The evening world. Newspaper, September 12, 1914, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| MENACE OF ZEPPELINS KEEPS OSTEND TERROR-STRIC, This photograph arrited by steamer to-day and in one of the resorted almost, exclusively to the steel in the recent Qebting. Their) first taken at the front showing soldiers of the Allien in action PARIS, Sept, 12.—The majoriiy of the wounded Germans being brought TODRAW GERMAN FROM INDIA IN ‘a IS THE HORROR (}f Ik PEL . on the field. here are suffering from bayonet wounds. They declare the British heve methods are to ebell the German trenches at length, utilizing all of thetr! RIGHT INTO A NET ‘ ; : i artiery, Thon the ontire British tine charges, | —-—— ¢ —_—_ , | ‘The majority of the Germans admit they have been unable to with-| Kroonland Sails From This _ mand the ferocity of these attacks, describing the British as wild mon who | bY refuse to be checked even with shrapnel, Hapectally territying are pe-|War Critics Say Gen. von Ktuk! Port With Colonial Patriots Ported to be the Irish and Scotch regiments. The rival between these two Saved His Advancing Army Rationalition tn acute, and every time that a Scotch coluinn distinguishes ~ Htaelf the Irish can be depended on to attempt to eclipte it at the next by Discovery. opportunity. nd! muaee their way to Correspondent Tells of Arriving in Ostend at Night and Finding the Whole City Shivering With Fear. | NEWEST CHILL FOR HUMANITY |°"*irie ‘are chasing the Germana "rence! y FFRE PLANED | 2 Ts Who Wil Eniist, By William G. Shepherd. | OSTEND, Belgium, Aug. 29. (Hy Mall to United Press.)—The new fear : is on Ostend. The streets are pitch dark, although it {s early evening, | Throughout the night there is the blink, blink, blink of signal lights and | the tramp, trhmp, tramp of soldiers’ feet. treal, Stand out in the middio the; comet four years ago with some-| there street. Took up at the star. in the] {hing of the wame feeling, But thin ." ‘ eae ing is atron; We aron’t all of blue, soft night eky and you'll under-|un sure that t are ‘comets that tyne stand what this new fear ix, S.and| might hit us a bring the world to out there with the hundreds of m: :, that fee ee y' oe nee, m bts Women and chitdren and watch tho 4a re Zeppelin and that they rop bombs that may bring our own night sky with them ond suddenly particular world t {twill come to you like an awful fog ¢ world to an end in one shock—the Zeppelin chill. [t's the ait, Pyreed about the dark! newest human worry; the latest mode | Streets of this once gayest shore re- fm terrors; the twentioth century /Sort of Europe, The palatial hotels were dead dark. Passl blood icer. And it is, ns George the main strect t heard strange ute ecard stra Cohan might say, SOME worr, — |dued nounda and suddeniy diseovercd | I felt it firnt at 9 o'clock this eve. jit = ine vananed whispering in the! ming when our boat from England — ness of scores of men and wo mn seated at the little @rew up at the magnificent Ostend /tabies under the cate eanopk at i The Kroontand carried forty-fv frst cabin passengers, fifty-six ies. @oek, in total darkness, Men withjora were feeling their way about, lanterns lighted the ways of passen-| Serving drinks ns best they could un- gers and porters, took ‘a. seat anid the ahiessring | ie “We don’t want anybody in the eky ree, ~ sid | te see our lights,” a marine explained.| 1 heard the word “Zeppelin” whis- A whole city trying to hide iteelt from | Pered At every hand Bomething that might be sipped about be here to fant t Zeppel up among the stars! The impossi-| pe! one voice nearby. | “Yes,” returned another whisper, | binty of 0 aity Sertrnd such @ thiNg | wput the Zeppelina have gun deeker oy | top of the gas > and carry H “The Zeppelins have been throwing great rifles.” wnat’ chance eee ah | abe dike @ bat- sixty miles ta only a litte over en| "Wale all this whispering was Sour'e run for « Zeppelin.” ing on I au Fecalled how proud. I feoked up at the stars. Was|!y wo twentii century folk bad every one of then sbining? Or were | ticned Zeppelin in hip every move me of them hidden by the black Of conawaritg ibe as. ut “aftr al a . shoes Guards, Scere = ees erreats HERDESPROMOTED (Belgians, Flooding Dikes, |72000 ANERGANS (Sez Setee es [p tn if Wurtem! and Saxony tnd ibe, Crown Trine fe it with the Tho audacious commander of the|¢héir trapper packe and thelr rifles German right wing, surprised by the! ang snow shoes, which they carried jreatatance of the Allles at Guise and rn their backs, Compeigne, wan rendered cautious and i over ‘They said ust have discovered’the presence of | they were spending their last pennies je army of Paris on hie flank, to reach London to enlist, jowed hia resourcefulnee by © aharP| They ought to take us. Either one of us can hit a German between the eyes at 600 yards and never miss,” one remarked. Mine Grace Martin and Miss Isavel Baker of Winnipes, trained nurses Lendon ia} who had volunteered to the Red Cross by (ys toma the war became block ride through the dark| then be awake, for it's hard to believe received “Ene bonses that even the good God can ee ON BATTLEFIELD | tents cor mane, in Trap HAVELEFTLONDON has gone to the front to direct the/ ba recovered by the Belgians. freak army ef Ralsiks troops, who ary assuming tha} Tene Bad bees serious fighting tn SINCE WAR BEGAN 1300 AMERICANS SAIL BY FRENCH CHIEF: pire Reve toed sorstaied Eaploesn bygr pole fia latter place the Ger. FROM ROTTERDAM; MANY . —_—— —— QRAMANS ACCUSED WHAT THE DOM.DUM. oto SW genta Tce-tae ites cna| innea (he macoas ata Se bates ie IN EMERGENCY CABINS|nenca oF tee pont BULLET J8 AND WRY Napoleonic Times Recalled the flooding of the lowlands ware Sanding” in” "adaition, the’ ne Eight ‘Liners Full of Refugees ROTTERDAM (via London, sept.| BRITISH SEIZE |. AMD USING DUM- ("00 18 FORD ODEN |e eee Guten td ag. | Zoe, Sods chanéening their arti-| ing Siosees were takes’ pelosesre ang Leave To-Day—Still Others |#s=* salied trom hare tor New verk|. SOLOMAN. ISLANDS. OFF... VEEROGRAD (6t, Potervoure),|| ‘The town of Dux Dum, in Brit- y - Honors erred @S | ery, which waa completely mired. At The provinces ct Antwerp and Lim- y tele marning on the sreamer Meuw COAST OF AUSTRALIA. Gept. 18-—Wounded oficers whe Bave | ish India, is . slited with orisi- Troops Look On. many points the gunners bourg are now reported entirely clear to Come. Assatercems, ie tot! Snopsaden te ——- Bating the soft-nosed bullets that bave figured in protests from both sides in the European war. The second Hague conference declared thelr use uncivilized, ‘The invention of the dum-dam bullet is sald to have been due to fanatical charges by native treeps who in their tr.nsy were insenaible or indifferent to the clean wounds of other types of miasiles. The ef- fectiveness of the dum-dum is due to the mushrooming of the blunt, soft lead nose, which is not pro- tected by steel jackets as are modera types of bullets. The origina! dum-dum had a Point of lead against a hard jJack- et, and when it hit, the soft iead expanded into the shape of a mushroom. A newer type was Jead covered, with except for a tiny ho! t Ite point. This hole communicated with a little channel penctrating the lead traces of their horses and of the enemy. It is reported here that 12 te eacape, leaving guns, ammunition] strong British detachments have are in the first cabin, 616 in the gec- Prese).—The Admiralty announced bala pele ‘of all sorts in| moved rt fro: ond and the rest in the steerage, thie afternoon’ that the British Paci- LONDON, Sept. 12.