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, BERLIN, Sept. 9.—Everywhere, ex- 2eet in the region of Bouches, the “ Aatest attacks have failed, the ni ———————— ie tip Ghanpugee eutacn e th ‘angus! plan bee been wee enert wu! Porkage the beoviest Gentine bow | slong (he Anglo Hritien ih ot the La Basen Germans third tine \renehes The Germs brome! teintoree i anal, if i e thee | beve @ Wr00pe, more wan! mee whe wore rooting We Ant @erp beving been browsht to the ue i ik uy TRY TO TAKE LENS IN DESPER- ATE BATTLES. WI the French of the Vimy rider BM) 140 and the Britiem on Ma On4 in Looe. sae le uasnety co and le under @ terrific artillery prepetory to en tafantry French are so eure they 4M 160 (het they bring op and nevel guns, with of Afteen to twenty miles, they | command the German lines ot | eommunioation for miles around and, | they believe, force # retreat which will permit them to wtrike on the Germans’ | Fight flank, It is in their efforts to) make these works safe before moving ponderous guns that the Angio-Freno® troops are fighting #0 Aeaperately to get into Lens and be- ttt Ha i I The French claims that the Ger- have Jost 120,000 men in the re- allied drive t# believed here, in ‘of the known intensenens of the fir which Iiterally burted ot Germans under their and in view of the capture unwounded men and more hty guns and an immense of war material, Amaterdam despatch to the Ex. Telegraph Company says Ger- man papers declare that the Kaisor ts im command on the western front, and that he already has removed two of his generals for failing to halt the allies’ onslaught, The same gource quotes German papers as say- ing Field Marshal von Hindenburg may be brought from Russia to take supreme command on the French — ‘ATTACKS OF ALLIES FAILED, SAYS BERLIN, WITH HBAVY LOSSES Ta i etatement says. Near German counter a! i of, the ground in the strug- Of the statement fol- ii ‘es attempts to break Hnes continued with bit- Present region of at- ‘ter attack, following British charge, led recapturing of part of tho terri- we abandoned north of Loos, A British attack from the region broke down with heavy losses, ted and stubborn French at- HUE aH cul Champagne also all attempts o oeeey to Unauceatl pprougp our PAST out $f a not enemy Sas not eur frenobes y and as Neuville, ve with Souches as th advancing waves of troops broke down tre Reserve No, 65 and Westphalian Regiment No, 158, losses which the ne eng repeated tained eur troops Le neowl @ break. At- of to recapture nich ties they’ 1 oat at La Fille Ga me Sere, failed. The has been in- two British aeroplanes | Bab orien jown. The occupants were -—__— 3 “LIVING CONDITIONS ‘ IN VIENNA IMPROVE {Wheat Supply Sufficient, Although Prices of Meat Are High— Death Rate Lower. BERLIN, Sept. 30. (by wireless to fPuckerton, N. 3.) —Improvement of @onditions in Vienna 1s reported in a from that city to the Over- Agency. b " ny ‘said the supply of wheat at ie sufficient, and that it is longer to use maize for prices ti high, ry conditions are, altowether 00d and the death rate ts decreasing. = BRITISH CAPTURED ALLIED SOLDIERS TRENCH WITHOUT DESCRIBE ATTACKS LOSS OF AMAN THAT WON AT L003. Wounded Se Tells of New Re iM Tense Moments During Guns an bed W Advance on Loos Like Hero a | “ “| WANTED TO) KILL”) GERMANS DIPD BRAVELY Tells How He Slew BeforehOne Officer } Signalled H | Piece of Shrapnel Struck Guns to Fire Shot That Him, Meant Own Death, | ~— | LONDON, fet. 20—A woundes| UINDON, Sept 90—The Britian | soldier has given to the Daily Mail Correspondents at (he headquarters! the following acoount of the Hritieh tn France have now been permitted |@@vance |to send descriptions of exciting "AL 4A. M. the Hiritiah heavy & phases cf the great batt Hat- | laa — un bombardment. I! yrday and Sunday north of Lene on away the German! «Now, after the firat rush ie over,’ \ writes the Chronicle correspondent, |“there ts time to tell the story of one of the greatest achtevements Gained by British troops tn this war. There were many battalions of the hew army men among those who led the attack, and among them were the Scottish regiments, who had thelr fall share of horrors in the first assault. “These splendid = hoys latenad | through the night of Friday last to | the intense bombardment which pre- ceded the assault, that in Itnelf was a tremendous test of nerve, but at 6.20 A. M. Saturday, when their officers wave the word, the battalions leaped out of their trenches with a wild bun ‘ah, ¥ Feached the enemy'n lines of trenches without suffering many eas- ualties and found he first two lines of barbed wire had been effectively broken down by tho artillery bom- bardment. ‘The third line was uncut and was very strong wire, with great barbs. . “The first two trenches were car- ried with a rush at the bayonet point, @ large number of Germans being killed. The uncut wire made the first check, but the British, reckless of their lives, attacked it desperately. They stood up under the deadly fire of machine guns and forced a way through the entanglements, COMPANIES SEPARATE BEFORE DEAD TROOPER, “One of the most extraordinary in- cldents among the grim scenes which took place in the amoke and mist came when @ company of killies ad- vancing at the charge came face to face with a very tall German who, although dead with @ bullet through the brain, stood erect, wedged in some | way in the trench, “lt was 6o startling and uncanny that with one accord the wave of inen parted and swept on each side of him a though some obscure spectre barred the way, “Rank after rank streamed up, and at last the great tide of men poured tirdugh and swarmed forward to the village, and (hen three-quarters of a mile further on, As they ran, shout. ing hoarsely, they were faced by fire from an enormous number of ma- chine guns, and from every part of the village there came the steady rattle of these weapons pouring out streams of lead, “There were machine guns in the windows of many houses and on tup of the ‘tower bridge,’ the tall mine cranes which rose 300 feet from the centre of the village, and tn narrow trenches dug across the streets, In the cemetery to the southwest of the | town which our men had passed, there were no less than 100 machine kuns, #0 it was in itself @ fort of reat strength, FIGHT IN THE STREETS FOR TWO HOURS, “It was § o'clock when those who had not fiilen reached tie outskirts of the Village of Loos, and for nearly twe hours (bere Was eet fignuuK of terrible character. “Although the towa had been sever ly damaged by our shell fire aud t Ghureb in the centre was in ruins, no fire had breken out and the shells of houses sUill stood. Phey were crammed with German troops, who used the cellars as trenches from whigh (bey could fire upon the Briush through apertures in the street. dere and there all these German troops defended them- selves with the courage of despair and would not yield unul they were killed to the last man, ‘Others were uning and rather courageous in their methods of fght- ing. A great mass of them edly were surprised by the rapidity and sweeping strength of the Hritieh atta end Fee by wholesale surrenders the Br! 10] PARIS, Sept. 30.-——President Polm-| 4 large number of prisonors, care, accompanied by William G, Sharp, ‘Men of pu lass, after the first re- basead sistance at rifle range or with ma- the American Am lor, Ariatide | chine guns, scemed to have no fight in Briand, the French Minister of Justice, | {hom at ali, In one house entered by Prefect Laurent of the Parts Feed a little kilted signallor thirty Germans, and others yesterday visited the Amer-| including an officer, surrendered t jean Art Students’ Club, which was] him after he shot down th who founded by Mrs, Whitelaw Reid and| tried to kill hi which has been turned into a hospital} “Yet, as I have sald, the resistance The French President remained for| was prolonged in some parts of the an hour, He talked with the wounded | village, and there were many cellars and complimented Mra, James Van} from which the rapid fire caused Allen Shields, the director of the ho#-| heavy losses to the besiegera. Tpey pital, on the work being done, were silenced by bombing parties who The club has been devoted to alding | Mung hand grenades into the subter- “Tt waa about 4.20 when ‘etand by’ | Was passed siong. You fust pas» it along, and the order Mies down the | line of trenches in a few seconds. I felt all wtift and rigid; 1 rememoer | fixing my bayonet, then some one raid, ‘Prepare to charge.’ “I repeated it to the next chap tn @ funny, squeaking voloe. It didn’t wom Like mo talking “Then there seemed a pause, I sort of prayed that something would stop the next order, You can’t think prop- erly; you Just try to pull yourself to- sether and call yourself a d— foul, “Then, suddenly, when I thought it Would not happen, every one was shouting ‘Go!’ and we were all climb- {ng over the trench «i ndbags, rushed forward a tow yards and fell down in the slushy mire when 1 saw the others dropping—then forward Again until We got within ten yards of the trenches, “‘Charge!’ shouted the officers all along the line, and we ali yelled. It was an awful din, everybody yelling themselves hoarse. I remember stand- ing on top of @ tumbledown parapet. It Was @ mess of earth, torn sandbags and piecos of barbed wire, “I saw two Germans, They seemed hesitating whether to throw up their hander shoot, Phen I just wanted to killa man, A chap does see red. One I stuc kwith my bayonet and pulled the trigger at the same time, and the other fellow—I just bayoneted him too, “We took that first trench without @ casualty, There wasn't any fight left in the poor beggars; they were all doddering, “The Germans were now opening fire upon us from their second line with rapid rife fre and machine guns, We stuck it for ten minutes and then were scrambling forward “We took all the cover we could, crept along the traverses and up the communicating trenches, and then, when we got within a dozen yards, we did all over again that yelling: ear-eplitting charge, “I saw three snipers huddled around a Maxim gun. They were shouting something. I put It acrons the three of them, and just th @ plece of shrapn did not get up again till I was helped back to the first aid some hours later, but I heard that our chaps who had again gone forward had captured the third line of trenches, I shall never forget the effect of the ‘Loyd George specials’ upon the first German trenches, We had to stand on dead Germans while we rested there, and tramplo ocer them on our charge for the second line,” ‘The Times reproduces a German ac- count of the bombardment which preceded the French attack on the German lines in Champagne, written by Dr. George Were: pecial cor- responden} of the Cologne Gazette, under the date of German headquar- ters, Friday mornin . ‘The thunder of distant guns can be heard better up on the hills than down in the valley,” says Dr, Wegener, “so I went up to the top of # bill which rises outside the town. “It was as if the sound came from unknown depths of earth, “Indeed, more than anything it was ke the uncanny underground growl- ing of a distant voleano eruption, shaking—as I have repeatedly experl- enced {t {In Java and in Martinique— the earth's crust for miles around and bryprinrd it tremble like a man in a fit of ague.” PRESIDEN] VISITS AMERICAN HOSPITAL French President Compliments In- stitution Founded by Mrs. Whitelaw Reid, parties of of more than fifteen miles after a bombardment for three days of well Rev Or SOM WESLEY HILL prepared German whieh were ; WOMAN POET SUES mand in waiting twenty days, He said there | echelons, with a complete acce sa | would be no compromise in the pro-|#°ry of defenses, including an im- ceeding, ind that they will be greatly] Penetrable network of barbed wire, interestcu an the woman's return to] Uderground hollows as a protection the city. against bombardment and small forts | the offices of the International Pe F her there thr nearer forty t coffee, cocoa, sugar and dried fruits at | cluded from the dried fruits schedule, and furnishing ® home for young | ranean cellars from the head of statr~ women studying in au the funds| ways, In Loos the cellars are still for this pKa, well A Be hos. | tull of dead. pital, be! “In one of these cellars an amazing LECTURER WHO 18 SUED 8) WOMAN PORT BOR BREACH OF PROMISE, FRENCH ARTILLERY FOLLOWSINFANTRY _INDARING ina | . wa pries Install Themse in Trenches as Soon as They | Are Won SUPPLIES ARE CUT OPF,| Latest! | Type Bombarded German Long-Range Guns of Munitions Railroads. PARIS, Hep! 80-—-A simuitancous movement of the French on @ front protected by dense networks of barbed wire, the use of the most recent o thona of French artillery and the shell- ing with long nge canncn of roads, railroads and railroad stations, while smaller guns swept the entire first line of the Germans, were among the elements which brought success to the recent allied offensive mo at ‘0 France, according to the Ha’ Agen. ey. which has ived from @ corr sponéent an authorized account of the battle in Champagne, The first position, which formed the principal line of resistance the correspondent, “comprixed two tive PASTOR J. W. HILL; DEMANDS $100,000 (Continued