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jb5 J PRICE ONE CENT. " BULGARS ATTACK NISH FORTS; Che Circulation Books Open to All, foo i, ty The Pree Rew Sure Werte) NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER BRITAIN TO FORCE GERMAN-OWNED SHIPS FROM THE SEAS; U.S. FLAG IS WEATHER—Few to night, Tuesday elear ond conten, FINAL o “Circulation Books Open to All. | 1, 1015. 22 P WARSHPS OF THREE NATIONS RAID THE BULGARIAN COASTS». xr. ‘iaatadlipicnanins Quick Advance Made From Strong Positions Captured Last Week From Serbs. FRENCH WIN IN SOUTH. Twenty Thousand Serbs Said to Have Taken Refuge in Roumania. BERLIN, Nov. 1 (via Amsterdam and London).—The Serbian town oft Kraguyévatz, at which 1s located the | WASHINGTON, great Serbian arsenal, has been taken by the Germans. Kraguyevatz is fifty-nine miles be- low Belgrade. In addition to the main arsenal there is a large powder fac- there, It connected by a line with the Belg*ade-Nish It was at this point that tory is bench RAilroad, the Serbs defeated the Austriansyarly | in the war. Capture of the hills south of Milan- rac, despite fierce Serbian resist- ance, and also of Trivonouch Moun- tain, east of the Morava River, was also reported, Bulgarian artillery that has ad- vanced from Kniazevac and Pirot has * begun a bombardment of the exterior forts of Nish, according to a despatch from Sofia given out to-day by the Oversens News Agency {Pirot and Kniazevac are Ser- bian towns, each about ten miles inside the eastern fréntier, waich the Bulgars took last week, They are approximately thirty - five miles from Nish, and Pirot is con- nected with the.gapital by rail, so that the Bulgarian advancé prob- ably was rapid.) An Anglo-French naval bombard- ment of the Bulgarian Aegean coast was reported again to-day in a de- spatch from Sofla, but no mention was made of a Russign attack on the Bla Sea coast, referred to in messages from other sources, BUCHAREST (via London), Nov. 1. —A Russian transport fleet was sighted off Balzik Sunday. Destroyers escorted the flotilla, Approaching the Bulgarian port of Varna, the trans- ports dropped behind and the warships began bombarding the port. (Balzik is on the Roumanian Black Sea Coast, a few miles from the Bulgarian frontier. Varna, Bulgaria, is twenty miles to the southward, It and Bur- gas are Bulgaria's principal Black Sea ports.) SALONICA, Greece (via Paris), Nov. 1.—An attempt made Oct, 29 by the Bulgarians with the ald of artil- lery to dislodge French troops trom their northernmost position in Serbia) met with failure, Advance posts scouting in the di- rection of Veles retired before a Bul- garian attack to their base at Kri- volak, where a division of French troops was strongly entrenched, The Bulgars attacked this position three times, They were caught in @ cross- fire of the French artillery and stopped when they were met by a fusillade of the infantry. yi Finally the French charged with the Diyonet and the Bulgarians were riven into the Vardar River, whioh 1s swollen by recent rains, and many were drowned, It is asserted that Kotchanic Pass has been reconquered by the French and that the Veles district has been (Continued on Second Page.) | White 4 WILSON WEDDING TO BE HELD NEAR END OF DECEMBER resident and Fiancee, to Step Speculation, Make Forraal Announcemeiit. Nov. announced Houge that Wilson ke 1—Tt to-day the formally at rriage of ident and Mrs, Norman It will t place “near December,” and that it at Mrs. Galt's home here order to quiet speculation, P Wilson and Mrs. Norman ¢ wuthorized the announcement their marriage will take near the of Degember, Thetr plans are . very simp nony. jdt will be rformed at Mr | Galt’s residence. invitations wilt be ected that the only members of the The limitation of the guest itst to the members of the two familie as a disappointment, but ‘no grea prise, to Washington society. The honeymgon will be spent in the South, possibly at Pass Christian, intimate friends of the t have urged him to go Prosident took a long walk to-day Mrs. Galt The habit, carried a the close will be of private “In ident to-day that auletly pe No and it is expe * the issued gues two families.” comes sur- where early President pocketful of breadcrumbs to feed to with as is his birds, of wh fond, Mrs, ¢ walking suit of n fur The tired in a business suit of dull gray and gloves to mateh Shortly after left for New Helen Woodrow ent. Both hopping to do. »-morrow the President leaves for Princeton, N. J., to vote, ‘Thursday he will join Mrs.Galt in New York. Ue engagement to speak ther the Manhattan Club on na l defense, The President's privat Mayflower, Vashington Navy Yard to-day next trip will be is inter- esting all Washington, ‘The present belief Is that sident will take Mrs, Galt yachting Saturday ———— MR. VOTER, KEEP ‘X’ MARK sb he and Mrs. It wore an Bolling n” and President was at- tweed and overcoat, with lat Galt are ALtn a ive gre toque. wore a the York Hone have a walk, Galt City Miss , cousin of t great deal Mrs. with Presit of has an before tion ALBANY, Nov. 1—A warning to voters to keep the “X" they mark on their ballots to-morrow witnin tne voting square was issued to-day by Attorney General Woodbury, Other- wise, the Attorney General decla entire ballot may be void, ral election officials hav | Mr, Woodbnry whether an incorrect | marking of the bullot in front of the | names of one set of candidates would invalidate the whole ballot or simply that part whieh was incorrectly marked, Mr, Woodbury believes the entire ballot would be invalidated, pene l RL, asked ord Paxicaus | sulpmo: iles for hire, “Toom, for bage and parcels uy day and Mahl, ‘Telephoue man 4000,—-Auvk, " place place | was tossing easily | WITHIN THE SQUARE “lhad the misfortune w bil Lead ho ch | Handled Dynamite, Is T ake! by United States Officers. SPIES IN U. S. FORTS? |Report of One Man in Fx cation Who Keeps Watch for Germany. A sixth man was added to those | | | held by the United States a ithorities fere with international commerce by bomb explosions afloat and ashore when Engelbert Dronkhorst of But- » Was held in $25,000 bail committed the Tombs United States Commissioner lor's, D and to by Hough- Dronkhorst, of fifty-two with a military carriage, j was taken Pa- | Jersey who is a heavy set man nto custody at the Erle in boug mally made a prisoner, For | #ix hours he was questioned by Chief | William J. Flynn of the Federa Service and used to giv He w questio station of t | City Saturday nigh h not for- thirty- his assistants, y int them ton, put under ind d for an hour and a Jquarter to-day by District Attorney Marshall and his assistant, John C. Knox, without result. Then he | taken before the Commissioner and | committe was Government charges that Dronkhorst, who speaks six languages had dealings ingle tries all over the world, with Dr." Herber “Lieut.” Robert Fay, two of the other accused men, He was an engineer in charge of the grading and roadmaking of the Lust at Butler's, “Dy.” Keingle was a patient there for several weeks The Government officials the dynamite found yssession by marks on the pac 1 found it had been sold to Dronk- se. Further aided Pay's an led Sanitarium ay they Fay's hor by Investigation, wers questions, "| them to the belief that Fay had asked | “Dr. him Keinale afterward told Fay to go Butler and walk about the railroad station oking a cigarette, A ma an unlighte 1 cigarette would y and ask for @ light ask Fay's name, Fay did this, according to.the investigator and the man without the light turned over | a quantity of dynamite Butler is close to the Du Pont de Nemours explosive plant, where there » been a number of unexplained Kgingle" to procure dynamite for with ap and | proach then explosions Dronkhors versity in he was born, He employed in the mond fields as an en “lw duate of a uni Bavaria, where ays he was once South African neor, Dronkhorst told ine tis ag Hanover, dia- hton “L have an un- ble aversion to any lawyer; L {t is an unetean profession, T when | formed of his rights, conau believe study law a little; I wa do with a lawyer. Of all the mass of information and was leading to satisfactory results employ of (Continued on Seegmd Page.) -|Dancer’s Wife Gets Final Di- under charges of conspiring to inter-| and shows @ familiarity with coyn- and n younger to nt nothing to} which has been offered to Chief Flynn frpin all over the country, it was sald| Davia in an action for that no small part of it was useful, ‘An intoresting part of the work has| been the ascertaining of the present) change of heart, beyond the faet thi nt of the officers and meh) the great German shipping con- [ARREST SIXTH MAN EUGENIA KELLY INTRACING BOMBS. WON'T WED DAVIS, 5 THAT S-NOT YET. j Marriage Is a ene Serious Proposition,” Declares the Young Heiress, FR TO WED TO-DAY. | vorce Decree—He Says He | Has No Plans. Eugenia Kelly announced positively | to-day that she did not intend to marry Al Davis, the cabaret dancer— | at least not just yet. A supplemental | Announcement, made with a very wide |smile, was that she had succeeded in “getting her mother’s goat.” Still another announcement mado by hor | was that abe deemed marriage ‘a | very serious proposition.” And then | she got into a taxicab and rode away from her home, No, 116 East Sixty- | third Street, where she had talked for | | few minutes to an Evenin | reporter, | | It had beon stated up to this time] by Miss Kelly that | marrying Davis as soon as his wife's |final decreo of divorce was signed This decree becomes effective to-day, | Miss Kelly has changed her mind at the eleventh hour, Apparently | there Is to no such honeymoon as was planned on Al Davis's dog and jchicken farm in New Jersey | “Are you going to marry Mr.| Davis?" was the question put to Miss Kelly ag she stood at the step of the taxicab to ay. “Lam not going marry Mr, |.Davis." was the point biank reply. | And after an instant she added, “At | not just “Why have mind?" “Well, proposition, | she intended you changed your marriage is a iss Kelly very serious replied, with From the very first mother to my goat, and ('ve got hers, Mother has really been throwing me at Al Davis's head by her stand, and all the publicity she has brought upon me and herself, like Imire Al Davis, and when | his name and mine were coupled and fuss about it all} Just as much of | a smile, tried nae mot und a | mother such | I determined I'd se him as I-pleased, And that's all there; is about it.” With this Miss Kelly got into the taxicab and started off, | The “change of heart" which has | come over Miss Kelly has t dent for several days, On Fr: she and Mrs. ‘Kelly, who hi ened many times to haye h under restraint, home arm to their apartment after dinner, This was the first time they | had been seen to r since over Davis started, When Mra, Kelly court last spring sec! fondness for Davis she promised to give up both of them, She went West with her later, at a Michigan summer sh und Davis we wether and Miss it was reported Davie mac en ey r daughter came | placea Jarm in mother, but resort found riding olly her | | \ | to announced, so | Intention to] | | A few days later sho said she would | not him, but after sked to leave a Broad- t she changed her mind wedding plans were on | i were waiting cree in Mrs. of the events | was the service Mrs, Kelly by $50,000 for marry she and he ain j once for was the ub Davis's divorce, One of thissstormy time of a summons upon slander. Davis was town, N. dw nothing about at his place In Eaton- and would say igenia’s — suddes he had made no plans of any sort, “I did see something somewhere about a threat to put me in jail if I appeared in New Work with Eugenia as my wife, but/thut was all rot,” he said, Beautiful Daughter « of Inventor Of Submarine Who Is Engaged ee eeebeee nee —= PRICE ONE CENT. —— AGES a” IGNORED “THREE STEAMSHPS SEED, ~ UNDER NEW BRITISH ORR, -—TWOOF AMERICAN REGISTRY The Hocking Held Up Between Here and Norfolk and the Llama Off From Here to Cuba Taken. ~~ OWNERS TO MAKE STRONG é PROTEST TO WASHINGTO: The seizure by the British of the American steamship Hocking off \Port, the American steamship Llama off Scotlind and the Dutth |ship Hamborn,between New York and Cuba, which became known to-day, gave definite notice of the order of the British Admiralty to drive from + | the seas all ships, no matter what their flag, in which German capital {| believed to be interested. ‘ ¥ FRANCE ADMITS This new campaign is in accordance with official declaration made by the British Government on Oot. 5 CAA is no longer bound by artidle 67 of the rn ww : oetorwet of nations knowns as the * ' : eclaration of London, whereby * ’ it Miss MARGARET + ship was protected by the flag it pf : ae | ae LAKE. oe ane : Tho British Government now > ( 1) Oymmmawess, | claiins that ownership, not flag he } ' try, determines the nationality of ® $ + ship. Vessels are to be treated in the FROST EERETEED TED E OEE DER DEAE EE EE EEE EO! same manner as cargoes and seisp@ Miss Margaret Lake, daughter of Simon Lake, inventor of the submarine, whose engagement has been announced to Herbert Dia mond of New Haven, Conn., is a talented linguist and pianist and was educated abroad while her father was visiting in London, Berlin and Paris Mr. Diamond is a graduate of Yale, 1914, and Js now in col- lege as an assistant protessor offeociology while qualifying for his Ph. D, degree, MURPHY DECLARES muat woman suftr vote | whenever t ed of belng owned by an enemy, Under this declaration the British Government now is seizing ships om the high seas, though they may be flying flags of neutral nations, The fact that a ship may be chartered Cases, It Is Claimed, Are Very Different From That of an American firm or that she has _ Miss Cavell. formally transferred to American | istry, ls enemy ownership ret | PARIS, Nov. 1 (United Press).—| will not have her from the secret of the fact) Warships. makes no e ‘ance “These statements and insinuations | that sho haa executed two women| “ blacklist published by the Brit are untrue Tammany Hall is abso |Admiralty contains the names of }lutely neutral on the question, The . the ships to which shippers have Jeentral organization promised the | Tho women executed by the French | warned not to entrust m leaders of the movement to keep their} Were found gullyy as sples, ‘They | under pain of conflacation. hands off and we are sticking by our| were Ottille 4 and Marguerite | ‘The owners and agents of the Womise with no reservations what-| sonmit [ships professed to be bewildered laoever. ‘ sg anow: tut ORG Vous the action of the Admiralty. ‘They he sample batlots which we sent} T°" hanes "| Were busy to-day preparing angry lout to votera w marked against us arrested by French ret service } protests to the State Department, the revised Constitution and in favor nity at Bourges, eb. 27, She called! The British Embassy at Washing- Has Nol . Jot the $27,000,000 canal bond Sssue,| herscit Jeanne Houvior at the timo, |ton said to-day that it had no infors ammany Has No Instructions, | There was no mark or suggestion on | ¢y hore were made out tn that|™tlon to give in answer to sugges. : > the woman suffrage amendment sam cae | tions that the ships seized on this aide He Says, to Oppose Efforts | pie to indicate that the organization| "me After being interrogated she |o¢ thy Atlantic were suspected of ba¥= . : im otherwise than strictly neutral, 1] confessed her true name and adm tted | ing any Intent to communicate with to Get Vote. have told no one how Tam going to] she was bern fa the KR provinces | the interned German officers who mM vole on the question, nor have t/a German She was unmarried; |cently escaped from the Navy Yard sought to influence the vote of any| thirty-three years old. at Newport News on a yacht, Charles F, Murphy, leader of Tam- | person.” For seven years before the war she At the offices of the American many Hall, gave out this afternoon} Two Tammany leaders have de-| lived at in the Bordeaux reston. | Transatlantic Company at Ne. 4? the following statement concerning |°lared for Woman Suffrage, Christy | giving German lessons: Battery Place the owners of the ‘a alana’ oe the.at ration on the| Sullivan at a meoting of his distric Wh hostilities broke out she re Focking, it was said that the firet eaterday told them that he} turned to Germany Being out of | news of the seizure of that vessel question of woman une 1 ha nixed “Big Thm" he would al- | we : caine & SY was sent came from t ewspapers, The ship ‘It has been stated and intimated) way f + for women. ‘Thorns | to i nee Were 0 was due at Norfolk, Va. from. this in Republican papers that or¢ have! BF. F 1 sample ba | Ni Montpellier aieresliee - hha port Friday evening, be en by the Democratic organt-| his district with the cross mark In| ons, t 1» the importance of ne The company had made vi, yation of this city that party leaders | the “Yes” square on the Suffrage alip.| troops formations, the frequency of gompany r gorous WATCH THE DOME OF PULITZER BUILDING For Election Results Tuesday Night WHITE LIGHT—Woman Suffrage Wins RED LIGHT—Woman Suffrage Loses WHITE FLASH—Swann Wins RED FLASH—Perkins Wins Get the News First, from The World & efforts to locate the Hocking when jraiiroad transports, thelr directlons | hor captain failed to report from Nore |the army sanitary condition, the num-| rie and intended posting the ship ab ber of wo d and arrivals of troops “lost or missing” when the news of at the ports, especially black soldiers | tne seguro arrived to-day. She was Viante ¢ ; oe tag, to have taken on @ coal cargo for the Pour hundred francs (about $80) ex-| Arsentine at Norfolk, Clerks were ense money was given to her from | OUSY setting together date for Riewp re ard Wagner, the President of the Marguerite Schm:: was born at] Company, to take to Washington §& iucourt, France, She was twen-| ™@king @ protest to the State Dé- tc Old. lie wan arrested | Sartmant as us MAKE PROTEST, * long examination she con-| ‘The Munson Steamship C st the Germat. sent her to|charterer of the Dutch ship, information concerning the|Hamborn, was making similar presen of British troops, reported to | parations for a provest to be made be in the Nancy jon, She was to|A. H. Brummell, Vice President Jreport also concerning various other |General Manager, regia d between Bar le} Halifax despatches say that Duc and st. Menchould, ships were convoyed by @ \ re known or suspect- © / -_ Sete frre ere,