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GERMAN COMMANDER WHO IS SMASHING ROUMANIANS BAC. x MANIA INVADED By cca ROUT pLAIMED 1 BERLIN ' Tower Pass le Paw Taken by Bavarians in Drive From the North, © ARMIES CRUSHED, d One Rolled Up by Falkenhayn and Dispersed in Mountains, BERLIN (via wireless to Bayville, L), Oct. 11.—Bavarian troops un- Gen, von Krafft, after capturing ihe Red Tower Pass, have marched hward and invaded Roumanta the north for thé first time since Deginning of the war, It was semi- ly announced to-day. Von Falkenhayn, having anni- the first Roumanian army, at once againat the second and it up from west to south with an blo attack that broke the en- W's opposition on the Sinka River threw the Roumanians across the intains of the Geister wood Into the Valley. Teutonic forces already we re optured Kronstadt and now reate’, (he central railway point at , forming the connection be- nm Bucharest and Moldavia. ‘The result of the Hermannstadt vic- ery, the military critic declared, is all Southern Transylvania and the st part of Eastern Transylvania been cleared of the enemy. ERIC NHAY Von Le Senssitie GERMANY SEEKS NEW $2,500,000,000 CREDIT Precautionary War Loan Will Not Be Floated, However, Until Next Spring. BERLIN, Oct, 10 (via London, Oct. 11).—A bill for a new war credit of 12,000,000,000 marke will shortly be submitted to the Reichstag, The bill hae only a precautionary character but Is deemed necessary because the margin ween the credit granted to June, 1916, totalling 62,000,000,000 Retailers 30° Quality J re ons iit cham wae jloans, has bece Tho new war ne rather small is not expected to be floated be‘ore spring of next year, as the Government hopes to get along until thea with the funds on hand and the help of short-term Treasury notes, The Herlin papers express their atisfaction over the fact that sub- scriptions to the fifth war loan from neutral countries exceeded similar subscriptions to the fourth war loan, proving the confidence of neutrals in German powe: FRESHLY ROASTED OFFEE Lbs For DIRECT FROM WHOLESALE Delivered York and ii remit Aa eae GERMAN RAID IN ARCTIC. Herlin Saye Wir Plant Was Wrecked—Nothing of U-Boat Loss, BERLIN (via wireless to Sayville), Oct. 11.—Three German submarines shelled and heavily damaged the Rus sien radio station at Yepnovalok, on the Murman coast, along the Aretic said Copenhagen reports to-day, One pith. was shot down and several men ates COFFEE Co. ae y/ tira ore 3 Yepnox ral Prices Make FEO) Shopping an oe | 125th ‘Street? West W Furniture ahat, Lifetime Service at Wetent Koch Low Prices. $225.00 Dining Suite ric. $198.00 William and Mary Suite of American walnut, 10 pivces, Buffet 60 inches long, china closet 46 inches wide; serving table wide; 6-ft. nsion table, 48-inch top, all hardwood ruction, Five side chairs and one armchair covered with panish leather Annual Sale of Portieres, Lace Curtains and Draperies You can now enjoy those ex- ceptional advantages that the Koch store made possible by av- ticipating its upholste wants when market prices were 25 to 40 per cent. less than they are now, Always complete with the newest to be had in the marke’ our upholstery section, in i ind greatly improv unusual in its pres- for the thrifty woman. Velour Portiere both sides, in a excellent quality, wildering variety of choice colors, SALE YORONEDAYONLY vir $14.50 t 3-Piece Velour Window Drapery, comprising 1 pair of curtains and centre valance, lined with sunfast material, green, brown, mulberry or blue. per window $2.00 Velour for draping purposes, 60 inches wide, in blue, brown, green and rose yard Marie Antoinette Lace Win- dow Pane’ heavily i in white or Arabe white ¢ ve cach $4.50 var $2.98 The Koch Plan of Deferred Payments is a C ‘onvenience $2.98 $1.69 hem mar Cluny worked | — Stitel | quisett Lace Curtains, either scrim: ¢ with lace insertion edge, color, ecru Sea, | La Leah OR RN RON ct anaes Sas eee a RE THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11,- 