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VOLUME ONE — GERMAN PUBLICIWHAT WAR HAS FAVORS SENTIMENT! DONE TO ITALY WILSON,S MESSAGE '°-<: $2,125,000,000 Spent in | the Two Years of War in Neopolitan Country; the Needy Ones Get Help By JOHN H. HEARLEY eo United Press Staff Correspondent Officially Ignore It ROME, Italy, Jan. 2—(By Mail) — The budget reports for Italy’s two SOCIALISTS DON’T LIKE IT | years of war today shows that in the eee jfinancial year 1915-16 y spe No Indication, However, That Ger-|$2.125,000,000, of which treo pant many Will Put Any Stop to Gi- [000 were for ordinary and $1.473.- gantic Preparations for Colos- | 000,000 for war expenses. lossal Spring Offensive Ordinarily there would have been er a surplus of $92,000,000 The war By the United Press ministry accounted for $1,398,000,- BERLIN, Jan. 24.—President Wil- | yoo, Needy families of s @ ‘ son’s address has been telegraphed to ceived $88,000,000 of th the Kaiser-and Gen. von Hindenburg|The Ministry of Marine spent $75,- at the front. | 000,000. After conferring with the German ,_ Other items directly due to the war Foreign office and other officials, Am-| included 000,000 for issuing and bassador Gerard cables Washington a|Paying interest on three war loans; confidential outline of the Foreign Of- | $4,200,000 for transportation and fice’s impressions of President Wil- helping emigrants to repatriate; $1,- son’s statement. 400,000 to place the Italian Red Sea The German public |colony in a state of defense and reviewed the/ address favorably, but offic while | $1,200,000 for the fishermen of the oS z Adriatic coast. The 1915 budget ended pointing out that the addr is an-|** om ' other step toward peace, believe that |" reat oe $152,500,000. : Germany can not take official cogni-} *" 6-17 the army budget was in- f | creased by $900,000,000 and the navy zance of the sentiments expressed by | ©Te#Se¢ Dy *f y PeeeACAVicoHna ees ¥| by $63,000,000. The payment of in- a |terest on war loans amounted to The German officials made no con-| ¢57.000,000; $4,400,000 went toward cealment of their satisfaction over) repatriated Italians; $1,000,000 to- the “freedom of the Seas” argument) wards strengthening further the Red presented by the President. Ger-|Sea colony; $900,000 to fishermen; many has always insisted that this iS} $300,000 to war orphans, The total the biggest question involved in the expense was $1,796,400,000 and the war. Except a small group of Social-| gegcit $652,400,000. : ists, all of President Wilson’s ideas The general economic conditions are supported. Nevertheless, there) may be considered almost as good. will be no stoppage of the gigantic Probably, much less distress has been | war preparations, and the German na- caused by the war%h italy than io tion is straining every resource for . | Officials Regard President Wil- son’s Address as Another | Step Toward Peace, But | be | other belligerent countries. Since the expected final and decisive en-|ihe war's beginning Italians have gagement. worked more, produced more and c Officials of the German Naval De-! saved more than ee partment believe that the naval forces! The population’s thriftness and toil of the Imperial Empire, will play any are proven by the fact that, while the important role in an unexpected man-| savings bank had $1,519,000,000 on ner in the impending conflict. | deposit on June 30, 1914, the present Germany is confident of ultimately | deposits considerably exceed $1,600,- winning. 000,000, This, in spite of the higher! cost of living and the war loans, which |has absorbed millions of dollars of )small savings. Besides, the remit- jtances from emigrants have almost | ceased, as there are now only 35,000 Monday. There is an unexpected un-!emigrants abroad, compared with! wiliiagness manifested in official cir-| 380,000 in 1913. In 1916 imports cles to forego the principle of the|excceded exports by $664,499,000. Monroe Doctrine, because the exten-/| =< sion is taken to imply the abandon-! ment of that doctrine. eo Woman Is Named Clerk of Senate Foreign Committee By the United Press | WASHINGTON, Jan, 24—Can al WILL SELLSI00,000 Wiis Wetsipa Relations sen « WORTH Of LIBRARY of the United States Senate thinks so.| Henry Huntington to Dispose The committee has chosen for the first! of One-Third of Rare Rooke By the United Press BUENOS AIRES, Jan. 24.—South América is delaying a verdict on the President’s address before Congress 1 | | | ~~ time in history a woman as the clerk | 5 of the committee. This is an import-| Left Him by the Late ant post. Her name is Miss Jessie L.| Railroad Baron Simpson—business-woman __ extra-or-| Se dinary. | By the United Press i Her nomination carries with it the) NEW YORK, Jan. 24-——The late privilege of the floor of the Senate,’ Collis P. Huntington's nephew, Henry enjoyed by but one other woman injE. Huntington, who married his history, Miss Leona Wells, clerk of} uncle’s widow and who has spent 3 of the military committee. jthe 50 million dollars the railroad Miss Simpson was nominated for|baron left him, for rare books, will the clerkship of Chairman Stone, and/sell $100,000 worth of duplicate vol- received the unanimous vote of the{umes at auction at the Anderson gal- committee, of which she has been act-|leries here today and tomorrow. ing clerk for six months. | Huntington possesses probably the imost remarkable and valuable library in the country and one of the finest in HARRY J. SIEBERT JR. the world. It is believed that before jhe is done his collections will be un- CLAIMED BY DEATH cixute: by that of any collector past or present. air las Huntington bought a million dol- News 6f th ¢- +? Barry J. Sie- lare worth of books from the Hoe col- s : lection alone. He paid half a million voce re ae cash forthe Duke of Devonshire’s Hie} found shock to the many friends of | brary and has bought a dozen ae one of Casper’s most popular young| World famous collections from seen | tes ante se Ble aklelr ginecdie fir army of cataloguers and assistants acute attack of appendicitis. The re-|#"4 yaa s teriane annually for the A ; ; care 0: 0 Prop is Shap berate 5.01 It is believed Huntington intends to taking chapel, where they will rest center his main collection at his er until Se Pieeal to be held Friday in Los Angeles. He is at present liv- i thorning from the home at the corner ing on Fifth avenue in New York, -but! of Third and Maple. The Rev. R. B,|he has shipped several hundred thou-| W. Hutt will have charge of the ser- sand dollars worth of his books to the oenase west coast and there is talk that h Harry Siebert had just reached his|™2¥ erect a sreal Ubrayy, sone 24th birthday on the 20th day of this), C¢nectors are Rare from or the month. Prior to his illness he has for! 0", ‘06 Coun x ee orate tim i ployed in the office |7#™° volumes Huntington offers, This, See ee aay ap loved in tne oome| is Partly due to the fact that not only be Stand: - * ot the Seine does Huntington possess one, but in P ee ke . Harry J some cases several and in a few in- Siebert. | Lee an stricken over| tances all the rare first editions of oy grief. the passing of their only son, and to poi Fare colnet a <3 sympathy of the community in their IN PRINT PAPER PRICE! hour of sorrow, The father is the ah AL Cele |JAPS IN U. S. SEND OVER |sparsely settled and mountain West ‘gion of the frontier, acquired the ex- DEMOGRATICSOLONS PREVENT PASSAGE IOWAN'S RESOLUTION Acrimonious Debate Precedes Laying Resolution on the GOOD AUDIENCE AT TO DISCUSS WORLD AN ABSOLUTE BONE REVIVAL SERVIGES TRADE AFTER WAR DRYNESSISWANTED Evangelist Eklund and Singer Pittsburg Scene of American British Prohibitionists Won't Given Gratifying Encour- Brains as Fourth Annual Be Satisfied Until Entire | agement During First Meet of Foreign Trade | Nation Is on Board Week of Campaign Council Opens the Water Wagon | By the United Good audiences greeted the evan- Press. By J. W. PEGLER 4 gelist, the Rey. Carl P. Eklund, and) PITTSBURGH, Jan. 24—This city) United Press Staff Correspondent Calendar from Where it was a magnet drawing toward it to-, LONDOD Jan. 2—(By Mail) —| his singer at yesterday’s meetings, es- pecially for the first week day of a campaign. In the afternoon after two or three hymns, Mr. Wooton ren- [ Can Be Taken Up day the brains of American business. British prohibitionists won’t be satis- coe In eight special trains the leaders of| fied until the entire nation boards the LEGISLATION IS TIED UP American finance, production and in- Wscer-wagon for the duration of the! dered “Jesus, Lover of My Soul” on|@Stry arrived as fast as Mogul en-|war and the demobilization period.) Senator from Lowa Contends That his mellophone, and after the talk, #iMes could bring them. |The gradual paring-down of “ope| the Propezals in the President's — with Mr. Eklund at the piano, the . The 800 or more traveling will join hours for drinking is not enough; Address of More Importance évangelis i his singer sang a med- 50 Pittsburgh men here tomorrow in| they want absolute prohibition of all| Than Other Business y of us, Lover of My Soul,” the fourth annual convention of the|!iquor and a ban on its manufacture, oeaen There Is Power in the Blood,” and National Foreign Trade Council, | __ Here are some of the striking com=|By the United Pre ‘My, Heavenly Hania” ial attention will be given by| Prisons advertised by the Strength) WASHINGTON, Jan. 24.—-The The : er drew a beautiful par- the convention (o the strengthening | °f British Movement, demanding! Democratic Senators prevented the " allel between the 90th and 91st systematically of the trade and social|®olition of Drink: {passage of the Cummins resolution, Psalms, likening them to the minorjbonds between North and South t During the war enough grain has} mitting a discussion of President and major strains in music, and then|America. Plans will be made for the ak used, Lt liquor manufacture to} Wiison’s recent address, but failed to from the three closing verses of the|development of foreign trade with) make two billion quarter loaves ofjeliminate the possibility of a pro- F }longed discussion as to the merits of | Breweries and distilleries us@ithe Wilson utterances. enough sugar to supply the Army. After several hours of acrimonious Bist Psalm, under the title of “The|our South American neighbors on the Seven Pillars of Wisdom’s Temple,”| broadest and most progressive basis. “eC spoke particularly of deliverance 'r prosperity through great- 7 te. ate 2 ¢ ; . from sin, prayer and its answer, God|er foreign trade” will be the domin re hough Germany has sunk 2,300,-/debate the resolution automatically ant motto of what promises to be the|?09 tons of British shipping, the li-|Went to the calendar, from where with man in trouble, the promise of| long life, and seeing the Master face|most important gathering of big busi- to face. With great effect, he quoted| ness men in 1917 the opening line of Geo. Matheson’s| The best way to meet new condi- noble hymn, ‘O, love, that will not let/ tions that the country is bound to face me go.” after the end of the European war For the four remaining afternoons) Will be the problem of this convention, of this week the evangelist announced| A score of the most noted econo: four talks on “Soul Winning.’’ The} mists, financial experts, traffic men, theme for this afternoon as “The Producers and distributors will treat Motive of the Soul Winner,” and to-|the question from every conceivable morrow’s subject will be “The Life of angle. Agricultural, mining, lumber- the Soul Winner.” jing, merchandising, and transporta- quor industry uses 1,800,000 meas-| urement tons a year to import raw| materials. Senator Cummins can call it up at any time he'sees fit. Action on the reso- {lution cannot be taken without a vote, The Board of Trade withdrew large} but Cummins, by merely making a numbers of skilled men from the!motion, can precipitate a debate on |Army to carry on ship construction|the Wilson address, and thus accom- ut the liquor traffic could release plish his desired purpose. | enough artisans to make 800,000 tons! genator Cummins declared he in- in six months, }tended to use his privilege of calling Coal shortage compelled the with- up the resolution at any time, and if drawat of 11,000 miners from the|he carries out his threat the principal jarmy to resume mining while liquor) Democratic argument against a spe- In the evening, after a great song|tion experts as well as bankers and ypbind congumes the output of |¢ial debate on the subject will be the service and a solo by Mr. Wooten, the| Manufacturers will have a part in the, 7) Tiners. ‘ |‘danger of tieing up legislation to a evangelist took as his text Matt. 18:/planning for solidification of Ameri-, ,/he Government passed the work-| point necessitating an extra session of 14, “It is not the will of your Father|¢an interests to meet every possible °"'* C¥stomary holidays but loss of | Congress.” in heaven that one of these little| eventuality. time directly traceable to alcohol! Senator Cummins contends that the equals a three-month vacation by the entire nation. Prohibition | proposals contained in the President’s a address are vastly of more importance tire of than any legislation now pending. >... ones should perish.” After a story of| James A. Farrell, Frank A. Vander- a Rooseveltian family whose relatives|!in and John N. Willys are three of proffered to take one child and rear!the leaders of the convention. people never it as their own and to whom the mes-}__ One special train was made up at iat the & co See art % i Su: sage was sent, “We are poor and we| New Orleans. It carries the progres- ¥ Th se ie a othe eenebioend American Suspeced by 6 have ten children, but not one to|Sive business leaders of the recon- ey Joined in the general outcry) Bri Undergoee Gruelling ird Degree by Officers form and figure, with a poise and carriage which any king might have envied; possessed of a personal cour- perience and developed the nerve which made them competent to trav- erse wide, unguarded areas with ir iy from a beau-| section so Sees ro 5S tiful city of that the frontier, in whose early, heroic and adventurous days he was so strik- ing and*conspicuous # figure, the} story of the néaceful passing over the! range to his final camping ground of | wu Py eae aes 4 * against the Asquith cabinet, daily de-! spare, ea Eklund anes of en ate a itancene ak wihird aag|manding that the ministers resign and the. ei Ehiatiealdie a ‘ Cas ey eastward-bound from the rich harvest Place the conduct of the war in more| By the United Press out, everyone who has not known the! from Chicago brought a large number simp potors ie Pape He the parli-| Reed, a Sacramento fruit grower, ar. better life. of railroad men. Still another from Goes wal sartbiva hb aleSGeaRuRaEEth xiyed soulay olt bourd the ) bts ana ~ fey a *e. |told a harrowi le of under, the evangelist wilt peak ty shen doit contifgent, The" ‘northern ‘Take| 1 an election the liquor matter| the thied degree by British authorities on the subject, “The Devil, Sons & | States sped eastward their copper apd) outa tndlresdy: become 78 Aa. at Falmouth, England. He said he Co.” and “Wyoming's Fight.” lumber men, Various group confer-) ct bs ae ih by t oe. 8s eat ©} was suspected of being a man named |ences will bring together from time! to “their advocacy of prohibiting eee | Rutherford, and declared that he was to time representatives, respectively, | ‘0 We!" advocacy of prohi ition or op-) forced to strip twice and was rigor- $2,000,000 TO HOMES of the banking interests, the trans. P°tion to it. jously examined. portation interests, the agricultural The story was cabled to Washing- By the United Press interests. Twa KILLED AND SEVERAL ton and agents for the Department of TOKIO, Jan. 2—Japanese emi-- Whether the war ends on a day's | Justice will meet Reed. grants in America remitted $2,216,-/notice or gradually through months! I= SR eae ESET 387 to their homeland during the first or years of ‘tedious negotiations, the HURT IN EASTERN WRECK’ VICTIMS OF RAIDER 10 months of 1916, according to an|delegates are firmly convinced that GIVEN PASSAGE HOME investigation of the Department of the conditions will be met without in- | uaarce need Communications here. Japanese injdustrial or commercial disaster-—_or By the United Press By the United Press Hawaii sent $801,454 and those injeven grave uncertainty or confusion OIL CITY, Pa., Jan, 24.—At least BUENOS AIRES, Jan. 24,—The Canada $527,056. to the country. seven persons were injured, including Hudson Maru, which arrived here a several passengers, when a Pennsyl-/few days ago loaded with prisoners vania Railroad passenger jumped the which a German raider nad placed track and crashed into a freight at'on board her, departed from this noon here today. One man is expected! port today, bound northward, Most to die. jof the prisoners were furnished with transportation homeward by the con- By the United Press suls of their home governments. CLEVELAND, 0O., Jan. 24.—One The whereabouts of the German man was killed and several persons commerce raider is still a mystery. | injured when a Nickel Plate passen-) a Buffalo Bill, the man whojin the consideration of these items, 8e" train went thru an open switch MALBURN GETS SECOND typified the romance of the covering the postal service in that end crashed on a pape aa RESERVE APPOINTMENT plains, received a tribute on | Western land so recently desert and * “ty “ieee hiss nine ere oda 5 a i jwilderness, now so strangely a com-| A! the injured wi aghladd | By the Uniied Press the oor of the National House|hination and mixture of these condi. PROBE MAY RESL RESULT IN | WASHINGTON, Jan. 24.—Comp- of Representatives the other | tions of culture and cultivation, and CORRECTIVE MEASURES “eller Williams announced the ap- day, after the _news of his development of the highest order, to |pointment of Assistant Secretary of death —the tribute coming |speak of this man, who was the beau By the United Press the Treasury Malburn as chief exam- from the lips of Representative |ideal of the romance and the chiv-- NEW YORK, Jan. 24.—The ‘leak’ | iner of the Second Reserve District, - W. Mondell. The postal|airy, of the courage and the daring of| probe committee adjourned their ses- |i" the place of Charles Starek, who routes were being discussed at/the good old pioneer days of the sions here and will return to Wash./W%S removed from the service, the moment, an Representa-|Golden West. lington. This action came after the | ae ae, tive Mondell took the oppor- Cody's Career _ {committee had been informed that it ha me" call a ae on age: th Whatever others.may have con-|change records as quickly as desired. . that the star route service in | ates te the histo rast that time} It is practically certain that od vs . / lant jon, to the work of develop-| committee will recommend corrective hy INSTALLED AT WIGWAR is the first cousin pad the immediate ment that has brought so marvelous; measures toward regulating the Stock! successor of the old transcontinental/, transformation into many sections! Exchanges. \ f hi a in f. pony express, that picturesque ser-|o¢ the old West, of the mountains and| ——————_ A thoroughly up-to-date Len. vice performed by the hard-riding, i, plains, no one will challenge Col: RUMANIANS ABANDON |tain is being installed this week for death-defying couriers of the desert A Paes crt \J. A. Ferguson at The Wigwam, which a Toles end |ouel Cody’s premiership in contribu- TULSA, BERLIN REPORTS he latdat) matropetieie and the mountain whose exp pits en jtion to those thrilling and inspiring brings the very .latest metropo| adventures appealed so strong'y ‘9 episodes, to the pleasing and pictur-| By the United Press ; conveniences right to Casper’s door. the basse and imaenations of a for-| eesque illumination of those incidents) BERILN, Jan. 24.—Successful Ger- a Rapeiven tir ty conan Par eu mer gent " F |section, which have most charmed and|nounced. The Rumanians have ahan-| White, with mahogany and Sani-Onyx Made It Possible . \challenged, inspired and thrilled the|doned Tulsea. _|used in its construction, It is 14 feet The pony sepeonsbectinn possible nation arid the world. in length, wip ton Perper Bhasges toy Mee thru the courage an ing of those! fountain of beautiful impo’ El E - 5. of expeditions, civil and military, Rimi Hd cera A Noe A feature of the new fountain is which penetrated or crossed the re- By the United rPess the system of refrigeration which age never questidned or challenged;| LONDON, Jan. 24—American fu-|makes it possible to have the soda ice prince, kindly and considerate in act|Burope any more. They have to for holding different kinds of ices and and attitude, it scarcely required the|Prove too many things about them-/creams are also a feature. é genius of a Buntline to enshrine him| Selves that it’s inconvenient to prove| Mr. Ferguson intends to youth of the land, young and old,| Probably the only Americans ar-|vsual daintiness, and these appetiz- which his native andtitibe made him|tiving in Europe, now-a-days without ing lincheonettes will be greatly ap- to those who knew him. first asking permission of Uncle precinted by the patrons of this popu- Qualities of Manhood of American ports under careless’ Other men have illustrated in a/Skippers. As soon as they set foot on| more marked degree some one of the; 2uropean shores are arrested Courage of Guides jand characteristics of his period and|man progress in Rumania is an- ul o Superbl: 1 d handsome i | FUGITIVES CAN’T GET TO who, serving as the scouts and guides|¢, 7 eo y> poe ane handsome in Rant aeble, intrepid as a gladiator, courtly as a{gitives from justice can't escape to/cold all the time. Various receptacles the hero and idol in the hearts of the| before they can get either in or ont, /all times sandwiches and salads of un- Combined Sterling 4 are, occasionally, sailors who ship out lar institution. e ities jand held until their ship leaves for