Americans Advance on Lorraine Front Under Fire of Guns From Mdz Fortress. * * V 1 * ja' w J* - ■ ■ - % * HARRISBURG ifSlSfli TELEGRAPH Ak ®jc otar- Jnsepcnbcni , ' LXXXVII Xo. 205 14 PAGES Ual Matier e ! th" d poi nHhrrrsb*>:re *"* HARRISBURG, PA., MONDAY EN ENING, SEP 1 EMBER 16, 1918. 11 * NKW SIMI' KH l\ "haII h'iSIM l'l S SI TW'O i CENTS s HOME EDITION HEAVY GUNS ACTIVE ON AMERICAN FRONT; SERBIANS IN ACTION - C Yankee Infantry Rests After Shattering German Lines; and Advancing to the German Threshold METZ FORTRESS TURNS HEAVY ARTILLERY ON PERSHING'S MEN By Associated Press With the American Army in Lorraine, Sept. 1 6. —Activity of the German artillery increased somewhat during the forenoon to-day. No in fantry attacks, however, were made. French and American forces to-day were in contact with the Kriemhild defenses, which are of enormous strength. Net it may be doubted whether the enemy feels safe in these entrenchments after having been driven in a day from some of the strongest natural posi tions on the whole front. These positions withstood some of the fiercest as saults of the war. Long Held by Bulgarian Army hAliied troops are on the offensive on the Macedonian front. Reorganized Serbian forces, aided by the French are attacking Bulgarian positions in the mountain on the Serbo-Greek border east of Monastir. - Three important hill positions which had withstood allied •efforts through several years, already have fallen to the Serbs and the French. The heights are Sokol, Dolbro Polie and Teak Yetrenik. Sokol is twenty miles east of Monastir. The captured positions are about midway between the Cerna after it makes a wide curve southeast of Monastir. Several hundred prisoners have been taken in the advance, which continues. French and British Push Forward Meanwhile, the French and British troops on the main battle front in France continue their progress. Between the Oise and the Aisne the French are pressing on. North of the Aisne they have taken the town of Yailly and nearer the Chemin des Dames have stormed Mont des Singes, an im portant hill position. Astride the Scarpe the British have pushed forward new posts, while along the Ypres-Comines canal, southeast of Ypres. they have advanced on a front of two miles. West of Cambrai and around St. Quentin the activity has died down after the British capture of Maissemy. No Infantry Attacks Develop The aerial and artillery arms have been active on the new American front southwest of Metz. The enemy guns have been hammering the American lines but no infantry attacks have de veloped. Allied aviators have bombarded railroad centers and other military targets in the Metz area while enemy airmen have bombed some places within the American lines, including St. Mihiel. Yankees Vnder Fire Along the batUe line. American attention is directed chiefly at the front in Lorraine, where the Americans are under flre from the fortress of Jletz and apparently are making ready for a drive against the "Kriemhild" line, to which the Ger mans withdrew their shattered col umns from the St. Mihiel salient. Along this front American forces are on the threshold of Germany. The victory of General Pershing's men has had more than a merely SEPTEMBER IS HALF OVER NOW • WAR STAMPS WILL COST 1 CENT MORE OCTOBER 1 £irAsk Arthur D. Bacon About It THE WEATHER 1 FOR Harrlxbarg vlelaltyi (load? to-nlKbt naif Taexday. probably rala; cooler Tacxdny. For Eastern Penaaylvanlai ( loudy to-night and Tuesday, probably ralnt coaler ta-nlgbt in north portion; coaler Tarxday: gentle, shifting winds, becoming north neat. River The loner portion of the mnin river will rise xlonly to-night and probably fall slowly Tues day. All other streams of the system will probably f„l| xlonly or remain nearly stationary. A stage of about 4.0 feet la Indi cated for Ilarrtaburg. Taeaday morning. Temperatarei 8 a. m., SO. >m 1 Risen. dtM a. m-i sets, 7.08 p. m. Moos i Fall moon. September 20. River Stogei A3 feet above lon water mark. Yesterday's Weather Highest temperatare, 7*. lowest temperatare, S2, .Mean temperatare, ho drill to-morrow morn ing: Keller, W. H, Miller, R. G. Miller, Ibaeh, Haldenian, Lowthci, Strouse, Herman, Hatched and Mc- Cullough, The Company B detail will, be made to-night. KAISER MAY HAVE PEACE ON OUR TERMS | By Associated Press LONDON, Sept. 16.—Austria's j invitation to the belligerents to meet in informal peuee discus sions is given a warm roeeption by the lyondon morning newspapers. The warmth, however, is not that of cordiality, but of indignant re pudiation. The note is set-n by commentators as a German trick in which Austria Is made the eatspaw in an endeavor to gain time to enable the German high eomtnanad to reorganize Its shat tered troops. The offer or peace to Belgium Is regarded as a shameless insult. "Our peace terms have been made abundantly clear," says tlte Tost. "When Germany and Iter dependants are ready to accept thorn tliey can let us know. There will be no abatement to them. Germuny must lie beaten, and must recognize that site is lieatcn."' V J ists said: "It is incredible that any thing can come of this proposal." Coming after the recent speech cf Friedrich Von Papen, the German imperial vice chancellor. Mr. Balfour said, "this cynical proposal of the Austrian government is not a genu ine attempt to obtain peace. It is an attempt to divide the allies. "I cannot honestly see in the pro posals now made to us. as I have been able to study them, the slight est hope that the goal we all de sire—the goal of a peace which shall be more than a truce—can really be attained." -Vo Basis For Peace in Latest Kaiser Plan Washington, Sept. 16.—Receipt of the official text of the Austrian peace proposal was awaited to-day by of ficials here, but unless the communi cation is couched in terms radically different from the version contained in press dispatches, it was felt that the entire plea could he eharacter [Continued on Page 6.] E! # 1 PORTUGUESE STEAMER U-BOAT TCTIM A Canadian Atlantic Port—The Portuguese steamship : Leixees Was torpedoed in the north Atlantic five day 6 ago, | according to sixteen members of the crew who arrived | here to-day. They had spent the interval in an open boat. I It is feared 35 others in three boats may have been lost. PENNA. MEN IN CANADIAN CASUALTIES Ottawa—Lieut R. J. Reegar, of Philadelphia, was | killed in action and E. O'Neill, of Wilkes-Barre. Pa., was j wounded. * COAL EXPERT HERE TODAY Harrisburg—T. Ellsworth Davies, Scranton, a coat [ expert is conferring this afternoon with bounty commis , sirners of Dauphin county on plans to fix the valuation of : fcoal lands. RYAN PLEASED WITH AIRMEN Paris—On his return from a tour near the battle | front, John D. Ryan, American assistant secretary of wir I in charge of air service, declared he was much gratified by [ the work done by the aerial force of the American army. HUN PROFESSOR IS PRISONER With the American Army in France—Among the cap | rives taken by the Americans at was Profes- I sor Otto Schmeernkase, the exploiter of ehlorine gas as a [ form of ftivilired torture. ; BAKER ARRIVES IN LONDON London—Newton D. Baker, the American Secretary : of War, arrived in London to-day from Paris. MOONEY APPEAL DENIED San Franciscc—The California Supreme Court to-day ; denied Thomas J. Mooney permission to seek a writ of | error in the United States Supreme Court. This was said j to be the defense's last move in the state courts. Mooney ! was sentenced to be hanged following his conviction for : murder in conection with a boipb explosion here two years ago. LLOYD GEORGE IMPROVES London—A medical bulletin issued at midnight said : Premier Lloyd George's temperature had fallen and that there was a great improvement in his condition. MARRIAGE LICENSES Wlllih Raymond and Hlniite Shiitton, < nrllxlos George C. . AVtafleld nnd Ethel I. Tndor, I'rternhure, Vn.i Thomna 1.. Ilevlne i and Ada SI. Kepler, Lrirlttona. CHILDREN AND WOMEN SUFFER MOST IN ATTACK 189 Lives Lost in Piratical Sinking of the Galway Castle LIFEBOATS ARE CRUSHED Heartrending Scenes Mark Landing of Survivors; Babes Cry For Dead Parents By Associated Press Plymouth, England, Sunday, Sept. 15. —Heartrending scenes were witnessed here when hun dreds of survivors of the tor -1 pedoed steamer Galway Castle • were landed at an early hour j Thursday morning. The pas j sengers were mostly women and ' children, and it is believed whole faniiles have been lost. I Among the survivors were i little tots scarcely able to walk, I crying in vain for their parents. | Parents were searching in all directions for news of their chil dren and women were seeking vainly for their lost husbands. | There seems no reason to | doubt that the vessel was tor pedoed without warning. The | explosion occurred between the [Continued on Page 12.] iNo Prohibition Against Purchase of New Shoes A rumor gaining currency in this city during the last few days t.o the effect that Harrisburg feet will have to go "shoeless" so far as new footgear is concerned by reason of a government edict suspending the sale of the same, was denied on every hand by local shoe dealers to-day. As a shoe-yarn it's a "shoddy" joke according to Harrisburg dealers who profess not to know how the rumor started.