uscania. A press dispatch from an Irish port early today, however, iftdicated that the figures of the Tuscania informa tion bureau there were still held at 101 Americans missing, while the British Admiraly figures given to the Associated Press in. London last night showed 166 missing, 147 of them American soldiers, four officers and 143 men. There were 117 officers and 2,060 men aboard the Tuscania -1 1 1 X J i I it. 1 ana me Aumireuy reports among me survivors 113 officers and 1,917 men. The War. Departments only dispatchs put the total missing at 210 of which 113 are American soldiers. Aitnougn omciais Deiieve the sur vivors list might come through today they was nothing definite in sight which would enable them to relieve the increasing anxiety of relatives and; friends. 'Jr'.C Suviyo? Welcomed. seifast, Feh9. Between 100 and 2G American soldiers from the fus eafiia arrived nere Friday. jThey were met-at theirailway station by; a "battalion of the Royal Irish regiment, headed by the regimental .band which escorted them to temporary quarters Crowds, of citizens' assembled at the station and in the tstfeel and greeted AMBASSADOR FRCIS STILL ON THE JOB with the American Army in France, Friday, Feb. 8. The : Ger mans are. using dogs in their front lines to warn' them of the approach of patrols opposite the American sec tor. A - German dog "listener" early this morning; - prevented' one of our patrols, from - executing a daring x m. i i. - BtroK.e. iwo corporals- wuo were concerned in it have been mentioned in official reports for their spirit and coolness.; - Accompanied by two privates, the corporals left a large patrol in a cer tain place in an abandoned trench in No Man's Land last midnight and went on to the German lines.- The first found a smooth wire barrier which had ben shot to pieces by the American jflre. Fifteen jards further on they came upon the German wire entanglements. The men were in specting an opening in, the Wire when a dog apparently chained on the oth er; side began to bark. A dugou door opened quickly in a trench and a : gruff volceN was ' heard to - say "F.er- tig!' Meaning ready., Sudenly a brilliant ; rocket went up andt the, Am ericans .threw themselves at -on .the ground just as a machine un began' xospit jullets In. their ;tlIrclon,- A" few feet away a heavy object struck tle ground. This was found later '-to be a' bomb which had been, hurled from the German trench. , The corporals stayed " where . they were , for some time and liatened'.tg the German soldiers talk.' . among themsefves. One of the corporals knows German and speaks it so that wfiat the Germans said. ; was under stood. After the Germans' 'returned to their dugout, the smaller patrol rejoined the large one, which soon afWwAa the target 'for 15 or 20 German .: shells but; no one .was " hit .Mumps again has appeared in the trenches.; A number of soldiers are afflicted ' ' as is one member of i the corps l'ol newspaper- correspondents. Washington, Feb. 9. All fear that Ambassador Francis might- have been expelled from Petrograd by the Bolshevist j: was dispelled today by the receipt - of a cablegram from the ambassador, dated February ;5; The rumor that he and .other .diplomats were being sent out of the country began to circulate, prior to that date. In his. message, the ambassador made no reference to any ' conflict with the Petrograd authorities. Some indications exist of slightly improved - relations between . the Len-ine-Trotzky government and the em bassy. Red Cross supplies recently landed in Russia have arrived at Pe trograd without any delay and with out any charge having been made for their transportation. . Until recently even Uhe' movement . ofi the Red Cross aid into Russia was looked up on with suspicion by the Bolsheviki. 