from First Vage) | maya) from a bi of particulars instead of | to trenches arranged Mina Covington in remembered in| ’arnished with quick firers, Further! land further, there was a system of trenches which formed a veritable labyrinth, “For three days our batteries bom- barded the German positions, We made uso of the most recent artillery and were able after an examination |vf the conquered trenches to witness its dreadful effect. At certain points the levelling of the trenches was com. plete, The protecting caves were filled, As to the network of barbed wire, It Was torn up everywhere or destroyed. panied President Taft on hia Northe| ."OUF fire covered the entire length western tour, He viviled Japan in| f the first position, and with long 1911 and established the Asiatic! range cannon bombarding routes and branch of the International Peace railroads, certain German units found Forum at Tokto, their supplies cut off and remained The Rey. Dr, Hill is a member of forty hours without pri the Republican Club of New York anc he moral effect was no lesa the Union League Club of Chicago! erful, Even the “ge and is Vice President of the American bombardment jner Sivic Association. His office is at No, 18 Fast Forty-firat Street, BRITAIN INCREASES = MANY IMPORT DUTIES en who worked with years ago thought her | han thirty. 4 fifty-two, and his first wife was Nora Holmes of Findlay, 0. who died in 1904, Two years later he married Mrs. Hie Harrison Schmidt of Brookiyn, He is widely known as a civic, industrial and na- tonal peace speaker. He made his first appearance in the Blaine cam- paign and took an active part In the McKinley campaizn in 1896, He was | chaplain of the Republican National Conventions in 1908 and 191 and during the campairn of 1912 De Hi gan a concentrated whe sroaely rated artiller musket fire. ane “The clear sky of Sept. 22 and 23 permitted the precise regulation of observation on the land and In the! air, On the morning of Sept. 2% the| gray clouds were very low, At® A.M rain began to fall, and at 9.16 o'clock ttack was ordered. Tea, Coffee, Cocoa, Sugar and 1 minutes our men, at the . ae © mall losses—small nearly Dried Fruits to Pay everywhere—, lumped into | the Gere | mastered thei fenders and continued their course forward with audaciousness, despite the soxgy ground, despite the renist- ance of the enemy who rapidly with their reserves arranged intermediary positions or who under the support of perpendicular — communieating trenches directed a fire from machine guns and infantry on the flanks of troops during their forward movement. “At three points the advance was particularly rapid, Near Souain we directed three divergent attacks and Higher Rates, LONDON, Sept. 30-——The House of Commons has approved resolu. tions fixing the Import duties on tea, the higher rates proposed in the Bud- get of Reginald McKenna, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Currants are ex- the Government having discovered) the existence of a treaty with Greece} ! *lcaptured several works and entered a ee eee teen? P| trenches called. von Kluck and. von M McKenna announced in the|Tirpitz. Then we penetrated “Trench William I “At the end of the day we had ar- rived to the north of Souain a north of Perthes in contact even with the second German position support- ing itself on the butte of Souain and eri of Commons that he would exemption from the tmport ps on motor cars of all motor vs and vans to be used exclusive- trade purposes and also of vi for ly chassis and parts thereof to be so used. ———— Consumption of White Bread Now Permitted tn Belatam, BERLIN, Sept, 30.—-Bread rations in the oceupled portions of Belmuny have been modified so ag to permit the consumption of white bread, Prices of bread have been lowered, communicating id themselves on ht of our departing line. “At dusk on roads that had for- merly been battered by enemy arttl- lery thousands of prisoners, escorted by territorials, were being taken to ward the rear, 2 JE es FIRST SCRIMMAGE FOR FORDHAM FOOTBALL MEN. Coach Vaughn put the squad through the first seri the week moh yesterday afternoon. cr lor nec second ymin ean ia furnished regulars. See incident happened which reveals the highest form of courage and self- rifice not to be denied the Ger- mans. A Colonel of a battalion which will be given high place in his- tory for thin day's work came into Loos after bis men had already