The evening world. Newspaper, November 6, 1915, Page 2

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_— point, Bushwick and Cumberiand horpitals war rustic bo the place, with (wo surgeons on ever) amibulan« thelr arrival Deputy Chief Latly. in charge of all Drookiyn berough firemen, ordered the automobile hove carts put tate service to carry injured girls to the hospitals, os and Seven to « load. The Pastern District, Willameburg and Creenpoint Hospitals are at! near the burned factory. and made repeated trips. Borough Inepector Dillon, who took command of the THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1915. sae | aoe Unds in Remarriage of Intore ’ fallce reserves, estimated at half past 2 o'clock that at least e $$$ Atier Declaring the Earl =| ~~ Drive Pass Straits of — [peee! Setlie of ime ie Divorced Couple twenty-five were dead Berlin Makes Offvlal AS Had Resigned. | Gibraltar Aga remane” Be. ke Onn patie ere The roof of the building fell in with o great crash and 7 | {ame “a wine evident cuece| Man ‘we ‘pats te ton ant conte, spurt of fying embers and flame at quarter past 3 o'clock - Fall of | HE MAY TAKE COMMAND, | _PAIIE. Now ¢—the meres of OM |W eyeing ADMITS WE MADE 98,000 fan desalted yong | f v in ee od by Ger on wit bim, an oe wor No girls jumped after that, and the number of those who were ibian | BLAZE ON LINER ee pgp oe De ihe Pn op Headkt AR i GRORIVERDIP FER, Vrelre ES OS, 088 Oe ae trapped or already dead was a matter for guess work. a F gon Ie That's x on Mallen a a ewe French steam-| Th ° was vealed alee oP Ki) ae of lhe ehiléren’s per- The new spread jGroseip ndon Is at ons he crew of one veasel ts mins. |1n enjoyed avors from MeCail. | ents s of the fire through the Williamsburg (7) \) TOWNS TAKEN RIO LAGES AT SFA raheer Wibiead Yodees saloe. Zhe crew of one reeset to tie we ore i vaonat ten |" wonet om tt tchene ad Troot ment ant fe “ during tbat! ine 4 n eruahe district in a flash and the families and friends of giris em- aaa | “The enemy's submarines, coming |time the Judge appointed him cndiomaged Cunéd Sad ployed in the factories gathering at the police barriers filled yo.) byroes Are Drivitn n Balkans, from the Atlantic, passed through the preset mee pve ye peated * et busy, iret : _ a —_—a! of Gibraltar o1 of or = 6 protitable | essence of oourt- the air with screams and shouted demands to be allowed to : | ; | awen “s ee, ‘Sur sea vis ora Pd pay | pees rater oS oow ; ye closer. There was nothing to do but to push them back | Ahead at Many Points Capt. Bell Says Germans Put) pox pox, Nov esata Cjouely following French ship Dehra, off Arseu, Algeria, Me received « salary of $1,800 0 year even further, for the walls of the building bulged threat ingly and threatened to fall at any moment. The fire spread into a box factory next door. All of the workers there were out in safety in plenty of time, but the added fire made it harder for the firemen to throw water into the big building. Hose was laid line after line through the narrow alley at the other side of the candy factory until the passageway was choked with the lines. Margaret Mac Rae, of No. 230 Eckford Street, and Annie Ruhfe, of No. 205 Richardson street, were two of the four girls in the candy factory. They came down the fire escape safely from the second floor. Fire Chief Kenlon and Deputy Chief Martin went over from Man- hattan as soon as they learned the nature of the fire and reinforced Deputy Chief Lally. It was not until half past 3 o'clock that ladders could be raised and ‘the bodies of three men and four women brought down from the fire es- tapes, where they had been burned to death while waiting for rescuers. A man was found with his neck broken in the yard back of the factory A temporary police headquarters was established at Metropolitan (Avenue and Sixth Street and the police, aided by Fire Marshal Thomas F. Brophy, began a systematic listing of the missing, those who were kaown to have escaped and the injured. Deputy Commissioner Leon Godley took charge here. MYSTERY IN DEATH ‘DE EDWARD NOLL “INAUTO ADEN oe De Lancey Nicoll’s Brother ound Dead, and No One _ Knows How Crash Occurred. ‘The death of Edward Holland @erionsly injured in an automobile ac- cident near Bletchley, England, last Bunday. Eéward H. Nicoll, who lived at Somers on the northern border of ‘Westchester County, where he had estate promotion under way, left Plains for home just before last evening in his runabout. was found an hour later the Saw Mill River Road, @ mile beyond the Elmsford of the Putnam Railroad. automobile, one wheel of which smashed, had been turned abuut was headed toward Elmsford. Coroner James P. Dunn, who was called immediately, thought it likely , Mr. Nicoll, whose head was facing Rorth, had been thrown out by the ing of the car when it ran into side of the road and the car him and crushed his skull, af- is ad Bergt. Sprain of the Aqueduct Police ‘Bagreed with the Coroner, + Others who studied the accident ‘were sure Mr. Nicoll's machine, which 4s very light, hud been in collision ‘with another car driven at high speed 4n the opposite direction, striking it @t an angle as Mr, Nicoll was trying to get out of the way, knocking it e@ompletely around, Mr. Nicoll was the son of Solomon T. Nicoll, He was @ merchant in thi city for years and wok an active! \ interest in Tammany Hall affairs, He fifty-seven years old and was Fraauaiey from Princeton in 1880, He Mise Edith M. Tri 5 = ; i Hi af i ? i | RE SI NCH Ba on the Front Nov. 6 (by Aayvitte | Wirelews) The capture of Nish, eap- fal of Merbia, by the Bulgarians was announced offelally to-day. of the elty followed three hard fighting {With the exception of Belrade, Nish Is the largest city in Serbia. Boon after the outbreak of the | war the capital was transferred | from ie! 0 to Nish. Here the | Government remained until the city was threatened by the Invad- ers, In the Jast month various towns have been mentioned as the temporary seat of the Government. {Nish ts situated on the main railroad line of Serbia, running from Belgrade to Salonica, There Are no recent statistics of its po lation, which twenty years ago was 21,0 More than half of Serbia and the greater part of the coun- try's raliroad system are in the bands of the invaders.) The capture of Varvartn, on the Morava River, in Serbia, about forty miles northwest of Nish, was also announced by the German War Of- fice. More than 3,000 Serbians taken prisoners, The town of Kraletvo, thirty-five miles southwest of Kraguyovats, has been captured by the Germans, who are pursuing the Serbians to the east survives him with their child of that point. Olin Potter Geer, Miss ‘Nancy Ai The Germans have reached the eae fenentes Bice De Lancey|Z™Panyevac district and in the Nicolt's daughter, died at tho home | Morava Valley have pursued the Ser- of her im. +» Mrs. Josephine] bians beyond Obresaicirica, lng, April 26 last.) Near Lukovo the Bulgarians de- for pearly a year trom feated the Serbians and in the vicinity Roosevelt Hospital, May 6, after an of Sokobanya also they won a victory, operation. INDIGTED LEGISLATOR GIVES HIMSELF UP, Clitus H. King, Charged with For. gery in Connecticut, Returns to Bridgeport. Special 1 The Frening World BRIDGEPORT, Nov. 6,—Clitus H, King of Fairfleld, Conn., a member of the last Connecticut Legisiature and 4 prominent lawyer here, gave him- self up to-day to Sheriff F, B. Pease on indictments more than two months old. He is charged with forging a mortgage, on which he t# alleged to have borrowed money from the Ridgefleld Savings Bank, ‘and appro- Driating a trust fund, King left Fairfield two days before the alleged forgery was discovered. He has been working as 9 laborer in Ghicago and selling books in the Southwest, Last night King telephoned trom New York to Sheriff Pease that he would arrive at Bridgeport this morning. His son, Marshal King, Was at the station with John Gray, his law partner, and the Sheriff, They had difficulty in recognizing King, as he had grown a heavy beard, He was locked up to await arraign- ment, The transuctions in which he was involved amounted to from $10,000 to $30,000, according to Mr. Gray, CATCH ALLEGED BURGLARS. of Two Men Arrested Prison Records, George Fay and George Kenne been out of Sing Sing less than year and re arrested lust night after, It 1s alleged, having forced en- trance to the apartment of Martin Thomas. Jr., at No, 876 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn. They were held without ball by Magistrate Reynolds in the Gates Avenue Court on charges of burglary this morning, Thomas suid he was opening the door of bis apartment when the two men rushed out and pushed him aside. — ile chased them to the street, where Pa- trolman McCrossin of the Atlantic venue Station joined the chase and Mies lym lnaie win Lwo smote er thelr heads. Fay said he lived at No. 279 Stagg Street, Brooklyn, and Kennel said he Mved at No. 334 East Twentieth Street, Manhattan. Their fingerprints, taken at Brooklyn headquarters, appeared to disclose their previous prison record. petal SEE PIMLICO WINNERS. TKST RACE ‘Two-year-old 112 (Damen), trai wow at WO. fom Vinge BAD, show 86.00, Ve Aho Iii@ian Chant to Peron Sevillian Dewslien, Bryn Chan ful, Plauiko, Jacobus, Turmoil also reg SECOND RACE. ane ty elk afte”) 00, ” w6e0 ime wood also mB, imlico Handicap Btooile- hip two: quarter inllos— brat nwok 18) . show 62. trernblce, 'Bfaog Wick ead taking more than 500 prisoners and six cannon. Bulgarian) and German forees got in touch with each other near Krivivir, (Krivivir ts about thirty miles @ litte west of north of Nish and twenty miles northeast of Var- varin, the railroad point reached by the Germans to-day in thetr movement toward the Serb capi- tal. (Presumably the Bulgar right wing will swing forward from Krivivir, with Nish as a@ pivot, occupying the whole stretch of railroad from Varvarin to Nish, completing Austro-German-Bul- gar control of the whole line from the Austro-Serbian to the Serbo-Bulgurian frontier, This may enable them to run through trains from Belgrade to Constan- tinople.) ——— KING OF GREECE STICKS TO HIS PEACE POLICY; ZAIMIS KEEPS OFFICE. LONDON, Nov. 6.—Any hope which the entente allies may have enter- talned that the friendly neutrality of Greece might be converted into some- thing more positive in their favor seems to have been dissipated by the latest news from Athens, It is reported Premier Zaimis has consented to reconstruct the Cabinet and that the Chamber of Deputies will © dissolved, The total Bulgarian losses in Ser- bia are estimated at 80,000, says an Athens despateh to the Rome Giornale d'Italia, which recounts the capture of Babuna Gorge and lavor by Serbian and French troops, —r BRITISH AND FRENCH AID SERBS 1N HALTING A BULGARIAN DRIV PARIS, Noy. 6.—Freneh infantry to rout the Bulgarians in the Prilep region in Serbia, it was reported to- day by the War Office, The allies’ victory was declared to have brought the Bulgar attempt to overrun Macedonia to a close, The Bulgarians, advancing along the Veles-Prilep road, were at Isvor when the Serbs sallied through the Babuna Past range which protects Prilep, and at- tacked them, The battle had been raging for sev- eral days when the British and French, arriving at Krivolak, deshed Into the fight, their ranks and drove them in di orderly fight back toward Veles, H War Office statement, enemy, The faii|in the cargo of days of steamer Kio and British cavairy helped the Servs | a defile through the| Their assault on the Bulgara quickly halted the tnvaders, The allies wrested both Isvor and Gradski from the invaders, decimated The Varder River banks, said the Sugar Cargo Aboard the Steamer at Yonkers. i HALIFAX, N. 8, Nov. 4—The fire far on the British Lages, which put in here |iost night With the flames stil amould jering, was caused by an incendiary bomb, according to @ statement to- jdoy by Capt. Beil of the steamer, The | fire is now virtually out, after ving been fought with steam and water continuously since it wan discovered learly Thursday, the fourth day out |trom New York. Capt. Beli said the cargo, which was consigned to tho British Sugar Com- miasion Queenstown, nad been loaded by Austrian and German vO~ dores at Yonkers, N. Y., and there was ample opportunity for a apy to place an incendiary bomb in the wugar bags. He added that spontane- ous combustion in such a cargo as his vessel carried was almost unknown. FIVE AIR BATTLES BETWEEN ALLIES Both Paris and Berlin Claim Success at Points in the Champagne District. “ARIS, Nov. 6.—"Mine activity ts continuous in the regions of the Ar- gc nne and the Meuse,” the War Office reported to-day. “One explosion in the vicinity of Malancourt seriously dam- ag d the enemy's organizations. “We repulsed another German at- tack on La Courtine, in the Cham- Pagne district Friday night. “Five combats between aeroplanes have occurred in the past few hours, One German Taube fell within the British lines.” BERLIN, Nov, 6 (via Sayville wire- less).—Concerning the western front, the War Office says that in the Champagne, north of Massiges, the French were ejected by means of hand grenades from a portion of a German trench which they had en- tered, —_——— CONSUL OF ITALY IN PERIL AS BOMB SHAKES BUILDINGS (Continued from First Page.) cre wrapped, and a fragment of what seemed to be an express order bearing in Ink the words: “E. L, Seavey, 3062 C Street, San Diego,” and in pencti “Prince George Hotel, 14 East Twenty-eighth Street,” and “H, Ap- one, 6063," Francesco Francolini, a seventeen- year-old boy living on the top floor of No, 222 Lafayette Street, was held and questioned by the police after the explosion, because he had a cut on his hand; he was allowed to go when he proved he had burt himself in using carpenters’ vols in his home. In May, 1914, there was a fire in the consulate which was clearly incend- jary. It was put out with trifling damage, Juno 16 following am un- Lighted bouw was found in the build- ing. Luigi Genuie, a man who had complained in Vain that @ remittance fivis ume Useiel Uke coumuiabe ina never arrived, wae arrested for fell- ing Count Fara Forni with a black- jack in the Spring Street subway sta- tion Oct. 18 of the same year, Six days later @ bomb exploded in the basement of the Consul’s residence at No, 43 Fifth Avenue, doing liule dam- age. Bombs, one of them with t fuse alight, were found in the con- sulate building last November and January, —_—eo—— JAPANESE MONEY FOR FRANCE m to Float Loan for Allies, Nov, 6—The Timea to- day says it he that arrangements | | | ANDTHE GERMANS nf , the Jere afoot in Paris for the Issuing as form another are clear o: joan to France from Japan, proba ate rom Goneva a 6 per cent, bonds. ‘Temps, the offielal announcement this after- noon t ' Kitehener had left Kngtand for the eastern front, came Molal statement that the printing plant of the London Globe hed been raided t © police tw t ° announcements had a ¢ The Globe to- containing b other bit ‘ n rd Haldane and t aring Kitchener had offered his ‘resignation, which was declined. The Globe sald the appointment of Lord Haldane to succeed Lord Kitchener would "ye concerning la at the request | of hw colleagues, has left England for a short visit to the eastern theatre of war.” Previous to this announcement | | t | had deen reported that Lord Kitohen er would take command in the Balk» ans. Following {s the official statement concerning the raid on the London “This afternoon Chief Inspector Fowler, with other police officers, acting under the authority of Sir Francis Lioyd, K. C. B., a compe- tent military authority, entered the premises of tho Globe news- paper and seized all copies of the newspaper for yesterday and to- day, together with the printing plant and type.” The London Globe is controlled by Ceci! Harmsworth, brother of Lord Northeliffe. It is the oldest after- noon newspaper of London. A despatch from London to-day said the Globe again asserted War Secretary Ketchener had resigned, because of “manoeuvres and machi- nations.” Offigial,denjal was made yesterday and again to-day that the War Secretary had resigned. It is possible that the Globe in this way may have incurred the displeasure of the London authorities, Mr. Harmsworth's brother, Lord Northcliffe, has been one of the sever- est critics of the War Office, through his newspapers—the Times and the Mail. The Globe also has attacked the policy of the War Office. RUINS DRIVEN AEROSS THE STR, BERN REPORTS Forced Back to Old Positions With a Loss of 6,000 in Prisoners. BERLIN, Nov. 6 ‘by Sayville wire- less).—The Austro-German forces tn Galicia are said by the War Office to- day to have won « further victory | over the Russians in the fighting along the Stripa River. The Russians were thrown back to their old positions on the east bank, In the recent fighting there 50 officers and 6,000 Russians have been cap- tured, The army of Gen, von Lin- singen captured further Russian pot tions northeast of Budka Russian attempts to break through the Ger- man lines on the Dvinsk front were futile, Following is the text of the report: “Army group of Field Marshal von Hindenburg: Tho Russians repeated their attempts to break through our lines near Dyinsk with the same bad results, | “army group of Prince Leopold of Bavaria: The situation remains un-| changed, “Army group of Gen, von Linsingen: Further Russian positions were cap tured northeast of Budka, At Sieui- kowce quiet reigns, The enemy has been driven back into hia old .post- tions on the eastern bank of the Stripa River, In the now completed patties Lie Russians have iost in prisoners fifty officers and about 6,000 men,” —_—_——S>_— King George Continues to Improve. LONDON, Nov. 6.--Though King George was offically reported to-day to be ao much better that no more bulle- tina will be issued concerning his condt- tion, his doctors admitted that It would be several days yet before he can leave bis room, jo passed a comfortable night and wes able, when he awoke, to quit his bed couch In his sick chamber, pitinidahistss ce A ta To Form New Lusembure Cabinet. PARIS, Nov, 6-—Grand Duchess Marie of Luxemburg to-day accepted the re nation of the Luxemburgian Cabinet, and charged Dr. Leutsch, a lawyer, Ministry, says to the for a few hours on a/the aforesaid astute young thought he had come down to say od the Fi h ship Calwador and the Nattan ship lonio near Cape Ivi “The crews of the Dabra and Tonto were saved. There is no news from the crew of the Calvados ALGIERS, Nov. 6 (Paria, 420 1 M)=The steamship Sidi Ferruch wae sunk yeaterday forty miles off thie port by a German submarine The steamer's crew of nty-olgt men arrived to-day at Algiers. The f.d} Ferruch carried no passengers. LONDON, Nov, 6=—The Griuso steamahip Woodfield, of 4,584 tons, has been sunk by a German submarine, of the crew bas been landed. It is believed the rest have been picked up by another boat ee VILLA THREE TIMES CONDEMNED FOUR AMERICANS TO DIE Men Whom He Told Funston Had Been Shot in Battle Turn Up at Naco, Ariz. NACO, Ariz., Nov. 6—H, R. T Pen and James Miller, American doc- tors, and two chauffeurs, A. L. Wil- son and J. D, Bylant, who were re- Ported by Gen. Villa th have been shot dead, arrived here to-day from Villa Verde, twenty-two miles south of Bonora. Weary from long marching and suf- fering from the strain of having been three times condemned to die by Villa, the four Americans wera exhausted after crossing the Ine and were at once put to bed, Thigpen said they were taken for spies when they ar- rived Wednesday at the Agua Prieta battlefield without credentials. Villa, they said, declared hem Car- ranza agents, despite their protests that they had come to ald his men, wounded by the hall of bullets and shells from the Agua Prieta garrison. The order for their immediate execu- tion was rescinded only after Col. Bracamente of Villa's staff, who knew the doctors, had interceded for them. Again at Villa Verde the following day Villa ordered the men shot, and once more Bracamente’s intercession saved them, They had marched under heavy guard from Agua Prieta to Villa Verde, and arrived Thursday night after Villa had informed Gen, Fun- ston and other American army offi- cers that they had been killed by rifle or shell fire from the Carranza trenches. Apparently to make his statement good, the men sald, Villa again sen- tenced them to death, Then yester- day came the order for their release. They were freed and made their way nione to Naco, Ariz, Their watches and coa ere taken from them by Villa soldiers, while that chief him- self confiscated the automobiles driven by Pylant and Wilson. COL, HARVEY SAILS 10 SEE WAR FIRST HAND Fools Reporters by Boarding the New York Without Baggage and Stays on Ship. Col, George Harvey, editor of the North American Review and recur- rent friend of President Wilson, sailcd for Europe to-day to give the war a general inspection and find out 5 stand from ers to Perhaps unintentionally, the Colonel completely put it over the astute young men who look after the departure and arrival of ships for the daily newspapers, Col. Harvey's name was not on the passenger list, The name of his son- jaw, Lieut, Colonel carried no baggage and wien he went aboard with his son-in-law goodby to the Heutenant, As the ent ashore, expecting him to follow. But when the ship backed out Into the " od the still aboard ai he will in. Marcellus H, Thomp- son, U. 5. A., Was on the list, The en time of departure ap- proached Col. Harvey drifted toward the gangway head and the reporters jfrom the county for court duties, which consisted of carrying books and papers for the Judge and looking after bi as a “general as- wistant Mackin could not say how many| receiverships had been given bit, but thought there were more than fifty The only ones he could recall were the Real Estate Mire Insurance Com- pany and the Seymour former yielded $869 in fe haps more, The witness remember the sun He Hotel The ardize the life of the Gov- the Admiralty announced to-day. Part | #0 out of the Seymour Hotel case, Then thore were condemnation com- miasionerships, principally relating to street openings or widenings. Mackin could not recall how many of these he ha recely ilo knew that he got $10 an hour He could recall only two cases, the Lane Avenue and the Ludlow Avenue opening: io the latter case his associates were William Quinn, who used to be employed by one of the gaa companies in New York, but| is now a court attendant, and Will- | jam Graemer, None of tho three) men was a lawyer. | “How much was your annual tn- come from your salary and your} fees?” asked Deputy Attorney Gen-| eral Lewis, “LT don't know," replied Mackin. “It might have been $2,000 or $3,000, tendant last vear and is now in the real estate and insurance business at No, 154 Nassau Street, Ip the same building with the Pubjic Service }Commission and Chairman MeCall.| Treasurer Atkinson, of the Kings County Blectric Light and Power Company, when put on the stand pro- duced the last three cancelled divi- ‘dend checks made out to Mackin, ‘The indorsements showed they had been made over to Mrs, McCall. Chairman Thompson then ordered the treasurer to produce the checks for a number of years back, to show | just when the change of indorsements from Judge McCall to Mrs, MceCall took place. All the stock books of the company were subpoenaed, If necessary the McCall bank accounts will be ordered produced, it 1s sald. Travis H, Whitney, secretary of the Public Service Commission, to the number of complaints against electric lighting companies in the Brooklyn combine that have been be- fore the commission, The Edison Electric Mluminating Company of Brooklyn, which is owned entirely by the Kings County Com- pany, had been before the Commis- sion on fifteen cases, about half of them involving rates, ‘There is now pending an important caso affecting the whole question of electric light rates in Brooklyn, ——een ANDREW FREEDMAN FAILS TO REMEMBER M’CALLSTOCK TRANSFER | The Evening World reached Andrew Freedman by telephone at Red Bank, to-day, 0 you remember ferred 387 shares of Kings County Electric Light & Power Co. to Judge McCall?” he was asked “I can't remember,” replied Mr Freedman. “I have many business Interests and it is Impossible offhand to say whether I did or did not trans- fer certain shares of stock to a cer- tain person," “This transaction took place Dec. having trans- stock in the 21, 1908, according to the records,” Mr, Freedman was told, “Can you recall it no “No, I cannot,” he sald, “At that ‘particular time I do remember that ;1 took part in many stock transac tions, but as to whether Judge Moe- Call's name figured in them I can- |not say. Come and sea me at my {office Mond Perhaps [can straighten tt out then,” i WILSON IGNORES ATTACK, WASHINTON, D, C,, Nov, 6—With the prominent Democrats in Washing- jton ining up almost unanimously against William Jennings Bryan, who \4s opposing President Wilson's national | defense programme, the President's at- titude to be one of silence toward his former Secretary of State. Mr. Bryan's attacks will be ignored, For several weeks it bh e were Secretary and Senator Gore, two of his former testified | goof ‘ ‘dent admire: i Man: ublicans also (ia favor ot the President the Bret kim, Not « responsive vr. Next came « hypodermic of rly married life Heotions with hot a cradie or # squall to mar the boriavn, Still two ead, unresponsive scarle Were Bot resuscitated, The no injection, * broken home and the tear-flleg earning eyes of two beautiful bile iren, That was enough, The hearts rec Lord, 41 years old and pros. { Arlington, XJ. had the ure to-day of jeading his wife altar for the md ty His oride ther May Miller, iived very 1 118 August 25 of y were divorced in N cree meant that two y and the girl, wore of the company of their parenta, @> the boy and girl conspired and tovk Di Cupid into their confidence, They knew from stray longing words nineteen years, dropped by their estranged parents that the old spark of mutual love still bravely fickered. Mr. and Mra. Lo were marrie! to-day in the Marriage Chapel of the Municipal Bul! Tho ring used nineteen years to-day was wlip- ped on the bride's finger. BRITAIN GE1S U. S, NOTE. 1¢ WII Be Published Monday by Matnal Consent. HINGTON, Nov. 6.—Secretary Lansing announced to-day that the American note to Great Britain on tn- terferences with neutral trade was de- or it may have been $5,000. I don't d to the British Foreten Office yen- ” + and by mutual agreement. be- remember. t t Mackin sald he owned no other stocks, He ceased being a court at- In this country and in Great Britain Monday morning. Copies of (he communication were de- livered by the State Department to the English, nch and Italian Embassies, a Reported LONDON, Nov. Preck- tin, harbor master at Varna (Bul- garlan port on the Black Sea), has Deen accused of high treason and shot,” says the Rome correspondent of the Daily News, “He was eus- pected of having revealed to the Rus- sians the positions of the mine fields defending the harbor, thus per- mitting the Russian warships to ap- proach close enough effectively to bombard Varna.” RADWAY & CO. Meet Druggists’ Demands vor 4 25¢ size norma. In Addition to Their Larger Stee, For Seventy Years They fave Millions of Dollars Mpdolir Ov tite Weer PAIN REED ES RADWAY’S READY RELIEF af Pe Rhtaote ‘Oo assist the droeeist—end orevent Se Paes eC # price witiin thelr means. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF Fol roe USED INTERN, EXTERNALLY ty Selatica Cold’ in Chott Tuinbago KRheumat isin Aiprains Insect Bites New Sore Musclon Ror Sore 7} Brulsce Treat) 5. 1915, ROBERT husband of Ida By Downte. at his residence, 4 bth at, Services Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Interment Mount Olivet. Where New Yorkers Find Employment! It is & good thing for one and all to know that there were Printed 68,144 WORLD ‘HELP WANTED” ADs, LAST MONTH—~ 44,486 More Than ALL the ary New York M hia Dew: Every Saturday many vacanctes occur in the ranks of New York's workers, For by far the greatest number and varlety of position off. %, See Sunday World Ads, To-Morrow!

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