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ey i Re? ag t ASPARAGUS-—A.M.&C..... + { ve i! — the following ships: , Vessel. sate ARMY OF 600,00 a et tive i Mint —1 battle. When reported in one erection, she would suddenly appear in end capture or rend some merchantman to the bottom, Bvery officer and member of the crew of the Bmden had been awarded fron Cross by the Kaiser for tie brilliant work on the sea. Capt. tou Emden’s commander war recently quoted as declaring to the raity that he knew his vessel would sometime be run down ‘but until thet time came the Emden would give a thorough rset. Evening News in an ciitorial commenting upon the destruction of Bmden says: "To the British nation there t# one regret in the destruction @f the Emden. That is the possibility of the loss of the life of the captain, a brave, ingenious and courteous gentleman. « He has played the game admirably. We hope he has been saved.” Capt. von Muller, the commander of the Emden, wae a native of Bisakenverghe, Belgium, and was nt one time an offleer in the employ of » fe Hansa Line of steamers. SOW THE KOENIGSBERG WAS BOTTLED UP. ‘The Aémiralty account of the bottling up of the Koenigsberg follows: After the whereabouts of the Koenigeverg had been indicated by the attack on the Pegasus, on Sept. 19, a concentration of fast ernisers was arranged by the Admiralty in Kast African waters and 8 Borough and prolonged search by these vessels in combination ‘was made. The search resulted Oct. 30 tu the Koenigaverg being digsovered by H. M. 6. Chatham, Capt. Sidney R. Drury-Lowe, hid- ing {n shoal whter about six miles up the Rufiji River, opposite Mafia Island, German Kast Africa. Owing to & greater draught the Chatham could gg hm aberg, ich probably is aground except at high water. Jisvct ter woe ot Wan Komnlgtvors bas veum landed ond to Ii of the river, Fem inoas wrenabesents and the Koenigaterg herself have been Dombarded by the Chatham, but owing to the dense palm groves amid which the ship Hes it in not possible to estimate the damage done. Pending operations for hor capture ur destruction effective steps have been taken to block the Kocnigaberg by sinking colliers in the only navigable channel to the river, and she ie now im- prisoned and unable to do any further harm. The fast vessels which have.beon searching for her are thus released for other sorviee. News of the destruction of the Kmden resulted in a drop of fifty per fn Lioyds insurance premiums on vessels bound cast of the Suez i ‘ERROR. ng ay th Rp BL Bd Fe Ir war, as thus far re- corded. {te most remarkable chapters. For sheer eudecity and suc cess of Mcotastunneat it has few paraliels—cortainly none since the Alobame, the famous old Confederate warship, was roaming the Atlantic. ‘Twenty-two ships, mostly British, have been sunk, and one has been cap- tered cruiser, Nite ahs fa August the Emden has been at work. Most of tho time she was preying on British shipping in the Indian Ocean, but late last Month she suddenly appeared at Ponang, on Malacca Straits. It wes here that the Emden performed her most daring feat. A fourth mokestack was rigged on ber deck and a Japanese flag run up. Thus dis- gaized, abe oteamed boldly into the harbor, pessing unchallenged under the Guns of the fort and fired torpedoes whieh sank the Russian cruiser took to her heels and escaped ‘The Moi i i } 3 oe had a total value of about $4,000,- Bmden's largest guns were only 4.1 Her speed of 245 knots was her greatest run dows merchant ships with ease and then war vessels that have pursued her. British, warebips in the Mast Rave been attempting ead to her career. to naval men how the Emden has been able to month after month without runsing short of coal and supplica. Jearned she has obtained euffcient food and fuel from cap- her needs. Jp at least one instance this ts known | ? i g = & z HE i ? the British steamer Exford, captured by the Emden in feported to his owners thet the commander of the Emden defore be sank the Exford he intended to take on board his C00 tons of steam coal with which the Exford was laden. report of the activity of the {&mden was on Aug. 6 when she ‘deen sunk in action with the Russian cruiser Askold off ‘was contradicted a few days later when word was received bad sunk the ‘bteamer City of Winchester on Aug. 5, and, of Bengal five daye later, had sent two more British Within three days she had sunk four vessels there. was accompanied by the Hamburg-American steamer Markomannia as eller. The Markomannia was sunk on Oct. 16 off Sumatra by a British i E € 3 = ‘ b? 33 i # Bengal, the Maden sank three British steamers in Oceaz on Sept. 14. On Sept. 22 she appeared off Madras and CUy, extinguishing ber lights and disappearing when the forts Thea sho renewed her activity in the vicinity of Rangoon, where Britteh vossels fell prey to het. Again she disappeared and was not turned up at Penang. : of the steamer Parom put into Sydney, N. 8, W., yester- Teported thet after the sucerss of the Kmden at Penang she was by a British erutser, but being a gaster ship was able to escape. store ships accompanying ber wore left behind, and the British cruiser ‘captured one sunk the other, During hor three months’ service as a commerce destroyer the Emden Tonnago, + 4231 City of Winchester, Indian Ocean, about Aug. 6. Indva, Ray of Bengal, Rept. 10 ' 2,103 a 7 Acker, Merrall & Condit EST, Company 1820 Unequalled variety of choice— Unequalled opportunities to save. CHICKEN SOUP Richardson & Robbiris.Quart tins .2] SAUSAGES . . Made from little pigs. . 1 Ib, package .24 MACARONI or SPAQHETTI... .1 Ib. package 10 Marcillat SARDINES-—-Gondolier . . Boneless in Olive Oil. sAg.tins |2 “CORN-A. M. & C. Finest Maine......... .large tins all large tins ,2] California Mammoth Green CHEESE-—Rogquefort—Finest Imported........ . Ib, 39 .. 36 men realized that sooner or later they must be sent to the ' Ae RAM RRR: tren rn = a RT Hp big: Aiea ere, pes ibs EB EVENING WORLD, TU BBDAY, NOVEMBER 10,1914. °° RUSSIANS MARCHING ON TURKS IN ARMENIA ( wf BC gs ea i 0 [RUSSIANS DRIVEN ACROSS FRONTIER -—_NEASTPRUSSIA Hurled Back Near Wirballem by Northernmost Ger- man Army. Killin, Ray of Bengal, Sept. 12...... Diplomat, Bay ot Bengal. Sept. 13. Clan Matheson, Indian Ocean, Hopt. 14 Trabboch, Indian Ocean, Sept. 14 Tymerte, Indian Ovean, Sept. 14... Harek (collier), Indian Ocean, Crafteman, Indian Ocean, Gryfevale, Indian Ocean . Foyle, Indian Ocean, Sept. Riberia, Indian Ocwan, so King Lud, bi in Ocean, Kabinga, Indian Ocean . Chilkaua, Indian Ocean . Trotiun, Indian Ocean . Benmobr, Indinn Ocean . Clan Grant, Indian Ocean Pourabble (dredger), Indl Ocean, Kamagasaki Maru (Japanese freighter), Straits Settlements. Jemtchug (Russian cruiser), Penang Harbor. Mousquet (French torpedo boat), Penang Harbor. The Emden aleo captured tho British oteamship Fxtord, « vessel of 2,006 tons, in the Indign Ocean. Tt fs estimated that the Emden caused the loss of $10,000,000 to the allied powers by the destruction and capture, of vessels, not including the loss of trade. Protests came from Bombay to the Admiralty, declaring that trade was being ruined by the Emdon. ‘ ~ | The nearcat approach to tho record of the Emden has been made by |the Gorman crujsor Karlsruhe, which {4 operating in the Atlantic. The |Karleruhe han sunk twelve British vessols, SISTER SHIP OF CRUISER DRESDEN. Tho Emden was a aistor ship of the crulser Dresden, which partict- pated in the naval battle off the coast of Chile Nov, 2 when the British equadron under command of Rear-Admiral Sir Christopher Cradock was Geteatod. The Emden had a complement of 861 mon, Her armament con- stated of ten 4.1-Inch guns, eight 6-poundere and four machine guns. She 2,257 4878 4,058 1 Was, She ¥ D her with a | HENRY SIEGEL ON TRIAL | +0» " IN GENESEO FOR THE |i: WRECKING OF HIS BANK tive about HEAVY CANNONADING OFF CHILEAN COAST, | “Ml REPORTED FROM PERU. ——— LIMA, Peru, Nov. 10 (Associated Press).—Heavy cannanading was heard at wea yesterday off the Chilean seaport of Coronel, according to reports re ceived here from Chill, -day Franc 3 ¥s law: : n the ‘phe ir, Yer, called Cropsey on J said he had Sullivan the stenographer at his office, | opacy told Mullin to bring them h before the Grand Jury. Ww. Tho: n one a k, N. J where he nm alled Grand Jury to-day includ sentative from the of Manhattan, , of Yonkers, who is said to ‘ave repaid in August a loan made to him by Michael J. Lally, the saloon- keeper whose bank account is under scrutiny in connection with the pur- ghase of McCormick's automobdi Francis B. Mullin, Sullivan's at- torney; “Mary Doe,” stenographer in the office of David A, Sullivan jr., and young Sullivan himself, DE WET’S SON KILLED AS BOER REBELS ROUT FORCE UNDER CRONJE. —_—_ LONDON, Nov. 10.—"Gen. Christian De Wet, the rebel leade.,” gays Reuter's Pretoria correspondent, “has been in contact with and dispersed @ small Government command under Gen. Cronje, a member of the Legis- before the Coronel 1 @ seaport about 200 miles south of Valparaiso. It was off Coremel that the German squadron under Ade miral Count von Spep met and éefeated the British squadron, commanded, Rear-Admiral Sir Christopher on Nov. 1. PEASE PIANOS For seventy years the name Pease has stood for fair dealing. More than 87,000 satisfied customers testify as to the BERLIN, Nov. 10 (via ‘The Hague and London) [Associated Press].— The cruiser ispiaced 3,600 tone. in May, 1908, chased, and with no port for refitting breadth of 43% feet. She carried ten tachino gui plement was 296 officers and men. The Koenigsberg in rated an a protected crutser. down In 1906 and she cost nearly $2,000,000. With a normal displacement of 8,400 tona, the Koenigsberg had @ length over all of 360 feet and a 4 two submerged torpedo tubes. also was equipped with two submerged 17.7-inch torpedo tubes. She was 887 feet long and had a heam of 431-3 feet. She was laid down at Dantzig in 1906 and completed Tho Australian cruiser Sydnoy carries a main battery of elght 6-inch guns against the Emdon’s ten 4.1, thus givii the German ship. Whilo the speed of tho two warships was theoretically equal—-that of the Emden being 24.6 knots as against the Sydney's 26— the former probably was foul and her ongines badly racked from her three months of almost constant cruising in southorn waters, chasing and being her a heavy advantage of or repairs. Her keel was lata 4.1-(och guns, eight 3-pounders, four The Koenigsberg’s com- The Chatham, sister ship to the Bydney, which destroyed the Emden, is @ Jight cruisef of 6,400 tons displacement. Bhe is 430 fect long with a broadth of 48% feet. The Chatham carries an armament of eight 6-inch guns, four 3-poundors and two submorged torpedo tubes. She has a com- plement of 380 men. Tho Keeling, or Cocos, Islands are @ group in the Indian Ocean be- | ——————__$—$$$—$___—______—_———— longing to Great Britain. They a western end of tho Island of Java about 600 miles southwest of the d have cable connections. A Russian repulse on the eastern frontier of Bast Prussia has been re- ‘There are two groups of islands cafied Cocos. One is in the Bay of| ported to Berlin from Gumbinnen Bengal, forty-five miles north of Great Andaman Island, and the other is | under date of Nov. 8. 600 miles Of the westerd aleo as the Keel tralia, Ja Cocos Islands in the Bay of Bengal. bound for Germany. a day. left bank of the Yser, EIGHT JURORS IN BOX TO TRY SIEGEL; STATE IS READY 10 OPEN ® (Continued from Firat Page.) Peremptory challenges allowed each aide, the defense had utilised ten and The questions put to the talesmen by Franklin Cook, for the prosecu- tion, and by Charles D, Newton, for tho defense, were numerous and searching. The prosecution seomed determined to accept only those who were fainitiar with business and the keoping of accounts and those who had bank accounts of their own, The Prosecution also wanted married men men of family, preferably, On the r hand, a knowledge of the intric- acion of business did not appear to be essential qualifications of those the defense desired to take a plage in the Jury box. HAD NI R HEARD ABOUT THE FAILURE. Particular stress was laid upon the newspaper reading of the talesmen, and how freely and often they had dincussed the Siczel case with their neighbors, Many of those examined {had read little or nothing of the at. |fair beyond the bare announcement of tho failure and the death of Siegel's | partner, Prank K. Vogel. In the caso of several of the tales. men, the attorneys held long, whia- pered conferences before announcing thetr decisions ax to the particular talesman's qualifications, ‘When the court was reconvened at 2 o'clock the personnel of the jury was five farmers, a machiniet, a wholesale coal dealer and a salt works employee Whether these men will be equal to wrestling with the overwhelming mass of fAgures which Assistant Dis- trict-Attorney Train intends to pour into the caso remains to be seen, Mr. \rain bas bad soveral small hond- charts prepared which pictorially rather than ip figures present his dis- coveries in Siegel's finance methods. ‘These ho hopes to be able to place In the hands of the jury -vhen the twelve men to thelr room for final de- eae Aes jacana owas sestertan, The fighting has swung over the country with great rapidity, some villages, such as Dixmude and Ramecapelle, changing hands several times The Germans hold only @ couple of unimportant villages on the extremity of Java. This latter group is known Islands, Here there is a cable station connecting Aus-| tons against the main Gorman army and Madagascar. There ate no cable connections with the| Under 27,600 Wounded German Troops Taken Back Home in 92 Trains TIIELT, Belgium, Nov. 10.—Ninety-two trains of German wounded, coach carrying 300 mon, e@ total of 27,600, passed through Brussels Nov. 8 Edwani Swan, Stewart Russell, Albert Orman and 8.J. Macey, spent the night in Green's Hotel. Sheriff George Root, with Deputies Chastes Simpson and George Coe had them in charge and they came into court to-day looking as If they had had ¢ very comfortable night. The half mile journey, from the hotel to the court house they made on foot, to the great Interest of thosé who chanced to be idling along the hamlet's main street. The nymber of spectators was somewhat reduced to-day, but among them was Mrs. James W. Wads- worth #., mother, of Senator-elect James W. Wadsworth ir, whose election won a $75,000 wager for his father and furnished a topic of con- versation. which atill thi... Genosoo, DIFFERENT TYPES FROM THOSE WN NEW YORK CITY. Throughout the big courtroom sat | the taleamen, a rugged, ruddy-faced crew in strong and healthy contrast to the types one is acoustémed to| see in the New York ‘ity courtrooms. Twonty minutes after court opened to-day the Mfth juror was obtained and sworn, He was Fred Niles, a machinist, of Portage. He is twenty- nine yeare old, {s married and has five children, All five of thé jurors thus far chosen are smooth faced, .1) are deeply sunburned, and, save for Macey, are lean of jaw, The sixth juror was sworn at 11 o'clock, He was Frank Wilbur, a farmer of Conesus, He was the thir- y-wecond talesman sworn, He is married and has a aon, Wilbur ts a lean-faced man of forty-two, with a litule black mustache, Just before noon the seventh juror was obtained, farmer, of Conesus, H, 3, Linaner, a farmer of Grove: | land, was accepted as tho eighth} Juror, Mr, Lisner is married and has 4a family, He is fifty-four years old and was the forty-third talesman ex- | amined, ‘The ninth juror accepted was John Perrine, @ ‘nurseryman, of North Danaville, Ho is married and has two children, He got to tho examination hair by © The name "John P. *" was called, and Perrine, mistaking it for his own, responded, as did himself, It Was not until the examination of Per- ring Was well advanced that it be- came known he was hot Fries, He He is L, G. Sliker, a! o Simultaneously with thelr opera- von Hindenburg on the line of the river Warthe, the Russians attempted to break into East Prussia by the old route, south of Wirballen, ‘out were mot at the frontier by Gen. von Morgen’s army and after very heavy fighting. were driven back across the frontier. ‘The Russians are reported as hav- ing left 4,000 prisoners in German hands. ‘The fighting took place where the Germans met the Russians in the early days of the war and which since bas beon the scone of repeated engagements. The»tides of invasion and counter attack havo swept back and forth across the frontier here. PETROGRAD, Nov. 10 [United Press}.—A Russian army of 600,000 men, including infantry and cavalry and supported by field artillery, con- tinues to advance against the Turks in the vicinity of Erzerum, an official statement issued by the War Office to-day declared, “The Turks have placed large bodies of troops, including armed peasantry, on tho Persian frontier,” the statement declares, “At all points the success of our forces continues. “Thousands of prisoners have been taken and the Kurd cavalry put to flight. Tho strong Turkish position twenty-five milos cast of Erzerum ts now held by the Russians.” ‘The Russians aré Show attacking the Austro-German rear guard on the outer Une of tho fortress of Cracow. ‘Tho Russian cavalry which invaded Posen has pierced the left flank of the Germans at the crossing of the Wartho River at Konin. These cav- alry operations with strong supports have nullified the entire defensive preparations of the Germans inside tho Polish frontier, ‘The Russians now hold without re- sistance the great line of intrench- ments running from Czenstochowa southward to Cracow and northward on Kalisz, German reserves and lo- cal forced labor had been employed for a month in digging and equipping these works, which were built and buttressed like underground dwell- ings. Now all are abandoned, On the Hast Prussian frontier fight- ing contin¥es, The Russian troops |have occupied Solap (Goldap?) In man who guards deliciously mild, was permitted to remain in the chair and was finally accepted, Fries was next examined and excused. a RECIPES—Free FREE CLUB tained drinks, Address Wilson, *. the direction of Mlawa (Poland) we have advanced and stopped the move- ment of railway trains of the enemy hear the station of Soldau (Kast Prussia). Beyond the Vistula the Germans have withdrawn from Wlozlawsk to Nicszuma and from Konin to Shepey (Slupoe?), An official communication from the Caucasian Army Staff at Tiflis, dated Nov. 8, says: “At daybreak, near Koprukeul, the combat was resumed with re- newed force when the enemy launched against us troops concen- trated in the region of Erserum, which, in their turn, were reinforced from the garrison of that stronghold, “To judge from such information that could be gathered, German of. cers commanded the Turks, “In the afternoon the fighting a sumed a particularly tenacious char- acter when the Turks supported their advance guards by fresh divisions, However, their attempted envelop. ment of one of our flanks failed, “Thanks to the valor of our troops, we were able, toward evening, when the battle moderated, to hold all wo |had previously conquered. One ‘of jour columns took possession of posi- tions at Karakiline (Karakilissee?) and Alaschkertska.” MISS BURKHARDT AND MRS. SULLIVAN FLED TO HOBOKEN (Continued from First Page.) had heard from Miss Burkhardt, but that he did not Know where she was on the day he tostified. Another telephone call went trom Moyers's Hotel to tho New York office whero Fred Burkhardt, brother of Miss Burkhardt, is employed, anc a third to bis home in Yonkers, S far as can be ascertained, no telo phoning was done with Ousining, Cropsey intends to try to find out who sent the original telephone mes sages from the prison town to the Burkhardt and Sullivan homes on the night of Goldstein's visit, SULLIVAN'S SON CALLED BE- FORE GRAND JURY. Yesterday a subpoena server vis- ited the office at No. 155 Maiden lane, where David A. Sullivan jr. is em: ployed. A woman stenographer said she did not know where young Sulli- The mainstay of our business is the / his drink no less carefully than his food That’s why we put WILSON in the Non-Refillable Bottle—so that the wise man always gets the same mellow Whiskey anywhere he goes—Wilson—Real Wilson—That’s All! SiS Fahim N.Y thal A lature, near Deornberg. In the course of the fighting Gen. De Wel son, Dantelpwas killed. “Thi vernment is sending strong reinforet its to Cronje.” Reuter’s Cape Town under date of Monday gives the fol Jowing official communication eo: cerning the fighting in South Africa: “AQ engagement between Gen. Lammer's forces and Transvaal rebels under Gen. Christian Beyers occurred on the Vet River, southeast of Bloem. hof, . “Th Beyers, a 9 m prison “Tl measure of our success. A durable piano of sweet, clear and mellow tone. Prices are moderate and our three-year payment plan most economical. Used pianos of good makes from $125 up. enting, exe changing. Write for catalogue and bargain list. PEASE PIANOCO. 128 WEST 42D ST. , near Broadway, N. ¥. H ofoNew Ses Newark” Acomplete stock of Victor Vice trolas, Columbia Talking Mas) chines, Records and Supplies. rebel ell armed and ted by were entirely dispersed, los- in killed, 11 men wounded, 364 re, 300 rifles and 300 ho: Loyalists’ casualties were 3 men Killed and 9 wounded. oe GLASGOW AND OTRANTO ARE SAFE AFTER FIGHT OFF COAST OF CHILI.) SANTIAGO, Chill, Nov. 10.—Tho| British cruiser Glasgow, which was engaged with the German SQUAQDON | pg in battle off the Chillan coast on/| Sunday, Nov. 1, and the transport | Otranto have passed Delgada Point | Light in tha Straits of Magellan, | bound for the Falkland Islands. This Information comes to the Ad-, miralty from tho naval duthorities in the Straits of Magellan, who said they had seen the vesse! through the Straits, aad After the battle the Glasgow and tho Otranto were sald to have taken | refuge in the harbor of Coronel, the former badly damaged. They were said to have been bottled up by the German ships Leipzig and Bremen. This was afterward denied, but neither of the two German boats turned up at Valparaiso after the Rue and bave not been reported si! a TSINGTAU FORTRESS IS FORMALLY HANDED OVER TO JAPANESE, LONDON, Nov. 10.—The stronghold of Tsingtau, accor despatch received by the Cent: jews from Shanghai, was unconditionally handed over to Japan at 10 o'clock to. day. The surrender of the fortress took place Nov. 7 after @ slege which lasted sixty-five days, | | German ton KENNEDY.—On Nov. 9, 1014, PATRION KENNEDY, beloved husband of Jobanas McGrath, Funeral from his late residence, 969 ‘W. 1434 at., thence to the Church ef @t, Oharles Borromeo, where a solemam e- quiem mase will be held. Interment Paterson, N. J. STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY, HELP WANTED—MALE. Allianca, Cristob: Saratoga, H: | Tivives, ort A : Advertised Speciale Are on Sale — a, ‘at All Our Stores.” dal for Tuesd aves” FEPPERMINTS © AND WINTERGREENS — Dainty little essortment It unlocks the doors of bundreds Of Apartments of High Class— <9 Apartments that you'd never see E’en though each day you'd pass, In luck is the house-hunter, Who of this key can boast; It's known as a World Want Ad— Pride of the renting host, 24,936 | 13,852 World “To Let” fds Last Month | MOTE TMA ag "S ALWAYS TIME TO MOVE WHEN NoT 1S ALVIN THE PLACE WHEREIN you Live rieD