1 IA m TRYING PASHA Defense Seeks to Show That Bolo is; a Loyal rTrench- -Central Powers Get an Open ing Through the ern Front t- J. 1 't NOT RECOGNIZED BY BbLSHEVlKr man Paris, Feb. 'i.-rne trial of Do?o Fabha, on a charge of treason is pro gressing with-great rapidity, and those in touch with the case look for an eaiUer termination than hadbeen an.i ticipated. ' Many of Bolo s witnesses arc not in ' France and it is expected that the lawyers .will begin their ar gument next week. . -x . 1 - Joseph Caillaut. former Premier, is expected to;4ake th? stand today as h witness ror 4b e defense. . . . The general trsnd of the testimony for the ' defense has been that none cf the witnesses eyar hoard Bplo utter The Terms Qnly Bind Tbe n Under the Questionable 1 T Authority of Uki ian Rada UBlXtr ,f..- untatriotic sentiments: "."Madame Bo lo. the second Wife of the accused, de fended her husband stoutly. The testimony of Charles F. Bei teili, the head of the Paris Bureau of the International Ievf Service, threw 1M tie lighten Bo' j's activities in the United1' States. Mr. Bertelli denied that- William R. Hearst to whom he LitroducedV Bolo. Was a Iriend of Ger mKny Ctoncerning Bolo, Bertelli said: "Bolo .spoke as patriotically as any I Frenchman,'- as much so . as M, Cla menceatv for instance;" SLOyiy REBJUljD.lNG ' X .... Warming"Svmjt6ms are Sub sidipg Says the Doc vtor Report BERLIN REPORTS AMERICAN CAPTIVES A' Cantonment In Philippines. sari i iiifltr? P. R.. Friday. Feb.v e&uK; was repulsed with still more and n-army supervising officer, ;has xiJxi-'i.iiM in knIM ia von trcnmRTl t fortheSaU' New York,Th. 9 The condition of Colonel ojheodore Roosevelt who tmttsrJ5eg.ttWO , operations ijusi vv eu nesday,. reported at Roosevelt hospital . eafly today as "somewhat Improved. .. lr. Harold Keyes attended, the Col- Li : x x. A Ua MnAi: One! USTOUfiilOUl Uie, mguu -uo i ed tfienatient had rested? comfort ably. The Colonel; did not awaken dur ing. C&is -night, -a nurse informed Mrs. Roosayelf when she entered , the sick roomsBiBirning. '. ' Doctors ' Martin and Duel, special ists-saw the" Colonel diiring the fore noim aifttiBported "progressive im provemeht'V'durlng the; . last , 24 ' hours. "His fpulse and temperature are noimai a4 a" bulletin IssueoV at lbh&li after the two physicians hadcalled. The alarming . symptoms jn 'the internal ear are - subsiding. Absolttfe'vuiet and rest, will be essen- except -for the nondescript they wore. Many had British army Lord Mayor Johnston has received from Ambassador Page a letter thank ing him for the help given the s sur-. vivors "which will be appreciated deeply by the American government and people." Sympathy From Italy. Rome, Friday, Feb. 8. -Evidences of warm sympathy with America oyer the sinking of the Tuscania are ap parently in all . sections of Italy. During the daily conference be tween Pope Benedict and Cardinal Gasparri, the papal secretary of state today, the Tuscania Incident was the chief topic. The pontiff voiced deep regret at the loss of so many brave yourig lives and expressed his feeling that prayer must be more fervent and vonstant that the end of the conflict France. MEDALS OF HONOR FOR TWO SEAMEN Washington, Feb. . 