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‘Despite Stormy Weather and
#‘Muddy Terrain, French Press,
on Farther Toward Encircling
S |
of the Bapaume Position,
g |
Continued From Page 1.
official report of the British War Ot-i
fice today. ‘
A division of the new British army |
took part In this latest burst of fight- }
Ing and behaved with great gallantry. |
Despite heavy artillery fire by I.hel
Germans, the British have consoli-!
dated their new positions north of the
Albert-Bapaume highway,
The text of the official report fol
lows:
“During the night the enemy shelled |
heavily our front south of the Ancre.l
‘We have consolidated the ground woni
yesterday at Destremont farm, south- |
west of Lesars, and improved our po- I
sition in the Thiepval arca. Germaa |
counter attacks were beaten off in the'l
neighborhood of Stuff redoubt and
Hesslan trench. Friday's fighting Ini
this section was very severe, A divi-|
slon of the new army engaged in |t
and showed great endurance and res- I
elulczp A successful raid was car- |
ried out by London territorials south!
of Neuville-St. Vaast. Enemy |
trenches were entered and prisoners
taken.” I
French Gain Ground |
. . I‘ x:
. Fighting in Storm
. By SYDNEY B. CAVE, ;
Staff Correspondent of International
News Service. |
LONDON, Bept. 30.—The hard!
fighting which developed on the
Somme front last Monday continues
with good results for the Allles, rle-}
#pite stormy weather., In the opera- |
tions against Bapaume the P‘rr-nch‘
bave gained new ground near Com
bles,
Powerful counter attacks were
Jaunched by the Germans northeast
of Thiepval, but they were repulsed.
A division of the new British army-—
20,000 men--distinguished Itself In
this fighting.
The severity of the fighting In
France is attested by casualty lists
published here today. In September
the British losses on all fronts were
5,489 officers and 114,110 men. The
«bulk of these were on the Somme.
After long-sustained and bloody
fighting, the Bul /rians have obtained
an advantage In western Greek Mace
donia In the sector of Kalamakcalan
Helghts. Allied warships are co-op- |
erating with the land forces in Mace
donia. A French aviator has bom
barded Sofla, capital of Bulgaria, and
British airmen have shelled the An
gista raliway station,
The entire flying corps of the Greek |
army has deserted to the revolution
ists, but up to this afternoon no Fo~l
litical developments of decisive im
portance has been received from Ath- |
ens. ‘
German submarines continue fairly
active, and the destruction of a num
ber of merchant ships, some of them
:;:utrd., was reported during the
Y. |
v .
Girls Hike 500 Miles
.
To Regain Health
DENVER, Bept. 30.—-Wh h
in Wichita, Kan., told m--’"v&s:?'g:fi?
ney and Miss Florence Beler, telephone
operators, the{ must give up Indoor
work for a while and get out in the open
air to preserve their health, the youn
Zmen Jaf thetr positions. pirchased
,\ overland to Denver. They stopped a
; m_'gs Colorado Springs on the way.
: ike" of more than 500 miles to
fi:& was made In three weeks' walk
~ h youn‘, women are now radiant
examples of health--strong, alert, sun
burned. But they mean to take no
chances yet on going homa to !ndoor
work mrn. g’ho{ wlfi stay In Denver
& while, living out of doors as much as
possible.
! .
Allies on the Somme
i
Fire 12,000,000 Shells
xs%lommflflul News Service.)
geempenicat wit Ethe New “Reclord
foroms on the Somme, states that the
Allles fired 12,000,000 shelis In a prelim
%thrdmaq} on that front.
S eueed By b ‘Snbke” P Culs
| : ha"““ y m .
10,000,000 Eggs Sold
.
At Half Price by Italy
BW‘ Bept. 30.—Ten milllon eggs,
stored J speculators and seized In
{?Nnn ties by the government, are
ing resold publicly at 2 cents each,
Inéf the market price.
he purpose of the sale at this fg.
ure is to ald in reducing the cost of
Hiving, which has increased 25 per cer .
in the last s'x months.
GermanStampTax on
.
Belgian Bank Notes
AMSTERDAM, Sept. 30.—According
mtier correspondents, all Belgian
R B
L-.k N”‘zunmuuru. .
bearing ‘:"u
. ®
Destinn Is War Prisoner
e @l oo el ol o
®
Love for Fiance Is Cause
o ot PO o S @ e
U. S. Seeks to Free Her
Emmy Destinn, grand opera star, who is held prisoner by
Austrian Government because she tried to gain freedom of her
fiance, Dinh Gilly, the baritone (below), interned as French ser
geant.
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Prima Donna Detained by Austria;
i .
I Vainly Seeks Passports to
1 the United States.
‘
__SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 30.~Emmy
Destinn, grana opera siar, is held a
prisoner by the Austrian uovernment'
in her castle near Prague, Bohemia,
because of her love for Dinh Gilly,
‘baritone of the Metropolitan Opera
Company and Interned sergeant of
the Fourth Zouave Freneh Regiment. ;
International complications devel
oped as a result of this romance. The
prima donna's efforts to free her
lover, resulting in her being hewd cap- |
‘tive by Invisible chains, now forms
& matter of interest to the State De
partment at Washington,
~ This situation became known when, |
on the arrival of the Oscar II in New
York, Destinn was not on board., She
was scheduled to appear in San Fran- |
clsco this evening to sing in the great
Oopen-air production of the opera
“Alda” on Ewing Field. .
| Aprul to Manager,
~ Instead of the singer came an ap
peal to her manager, Charles L. Wag-
Lner, In New York, asking him to help
force the Austrian Government to
grant her passports, |
Gilly has been held a prisoner since
1914. Destinn, who had unnouncod‘
her engagement to her “Arabian,” as |
she called him, has been seeking Lis
release for a year. What methods she
took against the Austrian Govern
ment, which she, as a Bohemian,
hates, may be made the subject of in
quiry,
Senator James D. Phelan asked the
State Department to mak represen
tations to the Austrian Government
toward granting passports to Delunn.l
Destinn took out her first papers as
an American citizen in New York.l
where she owns a home, February 3, |
1915. This claim will be presented to
the Austrian Government through the|
State Department.
The prima donna has been active in
Bohemian antagonism toward the
:umilu‘m. ‘Th:- 'r:u:u the situation
'.91 o dea t
o~ *" & pative of Pn -An
n R+ i L
A, 5 e
. . {
1
University Women |
COLUMBUS, OHIO. #ept. 30.—Accord.
Ing to a report made by Miss Caroline
Brevfogle dean of women at Ohio State
University, of the 1,100 or more women
altend'ng the university last year, sev
enty-six were self-supporting, 118 par
tially so, making a total of 194, or 17.5
per cent of the women students who
are making their way In whole or in
part. The girls work as stenographers
tutors, governesses for children, and
even raise chickens.
In a report showing what girl grad
uates do after leaving the university,
Miss Hrvloql» discovered that in the pe
riod from 1879 to 1915 of the 424 with
whom she was dble to get in touch, 253
were teaching, 111 were never in remun
erative work and 34 were engaged in
Other lines of work. !
e ittt e et . i
. !
Pair on Honeymoon |
At 50 Miles an Hour
I BUFFALO, Sept. 30.—Y.eroy G. Mil
ler, of l-‘runklln. known on Broadway for
his pink whiskers, slipped out of Buffalo
in & high-powered racing car with his
bride or a 4 few hours.
| Mr. Miller cons ssed being the son of
General Charles Miller, of Franklin, mul
timillionaire 01l man. He is 38 vears
Old and boasts.of 340000000 himself.
His bridé was Miss Viola Blair the _Fret
'ty 18-year-old daughter of Mrs. T. L.
Hiair, who has a rooming house |ln
| Franklin.
| Mr. Miller came to Buffalo at 50 miles
&n hour. An hour behind was a motor
car connlmnf Mrs. Blair, who had ob
| Jections to the match. She was per«
Suaded not to spoll the match. !
Kills Self Trying to |
llls Self Trying to |
Drug Neighbor's Cat
LONG BEACH, CAL., Sept. 30.—While
trying to chloroform a neighbor's cat,
Louls Jennincs, an electrical enilnnr.
|WS overcome hx‘ the fumes and was
found dead two hours later. Jennings
Igul the cat Into a large can, over which
he placed a ?unt soaked with chloro
form. When found his face was buried
in the drug-soaked cloth. The cat was
dead Inside the can.
o oo
I. . .
Zeppelin Mail Line |
.
From Berlin to U, §.
| CHICAGO, Sept. 30.—Twe *double”
Zeppaline, unarmed ard each with a
earrying carnc.u' of sixty tons, have
‘been built in Germany to carry mall
between Berlin and the United States, -
secord'ng to statements here by Morris
Epsteln agent of the German-Ameri
can Alliance, who has just returned
from Europe. i
.
F't, Worth Man Killed
.
_ln the Sofume Drive
e “N e ; i T I
MeU e G <
v }‘& 4, H g‘. -~ s
B wle Brian N R b
4 M Isident &
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1916.
|
i I
Civilians Will Participate in Na-i
1
tional Event for First Time at
Jacksonville,
{ ; e
The personnel of the Georgla Civil
ian Rifle Team, which will r(:prost\flt{
the State at the National Rifle Mateh
in Jacksonville in October, was an
nounced yesterday, and shows At-!
lanta larg:ly represented on the team.
The Morrow Rifle Club, of Atlanta,
will be represented by W. J. Nolan, J.
W. Hudson, E. T. George, J. M. De-
Floer, Jr., Leonard Adamason, E. L.
Murphy, J. B. DeFoor, T. A. Nolan,
Jr.,, R. D. Hill and B. M. Gilbert. From
the Atlanta Rifle Club will go E. H.
Elrod, F. L. Bmith, L. O. Grice, J, E.
Oxford, . Wright, W. E Markel, W. J.
Stoddard, W, D. Hoffman, W. J.
Timms and 'W. C. Slocum. 1
Nolan, Hudson, Murphy, Elrod, Ox
ford, Wright and Markel have attend
ed nationzl matches as members of
the Georgia National Guard team.
J. W. Hudson and E. H. Elrod have
both at times been rifle champion of
Georgia, L. O. Grice is holder of a
pistol cxpert medal. A. Wright has
represented Georgia at national rifle
i matches for fifteen years,
i This will be the first time civilians
i have been eligible to participate in
i United States Army matches.
Gerard Again Scored
| BERLIN, Sept. 30.—The American
| Ambasasdor, James W. Gerard, again is
;under fire“in a gection of the German
| press. this time for a remark attributed
! to him regarding a speech made recently
by Dr. Gustav Stresemann, National
Liberal member of the Relchstag, ad
;'nculng resumption of submarine war
are,
| Gerard is quoted as saying that he did
not understand how representatives of
districts for which export to America
was a vital question could advocate
ruthless submarine warfare. The Na
tional Libera press agency takes the
ambassador to task for ‘“‘unwarranted
is‘ut«rvention In a purely German ques
tion.”
| The Ambaseador, in reply, says he
| never heard of Dr. Stresemann’s speech.
Movies Teach French
~ Boy to Steal Coin
’ (a{ Intornatlo;\fl News Service,)
| PARIS, Sept. 30.—~A boy of 16, em
ployed as a postoffice clerk, was ac
auitted of the charge of stealing money
from letters to soldlers. His counsel
pleaded the crime was a result of the
yYouth attending the movies and that
the films were demoralizing the young
| people of the Prenem generation, many
| trying to emulate ‘‘favorite” bandits.
Tas\gTH the “LIVE A LITTLE
a%\ % LONGER” idea in view, the Camp
?JL 2 Grocery Company is waiting ye
people of Buckhead and surround
ing country to inspect its
New Sanitary
Branch Store
replete with all that's
Good to Eat
with this common sense rule of serving only
the best, cleanest, freshest in all lines, goods
that help to make us
Healthy and Wise
Highest Staple and Fancy Groceries and
Western Meats, and Mr. H. A. Bishop, Presi
dent and Manager of the Camp Grocery Com.-
pany at 345 Peachtree street, who already lLas
a host of good friends and customers, is Presi
dent and Manager of this new branch of the
old reliable Camp firm, already well known
for honest, straight dealings with their custom
ers, high standard of quality and prompt de
livery.
Ladies, we invite you, we appreciate your
trade, and we have gone IMIOY' @ than
half way to meet you.
Yours to command,
CAMP GROCERY (0.
345 Peachtree. Phones:
Buckhead. Ivy 562, 4661 ..
1,600 Youngsters to
.
Need Homes at Fair
Members of the Boys’ Corn Clubs
and Girls’ Canning Clubs To Be
Entertained Here. ‘
Homes are wanted in Atlanta for
1,000 boys and 50 oOgirls for two days
—OQOctober 18 and 19—during the
Southeastern Fair, during the contests
of the Boys’' Corn Clubs and Girls
Canning Clubs. Atlantans have en
tertained these boys and girls pre
viously, and a request is being made
for the homes to again be opened to
them.
Requests for accommodations are
being made by Victor H. Kriegshaber,
president of the Chamber of Com
merce, and Ivan E. Allen, president
of the Fair Association.
The exnibits of the boys and girls
will be at the fair. The visitors will
be cnaperoned by the superintend
ents of the clubs while in the city.
California Has 1,50
alifornia Has 1,
High School Ca¢fts
SACRAMENTO, CAL., Sept s
There are now enough hiih schy ca
dets In California to make a mall
army, according to Major J. P Wvan,
Instructor of high school cadets [l The
cadets total about 1,500 in 31 comfnies
Three new companies have been olgan
ized this year,
The first regiment of Californla4hl§h
school cadets will be organized thigfall,
It will be composed of twelve compdnies
from the bay section, Including Ean
Francisco, Oakland, Alameda and Sau
salito. ‘
.
Glee Club Forming
.
For Fair Concert
Vocalists at Cox College are being
sought for a Glee Club being organ
ized by Madame Mildred Langworthy,
head of the voice department, assist
ed by Misses Emory and Katherine
Todhunter
The club has accepted an Invitation
to give a concert at the Southeastern
Fair and at the annual meeting of
the lady principals of Georgia col
leges.
Atlanta to Observe
‘Apple Day,’ Oct. 17
‘ ppie Day,” Oct.
} Atlanta will joln other cities this
vear in the celebration of National
Apple Day—October 17. The move
‘ment was started here through T. L.
Haskell, secretary-treasurer of the
Fidelity Fruit and Produce Company,
and an effort will be made to have
apples displayed and advertised in
levery conceivable way.
.
$2,500 Cotton Gin
.
Fire at Chester, S.C.
l CHESTER. 8. C., Sept. 30.—A fire
of unknown origin destroyed McAlley
IBmthpra’ cotton gin near Chester
today. The loss was $5,000, and in
surance $2.500.
v
Order of 15,000,000 Pairs Causes
Dearth of Leather for the
1 {7 - »
Home Trade.
LONDON, Sept. 30.—A recent co
lossal order, now in course of fulfill
ment, of 15,000,000 pairs of boots for
the Russian army, has caused quite
an upheaval in the boot and shoe
tradg here, and is raising the price of
boots to a quite phenomenal figure.
Added to this an army order re
cently issued has commandeered for
Government purposes all the thicker
types of sole leather, leaving an in
finitestimal margin for civilian wear.
A number of prominent wholesale
merchants and others in the trade told
The American the story of some of
their grievances. They complain first
and foremost of the action of the Gov
ernment in calling up skilled labor for
military service at such a time as
this, when “next to munitions and
food an adequate supply of boots is
one of the most important factors in
winning the war.”
Another big factor, who handles
the product of a considerable number
of tanneries, has a word to say about
the American intrusion into the mar
ket. “The effect of tne order,’ he ob
served, “will be that we will have to
buy quantities of leather from Amer
ica for our own civilian work, and in
that case leather is bound to g 0 up
very mueh in price.
“The face is that the Americans are
trying to get a footing, and some
firms here have already large con
tracts with manufacturers in the
States, but I think they will suffer in
the long run, because the Americans
know that they ecan practically send
anything just now and customers will
eventually come back to those of us
who supply reliable English footgear.”
Flier's Wooden Leg
PARIS, Set. 30.—Flight Lieutenant de
Rochefort, who brought down his sixth
German machine the other day, is miss
ing. Flight Adjutant Tarascon, men
tioned as having brought down his fifth
machine, has one leg. The other was
amputated as a result of an aeroplane
accident prior to the war. Adjutant
Tarascon's wooden leg was smashed by
a shell splinter during one of his latest
daring flights.
L [ire Troubl d
you were to pay SIO.OO for tire service ypu
would resent the overcharge. ?
Yet that is exactly what you pay when 4011 :
buy a purposely high-listed tire in order to get
the ““free”” service that goes with it. I
If you will buy a dependable tire in the.
first place, you can cut off at one stroke the
necessity for constant tire service and the exc pe
sive charge you pay for the tire. " l N
v
You need have no hesitancy in accepting t
Goodyear Tire as the one tire that will end yo
* road troubles.
This is the very reason 35 per cent of all new
cars manufactured this year were equipped by
their makers with Goodyear Tires. i
You are safe in accepting this overwhelmingg’ /
verdict in favor of Cords~os wwhon oo
lakes of
in any
2 StOCk.
?aliona
éervicaa CO
gl“. .
ir Co.
set
ine Co.
‘eet
i‘.’ \ :
: Ca \
oot s
Petrograd Grows
v
40 Per Cent Bigger
Hundreds of Thousands of Fugitive
Poles Flock to Russian
Capital.
STOCKHOLM, Sept. 30.—A Swed
ish engineer who has just returned
from Russia glves an interesting de
scription of war conditions in Petro
grad. He says:
“The population of the Russian
capital has increased nearly 40 per
cent since July, 1915. This Is partly
due to the arrival of hundreds of
thousands of fugitives from Poland,
the Baltic provinces and Volhynia,
partly to the erection of numerous
new factories and the enlargement of
old ones. The industrial establish
ments in Petrograd and the sur
rounding towns now employ 600,000
men and women. Many of the work
ers have been brought from the in
terior of the empire.
“Within a radius of 30 miles of Pet
rograd every existing factory pro
duces war material and nothing else.
The Russlan industries, after some
deiay, have been as completely mob
ilized for the war as those of Ger
many. Under the direction of Rus
slan, English and French experts the
factoriss turn out enormous quanti
‘ies of shells of all sizes and car
tridges for machine guns and rifles.
The Putiloff works now make nearly
28 many big guns as the world fa
mous Krupp works In Essen, and it is
asserted that more machine guns are
finished every week in Russia than in
Germany.”
iR s s
Danish Island Bill
Ready in Bix Weeks
COPENHAGEN, Sept. 30.—The parlia
mentary committee’'s report on the Gov
ernment’s bi'l for the sale of the Dan
ish West Indies to the United States
will be finished in six weeks.
The Left party, in a majority in the
Landsthing, will insist the report, to
gether with the sale treaty, shall be
‘ubmitted to the Rigsdag, and that aft
erward a plebiscrite, together with gen.
eral elections, shall take place in Den
mark, ard a pleblscite be held in the
Danish Weat Indies.
The Radicals and Socia'ists say they
will adopt the Government's bill’ with
out change.
's Son Sh
Broker's Son Shot
By Chauffeur’s Boy
NEW YORK, Sept. 30.—Albert Stern,
14, was accldently shot and seriously
wounded with a small caliber rifile by
his father's chauffeur's son. The ac
cldent occurred at the Stern summer
home, Beeechwood, Irvington-on-Hud
son. Albert Stern, Sr., Ils a New York
broker and one of the board of govern
nors of Mount Sinal Hospital.
The wounded child was taken to the
hospital at Dobbs Ferry. Surgeons were
called from New York. Drs. Leo Be
and Robert Dennison removed the bullg
from the boy's abdomen. He will re
cover.
nd
N
A
Inventor Barlow Declares Saffisd
Propelling Torpedo Most De- ¢
structive Weapon Known, o
e
NEW YORK, Sept. 30.—F. B, i;
low, of the Frankford Arsenal, a#
Philadelphia, stated that tests of ‘his
aerial bomb torpedo at Hempstead
Plains Aviation Field, L. L, hay¥é
proved the weapon more destructis
than any extant. He declares it p
be very effective In aerial warfare;
The bomb, according to Barlow,a#
be sent from an aeroplane in any®
rection, as it flies with its opte
peller. It can be explodg¥ny time
while in filght. I' iy teet long
and five in diamel, 4 1 made of i
aluminum. The h' yriosive coms
tained will kill a “at 100 yards"
distance. The b 011,15, contains
deadly gases, and Y o released ]
from the airship by ¢ trigger.
The tests were by members &
of the First Aerial §; 'New York
National Guard, sta} /j .t Hemp- 8
stead, and, held at jght of 7,000 &8
feet, were successf ccording to % %
the inventor. The nts of the &
shell are secret, but explosive is =
designated as “T. N. ' gpith a prin- &
cipal ingredient of ni{ yeerine, =
Mr. Barlow has wi { for two ]
years on the bomb an conduct
ed experiments in M *lt is un- &
derstood War Depart tests will
be made shortly.
Civic Rights}(y
ghusylven
For Valor {Front
)
PARIS, Sept. 30.—F:d K
French soldielr)'s who ‘,fi',’f}f {t?g
war. been convicted £y .
that involved the loss
have been rehabilitated
on account of some si action
front. A law passed ARPril 4, 19157
vides that the criminal [ecords of e
soldler cited in the ordefls of the 4
IIM army may be canciled on app
on.
Among nine soldiers fßehabilitated i
cently, two had died o the battle
and thelr records clearegll on the appl
cation of a-father and idow. 5
Ad ItlE $25; Chil.
c drenY, sls. Cincine
=" nati §Cremation €
office 30 \Viggins Bik., |Cincinaati, O,
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3c All Sizes Kodak \Prints, 3.
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