The evening world. Newspaper, November 21, 1917, Page 1

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, and returnable to-morrow r ENT tn Crenter New Vout ana Competent, 908i pe jeseen County, . 3. TWO CENTS ceewhere PRICE & oascn “Circulation Books Open to All.” | Che The Frese Publishing Verk World), NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, NEW PANEL OF 50 ORDERED AUENSINFUGHT [| QV GEORGE'S RUSH ORDER TD FILL DE SAULLES JURY AS TENTH MAN 1S CHOSEN First List of 150 Talesmen Exhausted —Defendant Cheerful Because Son Visits Her To-Day—Her Chauf- feur State Witness. ‘ (Special from a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) MINEOLA, L, I., Nov. 21.—Justice Manning, at the close of the morn- tng session of the third day of the trial of Mrs. Blanca De Saulles, charged with the murder of her divorced husband, Jack De Saulles, Yale athlete and clubman, on the night of Aug, 3, at his country place, the Box, West- bury, ordered that a new panel of fifty veniremen be immediately drawn eerzine | When the court took a ré 12.80 o'clock the 104th man < fret panel of 160 had boen examined, © LITLE SISTERS SHOPPING leaving only eleven names In the box | FOR SANTA CLAUS SEIZED thirty-five having reported sick or given other legitimate excuses | Ten of the twelve men who are to| Never Had Christmas,” Says Elder | ait in judgment upon Mrs, Del of Two Accused of Stealing | Saulles had been chosen: iarie: s Toys in Store. Little more than half an hour was| At the Lackawanna Btation, tho consumed in the afternoon session|..1, W. Kurtis, manager of a five and| only ratiroad terminal In Hoboken, | Aisposing of the eleven remaining ten cent store at No, 2849 Third Avenue,| there was an unusually large crowd taleemen. Six had formed fixed the DB ran Into the atrect tn great) of outgo! passengers all day to- opinions which they sald would re-|*%c!tement at noon to-day and sum-| gay and among them were @ notic heen taal] moned Detectives Melihargy and Me- 7 ber of Germanic look- quire evidence to change. Two held hin tO mabe Gm areal. “tha ac,| RUly wnee DUM conscientious objections to capita! VEL. ak clpatin a hard job, ar-| me Persona. Owing to the many punishment. The others were ©X-| ranged their duonsive weareoe. ana| other ways of leaving town, however, cused or challenged. ch side HAs] rushed into the store, w they found| the crowd at the Lackawanna was exercised fourteen peremptory chal-| the 1 force surrounding two only pailent jndleati of the general! lenges and has sixteen remaining. ragged, boxrimed and forlorn looking | exodus of those who fear arrest. By o'clock | little girls Kurtis made a charge of ab oplifting In @ battered leather shopping bag car ried by the larger of the two girls the detectives fotnd « collection of dolls. at 2.30 The jurors selected | Court adjourned until to-morrow. to-day were: Harry Livingston of Seaford, a section hand on the Long Island 2 y-dishes and trinkets. The children Railroad. He bs torty-sieht years lare Freda and Martha Klein, fourteen old, maried but has no children HV-/and twelve years old, of No. 509 Union Roe |Avenue, ‘Their mother ia dead and Nicholas Schneider of Manhasset, |their fathor has a housekeeper @ blacksmith. He ts forty years ol, “We weren't stealing,” declared Fre- maried and has three children. “Martha believes in Santa Claus MR6. DE SAULLES HAPPY OVER Dut don't. We never had a Christman, VISIT OF SON. |Martha has been talking about Christ | mas, and to-day 1 took her to the store Mrs, De Saulles was moro cheerful ang told her Santa Claus hed pail to-day than on any day since hor! certain things for her and f semis trial, began, She came into court|them out and she took them and then f gmiling this morning, Her sister, | paid for them on the sly #0 she would Amalla, who followed her, walking | {ink ,,they were «ifts from Santa With Sherif Phineaus Seaman, was} ‘tho clerks and cashiers said they during the trial. She looked very pretty in her black turban with a bow of black ribbon at the side, her fetching dark blue coat with Its wide rolling collar and white cuffs. Miss Errazuris wears no jewelry. The prisoner wore a cream © charge of the little girls. U.S, LIEUTENANT KILLED IW ACTION WITH BRITISH ored the crepe de chine waist opened at : Pershing Announces Death of Or- throat, and there was just the : ; A ‘lantest actor in’ her chaskt: lando Gochnaur—Another Several things had co-operated to- American Wounded, day to bring about the change In| WASHINGTON, Nov. 21, — Gen the manner and bearing of the white-| Pershing to-day reported the death of faced young woman, who had been Orlando Goohnaur, Medica) | sitting inert while the machinery of © Corps, attached to the led In action Nov, 6 of kin | the law was being put in motion for the determination of her fate, This afternoon sho is to have a romp with her boy Jack, the innocent cause of riven | my | Ne, also of Corps, and attached her present position, my, Was slighty | This boon was granted to her y ta terday after a conference between eer Wilson at Fanerat i Justice Manning and the counse! in Men Scena ne Hanae the case, fp arts irl QUESTIONING OF THE TALES- MEN IS RESUMED. Ifictala attended the funeral to of Gustave B talesman| Warren 8. Young, for thirty-six years gpotil "secretary vay Rite Hows (Continued on 1 Page.) | seventy-three f _> . “> TUE WORLD TRAVEL BURE, BAU, iat ‘B RACING RA LTS, Page 2 ENTRIES, Page 12 jona, auilings, d&c., via all Rail . Central and South Americas stwamebip lines, “Baggage and parcel heck room dag and night, Travellers’ checks and money | cobs tee walt, Telebons Meskame 4000—Advi, FROM HOBOKEN IN FEAR OF NEW RAID Station Crowded Wi With Depart- ing Passengers—Another Round-Up for To-Night, Hoboken aliens who are German spies, friends of spies or simply sullen antl-Americans, are running to cover to-day. the city that there is to be another round-up of their ilk by Secret Ser- vice men to-night, to complete the work begun when several hundred were taken Into custody on Monday How © report of to-nmight’s ratd originated, nobody knows. But tt Is virtually impossible to buy a travell- ing bag or trunk anywhere in Hobo- ken. An Evening World reporter in-| quired at ten leading stor to-day and found that in each ptfer all sorts of luggage ry out in the eptacies had been wold last twenty-four hours New stocks of hand bags, grips, sult) cases and trunks have been hurriedly ordered from wholesalers in New York and Jersey City and Hoboken merchants expect the run on such goods to continue. dozen different trolley lnes, by the tube and by the ferries, the Teu- tons a going. In the Recorder's Court of Hoboken to-day Charles Felton of No. 88 River Street, an address opposite the United States Army plers, was charged by Joseph Brady of No. 809 Willis Ave- Aue with ng sald of departing troops: “ ad the Kaiser's going to get ‘em; to hell with Amer Felton is a naturalized Amer ican of German birth, showed his clti- ship papers dated 1888. In the abs sence of R Adolph Carsten, as- sistant Corporation Counsel William Kavanaugh sat on the bench and sen- tenced Felton to $100 fine or ninety days in jail. Acting Recorder Kava- naugh said: “There has been too much of thin sort in Hoboken, man should ven to learn he can loyalty here.” ——<———. This an opportunity t away with dis- 10,000 TONS OF SUGAR SEIZED FOR USE HERE Order Product Bought for Russia Turned Over to City, ran { tons of sugar which oad & Co, has held for a t the Russian Gov. to-day by the given out by George native of the United Committee, to-day tt waa t sear Would be dls. ade through the Hereyras s' Committee In the nee " neutral con eat weelved in thin tant is This sugar wi f ane pee will be distributed throughout New England if ‘The rumor has spread about | FOR A MILLIQN U, S, TROOPS CANNOT BE FILLED FOR YEAR | Sey Impossible To Do It | Though Working Speed. “AMERICANS COUGH ve) SAVED GERMANS - | WASHINGTON, 1917, BRITISH GENERAL WHO COMMANDED ARMY WHIC ba WON VICTORY | rs. De Saulles’s Trial Halts for New cet 5 “Clrentation Books Open to All. kc 20 PAGES GERMANS DRIVEN TO LAST _ HAIG MAKES GAIN OF SIX WEATHER—Uncettiod Te Morrow — Sh CENT tn renter Me lndeon County, Sd TW LINE: MILES HINDENBURG LINE SMASHED: 5,000 GERMANS CAPTURED: _—PERSHING SEES THE BATTLE .~o——— First Assault Carries Haig’s Third Army Forward Five Miles, and Another TakesIt toSecondSystem |tca's first million troops with | “muah” stamp desired by Prethter| IN i | of Trenches a Mile Further On. aged oe ob Bigland aie staal DebG nine bbb eben A nbe fetch, Ms ees aL Ny pouring into Frar But, offi Th BRITISH ARMY HEADQUARTERS IN FRANCE, Noy, cials sald to-day, with the utme - | driving power now henint the muni- | Soldier Un us to Contrat "| 21 (by the Associated Press).—The Germans are fighting on their tions and shipping programme at | and ADI hing Enemy last line of defense at one point of the British attack. a yroaching Ene the training of American soldiers Patrol Flet FOE LIKE WOODEN LONDON, Nov. 21.—The Hindenburg line has been broken onments, a million ¢ cared aro} Ch, i a 4 ments, ¢ " Mi : 4 2 lta depth of four to five miles, the War Office announces. British be fully equipped and maintalned tn ‘sisi aiogd ‘ HER RAEN Br WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY troops stormed the first system of this line on the whole front be- | It requires at east ton tons of AN PRANCE, Nov. 21 (by the Anse HOR tween St. Quentin-and the Searpe River, a distante of approxi- shipping constantly in use to y ted Pross).—Only the fact that the | ‘ five miles. each fighting man, Experts doubt Germans filled to venture into No ‘ | eaters thstysive sel [whether America would have more! Man'y Land on a recent tight envea | pai a staerint | [Adininsion of defeat is made by Berlin, A despatch from the j than 10,000,000 tons before 1919. brats SnurARNbeiee nu ebebRine | Germans Practically Asleey in| German capital says: “German reserves checked the Britisic In Officials agreed with the British ; , ‘ | Tanches Eve . | the rear positions after ground had been gained by the attackers,” | Promier that the situation in Rw a and mixty men of the renches, Says Eyewitness | ys to-day's official com: leation, The loss is announced of and Italy demands a vast numbor of | U8! battalions to enter the trenches of Battle. Marcoing, Grainco ‘ fighters from the United States for| {°° k were given #1 ni train: ede ec. | _ urt and portions of the permanently established the knockout on the western fr neler) FAIRE Seana ported 110. 4 re tah i, VaaQitaty Ghiete, ceanbine an 1600.04 i brawls acroas N ° ada WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES IN The British infantry and tanks pressed on and captured the pester : arse 20k posit ront of | THE FIFLD, Noy, 21 (United Press) . ae he ans a : or ieee K Maca ore alien a sie FIRLD, ‘ ; i | second system of defenses, over a mile beyond. ~ | alread predicte: 000,000 a ss | ne t battle in the world's a | would be placed in Cluss 1 of tt hihi mate It ee ‘ History Waw that by which the Iheiéh The second system of German defenses captured by the British is j next drat, Mi ee *T to-day amashed the Hindenburg Ine |known as the Hindenburg support line. The British captured Benavis, How many other miilions Ameri Bact t ror Only the wooden horse of Troy offers | [, 7 I i | must turniah is proulematica One| geet Moe ane ween tra Ba | y sodden ‘ eet ameau Wood, La Vacquerie, the defenses known as Welsh Ridg ial eta ‘ pecial task and the entire walt had} a comparison with Huaig’s blo cs lotieta pinion! was that tho country | schewrand the part it intended to.ptay | tactiney cetetgusity | Ribecourt Village. Their operations are continuing, vould never dravy eyond the midd an be al a Hole perene the ‘midi! under conditions to that in} Ata m when the world wis | The attack was begun yesterday by the Third Army. There was no Velun tare gataGrenteioravintic tx re | a Si ab ie a ie worion that ! ent a a uy | artillery Preparation and the Germans were taken completely by surpvise, |Heation of the present atrengih of RES GAGE Kau reanifod In, waiting lite al ame warecalniir tha cal The number of prisoners taken thus far by the British is given at Amorlean gressitannss it r I all Might, but not one German ap-| thing and sleeping soundly in thetr|about 5,000 in a Reuter despatch tiled to-day at British Hea quarters, since tho first menu f ios en "g te Pe fat re st (porntert vhle luge a without the |The correspondent says that although a great storm is raging the British known, at any placo iu Nu Wa | faintest suxpicion that anyt | were ted. Inadvertent teuk® of] pang » | wink ev paar dy, bn troops and tanks were still pushing forward a) Nae ast Guard oMcers a | The plan was allow several! ing British Infantry, rose up from t An Assoclated Press despatch from the ish front cays Gene ou ag saa : at n to Ba tk ground Ike magle ond swung to the! Pershing was at the British headquarters as the guest. of Field Marshaf Joe mit = ; would fail Geen oa a crake |Haig, to witness the British offensive The American commander fol- sions d repay m fully COF | Phe lumbering tanks blazed the trail janes the battle with the deepest Interest Small Amertean cities, Ame 1 French ralds, vd cauent | tele gtiganti i pathao ® Although no official announcement railronds, hospitals f t na wound | fering free entra the Infantry ly evident that Gen. tor trucks are appearing ‘ w to a} immediately behind. ‘They crashed mediate objective ia Cagn- Ike magi The Atlant i) cade ON) over wire entangle ver art. f the key ecitt to th ane tang a of the key cities to the Him- ually being bridged t ansport An A A 4 fully concealed « 10 frise, over nburg line. and cargo navy, Thy ‘ No Man's] trenches thor und the waiking | (Field Marshal 8 térrific and as many more as a ded A ’ Tommies followed sinash, resulte apture of can be safely handled ar | hd Prisoners p r k of t em our towns, two vil ham- over" as speedily . fn ; to-day wore Jazed with the eur t, an important ridge, three airy A 1 ita | They were fabber a the road from Bapaume te AMERICA IN WAR TO WIN, | from | Not'a5 ofines : 7 ise GREAT BRITAIN 18 ASSURED. | ana aaah est idea th id (Havrincourt Ma ng, Ples- LONDON, Nov 1 A Oia REMENRA pes an : quir “ oA Vanes eo, town a ‘ 1 A , | whe w y ‘ ae urt and Anneux, villages, am quick reply to the pla 1) Tw ff off Britain's st : ontradicts British Report That! the hamict of Bom are now joorgke at the first » td f ’ “* | War Coungil:that at the rey of ches 110 Baad No Artillery Fire Pre- | Wi Brkieh Bands. The Welge Jrush tr ns and " und Ju ' k {fe esa | i t ceded Drive, und the Coulllet woud, Neuf wood . . d : ot | “Englische . bus - nd Lateau wood succumbed te "The United States i» heart |!) si auaelh iba hou re les re { Ha : ve b and soul in the war,” he sald 4 : have Enos nities eee ome SrOUNG) ite to mass au My. dorses the statement of Preside ihe Gach y-day's official report as B Se ke Wilson that none of its r ‘A a tore 2 ; | iecaven ie FR would be spared, it a wan SR eeciar ates ‘ aaa Ge the: ecccaatieten Mike een ¥ # pie belnge. in than War Offtce says the Britis er portions of the second ling the war.” Avant, & a eet es ieoutg Main attacky strove to break thr haseuanh wits ut the en ny belag pe up t 1 t sleep bare att the direction vf Cambra schlevement in the great Raat : sound of ing ondary attacks north and south ¢ OFFICIAL REPORT OF THE aie iMpeeenais ? nain battle fleld had local and lim GREAT BRITISH VICTORY. A ore Vbtwaen 1 ine hen rep f the victory ‘i \ fs Graine t is added, the Yesterday morning the third army, 7 h. ¢ " ts German foremost tin t Sir Julian Byng, delivered @ wie the H A it. Quentin, the er icks between St. Quen~ a 1u Ge a strong 1 R Scarpe, These ate \ mM tided the English a w at pre: Rees uck. ‘I k , fighting | vious artillery | and ip | “President Wilson has selected ‘ae ' e K the sincourt and |each case the enemy was completely ! — nie Germans 1 ten M k tained in the possession | surprised. (Continued on Second Pas etor, HH Green, underfoot (the British |Our tréops have broken into the 1 , j A _" —_—_————— ee a -— ee

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