mMikS NIGHT EXTRA NIGHT EXTRA VOL. I NO. 47 PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER G, 1914. PRICE ONB CENT Corrr.iahr. 1914, t tntPORLto Utrxiat Commit. feuctttttn m fiyW HtVT fflKraie i rf Q ARMIES CHECK BLOODYONSET NORTH OF LYS French Official Report An nounces Failure to Gain by Either Side in Fierce As saults From Dixmude to , Arras. The opposing armies arc gripped in a deadlock between Dixmude and the Lys, the official French report an nounces this afternoon. Below the Lys, around Arras, bloody assaults by the Germans, aid ed by heavy guns, have failed to gain ground. Further south and to the west, re pulses of the enemy and "minor vic tories arc reported from Paris. Berlin, in an official report, denies that the Crown Prince or any other members of the imperial family is wounded or in ill health. General ad vances are announced in the Franco Belgian sphere. Dutch reports assert the Kaiser's forces arc rapidly being withdrawn from Brussels and Antwerp. No further news has been heard of the flagship Good Hope and the cruisers Glasgow and Otranto, dam aged off the Chilian coSfe-, and all arc believed lost. Ten Turkish and German vessels, coaling the Turkish fleet in the Black Sea, were sunk by Russian warships, iccording to Pctrograd official state ments. Thirty-six French vessels, eight Russian and one Belgian steamship Were seized at Constantinople by the Turks, according to Berlin. A Brit ish steamship was sunk at Aivali, Asia Minor. Turkish troops destroyed an entire battalion of Cossacks in Caucasia, ac cording to Constantinople reports, and repulsed the Russian advance. But, according to Pctrograd, the Turkish forces, surprised by the sud den advance of the Czar's troops, have fled in rout into Armenia. ' It is said 90,000 Turks are on the Caucasian border, ready to meet the Russians. French and British warships con tinue a long-range bombardment of Dardanelles forts. Movement on Berlin is again hinted at in the Pctrograd official statements. Capture of Mlawa. the German base in northern Poland, and occupation of Lyck, across the East Prussian border, has forced the Ger mans toward their second line of de fenses, and Pctrograd believes they soon will fall back to a line based on the important strongholds of Grauuenz, I horn- and Fosen, which protect the German capital. The Czar's forces already are in force in several places on German soil, and the Kaiser's armies are reported in precipitate flight before the invaders. Berlin insists the East Prussian de fense i not endangered and that strong forces are ready to withstand Concluded on Face Four ACCUSED OF ILLEGAL VOTING Three Men Held on Charges of Fraud at Tuesday's Election. Three men accused of false registration, perjury and illegal voting were held un der J WO ball each this morning for fur ther hearing by Magistrate William F. Beaton. They are Edward J. Patterson, James Crelghton and Lester Johnson, a Negro, whose registration address was given as 3633 Market street: tho uddresses given by the other men were Identical, each asserting that he lived at 3220 Mar ket street. The arrests are the first made upon the recommendation of the Committee of Seventy, who Investigated the cases and assert thatfce registrations were false. Patterson's claim to resldenoe at-2220 Mar ket street was the best founded, as he Is a bartender in the saloon at that ad dress. Magistrate Beaton, however, held that the man's home could not be Identi fied with his place of business unless he and his family occupied the building. ' CONVICTED OF PERJURY 'Man and Woman, Winners in Cam age Suit, Made False Statement. , Charged with perjury In their ault . against the Philadelphia and Camden Ferry Company for damages aa a result of Injuries received on a ferryboat, William Howard Kirk and Llllle Fred ericks, of. Camden, were found guilty in -Criminal Court today. Sentence 'will not bo passed until next Friday. Kirk and the woman said they were man and wife. Last week Kirk waa awarded (UC4 damages and the woman W. Attorney for the Ferry Company afterward learned that the woman had a husband named Frederick living in Beading, whom she deserted seven years ago for Kirk. miS :FAI Bs. f THE WEATHER For Philadelphia and vitiniiy Generally fair tonight and Saturday, vnth no dtoidtd shangt in tempem turt, light norlhwst utda tomght bt&mmg wtthsatt Saturday. For dttatb, 9tt last faqa. L jjKu ai "TSARGRAD," NEW NAME FOR CONSTANTINOPLE Russian Form Now Adopted for Turkish Capital. PETROGRAD, Nov. 6.