w yjjflfcf(m& frrj-lP&4' ;SB ltdwl"W!t i wpiiui ifjan WW EVENING- IiBDftBB PHILADEglA", TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1914. JHECHUN CAPTURED, FOE PUSHES ATTACK ON BELGIAN CAPITAL Germans Occupy City Thir teen Miles From Antwerp. Invaders Are Reported Re treating From France. ANTWERP, Sopt. 29. After a severe bombardment, the Qer Hintis liavefoecupled Mechlin, about 13 miles south of this city, according to an official announcement given out today by the War OITlcc. The Germans have been carrying on a hard bombardment of the forts at Wavrc, gt, Catherine and Wacltham, about, ten miles from tho temporary Belgian cap ital, but the lire of the forts has not ceased It Is reported (but not confirmed by tho HcIkIiui Government) that Burgo master M. Mnx, of Biusscls, who was nnostcd by tho Germans, has boon re leased on tho payment of $0,000,000 by tho municipality. OFFICIAL STATEMENT. Tho official statement of tho War Of fice follows: After bombaidlng Mechlin, the Ger mans under cover or nignt entered tho unoccupied town, but lmvo not resumed their inarch from thnt place. Tlio Germans lmvo directed flro of all their heavy artillery ngulnat tho forts of Wavrc, St. Catherlno nnd Wneltlinm, about ten miles from Ant werp, but with n result not Justify ing their great expenditure of am munition. 'Our foits replied and tho bombardment ceased. Between the Dcndro nnd tho Wllle broeek canals, west of Wacltham, the offensive movement of tho Ger mans bus been promptly chocked. The forts Inflicted serious losses on tho enemy and compelled his retreat. The city of Alost has suffered con siderably from urtlllery lire. On account of tho German position tho Belgian artillery was compelled to tako up a position that allowed shells to drop In tho city. In consequence flro started and It number of buildings were destroyed. DAMAGE AT ALOST. Host of tho damage at Alost, however, was done by the German artillery which occupied a range of hills 3outh of tho toun. A correspondent Just nrrlving from that district says: "Flro did much xdamage In tho new quarter of tho city. A church, the col lege, building, the railroad station nnd a hosnltal were all struck by sholls early In the engagement nnd sot on fire. AVhen 1 left the bombardment was going on furiously and smoko was rolling upward from tho burning city." The Belgians claim to havo silenced tho German guns and compelled tho Ger mans to letreat. Alost N an Important Belgian elty, having nearly 35,000 residents and lying shout 10 milts northwest of Brussels. It Is on the Dcndro River and has a big trade In hops. The old quarter of tho town Is more than M0 years old. During the florco lighting which raged around Alost tho burgomaster, 51. Gecrats, although SO years of ago, re mained In the town. "I must remain at my post," ho said when friends and relatives urged him to feck safety. Although a shell fell In tho garden of his residence, M. Georats remalnf-d on the veranda of his honso witching the battle. Tears streamed down his checks at the sight of the battle's ravages. EXHAUSTED FRENCH TROOPS CAPTURED HILL BY CHARGE Regiment Fought 72 Houru nnd Then Begged to Finish Work. PARIS, Sept., 29. As nn Illustration of tho spirit that animates tho French regiments the story is ioiu or an incident at Solssons, where, after thrco days' Incessant fighting, a sing o Infantry regiment thnt had as saulted tho enemy's position tlmo nnd again was compelled to retire. At the closo of tho third- day, by a bayonet flhargo, thoy had gained a height which covered tho German position, but tho latter wcro on a neighboring hill, whero thoy wero busy Jigging entrenchments. it was necessary to carry tho position oeforo tho digging was finished, If It was to bo takon at all, so Iho comihandlng omcer, recognizing thovcxhausted con dition of his troops, sent for reinforce mcn, ' "lvll0In ho ordered to charge. Tho regiment felt humiliated at tho call for reinforcements, nnd petitioned their colonel to bo allowed to finish tho work themselves. Permission was reluctantly given, nnd, despite their previous 72 hours vl uruuous lighting, tho remains of tho regiment charged up tho hill and carried It by assault. Thoy loBt heavily In tho c?.rt' but Ulclr Br,Jo lmtl 'oei satisfied. Tho Figaro, as an Instance of how little news reaches the French capital from tho front except In tho ofllclnl bulletins, quotes