The evening world. Newspaper, August 9, 1918, Page 1

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8; cooler to-night. “If It Happens In New York It’s In The Evening World’’ 10r10, “Circulation Books Open to All.’’ | _ “Circulation Books Open to aun?|_| ___NEW YORK, FRIDAY, “AUGUST 9, 1918. 12 PAGES — He ————— PRICE TWO CENTS. _ Copyright, 1918, by The Press Pablishing a. (The New York World: HAIG DRIVES ONIN PICARDY. STRIKES HARD IN FLANDERS KOSICE siti SHIMEEREZE “Stevie. GERMANS DRIVEN BACK 11 MILES LLOYD GEORGE REJOICES; SAYS “WE HAVE RIGHT ry Aff t U. S. Steel Co mon Goes Up. Vie "Mar ket Up, No Vengeance. T° first iss’ of Liberty Loan ONDON, Aug. 9. We have rel Bie bonds went above par Loses S'icc'conniat' [British War Office Announces Con-|19 GERMAN OFFICERS PUNISHED Will Be Necessa c ‘y to Invade on the Exchange to-day | (Conditions Better, With Mer-| the end of ° ° Deferred Cl asses U Z ji a vanectlg. Atlan dhe ete : cury at 85 fe Dropin | Hopi Gedrea decinreat hee tinued Progress on the Picardy FOR FAILING TO STOP DRIVE 0.02, shortly afte © openin oO 4 wloyd George declared to-day, in . - y of the market. There the Lib- a speech at Neath, Change Is Made. SAY ik balnied' the alstinetion'¢F Humidity. speech at Neath Front,the Opening of a New Drive OF ALLIES ABOVE THE MARNE being the only war bonds in the | God, in his righteousness, will 7 7 TELLS OF ARMY PLANS,| wort tebe aling abe te ce seeur throuth when visor in Flanders and Capture of Five poser teh eir exemption from taxation, comes, there will be no greed, : : p ‘ ; coupled “with the prompect of | 8 A:M.. 7 $3 | fo tenting up, no vengeance, I Towns in That Region. Gen. Von Planits, Two Major Generals and Tells Senate Committee He| turtner noavy tevies bv the new eau A . have no apology for the part 1 a Four Colonels Among Those Who Felt i Ss 4 e Reg- war revenue measure upon prac- M.. 78 ave taken in this conflict. I pro- re , i weedy, | SSS | thee: ge | a iiwien iemines |PAriS Reports Say That the Attacks| Weight of Kaiser's Anger. causes that yeni erty 31-28 on’t think I've been too optimis —_—_— {over the 100 mari, 2eM, 7 38 |. of Anglo-French Troops Are “De- ERNE, Aug. 9°.—For failure to stop the French offensive nine- WASHINGTON, Aug. 9—The en-| The cheering reports, of | the 3PM, 85 (a fence ere : : ¢ teen German officers have been retired, according to advices larged war programme was explained’ {1. errect on the market. U.S mrs . veloping Victoriously on a Great here to-d This punishment was inflicted upon Gen. von to the Senate Military Committee be- on, which closed last ‘The fitth day of poe Wenesen Planits, two major generals, four colonels and twelve lieutenant Sak dhoaba Game TIPhE ats tO8 sold up to 1111-4 | Promise of relief at noon when the fanils, : " lay by Secretary Scale’—British Nearing Chaulnes colonels, BRITISH CAVALRY AND TANKS, WITH SOME INFANTRY FORCES, PRESSING ON TO CHAULNES f the finst selling at 111-2 a with a temperature was sareek Baker, in urging enactment as soon |temperature wa gr j Wind from the southwest at thirty » which | sticky, WITHOUT ICE 12 HOURS «: THAT SANK MERAK CHASING OTHERS pS EE, LONDON, Aug. 9.—Fourteen thousand prisoners and guns too numerous to mention were taken yesterday in the British drive on the front south of the Somme, says to- day’s War Office report. A United Press despatch from British Headquarters |says that including those taken to-day the prisoners now miles an hour. had %e said the extension was essential to provide the men needed to bri he | war to a quick conclusion, The humidity w: the mark at hour yesterday, The wind was blowing at thirty miles an hour | |Lack of Ammonia Puts Huge Ice | Pkaint in City Institution Out of Commission. Prompt enactment of the Drs Kell Extension Biil be fixed as registration day, 1|Officers Report Conversation With Commander, Who Hunt- so that Sept. 5 m as sug- It was hotter at 11 o'clock to-day rar A gested by Provost Marshal General] Arrangements were mado by Dr./yy'a"dogree than at the same hour} ed Up Record in Lloyd's, |BU™ber 20,000. It says British cavalry have captured sev-| Bridges Over the Somme Blown Up to Hamper Crowder, was urged by Mr. Baker,| George O'Hanlon, Superintendent of|yesterday and the humidity was ee) eral more villages. German Retreat, and the Advantage Without the extension, he told the| Bellevue Hospita: -day to supply |nearly 20 per cent. greuter. But it ’ The German submarine which sunk the Diamond The Associated Press correspondent estimates the deta | prisoners at more than 17,000 and the guns at more ise ; ve ; \than 200. A German Divisional General is reported among committee, it would bo necessary to invade the deferred classes. Mr. Baker reviewed the situation| but added little to information al-| ution with ice from outside |W48 cooler on the streets for the rea- son that a twenty-seven-mile wind was blowing out of the West and thunder storm developments give that soure The huge ice plant of the hospital, which manufacturers daily 60,000 Is Everywhere Being Pressed. WITH THE BRITISH ARMY IN FRANCE, Aug. 9 (Associated American st was last ready given to the committee by Gen pounds of ice, was forced to idleness promise of a more comfortable night tu mber laden steam schooner and a the prisoners. Press).—British cavalry and some infantry were signalled in the neigh- y beens shal Ge : ed u ‘ow York has experienced since ie . ° Fi . borhood of Chaulnes this morning. When last heard from directly they, March and Provost Mar 5. eneral|| because of a lack of ammonia Monday, when the heat wave|'T@Mp steamship of wbout 7,000 t The Allied progress is continuing. The French have Crowder, according to Chatrma For twelve hours following the sé In qnotl This was learned to-day on . k Py eas together with armored cars, were operating back of Framerville, and Chamberlain atter the hearing closed.| snutting down of the ice plant there {™2s Set 1" motion taken Fresnoy-en-Chaussee, while the British have reached : ; H The Secretary said the decision to] was an absence of ice at the h pital, |. Taree deaths from heat were re-|rival hero of tho officers and crow of a point east of Le Q land Cai Ont f thi have now progressed many kilometres beyond, continuing the cleaning extend the draft ages was reached| tt the auroco acd ahvsicinns di tn, |Ported: Stanislaus Wisneiski, No. 300] the destroyed stoamer po ast of Le Quesnel and Caix. On top of this came after long study which showed the step to be absolutely necessary to best they could in utilizing cold water Floyd Street, Brooklyn; Frank Baylin, No. 70 Union Avenue, Brooklyn, and “As we wero rowing away," sald the announcement that the British had started another up of the country and capturing villages. in providing for the comfort of the + 4 : am|# Micer, “the U boat started arter| drive i Allied airmen have blown up many of the bridges over the out the agreement made at the|; 415 satiems i ey Jane Goblyn, No, 492 Amsterdam rive in Flanders, s Ri {th . treat A folisl f 4. Th carry .. patients now in the hospital. °, s 1 hailed to stop. The sub- Somme iver, an né enemy's retreat is serious! embarrassed, ns Allied conference. It was stated at the hospital that |AvenU inal ial ianabesie: aaa The War Office announces that Locon, Le Cornet . y Mr, Baker was questioned by Sena- tor Reed of Missouri and others, it was understood, regarding what was termed the “apparent change of front” on the part of the Department as to extension of the draft ages. the necessity of ammonia supply in time overlooked. 2 U. S, SAILORS KILLED, replenishing — the had been JAPAN TO. LEAD LEAD ALLIED TROOPS INTO SIBERIA) m: length and an officer, speaking per fect E tionality arine came up to within a boat's ish, asked id whe: did not s one of his |Malo, Quentin, Le Petit Pacaut and Le Sart, in Flanders, -| have been occupied. Initial progress of two miles on an eight-mile front British cavalry has rounded up many prisoners, but the larger part of the Germans so far taken were captured by Australians and Canadians. An enormous quantity of stores and ammunition has been abandoned by the Germans in their hasty retreat ‘An amendment to the Man-Power 3 HURT IN BOILER BLAST} wasiise li: iS ap Weer eee ea |along the southwestern portion of the Flanders salient was This afternoon the enemy’s transport lorries have been rolling along Bill to aravent aiciise Lato be’ pro- Otank whe ‘| Lloyds Register. Haamining the, Feported by the British War Office. The Germans are| the few good roads left in the Somme va They afforded excellent ee aria sablepe see Explosion on Nopatin Occurred in o veoamannes in Chiet the meron ae ible was a Hollander, evacuating their positions on the Lys River. at Oe as whe! played payne: Y el. SecaPiNS CONVOYS: ais Be grating can decane are Foreign Waters—Long combined forces, with the nt} was it?” H n asked if we had a Above the Lys region, on the front north of Kemmel, | ‘"* oi allele a rogue Lae ee ly ir fieation for industrial reasons would Island Man Dead various Government. sail, and on being told w he! the British carried out a local operation last night in which The enemy in the Montdid + pocket is now certainly in nt even be nullified by his absence from work pating. Major Gen, William 8 s, | advised us to holst it, w t € *. ok more pr us position than fay Ww operations of more than five da —Two men] in command of the American contin- | mark that the ist “was only ton’ their line was advanced somewhat on a front of more than the British cavalry menaces all nen and mat y has there. BB A CHHIES Sha Oman, tO Dewaha s. Nopatin eevee Hy gamle tie Ai io aia Reseda : 1,000 yards, The prisoners taken by the British forces alone in s fighting Pre ane msersiary cali due ee a staft officer shatbog | DUTCH 10 MAKE PEACE | North of the Somme, the statement said, the enemy is} toalled 260 officers and 11,721 of other ranks . ya sued yester uspend te, ung ae ‘ 7 officer | resisting vigorously, and heavy fighting is under way be- WITH THE BRITISH ARMY IN FRANCE, Aug. 9 (Reuter's).— manded an infantry PROPOSAL IS REPORT tween Chipilly and Morlancourt. he Germans are blowing up their ammunition dumps in the battle area. | | The British have captured Morlancourt on the north- This is considered an indication that they ar treat had saKen:& eps. EG SF) BAUD aaa KUEHLMANN PLANS PARTY ern end of the Somme battlefront, and the infantry line The British ¢ Ities since the begin nt drive are of the ord $9 el m i atelhgel te ; f that ooint th ale int h mE three-fifths of the number of prisoners counted up to 3 o'clock this Riss cama Oe Sis MarDIhe Choe ee ——” of Moreuil. This represents an infantry advance to the| aRNE, Aug. 9—Dr, Richard yon) 1 i depth of seven mile in the cent | th $12 Men's & Young aie mn 's Suits, $7. 95 Centrist Jeader f The ‘Franco- British advance south of the Somme has reached | a egret ; , (9p am | Weok i alee carseat ee WP KING OF BULGARIA ILL. a maximum depth of eleven miles. British cavalry, armored car: | ” RENEW BATTLE IN PICARDY, warin Bul ‘s als 1 is F aaly ibe: hla: | ee rg erase pea and tanks have reached a point within a mile of the Chaulnes REACH ALL THEIR OBJECTIVES ady ch say that he c ot attend to Bone The cavalry, tanks and armored cars, it Railway junction, four miles in advance of the infantry. British patrols have passed Foucaucourt (four miles north and west of Chaulnes), it was learned this afternoon. dicated, have | ahead to the line running from Framerville to Lihons. Scores of Villages in the Picardy Salient Fall Into the Hands of the Allies in Yesterday’s Fighting. affairs of state fo e months, A + . | . F eikuon ein gw ited States Governinent | ea He sphate, Nao stare of eats for meres maothy From Lihons the line runs southward to Meharicourt, south- | PARIS, Aug. 9.—The battle on the front south of the Somme was sear orders fat | husband has three children by a former r ately ajetipahin a Wumier aria, way wry PR COT RNS AR, None east of Rosieres, - resumed early this morning and the Franco-Baitish forces made favorably \ f { \ dame

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