The evening world. Newspaper, September 30, 1918, Page 2

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T amy attacked on the northern slopes of Bellevue Heights, Mont Cuvelet |, and Bouiconville. Alin Brook, which flows northeast toward Challerange, has been crossed and heights dominating the village of Manre, on the west side of the brook (on the railroad to Grand-Pre), have been taken, The Germans violently counter-attacked last night south of St. Quentin, in the Urvillers region, in an attempt to recapture Hill 188, All these efforts were broken up by the French defense. The progress in breaking the hold of the German invader on French $ FY soil is shown by the fact that no longer is any of the French departments entirely occupied by the enemy, This situation was established by the revapture of four Communes of the Department of the Ardennes, FOCH FIGHTING FIVE BATTLES Marshal Foch is fgihting five battles simultaneously and success. fu'ly—a feat unparalleled in the history of war. Each battle is so imed and placed that each army supports another, al} forming an indispensable part of the whole effort. Gen. Grant’s idea of a continuous concurrent attack by a multie plicity of forces on many fronts is being realized by the Allied General- Issimo. There are five battles today—there may be more to-morrow— ail inter-related and working as smoothly as the cylinders of a well-ad- justed automobile engine. All are directed to the same end—to wear down the enemy’s strength. Marshal Foch alone knows when the Allies will strike the de- chive blow. The enemy is still fighting well. He is still offering splendid resistance west of the Argonne, but how long can he keep it up? Expert commentators agree that the enemy's withdrawal to a shorter’ line, probably that of Antwerp, Brussels, Mezieres and Metz, is Imminent. Some believe he has hung on too long and tlat he will have great ditti- culty in preventing his retreat from degenerating into a rout. “For Foch, as for Napoleon,” says Major De Civrieux in the Matin, "to conquer is not to push back an enemy behind the lines previously fixed upon, but, gripping ‘him everywhere, to break the integrity of his) forces and then hurl him, disjointed and destroyed, on the road to irrepar-| able defeat. Like all great dramas which have changed the face of the world, the one which is being played during these fateful hours will bring triumph. Victory is in sight.” EXAMPLE OF GERMAN WASTAGE An examination of one section of the twenty-two-mile front on whico Gen. Gouraud is tackled to the Champagne will give an idea of the German wastage. On the eve of the attack Gen. Ludendorff, teeliny uneasy, reinforced the defenders with two or three divisions. After two days’ fighting he threw in ten more divisions. This twelve or thirteen divisions have been used up on a front of twenty-two miles only. From this the speed at waich the German strength is being whittled away may easily be calculated. The soberest and) most conservative observers here consider that yesterday marked the first step in the decisive phase of the war. The Bel- gians are close to Roulers; the British, marching up the Lys, will out- flank Lille; the Siegfried line is going to pieces at two vital points, namely Cambrai and St. Quentin, the fall of which places is considered a ques tion of hours; Le Catelet, the central pillar of the Hindenburg system, outflanked; Gen. Mangin is driving the enemy north of the Chemin-Jles- Dames; Gen. Gouraud is at the gates of Challerange on his way to Vouziers, the key to the lateral railroad communications of the Germans. Moreover, during the last week the Allies on the western front have taken more than 50,000 prisoners, How Foch Is Gaining Ground bb bas bb 5-64 bata +44 bho 44064 es. FO8-2686-0-3 % bd ee BULGARS SURRENDER UNCONDITIONALLY AND HOSTILITIES ARE ENDED oO |an armistice—probably the first step in Bulgaria's withdrawal from the alliance with the Central Powero—a few days less than three years after shoe entered the war on the side «° Germany. It was on Oct. 8, 1915, that Bulgaria issued a manifesto announc. ing her decision to cast her lot agains” the Entente Alliance. She bad been fifteen months in deciding her course. During the period of Bulgarian neutrality both the Entente Alliance PARIS, Sept. 30.