The evening world. Newspaper, September 5, 1914, Page 1

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TINA] NIGHT page ae 3% PRICE aller eal CENT. ‘Ce. (The GERMAN CF ES rews @.onPerawss.t Dawe. Copyright, 1914, se Press Pebtishing (rhe New Wort Werta). CK) NS AD : NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1914, _|“Cireutation Books Open to All.” 10 PAGES: __ PRICE ONE CENT | MUST BE FIGHT TO A FINISH, SAY GREAT BRITAIN, FRANCE — AND RUSSIA IN AGREEMENT. GERMAN OFFICERS WATCHING ADVANCE OF THEIR TROOPS NEF POPE IS FOR DECSNE KARLSRLME oS STHRESHPS ACTION TO END THE WAR’ DISABLES A BRITISH CRUSER Benedict XV. Holds folds That Head ¢ of Church Must/Cruiser Dresden Said to Have Sunk British}over to her intact after the war. Not Merely Preach Peace, but Place Him- self Among Combatants to Gain It. ROME, Sept. 5.--It was related here to-day that in conversations before his election, Pope Benedict XV. re= peatedly expressed the necessity that the Pontiff should In- tervene with an appeal for peace, not in a purely evangelical form, but in precise diplomatic action. “The Pope,” he is quoted as saying, ‘must actually place himself amidst the combatants instead of keeping away and preaching peace and concord from a distance.” It is asserted that these ideas were expressed in the Conclave with Genoese tenacity, but at the same time show- ing such absolute neutrality toward the belligerents that it caused the majority to elect him Pontiff. Pope Benedict, according to announcement made here to-day, will hold a reception for the diplomatic envoys in Rome on Sept. 7. Pope Benedict XV. has selected Cardinal Ferrata as Papal Secretary of State. Cardinal Ferrata was the strongest candidate for the papal throne in the Conclave which ree sulted in the election of the new Pontiff, it has developed. He succeeds Cardinal Merry Del Val, who was Secretary under Pope Pius X. Cardinal Ferrata's work as Papal Nuncio at Paris and as Pretect of the Congregation of Bishops in Rome stamped him as a finished diplomat. King Albert Hurt by Shell; His Automobile Is Wrecked LONDON, Sept. 5 [Associated Press).—A despatch to the Central Nowe from Amsterdam says King Albert of Belgium was slightly injured by a @hrapnel splinter while he was heading the retreat of Belgian troops to Antwerp. A ahell exploded against tho rear wheel of the automobile in which King Albert was scatod and his car was badly damaged Earlier advices reported what was probably the same incident, but it haé not been before stated that thy King was wounded. lt was stated that ‘Dis car Aad been slightly damaged by a-wiray bit of shell. ! | Warship Glasgow—Luckless Passengers Landed on Desert Island. The first word to come up from the Caribbean concerning tne activi- tes of the elusive German cruiser Karlsruhe since her running fight with British cruisere, reported three weeks ago, was that brought to New York to-day trom two different sources telling of her victory over the British cruiser Bristol off the Haitian coast and her sinking of dhree British mer- chantmen in the Caribbean. One report) adds that the smaller German cruiser Dresden had met and sunk the British cruiser Glasgow off Co- Jombia. Some confirmation of the Karly-!she bad taken refuge from British Tuhe’a exploits come to-day trom Earners, she ona and sane the z i ristol near the coast o itt ani J. F, Whitney & Co, abipa’ brokers | el i ne mee catty we at No. $ Bridge street, who got ® Brietol was sighted In tow of another cable from the Lancasaire Shipping | British cruiser Company of Liverpoct saying that| Word that tae Dresden had en- within the week tho Karlsruhe bad|faged and sunk the British cruiser gunk the British merchantman Bowes | Glasgow was brought ty Colombian Castle, bound trom Bram to New| Porte by a) Dutch tee ia York with a curgo of nitrate of soda! and was publiahed in Cylombian pa. and had sunk her off the Britt “D | por Denial of fhe truth of this re- (sland of St. Lucia The captain, £.{ port subsequently R. Howe, the orew end all the stores; iegrwevown by the Britiah euthori+ were taken off the Lowes Castle be-| ‘that the Karlsruhe had eent to the fore she waa sent beneath the waves! bottom two merchantmen under the and the German commander of the| Britten f before sho Karlsrube exbibited a daring obal-| Bowe Castle wus also vouched lenge to the Englixi: by landing the| crews und sicrea of Bowes Castle's luckless crew Maranhao or the Islan: : The Bowes Castle, wh! tons burden, was t Report of the ot tures of tha i smatier con e two ships ac been transferred to the Karia- island mere dot in the near the port of Haran. Winssner, and gave them applies to suifice for a He promised he would fore ord of their plight to Baran. brought to that they would be rescued, sorvints aboard hibald of the Algonquin Rie ia ruerta| Maid that heen forced to put oa Be easy ‘ ero thte ‘Tuck's a Brite posae olom inn, “Colom bie 888"/ ston In the Indies, for. eral ner, whe ts a lieutenant ») ervists, | Since he had sever -nine German VA. formerly. in tiusinexe lombia,, Serviat® aboard he feared a British ene 1k