—A despatch to th ser Lyng ip haley were h moving} LONDON, Sept. 12—With the de- Among thd passengers are Mire. fle fleet has oceupied Her! tbe Exchange Telegraph from Bor-|*h¢ water. id south to the ald of the German right! parture for America on eight boate| Henry van Dyke, wite of the Amer-| on wench Bay, the neat er drowned, #0 fast was the onrush of| wing, which is in serious difficulties on yy, the seat of govern- _ Geaux says that Arthur Maginot, whol the water. ‘The dike gates have HOW. to the wort of Prin taney one of which Ia the Lust-| {can Miatater at The Hegue, and al mont of the German Blomercht aris was Under Secretary of War in the tanta, all of them full, and inajuding | P&*ty Composed of her daughter, M pelago and the Soloman Islands. , cabinet of Louls Barthou and was one 1.200 \atoerage passengers, HL ©. | Catherine van Dyke, the Rev, Tertius |" rn6 oficial Presa Bureau gave out |of the promoters of the three years’ yan Dyke, Mr. Van Santvoord, Merle e Hoover, Chairman of the committee the following statement: “A telegram military service law, has just been Bel ian Bo of Seventeen of resident Americans, estimated to- | 9% has been received from Rear-Admiral Promoted to he an officer for bravery day that 73,000, peraons have left Lon. 0. Sir George P. Patsy, commanding 4 in action. He has been serving !.. the don for America since the war began, Rappard, the Dutch Avoteation Avy, \ Aannanes e army as a private. Re di. d fe Hi Of that number 16,000 left this week. | Washington, Mr. and Mrs. August During a recent engagement in a war e or eroism During the week 5,000 refugees ar-| Busch of @t. Louls, and large party. French village, the despatch says, OSTEND, Sept. 2 (By mail to the/toward the Germans. The other Bel-|:ved from the Continent, most of| The vessel carries Maginot at the bead of several sol- United Press, New York.)—On & cot/gians rallied and threw themselves|tbem absolutely destitute, Consider- dters rushed in and put to Gight a de-!in the Red Cross Hospital bere {#/upon the ublas. ‘Within a few min- | &t:y more than $100,000 has been paid tachment of Germans, He was pro-|one of the heroes of the war, Serst.|utes only Van der Bern and tw] Ut for their relief. The total number moted in front «. his troops and com-|Vvan der Bern of the Belgian army,|others of his command remained.| Who received fuancial assistance in Plimented by his cofonel, who kiseed! only seventeen years old. He was wae eee? were dead o we fora sine the metonina. st wee him on both cheeks, Maginot is one corporal when he started with twe: the Corporal’ Gh. war 680, of which number of the best swordsmen in France, ty-nine men on a@ reconnoitring ox- ace Sounieae “the he mgas boy |celved assistar.:e during the las BRITISH MAIL STEAMER Albert Palaphy, a young corporal, | pedition, during which he was wound: | picked them up and, displaying ai.| week. FEARS GERMAN CRUISER has been made a@ chevalier of the/ed, but he Gisplayed such valor that|/™ost superhuman strength, carried| “This is the hardest week since the oe Lesion of Honor and promoted to &/hin bravory was publicly related to|iie™, Jose tn gaa he Was MAKING | work of the committes bewan,” sald OFF CALIFORNIA COAST. Ageregates about 1,660, of whom 763 LONDON, sept. Russian auth: tl mare established the use by Ger “4 G@estrise Attack Said te Be Checked. PARIG, Sept. 12--An official state- meat issued to-night says: “The Austrian army which was de- tented at Lemberg has not been ab'e © gaveme the offensive, and in apite s@t heavy reinforcements it is being sub-leutenant for his bravery. In|all the soldiers and he was promoted. wounded men, Van der Bern was hit| Mf Hoover. “It has been impossible Foppleed. Qn the front between Ja-|1 for about a third its length, and || the thick of the battle the brigadier,| Van der Bern and his little com-|twice by German bullets. He stag. Bie Cormanetteae neat ae t"} gat Baws and onal ee when the bullet entered @ soft, || finding his colonel wounded and help- | mand came suddenly upon @ band of SE, the, Pences ble Hep, in charge walt until meas ween ‘end there inue belatecrne Gredek. ‘The second || moist Body the compression of air || Jee, rushed to his ald. Palaphy/fifty uhlans. Outnumbered, his men Walked to i elle ad pty wapertad chance for better tham steerage ac- nal t army hes been attacked|| in the channel caused the lead ang hoisted the injured man upon his|turned and fied. The Corporal|the engagement. Then he fell in a OORT NON applicants ar t Beltain in Shes, Gorman New massow and has com-|{ its bard casing to expand and || shoulders, and under a rain of ma-|shouted to them and dashed alone tuint. half needed not only pa apron juinea ie included in the to retreat. cause a frightful wound. chine gua bullets carried the colonel clothes, and we have succeeded in at- Rare ey ap armor tending to all, applications, ‘but the | harp MINNETONKA CARRI Gepmens Claim Victory at Lick, Gately’ to fhe Wreach lines, seat sub-committes Bect Pruscia. LONDON, Set Tie-A Reuter de. |GERMANS, DRIVEN BACK = |oncpeanc™” "Et * §| Comma Retreat Over Marne diy ted some nits i a ONLY 14 IN SALOON patch from Berlin says: FROM TERMONDE, SACK Beople who came in were American saa guerra aman army| AND BURN THE TOWN. |Siasseur ites naam ces! = AL Declared to Be a Rout |isiz i Pesce i, oswitacs cet ued against the Gaara, to find out what was required.” Corpo of Fintand hae tried to foree "| LONDON, Sept, da—A despateh hove standard he himself captured " « Metewees| DECORATIONS FOR BRAVE on aw defeated ac | fom Ostend, Belgium, to Reuter’s| Wounded by a» bd —Forty German prisoners, all wound-| Aviator Captain George Bellenger Caeen nn Wore Sood Telegram Company saye: pig Pe ce cae ecteese Sul eke od by bayonet thrusts, have arrived floally gave the exact location of the tenets isiies left poet J CONDUCT IM THE FIELD. je in East Prussia on Lake| “A severe engagement took place| thrusts, he was removed from the| bere and give a hint of how the Ger-| German batteries and soon thereafter ww York to-day with 3 Americans =r ‘ five miles South of Gum-| yesterday in the neighborhood of| battlefield in. the might. Then be| mare uttered im cmele retewat acrona| Wey were annihilated by: the Fees, er ae ncading Dr. Rawerd Hoane| BORDEAUX, Sept. 12.—It was an PARIS, Sept. 12 (Associated Presa). | cessation. Antilles Takes em 8-inch guns. Then came the rout, ac- nounced to-day that Gens. Manoury Ciunes. = Grembergen and Termonde, Belgium, | Ms ublieutenant and’ nominee | the Rivers Oureq and Marne. It ap-| sien Une. Then came the rout, ac ford Deaah, Mary Grace | Black, | oes" Duvall hove. beam doarrabed ohh GERMANS’ CAVALRY The Germans beat @ hasty retreat, | cbevallor in the Legion of Honor, "| pears that the German force sent to| ‘The Germans, pursued at the point | Sire, Cleveland, Johann Hottman, |the «reat eross of the Legion leaving thirty prisoners behind, ‘This incident of decorating a soldier| that region to face the Paris army of Boe sas hc Sromeed the Ourcq in} Mrs. Eva. Loer, Mrs. Ruth Harden, | for hegole, work tn the tela (S$ ALL DESTROYED, “Before departing from Termonde|on tbe battlefield recalls Napoleonic| protecting the flank of the allies was tom, cloaks, “hnapenske an men wie, B. Cowie, William fen age, bon peace. SAYS CORRESPONDENT, |‘%® Germans pillaged and destroyed | times. an important one and had been| ridges, Fioree and family, Elizabeth J. Gatos | °° *|the town, Out of 1,400 houses 1,100 EXECUTIONS IN AUSTRIA strongly intrenched. The losses of the Germans w..o way, all of New York; Charles Diet- LoNpon, wept, 3. —The corres. |*7* in ashes, and the works of art and When Gen. Joffre, the French com-|terrible and this point of the valley rich, Mrs. and the Misses Conway of 9 adent of the Daily Telegraph wines |Ristorical memorials have been en-| FOLLOW BLOW UP ervin-ohlet, ordered an attac,| $f ie oureg dngatll covered with Chicago: Mia Hope “Coumnia here | oe 5Q Years the World’s Pe from the front: kes A psgeive paved bal aed ent y-d OF BARRACKS BY BOMB,|® fierce ongesement of artiiery| “Phe French also’ suffered serious hy of romans rmans Maine; John H. Tone and fam “ , opened and lasted two days without casualties, but mostly in wounded. ‘ H. Lannon of Bo ive iat remnants of the German’ |e Mave Deen taken Praoners and 2 ° Liver and Bowel Re cavalry have been destroyed and a ROMB, Sept. 12 (via London).—A tele- “ f ‘ large part of thelr mobile artillery | gucg inte the ans nave been pur and ammunition trains have been ~ ° oer If you want to feel young and full of ‘surrounding | STA from Trieste to the Resto det Car- British Fleet to Strike NAMUR PAPER GIVES vigor be sure and your Liver and Seen ‘Same au." sot their sank] Ora on te the mecnange ‘Se: LIST OF KILLED AND | Bewols in good condition, ; - , If Turkey Ent Wi HOUSES DESTROYED.| Nothing so safe, so. certain or so] Capra a eret to Berlin which ace tee pe hse ag pa it ts reported that bombs wi ur ey n ers ar the tly satisfying as Carter's Little hyrau tooarae es tare toetae patel ©} | man army corpe, which 1s marching to the barracks, which wi ROME, Sept. 12.—According to the Tribuna, if Turkey goes to war in nce ae eemee Mention bs Bhan Fiver Pille. Purely vegetable. LITTLE We are badly in need of borses| toward France. An engagement bas aid of Germany and Austria, England is ready to break her naval strength which is now published under German Millions of , old, ung and ‘ and aupplies.” eran Rc t talpe piege ae ia anh Wak of ye at once. The Greek Government, the Tribuna says, has given England per- | censorship, bare wn pean reeetees bere middle age, take t for bili é l IVER 4 whit Mae ereeret who sient in an peeve ty Poesia er . _ mission to establish a naval base on the Island of Lemnos, which 1s only eae eye aedenes ‘and the. civiilane| dizziness, sick che, upset stomach i _— to one of his aides: ‘A great dis-/ ‘The Germans are said to have com-| CONDITION OF KAISER’S forty miles from the entrance to the Dardanelles. The British Mediterra- | puis adjacent towns and vilages, as| and for sallow, pimply and blotchy skin. PILLS iy i oe over aren Bee aviation | Binal, avacusies, (ch Ler] eae YOUNGEST SON Is nean fleet is reported as already in that neighborbood, and if Turkey enters | follows: LJ ’ scouting corps remarked: ‘It will be| Many German goldier: a miracle if any of these Germana| their units are being mi get home agali eir only anxiety | in the environs of Termonde. now ts to increase the distance be-| It is officially announced at Ant- tween themselves and their'pursuers.’; werp that the town of Waereghe: “ can be no doubt that the|in the Belgian province of crt Fi tide bas turned in the allies’ favor. | ders, bombarded by the Ge rday for thirty minu ud} There were po casualties, and only rn | few Sawa were destroyed by *: German the fight it will probably strike immediately. Tamines, 100 hou and 80 killed; shed fra REPORTED SERIOUS. This is valet be the real reason why the British fleet has not been oa + a gr gy till Al os active in the Adriatic, The French squadron has been left to ald tho |i Rouen and’ 2 illeds Bt Gerard, 36 ,| Montenegrins in their attempt to take Cattaro, while the British powerful |Peuss; <orer #8 flouses and the, town | battle cruisers have been sent to @ atragetical position where they can pre- | Her menten gars ne er Ae Rouses:, + #0 houses: M 16 houses; Cie juz, =| vent Turkey doing any damage by water to the interests of the allies or to etre Ee persone: 8 Greece, which will enter the war immediately as England's ally if Turkey in, ‘i aighte, many bowses! Werre, auany

Other pages from this issue: