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sta errr driving ng vicher the French or the German lines back for a distance 160 yards. “The casualties have been very heavy for both opposing armies, but bere as elsewhere, tho German losses certainly have been superior to those tion was brought forth by the publication in the German press yj athe ei to the effect that the French had been completely © Grivén otit of thie Argonne, while the alere of Verdun was proceeding. Re Gerding Verdun, it is declared that the French are advancing and that they are now from five to ten kilometres (three to six miles) further forward than they were a month ago. 535,000 Names in German Lists '. Of Their Casualties in the War __ ‘LONDON, Nov. 16.—A despatch from Copenhagen to-day declares the % ‘German lists Of casualtics published to date give 636,000 names. ‘The seventy-Afth list, just issued, contains 10,600 namon as those of ae @e killed, wounded or missing and covers fighting only up to Oct. 14. German Submarines Of Norway Wait for Russian Trading Ships BERGEN, via London, Nov. 16—Submarines have becn ited of the GRofoden and Vesteranien islands, off the northwest coast of Norway. They @ppear to be waiting for ahips trading between Archangel, the Russian Mite Bea port, and Great Britain. If these are German submarines their presence would appear to eub- @taatiate tho theory that ihe Germans have established secret depots for thelr submarines on the Norwegian const. A flying machine has been seen south of Bergen. It is knowa not to Been a Norwogian machine, MIDDELBURG, Holland, Nov. 16—Heavy gun firing was heard at © * Preshing yesterday. The reports were so heavy that windows rattled. Adout cighty mincs have been blown ashore on the coast of Zeeland. GERMANS BURN DEAD {FEDERAL RESERVE BY THE TRAN LOAD} BANKS ARE OPEN: geneva eevee, wee 141 — $460)000,000 READY (Associated §=Preas).—The National (Continued from First Page.) 2A i Beies to-day publisher a letter from © Swiss, who is doing Ked Cross work @t Brussels. The letter says: “The namber. of Ge Qtriving in unimagini Traina, | Whieb we call cemetery trains, full of © piled up dead soldiers, continue to afrive from the front. They contain Duadles of dead+-that is four bodies tied together to facilitate transporta- quires of their reserves, eo that t! new bank will start off with a con- siderable increase over the minimum requirements, Mearengers and express wagons dumped down in the bank millions more during the day, much of it com- ing from out of town members. As the vaults of the Federal Bank are Rot arranged to contain all this vast wealth, much of the yellow metal was lodged fn the U. 8. Bub-Treasury and Cortificatte of deposit there accepted. ‘Two receiving windows were opened, one for local banks and the other for out-of-town institutions, Tollere be. ‘hind the gratings received a hoard of wealth auch as never before had been passed over the counters of an Am: {ean bank in #0 short a time. There have been greater transactions on paper, but nothing to equal the actual bodies are burned promptly in FP Brussel furnaces erected just outside ENGLAND ADVANCES — GREECE $8,000,000 WITH WHICH TO BUY WARSHIPS. LONDON, Nov. 16.—Telerapt : jegraph! frem Athens, the correspondent of the a ‘Telegraph Combeny s save erates in ‘English Stay —— H-AVIATOR * DROPS A BOMB THAT KiLLS.15 PERSONS. IN, pong t my 16.—A German news- Publiched in Brussels declares @ British aviator fying over Cours Belgium, dropped a bomb upon the ing Afteen ae te Weal wenty- southwest o Ghent ‘and near border. T GATARRH IS on has been shid that every third is troubled with catarrh ip form, ; ce bas shown I catarrh ya weakened ition of the secretion of the mucous is quickly affected, and treatments in the form of snuffe wapore do little, if any good, correct catarrh you should treat ite esrichin, blood with the In Soowt fhion which isa building-tonic, from alcotiol or any harmful drug, Sentt a downs, Aicosnéckd. M.J- 44 U. &, Treasury notes, RATES FOR LOANS TEND TO MOVE DOWNWARD. In financial markets there was a Noticeable easing of loan conditions as & result of the new banking system. Money was more abundant and the tendency of loaning rates was down- ward, puictly call loans were made to-day AL per CeDL, as Compared WILD ¥ pos cont iast Ween aud 8 per COB aw vba ago. Dune loans were ar sanged at ofp per cont ‘Anere Was @ vuniest to see which Nauoual sane would be the