v 4 V n WemCNJO- PUBMO LEGER2?HmADEfjPHf A; (SiDBDAY, OCTOBER K, 1W3 , ; .,.. ,..,,'; 'V? ; .. . , , 1,,.,-C , , ;, , , - ,...; , . '-. - i , . ,. , , ..:...: . t --' " " 'StGUNS BLAST. WAY TO VICTORIOUS ADVANCESPECIAL CABLES FROM THE WAR FRONTS !, C,i v t.V r"i - 4. .Ii- a; i v. i l- 3 . r 2V . ft1 fV 3 -V rL r ' Kf M ' Lw SEV ii KJ y. H- V-C" ' .Jrf r- t PROTECTS ,ANKS OF ARMY inders and St. Mihiel Jl(Ms Guard Force Pre- ''-. . . IT. - fjv', paring uecisivc victory radartilMTTlMTrATTnM TC rTTT wvffAiuviiiua uun iu vju i yaried Battles Drawing Hcav- ,'ily on Germany's Strategic if ft Kcservcs 1 1,, By WALTER DUKANTY rSptciat Cable to Evening Public Ledger Cvvvrloht, tttt. Dv .Vcio York Ttmi Co fJWltli tlii- French Armlea. Oct. 5. h. t Tl tea nnw nnaalKIa In ntinll'o f h tE'. ; .-.... , - ,- mrBieKic conception 01 ino name 'i -. ;-W France, which continues with un- nA'dlmlnlsherl fury. The map allows tha f J , thy, ..whole battle front forms h salient (; OTiwwn rtifujitiri nnu vt-iiiuii it nunc ro of a circle, where n line drawn through Courtnl. Valcnelennee, Heir. On and Mezlere.a Ii the cord. Aa might be expected, these four towns re Junction points through which the principal enemy communications paps. Foch Is reducing the salient, In logical fashion by pressure on the sVle, which accounts for he violence of the flghtlnt; between Camliral, St. Quentln and the Champagne and the Meue. Protecta Itnth I'ltiiika To assure himself against Interfer nee from the flanks, the Allied leader first obliterated the pocket of St Mihiel, which gave Verdun and the Meuse as perfect cover for his right. Then he launched the army of llelglum on the xtremc left, to protect the flank of the rnaln British operation". The mrlklng success of this blow, delivered with un expected strength In an unexpected quarter, opened further possibilities of enormous Importance nothing leu than ft threat to the enemy communications from the whole riglon between the sea nd St. Quentln, which, generally speak ing, are directed toward a triangle formed by Brussels, N'amur and Liege. True to th principles of strategy, Foph Is exploiting the success to the utmost. Already part of the communica tions between the Oernian positions on the Belglan'coast nnd the Interior have been Interrupted and accentuation of the. threat to the Hruges-Hhent-Urussels line will force abandonment of the lit toral. Hitter Hlow tn llnrmy Such an event would be one of the bitterest blows Germany could receive; first, as greatly diminishing the already waning submarine campaign nnd, sec ondly, as wresting from the Invaders a coveted position on the sho-os of the English channel that undoubtedly was lone of their principal objectives of the f, -whole war. "tl In previous dispatches I have emphn- jf sized the danger of Franco-American , pressure on the right against the com v. munlcatlons from the eastern half of the !-SL battle rront, wnicn ionows mi iuhi f -Jii:.i. iino. irirKf. from I.aon throuah liSteitleres to Stenay ; second, from north OI linCllltH IU .MCtitttL, .im it,,,,., ,...-(,.. ethel and Vouzlers to Mezieres. The latest news indicates that, con- Hs Yulslvely as the Oerman3 are (.truggllng, R ,. t7nn.h nllil A nifr(r;t ns H TC adVallC- PJ''ilnir Irresistibly. Thursday these troops ftVi wrested from a crack Jaeger division a i".V whole mountain pesition hat had defied previous attacks. Here, particularly, are found concrete rhachlnP-gun shelters nrrnngert In tiers, according to tho newest method. Be fore each individual position of defense, an absolutely bare space, which the .French call a glacis, has been prepared, oyer which asrallan's must pass. Switch trenches on the Hanks and rows of wire ten, twenty and even thirty yards deep, bar turning movements and divide tho it' defense Into "compartments," each or UT ' which must be stormed separately. Vfr Advance Two and One-hulf ,Mlle " . keverthelesa the troops fought their ii r-,-nA tn. i Hrnth tt fVH Htlfl nill!- ., . n i- v. -lwH thn nnprntlnn CjjL continues against a strong crrM In the W$ -Y" Wf Ion of Orfeull. I.lry and Monlhols and, I1UIL Illlll'B. wu mw itrs- - lM, .2KSLP.!L"'. " ,fJ.rCvnUes'Tr,m further east, the rencn nac passcu V.UfilllCiUiU t (... - . yr?- .. i r vuuziem. rn th whole battlefront. the defense ia 1h gradually being overcome by a series IH&L& of thrusts forward, whereof each creates ', x a small saueiu wneiuuy ucienuv,,..,,, '.?.fli nosltiona can be outflanked and carried -,WJth panic at home, disaster abroad, and exhaustion and demoralization Jw spreading In the army, Oermany 's fr.it. fnrowl to make a supreme effort In con- KMT!-dltlons daily more unfavorable. t?M Uliir' yuupc. ,- ,ov , ..rf - V,?- 'HffftUVVIIttI ui HBsauuiiin, ..."., "v Jf,.i5t a period wnich tne acienacrs army i & l'Ki VeserveTa can come Into action. That ,A .1 -7t .V. .. .l..nlnn- ,.. 1,,B fl-rt Kl 4., I. I.. . 1.A nemo from rAunVPM aayoii. jo ivm ,.c u,,n; tium ,,.., .... -that Incessant and violent counter-at tacks have been supplied. But If. as In' trie case In the present battle, or rather, a series of battles for there are, at fewest, four distinct co-ordinated mAJor operations and two minor ofces by Slangln and Berthelot the sup- ply of reserves has failed to cnecK tne assailant, then appeal must be made to XrH VetrateBlc reserve for final succor. The. jiext few days will show what ?'- .ttie diminished strategic reserve of Ger- .'