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2- “If It Happens In New York lt’s In The Evening World’’ LQ. gM Che f bal Circulation Books Open to A. ] : PRICE TWO (CENTS. <a Copreight, 1018) by The Prem Febtiching ew York Wo bch did YORK, ‘TUESDAY, “OCTOBER 29, 18 PA 1918, [ “Circulation Books Open to All. | eves EATHER—Fair To- Might and Wednesday. GES PRICE TWO oRNTs. ALLIES FIXING TRUCE TERMS; TURKEY APPEALS FOR PEACE | PERSHING TROOPS ATTACKED WAR. MUST END IN FEW DAYS, SAYS VORWAERTS OF BERLIN, pl GAS SHELLS AND GUNS; BLAMING AUSTRIA FOR IT ALL ~ FRENCH GLOSE IN ON GSE New Baitle ayo To-Day cn Centre of American Front Above Verdun. ‘PUP GAINS.| FRENCH KEEP UI Many Villages and eee of Civilians Liberated Be- | tween the Oise and Serre. | | ARMY | WITH THE AMERICAN NORTHWEST OF VERDUN, Oct.) 29 (Associated Press). — Activities along the centre of the Amerivan front began s before aight this morning with a furious bom- bardment. The e¢ ty opened a heavy fire with gas 2.30 o'clock, W was changed xplosives be- tween 4 and & T American artil- lery responded merican patrols were active in Bu le Wood all night The artillery bombardment and ma- chine gun fire reached inten _sity during the nig The fire was nD na’ Or t } ! eas has charged him with the task of especially intense in Belleau and Or- until three Ge manbines were! i. Rolo if " rant Wools ssa teltal |the Rolchstag, according to @ Berlin) cine tne complete intenenaence| More Than 37 Miles—Cross Piave Gen, Pershing's men have wrested | One of the German machines fell} | “ se . : 4: : 1 \ : AMSTERDAM, Oct, 29 (Associated of Hungary, a d@@pat om Buda . rom the foe, We he Rives en to go down comple out o bi So liiphe Grcclamadaniadca shad peace fron i Hae debate, the Reichstag on Saturday proclamatior p le-Grand has been cleared of the) control, ‘Tho third German fell) Dasseg the bill changing the German |Will be aspired to at once and Hun- | Under Eyes of King Victor. supa : A Gennes yMolal statem ; | eran ee Sea after 169 rouns's| Conatitution and depriving the Kaiser |gary will join a League of Nations,{| 00 ploked Up by wireless, sph ene had been fired at the machine. Ne of the sole power to declare war or | her integrity and unity being the first | re i ‘ » ‘ oak: mite av river, | other ten Germans retired when their| Of Re Sole Power to declare war oF | Not | WITH THE ITALIAN ARMIES IN THE FIELD, Oct, 29 (United a Ally Uses | Superiority duced — wo J . | . “ ‘ waying 1 Mae ane | O iecoa, : A ie from Berlin. ‘The bill included the| {Archduke Joseph is a second Press).—The Italians are now advativing on a continuous front of sixty tn announcing nen e Sia : : ara aaseee ararean! | : TNGURRiGAta aan (ooRie % following provisions: | cousin of the Emperor and for ‘kilometers (more than thirty-seven miles), extending from east of Mont menced were & according to pian.” PARIS, Oct, 2.—Gen, Debeney's First Army contir s to close in on Guise and has captured German first line trenches’ and barracks and hospital south of t hateau in the town of Guise, according to ihe War iis Se aah | on Dutch Soil. | dismissals and appointments in the| olnay ae Pe Sy pelAp hema) uth of Guise the French have | inder the leadership of Count Karolyi, at he Louvry Farm,| WASHINGTON, Oct, 29.—Second | SEMY. faicocaperailon swith (ie Cechh ant persed beyond the Louvry |tJouts, State Secretary Groeber and War) pera e They also continue to make progress | Vivuts. Frank Minister Major Gen. Scheuch both|JUS0-Slavs, according to a Vienna on the right bank of the Peron River. ai New York, flying officers of the| declared, however, that there was|“espateh to the Politiken . The FreneW’have thrown the Ger-| Marine Corps, have been interned In| nothing tn the reforms which could| Karolyi, who was elected head of| mans back gbout two miles at the apex of their attacks, while in the region of Bois-les-Pargny, east of the Mitte River Peron, they have made Important gains, Many vill and thousands of civilians have been freed from the invaders. The French have broken the Huncing line at Guise, dangering the German positions to the north and south, and there is evi- “dence that the Germans have started a widespread retreat between the Oise and Aisne LONDON, advancing along the the Lys, have reached between Peteghem and (a front of eight miles), shal Haig reported to-day special Belgian communique Artillery duels and patrol encoun- ters were the tivity British fron he night Marshal Haig report stutement to-day WITH THE BRITISH ARMIE: FRANCE AND BELGIUM, O (Associa took pli Thuoy south of Va counter-attacked the British in woods and latest report parts of the forest held by Oct. 29.—French troops, right bank of the railway eghem 4 Mar- in his only Field in his official during th neiennes that sides. The fighting to-day followed hart | combats throughout Monday in the region of Famars and the Seheldt Canal, The British made additional progress Monday, } A To Newspaper Close to Government Says Vienna's Stand Means Finish and Assails Bureaucrats There. ERNE, Oct. 29.—“The world war will not last longer than a few days; we must arrest the vain flow of our blood,” declares the Socialist newspaper Vorwaerts, which is regarded as virtually a Geman Government organ. “It is upon Austria’s bureaucrats, who sent the ultimatum to Serbia, that the responsibility for the war rests the heavi- est. _ Austria's disappearance will end the s war. EIGHT U.S FLYERS. FIGHT 13 GERMANS; er AUSTRIAN NOTE IN WASHINGTON _ AS VERSAILLES. COUNCIL IL MEETS — SEPARATE PEACE FOR TURKEY, BRING DOWN THREE FEDERAL COUNCIL HUNGARY SET FREE APPROVES GERMAN ‘OF AUSTRIAN RULE The Other Ten Et Ten Enemy Planes| Escape—All Americans wo our ses ome REFORM ME MEASURE BY ROYAL DEGREE NORTHWEST OF VERDUN, Oot 2) (Avsociated Press).—Three German = airplanes are believed to ‘have been| Bill Passed by Rel by Reichstag bel Archduke Joseph Charged} brought down tn an aerial pattie! prives Kaiser of Sole Power | With Bringing About Inde- over Bantheville Monday between an aclare ’ pal: i American patrol of elght- machines) to Declare War, | pendence as Revolt Starts. nd thirteen ns | —_———. The American patrol had attacked) COPENHAGEN, Oct. 29.—The Ger-| GoppNHACEN, Oct, 29.—Arch- four German maohines, when nine man Federal Councif? has approved 4.6 Jouepn ton insued 9 praolaroe her enemy airplanes joined in. The the bilyamending the Imperial Con- ; tion stating that Emperor Charles Americans fou the entire thirteen stitution in the form as adopted by some time has made his home in Budapest, bas das a representative of the Emperor is a Austrian Sanction of the Reichstag ang Bundesrat needed for a declaration dF | war; Chancellor to remain in power only so long as he has the confidence #; Chancellor respon for the political action of the} Minister of War responsible chstag, and the Chancellor} thority over all promotions, where he ete NEW YORK avaTOR INTERNED IN HOLLAND John Frederic Gibbs of West 8tst Street and Companion Land ious occasions, He ol General in the Army! of the Reichsta sible Oct, 29.—Hungary initely revolted and formed an endanger the firm structure of the|the National Council, was given an army or the personal relationship be- | vation upon his arrival in Budapest tween the Prussian King and the | He told the crowds, which numbered officers thousands, that Emperor Charles bad ater Holland. The Navy Department announced to- | that the Lieutenants were com- peiled to land on Dutch soil when a naval bombing machine in which they | were flying developed FLYER EXCEEDS 2 MILES A MINUTE TO BEDSIDE day refused his programme for a ff degree of separation between A jand Hungary, wherefore an indepen- dent state was necessary. WASHINGTON, t. 29.—Diplo matic despatches received here to-day based on advices from Budapest say |Count Karolyi has failed in his at tempt establish an independent government in Hungary with repre sentatives of all the becaune the Slay and It tives refused to join him. on — /EXTRA STEEL DIVIDEND REDUCED 10 2 PER CENT. Regular One and One-Quarter Per Cent. Payment Also Ordered— Greater Decrease Expected. ngine trouble. to Father Ill, Railroad Vice ‘President's | Son Makes 228 Miles in 1 Hour 45 Minutes. PITTSAURGH, Oct, 29 An extra dividend of 2 per cent common stoek, In addition to the regu- lar quarterly dividend of 11-4 per cent nian representa A new ree It is as born | ord for an airplane fight between tray-|waa declared by directors’ of the United sumed that the Karolyi Government ton, Ohio, and Pittsburgh was claimed | States Steel Corporation at their meet- | referred to in Vienna reports throush t by James M. Schoonmaker jr,|ing here to-day Copenhagen was xet up without th won of the Vice-President of the ‘The extra dividend is # reduction from support of the Slave and Rumanians burgh & La ie Railroad the 3 per cent, extra dividend declared ~— BoRNE, Switacrland, Monday, Oct atthe O $ miles in on common stock for the lust four quar> yg aqane Genintiake Ge coe Haviland battlepla enterda nt reports on the Stock Ex- 2 sei ae tie oe ea 08 : ape *- numbor of 100,000 held a huge dem on In one hour pnd forty-five minutes re that the reduction would r ; : i onstration Sunday in the streets of An average speed of more than two be Rreater. Budapest. Count Michael Karolyi Hew a minute was maintaine | The regular quarterly dividend of 1% and his followers addresned the Young Schoonmaker, who is chief en. per cent. on preferred stock was de> crowds on behalf of a democratic necr of the Dayion-Wright Airplane Hungary. There were no disturb ompang, received a long distance tele arnings quarter end- ances phone mosenge that hia father, who p. after d $101,987 AMSTORDAM, Oat neriously il ith Howard Rinehart Wit excess pr Ye Naan RRnGunane tously . ‘ K : 1 Ri hart Magy aK petal se Premigr, it Was announced in a de ae pilot he left Weight Weld at 11.18 inet quarter and n year w spatch from Vienna to-duy JA. Mand tanded hes at 1 BML on se | | Brunot's Leland { YOU AKL IN DANGER ire 0 infta ‘oll SAE ot cpening urip oF mneunonle If you are enth leamabiwcnti, both ¢h ‘adulta, Weak and run-down, Build resisting. power pot fou times. dail r bat Une wilh Father “John’s Medicige, puss” tood sourisnment. "Vis 'terpaing iaior” vleanes teluet Tee Fens Peneils—-aave, Bed pulldts adv, tot svimtites, “Lay devant, oer—aan, $$ Se i cr ne natin tria | REPORTED oe BY PORTE ATALIANS, FRENCH, BRITISH STILL DRIVING AUSTRIANS: Allies ‘Expected to to) Cink Sur- render of Heavy Artillery, Oc- cupation of Fortresses and Evac- uation in East—Guarantees From Austria. WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—The Versailles Conference meets to-day, and it is supposed will ‘proceed immediately to the consideration of the terms that the military advisets—Foch, Pershing, Haig, Petain and Diaz— Suggest as necessary to insure the Allies’ military supremacy. The conditions pres¢ribed by the Allied commianders are expected to reach this country Wednesday. or Thursday, for as Germany's plea for an armistice was presented through America, the United States will prob. ably be the velicleof transmitting to her the answer, From the guarded utterances of some of those who are cognizant of what has been said informally, it is expected that the conditions agreed to at lo-day's conference at Versailles will call for: The surrender of Germany's heavy artillery. Proposal Independently. It is stated that the proposal was made independently by the PRISONERS TOTAL 19,000 _ + OPENHAGEN, Oct. 29.—Constantinople has proposed a sep- | Porte. ¢ Advance on a Continuous Front of |Spinoncia to Rocandelle. The Austrian lines have been completely pierced east of the Piave. Italian patrols already have crossed the Monticano River, nearly ten miles beyond the Piave A number of have been thrown ac Plave and these are constantly being added to as the engineers work like mad- men. Across these bridges light infantry and other units poure all night long |in increasing numbers, to take up the pressure against the where hy lines have been shattered, additional bridges @ AMERICAN TROOPS REACH PIAVE RIVER ON ITALIAN FRONT enemy Presence There Regarded as Signi ITALIAN HEADQUARTERS ON ficant in View of Austrian THE PIAVE, Oct. 29 (Associated Peace Pl | Press).—Fifteen thousand prisoners eace Fea. |had been taken by the British, ITALIAN HEADQUARTERS, Oct Italians and French in the advance (Aamoclated’ ‘Siaes) <x athevioan across the Plave which for the third. .14 soldiers ago in reserve along the time in one year is the scene of a " Fiave fighting zone. The correspond- |desperate ‘battle. ‘This time the DENIS sone Tr resapona |tables are turned against the Aus- trians, who are steadily being pressed through its “setting up" near the river, exercises this morning ent saw an American battalion going | The occupation of the Fortresses of Metz, Strassburg and Coblentz. The evacuation of all occupied territory, including Rou- mania and the Baltic provinces of Russia. The