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AL EDITION Che [Circulation 1 Books Open to A to All.” I | Vere ——— = ———<== \ PRICE ONE “CEN! cortege IN, Tee NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1916. ——_—__—. EEE ——— 16 orld, ‘Circulation Book: [“Cireulation Books Open to All.” | to Al To-Day's Weather—Cloudy To-Night and Te-Morrow AL EDITION ——s PRICE ‘ONE OENT. PAGES -414,200.LOST BY THE BRITISH; SOMME COSTS 3,400 MEN A DAY - WOMEN VOTERS OF CHICAGO (RORAO,RALNG, WHO'LL “SWING THE STATE” JOIN IN PRAISING WILSON oe raeatly Soarauulanine Senttcieett in Favor of President Found in So- ciety Districts as Well as Tene- ments—‘Down-State Vote’ Divided’ Marguerite Mooers Marshall of The Evening World staff has sounded the sentiment of the women of Illinois who will vote for President for the first tim and ‘this is what ashe found: That the 800,000 women voters of Chicago may, and probably a week from to-day, will, swing the State and the Chicago women voters favor Wilson That there is plenty of Wilson sentiment outside of Chicago in communities which are the Republican campaign maw agérs to be solid for Hughes Thut professional women claimed by that 18, women who are not in the salaried class That the Wilson practically as a wnit That the “wife and mother vote, ally for Hughes are gener women members of trades unions in Chicago are for as Miss Murshail the votes of the women who stuy ut home and attend to the rearing of families, is generally for Wilson, and that this condition prevails on Lake Shore Drive (the Fifth Avenue of Chicago) as well as in the tenement districts That eight out of ten of the pictures of « windows in districts populated by renters of small homes, or owners of two-family and three-family houses, are of Wilson haracterizes andidates seen in the ’ That “He kept us out of the war” is @ powerful slogan for Wilson among Illinois women That, with the exception of Mrs. Raymond Robins, whose nusband is for Hughes, the Proyressive women of Illinois are gen erally for Wilson . - ” That the general sentiment of the women of Chicago who repre: sent the feelings of women who carn their living is that “Wilson ts the sriend of the ordinary man and woman.” By Marguerite Movers Marshall. (Special Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) CHICAGO, Oct. 31.—In my despatch describing my search for the sentt ent of the women of Illinois who are to vote for President for the first filme next Tuesday, I told of finding quite an overwhelming Wilson senti- ment in Chicago and Wilson sentiment outside Chicago in communities typlcal of the country districts of the State, 1 closed with the beginning of an account of my visit to a bazaar and sale of St. Elizabeth's Woman's Club at No. 1102 North Deapvorn Street in this city, where the first womap I questioned was Maude s "] : Baley, an attractive young woman, who told me she was going to vote for Hughes “because of the way he pp treated women and children when he was Governor 5 r of New York,” { ve. ere If Miss Baley has any other reasons for voting for Hughes | wasn't allowed to hear them. Young women, laughing but shaking her. “How can you, how can you!” they ered. “Why, we're all for Wilson. Don't you know that he’s the best—— I left Miss Baley to the avalanche fof electionvering 1 had unwittingly loosed, In a room across the hall I found a blond, competent young he was Miss Josephine Smith, a stenographer “How are you going to vot 1¢@ asked. “Buy a chance and I'll tell you,” whe bargained shamelessly. “All right,” I assented, “but tell me honestly to whom your vote Three other proachful fingers, bore down upon cause | think he's for me and my people, and because he's our friend and willing to give us as much chance as he can.” LAKE SHORE SOCIETY WOMEN now Ws going. I'm not buying that.” “You couldn't,” she flashed. “I] FOR WILSON, TOO. wote for Wilson, He's the friend of There are those who will tell you the ordinary man and woman, He that the vote for Wilson will be con- believes we ought not to work more fined to the men and women who than eight hours, and we woulin’'t If have jobs. If I were a candidate and Anyway, he Must choose between them and the elegantly jobless, | should cleave the forme If only because more of t But in © plenty of women eight-hour Issue is purely he had his way about It. did his best. “And he kept us out of war, I don't want the boys I know to go to Mexico or Buroge and be killed or wounded, ‘They'll be sefe so long as Wilson ts to there ure ieago there whom the academle, who neverthel will vote ¢ President. a os ‘or ou “He made good and | don't see | ne ratic President a week from why we shouldn't give him an- | to-sy ether chance. I'm for him, too, 1 found three such women sellir eause of the child labor law, = to ntinued on Ninth Page.) woman selling chances on a sofa pillow. SAYS PROSECUTOR | TS "HOUNDING’ FM Makes Bitter Speech from the Witness Stand Under Hard Cross-Examination. IS SHIELDING {Refuses to Disclose Name When Asked About Flight After Indictment. ‘The exhibition of preparedness for his ordeal given by Michael A Rofrano, on trial for his fife in the Bullding not only to the » to Martin W his own attorney. his | * Criminal Court has caused astonishment, prose- cutor, bu Littleton, On the Dis- knees as he of Brothers to-day, fought cross-examination Assistant trict Attorney held a canvas bound, leather ino yrnered ledger with green edges, swore he had set down min- very bit of conversation with | such conversations. Rofrano drew the thick volume from the bagful of |documents which he took to the wit ness stand and explained it was hia | “Tombs diary,” kept to check agalist the Iles of stool pigeons, such as It Is your custom to plant over there." Mr, Brothers, the | jedger with cold suspicion, |day'’s session by askin jooked at that diary since yesterday Jand have vou found any versations with Heffler?” fat began to- “Have you regarding more con 4 FRIEND} Ro- | in| | prisoners and visitors {n the! | Artfully the Assistant Dis- trict Attor yesterday asked about MARINA SURVIVORS SAY SHIP WAS SUNK WITHOUT WARNING: 92 MORE SAVED FROM BOATS U-BOAT CAPTAIN | in a Heavy Sea Far | From Land. | —_— SOME AMERICANS LOST. | )President Still, Awaiting Defi- nite News—Not Govern- ment Ship, British Say. President Still Awaiting Defin- ite News of the Sinking | of the Marina. | LONDON, of Oct, 31.—Fifty-two more, survivors |M the British steamship rina, torpedoed without warning ~FHEBROKE RULE MISS HARRIMAN INJURED AS MOUNT FALLS JN HUNT 9 BRITISH LOSS IN DEAD ALONE “($ ESTIMATED AT 85,000, ~ 399,000 WOUNDED OR TAKEN Official Reports From London Indi- cate a Terrible Toll of War in British Army, With No Account of French and German Losses. BERLIN HAD REPORTED SACRIFICES BY ENGLISH LONDON, Oct. 31.—British killed, wounded and missing during | | test Saturday, have been landed. ‘'Thir eW a Returns to Her Arden Home After the past month numbered 108,255, according to the offigidl casualty list ee © sti s vnd United State ASHINGTON, Oct. 4 The Seueine 2 : | teen are still missing and United States 31.—The ¢ Physician Attends Her announced this afternoon, | Consul Wesley Frost at Queenstown man bassy does not believe the Shoulder Of thi 1 22,859, i i i believes they are dead. He als evidence will show the pledges given) Gosimn, N. ¥., Oct ‘$1.—Miae Carot BS REN ALB? IERIE 1,907 CHES 800 21,02 ports that some of the dead were to the United States have been vio-| 4 yarriman dou © of Mra. Bt. | killed. ed, It is sald at the basay - . 7 5 , . probably An # Mis report to the jn Te is ‘ ; ate h re NAT | rastrnin, wae balk aterday while Of 70,684 wounded, 2,858 were officers and’ 73,826 were men. American Embassy Js as follows Aaa BH COMMANGEP (OF AT tie ehe: a yee Of 8712 : 7 itty-two morghurvivors of the Stbmaring has violated or exceeded | OUOwnE the “Glen Arden Hunt. of | f 8,712 missing, 439 were officers and 8,273 were men. aa ae eka ” his orders his action would bel Which she ts one of the masters, The ibs ina landed at Castietown Fier, only promptly met with se eh. | Pack of hounds Jumped a fox at Green | October losses bring up the total British ca i thirteen now missing, believed dead, Ith severe punteh-| Fin arm. two miles trom here: Irish s sses bring up the total British casualties for the four J Not tess than thirty-six Americans hee ors Holler, the horgs Mis# Harriman way Months of the Somme offensive to 414,202. The daily average loss for |aboard, of whom sixt saved wt OMictais of the Embassy feet riding, fell In Jumping a fence and her | October is 3,452 et ss in killed i t , Crookhaven, There will probably pe Consul Frost's despatch yester poulder was hurt. & physician attend: | 452, The total loss in killed is nearly 85,000 officers and some American fatalities.’ Survivors %Y!M& the Marina had been shelled, | ed she thén returned to her Men. The number wounded is about 394,000 and the missing 35,000. tate the vessel was torpedoed without, Picated that the vessel was trying| home at Ardem, | The 3 pectal . FD em 7 New York Horse Show. Yesterday's in- | versy between London and Mr. Frost is obtaining atfuavits trom | renerts on the Fuetion of the] jury was not her firet,ebut sho has HUGHES BY 50 000 VOTES Horlin regarding the losses of the Allies survivors and ascertaining how many itish ship Marina, with probably always to escape with slight f) on the Somme. Several of the state- ‘Americans are among the Castlotown |1M# Of American lives, atil! were too . nents in October from the German a ae omplete to Tt of any col { Rs oe American Embassy to-day re- : allow him to dise . apacidanitt: vi t ish and French to obtain a ved a telegram from the American| the case, Fuller reports with affida- Evens on Presidential Race but | comparatively small amount of peti LARGE SUMS SPENT Rofrano named half a dozen dates| Consul at Glasgow, stating that the|¥/t# of American survivors have been Most Want 10 to 8, tory. It was said they had made des- from July to September, saying| Marina left Glassow October 25 for| ordered by cable. More than $5,000 has been wagered, P&rate efforts to break through the “That is as far as I've got.” Baltimore and Newport News, with) This morning's news despatches ithat Whitman “wilt pee New York| "Man Hines, hurgng forward great Q. Did you speak to Heffler tast| fifty Americans aboard saying Some of the survivors had seen | State by 100,000 on the declaration | Poles of troops and sustaining enor- night? ALN | Frost's dew ies reached the em-| the wake of a torpedo and that the} | that he will run 26,000 to 60,000 ahead , 70Us losses, Q. Didn't he say, “Hello, Mtket|bassy half an hour after press re. | Ship was struck twice, added gravity | of liughes. . On dne occasion the British War nd didn't you say, “Hello, Al?” a,| ports from Queenstown stated that]? the situation Oddw in the early afternoon were | OMe denied a statement of this na- > from fifty to cishty-flve of the Ma-| Officinix noted, however, that tne| quoted on the curb aa 7 to 10 wanted | ‘Ure from: Berlin, Unofficial advices ASSERTS HE DECLINED TO SEE|rina’s crew had perished, One cor-| Vritish Admiralty was not prepared 1y Wilson supporters, with 10 to 9|{™ British sources stated the losses HEFFLER. respondent wired that thirty-five} '® Say the ship was torpedoed and offered by the Neveiealornah of the allies, relative to thoae of the Q. Didn't you send Jew Murphy to| Americans lost their lives, It 1s ag-| that Consul Frost's ro yesterday -_-——— | More than $10,000 was offered on} Germans and to the operations un- Heffier this srning to ask him to| sumed that these dispatches were filed | S*id she was destroyed by Kunfire. my + |the b yeste y |dertaken, were decreasii tell Mr. Littleton everything the Dis. | beford word reached Queenstown of| Admittedly the case was viewed aaj Newspaper Advertising Big thee Wines eluaceery Ont There | marked extent, on “nea Psa trict Attorney knew? A. T did not, | tae landing of more survivors at Cag. | tore serious than any other since) tem of Expense, List Filed | were no takers. creased efficiency of the artery and Jew Murphy came me and gaid: | Ueton lestruction of the Sussex, as it is the “y 4 Some of the largest bets on the) “¢Mal services, “Hoeffler is sore on the District At-| A private telegram received to-duy| frst invdiving Joss of American fae Yo-Day Shows. | President come from Nevada and) 50 far as ts shown by the London torney for throwing him down, He| from Crookhayen by Robert P, Skin-] but the State D nent gave no the Pacific Coast, It 1s said $50,000| Mgures, which of course take no ac- can go before the Jury to tell the|that among the survivors from the| sathering the facts Repotlican’ Navonal miter [avon era willine te tele cddg of 1o|0ases of the British have been de- truth.” I answered: “Tell Hefler| Marina is Frank Howard Smith, a LONG BRANCH, N. J,, Oct. 8U—| up to ten days before elect is re. | to 9 and 10 to §% creasing since August. The total re- t want nothir » do with him, gna] ¥ inary surgeor President Wilson this moray waslquired by law, was mad biic to. | Odds of 2 to L that Wilson will| ported for September was 119,549, or if he wi to communteate with| The Marina was first struck amid.) still without suMetent. definfle in-| day. It shows a great deal of money [SAY ecareuter New York by 60,000 0 daily average of more than 3,800. me it must be through my attorney,| Ships. A terrific explosion oceurred| formation concerning the submarine| hay heen sent into the various Staten | money Couney 18 Auguat the total was 127,946, a Mr, Littleton.” n the starboard side, The second|attacks on vessels carrying Ameri-|in which the Republicans think they {In the . Hughes Jally average of 4, In July the Q. Is that in the book? A. It win|torpedo truck the bow and the}cuna to enable him to reach & con: | nave a Aghting chance, Two curious [continues a 10 to 7 favorite, camualtios 1 were only 69,676, be before night. I've left @ memor-| steamship went down almost Imme-|‘iven directions thet un soon am com. | disbursements ¢- = andum of it in my ce diately in two part It 1s repor ed | clusive. fac ts were & thered by tha| Caro! | EXTRA UL S, STEEL DIVIDEND BERLIN EPORTS rhe man who started Ife as a con-| seven men were killed while attempt-| State Department they would be for-| A 5 tis 7 THA _ | gtruct.n camp water boy and became| IR to get Into boats warded to him, ae |” QN $85,817,067 EARNINGS S#PULSE OF arracks the confidant of a Governor, a Mayor| S#ilors aaw* the wake of a torpedo, | . a in foreign cuuiege Silt ON SOMME FRONT and the rest of the city rulers, ang|&ccording to these advices, and untit FOUR HURT IN CAR CRASH. other th German Hint | — ee gained admission to the bar was ap.| th? *h!p was etruck thought It was a! rman Havloses that Hal Re » directea | Common Stock Sells Up to 119 1-4! BERLIN, Oct. 31—(By wireless to enjoying the game ue was| tis? ; | 1» moving: picture hooking that Crucible and Pittsburgh Coal ,S@yville).—attempts of the French and swith his life at stake, He| tt !# believed at the Embassy that the Republican National Committe ed British troops on the Somme front ae confidently at his attorney as|FTost @lready is en route to Crook- was afraid to put out, recelved A r near Les Bocufs and La Maisonette, he met the thrusts of Mr, Brothers, |aven or Castletown to obtain ats) morning when @ Madison Avenue car | $1450 for hin work The United States Steel Corpora. to advance yesterday were defeated by Q. Did Heffler talk to you at any| f4avita from the American survivors. | crashed into @-—Broadway trolley on ing Is a complete Hist of th this afte declared an extra the Germans, the war office announced timo about accomplices? A. 1 thing | SUmmaries of the contents of these! Forty-second — Street — ne Mad ca vmiltten ributions to ldena ent. on Its common | to-day. The statement says:— affidavits will be cabled to the State! Avenue nus [a \ ” not, but I can tell you by looking in : , a ‘inate Oke 50 r ; stow Army group of Prince Rup- the book, What t# the date Department’ at or Phe: Adair aU Mornniens: Rute ars dwt ; were as follows: — precht:—'Phe activity of the fight- } cused man looked in the| 28% begun an: r investig id One Hun “4 1 ant t 1) py ania 650,006, an increase of on the Somme was Imited book us Sept. 19 and corrob rated | Govert ment officials deny that the eas BF ani en ae i said bt ans f Eats election ‘ f July, 191 August, by unfavorable weather, Detach- aria tail Hatvlag that a eae was nue wove Fra cis | N orth, Dakota 1 reane of 1 6.877.804; ment of the enemy which ad- Sing § ° on prison? A, No. ; str f 4 ‘ ortheast and east o: ‘s Q Do you_remember Heffler way: fr aad Bie Meier Od Eek y jean y ter weredriven back by our fire, An {Continued on Second Page.) BASTON, Md. Oct 31.—H S Langs tian 15.000 hs 048 attack of a French company . a dale, member of the Easton Ut : ew Mexico 0.900 mmon aold up *8ainst LA Maisonette failed, onimininaina, wea salina’ (0) Gt Virginia Goes the Water Wauon a nda 15,600 o% this af ming at eaMally without success were at- R A Cc 1 N G this morning | 8 tw ar-old at Midnight To-N tage Wea Vt trod | Liste M i ttod empts of hand-grenade squads mm, Bryar yemptied a char WICHMOND, Va. 0. 1—In y f ' bit > ur new trenches south RESULTS ON PAGE 2. shot into his back, ‘The non, who has! 20°ten ee OO ercaeed: the Slate oF eee ina 15,000 nts to 44% of Bioches, attacks of stronger ENTRIES ON SPORTING PAGE, | “hevting, was arrests, ately Virginia to the wa ha noe enttal 1 anew high, French forces against Ablain- ond is held in bd wagon at fo-might, =§«-_-|-_— Tenneasee veceseeeseeeseseees 26,000 at #9 court and on both sides of the ’