( '-'many can accomplish. In the mean- '. time., it la In the hunds of the assailant 'r to reply with a Blmllar introduction or '' .1 hi own strategic, reserve In a smashing i6' Mow which may bring a decisive vlc- :t" ' FRANCE DISCOUNTS MAX .Confidence That New Chancel leans a Reformed Germany J, Cable to Evening Public Ledger Hoht. ll, lu .Vrio 1'ork Time Co. Oct. S. France looks upon the kitment of Prince Max, of Ifaden, erman chancellor as an entirely rible matter, l,ls remembered he used to denounce militarism fttuQermanlsm at the Hague uou- , but this counts nothing now. lusi wuai d luia uuiid eiuiu urn Ine of the war. m last speecn, ne sam mat man I, erman recline was tne uesi mental lystem In the world. He otnuig or peace before tne ne- or tne uerman nereat in Juiy. s been selected to succeed llert- (o doubt, because he Is u bit of a mer ana iree minner nna on "of his former renutatlon. tne In the way of a change of ment can arouse anv confidence (the French people In Uermany, i It. lh BiamA nlri pnnftlfitrtn tA 'the conflicting desires In Derlln continue military control and keep a IkAV, hi(A irnt nn nna hnnri nnA on Her tn appear to ine ouieiae ax a regenerated and reformed it is toKen ior srantea uutt en (union and canincf wii, ib in irui,riu wti FIGHTING U. S. SOLDIERS DEFEAT TWO CRACK PRUSSIAN DIVISIONS ronllmird from re One yesterday's battle gave us Rnlr.h nil nlong the army front, from the vicinity of ninnrvlllers to tho Mouse Itlvcr, tho gains boInK In some cases as much us live kilometers. l'le tn l'iie War Yesterday's attack Is iV, continuation of the drive westward on September 1!6. Modern warfare Js largely a matter of engineering, and It has taken live days to rebuild the roads and fill up the enemy mine holes, so ns to get up the artillery nnd make sure that supplies would reach nur advance menus an eten greater tnk for our engineers. Now that the (lei mans under the pres sure of the llrst American army are hack on the Krlemhllde line between tho Alsne nnd the Mouse, 1 am permitted to discuss the slcnlficanee of tho opera tion which begun on the morning of Sep tember -C, when the first American army and the fourth French army attacked on the Chnmpagne-Argonnc-Meuse front. This successful attempt, made mi a field already staltud with the blood of hun dreds of thousands of brne men In the last four yenrs, was perhaps spectacular, but was also otio of the hardest of all the operations In Marshal Koch's gen eral campaign against the Herman front. Oertnnn I'rVnt a t'allent To understand this fait one must pic ture the Herman front as a salient, stretch'ng from tho sea on the west to the Moselle Itlvcr on the east, and pic ture the Allies us engaged In reducing this salient. The wings of this salient, stretching across northern Franco, rest In the west In the fortified position of I.llle nnd on the east fortified as the position of Metz. Foch's plan of attacking the great allent war. as every ono knows, to stilke tho two wings. It Is manifest with what fury the Hermans defended the western wing, where stupendous, ef forts of the British and French aro needed to break the positions around Cambrai and SI. Quentln. Ainerleiin Blow ('minted To the first American army and the fourth French army was assigned the task of striking the east wing In the Champagne, the Argonno and the MeUse Valley. To state that the (ffort of those two armies was successful, one has only to say that the Hermans no longer hold the Hlndfiiburg line In the eastern Cham pagne, In the Argnr.ne, or between the Argonne and the Meuse. They have IokI Montfaueon. they have lost tlielr hold on the Argonno fastnesses and, Instead of standing behind I lie strongest fortifications which modern war lias been able to produce, hae only the thin Krlemhllde 'Ine between them and the vast stretch of county to the north, in which they hae no organized position this side of the French border, Hut perhaps as Important as this Is the fart that Hencral Hourand nnd Oen eial 1'en.hlng have kept occupied forty Herman divisions, at least twenty-two of which were rusln d from other parts of the line and from tho Kalssr's rapidly diminishing rescives. Viewed by Kestitts Tho Importance of the advance of the First American Army against the ter rific resistance should be emphasized In order that the American people may not measure Its advance by miles, but by Its slgnlflcanco and Its potentialities. One may direct attention to the Im portance of our canture of Montfaueon. which not only deprived the Hermans of a valuable obfe-vatlon point from which they could watch the Meuso valley south of the city of Verdun and as far north as Hrand-l're, but with this point In our hands, wo have an ad vantage such as the boche enjoyed from Montsec In the late St. Mihiel salient. In company with an American gen eral, I was standing atop of I.c Moi.t Homme, or dead man's hill, yesterday afternoon, looking out over thn scrag gy piles of stone that once were French villages, over hilltops from which shells were stripping stumps of what once were forests, over u land honeycombed with dugouts and bearing nil tho million marks which modern war can make, when the general said: "How many men do you suppose have died In the last four years on the hattleflelds you can now see?" Where Million .Men I'ell He said the number was easlly n million. Far ott to tho left we could sec the forest of tho Argonne, where so many bravo Frcnchnun died to save France. A bit 'nearer was the Hols do Montfnucon, tho charnel house 'of 1916. To the right were the heights across tho Mouse on which died countless Germans trying to carry out the Crown Princes desire to take' Verdun VANDALS MUST PAY, FRENCH PRESS URGES Demands That Germany Re pair or Replace Destruc tion After the War Sr.eaat Cuble to Evening Public Ledger Cot'urtoht. lOtt. hi .Veie York TOiifs Co. Purls Oct. 6. The feeling of anger against the Her mans for their deliberate and systematic destruction of every town and village from which they have been driven is growing dally throughout France. Al most without exception the French press Is now perslsltntly calling on the Allies to decide to make a Joint pronouncement that they will take reprisals, town for town, village for village, chateau for chateau, church for church, property for property. Georges ncrthoulat. In the I.iberte this evening, which Is only one of, many nows papers urging this form of reprisals, ex plains that tho policy he Is advocating does not mean the destruction of n given Herman town to atone for the destruc tion of a given French town, but shall be made to pay In money and labor the ccst of rt constructing some given French or Belgian town. "France Is not going to carry out In Oermany such devastations of the six teenth century ns modern Germany Is Inflicting In the twentieth," ho declared. "Iltit she will oblige the destroyers and burglars to repair, to restea-e or to re place even stolen or destraMI art treas ures. J "The museums of Munich, Dresden and Berlin are being considered as reservoirs upon which we may draw. Such works ns the l.aneret pastels at Sans Koucl, for Instance, may be taken In replace ment for the pastels of Fantjn la Tour stolen from St. Quentln. The same pro gram Is to be followed In regard to furniture and In the manufacturing plants. "German labor, of course, will also have lo contribute toward the Indemnity to be paid by the State. The miners of Uochum wilt be compelled to recon struct I-ens and also Ortey, If that town suffers the same fate, These thing' must be said now, to save (hose of our "are still under tbe boot of Within our range of vision surely history had been made, for there the story of Verdun was written. Tho bat Hi field between the forest of tho Argonne nnd tho Mcuso limy bo en titled, oerhaps, to rank ns tho most vital battlefield of all' It lias not been the scene of the sensational and spec tacular ndvatieen In which ono side or the other has swept forward In a day. It has not been n field of maneuver, hut rather the pivot upon which many great battles of tho world have hung or hinged 00 buck to 1014, when the Herman hordes which were pouring down from "the north faced the line on which Jorfro fought the battle of tho Manic. In that dlstnnt dny tho pivot of tho line was the fortress of Verdun, which wns surrounded on three t.lde", hut resisted all Herman "ftorts to reduce It. In that buttle French soldleri. some of them lighting along the heights with their backs to Henna nc, had tho most Im portant part In turning the tide, al though not so spectacular and perilous as further west In front of Paris. But. If the Hermans hnd got Verdun. If tho Hermans had battered their path down the Moselle Valley, would .Toffru hnvo been able to win the battlo of the Mnrne? Verdun Trance's Harrier 1 he Hermans did not make another at tempt on Verdun until 1U10, but the world remembers the IDlii story of the forest of tho Argonne and the valiant though vain efforts of the French tn throw the Hermans back In thnt Jungle of death. It was In the Hols de Hiuerle nnd about Vntinuols that tho bitterest fighting took place. Names like Vnu nuols. I.e Hurazoe, T.o Four do Palls, and I.a Flllo Morle aro memories in the breasts of all French fighting men, and there Is Immense seiitlmentnl slgnl. flennce to them In the American success In the northern Alsno and tho Meuse. Some of the bloodiest fighting of the war occurred In lOlfi. In tho French cf fort to drive tho Hermans from Vau miols. which now Is In the doughboys' hands. It was the French purpose then to win back the Important point of Montfaueon. In the same year, the Hermans tried vainly tn force their way on to tho heights of St. Menehould nnd for n sal lent to the west of Verdun similar to the St Mihiel salient to the east. This probably would have won Verdun for them. It will be remembered that the Crown Prince started his attempts on Verdun on February 2V. on the right hank of the Meuse, nnd after terilflc fighting and enormous losses, got to Forts Pouaumont mid Vatix. and penetrated as far south as Hie village of Floury, tho extreme point of the Herman advance. On the left bank of the Meuse Herman opera tions did not begin until the month of May. The object hero was to advance the lines south to Join with Floury, then capturing Dead Man's Hill and Hill 301. The Crown Prince gained these two strategic points, but got no further. J.lne Htiitlmniry 1'nnr Years it will be recalled In the fall of that year the French began a counter-campaign to free Verdun. In October Hen era! Mnngln, now commander of tho famed Tenth French army then n corps commander, succeeded In retaking Forts Douaumont and Vaux, then two battered mounds of torlured earth. In December an attack on a larger scale forced the (lermatio back to about where they start ed from In February, except on the left tmnk of the Mcusc. Hill 301 and Dcnil Man's Hill were retaken by the French on August, 20, 1017, and the boche put back on the Avocourt-Forges line, which he held until the Americans hit him on September 2C, 1018. That part of tho Herman line running from Avocourt to tho Argonne had been stationary vir tually for four years until Uencral Per shing went at It- Defenvr System on Height This line, ns It extends from the val ley of the Aire to the Meuse. has been reached by the Americans in tho vi cinity of Hrieullcs. This system Is part of tho general Herman derenso series extending from Poual south to I.a Fere, and thence east to tho Mouse. Across tho Mouee It extends by way of Ktnln to the vicinity of Pngny-sur-Moselle. Reducing the St. Mihiel salient, the Americans put the Hermans behind this ,inc between the Meuse and Moselle, and now between tho Alsno and the Meuse either on It or directly In front of it. Between the Argonno and the Meuso the enemy's main combat zone wns bounded on the south by the lower edge of the Hlndiiihurg line and on tho north by the Kolkrr Stellung. running thiough Hoiry. Kplnomllle and Mont fnucon to the Mouse NEW BATTLEFRONT DRAWN ON DANUBE Germans Will Have to With draw Forces From Russia to Hold Tt Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger CovurfaM, 10IK. by .Vrie Yorlt TImm Co. I.undon, Oct fj. The new Bulgarian fri.nt Is expected by experts to be drawn along tho Dan ube. At the moment neither tho Allies nor tho,Central Powers have more than enough forces available to establish such a position, but there may be develop ments at any time which will materially modify the situation. Germany can only defend the new line by tho withdrawal of forces now In Ilussla. These consist of thirty-three German and thirteen Austrian divisions, and a large propor tion of them in e understoojl to be of anything hut first-class material. On tho other hand, besides holding the new line, the Allies will havo to clear up Bulgaria and police It, and must keep watch on the Turkish frontier,- unless Constantinople decides to throw up tho sponge. The use of the Bulgarian army against Its hereditary foe by the Allies, which was hinted at In ofllclal announcements .regarding tho armistice, has, the Kve.n ino I'uiimc LEtann Is Infoimed, met with criticism here on twa grounds: first, that It would give Bulgaria a cer tain claim for special consideration at the peace conference, which tho Allies, In view of her conduct of the last Tour years, would be unwilling to recognize; secondly, the feelings of the Greeks and Serbs toward the Bulgarians are natur ally greatly embittered, and they nre unlikely to agree to fight side by side with their traditional enemies. Con sequently, whatever cperations the Turkish situation demand must be un dertaken by the British, French or Ital ians now ln Macedonia. One of the chief questions that would In that case have to be considered would be; Can Germany send re-enforcements cf any kind to the Turks? She still has mentis of communication with Constantinople by way of Odessa and the Black Pea, but It Is very doubtful whether t,ho has any- troops she can bptte from Fritnce DEEP IMPRESSION MADEBYWIISON Silence in Europe 01) Presi dent's Speech Declared Eloquent UTTERANCES TIMELY Such n Keep Leader Motives Needed of Allies to Pure in Victory Ity CHARI.KS II. OKASTY Special Cable to livening Public Ledger Comrtaht. tOIR. by .Vnu Vol k Time Co. I'urK Oct. 5. It Is Important tint the silence of the Kuroprnn pi ess on the President') New York address of last week should not be misunderstood In America. It doesn't mean that tho sentiments ho expressed have passed unnoticed. On the contrary, nothing could be .moro eloquent Hum silence under the circum stances. in the last few days I have, encoun teteil many evidences of the deep Im pression, both favorable and unfavor able, made by the President. Many of the soberest thinkers legard the pro nouncement ns one of the most signifi cant and potent ever made by Mr. Wll lon. It was. accnidliig to these opinions, ijot only the asserting of a gfeat ab stract principle, but the President saw how conditions wire shaping themselves, and made tlnn ly and practical applica tion of principle. The President has expressed and heartened the deep widespread feeling thnt exists In Kiirnpc. But that la not fully voiced by the press. A man well Known In Kuropcitn public life for his whilom and conservation, said to me today: "Piospentv lias lis dangers UK well ns ndvert'lty. The world H fortunate In having such a bailer as Wilson In stand tip against I hose dangers from within by which e shall be l'set lu the hour of victory. Wilson has tho mighty power of America behind him. He has tho opportunity growing out of Europe's need of that power against Herniany'8 iissnrlt He lias the detachment am! perspective to limbic hlin to see Die sit uation as a whole. And ho has the lin di islanding to p, mtiato the vitals of the Munition, and the cool courage to make full use of all these advantages, "Thoughtful elenicntB In Kurope wel come the I'lcsidiiit's latest utterance as showing thai he is not only n statesman who can ptcuch, hut one who i-aii and will in" when the time comes for action. We want an end of militarism and Junk erdom everywhere. Without dial result our victory would bo an empty one. "The Piesldent has raised the Issue at the light lime and In tho right way. He has n stated his peace conditions In absolutely plain terms and Invited Kurnpcan statesmen to an open discus sion of them. With full publicity, F.U ropenn opinion will support tho Piesl dent's contentions, and they will pre vail. "Meanwhile, the lines on which ho has proceeded make for a completo defeat of Herman militarism, as well us a bet- ter understanding and unity among tho Allies. There must be u thorough ping ing to get ;uiilty of motive for the great dav of Judgment, and the painful ncss of that proems Is the measure of Its need." BRITISH FLIERS AID OURS Pour Itiiinlis on Kiieiny Rail Lines in Lorraine Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Cov-jrxaM. 191H. hv .Vfie York Tonrl Co. T.ondon, Oct, 5. British airmen have taktn part dur ing the last week In the American oper ations in Lorraine They made n spe cial point of ntfarltlng vital enemy rail way communications south of Luxem burg. Thus in the twenty-four hours ending at dawn, September 27, fifteen separate inlds were carried out upon the railway triangle at Metz-Sablon, two upon the junction at Thlonvillc, two upon the railway at Mczlercs, ono upon Audi'.n-le-Iloinan, one upon Ars and two tilioii the airdromes at Frcscatl, Flap penviHo, near Metz. Other British alnnen In the courso of air fighting over northern France nnd Belgium last week destroyed 11M enemy machines, drove down foity-slx out of control and shot down thirty-four Ger man klte ballot ns In flames. Ninety British inaclilnes vvim reported missing last week. HOPES FOR BULGAR SPLIT German Paper Says Troops in Sofia May Change Situation Special Cable to livening Public Ledger Coiwriu'it. 111. Ini Xtw 1 orfc rimes (79. Tbe Hague. Oct. ",. Thu Cologne Hnzette. ommenting on the Bulgarian situation, says- "It remains to bo seen Lhow the ICntente 'negotiations1 will bo trcateu in nona, aim neriw urn iv. sibillty of a split among the people. The Local Arzelgrr says that the facts must be confronted, as It Is evident that tho Bulgarians havo deserted the Central Powers although it Is not yet easy to foretell how far a deflnlto situa tion Is created for those powers and Tnrkev. All the same, the paper con- llmioM. Ibp lesult nf lhls act will havo Important Influences on Balkan politics (mil mllwt be F.erlnllslv ennslderod. Bul garia, It pioeeeds. no longer has n right to consldeiatlon, and H.i Teuton troops must be slowly withdrawn. The paper asserts that military events may still change in spite of the political decisions, and that the last word Is not vet snoken It inns considerable stress on the recent tending of troops to Solla. CONTRACTORS Of course uou can bun trucks that cast less, but Master qu at it u and per' formance cannot be measured in doli tars and cents. All Sizes Immediate Deliveries Larson Oldsmobile Co J 231.33 N, Bread WSTOSamslP N?'niitii.!5i' i .St. IUI mm AMERICANS PERIL FOE'SIRONMINES Teutons Have Lavishly Fortified Briey Coal and Ore Region VITAL TO THEIR ARMY Advance of Few Miles Jy Americans Will Mean Vital Loss to Enemy Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger CovurluM, iS, liy .Vein I'nrl,' Ttmra Co. ' l'nrlx, Oct. 5. Little news has been given lately by the ofllclal communiques ni- to what la really going on upon the American front east and west of Verdun, but this may be regarded lu tho unturc of things. Tho situation of the American troops In thii' region Is looked upon here as distinctly paradoxical. From Pont-n-Mousson to the outskirts of Verdun thcli front faces almost directly northeast lo. ward Ktnln, tho Ilrley ore llelds and Metz. Abovo Verdun they occupy a sub stantial stretch of the left bank of the Meuse as far as the nnith of Ilriullles nniMool; due cast across the river to tho enemy, who holds? the opposite bank of tho stream. Westward fioin this point tho American front faces, roughly speak ing, duo north, to where It Joins up with General Hourarn's fiout on the left. But for tho rampart afforded by the Mcusc this situation might be regarded ns somewhat risky. The experts here are delighted to see that after their mag nificent bound forwnid of twelve to thir teen miles nlong the western bank of tho Meuse, tno American (loops havo been satisfied to restrain their ardor and settle down steadily to consolidate their new positions despite counter-attacks on their own side of the liver and heavy bombanimentn, Including i substantial proportion of gas shells, from the Her man batteries c't the opposite bank. The hardest nut the Americans have lo crack nt present Is on their front between Verdun nnd Ponl-n-Mnusson. Here they nro facing a complex and powerful mats of formications by which tho Germans have protecttd their most valuable frontier foi tress of Metz and even more valuable Iron field from which comes a MiHt proportion of tbe oro that nlono enables them to continue to carry on the war. The first of these defenses, apart from a labyrinth of advanced trenches and hundreds of acies of hat hod wire, consist of n lone continuous lino of for tified works of great strength, starting from Aznitncs to the noith of Bezon vaux on the outskirts of Verdun, and running by Rtan. Ilarvllle, I nehausso. Charey, Itcmboi court, and Preney to Vaudlercs, where. It hooks shaiply round to tho westward till It ends at Vlllers. The object of this hook at the end Is to flank the positions at Vlttonvlllc ind Chninprey on tho opposite bank of tho Moello Just north of Pont-a-Mnus-son. It is before this powerful lino that the Americans are at present mark ing tlmo before they succeed In forcing It; as the Hlndenbuig line has been forced further north, they will be faced with what Is virtually thrco other lines of strongly fortified irasltlons on which the Germans have been expending nn enormous amount of care and labor during the last four years. They nro virtually three lines, be cause these positions are not entirely continuous They begin with tho forest of Mnuglentio, north of Azannes, which has hfcn converted Into n fortress re sembling lloutholst wood, which the Kngllsli and Belgians carried a few days ago. Then there is the final main lino of defense coming from Verny, duo south of Metz, crossing the .Moselle just below Noveant nnd running duo north outside the belt of twenty-five forts which pro tect Metz and away up lu front of Thlonville and beyond other supplemen tary fortified positions cover Longwy, tho French Pittsburgh, and Longuyon, which has been In German hands slnco the beginning of the whr. GERMAN KINGS UNDER FIRE ' Puppets of WnrltcMiiherp and Sax ony Scurry lo Safely With the British Army, (let. B. From civilians freed from the Germans In Flanders It was learned today that the Kings of Wurttomhcrg and Saxony both norrojvly hilssed hnviiig something hap lien to them at lindlzeelle, northwest of Mi'tiin. a few days ago. Both monarch were In the town when the British guns suddenly opened upon It with a whlilwind bombardment. They fled In a hurry, and so far as Is known managed to get away safely WALL THE LIBERTY BONDS YOU CAN! B MP0RTANT NOTICE We Have Opened a CAFETERIA On the Second Floor of our Restaurant ELEVATOR SERVICE Juniper Below Chestnut Street Capacity in this beautiful rpom 250 See all foods