-Thc name of Constantinople Is being replaced In the columns of the newspapers In Russia by tho Slavonic form of "Tsargrnd." The Czar yesterday made a visit to Mlnnsk, crtpltnl of the government of thnt name, nt which he was given nn enthu siastic tuceptlon by tho people. lie visited the wounded on the western nnil southern fronts hi the military hospitals, and distributed medals to several who had been .recommended for particular bravery. ADMIRAL CRADOCK LOST IN FLAGSHIP, CHILIANS-BELIEVE Wireless Call From Glasgow Last Heard of Scattered British Squadron, None of Which Reach Port. VALPARAISO, Nov. fi There Is llttlo hope remaining In Val paraiso that Hear Admiral Sir Christo pher Cradock, his flagship the Good IIopo nnd the 000 men of her crew survived tho first great naval engagement of the war, when, on Sunday evening, n German fleet sank the Monmouth and scattered the other units of the British cruiser squadron. Whether the Glasgow and the Otranto, which escaped destruction, survived the damage .suffered Is not known. The whereabouts of tho German cruisers Leipzig and Itromon also remains In doubt. Contrary to' first reports, th6 Good IIopo nnd Glasgow did not roach Coronet or Talcahuano, nor did the Otranto find a Chilian port. The German fleet, with tho exception of the Leipzig nnd the Bremen, after putting in here, left again. If they had any word of tho Leipzig and the Bremen they did not make It know n. Tho tiansport Prlnz Eltel unchoied In the bay last night. A wireless cry from the British cruiser Glasgow Intercepted by the German victors was the last word received from Bear Admiral Cradock's squadron, follow ing the engagement off the Chilian coast Sunday. The Germans saw the Monmouth sink and heard an explosion on board tho Good Hopo that they believe sent the crippled flagship to the bottom. All that night tho German cruiser Numberg'senrchcd tho seas for the Good Hope unsuccessfully. They picked Up a radiogram directed to the flagship by tho Glasgow. There waa no reply. - At the moment that the Gennan guns were trnlned the Good Ilops'was seen coming at i full speed, and through good seamanship she managed to Join thn other British ships. The British had come about and the two squadrons steamed southward in parallel lines, the Germans being closer to tho coast. Grad ually tho two lines came nearer to each other and the Scharnhorst and the Gnel senau simultaneously let go their 12 8-Inch guns, which they concentrated on the Good Hope. The firing continued for several minutes without damage. The German shots fell short, and the Good Hope had such n roll that she could not reply. The small cruisers were far out of range. Slowly the vessels drew nenier, and when the two units were but CO00 yawls npait the Good Hope tired her two S-lnch guns. She was still unable to uso her eight 6-Inch guns, which on the gun deck were so near the water line that as the vessel rolled they were almost awash. A tirrlble broadside from the Scharn horst and the Gnclsenau crippled tho Brit ish flagship and her engines stopped. Tho Monmouth, recognizing the distress of her companion, made a dash to cover the Good Hope, but by that time the distance separating the two squadrons had been reduced to WOO yards, and the Germans were able to bring all their ship into action and to use all the guns of the nve vessels. GFRMAN STEAMSHIP SUNK Japanese Wreck Collier for Pacific Warships. PEICIN. Nov. 6. Tho Japanese Legation announced today that a Japanese patrol boat had sunk a German steamship off Hawll. The steamship Is believed to have been carrying coal and food supplies for the German warships in the Pacific. ' WOMEN ELECTED TO OFFICES Two Out of Ten Candidates in Col orado Successful. DENVER, Col., Nov. .