1916 peertal Bernhardt Keeps Young at on Simple Diet of Milk and Potatoe | | World’s Greatest Actress Explains Her Secret of | ele tag tate Warding Off Evidence of Years—-Pays Tribute | to Women of All Nations by Declaring ried in triumph from the steamship tre ue y 6 a ee which had come to doubt all herorsin that the women of all nations are pathy even more. equally admirble.” REEP YOUNG, DRINK MILK AND EAT POTATOES. Madame Bernhardt sipped a glass of milk as she sat behind « table bests with orchids in the Louls | Quinze suite of the Majestic, where ment of American Beauty | Roses was ned up fn honor of the | Greatest artist of France, | “I drink only milk now and I eat | only potatoes,” sho explained smil- | ingly ‘That is the way to keep young. Madame Bernhardt will be seventy- two years old on Oct. 28, Yet of all the women I have ever known she {s most fitted to give the recipe of eternal youth. Her hair ts tawny gold. Her eves, the color of jade, have kept thelr translucent fire, The queer quick- silver smile that darts all over her | face like a scarlet ribbon has the old vividness, No one saw her walk ye: . So it ts impossible to say how | well ahe is able to disguise the recent amputation of her leg. But she wore & loose gown of purple silk, hung with white Jace, Her throat was banded with the Sarah Bernhardt col- lar she introduced forty years ago | to soften a too slender throat and she wore the long lace sleevés with points extending way over the hands which characterize her earliest photographs, A toque of gray lace and flowers crowned her flaunting hatr, She was gy and charming and indomitable, | But for tho firat time a certain wist- fulness showed in her effort to please | und she powdered her face and in- ‘ carnadined those smiling Ups as she talked, SHE TRUSTED HER STAR | SUBMARINE PERIL. | “I must be pretty. 1 must be pretty, |for America,” she said to me as she mischtevously touched her cheeks with the powder puff. “And It is not eo easy to be pretty when you have J como off a ship which ev thought would be torpedoed, I was not atraid when the captain changed the course of the Espagne. I trust my star and [ am too old to be afraid of anything, The old have expori- enced everything — they know tha death Is just one more sensation, But we all realized that any minute we might be attacked by a submarine. And it was amazing to me to see little girls of twenty run about the ship | la ghing, flirting, singing as though they too knew no fear, 1t was admir- | at re “Do you know,” Madame Bernhardt | asked, after a pause and another sip | from her goblet of milk, that, when! I return to New York in November, I am golng to produce a play written by one of my granddaughters! I have| two granddaugntors, 1 do not know | which Js the lovelier. One 1s, perhaps, more beautiful, the other more charm. ing.” “And which do you consider the greater weapon—beauty or charm?" { asked Mme, Bernhardt, “Charm—enormously,” she replied. “Charm is genius, the genius of pleas- ing, If a woman has it it does not matter whether sho ls ugly or beauti- ful, twenty or fifty, But charm, un- fortunately, is born in us. It cannot bo acquired, A child of three may have charm; so may 4 woman of eighty. Children, {n fact, have charm in {t# most natural aspect—not all children, In one family five may be just nice, ordinary children, and thy’ sixth possess this genius of plear- | ing. |LACK OF LOVE FOR CHILDREN | AMERICAN WOMEN'S FAILING. Do you know,” Mme, Bernhardt added, “there ts ‘but one thing with which I reproach the American wom- It ts that you do not care enough en for children, You marry for love and that is splendid, but go many women do not wish for children, What will | | | | they have to love when they are fifty? & man surely, ‘I was a mother at soventeen and a krandmother at forty-two, I pity women who wait till they are twenty- five to become mothers, They deprive themmolves of Life's greatest joy, They are old women before their daughters are grown up. | 1 put to Mme, Bernhardt, so often put it before, the womnan who has lost’ or reje stoc swers to the grei of I » woma existence 1 J and who ither plan nor hesitates to thrust her own purpos: 1 am neutral. tenderest sympathy War Has Proved Their Heroism. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Sarah Bernhardt spent elght hours in New York City yesterday, Car- Espagne, sho was greeted by more than a thousand of her fellow-countrymen who are resident in New York, She recotved her friends during the afternoon at the Hotel Majestic, and at 8 o'clock took a train for Mon- where she will appear to-night. This is a neutral country,” the greatest actress in the world proclaimed to everybody, “I bring @ groeting from the women of France to the women of America, who have shown toward us the understanding. They have given unboundedly of money, but we value their sym- I shall not talk about the war except to say that it has «t least served to show @ world and doubts and v: eration ahead. “T have uo patience with such peo- * Mme. Sramatic shrug. we here? We are here through love. to love each other, They ask, contd are we going?) Why, forward, yard, through our children, You s do not Jove enough, I » your men alwats together, Women always by themselves, most important thing tn life Is to love and be loved. And to be loved when one is young, gloriously, completel sheds a splendor over all of life. ives golden memories which one may count over and over, MADAME IS REMINDED OF A PA- TRIOTIC LETTER. Tt seemed harsh to crash upon Sarah's mellow mood with an- r question about the war, but [ could not help tt. can say nothing,” she answered; othing except ‘thank you for me and for all the women of France for id and the sympathy of Amer- “Before you left Fran minded Mme. Bernhardt, “ me a wonderful letter about of the women of France. ‘The women of France are adimirab| Ali go about In mourning, but not one bows her head. We march forward er as though under a toward a whed their last tears, our men will rpill the last drop of their blood, France will give her last children, but she will be victorious for justice. Right and her intact honor fight for he! The face of Sarah Bernhardt in hor newest and most difficult role, that of neutral, was @ most interesting thins to watch as I recited to her her own glowing words. Something of their fire touched her face for a moment, and then she 4 smiling a little mischievous): I—I have forgot- ten that letter. m a neutral.” _—————— PROSPERITY. Still, they had to sidetrack Mr. Hughes's special to let the freight trains go by. ——_———_— 92,404 IRISH CATHOLICS | AT FRONT FOR ENGLAND Grand. Total of Celts in British Army Since War Began Reaches 189,617. DUBLIN, Oct, 11—The Irish divi- sion at the front will need reinforce- ments of 30,000 men before Christ. mas, according to a statement made last gnight by Lord Wimborne, Lord Lieutenant, in an address made at a banquet, The Lord Lieutenant said that b¢ fore the war there were 34,822 Irish- men with tho colors and in the re- serves, Since mobilization 92,404 Catholics and 62,391 Protestants had) joined the army from various parts of Ireland, This makes a grand total of 189,617 Irishmen fighting for England. These figures do not include Irish. men in the colonfal forces, BRITISH PLACE GERMAN LOSSES AT 3,556,018 Official Lists Declared to Show That the Kaiser's Casualties in September Were 179,884, LONDON, Oct. 11,—German easual- ties from the beginning of the war to the end of September were 3,556,- 018, according to an official British compilation as given out hero to-day, |v The statement s “A report complied from German official casualty lists shows total German casualties in September as 179,884, bringing up the totals sinec the war from tho n© source to 8,056,018." ae BRINGS IN WRECK VICTIMS. Liner Sama is Mew Who Sui vived Hurricane Perth RRR Rub It On Rub It In It Does Not Blister | RADWAY’S READY RELIEF | USED AS A | LINIMENT “STOPS PAIN” INSTANTLY Mh PREUMIgles