The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1918, Page 1

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| “If It Happens In New York It’s in The Evening World’’ PRICE TWO CENTS. Copyright, Co. by Che “Circulation Books Open to All.’ NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, The Pros Pablishing 1918, 16 PAGES WEATHER—Fair To-night and Tuesday. FRENCH MAKE NEW ST. QUENTIN ADVANCE: 25,000 TURKS TAKEN; 40,000 TRAPPED CARDINAL’S DEATH ISLOSS TO NATION, PRESIDENT WRITES Message of Condolence From Wilson Sent to Archdiocese of New York. 500,000 AT BIER IN DAY. Cathedral Is E xpected to Hold 10,000 at Funeral Services To-Morrow. President Wilson has sent a message to the Archdiocese of New York ex- pressing the nation’s sense of loss in) Farley, Pat- the death of John Cardinal whose body iles in state at St riok’s Cathedral te White House letter bas not yell iw, torpedoes were discharged and m from Secre- arrived, but a teleg: ary Tumulty saying that the message waa on its way was received to-day at the late residence of the Cardinal. Aimilar letters have veen received (vam Becretary of the Navy Daniels ind Acting Secretary of War Crowell And a letter was received this morning expressing tle city’s sorrow ‘This morning, while propa were beling made for anc em mass at the Cathedral wos an nounced that betweon 6 A. M. yester day and 1 A. M. to-day more than 109,000 mourners had passed in slow] falque on ocession before which reate the ty of the prelate | Freighter in Port ort With Eleven SHIP SINKS A SUBMARINE. MUSTPAY IOP... BERLIN ADMITS LOSSES IN ATTACKS BY BRITISH | IN 3-HOUR RUNNING BATTLE: UBER BOND 300 SHOTS A Holes in Hull, Masts Gone, Decks Splintered. AVED BY CREW Sailors Line Rail and Watch U Boat Go Down 500 Miles Off Atlantic Coast. After a three-hour running batde with a German mybmarine 500 miles) | off the Atfantic Coast, during whieh 200 shelis exchanged—the last burst- tng on the forward deck of the mib- | marine, blowing It, the gunners and) la five-inch gun to bite—the crew of the N-—- H—, @ frolghter on its maiden trip, stood along the broken raf] and saw the undersea craft eink ‘The steamer entered an Atlantic tHona|port thie morning with eleven shel! in hor bull, her masta shot away, her deck torn up and splintered her lifeboats riddled with shot, one having seventy-two holes in ft—but none killed. holoe And from @ fury mast o |tattered British flag fluttered in the commanded | after one of the L he figures are these of Police In- vector Morrison, who he squad that guarded the building! nd handled the great crowds. For .the funeral to-morrow 3,000! +ntre chairs have been ordered, and heme will be added to the ordinary Cathedral, It ust 10,000 per- seating capacity of t + believed that sons will be preser number would be pr ng could contain Cai dinal O'Conr ston, Cardi nal Gibbons of Baltimore and Cardi nal Bagin of Quebec will be ventral fwures at the ot «hich means that ) North America present With them will be Arohbishop Bon- rano, Apostolic Delegate to Washia- on. Forty Bishops will be present. at build. eur of 1 will be The Embasies and high missions of | gy No sooner were her decks above \i the Allied nations will be repre- sented, acoording to an announcement nade this morning by Sacristan (Continued on Ninth Page) OPE HIMSELF TO NAME ONEOFAMERIGAN BISHOPS: AS SUCCESSOR TO FARLEY \rehbishopric “of New York idered So Important That Usual Procedure Will Be Changed OME, Sept. 23.—The arch- considered so important that Pope Benedict and Cardinal Gasparri, the Papa Secretary of State, will pe 8 the late Candinal Fur 8 Accessor, nstead of folly the usua procedure of leaving the sc 1 to the consistorial congregation, it was announced at the Vatican to day. The new Archb: op of New York will be s d from the American bishops afier most eration of the qual areful consid and fitness of each Following the selection, the Pope probably will transmit the new Archbishop's name to the Apos- tolic Delegate at Washington, for announcement there before it is ahs public here y tmes that, | bow any more for the captain swings ‘o-MOFFOW. | he did for we hang over tho rail and the Cardinals) y ston @ torpedo cutting through