DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. T LAP F -M- CLASSIFICATION OF 8NEI.LING MEN INTO DIVISIONS OF SERVICE 8TARTS. WILL WEED OUT WEAKLINGS No partiality shown In Training of Rookies, Who Have Been Put Through Gruelling Course of Study and Manuals, tTmUrn Newptr Union Nw Brr1c. Fort Suolllng, Minn. Tho first per iod of tho northwest's offlcorB' train ing camp has been comploted. This Brat month of training to becomo of ficers In Unclo Sam's now army, to attain tho distinction of being includ ed in tho "flrflt 10,000" who will train tho first half million citizens to bo dratted Soptombor 1, just onded, has been tho satno for all the rookieH nearly 2,500 of thom regardless of profcrrod branches of service a month of gruelling, grinding study, drill and practice In infantry work. Now comes tho time for classification of studonts into soparato units accord ing to thoir choice of service, such as infantry, coast defense, artillory, on glimerlnc and no on, for intensified work in tho ruspoctlvo departments. Tho first period of tho threo months' courso has been dovotcd to basic in fantry instruction nnd Instruction In those duties of officers that aro com mon in all branches of tho service. Tho socond porlod, and remainder of tho limo In camp, will be formulated to Include tho special training re quired for officers In tho particular branch of tho army In which tho stu dent hopes to obtain a commission. With this shakoup comes tho pos sibility of considerable weeding out, too. Tho work of singling out thoso rookios not uunsldorod sultablo to be come offlcora has boon going on stead ily until somo sixty-odd havo been droppod. Indications now aro that with tho unit systom in voguo and tho work bocoming moro sovore inoro would-bo offlcors will bo loft behind. They certainly will havo to show a groator burst of speed to maintain tho pace that will bo sot from now on, which of courso promises moro dis missals for lnofllcioncy, physical and otherwise. Tho strain on tho boys' montnl and physical rosources multi plies with tho change and as thoy ad Tanco In this cramming procoss. Thoro can bo no woaklingB among tho mon who will train Amorlca's great citizen army noxt autumn ovory man must bo sound to tho coro, ring truo to tho high standard of military of flcloncy doflnod. Tho oft-tooted Gor man efficiency can havo nothing on tho now American brand now in tho making. FREIGHTER SUNK BY "8UB.1 French steamship Mississippi Is Lat. est plunger Victim. Now York. News of tho destruc tion of tho big French frolght steam- nhlp Mississippi by a Gorman sub marino, with a loss of ono of tho mer chantman's crow was brought horo by officers of a British frolght vossol that arrived from a Fronch port. Tho Mississippi, of C.677 tons gross, was torpodood and flunk about 14G miles out from tho port of Brest, Franco, on Juno j1, according to of flcors of tho Uritlsh ship, which res cuod forty-sovon offlcora and soumon from open boats. Thoy had been afloat only a short tlmo. Tho British offlcors refused to ills closo dotaIl8 of tho sinking as related to thom by tho French crow. Tho only sailor lost waB drowned whllo tho crow wns taking to tho boats. Tho Uritlsh Hhlp landed the survivors nt Fayal, Azoroa. Tho MIbbIbbIppI, ownod by tho Gen eral Transatlantic Stoanmhlp com pany of Havro, waB last roportod in marino records ns having arrived at Now Orloans on March 13 from Havro. Sho was In rogular trado botwoon tho two ports. For Air supremacy plan. WaBhlnuton. n. n. i.'iiii n,.mvni has boon given by tho war dopartmont to tho air supremacy program of tho dofenso council's aircraft board and President Wilson has boon iiBkcd to put tho administration' nnnnnn u. hind tho groat project for which an appropriation of ?GOO,000,000 Is Bought. Undor tho plan, tho United States would becomo a groat olamontary training baRO Immodlntoly for all tho allies and onormous numbers of train ing muchlnoH would bo turned out while American plant aro developing a horvlcoablo battle cruft typo. To Train Airmen. Now York.