The evening world. Newspaper, November 9, 1917, Page 3

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Sent eer “FRENCH CSE GERMAN ATTACKS: BRITISH IN RAS Teutons Les Hee Heavily in Vio- ? lent Assaults in Le Chaume Wood and at Arracourt. PARIS, Nov. 9—German attacks Against Le Chaume Wood, in Lor- raine, and in the Arracourt sector, ‘Were all repuls d by French troops, gthe War OMce reported to-day The Le Chaumoe Wood attack was the most violent of the attempts, be ing preceded by a very heavy artil- lery bombardment, but the enemy here, as at other places on the line, gre thrown back with very heavy orm. French troops successfully carried out raids in the Argonne, on the left bank of the Meuse, and in Upper Alsace, around the Sepois region LONDON, Nov. 9—An_ official statement Issued to-day by the British War Office regarding muill- tary operations in Frange and Be gium says: “We made a successful, raid ta night to the eastward of Hargicourt. There was nothing of special inter- 4, est to report.” — BRITISH REJOICE AT END OF AMERICAN ISOLATION London Press Says U. S. Will Have Voice Hereafter in Innermost War Councils, ov. %—The Br press exulted to-day n Secretary o State Lansing’s announcement that the American Mission is a war mission and ‘nothing else. On all sides It wan declared the pres- ence of the Americans showed that the O14 tradition of America’s sp lation from European aff. crumbling. From now on, f serted, America Will be repre ‘ the innermost ouncils and her volce will be heard tn all decisions affecting the war. MANY U BOATS WERE SUNK ' BY BRITISH LAST WEEK LONDON, n Merchantmen, Pleases Navy Officials. ‘ LONDON, Nov. 9—"It was a good week for us and a bad one for the German submarines,” was the com- ment made here to-day in high naval Quarters regarcing the greatly re- duced losses to merchantinen. While there is no indication of the jon that It was consid the previous weekly above Viner ° Mrs, Leal 1 day of her # yp rion to-day ) divorce against Dr. J ele Chi an, at the conel for absolute Mildred, at specified (imes “Bince this action was institu Joule Hartman, attorney for Mrs, Lip nan, told Justice Newburger, | “Dr. Lipman hax d very decently t ward the child 4 Bppresents and aioe view of this attitud nc objection to allowlt } he Httle girl once a wee The Justice ordered a provislo PF the decree that Dr. Li child every Saturday or Sune el noon between 4 and 6 0% PUBLISHED Hensfoot Corne y of y was on 4, It was our there was Each and every \from_ his fe a free and untram: | exp meltied newspaper and] Tootste | ositively cannot be (I) bousne: u ® ners, | wre es ) Onry, thing you'll want| he was town be nays. writ anne » to buy after you read) cutuy and conic. Bet>|auaul, them § tellers this paper ise Lance watch out 1. | Wearing nion, Su Cough Pr ‘ops, 1 mnie Hen is pretty pit sf ance 4 ° awh Rolls and Nut otaie | clever pay hlante of wat Rolls, and w can't} eee. BU TaRn ehaae ay blame you for that | Cont Jbution cheerful! ad about, THIEVES GOT [3% St, 120!" | HEN Says: | HIS ROLLS ¢ torgot Hen Leavitt saya that| that we } ‘tosses in dead, wounded and prison. | ) This, With Reduced Losses of number of U boats destroyed, there AIDS H HUSBAND S SHE | DIVORCED Mra, Lipman to tow Doctor to eph Lipman, a wealthy Harlem physician, agreed to allow him to see his young daughter, ni her various “of hing. In pian has hun to see nin the TY EDITION | NEW PAPER COME TO | Advertisements _ TOWN. HOWDY, FOLKS! | Ye Ed's giv name is Bors ang Crate. up. fe Ci ear) bot Cuiners, biKosh, and of it. Eve come to to show you « fo! t think much of thin] [Drops People to pat an nurs, which 1] Lad roadway in He iiaiateawie | {TO KEEP SPACE BLLANCE cltement on Sat pecially Hosed cially “ rund for the Hound. nine hasn't none inf | JER. TOUGH LUCK WARNING! [inks then wan tobbea | (SAM! up way scriber alking warned | at | You" want THE HOD vou elf, Hen, say