The evening world. Newspaper, November 8, 1918, Page 2

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CENTRIST LEADER WHO HEADS GERMAN DELEGATES 10 FOCH 4 IN SEDAN DAN STREETS German Majority Parties Reported About to CES HARDER TOWN THAN WA, sys sal When Senators Call Him Savior of France. PARIS, Nov. 8—Premler Clemen- ceau appeared for a moment night in the lobby of the Senate after a sitting of that body which had de- | clarag Him to have “deserved well of It was the signal for ee O-9O8-69O35-9-6-9-40586-9:8-5-96 oe an ovation to him. He was speedily surrounded by & “No} no,” replied the Premier, “It | is the country which has done every- Seteryrrye Es tant tab PORL-1DI2O6 46 REVOLT SPREADS 10 BREMEN, SCHWERIN AND EAST PRUSSIA “Thanks to you,” the Senators re- returned the “1 ansure you have done my Any one. of you who loves Franc@ would limve done as much. There are moments when the spirit, | of itself, rises within one.” | Overcome with emotion, the tears coursed down his rugged counte- nance, which so many. violent storms in the past had left impassive. (Continued From First Page.) finally said. “f did not deserve #0 much Shonor as you h Let mé tell,you that I am proudest that you have associated my name with that of Marshal Foch, that great the darkest «hours, the destiny of his Ho has inspired ev with courage and. we owe him aaj infinite debt. “Gentlemen, we are now coming to It is harder to win revolutionaries.) PRINCE HENRY, ON BY MARINES. COPENHAGEN Henry of Pruss soldier wo, never doubted on Wednesday | in an automobile flying the Schleswig He was pursued py fired a dozen shots at him, the le flyin flag, | progress along Setey. warlite. ths according to Field Marshal Haig, they SERBS ENTER HUNGARY, have reached the outskirts of Quie-| vrain and Crespie, close to the Belgian | a djMfoult time, peace than to win the war. so act that. France will resume the place In the world of which sho Is More than ever must she More than ever Prince Henry has arrived at Flens- , in Schleswig, after from Kiehl. wounded by the marines, upon the Prince, (Prince Henry of Commander-in-Chief of the ¢ man Navy and the only brother of the German Emperor. Prince Henry visited the United States, spending one month here Revolutionists have cut the North German Railway line south of Fiens- in’ Schleswig-Holstein. communication north with Hamburg. AMSTDRDAM, ‘Thursday, (1 P, M)—The great German mv time port of Hamburg is comple gather herself up. must she be disciplined and strong, I have confidence in her.” Then, pushing his way through the eircle, the Premier said: “Will you cllow me to return to my task?” France knows at last that triumph has come and gives rein to Its unre- MESOPOTAMIAN PEOPLES ASSURED FULL AUTONOMY Britain and France Issue Declaration on Region From Taurus to Persian Gulf. PARIS, Nov. British Governments have issued a joint the peoples be- tween Wie Taurus region and the Per- sian Gulf of assistance In obtaining full who fired Play according to reports trom Hamburg newspapers printed the Cologne The red flag is flying on all ships in the harbor, The headquarters of the Command- er of the port has been occupied by the Soldiers’ Council after exciting oc- ‘The: peciaration currences In which machine guns were Great Britain will ald the establishment of native Governmenta and Adminis- and Mesopotamia, already liberated or being liberated, ard will recognize : soon a8 they are effecti All kinds of excesses took pl: the neighboring city of Altona, Port Commander there agr the demands submitted by the Sol-| Governments ed With M Sergt. Milton J. No. 4008 Ferris Bremen was ef- . who died Monday at State Hospital, was burled with military Rational Cemetery, Cy- after which a meeting was held, y demanded the @ social democratic republic. Joined with the marines in opening the prisons, tained by the marin {Bremen is, next to Hamburg, the principal maritime emporium of Germany, Weser River, of Hamburs. honors at the press Hills, to-day. member of the Tank Corps. SEE The Dawn of a Happy Tomorrow Gone are the black days of doubt ‘The Thing bent on the of the world is forever ‘atitude to our 59 miles southwest Its pre-war popu- Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg- crushed, In our Schwerin and is situated on the boys “Over There” and the fine, brave fellows with whom they fought, we naturally turn to music. miles southeast of 1 It Hew on the loft pes our loved ones and they have made the world safe at last. Koentgubers. tion is about $6,000.) Vorwaerts of Berlin publist LET THE GLAD voice of music fill your home with rejoicing the wonderful music of the New Edison, party's firm intention to secure proclamation upon our people must All necessary are being taken to this end. ception will be made however highly placed.” ~ _> of any person, come in tomorrow after- Bradley about Special | Workers at ¥ Thankegiving Terms ? cue. °8 Lhe EDISON SHOP site Public Libr. 