TCEDiNESDAY, OCTOBER 10. 1917 I rAGE TEN. THE ASHEVILLE TIMES. 'l I BRITISH AND FRENCH ADVANCED TO DEPTH OF 1200 YARDS YESTERDAY Allies' Victory in Flanders Made AH the More Wonder ful on Account of Natural Difficulties Germans Lost Heavily in Casualties and Prisoners Taken Teuton Resistance Weak British Front in France and Bel gium, Oct. 9. (Delayed) (Tiy Asso ciated Press) The Mow struck by the British and French forces today against a wide section of the ilerman defenses between the lioutholst forest, lind Kroodseinde lias resulted in an other great success. Over much of thiB front the attacking troops swept forward to a depth of I.Uim) yards or more, over-running many important strongholds of the shattered enemy. This afternoon the allies were dmmng lb. almost on the outskirts of liout holst forest, the I-Sntish were bevnnd Poelcapelle after sancuinary hand-to-hand fighting and further south they had grained the l'asschendaele ridge within less than 1.000 "yards of . Pass -chendaele, thereby ' wrenching away almost all that remained to the !or mans of their famous I'asschehdale- Gheluvelt ridge system of fortifica tions. Again the German losses have been great, and reports from all along the line indicate that their organisation and moral" were hit hard. It has been another wonderful per formance on the part of the allies and the victorv is been more remark able because of the tremendous nat ural difficulties to the advance. The rain of the last two days had turned much of the battle ground into' a morass, through which the French ami the men of the Untish empire floundered knee deep. How they could .make their way . forward over such ground; much less tight over it, is the amazing thing. This very fact Un doubtedly contributed to the day's triumph for German prisoners say no body on their side ' had thought the allies mould advance under such con ditions. The appearance of the mud covered allied troops com In k out of the marsh es before the German lines apparent ly unnerved the enemy. They sur rendered m large numbers In many places, or ran away as fast as they could. An entire .German division the 227th was brought up during the night to relieve the division in the line between I'oelcapelle and the Houtholst forest. The men were transported in motor lorries from Roulers and ar rived at the advanced positions about 3 o'clock this morning. They were Ig norant of the nature of the country and when caught m the attack some two hours later they were bewildered and put tip little resistance. The attack was .launched, as dawn was breaking. The French on the left flank of the Pritish were facing prob ably the worst section along the line, as the ground over which thev hnd to advance was interlaced with little streams and the rain had turned it into a bog. The French pushed forward rapidly, however, reducing numerous German pill boxes and redoubts and had ac complished all they had set out to do by 10 o'clock. This meant that they were some f00 yards beyond Mange laere. and almost at the edge of the lioutholst forest. Heavy casualties were inflicted on the Germans by the preliminary bom bardment and during the fighting. At an early hour the French reported the capture of several hundred prisoners and also lhat their own .losses were light-1 , . A .separate attack made by the Brit ish south, of the ' main offensive line ? on a narrow front embracing Reutel and Polderhoek was reported to be successful. No deep advance was at tempted here, the operation bein mainly to improve the positions reached Thursday. On the whole the Germans made a weak resistance today. Their in fantry appeared demoralized in many sections and their artillery Are was weak and erratic. No estimate of the total German losses Is possible but they are believed to have been exceed ingly heavy. The Pritish and French losses are reported to have bee nhght. It is es timated at a conservative calculation that in the attack last Thursday the German