the | | | boat is sprayed | Con-} we had | trom bow to stern law the oniy cure The jury mast was rigged up boat shells carried | away the mast and fag, but members) ot the crew saved the fag A member of the crew story of the battle thus: “Woe were beatin’ {t along on tho mornin’ of Sept, 14, about 500 miles | from the coast. It was after elght| bella, $20 in the mornin’, when tho cookout spots a & ing in the water 00 yards off tho port bow. Boon wo see a periscope, but {t ain't off the breeze. told the It's a good thing the ship around. water along our aide not twelve feet off, “She missei—sure she did. While we're looking for another up pops the! water when the forward gun starts throwing shells at us. We reply We tag and twist and cirele ‘round. We cut holes n the ocean with our shots. The | Sho hammers at us with that five-incher and then starts in the s#lern p with a little follow ot our reil are deck torn Ploces up “Finally the [ stern, starboard boat finds us in the T o's a mountain | RE EXCHANGED REPORT BAVARIAN PRINCE FIRED AT VON HINDENBURG Swiss Hear of Splits Between sian Dictators and South German Politicians BASLE, Sept. 23.—Sorious difference | between the Prussian dictators and the South German politicians, who hav ever been at sword's point, ported in many of the Swiss newspa- are re- Central Swelz Demokrat of Zu- werts that ono Bavarian Prince @ shot at Field Marshal yon Hin- denburg. but missed. It also reports that a Bavarian army Commander at- tempted to attack Hindenburg, but was | restrained. An soime quarters it Is belleved these reports refer to Crown Prince Rup- precht of Bavaria, who has long been anid to be at odds with Hindenburg Kupprecht left the Somme front in Aug ust for a “vacation” and his engage- ment te @ young girl bas since been re ported, epee NO WOMEN CONDUCTORS ON CLEVELAND CARS Recommendation Made That Service Be Abolished Nov. 1 by Fed eral Investigators. #LEVELAND, shall not Bept. 23. be employed as conductors Women on Cleveland etrest cara on or after Noy. 1 next, 1918, is the decision of Henry B, Diehimann and Miss Mar gurt Russanowska, }elera! invest! gators, acting as special roprasenta- tives of the Department of Labor, in a report to Presicent Stantey of the Cleveland Kallway Company, received to-day, Members of the Stremt Railway Unton here threatened to strike re cently because of employment of womea conductors ‘The investigators found that the tabor atuation in Cleveland does not demand the employment of women because of the shortage of man-power. ‘The report says the company will have to lower its standard of service somewhat, but that every industry in the country has bean forced to do likewise and that if male applicants will be allowed remuneratior for the ten day training period the labo shortage can be filed ENEMY WORKS SMASHED BY 15 TONS OF BOMBS h Ai Return Safely Afte of spray come and wo sure though Showering Bhist Furnace 1 plugged below the water and Aerodromes | jJine, but the ship Keaps on zigmasging | DON, Bept. 13.—-Fifteen tone and sigan xging. | Another gets our charthouse, blow. |Po™DS were dropped on en obje | ing the door half across the deck, We ,tlves by Bri a8 | were all runnin’ around loose trying |'t *a* om 1 to do something and not @ man was! SMtUriAY Alr 1 mite attacked four bh aint hit with bombs and om | “We've been fighting now for two |ytatemen: sa’ | “The nding . (Continued on n Seventh Page) as we re 1s tons of b ” | Dis Meth. Marties aT New © AM Other NEW YORK, N. ¥ 1 tists throughout the United States have finally settled upon nia treatment up your de pot Pyorige, & ded. med cated massage um, dispe at all druggists for receding bleeding guns, sore gums, loose teeth and all symptoms of Rigg's disease Write the Prorigg Co., 12 E. 48th Strec ¢"oample by mail. | acai” nas ARCHBISHOP IRELAND DYING, © Charen only part of Until to-day the Archbishop |! conscious threughout hie | oD was cons | en time ‘iad | bed | MEXICO FLOUR $2 A POUND. PLEDGE AT ONCE oF Plan for ue bes Loan Issue Also Calls for Three Additional Installments TON ourth WASHI) cent. of th Sept Liberty Loan «ub scriptions will be required on appll- cation, for nounced to-day instead of five the per