we, Rol Henafoot Cc * When the thermome to tell youlfer takes a drop, ta N.Y. people have tak-|dept. on the Hound, of|a drop—-a Lance Cough ing 4 Ware, Bays he | wht eal amnary, feller Wiss urty altok, | tofed “about ten pkgstl fram Hensfoot Corners | Hen? Well pee an ad | of Nut Tootsie Rollsits ady mar, Rates on yee? a with him, and now hy| application i Ty FAILURE BLUNTLY TOLD BY GERMAN EXPERT Capt. Persius Warns the Opti- mists and Speaks of a Grow- ing Impatience. COPENHAGEN, Nov 9 Capt. Persius, na expert of the Berliner Tegeblatt, notes ai growing im- ! patience among Germans with the results of the sul parine campaign registered in a swelling flood of let- | ters demanding an answer to the Question: “When shall we have Eng-, land beaten?" He throws cold water on the optimists and warns them against accepting as reliable figures | on destroyed — ton those Including statistical material, Capt, Verfus says that with the IMT harveat on the imports of grain the food problem can scarcely become A motive, for the next x months at least, to make Great Bi in inclined to conclude peace, Me holds that the submarine question for the British will not be “can we continue the war?” but “will it pay?" Admiral von Tirpitz, former Minis- |ter of Marine, has been asked by a committee of the Conservative party to stand for election to the Reichate«! in the vaca) zen-Kai that tho parties of the Left will re- t Saxon district of Baut- gard such a candidacy as a provoca-| tion, It says they undoubtedly will contest the € upon at the ou t arlous parties not to oppose a candidate of the party In posses if the seat Is v otherwise during t RECORD CROPS OF CORN, ion je war. POTATOES AND TOBACCO Buckwheat and Flaxseed Yields Below Expectation — Short- age in Cranberries. 9.—American ers will have a total corn crop of 100 bushels, or 66,000,000 bush- eis more than ever grown before in the | according to the Depart: | ment of Agriculture estimate {ssued to-| United State day, Had weather conditions been @ the October forecast it 1s esti- mated that the yleld would have been 0,000 bushels above the present fig- With an Indicated crop of 429,686,000 bushels potatoes also will break all rev- record breaker ts tobacco, heavy corn crop Is due to larse acreage planted jeld per acre, whi raged nature pi be useful for silos and early The buckwheat production of 16,813,+ 000 bushels fell although it comp. years, The flaxse rop, estimated at 9,648, 600 bushels, 4s disappointing, and the cranberry crop 1s very short oo No Han on Movie Theatres Paying Your War Tax WASHINGTO: ov ture th without collecting tt from ternal 1% ate In- » to queries whe TRI-WEEKLY ned after in the per, bat, vot Cor-| they Won't do nights, si halt’ pase EMPTY FOR THAT AD.! AND NOW IT'S WAST. while © watch with Nut 1 with ome ve an adv. (tone for you lo’ take St LANCE, Don't GET THE HuRRY ANO WORRY eat Too FAST set up STRAIGNT * parently German, and other! Men Who Live Too Hard Grow Old Too Young, the Best Lo- cal Authorities Agree — No Principle of Science Limits Life, They Say—Free the Hu- man Body. of Its Poisons and Let It Live On Indefinitely— Lead an Open-Air Existence, if Possible, Eat Moderately and Keep Clean and Serene. drug selling char iz. The Vorwaerts says ction if von Tirpits! |runs despite the political truce agreed set of the war binding | ted by death or) By Nixola Greeley-Smith. RE you growing old too young? If you are a suce man, an overworked lawyer or doctor, or a temperamental fol- lower of the arts, it is very probable. The tellow who lives too hard grows old too i i Paylor in the current Growth and survival values are influenced, often disastrously, by faulty behavior ag- gravating morbitic agencies, but are capable of much Premature senility is a condition of ‘ance, but too often escapes attention or right interpretation. “In ordinary men of good physique and self-con- trol, under emotional strain there may be lost equipoise; come irascible, impatient under frifling provocation; also introspective, unable to put aside worries; they exhibit abnormal fatiguability of the mind, ‘brain fag,’ are indisposed to mental exertion, avoid the effort of exact reasoning.” Modern medical opinion looks upon old age as a preventable malady. se tne| In the human body itself there exists no reason why man should ever esstul business | TEMPTING U, §, FIGHTERS * 70 BE GOOD, SAYS DANIELS Secretary of Navy Urges Support of $4,000,000 Fund for Camp Community Service. Nov. 9.