fret w vier Qummorcual paper tur rediscuunt, ene Chenucal Neuunal Beuk Dad WuLclpated securing tue honur, but luere Were taree or four competitora, BLU Lhe vllicils declined te aay Which ehuwd lane Bret piace, At wilh ve several Usys Lelure the notes will be passed upon sad the Brat discount wade, egus of returning confidence among smvestora are afforded by eparp ad- vances in securities . ie te inst tem Gaye and the removes on hg 4 inet Of ali restrictions on dealings ia unlisted stocks. The reopening ns ee merican At to estimated tha: on July 90 last the United States owed Rarope pee of which the City of N have no work to you feel “igwncas. fal aah ‘World “Help Want” ads. your courage will returo Whe a rei minute, B World “Halp Want” ads. each day neut show the way, them now, without delay; this tip and surely you'll find L something In it. B,536 na! yg “Hel rented” headaches it is your 0c tor catches & City Hall Don’t Let Your Stomach Trouble You mierahin ren deve, have » bad tagte tn the mouth, erated —er wim ae Laxative Chocolate veut bevel ft undated EAGLE SNAPPED AT LUNCH 200 FEET | ABOVE PARK ROW, Bird Carries Pigeon to High Ledge of the Municipal Building. A great gray bird beating the air with tireless wing caught the eye of an Evening World photographer a lit- tle before noon to-day. The bird swept northward along Park Row, nearly 200 feet above the pavement and a good fifty feet above the pho- ‘apher in his eyrie. ‘Look at the seagyll!” cried the camera man. “See him—he's alight. | Ing on a ledge of the Munictpa, Build- ing. That's a queer place fov a sea- | ull to bring hin luncheon ” “That isn't a aea-gull,” said the bons, “That's « hawk, and he tan’t eating @ fish but @ pigeon—big, plump, grey pigeon,” “No; by jinks, youre wrong!” cried | the photographer. ‘It's an eagle. ‘That's what it is, sure. Here, take | my glasses and look him over, See that head. See his gray back and those mottied gray and brown parts. | It's an eagle, I tell you, and I'm going to get him.” The photographer surrendered his fleld-glasses, grabbed a loaded camera d raced to the c'evator. The watch- ere in The Evening World astu- dio presently saw him scurrying across Park Row, a tiny little man a was foreshortened to their down- ward gase. He sprinted into the Mu- nicipal Building and entered an eleva- tor. Alighting at the twenty-firat floor, he walked east to the corridor at the edge of the building and then north as far as he could go, He entered a wash room, opened a window and climbed out. He was on @ ledge of granite about a yard wide, with nothing but vacant epage be- tween him an’ the stone pavement more than 200 feet belo “Oo-ooh-ugh!" aaid one of the spec- tatora In the studio and turned away. It may, be necessary as a reporter of Eagle Lunching on na Pigeon on Ledge of Municipal Building (Specially Photographed by an Evening World Photogerapher.) SEGEL'S CASHIER TELLS HOW STORES DRAINED THE BANK (Continued from First Page.) posted in the private ledger, showing that the total cash on hand on Jan. 20, 1918, wan $814,720.49. Q. Of this amount was not §¢88,000 called “cash items” and carried on the day's tistory to look at awful things, but it isn’t ‘cet see a fellow you know in danger of being dashed to pieces. ‘The photographer wasn't thinking of any auch thing aa a 200-foot fall. Tt is Bis job to get pictures, not to think about himself. So he crawled along a little distance on the narrow ledge, pushing the camera gently be- fore, him and with as little noise as deposit of gold, gold certificates and | possi! Presently the eagle looked up from Nis meal and held the intruder with hie glittering eye. Thinking him about snapped the picture that appears here, “But I was mistaken,” said the pho- tographer afterward to his friends, “That eagle turned and looked at me he would eay: ‘Well, what tho ena do you want butting tn here?’ And then calmly went on picking the pigeon to pioces. I took two more anaps at him. I guess I got up to within six yards of him and he didn't care a cent.” "Why didn't you grab him?” asked a ailly man, “Grab him? I guess not,” cried the Photographer, “You don't catch ME taking any foolish chances. He doean’t know yet, poor man, why everybody laughed at his pre- tence of prudence. Volunteer orni- thologists came forward with the in- formation that theeagle lives some- where on the Palisades, N. J.; that he frequently catches a Woolworth pigeon and eats him on the Wool- tower, and that when he pon he very 9 Municipal properly. eata him on iu. tah "“|“CANOPUS IS SAFE,” CHURCHILL ASSURES HOUSE OF COMMONS. LONDON, Nov. 16.—"T have every treason to believe the Canopus ts safe,” Was the statement of Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty, in the House of Commona to-day. The announcement of Churchill was made in response to inquiries from mombers of the House as to the batth ht ¥ 14 4 ta in he Pe ihe hips of A dook's squad which mets fone on Chill, resulting tn ‘the hi Gers and Monmou Hope Canopus did not take part int 0 some fan Oe your stomach, liver Cleansing at once. Se without pain or grip- slips of paper? A. Yes. KEY SHEET FOR LEDGER HANDS OF RECEIVER. Q. Didn’t you have a key, a sheet of paper which could be slipped over A. Yes, Tho key sheet wa hands of the receiver the last time I} aaw it. Q. How often did Mr. Siegel see the statement? A. Two or three times a! month. Q. Mr. Vogel ever come to the bank? A. Yes. Q. Who came more often? A, One came about as often as tho othe Q. Didn't you tell me Friday that Blegel came more often to the bank, but Vogel more often to the Four- teenth Street Store? A. I think it was about the same numbcr of times. Q. Now tell me who came most often to the bank, A. I think it wan Mr. Vowel. Q. Are you sure? Iam speaking of the bank, not the Fourteenth Street Store. A. I can't tell exactly, Mr. Stanchfleld objected to what he lied the leading of the witness. ‘This witness has como here from Kentucky,” he sald. “Ho's had a bodyguard ever since he's been here in Geneseo; he's sat, at table sur- rounded by tho attSrneys for the other side, It has been impossible to get anywhere near him. He has said Vogel came the more often and that's an answer, I should think,” Check by check Mr. Train had the witness identify the several steps in the transmission of $150,000 from the Drivate bank to Slegel-Cooper & Co., the Chicago store, in 1918. The twen- ty-nine operations were conducted on three daye—Jan. 10, 17 and 23—when $50,000 each of those days was sent by criss-cross methods from the bank to the store in split checks and thence to the Chicago bilahment, Q. Who gave you the orders to gend the $160,000? A. I don't know from whom the instructions originally came, but Mr. Prall gave me the or- ders, I was told to draw a series of three checka on two days and four checks on the third day; the total to be $150,000, Q. Did the Chicago store pay this loan back? A. Yes, but I don't know = | how it came. Q. Did you want the public to think that this bank was a savings bank? Mr. Stanchfield objected and was sustained. Mr. Train relinquished the witness and the cross-examina- tion was begun by Charles D. Newton, Q. When did you first understand you'd be asked to be « witness bere? A. In July, ‘The witness said Mr. Train had had @ talk with him before he was a wit- Bess before the Grand Jury, Q. Was a compensation fixed for your services? A. Not then, Q. Aro you being paid now? A. Yes. just what I was paid by Mr. Siegel. Q. What does the County of New York pay you now? A. $50.96 a week, | ' | feally Frank E. Vogel, had destroyed any of the records of the transactions be- tween the Siegel bank in the Four- teenth Street Store and the several Siegel stores and enterprises on the Right of Dec. 29, 1918, the date of th» appointment of the receiver for the stores. It was stated yesterday by the prosecution that tne story of this desruction of records would probably old on the witness know nothing whatever it,” Mr. Sle sald to an Ev World report “There is whatever in it. That's sumicteat to aay, isn't it?” —_—__— JOHNSON ON WAY HERE TO BUY DEVERY’S STOCK American League President's Plan May Put Ex-Chief Out of Baseball. A report from. Chicago to-day, sald that Ban Johnson has left the Windy City for New York for a hurried con- ference with Frank Farrell, of the Highlanders, The report inti- mates that Johnson is making the trip to put through a plan for the purchase of the stock William Devery holds in the New York club. Devery’s infterference in the man- agement of the team has been mentioned as the cause ‘of Frank Chance's withdrawal as manager. Other troubles of the club, its lack of success, &c., have also been laid at the door of Devery. The ex-Chief of the New York Police Department is said to hold nearly half of the entire atock in the club. Frank Farrell wasn't to be found at his office or any of his haunts