The evening world. Newspaper, September 14, 1914, Page 3

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WS Of BSH HEROS | Pa = cas seer as TO. THE ARLE DIRS READY NOW FOR RETURE ~ REPORTED BY GEN. FRENCH Instance of German Chivalry While On Retreat —Gen. Joffre Joins in Praise of English Aviators to Lord Kitchner. Also Has 500,000 Fresh Troops for the Front Correspondent in Field Tells of Battles and Burials. LONDON, Sept. 14 (Associated Press).—The Official Press Bureau (s- »:@ued 9 statement this afternoon compiled from information sent from the “Headquarters of Field Marshal Sir John French, under date of Sept. 11. “The items of principal interest are the following: {01 Friday, Sept. 4, it became apparent that there was an alteration in ‘the advance of almost the whole of the First Germany Army. They were evidently executing what amounted to a fank march diagonally across our front. Prepared to ignore the British as being driven out of the fight, they were Initiating an effort to attack the left flank of the main French Ariny, en “whjch stretched {n a long curved line from our right toward the east, and so to carry out against it alone an envelopment which had so far failed gainst the combined forces of the al “Saturday* the Sth, large advance¢————___ _ Parties crovsed the Marne southward | ony were left, both of them being at Trilport, Sammeron, La Ferte-lous-| wounded, The Germans came up and Joubrre and Chateau Thierry. There] shouted to them: ‘Lay down pee | BY WILLIAM PHILLIP SIMS. PARIS, Sept. 14 (United Press)—Gen. Gallieni, Military Governor of Paris, to-day notified Minister of War Millerand Parts may be made the capital again at any time. An official decree retransferring it is looked for in the very near future. Meanwhilo Gen. Gallien! fe sending the majority of his army of the | defense of Paris, 600,000 men, to reinforce the French forces now fighting desperately to drive the Germans back across the eastern frontier. They. are no longer needed here. They have been tried and found the wonderfal fighters their officers previously announced them to be. “1 have returned to-day from &—— complete inspection of the front IN |tained very close to the fighting line. the neighborhood of Meaux-Chateau | Not a single moment is lost in moving Thierry and Solssons, and, from close — fiPpiies Ammunition a Inspection and acrutiny of the official ~ ply reports, France is furnishing the en- apere and sang while awaltei tire world one of its greatest ir to mo rward to the at Solssons hi prises by the extent to which the lantly sacrificed the comforts and *ipench Filth Army on the Preach lef | arte’ ,THe German commander, how. ste Sis trlesspuad aver toe German lateasive | Seton Ih clas to nresl ee SEIbK fai Wace trea teu POMGHE MONTE [STS signed to them to keep their 7 & REGIMENT OF CANADIAN INFANTRY CROSSING JACQUES CARTIER RIVER a rf tions, ing the fleld operations with ambu- h arms and then asked permission to UNCRRWOOD AND UNDunwoon a organisa’ arti. |!88ce" and nurses. They were kept of the Marie toward the Seine, shake hands with the wounded nen- : When t reached Solssons an artil- lfar in the rear, and the wounded eee"On Sunday large hostile forces) commissioner officer, who was carried I! lery duel was in progress, The oDp-| were taken kK in such vehicles as ‘efossed the Marne and pushed On| of on his stretcher. ith bis rife & ter a heated argument he did so. possibility that Germany might b@| posing batteries were well concealed {Could be pro: into service. Every: through Coulommiers and past the! nis side, w 8 rifle by The next day he brought a troop of able to make individual terms that] behind the hills that nestle around | Tne rae the ela” telenean Tae British right further to the east. They} “Ong of the feat et soldiers and burned the chateau to would permit her t) retain her present! the town, The French artillery WaS|telephone system keeping the com were attacked nt night by the French] 59, “pipe ie be oo the ground satus, posted on the heights south of the/manding officer at all times in touch PA Army, which captured thiee Vil-| coe ca cre, ne nae beet the see: “ : France wants Alsaco-Lorraine| town, ‘The Germans were over a! With every section of the feld. { vy 6 agent, cess obtained by the royal flying ‘A doctor from Malines relates Dick: MAA WH 16: Che @ndrmnbdb tie Looe” wed in| ..The Proverbially stolid Bri om. lages at the point of the bayonet. corps. In regard to the collection of that he had his whole family hidden mile away, their guns maal cers are being outdone In cvoiness by “On Monday, Sept. 7, there was 8] intormation it i demaity of $1,000,000,000 that Bl} clumps of woodland. The German| the French commanders, whose con- general advancé on the part of the ‘mation it is impossible either to | {u @ cesspool, thinking they would marck wrung from her in 1871, But guns alternated a rain \f concussion | fidence in the offensive possibliitios of he Germans began to re- sive too much praise to our aviators ] be safe there. A German officer even though that were offered her titery and| ‘26 French army. is superb, allies, and the Germi 6 for the way they have carried out . shells on the French ar:illery At Soissons, after the Germans tire towards the northeast. This wae| i.) 0g opened the trap and shot one after |by Gormany right now sho could Bot! sirapnel on the Frensh infantry toned their position, f counted die frat sign that these troops had| el Gutles OF to overestimate the/ another. One only, wounded, es- accept, as Lnygland ang Hussia have! aicned under th rt of their| 145 used shells about a disabied Ger- turned back since thelr attack at) Value of the Intelligence collected, caped. tied hor hands. ‘The same is true|pienes Under the suppo man gun, This shows the rapidley of 4 more es; ui - “ Mons © fortnight before. From ete ee eee iene oe sneee trou ‘Count Polo de Borehgrave, Burgo- of any -suggestion that might .0®) "ang quel started at sunrise on Bun-| "hens ang ters found on dead soldiers there 1s no} (n° ‘ a Shasies!ek Wismall village te Lines i made acceptabie to Russla or £0g-| aay and continued throughout the| poet geen, Menux, and, Bolmecme Hdl tad inkl che dartehorerh ee Pinon aria wes eae Sept. 3 English Society Woman) province, was tied with ropes to «| Officials Say Propo Proposals to That MVASHINGTON, Sept. 14—United| purating anrapnel shells In & wagle ammunition that shad’ Sonn exponged = Among the enemy's troops that they |, pic marshal Lord Kitchener: Gathers Evidence of Out- |oard. fogged and then thrown on End Would Not Be States Ambassador Gerard, at Herlin,| minute, indicating the flerceness of| ang abandoned. ‘Th seth peptic a “Pl xpress most particularl: athers Evidence of Oute |. dung hea. His wite recognized bas made no report to the Wasning-| the Gormun fire. Severad of the! iittered with Germa: "On ‘ ssday, Sept. 8 the German Pak ae (atane ie ihe , ; pore sini ton Government with reference to] houses in Solasona proper were set| impedimenta, which movement. noriheastward. wad con- to Marshal French my thanks for the rages in Belgium. prince who married a Belgian prin- Received. the inatructions sent him aimost al on fire by bursting shells, but there| cipitate had been the (el battle between the French Sixth|the English fying corps. The preci- outrage. She threw herself at his! erm q to di terms of the German fire on Nar eed Theol LONDON, Sept. 16 (Caited Prom — [Prepared 1, clog, terme of pence the Germ cat tn tt|[__ Established 82 Years Army, and what was now the German | %0n - behtrant ee bagel the] LONDON, Sept. 14 (Central News).| fect, and he w we | news brought in by its members are % | 3 ved by the State Depart-| had taken rerug flank guard along the Ourcq con. avideahe of thile gertaek ce ganteation —A4 society woman in England be) husband's life. British officials are amazed by sugges- Dee: es Mery y. vee Sorat Me | Bee Pout OF hard Beg ! tinued, and the igen bales crossed land. Also of the pertect tathieg of |!onging to a well known Belgian “I have incontrovertible evidence !tions that the United States wants to direct or ne eG Sount von Hera: attributable the fact “that there were ts ti t t rmans, i} be rious the Marne in pursult of the Ge: fee pilots and the observers, family, the wife of an English f countless other outrages too hor-| propose a compromise for the tmme-|storff, the German Ambassador to the | ny. ne omnes. induced to save her who now were hastily retreating United States, relative to Germany’s| The French gun crews were abso- “To give a rough idea of the ible or disgusting to relate.” @tate ending of the war. It is felt that | UNIt se to discuss mediation for|lutely unaffected by the fre and the northward. On Thursday, Sept. 10, colonel, transmits the following re- —— Infantry and were very cheerful. The the French Sixth Army continued its|#mount of work carried out it ts euf- the position of the allies must be great- | peace. the French Algerian troo) Company {pressure on the west, while the Fifth ficient to mention that during p|™arkable detalles of German) PARISIANS RUSH TO ly misunderstood if It ts believed any | Latil some reply Is recelved to Mr, Turcos (une Trench Algerian, troops) ‘Army, by forced marches, and our{eriod of twenty days up to Sept. 10, | atrocities: BATTLE FIELDS OF peace proposal would be received at| Bryan's inquiry the hands of the the orders finally camo to chi ve. ap. drove forward recklessly, ! ’ troops also continued the pursuit,,% “ally average of more than nine/ “I've been working among the this time. Washington Government will be