—The announcement that an armistice had” been signed with Bulgaria after that country had accepted all the conditions of the Allies aroused the keenest interest in Paris, The actual suspension of hostilitisse immediately followed the signing of the armistice, but it is moted that this suspension applics only to Macedonian by the Belgian War Office: “During to-day the Belgian and British armies continued their suc- cess, defeating the enemy after se- vere fighting on the whole of the great Flanders Ridge as well as on the whole of the Messines-Wyt- schaecte position, The Belgian army! captured Dixmude, Zarren, Terrest, | Stadenberg, Westroosebeke = and Moofsiede, It repulsed strong coun- ter-attacks between Staden and Ter- rest, and ut the end of the day was attacking at St, Pieter, on the Rou- lers-Menin road, as well as at Col-| and English troops, in heavy fight- ‘ng until late in the evening and in spite of strong opposition, gained ground and took many prisoners. “At Bony and Villers-Guislan hos- tile counter-attacks during the latter part of the day pressed us back slightly to the western outskirts of these villages. Elsewhere our gains were maintained, “North of Gonnelieu further prog- ress Was made during the evening in the direction of Les Rues des Vignes (five miles directly south of Cambrai). “Heavy loases were inflicted in the les of the Central Powers, | tente late in August, 1916. unanimously joining the Teutonic Alliance, On Sept. 14, 1918, Franco-Serb; forces attacked it in no way affects Macedonian hos- tilities which the Alllest armies will continue against Austria-Hungary, Turkey and the German contingents | stir, Breaking through, an front. by of the German- Bulga Bulgaria was invaded mander-in-Chief of Macedonia, signed | the r the Allies and the Bulgartan dele~ gates for their Government, Instruc- tions have been given by the Goy- ernment to Gen, D'Reper to pro- coed immediately to the execution of the conditions of the armistice. ing the Messines-Wytschaete Ridge, encountered very strong resistance. The enemy attempted vainly to de- fend the approaches to the River Lys und suffered very heavy losses, espe- ¢lally in Ploegsteert Wood. “At the end of the day the and it ts still stormy. FRENCH. PARIS, Sept. 30,—Following ls the text of 1 -cay's War OMico statemen’ “In the course of tho night the armistice, Bulgarian Proposal by British | Germans delivered & violent counter- |earian army, The Bulgarian repre-| Bmperor Still Talks of Confltct « s STOCKHOLM, Sept. $0.—Leon Trota- Army had gone beyond a line Lae jattack in the region of Urvillors| M9 armisticr, La Liberte says ed-|Hentatives reached Balonica Saturday a Defensive War, {far ee OF tad fall Ty. Bolshovike War Minister, t9 reported 2 vi ° . ane f ene ™ ‘ e o the great. | day to have been shot in the shoul eabtern edge of Ploegstesrt Wood tol. of si. Quentin). All thoir ut- | orally, was signed with the full con- PRdine the Ride CRETE GaN tate LONDON, Sept. 20.—Emperor Will-| powerful, famous democ' of | teey sannne Bean Shay J tie Bi gulese Gaepaert, to St. Tenbriclen, to Ter-| | to 1, 8 were broksn |8Bt of King Ferdinand. It prints al over the occupation of Bulgaria it 1a|!@% according to an Hxchange Te'e-\tho west to lead them to the [irl rh act deat a eine ceil Ns hard, to Dudizcele up by the French fire. denial of a repert that he had taken| not unlikely that the Bulgaria mili-| staph despatch from Amsterdam, has|new day, for which they have ’ “During Sept, 28 and 29 the Bem ere item eruiiory siguting | eflike in VieNna. ‘The King, it saya, | ‘fy party and Germany and Austria Maroneiae Patrtotia meciety yt ama One seat aiinplicity, that deri ‘| BAKER IS IN LONDON. artille 1 . is otle ety: their logtea! city, ay 4 slan and British forces took More| coursed between t! Aj and tho | not left Sofia mil wane Getsrsiied ettoria to keep NGormany 18 ocided to 0. titine tacy meana that women shall pl le than 9,000 prisoners, more than 200) 4 isne BULGARIA WILL FIGHT AGAINST | cause the soceasion of Bulgaria wourd | war until a victorious. end. is e-ured | thelr part in affairs alongside men vi) guns, come of heavy calibre, as WEN) win ihe Cha ‘pagne there was n> TURKEY, SAYS MINISTER. mean the collapse of German aima in| and the Fatherland protected for ail] upon an equal footing with them, If as a very considerable quantity of bad TASHIN wo Turkey and the Near East, the proo- | me against foreign oppression. wo reject measures like these in ! Lhe British army captured | i ttty the night, The] WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—Hulgaria| apie elimination of Turkey trom the | "A, glance at the magnificent suc-| ygnorant deflance of what a tow axe Cae ee ee inion and 96 aoid{ ee Pesan again at inybreak. will be friendly to any allied movos| war und the reconstruction of the (comses of our herole sone and thelr) jay brought forth, of what they have 4,000. me: 4 90 fel’ i ; oug srontec ; abe d 48 officers, 4,000 men | dak against Turkey, and will be practical: [eastern front with Roumania taking Ree eee ite: auanin the chanerasie) teen Se ee Teil ceawe ; ae MeBritish homing alrplanca during RIC ’. ly on the side of the Allies for the re. | leading py fortunes of war, a eases die ey he with Americ 4 a . Als navn foods Q ' remnancraee. carrageenan’ a tified d joubt"” sd “4 = 4 WASHINGTON, Sept. 30.—Tho fol- | '™ lor of the war, Bulgarian Min- COUrRS ment and unjust Sats caine ( nt, 28 © ery | pl ho fol an taitnas! tated LES They have seen their own Hy the day of Sent, $8 eel tees Mike lowing communique from Gen, Per. | ister Panarctoft told the United Prem | SLUMP IN CORN PRICES, ernments accept this interpret b | greatly to the success of the opera) ning dated Sunday, was made public | to-day. Seren 40,000 GERMANS TAKEN of democracy; soen old Governments tions. They bombed without ceswa- | (O08 | AMSTERDAM, Bent, toa apeotat| Breaks Follow Ne- like that of Great Britain, which did tion enemy troop columnr, transports!) ~,, | ceipt of War News tn Chicago. not profess Lo be democratic, prom ist and communi. | “Our troops have continued to meet | rticle in the Vossisehe Zeitung Urges) Cinicago, Rept, 30. — Kensat BY ALLIE S. readily and, as of course, this justice with determined resistance on the | Germany to force Bulgaria to con- ep) == Bensationas to women, though they had before F fart of tho enemy, who has t tinue her allegiance by a milit breaks in the value o feorn took place | WITH 300 CANNON refused it; the strange revelations of i BRITL faneed tem exis ho has been i eiey By MMAFY) towday aa bulleting streamed in wh "¥ this war having made many things : , . c hastily to bring up and engage | d¢Moenstration against Sofla | traders inferred to mean the bee | new and plain to Governments as well LONDON. Sept. 36.—Followt >| divisions from other parts of the _—_ r < s to peoples 4 Lanta aay Since July 18 They Have Captured “gi? Pec the report iskued to-day by the War front. Between Crergus and the val-| ALLIES DEMANDFOD BREAKING ine y ya PLUTCE OVo mit cither conform ov dolin- Mh Weak Soecial ler Ti Office: ley of the Aire wo have met and re-| RELATIONS WITH GERMANY. 200,000 Prisoners, 3,000 Guns «rate y reject jebat Hiey Realy a 8 ia Our eek Speci tai for Tue: ‘ “There was heavy Gghting yester-| pulsed heavy counter attacks,” | ‘The terms laid down by the Allies | and 20,000 Machine Guns. ORES RAP ERS RERWIB) ME? . havo 1 voit med day aftefnoon at the lett of the | = were oficially reported to be as fol- | Bay State) PARIS, Sept, 30. | “Aro we alone to refuse to fearn giving 9 an battlefront, Our advanced troops, ERBIAN, lows | Shows Progress. RENCH, British, American |2¢80n7 Are we alone to ask and take ya NG sae at who had taken Aubencheul-au-Bac! LONDON, Sept. 30.—The following, Surrender of all Bulgarian forces| BOSTON, Sept. 9—A alight improve- ENCH, British, 4 {the utmost that our women can give and bad entered Arloux (an import-| report has been issued by the Serbian | outside Bulgarian territory and doe |Mene '? ths ported to-day, (Continued from First Page.) ARIS, Sept. <n cal ad and the Central Powers had made P eau es fel a fate many'a aotion, Some reporta: trom | oférs to Bulgarte and Russie. who for and men of Gen, Boohm's LATEST OFFICIAL REPORTS Jaormany state that sho will try to|¥ears had protected Bulgarian inter-} a; y nave bee: shot, following an * lkeop Bulgaria in dine by force, but ests, sent an ultimatum to Bulgaria} attempt at .evol:, according to |her abilty to do 0 is another quea-|'0 October, ey piers refused] advices from the Swiss frontier BELGIAN. of St. Quentin) and Gonnelieu eight | ton. UE platy ee vated nace a a _ ; miles. southwest of Cambrai), the| HOSTILITIES AGAINST OTHE! gar joehm's army ha. been severely HAVRE, Sunday, Sept, 2%—The ; bs ¥ ENEMIES IN MACEDONIA Oct, 13,1915. Her entrance into the] battered sa t prosat offensive | following statement has been issuea|eMe™Y'S resistance was obstinate eae On war led to the overrunning of Berbia,| operations of the Allies, yesterday. American, Australian ¢ Montenegro and Albania by the arm- Bulgaria's joining the Central Powers was one of the reasons that led Roumania to enter the war on the side of the En- | The population of Bulgaria was not in favor of Bulgaria D the German-Bulga- hostilici#s aguinst Bulgaria, and that rian line in Macedonia east of Mona- the Allied troops rapidly advanced northward, driving a wedge between the wings British Bulgarian Government a propo- wal that military operations be sus- pended pending negotiations for an Pending discussion of the the Aliied Governments the French General sald he would not stop fighting, but would receive representatives of the Bul- influenza ettuation was re- and health authoritie '15,000 AUSTRO-GERMAN On All Western Baftle Fronts| CAPTIVES DISARMED BY JAPS Prisorfers Were From Blagovest- chensk and Reached Heiho on Sept. 18. | TOKIO, Friday, Sept. 20 (Associated Press)—Wifteen thousand armed Aus-| tro-German prisoners from Blagovest- chensk reached Heiho on Sept. 18 and were disarmed, according to a statement issued by the War Office, The statement says, that Japanone and Chinese which have been on duty along the Amur River entered Blago- vestchensk with the main force of Jap- anese cavalry when that city was taken by the Allied forces. AMSTERDAM, Sept. 30.—Gen. Ro- gosa, the Ukrainian War Minister, ac- cording to @ telegram from Kiev, an- nounces that plans for the Ukrainian army call for the formation of eight army corps of two divisions each. The Minister says the population regarded oxinpathetically, wh ing “extreme good will” toward the formation of @ Ukrainian army and are promoting it “generously and en ergetically. h Germany and Aus tria, he added, denied they wished t use Ukrainian army for thelr own {n- teresus. ‘ainian youthé who will be twenty years old next January will be called to join the conscript army. POOR Ob4:15 3OO84H34404OOO8 @ a eebe eee eee GERMAN SOLDIERS SHOT IN ATTEMPTING REVOLT IN GEN, BOEHM'S ARMY Non-Commissioned Officers and Men Reported Executed, Accord- ing to Swiss Frontier Reports. 30.—Dozna of NOW IS DECISIVE HOUR, SAYS KING OF BELGIUM “Everywhere ¢ Germany Falls Bac KI —Porward for Right and Lib- erty,” He Shouts. HAVRE, France, Sept. 30.—In ad- dressing the Belgian Army beforo its attack Saturday morning, King Al- bert asked his soldiers to drive the enemy from the Belgian coast with the help of their French and British Hemolenholk, four kilometres west of | repulse of determined counter-attacks |8¢Mt to that locality | soaps Be a, Holat nerihl of Balonks % i Roulers. jlauached in the Cambrai sector, A| A Ralonica despatch states Gon, | 48d 09 Sept. s7 Gen. Franchet d comrades. ‘This ts the decisive hour, 5 . reeks is perey, the Allied Generalissimo, an-|said the King, “Everywhere Germany “Gen, Plumer's army, after captur-| heavy rain has fallen during the night | Pranchet D'Esperey, the Allied Com-! pounced that he had received from| falls back. Be worthy of the sacred cause of our independence and the traditions of our race. Forward for right and liberty and for glorious aad immortal Belgium!" Pos b+ FIGHT TO END, SAYS KAISER. | and Belgian troops in the sn three days have cap- ant town five miles and w half di-) War Omi mobilization of the army within. Com- | were hopeful t or ave Yat Pectly south of Doual) were com-| “By a bold manoeuvre we aie le breaking off of olationg ita [ae hate an aiat the, creat pe he ise | tured 40,000 prisoners apd $00 pelled 0 withdraw from these vil-|taken Carevofelo and cut the Bul-| Germany, Austria and Turkey . Fe nat the inca ay | guns, according to an estimate lages. | garian retreat. We took more than access of Allied forces to Bulgaria tively » from it.