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BRITISH CAPTURE GERMAN MINE SHIP jaunted Catches Her in North Sea Disguised as Hospital. TARS PRAISE PLUCK DISPLAYED BY ENEMY ^ich Gives Stirring Wei ^?K to Victors in Bi? FlfjM Against Destroyers. j ? Oct. t* A Central News ^n fro? Harwieh saja that the ?SreraiseT l'i.daunted. nccompa ??? taw torpedo be?, destroyer*. ?? ?oming captured a German mine ?Ltaths Nortl Sea. hEf. *,ne layer, the dispatch says. ?,S i ?'? *"'!'? .'Hie gffl ? bringing her prise into ?rtktteh trom Yarmouth says the l'?asbeer brought into the reads ' ""^ Whether .-he was laying mines tk"Lt^S SI e is the Ophelia, of S 'Civ end i* completely fitted as a iCnLa CrVss ?'??' ?i-o a jLSsSStallation, and that the Hrit ^iTapeet?d, Yarmouth mes Ji?ay.. trs: !hc ?"?Pi-?'!'-? *iU ,u" be &BSf'*M ffiisp"?"' ??? ' ' ifr :hht f' VM IsyiiK (.et Stirring V\ eicomc. .. r/aas the British de? JL, ^ ' and sank the aWCcrsuui destroyers on Saturdxr, L.?ed -o Ra ' .?sad ?"?? ' ,romr:, Sjiier? -cldif-' ?' '' I armed *t ??ST '?' ' -*???***? SS*! n??i" ,.|e ptai ? the Hell? Zaassrt -sei?. ??JJi of th* ! they ^L^the t>>i" "r' Saturday JanMr. ai ?fht. IWCrnnr * '??d the odds ?twr/. w ' "", ,ht' rtl* ?gad or""n ':r'' >-; a rtt,!>:,> of hvft aflshiad tl ('J ln hi fanning light the cruiser, pro ^^ {ror | * by her righting (eatarts. devoted I >r attention ta two ,' th* rnemv. ...... the destroyers at ?H?K th? other two. The ~rst foe ?:.k ui half an hour's lighting, and battle was Praises l.erman.? I'luck. .-h tribute I Mid. sud kept firing till they ' sllness i ought back eg,, iritii r with ?m kooifs of four German men and SHtsaar i iccumbed to their Tin vi ? nsferred to ?oil?! Besp 'be prisoners of w tien to be 11 Thi trawler ; e crew ol . Lewestoft to-day an survivor?, one of isasssrraal officer. Both men wen ;, eked up from a boat, which I id .-. pahag swsy from the German oistroyiT 1-118. Th? trwltr'- I vatched the battle fron start to that ???I? the G?rr - ghted the !' ???.raid? frantic effort? to esca ?j? Brifii* steamed tip at lull speed as sank the four German destroyers ?M ?fur snother. After the tiring' ami i ima!! boat was sighted and fna. to contain the two exhausted Genuas, who have beer, uwiioiiir? of war. "TVt Daily Chronicle" coi ?t Harwich, describing the sinking i the four tioiman destroyers, says: "Contideneo in the British gunnel hns boon justified bv tire of our vo sels. It is stated to have boon remar ?ble ?uponor to that of tl riiomy. erke, t is said, discharged number of torpedooa which aimpls 8 ?led out. Oae of the British boa ..i up tare of theso spent torpetlor ?I ; . ?idinf in the conflii whon n British destroyer found herse clo?o to flic Oermaa boats and a sht k hor m (lie ?tern and penetr?is about four f??l above the watetlin milking ? big hole. . ?'On one ?f UM British deatroyrrs pet nionkri, B?1 relishing the ?e scurry of the set ion, flow terrified nit the galley, climbed on to a top ?he lead there hid himself in a big ti* saucepan until firing cased " ? BRITISH CRYING FOR HELP, SAYS BERLIf "Chaos" in South Afric; and "Revolts" in India Given as Cause. Berlin, Oct. ! ??? \r> Say ville. Leng ls!s,nd>. "Urcat Britain' cry for help to Portugal," :i\e "chaoti situation" m South Africa, and the "re volfs m Inda." according to announce ment n.ntlo \n Berlin to-day, ?re ?1 tending to raise German confidence hi -i- ; non Conatanti nople shy that Great Britain has ?en three BCth | Halt? ti India. Accoriimg tu reporta from Ruaeiai Warsaw, there are at lea i ? in tlio Poland cum paign. There ?? treat lm k of medii i and aanitarj auppliea, and the h. ? end elaewhere an overcro? ded. The Austrian offen a iva in Galicia is ?am in Bs rim to ho advancing. lHirin^ the assaults on Prxernysl tin- Rua 10,000 men in killed ami wounded. troopa from Beaaarabia have Caaua, whore re? volts have' broken out The Russians iding difficulty in fmming new ations. Despite then