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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1917)
I r. " - 1 i FRENCH TROOPS ARE :. - ..-i VANNING VICT OF OR ES IN ViCiNnY CRAONNE 1 German Hetirement to Meuse J- iiimi r- I it r4l Will pe rorueu n Dame i s 4 Contin .i RESULT ues Favorable. MAY TAKE WEEKS Onou Count Attacks laaleat by $ jruniDsr and. 3Trooity TBJrt ssnemy Appreciates Danger f ituation. j k '! By Henry Wood. tWith the French Armies Near Cra--onne. May 28. U. P.) Steadily through on entire week a battle has e been ragtng around Craonne, which imv ultimately force Germany's retlre- y tn.ni tn th mcum. The French cora- nunimia. have not menuonea mo fighting, except Incidentally but ft hM continued incessantly, bitterly and t victoriously for the French. j Already the Frencn troops nave de scended from Paon plateau into the v.ii.v nt th Mlette. Today they were f Steadily driving a two edged and fatal .Wedge into ne Irtnuaii xturo. Once this wedge is sufficiently i plunged inio me nicmjn n" ...... ! French can turn either north or south. ! or In both directions simultaneously. ; A successful movement in euner uireur ! tion will be sufficient to force a Oer i man retirement to the Meuse line to front northward P through Laon, St. Quentln, Cambral Jj and Douai. i 2 assay Small Attacks Mad. i P Already the battle has advance ...ffui.niw tn in hh re this result If ill fc continues favorable to the French. W But several weeks' continuous opera-j tions are likely berore tne aecisivc, moment in this stroke is reached. ! Th.i th Hermans appreciate, the; k exact degree of the menace was lndi 5 cated today in the number and fierce-; ness of the enemy counter attacus; : launched against the French. The Craonne battle has had no spectacular mention in the daily offi cial statements, because the French, Instead of launching immense assaults on an extended front, have temporarily adopted the strategy of capturing small bits of the line at a time, by ! small and almost daily attacks around each position, j Wedge Steadily Advanced. Th nast week has witnessed steady advance of the wedge toward Corbeny. I Meanwhile, the Frencn nave compieic f ly -captured all! observatories domlnat Ling the Allette valley by a battle fought with tactics similar to tnose Jf being pursued on the Craonne secto. Further successes reported today 1 north of the MoronvilUers crest Is one other , menace ! to the German line ft which may force their retirement. An Mother wedge Is being driven here Into S th big bend in the German front. This is far behind the present German Hue 5 against which the British are batter 5 lng to the north. C ,. ' ;i Gormans Vse Fire Sprays. ? Mav 28. (U. P.) Kepuise oi U German raid, made with mating nr 'sprays around Mont Blond, was an nounced by the war office today as on iof a number of desperate German at !tmpts to force the French to re linquish some of their recently gained I; territory. . . "In th Champagne at nigntiau there were two attacks around Monts Casque and Teton, which were every where repulsed,'' the statement con tinued. "West of the Meuse In the region of Hill 304 and Deadman's Hill, artillery fir was very active. "In the region of Vffholtz, in Alsace, Trench detachments penetrated the sec ond enemy line, finding many dead and bringing back many prisoners." German Night Raids FaiL Ixmdon, May '28. (U. P.) German night attacks northwest of Cherlsy and south of Lens were repulsed and a number of prisoners taken. Field Marshal Halg reported-today. f : "Tn enemy sunerea severe losses, 2 Successful raids by the Bngllfch on German support lines north of Axmen 1 tieres are also reported, "between 20 assaults were launched at two points, near Teten and a little to the east of that point. - ' The British, according to the night report from headquarters, gained new ground Sunday in forefleld positions on the "Wotan line," In the region of Fonkain les Croiselles. British flyers bagged three German machines and drove eight others out of control. Four British machines are missing. It Is of ficially admitted. Flench fryers Saturday brought down four German aeroplanes. Bom barding squadrons hurled 3300 kilo grams of projectiles on works behind the German line. Berlin claims the "bagging" of 15 entente machines in Saturday's air battles. On the Anglo-German front only raids and minor Infantry actions ar reported. Russian aviators dropped slxf bombs on th railway station of Pinsk, Petro grad 'reported Sunday. The western part of the town burst into flames, and the railway line was hit. Otherwise noth ing of importance is reported from in eastern front. i . "Attacks Repulsed," Berlin. Betlln, Via London; May 28. (U. P.)