gone on to Hill 7. With signallers and)! ther men he established quarters, ac- cording to previous arrangement, in a) house practically untouched by shell} fire. At this time there was very lit- elling, a8 the artillery officers} on either side were afraid of killing] their own men, and the house seemed fairly safe for the purpose of @ tem- porary signal station, “But the Colonel noticed with sur- prise, shortly after his arrival, that heavy shells began to fall very’ close, and the Germs 2 were obvioualy aiming directly for this particular building. He ordered the cellara to be searched, and three Germany were found, but it was only after he had been in the house forty minutes that in a deeper cellar, which had not been before, discovery was made of a man officer who Was actually telephoning to his own batteries and ting their fire. “Suspecting the Colonel and his companions were important oificers, directing the general operations, had caused shells to fall upon th ho knowing @ lucky shot would mean his own death as well as theirs. | tw In any case he was certain to die, and he died bravely, having made this su- preme sacrifice of courage, The t teams. und phone apparatus is now a trophy In, the ‘ausplocs of the County Corkinen of the British Greater New York. ‘ 4 Fordham Brooklyn's Reserve List, The Brooklyn Club has the following players reserved for 1916; Pitchers. Edward Appleton, Raleigh Aitchison, Kwon J. Cadore, 3. 3. Chapek, 1. Cheney, Ira Colwell, J. W. Coo @ Dell RH. Joodbredy Walter stalls, arquard, Faiward Pretfer, Monty F Boats GON: Rucker, Sherrod | Smit ster B. Steve Thos 4 Hummel, H.W, Myers, Albert R ‘smyth, GD! Stengel, % Wheat and W. Zlminerman: mcaieomnnt Gaelic Football Championship. The Gaelic football championship of |the East will be decided at Caltle Park en Sunday when Cork and Kilkenny will battle f Thoso tenma met THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1915. _ SOLDIERS TELL OF HAND-TO-HAND BATTLES IN CELLARS OF LOOS i. GERMANS KEEP UP DRIVE ON DVINSK; — IN all Berlin Writer, However mits Failure of Movement in Volhynian Triangle. HENLIN, Rept Wield Marshal vou Hindeaburg has pured b somewhat nearer Dvinek, and forces have also advanced further meuth: » the Viltya I m be) tween Hmorgon and The | offictal report on the Musstan front also confirma the report from Vienna of an advance In Volhyaia between the Btyr and Goryn Mivers, The} statement says | ‘BRONX WON'T SETTLE PRIMARY BETS YET! ‘TROOPS OF ALLIES | | MORSE, 1 Democrati hems) ary bettie we upeet the ' Arihur Murphy'e quis © Tuesday rl -— 44 a ‘ i he © omeegd | Ar n I - Neat deyom James Geraghty, the Tam Salo ow S pany ender In ihe Tainty-eoneed Ab-| Monika for Service sombiy ¢ . ciaune be hee} rbia three w y of the Cowmty Commit. | - He 6a “y j oe ry ote re of my district | Shea, meee i pee es | WAR STARTS OCT, 182 oa Chany Onbauuien: -__ ves only eighty-four and assures my election Greek Assembly Calls for Geraghty on 1 » ther ben bes wnt Loan of $30,000,000 for #7 com mittoens 3) tae” Thirty fourth Aagaumbly Preparation District where Patrick J. MeMa Civef Clerk in Dietriet Attor - a “The attack southwest of Dvinsk has leader & Uiewnt, the] MERLIN, Kent. 40 (by wireiens te A he renin of Lake | SHicee of the battio haw not cleared. |Bayvilie, L 1) —lritish and Fron névanees an tar a5 the region © eT] the MeMahenites admit defeat I lipoops intended for service in Serbie Swenton (tem miles south of Dvinsk), | the rahip Aght, but claim the} loos intenies Laelia Me south of Lake Drinviaty, and at Pos. vation of Haptienl Murphy for oot Bena tok oe be: ge doa ee continue (ti? Assembly againat present As- jonte . n tavy cavalry engagements continue.) iiyinan M. Muldwin Fertig. Nu-lreporte fron wt received (These points are a little further ‘Trent, however, aaye the Neures show the Frankfurter Zeitung, the Overpere After having effectively supported the | 4 clear lead of 103 votes for Fertig we Agency announce operations Gen yon Kichborn oa RO The Overseas Agency > wayet the enemy's flank, our cavairy has loft Two MORE DEAD BABIES “A epecial train filled with Bubs the region near and east of Vileika arian students tet fteriin yeaterday (on the Dvinsk- Minsk Maliway) R | to Join the Kulgarian army, Promieg “The enemy remained inactive west Radoslavett's son will depart tov af Vileika. A column was dispersed | night.’ y our artillery. Between Smorgon capneraraiinnes ae ser ee ed og iegpiraPbchad ae Fourteen Infants Found in Water! sowttieation of Army fe Ratited. viosecinie. nett ~ . ATHENS, Sept. 29, 645 P.M. (vig Reet tener aa kaw | 8 Month, and Coroner Sus atie, Sept. 30).—The Greek Chame ened with the arinies of Prince Lo - | pold and Marshal Mackonsen my of Gen. von Linsingen| Gn Volhynia, south of th Pripet marshes) has driven the Russians be- hind Kors and Putilovka (between nand Styr, in the Volhyolan Kle east of Lutek) | ‘Gen, {vanoff undoubtedly has been says Major Moraht in the} Berliner Tageblatt of tho Volhyniun| operations. “Ho has understood how] to render harmless our threatening flank movements north and south of Jolhynian tri- must be conquered lator ITROGRAD, official communi of Hirshaten, The attacks were repulsed by artillery ra. “At Dvinsk there has been a con- tinuous cannonade. The German at- tacks on the front comprising Gh tenle, Swenton e and Medmoussi Lake, were repulsed by our fire. The fighting continues, “In the region north of Krewo an southeast of Osmiana tl my at tacked energetically and drove back | the Russians somewhat, South of the Pripet the enemy repulsed the Ru sians to the right bank of the Styr. The village of Nowo Alexiniec was thrice attacked by the enemy on Tuesday under cover of a hurricane | f artillery fire. The enemy was ro- | pulsed by the Russian artillery rifle fire. “In the and} n of Koupchintze on the Stripa west of Tarnopol there wa progressive artillery fire, In _ th ‘ourse of terrible fighting the Rus- sians occupied the enemy's trenchos and also one of his fortified positions west of Chodaczkow. Tn continuation of a further offensive the Russian: after strong artillery preparat! rushed to the attack and, clearing the entanglements, captured the enemy's trenches east of Koupchintze.” Riots tn Moscow Lead tn Killings, PETROGRAD, Sept. 99.—A proc! mation Issued by the Prefect of Moa- cow exhorts the inhabitants of that city to avold a repetition of tho re- grettable Incidents of the last two days, when five persons were killed and a number slightly wounded as a result of unwarranted interference with the police. The Prefect also requests the people not to gather in crowds, saying that rufflans awalt opportunities to begin disorders wherever people assemblo, however caaually. The proclamation has had the desired effect, lei <p NO HELP FOR AMERICANS. Loudon Committee Will Ald No More, It Say LONDON, Sept. 30.—The American Committee at a special meeting hus issued an emphatic warning to Ameri- come over here from now on t no reli at the hands of the committee If they shoulll fall upon hard times, It is estimated that there are from 15,000 to 25,000 resident Americans in the United Kingdom. Many of them were thrown out of work because of the war, —_—_——_———_. Benedetto Brin, r Fire and Px- ploston, In Still Afloat, ROME (vin Parts), Se 20.—The Italian battleship Benedetto Brin, board which yesterday there was a violent explosion following a fire, badly damaged, but stilt cording to the Measaggero. of clearing away the wreckuge proceeding actively, Several guns already have been taken out and preparations are being mad: ont the bigger one, the saya on to lift eevee Capt, Maude a Court Guest, Cyril Maude, English actor, was in General Sessions yesterday as a guest of Judge Malone. ‘From the bench he watched the arraignment of a score of prisoners, Mr. Maude, who was a bar: rister before he became an actor, sald Mt seemed more kindness prisoners here tha th | mngiand, He wan escorted tironeh th ‘Tombe by Dr. McGulre, prison physician. —— Hospital Ship Solace Her: viewed by Coroner Wagner, oner sald that in the past month the infants had been found In the creek near its mouth, He sure a baby farm js in neighborhood and VW, pects a Baby Farm. A watchman discovered the bodies carried them to the Greenpoint were re nd Police Station, where they ‘The € bodies of fourteen said he f operation in dead infants are got rid of by throw- ing them Into the creek or river, municat Deteeti Rureau and asked that ast Eleventh Street to Broadway. | ~~». |GEN. VON KLUCK RECOVERS. Commander May Retarn Hin Army in France. BERLIN, Sept, 30.~-Gen. Alexand R fully restored ing in his Berlin home, an Unofficial announcement here to-day, The Kiuck had not been good ded late in Mareh fire while inspecting according pn ‘a tern battle front. ht oie Kluck will return to active service, ——$—<»——— SAFE CONDUCT FOR DUMBA. seriously did the Coroner regard situation that he got into com- n with the Seventh Branch uad of men be sent to patrol tho River water front from North von Kluck, after a pertod of recuperation in the country, is now to health and ts liv- made health of Gen, von since he by the need German positions on th not known when Gen, von easion torday ratified the action of the Government in de. The bodies of two girl bables, both | creoing a general mobilization of t of whom, It is believed, had lived @/army and authorized a loan of §3 tay or more, were found last night tn | 000,000, Hushwick Creek, near where it emp- | ie Be No fa [tlew into the East River at North | amacte we eee a so Rates Thirteenth Streat, Willamsburg, | Paris, 30.—""Buigaria and the central powers bay cise agreement, ac taulve information,” says the corres spondent at Salonica, Greece, of the Temps. “Under this agreement Bule garia will enter the war on Oct. 15.* Plans for the campaign ure now being drawn up by the Bulgarian General Staff, the correspondent says, with the assistance of numerous Gers man officers who bave arrived ia Sofia. Bulgarian officers say no attack will 2. be made on Gre The Athens correspondent of the wa Agency says it is now concluded a prae & ding to authorle a Havas » expected that Bulgaria will begin an attack on Serbia within fifteen da: Army of 300,000 Rep: Moving Agutust Se \. to] LONDON, Sept. 30.--"Three hun- dred thousand Austrion and German troops have begun an advance on the Serbian frontier, in the direction of Orsova,” says the Athens correspond- ent of the Exchange Telegraph Com- pany. Information received na,” says a Havas Athens, “is to the effect German troops are being hurried the Serbian fron and that Ge von Falkenhayn, Chiet of Staff of the German army, has visited the front ge bora ASKS $50,000 FOR SUICIDE. 10,—That er oH from Vien- tch from that fres LEXINGTON, Conn. Samuel! Gordon Sept # ern-| sulesman, hanged himself Oct. 4 at Secretary Lasing to Meet vou Berne) ei iviiie, in his room in the Seelbech sibeeens Hotel, because he was fll and insane ‘ ng and lowes at gambling, Is WASHINGTON, Sept, 30,— The| from drinking an b: is estate & ‘cover State Department has announced shoes ip sult Ov apne to aprover that Secretary Lansing and Count It is averred Gordon was induce von Bernstorff, the German Ambasea- d play “draw poker Jr the administratod : ; dor, have arranged to meet in New| is the petitioner. “Atturnnya for, the 4 ‘oastaen . York Saturday to discuss the pro- pling a yoy row: liminary steps to be taken in a set a tlement of the Arable case and the! Amertean Salling bp Borns. general submarine issue. SNDON, Sept. 30.—Tho American Oticials. of the British EBmbeasy,| LONE » have assured Counsel State Department that Great Brita’ will interpos Ambassador Dumba safe conduct. r Polk of the no objection to giving walling ship Vincent has been burned. Her crew was saved. Tho Vincent sailed from Archangel on Sept. 4 for London, on her way to New York, in — Her gross tonnage wus 1,904, She # Meet in Buble School, | was built in thst and owned in The Parents’ Association of Public| Boston. School No. M6, of which Dr. Joa) | Haney ts Principal, will have thelr regu- oreo. ter reetng Incliies an address by Judge | KELLY —On Tuendny evening, 10 o'clock, John M d other prominent HANNAH (0 Hannah lurley), Mil- Bronx representatives, as well as @| tarney, wite of John Kelly, lennon on Bre lyn matte ma and’a class of paplls; a Non by 1B children, und. du hy eelected pupils of the Girls’ Athlede gu Special for T. huraday grep HL ater F tinted” Fall eva need ve ant mo real Mew Uperiative Sweets. ¥ eating terme with them thelr rs mA Oost Mr With her hull and need of repatri nee arrived at the Brooklyn Navy Yard ie has 1 out for several months, She will be put in first class shape be- tore ard. she leaves the Ke Vibe ates D" a 4 Dates prevention by Miss Caro- years, Will be buried on #riday morning, 10 o'clock from 4512 3d av., South Brook- lyn, Special for Friday sates DAINTIES—All the goods vou love ad Vii wagon ming Cun mm. Molannen sa others, Friday Extra Special. cnoce Th COVERED CREAM. pRY CARAMELS—Theae dainty, creamy caramel deliciousness, spangled with various eranched nats ur Celebrated Choy ‘They are in Richness :19¢ 206 nKOADWway Tm mt Bats te v UNI Np nox 2] oer Fh Plats wank tn ee ee a New York travelling ~ \