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Austro-German Invasion of Italy Continues « H . • n Thoma'idfr of new names are £• f’lftWf'jiPL I being added to The Timet*.circu ■ CI4Ie3JOV • lotion thru the efforts of the > •) <U im.utship Club. It will require some time to mir • 225 carnsr routes to take care of this ln > .1 c, io we r '.iv t .nk new subscnbers to bear with us if there should be a delay in the delivery of Ihfir piptr KI i. IL! V. 1: \ I II \ KA K . no. :i:>. HOPE OF KERENSKY LIES IN COUNTRY DISTRICTS MACKENSEN IS ACROSS LiVENZA IN BIG DRIVE Seventeen Thousand! More Italians Captured RETREAT ORDLRLY, ROM E ASSERTS Destruction of Five Enemy IManes Is Reported l<ONfKlt'N, Nov 9. l n.-Hiiiirh*' ■- rrcrivt'd lnr- hi » nvht Indicated tbit A;: .trrifli v mt fnree«* have crossed th*- Livenza rt . r, in north ern Italy. win ii fi«-n Cadornu WR" r\p< ( !.•«! in make i i.ir. l, .m l cap hired 17." ' * hri oner The total number nf prisoners now daimi'll U-* Ati-’ro Irrinan fore* 1 ' is in *\< ‘ if <u,dOP, ac cord :>• to r n •?! 1 ’ *tr no nt Tho thou and thr ■ i uti r<«! r mnon hav. bc-n < apt ■'-•■•I ’v 1m inv.dir- S'.Mi tm tit h from It .iH*i» source., a*mt! that lh<* It »li. n t r-at i- h< ire earn* •! out in oi»d order, and rejMirt M.o <l<- ti i inti of fiv * min aercplan' f'hatt inoovri : to tit. meeting plat . toil ot ' 1 ro .-on till rn coni* tom . ** * M t iona-1 A -on i tiun for M ,and .in ! l*i• v. ution of T lb* real*. \ Expert Show* \\ hit o House Propei I'oimls r<> Eat s* Ti f\U*. bIUIIVs U*U O^n^LS. Hr. HP rs. I inst ». ...... **t ><■» I nrk imltcrtlh .h* «• t Imp Itemt * thr l.*».»* «ts V|r« II >h-rt I nn«ln«, nllr «•! the »»rri ■r * »( » I •! •*, 1*» >’ "* •tint nf Ik' hili 'n " l» l <'k rr» 11, l nt. r\ < it In rlil km. «n« |»rr ftnrrd after tie h« dmlion l« to". Irplnrlnv llirimiil llir ninntr« tin this *wh|* et until* the illrrft |tttt «tl lllirr n nf Vli |i II I* lit • 111 tin ll I\n»h -IItH !•>lt h|ip i«lt •**•>< |t*» m I'titntnmill • tie* It * tlrltl In K ttlrtMt lii ftrM fnrmlng liit» tt«hl fi it hi r* tin" f ■ enter's ttlfr inn * li' *" lift ft nils tit'll trupmlilpt fn* il*> tm Mini »*• rlnti, tints >iii Inn ••«•■ *he frilml nnitpt »if Ihf fnrmlnii illitrli I* Mrs. Crimes lots Instruct il non fii In the nrl ill <ln- Intt Mini iitinl'l'tii mill* wml inti'lN" lilli <••• h fi ii u . mil tnilt for their mi n H%c nnif snitrr e*tin»tnP'itl it >ilm Inn "i ■' i Inn mlent y»»*lhntl n| n'tillntt In I hi* Inn* til III* I run I. i hl' 'rrt Iff II e stinted * t »v -n • ftMt* l T‘ It ' i"<l If rr. r»..n f t |... I . in' »in 'mill nil'll •nf’.lii 11 iit« ii. »t U fivn>' Harden* n\t i \ rt f)- 1 Ml v •r drill* * I fin «*ren nitMlr til., t fi. I'Mimn Motel. At|» MISS HEY WOOD IS VICTOR AGAIN Miss Clara Hey wood, woman champion billiardlftt, Hgain won from Cline, of Philadelphia, in the balk lino Rime in Hi - Recreation billiard ball, Thursday ni>;ht, the score belli* &0 to ,D>. Mins Hey wood ran her string out in nipt innings. Ora MornliigMar also won from Cline, roo to s7 (Ire- nlaaf defeat* and Palmer at pocket billiards. !><) to 151, OHIO VOTE SWINGS TO SALOONS Latest Returns Show Liquor Men 3,000 In Lead COLUMBUS. O, Nov. 9—On the face of beet returns avail able at A o’clac kthis morning, the wets have a majority of 1,16 ft votes In Tuesday’* state wide prohibition election. A complete official count will be necessary to determine the result rOlfT MHI S. U. N’t" '» Three i lion -■ uiiii on** hmidit'il arid nine Thru is the majority the wets v • re It udinr with early this morning. a v roinpleie ofßt'inl r» turns on Ohio'-* prohibition election of Tuesda> wort* jifine received by th< secretary of sint'* Con .plete oflh irtl return lrom Us counties with complete on off,rial returns from tin- remaining counties curly today •■bowed: Dry. wei, 522.d*2. Th« <• tin il res credit the wets wi*h changes niHiie .is result of mistakes discovered in Hamilton county. YOUNG M AN IS ARRESTED ON GIRI/S CHARGE Artnand Isfcbvre. '„M venr* old. • •ii ttf Hr Arthur Lefnbvre, N*o. H2.t V. •st Grand blvd , was arrested Thursday night in Clark park t>n a rerlour charcc. Miss Kllfcibeih Archibald. I'* yeH rs old. No I4t Twenty fourth-st.. is the com plains nt It. was about U* o'clock when pedestrians were startled by a Kiri s screams coming from the park l’a *rolnian Willis H.tvid'on. of the ftmrt h precinct • tat ion. wan near and he responded to the cries fur help Davidson '•«' he tound Lcfebvre anti the Kiri struggling and be promptly ttmk the young man in charge. .1 |*. I t»ek hurl hit" hern arrested »•• Inert I federttl intents n« tin ‘»< . , f I'm- I (• t *!!•'' ild. h<•t 'I In * 'li Icm K» ■ n a charK'- of ns* inu IH> ititiH i" <T* l in ud r~>'.’ KM it Id had tin ofrt' f to lie Kr,"*«r lull Mine l*<trilltei* ha\ <• ■ invest* I nit ait $| JO cm in tes NatU'O’O to*' ,<t- i’:,»efig rnmptiny. >S "t|M I'rrrt t. litlr n« «w« nf" Ik tint hrlier .1. stniilfi llurif, I nllrit «Masc« ••i«ni mtsMlonf i Th'irsda >. • ' he U t■■ Oif Kiari't jury unit r *i '•«" *••• 1 1 Ilf in jiii iiit'd af hnvltiK hint Jen pi< I* into Mim • »Uf»tr\ fr«»tn \\ iml-or in viol "i ♦»»•’ imm< iriation la« Idl enn furnished the h til nnd «n.' ri'li .is.-d I nnprr \\ <m»il, sfi-r-lnri »>f llie l»e --tri'll fhn|ilrr nf the llril l ri»». ile ,r. N ft .(.till-nt i l ain ti 't» i >"i* i.finir lUntilliiit'it, pur port in: tn !"• r tt.. ii." nf iJiiMinn funds f .r a fled f'r« “S hn-p tat In Dari* li, ih< |"•"t>’*■ l iretl'»n* and In ll u . l. ri.a ar< led j«uth.a ‘" I »«• , 111 .'t f..f the Os t I’ff • The l"t --t. r whh h Inis haht ed -j' a "'ll In » e ft* oounced ihi i th< 'at nun- nf The T mi* s |irn n’cfittie aif" t"iir<tln| l» .litfif « J Mr nl*. ntl lre - |nr »«f Inf' mill mri'Mr. nt I* ast 7 o OOii I H*t i«* ♦ t i- * • tin wir Ihv of I wo |>* r ri nt »»f in* mm in • “ f..r unmitri led i>*r.»nn# and $ 1 f*>r mitlTieil perenhs *'..Mi. • *att. *.re. murines I' ' nr* n<»t i.v< mpted and must HW re luins tin s*»im- a • • M hred ha* n"• r* >ilnf and ih< •" eesarv hlanks In fill out. hui tti»• • >of* n"t. »"'''"in«. dai until te < v '*a r Ma*ur ItnM I It in «>lit • ftflfHim.il Miiienl the |iillii«l"« elithf il I* ■ J t*' attend th • ' r I'- «(in "iiuT"** wht'h will up"! n ||. rnti I'd* la <d. -ftp. I IP** nd* ut "f |ti. tl'-tr-dt M"-u • "t **•»»" h"n i*m| the fn p* inspeefm he 1 .Irripeah f.