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Of others trie4 te tellow them Se he tee! erretity tore ie ther te fright end fought te get to Peer of the beat, Several of the bed been Reocked from ther By the Sherk of the trtpert Gawing a4 Waring to or erowd fell back upon them boress suddenly gained! arted to rush tor nine years ot Ne Btrect, Hoboken, twe rite Ag tured LEE, JOHN, of Ne. 209 Jack: ger Street, Mobeben, compound frecture of the mgmt leo PHILIPS, BUGENE, Wo. 1975 Gremt Avenue, iqmey Citys epreined lett anki, geesibte in | end bervese 064 wagons be ternal injuriee wih the stregeing WALLACE, JOHN, of Ne. Bf) A teem of erty) Willow Avenue, Hoboken: com pound Precture of the right leg Aaron Zenger, ot whe was with bim ed left after being (rented were ARPUCKLE KLIRARETH, Oa ot foo tt i od aneinorm «4 beter ot rg me Lt} trampled tan eek tw we front of (he lower deck, where the panic was ot its worst, and Widveve the crowd back They were Gradually joined by some of the Seecler men, and the crowd wes “Poreed to the rear of the boat, the in- | pogo Deing placed upon the cabin \ wm hs PLOMETLAY MAK 1% at Ne 8S Thoet ereet, Semmes Cite rnctore at Nah town BRIDE EMMA. Ne “The shrieks of the men and wom brousht hundreds te the front, and several policemen rushes #@Et to the pier and boarded the bea’ THA few minutes later three ambulance from St. Vincent's Hoepite j t while BROWS JERE, of Ne GOT Pan mevert Hetrdee, Msmcation of AM thewhter ant me us URNS, EOMT ND Aveo, Ustow Mu DID Willow Ane sorninet most seriously 104 Hopkins Ave —_ DICKINGON, JAMES. ba ame, @ ¥ ONT JUGT BE! ., “sae Dirisice Birect, Welt Buteben, con FORE CRASH CAME. Harry Grob of Lyndhurst, N.Y. & man-o'-wareman, was stand- ‘at the bow of the ferry, just inside tes when the crash oc- we escaped with slight in- 1 I od green he it tustone of eide. FARRELL, MARY, Ne 6402 Musee Rowlevard, North Mergen, atwasion of right hip. FROMME, ADAM, 41, of Mo. 197 Park Avenue, Jemey City; fracture right hip. GREENBERG, JOMN, 94, of No. 620 Fox t mi Mireet, the Bronx: contusions of left leg. ‘feel! GREMBOUT, WH. B., 43, Bast Orange; e ackea ne remained in t contusions of left leg. boken twenty sme our GUUB, HENKY, 27, of No 442 Kings land Avenue, Jerey City: contusions of both 917 Courtiande the cabin and the run- an on deck, knowing that we were this wide, T said to a deckhand ‘@ lookout ste ding ide mo “Sant that land rw He pald no tion to me an erased into tu HANLIN HARRY, No Atenus, West Hoboken, PE, MINNIE, 25, of No. fourth Btreet, of heed and ot MUPP, WILLIAM, 43, of No. 910 North ervey Clty! N. J., right keee cut, LABEL, GEORGE. 17, of No, 818 Mon. foe Street, Mobokem; contesions of right ankle, |. 18, of No, 6323 Hudeon Reventh Street, Newark; contusions of both kegs and ankies, JORDAN, MARY, No, 182 White Street, Boulevard, North Bergen; frecture of right Jeg and beck, LIND, ALEXANDER, 43, of No, 698 Grant Place, Went New York, .N. J.; contu- 491 Twenty. ittenberg, NX. J.; contusions there eae one bong ar ‘hurt, 04 aaa suffering Rigged trom the stea picked by launches wateh re gees ‘way to the scene) chen, RHEINBOLD, JAMES, 29, of No, 227 ‘Central Avenue, West Hoboken; fractare right ni LO eae Et Others whe were infered and @he - THE EVENING WORLD, THUR "THROUGH TOTURKEY RAILROAD TO NSH IN 5 WEEKS, SAYS CUTINTWO PLACES GERMAN OFFICIAL BY BULGARIANS | Then, Supplies Secured, Fight Against British Will Really Begin )St EZ AND EGYPT NEXT had ar's Outcome Hangs on Suc- cess of Teuton Allies in Balkans, Is Opinion j By Carl W. Ackerman. BERLIN, vie Amsterdam and Lon don, Oct. 1 (United Press) —Within [two months Germany @ili “really begin” to t the Britieh, a high of ficial of the Kaiser's Foreign Offee | told me to-day Tt was on the success of the Teu tonic Balkan campaign, with the opening of & source of admittedly much-needed supplies, that he was counting when he spoke “In five more weeks,” he said, “a way will be opened through Serbia to Bulgaria and Turkey, where