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The Sunday Bee is the only Omaha newspaper that gives its readers four big peges of colored comies. THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. THE WEATHER. Fair ——e VOL. XLV | NINETEEN SHOT | AND CITY AFIRE, RESULT OF RIOT NO. Four Persons Are Probably Fatally | Hurt and Ten Buildings Burn- ing in Youngstown, Ohio. STATE GUARDSv AilE EXPECTED Governor Orders Two Regiments to | Be Held in Readiness to Go to Scene of Disorder. GREAT STRIKE OF STEEL m:N“i YOUNGSTOWN, O., Jan. 7.—Nine- teen persons have been shot. four probably fatally and many others| injured and ten buildings are b\lrn-! ing, as a result of steel mill riots hers tonight. The fire is not under | control and threatens the entire east | Youngstown business section. State guards men are expected to arrive before midnight, YOUNGSTOWN, O., Jan, 7.—~Troops in | Cleveland, Alliance, Akron, Bucyrus and this city were held In readiness tonight to take charge of the steel mill strike situation here. Riots late this afternoon in which two | men, John Baker and Stephen Gardner, | were injured so seriously they were taken | to a hospital, led to the request being made by Governor WIillis that Ohio Na- tional Guard regiments in Youngstown | and nearby cities be held in readiness for trouble, i \ De s of Men, i Announcements by -the Republic Steel and Iron company, the Youngstown Sheet and Tube company, the Brier Hill | Steel company and the Youngstown Iron and Steel compaeny, that they would grant a wage increase from 19% cents to 22 cents per hour, falled to bring peace. The 3,000 laborers on strike demand 25 cents per hour. Late this afternoon a crowd of strikers | and strike sympathizers gathered about the entrance to the Youngstown Sheet and Tube company plant and a number of shote were fired across the river at the workshop there. Whether or not any one was injured is not known. Orders Soldiers Ready. COLUMBUS, O, Jan. T7.—Governor ‘Willls tonight ordered two regiments of the Ohio National Guard to mobilize and h to be héld in readines sto be sent to { Youngstown where rioting in the ptrike \ of steel workers was reported today as PIONEER AND FORMER SHERIFF | CALLED BY GRIM REAPER. | | | | | re o) RINEWART John TPower JOHN POWER, OLD PIONEER, IS DEAD Former Sheriff and Prominent in Political and Civic Affairs, Suc- | cumbs to Heart Trouble. | HE CAME TO OMAHA IN 1870/ John Power of 1913 South Tenth | street, former sheriff and yloneer! citizen, died at 8:30 a, m. at St. Jo- | seph’s hospital. He was 66 years of | age May 6 last year. He was re- moved to the hospital on New Year's | day, complaining of a severe pain in| his chest. Heart fallure was xlven‘; jas the cause of death, Funeral arrangements have not | been completed, but in all probability | | sclemn high mass will be observed | Monday morning at St. Patrick's | church, Fourteenth and Castelar | streets. He resided in St. Patrick’s parish forty years and was trustee of the church at time of death. worious . The governor's action was based on a \ | report..xeceived from General John C. Speaks of the Ohio National Guard who was sent to Youngstown today to investi- 1 | gats the strike situation. The general reported that troops might be needed to maintain order in the city and the gov- ernor immediately sent out the mobiliza- tion order. Wlscon.sm Moves Into Nebraska Class On Bed Sheet Law MADISON, Wis., Jan. 7.—The long bed sheet law, merely a topic of jest, has come into its own. State hotel inspectors reported today that 95 per cent of the commerclal hotels and 50 per cent of the others now comply 1 with it. When the old linen supply of the other 50 per cent is worn out it must be replaced by sheets of the full length. The -state hotel rules say that worn-out beddimg should be discarded entirely. The top sheet, according to the state law, must be not less than ninety-six inches long after being laundered. This allows the end to fold over the edges of the covers, preventing the covers which are not changed for each guest from / coming in contact with the mouth of the sleeper. The top sheet is to be folded back so a8 to cover all top coverings at least twelve inches. The under sheet must be long enough to cover the mattress completely and fold under on sides and ends. { The Weather Forecast till 7 p. m. Saturday: » For Omaha, Council“Bluffs and Vicinity Falr; not much change in temperature. Yesterday. at Omaha mperature EFEFIELEEEEE Comparative Local Record. 1916. 1915, 1914. 1913, 283 Mighest yesterday ...... 8 28 58 1 Lowes} yesterday 0 % » ‘o Mean 'temperature 2 N8 ¢ Precipitation ...te.....» .00 00 .00 .26 Temperature and precipitation depart- ures from the normal: \ Normal temperatu : 2 | s for the day soasesere I Total deficiency since March 1 e Normal precipitation 02 inch Deficlency for the day.. .02 inch Total rainfall since March 1....27.41 inches y Deficiency since March 1 . 1.98 inches Deficiency for cor. period, 1914. 3.37 inches Deficency for cor. period, 1913. 5.63 inches Reports from Statlo) Station and State Te of Weathe | clear ...... clear .. Cheyenne, Davenport, Denver, clear.. Lander, cloudy . North Platie, clear . Omaba, clear . Pueblo, clear..... Rapid City, clear o Salt Lake City, cloudy.. wof | y clear ... - ! o part cioudy.... 2 3 0| wioux City. H ¥ w Valentine, R B 0 of precipitation. r ;| | The surviving children are Nicholas, |Lora, Alice and Mrs, ¥\ C. Thomas, all {of this city. Mr. Power's first wifo was ( | Mary Quirilen “afore “harriage. She dfed * in 1888, His second wife, Mamie O'Malley | of Dubuque, died September 1, last year. Had Many Interests. | Mr. Power was & mémber of the Anclent Order of Hibernians, Knights of Colum- | | bus, Emmet Monument association, Good | | Fellowship club, Elks and one of the | founders of the Jacksonfan club. He was | general manager of the Power-Heafey | Coal company, president of the Allen | | Mining company of Colorado and inter- | |esteq tn an ofl company in Wyoming and | {a cement block company in this city. | He served as sheriff of this county for three terms, from 190 to 1906, and re- cefved commendation for the judiclous | |manner in which he handled a strike |among packing house workers at South |Omaha. He mingled with the men and Ispoke to them as a fellow man and won {thelr confidence. He was known for his | fearless qualities as sheritf as well as {citizen and earned the briquet of | “Honest John." It was always said of | {htm that he meant what he said and ihad a manner of expression that wom | trtends. He was born in Waterford, Ireland, | moving to this country In 1865. He set-' { tled tn Omaha in 1570, taking up his trade | as cooper. e established a cooperage business at Fourth and Jones streets, which site he sold to the Omaha Electric | | Light and Power company for a power | house location. He engaged in the manu-| tacture of washing machines at Seventh | and Jones streets for seven years. Preserved First Home. Mr. Power's first home was at Fifth { ana Center streets, a cottage which he, { always kept up because his children were born there. When he moved into his new | home on South Tenth street he said he { would never part with the old cottage. { He was one of the first residents in the | southeast part o the city. Mr. Power was one of the old wheel | horses of local democracy. He was chosen | | . | delegate to many conventions and served 2 | on central committees He assumed au | say a pleasant word or offer a bit of en- | couragement. He was a member of the Douglas County Association of Nebraska Pioneers. | Four Thousand Invited to White plain exterior, but always had time to| | | WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.-The White | House social season will open tonight with & reception in honor of the delegates to the Panamerican Scientific congress More than 4,000 invitations have been is- sued and hundreds have been refused. The president and Mrs. Wilson will rg- ceive together in the Blue room, assisted | by members of the cabinet and their wives. The reception will be the first appearance of Mrs. Wilson at an affair | PADEREWSKI WIRES HE Jan Paderewsk! wires that he {po-umly appear in Omaha on his sched- {uled date In the charity concert course at |to postpone placing sugar on the free {the Auditorium. In a teiegram from | Minneapolis to Louis C. Nash, he s | “Please deny In wmy name any rumors | to the effect that T have at any time con- llelnull!»d cancell'ng my Omaha engage- |provision which would admit sugar with- ment. Have absolutely no idea who could LA \\':ngfl, 'wfu Forecaster. |have searted such rumors. Best regards.” | went to the senate finance committee. & | erick T. Price, a local business man, | wife, for whose murder he is on trial | Villa Chieftain i House Reception {has fled with a small force to the moun- |ing to General Herrera today. ( | today | of the kind. | First Step to Keep WILL SURELY PLAY HERE' will | . lof w joint resolution by Senator Brous- OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY &, PRISONER SHUDDERS BERLIN PLEDGES WHEN WIFE'S SKULL den:g’fim mm“";:."l' it | German Assurances Regarding Sub- 9 P :U " 1 ‘;‘]“ - | marine Warfare in Mediter- | 2 oo | ranean Broader Than ! HE HEARS DAMAGING EVIDENCE for North Sea. OFFERS TO PAY INDEMNITY Bernstorfi Submits Proposal to Pay SAFETY OF ALL Medical Experts Say Death Appar- ently Due to Blows on Head ijf“im‘ Damages for Americans Lost THROWN FROM CLIFF, CHARGE Wil Sitanis. MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 7. Fred-|IKELY TO END CONTROVERSY WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.—The as- surances regarding submarine war fare in the Mediterranean given by Ambassador Bernstorff to Secretary Lansing this afternoon are of broader scope than those given after the Arabic disaster and covering the warfare in the North Sea. The lat-| ter guaranteed only the safety of liners. Those for the M«dnorrnncnni cover all noncombatant ships. The following statement was later | issued by Secretary Lansing: “The German ambassador today left at| the department of State under instruc tions from his government the following communication: *‘First—German submarines in the Mediterrancan had from the beginning | orders to conduct crufser warfare against enemy merchant vessels only in accord- | ance with general principals of interna-| tional law and in particular measures of | reprisal as applied in the war zone| around the Britlsh lsles were to be ex- shuddered today as the skull of his was placed upon a table before him while medical experts testified that the injuries resulting in death could not have been caused by a fall from the east river road cliff. They de- clared that death apparently was due to blows on the head. When court adjourned tonight. until Monday a dozen witnesses had testified in support of the state's charge that Price hurled his third wife fro ma cliff, on the night of November 28, 1914, and then went below and crushed her skull, in the hope of inheriting her fortune. The state expects to complete its presntation of evidence nxt Tusday with the testimony of Charles D. Btchison, who, after his arrest on a joint indictment with Price, swore that Price killed his wife and gave cluded.’ | him $4,70 for his silence. Passengers Must De Safe. | ‘ ‘Second—German submarines are, | Wisconsin solons ! therefore, permitted to destroy enemy | merchant vessels in the Mediterranean— | R A k 1. e., passenger eSent AttACK OD |us'rer as they do mot try to esonpe or G A . offer resistance—only after passengers | | merchant ships in the Mediterranean in | Jan. 7.—Represent- |y German submarines are concernod today in the house by two republican ., 4ngq pesides submitted to regular colleagues, Stafford and Copper of Wis-|prze court proceedings. Inostar na | nation. |the result to the American sovernment. “The remarks we have Just heard Were .y, g4l0, fn the Persia case, if the cir- Cooper, who is the ranking member of lmarines should not have obeyed the or- the forelgn affairs committee. ders given to them, they will be punished; British than American.” criticised him for death of or injuries to American cit- the nature of his remarks, ‘‘when every gens.'' Amerioans. Mr. Statford took particular|ject still was confidential. exception to the declaration that Ger-| The Frye note, dealing with the small 0ld ana dynamite.” ubmarine warfare in the Mediterranean ““Those charges cannot be made against convey the first information that Ger- | advocating the German cause, but 1 (Continued on Page Two, Column Two.) know that in my own districts munitions ! -P—————— { and crews have been accorded safety.' | WIABHINGTON, vigorously assailed | consin, when he made a ‘speech criticls- |y ooy o oo te are concerned, the ! as violent as could have been made in cumstances should call for ft. In an Impassioned address Mr. Stot-|ryrthermore, the German goverrmuent will member should weigh his words M"—i Mr. Lansing made no announcement of man-Americans were destroying Ameri- boat question will be imade public later. the 8,000,000 German-Americans, who ale man submarines were operating there. In | faotories surrounded by thousands of| Eleven Hours Going s well as freight ships| “'3 All cases of destruction of enemy | tive Gardner, was | are made the subject of officlal Investiga- | ing German-American and the German German government will communicate the British parliament,” shouted Mr | .. 1f commanders of German sub- ford declared Mr, Gardner to be "more make reparation for damage caused by fully” and strongly defended German-!(he Lusitania proposals, saying the sub- can ammunition factorties with their! The assurances reg: ng the conduct of in this country,” he declared. “I am not excluding all ships except lines from the German-Americans are running dafly | without interference. I, thererore, rise to! resent this baseless charge, which Is un- | worthy of any man.” | Verdi Not Armed | Bhip/ Ak Oninion-ofs |77 Teweny s commea tetay COPENHAGEN, Jan. 7.—(Via London.) Through Germany | 1916 PAGES. SCENE OF NEW AOTIVITIES IN THE EAST--Map shows Volhynia and eastern have launched a new offensive, kowina, the key to the Carpathians; Lemberg, the big Gali- cian city, and Czartorysk, on ter, are now bitterly contested. The battle line, 500 miles long, stretches from Volhynia through Bessarabia. 3,000,000 men are believed to SUPREME JUSTICE WHO IS CAN- DIDATE FOR CHIEF JUSTICE. Judge Fawcett Is Out for Place of Nebraska's coming judicial election un- c n M 1 | train, for the passage of which through ollector Ma OI@ |part of the war zome, permission has {been granted by Germany, are 180 peace | advocates. They will be In Germany for eleven hours, from the time they cross the fron- tier at Warnemunde, this afternoon, until WASHINGTON, Jan. Malone's report on the Gluseppe Verdl, which arrived at New | York yesterday with two guns mounted, | | 7. — Colleetor Italian liner was received today by the Treasury de- partment and forwarded to the State de- partment without belng made public. It is understood Collector Malone's neu- trality investigators reported there were no Itallan navy gunners aboard and that all the members of the crew Were regu- larly so. The collector’s opinion is understood to | be that the presence of the guns has not altered the Verdi's character of a merchantman. His opinfon, however, is not binding upon the State department, which is understood to look with dis- | favor upon any merchant ship entering | American ports with armament it has been indicated that the depart- ment will ask the Itallan government to | have the guns removed before the Verdi salls. party 1s pledged to abide by military | rule. Holland 1s the last country in Europe i 'which the party will visit, It is expected that delegates from a large number of neutral countries will gather at The Hague for a protracted peace conference, Steel Cars Leave Trucks and Tear Up Strips of Track MUSBKOGEE, Okl, Jan. 7.—Two hun dred and fifty passengers on the Mis sourf, Kansas & Texas railroad's fast \train, the Texas Special, from St. Louis to Galveston, escaped death and serious injury between Oktaha and Rentlesville, Okl., early today, when the all-steel 0ff Reservation EL PASO, Tex., Jan. 7.—General Rosa- lio Hernandez, formerly a Villa chieftain who accepted amnesty of the defacto Mexican government and joined forces with Generals Trevino and Herrera in the | were badly frightened and shaken up. advance on Chihuahua City last month, | The four Pullmans and two combina |tion coachés which were derailed plowed a ditch four feet deep in the roadbed |before capsizing and displaced 3,000 tles and six coaches stripped of thelr trucks plunged into the ditch beside the right- of-way. Not a member of the crew nor a passenger was seriously injured, al- |though those in tne overturned coaches tains of the San Rollano district, sources were reticent as to the cause of his defection General Nafarette at Tampico reported to the military commander at Juares to- day that he had captured and was hold- ' ing the Villa general, Carrera Torres. Reform reguldTions posted in Juares instituted a segregated district, confined saloons to the sale of beer and ST. PAUL, Minn., Jan. 7.—Robbers last barred women from cafes. night obtained approximately $1,000,000 in negotiable internal revenue stamps and several thoussnd dollars in cash as the result of probably the most skiliful and | successtul crime of the cha history of the northwe Blowing & e safe in the old federal bullding, at Fifth and Wabash streets, without at- tracting attention the robbers selected their loot with comparative lelsure and rejected a large quantity of stamps were unnegotiable. They then made their escape without leaving the slight- est trace of their movements. The rob- Tariff On Sugar | WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.—The first leg- |islative step in the administration’s plan list was taken today in the introduction |sard, democrat, of Louisiana, providing ifor the suspension of the tariff law next. out duty May 1 The resolution was opened for business today. Molland s reached. Hach person in the | train, making up lost time, left the rails | 'Robbers Biéw VSafre in Str. Paul dergoes a kaleldoscopic change by the announcement that comes from Judge Jacob Fawcett, one of the sitting judges | of the supreme court at Lincoln, that in- stead of standing for re-election he will |run for chief justice, The presumption Is that his opponent will be Judge Andrew Morrissey, who was | promoted to the pesition temporarily | when Governor Morehead transferred him | from a deputy attorney generalship which | had been given him as & reward for his illl‘r\ ices as secretary to the governor. |"The names will go on the nonpartisan ballot to be veted on at the primary elec- tion iIn April, with final choice at the election in November, Judge Fawcett is the only member of the supreme court from Omaha and has with laudible ‘ Chief Justice| | been one of the mainstays of that trib- unal. He was In line for the place of chief justice when Judge Hollenbeck died | shortly after qualitying a year ago Judge Fawcett is well known to the bench and bar of Nebraska. His long residence in Omaha was marked by h's rise in his profession, and he was finally looks to the high position of chief justice ambition. Galicia, where the Russians Czernowits, capital of Bu. the Kovel-S8arny railroad sec- About be engaged. 'KIRKMAN FOUND naped, but Staying with Woman. OLIENT HIRES OTHER COUNSEL iy, HASTINGS, Neb.,, Jan. 7.—(8pe- clal Telegram,)—Attorney Roscoe Kirkman of Rfichmond, Ind., who was supposed to ave been kidnaped by perscas connected. with the John 0'Convor case. in which he was an attorney, was found by the police last night in the Clarke hotel, where, with a woman giving the name of Mrs. C. L. Braman of Holdrege, Neb., he had registered as Mr. and Mrs, H. C, Beott of Chicago. He was | practically unconsclous from stupor ]:nd the house physician said he might have been drugged. The woman was detained temporarily | When she tried to leave the hotel, {but today Kirkman assumed all | blame and she was released. Kirkman was fined $25 and costs on a disorderly charge, but is without funds. | He is well known among the Indiana bar, |!s & prominent chautauqua lecturer and with ex-Governor Hanly was one of the state, | John T. Kirkman of a, professed | son of John O’Connor and client of Kirk- | | man, is proceeding to presa his claim not- | withstanding it wes withdrawn from the | heirship hearing early this week. He has |had new photographs taken of the body | |of John O'Connor and is collecting new |evidence. He has employed a firm of Omaha lawyers, | The greater part of today in the O'Con- |nor case was consumed in hearing the | testimony offered for Hannora O'Connor | Allman of San Francisco, who is seeking |10 establish her identity as the only sur- | viving sister of the rich recluse, whose $100,000 estate is up for disposition by the court | Mr. and Mrs. Brady of Washington | testified that O'Connor had lived in that |city fo ra few years preceding 1871, and | that he had a brother theer at that time | Mr of O'Connor and that she knew that in | bis early life the recluse had a sweet- {heart in Jerseyville, Tll, Alice Way, by { Thousand Dollars called by the voters of the state t0 & | pame. place on the supreme bench, to which he has been twice ve-elected. He now sermea.| More Goes to Aid 1 It will be two days before E. J | revenue collector | bery exact amount obtained by the Obviously well Informed, effected an entrance to Mr. in whose office the rob- erimina the Liyneh, robbers Lynch's of- ter in the|fice and with apparent deliberation used|forth go to the Nebraska division of the urer of the German-American Alllance of Nebraska, for the benefit of the German | |and Austrian war sufferers abfoad. This makes §7,000 collected and sent by the |small group of women comprising the | Ladies’ Ald, the money being raised by | the sale of “iron" rings, nails driven into |a large wooden cross, signatures in & so- {called “golden book.” which when Miled will be sent as & memorial to the National museum in Berlin, and by veluntary con- was committed, can determine the | tributions. The first $.000 were sent to the German and Austro-Hungarian ambassadors In Washington, while all moneys will hence- #n clectric drill to open a hole five|German-American alllance, and f) inches in diameter in the outer door of |there in larger sums to the Europea: | the big vault representatives and Red Cross officlalt, | Despite the fact that the bullding 1s|in order to make the showing for Ne- situated almost in the center of the hat | downtown district across from the city and but one square | | adies Ald, sev principal | heen sent hall and court hous from several of the city's ihr--kn & more comprehensive one. | Besides the #7000 cash collected by the tons of bandages have to Germany hotels no one could be found who had|ihe use of the wolinded, and several car- bry was not discovered until the bullding | heard noise of an oxplosion during the |joac | night of old clothing to Siberia for the | prisoners of war detaived there | | | | IN HASTINGS HOTEL Attorney for Omaha Man Not Kid- | !leaders in the dry fight in the Hoosler | | celot of dispatches | Penfleld at Vienna, COPY TWO CEN PERSIA CRISIS IS CONSIDERED BY THE CABINET President Wilson Lays What Few Facts Are Available Before Meeting of His Offi- cial Advisers, GARRELLS SENDS AFFIDAVITS Twenty-One Survivors Agree that No Warning Was Given Persia by Submarine. NO LIGHT ON ITS IDENTITY WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.—The sub- marine crisis, still of uncertain status because of lack of detalls, was placed oy President Wilson before the cab- inet today In its first meeting since 1‘hm return from Hot Springs, Va. The | senate foreign relations committee also met to consider the situation. Although more than a week has passed since the steamship Persia was sunk in the Mediterranean with the loss of American life, officlals today were still uninformed as to whether the vessel was torpedoed, and, if so, the nationality of the sub- marine. Developments today con- tinue to indicate that the erican government would withhhold action pending official advices determining these points. Penfleld Heard From. Overnight developments included the re- from Ambassador asserting that, the | Austrian government was without in- formation concerning the incident up to the night of Janary 4, and from Consul | Garrels at Alexandria, Egypt, stating that | he had obtaled affidavits from twenty- {one survivors, including C. H. Grant, an | Americun, and that all cnfirmed previous statements that “no warning was given and no vessel was seen, Ambassador Pentield's dispatoh added that Baron Burian, the Austrian for- | eign minister, has asked what informa- tion concerning the Incident was in possession of the United States, | Officers and crew of the Persa, Con- !sul Garrels reported, have left Alexan- |dria for England. Their affidavits will | e sought upon their arrival there. As the cabinet assembled it was made plain that the members agreed with the president that in the case of the Pernia nothing could be done until all the facts were ‘at hand. Some members expressed the opinion that it might never be learned whether the Persia was sunk by & submarjné and If so, what nation was responsible, Regardiess of the outtome of the Per- Sla case, however, the majority of the cabinet members are represented as be- lleving that the time has come for mak- Ing certain that no further attacks on | merchant ships carrying Americans will be made. The administration leaders feel that continued loss of Amerl will lead the United States into hos- tilities. The Persia incident was taken up only briefly at the cabinet meeting because Secretary Lansing had no definite recom- mendations to make in the absence of | specific facts regarding the sinking of the ship. | One cabinet member said that the men- tion of the foreign situation at the meet- ing was ‘‘only superficial.” French Cruiser Ordered to Stop No More U. 8. Vessels WASHINGTON, Jan. 7.—~The State de- partment was advised today by Ambas- Brady clalms to be a second cousin | Big Bullding CINCINNATL, O.. Jan, T—The large Th three-story depot and office building of W S'uff gy g o K ML e yvar erers northwest corner of Front Butler | - itreet. this city, was destroyed by (ire e otar. T o eatimated at| One thousand dollars was sent yestei- $500,000. Crossed el rl('l wires in_the 'day by Mrs, Bertha Getzschm pm-hicmv.1 auditor's department on the second floof | of the German Frauen Hilfsverein or D e bull t e o A | oot pullding are sald to have cavsed |;, g0y Ald soctety, to Fred Voipp, treas- and Austria for | government had ordered the captain of the crulser Descartes to act with great care and circumspection and not to ston any more American vessels. The crulser | recently stopped three in Porto Rican waters and removed Germans, who since have been released. |ITALY PAID TWO BILLION LIRE SAYS BERLIN PAPER BERLIN, Jan, 7.—(By Wireless to Say- ville.)~"“The Neue Zuricher Zeitung has recelved reports from reliable sources,’ says the Overseas News agency, “that the London treaty, providing against the conclusion of a separate peace signed by Ttaly, contains a special clause under which Italy recelved £2,000,000,000 lire for giving her adherence to the agreement.” The news agency says it has “special information” that another clause -in the treaty is directed against the vatican. ; The Day’s War News A BRITISH SUBMARINE was suni | yesterday f the Duteh coast. ! The entire crew of thirty-five was rescued. PREVIOUS STATEMENTS that ne warning was given the liner FPer- and that the blow that seat It hottom came from Garrels at Alexandria. AMBASADOR PENFIELD cabled wna (hat the Austro-Hum- P to yester- mdvices regurd- Perala. tog the sinking of ROME DISPATCH SAYS Serblan refugees by thousands are flocking to the Serblan legation the various consulates in laly with requests mitted to join o effort, with sador Sharp at Paris that the French® A AW+ b RTR