a London dispatch concerning tho wounding of Carpcntler, tho French box ing champion, who Is nt tho front. SCHOOL CHILDREN'S TRAGEDIES ARE REAL GITRMANS AT BRUSSEI.S. OSTEND, Sept. SO. A traeler Just returned from Brussels reports the town full of German troops. TliU his led to the rumor that tho Ger man army In Franco has begun to re treat. Thlrt-!lve thoiffeund refugees havo ar rival In Ghent, many of them arriving from Must. A M'ort from Ghent taya five villages are In tl.tine nr.ir there and that a Zep pelin balloon Hew over Alost, dropping bombs. AMSTERDAM, Sept. 2). Icrouse a u-niultidn- of tho war levy l'lacrd upon Brussels by the Germans 1 unpalil, tho Germans have announced that In tin futuie they will pny for noth lnir. but will nqulHltion what they need, according to dispatches from Brussels. Funny Little Things That Cause Childhood Much Suffering. School Is well begun. For several days thoy have gone laughing and quarreling. uy mo uoys and girls with faces, hands, blouses and dresses nil clean. Once or twlco thoy have slipped through back yards, Httlo hooded, figures taking short cuts through tho autumn rnlns. There may be something that Is pathetic, thero Is much that Is Joyous nbout thorn. Oho or two persons havo said that It Oiled them with emotion to watch tho children como trooping out of the school building, Perhaps It Is because of tho tremendous hopo that they represent, nil unconscious, tho hope thnt Is a part of tho parents of overy one, perhaps It Is Just because they nre unconscious of It, that they aro a Httlo trnglc. The tragedies, which aro so much more Interesting, however, becauso they aro so much more nllve, aro tho funny Httlo inuivmuni tragedies of the children. Mary Louise has been weeping over her tragedy for n long week. Torhaps sho would not have wept so long If It had not occurred to her fresh each day. Josephine Is no longer In her room. Sho would tell you nbout It tho first thing If sho saw you. Josephine Is not In her room, and sho lives too far away for evenings and she will Jus never seo her except on Saturday and there are so rew Saturdays. Dicky has a moro common cause for grief, ibut It Is not entirely unmixed with happiness. He was a shut-In baby, and the teacher and her lessons nre as noth ing to him, compared to tho things hu Is learning about other boys and girls, who teaso him and mnko him miserable, but whom he tidmlrcs above everything. Some of tho funniest tragedies are left at home. Sarah Is six and goes to school. Susan Is only four nnd stays nt home. Sarah and Susun are aware, not only of Sarah's superiority but also of Susan's Inferiority. Sarah is not content with the pride of skipping away to school with the big girls each morning. Sho Insists upon Susan being her baby when sho gets home. Susan hates being a baby, but there Is nothing else to do, and nt any rate sho rejoices that she Is not like the wistful little girl next door who has not even a sister that can go to school. - -I' IBKlifefr is. . sv SH n TtPeaL!TrrHiwffT'Mllii .i v L i -- TssAlll'lttl ' ' MJttHlll " I . ut!9fKtmtra AM ONE OF AUTO BUSSES PROPOSED FOR CONTEMPLATED BROAD STREET LINE VICTIMS OF SIBERIAN RIGOR SKEPTICAL OF CZAR'S CLEMENCY RED LIGHT HIS UNDOING Members of Relief Society for Political Prisoners of Russia Do Not Believe the News of Promised Amnesty. BRITISH INDUSTRIES BEAR WELL WAR'S FIRST BLOW Manufacturers Adopt Shorter Hours Rather Than Brduce Staff. LONDON Sopt. HO. The Boird of Trade has i.ssucd an in teresting report of the state of British In OMtrlis for the month of tho war. In quiries adtlrfkuixi i.v iia 1. ..... 1 1.. auin.- prciflpal manufnctuieis hliow that emploNnrs ..jverlni? 73 per cent, of tho jicrR p.opie inciuficd in the returns re kv Vv, Vu "nt be,'u BI'toKiIly nifeeted L ?','"" 'r',''fle employers report slneo ill I1"'"10 of Jl"- a total I eduction ol ine staff ,,t only 1 3 per cent. Employers of tneiemalnlng 25 per cent, report they Me b,-. n aflucted by the war, and have n iir.,1 ,hl.,r stuff rlnC() (lu mmlo ( h b' -7 I,er cent. th ft" '"''us'rles most foncurued are nrV'i . ?" Im,us,try nnd the construction trJii ?' '''"'" "r w,llch hl,ows t-""-. "" ",f ,lb,,ut 1" Per cent In tho imm- tlml ,. . , ptr ''ent- nro working short t,, th ,a" ""ly '" l,art bt' attributed ,,,', vv"r (Jther ludustrl.'S showing n Su n .?".."' .b"lff Ur0 fl"-"'-''- enslnerr ' nn,l linpliitos, but tho llittor Is linw. - iii.i Kp,i liupruwiiiciit. While coal tZZ ",1"W"B "" export have been nf mli!l ""'" ""Uorltj of tho coal thi "'"".t ,,,L'lns"'lvh us unntfeeted b lln. " eoiiblderabli. number of enl- ";',;."'; ""iking only four m- live days cor.i.i .","' " tho otller '"'. '"ire Is tr.,',1. i . "riS',l"e I" the btwim coal comm " huu,h U'aUs "'hero more men hi I., employe,, If available. Jnuii, ,',"u"," operations In Wales aro Tin i l" -'u,"Jt's other than tho war. erta,,. '.'"'" ''rs ,0 bc o appieclable ln tm.i i, . """'"I'loMiient In the aarlcuN Porn, "', rlt'8' evo" t""! llsulcta rc- ivillll., , Ml,nri.,. ... ,, n. . . ---.... ,,, luuur. Jm. ronrmi LOSS OF THE GARTER, THREAT TO KAISER BY BRITISH ORDER Treason to Knighthood Charged in Effort to De prive Austrian Emperor Also of Coveted Insignia. lUllt II.. then i u,,a' ""High at the moment a riM.o ' cn,"-''con of employment ,s l-n ...I , W"r' thl8 co"t'actlon has flu.tC n? .tt 0I; ,,m,kwl ,tent by a In th '.. ,"mr8 '"stead of u reduction tin. Ull llinlv-tl,ra ..A.. w.,rk , . " :." ,".v : ." "'". Ul r. .tin ""'"- '"gagen in production na o i, ly or " emplojed. l"t fw m.Vii. rc,l,rt"entB men who have the T, """laO r navul sieivlce. Thus, ""Cwi?'!0,', W'k 1,00"le U,10"' tfj- ,i i. "'f'uilliib- women, has only In- Cf "'e. Ml,olp "l the contraction Uaruu in the lint fortiilisht of the wSw"rlfS !?y ,,,ome '"Wee limtructors on Wl m'Si?': ,e,n"lo"'B normally t bSSSX" ?" a,u. fmaiM, hovv "ck in SiV '"nai m aawj cases, --, hiu nrpHBi i-a tT wtwie in H ha Vnk2 W8 rr. i ... , . I'ir.omtj oi worn in tin. J., W'klnjc full time, 3 short trti-a - tTJ"y. tz hve cloj-d or ai- i i'o,ie. LONDON', Sept. S3. Tho Kaiser will lose bin gui ter. Such somloftlclnl announce ment has been made here. Kngllsh public opinion will not permit him to retain tho dainty Jeweled ribbon bestowed upon him by Queen Victoria, and which canlus with It mcmbuishlp In the oldest and most exclusive, older of chivalry in the woild the Jlost Noble 1CdiT of the Cinrtcr. There Is no doubt that tho matter of removing the banner!, of tho Kntser and tho Crown I'llncn fioni the Garter chapel 111 Windsor Castle Is being eonsldeicd by olllclnls. Thero is no precedent, however, for expelling u foreign monarch. High treason Is the only crime that can justify expulsion, and the loadln? authorities ngreo that It may bo dltllcult to try-one nion irch for treason to nuother. The Inst member of the order to bo Ignomint ously expelled was John, Duke of Ormond, a Jacobite hnbleinnii, wlio saved Ills neck by Hoeing the country. Thoso who liiblst that tho blncli-eagled banners In tho Gaiter chupel must bo torn down as unworthy of a place among the historic emblems hanging over the knights' pews, contend that tho Germans' actions nt I.ouvaln, Termonde, Dlnant nnd elsewhere give ample grounds for expulsion. They deelnro tho Kaiser Is suiely guilty of treason to the lofty ideuls of chivalry on which the Older is based Thev insist that tho noblest blood of lUiglund, to say nothing of other Euro pean mouarchs who are members of the order, cannot continue to regard as a 'brothor. lover and fellow" according to the rules of the Order a ruler with whom thev ure at war and whom they hold has broken the laws of knighthood. I'niice Henry of Prussia nnd the young Dtiho of Saxa-l'oburg-Ootha certainly will almost share the Kaiser's fate. Neither can Hmpeior i'raiu Josef well be allowed tc Keep his Gaiter. Hut tor the fact that he might be re guided as an Innocent tool, the Duke nf Kixa-Cobuig-Ciothu would havo short slulft. Guitur-kliig-uf-nnns tukeb a very grave lew of his lase. for in addition to being a iclgniug German I'rlnce, lie is a "i'rllico of Great llritaln and Ireland." Including King George, the Cuar umi tho Kaiser, the Ordei of the Garter num bers 1.' Dnipcruis and Kings and 11 I'rlnces while the oilier knights com panions" iiuludts 11 lirltluli Dukes, six MaKiuesaes. niiiu Kails and one Uuionct (Sir Kdvvard Ureyi. Alinokt us strong ns the demand for the expulsion of the KuUer la the public dcslie lor the bestow il of :i Uauer upon King Albert of llelgium. The Kin' of the Helgbins U certain of a Gaiter soouer or later, but the demand now U for uu Immediate bestowal, following tho gal lunt dcfeiiks; of his nation uguliut the CUrmuiJ. In the ineanliine, In the Qaiter cIiuimjI at Windsor, the clergy of tlic order dally ruito a. prayer for tho knUhu w10 ure flghtim;. The piescrlbcd p - 'Gxl tave our Gracious t)ovrri n t ,.) vi t , r rpii l f fl - r.if t "1. I r . i i la l'rt r "f t G- t r The news that tho Czar contemplates tho liberation of all political offenders now confined In the prisons of Itussla and ln.SIbcrlan exile Is being received by Rus sian revolutionary refugees in this city with doubt and distrust. At a meeting of tho Relief Society for tho Political Exiles and Prisoners In Rus sia, held at Sixth street and Fnlrmount nvonuo this afternoon tho news received only slight consideration. "It Is Impossible to conceive that tho Russian Government, the most despotic and tyrannical nnd merciless on earth, has suddenly realized the evil of its ways," said Samuel Zukerman, of 411S Stiles street, secretary lot the society. "The Russian Government, ever since its strangling of the manifesto of October 17, 1003, grnntlng tho people u certain amount of freedom, has constantly been seeking tho death and destruction of tho thousands of political prisoners and ex iles who lmvo dared to commit the crime of wot king for tho liberation of their coun try from absolutism by peaceful and edu cational means. Tho acts of the Govern ment, tho manner In which these pilson ers nnd exiles aie treated would put the cruelties of the Middle Ages to shame. And now the Government has suddenly seen the evil of Its ways and wants to atone by proclaiming u general amnesty. I believe that this sounds llko u travesty and u joke unless tho days of miracles are not yet over. Nothing short of a mlrnclc, or, pel haps, grave danger, such as this war holds out, could Induce the Government of the Czar to free Its vic tims, who for years have been tortured and mlstiented In n way which puts the Government of tho Czar under eternal condemnation and places tho anathema of history upon tho heads of those re sponsible." KSCAPKD KROM .SIRIIRIA. Mr. Ziila-nimn, a oung mull of nbout 23, recently esenped from Siberia, where, after being conllneil In a prison, ho was sent Into exllo to n lomoto point on the River Angaia, TOO miles from tho city of Krasnojarsk. He made his escape ono year ago, after walking for IS days tluough the Siberian wilderness, until ho reached the city of Yenlhseisk, whence, n .! being supplied with money by friends who had been awaiting him In that city, ho made his way by train to Cheliubinsk, In tho Ural Mountains. Kind- lug a number of gendarmes who were sent to recupture him. ho llunlly, after two months' traveling, lauded In south ern Russia, made his way across the German frontier to n German port and sailed for America. Kqtially ns sceptical about the Inten tions of tho Russian Government wero a number of others, former elles and men who havo served long terms in Si berian prisons, culled "katorg.t." Among these wero Julius Lighter, of O.'O North Sixth street, und Wphralm I.erner, of 1118 Stiles street. Lighter, who has undergone an unusual amount of htiffiilng while In prison nnd exile, bald that tho Russian Government must be contemplating s,ome other bitter Joke on the thousands of unfoituimte who have hud tho misfortune of falling Into Its hands btcauso of their political activity. "It Is needless to talk about the Inten tions of tho ItUBbUn Government. Tho Government is trying to stliio the enmity nnd opposition of tho Russian people ngaliibt tho rule of the Czar by making another promise, which will most prob ably be broken nt the neatest oppoitu nlty. Wo lmvo nothing' definite to say on tho matter; only that even If tlio uusHian Government tloes free its poli tical victims. Its act wilt by no means absolvo It from the responsibility which lies upon It In having caused the death and destruction of scores of thousands of the best sons and daughters of Rus sia. Tho Czur and his Government will pay for their crimes, even if It be with their own heads The people uf Russia, ut least the Intelligent part of the popti latlon, have an awful debt to exact from tho despots of their country, and they will exact It when the time comes to do so." AWFUL RECORD OF CRIMB. Mr. Lerner. a young man who lias aUo Buffered a great deal while conlltitd in Siberia and In exile, was even mote bit ter in his comment on the intentions of the Rusklmi Government. "Whutcver the iVar und hut advlseis may do In this nwtter. they cannot free