ted after a considerable amount of fight-|Teconnaissance flights of over 109 | eats eehintas liad have dnt ¢ MARNE FOR SOUVENIRS| ‘The Times to-day, commenting on| go far as further efforts at mediation Wushier Finns over the mound, of 104 W. 17th St * ing capturing some 1,600 prisoners,|™iles each has been maintained. The j lee ck G ma eot ie the henge ise ee eee only Deace| ate concerned. This Is 20 because to be « desire to outatrip the French 106 e e - t at hine guns and fifty | tactics adopted for dealing with hos-|S0Me amazing stories of German| PARIS, Se (Associated Press)—| concluded in Berlin and the dispersa! Fi and Tegulars in the charge. dle Peeples Yleite air craft are to attack them in- cruelty which are fully verified, {Certain parts of the feld of the battle| of the German fleet will be acceptable from Great Britain, France fhe French army organization 16|1 Duofold Parlor Bed sia President Wilson compact and efficient, The cavalry, |stantly with one or more British ma-| of Marne, in the Department of the| to the British people. It declares that : any of the enemy were killed oF Chines, “This has been so far euc.| “M: David, one of the most im- Oise, were objects of a veritable pll-| any oficial who vould consent to any (ceived advices that the allles.are not infantry, artillery and supply trains Wounded, and the numerous thick cesstul that in five cases German grimage Sunday, The suburban trains ready to talk peace except on their “ork polly In close formation with woods which dot the country norta|ptiots or observers have been shot |POrtant men of Louvain, the father Ori Northern Railroad carried great aias vital has Seay hese ae ps aa cog ahh wes! Be cileiaent ohh tual onal vensttat of the Marne were filled with Germaa| While in the air and their machines |of Minister Descamp David, treated | numbers of sightseers, most of whom | Withstand the upheaval of popular Latin temperament was nowhere in brought to ground. As a conse- . disapproval. tmpossible for Germany to accept. . so far as L could nee. The stragglers, Most of them appear to auence, the British Aying corps has |the Germans with every care, He returned with souvenira of the great} "7 et tote een the allies ffivora were cooly fraternising with a... © t | suc have been without food for at least succeeded in establishing an In-| gave them the best of his wine and From 8 o'clock to midnight Sunday,| that peace would be concluded only that th di overseeing their food and two days. Indeed, in this area of the dividual ascendancy which Is operations, the Germans seemed to|viceablo tous as it 1s damaging to|was promised that all of his fauiily |‘ trains brought Into the Northern sta-|t/ an agreement satisfactory to all,| that it may fie ar ‘enough to the enemy.” C Zouaves, and in-| ended for all time, officials say, the; be demoralized and inclined to sur- SHEET would be well treated. The next day | thutaiese wdaaed fears AUX, Lsalalied render in small parties. @ horse was found dead at his door,| The souvenirs brought from the bat- “Much brutal and senseless damage GERMANS DESTROYED Uefield consisted of helmets, fragments has been done in the villages occu-| CONVENT, COLLEGE AND | Ts was sufficient excuse and the] of ghelts und cartridges, weapons, pen- led by the enemy. Property has been |Germans rushed in and killed David | nants and equipment. All who visited only destroyed, Pictures in cha- BANK IN TERMONDE. | ; ‘the. battlefield were ‘enthusiastic over . and his son, removed a few stones in : teaus have been ripped up and oem teed | | the evidence they had seen of their 4 «j,|_AMSTERDAM, Sept. 14 (Central|the yard, and buried them. countrymen’s victory. They sald, how- Houses generally have been pillage, News).—A Central News correspondent, Lt the battiefleld: ull a It ta stated on unimpeachable author- | Sitar visiting ‘Termonde, reporte great, “ME TOFFeau, a professor in Lou-|cver \nRt the basuenelde Ark All © ‘tty ‘also its, fun stant have | damage done by the Germans in that | vain University, and his wife were French and Germans, shattered by shell been much Ill-treated. city, The convent of tho Sisters of ; au was | Wounds, are lying thick along the roads “Interesting incidents have occurred| gt, Vincent de Paul on Rue d 1'q- |*!mUArly treated. Mme, Torreau was tee ines. @uring the fighting. On Sept. 10 part) lise was burned, The Banque de | confined with childbirth the previous | Stray German soldiers, suffering from of our Second Army Corps, advancing | Franco was destroyed by the unsuc-| day, and she hid in the cellar with | hunger. are still being brought tnto {rito the north, found itself marching| cessful efforts of the Germans to blow | Meaux. One British soldier Sunday peralicl with another infantry force.