The evening world. Newspaper, October 31, 1918, Page 1

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8 Rei “If It Happens In New York It’s In The Evening World’’ ove | “ Ciroulation Books Open to All. | “Circulation Books Open to All. | —— Conve 1918, by The Press Publishing € New York World) TRO Lh bdhade TWO CENTS. Bo kl YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, | Paren TWO SERTS. (1918. 20 PAGES be TURKEY ALLIES TAKE UP DETAILS OF TERMS FOR GERMANY Bonar Law Crosses Channel From GERMAN EMPRESS. VERY ILL: England in aah to a i HAUNTED BY FATE OF RUSSIA, Paris Meeting—Statesmen in Ses- URGES KAISER TO ABDICATE sion With Col. House. ee aTEMIN 1D) Emperor Himself Quoted as Saying if Moment Comes When Interests of Germany De- WILSON LONG WITH BAKER; BIG DEVELOPMENTS HINTED mand It, He Will Quit Throne. AUSTRIAN ARMY TO QUIT: ARIS, Oct. 31.—The German Empress is very ill and weak, accoding iv a Berne despaich io the Petit Journal, it is said President Sees Lansing Before His Conference) that she is haunted by the memory of tie Russian revolution With Secretary of War. and insists upon the abdication of the Emperor. ASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—President Wilson was in a long femand it, I should abdicate without hesitation. But the ne of Germany ¢ conference with Secretary Baker this afternoon, the meet- moment does not seem to have ¢ ing not having broken up at 3.15 o'clock. LONDON, Oct. 31.—"If the moment comes when the interests | | | -W tid this in an address to It was hinted that the discussion was of great importance. Pre- | Emperor William is quoted as having | } a r of members of the German Reichsta to a de. S| ¢ President saw Secretary Lansing. 1 num ‘aula aman ecadtial spatch to the Exeltinge Telegraph: from Amsterdam, quoting advices LONDON, Oct. 31.—The preliminary conversations which rile from Berlin. have occupied the Allied re presentatives in Paris have been concluded anc more important discuss ions now are beginning, according to reparts reach- WIFE HELD FOR SHOOTING | HUSBAND, PHOTOGRAPHED AT POLIGE HEADQUARTERS, ‘AISSED THEN SHO BY WIFE, CHARGES DYING INVENTOR ing official quarters ‘here. To take part in the discussinos, Andrew Bonar Law, Chancellor of | the Exchequer, went to France yesterday, crossing the Channel in an | airplane, as he had done on a previous occasion, The scope of the detiberations of ie And vere Ye ot BGH'S TERMS IN BERLIN, been announced, and, although it is} sinted from a reliable source, some | DECLARES GERMAN PAPER ek official declaration of armistice lit. Dontt. Remember what terms possibly may be made before | Washington, However, Believes | Happened in Auto,’ Mrs, the end of the present week, nothing Statement to Unofficial Forecast. Refers Only Howard Scutt Tells Police. definitely is known about them, | mmentators believe that | | : «deliver : | ‘The Mrs, Maude Scutt, the deliberations will be protracted | ; | who is ac f aving shot her beyond the time originally intended. | Unofficial reports and specula- | Niahanal nt elee ys tiona on the armistice terms con- they sat in bi ou le, may rest occupy @ prominent place in Si eset aN ial rte, bg backs sph : WASHINGTON, Oct, 11 nfor- | Saat ae ; : me : pached Washing is reported to ave made nree hour. Guggestions put forward by the pple Rg heft ut ahs 9 (eae | British delegates, the Daily Wxpreas|cnroun, mither official or aiplo tore | eaye in an editorial, probably will bel ant Ailied iiliva pesarien | oC w | Frunce | fel | adopted with some modifications ‘ty the rest of the Allies, The proposals were put forward, it adda, with the Aefinite idea of preventing Germany from. resuming hostilities when once an armistice is granted, and also of securing adequate euarantees for the signing of a peace treaty based on President Wilson's fourteen poinds. PARIS, Oct. 31 (Inited Press) Conversations between members of the inter-Allied diplomatic council | who li "Ther at elar "Oh, framing might be gra It was assu arrival of Ma: in Tuesday ri en despatch au Zeitung, was based upo' ie spatches of Tuesday trom London p porting to outhine what would be de Mmanded of Germany. PHONE GIRLS, IN IN FIRE, USE friend continued to-day at Col. House's ee ale headquarters, Allied representatives IMPROVISED GAS MASKS |. j he had made It called there and remained some time. DAG ARAR A a Premier Clemenceau and Marshal! Gay masks hastily improvised hy wet | pao Kk." she said Foch returned at noon from Ver-|ting handkerchiefs and placing them 1 kne ) sailles, where the council ts sitting,/over their mouths were used by tele- in the orp hea ati looking grently satisfied, phone girls in the Murray Hill Exchange |», gon mite Chet When the Austrian note to Pres{-|this afternoon when the b was | time flood " ime I in HY dent Wilson was first handed to Col, |Mooded with smoke. The Cece the five-story building acros: at Nos. 218 and 220 East 37th House he was asked by a correspond M ent which was dest “Will A separate peace be the out-|anout $30,000. “a ; pie) Fire started on the third f \ rooms orcupled by facturin y certainly are asking for 4t," “but your opin. he vepiied smiling! concern, iN} a conatder the of the Aus-| we | Findings dows quickly ~- pYOU CAN AVOID IMFL ment ptem ’ Granum,. ‘the ‘Unows (4 merves Any druggist, 28 cln—adre. NEAS INFECTION | giver ut fi publication in the Eewepspers. to-morrow morning. (Continued on Fourth Page.) ee ee RE LLL LLL A AL In —- ' HUGHES REPORT TO-MORROW | _praee back beyond the Turkish ed from the ‘hospital cir ae ing. SURRENDERS TURKS SIGN ARMISTICE AND OPEN | DARDANELLES Admiral Calthorpe, Acting for Ose lihiahielaitinraal ts Chief Makes Allies, Agrees to the Truce—| Application for Armistice Direct Turkish Army in Mesopotamia to Diaz in Italy and It Is Referred Surrenders. | to Versailles. 1 LONDON, Oct. 31.—The Austrian Commander on the Italian front has applied to Gen. Diaz, the Italian Commander-in-Chief for an armistice, the Exchange Telegraph Company states. The application has been forwarded to the Versailles conference. : » An official armistice between the Allies and Turkey was signed at Minos, it is officially announced. The terms ji are said to be a complete surrender. Turkish plenipotentiaries arrived at Minos early this week, and Admiral Calthorpe signed an armistice last night, on behalf of the Allies. The Dardanelles were opened at 6.30 o'clock this morning. Ismail Hakki, commanding the Turkish Armies of the group operating in the Tigris region in Mesopotamiay | has surrendered with one entire division and the best part of two other divisions. $$$ ‘TURKEY GERMANY’S SECOND ALLY AUSTRIANS FORCED TO RETREAT TO QUIT UNCONDITIONALLY; ENTERED THE WAR IN NOV., 114 Military Operations Begun When England ia) Official nexedisland of Cyprus—Allies Withdrew BY ATTACKS OF THE ALLIES; 45,000 ARE TAKEN PRISONE Denial Made of Vienna Announces >y pr ¢ ment of Voluntary Withdrawal—Gains in Gallipoli Campaign Made Only by Hard Fighting. | PARIS, Oct. 31 (6 P. M.).—Gen, WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—Official wireless reports frouh British Mesopotamian force which surrendered at Kut-cl-Amara, was the} Rome to-day flatly deny the Austrian claim of voluntary with- messenger who bore the Turkish request for an armistice to the Allies, it! drawal, = “Yesterday's Austrian bulletin,” says the official message, ‘states that the Austrian army is voluntarily evacuating territory | a ross the Piave. This Austrian statement is absolutely false, in Palvgiina th Ailied | The Austrian army has offered and is still offering a formidable der Ge a; All cas lta met resistance, and it is only since the Austrian line was broken and Poe ‘vhe ttus. | the enemy obliged to retire in disorder that the ground has been n in the Cauca, given up. The fighting is Proceeding with great bitterness, tho | Austrians being everywhere on the retreat.” | | Townshend, commander of the, | otticially announced to-day. | April 29, 1916, and | «, was Townshend was forced to lay down his arm a prisoner to an island in the Sea of Marmora was sent as which now ha ce, entered when sh Nov . 194 diplomatic Trance cond of the to ask the Aes ¢, Bulgaria havidig been lee whiceies unec surrender, © ly four Military operations Turkey on Noveer Britain annexed the I Turkey entered the days after Breslau ar shelte at once Apr don the troops were withdrawn in December of the s The along Rivers emu import relations with and Russia us wa Britain, She Powor: is for an In all, more than one thousand square kilometres of Italian territor, | Was reconquered yesterday, and apparently the whole front is being dri northward, eo) ing between the Brenta and the Plave gh the capture of the mountain Fifteen Austrian divisions opera jhave had their retreat cut off throu of Vadal by Italian and allied troops, Turkey ea under the jermanophile ‘Turks has been marked with Turks and of Cypru: 4 few war only The despatches from Rome say jad {vantage is being Pressed to the utmost, and that a crisis is near. E | losses are desc appalling. Valley of Quero by the Italian Army Corps ap | tbe g north of Valdobbiadene threatens Feltre and exposes the Austrians. in the Grappg region to a flanking movement, which, it is said, will com. The Third Italian Army on the Lower Piave is | reported advancing steadily, in the face of desperate enemy resistance, . PARIS, Oct. 31.—Austrian prisoners now total more than 48,064 «Dar it was officially announced here this afternoon. Three hundred ot . canal in| ive been captured and more than 100 villages liberated. LONDON, Oct. 31.—British troops have entered Aslago, the ima rtant town which forms the chief bastion of the mountain region of he Italian front, it was officially announced by the War Office to-day,” The advance, which has been widened to more than elghty mllesy continued rapidly, The Italians have taken the great supply base of | Vittorio, bie ; The Tenth Army (with which Amertcan troops are brigaded) has, ¥ |taken more than 10,000 prisoners, ately remov British and llalian cavalry have reached the outskirts of Sacile, file rman had e Dardanelies, whic ded by the Allied fleet Ajlied troops were 211 Peninsula, but the subject nai ties ribed as Army many Ger Occupation of the and the ha Turkish Navy is Mcer ntrolled ri mar ign failed and the Allied jermans, It was. re at the| ably | pel immediate retirement. Dar- } not un noipal pro- | will be that ported Germans in suld prob ame y British the 7 in Ne ear y w irks opened The within les# than but were ¢ retreat to ey were late the FIRE IN ARMY HOSPITAL. | Por Struct Jed Pre Pitted wien] France Fire bre i t Fort lr paigns had «a mea first, bu AA 4

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