~The $4,000,- “Medical Rect ord, WASHINGTON, 000 fund being the War Camp Community Ser tn the opinion of Secretary Daniels, its part toward making American fight- Ing men ideal types of the democracy ‘The movement, clares, cannot be supported too stronaly. * gad Secretary “that you cannot amendment, they may be- | stant attendant In @ statement to-da: place thousands of young men in rough camps on the outskirta of strange them or treat nger of caus ne them to yleld to tha! hospitality of | and iilesontion Invites, are giving some! Conservation «Campai, Managers thought to the social organization of the paign B million young men we have wathered to- | wether for training for the army and the I might say we are Ke voldiera and saflors to be good,” ~ spa EX-AMERICANS FORCED INTO THE GERMAN ARMY Naturalized Citizens Who Returned to the Fatherland, COPRNHAGEN, Nov authorities continue the » of putting Into the army sons living In Germany A distinguished , an estimated crop of 1,185,478,000 | t to the | Wear ap can reveal there @——$—_ seema to be no princtple limit Irving Fisher, nie Reference naion Institute god and bad re While 20 » did nov! ed, as ’ Logically, therefore, bis ex- pectation of life should be 100 or 126 Chatrman of the , by this standard of longev- feed- | roard of the Life y, men of forty and fifty are mere If they do not ¥ live too much {ndoors, eat improperly and drink and smoke . The Life Extension Insti- tute believes that ANY drinking Is ‘TOO much and that smoking Is only Jess injurious to the human body than sons why men necessary reason Wh low early forecasts, s well with former has kept tissue leells of animals alive outside of the and growing apparently te all appearances multiplying unchanged by time, People who belleve In a short life and a merry one may think that they would rather grow young by struggling. who follow the physi- clan's rules tn how to live have really nothing to live for. New York physician announced not long ago that prohibition of alcohol will never prohibit because deep in man’s nature which be obtains through drink, and comfortably on and nourish- If we could Moving ple- iy washed of poi atves may pay ye war tax ed in a proper media feel that peoply who have lost| ue Commissioner Roper | led tredaye ThA ruling’ mea fe eer [free of his polsons her it, Waa legal | there seams to be for a theatre to advertiso: “Admission | (Mere ts. We pay your war tax.” |#hould not liv and nourish hin reason why he . Including form be employed but must serve in the armies of occupation or elavwhere be- front line troops, American medicine, wrote recently claims of other physicians that never done any good, vged American ‘ who weturned to Germany e to faulty living habits— | y, however, authorities are agre dren of such parents ot completed the r American city oo JAPANESE PRESS HAILS AGREEMENT ON CHINA SAY SUFFRAGETTE PICKETS en Methods at Washington Jail De- young, men should lead almple lives, | preferably in she country, | and exercise enough, and ‘stop worry: | ing and overeating torty ‘Se HUNTER HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS SEND SOLDIERS | XMAS KITS, cre raplily grow + death rate be- | exercise and worty ling in numbers. cities. than in Good Lack ‘The hundreds of ic, Says the Times, ~The Japanese pres in enthusiast of