| Pen. the sal len. The Bishops’ College, her child and her husband. The Ger-} afternoon brought In five Germans who e hospital, the Or institute, the : At first it was thought this was an- Senvent de Pauvres Mairos and’ the |mans dragged them out and shot | seemed to be willing captives, ————.—_—_ ether British unit, After some time, | tn, Hall were, uation aad Se, ciites’s | Torreau dead before the eyes of his however, it was discovered that it was| Church | were heavily bombarded. . . 40,000 AMERICANS | belong to. friends. of the | Wife, who has since died from the| @ body of Germans retreating, Mens. | (ernans were indicated by chalk marks | shock, | STILL IN EUROPE CAN ures promptly were taken to head off! on the doors and were spared, . ‘the enemy, who were surrounded and| Many fugitives have returned to Ter-| “34, Bosman, a solicitor, had somo, | GET HOME WITHIN MONTH trapped in a sunken road, where over | ™onde from Ghent and Antwerp. \ f, Will viii Vauiatinnuadalt r= Extension Table 4 Leather Chairs 1 400 men surrendered. . German officers quartered in his | WASHINGTON, Bept. 1 SS “On Sept. 10 a small party under a|REPORTS ATROCITIES house. He, his mother, aged elghty- | [thousand Americans remaining in | Rugs—Draperics | Ee e ransportation nontcommissioned officer was cut off two years, and his children were all; Europe all can ge 4 and surrounded, After a desperate COMMITTED AGAINST thrown out of the window during; Home within @ month. seine 2 room uttit resistance It was decided to go on GERMAN WOUNDED. |the night, all of them stripped naked | \ariment, ive handred, will, #ull ; fighting to the end. Finally the non- and were found in a state of prostra-| from Genoa soni®time before Sept comtmissioned officer and one man pe. Mary B. Gray of No. 16 Cot-| 110. by the neighbors. 26. tage place, Montclair, who arrived 7 a yesterday from armany, sald she saw| “Baroness Dieudonne left her cha- gustiuanle sor eatnerad to ere & trainioad of wounded soldiers being |teau at Corbeekloo a few days be-! the few Americans remaining in Brenent te. Hambure. 959 Pes mary fore Louvalg was burned and re-| Russia, and ip response tc u report tered barbarous maltreatment... [turned to find a German officer with {hat forty Americans were stranded number. of cases,” said Mrs.| pictures from her walls. She pluck- A. 6 y Z ‘en ‘the German soldiers had had thelt eara and noses cut off and other |ily ordered him to restore them. Af- horrible indignities inflicted pon them, Some haw their eyes poked out. ——— “In the face of this suffering,” she said” “the soldiers, aid. not fall to speak of the b y of the Belgian soldiers and tet the world know that they were not to blame for these das- taraly crimes, which were, committed by the civilians of Belgium he b ee \ ba-Los relievesconstipation, regulat: a mapation rexsiates | $1,000,000 GLASS PLANT, Along the River of Doubt —there are multitudes in perplexity as to the cause of their headaches, biliousness, sleep- lessness, heart flutter, nervousness, etc.—ills that constantly interfere with personal comfort and success. in Budapest, was given dis- ry orders to ge to that city if ary. There are others who have learned that coffee—with its drug, caffeine,—is very often the cause of these troubles, and that a sure, easy way to escape such discomforts is to quit coffee ~ POSTUM —a pure delightful food-drink made entirely of wheat and a bit of molasses, It is absolutely free from the coffee drug, caffeine, or any other harmful or comfort-destroying ingredient. liver en siuestion, load for | OWNED BY AMERICANS, Young and old, A0cw dée aad $00 44) NOT DAMAGED BY GERMANS. LONDON, Sept, 14 (Associated Press). —John Pitcairn of Pittsburgh, Chair- man of the Board of Directors of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, which bs has a plant near Charleroi, Rolgium, e “Storm Hero” maiztine Umbrella Postum now comes in two forms. Regular Postum—must be well boiled. 15c and 25c packages. Instant Postum—asoluble powder. Madein the cup with hot water. No boiling re- quired. 30c¢ and 50c tins. berate lost ce found a exter of \¢ Maea’e at "ine Worl Inferma- ton Bureau, Pulitzer Bulldiag silcey northwest vy Office, northwest Sera ana away World's Mariem Office, 15 valued at $1,000,000, was advised to-day that this factory has not been injured by the Germans. He ty, however, un- H able to make his way to Charleroi to look after the property because of the military occupatioy ° h Shocks Rock town. |NO ALCOHOL OR INJURIOUS DRUGS LIMA, Peru, Sept, 14.—The sejgmic disturbances In the artment of res | quipa continue. Yesterday thirt; shocks, some very ce were & S a corded “ears, was s weeks The ‘ att Both kinds are delicious, and the cost per cup is about the same. Grocers everywhere sell POSTUM

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