'S Fifth ae Also East Orange and Newark PHILADELPHIA, made possible without efforts of the werkers a the patriotic Board last night at an entertainment | and reception here given hy Director General Schwab for employets of the Emergency Fleet THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1918. ' ANY GERMAN CITIES IN THE-HANDS OF THE REVOLUTIONISTS RAINBOW DIVISION ABDICATION OF THE KAISER FIGHTING FIERGELY Upton Troops oat 77th Are Pressing Germans Steadily Back—Heroic Regulars. LONDON, Nov. §.—The pursult of the fleeing Germans in France and | Belgium continues all along the line, The! greatest gains up to early to- day had been made by the French, | who yesterday preseed on for ten miles at points directly menacing’ the German centre communteation: More than 100 villages were freed from the enemy The Americans are throwing | bridges across the Meuse at Sedan, | the western section of which they | hold. It was the famous Rainbow Division, of which the old 69th New; York 1s a unt, that took the city. | It also is permissible to state to-day | that it was the Sth Infantry, regu- \lars, of the American Army, which | |swam the River Meuse, waded | through three-quarters of a mile of awamps, swam ihe Meuse Canal, clambered up its precipitous banks | with ropes on grappling hooks, and defeated the Germans Monday. The Americans not only are in So- dan, but they have made a big JUMP rexumed their advance along the | (Associated Press forward toward the great Briey tron | fields, which the Longuyon Ine pro- Longuyon has been under fre| Princo! of American naval guns for several tee days. British forces are continuing thotr the Franco-Belgtan battle line. Northeast of Valenciennes, border American troops from Oho, under was the command of Gen, Barnsworth, a great part in tho relief of the city by an attack on the Eecke salient, sixteen miles southwest of Ghent, which was taken by storm Tuesday. FAMOUS RAINBOW DIVISION WAS THE FIRST IN SEDAN WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY Nov. 8 ~The matter of peace negotiations failed tu slow down in the slightest degree |Vi#ional Government. The statement be provided ‘for and will live in- his adds that five steamers and a monitor house at No. 9 Railroad Avenue, were found at |}ON TUB SEDAN FRO? (680 P.M.) (Associated Pr the operations along the front yester- revolutionists,|day, The news that Germany has taken definite steps to secure an armistice reached advanced head- quarters, but was not accompanied by any orders affecting the big drive and it is expected that the American line will be car- now in progre! ried forward without pause. With that part of Sedan resting on the western bank of the river oc- cupled, the American Army ts con- solidating its positions and prepar- Jing for a further advance. It was contingents of the noted ion and of the tst | Rainbow Di: iT) |wind dash into Sedan. It is now permissible to mention the} divisions which participated in the mous drive that cleared ihat part of France west of the Meuse oceupied by the Americans. It was the 2d Division which, oper- ating at the centre, mado che strenu- ous push on the afterncon of the day the Germans began to weaken, and pressed forward until it controded the heights below Beaumont. This made possible the shelling of the Mesieres- Mets Railroad. |It was the 2d Division that helped stop the advance below Chateau ‘Thierry, Afterward it broke the Ger- man lines below Soissons and started the great retreat from the Marne, Later it broke the German lines In the Champagne by the capture of Blanc Mont and forced the retreat from Rheims. ‘The 2d Division js com- posed of the 3d Brigade of Infantry. made up of the 9th Regiment, the 234 Regiment and the 6th Machine Gun le up of the 6th Marines, the 6th Marines Battalion; the 4th Brigud and the 6th Machine Gun Battalion; the 2d Brigade of F = | Regiment and 17th RB | Artillery and the T neh Mortar Battery; the 2d Engineers and 1st Field Signal Battalion, the 2d Di- visional Headquarters Troops and the 4th Machine Gun Battalion, Continuing its successes tn the Ar- gonne Forest, the 77th Division fought | its stubborn way upward along | Bourgogne Wood, in conjunction with the 78th, —_—<»—- veaco |BONZANO MAY BE