the agreement retary of State int Ishi as to China Christmas kite to our poldiers in France thr Cross Soctety. simple tn character wor strike of Wom young are| gum, and too fast. | of » | Yelopes, a pencil and « @ small box of candy Mon ‘who grow old too men who eat te n of Japan's apec a’s action ts Irving usher mn ip | eaten have each ered and ribboned bound mugazines various publications. All the pages of the bo and | fully Humbe od bulky |other We sbould avoid sleep Gutdoore, If possible as much exercise We should ea hours, the | in the open alr necessary o Japan Times devia and some raw food nm peace be! we Jf the senaer ond Happy New Ye BUMS | new penns in went with enc The scholars DUP each A quested to w summarized rules for keeping x’ added pleasure when laches for G Viriog Hene stan Line, Savagon n ags for Ainericn sand the gifts f mammals other maa the period of Each bas contains man cluding candy ar from one of the nla. on the Kuss ach bis (uli growte (i) Be we (wane THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1917. ‘Avoid Hurry Habit, Shun Worry Habit, Get Happiness Habit and Live Long, The Advice of High Medical Scientists PY Dy ! THe HAGiT OF HAPPINESS ~ Play GOP TORNUP EXPRESS. RECEIPT CLUE 10 CHAPIN MURDER eeiboencie Name of Suspect and ileg: ul lraftic in Drugs Revealed in Cleveland Case. CLEVELAND, Nov. %--'Torn pieces of An express company receipt may lend to the capture of the slayer of Dr. Harey 1. Chapin, Cleveland phy si rand world-wide trav eler, found dying in a down town hotel room here late yesterday afver noon from a fractured skull, Dr Chapin died shortiy after beth found and Coroner Byrne deciares he was murdered fhe scrape of the express com pany receipt haya been pieced to ether by the police and show name of the suspected murderer, former Cleveland druggist, the intence of an illicit trade in nar- cotica In which he was engaged and & probable motive for the killing The name of the suspect is kept se- t by the police, who aay he has Deen arrested several times on ilileit victed The illicit traffic uncovered was the Handling of drugs in violation of the | Federal law, ‘Nhis discovery brought on its trail the admission by Mrs. Shapin that her husband wa dicted to the use of narcotic drugs and that the suspect kept him sup- plied The motive for the killing, police assert, may He in Dr. Chapin‘s efforts to break with the drug-runner in re- sponse to the pleadings of Mr. Chapin. who, @ short time before the killing says she begged her husband to see the man no more For years Dr. Chapin was known i “the Blind Doctor of Cleveland.” was about forty-five. Dr, Chapin lost bis eyentaht in bin insatiable pursuit of travel and ad-! venture in foreign lands. Shortly | after fnishin| tour to sew the “seven wonders of the world.” While travelling across the Ausyrian desert he was blinded by the glare of the sum In 1911 Dr. Arnold Knapp, a New York surgeon, performed an operation but never con- | ad-' ollege he started on a| KAISER’ $ PICTURE TAKEN OUT OF HAMBURG OFFICE Seventy Employees of Seized Head- quarters Depart, Many on Vagge of Tears, Seventy emplovees of the Hanburm An Line, the palatal headquar No. 45 Hroadway was at At noon to-day, took their per onal belonainae from thely desks and dovaried, many of + "on oome States Deputy Mar shale, who had been on ev ne niet) e<w to it that the took away nothing in the shane of of fleint do ente. About the m of tears, Uni e time, Juliua Henry Cohen, Secretary of the newly created War Board of the Port of New York took al fon of offices | which, from now on, will be the home of the War A full length olf painting of Kaiser Withelm, in all hie war regalia, had been removed from one of the offices and pinced against the wall 1 guess there'll be no retion to anyore removing that pleture,” said one of the Depnty Marshals — BRITISH MISSION MEETS HEADS OF INDUSTRIES HERE Envoys of