-eyrr. 't.irvi| I'" -fun m I ind * In Udwei.l r < !*•••* c T 1 1 • •** prat'd 1 lop af -' el nnd I* a' v 11 It difipM tound* inf the li' hri'j.'f inrtltute DETROIT TIMES n •*** r.jfi. -sa.sgsr * tgu’i.i—wwa-arys-ars * -miiM* * : ~• **..#*." ; wSr 1 m 1 * so aw in lll wupw ■ iif r v- • | '' ' "* '• .■ ..n I.-. ■ V. 1 "* , j ‘ i A )~— Wilt'am R Holler. Brooklyn, fB» Charles F. Gant, Jamaica, L I. (C)—J. W. Bernhardt. Brooklyn. (D) —8. Towle, Jamaica. L. I. (E) Richard Wesche, Brooklyn. (F)—Herman Spitzer, Brooklyn. First Americans to Die for America in the Trenches -~ir >• - * iyp 'JXTT “ ''' V • '*> • ■»».■»« *~r- ; ' ' ' '.P' '"’ *t ►•: w • *»n \ . •*. k is : '#|| X# 4 1 - >«W l\ 1 %MSr Jr. ‘ :• tjf ,£& yflT -V ,:•• **' %>■■ V. • i:. JlEßggßgw • V <v^s?' w . \ ' ! % V-'., -■ - t -£>* . • HMHI* • M r- - ■- u k. • v *• WyA . »;AMt.s^li.CWl.**lArn ri<ivA.i t. mi Wi-t a. > uvY ‘I hr three t»r«t < mint tmrrliaim tn die for \mrrtrn In the irenfhes In • enrtfe oere Merle It IliH . nf «*llil- Ilen |,|| Jnnie« 11. l.reshi.ni. nf Idnmilllf. lint , ntn re tt.fr. Is a Inr * ' erm.'n p..|... »t lnn. Nn.l I h<nnn« I'. I nrl- lit >.f I’ll l-l'iir K h. It Is heller r«1 they «er* nt the limn el •’ '' ’ it hlne- Mnrri' rnnnl I'ilerse* t* t|»e tinttti* line, n plnee irr* near the t»rrwHn li«iiin<l,ir» llm, "hit nn« n fnrmer nt t.'Mil*" Ii Ini •ii'Tf'*' nrnn 'tin M» He I me* u ni'ither unit f"fhrr nnd «U'" In I lumtllli*, nherr he lenrei n innthfr. sit* tirohe ilnna V* hen teM nf rfralh, l.n*li:hl inlnlffl In the nim.i ■i. lii *em« ip*. It** >* n» In the *l»»«enih Ir.iimn.i. De*oon'ient Min Kill* Self. .lol>n Herberts, r»‘t v.itrs «»ld. gro rer, ended bis 'ife bv swalliiwiriK ; •,»i an ill hi- home. No H 27 f.afnv i>h< a\* cad. early I'rlditv ninrnine. Coromt's <l* ik (‘cniei. who investi ti».l |hi* and ii ||, i ’old 11'lbtTts bad ben de *p ,nd* nC for nomf lime Ilpl W is h.',.nd to lilitue tbrents Id inkittK hi* life lit Ml tV> ♦ • 1»K SIM. •■tin -f \it »i* \ m.i • a ntyyi'B" ♦ one. t' . »tr —I * it * fit lit it! CLEANEST NEW jHArtK American Naval Reserves and Ship With Which They Went Down NORTHEKN H!(iH LEADS IX P-U OF WAR HOXDS f’tipils of North, rn boh led all othet in the t »ty ?i ’ . • of Liberty bond*, of the s«iie. They t<*ok • 'on- for a I I nl t‘ihnl *1 ;nn nf f}• \ t» K * * » ,J |' i • no) (rtiil j n f * ( *j * f Mfnofiiilinir to FRIDAY, NOVEMBKK 9. I*ll7. 100 iHirwl- $157.;:7 a'erur* •; North v « tern, joibs’T r; Inn -, P’fl -00 !mn<!\ nvera:.;; f> if. r r !>• ion- . t .1 1 no f . V, i I* * . t rK ftrit »\ .» ’ ..! H bot*'** ( *fo • * , of, < . <rv*fh- I'lie (tnlrol hoot Alrfilo. formrrli m * ni'lii imiird In (•( nr*. \V. < hll«i» Dri trl, of I’Hlliulclphtn. «»« ni'lii In ihr liolloni It) n Rrrman t«ir|t«-do (hr ttllirr tin>, mid of Ihr ‘Aft mrm lirrn of Ihe Nil, 111 llr««rr,r ~ho m»itti< il Iter, Lit were reported ml»«* iitie The HrH,r photoicrnpha nhow Ihr mrn oho were lottl. Npllr-rr won *mcß, MRS. O’NEILL DIES 29 HOURS AFTER HUSBAND V cakencd nticr- an illness of *ev eral days with bronchial pneumonia, M r s. Willia tnH. O’Neill was unable to withstand the shock caused b> ihe announcement of ihe death of her husband. '.ln* late (’apt. O'Neill, former harbormaster Sin* died. Thursday, in ihe faintly home. No •iti Brrtdyst., 29 hours after her hus- i band nad passed away. A double funeral will be held Saturday morn Inc at 9 o'clock, from the residence, and at ft:10 front SS Peter «md Paul’s eathedml, with burial in Mt Elliott .n metery. <';ipt. ind Mrs O'NYill elebrated their golden w **d j lmc ; nnivei ..i v las' J.muarj. No [ children survive, an only son having 1 died 2 >ear- go One* of Hoover's Helpers t I £ -*U t% *i i ‘fSt- ..v'.: V.... - F v *r it r ,« * l ’ I / -i 1. * r [ i V v *'• VvrrJ * v i L X A- »■ : ‘V • *' •' [ if; *?.£•£ V •- J ..'j / ,*••< •••» „•*! | r-r.l 1lr«» n ’lnvin, (iirtm fit fie, ir sl.lrnf let IMe 'HI \»f K l*M*- ■litt r> I.hKdiup, »vll«*r« hf r.. i|i»lT« a i . ki.iitil 4<• .It,lit I e 111 i Ihr • '•»•»*- I t ,|. i iti,» h * fir. ii iii'iH' il fit UV -lii-rt llmitrr, mlmlill*- i ,«.r ei \v hIN .inti. I >r •nnif time i' it. it |>e hii'i ti m (tNrih'it i, ii r fh* lf«,| i r»«». >«« H i.'tli h nf M« tlmr In i u Or. It,»«»* rr i lemt (hr |iro. „f i.tin- .in,l aitlirr limiH »ln e *. l ~••»% \\ nlmii ir |ifr IH. Mm ,ii''tiN,i'M« l.niinHrj In . Visit* .111*14— At-' THE WEATHER Tlfl 1 : WEiTHV.It Detroit nod vlefnltyi Erldoy nli*ht nod >otiirdu> fnlri not murh rhnnar In femiiernturet nenllr to niodemtr , urfitlile tvlltda. I,oner MlehlKNni Pnrtly rlondy t'rirtn) nlcht nod **nturdnyi prohahl) denitr foil. in-Ur l.nkr >llehl|*un und north l.ukr Huron. DOCTORS TO BE TRAIN D AT CUSTER Selected Medical Offi cers To Take Courses In Hospital There Hu HAROLD V. WILCOX. CAMP CUSTER. RATTLE (’REEK, Mich., Nov. 9. —It is th*' in tention of th*- Rovrrnment to make the bane hospital at Camp Custer a school for tlm special instruction of selected medical officers In military hospital work. Th** atudents wtft he selected from those who complete the course of Instruction Riven all army medical officers at such train inar schools as Fort Benjamin Har rison, Ind , whore the Custer medics took their training. Graduates of tho Custer course will he ellßible for high executive positions In other i army base hospitals. Construction i additions necessary* for the installa ! tion of such a school here will be j gin at once. Lieut.-Col. William A. Powell, dl -1 vision sanitary chief here, and as- I .-istant to the division surgeon, has been transferred to Catnp f>even, at Ayer, Mass., where he will become division sureeon. His successor at Camp Custer has not been an nounced The first formal review of the flight y-flfth division will take place here this afternoon. All units have been practicing reviews for the past week, and every regiment in camp spent most of Thursday on the pa rade ground, polishing off rough edgi s. The infantry brigades will lead off, followed by the depot brigade, the artillery brigade, the divisional machine gun battalion, the signal battalion and the trains. Taj-fUn IMckrnan will b»- the re viewing officer The officers of the 3;!oth Held ar tillery- a Detroit regiment intro duced n training innovation last night They took a tactical walk They placed a theoretical enemy at a certain place and matched over the hills pretending to be a regi ment of artillery -<»•< mg to find and shell th* enemy The officers were ordered to prepare a plan of tact ion 1 mxjceodure against the en ••my as thev advanced Early in the working out of the problems free discussion was permitted Later th»* offfe. r will be required to form ulate their plans of attack from their • > ti knowledge of tlic wai came, and to submit their plan in the f"t-m of order* These will b*- handled hv the regimental com mander ns a college professor would hand!** • tatninaflon papers. Truck, company No. 5 of th** Slffth it pt >1 v * train »on-i'je!> it-e's one of he more fortunate organization* of the brigade It has verv nur Tt:ir tiT. in Barrack j No 10.H1 In the barracks are a plaver-plano, a i < ni p. nv • xchange, a h* **-■ rtl table, a library and a big writing table For first conk this companv ha** a lor m< r chef of a Inrg* Milwaukee bo l, 1 H! a Ist ant i- a • i butcher who |s a star at unearthing good ova? f< r the boys- Lieut. V G. Whitii r. a f fm*r newspaper man who command fhi- company, has arranged a number of *>* near by towns for hi non, tn«l al* iy« h«« a part it. par* «l for them at the town vi ted i• * • i to *1 , nnni’i' r of I’b vho d< sir*' service in thf «*T Ht Ar rift rv c have h*fn invited to -1 ,u »n that h tv ,• of tlv • rre*»» Tho third bi’t Hon of th»- -“fifth iuf• ■ nr r * n- ' i omntand* t It is Maj. Harrv H. REso ’l, who) for m. rl> erved in Hottv first in lantry. ' Th, fervent rtfi'fff In flu* I i!fit-ll.*!tSf • lilt i« iII ».,• h'mf.it .tv**" s*t*.r.l*» m-.rnln*’, t.i < omit .Utclge ii- • tf* g lluanrei Th« *|.. tston hsnd.'d ,1 am I \ ‘'ft ft ii l»-uc» u fa* <«r of the |» *flg« brothers rue fn. ins I Mt W'M I*** supi.omrn -1 n * In (he <|• e.su.n slid wit' *■<•( the details. NOON IN DETROIT: ONE CENT. BOLSHEVIKI REBELLION CONFINEDTO PETROGRAD Former Premier Be lieved Fled To __ Moscow REBELS SHELL WINTER PALACE Defending Battalion of Women Forced To Surrender x By ED. L. KEEN. Staff Correspondent United Pre*#- LONIX>N, Nov. 9.—Russia la back apntn where she «u last March. Rolshevikl fanatics, extreme radi cals who burn at once to make the world a brotherhood, who are set against all wars, who believe in ut termost demtKTßcy, today seemed to control all Petrograd, the capital. Premier Kerensky and what re mains of the machinery of the pro visional government, apparently still has support of the remainder of Russia. The situation was regarded here as precisely parallel to the first few days following the revolution by which the czar was upset. Then It ■was LvofT, Millukoff *»nd other Lib erals who first seized the outward symbols of goverunont in Petro grad. The danger, as London saw It to day, was that Trotsky and his fellow fanatics of the Bolshevlkl would be able to extend their con trol beyond Betrograd find sway Russia’s great peasant population, ignorant of the Utopian idealism of the Bolsheviki, to their side. Kerensky was reported to harp escaped the rebels in Petrograd. Ho was reported seen enroute to Mos cow-. Il was believed here that he would name that city the capital and there endeavor to consolidate all Russia against the usurping group at Petrograd. The Holsheviki-controlled cable agency announced that the. foreign minister, Tereschenko, Minister of Commerce Konovaloff, Minister of Public Relief Kl-hin. Minister of Justice Mallantovitch and Minister of tlm Interior Nikitin had alt been arrested by the new revolutionary governing council of Petrograd. Other provisional government, ofh « ials were detained. Nirholai Lentne, radical fanatic, who-»> energies have always been r> ganJed here as directed from Ber lin. is firmly seated In power at Petrograd by the new revolution. Leon Trotsky, bis co partner in the cdTip tty which the “Bolsheviki over threw control in the capital, ha* likewise come under previous sus picion a* dominated by the Germans. Because of this the fear is felt here that in pursuance of their < rnzv -• !:• me Os restoring peace *o the whole world or possibly. In • ir ,n, * <; ;'an <f* the German offi< Us who hold I.enine, Trotsky mn.l others in sh. ir power the Hoi beviki would ripen the way to Pet rog-nd to a German fleet and Ger man reinforcem* nt.s to their forces 11 ■ retofore the Bolsheviki have n<n -’rcrv.ffh only in the larger i .... til . P- tro. r,d and Mi'sCftw. •yv,. -.■ n*. meJTf~’ where thrtiont Ru la for the faction ha* been nog l , hi* Th« - !’• »rozrad council i ( *v let i of wo| in md soldicea j>,< alw.-iv s been overwhelmingly Bol«herlki Icit sh» R'l-si,** rouncß of *ob (Her* .and workmen, ar organltaUrm of all fh* i«*> it conned s. har hcre i.• • % n m.a* cal U-d to lav in connection v ;th the Bolsheviki claim of Ihtktrse ni. tit by this all Ru--.i m b<**lv «•( Hie revolt, that only '2k'» member* out »>f the full roster of r.h«t m* *• h»Tg *\ ere present. The n'ftnt'er. Is sig nificant i» was stated since 2t>o I* • \ ,rflv th* 1 tremrth of the H«*l*he vikt for* e«* heretofore shown »n that !*.id\ Th- Leninites and Tm«*ky v • ter* l therefore i id their fl*ng I catefully,' having only tried and tn»