9. Secretary Daniels today announced the award of medals of honor to Seaman Ora Graves, of Maxwell, N. M., and Ted-lfr? ford H Cann of New York-City ' fbl,wi?'1, extraordinary heroism, An explosion aboard the U. S. Si Pittsburgh, December 53, threw Graves to the deck, but he extin guished burnig waste near powder in the casemate and prevented 6erious damage. Cann entered a ooded compartment of the United States patrol vessel May on November 5, stopped a leak; and saved the vessel from sinking Cann is the first , naval reservist receive a medal of honor, raneements were made? to have her re main hero uUIrasolutelyH heeded for f e?TO9 ;Bjtors;; commgto 'INew pern f rotii GENERAL MASSACRE : . London, Feb. 9. Scandinavians from Finlan'd' according to ail ex change Telegraph dispatch from Cop enhagen, report that the Red Guam eovernment in Finland a few days agot seriously discussed the question of ai iranelne a "St Bartholomew's Night. tit was said they planned to kill all jected only by two votes. The massacre of St Bartholomew resulted-in the killing of more thin 20,000 persons, members of the Hugr unot faith in France in 1572. The rT-inr-in'j1 victim was Ailniiral .Col- ogny and the massacre -began in Parft on the night of .August Z3-Z4 j. Steamer Floated. An Atlantic Port. Fett. 9. An American steamer which .ran aground !5rder: which. off the Newf England coast Sunday, was floated at high tide early today by a wrecking tug with the: assistahce of two government vessels. The steamer bound east with general car; TIWfMflC Ac- survivbrs appeared: & little mtlyM worse for their tef rljHexperiences; f i. -: i r.- -,f , rVt clothing l p ' ;Wi,v ' t ; rtl a ti vycione-ynentai js : UghtediUri Spelal to TJrnipatcU.)f Hew Bern, Feb; ;The: little town otOriental. .'Palmlco 1 county littlJ more than a score of miles from New Bern : now.-bdasts -of vits;xwn electric lighting plant, and each erenin. the residents ofat places are.-able to switch; as the current and secure il lumination and electric taoUxe ro-cver from the "Juice! which - is generated rbcht in their own munlcpial rUnt. v' The hewlfghtmtplantwas f.rbtl put " into , operation v a Tew. Crs; &zo and It has. been a topic of convex zticn for the citizens of the town, since ilsA time." A .Miss - Eivera Anderson, local x- Red ctoai and . visiting nurse' f-wlxo some few days agorxecfeived call tof taltie ap work , tn one: of the; army cainpsi' will ' probably remain itt this city untiti June unless the dl-risloa with which she is to le connected; is called for foreign serv1cebefore that time. - '-. -...v. K 'T.:jp:.i Owing . to the? fact I thMIJt waa tins- Germany's efforts for peace on', the t Eastern front, centered hbw appami- , ly in an. effort to open " up frontiers' - through which she: may secure tij;! plies of tood .for her hungry , pfeople,. -; have progressed so far as the siSfn- ? 1 ' , ing of a separate peace ' ageemsifit, ; with the Ukrainian Pada, according to' semi-official advices from7 BetUnA "' This peace, important or otherwise; aS; events -may shiw, is the fitst tq -'bo; signed by any of the belligerent;, ; How, far the Tuetbn plan mi;prove successf ul . TBeema to depeh4 f .uppk' t the measure ot control the Ptdljifcrf--over the territory . of, the so-called5 Ukrainian republic which .embCj6s; rich grain growing lands. Sucjhccrh'. ; trol is hotly disputed by.the;mBol4h viki, who recently disowned : . rth.r: Rada's , delegates as bourgeois 1 wheft--they were found treating '-seprtfyTX with' the ; Central Powers, andnameit delegates X)f their own. The r Qe- mans : and Austrians, however," coil- ; tinned to treat with the RaiasveiK v lsentatives. ; ; ' ";v Bdth Bolsheviki and Rada V haf: -hftpn ; ' riiiimina militarv successes. lal'alnst each Mother iiftlhe ttidsiZh 4TP' fill"'- Nv"""Tr ?TT -l t slated, . howe,Yfv as ; v?0:-;u$e3if 11 in- has TOcentlricome ' fromi German , cVwott'tb-JctikpwItt-'ttt-tm;; Una;ga$V the "Bolsheviki RUman 1.-la.- it wusnolnted out.t eoufd'obtalrf'fc ccjipcnsatioa f or1 ;tte loss- bDobrttdja ; to the Btagarfans by .taklntiWBejsf i;; 4: - - -Washington, 'Feb. " :Thilir :6r : the-first of W jieWitypeipatrct'iv, beats tobe u!lt by thei HenryrFota Company ;was; mid-: just 20 'days :aftfl o th CQntracts were awarded, Secroity Daniels Homonnced-twlay'lnt tellins- of v ; rthe rapids proeressmade, in,thYpliuiTi -to increase ;;the'l , navy's ; ? bmarln e h. i I of the vessel, which- possessemahy,: of la,Iaer than med Itype of chaser, town which was ' almost demolished by a storm of cyclonic inten?ity which swept over'that section a few .weeks ago, state that the work Of rebuilding jtlje structures which were torn downi try tne wind nas oeen startea ana tnat this; will go on just as rapidly aa-pos- '-t STheV people of-Atlantic .'are, 'of V-i yuiP9r uiuuciw wj u4Us vrV4 . iiuiua red guard. ycsmjss to start to rebuild "their 'TloTQSer'att'd places of business. . - j - f Fertilizer salesmen- trayelins' over Eastern , North Carolina ;sayt Jtbat- Jn many Instances - the delivery -of 4 this product will be delayed for two i. Or I three weeks oh account of jthe 4"npaar UX.'JIX' " M - M, . .. ta-ut?r SDHUT.iou oi many oi uie rnang. fc.;?, ho vuwik ircauict , , ix,xa j XOh pt-evailed-in EasternNorth Carolina since: Christmas, bar caused Ox&.fonds to become : In an almost- .impassible members of the capitalist class ove$ eight years old. The project was re-ico ditIon m many BeotionS and It ial impossible to transport' the ; fertilizer over xnese. WEEKLY mGlLN6 P., 2f Xondon, -Friday,. Feb,-. After hamclL coritationover yarious ronos- axs, aron itnonaaa,: tn iooa conLroi ojiVhlghlislM oirder ; which ? ' gives'leach : civilian mi&roximately onetuhd;ceat xj . .. Wx...; ' - . lVa weeiuy. unuaren unae tx axo er Mit 4hi : understo:t2iatl tne ' prsent t&$&ttiom tar iiXlGutogti i the I early aytcesftregatdf ing; the ; slghiny; of thCt-ajfrcement saii 'hdthlng- about the tenns. JV&its j beerp preTionaly repotted C ttatfdb Ukrainians ;wjere -off ered -a-sct" -;of : Russian Poland as -an Inducemfent fpr; f them "to make peaceV ....... . ..... . - j . . ... m 1 ""II' FORD GETS MSGVEy fleet. rThe .-4 teTrmepunsJiadihenvsuhmittM--aa discussed. k Orf 4he 7- the? Depsrimert i ttlepbetfeawarJt CtJinpiny Hnt rntrftct - ;ATTC,T:TO-DESEIli; 3 4. H & - - t ..." - r j ' Spartanburg,. S.'CV eb.9PrlTat3 Jlsnry KBearjLvcoxarlOW: t ; zizrj id. toe party; c ' ttryJS.rlng: 1 thre.prisoaeztr!iaa.ttcarpted to-.es- cape rrom toe r.ncntai guara nous a at Camp Wadrvcrth'Ca the'nlsht'cf , Jar-:-ry ?4th in r, Uta, - -atf : Prifata ? ZC .7 mj,ki::-3 r- nr:,ther prikcV er xrcz-Zed, t.z3 Lcaesnteace4tb? corrt mrtial".ta -i zrvi"-tLr9tatglrt ths 1 wleral prises e,t' Atlizta. 'tr.$is i teat. -z$ "Jaas Tc;a 7pr?3- Xt Ur!C .aerai CIlr-xrAt cxrirsticts! cVVts sentence' h8U rcccife"aiL: M'ci r" T AX r-:T":- ship-FrieIauiFr::: tf-l?zZslfilll grsJa-' from an Ar::;i?c fxcrt xriT'. sunntjy boufid fcr.-T ttrrlaatvl ;;; torpe4oeia-yeir?rl2r,f ;;?r-l't!r3. V bontardedUClxric'a'.T-: rs.. ttZt&t'z 2 cording v-tbthoj.IIarf ;itlad.xw"citrf'. h nxue survivors weer isaea-cj .v.- ; v PThaSwealslistsrlTli! rd?S3tbotit e,cD, OVtt came from nrn vJ imi 'hn ' neonlaitand. anarchy ' in-1 ;pB.rpced;aoiiher reeklyi . wthcnbux i-; 'r 'J v5"-,'-f--v.";.v-' '; ;."- ." " -' ..