| given out by the Havas Agency, West and northwest of Cambrai | 700 prisoners and 20 guns territory | ont of i deaths, | Since July 18 the Allies have the enemy was unable to prevent our St, Nich ten enemy regi- Notwithstanding the signing of the/in the forty-elght hours from Saturday captured £00,000 prisoners, 3,000 progress, — Advanc detachments ments tried to defend the town, but. truce the following despatch wag sent ;!00% to noon to-day guns, 20,000 machine guns and Bp teached the junction of the Arras-| our strong attacks compelied them to to-day from Amsterdam: “King Fer- Woman D Dead ow enormous quantities of material, Cambrai and Bapaume-Cambrat!)/ abandon it. We are now ten kilo- dinand of Bulgaria bas telegraphed to Mrs. Anna forty-nine, of This does not take into account yoads, and entered the northern sub- | metr 5 (six and a quarter miles) to| Emperor Charles of Austria assuring 425 Bergen Avenue, Jersey City, Urbs of the town, Yesterday, north of St. the northward, him of his loyalty to the Quadruple 4 “serbian and Freneh troops have! alliance, according to the Neue Frole| coruandt Street, Statien of tee Mi Quentin, »pped to the floor on the uptown Avenue elevated last night and died Bay. the operations in Macedonia and th| Palestine, diand division alone captured | taken the dominating heights on the Presse, which is quoted in despatches] before Dr. arrived from the |. in itt & Comman Beef in No ners and forty guns, [left bank of the Pchinja (twelve reaching here" Broad oft ha 08 ia tae mat Peete een cake’ Bret. ne “Miler -nortly. miter enst of "eiuh),” Bulgarian rogeorentntives agreed to with her, Ve leh Peiad ‘per pound Adve jeause no disputable principle is in- jbe extended to women, the method of obtaining it, can right- | ings. or hy shamed, as the guire ant fully hesitate to substitute Federal | ‘iFector of forces cauent im tty neod linittative for State initiative, if the! of every material and spiritual re- early adoption of this measure Is| source this great nation posses: 1 necessary to the successful prosecu- | tell you plainty what thie ime naure tion of the war, and if the method| % ae ond te Cie enate | of State action proposed in the party lied nothing less persuasive and con- ‘yineing than our actions, Our pro- y and whicn fessions will not suffice, Verification must be forthcoming when veritica- ie Presid 1 hardly left the on is asked for. And in this case} Senate chamber bet nator Un ve rerifieation js asked for—asked for in} derwood of be ana, an ASHaauts this particular matter. You ask by of those Senators upon |whom? Not through diplomatic} whom the President's appeal was lchannels; not by Foreign Ministers; | held likely to have the most effost not by the intimations of Parliaments, | falled to Foveal one Shon want ee }1t is asked for by the anxious, ex-! jitjon ' pectant, suffering peoples with whom] Senator Benet, South Ca we are dealing and who are willing} on eine iy said if he cou vinced Sulfrace was necessary to win to put their destinics in some meas: ii war he would vote for it, declined ure in our hands, if they are sure that} {o state whether he had been con= wish the same things that they do. | vinced “LE do not speak by conjecture, Itis{ Southern Demoprats were appar- . y cmbart iby the not alone the voices of statesmen and] i)! (nirnsnll I of newspapers that reach me and the] war mi HE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1918. PRESIDENT URGES. WOMAN SUFFRAGE AS A VITAL WAR MEASURE (Continued from First Page.) and upon the very skirts and edges of the battle itself, We shai not only lhe distrusted, but shall deserve to be} are judged in the view not only of diatrusted, if we do not enfranchise our ows te and ov con. | ‘hem with the fullest possible en- atin yevpls) SAG) oor own ral franchisem as it ia now certain s es, but also in the view of all) that the other great free nations will nations and people, will, I hope, jus them, We cannot iso- tify in your thought, as {t does in ie Wes ht feat ae ven in gst 4 matter from. the vught of the mino, the message I have come to} word. We must either bring you. aeliberately reject the leadership of “I regard the concurrence of the Senate in the constitutional amend- ment proposing the extension of the suffrage to women as vitally essential to the successful prosecution of the gSreat war of humanity in which we are engaged. I have come to urge upon you the considerations which have led me to that conclusion. It is not only my privilege, it is also my duty to apprise you of every circum- stance and element involved in this momentous struggle which seems to me to affect Its very processes and its outcome, It is my duty to win the War and to ask you to remove every obstacle that stands in the way of winning It, “f had easumed that the Senate would concur in the amendment be- liberal minds to others,” ‘The women of America are too noble and too intelligent and too de- voted to be ‘slackers,’ whether you give or withhold thia thing that iv mere justice, but T know the magic it will work in their thoughts and spirits If you give it to them. I pro- pose it as I would propose to admit soldiers to the suffrage, the men Aght- ing in the fleld for our liberties, and the liberties of the world, were they excluded, The tasks of the womon lie at the very heart of the war, I know how much stronger that hi will beat if you do this just thing and show our women that you a] them as mich as you in fact and of necessity depend upon them. “Have I sald that the passage this amendment is a vitally cena war measure, and do you need fur- ther proof? Do you stand in need of the trust of other peoples and of the trust of our own trust an asset or is n “I tell you plainly, as the Comman- der-in-Chief of our armies and of the gallant men in our fleets, as the pres- pnt spokesman of this people in our volved, but only a question of the method by which the suffrage is to There is and can be no party issue involved in it,| dealinge with the men aoe women | |throughont the world who are now | Both of our great national parties| our partners, as the responsible head | are pledged, explicitly pledged, to|of a great ronment which stands equality of suffrage for the women | and is questioned day by day as to its of the country, BUrpORCe, its princip! its hopes, ether they be serAv “Nelther party, therefore, It seems| everywhere or ony te to me, can justify hesitation as to) must himscif answer ration and of battle ne Winning of the war alike of ‘And not i platforms of 1916 ts impracticable, “LUSITANI os WAR ChY OF NEW YORK AND SOUTHERN Tl OOP, -|U, 8, CONSUL GENERAL WRO WENT WITH BULGAR DELEGATES ORDERED BACK Murphy, Stationed at Sofia, Had No Instructions to Participate in Negotiations. WASHINGTON, Sept. 30,—Dom-" intek Murphy, American Consul Gen eral in Soffa, who accompanied the Bulgarian Plenjpotentiaries to Sa lonica, where they arranged the arm. istice, has been ordered back to his conforin or| Post by the State Department. There is no criticism of Murphy here, but » it is made plain that he had no in- structions to participate in the nego- tations, and probably acted only as an observer, Bulgarian Minister Panaretoff to- day submitted to Secretary of @tate Lansing a communication from Bul- aria asking the United States to use its good offices in helping conclude the Allied-Bulgar armistice. Inas- much as the armistice has been signed, it was held by the depart- ment that no further step by the American Government is necessary, '|BERNSTORFF TRAPPED IN TURKEY, BELIEF HERE Is that] Former German rman Anibasendior to U. S. Reported Able to Leave Only, by Way of the Black Sea. Count von Bernstorff, former German Ambassador to the United States, is be- lieved to be trapped In Constantinople as a result of Bulgaria's defection. The only apparent route by which von Bernstor{f, who was sent to Constantl- nople, ona’ German ‘mission, can get back to Berlin--w ad would be m rary in case Tu follows Bul ‘e cuee—wonld be actors te. Back to Odessa and thon through