--All expenses or twonty young Americans who will bo Hont to Franco nnd trained to Join tho La fayotto Esacndrlllo probably will bo paid by tho Aoro Club of America, tho board of governors unnounccd. Army surgeon Suicides. Washington, I, C Major Jamo.i Bourko, of tho army modlcal corps, fihot and killed hlimjalf nt his home horo. Ho had boon suffering from a montal breakdown. Major Bourko was bom in Iowa nnd waa a graduate of Rush Medical collogo and tho army and medical school, Flro Loss Heavy. Minneapolis. Flro of unknown origin destroyed nn olevator of tho Goorgo C. UiRloy Elovator compnn causing a loss of 1225,000, s NSHED SCORES THE KAISER PRESIDENT 8AY8 MILITARY MAS- TERS DENIED U. S. RIGHT TO BE NEUTRAL. FILLED COUNTRY WITH SPIES Failed In Attempt to Spread Sedition German People In Grip of Same Sinister Power Tnat Has Drawn Blood From Us. Washington, June 10. President Wilson In n Flag day address deliv ered here on Thursday declared that wo were forced iuto the world-wide wnr by the extraordinary Insults und degressions of the mllltury masters of Germnny. The president's nddress In part is u follows : My Fellow Citizens: We meet to celebrate Flag Day becnuso this flng which we honor nnd under which we serve Is the emblem of our unity, our power, our thought nnd purpose as it nntlon. It has no other character than thnt which wo give It from generation to generation. Tho choices uro ours. It flouts In majestic silence above the hosts that execute those choices, whether In pence or in war. And yet, though silent, It speaks to us speaks to us of the past, of tho men nnd wom en who went before us and of tho rec ords they wrote upon It. Wo celebrate tho day of Its birth ; nnd from Its birth until now It has witnessed n great his tory, has floated on high the symbol of great events, of a great plan of life worked out by n great people. We nre about to carry it into bnttle, to lift it where It will druw tho Are of our en emies. Wo are about to bid thousands, hundreds of thousands, It may be mil lions of our men, the young, tho strong, tho capable men of the nation, to go forth nnd die beneath it on fields of blood fer nwny for what? For some unaccustomed thing? For something for which it has never sought the fire before? American armies were never beforo sent ncross tho seas. Why are they sent now? For somo new pur pose, for which this great flag has nev er been carried before, or for some old, familiar, heroic purpose fov which It has seen men, Its own mru, die on ev ery battlefield upon which Americans have borno nrniB since tho Revolution? These arc questions which must be answered. Wc are Americans. Wo In our turn, servo America, nnd can serve her with no prlvntc purpose. We must uso her flag as sho has always used It. We are accountable at tho bar of his tory and must plead In utter frankness what purpose It 1b wc Beck to serve. United States Forced Into War. It is plain enough how we were forced Into tho wnr. Tho extraordi nary Insults nnd aggressions of the Im perial German government left us no self-respecting choice but to tnko up nrms In defense of bur rights ns n free people nnd of our honor ns n sovereign government. The military masters of Germany denied us tho right to be neu tral. They filled our unsuspecting com munities with vicious spies nnd con spirators nnd sought to corrupt the opinion of our pcoplu in their own bo half. When they found thnt they could not do that, their ngents diligently spread sedition amongst us nnd sought to draw our own citizens from their allegiance, and sonic of those ngents were men connected with tho ofllclnl embassy of the German government It self hero in our own capital. They sought by violence to destroy our In dustries and nrrcst our commerce. They tried to Incite Mexico to tula up arms against us and to draw Japan In to a hostile nlllanco with, her nnd that, not by Indirection, but by direct Biiggestlon from tho foreign olllco In Berlin. They Impudently denied us the use of tho high sens and repeated ly executed their thrent that they would send to their death any of our people who ventured to approach the coasts of Europe. And mnny of our own people were corrupted. Men be gan to look upon their own neighbors with suspicion und to wonder In their hot resentment nnd surprise whether there was any community In which hostile intrigue did not lurk. What great nation l'n such circumstances ' wou,a "ot ,mvo t,l,c" "" lirms? MuL'h I ,IH wo llml lUslml lK'cp. 