CARDINAL. De Listed A mbites at Home, Apont ROME | for the eported that a nals are Archbis! ong t sno, the Apostolic Delegate at Washing t and Madrid, Among the Car Will be created can be m Arch of Prague and the Bishop of Breslau. FIGHTING STILL IN PROGRESS; continuing their advance along the|¢arly to-day captured Singly, less | active battlefront. nounced the capture of two vil- }and much material were captured Jages in the region between Mons| yesterday. and Maubeuge. French Troops Also whole front this morning, The War]and machine gun fire, which was par- Office to-day reporta that F | Troops Are Welcomed After Cros Danube at Belgrade, also has been crowed, entered Visegrad and entrained@ | for East Orange Man Was Signal Corps} “i tt ‘trees from previous clove years old, No, 70 Ansherst Street, Hast | 4! Ora Oct. 1, He was the son of Frank M. Ho ate of Union College. He joined the Signal Corps in February, 1917, being instructot in various training camps before going to France last June. jon that made the final whirl- | Kinley Avenue, East Orange, was!‘ comm fantry, 29th New Jersey National Guard division, Avenue, East Orange, received word that his brother, Private Lejonel R. MAIL BOX THEFT CHARGED. |lctis c's inter, Nioke! Kan, City Souther Brookiyn Wo private mail boxes to obtain money, Mrs. Catherine Ryder, nineteen, No, 7206 wid In? $1,500. by exa NOY. Central held tn’ $1,600 bait for examination on]: ¥ Leyny Upton Artillery, made up of the 12th Regiment, 15th wiment of Pield Pyder took letters from four mail hoxes. 5 declare, after she was ol a hallway with lett which she afterward tore and threw |B gaat them away, according to the police Who | Rep. frory one letter and cashed, the police | shot nay 8 Havana Takes 1 ment and enthusiasm followed pubil- F ; cation here of the report that an/t) : , 5 alled armistice with Germany had_ been |{! ay signed, Whistles tooted and bells|', rang, and the streets of the capital were filled with parading crowds ,soe) waving fags of the Entente Ailies. S.-Although no date hae ig of the Clty Needs Auto and the Papal Nuneios at Vienna] demand by the city. There are fifteen als who e day, wil ishop of Warsaw, the Archbishop (28%; With : Room i480" Municipal Building. Pasi anmecamiearcs coraamnteunaoasnsomannesmmaes summmmmmneeenne nemsmsis mateatanl i ~ pe nuucenaneceecemeeatemeemeceet aaa MADO0 ORDERS HARBOR STRIKERS TO RESUME WORK | win Replace Them \ Them With Navy Men if They Refuse—Wage Demands Turned Down. MAY TAKE PLACE TO-MORROW, BERLIN DESPATCH DECLARES’ Demand Unanimously That the Emperor Quit. ONDON, Nov. 8.—The German majority parties have held a 2 final discussion on the question of Emperor William’s abdica- tion and will without doubt unanimously demand that he abdicate, according to a Berlin despatch to the Copeninagen Politiken, forwarded by the Exchange Telegraph correspondent. The alxiication, it is added, will probably occur to-morrow. ‘The strike of employees of tug- boats and lighters in the harbor, which has been on since Wednesday, — | received a serious setback to-day, ac- cording to'W. B. Pollock of the New York Central Railroad Company. He said this afternoon that Director | BRITISH AND FRENCH BOTH GA N ceners McAdoo had decided against | py aii | the men and had instructed him to} tell the strikers that unless they re- Haig Captures Five Villages, and French Ad} turnea to work at 7 o'clock to-mor- | row morning men from the navy vance on Right of Americans on Sedan Front. LONDON, Nov. §.—The British are;line joins the American, the French | would take their places. H ‘The strike has resulted in one of the greatest congestions of freight ever known in the port. It has been necessary to place embargoes on happen anaes South ai aaa OF freight destined for New York, most and rence about one mile west of! }ot which Is for the army and the Sedan. Fifteen hundred prisoners, Allies. | Field Marshal Halg to-day an- j Artillery Active on American Front —_—_—_—_- Railroad Board of Wage and Work- ‘ Thet at Sedan, nttoge Thelt) WITH THE AMERICAN FORCES rench troops;ON THE SEDAN FRONT, Nov. 8 Beyond artillery aa ov. ee. PAs, and lighter men, assembled this morn- engh | ticularly active in the region of § Infantry action has been reported on | ington which presented the union de- On the right, where the French any sector of the American front | mands to the Director General ies - A number of the tugboat men re- | turned to work yesterday, pending |DUJAT SENT TO SING SING | ine"tecision’from Washington, and i was said at the meeting that they FOR ONE TO THREE YEARS soci es out asain it the answer were sUBRESREOES | unsatisfactory. te ke e Up to a lute hour this afternoon Former Queens County Clerk, Con-| the strikers had not received an of- ing the Danube and Save victed of Bigamy, Sentenced | Gag! Botige of the action of Direator Rivers. by Justice Carpenter. | who were told of Mr. Pollock's state ment declared that if it were true, Noy. §$.