numerical superiority officers and non eommiaaioned officers are lacking at aw. It in expected in Berlin that General von Hindenburg. the German command? er m Ruaaian I'oland, will be victori? ous. SUBMARINE SUNK BY FRENCH FLEET Austrians Send Out Two to Attack in Adriatic -One Escapes. i - : '". Montenegro, Oct. 19 London i. An Austrian submarine was sunk in the Adriatic to-day by a French Two submarine vesseli wenl out from the Bay of Cattaro to attack h French which was making its way along the Dalmatian coa-'. They were quickly sighted by the French look? out-, and a she ?eut the leader to the j bottom. The other escaped. The French fleol subsequently recom? mence?] ?he bombardment of the forts ' ttaro. A- Austrian aeropT-ane dropped sev- ' mbs in tin- neighborhood of the ! hut iliil r.r PATH ESCOPE VOTING COUPON vote* Th? Tribune's \..i.| Win N.ncmlirr 2. !9U. Cr?d.t Votes to School. Coupons should be tied up in packages of 25, 50 or 1?, wtth r.urnber or name of school on top coupon. Mail to the PATHESCOPE EDITOR, NEW YORK TRIBUNE. 'Oct. 20, 1914 Pathescope ?editor s Daily Letter to the Boys and Girls: ?A girls high school is very much in the contest. ?How one school greatly boosted its standing. Tuesday, October 20, 19?4. MAP boys AM) G1RI Julia Richmond High School ( ?'?'? hei loyal ??lhfrfnts to the -lag. ?t is out i<> win a Pathescope. Severa! wideawake teachers are directing the campaign. The tirli art pull dily :md stroiigl) and have made a ?t?lt eacourai i toward their macl Arthur M. Wolfson, the principal, is as delighted with the P-thescope as are U.e eiris. He set's i;reat possibilities for its use 0 connectiri'i with sUch sub'ects as biology, commercial geog Jjphy, history and science branches. 7 he simplicity and prai jllyof the Pathescope impresses him particularly, and he predict"; *?t it ?oon will be used in all schools the country over. Last Friday an interesting thine occurred which mighl convej ?hint to you. One of the schools which had been operating in a x*'y quiet way suddenly lumped far to the front. It seems that ?*? families in this school's neighborhood were considering a ?jif? of papers In favor of The Tribune?on account of its <-.\ Ct|>tnt w?r news. A live boy got bus-. Me induced them to sub ????for a vear and give the votes to the school. The Iwo sub votes s:id cave the school a tremendous The list of entrants is steadily growing. There is vet abund p opportunity for all schools. The PatheSCOPC Contest is not *h^k for one si"c'f pri?e* it is merely a friendly competition in p'th tw'nt'r schools will finish victors. Twenty schools will win 2?*JC0P??; and, as no school has secured enough votes to las 'i claim, as vet. to a machine, new schools can enter bow wiili >g handicapped. Yours heartilv, 7? P^L^^_ i^ufe WHERE RUSSIANS FACE THE AUSTRO-GERMAN ARMIES. >*\ } y ,T\. ?DRESDEN *?*%l L ? LU|UN? . \? ?T Hi ?VIENNA . PRiEMYSL V^t'Bt.^'.. Official Report of FrenchWar Office I'm*, (let. 10. The official com? munique .?sued tonight says: "In Belgium, attacks by the German* between N'ieuport and Oixmude have been repulsed by the Relgian army, effectually aided by the British fleet. "Between Arras ami Rove slight, progress had been made at several points. Our troops have reached asi fur ?s the wire net works of the de-1 fence. "In the neighborhood of Snint-Mihiol WS have (fumed some ground on the right bank o!" the Meuse. "No news of importance hss been I received regarding the remainder of the front." Ths War Office's official announce meat thi? afternoon follows: "In Belgium the heavy artillery of the enemy bar cannonaded, but with-! ? ; result, the front from N'ieuport to Vladsloo, to tue east of Dixmude. "Th" forces of the Allies, and notably the Belgian army, have not only re-' pulsed further attack* on the part of the Germans, but have advanced as far' us Roulera. "On OUI left wmg. between the River end t'ne canal of La Bass?e, we l.ave advanced in the direction of Lille. There has been very stubborn righting on the front from La Basses to Ablain and to St. Na'.aire. We are j advancing from house to house in these localities. "T.? the north and to the south of i Anns our troops have been fighting' without respite for more than ten days and with a perseverance and o .