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‘ s. TURKS BATTLING @ number of houses. At Tarakosch the Montenegrins o¢+ cupied the highest point of the neign-|°” ~MONTENECRNS GATES OF SUTAR Force of King Nicholas, Driven | Back in Hot Attack, Pre- pares for New Assault. th called upon the Turks to surrender aa be prevent further useless bloodshed. The occupation of the town was effected after a bombardment of the rortress by all the Montenegrin guns. The Turks replied with twenty-two guns, but | those on the highest points were lenced after two hours of firing. The fall of night ti ‘upted further artittery action, but the infantry made several night attacks, and aa a result of thelr efforts the Turks evacu the upper fort and the Montenegrins occupied it. Gen, Vukotitc>@ajagraphs that he bas overcome and @@e@me@ the Moham- medan Arnauts of the Rugara tribe who inhabited the district of Plava and who had offered a stubborn resistance to his troops, The roads are now open for the advance of the Montenegrin; 4P troops against the town of Ipek on the Fé! left flank, Gen. Vukotiteh’s troops have since advanced to the town of Sienitza in t district of Novipazar, whence they have approached within five miles , Servian troops coming from the direc: to join them, CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. %.—On the other side of the peninsula Zekki Pasha with an army of 9,0 Turks Is reported to have attacked the Servian army north of Kumanova just as a large force of Bulgarians was about to effect @ junction with It. The Servians found the four divisions of their troops broken alming at/up and they fled in confusion back frontier, leaving a battery of of to for PANIC IN THE CITY. Bulgatians and the Sultan’s -Troops in Furious Hand-to- Hand’ Conflict. thi ca RIEKA, Montenegro, Oct. 25.—The| Montenegrin army succeeded in sur- Founding the Turkish town of Scutari yesterday afternoon, ‘The Montenegrin artillery opened fire on the town from the northwestern quarter, the citadel and the Mohammedan dis-! trict. A number of shalls fell in the Mohammedan district without doing |and @ny damage. The Montenegrin envoys oun Droceeded. toward the town to open{ 4ckk! Pash ‘hen turned his attention Spetehay Ate hy. t2 the Bulgarians, whom he attacked | negotiations for its surrender, but with: \and routed, driving them also. back | out effect. ; across the frontier with the loss of four ‘The Montenegrin infantry then made !of their field guns. @ desperate attack on the town, but en-| HAND-TO-HAND FIGHTING BY n,annibilating fire from the TURKS AND BULGARIANS. Turkish . artillery and finding them-| Stories of desperate hand-to-hand gelves hard pressed and in danger they fighting between the Bulgarians and wore compelled to. retire to. their} the Turks are told in newspaper de- tor an }spatches reaching here from Adri- emer positions, janople. Great losses were sustained They immediately began to make) py both armies in the battles around) Dreperhtions for a renewal of the at-| that city on Tuesday and Wednesday. ta This ‘wag made under cover of | Bayonets were used freely in the fight artillery, the mén leaving thelr trenc for the possession of the banks of the| as the ns Opened fire. A vigorous at- undja River and hundreds were killed tadk. isto be made on the city to-day | coped ead ini nda general's flag behind The Turks took many prisoners | a large number of dead and on th i a in UI o} nt battalions of Bulgarian troops! A cary attacked the village of Maras yester- | PEOPLE OF SCUTARI IN STATE | a. were repulsed by the Turkish OF PANIC, tr with heavy losses. e he Turks have 15,000 of their Crown Prince Danilo and his staf at/fnest troops on the line stretching one time were in great danger, a shell from Kirk-Killsseh to Adrfanople, | x bursting a few yards from them. {which latterscity Is garrisoned by an- | ¥ ‘The population of Scutar! ts in a state! other 60,000 men. Still another 60,009 4; “) During this sale informal ‘}-player-piano recitdls will be given every afternoon from $.00 to 4.30 o'clock, to which you are. cordially* invited. player of all time, said this: ‘‘To make a home house: necessary. say MUSIC is the one essential.” lor panic, and white flags are flying from} men guard the line from Adrianop! back to Lute Burgas. ago declared that the troops boring mountain and Gen, Martinoviten | Gfnowal were sufficient and since then | was received to-day by bureau of the United Press in reports of a Ser Servia I am ordered to inform you 1 the Servian army {s constantly and # cessfully progressing on its entire fignt- ing line. patch says that Mukhtar Pi () Sidney Lanier, the poet, the Christian, the greatest flute hold, given the raw materials—to wit: wife, chil- dren, a friend or two anda house—two other things are These are a good fire and MUSIC. And inas- much as we can do without the fire half the year, I may THE E Abdullah Pasha, the comman ief of the Turkish forces, some time his e great stream of fresh troops has) en directed toward Salonikl. Communication with Adrianople ts and no serious reported by Fugitives from Kirk-Killaneh, most | them Christians, are being brought Constantinople by train. —— “VICTORIOUS EVERYWHERE,” | CABLES KING OF GREECE. LONDON, Oct, 25.—From_ King George of Greece, through the Hellenic the following telegram the London re- jonse to a query concerning the prog- ss of the Greek campaign In Turk ‘The King has received your mess reign office, and commands me to forward to you ie reply: “Thanks for the interest you mani- fest.on behalf of the American press | in the war Greece is waging in the) une of cfvilization and humanity. & am glad to inform you that my army is victorious everywhere and in ad-/ vancing steadily.” (Signed) “COROMILAS, “Minister of Foreign Affairs.” In a postscript the Foreign Minister added that His Majesty dictated the | emsage to the United Press aboard the royal yacht Amphitrite just before sall- ie for Volo, whence he will join the Crown Prince at the front. In reply to a request for. information | rectly from he: dquarters concerning defeat by the Turks Albania the London bureau of the nited Press to-day received the follow- ing telegram from Belgrade: “On behalf of his Majesty the King of (Signed) == “Voyslav Yovanovitch, “Secretary.” — HAIGH TURKISH OFFICERS PRISONERS OF WAR. LONDON, Oct. 25.—A Sofla des- . son who commanded f the Grand Vizier, the fortress of Kirk-Kilisseh, was cap- tured by the Bulgarians, as well as Prince Abdul Halim and several gen- rals. OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS, SAILED TO-DAY, or St, Thomas, Madison, ' Norfolk, jatanzas, Tamvico,” Lard Downshire, Bahia, ‘ahoe, Jacksonville, 3 out of a the Turkish com- | mander, | t | In New York’s NEILL- Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street Come tomorrow with F/VE dollars and come with the expectation of having one of these magnificent pianos or player-pianos sent home NING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, ANNULMENT 1S ASKED BY LAWYER'S BRIDE; Love’s Dream in Four Mont Becomes Mightmare for Mrs. Benjamin Terk. Love's sweet dream, born in of Lake Piacid last summer, has ent of her marriage for the an Benjamin Terk, | fascinating young attorney, and | all contributed to shatter the girth | tdeal of the plaintift. Instead of love and respect for it she ands T as 1s evidenced by an am made, in which she publicl. the husband of any re that as soon as she jWas not what he represented him | Schenectady and come to New York cause his clients were clamoring money which they sald they had trusted to him ang which he had propriated to his Own use, Two 4 her a letter in which he said: “My condition that disgrace and ruin imminent, and consequently IT must lor commit suicide, My first imp to resort to the form Mra Terk, who | with parents is at now her No. to grant an order directing that runaway be served with ment by publication, zg ue, Cu here tomorrow. Tucka five dollar bill in your ROMANCE SHATTERED youthful heart of pretty Hattle Siegel while she was enjoying the pleasures come a horrible nightmare, and to-day she filed @ sult In the Supreme Court} The lure of the moonlight canoeing | and automobdiiing with the dapper and) packages of clearettes, | representations of wealth and affluence, man who led her to the altar less than | four months ago the pretty bride now has only a feeling of disgust and hatred, | as @ forger and thief, totally unfit to be ble woman. @iscovered Terk to be to her at the time of thelr mar- |riage she ceased to live with him, That was on Aug. 14, when Terk was forced to give up a lucrative law practice in later, said the young wife, Terk wrote personal affains are in @uch was to do the latter, but T concluded | living! 3 West Ninety-fifth street, has asked the Court the summons | it w: and complaint in her action for annul Shopping Centre AMS 1912. YOUTHFUL BURGLAR, ‘INCOG,’| MILKMAN WHISTLES; WELL-TO-DO, SAYS LAWYER. BURGLAR IS CAUGHT. Policeman Says “John Doe” Tried| Seen Coming Down Fire Escape to Stab Him After Saloon and Block Is Surrounded— Robbery. Found in Cellar. A yout man who refused to give hI8) Bicyole Policeman William McLough- name and who would onis| say that Meiiin landed a prize criminal early to-day ile counter ond waa innocent of the| Without knowing It when he arrested |putsory prayer meeting; Friday, flus- charge against him, was arraigned in{Charles Kaufman in Simpson's barn on| trated lectures; Saturday, dance for the Jefferson Market Court hetore Mag-| FOX street, the Bronx, At Police Head-| young people. {strate Barlow to-day charged with bur-| Quarters it was sald later that K alary, On the ri he figures as|than, or Karabon, his real name, h Douglas Levien of No. w6| record asa burglar and fat thief d his counsel, told the Court) as far back as 1897, he wished to waive examination, { A nitkman saw a man coming down “LT don't Know why this boy should] the fro escape of the house at No. 106 commit a crime,” he sa! “He haa| Lowell street near dawn to-day ant plenty of money, much more than many,| Blew his poltce whistle, Pollceman Fox boys of his wee. He has been a bad heard tt, caught a gilmpae of the fleeing boy and [am going to have his sanity |&Ure, and rapped for help. Soon the inquired into.” reserves from the Morrisania station In hia aMdavit, Cornelius J, Dwyer, a| Were strrounding the block, ‘Then Me- Itiquor dealer of No. 216 Fighth avenue, | Loughlin found the burglar hiding in £0) tne complainant, says that the prisoner | the unused barn oke Into his saloon on the night of; A Kold watch was found in hia pockets Mt. 2 and atole $2 and two dogon| When he was searched, Later William While he was|Stanech, who lives In the house from a) Which the burglar was seen ping, claimed the watch as his own. Nothing else wae stolen, WANTS WIDE OPEN CHURCH SEVEN DAYS A WEEK. SUPERIOR, Wi Oct. Joseph Konkel # in favor of @ seven- a-week church. In the Firat Pap- ald he would » Mission Thureday, com- hs | the! be- hii *) breaking open a desk Patrolman Jot of the West Seventeenth street at saw him and pla after the youth, he police: man, had tried to stab him in an effort to get away. \ He was held for the Grand Jury with-| out bail. ood the CONVICTION OF ELLISON IS UPHELD BY couRTs. | has erk Like a Mrs, T who is the daughter of mene Abrtat singslc’a Wal ts co Maseru S ivrington it || _ GET THE WHOLESALE PRICE fara aban anutnine taal ore tae dicaeeremer ie Tt Friendly Hand Go to Sing Sing for Manslaughter, The Appellat Division to. self For Men Who Dress Well OUR WHOLESALE PRICE TO YOU The aching ligaments of a falling arch are gently held in ay con- firmed the conviction of James Ellison, their natural, comfortable better known as “BIff" Ellison, who ta ‘ be-| was tried before Justice Davis in the position, by the friendly for |Criminal Bra’ of the Supreme Court assistance of the Cowarp Arch In-|on an indlctinent charging mansiaughter ap-|in the first degree, in Ju wu, In Support Shoe. Equally help- ays | November, 1911, Ellison was released on ful to weak ankles and ** flat- bail pending the decision on appeal. A few days ago he was surrendered by his bondsman on the ground that ire was insane and ja now In the Tombs, alligon and James Kelly were indicted ‘for murder In the first degree for the killing of William J, Harringtos %, 16. Kelly surrendered and 14, 1908, entered a plea of not guilt; was discharged on motion of the Di foot.’” Coward Arch Support Shee and Coward Fetension Heel, have been made by James S. Coward, In his Custom Dept. tor over 30 years, are} flee | ulse 11d Hin Pries i 1 2-4 Maiden Lane = 170 Broadway Co. JAMES S. COWARD 264-274 Greenwich St., N. ¥. ora the trict-Attorney, Ellison disappeared, an some three years after the com- ission of *the crime that he was ar- ested, All of the features of the co- operative plan are carried out in offering the player-piaaos, with the single exception that the terms on the player-piano are two dollars a week, instead of—as on the piano —one dollar and twenty-five cents a week, 1912, by Stone & McCarrick, Ine. ‘ pocket before starting. And come with the expecta- tion of beginning right then aid there to own one of these fine pianos. You will be surprised—agreeably surprised. We expect you to be. For you will see a piano, which, in design, in finish, in tone, and in action will equa not surpass—those of your friends and neighbors which cost three hundred and fifty to three hundred and seventy-five dollars: And even up to four hundred dollars. We don’t care how skeptical you may be. You will see that these instruments are the biggest kind of bargains at the price ($248.75), tosay nothing of the many other advantages you get in the plan through which they are now being sold. You will see that these are just the kind of pianos you have been picturing in your mind for your home. You will see at a glance that these instruments will grace any home: They will cor- spond with any modern room, it matters not how beautifully appointed. n fact, you will be so delighted with them that you will be irresistibly compelled to select one for your very own. The whole proposition gone over again @ In order that you will know this pe proposition just as well as we know it, we will go over it again. @ First, we are going to sell seven hundred pianos for two hundred and forty-eight dollars and seventy- five cents each, which, under the usual merhods of selling—sell at three hundred and fifty dollars mie @ Instead of selling them on regular terms of twenty to twenty-five dollars down and ten, twelve, fifteen dollars a month, you pay but five dollars as an ial payment and the remainder at the rate of only one dollar and twenty-five cents a week—and the piano is sent to your home at once, @ A joint guarantee, signed by both the manufacturer and ourselves, is handed to you in writing, whi i guarantees the material and workmanship of the piano for five years from the day you make your urchase. ” You can get your money back at the end of a thirty days’ trial of the piano—if you wish. At the end of the first year's use of the piano, should you wish, you can exchan; other new piano we sell of equal or greater value, This gives you a whole year to fully satisfy that the piano is all you wish it to be. g And, should you die before all of your payments have been made, all future or unpaid payments will be cancelled voluntarily. @ If you wish, you need not take the full one hundred and ninety-five weeks’ time in which to pay for your piano. You may pay in less time. ‘This is wholly optional on your part. But for each and every week you do shorten the life of your agreement, you can earn a cash dividend or cash premium of fifteen cents, q Included, without extra charge, are a late style s O'NEILL-ADAMSCo. Sixth Avenue, 20th, 21st and 22d Streets Main Store Sth Floor: take 224 Street Kievator arf, a stool to match the piano and two tunings. t. ., 6th Ave., New York hotographs ‘pianos belng Name, Street end No. OW reeeee %.—Mayor Be a Wise Woman! a8 Ne. 406—Iow bust / f No. 408—medium $4.00 When you sit down, the bands ex ; you're cor Band your corset doesn’t “ride up, Be nice to the dealer: whe; tries to sell you “something just as good” as tho Nemo, but Be a, Wise \Vomant 3 —and consider firt YOUR OWN style, health and Hf at if HH i i tr