—Serbian’ troops| Alexander Dujat, the former Queens} they would not return to work in the ACCLAIMED BY PEOPLE LONDON have crossed the Danube into Hungary, |County Clerk convicted of bigamy,| Morning, leaving thelr jobs to tae where they have been revseived with |to-day was sentonced to Sing Sing tho greatest enthusiasm, says an of-|for not less than one year nor more ficial statement issued by the Serblanjthan three by Justice Carpenter, War Office Thursday. navy. M’ADOO TO RAISE PAY Dujat, who showed the effect of his the confinement in jail since his trial be- Gan, sald he had made no plans for the future, He said his second wife, The River Save, which joins Southeast of Belgrade Serbiang ‘have Said to Meet Demands of Men Only in Part. . ajevo at the invitation of the Pro-! 8!X-months-old daughter Marcella will miin, on the Danwbe. Corona. They were married in 1917. | wage increase will be issued within a Matilda Clifford Dujat, whom he mar-| few days by Director Gen. McAdoo, it rled in 1906, were in court when he|was said to-day at the Railroad Ad- ‘as sentenced ujat's counsel, Abe |rninistration, The advance is said to \Levy, made an appeal for lenioncy. | average about $30 a month. onerienastiiimenreine IS DEAD OF PNEUMONIA | CLOSING STOCK QUOTATIONS, |p*rtiaiy. it was stated. Reports thet a strike of railroad telegraphers in the Southeast had been called for next Thursday unless higher wages were or- dered reached the Administration and H. B. Perham, President of the Order of Railroad Telegrephers, through un- official channels to-day. High, Alasko Gold Mine... 3% Instructor—Capt. W. J. Redden Is Wounded. Capt. Luther A. Hagar, twenty-seven | 4 ped Between 30 and 100 per cent. increase was the origirgt! demand of the Kaliway Telographers last July. The mininum wage now is $120 a month, The prom- died of pneumonia in France | ‘ar of Platteburg and was a gradu- | telegraphers to $150 a month, The in- crease is retroactive to July 1. Teleg- Taphera of the Intemnatioril News Se=- vice and United Press Association hav+ laid their wage demands before the War Labor board, The avérage pay is now Capt. William J, Redden, No, 16 Me- wounded in the leg and 1s now in a 0 a base hospital in France, according to a ble received by his wife. He tn -'«| DENIES CROATIAN REPORT. jer of Company B, 114th. In- Leader Slay Thom Stiles, No. 746 Springdale Swiss report that the Crotian Parlia- ment in Agram, capital of Croatia and 14% Slavonia, had declared the Croats Stiles, 113th Infantry, died of wounds MQ would join an “Austrian Kingdom” was Oct _itie parente tive at Turks} ¢ 1B denied here to-day by Dr. Bogum L, Island, West 296 0 so Vounjak of the Jugo-Slav Committee. — —_— reat. Now wy “An ‘Austrian Kingdom’ never existed {rmvtration, Govincr! ih and does not exist to-day, but the Croatian Parliament undoubtedly de: clared for union with the ancient Illy riun Kingdom, & creation of Napoleon, which comp! Carynthia, Carniola, Gorica-Gradisca, Trieste, istria and Dalmatia,” he ‘said, ‘In’ all these lo- calities except Trieste, the Jugo-slavs are in overwhelming majority.” an, Who Is at Camp Upto ed to have take a A mail from SFRPSERTE PESTS ETESEOIET ER. d Avenue, Brooklyn, was to-day Father of Four in War Dead From ov 11, Her husband is in Camp in the home of Mrs. Mary Fay, No, 359 Alexander Avenue, the Bronx, was found dead this morning, his room Jt is said by the police that Mrs. Was arrested, the police |its. & coming out peat Mee » her hand, | hen the #48 on accidentally last night had three song in the army and one in in touch with the sallor son, who is believed to be in New York, o say Mrs, Ryder confessed |Rumeiy et," A certified ¢ for $296 was taken | Rumely ct NOTICE TO HOLDE HA oF tut sc ATEN TREAsUMY Crib MicaTys OF D Cele HAVANA, Nov. 8 Torn, nie sinh Wild excite- sli Cotte Of | fedlema tic Novaamter 21° 1018" Intareet go wll cortfica said’ series will cease tO” gee i cial WG Ano Secretary) of the Trabury ember 8, 1018, sh Wer honee Western {| LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS, wba tla tk ra bile Mechantes, | Automobile machinists are in great To! * in the rege shops of. the partment, ‘The wage is $6 4 ‘o. weeks’ Vacation with | Hications