-Of 10 women eandldates for political offices In Colorado at the recent eleotlon, only two were sue cusaful. They were Mrs. Mary C. O. Bradford, re-elected State Superintendent of Instruction,, and Mrs, Evangeline Hartz, elected to the lower House of the Legislature. Mrs. Hertz, in the House, and Mrs. Helen Robinson, In the Senate, will ba the women in the Legislature during the coming session. May Quarantine New York Potatoes WASHINGTON. Nov. 6The Depart ment of Agriculture announced today that it was considering a quarantine en pota toes in New York similar to the one in Maine, because of the presence of the powdery scab disease in the northern part of the State. A hearing will be held here November 13 to decide. Wants Negroes Sentenced to Qhurch WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.-An appeal to Judges to sentence Negroes te church instead of to Jail for wrongdoing was today sent to Judges in New York, Mary land, Virginia, Illinois, Ohio. Indiana and Pennsylvania by the Rev. gunon p W. Drew, president of the sattoaal HSK Baptist Bvans-eUtUe AWaMe. WAS BISKS NOW SOAKING LONDON Nov 8 -There has been an aU around advance of ix per .em on O&f to gt BA YM1 plying i ' , t d 6sttct ASB55BSffl -"w " Wr-vs. "COME CARRANZA NOTIFIED TO QUIT HIS POST OR FIGHT FOR IT Expected -to Defy Peace Conference Order to Retire by November 1 0 Re newed Hostilities Threat ened. AGUASCALIENTES. Mex., Nov. 6. Gencrnl Cnrranza has been given until November 10 to comply with tho decision of tho peace conference that he must re tire from the provisional presidency to make way for General Eulallo Gutierrez. The conference has sent the First Chief notification that If ho falls to surrender tho executive by the date set, troops will I ba sent to oust him. It Is believed hero that Carranza will nfuio to ictlio, and opening of general hostilities Ih expected within 10 days. General Gutierrez has sent a message to General Caudldo Aguilar, commander of the Constitutionalist troops near Vera Cruz, In which he says: "General Villa has resigned definitely and withdrawn from the command of the Division of the North. The Zapatista delegation assures us that General Zapata will do likewise. Therefore, all thn conditions Imposed by Senor Car ranza have been complied with." General Gutierrez signed the message as "Provisional President of the Re public." Carranza's Force Exceeds Villa's PUEHLA, Mex., Nov. 6.-GeneraI Car ranza Is uslns this city as temporary headquarters for himself and Cabinet. According to Isadore Fabela. Minister of Foreign Affairs, assurance of sup port has been received by Carranza from 20 other States, Indicating that the latter has a numerical advantage of EO.000 sol diers over Villa. Generals A'illa and Zapata, the oppos ing factions control seven States, The former's Include Durango, Chihuahua, Sonera, Zacatecas, Aguascalientes and part of SlnaUia, while Zapata holds the State of Morelos. Generals Haj. Vlllareal, Agulrre and Renavldes. delegates to the Aguascalientes conference, are expected here today to confer with Carranza, who still remains here. The First Chief denies he has changed his Government to this place. Americans a,nd Mexicans Fight EL PASO, Tex., Nov. 6. News of a fight between Americans and Mexicans on Mexican soil was received here today and ah investigation was immediately ordered by the United States authorities. Seven Mexicans were killed and wounded in the encounter. According to reports that have reached here the Mexicans were members of a gang of cattle thieves that crossed the border into the Big Bend country and stole horses belonging to American ranch men. A posse oCrnerican oowbojrs pur sued the thieves and overtook them a few miles south of the border. The Mexi cans were whipped in a night fight The Americans recovered their horses and brought them back safely to the American side. It is said none of the eowbovs was wounded. The impression here Is that the breach j between tne carranza ana tne villa Zapata faallon of the Constitutionalist party cannot now 6a bridged. XI. S. Troops to Stay in Vera Crua GALVESTON. Tex.. Nov. .A mes-' sag received ben from Vera Cruz, stat log tfafjjt th amy transports Buford and DsWMT hav- been ordered to unload the baggage k4d aboard those vessels sev eial wki ago, iodicsjtts that the United states Government dees not Intend with di awing the American troops from the Mem in cure in the near future. The Bufurd has Urad started unloading the I baggage, and the Denver wiit bgls doing I so is a few das. OIN, THERE'S PLENTY OF A STKAP OR A SEAT? The beneficial results which have como to other cities by the estab lishment of high-speed transit systems nnd the opportunities for development of the outlying communities of PHILADELPHIA will bo shown In tomorrow's ISvbkiko LnDann. No one questions tho asser tion that prosperity follows rapid transit. The demand for comfort nnd speed has made It so. This city has taken the first step by voting for tho loan which starts the machinery In motion. You can help to keep It moving. SDFFRAGIST READS MAYOR A LECTURE; INSULT, HE SAYS Mrs. J. D. Thomas, at Head of Delegation, Brings Re markable Statement to Mr. Blankenburg's Office. MRS. J. D. THOMAS A remarkable statement denouncing the Mayor and Councils for "playing petty politics" and asking them to resign for falling to put under contract 17,000,000 to elvo work to the unemployed was read to Mayor Blankenburg In his private of fice today by Mrs. J, B. Thomas, presi dent of the Woman Suffrage County So ciety of Philadelphia, in the presence of several members of his cabinet, newspaper men and a clergyman. Mrs. Thomas, at the head of a delega tion of four other women, gained aeoess to the Mayor's private office through a request made seme days ago for an in terview. Bhe gave the Mayor no inkling of what she had prepared to say to him and her statement, couched in vehement language, came as a distinct surprise. , After it had been read the Mayor an swered Mrs. Thomas with a statement equally direct and forceful. He charac terized the statement of Mrs- Thomas as Insulting and offensive, and declared that It would, do store harm to the suffrage eause than it would do good to the oau of the unemployed, in whose name it was o&ered. As a result of the Mayor's statement. Mrs, ThoBtaa analogized. When she and the oifaer woe left Ms oflloe they were pH,iWy ujxtt tjujl bsvhm. Mayor SUak- Coaaladtd n fas Two ITALV 3?terfs ROOM!" MANUFACTURER SHOT AND KILLED WHILE ON GUNNING TRIP Henry M. Schadewald, of This City, Victim of Dis tressing Accident Near Mauch Chunk. William S. Schadownld, a Kensington manufacturer, whose home is at 2232 North Lawrenco street, died In the Pal merton, Pn., Hospital early this morn ing as tho result of gunshot wounds re ceived yesterday morning while on a huntln; trip near M.uich Chunk. His brother, Henry M. Schadewald. 102 "West Munheim street, whe hurried up-State on learning of the accident; his wife, Mrs. Amelia Schadewald, and Marie, a 12-year-old daughter, were tit the bed side of the Philadelphia!! when he died. Mr. Schadewald, with his brother, Henry M. Schadownld, conducted the Schadewald Mills, at 3d and Huntingdon streets, and was a big manufacturer of spreads. According to tho accounts of the acci dent, whloh resulted In his death, Mr. Schadewald waB accidentally shot by an attorney, who was a member of the hunting party, early yesterday morning. The hunttng party, consisting of Mr. Schadewald and four friends from this city, started out early In search of rab bltB After a short time the party got on the trail of a rabbit and Mr. Schade wald, who was the first to see It, leveled his Bhotgun at tile rabbit and tired. His shot missed tho rabbit and then another member of the party, an at torney who stood at the side of tho manufacturer, took aim at the fleeing rabbit. At tne time he was standing on a stone and in his excitement slipped from the stone and fell on the double barrel shotgun which was loaded with a heavy charge. When he fell, the gun waa discharged and the full charge of the gun went into Mr Schadewald's legs as he was standing only a few feet away. Mr. Schadewald fell and soon sank Into unconsctousnoss from the loss of blood. Other members of the party quickly summoned an automobile and a dash for the Palmerton Hospital, 30 miles away, was mode, The hospital physicians found that the load of shot had almost severed tho left leg below the knee. The attorney who unintentionally shot his friend was overcome with grief, and physicians at the Jjospltal attended him Mrs. Schadewald and her daughter, who left their home on Lawrence street last Saturday morning to make the trip, were In Mauch Chunk when the accident hap pened, and a message was sent to them. Mother and daughter left Immediately for the wounded roan's bedside. Members of the party also notified Henry M. Schadewald, a brother of the victim, and be took the first train out ot the city of Palmerton. He arrived there last night and met the wife and daugh ter, who had remained continually at the side of (he Injured man According to dispatches from Palmer ton, the attorney who snot Mr. Schade wald gave himself up to the authorities, but U is said the shooting was an acci dent pure and siinpla. Word was rceivd of the death of the manufacturer at the mills. 3d and Huntingdon, afreets, this ruorniu, nnd east a gloom over the employe. At the Iwmim f Henry H- Sta,d,wld it was said tb body qt ths manufac turer would he brought to this city by. the menoais of the, fMtfy. DOVEB BBASS HEAVY PJHJCN& DOHTBR. En Nov s -Heavy oajBaan sdfesK. aereuU oo tbe BilR coast ox in the Korth Sea, was sward here today. LETTER TO SISTER IS U. S. SAYS VON KLUK IS DEAD Duluth Woman Is Told General Suc cumbed to Wounds. DCLUTII, Minn., Nov. 6 -Mrs Michael t'ndon, of Duluth, n sister of General von ICIuk, of the German army, has received n letter from tho family, stating that tho general has died from wounds received Ih battle. U. S. MARINES LANDED AT BEIRUT, IS REPORT Washington, However, Knows Noth ing of Move In Turkey. WASHINGTON, Nov. .-Stato and Navy Department officials were entirely in the dark early today concerning tho reported landing of American marines at Beirut. If this action wasi taken by the com mander of the cruiser North Carolina, lying oft Bcliut, it was without orders from the Navy Department, It was stated. FRENCH DESTROYER WRECKS FOE'S BATTERY ON COAST Commander Recommended for Legion of Honor Cross. BORDEAUX, Nov. 6. Destruction of a Gorman battery on tho Belgian coast by tho French destroyer Avonturlcr, co operating with tho British fleet under Admiral Hood, was announced by the Ministry of Marine today. The commander of the destroyer has been recommended for the cross of the Legion of Honor. He took his boat close to shore despite raining shells nnd bom barded the German battery until It was destroyed. GREAT FLEET SUBMARINE TO BE BUILT FOR U. S. NAVY Will Have Cruising Radius of 3500 Miles and 21 -knot Speed. WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.-Deslgns have been completed nnd specifications pre pared In the United States Navy De partment for a now and distinct type of submarine which will outclass subma rines of the German U-9 class. It will bo tho greatest submarine afloat. This new type will be known as a "Fleet Submarine." It will dlBplaco 1200 tons, which means that It will be twice tho sizo of nnj- existing submniine now In commission. ' The aim of the naval authorities in cnlllng for bids for this distinctive typo of undcr-water crnft is to obtain n eea kceplng, fleet-going submarine of high speed and great defensive power. It must bo able to accompany the American bat tleship fleet. Bids for tho new fleet submarine will be opened nt tho Navy Department on December 15. The cost will be about $1,250,000. It Is to have a cruising radius of 3J0O or 4000 knots and a surface speed of 21 knots and more than 16 knots speed when navigating under water. It wilt have double the surface speed and nearly three times the under-water speed of thoso previously authorized for the Ameri can or any foreign navies. MILLIONS NOW THOUSANDS Supposed Vast Estate of "Cotton King" Shows Great Shrinkage. NEW ORLEANS, La., Nov. 6.-An In ventory of tho estato of William Perry Brown, known as the "Cotton King," filed In the civil District Court here shows ho was worth only 68,000 nt the time of his death. It was generally sup posed that he possessed great wealth, and his estate was estimated at from J5.O00.OO0 to $15,000,000. The only real estate shown in the in ventory is tho home here, appraised at $70,000. It was believed to have been worth 1250,000. The cash totals less than 16000. and is distributed among New Tork and New Orleans banks. Much of the remainder of the estate consists of stocks and bonds of various corporations, many or tnem local. In his spectacular career Mr. Brown made huge fortunes and lost them about as quickly as he acquired them. TRAIN KILLS TWO MEN Walking: Along Tracks When Hit by Express. TRENTON, Nov. 6. Two unidentified men met death here early today when hit by an express train on the Belvldere division of the Pennsylvania Railroad. The accident occurred In tho Cadwalade Park section of the city and one of the men was killed instantly, the other dy ing in an ambulance while being hurried to a hospital. The men likely were from Pennsylvania, as the tie of one bore the words "Edward W. Phillips, Norristown. Pa." Engineer Case saw the men walking along the tracks ahead of his trnln and blew the whistle. It is thought tho strong wind carried tho sound In an other direction and prevented the vic tims from hearing the warning. They were hurled SO feet. CARGO FOR RELIEF SHIP Thelma Will Take on 13100 Tons of Food, for Belgians. The work of ioadjng the steamship Thelma wjth provisions for the relief of the Belgium noncombatants will start to morrow The Thelma will be at the City Pier at Dock street and Kill take on 2100 tons uf food supplies selected by the Belgium Relief Committee. The loading nrwMy wjll continue for a week. The ca,rgo will consist f meats, Hour, potato jjjqd canned goods. The vessel will sail djreot from here to Rotterdam, where the sun Piles will be distributed. SALOON TRANSFERS OPPOSED BittJwgb Court Will Nt Welswas West Virginia Liquor Sails, PITTSBURGH. Pa.. JJor. t-ilaay sa looskeepere wk have bee drives out or West VtxJsj by tb swr prohibition law are nairhftg to buy satooaa la tbis etty, but tt to understood ths courts feere. wiH not sanettan such traottws. WARSHIP SUNK BY TURK FIRE FROM COAST Allied Fleets Lose Battleship in Bombardment of Dar danelles Forts Ten Turk ish Vessels Wrecked by; Russians. CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 0. It la off!--dally announced that one of the Allies' warships bombarding the Turkish forti fications at the western entrance of tlie Dardanelles has been sunk. i PETnOGRAD, Nov. . Tho Russian Admiralty today announc ed that 10 Turkish and German vessels carrying coal for the Ottoman navy had been sunk In the Black Sea off the north ern coast of Asiatic Turkey by Russian warships. Tho .War Office at the same time Issued a statement declaring that tho Russian droops of Transcnucnsln, continuing their advance in Turkish territory, were lap pi onchlng Erzerum, the principal city of Turkish Armenia. Advanco of tho Russians toward Erzerum is being led by tho Cossacks, who are clearing tho country of tho Turkish troops to permit the advance of Infantry and nrtlllory. To capture Erzerum It will be necessary to bring up heavy guns, as the city is defended by modern fortifications. The Turkish troops concentrated nt Erzerum are said to be under command of German officers. Tho newspapers hero proudly comment on tho wonderfut 00 hours' march In tho Caucasus by a Russian column of rall three armies over mountain passes cov ered with snow. Tho Russian front ex tends over a hundred miles. The most importnnt fighting is expected to take place near Erzerum, Turkish An menln, where the Turks are concentrat ing. Military experts estimate the total strength of tho Turks nt 00,000 men with from 53 to 60 batterlos, or 230 guns, 35 to 40 squadrons of regular cavalry and 20,00.1 Kurdish Irregulars. A part of this army probably will be detached to defend tho ' Black Sea littoral, leaving from two to two and one-half army corps in Erzerum. It Is stated that General Li man voa Sanders, of the Prussian cavalry, is in command. Tho Moscow Armenians are appealing; to their fellow countryman in Russia for volunteers for the Russian nrmy and. for funds for medical detachments. Thejt also nre requesting aid for refugees. It la, feared here that there will- be 'atrocities, but It Is declared that ."if they occur they will be tho last, as a new sun will soon arlso over -Mr. Ararat ond a new life will dawn !for the Armenian people." TURKS SEIZE 35 SHIPS OF FOES IN HARBOR Shelling: of Russian Fort, Batoum, - Announced. BERLIN, Nov. 6. An official dispatch from Constantinople states that the Turkish fleet has bom barded the Russian port of Batoum- on the Black Sea and caused great damage. Batoum Is the chief Russian port of Transcaucasia. It was ceded by Turkey to Russia In 1ST3. Turkish naval authorities have seized, in the harbor of Constantinople 3S French vessels, eight Russian vessels- and on Belgian steamship. The dispatch adds; "The British fleet bombarding the forts at the entrance to the Dardanelles fired 251 shots without causing any serious damage. On the contrary, tho Turkish, forts, firing only 10 shots, hit an iron, olad. The shell caused an explosion on the vessel. "At Aivali. Asia Minor, a British! steamship was sunk. "The Russians have begun to relnforcsj their positions on the frontier, but were completely repulsed from Kara Killsss and in the Jaghan region." The following official statement was) made today: "In Egypt the English have abandoned the Arabian frontier, and have withdrawn across the Sues Canal." The Constantinople correspondent oC the Frankfurter Zeltung has sent the fol lowing dispatch to his paper; "Tho Turks attacked and destroyed a Cossack battalion on the Rusao-Turklsh frontier, near Ordulla, and then crossed, the frontier, taking up a strong position In Russian territory. "The .Russians are now strengthening; their positions near the frontier, but hava been repulsed completely from the Karak. llssa and Teehan districts, "During the bombardment at the en trance to the Dardanelles, the hostile) fleet fired 310 shells without causing ma terial damage. Our forts fired only tea shots." FRANCE DECLARES WAR ION OTTOMAN EMPIRE Attack on Prench Steamship Ono of Causes Assigned. PARIS, Nov! 6. The French Govern'" ment has declared that "a state of M exists between IVance and Turkey," ac cording to the Bordeaux correspondent of the Havas Agency. The rprelgn Office issued the following note: "The hostile act of the Turkish ne$ against a French steamship, causing the death of two Frenohmen and so r lows ....,.,. in the shlD. not Tiavlniir been id- lowed by the dismissal ofthe Oermaa naval and military nJsstorw, ij nwjurara ,i..vttKv TnrkAv uild dtaclsiE huitv. the Government of this ntWblls u r-'-.a St. state that as a resltWsf ..... !& n.' 4hA flttoflaan navnn itaJe'Ojf. war elet between France a&4 SUDDBN RUSSIAN CtfARQB ' ROWS TURKISH FOrtpRf nil sjumsu'Wsr"1 Flying CWamaa Hwrt Vam Sufc Ipftg Arweala. constaAiinople aaw.ea fleribw thsg TttrJUsjt ar gBi M eWrtly dnrmnHtwt aaf BsMstedisl 4M VtfUM StOMM i m r I I iTfe- t'YsK "- - - -iSt. ff 'v mif " essi tottg IsBterif" "iMssfc fr-ifeJ3' hr tfifrfrfiP rYlliW -li'iiVlll II ilssssssl -v3&iLi - iT-TiiirrTwnii-ifrm-Tir i --iti i ., .nt iir , asmBmaaasiaaMBMMK&tHHUKEamBmaSgSBmBmm