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PARMMOUTH 1S BOMBARDED HREE GERMAN CRUISERS (Contineed From First Page.) the Yser from Nieuport ta the direction of Lombaertsyde and «ho counter attacked by the Germans, were sustained in time. The has been entirely re-established in this locality. - Dizmade | movement. Further to the south the attacks of the enemy around Bix- troops, who subsequently advanced. fn without change. To the south- @ have resumed the offensive in combination with the operating in this region and repulsed an attack particularily belonging to the active army corps 8. of La Basser the British army, Neuve Chapelle. Between the canal | end Arres, as well as between Arras and the Olee, several Gdlivered by night and day, bave been checked. We even made progress tn the region of Vermelies and to the south of Aix centre, in the region of Vailly, we continued during the day ground previously lost by us. In the Argonne of the enemy were repulsed, and at the end of made progress at several points. Verdun we have taken possession of the villages and of Negevitle. region along the heights of the Meuse, southeast of the Forest of Apremont, southeast of #t. Mihiel, the offen @ the led. Some trenches in the vicinity of 2} ie £ of the Germana on the advanced marine fustiiers repulsed a fresh counter offensive! Naacy (the circle of fortified positions fesuited in perceptible losses for the enemy. A sur- ‘wndertaken by the enemy against the heights whieh dominate fesulted tm complete failure.” OFFICIAL GERMAN REPORT. Progress Made at Four Points, Says the War Office in Berlin BERLIN, Nov, 1—Aa official statement tesued by German Headquarters i Our offensive to the northwest and southwest of Ypres has that ft is ae yet without result. The Ger- been able to make slow advances at several poiats on southwestern front is shown parte of Alsace schools which had been closed owing at Tsingtau Blown Up By. Germans Before Surrender . TOKIO, Nov. 7 (Associated Press).—After desperate assaulte tn which are cald to have rivalled the bravory of their forces at Port face of heroic resistance by the Germans, Tsingtau sur- morning when Gov. Meyer-Waldeck, following flags on the forte, sent an officer with a flag of truce the Japanese and German officers opened Moltke barracks when the formalities of capitulation wero nstinted tribute to the bravery of the to the Inst. Unofficial reports tre that of their forts before surrendering and A Japanese torpedo boat flotilla Jeapons learned from the siege w heavy guns that the JapAneso of the aeroplane defense were discovered. and 6,000, will be brought AngloJapanese victory issued by the Jap- lows: general bombardment on Oct. 81 permitted the occupation on Nov. 1 the first altacking position—86.5 Metre Hill, 9,000 fect south of our Dy the ShiHo and the Shunkas-Ho, We further advance, and on Nov. 4 we pro- tion at Pompuga on the FusaueHo, where we met galling fire, yet never flinched. The heavy artillery moved closer and rotected the infantry, of the entanglements that screened the forts. Gen. Yosh- ‘8 command advanced from the centre and forced its way Getenses, crossed the intervening ditches, and , Captured the centre fort. This helped Gen, Hortucht Gen. Yohoyt, and the British right centre, led Jointly charged and early on Nov, 7 completely aad Biemarck, foreing the enemy to fly flags Germans Massing Great Force ) For New Drive Toward the Coast PARIS, Nov. 7 (Associated Press).—Having deen driven by guafire ty flood trom the read to Dunkirk the Germans appear to be concen: all their energies om the YpresLille-Arras line with the object of Boulogne through the valley of the Canche River, in the Depart- army corpe—the Eighteenth from Frankfort, the and the Tenth from Hanover—have been brought up are exhausted after nine days of ceaseless maseed around Arras and Lille behind Beauvais, Tilloy and St. Laurent de Blangy. bes Atotri Decome intense !n the last two days, ac jet Just arrived in Paris, Attacks of the .| years Gen. Sickles’s coachman iy Ws rae av GENERAL ADVANCE ON BERLIN BERIN YCLURS AMES Russian Central Army Defeats Germans’ Attempt to Re- sume Aggressive. AUSTRIANS FALL BACK BNING WORLD, SATURDA Rats eee. ts Y, movi Hundreds of Wounded on Both Sides Perish from Exposure to Cold. PETROGRAD, Nov. 7 curnitea | Prens).—All Russia fe to-day cel brating what is officially character. ined as the “greatest victory of the! war.” OMcial eccounte agree the general the Germans inveded Russian Po- Jand in force, has now been resumed. ‘Three great armies are pressing for- ward. pushed well across the Wast Prus- alan frontier, Ite objective will again be Konigeberg. “; The Hussian central army, which Geciaively defeated the Geamane in front of Wareaw, te keeping up ite Warthe River, Russian Polan, southeast of Kaliss, and about fifteen miles east of the German border. oF FE last three weeks. Thd foo bas boraly attempted to Bis po- pitiona in the face of artil. lery fire, man. captured large quantities of muni- tiona, cannon, automobile guns and rapid Grere. from the mountaina and have voured the dead and wounded, An official sta: at, covering the developments of the entire campa’ insued by the general staff to-da; concludes: “Developing over a period of eigh- teen days our success along a at of 888 miles resulted in breaking dow! general resistance of t' enemy everywhere. The Germans 'n the north and the Austrians in the pouth are now in full retreat, and our main armies are now in position to carry their task to completion.” — WIFE AND SON CUT OFF IN GEN, SICKLE’S WILL Testament Leaves $5,000 to House- keeper, Now Dead, Who Caused Estrangement. to the will of Gen, Daniel filed for probate in the Court to-day, the widow of the hero of Gettysburg who nursed him in hia final fliness, after an es- trangement of twenty-nine years, and hie only eon, are cut off without a penny, while the testator’s ‘good friend,” Eleanor Earle W he recipiont of a bequest of as @ testimonial of my of her faithful services.” Miss Wilmerding was for many eare Gen. Sickies's housekeeper at ie home, N: Fifth avenue, and Mrs. Sickles named her presence in the General's house as the cause of her estrangement from her husband. Mra, Wilmerding died after the will was drawn, @ year 5 pieee tonne hi anger Pe ns hk Gen. Horatio C. 4 income to Owen Healy, for hai 4 to Eleanor Nielson Paly, daughter of Isa ih Daly, one the residue of the eatate to go ree and da Crack- enthorpe and Daniel Bichles. erand- ie 000, preciation advance against Berlin, halted = URKISH SAW LAND AND SEA BATTLE BY USING EDGREN'S NAME (Continued From First Page.) editor while 1 watched the men in the balloon signal to some one in a wireless etation nearer shore, who, it was explained to me, was letting the gunners at sea know the range. All you could see, even from the top of this highest sand dune were rolling sand dunes to the east and au eocasional belch of amoke showing where a German gun was hidden. The moment the smoke began to dissipate you could no longer make out behind which one of the sand dunes that gua was placed. Up in the balloon they knew, however, and the English cruisers were tearing into the sand dunes in a way that made me think they were getting results. The German guns 414 not seem to diminish, though I learned later the cruisers had demo!- {shed one battery of three big guns. The cruisers, sailing in a circle, kept steaming by at hall speed firing steadily, guns flashing flaming tongues three seconds before we got the reports. The Germans were compelled to shoot in the alr, hoping to drop enormoug shells on the decks of the cruisers. If one had ever struck I believe it would have wrecked whatever it hit, but the shells fell all around the cruisers and never touched them, Inland there was no making out \pything except the course of the Yeer with sholls breaking everywhere. Nicuport was catching most of these and none was falling our way until ouddenly a shrapnel shell broke right over us and all about us buszing with aropping missiles, Immediately there was another a little closer to’ the balloon overhead, and in less than a minute the balloon was pulled down. Out of it stepped two young members of the flying corps, a little relieved to be out of range of shrapnel. ‘The first thing my friend, the sailor, sald to them was: “What d'you think, this fellow works for the same paper as Bod Edgren.” Funny part of it is I have never met Robert Edgren. ‘] felted a $3,000 bond already. He has not denied the facts alleged against ’ him, but has contended that a Con- IN FAN TRY BOARD MAY KNIFE TIRRELL-ADAMSON SALARY INCREASES Fusion Aldermen Planning Fight on Self-Recom- mended Raise. Vigorous opposition to the recom- mendations made by George L. Tir- rell and Tilden Adampon to increase thetr own salaries from $6,000 to $7,500 in the 1915 budget is expected from the Fusion members of the Board of Aldermen, Henry H. Cur- ran, Fusion leader and Chairman of the Finance Committee, to whom the budget report of the Board of Est!- mate will be referred by the Board of Aldermen on Tuesday, made that plain to-day. Both Tirre!l and Adamson, as direc- tors of the bureau work of equalizing and stardardizing salaries, were as- signed to take charge of the budget drafting. Although they arbitrarily slashed salaries in all departments of the city government, recommendations were included in their report to the Board of Estimate for the increase of thelr own salaries. ‘Thone recommendations were passed at the final meeting of the Board of Estimate on the budget appropriations at midnight last Saturday. However, LAUTERBACH, ALSO INDICTED WITH HIM (Continued from First Page.) denied by the courts. boasted of the gre: jume of money he has made, Ho ment to flee, I in, $50,000 at le Lamar arose to protest. He made threo quick, short, jerky, backward bows ‘and smiled amb-lke as a “Wolf of Wall Street” might be ex- pected to smile and sald: “I was only indicted once in my life, your E Li for assault; and T was acquitted, “The Court,” said Judge Rudkin, “indulges in the assumption that the defendant ia guilty, otherwise it would not hold him in bail at all, I will fix the bond at $10,000 on each indictment, with leave to apply to any other judge to reduce the amount.” Lamar’s lawyors hyrried away to look for a more lenioht Judgo, The officers kept Lamar with them. He terbach, called on United States Dis- trict Attorney H. Snowden Marshall and promised that Mr. Lauterbach would appear for examination Mon- | day morning. Thereupon no effort was! made to arrest Mr. Lauterbach or hold him under bail, The lawyer, for- every induce- | that he be held the Board of Aldermen has the power to cut the budget, when it comes up vote on Tuesday. forusion leader Curran intimated, to- day, there will be decided opposition {n the Board of Aldermen to the Ad- ameon and Tirrell salary increases. He said: “In a year when all doubt- ful expenditures should be cut, I think increases in any of the higher ralaries must tinized. i GIRL HEROINE LOSES LIFE. shee With Boy and Man She ‘Tried to ve From Fire, SILOAM SPRINGS, Agk., Nov. 7.— Racrificing her life 1 ittort to reacue two other ps "| Dynamite, be very carefully scru- | I am already at work on/ merly so active in Republican poll- ties, happened to be in the Foderal building when Lamar was brought in; but be was engaged in another cage, and he did not see “the Wolf of Wall Street,” accused of being his fellow conspirator, Lamar joined bis counsel, Lionel P. Kristeller and Henry J. Goldsmith, at the bar of the court at 10.30 A. M. He seemed almost jaunty. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that he tried to appear jaunty and nearly succeeded. His black hair, a litte thinner than of yore, but not showing gray, and his black mustaches bristl- ing energetically, gave him at least a semblance af ease and confidence. But his dark eyes had « look of fore- boding and corners of his mouth had a downward droop in apite of all bin efforta to keep @ stiff upper lip. Mr, Kreisteller unwed that Lumar be Connell, ith Jen tt ont has one week in which to plead to the first two indictments and two weeks to plead to the newly revealed indict- ment—that of July 31, 1913—upon which he was arrested in court be. tween paragraphs of the lawyers’ argumenta, Failing to secure a bondsman by 3 o'clock Lamar said he was tired waiting and was taken to the Tombs| by Marshal Henkel, Refore leaving | the building Lamar posed for 1 num- ber of photographs. to-day returne’ @ verdict of accidental Jeath in the case of Arthur Crosby Hudington of Eaat Lyme, Conn, who wan found dead in his rooms with a bullet wound in the head, Hudington, wha had many friends among the di- Jomatic corps, Wan planning to go to ne front to take part in the Red Cross work. aia of aut allowed to go at large under the bond ‘of $3,000 imposed by the United States Supreme Court at Washington, which ia considering his appeal against be- ing sent back from Washington to New York for trial, District-Attorney Marshall declared 000 bon: be ordered. With Gas. t Dauerteder, tifty-nix ‘old, who had been a victim of | melancholia for ir, was this | morning found di the kitchen of her flat at Two Hundred and Twelfth street and La Rochambeau enue, the Hronx. “A rubber tube ttached to a gas jet w im her Be the body was discovered | Mun er husi By Next Week’s FUGITIVE SLAYER S CAPTURED HERE EQUPPED FOR WAR Guns, Stilettos Found on Man Wanted at St. Johnsville. Tony Manull, wanted in Johnaville, N. ¥., for murder, and arrested here to-day, would be of use to the Ger- mans or allies in the sapguinary war- fare now waging in Europe. When searched in the Detect ureau ut One Hundred and Sixteenth street and Third avenue this afternoon Tony was possessed of the following: ‘Twelve (12) sticks of dynamite, One (1) loaded .38 calibre re- volver. One (1) box of cartridges. One (1) canvas bag of black powder weighing sixteen (16) pounds, ‘Twelvo (12) railroad torpedoes. Three (8) colls of slow burning fuse. One (1) razor-edged stiletto, Ten (10) two-for-a-nickel cigars. The Detective Bureau received a telegram a week ago from the Chief of Police at St. Johnsville stating that Tony had committed a murder up there was headed thi eway. He checked a suitcase in the New York Central Station at St. Johnsville to the One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street atation in this city, and Detec- tives Conroy and Enright were sent to the station to watch for the suit- case and its owner. The suitcase got here a week ago to-day, Conroy and Enright took turns camping in the baggage room waiting for Manut to call for his baggage. It was Conroy's tour of duty this afternoon when Manull got off @ train from the north and en- tered the baggage room. Conroy spotted him the description. The detective wore & cap and was apparently one of the ‘baggagemen. Manull approached him, |dropped two boxes, one of wood and the other of pasteboard, o.. the floor. ‘Then he presented Conroy a check for the suitcase. He aald he wanted to take the suitcase out and put the boxes in. Conroy nabbed Manull and sum- moned Enright, and they took the prisoner and his two boxes and the suitcase to the station. Having seen Manull drop the boxes on the floor of the baggage room, Conroy and En- right treated them with scant re- spect and kicked them out of the way a couple of times while they were registering Manull at the desk. When they opened the boxes they found six sticks of dynamite in each. The reat of the war apparatus was in the suit- case and on Manull’s person. The Chief of Police of St. Johnsa- ville failed to give any particulars of the crime Manull is alleged to have committed in that town. ———— Kavanaugh ta Re-elected, BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Nov. 7.—W. M. Kavanaugh to-day was re-elected pre- sident of the Southern Association of Faseball Clubs at a di ra’ meeting f the organization in ion here. at once from TURKISH TROOPS ON MARCH NEAR CAUCASIAN BORDER {PISCIAN INVADERS “ar BEAT TURKS BACK. WITH BG LOSSES Masses of the Population Along Trans-Caucasian Border Rise in Arms. PETROGRAD, Nov. 7 (Aseooiate1 Press).—An official communicatic from the General Staff in Cauoas! dated Nov. 6, says: Some Kurdish regiments, eup- ported by infastry and masses of the population in arms, attempted an offensive movement tn the re- sion northeast of Kara Kilissa. The Turks were drives back with Great losses. The Russians continue to pur- sue the Turkish and Kurdish troops, who were defeated in the hilly regions of Passine, Diadine and Baiset. These places have been occupied by our troops. The Turkish troops have been im part exterminated and in part éts4 persed, Other advices from the Turki frontier aay the Russian Turkey @ vance is continuing unchecked. On the Caucasian troops are engaged, @ though reinforcements are being set to their ald, as they will be compel to penetrate a mountainous counti through which there are no railroa and only indifferent roads for a ab tance of more than 700 mites, Until the Goeben and Breslau a: sunk it will be impossible for the Bu sians to attempt to send troops acre: the Black Sea, LONDON, Nov. 7 (Associated Pree —Telegraphing from Amsterdam, t! correspondent of Reuter's Telegra Company says a message from Vie na sets forth that the Austro-Hung rian Consul-General and the Turki: diplomatic representative at Tabr: , Persia, have been taken prisoners by the Russians and transported to ‘Tiftis. The Persian Government and the American Minister at Teberan, Charles W. Russell, have protested to Russia, according to the correspond- ent, against this alleged infraction of international law. FOUND AND REWARDS. The Greatest of . Publicity Dirigibles! The World's Want veritable ‘:ying machine that rain of opportunities structive missiles, t every morn! more liew York City than the Herald, Times, Su,. and Tribune COMBINED, It scatters ore want-filling ‘adver- tisements rary wi monta and yer than the above-named newspapers ADDED TOGETHER. Watch for \orld ads. every They vill visit you before every day if you will but say the word to your news {esler, With Worl! ads. at hand, the coms of life and available acon to ahs hire, buy, sell, rent, invest, &c, to the pa advantage, are within your -isy reach, When World Ads. Enter the Door Poor Man’s’’ Adv RUPERT HUGHES WILL BEGIN MONDAY... Complete Novel In The Evening World What Will People Say? A Romance of New York Society and entures Adeersity Leaps Out of the Window! -“\ ,