- Oft-repeated attacks by English forces between Cherisy and Bullecourt failed sanguinarily' declared today's war office statement. "West ot wyscnete English attacks were re pelled by a counter-attack.' I CHAMBERLAIN HEARS APPEAL ROM OREGON F Tp SAOIVER FUND Request Made That Senator Secure Appropriation of $9(75,000; AUSTRIA IS MASSING EVERY RESERVE TOR -DEFENSE OF TRIESTE t Prisoners Say Russian Front Has Been Drained of All Possible Men, Passengers Eeport TT-Boat Sunk by Ship CIVILIANS QUIT TRIESTE Anstrlans Also Sportl to B In Tar of Bnwd SrlT on East Front by Russians. I and 30 prisoners being taken." J , Battle for Quarries On. London. May 38. (L N. S.) French- ? Baturday night and Sunday In th fa- 3 mous quarries north of th Alan rlvr S which General NlTelle's troops cap. tured In th first phase of th present offensive and part of whloh wer re J taken by th crown prince last week. ;Th French, according to th Berlin 'statement, launched t five violent at i tacks against these regained positions without, however, making any head Iway. The Paris war office, on th other 5 band, announced th repulse of a Ger , man assault north of th Moulin de , Leffaux. Strong artillery actions in th Champagne are heralding new in fantry fighting. Th Paris war offc In its night fitatement admits that on of three ! Teuton attacks In th Champagne suc ceeded In penetrating the French fira lines. A French counter attack, how Jtrer, threw the Invaders back except in It Xew trench elements. The German Washington, May 28 (WASHING TON BjUREAU OF THE JOURNAL.) Senator Chamberlain is being asked to perform a big task In the request that comes' from Oregon to save the $975,- 000 appropriation for the Columbia river Jetty in the rivers and harbors bill. Representatives McArthur and Haw ley were not strong enough to save the day in the house. The northwest no longer even has a member on the house committee which originates such bills, although members from the northwest, including these Oregon men, could have had a place upon the committee. 1 When the committee reported the bill with the appropriation for con tinuing the improvement at the mouth of the Columbia stricken out the chickens came home to roost earlier than had been expected. There had been some fear expressed that funds for northwest projects would fall off when no man from that section was Cn guard in the committee room, i Chamberlain Only Hope. : Whether this appropriation could have been kept in the hill before It was reported Is something' that can not be answered. That it was not kept there, and that no Oregon or Washington member was there to pro test its being left out cannot ho dis puted. : Hope Is now expressed that Senator Chamberlain can prevail .upon the sen ate conynltte to write the Columbia river back into the bllL His influence has been potent heretofore, but there are limits to It. On the bouse side there was a skirmish in the dark, and the Columbia lost. On the senate side there will be a fight in the open, but an uphill fight. ; The army engineers have told th house committee they are content with the bill as it Is. There is strong sentiment against enlarging the fig ures in the bill because of war time conditions. Extra Justification has to be found for putting a big item into the bill which It did not carry in the house. Similar Situation Zast Session. The situation is in many respects parallel to the conditions at the last session, when all the burden of secur ing an- appropriation for a , submarine base at the Columbia river was thrown upon Senators Chamberlain and Lane after the naval appropriation bill had passed the house, and no effort at all had been made to provide for such an appropriation by members of the house delegation. Senator Lane introduced an amend ment for the base; it was adopted in the senate, and he and Senator Cham berlain followed it Into the conference committee, where they insisted that the senate conferees make a fight fur i Under the conditions existing, th omission of the item from the com puted bill was to be expected, for not a . blow had bean struck for It until th senators took it up. ' Senator Chamberlain has better fighting power on th rivers and har bora bill, because he Is a member of the committee which considers such legislation in th senate, and as rank ing Democratic member will no doubt bo one of the thre senate conferees when th measure la finally put into shape. By John H. Hearley Rome, May 28. (I. N. SJ The vil lage of San Giovanni is the latest Aus- trc-Hungarian stronghold to fan fore the great Italian offensive. capture was reported by the Italian war office today. The Italians forced a crossing of the Timmavo river and fought heir way into San Giovanni, capturing nine 6 inch guns. San Giovanni lies Just north of Duino, the so-called gateway to Trieste. Rome. May 28. (U. P.) Austria is massing every man of her reserves for a last desperate defense of Trieste. Meanwhile her troops on the left wing are gradually giving way before the irresistible Italian. Estimates from the front today. put the total Austrian losses in dead, wounded and missing since May 14 when the s Italian offensive started, at 60,000 men. "The enemy Is fighting bravely under decimating fire and ter rifle smashes from General Cadorna's infantrymen According to word from the Carso line today all Austrian reserves are being concentrated close to Trieste and the civil evacuation of the city has been ordered. All supplies are be ing hurriedly transported to inland cities. Bussian Offenslv 7ard, Prisoners were quoted today as de claring that the Austrian t rrsneh 8tamr XsJtL Thy Say, Also Eluded Ssoond BubauurlB - Shortly Aftsr Xarlxi- Bordeaux. Panama City, May 28. (L N. S.) Passengers on the French steamer Haiti, which 1 has arrived at a : Latin Americn port, reported that the ship sank a German submarine shortly after leaving Bordeaux. Later another U-boat tried to attack the Haiti, but was successfully eluded. Tnis information was given by sev era! passengers, including M. de la Foose, French minister to Peru. A running "battle with a subma rine during which the U-boat fired on torpedo and more than a dozen shells, some ! of the latter striking the vessel, was reported by an Italian steamship arriving from a Mediter ranean port. The submarine cam up to attack on May 3 near the island of Sardinia and despite a return fir from th deck of the steamship, followed its intended victim longer than an hour. No damage of any consequence oc curred to the ship and so far as be-1 known the submarine was not hit. Its PEACE MEETING NDS RIOT CHICAGO AND ARRESTS FOLLOW than to comply with a law which seeks) ,' Missouri 1 dead, 13 rnjuredl. to enalav workingmen, it declared.! Kentucky and Tennessee -r 0 dead, after asserting that the United Sta'.-s joo Injured, had been plunged Into the war in thei . r-4-A Wa.dut interest of th, capitalist Class. Mtto " TUrt Vt.. , The pamphlet cited -the Thirteenth' neaviest osa J'1' w? ,'n amendment to the constitution of the Mattoon, 111., a city of 10.000 popula- jAJndted States, providing against slav- tion, where Ssattrraay afternoon s storm ' err or involuntary servitude, in Jus- ui Z'T tlftcation of the an ti -draft movement. Injured estimated from 800 to 500. The prisoners wer to b questioned The property loss In that city and th this afternoon by Herbert J. Cole, spe- surrounding country 1 estimated at trial agent of the department of Jus-i $2,000,000. .c -Uic. Pacifists and Socialists at An- other Demonstration Ask for U. S. War Demands. ELECTRIC A HITS AUTO; FIVE PERSONS MEET INSTANT DEATH Two Others Killed in San Francisco in Parallel Ac cidents Sunday, ; San Francisco. May 28. -(U. P.) Seven people are dead today and 17 Injured as a result of Sunday's auto mobile and streetcar accidents in the bay district. ! Four women I and one man every occupant of an automobile met a ter rible death lata yesterday ; under the defense I wheels of a sDeedlnff electrlo train at irhould be greatly handicapped because I Mo ma-a Crosslnr: of lack of adequate reserves. The Rus- While 10 relatives sat ; helplessly sian front has already been drained of m two other automobiles nearby, the every possible roan consistent with I im In. mlnar 4B mliu an hour, struck safety, both to reinforce the dwindling the automobile squarely, and strewed man suppiy on me western ana tne wreckage along the track for 800 feet. Italian fronts. Moreover. Jt was de Th. v hrwii. wr nnrMornlubU clared that Teuton army commanders masses of flesh when removed. The are now apprehensive over what Rus sian troops may attempt against them. Minister Kerensky's fiery appeals to Russian sodiers may result, the Aus trlans believe, In some sudden offen sive. For this reason the Germans and Austrian have been compelled to keep the northern and eastern fronts fairly I Hawkins, 30, well defended, Artillery Tlx Xills ICany. All prisoners declare their orders were to resist the Italian advance at alt costs. All were unanimous in de claring the hurricane of artillery fire to which they were subjected was ap palling in its Infliction of losses. Then came the overwhelming dashing ad vance of the Italian infantrymen. Desperate and repeated counter at tcks reported .today indicated. In the automobile collided with a McAllister belief of war office attaches, that the Austrians have not yet given up hope of capturing the vodice sector. Over 13,000 Italians Taken. Vienna, May 28. (L N. S.) More than 13,000 Italian prlsonershave been hill and capturea oy in aurxto- Hungarians in the past 16 days, according to a war office communication made publio to day. It added that violent flsrhtlnr has been in progress along the Isonzo line and along the Carso pleateau. strong Italian assaults were repulsed. 'in battles are still in progress. Unfortunate. From the New York Tlinw. "No, that salesman could not Inter est me In his car after the nnfortu nate remark that he dropped." i"What was that?" "He 'said that his car was a winner, and then he added that It -would win I in; a walk." Every package -every tablet of Genuine Aspirin bear wrecked automobile was hurled against a telegraph pole with such force that the pole was broken. The dead: Miss Gladys Mortimer, 20; Mrs. A, K. Richmond, 24; Miss Eva Walker, 16; Mrs. F. J. Canon. 66, and A, J. A. E. Richmond, with his little daughter, sat in another automobile and saw his wife killed. Another electric train struck an automobile driven by Peter Block in Berkeley. Little Viola Block, aged 3. was thrown from the machine and in stantly killed. Seven other occupants were somewhat bruised. In San Francisco. Mrs. Laura Mul- lins, 80, was Instantly killed when an Chlcato. Mar 28. (I. N. S.) A riot broke out In a peace meeting in Grant park Sunday afternoon, resulting in the arrest of eight speakers who had denounced President Wilson. The crowd was composed of persons unable to gain ladmittance to a meeting in the Audiltorlum theatre where 8000 persons demanded that th government set forthj in simple language the terms upon which it would make peace with Germany The Grant park peace meeting was peaceful i enough until George Roop, a speaker, abused President Wilson. Then sailors, soldiers and civilians joined In la general fight with a large number of Germans and pacifists in the crowd. Crowd Zs Dispersed Quickly. - Police Captain Lav in sent in a riot call. A squad of detectives and 30 federal agents who had been scat tered through the crowd Joined the riot sauad. and quickly dispersed the crowd. Soldiers dragged several per sons from the crowd. They were booked on charges of disorderly con duct and then turned over to the fed eral authorities. Jennie Stein, a Russian saleswoman, was among those arrested. A Russian tailor, whose name is withheld by gov ernment agents, is alleged to have started th riot. Prominent Persons is Theatre, Scores of prominent- pacifists and Socialists attended the meeting in the auditorium, among them being Jane Addams, Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones, on of the Ford peace voyagers, and Dean Robert M.i Lovett of the University of Chicago! who was chairnian of the meeting. I There was no criticism of the admin istration at the Auditorium meeting for embarking j in the war, but the crowd enthusiastically cheered speakers who tald that It this war is a people's war, the people must know upon what terms it will bei stopped. While Seymour Stedman, Socialist, was speaking, red flags and handkerchiefs were waved from the galleries and boxes. Mention of Elihu Root's name in con nection with a reference to the Russian mission was greeted by hisses. "We are told that we are fighting for democrac," said Stedman, "but do we mean democracy for India, for Ireland and for other nations oppressed by the British empire? "Let us make that one pf the terms jf peace." KNOWN DEAD NUMBER 241, INJURED 1445, IN WAKE OF TORNADOES Property Damage in Central, j Charleston. 111., It miles east of Mattoon, also was partly wrecked, with 1 a loss of 60 lives. The injured are ? estimated at 250. The damage there is estimated at fUOOO.000. The Joss of life elsewhere In Illinois Is estimated, at 15, with 100 injured. .The storm tegan Friday in Kansas, where Andale was wiped out with 2 dead and 60 injured. Late Saturday a series of tornadoes originated in the vicinity of St. Louis and swept northward and east ward, extending northward nearly to Chicago and crossing the state line into Indiana.' where Bloomlngton and other cities were hard hit. Belief work Starts at Once. Wires are down and It may b many days before the complete figures are obtained.- The property loss in these two states, it is estimated, will reach t5.000.000. ' These Arkansas towns report loss of life: Manila. 