-pirit which never fur a moment have lieen relaxed. "In the region of Chaulnes we have repulsad a strong counter attack deliv? ered by the enemy and have won some ground. "On the centre there is nothing to leport. "On our right wing in Alsace, to the of folmar, our advance posts are j on the line between Bonhomme. Pairis and Snlsern. More to the south, we stili occupy Thann." HORDE OF CONVICTS FREED IN ANTWERP Prisons Opened as Ger? mans Come?Refugees Delay Returning. [Bj COM? to The Trlbaw I Siuis, Oct. 19. A great number of proelamationa are posted in all part. of Antweip, in which the fugitives are advised to return. The number of those who followed this call is small, as the Belgians are afraid of heilig compelled to work at repairing roads. Burgomaster I'evoes was much upset by the fate of Antwerp, ami temporar? ily was repluced by Louis Franck, s member of the Belgian Parliament, who advised his countrymen not to re? turn unconditionally, but only after he had reached an agreement with the German authorities at Berlin regard- i ing the conditions on which the fugi? tives might return. He says he will try to make this agreement within thi ? in at twelve days. From some of the Dutch frontier I towns, which still are terribly over- ' crowded, so much so that some of them contain twice their ordinary popula? tion, delegations have arrived in Ant? werp to consult the German Military Governor, but with no definite results FO far. The number of citizens left in Antwerp is about 15,000, the majority of whom are old people, women and children. A large quantity of corn was in the town before the arrival of the Ger- \ mans, but this was sent by way of St. Nicholas to Ostend, and must have been forwarded from there to Havre. At the last moment, when the town was on fire and the great exodus took place, the prisons were opened, and several thousand criminals set free, i Merx Place alone harbored 3,000, amon?; whom were ruffians of the worst clas*. The Germans laid mines in the Scheldt for three kilometres, so the river is absolutely unnavigahle. The number of Germans in Antwerp is about 10, 000, ail Prussians, but it is said they ? replaced by Bavarians. V.. entered the town with men, but he and the greater part left >oon after. Among those remaining ont 1,000 marines. Communica? tion between Antwerp iind Brussels :? kept up by motor cars. Some foreign? ers must be in Antwerp still, but they are not allowed to leave the town. 12 BRITISH OFFICERS REPORTED KILLED London, Oi t. IV A casualty list i!i ted October 15 and made public here to-night gives twelve officers as hav? ing been killed ana forty wounded in the rei ent fighting. FRENCH CONSUL TO FIGHT Benri Goiran, French Consul in Ner? York, i.nd Paul Pierre Moracchini, an attach? of the consulate, have been called for military duty. They will sail for Havre Saturday, on the French ; Line steamship La Touraine. Both : have seen military service, and Mr. 1 Goiran is a lieutenant of reserven. They have been in the consular service Both are married, Mr. Mo- ' raccbini to an American Their duties in facilit?tinp the re- . turn of the French SSOI ended iturday. <>n that day the time limit fixed for joining the colors, and the amneatj granted to deserters, ex? pired. Up to Saturday f.,000 had re? turned to France to join the corn Many sailed from Quebec and from New Orleans. | German-Austrian Official Reports Berlin, (let. fu ? \ m London). Ger masi army headquarrtera have giren ?ut an official announcement under to-day? date a- folio "The attacha of the enemy to the W?al untl notrthws I of Ulle have been repulsed by our troops with the iu fliction of seven "In the eastern arena of the war, the aituation remaina unchanged." Washington. Oct. 19. The German Embaaay to-day announced the receipt following wireleaa from Berlin: I "Official headquarteta report on Oc? tober 18 thai the in -tern theatre of war was quiet yeaterday, with the situ? ation not changed. In tin- <as(orn tb.eu tre. dorm?n forcea .in advancing near I.yck. ami ? ."ing on near and south of Warsaw." Manchester! Mass.. Oct. It*. Dr. Con-I atantin Theodor Dumba, Auetro-Hun garian Ami :.. the United States, raw out to-night two oil - g the Aus? trian operations m Galicia. The first lead u- follows: "Our forward movemenf in batt'e on both m- '?? the Ssn Rivel continued yeaterday. On aoms pointa near the 1 ii lines our troops proceeded slowly, -s.? m - .... ? airare, by trenches. Last night ? 'tack of thi , i i, m,:-. ,| with leases. To-day, too, fighting con? tinued on the whole Inn. Our heavy artillery has t on - ing. "Russian ive beer, repulsed rear Wyszkow. Othei perte of our army that advanced through the pathian ? ta north of the Orow and Uros districts. "The the Russians In at? tacks on Prtemysl nie estimated at i I,.i il.-atl aiui wouiuleii." The second message said: "The battle fought on the linea Stry-Sambor-Medija and on the San, as well as operations directed to.varti the Dniester, are tak ng a favorable turn for the Austrian troops. North of Przemysl our troops have already tern bank of the Baa Hiver, and points southeast of S*ry Sambor were carried after stubborn fights, "We an everywhere pursuing the enemy. The number ' in the- pr?s ee movement more than 16,000. "The American lied Cross detach? ment has ai rived at Budapest, where it was received with "lie greatest sym? pathy." WORLD'S TRADE FOR GERMANY AND U.S. Papers Urge War Without Scruple on British to Wrest Markets. ? London, Oct. 19. Berlin papers qo? reaching London bear evidence of the increasing rage of the I ,-ainst (ireat Britain. The immediate cause of this fresh outburst is the damage done to the German ?hips Interned at Antwerp immediately before the ?vac? ua'ion of tnat city. The "Lokalanzeiger" der-lnres that ' any will gei over this loss, but demands that she shall reply by act? ing always and everywhere on the same principles. The paper asserts that it must be dear to every German that: "There ran he no peace and no real for u? on earth until we have had a linal anil satisfactory settlement with this nation of brigands, For the pres int. however) v>c must hope and wish thai our army leaders will continue to conduct the war ?gainst England both or. land and sea with the utmost ui scrupulousness am! thai all our' meas? ures will be dictated exclusively by the ity of putting ?n end to this vile piracy. It it toward Kngland thnt our eyes and all our thought! must con? stantly be directed, and we must not ?iiting until England is irretrievably involved in the defi her white, yellow and black eonfeder The "Vossische 7a the destruction of the German r< ..m of the important rage of the British ei -I d< i larei that Ger many' i must b? "to force Englai ni way, to be as firm as iron against all her pretensions and to enlighten the outside world in all that concerns Germany." In another issue the same paper de? clares that when the war is ove many will ?lu little trade With Kngland ami Franc-, SO that she and the United States will then together dominate the world's markets, it urges German boat nen to hear this in mind, and to direct i'l their energies toward finding the means of working with America, but ? ping up with her. SWIMMINGCOLLARS FOR BRITISH CREWS London, 0( It. ihat the Admiral fully alive to the necessity of providing a means fer the trows of waiships thai strike mines or are tor? pedoed by submarines to escape dro-.vn other warships sre prohib? ited going to i he ? i - shown ?? announc By that the !..