losses aggregated 20.000. Little Serbia is Being 1 Depopulated By the War Ttie Aonthera nrrm the "" PuhllRhed u Information not iTiarantaaA HOME CARD UNITED STATES FOOD ADMINISTRATION WHAT YOU CAN DO TO HELP WIN THIS WAR "WTN Tllfi WAR BY GIYIXG TOUR OWN DAILY SERVICE Our problem is'to feed our Allies this winter by sending them as mueh food as Ave ran of the most concentrated nutritive value in the least shipping space. These t'ooefs are wheat, beef, pork, dairy products, and sugar. Our solution js to eat less of these and more of other foods of which we have au abund ance, and to waste less of all foods, Bread (tnd cvrccds. Have at least one wheatless meal a day. Use eira, oat, rye, barley, or mixed cereal rolls, muffins, and breads in place of white bread certainly for one meal and, if possible, for two. Eat less cake and pastry. As to the white bread, if you buy from a baker, order it a day in advance thjen he will not bake beyond his needs. Cut the loaf on the table and only as required. Use 94ale bread for toast and cooking. 3!e(tt. Use more poultry, rabbits, and especially (ish and sea food in place of beef, mut ton, and pork. Do not use either beet', mutton, or pork more than once daily, mid then serve smaller portions. Use all left-over meat cold or in made dishes. Use soups more freely. Use beans; they have nearly the same food value as meat. JIllIi Use all of the milk, wnstc no part of it. The children must have whole milk; therefore, use less cream. There is a great waste of food by not using all skim and sour milk. Sour i! ilk can be used in cooking end to make cottage cheese. Use buttermilk and cheese freely. .;'''': V fats- (butter, lard, ecJDairy butter has food values vital to children. Therefore, use it on the table as usual, especially fur children. Use as little as possible in cooking. Reduce the use of fried foods to reduce the consumption of lard and other fats. Use vegetable oils, as olive and cottonseed oil. Save daily one third of an ounce of animal fat. Waste rc soap; it contains fat and the glycerine necessary for explosives. Yon can make scrubbing soap at home, and, in some localities, you can sell your saved fats to the soap maker, who will thus secure our needed glycerine. c k.War. Use less candy and sweet drinks. Use less sucar in tea and coffee. Use honey, maple syrup, and dark syrups for hot cakes and waffles without butter or sugar. Do not frost or ice cakes. Do not stint the use of sugar in putting up fruits and jams. They may be used in place of butter. ere((lbks (Hid 1 fruits. We have a superabundance of vegetables. Double the use of vegetables. They take the place of part of the wheat and meat, and, at the same time, are healthful. Use potatoes abundantly. Store potatoes and roots properly and they will keep. Ust fruits generously. ?ie.Coal comes from a distance, and our railway facilities are needed for war pur poses. Burn fewer fires, If you can get wood, use it. Washington. Oct. 10. The T'nifd Plates apparently has picked up some thing in the way of a wholesale house cleaning job as well as territory of vast military value in buying the Vir gin islands. Officials sent to look them over recently asked congress for $2iM,iiiin to correct these alleged con ditions:1 N'o water works :j in any town. Drinking water obtained from ois-, terns or hauled in wagons from in sanitary wells.. Fire departments con sist, of hand-carts, tubs, tanks and hand-piinips. No sewerage system. Xo furniture for government offices which contain old Danish safes made of cast iron and locked with keys. The cheerful word was brought back that for many years past, the islands budget has never met ex penses. The biggest revenue obtain ed was from customs against imports troin the I'nited Stales which are now cut off. Tn addition labor trou bles are chronic became of importa tions from the Barbadoes of low class workmen.' IF- After seeing a business 'man! light a cigar, and slip the match thoughtlessly