may Ibe Aled an | gouth Ry ot Manaus é * Roo Verigd. Rate, Pay ‘close, BA Ba ‘ ‘ P ’ 0 saber F Le CORN CROP 410,000,000 BUSHELS UNDER LAST YEAR Droughts Make the Qual- WASHINGTON, Nov. &—Corn pro-| WASHINGTON, Nov. duction for 1918 was. 2,749,198.000 bush- ) the Department of Agridulture an-|reau to-day announced, amounted nounced to-day. This figure 18 approxi | 7,793,615 bal z 343 ly 410,000,000 bushels leas than the bales and 17, 99 Hagedorns Distinction is always manifest in Hagedorn Models shown in the very newest fabric and always moderately priced. Afternoon and Street Dresses A collection taken from regular stock —very smart, fashioned on simple lines. Finest quality satin, meteor or Georgette. 19 75 Form’ly up to 35.00 Saturday’s Special . Tricotine Dresses Of finest quality, each model exclusive and indi- vidual; embroidered and tailored. 3 4 50 Form'ly up to 59.50 Saturday’s Special ° Tricolette Dresses—Navy or Black Of exceptional style and quality, fashioned on distinctive lines; most exceptional offering. 37 50 Form’ly up to 89.50 Saturday’s ‘Special SS Dinner and Afternoon Gowns An assortment of exceptional models both style and material. , Not a gown in the collection sold for less than $85.00. 39 75 Coats—Plain or Fur Trimmed Of Finest quality cloths now in favor—only one of a kind—plain, loose and belted; also with large fur collars. Form’ly up to 95.00 Saturday’ 's Special When the men struck for an eight- | hour day and a wage increase the} situation was taken in hand by the) ing Conditions and passed along for | decision to Director General McAdoo. | Three hundred delegates, claiming | to represent the 3,000 striking tugboat | ling in White Eagle Hall, Jersey City, | unils have reached the railway juries | there has been little to report from |to wait for McAdoo's answer. A dele- ton of Liart, about twenty miles|the battlefront since last night. No} gation was sent yesterday to Wash- |north of Rethel. neral McAdoo. A number of them | OF RAILWAY TELEGRAPHERS Mrs. Edna Young Dujat, and their Average Advance of $30 a Month | to choose from at prices which suit the humble as well as the pluto The woman who is becom- ing tired of the low corset, at WASHINGTON, Nov, 8.—an order |{| Whose shrine we have all been Some German units are still in Banat,| Neither the second wife nor Mrs, |< *ntins rallroad telegraphers a general | in the southern part of Hungary. PSS SRE ag CAPT, LUTHER A, HAGER devotees for a long time, will find that the L. pated that mood. vided a corset model which gives the bust a certain amount of support, relieving a strain which certain women are find- ing to be accompanied by in- creasing discomfort. Not all figures are naturally adapted to the low corset. II] The L. R. corset makes provis- {sed advance will bring the pay of the i , ion for fifty of the differences in the human form, Among the better numbers A pink coutil corset with the | waist belt, $4. A silk figured brocade corset, with elastic top and with or without elastic gores, $6. Have your corset fitted in one of our charming boudoirs, JOHN WANAMAKER Thomas Gallagher, sixty, who roomed | |Alled with It is believed he turned | the navy. The police are trying to get | ie New. OF Halos ate about 7 % Nor, 30 Nov. 18 format Neal to reou' at the car, Noi @ 24% Dee: a? Nov 8 iter lusursnoe ompsny, 90 Willem st,, N.'X: Dare ie “% 1917 erp, but approximately the as the four-year average ending 19 The potato crop fell to 390,101, bushels, 50,000,000 less than in 1917. ‘quality Is poor, due to droughts. An Increase of 70,000,000 pounds Also Falls Off, and [shown in the report of the tobacco The production was 1,266,686,000 pow ity Poor, Cot sinned prior to No’ 1, the Census Broadway, Cor. 81st St. Saturday Specials Saturday’s Special 59. 50 Close Upon Fifty Different Models of L. R. Corsets atic purs R. has antici- It has pro- two figures ure alike. A light-weight silk figured brocade, slightly higher than usual in the bust, $10, A very handsome silk brocade for the heavy figure. Elastic gores for comfort; lace and stitchery trimming at the top, $12.50, covered in satin —elastic 7 Fy Third Floor, Old Building. PRIEST Ay Broadway at Ninth, New York. End of Week Special for Friday and Saturday MOLASSES DAINTINS—No matter what likes or dislikes « candy lever vA it neems thy the Old Fash an AD. ARsor in always wel i MDAY SORT CaNteds pleasing Vu- mi ed wie Stores: New Yorks UN ic Gers, 2 Terk POUND Hox exact location see telephone directory ‘The specified weight includes the gonta! +. he

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