't was denied ' us' liml "ot of our own cl'olco. This ' ttttK "ml,T w,,,t"" Wl sm' W0H,(l ,mvc ' ,,l,' dishonored had we withheld our hand. No Emnlty Toward German People. But that Is only part of tho story. Wo know now as clearly ns we know before we were ourselves engaged that we are not enemies of the German peo pie and that they aro not our enemies. They did not originate or desire this hideous war or wish that wo should be drawn Into It ; and wo are vaguely con scious that we aro lighting their cause, as they will somo day heo It, as well us our own. They nre themselves In tho grip of tho sumo sinister power that has now at last stretched Its ugly tal ons out and drawn blood from us. The whole world is In the grip of that pow er am! Is trying out the great battle which shall determine whether It Is to bo brought under Its mastery or fling Itself free. Tho war was begun by the military masters of Germany, who proved to bo .also the masters of Austria-Hungary. .These men have never regarded na tions as peoples, men, women, and children of like blood and frame as themselves, for whom governments ex isted and In whom governments had thoir life. They havo regarded them merely us serviceable organizations which they could by force or Intrigue bend or corrupt to their own purpose. They have regnrded the smnllcr etotcn, In particular, und the peoples wno could be overwhelmed by force, &s their nnturnl tools and Instruments of domination. Their purpose has long been nvowed. The demnnds mndo by Austrln upon Serbia were u mere single step in n plan which compassed Europe and Asln, from Berlin to Bngdnd. They hoped thoso demands might not arouse Europe, but they meant to press them whether they did or not, for they thought themselves ready for tho final Issue of nrms. Vast Empire Planned. Their plan wns to throw n broud belt of Oermun military power and political control ncross tho very center of Eu rope and beyond the Mediterranean In to tho heart of Asia; and Austria-Hungary was to bo as much their tool and pawn as Serbia or Bulgaria or Turkey or tho ponderous states of the "Bust. The dream had Its heart at Berlin. It could have had n heart nowhere else I It rejected the Men of solidarity of race entirely. The choice of peoples played no part In It nt nil. They nr dently desired to direct their own af fairs, would be sntlsfled only by undis puted Independence. They could bo kept quiet only by the presence or tho constant thrent of armed men. Tho Germnn mllltnry statesmen hnJ reck oned with nil thnt nnd were rendy to deal with It In their ownVny. And they have actually carried tho greater part of that nmnzlng plan Into execution I Look how things stand. Austria Is nt their mercy. It has acted, not upon Its own lnltlntlve or upon the choice of Its own people, but nt Ber lin's dictation ever since the wnr be gan. Its people now desire pence, but cannot have It until lenve is grnntcd from Berlin. The so-called central powers arc in fact but n single power. Serbia Is at Its mercy, should Its hands be but for a moment freed. From Hamburg to tho Persian gulf the net Is sprend. Why Berlin Seeks Peace. Is It not easy to understand the eag erness for pence that has been mani fested from Berlin ever since the snnre was eet nnd sprung? Peace, peace, peace has been tho tnlk of her foreign office for now n yenr and moro; not peaco upon her own lnltlntlve, but up on the lnltlntlve of tho nntlons over which she now deems herself to hold tho ndvnntnge. Through nil sorts of channels It has come to me, nnd In nil sorts of guises, but never with tho terms disclosed which the Germnn gov ernment would bo willing to accept. That government still holds n vnlunblo part of Franco, though with slowly re laxing grasp, and practically the whole of Belgium. It cannot go further; It dnro not go back. It wishes to close Its bargain before It Is too late and It has little left to offer for the pound of flesh It will demnnd. Tho military mnsters under whom Germnny Is bleeding see very clearly to what point Fate has brought them. If they fall back or are forced back an inch, their power both abroud nnd nt home will fall to pieces like n house of cards. If they can se cure pence now with the Immense ad vantages still In their hands which they have up to this point apparently gnlned, they will hnve Justified them selves beforo tho Germnn peoplo; thoy will havo gained by force what they promised to gain by It: nn Immense expansion of German power, nn Im mense enlargement of Germnn Indus trial and commerclnl opportunities. If they full, their people will thrust them nsldo; a government nccountnblo to the peoplo themselves will bo set up In Germnny ns It has been In Englnnd, In the United Stntcs, In France, und In all the great countries of the mod ern time except Germany. If they suc ceed they nre snfe nnd Germnny nnd tho world nre undone; If they fall Ger many Is saved nnd the world will be nt peace. If they succeed, we and all tho rest of the world must remain armed, ns they will remain, nnd must mnko rendy for the next step of ag gression; If they fall, tho world may unUe for pence, and Germany may be of the union. Seek to Deceive World. Tho present partlculnr nlm of the masters of Germany Is to deceive all thoso who throughout tho world