terms of peace, including the surrender of all of Alsace-Lorraine to France and Prussian Poland to Poland, will come later, There isa probability that the matter of Schleswig-Holstein, for which Denmark has put in her claim, based on the unfilled treaty, will also be considered, there is an inclination to include Schleswig-Holstein in. this part of the business as a guarantee of the future neutrality of the Kiel Canal, though an alternative might be the dismantling of Heligoland. The new Austrian note asking for armistice and peace terms was re ceived by cable to-day at the Swedish Legation for delivery to the State Department. The text Is said to be identical with that cabled by the As+ sociated Press from Basel, Switzerland, yesterday. Word of the arrival of the note came just as the Cabinet was assem- bling at the White House for the usual Tuesday meting, at which both the new Austrian plan ay) the latest German note were expected to be discussed, No official statement as to America’s reply to Austria’s appeal for a Separate peace i$ forthcoming, but it is surmised it will order that Austria deal directly with the Czecho-Slovak National Council, which has been recognized by the Allies, and with the Jugo-Slavs, as to their desires for independence, and that, as a precedent to all peace preliminaries she witn- draw all her forces from the Balkans and from Italy, togther with yielding Pola and Trieste as hostages for her compliance with whatever terms of peace may be accorded her. There is reason for believing one of the armistice terms Austria will be forced to accept will be the yielding of her railways to the Allies, so that Allied armies may attack Germany from the east. +-——__—__ |back from the eastern bank of the “nah | WASHINGTON, Oct, 29.—~Amer | The battle has been going on for) CAM troops are on the verge of active | five days and has been marked by the! Participation on the Majori Italian front, This was the interpretation here to-day of news from t desperate resistance of the Austrians. |'They have directed their artillery fire Italian AUSTRIA MAY FORCE GERMANY ‘TO YIELD, BELIEF IN LONDON | against pontoon bridges thrown across| Headquarters that Americans are the Plave and their bombing airplanes “tanding reserve behind the Brit- also have caused trouble for the|!#h and Italiin forces now driving ; 5 on toa the Pav Vienna's Note Looked On by Press as Uncon- Austrian prisoners declare that they he news 1s considered significant 4 now nothing of the pol situation (Because it Indicates that the Italian ditional Surrender, at home and the eff HOP BBY ee qnise: 5 th LONDON, Oct, 29.—Austria's reply | for which, besides being a most grave ernment to arrange an armistice, The Offensive that is rapidly bri ; military misfortune, it involy nostoffice - ymplete defeat to the Central Po to President Wilson is viewed here as | ™ involves an Austrian army postoffice ia sald to ais a w ulUmate crushing political defeat, as have stopped the delivery of anail (hm It haw added mean to officinty an unconditional surrender, Although it destroys the monstrous fabri some time ago. Me iy MARS SGM eee ow plead- | recognized as an event of intrinsically | known as pan-Germaniam.* King Victor Emmanuel saw the © oP an UMModiehe armiaticg, the greatest moment, denoting the Chronicle says: “Lt completes tee A r roa i f ! , ; : breaking up of Hapsburg power, main “als ation of many, Which, if it of the Plave e wore a uniform mad mbardment to prevent the Allie decides o war of defense, th initay é achat : ‘ Miled interest in ituation Hes in the DS was fense, must be of the ma al ust o 1 passage of the river prepared to meet invasion from the vate soldiers, The King was under t LON DON Six Auatrian effect it will inevitably have on he wid where the whole fire of the Austrian guns und was at| divisions have Jost more’ than 50 pe, position of Germany Italian Army will be able to operate various points where gas shells and | cent of their effectives, so far, in the! “lt remov says the Telegraph, ,agninst it.” shrapnel were failing, He spent much Anglo-Italian offensive, according to “any lingering doubt as to the total; The Daily News likens the chaes tw time near where there was a heavy ¥ 4 despatch from Rome to-day, and irremediabie defeat of Germany, |asetactt Anas tw that & bea