into ii corner of his oltiee near a waste basket a man wrote tho following par aiihiase of one of ; .Kipling's best known poems. . ..V. Tf yon can toss a match into a ciear ing, :' . . And never give thought to put it out. Or drop your cigarette butt without - fearing, ... That flames may kindle in the leaves about. . If you can knock the ashes from your brier, - Without a glance to see where thev . may fall, ; And later find the forest all afire. Where you have passed with no one near to call. If you drive your auto through the working. And cast your stogie stub into the slash. Unmindful of the danger therein lurk "' ins, Or home or happiness that you may smash : If you can leave your campfire while 'tis glowing, No thought of industries that it may blight. . .,. Or of the billion saplings in the grow ing. ' Turned into charcoal 'ore the coming, night: If von can start a fire beneath a brush pile When the wind is roaring like a distant- gun. You surely should he .shot without a trial. And, what is more, you'll be a fool, my son. Washington, Oct. 6. Red Cross ca bles show that the people of Serbia are being wiped off the map or scat tered to the four corners of the earth by the war monster. Set upon by the enemy from three sides, their homes have been sacked and burned, their lands and storehouses pillaged and their defenseless women and children murdered or left to starve. "Despair is written in the faces of the Serbian prisoners of war in Aus tria. Brutality is their daily lot; and what they get of food is not enough to keep body and soul together. These black stories of Teuton cru elty and butchery were brought to Dr. Edward T. Ttyan. of the Red Cross at Salonika by Serbian prison ers returned. If Italian prisoners in the Austrian camps had not shared their scanty packages from home with these 500 Serbian prisoners, all .he Serbs would have died. Dr. Ryan reported. "Prac tically no food," said Dr. Ryan's ca ble, "was provided by their Austrian jailors. AVhat was given amounted to eight ounces of bread a day. - t noon they had .vegetable soup with a small piece of horse flesh, generally taint ed. Morning and evening, a drink of black liuid known as coffee, made of chicory;.: was given with their brea'd. This was their whole ration. ."From an army of nearly a half million, at the begirning of the war, over.'-150,000 men are estimated to have been taken prisoners by the cen tral powers. Nearly i.ll of these are suffering from malnutrition in prison camps. "r-,-r.r7 thousand Serbs per jrr.ta tn the bloody repression of a revolt at NJek. last February. The Bulgarians have deported 30.000 in habitants of Serbia to Asia Minor. Fifty thousand fatherless families, it is estimated, are facing destitution, a problem comparable to that which would face the Red Cross and other charity organizations if the fathers of all the families in Louisville, St. Paul or Denver were mtflclenly de ported. Fifty thou and families, a population about the size of Indian apolis br Providence, are Interned in Austrian citmps. - "The Serbian legation in Washing ton has just issued the following statement: In 1910 there were 1. 50S.04S inhabitants in Serbia; )n 1916 the reduction in the female popula tion is 40,000. In ; rbia. as else where in the southwestern part of Europe, the male population is great er than the female. The census rec ords a proportion of 200 males to 141 females." Reports received at' Red Cross headquarters show that there is need of doctors and nurses to care for the civilian population, as all the doctors have been pressed into the army tser vce. Food, clothing, bandages, blan kets, seeds and agricultural imple ments are also needed. . In previous invasions, the enemy had destroyed the farming tools of this agricultural .people. A system of soup kitchens in the villages is ati absolute necessity, if famine is not to take n neavy toll this winter. line and a railroad. Municipal coal yards will be established on each of these lines in Kvansville. The coal will be sold at wholesale and retail at slightly above cost.' The city will ar range to haul It to the house of the buyer. " EFFFCTIYK JT1.T . 1I7 -Eautem Ttma. Arrlre From Trnlna No. No. 15 No. H No. 2(1 No. !1 No. 27 No. ! No. 5 No. 41 . t:4t p.m. p.m. p.m. .Turks Mlvlll. Savannah. Columbia and Charleston.. S:l 1 Rlrnmon1. Norfolk. Nw York, Philadelphia. Baltl- lnoro .............. Phntrannna'a. Knnxv t t I . .. MemrhK ClnrtnnatL Louisville' and St. T,niil.. Jfnr Tork. Philadelphia."' Baltimore. Waehlnirton. . ,111:85 Murrhr. Wavne"Me...... :Sfl Murphy. Waynesvltle f)oMboro. Raleigh. Oreena- horo . . , , Charleston. Columbia and Spartanbnrir Cincinnati. Chlraao. Mem- . phis. New Orleans. Blrra- Intrham ..1(1:40 Salisbury nnfl the East..;. ': Pnnrtsnhurir, Atlanta. Va eon. Montgomery and New Orleans .11 :45 PHsto;. tCnoTvllla ind Chattanooga 10 55 :! p.m. p m a.m. a.m. am p m. Trains No. 10 No 1? No. 1 No. 17 No. 19 No. 2! No. 27 No. S No. 42 No. 101 Evansville, Ind., Oct. 10. Coal deal ers here say coal will be more scarce this winter if local consumers .depend upon them. :':.'. Hut Kvansville . consumers don't, care a hang. ..Mayor Hosse has prom ised to furnish coal from his new municipal, mine at a little above cost. Uorings for the mine, the first city owned in the country, lire about com pleted. The mine is located just above Chandler, Ind., 12 miles northwest of the city. ... Local coal dealers have their out put tied up in iron-bound contracts with concerns in other cities. They claim ' local consumers have always boycotted them, ami used cheap non union coal from otlur cities. There fore, they do not intend to break out side contracts to keep Evansville from freezing. Mayor Rosse wants to make sure the citizens get .coal and at a fail price. So he started his municipal mine, which will cost at least $lot, 000; The mayor is going to build it with his own money, then sell it to lit' city to be operated by the water works department.. The mine w ill, be sold to the city at cost plus six per cent interest oti the original ni. esLmciiL. a usi. now uie 111.V4 Hooray! l S. Cfiinn has a dry goods store at Crawfordsville, tia, ' PBCPflPrTC enp L!U I U wouldn't take over the mine, oul lis 1 charter and the Indiana laws do not .permit a city to operate its own coal t mine. Hut Posse declares he will ' light for a new law to permit munici pal operation of the mine. In the meantime he is going ahead to get the new mine running. Law or no law, the people must have coal, is his! stand. . The mine will produce 1,000 tons of ; f "in, a day It will have the mo' modern equipment. Coal will be i shipped to the city on 0 traction. icpnp UlipJiJUii HEADACHE, COLDS, ainEyoiLS Enjoy Life! Don't Stay Bil ious, Sick, Headachy and Constipated Get Rid of Bad Breath, Sour Stomach, Coated Tongue, Indigestion : Oct a 1 0-cent box now. . They're tine! . Oasearets liven your liver, clean your thirty feet of bowels and sweeten your stomach. You eat one or two, like candy, before going to bed Sind in the. morning your head is clear, tongue is clean, stomach sweet, breath right and cold gone. Oct a box from your druggist and en joy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. Cas carets stop sick headache, biliousness, indigestion, bad breath and constipa tion. Mothers should give a vhole Cas :aret to cross, bilious, sick, feverish children any time. Thev are harm less and never gripe or sicken. Tepart For Columhla. savannah, Jak aonvllle Atlanta. Charlea- ton and Wilmington. Knoxvllle, :' Chattanooga, Memphis. Clnetnnntl. Louisville ahd St. Louis. . Richmond. Nortoik. Local east New York. Philadelphia, Washington and east.;.. Waynesvtlle, Murphy v. Waynesvltle. Murphy ..... Rnpelprh and OoMsboro... Knoxvllle, . Chattanooga, Birmingham, New Or leans, Memphis, Cincinnati and Chicago Charleston, columoia ana Spartanburg Salisbury and east ....... Spartanburg. New Orleans Bristol, Knoavllla and Chattanooga 4:10 p.m. J:S8 l.'BS S45 S:S0 4:S0 :10 p.fu- p.m. p.m. a.m. p.m. a.m. S:30 p m. 10:4(1 a.m. 6 :00 am. 7:00 a.m. STREET CAR SCHEDU 'Lri IN EWECT TNE 1, 1!17. Zl..lcf nnrl Return 6:00. 6:15, 6:30 . m. Rivei-slil Pnrk 6:J5 and every lE mln utv until 11 :0 p. m. Depot Via Snnthlrlf Avemit 5:30 a. m.. - , and everv 15 minutes until 1 .15 p. m., thn . every 7 mlnuton until 3:45 p. m ther, vrv 1f mlnufeji until 11:00 p, m. : Depot Via Frenrh ltmncl AveniM? -tf:00 n. m.. and ever; 15 minute until 11:00 p. m. Manor 6:00 ft. m., and every 15 minute until 1 1 :00 p. m. Crmrlotte Street Terminus 8:00 a. m.. flnd every 16 minutes until 11:00 p. nv. 11:30 car run tfcrmisfc: return leave end of enr line at 18:00. Ftton Avenne 8:00 a. m.. ana every 1 minutes until 11:00 p. m. Kant Street 6: 00 a. m.. and every II minute until 11:00 p. m. (.race Vi Merrlmnn Avenn? 8:00 a. m., thn every 15 minutes until 11:00 p. ra. lit more 6:00 a. m.. and hen every II minutes until 11:00 p. m.. last car. Depot and Went Ashevllle Via -Sonthnlde Avenue 5:30 a. m.. and every 16 minutes until li :00 p. m. On evenings when entertainments are In ,j proRresa at the Auditorium the last trip on all llnea will be from entertainment, leaving Square at regular time and holding over at Auditorium. Oar leaven Square to meet No. 85, night-, train. SO minutes before achedula or an nounoed arrival. Sunday Schedule PHTera aa Fpllownt Oar leaves Square for Manor 6:00 and 6:15 a. m.. return arrive Square :15 and t:S0. thrjti every 30 minutes until 8:30. Cars ieve Square for Depot via Southnld avenue 6:30. (:46. 6:00. 6:15, 6:30. 7:00, 7:30. 8:00 and R:30 a. m. Cars leave Square for Hepot via French Broad avenue 6:16. 6:30, 6:45. 7:15. 7:46 and 8 15 p. m. Car for Depot leaves Square fl:4S a. nu " both Snuthslde, and French Broad. F'rst car leaves the Pquare for Charlotie street at 6:00 a. m., and every 30 minutes until S:30: next 8:45. First car leaves Square for BUtmore 6:80 a. m.. and every 30 minutes until t:00 o'clock. First Car leaves the Square for Klverslde 1:30; next 8:45. First car leaves the Rouare for West Ashe vllle 6:16. 7:00; next 8:30. With the ahove exceptions, the Bundsv schedule! rnmnienrec at 0:00 a. m.. and continue sama as week dava fpJS GENERAL Buy less; cook no more than neces sary; serve smaller portions. Use local and seasonable supplies. . Patronie your local producers and lessen the need of transportation. 'reach and practice the "gospel of the clean plate." . We do not ask the American people to starve themselves. Eat plenty, . but wisely, and without waste. UNITED STATES FOOD SUGGESTIONS Do not limit the plain food of grow ing children. , Do not eat between meals. Watch out for the waste in the com munity. You can yourself devise other meth ods of saving to the ends we wish to accomplish, finder various cir cumstances and with varying con ditions yon can vary the methods of economizing. DM 1 N1STK ATION ! These stalwart red men whose fathers fouKht against Uncle Sam In the wars of the border now make up a company in an American infantry regiment, and each one of them is anxious to go to the front to fight for him. Nearly every nationality in the world is now represented on the French front, but when the white and red Americans get there two more races will be represented. HANK AND PETE HIE THOUGHT RE STAYED IDER All THAT TM ByKENKLSNG Hetees a sAce OH fANAHA Mats ! i'u Cer owe an' nAKe. HANK COOKUKC TWO.CeNTS IN HIS OLD r-etSW?'.i ii.J ' , -pf HERES tu CHEAPEST PANAMA IN THf SHOP 5IR- YOU CAH HAVJE it PoR'ao.oo - ". . ' .... L; TtJENTf POtURS?! SAf(j VJANT To Buy A HAT - VNOT I ME 5T0Rt " this hat is made OF THE BEST FABRIC IN THE UOAlD IT TOO A MAH SV OAVS TO MAw:e it ! '' ' Cec, xP0NT see HOW-A' CUV CAN STAV UMO&R SO LONC MMMmfA $ WH . of coursc not ! WW" "ytw n" 7'i fwiLL it spoic". I KN0 w . J A AN' lT took WMn rt ll1 .-'uciHitN m -hi; i i mmm tr -wffm xtw vvmw.&-- . zmzvv.m b , -r vm..- wyy,-.. .i 1 i