stand for tho rights of peoples nnd the self government of nations; for they see what Immense strength the forces of Justice and of liberalism are gathering out of this war. Tho sinister intrigue Is being no less actively conducted In this country than In Russia and In every country In Eu rope to which tho agents and dupes of the Imperial German government can get nccess. United States In War for Freedom. The great fact that stands out above all the rest Is that this Is a People's war, a wnr for freedom nnd Justice and self-government amongst all the na tions of the world, a war to make tho world safe for tho peoples who live In It and have made It their own. the German people themselves Included; und that with us rests the choice to break through nil these hypocrisies and patent cheats nnd masks of brute force and help set the world free, or else stand aside and let It be dominated u long nge through by sheer weight of arms nnd the arbitrary choices of self constituted masters, by tho nation which can maintain tho biggest armies nnd the most Irresistible armaments a power to which the world has af forded no parallel and In the faco of which political freedom must wither and perish. For us there Is but one choice. We have mndo It. Woo bo to tho man or group of men that seeks to stand In our way In this day of high resolution when every principle wo hold dearest Is to'be vindicated anil made secure for tho salvation of tho nations. We nre rendy to plead at tho bar of history, 1 und our flag shall wear u new luster. AIR RAID ON LONDON NINETY-SEVEN PERSONS KILLED AND 437 WOUNDED BY BOMBS. Ten School Children Are Slain and Fifty Injured Great Battle In Air. London, June 15. The death of 07 persons nnd the injury of 437 in yester day's air raid wus announced in tho house of .lords by the earl of Derby, secretary of state for war. The sec retary said ho feared these figures would bo exceeded when fuller reports had been received. Tho motorcar used by Vice Admiral Sims, commander of the American na val forces In European wnters, was in tho vicinity of one of tho areas which wus bombarded most henvlly. Thlfl gave rise to n report that the admiral had had a narrow escape from n'bomb, but Inter It wob leurned thnt ho was not In tho car nt the time. Tho East end of the city was bom bnrded by 15 nlrplnnes. A large num ber of British airplanes pursued the Germuns, who Hew over Essex to Lon don. The German ulrplanes nppenred over London shortly beforo noon. A grent battle occurred In the nlr. Tho In vaders were nttneked by antiaircraft guna as well us by British nvintors. A bomb struck a schoolhouse, killing ten children nnd Injuring fifty. Ono German nlrplane Is reported to havo been brought down. Tho East end of London, In which live the city's poor, suffered henvlly DEFENSE Principal Items in $3,500,000,000 Army and Navy Defi ciency Appropriation Approved by Congress. Washington, June 15. Hero nre tho Items exceeding $10,000,000 in tho $3,500,000,000 army nnd navy deficiency appropriation npproved by congress: Construction of tho mer chantmen ($750,000,000 authorized) 103,000,000 Field nnd siege guns, am munition 307,000,000 Army clothing, equipage.. 231,53S,54S Army pay, enlisted men... 220,882,500 Army trnnsportntlon 221,003,745 Army subsistence 183,020,0-10 Field nnd siege nrtillery.. 155,000,000 Army ammunition (small army) 131,048,000 Army ordnance supplies... 100,550,000 Army quartermasters sup plies 101,800,114 Army engineer operations. 04,500,000 Pay of the navy 75,503,072 Army horses 25,000,000 For procuring, producing, . reserving and handling ammunition for vessels.. 08,004,858 Machine guns 05,000,000 Army nrms manufacture 55,849,000 Army barracks 47,003,314 Airplanes nnd aviation 43,450,000 Bureau of construction and repair of naval vessels.. 57,327,340 Army pay, officers of line. 42,000.000 Army engineer equipment. 35,870,000 Bureau of steam engineer ing 34,000,500 For provisions, rations of nnvy, coast guard and lighthouse service, naval reserve force, etc 31,740,002 from the raid. Bombs fell In many congested districts, nnd, while the num ber of casualties has not been ascer tained, two hospitals report handling more than fifty enses. , REGISTRATION NOT A J ' BAR TO ENLISTMENT J ; ; t Chicago. Tho United States t ' army Is In urgent need of men. J The formation of 51 new regl- t ments offers n raro opportunity t for trnlnlng In the finest prnctl- , cal mllltnry school of the nn- , ' tlon. our army, which Is nlso the J t bnckbono of our lnnd defense. t nnd opens for the American n J t field of ndvnncemenf through , t achievement which has hereto- J 0 fore been unequaled. t ' Unmarried men between the J t ages of eighteen nnd forty can t J volunteer for service In the reg- J ular army for tho period of the J war. Men between the ages of J twenty-one nnd thirty-one who t J have registered can also enlist, J ' nnd. In my opinion, should do so t In'proferenco to awaiting the se- J lection by universal service, bo- t cause they will receive a mill- J ' tnry foundation thnt will plnce them In nn excellent position for J ' future advancement In tho great t t armies that will !. called later. ' t F. R. KENNEY. t 0 Captain Commanding District. J t Twenty Killed In Explosion. Now York, Juno 10. Twenty. work men were killed und burled undor parts of tho walls of a mixing building of the American Sugar Refining com pany's plant In Brooklyn, which wore ripped apart by nn explosion. Japan to Send a Mission. Wnshlngton, Juno 10. Japan will (tend a mission to the United States. The mission will hnvo broad powers, especially In diplomatic consultation, nnd Is expected to leave Japan during the first part of July. E DRITISH DRIVE FORCES FOES TO ABANDON POSTS FROM ST. YVES TO LYS. OFFENSIVE IS BIG SUCCESS Major General Maurice, Chief Director of Military Operations at War Of fice, Says Messlnes Battle Was Great Victor. London, June 10. Important sec tions of the Germnn front between this Lys river and St. Yves havo been abandoned by tho Germans, It was an nounced oflkiiilly on Thursday. British troops nre reported ns fol lowing the reatreatlug Germans closely nnd have made considerable progress east of Ploegsteert wood. Tho statement Is as follows: "Our further advance east of Mes slnes, combined with the pressure of our troops south of tho front of our nttack, has compelled the enemy to abandon Important sections of his llrst lino defensive system In the area be tween the River Lys nnd St. Yves. Our troops have followed up the enemy closely and have made considerable progress east of Ploegsteert wood. We also gained ground during tho nlgb In the neighborhood of Gnspard. "Wo raided enemy trenches during tho night north of Bullccourt und south of Hoogo and captured a few prisoners In ench case." COST Army gas masks nnd med ical supplies 20,780.000 For batteries, merchant ships nnd nuxlllnrles ... 29,072,000 For reserve nnd miscella neous ordnance supplies 29,200,000 Alteration nnd maintenance of mobllo artillery, In cluding purchnse and manufacturing of ma chinery therefor 25,000,000 Army pay, quartermaster's enlisted men 24.890,128 For new batteries for ships for the navy 22,333,000 For ammunition, merchant ships, nnd auxiliaries... 19,988,800 Coal and other fuel for ships. Including transpor tation 10,3(52.420 Army pny, medical corps enlisted men 18,748,900 For ordnance nnd ordnance stores, armament of ships, etc 10,905,300 Army pay medical corps of flcors 15,131,752 Sencoast cannon ammuni tion 12,255,000 Army quartermasters, Inci dental expense 8,000,000 For purchaso nnd manu facturing torpedoes and appliances 11,242,000 For nnvy nvlntlon equip ment 11.000,000 Army post sanitation 10,540,100 Small nrms, target prac tice 17,500,000 The Messlnes offenslvo wns the most successful nttack which the British have yet made, every single objectlvo that was ninrked In tho preliminary plans hnvlng been nttulncd, said MaJ. Gen. F. B. Mnurlce, chief director of military operations at the war olUce, In his weekly talk. PERSHING NOW FRANCE Big Crowds Greet American General Met by General Joffre and Other Notables. Paris, Juno 15. Major General Pershing nnd stuff have arrived In Purls. The general received a tumult uous welcome as ho proceeded through the thronged boulevard. At the sta tion he was welcomed by Marshal Joffre, Ambassador Sharp and Paul Palnleve, minister of wnr. After the greetings had taken place, the party drove In open carriages through the Grand boulevard, General Pershing riding with Minister Puln love and Mnnhul Joffro with Ambassa dor Sharp to u hotel on tho Place do Concorde, which will be the headquar ters of the American olllcers during their stay In the French capital. U. S. Cutter Sunk. Los Angeles, Cal., Juno 14. The U. S. coast guard cutter McCullough was sunk when it was rammed by tho steamship Governor oft Point Arguello. Tho crew of tho .McCullough waa res cued. Smoot Resolution Adopted. Wnshlngton, June 18. The sennto on Friday adopted the Smoot resolu tion calling on tho secretary of war to state whether the Enfield riflo has been adopted for army uso In plnce of the Springfield rifle. Liberty Bonds Above Par. New York, Juno 38. Initial trans, actions