The evening world. Newspaper, October 10, 1918, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

You: +e Not Taking a Chance Buying a 4; Per Cent. Bond! The Fighting Man Is Taking = Chance Conran ims, by Co. (The ‘New Che The Pres Pubite! York World), ‘NEW ‘YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER ENEMY POWERS IN TURMOIL AS BLOWS BY FOCH DOOM HOPES OF A FALSE PEACE Austria-Hungary Reported on Point of Breaking Up—Reichstag Ma- jority Said to Have Adopted Wilson’s Terms as Peace Basis. LONDON, Oct. 10.—It ts reported from Vienna that the Austro-Hun- garian Ministerial Council has decided to introduce national autonomy “in order to make President Wilson's stipulation an accomplished fact,” says an Exchange Telegraph despatch from Copenhagen to-day. A movement favoring a proclamation separating Hungary and Austria is making extremely rapid progress among the public in the Dual Mon-| archy, according to an Exchange Telegraph despatch from Zurich. Count Teasaare Hauhramyl, sormer ‘Mlnintar in he dtonpariah Cas| inet, speaking at Budapest, empbasized the urgency of bringing about a |carried @ large crow, 1S. STEAMER SUNK BY U BOAT; MANY LIVES MAY BE LOST 20 Survivors of Ticonderoga, | Former German Ship, Torpe- | doed 5 Days Ago, Rescued. AN ATLANTIC PORT, Oct. 10—| News of the sinking by a submarine of an American steamship, wits {he probable loss of many of her rew, was brought here to-day by al British freighter, The British ship had aboard twenty survivors of the American vessel. It was reported In maritime circles that the U boat's victim was the Ti- conderoga, formerly the Cierman| steamer Camilla Hickmers, of 5,130 gross tons. The ship was interned at Manila at the beginning of the wa but since she was taken over by the} United States was a cargo carrier in overseas service The Ticonderoga, said to was shelled and then torpedoed, according to of- have} separation between Hungary and Austria Czech newspapers declare regular working of a future Czech state, that preparations are under way for the and identical statements are! Jugs being published regarding the Telegrams from Warsaw announce that a proclamation js about to be {issued for the union of all Polish territories into @ Polish state. The Congress of German Associations in Austra, advices received here say, have resolved to favor the creation of a German state in Austria, ‘The Vienna Arbiter Zeitung is quoted as saying: | j “We must have peace. It can be obtained and we must have it. No price is too high. With voices choked with tears we call upon our rulers | to throw aside all considerations. Let us pay the price, whatever {t 1s.| It may save mankind from destruction.” PARIS, Oct. 10,—Feverish impatience is shown by the people of Vienna while awaiting President Wilson's reply to the peace proposals of the Central Powers, according to a despatch from Zurich ——EE TURKEY MAKES PEACE MOVE; | HER TROOPS EVACUATE BEIRUT Agents of New Government Reported Seeking Terms From the Allies. | steamer was en !.. | Passengers Arriving at Atlantic fictals of the rescuo ship. Tho attack was made fire days ago while the ¢ to Europ. Estimates placed the number of mea aboard the torpedoed ship at 250 ‘SUPER U BOAT WHIPPED AND TOWED INTO GLASGOW Port Tell of Capture of Giant | Submarine. AN ATLANTIC PORT, Oct, 10.—A| British steamship, arriving here this morning brings the story of, the cap ture of a super-submarine in Louxh Swilly, off the north coast of Ireland. | The huge U boat was towed into gow Harbor while the British ste was there on Sept. 28 Tha submarinn bore evidence of a severe drubbing in a fight with her captor, Her conning tower had a list, there was a big hole in her deck near r was riddled. The passengers said the U boat was fully 400 feet long and carried a gun fore and aft, each 15 feet long and ap- parently of six-inch calibre, While the eraft had been badly damaged she was in such shape that she might be re- paired and used aauinst the Germans, SHORTER | GLOVES, LADIES. War Industrie rd Also Abol- fahen Fancy Colors, WASHINGTON, Oct. 10. — Women's gloves muat be curtailed in length as a “win-the-war" measure, the War | Industries Board announced to-day | Under the new ruling the maximum ength of not excred| | twely WASHINGTON, Oct. 10,—Repre-|the Allies to give them separate recog- sentatives of the ow Ge They claim this on President} eriment ate 1 the Wilson's principle of self-determina- tion ‘Mies as to terms upon which they Allies & LONDON, Oct, 10.—Freneh and may withdraw from the war, it Wa4/pution wasships which entered Relrut, earned from an authoritative source | the chief seaport of Syria, on Sunday to-day. The new Grand Vine Tew- that the town had been evac fk Paste, tuted as a pro-Ally, ha vy the Turks, says an oficia representatives now in touch with ied to-day by the Brit Allied Gove od the statement adds The Allies are holding out for tue|“fritish armored cara, preceding our game terme os ihone ¢ F 1 4 Infantry columns, arrived | Bulgaria. Meanwhile, 1h vern-|and on Tuesday advanced detach up . ! ) Infante ment of 1 1 ate abews to Athens who are trying t Se asitaaia’ REICHSTAG MAJORITY REPORTED | TO HAVE ADOPTED WILSON TERMS Chancellor to Address Bedy on Saturday — Cologne Paper Calls Hour Grave. COPENHAGEN, Oct. 10..-The German Chancellor will address the Reichstag Saturday, according to copies of the Beriln Tageblatt received here to-day. LONDON, Oct. 10.—A Central News despatch from Amsterdam, dated Oct, 9, asserted it was reported fiom Berlin that, as @ result of German press comment on tue war situation, the Government majority in the (Continued on Second Page) \« | The 8 dark tan, gray 4 | and natural ‘COPELAND T0 PROSECUTE LANDLORDS WHO REFUSE TO HEAT APARTMENTS ALTH ned khaki, beaver COMMISSIONER asked lish the fact cute all landlords wh heat thelr apartmen A number of complaints have reached the Health that influenza patients have been denied heat will prose refuse to Department One case is of a mother who died, and her two /ittie children were found in cold, desolate rooms, the stern and the remainder of the deck | = YR. JOINS MED. FOR THE GRIF, Bale Dreventive, from aleohel.—Advt, LOAN DRIVE GAINS, BUT MORE SPEED ISNEEDED 10 WIN Seventy Per Cent. Remains Be Subscribed in Last Nine Days of Campaign. Distinct improvement in the Fou Liberty Loan York di figures & the district committees at No, 129 Broadway. campaign in the New ct was revealed by off The official total at 10 o'clock w $415,678,200. This inclu night gain of $87,514,500, the largest overnight gain thus fur recorded, The total at closing yester- day was $378,163,700, But while the new total shows a an ov which ts real improvemen’ in the situation, the improvement is not enough nor any where nearly And If New York is to reach her quota of $1,800,- enough 000,000 in the alloted time, the sub- scriptions from now on must come in more than threo times as fast as hey have been coming The New York situation is ge y typical of the situation country at large, At the Department in Washington | the official total wax $ about 30 per cent of th 000,000 required, leaving 70 ver cent to be subscribed in the remaining nin days of the drive Against these unsatisfactory figures the optimists in Washington find coinfort in the history of the three] earlier Liberty Loan campaigns und point out the fact that in each of these the bulk of the subser were received in the final days. Tre ury officials remember that in middle of the Third Loan campaign the situation was quite similar to the] (Continued on Fifth Page.) ‘DOUBLE YOUR LOAN PLEDGE TO AID BRAVE FIGHTERS,’ SECRETARY M'ADOO URGES “Don't Put It Off,” Pleads in A Treasury Chief 1 to Ever American. ASHINGTON, Oct, 19—See- | pealed to achive in Fr tories of 1 Patriotic uble mateh the Allied armie “Brili American terday,” ould American | his subscripti That is the Liberty Loan over that is the best way the fighting power moving very zn to ant vi said impel every 4 mediately men who are Hash and Access the Hur 1 every one dou 4 su scription t who has no ription off "Let our boys in the e we are fighting wit 1 siasm and determination here as they are over the 4 re than all, that ry doing, not by words but by deeds," Racing Entries Page 8) Results Page 2 }which they gained 10, 1918. REAT NOW IN FULL S ON 100 MILES Circulation Books Open to All. | 24 PAGES OF GERMAN LINE ~ WEATHER—Fair to-night and Friday. % WING WIDE SECTORS GIVEN UP FROM CAMBRAI TO RHEIMS —-¢=>_____ British Cavalry Is at Outskirts of, German Base of Le Cateau, and’ American Troops Are at Heels of Routed Enemy. Entire Battlefront Lighted by Burn- ing Towns to Which Germans Set the Torch—Pershing Reports Capture of 2,000 More Prisoners. PARIS, Oct. 10 (3.45 P. M.) [United Press ].—The Germans are reported to be withdrawing on wide sectors along the whole 100-mile front between Cambrai and Rheims. They are employing machine guns to slacken the Allied adveaces. Sambre-O.se Canal. Toward Guise the Allies are accentuating their progress and are reported to have reached the This represents an additional advance cf about four miles, northeast of St. Quentin. The railway from Laon to Maubeuge, via Guise, is now under fire. Northeast of Vailly, Gen. Mangin is ad- vancing on the roads toward Craonne. 350 AMERICAN AIRPLANES JOIN IN ONE BOMBING RAID; PERSHING TROOPS MOVE 0 Twelve Enemy Machines Destroyed and 32) Tons of Bombs Dropped on Cantonments— Two Americans Fight Seven Germans. of Verdun. The Ams an exp marks one of th hig spots in the alr fleet opeartion | nore than 200 bombing prec *, 100 Pee Gaia aaanlnen Were nen | Rhine Cities bso Get Rumor splendid prat n during the aerial August Wilhelm Takes battle which took place during the : operation. ‘Twelve enemy machines | Throne. were 4 Only one F en — | plane STOCKHOLM, Oct, 10 (by Assocta- ceria : | ted Presn).