10 dead. 30 injured. Clear Lake, two dead, six Injured. Malvern, three dead. 20 injured. Blytheville. reports 20 deaa in Mis sissippi county and 100 Injured. Tennessee towns reporting deaths: Catea Landing, four dead, 30 hurt, Sharon, three dead, 60 hurt. Dyersburg, 12 dead. 40 hurt. Una, seven dead, 60 hurt. Baker, two dead, four hurt. Sanier, one dead, 50 hurt. States Swept by Storms ' Kentl&lerev liMl D I iimi' noon and last night, while a tornado Will neaCn MllllOnSi ', struck Murphysboro and Willtsville, to j southern Illinois. " i Recoveries of bodies of the dead. succor of the injured and provision for the homeless and suffering, were pro ceeding rapidly today. Citizens of the towns and cities affected raised thou sands of dollars for relief work, while an appropriation of 13.000.000 was to be asked of the Illinois legislature, toda. Militia has been called out in the stricken district, and was aiding in relief work and protection of property. Mayor Swan of Mattoon has appealed to the people of Illinois for aid. He said that more than 2000 ar home less, and that "many of the breadwin- Weather Bureau. Issues Xeport. Washington, May 28. (I. N. S.) Reports to the United States weather bureau today in dicted that yesterday's death deallng'cyclone over the Missis sippi valley has spent its force and Is now breaking up into separate thunderstorms. The cyclone today centers over Indiana, according to the weather bureau reports. It is moving eastward with greatly diminished power. Heavy thun derstorms are reported over Kentucky, Tennessee, Indfana. the south Atlantic and the gulf states. The weather bureau . looks for no further devasta tion on a great scale, although the thunderstorms themselves are likely "to do some damage. Seymour's Loss Is $50,000. Seymour, Mo.. May 28.--(U. P.) About 12 persons were Injured and property damage estimated at 850,000 was caused by a tornado which swept through thl3 section late yesterday. Na deaths have been reported. Thirteen houses were demolished here. Tele phone and telegraph communication with points in this section is down. Communication by vehicles also Is In terrupted, a heavy rain flooding the roads. 8 streetcar. Two other people in th automobile were slightly hurt. Eight people were badly shaken up and one man may die, as a result of cable car accident in San Francisco yesterday. A Sacramento .street car lost Its grip and: sped down a steep crashed , into a Hyde street car. Martin K.urteia s skull was fracr tured. A Helpful Suggestion. From the Boston Transcript. "Here's a woman correspondent who wants to know how to get rid of red ants." "Oh,-tell her to dye them blue." Five Arrested at Detroit. Detroit. Mich.. May 28-(U. P. Accused of treason in connection of an alleged nation wide antl-conscrlp-tlon plot, five Detrolters were arrested today. The specific offense for which they were held Is distributing of handbills bearing the caption "Kill the draft," and announcing a Socialist mass meet ing to this end for June 3. The prisoners are: Herman Eberly. Max V adman. Philip Ehavis. John Furler. 'Pane Parker. Several thousand of the circulars had been passed out before the men were taken into custody. The circulars, which urged workmen not to register, were alleged to have been Is sued by the Detroit local of the So clallst party, and quoted . resolutions passed by that body. "It is better to be thrust into Jail Chicago, May 28. (U. P.) Two hun dred and forty-one persons were known dead and 1445 injured, many of whom will die, as a result of a series of tornadoes .which swept Illinois and In dians, on Saturday and parts of fCan sas and Kentucky. Thousands are des titute and homeless. Property damage amounts-to millions of dollars. The dead and injured are listed i follows: Illinois 128 dead, 850 Injured. Kansas 24 head, 60 Injured. Alabama 12 head. 234 injured. Arkansas 9 dead, 14 Injured. Indiana; 7 dead, 176 injured. ners have been killed. "Money is needed," he concluded. "It must be had." Morgue Contains 63 Bodies. Mattoon, 111.. May 28. r(U. P.) Early today 63 bodies were lying in temporary morgues here as the mute testimonial of the fury of the tor nado which tore through this city late Saturday afternoon. More than 600 were injured and phy sicians estimate many of these will die and that the total dead will reach 100 In this city alone. At Charleston 60 bodies ' have been recovered and it is estimated the dead there will reach 76. Property Loss Is Enormous. Memphis. Tenn ' May 28. (U. P.) Incomplete reports from surrounding towns show 35 persons were killed and 156 injured in a tornado which swept portions of Arkansas Sunday, white Tennessee's toll Is 29 dead and 190 injured. Coquille to Have Memorial Program Coquille, Or.. May 28. Mayor E. E. Johnson has issued a proclamation making Wednesday, May 30, Memorial day, a holiday. The memorial serv ices were held st the Presbyterian church last Sunday, Rev. F. S. Shlm ian preaching the sermon. A program has been, arranged for Wednesday, as follows: Song, "Star Spangled Banner," by audience and band; prayer, Rev. T. H. Downs; Get tysburg adress, Julian Leslie; ora tion. Professor C A. Howard; reading Ruby McDonald; flag drill by chil dren. In addition there will be spe cial music by a male quartet. A pa rade will he formed In the morning to march to the cemeteries, where the soldiers' graves will be decorated. The march wll be particpated in by the band, O. A. R., W. R. C. Coquille military 'reserve, Coquille Honor Ouard and school children. Gardinal Gibbons to Assist Liberty Loan Baltimore. May 28. (I. N. 8.)- dlnal Gibbons has Just issued a state ment saying he Is in favor of the Lib erty loan', and will soon send an open letter to the clergy of the diocese ex horting -them to use their best en deavors for the furtherance of the project Teuton Prisoners Nearly 24,000. Rome. May 28. (I. N. S.) Car- tures made by the Italians in their latest tnrust toward Trieste have brought the total number of Auatro- Hungarian prisoners taken since May 14 up to nearly 24,000. The losses in flicted upon the Austro-Hungarians in tne last Durst of fighting against-1 Castanavisza and the Adriatic sea were very heavy. 'ThmBttyr Cross , JE Your Gaarant of Purity" Theirfe is O Q i0(POCrO has been Only One True Aspirin Th trade-mark "Aspirin" (Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.) is a guar antee that the mono aeeticacidester of salicylicacid in these tablets and capsules 14 of the reliable fijiyer manufacture. Italians Advance on Trieste. London, May 28. (I. - N. S.) A crushing answer was that which Italy's armies Sunday gave the Vienna war orrice. The battle already is de cided In our favor." said Saturday's official statement from Austria's cap ital. What General Cadorna's armies have since done was summed un in Sunday's bulletin from the Rome war office. They have smashed solidly ahead on a tnree mile front on the Carso. ad vanclng at some points two miles to ward Trieste, from which they are now less than 10 miles. At the same time, they stormed Austrian position in the Plava sector, registering sub stantial progress. ' Prisoners Vumber 1250. Twelve hundred and fifty prisoners have been taken by . the Italians since Saturday and the booty Is large. At one point a doiq coup netted tnem a field battery of 10 guns with ammuni tion. On the Gorizia front they took one gun, two trench mortars and seven machine guns. Forty-four officers are among the prisoners. At one place the Italian storming columns suffered a slight reverse,; which 'is admitted by the war office. This was at Castagnavizza, some three miles northeast of Jt-miano. Casta gnavizza forms the northern tip of the semicircle that is being gradually shoved southward in the direction of Trieste. ; Town Taken but Evacuated. Italian troops reached and even passed this town, but so murderous was the Austrian gunfire that closed In on the invaders from all sides that Cadorna's :ment were "compelled to evacuate ground." They stuck tena ciously to the tojn's western boun dary, however. The lower bfclf of the semicircle was swung a considerable distance east ward. This Is. on the southern part of the Carso plateau. Here the Ital ians crossed the important- railroad running aloag the coast from Monfal cone to the famous watering place of Dulno. An extension of this railroad runs to Trieste. Italians Enter Ksdeassa. Almost due north of Dulno lies San Giovanne. half way between the sea resort ' and Medeasza. Near San Gio vanni the Italians crossed the rail road and then pushed straight through th outskirts of Medeaxza. One of the most important defense positions wrested from the Austrians in this latest advance is Hill 145. southwest of Medeazsa. .Far to the north on the Plava front. Cadorna's infantry "brilliantly car ried" the heights at the head of the Palllova valley, thus linking up the Italian positions oh Monte Cucco with those on the dominating Hill 863. . TpEOPLES . r-N. suL now Playing ; 1 A - ' it ' 1 1 P ' - 1 - ii CfMilPJi(Ms?,L ii n Presenting J. WARREN KERRIGAN in Person The screen's greatest treats MARY PICKFpRD Is irresistibly; charming in her newest production "A Romance of the Redwoods" You'll enjoy every jsecond of this stirring stolry of the Days ""L'i 0f '49 it wonderful. i At the PEOPLES10:30 A. M. to 11 P. M. And the Mr show- merle a's haadsenu est star In foyer re captions, p s o aal talks, etc. Every afternoon and eve ning, Monday and Tuesday. 1 rn H 1 Master of human emotions in the d saatle maartwpieoe. "The BCareelllal Millions." riashew of great tender, ness touches of quaint eomedy for s; eons setting and an abeortotng lore storr make this a dot are to be semem- Zt's a tnuntpn zor wee. jsesn. N $ T A R Washington at Park; ONLY UNTIL WEDNESDAY ina Badet The vampire of France, In a wonderful, soUl-stirrint dramai - i Atonement Also a screamingly funny 2-actj Lone I - some Luke comedy it's great - S K 11 A. M. to 11 P.M. Als A Klever Keystone n,