-lierai supply of ?wimming ct of the The men are instructed that the col? lars shall be carried on their p. when they are awake and k-.-nt inflated nml rear each individual when he is aalcep. RUSSIANS REPORT "PARTIAL SUCCESS" Tell of "Very Fierce Fight? ing" Near Warsaw and in Galicia. Petrograd. Oct. It. The Russian General SUitT made thi* announcement to d i. : "We report partini saceossos on October Irt in very lierce lighting in the regies of Warsaw and ?oath of I'l/.i inysl." London, Oct. 19. A Reuter dispatch from Vienna grives mi official state? ment of the Austrian operations in Gsl cia it i.?il by Oeneral von Boefcr, deputy chief of the Austrian General Staff, which says: "Our at?nek in the buttle on both bank? of the Bttwias River, south of Prsemyal, was continued Saturday, and our troops neceeded in getting close j to the rionij. At several points our troops were advancing a* against a fortress Bet/oral attacha of the Rus-' liana were repulsed, with heavy lossea the enemy. Our heavy artillery il non .11 setion. "I'll" ' i of the enemy north of Wysskoff, nest the Carpathian passe?, In Otht r parts our ? lia\e already advanced over the ? m pal iiian?. I ii"s,.t,i lossei during their at? tack; on Prsemyal are estisaatad a' fort] thousand dead and wounded." 2,000 N. Y. RECRUITS IN CANADIAN CAMPS _ Salisbury, England, Oct. "<>? Exeept for a few detachments working with thi supply and horse transport trainf, ml the Canadian* have arrived at their four camps scattered over Salisbury Plain. The early srrivslS. who save completed their camp making, amused themselves by playing baseball and football. Among the player? there appeared a ! surprising number of sweaters bearing the Winged Foot, emblem of the New York Athletic Club. One of the play ( r. said that patriotic Britons: residing in New York had equipped and sent to : taiiada more than two thousand re who are now with the Canadian eontingenl A general air of cheerfulness pre? vails among the Canadians, but some grumbling is heard because of the iso? lation of the camps. None of them la within four miles even of a village and seven miles separates the nearest of them from any considerable town. The prohibition rule imposed on the Valcartier camp in Canada by Colonel Sam Hughes, the Canadian Minister of Defence, rule* here and Is being rigidly enforced. The slowness of the Caniulians in reaching camp has caused a postpone? ment of any attempt at a review of tin troops, and it la expected that General Alderson will take command with only the usual ceremony. Ottawa. Ont., Oct. 1!?. Frederick Stoddart, purehasii.g agent of the Brit? ish War Office, will start for New York as soon as he aacertaini what army supplies Canada intends to furnish, it was learned here to-night, and there place orders for army gloves, socks, underclothes, uniform cloth and practi? cally everything an army in the field rrquh as. FALL OF SARAJEVO DECLARED AT HAND Balkan Allies Mold All Outer Defences of the Bosnian Capital. : I I . I ? 1 ?> Milan, Oct. 19. The capture of Sara? jevo, according to information received by the Bari correspondent of the "Staiiipa." is now considered only a matter of days. All the principal torts aie In the hands of the Serbo-Monte iiegiin army. The defenders have forced te retire to the weak inner line rtiflcations, consisting largely of temporary works thrown up during the siege. The Austriani surrounded Sarajevo With a girdle oi forts placed on the heights around the citj and armed them with powerful guns. Against these defenec? the Serbe-Montenegrins ?ere able to bring into action several hoary Servian guns employed in the lirai Balkan war at the siege of Adri- ' nnople, and these were reinforced by naval gu.is from the allied fleets on ? t?ie Adriatic coast, conveyed through ? Montenegro into Botnia. These heavy guns ha\e reduced the\ Au?trian forts to silence, while the I infantry, as soon as they ha''o seen j any point in the defences seriously j weakened by artillery fire, have dashed in and captured the position at the j point of the bayonet, daunted neither b, terrible losses suffered in charging sere I open ground nor by the intri cats barbed wire entanglements around the Austrian works. By October 14 all the forts had been captured except three very strong po? sitions const ituting the key :.. defences of Sarajevo. During the whole of October 11 and 15 a tremen .'.oiis artillery duel raged for pi I on of these forts, and on the evening* ober IS the infantry were able ? to carry out manoeuvres unobserved by the enemy which enabled them the next Horning, under cover of heavy tire of big guns, to execute a decisive flank nt'ack on the Austrian positions. A* midday on October 16 the Berbo ! Montenegrins were ma?ters of tiie whole girdle of forts around the Bos? nian capital. Sir ,L Roper Paringlon, Consul Gen? eral for Montenegro, has received the , following official telegram from Cet tinje: "Montenegrin troops operating around Sarajevo continue concentrated ? upon the heights in the immediate vi of the Bosnian capital, firmly holding the important road to the southeast of Sarajevo. The enemy has retired toward Gelicbc and Kladnuo, being unable to resist our energetic ad '. anee. "On the south of Sarajevo our troops are encamped on the heights of Jabo ina and Bukovaglava. The position now occupied by our army around Sarajevo is excellent. "The garrison of Kalinovin, ec ing of some 8,000 men, refused to at? tack ii.-, and restricted themselves to defence of the fort and intrench? . ment?." London, Oct. 19, An Exchange Tele? graph dispatch from Rome says advices from Cettinje, state that the Austrian fleet in the harbor of Cattaro, Dalma , tia, attempted to escape yesterday and break through the French fleet blockad? ing tho port. AUSTRIANS SWORN TO UPHOLD KAISER London, Oet 19, A Rome di?patch to the Central New* - "According to advices from Trieste all the new Austrian soldiers are re ? quired to take the oath of fidelity to the German Kmperor, a3 well as to the Austrian Emperor." Today cind tomorrow in this Sale of $4 & $5 Shirts at $1.95 A man can find designs such as he never can find for less than $4 & $5 under ordinary conditions. C| They are fancy cloths, all of them?Scotch Madras, Oxford de laine satin stripes, and radium striped silk and linen crepes, in the newest and most brilliant of designs and colorings?big, bold, trenchant, flameful color stripes that are the hall mark of fine shirtings. Plain and pleated negligee models, with starched or soft cuffs, and beautifully tailored, i he latest European novelties in designs ?and highly novel and original values at this remarkable figure. ?alisMomjiamj Broadway at 34th Street. ^_ GERMANY ADMITS BIG BATTLE LOSSES British and French State? ments Confirmed?Aus? trian Casualties. B - table to The Tribus?.] Rotterdam, Oct. 1?. The latest lists of casualties published in the German papers clearly show that the claims of the Hritish and French troops to have wiped out whole battalions of the enemy are true. Reserve Infantry Regiment 17 lost in one battle K00 men wounded, apart from the dead, and in another battalion of the same regiment Till were killed at the battle of the Marne. Reserve Infantry Regiment ti'.? is said to have had an "unassessable loss," and such words as 'innumerable" losses and "tremendous" number of dead and wounded followed the names of several regiment?. # These pbraaea ?re full of - when it ia remembered that t h < Ger? mans have not hesitated to publish ioeal lists of the dead running into six columns. a-.-.? te Tht Ts lb .- ? Rome, Oct. It. The Austrian losses in actions against Russin, Servia and Montenegro until October 6 approxi : mately are estimated as follows: Officers kilbd 486, wounded 1,53t; men killed 4..7.U, wounded ???72. Total , killed. 4,76t; wounded. 21.H1 ?. Only eight officers and 132 men are to be missing, and the number taken prisoners it not given. These ? [urea are official, but are said to be approximate and are regarded as un tie rest ?mated. GERMANS CRIPPLE BRITISH WARSHIP Triumph Put Out of Fight at Tsing-Tao, Says Eimbassy Report. Washington, Oct. 19. Shell lire from howitzers in the German fortress of Tsing-Tao has heavily damaged the great British battleship Triumph ami compelled her to withdraw from the British-Japanese bombarding fleet, ac? cording to a statement issued to-night by the German F.mbassy as based on dispatches from the Fbt Fast by ?ray of San r'nuii-iM 0, The Triumph is a battleship of 11,800 tons, built in It08. She carries a com? plement of 700 officers and men. No details were given in the dis? patches, embsssy officials stated, ami the date of the incident was not men? tioned. The official?, however, thought the damage to the bombarding fleet was inflicted yesterday. They discredited reports that the Tsing-T?u garrison was preparing to ? ap "?late. Tokio, Oct. 19. The Japanese cruiser Takachiho was .sunk by a mine just outside Kiao-Chau Ray about midnight Sunday. One officer anil twelve mem bera of the cre-v are known to have been saved. Her complement was 1284 men, and it is believed that 28 officers, 54 non-commissioned officers and 189 of the crew perished. The Takachiho was on patrol duty outside Tsing-Tao when she fouled the mine. Japanese destroyers heard the explosion and saw the flames that re? sulted. They hurried to the assistance of the cruiser, which, however, disap? peared quickly, anil in the darkness rescue work w is impossible. A typhoon lias struck Kiao-Chau, de We speak from the workshop f] We are tailors, not brokers?tailors of our own wares, not re-tailers of other people's. ?f We speak from the workshop, from the tailor's bench, and we know well whereof we speak. ty Saks clothes are ours, without question or equivocation?the work of our hands, the pride of our heart. ?I When you buy a Saks garment you eliminate the middleman and come into personal, intimate contact with the tailor. ?Q And it is that personal, intimate contact between the maker and the wearer of Saks clothes which has enabled us to sense and to satisfy the demands of the most discriminating men in town. Suits.$17.50 to $50 Pall Overcoats $15.00 to $38 Broadway at 34th Street as mt stroying th? landing piers. Twenty Japanese sailors were drowned. The Takachiho was built !n 1885 anit refitted in ItOO. She was of ??.700 ton?. !i00 feet long and of 4 si feet beam. Her main battery consisted of eight 6-inch ?.-uns. ami her speed was about eigh? teen knots. WILSON NOT TO ACT ON BOMB PROTEST Washington. Oct. 19. President Wil? son to-day received a written protest. ugainat the dropping of bombs upon undefended cities by German airship? from F. Hopkinson Smith and other Americans who recently returned from Europe. It is understood the President will take no action, the I'nited States hav? ing no right to interfere. r .iami W??Mmt?aimsw?S^ti^wcassmiWWamfW^OXB'^'Z "The Telephone Increased Our Sales $ 15,000.00 in September" TWO of our men sold $15,000.00 worth of goods by telephone during September in addition to the orders regularly brought in by the field men," is the report of a large wholesale house that inaugurated a selling by telephone campaign in August Such reports again prove the efficiency of the tele? phone as a business getter. They demonstrate the value of putting the telephone to work to overcome the handicap of unsettled business conditions. They show, in a measure, what you can accomplish in your business, if you will study the telephone's possi? bilities and properly adapt it to your particular problems. Why not start a Selling by Telephone campaign T Our nearest Commercial Office will gladly give you a copy of "Selling by Telephone" and suggestions as to the proper way to adapt the telephone to your neeJa, NEW YORK TELEPHONE CO.