themselves from the horrible cilmcn that rest upon their heads. ' ,k Lerner When tho true st rv of t:,- ,l-x -,r, , .., ' i' tYf r, ttn ' t i ' 1 , , Pollcemnn Watches Lantern's Z'S zag Course, Then Arrest Bcnrcr. It is generally agreed that thero are lots of honest men In Gcrmantown, but Georgo Ducklt, of Youngstown, Ohio, vho started out to find ono early this morning, a la Dlogones, had to be sat isfied with Policeman Kenny, who la cqunl to any emergency. Kenny saw a rod light moving down Cheltcn avenue. Ifc noticed that It took a zigzag course and wn3 convinced it could not bo a police patrol. He hid In tho shadow of a building until the light reached lilm. Ducklo was tho bearer, and ns lie could give only a hazy expla nation as to how he got It. tho police man took him and the light to the Germttntown police station. When the prisoner was given a hearing before Magistrate Pennock, It developed that many other lights in Gcrmantown were missing. Incidentally there came walls or complaint from a dozen other prisoners, several declnrlng that If Ducklt had let the red lights alono last night tncy woum nave been able to reach home safely. Ducklt disclaimed responsibility for the dlsappearancn of tho other lights. Tho Magistrate sent him to the House of Correction for five days. LIVES OF PHYSICIANS CUT SHORT BY WORRY Do Wot Xive ns Long ns Men In Other Callings. A Httlo newspaper item, stuck off In ono cornor of the page, recently told hov a doctor had died of apoplexy on the steps of an elevated railroad station. Of course, any ono might dlo of apoplexy; nnd yet this cause of death la not ai rare among doctors us in many other occupations, says the Hygienic Gazette. It's a strange thing to say about doc torswhose business it Is to keep other people well that as a class they arc moro sunject to illness than nny other, nnd their expectation of long life Is les, than In most other callings. This pro fession has tin average of 57 years at death much too premature In these day.i. Thero aro several reusons for this:' There Is tho anxiety and the responsi bilities that weigh heavily upon doctois. who are generally men of conscience and sjmpnthy. Then there Is the amount nnd the trying nature of most of the doctors' work the Iriegular meals ami tho broken rest, exposure to tho ele ments nnd to Infection. And then there Is tho scanty pay which most doctors get for their services, not to speak of the tlllllculty of collectlnir a gleat deal of money they have earned; nnd when to this is added the faot that about half a doctor's work nowadays Is done in hospitals and dlsponsnrles for charity, who can wonder at the over whelming strain to which these Immune men ure put. Broken sleep Is one of the most cer tain causes of tho shortened lives of doctors. What this means can bo judged by healing anybody not a doctor talk about how once or twlco In his lifetime ho had had his night's rest broken. Pos sibly he has sat up with tho coifln of a dead friend. Mnyhe ho hns given a tou plo of hours from his rest to a sick friend. Or perhaps his wlfo hns needed a little midnight nursing. Throughout tho rest of his days, in season and out of season, you will llnd him buttonholing everybody he can get to listen to him, while he explains liH noble self-denial and his beautiful finis- tlnn act. jly nnd by, when ho is seen approaching, his friends (fearing to b told about it all over again) will dodge down a sldo street as If trying to avoid ! a creditor. I Yet such night work Is the common lot of doctors, while the day's work must go on just tho same. Relng urnutcd In the tirst hour, when sleep Is profound est. Is always a shock anil frequently a grave one to tho heart nnd the nervous system. That Is why angina pectoris, or i.euralgla of the heart, is called tho doc tor's disease. MARINE SIGNALING APPARATUS AIMED AT SEA DISASTERS Electric Ocilator Announces Other Vessels, Locates Icebergs, Indicates Sea Depths and Transmits Messages. Through the application of n marine slgnnllng apparatus, which during recent tests has demonstrated material possibili ties. It Is believed the dangers of great sea disasters will soon be manifestly di minished. An electric oscillator which announces the presence of another ves sel, locates Icebergs, Indicates sea depths and provides for the transmission of sub marine telephone and telegraph messages Is an Invention