great quantities of food and raw materials are stored. Within two months we will have all the Anatolian cotton and wool require, #0 that we will not need an American supply. “When we have established com- munication with Bulgaria and Tur- key, war against England really will begin. “We have enough of France and Russia already to suaranteg eatis- factory peace terms with thede two. “Our success in the Balkans will mean the aiéiacing of the British empire. Once the way to Constanti- nople is open to us, we can strike at Suez and Egypt.” the | Serbs Seriously Menaced, Declares Official Report in Paris. LOSE TOWN ON DANUBE. Bulgar Forces Driving Ahead) ; at Many Points Across | the Border, | | — PARIS, Oct M1 —AN offcial state Ment ismued yesterday at Nish saya: ‘The situation grows more and more | serious The oe of the Ber. bien troops is but the strong triane and Germans from the north and of masses of Bulgarians from the | eeet is menacing seriously the Ber. bian army, which is now cut off from Th Salonica ‘The Berbians in the Aorth hold the Rakhanats-Alexanderovats- Daihgolc bovi and the Asagna-Kosmal lines and the right bank of the Kolonbasa. On the eastern front they hold the Zal- otchavi - Koliatsova: line, but Bulgarians have taken the towns of Vrania and Volosso, cutting the line to Saloniki in two places. Jovatz, Serbia. The inhabitants are seeking refuge in Roumanta (Radujevats is in Northeastern Serbia, on the Danube, at @ point near the Serbo-Bulgarian-Rou- mantan frontier. ‘The capture in- dicatee the progress of the Bul- far move toward@® function with the Teutonic forces in Northern Serbia.) The Athens correspondent of the Havas Agency sends the following Count Reventlow has emphasized editorially in the German preas views similar to those which my informant expressed. That the war's outcome practically depends on the outcome of the Bal- kan campaign is, in short, the con- sensua of opinion in the best in- formed circles here. Roumania and Greece, it is an open secret, are being closely watched, though German officialdom is firmly convinced that both will remain neutral. Sir Edward Carson's resignation from the ott” ad inet and the pee LS other ministerial changes des are also the sub- Ject of much comment in Whilhelm- ptrazse, where the political situation in England is regarded as critical in the extreme. —<»———__. STOCK QUOTATIONS, 1 P. M. despatch, dated Wednesday: “A great battle is going on on the heights of Viassona and Kitchana. The Bulgarian object seems to be to march on Monastir, so as to cut com- munications with Balonica. In the Negoin region two Bulgrian attacks have been repulsed.” (Monastir, toward which the Bulgarians seem to be aiming, is in Western Serbia, just a few miles north of the Greek border, and midway between Bulgaria and Albania.) “The neowapapers etate that after the occupation of Istip and Kotchana by the Bulgarians the Serbians fell back on Uskub (mid between Sa- lonica and Nish). The population of Uskub has left. Communications be- tween Nish and Uskub are cut. “The Ministers of the Quadruple Entente have left Nish for Krajevo. The Bulgarian army is advancing rapidly on Kumanovo and Uskub, ac- + Pirot-Viassina | ¢ Bulgarians to-day ogeupled Radu-| the town of Borkowitz to Bersmuende, Pm Ueee Eee ES eee eerrrcrer Poe e eee rete ee PORE ETE EEO. 4 ROR EE EEE EOS SE ad Wy - MISS MARIE AILER UNDER WO se C6864 IRI OIFDS IAG HAE aE no Pr te 2070 DAY, OCTOBER 21, 1015. |Miss Marie Tailer, Who Will Be Bride of S. Bryce King Nov. 3 i $$ a 5 z ? > > i sessenesrocoerooen GERMANS CROSS. THE DVINA RIVER, NEARPORTOF IGA Russians Offset This With! Claim of Victory Further to the Southward. BERLIN (via London), Oct. 21.— The Germans have captured from the Russians the Dvina River bank from | southeast of Riga, it was announced oMfcially this afternoon, A despatch from Vienna says quan- tities of Japanese arms and ammuni- ‘YEAR OF BLESSINGS TO US, SAYS WILSON IN PROCLAMATION (Continued from First Page.) avail themselves of our advices in the midet of crises has been increased, by @ gracious Providence, by more and more abundant crops; our ample snancial resources have enabled as to study the markets of the world and facilitate necessary movements of commerce which the war might have otherwise rendered impossible; and ;Our people have come more and more |to a sober realization of the part they have been called upon to play, in a time when all the world is shaken by unparallelled distresses and dis- | ford Ratiroad, Ah a hahhahasahhhaaeanmanararaaaaaddarnroooeasenannnnd , NEW HAVEN GAVE MELLENJOBTOGET | Former President Activity as Competing Man- ager Forced His Hire. JUST DREW BIG SALARY. jAided New Haven in Shutting Of Old Line He Had Developed. Charles 8. Meilen, once President of the New York, New Haven and Hart- continued to-day bis testimony against William Rocketel- ler and ten others of the one time as- sociates in the management of the New Maven. Though ho is sixty-fouk years old, Mr. Mellen stood up to His carriage was erect and entirely free from any appear- testify he w jance of fatirue aa he talked hour after hour, He could not be seated because the questions asked by Frank M, Swack- er for the Government called for fre- quent turning to a big map of New England and the use of a pointer. Mr, Swacker, who has been working with the Interstate Commerce Com- miasion and with the Department of Justice for eight years, has spent nearly all of his time for five years tudy of the affairs of the New Haven, interrupted only by court appearances in cases he had previously assisted In prenaring. New ng. 8 uninteresting until he z land’s lines reached the point of his experience as general manager of the New England Jiroad in 189%. He said the com- petition between the New England and New Haven was the worst he ever kn just cut throat work on both wid “There were three trains in each direction,” Mr. Mellen said, “between New York and Boston, at 3, 4 and 5 o'clock. every afternoon, The New Haven ordered a change of time so that the time of the 3 o'clock trains over the Boston and Aibany were cut from six hours to five hours and forty minutes; that of the & o'clock thains over the New Haven's own share line were out, but the time of the 4 o'clock trains over the New England (Mr. Mellen’s road) remained at six hours. TELLS HOW HE SPRUNG SUR- PRISE ON CLARK. Q. What did you do? A. I went to New Haven and saw ©. P. Clark, President of the New Haven. T told him I thought it was most unfair to treat our schedule that way. Q. What was the result? A. I per- ag him to make a fairer arrange- men z= Tells How | tot him Tt hed papers of at up te % Srenet the eveving papers of that } & $6.2 Bee & ew Th nay oh te ation’ to Allen's Point, 5 |*e [estos oft H @ Whet 44 he answer? A Me heked at the printed pre © ot pee ome if an wonent nd be tekophoned ake it v by the @ What form 44 that employment teke’ A Mr (lark made me | view president in chai ar HOW HE GOT HIS JO8 WITH NEW HAVEN Q What aid you de A | was oup- posed to oversee (rate | _@. 1Md you discuss your employment with hh A. Yes y ‘ne that dincussion ? | OMe anewer umtil mm direc tune) A. 1 told him I was dissatianed couldn't see what return the rail was getting on the salary vaid to @ What did he any? A That company was satisfied and he saw no reason wh) I should not be content to take my salary Q. Did he way anything ae to the object of your employment? (Again the witness refused to anewer until ordered.) A. He said | had made too much of @ nuisance of myself when I was with the New England Q. Did he say anything of « to embarrass the management of New England? A. Yes Mr, Mellen told of being eent to Boston by President Clark to start s suit againat the New agent on the of mismanagemen: Mr. Mellen told how the New Bng- land was cut off from « Bound route to New York by the at forced sale of the Wilson’ Spat » 24 minal by the New Haven, Wngland made a contract mt New York and Northern enabling t to send tramc to New York by way of the Hudson. The New York tral bought the New York 5 Northern and at the New Have quest broke up the New Ei outlet the ES ETHER curios- ity or enthusiasm takes you to see the Suf- frage Parade on Satur- day, both “pro” and “anti” agree that the best way to reach the line of march is by @ Fifth | enue Bus lormation from a Bul- : es Ja. tat, Te caest on 0m O Bul | on have been captured by the Aus. | asters. @. How 414 you persuade him? A. 1 homes asbempen eg bt ae trians from the Russians in the coprse | “The extraordinary circumstances which had been Uned up in front of % of fighting on the Putilovka River, in| of such a time has done much to ‘the ferry house waiting for them. the Galician war zone, according to|@uicken our national consciousness % ci BuARUns, of 2 a an official announcement issued here| nd deepen and confirm our confi- ; Soca pied " . to-day dence in the principles of peace and LIST OF THE INJURED TAO oo 1 sen SUMP OF TG) POINTS te scsttnc edoct. weal teetons Ge tenes ae eee hat Ma apd ‘Street, i 1% «Tey incidental to the destruction of a ee to be guided. . i i 4 train. “Out of darkness and perplexity FERRYBOAT CRASH! = fi Soars to 59974 After Opening at A eect ie ies ScrIki aunteiet! aan | $AVOr60ms fsmaee ogunasib e? netitien cM ik 5 ison 550—Almost Makes a ed the seatement, continue through- ane slearee Dereaption, 0¢ the sesen- sy Wollowing is the list of the pet r out Wednesday without important) N's J » @ have ‘tis the thsketaces teste | ad i % \ Record, changes in the situation Z |Prospered while other peoples were dent: % 1 Bethlehem Steel stock made the| PETROGRAD (via London), Oct. 21./4t war, but our prosperity has been SERIOUSLY INJURE td nm | An important Russian success in the | Vouchsafed us, we believe, only that 4 ire ‘were. ‘many. oe women iy # grea! leap to-day that records of | region of Baranovichi, is claimed in| we might the better perform the af 7 py dy WILLIAM, of | tréated for shock by the matrope at ips ity [the Stock Exchange have contained the following report trom the War| functions which war rendered It Im. ‘errace, ce: i" fo |eince the Northern Pacific corner of | O11... aistricta southeast of Bara- | Possible for them to perform, AS 4a bad shi at alint ks bo ne | Rovichi our troops, after a dashing| “Now, therefore, 1, Woodrow Wil- losing last ni tat a share, the WE MANUFACTURE OUR OWN CASKETS AND FUNERAL SUPPLIES Nig Fp Rigen 1100 on a funeral. ad Giuy, price fer a while other throughout $25.00 and mentioned caskets, and we "GUAR: lor for $100.00 is equal to what any the undertakers’ ion, better Trust, will furnish for $180.00 or even . pod, uttop casket; HARDWOOD, oct casket; Han 800° ‘octagon “end, three hued casket }, octagon end, ca nel, half-couch sae HARDWO9D. HARDWOOD, octagon end, drop. ful fe Cals black cath or any cole paced pit bee Mid wit jon ber he at th ext Nes, engraved me ond shreugh, eet with « silk lining, hand. tulted mattress and pillow to match. ‘bes, embalming remains, burial suit or robe, hearse and coaches (cither horse drawn or ocomente| service); draping of room, ete oe use of chair: everything elec necessary to complete the Other banerals ot $43, 575, $125, $150, $185, $250 $200, $500 and $1,000. WILLIAM NECKER, World-wide Known and Largest Undectaker, Home Ge, Cemaegy wed Factor Main S., telephone exchange—120 or 12) Nidlow ALL the Branch Offices: Private br fort late ge TRL ty pe = on watt? onaxahy Ss onsase oT) that at aT. eprecoen so opt gesaaaresssb 2332 Be Saeietees Geese FOF SSP ER SE ee a ey if i ied sconces SPSS ssgascoerkoesy: = eee i E | ieat, comm and coon markets, Resinol Soap for Natural Skin Beauty There can be no comparison between & naturally beautiful complexion and one the defects of which are covered w Besieet Seep helps you to have the rig! Tt is a delightfully pure fect}, | suited to everyday use in the toilet aud bath, yet to it are added gentle Resinol the Sik to eoelly” elon es balsams, which