cent. as past loans ‘Treasury an Nov. | twenty Twenty per cent will be due Dee, 19, 16 and thirty per cent 1, twenty per cent per cent. Jan. Jan, 80, This is the Arst time more than| three instalments have been arranged | in addition to the payment on appli-| cation for any Liberty Loan, ‘The| initial payment was increased as a| moans of discouraging the practice of | some persona tn tho past of subseriv- ing without carrying out the instal | ments ‘The sotting of the last instalment of 10 per cent. as inte as Jon, 30 was in- terpreted as assurance that the Fifth Liberty Loan would not be fluated be- fore jate fn February or possibly Mareh. The amount of the Fourth L and the redemption terms may announced to-niei The tnitial pay st the ume of pledging, need not be mid until Oct. 19, the end of the @ub- tription period and loan campaign. | The installment dates will not tn erfore with the p thee by which many subscribers have bought bonds} hrough banks or other agencies and] | he eu though due ind@ 10 per cent. a month for ap- | proximately ten months, ‘That ar cangement, oMcials explain Is a transaction between the nk und ta customers, and the Treasury ts not Involved. A pos sued by the linperial] jerman Governm in an effort to nelittle America’s contribution to rhe var and bolster the fatling spirits of la people has been reproduced by ne Liberty Loon Publicity Bureau ind 2,000,000 copies will be distrib. } uted tn this country during the Fourth Liberty Loan campalen | “Can America’e ontry make @ dec! sion M the war?” Is the poster's titie, And with diagrams showing a sinall| American ariny and a small merehant marine the pamphlet {nte an swery “No.” | ‘Russla’a army of miilivn, could} ot down Germany,” argues the pos. | « "america threaten send trans tx of one-half million sat it annot ship t |ANTONMENT AT MILLS FOR 50,000 SOLDIERS | tal Infirmaries Abo W 40 (onstric ind Work Buildings Ku WASHINGTON Y r ent camp at Camp hd, w onverted inte a 1D ximately 59,000 v4 ar | Departmen’ to oun A 2,001) be ' r Camp M It was aly fiarencks, 4 ‘ ape thy wuthortz | yon. A Paanengere| Mexico, report that four is selling there| r $2 per pound, egea 24 cents a pleo young chickens $2.60 each and ice ber ton, with $18 added for delivery. 75,000 TURKS AND 260 GUNS "CAPTURED BY GEN. ALLENBY; 40,000 MORE ARE TRAPPED ———— + 4 Escape Cut Off by Seizure of the Crossings of the Jordan—Entire Transport of Two Armies Has) —---— +4 French Capture Village and Fort of Vendeuil and Push On to Oise River—German Troops Reported’ to Be Evacuating Cambrai. PARIS, Sept. 23.—The Temps declares the Germans are evacuating Cambrai, sending the inhabitants to Mons. French troops yesterday and last night made notable prog: ress in their drive for the encirclement of St. Quentin. They’, pushed in far on the south and captured the village and Fort of Vendeuil, close to the Oise, nine miles southeast of St. Quentin, to-day’s War Office announcement shows. From Vendeuil the French pushed on to the river. North of | Lafontaine they penetrated the wood in the direction of Hina-, court. ‘ ; Been Taken. LONDON, Sept. 23 (Associated Press).--Twenty-five thousand Turkish priséners and 260 guns had been counted up to yesterday ¢ve- \ning by Gen, Allenby's forces pushing northward through Palestine, ac- cording to an ofticial statement issued to-day by the War Office. The War Office announcement says that the 7th and 8th Turkish Arinies have virtually ceased to exist. The entire transport of these two armies was captured by the Brilish, Seizure by the British of the crossings of the Jordan at Jisr-ed- Dameer on Sunday morning shut the last avenue of escape to the Turks} | vest of the Jordan. Palestine front this aftenoun indicate that none Turkish force of at least 40,000 men, by the British ure of the last of the passages of the Jordan, can possibly | Reports from the f the trapped through the seiz' away Turkish force@———— get Virtually ‘ne entire | or will be avoounted for in killed, | GERMANS ATTACH | wounded and prisoners, Hundreds of straggiara aro boing found wandering DEADLY DEVICE 10 about in the mount country The Turks had s Hh divisions south | - ah of Nagurath and west af the Jordan. | Grenad