CAP! MAY COUWTY fang. EKA HLK OITT. H. i.
Page Thret
ME WITH
■ENZOLLEIS
tan's Answer Hems Uncondlliontl Surrender.
LET UP
THE WAR
ca Will Conti*>«»• To SoM »C Mon To Franco Eacli Month, And No Effort Fo Will •* J
uhlnjrtoB. U- C—Pwaifloot Wll bos Coil) and nnoll) rejected the overturei of the German ChanHr bar announced to Gennanr , the worid that no peace can br vitb tb* HotaenxoHern restice. that not even a truce In the flchtwill b* i onaMered a* lone aa the d forceo of Germany eominu* iliesal and inhaman practice* they rtfll peralat ln-^ - lierlaioif vaa reached by the :d> r.: within a few hour* from the tbi offleial text of the accocd an note waa laid before him. a * hlch. on ita face, accepted every bd which the Prealdent had : hot which In reality waa a al hoax convolved in the dr*- ■ hope of aavtnc to the German ror hi* throne MAN NATION MUST FIRST RID SELF OF AUTOCRATIC RULE, hinstoa.—Following la the text realdent Wllaon'a reply to Gerpeace proffer, aent through the rdlah Charge d Affaires:
In reply to the communfeation of the i Government. I have the honor reqoeat yon to transmit the follow-
“he Preaident feela bound to *ay that the whole protean of peace Pill. In hla Judgment, depend upon th* deffaUeneaa and the aaliifactory char actar of the guarantee which can be given In thU fundamental matter It la iadlapensahle that the goveramenta aaioctated ecainat Germany ahould know beyond a peradventure with
whom they are dealing
"The Prealdent will make a separate reply to the royal and Imperial Govern
meet of Auatrla-Bungary.
•‘Accept. *lr the renewed assurance
of my high consideration
(Signed) ROBERT LANSING.
“Mr. FVederlek Oederltn.
“Chcrge d'Aff alres ad Interim, la charge of German Intereats
II the United States "
PRESIDENT WILSON APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN. “Recent events bare enhanced, not lessened, the Importance of this loan, and I hope that my fel-low-countrymen will let me say this to them very frankly. The best thing that could happen would be that the loan should not only be fully subscribed but very greatly overeubrrribed. We are ’ in the midst of the greslrst exercise of the power of this country that has ever been witnessed or foreseen, and a single day of relaxation In that effort would be of tragical damage alike to onrselve* and t» the real of the • world. Nothing has happened which make* It safe or possible to do anything but push our effort to th* utmost. The time Is critical, and the response mu«t be complete."
GERMIK ACCEPTS ISIS TEPMS Note On Its Face Seems Complete Concession.
RECEIVED WITH SUSPICION
OCCUPATIONAL TAX.
House Provision Adopted By The
Finance Committee.
Washington—The Senate F.nance
People Should Be Cautioned Against Any Certainty Of Immediate End Of Hoe-
tilltiea.
TEXT OF GERMAN NOTE. Washington.—Germany's reply to Prealdent Wilson's Inquiry. Interceptaa It wa* belug sent by, the great wireless towers at Nauen and forwarded here In an official dispatch rfcm France, says • In reply to the question* of the President of ihe United States of America the German Government hereby declares: The German Government has accepted the terms laid down by President Wilson In hi* address of January the 8th and In hla subsequent addresses on the foundation of a permanent peace of Justice. Consequently Us object in entering into discussion would be only to agree upon practical details of the application of these terms. The German Govetnmentment believe-, that the Governments of the Powers associated with the Government of the United States tlso take the position taken by Prealdent Wllfton In hit addres*. The German Government, in accord with the Austro-Hungarian Government, for We purpose of bringing about an armlatlce. declares itself ready to comply with
German Governments, the Govern menu that declared the treaty Itvur Ing the Inviolability of Belgium a “terap of paper" and forced the oner ou« pear« treaties on Russia and Ru mania. The President bea gained the opportunity he has sought. oOelali declared —the opportunity of telling the German people: "You are willing to evacuate all conquered territory Yon are willing to make good the wrongs you have don* There la but one way in which you can convince the people of the United States and the Allies of your sincerity, and that Is by getting rid of the political system responsible for these wrongs." The President's reply. It was de dared, will be oOcially addressed to the German Government, but he will actually speak above the head of that Government—to the German people themselves—In an effort to convince them that the Hohensollems inn*! go ere peace can he returned to them and the whole of Europe. Reporta That Kaiser May Abdicate Irv
Committee In rwrlslng the War Rev- th( proposition, of the President in n
I psard to evacuation.
Zurich. Switzerland.—Neutral trtvel •rs arriving here from Germany report that rumor* that Emperor William may abdicate appear to take greater con tency day by day. The arrivals add that the unpopularity ol the German Crown Prince has considerably in creased in Germany Favorwd By German*. Paris.—TUe tendency Is remarked in certain German circles, says a dispatch from Geneva to the Temps, ti represent the eventnal fall of Emperor William a* a concession which the Germans would be disposed to allow to the Allies If th* j demanded It. Such talk apoesrs. above all. the message adds, to he an attempt to -bring about an event which many Gt r mans judge to be Inevitable and even desirable.
PRESIDENT LEADS TROOPS.
enue Bill approved a business or oc-
cupational tax. House provisions | Thr Government suggerts
placing a tax of *10 on all penon* I ihe*Pre.ldett: may occa-lon the Mjfche , * t He;;i or Armed Forcas In engaged la any trade, busines. or I <» r * commission lor Ne „ York .
, v making the necessary arrar.ceinent* |
La KUW ».r, adop*.,d «n,r N-lnr *' T“ ■”•- I SO,
The unqualified acceptance by the sent German Government and by a t< majority of the Reichstag of the ms laid down by the President of United State* of America in hi* Ires* to the Congress of the United ites on the f th of January. 1818. and
his subsequent addresses Justifi-- . . , . .. _ ,
m ».«»« * *“ ,a
■ «t stat* men: of his decision with j'* tcr - •trd to the communications of the ,
Government of the 8th and
whom the House had eaempted. nouncement was made that i menu which would furnish t
‘ of October. 1918.
l! must be ciehrly understood that toadiiion* of an armistice are mat■s which must be left to the Judyu- and advice of the military aders of the Government of the Unitd States and the Allied Government*, id the President feels U hU duty to ty that no arrangement cam be seated by the Government of the Ur.ltd State* which does not provide abely satisfactory safeguards and in tee* ul the maintenance of the nt military supremacy of the armies of the United States and the
Allies in the field.
He feels confident that he can safeaasome that this wilt also be the Judgment anti decision of the Allied
'The President feels that it L also duty to add that neither the Gov ■rnmrm of the United Slates nor. he I*
governments with
RED CROSS MAN KILLED.
undertaken thk reapims!b3!ty for.thls ; . ad Nav,. ...arched at the head of th. step toward peace, hr* b.en formed • Americ. a forces .a the Columbos-Lih by conferences and In agreement “with e:t> I>:- parad one o! the mos: Im the great-majority of the Reichstag, [.resslve and Inspiring spectacles New
The Chancellor, supported In all of his j York h ; ever had.
action* by the will of thia majority. Unde: a wasopy formed by the flag.' spevks in the name of the Gennat^ of the U nations arrayed again*'
CapL Harris. Richmond. Wounded While Bringing Up Supplies. Paris.—SL Clair Mott, ef Jacksonville. FU . was killed and CapL E. D. Karris, of Richmond. Va_ wss wounded while following the American 'roopi with equipment and enpaliew over a shell-swept road northwest of Verdun. Both men were attached to the American Red Cross. Molt, who was driving the car, wo killed Instantly The vehicle dashed over an embankment, throwing out lu occupants. MORE TROUBLE IN CHINA.
Canton Government Declares War Os
New Prea'dent.
Peking—Tuan ChiJul will relln qulsh h's post as Premier in the Chin
«« ..nr, •” '•*“”> °*
-in ti*. „t ,u rwirt h™ si.ii.-auM nMat. ctm- - ».-* U «.mki..-d a. balliaeuau Nur-H- .n. u-i-' lp.. « . f-piJui ..II ™...| .» pp».Ut as .nsl.t.p. 'll a T “* CMJ « 1
vo Ion* a* the ann.d forces of Ger- ; M t*r'-mler
many cor.tinne the Illegal and inhuMane prartlOM which thPy *till persist
Government and of the German peo tocracy and with squadrons of Am. rplv SOLF. jican altvJanes toverlns overhead, thi State Secretary of Foreign Offlce. ‘ ‘ B6 “ “*
Berlin. October 12. 1918.
A GIRL FIRES ON OUTLAWS.
the very time that
ntneat approaches the Governo! th* United States with pro- , of i-sce hs submarines are er tn sinking passenger alilpa at >nd not the ships alone, out the host* in which their passenger* 1 ••**> seek to make thair wsy to
Canton. China.—The military gov T j ernment here ha* isrued a formal dec |
the German Umtloa Of war agatnat Hsu Sh.h
j Chang “for having accepted an elecj tion «f the Pn-aMency from a bogus
Parliament-"
President strode with 25.000 flghtlm men from five continent* and IsUndirom every sea over the entire thm1 mile Un - uf march along the Avenue
Washington. — Whatever promises | th , Then, at the foot of Germany may make to the United Flf!h , venu .. beside the Washington States and her All.es they cannot ■ Brc j,. he took hU place In an aulomo serve as a basis for an armistice or , b;le >n ,, rwviewsd the long column. peace negotiations as long as the
Hohensollerns and the system of gov ernment they represent remain In
power.
And thia. in effect. U expected to be the reply of President Wilson to Germany's reply to the Prealdent accepting the terms laid down by the President The President has made It plain that the German spokesmen a* prevent constituted canrot be trus: In his address in New Yor*, September 27. he said: We are all agiced that there can be no peace obtained by any kind of bargain or compromise With the Governments of the Central Uni plrea, hi cause we have deal; wi;h them already and have nett them
deal
NO NEW NOTF. IN FALL MILLINERY
New York.—There la nothing In millinery today upon which one can pnt the finger and say that It Is definitely new. asserts a leading r.utbority. In looking over the collection, one feela that a strong struggle goes on between the fashion for trimmed haU an 1 the fashion for untrimmed ones. At n meeting of all the milliners In America, which was held In New York last spring, there was a loud clsmor for ornamentation In millinery. The mere mertion of It brought forth the clapping of hands. Roses were desired, quills, feathers, fantasies, pieces of fur and Jeweled bandings—In fact, anything and everything that would create something that bus not existed for a half decade. The deairr of the French for severity and that of the Americana for ornamentation are shown, undoubtedly. In the conflicting hats of this autumn. There Is nothing that has not been, and yet there U much that is good and acceptable. Since there Is no exclusive path o£
top. as though the cream were coring OUL There are comic opera hate but, they do not play the comedy role on a woman's head. They are quite attractive. They need a veil, and a good-looking one at that, for veils are bark In fashion and they may be the forerunners of glove*. There are women who always wear both, and there is a large majority that avoid both whenever fashion allows the slightest loophole of escape. Even the French forsook veils fer four or five years; but as the weather last winter demanded that they use every means of protection to their flesh and blood, veils came bock ns a part of costumcry. They at once became ornamental and coquettish. They carried their own collars with them, und tb-y sometimes seemed to carry the hat. which they evidently considered merely n trifle on which to rest their own ornamental selves. Thcte are the veils that hold good today. But It Is quite probable that
Br*
» to thia strugg'.-. k and Buchar- -L Tt'
r and do not int-cu
ENTIRE DRAFT BOARD OUT. |
1 in t
d Flan
- and I
Member* Of Georgia Body Remo.so
By Wilson's Order.
Allan's. Ga.—Removal at the order of Prealdent AVSlson of the member* j
r* pur*u:n* » i ^ ^ | oral dralt board of Liberty | In d-ro-t I c « ust > because of .-airg-d IrrogUlari : <1 nracllce* of I ,! *'» » nd ,n, l wt ’** r ro: ' dBrt cf rrt i j r r villa*e* Billion* was announred to Major Joe'. T * r ri d if i U Mal'elt tn charge of admln.ktrattcn ,
„i! 1 tb. ..:f lu. vi— U— I. ,
; =««« TT
a n-svsllon
i manRy. spot Ha-
ir* b*:ng
thos-
,nd t!ie.r own Interest. W
1 h- y bava- made it
The German i»ople mui tine be lullj aware t'is nnot accept the word v who loiced this %ar ut*o > do cot think the s*m
thoughts or speak the esme 1st
guagr uf agreement.
Tarr- i* noth.ng In the G—r jte that Ju»ttfiM the I'osid'ii' rsUffe a single sen ten cv of the t
.•mg pa»>*ur
The **-UIallies clv<c by the R
Union'own. Pa.—Barricading herself In the rower at tha Pennsylvania Rail road crovsing at Gist, nssr-hete. Miss E. 3d ' ensel. signal operator, ptuc* Uy held her post and fought a revolver d .el with throe men who at tempt-d .3 wreck an ammcnltlnn trslc by piav ag Ilea across the track* With bit".-ns crashing thr-jugh the tides of : te tower bouse *be returned shot for khot until the arrival ol the ! fn-isSu train frightened away the ih
j truder*.
TO PLAN LEAGUE OF NATIONS. German Foreign Minister Will Name Comm.ttet Of Reichstag, i Am*’e "dam — Dr. Self. German
Jr*i* And Nickel-Plated Styles Ai Stopped; Others Curtailed. Washington —The mancfurturc o
THE NEW HATS OBEY NO LAW, BUT SUIT ALL FACES. (1) Adapted Aniac hat made of black satin and turned up at one side with a huge shell puff made of Nattier-blue ostrich strands. The collar la made from equares of seal and beaver, which :s a new idea. (2) Shrapnel helmet of violet velvet, with sweeping willow effect In long ostrich fuee of black and violet. (3) Cone-shaped Mexican hat of capphlre-blue velvet, with shirred crown and brim edged with a band of Rureian squirrel. (4) Oblong walking hat In imitation of the new service caps. It Is made of gray angora with a broad quill of jet beads. With this goes a neckpiece of angora heavily embroidered In Jet.
I Safe Arriva! Of The Manne Corps
Commander
j Washington. -Arrival in France of j i
; hearts. 1 Major General iia d-r that-1 Uw 1 n*:ed Buvtr • yiiiapti. 1 Briga Genera
dtps, and
: AT EXCHANGE.
Agreement Or
) ARCHBISHOP CARRIED OFF. I Hunt Remove Primate Of Cambra When They Retreat.
CADET FLIER KILLED, caippl Lad Loses Life I" .. Worth. Te* Uadel Pr'TT
fashion la which all should walk If they would be la the procession, there Is the more genial, broad highway. In which all types are jostled and mingled and call themselves In the fashion. All the hats of the hour are on this broad highway, and that suits the
majority.
No matter wont a woman chooser, ahe ha* Mime master deslgmr back of , her choice. To begin with fabrics, she ! may keep loyal to velvet, or she may dip inlo me capriee of the moment as I It Is exprersed by angora, braid or
j even serge.
1 She may InMM upon satin from now ’ until next April, and she may choo*e It in any color that harmoi.lre* or corresponds with her gown. Hbe may feel , tm lined to avoid fell, for It I* so little
lu the picture.
i As for ornamentation, she may adopt I !■ if she likes the Idea. If she prefers | simple it>. she has three dozen or more
1 French lists at her disposal.
I If alio like* ostrich feather*, she tiffiy Join in with the 'Arrlets of London and buy herself a big. thle!;. curled one. j place H on her heed, and feel herself : as correctly plumed u* was IL-nri 1 tjiiatn-. She cannot buy paradise, lie. muse of a law that !- greater than | 'list of fashion, but sbe has a plenteous supply of harkel. .monkey fur or i goura to take Ita place. She will also find that shredded taffeta 1* considered , as ornamental as dahlhis on a turban. and she will soon realise that toothI brush fringe can be used to flicker over | the surface of any hal, with -••*sl
| result*.
Question of Brims and Crowns. Suppose -be I* ronei-rucd u'~*Ut the Shape of her hat. and If *h-- l-u'l she J should Of once take the of first I aid to th- Ignorant. If her fare do ; mand* u wide brim, let her i-!e»«*e that | shape, und she will find that each ml! I liner has made at bust three bats to ! suit her fancy. | Th.Tr are Irregular brim*: there
ward <
■ up" at •n the •
side
■. Willi 1
a Bind*
U S. CHASER ClNKC. i-s Oiw* tn Fareign Waters AG
i he observer nlstu-s
The milliners take It for grante ■ that every woman doe* not wish t I ihimvsI the npper part of her fait | even though fnshiou has gone to tb j uiosi extreme limit In that tine. S 1 there are hats that roll straight awx
exs'tiy ilke a nlc- thick . "ilk a bun'll of fooliab or le feather* 'stnlng out of the
they will be discarded when the cold weather come* by those who will take up the two leading fashions that have been revived from two year* ago: the funnel collar that cnvelopca the neck, the chin and the lobes of the ears, and the hat that envelopes the eyebrow*, the ton of the cars and the upper part of the eyelids. What In the name of nil common sense can a veil Co between these two? Inspiration From the Anzaes. We Uke to trace onr present fashions to an Immediate Inspiration, to some fantastic or picturesque source that 1* a jiart and parcel of our present struggle for existence. It srjta our mood better than going back to the dead and gone jiersonuges who probably figure more gloriously In llt-e-ature than they did In fact. We hate caps on women. There Isomething of undying coquetry in the rolling, dii-hing. spirited headgear os against the new street suit which la flecked with an Insignia never before exploited by women—the stars of service. the Insignia of rank, the colored departmental lands. The hriuis of hat*, therefore, are cut according to romance or shortened recording to ; cactlral Ideas, but tha crown* an* unusually high. The majority of American women have long faces—It I* the racial stamp—and to such women a high-crowned hat 1* never becoming. The French wear it well liecaose they have slender, oval face*, with pointed chin* and delicately painted mouths; but when one put* the tj-plcal French hat of the hour above the typical American face, with Its lengthened line from high riirekhone to chin and the l«ng eleen-cot line of the Jaw backward to the vt*r. then the defects. If defects they are. stand out In a rugged prominence that Is far from attractive. . The average American face needs a low-crowned hat. n** matter what the brim. Thi* |* a fundamental fact that Is provoked by n continental demand: It ha* nothing tn do with the phases of fashion. We look our best In width
r the
t heigh I
Kn>li woman, therefore. nm*t struggle wiih her own probleta In this new deluge bearing down upon us of high crown*. Home of them an- direct Imitation* of coaching hat*, and > .hers rise to a j*eak that-no Uhl Human ever allowed In the turimn upon which we have paiterned aome of oar new hats. 4<’«j>|ri*ht. an. br^dur* Newspaper An InrAitor ha* combined a pencil holder, ruler, comb, envelope opener and nail file lu u single compact imple-