Relation, jore Muscles, mata Sore © 25s mens 50C embers of the crew of t n, wrecked off Savannah » Jamates, in @ hurricane on 15, were brought to thia por to-day aboard tle United Fruit Line steamship Sama were Vir Officer Martinsen, Se Officer Cornelussen and Steward Johnsen ¢ all are on their way to Capt. Cornelussen, a second officer, and members of the crow Sey cillations upon the gen- what are we here for? the) iat tivities beens ee O64 oe Sarah answered with a “They ask why are| « your The ig And it keeps BIG GERMAN FORCE CUT OFF BY FRENCH, BERLIN ADMITS Troops That Held Salient South of the Somme Are Isolated j BERLIN, Oct, 11.—G jin & oallent projecting toward the| town of Vermandovillers, on the brt- tle front south of the River Somme, have been cut off by the French forces, {t was stated in the German rman troops} official statement given out to-day. PARIS, Oct. 11.—South of t poate where a successful blow yes- erday carried the village of Bou- vent and brought the French noose tighter around Chaulnes, Gen, Foch's troops made further progress last night in grenade operations, it was | officially announced to-day, Most of tho night was spent in or- | ganizing the newly won positions. | The total of prisoners since Oct. 1 |numbers 2,616, In mpagne and on the Verdun front several small German attacks were checked before they reached |Irench trenches, In the Vosges the | ans reached a few elements of French trenches near Shonholz after an artillery bombardment, but were driven out by @ grenade counter- attack, losing heavily. | Tho official statement also says: “Yesterday bombs were dropped by enomy aeroplanes on Gerardmer and |Belfort, The damage was Inaignifi- cant. Five shella were dropped with- any of town by the enemy's long-range ar- | ullery, “In the course of yesterday, he- sides numerous survetllancos, re- connaissance and range-regulating filghts, our aeroplanes fought fifteen engagements in the Verdun region, fourtecn south of the River Somme 4nd forty-four north of that river. In the course of the latter engage- ments four enemy machines we brought down, one by Adjt, Dorme, ho thus reached his thirteenth ma- chine, Six other enemy machines were seriously hit and fell Into the German line “Biyouac! and cantonments In the vicinity of Peronne and Tergnier, and aviation sheds and the railway sta- tions at 8, Quentin, Guissard and the Wood of Porquertcourt were severely bombard A train between Annis Jand Ham was attacked both with jbombs.and machine guns, “During the night of the 10th Lor. rach, in the Grand Duchy of Fade the Aviation Ground and the Muelheim Ratlway Station were bon | barded.” LONDON, Oct. 11.—-German artil- lery was more active throughout last night on a large part of .the bat Gon, & reported this after- front of Neuville St. Vaast the exploded a small mine, ) casualties, South of Hole h detachments carried out ustul enterprise against enemy ne | Was | Blown Up, nt wireless to Sayville (via report that #@ large in the direction of that |‘ eee 4 Ge Ha oEDE @ | AMBASSADOR GERARD MEETS VON BERNSTORFF Diplomats Have Short Conference at Ritz-Carlton, Where Both Are Stopping. } | James W. Gerard, the United | tes Ambassador to Germany, paid but possibly an tmpor- tant call on Count von Bernstorff, the German Ambassador to the United States, at the Ritz-C on Hotel to- day, Ambassador Gerard went to tho} Ritz-Carlton on his arrival in New York yesterday, and Count Bernstorft makes that hotel his home when he iy in New York City, ' rmal, an The sare old friends. Mr. from_ hi: | to that of stort a | mained fit 8, after which | » went for a stroll _up to Central It {9 assumed that Gerard eyed to Von Bernstorff some per- | sonal messages from mutual friends in Berlin Park. ard and I knew each othor before he was appointed Ambassador to my country," ald Count von Bernstorff. I hope to see him frequently here and in Wash- Gerard refused to discuss the ‘HORSES STAMPEDE AT SEA, MAIMING THREE OF GREW, Steamer vaho avaho Forced