to-day to deny or affirm the reason for Jobn- son's trip East. — 31. YEARS FOR GASKIN. Wallin, Second Jew Given 19 Yea John Gaskin and Henry Wallin, two of the three men who confessed to the robbery of Joseph Saresky’s Jewelry store at No, 1674 Broadway, Oct. 9, were sentenced by Judge Fawcett in the County Court in Brooklyn to-day. Gaskin was sent to Sing Sing for thirty- and was adjudged a habitual Wall! teen years. Joseph Usoff's sentence was put off until next week. askin, when. ae By algned, at oe eenat dott doing “wnich i received he when he was sent to Elmira Reforma- sf Judge Fawcett found that Gorrta peg not told the truth and that participated in several heRee fee mong. them the burglaries of United Cigar Stores. 14,500 RESIDENT ALIENS INTERNED BY THE BRITISH. LONDON, Nov. 16 (Associated Press). Speaking in the House of Commons this afternoon, Home Secretary Mc- Kenna said 14,600 alien enemies of Great Britain were to-day interned te concen- re in aw pri taken in action and the men re- moved from the merchant ships of the or aacenns added that there w. 35,000 alien enemies still at lar |Sing Prison affairs with particular '1@ alleged to have manipulated from |company j that da | ¥ ostigation. owner | bro! OF PURITY AND EXCELLENCE—-TEMPTINGLY DELICIOUS waste matter, and wi les er ber oni wt (0c bos of Ex-Lax fs enough to convince you, is at your drug store to-day, 0c, 25¢ and 50e, ibis He denied that any promises of im- munity had ever been made to him by the prosecution if he would testify Se i on ree eee ae fy Unni asians Are The Best: Paks Tide bia "POSE PLOT IN SING SING 10 AID NCORMIC Prisoners Met and Planned to Block Sullivan Inquiry, Says Goldstein. THIS LITTLE VILLAGE GOT IN PATH OF WAR, K WRECKAGE AN AND DEATH Ivo WOMEN SUFFER FROM WAR Thousands of women en of Eurepe ere left destitute, unprotected and in misery. The hea LS eee ; PMs out to their sisters in — ite left in misery and want. Americse women often suffer from derangements’ that me vag feminine. At the first symptoms of any derange ment of the feminine organiom at period of life, the one safe, elt. betta remedy is Dr. Pierce's Favorit nds of women have tion. Tens of thou: ing success for every ent acd disease of o ’o medi- captain, found the body of the East River to-day. was apparently thirty-five Gere with be Siheattiidiaile Its 600 Homes and 2,800 People Are Wiped Out. SERMAIZE-LES-BAINS, France, via Paris, Nov. 16, (Assoctated Press).—The reginal town of 2,800 in- habitants defo the German \n. vasion Is representative of what hap- pens to a place in the path of the hostile army. There .were 600 houses and now a dozen bullet. ‘red bulld- ings are standing. All the oth have been knocked to pieces by shelis| or burned, mostly burned. 1 Walls of brick or atone, constructed | with old-fashioned care, bu: by the heat, ard tumbled in ruins across the streets. Some hundreds of chimneys stand starkly. As for the rest there are left only irregular fragments of walls with vacant wind Two hundred persons live in the dozen houses or in improvised shel- ters set up against some of the half- ruined walls. Where are the others? A couple of hundred men answered the mobilization call posted on ths City Hall on Aug. 1, Then the French army in retreat came throys) and upwards of 2,000 inhabitants took fight, eome by their own convey- ances, others on the wagons of the army transport and hundreds afoot, carrying packages and their small children, , Sermaize, which f® seventeen miles cast-northeast of Vitry-! ‘rancois, was on the battle line of 120 mil 8 | chosen by Gen, Joffre for the French wand. It was under shell fire when | the French occupied the place, again | when the Germans held !t, and when | it lay between the two armies. This) went on for five days. The frightened! inhabitants Jived in. the cellars until! the tumbling ruins’ began to choke/ the entrances, Then the Germans, withdrawing for the last time, th retreat having been sounded, it is al-' leged they set fire to all dwellings left standing, and that most of them were burned. The two hundred resi- The Kings County Grand Jury re- sumed its inquiry to-day into Sing reference to David A. Sullivan, the convicted President of the bankrupt Union Bank, who ts doing time there, Among the witnesses examined were James McLean, a stock broker, who was questioned about deals Sullivan taken it with conccivable ‘orite Prescription 16 @ men ANS ihe! t d at times of pain when tl are not performing thei functions “Mer headache, hi thal ondition representatives of a surety that furnished Sullivan's bon David A. Sullivan jr. and Loutee D. Burkhardt, Sullivan's pri- vate secretary. Assistant District Atorney Gold- stein told, to-day, how he learned, during a visit to Sing Sing Prison last Saturday, of an attempt he says was made there, on Oct. 2, to halt the Kings County Grand Jury in- vestigation. Mr. Goldstein visited the prison on nd questioned John Malloy and other prison employees. After he had doparted, he said to-day, a meeting was held in the Warden's office by Malloy, a clerk named Stowe, William Watson, secretary to Warden McCormick, Head Keeper Deoley, David A. Sullivan, William J. Cummins, who guided tho Carnegie Trust Company .to bankruptcy; August Prince, formerly a Brooklyn + serving time for cheating a client, and a convict named Joe Rittola. It was agreed, said Mr. Goldstein, that for the protection of McCormick an attempt should be made to strangle the Grong Jury in- prison; lls, lessitude, yaad exbaustion w should never fail to take this tried and frue women's medicine. Prepared from nature's roots Ld herbs, It contains no alcohol cotics, It's not a secret rem ae ingredients are printed on the wrap- | per.. Sold in either tablet or liquid forms. if ‘yee want a specialist in wom dis enses to diagnose your case absolutely {ree of charge, write Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, Y., to-day; 186 page Veen on women's diseases sent vt. Stee PROSECUTOR CHASES THIEF. Hatting Was Too Fat, but He Got Some Exercise. If Assistant District Attorney Peter Matting of the Bronx were a little less stout he might have caught a@ thief to- see remaining took refuge in th . ‘An indeterminate num- ‘THal”,weating « ber, it ta said, wore killed or wounded London Feather Hat, $5 to 810. 8 ttle city, In a district which ts the centre of jugar .| manufacturing, was almost effaced The correspondent has seen seven such towns, and there appear to be a hundred more in the country recov. ered from the Germ: Avenue, and Hatting joined in the ch: But an iceman who had less to carry beat Hatting out and collared Flynn be- fore he had run far, In the pocketbook, which wi ered, were two $10 bills, mich repre- an aGvance mad a Mra. Sazanskt's” hus! ‘watch. fied the thief succeeded in a: ting away Mrs. Spazanski would fave been penniless. 2s LETS NELLIE BLY IN BANKRUPTCY. Petition A it Her In Filed by Creditors of Company. Advertised Specials Are on Sale at All Our Stores ‘Special for Tuesd ie dello ie A petition of bankruptcy was filed to-day in the Federal District Court| against the American Steel Barrel Company, of which Mrs, Elizabeth Cochran Seaman, ly,” in Prepident. CHOCOLA‘ Cielaty. slender sr iktie tubes Dav ing @ finish thet resembles frest- ed ollver, and @ filling 10c tt Seo Box COVERED SAIR DATES:—The cheleee, CHOCO y of Oriental Dates enclosed in a shell of ike to defr: Sire Reaman inherited the ance the ‘American, Steel. Barrel Com] and of the Ironclad Compan: her husband, who died several m years ‘Bome three yeat 4g the affairs of the Ironclad Comp: becoming in- volved, the creditors, threw it into bankruptcy in the Brooklyn courts, pS DR. ANNA SHAW RE-ELECTED. NASHVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 16.—Dr. Anna Howard Shaw of New York was this afternoon re-elected President of the National Woman Suffrage Asso- tion in convention here. oti tne other candidates on the Ad- plngtragion, Ucket which was headed by Dr. Shaw were also chosen. Incom pa Chocolate tells the whole sweet story. POUND BOX... ing lit al ( Gina Se eer the on of So tale ted with our THANKSGIVING FAVORS Turkey gobblers and hens, pumpkins, roast turkeys, ice and nut cases, lace papers, paper napkins, snappin, motjees, place cards, tally cards, wond 1 looking tarts and cake: jack Horner ples sterling ‘sliver noveltion and endless variety of favors that are both amusing and in- teresting. Also thousands of new and original Favors and Novelties for Cartermes and New Year's ‘as Parties, Dinners, Dances and other Entertain- Saas 4 very clever mle Pine’ part sali Price Nef or Candy Party Case, Bow, 100 B. Shackman & Co., 5%: tie cad Mit Ses “The Unique Favor and Noveliy H louse” eatinga pleasure. Gives a delicious flavorto soups, steaks,chops, etc. _ Per Bottle Madebby E. Pritchard, 331 Spring &., N.Y. cardnsider, BALDPATE aise and a avines fou. York