ispiotes® When Frene i but the exact total cannot be deter-| Soldier Tries to Lift Fallen | mined owing to the weakness of some | Image in a Cemetery f the Turkish divisions, tutals of ha aeaceay nite eine hal ttas IPH THE FRENCH ARMY | ath SAE SY ERE ps | IN FRANCE. Sept. 23 f %,000 prisoners roported is far less | 2 . | seal te Anel Arai anane cael kt (Associated Press). Gen, | SPRAT SHE SHEL 2eke ¥ Pape | Debeney’n men continue to ad- at reparts prisoners we F\ vance, notwithstanding the for bis as able fortifications und the | The lean-up fee . asn etic rewintinoe of the ene | he quickes nd most complete German forces tn this region. | niire war, 18 MAVIDE) according to eviden orthy n sts of le stlon tn preparing " trap A tot | at t r etary a ‘ was throw 1 ! ' es F i ‘ CHILDREN PLACE FLOWERS| : 1 ‘OWMRS, PERSHING'S GRAVE} eo foo Poo Chrift Stamy ares let Vhey R Genera | by Snbmarine \W { thd 3 ei . ewer KInigehor YE ' wD ) ‘ ff Malifax, wa ng tien Pe ie rile | ‘ } 1 he | ney wer of ent ¥ - : a “d 1 parine 1 * ‘ et sal Rh lad ! raight bow, « 1 two 6 h - " ' RAVEL BURPAL —e Riv iding No Extra Charge For tt, Advercinmnaste for The World may be if at 07 American Diviriet Memwrngw office i the otty mae, iw BRITISH MAKE PROGRESS ABOVE ST. QUENTIN. LONDON, Sept. 23.—British forces last night attacked (he Germa lines between St. Quentin and’ Cambrai, opposite tie Gatetet,” nvaking) pregress in the vicinity of Tombois Farm and capturing a group of, trenches and strong points on the ridge northwest of Vendhuile, Field Marshal Haig announced in his official statement to-day. Another enemy strong point near the Renssey-Beny Road, just to the south, also was taser: by the British. German troor vicinity af Haig announces Northwest of St. Quentin, British line at one point late yesterday counteraltacked in the Field Marshal the repulse of the enemy with heavy losses Gillemont Farm to the west of Le Catelet at Berthaoucourt, the Germans during an attack. 4 counter-at A despatch from Kerlin qavtes the War Office as admitting that British forcos to the east of Epohy, southwest of Cambral, yesterday obtalned a footing in sections of the German trenches. A slight advance of the German lines west of the Moselle (Ameri- can front southwest of Metz) is c The repulse of strong | detachments which need ind elsewhere in re | connoitering operations in this sector, likewise is announced. On the front between Arras and Lens there was a penetrated the The position was re-cstablished by kK, imed by Berlin, adv: against Haumont, continuation of the British advance in the neighborhood of Gavrelle. Southeast of | that village English troops made progress on a front of three-quarters of a mille, ee 25 SERBIAN TOWNS TAKEN; GERMAN AND BULGAR FORCES DRIVEN 25 MILES IN A DAY. Two Main Railway Lines Cut and Much War Material Captured—Between 9,000 and 10,000 Prisoners and 120 Guns Taken. PARIS, ~Allied forces in Macedonia have captured twenty- ive additional villages in the last forty-eight hours, according to a despateh from Salonica front to-day Entente Allied cavalry yesterday was three miles from the Bulgarian tronuer in the region of Strumitza, according to news despatches reported by th The Eleventh German Division was said to have heen cut off from the main Bulgarian army and to be retreating in disorder, Sept | rece ved the ¢ Havas Agency The news despatches say the First Bulgarian Army in the region of Mouasti has been cut off from communication with the md Army in the Doiran sector The Franco-Serbian troops are pursuing the Bulgarian army, which full retreat, The Entente Allies now command the mountain zone, will be able to debouch in the plains LONDON, Sept. 23.—Serbian troops have cut the main railway line ween Uskub and Salonica and are on the western bank of the Vardar River, according to the Serbian official statement of Sunday. West of the Vardar the Serbians have cut the railway line to Prilep, which is the main line of German communication in this region, Serbian infantry units are now in the mountainous regions and ad- vanced twenty-five miles In one day, The number of prisoners and the from which the be i] ' i |

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