The evening world. Newspaper, November 10, 1914, Page 1

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H ) pi Jury of Farmers Will Hear of Deaths and Suicides Caused by Crash. awd IN COURTROOM. Defense Bars Aft With T: iii ing int Figures—Jury May Be Completed To-Night. indent (Opecial, fram 0 Sat Garreope GENESEO, ¥., 10.—If Henry Giegel were being tried for murder instead of for the larceny of 9084.05, the attorneys arrayed for and against him in the Geneseo Court House could scarcely exercise more care in tho selection of a jury. When oon recess was reached to-day 43 [onegaae almost half the panel had ined and there were only pen ec in the box. Of the 20 Nov, eaatcoatanye’ op Xe on Second Page) _ SUBMARINES! World ads. search the very bottom.of the Sea of Opportunity. M there are bargains .o be offered, ‘orld ais. show them. W there are bargains to be found, World ads. locate them. J. Edward G, Meyran, 187 Iv) St, aA 1, writes under date of 4: 5.894. World “Real Estate” Ads, w.-e last month— 1,368 More Than the Herald. 2,567 more than the Times Sun, Tribune and Press ADDED TOGETHER, . in Reat Estate for Sajety * tomes in nd Profil printed FINA IGHT PRICE ONE _PRIOE ONE CENT. HONE URORS IN THE wr TO TRY SIEGEL AT GENESEO: ‘STATE 18 READY TO OPEN bia ih jewelry and other valuables. pete Me Sued a - im L @hbe '“ Circulation Books Open to All”? | }ORS, MOSTLY FARMERS, CHOSEN TO TRY SIEG. WEATHER—Pair to-night and Wednesday; warmen » FSeL : { “Cirenlation Books Open t to All: : Copyright, 101 Ge, teks’ Nee PHONE GIRL HEROINE OF APARTMENT BLAZE: TENANTS TERRORIZED Miss Collins Sticks to Her Post in Manchester While Others Flee. Miss May Collins, telephone opera- tor at the Manchester, a big twelve- story apartment house at One Hun- dred and Eighth street and Broadway, rose nobly to her opportunity to be- come & heroine shortly after noon t6- day, when fire started in the sixth floor rear apartment of Edward Roach, a retired business man. Nobody was in the Roach apart- ment when Mrs. William Hord, who lives two floors above, saw the smoke and notified Miss Collins, In two minutes every tenant of the apart- ment house, which covers half a block, had been warned of the blaze, and the Fire Department had been | summoned. Then Miss Collins stuck | at her post while water poured down | the stairs, over the switchboard and thoroughly drenched her, making two-inch lake in the lower hallway, ‘The wealthy tenants, alarmed by the smoke and excitement, forgot | about the elevators and made a dash for the stairs, many carrying their None was hurt, though several reported bruises from falling in the baste, ‘The fire was confined to the Roach apartment, and tiough everything there was flooded or damaged by |smoke, Mr. ltoach said the damage was not great, The origin of the fire is unknown, though it is thought! possible painters, yvho had been | working in the apartment, dropped \a mateh or cigarette atub. geese Prees Pablishing - lew York World). Pf The NEW “YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER “10, 1914. 18 PAGES 1 GERMAN TERROR, EMDEN, DESTROYED; CRUISER KOENIGSBERG BOTTLED UP; HARD FIGHTING FROM YPRES TO SEA - THE CRUISER SYDNEY, CRUISER EMDEN SHE SANK AND CAPTAIN AND SOME OF HER CREW MISS BURKHARDT AND MRS. SULLIVAN FLED TOOBOKEN Cropsey Learns Hiding Place of Pair Sought in Investigation. When District-Attorney Cropsey re- sumed to-day before the Kings Coun- ty Grand Jury his inquiry into the Sing Sing scandal centring about the banker-convict David A. Sullivan, he was possessed of some significant in- formation, He knew Louise D, Burkhardt, Sul- livan's confidential secretary, had been hiding at Meyers’s Hotel in Ho- boken all the time that subpoena servers were trying to find her at her Yonkers home to bring her before the Grand Jury, He knew Mrs. Sullivan, the bank- er-convict’s wife, had fled trém her home on Pacific street, Brooklyn, to the Hoboken hotel at the same time Miss Burkhardt took refuge there and that Mrs, Sullivan posed-as the moth- er of the younger woman. That telephone messages from the central telephone exchange at Ossin- Ing, about seven minutes’ walk from the prison, were received by Misa Burkhardt in Yonkers and by Mrs. Sullivan in Brooklyn on the very night that Assistant District-Attorney Gildstein made his preliminary visk of inquiry at the prison was another feature of Cropsey’s information. ‘These messages were sent at 7 P. M. on Oct, 24, Just twenty-five hours later Miss Burkhardt and Mrs. Sul- liven registered at Meyers's Hotel, Cropsey’s detectives have laid be- Miss Burkhardt. The two women arrived in a taxi- cab at 840 o'clock on the night of Oct, 25, the day following Goldstein's pa to Sing Sing, and remained there ntil Oct. 30, keeping close to* their rooms, They did some telephoning. One call was to William 3, Schneider, County Clerk of Manhat- tan, who was summoned before the| Grand Jury last Thursday to tell | what he knew concerning Miss Burk- hardt's whereabouts. The telepyone call to him antedated his appearance | before the inquisitorial body by sev- eral days. Schneider testified that he fore &@ pretty complete record of the vit to Meyers's Hotel of “Mra, L, Burke, Asbury Park, and Miss/ Burke," who were Mrs. Sullivan and Q EMIDEN KEPT FIGHTING TILL GRUISER SYDNEY DROVE HER ON SHORE German Warship, Which Had Sunk 22 Ships and Caused a Loss of © $10,000,000, Set on Fire During , Running Fight. . : ——— KOENIGSBERG TRAPPED BY SYDNEY'S SISTER SHIP. LONDON, Nov. 10.—The cruiger Emden, German terror of British commerce and even of allied warships, has been sunk. She was drivén ashore on an island of thé Cocos group in the Indian Ocean south of Sumatra by the Australian ___ | cruiser Sydney. The Sydney sighted the Emden yesterday morning. With superior speed she at once closed in and gave battle. © The German boat could not escape.. There was a running _ ee the end of which the Emden, burning from the * f the Australian boat, was beached. The news of the destruction of the Emden was announced by the Admiralty to-day. Almost at the same time came word of sey British victory on the sea when it was ane nounced the German protected cruiser Koenigsberg had been pl into port in Rufiji Island, off German East ASLEEP TEN MONTHS, | PATIENT 1S SHOWING SIGNS OF AWAKENING (Ce Massachusetts State Hospit Doctors Expect Mansto Be Conscious in Few Days. ALLIES CREEP UP THE COAST DED BY BRITISH WARSHPS: ll Paris Reports Hard Fighting fro Fighting from Armentierés| Africa. The British cruiser Chatham chased the Koenige- berg ashore. The Admiralty declares that the Pacific and. Indian Oceans “‘are now clear of the enemy's warships, with the ex-” ————“—_——- ception of the squadron off the coast of Chili.” PARUS, Nov. 10.—(Assoclated Press.)—Fighting from aand dune to} ADMIRALTY’S STORY OF THE BATTLE. sand dune, hampered by thick fog banks and at times crawling on hands Telling of the destruction of the Emden, the Admiralty and knees through high grass; the advance of the allies along the Belgian | statement declared: seacoast continues. It 1s again being alded by the British warships. “Yesterday morning news was received that the : Repulse of the German advance in the regions of Bixschote, Ypres and Emden, which had been completely lost since the to Sea, Each Side Alternating in Offensive. (Special to The Evening World.) GARDNE: Mass., Nov, 10.—The sleeping patient at tne State Hospital at East Gardner, who has been in a state of coma for ten months, ts showing signs of returning conscious- ness. During his long sleep spectal treatment was required to keep him|AFmentiores was announced in today's 8 o'clock communique, It was de- action with the Jemtchug, had arrived at Keeling, S 4 alive, and he ts fed twice a day by|clared that fighting contlaues with unabated violence between Armentiercs Cocos Island, and landed an armed party to destroy 7 paneprine aa two weeks the doe.| 884 the ea, both aides clashing in offensive movements, the wireless station and cut the cable. The Emden a 3 tors at the institution have noted a Tha text of the communication follows: was caught and forced to fight by the Australian ware 4 eee ees ETP e lop Apaientierse. ‘The enconnters werk of particular: vislenes tor’the|seasen ‘tA sharp action followed in which the Sydney lost : three mon killed and fifteen wounded. The Emden was driven ashore and burned. Her losses are to be very heavy. Every possible assistance was given the survivors by various ships which were despatched to the scene.” The Admiralty sent the following message to the come mander of the Sydney: “Warmest congratulations for the brilliant entry of the Australian navy into the war and the signal service rendered to theallied cause and peaceful commerce by the destruction of the Emden.” The Emden's career has been the most picturesque in the Kaiser's navy. Commanded by Capt. Karl von Muller, she has swept the Pacific, capturing or sinking more than muscles of his face twitch. During! theso periods he gazes at persons who happen to pass his cot, Dr, Charles F. Thompson, Super- intendent at the hospital, said to- that it is probable that in a fow ¢ the patient will become active, but whether he will be permamently cured of his strange atlment is a mat- ter of conjecture, Owing to family reasons and the rules of the institu- tion, the name of the patient has not been made public, that the opposing forces are alternately taking the offensive. “Summing up, it may be said that the day was marked by the checking of a German attack in considerable force to the south of Ypres and by perceptible progress on the part of French forces in the vicinity of Bixschote and between Ypres and Armentieres, “Equally on the front of the British troops all the German attacks were repulsed with energy, “Along the major part of the front from the canal of La Bassee as far as the Woevre our troops made secure the results attained in the course of the past few days. There should be reported also our progress In the region of Loivre, between Rheims and Barry-au-Pac, “In Lorraine there is nothing to report. “In the Vosges fresh attacks on the part of the enemy directed against | the heights to the south of Mount Sainte Marie and the southeast of Thann all bave been repulsed.” ee ener | TURKS WILL KILL THREE FOR EVERY | MUSSULMAN SLAIN. TANG HOY, at rd OFFICIAL GERMAN REPORT. a score of merchant vessels of the allied nations and brought in formal pati ete aa io th Ara her raids to a climax by boldly entering Penang harbor, where she sank the two allied warships. | LONDON REJOICES OVER BMDEN’S FATE. Coming on the heels of the stirring war speeches of Lord Kitchener and Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Ade miralty, the feat of the Sydney in destroying the Emden roused London to a fever of enthusiasm to-day. The cry now is that the Good Hope and Monmouth must be avenged. - can Consul-Ceneral and intended fo : Big Advantage Gained at Ypres and Arras, Say Berlin Officials’ BERLIN, via The Hague, Nov, 10 (United Press).—The situation in | the west continues satisfactory and some advantage bas been gained in the regions of Ypres and Arras, according to the German official statement [issued this afternoon. There has been no change In the east sponsibility for any uprising againat Christlans which might ensue from such | |x bombardment. | ‘The Turkish commander stated for any Turkish property dan pesscacnamlaie Compensation would pe exacted by The Turkish campaign is declared to be progressing satisfactorily, At least seventy warships have been conaeabe Feciti in search, | eatinved on Geovad Pagey sodchesoe valve bad westher. sho Emdeg, Alyayp abe bas cluded pursuers. gui it ovemed abe A , ph 5 s a tat 9 bes ‘ pe i Smcaceaa le “i anaes

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