which is .now being watched with giettt interest "by naviga tors The device consists principally of a 21-Inch metal diaphragm attached to a cylindrical ease, within which Is nn elec tromagnet actuating n copper sounder. The oscillators, when In permanent posl- nro placed Inside of a ship's skin WOMEN SPIES AID ARMY OF KAISER IN BIG BATTLE Many Germrtn Agents Captured, Snys British Statement. LONDON, Sept. 29. The British Ofllctnt Press Bureau in Its last statement describes how the terri tory, over which the armies lmvo been fighting for weeks. Is Infested with Ger man spies. Women agents of the Kaiser havo been captured. The ofllclnl jstntc ment snys: "lisplonago plays so large a part In the conduct of the war by tho Oermnns that It Is difficult to nvold Mi-tlmr refer ence to tho subject. They have evidently never forgotten tlio saying of Frederick the Oront: 'When Marshal Soublnc goes to war he Is followed by a hundred cooks; when I tnke the Held I am pre ceded by a hundred spies.' "Indeed, until nbout twenty ymrs ago, there was n palagrnph In their field service regulations directing thnt the service of 'protection In tho field' e. g. outposts nnd advance guards should al ways be supplemented by a system of csjlonnse. "Though such Instructions are no longer made public, the Germans, bb Is well known, still carry them Into effect. Apart from the more elnbornto nrr.ingi ments which were made In pence time for obtaining Information hv paid agents, some of the methods which are being ' employed for the collection or convey , once of Intelligence are ns follows: '.Men In plnln clothes signal to the German lines from points In the hands of the enemy by moans of colored lights at night Hnd puffs of smoke from chim neys by day. 1'seudo laborers, working In the fields between tho armlr-s, liavn been detected conveying Information, and persons In plnln clothes have acted tts ud vnnced scouts to the German cavalry when advancing. German ollhers and soldiers In plain clothes or In French or British uniforms havo remained in locali ties, ovneuated by the Germans In ord'T to furnish tliem with Intelligence. "One spy of this kind was found by our troops hidden In n church tower. 11 In presence was only discovered through the erratic movementH of the hands of the fhureh cloik, which he was using to slgnnl to his friends by means of nn Im provlsid semaphore eode. Hnd this mall not bfen j-elzeil it ! probable h" would have signaled to the German artillery nt tho time of tin Ii nriival the extirt loca tion of the hendquurterH and staff J high explosive shell would then have mysteriously dropped on the building. "Women iples lmvo also been caught; secret ngunts have been found nt the railroads observing entrnlnments and de tralnments. It Is a t-Imple matter for spies to mix with the refugees moving about to their homed: dllllcult for our troops, who peak neither -French nor German, to detect them. "The Frfnch lmvo found it necessary to search villages and also cusual way farers on the roads for carrier pigeon". Among the precautions taken by us to guard ngalnst spying Is the publication of the following notice, printed in Fronch, and posted up: Motor cars and blcyclcn not carrying soldiers In uniforms may not circulate on tho roads. The Inhabitants may not leave tho localities where they reside between 6 p. m and 0 a m. In'.nbltnnts may not quit their homes after 8 p, m. S'o person may on any pretext pass through the British lines without an authorisation countersigned by a British otllccr." WHITMAN AND GLYM NOMINATED IN N. Y.; WM.SULZER LOSES Progressives Give Davenport About 2255 Majority. Gerard Democrats' Choice For Senator Republican Outcome in Doubt. AEROPLANES NOW HAVE DEVICE TO FIND RANGE tion. beneath the water line, on both the port and starboard sides. Vibrations of the dlnphragm amounting to a movement of ono thousandth part of an Inch and re peated with great rapidity throw out sound waves under the water which may bo caught by the icciivli.g nppai.itiis oit another vessel. .Slgnnls of this kind have been heard at a distance of 30 miles, while at shorter ranges numerous tele graphic conversations have been carried on successfully. In one Instance the p perlmcntcrs actually talked between two SlllDS. In locating icebergs it is the echo which gives warning of the pivecnce of danger. With a stopwatch it is possible to estl mttte finite accurately the distance of tnese hnriiers, this being accomplish-d In nt Successful Experiments Made Army Aero Station. Successful experiments in dropping bomb.3 from aeroplanes tit the nini uvro station ut San Diego, Cnl., aro reported to th v.'ar Department. A new type or aero bomb pioduced by the Ordnance De partment und an aeroplane range finder NEW YORK, Sept. .