Bessurabla, — s—— - COUNTESS IS SENT TO JA ntenced for Sel to Soldiers. om Kuppers, wh a Inn at Mas 1, and Leo Wasservogel, 1 to_ prison Fudge Chat a Federai kiyn, for seling Mauor to uniform, The ountess y by . Br Jaoldiers In was sentenced twenty within any reasonable length of |° Is vital to the a time, if practical at all, And its|/must set! tle f adoption is, in my judgment, clearly | when the war ts over. We shail need necessary to the successful prosecu- (then in our vision of atlas, wx Mt tion of the war and the successful | syinpathy and insight and clear realization of the objects for which| moral instinct of the women of the the war is being fought. | worl The problems of that time “That judgment 1 take the liberty F ‘ave not, hitherto of urging upon you with solemn and L for one believe th earnestness for reasons which I shill safety in those questionin, state very frankly and which I shall|a# well as our comprehension of mat: hope will seem as conclusive to You) et ye isan the dircct and aul- as they seem to me, horitative participation of women in PEOPLE'S THINKING CONSTI-Jour counsels, We shall need their TUTE MORALE OF THE WAR, | #toral sense to preserve what is righ nd fine and worthy in our system of “This is a people's war, and the]) to discover § what people's thinking constitute its at- ° to be purified and mosphere and morale, not the predi- formed, Without. their counseling lections of the drawing room or the all be on y ha f mu eee political considerations of the caucus. Me tony ite Vault It { we be indeed democrats, and wish but no ene can brush it] to leave the world to democracy, we] aside or answer the arguments upon can ask other peoples to accept in} Which it is a ed. no executive proof of our sincerity and our ability] iS iyat you lighten them and plac: to lead them whither they wish to beJin my hane strumen ritua nstriments. not now pos. voices of foolish and intemperate agitatora do not reach me at ali Through many, many channels J have been made aware what the plain, | struggling, workaday folk as thinking TROTZKY REPORTED SHOT. Isheviht War Minister Wonnded at Brinuskh—Assnilant Arrested. the offense, received jail, ee months in ee Holub Enters Plea of Gatity, John Holub, who swindled scores of women of $250,000 in a pseudo-invest- ment business he conducted In the Bro- ng Broadway and 42d Street, guilty to-day before Judge ams in the Court of Gen- eral ons to the charge of grand and was remanded to the Tombs | jure \By our “New Scientific Method” we are able to remove |nerves, drill teeth and extract the most difficult roots without the slightest pain being felt, Teeth inserted without plates —decayed teeth saved—and dis- eases of the gums treated, All work guaranteed 10 years. Consultation without charge at all our offices, Or. Salter Dentist 17 West 34th Street, New York Hours, *.30 to 4, 491 Fulton St., opp. A. & S., Brooklyn upon whom the chief terror and sut- ~-service and sacrifice of every kini and still say we do not see what title that gives them to stand by our sides jin the guidance of the affairs of their | Nation and ours? }MAGE PARTNERS OF THE WOM- EN IN THIS WAR. We © made partners women in this war Bhall we them only to a partner ing nd sacrifice nd to! partnership of privile and r | This war couid not hav n fought either by the other nations\ enguced or by America, if it had not beon for the services of the women-—sery rendered in every sphere—not mere! in the flelds of efforts in which we have been accustomed to see theny work, but wherever mon have,worked. ent we Amit p of suffer a of ‘Phe upecifigd welaht Hours, 8.30--1.90, Sundays, 9—49. BRANCH OFFICES: | Gor, 624 St, & bth Av, Bay |Cor, Columbta and Carroll |140 Newark Avenue, Ridge, Bka. Eas Bklyo. Jorsey Citys My J. Now Brunswick, M, J+ |i19 Smith Streot, Perth Amboy, M J. i Mm |147 Albany Bt, DIED. Yn Sept, 2M. 1078, ALBXAS oved huabuod of Anna W. 5 ut his Into residence, 182 dav atvornoon. 9 atelock:: sday and Wednesda DPROPS— These ditt enicusing 2 i et 5 DIG CHOCOLATES SA choice catlectlon of ronan Sweets rich r arin bleanin frage vis paesnt includes the container.

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