Munitions Ministry to Give Americans Benetit of English Ministry. The frst confer ce of the special ‘mission of the British Minlatry of Mfu- nitions was held to-day in the rooma of the Merchants’ Association In the Wool worth Bullding, Commissioners Garrod and Asquith met representatives of the oll, leather and rubber industries in New York at the same time Commi foners Kent and Baillie conferred with the representatives of the food, clothing and textile industries. These conferences, by request of President Wilson, are to be executive. ‘The commission will «ive the American manufacturera suggestions based on England's seine Sg ony WILL REAPPOINT | MISS DAVIS TO IS 10 $7, 500 JOB Hylan May Have to ave to Prefer Charges to Remove Her as Chairman of Parole Board. One of Mayor Mitchel’s last oMctal will be the reappointment of whic- enabled Dr. Chapin to recover Katharine 1, Davis as Chairman of the partial use of his sight. Valentine Fries, millionaire lumber- man and boat owner of Sanduaky. Mra. Chapin was her husband's con- he left the house. 600,000 HERE SIGNED FOOD-SAVING PLEDGES Plan to Form Permanent Organization, ‘The imo card canvass to eniiat housewives in the food conservation campaian closed with @ total of approx- imsately 690,000 pledges obtain: The actual number recetved t# 584.054, but there are some yet to come tn by mail from #lx schools and three ho Queens borough, presided over by Mra. | John K. Robinson as Chairman, made the beat showing of all the boroughs, Her quota, based on the national eam- alan figures. wan exceeded by nearly 6,000. The Seventh Ansembly Distr of Manhattan, under Mra, Wallace Ham {iton, Chairman; Assembly District No. 23, Dr, Lilllan Crary Randall, Chairman. and the Firat Assembly District of | Brooklyn, of which Mra, August Dreyer ® Chairman, all ncored over 200 per cent Following are the city's figures, which jo not include 9,299 undlatributed cards that came in by mail Manhattan .....+.. eves 997,408 Brooklyn . 13.164 Bronz . 87,066 Richmond 1448 PaLAY seas 14.758 OMeluls of the campaign are forming a permanent organization FORCIBLY FED TOO OFTEN, nounced as Unnecessary and Inhuman WASHINGTON, Novy, 9. Th: v's Party mil n the fail here has re a dispute over wheth were fed forcibly or whother they took vod wiiling! Woman's Party need that Alice Paul 1 been forcibly fed thren t rday afternoon and that Winsiow, her fed twit on in al! (le more than twelve contended, was un d inhuman Th was no forced feeding,’ said Dr, J. A, Gant These women t the women adaqui the Jail vhyatelan. vk the food without esistance and merely want to adve lye themselves by saving they have fed forcibly Miss Paul's cond tion ts not ort ous., Sho is doing well It is not even sert Bar at Washington against torday by Mrs. OH of the National Wom telegram to FPrestdent She deciared that “ey #ileged persecution CAUBAB aan) |Parole Hird for a ten- It was after ho had gone blind that! Dr. Chapin married the widow of nd guide whenever ith r term at $7,500 a year. Miss Davis Is a Suffrage leader, and, it Is understood, expects to figure prominently at the annual saa- will be held probably at the Hotel As- tor, beginning Nov, 20. When it became known to-day amet ermined to reap- iy er Hine. eeceralines P| co-operating against the Turkish com= | munications along the Mediterranean | const. point Mian Davis, one of the first questions asked was whether Hylan as Mayor would have the right to re- ims ve her, In most cases a Mayor has the right to ask for the resignation of an appointee. without preferring charges, It t* understood, though, | leat if Hylan wants to remove Mins| Davia he will have to firat prefer | caurges against her, She ts protected by @ special charter provinion, Minn Davis's present term as head of the Parole Board expires Dec, 27. > to Ald in Food Ct fon, WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—Represent- Steamahip