appetizingly displayed. New features Our usual standard of quality Satisfactory portions Minimum prices. TRY IT YOU WILL COME AGAIN OTHER DEPARTMENTS Firt Floor Automat Lunch room. Firt Floor Adjoining Automat Lunch, counter and table service. Basement Lunch counter and NO GERMAN POSITION NOW CAN HALT HAIG British Have Proved They Can Overcome Mightiest Defense Lines That Enemy Knows How to Build liy philip Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger Comright, IDIH, bu Sew York Tlmra Co. War Corrcspoiulcnt'A Headquarters lit Franco, Oct, 5. Yesterday morning, when t vvot.t up from llelleligllseund llllllcouit and nlong tho great tiinncl, where tho Scheldt goes underground for several miles, there was heavy gunning or. the left by Gouy nnd Lo Cntelot uml In the direction- of Mont lirchaln nnd llctturcvolr, where there vvus fierce fighting Wednesday, cot.tlnulng throughout the night and resumed to day, A famous Kngllsli division added to their record by capturing 2000 moro prisoners at Wlancourt nnd In the outskirts of Mont Urchatn, whore they lmd heavy fighting. It wns probably some of these men I saw marching back yesterday morning, shortly after dawn, whet, the mists were white on tho field nnd trees on tho skyline above tho canal were faintly penciled fn it gray tiky, llko masts of ships In u sea fog. The Marks of Defeat Thiough this grayuess and high Uilstlcs that grow between shell crat ers nnd trenches, came n long column of Germans, guarded by n few men with fixed bayonets. I watched them as they passed from the b.ittlclliic In their long, gniy overcoats ami field raps. Only a few wore their camou flaged shrnpnel helmets, and tiere and there was a man without any kind of headgear. Later In the day I saw another column of nbout COO. without overcoats, having left their lino It a grout hurry. An ofllcer with mo said: "It looks llko defeat. Kvcry day ono sees such numbers of piisoncis com ing buck. Truly. It looks like the break-up of nn army," Vet Hip enemy Is lighting hard now for his ISc-uircvnlr line, lomvvlng that if ho loses he loses ever.vlliluK that can lie called a line uiilll he goes much farther back. It was no easy lighting for our men Thursday, i.or any easlet yesterday. Kngllsli and Scots of the Thirty-second Division, who retook be ittiehart, which had nlrcutly been In our hunds twice, were violently cntin-tcr-nttlicked, but succeeded In 1 outing off these nttiicks. It was the Second Australian Division which broke the Hoaurcvolr line west nnd southwest of that village, working forward with the nld of tanks, which were handl caiipod bv bad ground ur.d water, to the outskirts of Mont Urobilin. Fight Ahead Willi Masks On the eastern sldo of the vlllago of Kstrees, tho enemy had pill-box fortresses, from which thero came sl.ishlnu- machine-gun lire, nnd tho Australians wero checked there for six hours until, by dogged efforts, thev overpowered the place and cap tured 1100 men In a concrete shelter. AVhilo they wero outside it they were bombarded by gas shells, which la a. horrible method of fighting, and they had to wear their masks, but would not go back because of that. They man aged to get to tho cast of Wluncoutt ai.d to the west oi ueauiuvoir unu held their ground during tho night, while Kngllsh troops wero thrusting back a cpuntcr-blovv, which made them withdraw from Mont Urobilin, Into which they had penetrated during tho day. This village was mined nnd there wero two explosions while our men wero lu the streets and fighting different bat talions of no fewer than nine differ ent divisions. Thfl enemy was on hghcr ground than the Kngllsh and Australian troops and was able to get an enfilade llro from ono position to another, so that for a 'time the situation at Mont Brehaln, vvhero our men were fighting from 10 o'clock In the morning until G In the ctenlng, became untenable, On tho left of them, arobnd Le Catc let and Gouy. some Kngllsh battalions who had taken these places by most desperate endeavors wero having nag ging fighting In the trenches and ruins which form part of tho old Illndenburg lino beyond the canal, and yesterday morning this continued without much progress, although somewhat to their l Ight other comrades of theirs were able to make ground, toward Ponchaux and Beaurevolr. Foe Mlr!lnneoii Crowd Against them wero a miscellaneous crowd of Germans, Including Guards, Grenadier nnd reserve regiments and tablo service. i J mmmmmmmmmmmiimmmm oinns tho Forty-sixth. Sixty-sixth, Klghty-sev-euth nnd Ninety-sixth Itescrvo Infantry regiments, while south of them the Thirty-fourth Herman Dlviskui, with scrnp Ings from depots nnd ofllces. cook houses and camps, wero hurried up to counter-attack our men when they were exhausted nfter long fighting. So, for some hours, the Herman re sistance has been stiffened and they havo been nble to keep us in check, Tt cannot be for long, I Imagine, be rouse there Is no doubt the enemy Is In depenile inlriills for reserve strong enough to make n firm stand, nnd what I vnw lodiiy Is renl proof (hut there nre no linen abend of. us now which our men cannot break If they have the fresh nps and niinibern nnd lire not toed Sip by tno long n period of fighting, foV men who ruptured (be further bunk of the Si hehlt Ctinnl enn take ntij thing and hrratiftc' the Hermann eould not hold tliU line, the' enn hold no line. 1 went nlong a great length of It to day, nnd was astonished thnt our men could get across with such llttlo loss. It has steep banks 9nto 100 feet high on each tide of the canal, cutting high and dry by Belllngllse, but with five or six feet or moro of water twenty yards wide between that village and Ilclllcnurt. Somo miles away, when It goes Into the tunnel, It Is perfectly pre pared for defense with communication trenched leading from tho lower ground beyond to high banks, where machine gun and field-gun emplacements were having n perfect Held of fire should any men ho rash enough to iidviinco over tho rldgo to the western bank. Our men were rash enough, and ovef the canal aro bridges of planks on which they passed and, In the water, rafts on which thej' floated. "The old bocho ought to have defended n position llko this to tho crack of doom," said ono of our olllcers this morn ing, and, Indeed, It was only the mar velous courage of our men, favored by tho dense while fog, which achieved this crossing of the Scheldt Canal. In tlmo of pence It must have been a pleasant place, with steep banks clothed with undergrowth and by a long straight vista of watir, which goes suddenly into the hillside. None of Yser's Horror Kvcn now It has none of that grim horror which haunts the Yser Canal, and bomo of the Australians there to day hauling buckets of water to tho crest of the high banks seemed to be In x picnic mood and sang as they worked, though there was bloody fighting just up on 'tho left by Houy, and German shells were crumpling the neighboring ground, and there was a bald sky, more prolonged and moro intense than any thing I have seen slncu tho fighting in Flanders last year. Geiman airmen wero audacious .and somo nf their best lighting scouts were out above tho Sheldt Cnnnl watching our activities and prcpailng for any new menace preparing against them. Our nlr patrol challenged them tn slnplo fights and tourneys, or "dog flghtsr' as our flying men call them without romance, and there was a constant chatter of machine guns overhead and tho noise of many engines, and nur squadrons camo sailing up and more hostile air craft nppeared from tho clouds. From behind the British lines, many thousands of men stared up at this sky battlo and thero was furious work by our antiaircraft guns. One after an other. In less than two minutes, two air planes' camo crashing to earth poor, broken things. Out of one a body fell, swaying so lightly that I think It must havo been fustcned. to a parachute, but ho other fell like a rocket. V.A. ims&M. Until Seven WANAMAKER INSTITUTE OF INDUSTRIES Iceland Walnut Strcat: Rejjlster Now Coit of Each Course Six Months Archil,,!,,,.,,! nrauliiE. thm. nltMa. ,15?, A't redlmork. two nlnlita " J!""'0., tno nlchta (one period) .! huslnea. Arithmetic. ?o nlitii'ti",'. '..'.'. I!g0 Cookery nnd l)nmitl HcTnr. I! nlrhta 18.00 lln.Lmn .ln. ..... -....- n.lM.l.t . :.'. -- - a , ,, nmmerrlal Department, live nlllita. CorrevDonilenrF, t nlchta,, rrorhrtlinr, tno nlchta?...." "!1X. 11.01) 8.00 H.llil is.no it. oo 17.00 III. All -...iK, two uicnia tone perioni,... Drruniuklnic. Ilrat enr. two nlclitt. second year, two nlchta i-. ,i , tp'ti eur, two nlchta I'licllali I.nncuaca tun nlchta 'ruiiinu, two nlchta (one period). 14.00 tP.jr'Olne. two nlchta St.OO FHInc and indexing, two nlchta, .I... 10.00 Irencl, Lnncmce, two nlchta 111.0(1 Oarment Cutllnr. two nlehN. moo ''"Itnr. two nlchta (one period) 2.100 j'.NiMimin. two nlchta (one period) zn.uw ,1111 ,00 ,no .00 .. -.-- ,- ....... .UK,. (Till 1'lan Rending- KatlimtlnE, I'lll.lln H.l.n,! .! n1-l.. . H..I. nlchta 111.00 1.1.00 in.no gniinUli I.nncnncr.,twn nlchta, , gtennerivphy, elementary, three nlchta 1.00 glfnocrni'hy. advanced, three nlchta; 14.00 steel (.nttar. ten leaanna 1R.0A TelecrnphT. two nlcht 15 00 rknlele. ten feaanna m.OO ---..... -..a ii'iiiiii'ikr.finii IIIK'liai. ....... J.iniin, nvn nlclita (one period) X5.00 Jec'il Mnjlc, two nlchta (one period).. 4.1. oo VVntrhmaklnc. two nlchta , JS4.00 raymrnta One-third nn raclaffatlnni hal ftnee In four weeka, dlacount If entire pay ment )a made !n ndvnnre. Bend for further Information. HIlfirtTIIAMI AMI IIODKKF.F.I'INn our Krnduata are In eonatant demand. Oood paylnc nosltiona await you. (Irene Short hand, the easy, anecdy system. Complete huslneaa nnd secretarial eoursea. Day anil nlcht clasaea. tntenelvn trnlnlmr, ffJ, Knroll any lime. Call or write ir," tor full pirncnlara and catHlea", iXiifS P1III,A. IM'SlM'sS fni.l.KOl' viii anil Cellere nf Commerce 1017 Cheatniit Ht., I'lillailelphlu WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY ntAI.MF.It8 INHTITUTK. SOlfl ARCH ST. Ctaasea for men and vvoment private periods. Kail claasrs formlrar. Enroll at nnce. Call, write or phone Iocust 3584. MISS WHARTON'S SCHOOL 1710 riNB STrtEET REOrEN8 OCT. 1. Girls and Utile Ooya. MUSIC LEEFSON-HILLE orsTo1''' 1C34 Chestnut St. fith Ave. and York Real Oak Lane. Fuhllo School Mulo Supervision. nUOrKNB SIIlTEMHKll IUT1I Sri.F.NDlD OPPOIITUNITT offered to sev. eral young men to elmr In one of tha best vested chnlra In the city I tenors and bussca ; aalary J 0J.T. Ledger Central. EDITH WALTON HAMLIN Piano, nunnlnp: System. Progressive Series. lf.00 Maaler HI. Phone, ropier 81)0 W PIANO. VIHITIN'fl TKACilEir. MAItV HMlhYVUIlNON. 103(1 Ant'll HT rnscisn 5 puivATK Dancing wmsoxh $5 The C'llRTIfiKnZ Hf'IlObr.. Mirrored filmllna ISM Cheetnul rlt. lnv Dm l,ia-uat Sitrj !. .' J. ..'..'.1 "..... '..'..:!..' !' . J I rv... i. IV r'". r , rni i'HI'11.. TiA.tuvtf viiri vvtrov llllltll HI' ,yift.. lt lt.. t- HAIfWEMI EDUCATIONAL JM3 k.;...,1"",11J I'rnwinc. two nisnta,,.,,, in, lllliyrT. two nlht.. I..,. 17, nlntlnc Art. twn iilelita..'...; 12, rnniinhln. two nllhta , K I'lAnn. fl.pAA nUlil. ,-. h..i.j1 nx So, In the sunlight which had now broken through th mist, thero was Bivlft tragedy llko a stab at the heart, but that way of death was better thin another way which I saw when I went Into the tunnel where tho water goes under tho hill. This tunnel Is flv miles long, but I wnlked only ft little way through It. It was pitch dark, without tho tiniest glimmer nf light, so that Its blackness was like velvet on one's eyes. By a pocket torch I could see a y" ahead, .and flashed It over tho black water of the canal, vvhero thero were many big, old, wooden barges. Hero many Germnn's were hidden , until they were routed out, and, after thnt, when a pnrty of Australians ad vanced with torches and hand grenades and Ilxcd bayonets they saw ahead of them a glint of light and shouted, "Who goes there?" and wnltcd. Presently, very slowly toward them dime, not Ger mans, but two old bushrangers with a stump of a candle between them. "Well, boys," they said, "don't be scared, Wc are only exploring a bit on our own." They had got Into the tunnel hl",her up and were on n prowl for Germans or souvenirs. There were only old dead Germans in tho tunnel now, and dead In such a way that the sight of them revived thnt gruesome story of the Gcr. man Kndavcr Anstalt, or corpse factory, which some time ago deceived tho credu lous, A wild rumor spread among the Kngllsh and Australian troops that hero they had discovered the ghoulish work of boiling down German bodies for their grense, and because It Is likely to spread to tradition I must tell tho truth of It. "Kailaver AnMndt" Unreal III a cavern, oft the main tunnel were two hollers and around nbout them I saw tho bodies of German soldiers and Inside the hollers were bits of bodies. What moro was wanted as evidence of foul practice? To men of easy belief. In tho worst horrors of humanity, such evidence would ho good enough, but I prefer the mentality of nn Australian boy whoso face I could not see, but who as he stumbled nlong by my side sftid, "I want to get at the truth of this tale, because I don't think nny men In tho world would bo vile enough ,to do such things." And the truth Is that, by somo explosion from within or with out, theso German cooks and soldiers had been killed and blown to bits as they stood round their stew-pans, and parts of their bodies had fallen Into the boiling grease. The WORLD WAR HAS C'AlY.KIl Foil The Positive Note in Christianity A rolleetlon nf thirteen leetures nlven In the Memorlnl Ilaptlst Church, mil. do)iln. In eonnertlnii with ths eelebra tlnn nf Its Fiftieth Anniversary In: 1U17. by I'.ihvln M. I'nlent Wllllnm 11. Mnlll Curter H. .lones Robert K. Hppr T. l'tlwln Iirnwn 13. 11. Pollard MIHnn O. Kvuns .Tnmestf. Franklin '."r V. llullin Itolit.H.MnrArthur Truest Ii. Hurton urfls I-eo L.iws vVllllam 11. Owen These lectures all have As their key. note tho awakening nf Interest In the Church, nnd set forth the fundamental, positive trutlm of Christianity. They (.mind tbe Christian nntn of certainty In tho uncertain times of war. !!00 pacta; bound In cloth. HI. 50 net. AMERICAN IJAITIST PUBLICATION SOCIETY Ul.ollclit llool.fchon) 1701 Chestnut Rt. I'lilladelpula KHI.miOI'S XOTIfKH llnntKt t'HKSTM'T STKIIKT IIAITIST CIU'RCft Chcatnut at. went of IHth. titilllKJi: l. ADA1IH. I). !.. Paator. church closed on itrcount of order of lioarci or iiraun. I'rnletlnnt KpUcnnnl si'. JA.MKSN. .,! nnd Walnut ta. Itov. JOII.V IKH'KHJWin. I). D.. Hector. All Fcrvlcen unci till mectltifta In the Oulld IIouho positional until further notice, by nine? of Ihp Mount nf Health. I'nltnrlan I'MTAKIAN MK'IirrV OF (fEKMANTOlVN Chelteii uve. nnd tlreono t. No Sunday M'rvlee. uccoidlns to ruling of the Hoard of Health, Ilotli Sevaa Foreign Trade Ilcnuires trained men men who understand the principles anj tech nique of Foreign Trade, and who are capable of holding positions of re sponsibility and leadership. The lack of such men was n serious handicap in the expansion of America's 'over. seas trade before the war. It is a pressing problem today, and it will become absolutely vital as" soon ns we again come into competition with the unrestricted commercial forces of Europe. To train men and women for Foreign Trade, wo shall conduct a course in Foreign Trade co-operating with tio Business Training Corporation 'of Now York, beginning October 10. We shall bo glad to send you a book let, describing the course, or give you full particulars "if you will call at our Instruction Department, CENTRAL Y. M. C. A. 1421 ARCH STREET Strayer's Business College Philadelphia's vreateat bualness achool ts sa well known that I area advertisement fre unnecessary. We haveKhe best teachers n town, and more of them. Unequaleq eoulpment. Practical courses. Pitman and flrecc Shorthand, or, without ectra charct. Btenotypy. the famous machine method, which Is both morn rapid and more accurate than any hand-written method of shorthand. Sclentlflo Touch Typewriting;. Strayera students win more rold medals tor speed and accuracy In typewrltlnc than are won by thn students of all other business schools In Philadelphia taken tocether. Certified Public Accountant inethoda ot bookkeeping:. Everything: else to corre spond. Individual advancement. Charssa moderate. Positions guaranteed. Day and nlcht clasaes.' Come see for yourself. 1100 students now attending. Start near. C07 Chestnut Htreet I'hone Walnut SM FRENCH nnd Spanish by native prof, teach ers; high ref.t grammar, conversation! success icuar. J 034.' Ledger Central, AI1T11MX HKSOBTB ATf,ANTIO CITY. Tf. J. Wpe.rming.ter lyav. nr. Den. Elev. to at. Westminster j,rv.baths, running; water. i;..')0 up wkly.t S-'.fiO up dally. Chae. Duhra, HOTEL B0SC0BEL &S.,uciwT10B-' Isxr, Euro, plans. Bklt. !a ID. MAIUOK liAKKwonn. y. j. Laurel-in-the-Pine Lake wood, N. J. WILL OPEN FOR TUB FAMa, WINTER AND SPntNQ SEASON ' ; Saturday, Nov. 16, 1918 ., FRANK K. BHUTB. MOB. ar CAI'ft MAY. V. . THE WINDSOR ! M J- fv ,V jl 't M ,t v,l l e. I -; Jv A- .CI i .1. Jfflttsi ' jS ,i-.,.IL-.A SeHHB.bWj ' . i .'i ;JHcS&J'. i;'; K,lll ' hhwm. M1TMW ' V '.fftl .. .., ? .' ." '"'." iMttfi :.& CTi .. MM "A-?, ' k 1 S..J.J ? LLi..asJ . ,JW. "'BHHb . vrj&ByHHMMKMjjfKj9ACT.