Marshal Foch Drives to Force Germans Out of Back to Old Line HARRISBURG iSSglli TELEGRAPH M * otar* Undcpcnbcni * LXXXVII— No. 184 12 PAGES r.. HARRISBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 21, 1918. HOME EDITION BRITISH SMASH HUN LINES ON 10-MILE FRONT, CAPTURING IMPORTANT VILLAGES 156 DAUPHIN MEN ARE CALLED TO ENTER WAR SERVICE, AUG. 26 Many of 1918 Class to Leave City For Camp Lee Where Thcv Are to Get Training For Overseas Service MEN TO ENTRAIN AT MONDAY NOON Draftees to Report Sunday F c Final Instructions; Or < .*s For Entrainment Re ceived From State Draft ureau The names of the 156 men who will be sent to Camp I-.ee, Petersburg. Va., from Harrisburg and Dauphin county vvere announced by the six local boards this morning. The men will report Sunday afternoon at their boards, and will leave the Pennsyl vania station in their special at 11.50 Monday morning. The Elizabcth ville contingent will entrain at 7.29 Monday morning. While the continsent Monday is not the largest 'hat has yet been call ed, it is the first regular draft quota from the city and county in which 191S registrants had to be called. Possibly liftv of the registrants are the 191S registration. " Many of 1918 Class City board No. 1 has ten 1918 reg istrants tn its quota. City board No. 2 has almost as many. City hoard No. 3 has six. County board No. 1 has enough 1917 registrants to till the quota, the Paxtang board used about fifteen of the new registrants and the Elizabethville board us many. The registrants have been notified to report at the hoards Sunday af ternoon at 4 o'clock, with the excep tion of the Elizabethville quota, which will report Sunday afternoon at 2.30. The hoards' quotas were as fol lows: City board No. 1. 26 men: No. 2, 24 men: No. 3, 15 men; county [Continued on Page 2.] Old Rubber to Be Sought For Red Cross Benefit ' "Any shoes, any tires, any hose or rubber, to-day?" This paraphrased call of the old junkmen will be the substance of a plea for rubber goods within a few days of Mercer B. Tate, chairman of the rubber station, to he institut ed by the salvage committee of the Harrisburg Red Cross Chapter. The appointment and acceptance of Mr. Tate as chairman of this com mittee has just been announced .by Mrs. Mabel Cronise Jones, chairman of the salvage committee. He expects soon to erect the rubber station at some public place to lie announced later. He will assisted by a sub committee, the names of which •will soon be announced. This station will receive any goods of rubber as salvage to swell the funds of the local chapter. Such cam paigns in other cities have netted thousands of dollars. Bretz Faces Another Serious Criminal Charge Charged with the embezzlement of $l,OOO by Franklin Wertz, 1420 Green street. Harry M. Bretz, recently ad judged bankrupt, was held under S.iOO bail by Alderman Eandis this morning. Wertz affirms that he held a $2,000 mortgage against a third person who had paid $1,400 on ac count io Rretz. Bretz had paid oniv $4OO of this amount to Wertz, the latter declares. HARRISBURG BOYS ARE GOfNG OVER Are You Putting By? ff'WAR STAMPS } SHOW THE WAY — i ITHEWEATHF.g] For Hurrlabnrg and Vicinity, Fair ! to-night anil Thursday) warmer to-night. For Eastern Prnnnylvanln: Fntr to-night and Thursday, slightly warmer to-night, moderate south went winds. Hlvrr The Susquehanna river and all Itn branches will continue to fnll slowly. Temperntnre, 8 a. m„ 5. River Stage, 8 a. m., 3.5 feet above low-water murk. Sun, Rises, 11,18 n. at., sets, 7,42 p. ni. Moon, Full moon, August 21, Yesterday's Weather Highest temperature. 78. l.owest temperature, stl. Mean temperature, vh enumerated thirty-' two American divisions us having 1 arrived in France. They are as fol-i lows: First, Second. Third, Fourth,, ■Fifth, Sixth, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th,' 30th, 32nd, 33rd, 35th, 36th, 37th, 41st, 42nd, 76th, 77th, 78th, 79th. < 80th, 81st, 82nd, 83rd, 85th, 89th, 90th, 91st, 92nd and 93rd. SOth in Flanders Answering further questions re garding individual divisions. General March said the 76th division (New England and New York National Army), now is serving as a depot division and is stationed in a back area. The SOth division (Pennsyl-i vania and Virginia National Army), is serving with the British in Flan-, ders. The success of the enlarged Amer- : lean program of the War Depart ment, General March said, still is dependent upon the acquisition of adequate shipping and while the Emergency Fleet Corporation is con stantly swelling the tonnage at Ihe army's disposal, it still is necessary to charter and hire many additional ships. On the plains near the Oise the al lied advance has put the line well back of the old 1916-17 line. On German Soil General March said the War De partment had not yet received de tails of the capture of Frapelle, in the Vofeges. by the Fifth United States division (regulars). The line at this point is four miles over the German border. In commenting on the shipping situation, General March divulged •for the llrst time the fact that Brazil had given a ship to the United States without compensation of any sort for, two trips. He said that so far as he knew this was the only case of the kind on record. NEED STENOGRAPHERS State draft headquarters to-day re- : cched notice that the army wanted good stenographers with legal train- 1 ing to volunteer from roup C of Class | 1 of the draf. These men ure tto serve ! In courts-niartlaf in the Held and the j : time for volunteering will end Au- < gust 31 I; Foe Recoils Three Miles as Haig's Men Press Forward Under a Heavy Mist . INFANTRY SURGES FORWARD WITHOUT ARTILLERY WORK Battle Line Carried to Within Three Miles of Bapaume, One of Hun's Supply Bases By Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 21 (4.45 p. m.) —French troops advanced three miles to-day along the Oise and reached Sempigny, a mile from the outskirts of Noyon, according to reports from the battlefront. * British forces struck the Germans over a front of approxi mately ten miles on the line southwest of Arras at dawn to-day. According to meager details received from the scene of the new assault, the British have advanced from two to three miles and have captured the towns of Moyenneville, Courcelles, Achiet- Ic-Petit and Beautcourt-aur-Ancre and have reached the town of Achict-le-Grand. Sweep All Before Them The assault was begun under cover of a mist which materially assisted the British in their advance. It would appear from this that there was only little, if any, artillery preparation and that the plan of attack was similar to that followed south of the Aisne on [Continued on Page 10.] ___ I - GASCONIER STRIKES MINE; SIX LOST |lf Christiania, Norway—The Dutch steamer Gasconier, ] if; New York to Rotterdam, operated by the Belgian Relief i;j; Commission, struck a mine in the North sea, caught fire j j fit* and sank. Si* lives were lost. A guard ship took the | ; | survivors to Haugcsund, Norway. j ! | . TRIS SPEAKER TO FLY IN WAR ;;j; Boston—Before leaving here last night for Washing- J jf; ton, Tris Speaker, of the Cleveland American League ; ; j|[ Baseball team, said he expected to complete arrangemnt# i ; i|j to-day for entering the aviation school at the Massachu- ; • i setts Institute, of Technology. 1 YOUNG LA FOLLETTE TO GET COMMISSION jji |j| Chicago—Philip La Follette, son of United States ;; 11; Senator La Follette of Wisconsin, is among the 200 stu- i ; j dents at the Fort Sheridan officers training camp who ; | ; have been recommended for a commission, it was an- ! ;|; nounced to-day. > j p ||| SOVIETS TAKE ALEXANDROVITCH Ij; Amsterdam—The former Russian Grand Duke Paul I ; ! Alexandrovitch, says a Moscow dispatch, has been j ; arrested by the Bolshevdki. He is art uncle of the late I j | emperor and father of Grand Duke Dmitri Paviovitch. *; 'Z i' GRANT'S SON GETS DIVORCE ;j; Reno, Nev.—Jesse R. Grant, son of General U. S. if; Grant, has been granted a divorce from his wife at Tono- i i I ! pah, on grounds of desertion, it was learned to-day. ij; | ' ' j j LORD READING DENIES ALLIANCE RUMOp j i London—Lord Reading, the British ambassador to |j| fjj the United States, speaking at the American Luncheon j I | Club to-day denied reports that he had returned home j '\ > \ | [ to draft the tenns of an offensive and defensive alliance | I ;f| be ween Great Britain and the United States. j p [i lib MARRIAGE LICENSES JIIIIUH BouknlKht, Baltimore, nnil /nnnle Wood*. Canton. 9 <> Ohio; Sjlvmlfr Kllloon anil Mamrft J. Willlnnio, HarrUbnril Lta K. Tltoworth, Mont Roar, nnd l.aura A. Stewart. Philadelphia. f*-^ K r-r v Tr^rt , rrtrMrrnTrrrrrrrrrMrrT""7";TT7T77T;7)?r777TT7i7?iQij)>oj| '