bt| boarding party might take them to t és shore as prisoners and he was reads other second line mes of the German|to make a run for it rather that al: | army aboaré the Clyde liner, was}iow this to happen, But from tha} authority for this version of the| ship he could see only four white men enlecw apniiite ashore, and one of there, F. Harriott, he - came aboard ws @ passenger His Word had some ty Columbia sev-| Germans were not moleated. eral weoks et, ented through th cbanunan, was inade in| werp correspondent of the Petit Parisien wires to his paper, met the| Kaiser and the German General Staff to take both Paris After ie and Antwerp at all costs. }fuhe and they had been sunk the munication from Bordeaux, the new seat of the French | troops are much nearer Paris than t has been indicated of- ALLIES DRIVEN ACROSS MARNE & THIRTY MILES EAST OF PARIS | Kaiser Reported to Have Given an Order to Take French Capital and Antwerp at All Cost—Sends- ‘ Troops From France to the Vistula. ie LONDON, Sept. 5 (Associated Press).—Russia, France and. Great Britain to-day.signed an agreement that none of the three would make peace without the consent of all three nations. Following he text-ef-the protocol: “The undersigned, duly authorized thereto by their respective Governments, hereby declare as follows: The British, French and Russian Governments mutually engage not to conclude peace separately during the - present war. The three governments agree that when the terms of peace come to be discussed no one of the allies will demand conditions of peace without the previous agreement of each of the other allies. “In falth whereof the undersigned have signed this declaration and have affixed thereto their seals. “Done at London in triplicate this fifth day of September, nineteen hundred and fourteen. “E, GREY (British Secretary for Foreign Affairs.) “PAUL CAMBON (French Ambassador to Great Britain.) “BECKENDORFF (Russian Ambassador to Great Britain.]” LONDON, Sept. 5 [United Press]—It is believed here that the agreement signed faee will serve to permit France and England to have the final say in any peace negotiations, should the German armed forces be crushed. It has been suggested that Russia might demand that Austria-Hungary be turned Now, it will be possible for England, trading with France on the one hand and Russia on the other, to insist on a basis of settlement: taat will not disturb the balance of Europe in the future. The signing of the above compact can only mean that the war is to be prolonged until each of the nations j party to it has exhausted all of its resources. Already the public in England and France are being educated up to the idea that Paris may fall into the hands of the Germans, All accounts agree that the moment is approaching swiftly when the French capital must have resort te its own defenses. Despite occasional temporary successes of the allies, their lines appear to be slowly sivieg ground before the German advance. The Germans in the form of a semi-circle seem to have reached points east and west of Paris, their left wing touching La Ferte-Sous-Jouarre, in the Department of Seine-et-Marne. This situation may have hastened the agreement signed to-day. ALLIED FORCES ARE NOW REPORTED 10 BE IN GRAVE DANGER BORDEAUX, France, Sept. 5 (United Press), The Ant-|ficially; they are said to be within a few miles of Chantitty, |twenty miles north of the capital. The official information bureau announced that a German squadron had sunk fifteen British fishing beats in the North Sea, ‘ PARIS, Sept. 5 [Associated Press].—An official announge= ment says: “The enemy Is pursing his * * * movement. He com tinues to leave the entrenched camp of Paris on his et and to march in a southeast direction.” (One - ‘ord, the omission of which from the French official state ment is Indicated by asterieks, was evidently confused in trase mission. It appears most likely to have been meant for “coavesg~ ing.) Five German army corps have arrived at the Vi: River, according to the Rome correspondent of the Matin. These corps are mostly from Belgium and the of France, the correspondent says, and were brought up oppose the advance of the Russians. [This might mean that the Germans are eo well satistied with their position that they can afford to withdraw troops, but an J@se clated Preas Gespateh from London says the news is not credited there because, with thelr eupreme effort im the west en. now being published here, that German officers who have been taken prisoners declare that it is the intention of the LONDON, Sept. 5 [Associated Press|.-An official com- Government, speaks of the German movement on Paris as having been diverted to the eastward, in which direction the invaders have reached La Ferte-Sous-Jouarre, some thirty miles east of Paris. This would scem to confirm the German announcement that the allied forces have been driven to and in some cases across the River Marne. According to other sources of information, the German The Evening World will ™\be published as usual on Monday, Labor Day.

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