atives of thirty-three of the most tm- portant steamship lines pledged them- selves to-day to follow the food con- servation directions of the Food Admin- | yetrat in. The a more thai mahip lines repre: #100,000,000 nente | pureha: [worth of food supplies a year RUSSIAN ENVOY SAYS BOLSHEVIK] CAN'T HOLD POWER M. aktekot, Aihih Ambassador to Paris, Declares Nation Will Yet Be Saved. PARIS, Nov. §—"Those who thought the Russian Revolution bad been finished made a mistake,” said M. Makisko?. the Russian Ambassa« dor, in an interview which appears {@ the Petit Parisien. “Alas, now the, blood of our people will flow again in the streets of Petrograd “But however «ad may be the ad- vent to power of the Mextmalists, it can be only a momentary success. In my opinion it is the supreme effort af the Maximalists. Thin desperate at- tempt, this caring stroke, can be only the signa! for thelr downfall and or- ganization of the revolution in a ma. “onal and patriotic sense which is bound to assure victory against ene- mies within and without, “Russia asa whole is about to rally around 4 national government and form for it & rampart of flesh and blood, A radical surgical operation was perhaps necessary, after the misunderstanding caused by Gen, Kornjoff's move, in order to assure the salvation of immortal Russia, This represents the view generally held here, It is pointed out in the press that according to thelr own statement, the Maximalists seized the Central Telegraph office as one of their first steps, so that all ne from Petrograd should be receiv with reserve until more impartial in- formation in obtainable. Neverthe- leas, the oxtreme gravity of the situa tion, both from the viewpoint Rus: and of the effect on the war 8 & whole, is emphasized, and fears are expressed that, in the words of Guatave Herve in La Victoire, “These unfortunate creatures may sigh an armistice with Germany and dishonor their country by abandoning the Allies in the midst of the struggle.” oT ENTIRE TURKISH ARMY IN PALESTINE IN FLIGHT British Airmen Follow Up Retreat and Drop Bombs on ‘ Ottoman Troops. LONDON, Nov. 9.-—The entire Turkish army In Palestine ts retreating toward the north, British airplanes are follow- ing up the retiring Turks and bombing on of the State Suffrage Party, which | them. Forty Turkish guns were captured, saya the British official statement an- nouncing the Ottoman retreat. British and French naval forces are A protectorate for Palestine was aug- gested to-day by the Manchester Guard- The newspaper has in mind a British, American of Joint protectorate acheme."* PRISON FOR Sh SMUGGLERS. Year and Day and 81,000 Ft Three Caught With T One year and a day plus $1,000 fine cach wae the sentence Justice McCatt to-day Imposed on three Swedish sub- cts reecntly cought in an attempt ty amourgle tungsten, a valuable ingre- dient in the making of high «rade ste out of the cou ‘The men are man J = for Frits Ocrundal, Wata sand Robert J. Collina, Th 1 to amuxxle the ore ov board th United States and plead- ed ullty, all denying the Prosecut® ¢ Attorney's st that Che metal was tined for ines Bay Wolf—Large \nimal Shapes Big Sale $25 Fur Scarfs ¢ 9 $ 1 6G 50) With Muffs to Match Stunning Big Coats *19” $ 1g” 53y°” Extremes of Luxury Magnificent Fur Trimmings Beautiful, soft, warm coats, presenting all the % harms and richness of { #80 to $50 productions— assortments at the very height of thetr complete- ness. Genuine Fur Collars Bolivias—Broadcloths Velours—Silk Plushes Silvertones—Pompoms Crush and cross-over collar designs, wide gir- dles and the exactly cor- rect flare to the skirts— brilliant Russian and lim- ousine modela—the choice of the city. Alterations Without Charge Sale at Four Fashion Shops Nineteen West 34th Street Brooklyn: | Downtown: Newark: 460-462 Fulton St 16 W, Idth St, Broad & W. Park 4 J 4 j , { {

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