-Thn three party machines apparently were successful in tho first popular State-wide primaries held In New York yesterday, according to latest returns today. The three regular cantltdntes for tho Democratic, Republican and Progrcsslvo gubernatorial nominations were named as expected. They ale: Democrat-Governor Martin H. Glynn, with nn estimated plurality of more than 100.000 and a probable majority of S.",000 over John A. Uemicasy, the untl-Murphy candidate. Republican District Attorney Charles S. Whitman, with nn estimated plur ality of about 15,000 or 60.000, a margin that his campaign managers say is sur pilslngly huge over Hnrvey D. Hlniuan and Job 13. Hedges, who ran second and thliti lespectlvelj. Piogtesslvo Frederick M. Davenport, witli a majority of about 2iM over ex Governor Sulzer. The former executive, was uncontested for the I'rohlbitlon nomination und will oe a cuntlldato nt the tegular olcctlou. Sulzer today re fused to admit detent, fining he would win "If there is nn honest count." Jumes "W, Gcrmd appears to have won tho Democratic senatorial nomination hv npptoxlnmtoly 115,000 with six counties still missing. Franklin D. Roosevelt ran a fair second and James S. McDonough. third. The Republican Senatoilal nomination may be decided only when the complete returns aie In. Ballots tallied up to 7 o'clock this morning seemed to indicate, howevei, that unless up-atato returns show a reveisal James W. Wndsworth will bent William M. i alder, of Brooklyn, by a very small matiin. Caldcr's gteat strength in Brookljn and New York, le sultlng from the legulur organization bucking in those places, s chiefly re sponsible for the closeness of the race. lialnbrldgo Colby, Progressive, had no rivul for tho Senatorial nomination In his party. With returns coming slowly today It arpears that less than V) r cent, of the enrolled voters took advantage of the primaries. The Demociatic vote, even in Now York, was not moro than iO per cent., while the Republican vote was not more than one-third of the party en tailment. Count of the votes for candidates for Congress and minor State offices wa3 not undertaken until nfter tabulation of tho votes for Governor nnd Fnlted States senator. It appeared, however, that 29 of tho present l,t New York Congress men havo been renominated, a score of Democrats und nine Republicans Tho piesent delegation In Congress Includes J2 Democrats nnd 11 Republicans. vlth- mates on tho speed of neroplunes .. iiiu um ot nny instrument. This. It Is stated, accounts for the in ability of nnv of the Powers In the pres mt war tf do much effective work with bombs at high altitude. The maximum height at which th tests were made at .nn Diego was 1500 feet, hut m, ,.,..,....... Invented by Rllev ;. Scott, a former "' which the bombs dropped Indicates t'nltid States Army artillery officer, worn used In the i-xperimt ntw. which it Is be lieved wilt Increase tho effectiveness of attacks from neroplnnca. Th, bombs, which were of two sizes, 13 and 50 pounds, were equipped with adjus table fuses. Until It Is set the bomb can be bundled with iterfect rafety. In drop ping irotn an aeroplane the bomb Is silp pui down Into a net below the machine, with a string attached to the fuse. The aviator then pulls the string attached to the fuse, which "loads" or arms (as ord nance officers expn ss Iti the bomb. This ,... I.,..,.... .. ---,-- - ... , ,,,l,k(- iiiuirm r.Y,,(o.