stimulate the pores to | healthy saliviy, a whey irritations, aed An ambul vtiical elds vo seieert Je this morning was 550, me a jump to 699%, figure was an advance of points from last week's price and compares strike 1 ea January's sales of the at 46, starting ing! stocl GOVERNMENT’S FUR SALE. More Than 600 Pelts Fr Alaska Preserves om Auction List, ST. LOUIS, Oct. 21,—More than six hundréd furs were to be sold at auction here to-day on behalf of the Federal Government, They came from Alaska and represent the yearly catch on the Governmed® preserves. Buyers from all over the world have been here several days looking over the stock. The pelts | include 518 blue fox, 65 white fox and | 10, beaver, | ‘Thousands of pelta also were to be placed on a@ale at the auction for private shippers. Among these were 10,000 ermine, 10,000 ctvit eat, 66,000 musquash, 136 silver fox, 2,770 lynx and 660 wolf, ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. International Harvester Cor New Jersey, quarterly divider & cent. on preferred Stock, 1 to stock of record Industrial Alcohol, common, sold at | | 128, up 111-8 pointe, Studehaker, common, sold at 194 14 up 181-2 points. Btee} rai id 871-2, up 13-4 U. 8. points, Central Leather sold at 68 3-8, up 37-8 points. A few minutes a heard tn an argument with three men, John Rodgers, sixty years old, colored, Janitor of a8 Ww: One Hundred and Thirty fourth 8 dead in t add surprise attack yesterday, captured German positions near the villages of Ekimovichi, Odokhorschina, Noviki and Nagornia, In the course of the day we took eighty-five German and/ Austrian officers and 3,552 prisoners, in addition to capturing ten quick- firers and one gun.” Baranovichi is in the central portion of the Russian line, to the north of the Pripet River, Tiny Farm. aries mpkin tm 2 by 4 feet in size of No. 582 Fourth A) toria, raised a pumpkin which 57 inchs ed the pul kin on exhibition in Manhattan, and ail Of Astoria ts proud of it. oe Swedes Commend Wilson. WASHINGTON, Oct. -21.—President Wilson was commended for his neu- trality im resolutions presented to day by the Vasa Order of Amérika, made up of Swedes, Similar resolu: tions have been forwarded to the King of Bweden 69 tol terd: the Chamber of Deputies Pils notioned a cha tution which will g freedom: | son, President of the United States of | America, do hereby designate Thurs- day, the twenty-fifth of November next, as @ day of thanksgiving and prayer, and invite the people through- out the land to cease from their wont- ed occupations and in their several homes and places of worship render thanks to Almighty “In witness Whereot i have here- unto set my hand and caused ee eal of the United Btates to be affixed, “Done at the City of Washington, this 20th day of October in the year ot our Lord one thousand nine bun- dred and fifteen and of the indepen- P= | dence of the United States of Amer- ica the one hundred and fortieth. “WOODROW WILSON, “By the President. “ROBERT LANSING, “Secretary of State” —— \Barns to Death Under Car in Her H MAHONY CITY, Charles D. Lerch, wife of the pastor of the Reformed Church at Ringtown, was burned to death last night at Tank while pinned under husband's autos mobile. At a sharp curve the machine had plunged over a forty-foot embank- ment and caught fire. Mr, Lerch badly burned In futile attempts to save fed a ed Street was arrea' Fretzzine Carstairs Rye had reached notch" of perfection, ‘good old times''—is in the non-refillable Good Bottle to Keep Good nis wife Years Before The Was Built or Sanday World it Than the Her World ‘‘Lost’’ Ads. Search the Missing Articles ! If your “LOST AND FOUND” AD. is 's_a circulation in New Yor! |, Times and Tribune COMBINE, folaged Order a World “Lost” Ad. by Caling (000 Beckman You Ploaa! Go Stands for Found, Which makes one enthuse When World “LOST & FOUND” Advertisements are used, For what's lost to-day Use a World Ad. to-morrow, The best way to banish All attendant sorrow, printed in ™ bot |