to Put Back With Wounded After Sailing for Italy. How a cargo of western horses bo- came terrorized and — stampeded aboard the freighter Navaho during the heavy seas off Sandy Hook last night was deseribed by three of her injured crew in the Marine Hospital, Staten Island, to-day, Tho Nevaho had cleared for Italy, but was com- to return with tho wounded n Land of Oklahoma City, her before he turned sailor, nt into the hold when the horses grew restless at the first puff ! high wind and the stampede be- gan. He was brought out with a broken arm, John Ryan of Dublin and Joseph Matson of Liverpool sut- ered kicks and bites, ‘Hour of the horses sustained brok- en logs and were shot. sltacol’ ak ‘ay with i> geing through @ ome army manoeuvres Brat her last year's ha “What d'ye me “Well, she's Good-bye Dyspepsia Do Your Own Cooking, Sample Each Dish and Still Have a Keen Appetite. n, army manoeuyre) urning the wings. thelr appetite r brash, heartburn, rumblings, bad breath, —coa\ ue and Cred all over after cooking 1, Stuart's Dyspepsia r own A Tablet after each meul will overcome there tr ; If you onJoy preparing @ luncheon or an attra dinner, but the odor of cook he palls on you, take ono of Btuart's Dyspepsia ‘Tablets’ after your next meal and you will fad at once @ remarkable ‘Tableta are for salo Oo a box will at once Free Trial Coupon ¥. A, Stuart Co, 229 Stuart Bulld- Ing, Marshall, Mich., send me af once a free trial packuge o pepsla Tablets, Aus Atlantic count an hattleship exploded in Pola ps on her way up published by urls New She drought twelve | Gaitlols, was to-day seml-oMet and « general cargo aliy denied, Btreet ITALIANS LAUNCH HEAVY. DRIVE ON AUSTRIANS General Attack Along Adtiatic Coast After Eight Days of Artillery Fire. VIENNA (Tuesday), Oct, 10, via London, Oct, 11.—Itallan forces yes. terday afternoon, after elit days of strong aftillery and mining prepara- tion, began a genéral attack against the Austro-Hungarian positions on the coastal district front, says th Austro-Hungarian official stateme issued to-day. The text follows district front, after G rnin at Grade, hernéon ond the Dot Lagune began nd OS Baad be ‘attack against ovr po! eet, “On \ the “Karet au, in the Carsd, ig fond 6 Sa ahh a . The continual was pow to. shake them, With un broken suvett they repul tors yy matin. midable attack with | ve enemy loss plotel ned thei tian Afemen it Ttaltan Otties NA, Oct. 10 (via Landon), Oct. 1.-Austro-Hongarian aerial squadrons have made Attack on the towns it and Noi at San valerate Di ra, according to an official st nt_ixtued here to-day. The WEAR@SCOPE “A PACT. FINDER. in tha FIELD of MENS WEARS Registered echoes YOUR viewpoint on the Mental Ownership of Men’s Shirts HE shirt you own should be yours, not only physically because you bought it, but also mentally because it re- flects your mind habits. Which explains the velocity of the success of this Shirt Shop. al Exclusive patterns—always a season ahead. Guaranteed fast colors. All the fine points of custom craftsmanship. The difference between custom shirt cost and the prices below is due to this foresighted reason: In a custom shirt shop, you are measured before you buy, and here you buy before you are measured—we have your size in stock, A few specimens of shirt values: Striped Madras.................1.50 & 1.75 Japanese Crepe..........scss000 2.00 Silk Fibre Shirts................3.00 & 3.50 Silk Shirts and Crepe de Chine...5.00 to 8.50 White Pique Dress Shirts........ 3.50 Mens Farnishing Shop A Separate Shop 16 West 38th Street On the Street Level ranklin Simon & Co. Fifth Avenue—New York A Hanan Walking Boot combines the Style, Fit and Wear characteris- tics of Hanan shoes. Made of Russia calf with long wing tips and straight boot heel. Wustrated Catalogue sent on request Good Shoes ere an Economy Hanan ease yt aOR. te i | mM li i I | THE NEV YORK WORLD SETS THE PACE THE WORLD SELLS 100,000 Copies More 7 in New York City Each Weekday Than Any Other Morning Newspaper