-, it llie i,,,irii, mis "1 '"" '?;,". (iPV I'M: :"? w5 st ." " " "" J"t before tlio net Is opened and i ii-irimi- I'uiitT nan railed to obtain an ectio wnen within IM nds of a berg. Whilo tho fog hoin hat, been of eertnln assistance to tho mariner, It also has been an Instrument which hat, terrliletl him. It has told him that he was near danger, but lately whether he was headed for It or running from It. because the nlr cur rents made It impossible to determine ab solutely whether the sound was coming from one direction or fiom another. The oscillator sending its vihnttinnH tluough the wattr eliminates this. Uy listening from both hides of a ship It Is eusj to Jetermiue irr.m what tilt ect Ion the strongest sound Is coming, and It Is then possible to tin n immediately nway fiom. for instance, the course of an approach ing .steamship. To Illustrate the strength of tho device, as already demonstrated, an osclllutor hung over the wide of a tugboat. In a test made at the lloston lightship, received tUnals from n collier rounding Cape Cud. the message being transmitted lit code under the water across Massa chusetts lla. the bomb dropped. The Scott range finder is telescopic and indicates just when the bomb should be dropped In order to strlKo tho target. It does this by estimating the speed of tho machine anil Its hoight above the ground. With all of the nttenthm thnt the Kuro ptan armies have been giving to aero planes ami Zeppelins none of them has dot eloped a reliable range tinder. Most of the bombs tlropped have heen guided only by n Judgment of distances and estl- thnt Un o,. .. ., . . ... ' ll ,u"e miner is u succeis and will enable military aviators with proper training to do effective work nt a height of .-.noo feet. This would place aeroplanes out of the range of small arms nnd most of the Held nrtillerv guns. Tho bombs, containing high explosives, tore great holes In the hard soil six and seven feet in diameter and three or four feet deep. LIVE STOCK QUOTATIONS CHICAfU). -cptcnilicr Vj.-lt liiH.-Itecelnts. Ill.ooo, iiui-Uts. Se lilchtr. tnlted dint tiiuVli' ers, s.-J,-,ti!i vs. too.) heatj, K ,"S(i. rouuh licat. "USMst.ft light. s.ioio.5, iik 0.1MjS..-!.-,. bulk. MStJShT " !" fATTi E-ihulpii. Oflt-i. strait. Uee 10.plH t. IQ3 and llrlfew 1 7T4IO. ttoifc- tti ani ffcdi'rs. Otis lu, Tvijii), ;.pmj,ni SlIKKP Iteinpis .IToOo, c,,U native an.i (Votern iaft.VTa. Ium( .'i n j, 7 7.1 PURE FRESH PAINTS Believe Me' It Pays to Get Rid of "Acid-Mouth" "Acid-Mouth" raises havoc with teeth. "Acid-Mouth" breaks down tooth enamel and causes cavities to appear. Pebeco Tooth Paste stops tooth r Wedding Gifts " In antMiutlnn of the full ue.1 tints wc hake bruught our stmk ot ailier and other tullat.le glfu to a otato of cmnpleientM. Th o,win unity to dl I'lay our colleitlvtt will Ui erratic ai'prwlated. C. R. Smith & Son, Inc. Mnrket Stroot iqii. S Do you want your painting dona right and done right NOW? KuehnJe's 'phone is Spruce 5799. No matter where yotj live or what you want, you will get expert painters or decorators at once and a good job finished on time. Kuehnle Painting and Decorating Qtt Our fiUntato First Both Phones 28 South 16th St. the Kiitsc of 9CKr of decay bv neutralizing unnatural mouth acids. Remember, mere mechanical cleanliness doesn't stop enamel decay. But Pebeco dues, be cause it stops "Acid-Mouth." v Srol BtFITEIL DENNflS i MiLwiiccrrr n.j i IN AUTUMN i' -- idea a tuiiiu tt un.f r i . ... hura le'Mtl env run i.t-ni in-i lilt- 1 tl ub nn i,l,l ...i. . hnnif in, , , lh9 ,tlI, ,roV ' Jl a Uy um. l TDK J lll'ZHY. andjst ha ih 1 1116 Yfclnut Street M.umi:iu i 'V? h"filne '- " ' "b.liiarao iwlt.h oard olt mttr, ckiirtr llKht outttt .hafT. tint ljltei bli,no .11 i.r,i, .. ' '- Two acant lit, one ev SVI d ,rayi r .ti mi opp.lto lvn-,a It It Ks- i- rt ' "School board) i.ovv tay much at tention ty drntul hgien. I teih In ti ilat the im Ikji isuct of sound tctth. i'eriM.iMllj, I tlnd no dentifrice uble tu keep my teeth uound umi r my breath so trt fruiii inuulh tutur as does JVbfcco." The taste of Pebeco is un sweetened. You will prefer it to a "honey-sweet" flavor. Pebeco costs a triile more. Comes in extra-la rye tubes. Manufactured by LI" UN & 1-INK, Nnv Yurt I v III u ' "1 Perry's Fall Overcoats are Winners! $15, $18, $20 "N. B. T." interpretations of the Rahnacaan, of the rag Ian shoulder sleeve! Here's a pippin of a Coat, soft, camel hair finish, $15 At Perry's The hack is all one pigr .so is each sleeve! The bfensi anil front under the arms have a smooth, almost form fitting appearance. The "hang" of the body is a dream for style "N. B. T" Sla . .4 D1,,' rite irf f A Cn .. m ---v. mi iisMinmcni i the newest patterns, velv collars or self-cloth collars; yoke lining, quilted silk fac ings on skirt. bottoms, etc., etc.-r, At Perry's Every man's Tall Overcoat ready fQr ,;m to put on and wear away At Perry's Perry & Co.,"N.B.r 16th & Chestnut Sts. r J lV V II ' Moutrrat