In Liberty bonds, trading In which began on the New York htock exchange nt noon Friday, were above par. A lot of $10,000 sold at par nnd 1-00. GERMANS II R TREAT SEIZE DRAFT EVADERS U. S. OFFICERS ARREST MANY SLACKERS IN COUNTRY. Two Men Convicted In Federal Courtt of Conspiracy Against Con scription Law. Wnshlngton, Juno 14. President Wilson, who now hns under considera tion the regulations for exemption from mllltury service, expects to Initiate the first drawing of names for the selective drnft about July 1, ac cording to Information obtained nt tho White House. New York, Juno 14. Louis Kramer and Morris Becker, nntlconscrlptlon Ists, who proudly acclaimed themselves nnnrchlsts opposed to all governments, were found guilty of conspiracy In the federal district court. Tho specific charge wns that tho defendants con spired to persuudo men of conscript nge not to register under the selective draft law by distributing literature nt n Socialistic meeting. Threo men who were arrested at a meeting of the No-Conscrlptlon league, where Emmrf Goldman and others de nounced tho wnr and tho urmy, were held for tho grand Jury charged with refusing to register for tho selective draft. They are Phillip Luvlne, Her man Wascow and William Hcrrguth. Milwaukee, Juno 14. Warrants were Issued for six persons who failed, to register under the selective drnft act In Milwaukee. Virginia, Minn., June 14. Nick Luonn, aged twenty-eight, nnd nn I. W. W., wns shot In the bnck here by Patrolman Pickle while running awny from arrest on a charge of being u slncker. Ho Is expected to recover. St. Paul, Minn., June 14. Edwnrd Boskl, editor of the Referendum nt Fnrlbnult, Minn., wus arrested hero by n federal agent on a charge of printing articles discouraging enlist ment. He wns Indicted by the federal' grand Jury recently. WAR TAX BILL CUT $9,000,000 Senate Finance Committee Takes Tar iff Off Athletic Goods, Patent Medicines. Wnshngton, June 10. The hous wnr tax bill wns decreased about $9, 000,000 more when tho senate finance commltteo on Thursday decided to re duce tho manufacturers' tax on ath letic goods, patent medicines, per fumeries nnd cosmetics from 5 to 2r per cent. Rates of distilled spirits, mnlt liquors, wines und soft drinks, rnfslng nn aggregate of about $100,000,000, were approved virtually as drafted by the house. The committee also ratified Its for mer tentative approval of amendments by Senator Gore of Oklahoma plnclng prohibitory taxes upon cereals used' In manufacturing dlstlllod spirits for beverage purposes and prohibiting Im portation of such beverages. Reduction of tho tnx on pntent medi cines Involves a revenuo loss of moro than $5,000,000, nnd at the new rate of 2 per cent will lncludo nbout $3,400, 000 Instead of $8,500,000. The reduction In tho rate of athletic goods will reduce prospective revenues from that source from $2,000,000 to $800,000. U. S. LINER SINKS DIVER Kroonland Rams German Submarlno While on Way Home French Liner Sunk 190 Perish. At nn Atlantic Port, June 15. De struction of a Germnn submarine by the Amerlcnn steamship Kroonlnnd wns reported by the merchantman upon her arrival In an American har bor. Her offlcors refused to discuss the encounter except to say that by agile maneuvering the Kroonlnnd managed to rnm nnd sink the U-bont shortly after two of tho underwater boats had attacked tho merchantman, one from either side. The Kroonlnnd lost a blade from her propeller. Boston, Juno 15. Tho Leylnnil liner Anglian, which left Boston May 30 for Liverpool, hns been torpedoed and sunk by a German submnrlne, ac cording to cable messages received by agents here. Paris, Juno 15. The French South Atlantic liner Sequnnn, 5,557 tons, with 550 pnsscngers on board, has been torpedoed und sunk with a loss of 190 men. NAMES ROCKFORD ARMY CAMP War Office Announces Approval of Illi nois Town as One of Canton ment Sites. Washington. June 10. The wnr de partment announced on Thursday ap proval of the following four natlonnl army cantonment sites, completing tho Irt sites to be selected: Rockford. III.; Ydphank, South Haven, L. I.: Annap olis Junction, Mil., and Petersburg, Vu. Armed British Ship Sunk. London, June 18. The British nrmed merchant cruiser Avenger was torpe doed and sunk In tho North sen on Wednesday night. All but one of tho crw were saved. Several Norweglnn ships were sunk on Friday. British Capture 00,000. London, June 18. Moro than 100, 000 prisoners hnve been taken by tho British during the war, James Ian MnePherson, parliamentary secrotary to the war office, announced on Friday In the house of commons, r A