—There Is a persistent ru- stroyed or bi |mor here that Emperor William has | abdicated. [Spec bles from London to day id rumors of the abdic Lieuts, Irwin and Easterbrook, pea eat tui ony sirsiia Mt ; ea are current in Rhine cities in Ger- while on a falsan mlsalen yeste } many, with Prince August Wil day, encountered a Boche p' helm reported as hin probable near Exermont and forced it to | A few minutes later they | met a German biplane and a mon and they drove the biplane down out of uccesor said ho ts neurasthenia at A Pgris cable suffering from Potsdam.] AMSTERDAM. retire. oplane over Varennes, Det diecainn pacer | William in th ng the German I control. Jdustrial Asc on for its vow The Americans next ran into two tide juoted by the Cologne biplanes and forced them to re jazetto an vaying tire, Starting onward again, they ‘The hour is grave. We are fish encountered a biplane which they engaged and crashed, The Amer + for the future of the Fatherland protection of the soul of cans then finished their mission und, To that end we need of locating a certain unit, Re 1 action of the intellectual, turning home, they fought @ big | moral and ¢ omic powers of Ger Haherstadt, but without result the co-operation of those yr invincibility rests, ate win) neeption he spirit nity of thing of “! WILL MODIFY GASLESS BAN. for WASHING ban on Sund, ne partly litte meeting with little enemy activity except for a barrage, "The new pian, {t ts underetond, will permit restricted use of passenger au- tos on Sunday. —— for defense muat bing atl} 1 rep’ FRENCH-AMERICAN TROOPS LONDON, Oct. 10.—British cavalry to-day reached the out- | skirts of Le Cgteau, the railway junction southeast of Cambrai | which is the immediate British objective, says the Exchange Tel- é¢graph Company. | WITH THE ANGLO-AMERICAN FORCES SOUTHEAST OF CAMBRAI, Oct. 10 (Associated Press).—British and Amer- ‘an forces continued to advance rapidly and are driving the de- | moralized Germans before them, according to all reports on this front. The whole battle is on a field that was aflame throughout | the night. Fires have destroyed many towns and farm houses completely. LONDON, Oct. 10.—The attack of the Anglo-American | forces in the breach between St. Quentin and Cambrai resulted yesterday evening in continued advances, according to Field Mar- | shal Ha: report to-day. The British are now within two miles jot the railroad centre at Le Cateau. Sallaumines and Noyelles have oeen captured. [The capture of these two towns represents an advance In the dis- trict east of Lens. Le Cateau is only 16 miles from the Belgian border, between Valenctennes and Maubeuge. It is 17 miles directly south of the former city.] Further progress was made by the British last night toward the northern part of the present battlefront, to the east of Cambrai. Fighting is in progress southeast of Cambrai, on both sides of Caudry. The German Army is in retreat on a thirty-seven-mile front be- tween the Scarpe River and the Oise, south of St. Quentin. What is left of thirty full divisions (420,000 men) are moving backward, Cav- alry, armored motor cars and whippet tanks are in close pursuit. Allied troops, instead of advancing in skirmish formation, are pressing forward in columns of squads, a method of advance never before used in this war, Germany officially admtis “the enemy has made deeper breaches in our lines.” At least 20,000 German prisoners have been captured by all the Al- lied armies since Monday, together with more than 250 guns, The amount of war supplies captured is incalculable, In yesterday's fighting Bohain, Busigny, Clary, Caudry, Fonsomme, |Caurior, Carnieres, Fontaiae-Notre Dame, Marcy ind Mezieres-sur-Oise wre captured, WASHINGTON, Oct. 10.—Penetratioty of the German main line f resist west of the Meuse by the Americans, against fresh enemy ivisions, is reported in Gen, Pershing’s communique for Wednesday. ll East of the Meuse furtner gains were made during the day in spite jof violent counter attacks, while in the Argonne Forest the American forces captured important héights south of Marcq and joined hands with the French at Lancon, More than two thousand additional prisoners are | reported. $4 —______ KEEP UP THEIR ADVANCES IN CHAMPAGNE AND ARGONNE These Successes Have Forced the Germans to Hold Their Reserves There, and Aided in Victory in Picardy, PARIS, Oct, 10,—French troops, advancing east of the St, Quentin- le Cateau Rallroad, have captured Etaves Wood and Bocquiaux village

Other pages from this issue: