2 CASCJREIS FOR BOWELS. STOMACH HEAD!®. COLDS Clean Your Liver and Constipated Bowels To-night and Feel Fine Get a LO-i-ent box now. Are you keeping your liver, stomach 1 and bowels clean, pure and fresh with Cascarets —or merely forcing a passage way every few days with salts, ; cathartic pills or castor oil! This is 1 important. Cascarets immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; ! t ike the excess bile from the liver and carry out "f the system the constipated waste matter and poison in the bowels. | No odds how sick, headachy, bilious 1 and constipated von feel, a Cascaret to night will straighten you out by mom- ; iiig. They work while you sleep. A 10- j cut box from your druggist will keep I your head clear, stomach sweet and | your liver and bowels regular for months. Don't forget the children — their little inside? need a gentle cleans ■ Adv. | C V. N FARMERS' DSY A BIG EVENT Mammoth Display of Fruits and Vege tables Brought People to Gettys burg by Thousands Gett> -bit.-.;, <>-t. 19.—Edlipsing <•' n;ileifi; the not:: >.e - i. esses of the I'.Tine - pay celebration of the past I-" >'a —. Adams vomity residents Do m\| : i tiottysiiurg t:ii.« morning by tiie t iiin,.-.i!nt-i bringing «'.:n them the x I ry in'-t ■ i the products of farm, or I'M i .«;i■ i ien. The displays in the v.iiin.ts ties-* houses tar exceeded those seen at many a county fair. Neve: have \iiams county people I .ave'i ... mere remarkable display i vegetable.-. Potatoes of many vari ■ci:i' . and the iicst of their kind, were f-' 1 inn in a numlier of the stores. Mammoth pumpkins, lieets, cabbage, tomatoes and turnips were attractive ly : rtr.nged, a striking testimonial to tiie si;in of the farmer and his wife in growing tlie best tiie garden can Bile: <i. TRAIN KILLS O(TO(iK\AKIAN Body Found on Track After Long Search Cumberland, Md., Oct. 19. —The body of Miss \i:ginia C. If van, S3 years oid, xxas found on the We.-t ■rn Mn x .aud ra iioad tracks east of I'rots i'irg. yesterday morning. Miss Ryan im . been stra.-k ;>v a train. She left tne home of her cousin, Mrs. P. H. la Ml. Savage. early Saturday afternoon, tor a walk. Not returning at nightfall a search was instituted and contiuued a! night. Miss Ryan. :i retired milliner, after tiny years in business, was active men tally and physically, She leaves a large estate. CHANGES SUICIDE METHOD After Planning Hanging, Man Usea Gun in Son's Presence H igerstovxn, Md.. Oct. 19.—Em manuel Hoffman, aged 55. tenant on Jjitgo .lames I'iudlay's farm, commit ted suicide yesterday by shooting off the to.' of his head with a double-bar reled - iot mi at his home near Wil liams-port. ti is son, Victor, witnessed the deed. Hoffman tried to hang him self n a xvugon shed before the shoot ing. I he ro:>e. witii a noose tied at one end. xvas found dangling from a ladder. A widow and nine children survive. Killed, in Leap From Car Martinsburg, W. Va.. Oct. 19.—<-As a result of an automobile wreck, Mrs. Pan M. Parsons, aged 32. member or n : omiilent Martinsbiirg family, die I Saturday night in the King's Daugh ters hospital. Mrs. Parsons was the Why Are Ten Tons of Quinine Used Every Ye&r? enormous quantity of Quinine alone (representing , about I=3oth of all the Quinine produced in the world) is i equired for the preparation of Laxative Bromo Quinine, Seven Million (7,000,000) Boxes of which are used every year because of its extraordinary merit. - After reading the accompanying label from the box of r ~ ~ Laxative Bromo .An excellent remedy (or Cough, and Colds. Relieves the ) 11 i«,* - ~ *ll * (jeough aud also the feverish conditions and Headache ) WjUinilie, telling HV" us " a " yafsoci * t «l with colds The second or? whatitdne«? and lirvtv Sthird dose will reUeve the Cough and Headache and will? . 7 UOeS ana DOW ) the i b ° W j'* wcllwilhinS °f 10 hours, when the cold) it doeS it, VOU Call in,'' K re . In * r ««tinc colds it is very imporicni that £ «. j v 1 • < the bowels should move well every day This preparation { Understand why thlS S moves the bowels gently without tripine. and arouses the S remedv ncpP ) liver and all thesecretions to action Directions.-Adult*' re ni"ay IS Used SO S lateh'a'ter ®Adshotild be taken itnmed-lj effectively by SO \ iatel> - , .ens. who ■V^l^^r/ ? Cjr£)CAe sufficient J man Y millions of ,° ~ ke< -P™; b°»cls open freely until th ? Cough and > neOT)le WVlPtiPvr«r (Cold is relieved then take one half the dose for a few { F CU P'C. WUenever hi ! dr f n T lu>a re notoMcnoi '<f h tosw»iiowpiiis.the< you feel acoldcom , tablet can be broken or cut in half and given in proportion J .i • , , , (to age To be swallowed not chewed. For headnche lake ? On think of the C üble '" v " y: or 3 name Laxative (lac-simile of label on back of Laxative Bromo Quinine box) BrOmO Quinine. —but remember there Is Only One "Bromo Quinine To Get The GENUINE, Call For The Full Namo Laxative Bromo Quinine WORLD OVER TO OURE A COLD M ORE OAr Look for thla mlgnoturo MM M •" tho km*. Prloo 2 80. Gc>< guest of Mrs. Mnx von Sehlegell on an automobile trip in the latter's machine. The ladies were returning to Martins burg, and when Mrs. von Schlegell, who was driving the ear, attempted to pass a xvagon, believing a collision was imminent, Mrs. Parsons . became ex cited and sprang from the automobile, falling upon her head on the road, j With a fractured skull she was hur- , ried to the hospital, where she expired several hours late;, without regaining 1 consciousness. Town Dry Another Year Carlisle. Oct. 19.—1n accord with 1 with an opinion filed by .Tudge W. P. Sadler, of the Cumberland county Court, a vote on the liquor question in Shippensburg will not be necessary this j November, but will come up for action of the voters at the November election I next year. The special act of assembly which gives Shippensburg voters the right to decide whether or not liquor licenses shall be granted in the borough, pro vided for an electiftn every three years and as the last vote on the question i was taken in 1911 when the "drvs"| won. the three year period would end this November, but the more recent j act of assembly providing for munici- ' pal elections on odd numbered years makes necessary the extention of the time to November, 1915, the last act j taking precedence in the matter, so that the decision of three years ago stands for another year. At St, Woman Cuts Corn Waynesboro, Oct. 19.—Mrs. Henry- Bailey, xvidoxv of the former caretaker of the Bailey dam of the Waynesboro water system, is 84 years old. but not withstanding this, she cut twenty-one shocks of corn and dug up several bushels of sweet potatoes and she goes about all her work singing as cheer fully as a young girl. Her daughter. Miss Alice Bailey, is deaf and dumb. She delights in -ex terminating rats having caught 130 rats in traps the past few months. Synod to Meet at Gettysburg Gettysburg, Oct. 19.—The commit tee on place of meeting of the West Pennsylvania Lutheran Synod which adjourned at Hanover Thursdav, has accepted the invitation extended by Cnrist (College) Lutheran church, the Rev. Dr. \. K. Wagner, pastor, and the ninety-first meeting will be held bete next vear, from October 11 io 11. Jilted But Not a Suicide Waynesboro, Oct. 19.—A rumor in circulation here had it that Harry H. llassler, of Chambersburg, had at tempted suicide because he "had been jilted" by a Waynesboro girl. The rumor is without foundation. Mr. Hass ler is aiivp. He confessed, however, "I was jilted all right." Wilson Seniors Grant Colors Chambersburg, Oct. 19.—Miss Eliza both Conklin, a secretary of the .Stu dent Volunteer Movement, addressed the \. W, C. A., Sunday evening on missions. I iie annual color ceremony of the ollege takes place this evening. The senior class will hand 'down to the freshmen class the colors of 1914. The line of seniors each carrying green and ix iiite lanterns for the treshmen mox-ed slowiv to the rocky field where the ciass of 19IS had gathered. Miss Kunice Allison, Chester, . \ a., presi dent of the class of 1915, made the first presentation to the chairman of the freshmen, Miss Anna Hulsizer, of As ,Ury, N. J. At the end of the color ceremony, the two classes gathered on the steps of South College to sing col lege songs. Recital at College < h ambers burg, Oct. 19. —A harpsi chord refital, the first of the course of entertainments to be given at Wilson College throughout the year, was gix-en by Miss Frances Pelton-Jones on Sat urday. Miss Pelton-Jones' instrument is an exact reproduction of those used in tlve days of Bach, Bx- h x-erx f care fully studied program. Miss Pelton •lones presented to her audience ex amples of original harpsichord music dating from 1563 to 17J4. and modern music of Hofmann and Paderewski ar ranged for harpsichord. Miss Pelton- Jones appeared at her harpsichord in a Watteau costume of the period of 1760. The enthusiastic appreciation accorded Miss Pelton-Jones' recital marked an auspicious opening for the entire series of lectures and entertain ments. Talk of minimum salaries for minis ters is peculiar. They are already as minimum ns thev can be. HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPEXPENT, MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 19. 1914. BREAKS A COLD IN A FEW HOURS WITHOUT QUININE ! First Dose of 'Tape's Cold Compound" Re lieves All Grippe Misery Don't »ta,v stuffed up! CJuit blowiug and snuffling! A dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a severe cold either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nos trils and air passages; stops nasty discharge or nose runuing: relieves sick headache, dullness, feverishness. sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. "Pape's Cold Compound" is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only 23 cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, and causes no inconvenience. Don't accept a substitute. Adv. GERMAN FACTORY RAIDED BY THE MILITARY IN EDINBURGH Edinburgh, Oct. 19.—-A large fac tory owned by Germans was raided by the military in Edinburgh Saturday night. The building, erected ten years ago. is of imposing appearance, covers a large areu and is three stories high. Al though capable of accommodating 500 hands, never more than six workmen, all Germans, were seen about the place. According to information supplied by the builders. $150,000 was spent on magnificent concrete foundations, the proprietor explaining that exceedingly heavy machinery would be required for the factory. The machinery never ar rived, the faitory never started aud no workers came, but the situation domi nates Edinburgh and the prepared po sition, jutting on the sea, would enable big guns to nit the Forth bridge. SAVED IS FROM THE HAWKE, TORPEDOED BY A SUBMARINE London, Oct. 19.—The steamship Modesta. which picked up 4 8 survivors of the British cruiser Hawke, sunk in the North sea Thursday by a Germau submarine, arrived in Christiana Satur day night. The '.Modesta picked up tho survivors from a small boat live hours after the disaster and transferred them to an English trawler eff the Scottish coast. The crew of the Modesta declared that a German submarine appeared for a moment off the steamer's bow while the Kuglish sailors were beiug taken aboard. The Modesta's crew saw noth ing of the catastrophe. T'nev cruised in the neighborhood for an hour, but saxv no more survivors. NO ACTION B\ I . IS. SENATE ON SEARCH OF STEAMER METAPAN Washington, D. C., Oct. 19. Official protest on the stoppage and search of the American steamer Metapan by the French cruiser Conde, which xvas made the subject of criticism by Senators Thomas and Stone in the Senate, iias not been reported to the State Depart ment. In the absence of protest the department will not pass upon the rights of such searching. Unofficially i* is stated in the department that Dutch and Swedish vessels have been boarded by British warships and Ger man subjects taken off and impris oned, and thus far no successful .pro tests against such actions have been reported. Protest, if tiled, officials de clare, should come from the owners of the seized ships, in this case the United Pruit Company. The fact that no piotest has been made is taken by olhcials to indicate ; that tho company whep it recently I laced its Heet of ships under American i registry expected some annoyance, and is not disposed to raise an international issue over the searching of the Meta I. pan. Authors to Ean Germans Paris, Oct. 19 —The executive com mittee of the French Society of Authors aud Dramatists has decided to recom mend to the general meeting the expul sion of the German members, Uum;>e*r -1 dinck, Haaptmann, Sudermann, Sieg fred and \\ agner. Wagons foi Warriors Lancaster, Pa., Oct. 19.—Firms in this county have received two orders from the t'rench, English and Russian governments, which will keep large torces of men busy for a long time. The English and trench have ordered 3,000 wagons from the Columbia Wag on Company, and the Lebzelter Com pany has received from the Russians an order for |VS,UO(i worth of wooden ma terial for use in wagons and automo biles. Wolves Pursue Soldiers Odessa, Oct. 19.—The batt.es in Ga licia have brought out all the beasts and birds of the Polish forests in wild alaim. Scenting the lakes of blood that cover the battlefields, the wolves are out in g eat packs, and even pursue the victors, whose boots and clothes are crusted with biood after the fights, to their camps. Often at night a volley has to be fired into the pack to disperse the intruders. Dresses for War Orphans MiMville, X. <l., Oct. 19. —One thou sand warm flannel dresses, for children I year old and younger, will be tne I contribution of women here to the "Christmas ship, - ' which will sail for , Kurope on November 3. A women's mass meeting will "be held this week and a committee ig already at work. A wrapper company here has volunteered I to do the cutting if the women will sew the dresses. Escaped Bomb in Paris Washington. Oct. 19.—A bomb from a German airship struck a Paris shop just as Mr. anil Mrs. Thomas M. ( ha tard, of Washington, who returned home Saturday, were entering its doors. It did not' exipiode. Mr. Chatard says he believes the European war struggle ; wil! go on as long as there is a soldier [ left on either side to bear arms. 71 DAT OF VU; ALLIES HOPEFUL The Situation in West Flanders and at Lille Appears More Favor able to Them GERMANS SAID TO BE IN PERIL ! " * Kaiser's Troops Operating Along the Coast of Flanders in Danger of Be ing Cut Off From the Main Body of the Army London, Oct. 19, 10.30 A. M.—Prom I'he fcin't of view of the allied armies, so far as could be learned from dis patches reaching'ljondon to-day, the sit uation in West 'Flanders and in Prapee as far south as Lille, seemed on tihis, the seventy-seventh day of the war, perhaps more Ihopeful than at- any time since the German advance on Paris was checked. Though the news reaching England is meager and to an extent delayed as always, all tidings seem to indicate that Uhe German advance from Ostonil on the French coast towns has 'been blocked temporarily at. least, xvhile further south in a region that was a week ago the extreme German right, the invaders 'have been again compelled to give •ground >before the allies' wedge force which has been concentrating on Lille. Beports Not Confirmed Several reports contend that the Ger mans .have withdrawn from this towu, •but this is not confirmed, nor is the re fort t'hat thev evacuated C-ourtrai, near : ly thirty iniles northxveat. It seems i plain, however, that the menace here grew marked and that the German army operating along the coast of Flanders found itself in peril of being ■cut off from the main body. What opposition they met aloug the sea is only guesswork, for it has never been disclosed in Great Britain what forces the allies have or at v/hat point they touch the coast. All reports seem to agree that the city of Ostend is practically clear of 'Germans xvlio apparently are reforming to 'the south with reinforcements and tiie siege gnns used to batter the Bel gian forts and that they now promise to hammer on toward Dunkirk and Calais. One report says that they are beyond Kurnes, less-than ton miles from Dunkirk. Garmans Bombardiug Lille In Prance reinforcements from Brus sels are said to have been brought up before Lille which the Germans are re ported as bombarding in a desperate at tempt to retake the place. The Belgiaus themselves have been , utting in some hard knacks. According to last night's Paris official communica tion they have held the Germans in an attempt to cross the river Vser. south west of Dixmuile, Belgium. This was the first heard of the R«igian fdi'ces since the evacuation of Antwerp and noxv they are found appropriately and picturesquely defending that little splotch of their own country that the invaders have not taken. King Albert, unheard of for some time, is said to have cheered t'ae men in the fieid. Some of tiie London papers describe the German evacuation of Ostend as a retirement to the east on the theory that the allies' progress to the south threatened to isolate the Ostend garri sou, making a retreat imperative. The dispatches are far from unanimous on the direction of the retirement 'however, most of them describing as a passage to t'he west and any attempt'therefore to analyze it is 'but conjectural. Heavy Firing at Dunkirk From various sources come reports, none of which were confirmed, that some sort of naval craft are being -pressed into use by the- allies in the canals of Flanders and perhaps from the sea. Sunday a dispatch direct from Dunkirk said til at heavy firing could be 'heard there and it was believe I that gjn •boats were being used in the canals, ft was added that heavy 'fighting was pro gressing south of (Istend, whk-lh, if true, meant the presence of allied forces at a point further north than hereto fore suspected. This is contradicted by the rnorr that uie Germans are west of Fumes. There was sporadic recurrences of the anti-German rioting in parts of 'Vondon early this morning. Police pro tection in such places has been increased and no serious outbreaks during the forenoon in the city 'but at Saffron- Wialdon. in Kssex, an English lawyer's Ihouse was attacked and the windows smashed because it was said he had been harboring two Germans. In the vontinuation of the rioting at Depford last nig'ht' a German grain dealer's house and store were wrecked and then fired. The Great Battle of Poland In the eastren war area the great bat tle of Poland appears to be progress ing in favor of the Russians who claim to have checked decisively the German farces in their attempt to cross the Vis tula. "Phe Russians in and around War saw are being temporarily protected from fresh German artillery aggression •by reason of the impassable condition of the country through recent rains and owing to the destruction of the only railroad from lyjwicr. to Warsaw. Around Przemysl ti'ne Austrian* claim to have killed and wounded 40.000 Rus sians and aiso to have crossed the Car pathians. but on tine other hand the Russians re'uised an Austrian attempt to cross the riveT San. That the Aus trians are meeting witlh. vigorous oppo sition is adm it-ted in the la t eat Vienna dispatch which says that, "rtur troops are advancing as a fortress." WHAT CATARRH IS It has been said that every third person ' is troubled with catarrh in some form. Science h&s shown that nasal catarrh indicates a weakened condition of the body; that the secretion of the mucous membranes are quickly affected, and local treatments in the form of snuffs and vapors do little, if any good. To correct catarrh you should treat its cause by enriching your blood with the oil-food in Scott's Emulsion which is a medicinal food and a building-tonic, free from alcohol or any harinfuldrugs. Try it. M-7J Scott & Bonne, Bloomfield, N. J, CERIHAN SHOPS BURNED IN FIERCE LONDON WAR RIOTS tiondon, Oct. 19.—Serious anti-Ger man rioting occurred yesterday in ' High street, Deptford borough of Lon don. Shops conducted by Germans were wrecked by crowds and one shop ' was set afire. The police were called out to restore order. | Twenty shops were wrecked. Dam- ' ;\ge was also done in the Old Kent. 1 load, where meat markets were smashed j < late Saturday night and a confectionery ' store wrecked early yesterday morning. 1 Some of the shops wore pillaged. Po- \ lice were called out and 20 arrests wpre made. Precautions have been ta- j ken to further rioting. Great excitement prevailed through- j out Sunday in Deptford and neighbor- I ing borough. Crowds thronged the j streets and refused to move at the or-1 ilers of policemen and soldiers. It was j found yesterday that twenty bakeries, | butcher shops and saloons were com- j pletely wrecked. The rioters threatened j to attack German places in Bromley and other boroughs if the authorities; permitted them to open. The rioting was led by 100 dock la borers, who had been turned out of a lodging house to make room for Bel gian refugees. The men gathered in a German saloon .and smashed the win- j dows and the bar. The dockers! charged the owner of the saloon with having started a report that two Brit | ish battleships had been destroyed. i The shop of a German butcher, in the ! window of which a picture of Emperor : William was displayed, was wrecked. The rioting proceeded for a distance of a mile before it whs stopped by a!' detachment of soldiers. The shopkeep- ! ers all lived above their places of | business, and their apartments were 1 sacked. Twenty m?n were captured in one house. They had* thrown a piano down the stairway, and the instrument: became jammed and held them prison ers. VOH TIRPITZ. THE KAISER'S NAVAL MINISTER, AT ANTWERP I<ondon, Oct. 19. —The Amsterdam | correspondent of Router's Telegram j •Company says that it is reported from ; Sluis that Admiral von Tirpitz, German Minister of the Navy, is at Antwerp,' where, it is assumed, he arrived soon i i after the fall of the fortress. A dispatch from Rome on October 9 i said that, according to German news- I papers received at the Italian capital, | the war against Great Britain would j begin late in October, after the fall of , Ant werp, when Belgium would become I the base of operations against England. Ruined Poincare's Home Paris, Oct. 19. —The Mayor of Sant | pigny-gur-Meuse, states that German | shells completely destroyed President! Poincare's country house there, ruin ; ing all the paintings and statuary. Sev j eral shells went through the roof, the fire being -remarkably accurate. The j barracks, the town hall and a church, all nearby, were untouched. French Capture Holland Ship Paris. Oct. 19.—The French torpedo' boat destroyer Oassabianca has cap tured the Holland freighter Kouingeu j j Emma, bound from Batavia, Dutch ! Hast Indies, with a cargo for Ham ! burg. The Koningen Kmma was tiiksn ; off Marseilles and conducted into that! | port. This information is contained in j a dispatch from the Marseilles corre-1 | sppndent of the Exchange Telegraph j j Company. British Buy Pottstown Shirts i Pottstown, Pa., Oct. 19.—An order I | for 50,000 dozen shirts has been given i by the English government to S. Liebo- 1 | vitz & Sons, who operate a large fae- ; | torv here. The order must be com- { j pleted within a specified time. CZAR'S ARMIES HOLD LINES tenclyca ▼ jjL x»Lukov \ , a-«SfaMtt. 1 S\ », (sJc «^\"4^^*)iv> * ~Tj ■ . \b latz a .. U ,A BstQpnie^^ f > B. MiQchowS©. * ••: #j *« S [/ S % A&J J ESS GERMANS Mi RUSSIANS • ••AUSTRfANS Si^>^^3 Tbe campaign In Poland and Galicia Is developing into an extended battle on the Vistula and the San, where tht Russians are strongly placed, supported by the fortifications of Warsaw, Praga. Novo Georgleres and Segrlche. G<»r mans are approaching th# Vistula, while the Austrian® are attacking the Russians along the San, from Stry to Sa* 1 dotnlr. Petrograd reports n demonstration by a German detachment near Mlawa. BRITISH LOSS 14.000 IN 2 OFFICIAL CASUALTY LISTS 'London, Oct. 19.—An official report by General French, commanding the! British expeditionary force, gives the j total of British killed, wounded and I missing from September 1 2 to October 8 ns 561 officers anil 12,980 men. The War Office issued last night an other casualty list received from head quarters, under date of September 16.; giving 51 non-commissioned officers, and men as having been killed, 149 1 men wounded and 565 men missing. Those of the killed belonged entirely to the Royal Scots, the Royal Irish and the East. Surrey regiments. The East, Surreys, the King's Own Scottish Bor derers and the Somerset light infantry figure largely in the missing list. Of command oflfcers the list gives four killed and five wounded. One of the most pathetic incidents of Saturday was the arrival at Folke- i stone of the body of Major General IHII j bert I. W. Hamilton. Two hundred i recruits of Kitchener's army met the | body outside the harbor station and j stood at attention while the hearse passed. The refugees uncovered their j heads and the emotional Belgian sol- I diers wept. The casualty list which | includes General Hamilton's name makes no mention of where or how lie i was killed. ** I WOUNDED FRENCH OFFICERS PREFER DEATH TO CAPTURE Paris, Oct. 19.—That. woumlsd French officers prefer shooting them selves on the battlefield rather than \ risk being picked up by the Germans! ! anil held prisoners, is'found in a report j i published in the "Temps" yesterday.! I This was revealed in a letter from a | Freneh officer, which says: "1 was shot in the breast while lead-! i ing a charge and the fear seized me that, j i 1 might fall into German hands. There-1 | fore, I held a revolver at mv head , ready to pull the trigger when my own , men dragged me to the rear under a hail of lead. "That evening a sergeant visited the i ambulance with an address dratted by i j the regiment expressing a wish for my I ; speedy recovery. But when .he saw how 1 ! pale I was, concluded that I was dying, land, leaning over the bed, he kissel me while tears streamed down his cheeks." $1,000,000 FINE REPORTED I LEVIED ON CITY OF OSTEND | London, Oct. 19.—The Flushing, j Holland, correspondent of the " Weekly Dispatch,'' in a message dated Satur j day, snvs: "The Germans have levied a fine on Ostend of 200,000 pounds (SI,OOO, I 000). At an early hour yesterday j great forces began to pass through', j The artillery, in close formation, con sisted of a : bout 400 guns, and there [ were 400,000 infantry and fewer cav j airy. More guns arrived at noon. "There are indications of a big l movement against Dunkirk (the French ! seaport) ou the allies' left. German sailors arrived at Blankenberghe, a Belgian port on the Knglish channel, nine miles northwest of Bruges, yester ; day.'' French Champion Killed T'aris, Oct. 19.—The war has been ! hard nil French sport; a number of ath j letes have given their lives. The latest j name added to the list of victims is j that of Eugene Kstrade, champion | swimmer of France, who was killed in | the battle at Liege. German Flier Falls to Death Amsterdam, Oct. 19. —During a I eross-countrv flight from Doeberitz, IFri | day, a German military biplane when near Rathenow, Brandenburg, Prussia, [suddenly fell to earth, killing the pilot and severely injuring a passenger. AISHE BATTLE HOT DEBIT ill Col onel Rous set Re fuses to Concur in Statement That Al lies Scored Victory A RENEWAL IN ANOTHER FIELD The Paris Military Expert Says thb Now Battle, That of Flanders, Is Clearly Offensive on the Side of the Allies Pads, Oct. 19, 6.45 A. M.—An un interrupted offensive movement by the allies at certain points in northern France was predicted here to-day as the j battle was resumed. The retaking of Armentiers, on the river Lys on the Belgian frontier, and the occupation . ten miles west of Lille of the right line 1 leading towards Douax via Givanchv i and Fromelles was considered as con stituting an excellent advance guard t position *bv reason of its numerous j places of support. This, with the prog gress in several other sections, notably I Arras, gave the allies hope of'contin ' uance of their advance. Expert Reviews Situation j Lieutenant t'olonel Housset, in re- I viewing the situation, refused to enn | cur in the statement made that the hut tie of the Aisne has hoen definitely won i by the allies. i "One never knows what will hap 'pen, - ' he said. "and. while the enemy ; will not take the return route, a revival i of its activity can be produced in an other vicinity, especially if the Ger mans see that their maneuver in the north is endangered. But it is certain that upon the horizontal line, going from the Oise to the Mouse, the allies have nothing to fear, as every effort of the Germans from this side would cer tainly be stopped. New Battle of Flanders "As to the new battle, that of Flan ders, it is clearly offensive on the sidn of the allies. The circumstance which : in some quarters it is said may develop j of more favora'ble for attack than de j Tense it is undulating land widely j spaced, where troops can easily defile for aggressive movements." The Socialists of France have de j dared as inopportune and premature | the suggestions made that their coin i rades in the United States hold an in i teruational Socialist peace congress. The public was greatly pleased that j Sunday passed without a visit, from Ger man aeroplanes and to-day it had much praise for the activity and vigilance of the aviation guard. Kaiser's Son Is Promoted Berlin (Via London), Oct. 19. j Prince Joachim, the youngest son of i the Kaiser, has been promoted to be a ! captain and liaß been assigned to staff ! duty with the Eleventh German army ! corps. German Aviator Dies in Fall London, Oct. 19.—A Reuter dispatch from Amsterdam says that in the course j of a cross-country flight from Doeberitz, ] October 16. a German military biplane, i when near Rathenow. Prussia, suddenly ! fell to earth, killing the pilot and se verelv injuring a passenger.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers