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— it ‘ s e herself turned into a commerce raider, and is understood to have cap- tured two enemy ships while en route here. What became of them is not revealed. Passengers expressed the belief that the raider was only a tramp Ger- man ship, but this has resulted in the supposition that a submarine may have captured the small British ship, put part of her crew aboard and then used the former English ship to bag the larger game. The original raider resumed her business of attacking British vessels after taking the Appam, sinking at least one in view of the liner, The vessel sunk, according to all accounts, was an Australian freighter laden with meat. The freighter showed fight and several of her crew were injured. Tite German tramp put them aboard the Appam, tock over the cargo of meat and steamed away. There are 451 persons aboard the ship, including 138 survivors of seven ships sunk by the submarine which captured the Appam; 20 Ger- man civil being transported from Africa to England to be placed in detention camps, 155 members of the Appam's crew, 116 original pas- _ wengers on the Appam and the prize crew of 22. Just how much of @ fight the Appam put up before surrendering is disputed. Capt. Harrison says surrender was immediate, since he had ony one three-inch gun with which to resist the raider's attack, and that it was unmounted. Some members of the German prize crew say the British liner opened fire in answer to the first shot across hor bows. The Appam's passengers way the raider placed 138 prisoners from other ships on board and that these prisoners’ stories indicate the raider had sunk at least seven other vessels. Passengers declare that when the raider first appeared she was taken for a pirate. Lifeboats were lowered simultaneously from both vessels. Some of the Appam crew sought to escape. The stranger sent armed men to board the liner. One of the Appam’s lifeboats was ‘crushed between the two ven: fels. The boarders scrambled upon the Appam's deck and hard fighting _ followed. Several were injured and two died later. Others aro expected _ to die, Lievt. Berge then went aboard and took command, with a prize crew of twenty-two men. The merchant ratder got under way and diap THE EVENING W , Atlantic, eluding British scout cruisers and all other shipping, in charg \of a bare handful of Germans, surpassed fiction of the sea | With lights out, at slow speed, zig-zagging out of the ordinary Atlantic commercial channels to avoid meeting any British vessels, and with her wireless muffied, the Appam's transatiantic fight presented elements to stagger imagination. PASSENGERS ARE HELD ON BOARD. The full story of the Appam’s capture and filght leaked out In meagre and tantalizingly slow details. Her passengers were held on board and no one permitted to leave the ship until its status and that of the passengers and crew, technical prisoners of war during the trans-Atlantic run, was definitely settled ‘ The Appam arrived in Hampton Roads with only one visible sign of Injury—a dent on one of her plates on the starborrd bow. It was reported she was struck by shells from the German submarine before halting and permitting capture, How the British officers and crew were held in subjection, during the thrilling flight across the Atlantic; how the passengers were confined, and jow the scanty German prize crew navigated the vessel through the Atlantic vessel-infected passenger lanes are details yet to be learned, Immigration officials to-day found twelve cases of sickness aboard the captured liner, None was reported serious. Inconvenlence rather than hardship was the principal suffering of the passengers, in being held closely to their staterooms, Details were riso lacking on what measures were taken by the few Germans to prevent mutiny and being overpow- ered by the overwhelming crew of the captured prize. The German Commander refused to state this morning from what vee- sel he had been placed aboard the captured British ner, Information from other sources indicated Urat the ship which captured the Appam was an iron vessel. Lieut. Berg stated that from one of these seven vessels there were tout two survivors, both of whom were injured, Appam Had 166 Passengers And a Crew Numbering 134 The Appam sailed from Dakar, injable portion of her passonger Liat. the French colony of Senegal, West] Among the passengers who were peared. Lieut, Berg refused to discuss the matter, saying only that he brought the prize into Norfolk “because he was sure of decent treatment here." "CAME IN AS A GERMAN CRUISER. The vessel came into port under the name “8. M. &. Appam,” meaning ; His Majesty's Ship Appam, thereby indicating that the Germans may con- tend the vessel is a German auxiliary cruiser. This theory is also strength- © ened by the fact that the Appam flew the German man-of-war flag and not the flag of the German merchant marine or the British flag as she entered While Licut. Berge was ashore he paid his respects to Col, Haynes, tommandant at Fortress Monroe. Quarantine officers boarded the ship. » Meanwhile no one clse was permitted to come ashore. The battered lifeboat from the Appam, picked up by the British ‘steamer Tregantle, it is believed, was ca overboard by uve Germans, By this ruse the Teutons spread the belief that the Appam had gone down and eliminated tho possibility that further search might be made for her. The Appam made its audacious dish into port with the German flag fluttering at its staff, recalling the almost equally daring feats of the Ger- Rae _ commerce raiders Kronpring Wilhelm and Prince Eltel Friedrich, The capture and flight of the Appam across the whole siretch of the SAYS BODY IS A POISON FACTORY’ Urges everyone to drink glass of hot water before breakfast. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves be- hind 2 certain amount of incombustible jaterial in the form of ashes, so the food ind drink take: day leaves in n da; er the alimentary canal a certain amount of if oe maiacisl. ee if not oom nat te tlay, becomes food for the millions of _ bacteria which infest th ie bowels, tueked into the bl He mest berta ts tase lacs Cotks in to in: Before eating breakfast each morning of real hot water with a ful of limestone phosphate in it out of the thirty feet of bowels : U. S. WILL NOT ACT UNTIL SHIP’S STATUS HAS BEEN DETERMINED. WASHINGTON, Feb, 1.—Secretar: Lansing said the Appam case woul involve considerable investigation be- fore any action by this Government was taken. There was nothing to do, he said, until the validity of the cap- ture was determined. Inasmuch as the Appam is the first case since the beginning of the present war where a prize had been brought into an American port, officials said, there would be a careful study of the subject in all phases, so that when a decision is reached it inay be used as a precedent. The United States must determine whether the ship simply is a prize of war or whether she has been supplied with an armament which would give her the character of an auxiliary cruiser, The German ships Kron- pring Wilhelm and Pring Eitel Fried- nich, which took refuge in Hampton Roads early in the war, were aux- ‘Mary cruisers and now are interned as such. In case the Appam can be consld- Africa, for Plymouth, England, on} booked to sail on the Appam were Sir Jan, 11, When about four days out! mdward and Lady Merewether and wire # communication with the ves- | their suite; Krederick Seton James, sel suddenly ceased, and as the days) former Acting Colonial Secretary and passed without further word of her! cjosely identified with the colonial ad- = ve si ey. ee aa acy minivtrative affairs in Africa; Mrancls jespatch from , England, tO} Charles Fuller, who was appointed agen pares canis Wesaentie oy Chief Commissioner of Ashantt in 6 Hritish stew 1905, and Mra. Fuller. reported having passed at sea on Jan.) when the Genisne captured the ws irate vee the eet oe Appam they liberated more than a ~eusteeiy Kairiy highheels she hag |" Of German prisoners, captured ' “lin West Africa, who were being Seas is ike meeiooe tins wich | transported to London, London de- ine wae dansthe oF possibly bad ‘ee spatches to-day reported the presence Q of these prisoners aboard the vessel. a Ge ; “lt countered a German submarine oper |r eee a tat the raleamed ‘Cee ating off the African coast. ‘The AP- | mans wided the submariners in main- pam, under ordinary conditions, |taining peace aboard ship en route to would bave reached Plymouth on| America. Jan, 2: A bit of mast, supposed to bave been from the Appam, was picked up off the Morocean coast a few days ago. One London despatch to a New The Appam salied with 166 passen- gers and with a crew of 134. Among wpe eo ee PEEP ORLD, TURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1916. PIETER POLICE ARREST SILENT ASSASS Claim Made That Prisoner Had Gun Outfit Similar to That of Albany Slayer. SCHE TADY, N. ¥., Feb, 1 George Beverly, twenty-four years old, suspected of being the mysterious {gunman who shot four persons in Al- bany, was arrested here to-day at a rooming house where he had aroused | suspicion, In his room was found a Stevens rifle, 22-calibre, with an arrangement to fire it when concealed in a coat sleeve, There was a Maxim silencer on the weapan, Tle admita being in Albany Friday and to have practiced there with the weapon, the police said, —— HOUSE TO “PUSSY-FOOT” WILSON DIPLOMACY Colonel Finds Penfield and Other Ambassadors Hampered by “Too Much Noise.” By Carl W. Ackerman. FERLIN, via Amsterdam, Feb. 1 SUSPECT AS THE | PATRIOTIC WAVE WILSON AWAKENS “ALL ALONG ROUTE (Continued From First Page.) | | their politics, Wilson's preaching of American {deals and his sounding of the tocsin for national defense seems to have sunk intd the ‘public mind. All the newspapers of the region give him respectful commendation. They tell him that the people out here do not want to war, nor will they coun- tenance any preparations for aggres- sion, but that they are ready to con- sider favorably reasonable measures for national defense. WILSON A COMPROMISE BE- TWEEN T. R. AND BRYAN. Mr. Wilson has been seeking to bridge the gulf between militarism and peace with a policy of preparation for national defense only and for maintaining liberty and democracy throughout all the Americas. In this middie course he has found a surpris- ing number of willing followers ready to turn doaf ears to the fighting milit- ancy of Roosevelt on the one extreme and the peace at any price pleas of Bryan on the other. President Wilson and party left to continue his speaking tour of the Middle West. He said he felt full of energy and much invigorated, (United Press).—Col. House is car- it was reported to-day, American officials, it is understood, visit here that President Wilson might accomplish more in his deal- ings with the central powers if he moved with greater secrecy, He was told, for instance, that Ambassador Penfield at Vienna believed his work was hampered because press reports of instructions he was to receive reached Vienna and were published the passengers were British colonial oMciais, After leaving Dakar she called at all ports on the west coast of Africa, picking up officials who in- tended to return to England on fur- lough. These men formed a consider- York paper sald it was generally be- Heved the Appam had been torpedoed. The Appum was one of the newest of the liners controlled by Elder & Dempster. She was built in 1913, dis- placed 7,781 tons and is 426 feet long, with a 65-foot beam, *|Daring Exploits of Emden’s Men Recalled by Capture of ‘The arrival of the captured Appam at Newport News recalls the dra- matic thrills which astounded the world when forty men and several officers of the German cruiser Emden arrived on the Red Sea coast of Arabia and made their way overland way of Damascus to report at in for decoration with the iron cross and for further orders, The Emden was sunk Nov. at Cocos Island in the Indian Ocean by the British cruiser Sydney, after she had destroyed twenty-three vessels of the allies, valued, with their cargoes, at $20,000,000, and had raided the harbor of Penang, sinking the Rus- sian cruiser Jemtchug and a French destroyer after entering the harbor disguised by the erection of a false Appam Muller steam out to meet the Sydney and saw both ships, fighting, disap- bear over the horizon and reappear, disappearing around a bend of the Island. They thought the Emden was win- ning. Muecke seized a British schooner, the Ayesha, mounted ma- chine guns aboard her and set out to rejoin the cruiser, which, though he did not know it, had been forced ashore, had surrendered and had been destroyed. Muecke and his forty men sailed to Padang. They had discarded their tattered clothing and were stark naked when they encountered a German collier and made themselves known to her astonished commander. They gath- ered a number of marooned German citizens and after sinking the Ayesha went to Hodeida, Arabia, dodging Be 9 day's accumulation of poi- and toxins and to keep the ehtire canal clean, pure and fresh. who are subject ty sick bead- re wit Sec nbe aa itt bad taste f wal jor th, backache, theuma - ered ax an auxiliary crulser she is entitled, under international law, to a certain length of time to make any necessary repairs and load enough coal and provisions to carry her to the nearest home port. tic stiffness, ar] German Ambassador von Bern- ‘& sour, gassy stomach after meals, | storff was highly pleased with the ‘are urged to get a quarter pound of lime-| "Ws of the Appam's arrival’ in tiset pheaptate drug. store, | Charge of a German prizo crow. All 4 ising internal sanitation, | 2° had recoived, he suid, was a de. anf pega tis eulficient | SPREEH, from tho German Consul at No make anyone an enthusiast on the |criiser had just put into port. portant than cutie bathing, becaun | RECORDS OF VESSELS ue. sie veree do ‘Bat Bhace lapuritie SUNK BY THE RAIDER | while the bowel pores do. Just as soap| WHICH TOOK THE APPAM and hot water cleanses, sweetens and hot and lime- Following are the maritime records of the ships sunk by the raider which captured the Appam: The steamer Trader was a British vessel of 2,827 tons, and her Jatest reported voyage was from Callao to Queenstown, She was last reported as having arrived at Montevideo in December, The Corbridge was a british collier of 2,882 tons and was last reported as having arrived at Barry, Dec, 22, from Nantes, France. She yu- doubtedly had left Barry on another voyage when sunk by the Germaus, Tv Ariadne was a@ Britiwher of 1,935 tons, last reported sailing from Buenos Aires, Dec, 21, for Las Palmas. The Dromonby, 4 British collier of 2.83 tons, was last reported sailing from the Clyde for the Hristol Chan- net Dec, 29. The vessel probably had taken on coal and was bound to some south Buropean port when sunk by the Germans, The steamer Farrington, a British vessel of 1,993 tons, whose trading ports are not given, The Clan MacTavish was a British steamer of 3,615 tons, which left Fre- mantle, Australia, Dec, 7, bound to London. It waa this vessel, undoubt- edly, that carried the large cargo of beef which was taken off by the Ger- mans before she wae sunk, No record of the Arthur can be Mr. Tenant saw one day ‘That he was wasting rent— That he could t iy a home for what He to the landlord spent $0 suiting action to the word tound, Through World Want Ads. he bought en rnersionse A bome that saved him a snug sum— CHURCH BELL MUNITIONS. The very home he sought. Austria Also to Hel All Co) From Roofs. BERNE, Feb. 1.— A military order ‘has been received at the Austrian | Village of Hoeohts, near the Swiss ‘frontier, for delivery of the largest church belis and of op) from THE WORLD PRINTS MORE REAL ESTATE ADS. THAN ANY OTHER NEW YORK MORNING AND SUN- DAY NEWSPAPER! fourth funnel, British, French and Japanese erulsers had scoured the seas for three months seeking to stop the Emden's work of destruction when the Sydney Sighted her off Cocos Island and of- fered battle, A landing party of forty men under Lieut, Muecke, was ashore from the Emden, destroying a cable and wireless station, They saw the Emden, commanded by Capt, yon NRS, WD, OSLER ACCUSED OF STEALNG NAN 1600 MALE Wife of Ex-Assistant Prose- cutor Freed by Magistrate, but Case Goes to Grand Jury. Mrs. former Assistant William D, Bosler of No One Hundred Street was arraigned before Magis. | Freda Thomas Bosler, wife of District Attorney 825 West and Seventy-ninth | trate Cornell in the Centre Street Po- lice Court to-day, charged with hay- ing taken a wallet containing $1,600 from Perey MeCort, who lives at the MeAipin Hotel, In his complaint Me- Cort swore that on Nov, 16, 1916, he was downtown with Mrs, Bosler most of the day and that as they walked Up the stairs of the Cortlandt Street station, to take the elevated, she col- dided with him, When she left him at the hotel, be said, the wallet was missing. he swore that Austin Montegriffo, an attorney at No. 299 Broadway, had told him he had seen the contents of the wallet, which included a season Pass to the Broadway Theatre, in the possession of Mrs. Bosler, but in court to-day Assistant District At- torney Carter told Magistrate Cornel) that Montegriffo had refused to sign 4 corroborating affidavit to that effect many French eruisers and merchant vessels. The Arabs received them with joy, dressed the little company in baggy trousers and fezes and escorted them inland and across the desert to Da- mascus, where they arrived in May, 1915. It was not until they reached El Ula, the terminus of the Damascus railroad, that they learned of the fate f the Emden and of the capturo of . von Muller and the rest of bis ‘ew by the British, that he was under subpoena to tell the Grand Jury what he knew of the case and the he would tell no one eise, Magistrate Cornell then dismissed the complaint and discharged Mrs, Bosler, The matter was then taken to the Grand Jury, which heard one witness and adjourned the matter unt! to-morrow, MecCont, it developed, had taken de- tectives to the Bosler home this morn- ing and had accused Mrs, Bosler of taking the money. Bosler, kndwn formerly as “Big Bill,” is said by the detectives to have attacked McCort, McCort had a discolored eye when he uppeared in court. Bosler was taken to the Twelfth Dis- triet Court, One Hundred and Sixty- wixth Street and St. Nicholas Ave- nue, to be arraigned on an assault charge preferred by MeCort, ——— JUDGE LACOMBE RESIGNS FROM FEDERAL BENCH Retires After Almost Thirty Years’ Service in the United States Court Here. WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—The resig- nation of Judge Lacombe of the Unit- ed States Circuit Court of Appeals at New York was received to-day by At- torney General Gregory. Judge La- combe announced several months ago that he intended to resign early in the cause ie has had auch long service present year. His retirement is ef-} fective Feb. 15 He has served almost thirty years on the Mederal bench and retires be- | before be received the instructions from Washington. Consequently, all the Austrian diplomats were put on guard and would not exchange views with Penfleld, not even at the ex- clusive Jockey Club tn Vienna, where diplomats and officials meet at bridge each night and discuss international affaira informally. PARIS, Feb. 1.—Col. House turned to Paris from Berlin to-day, companied by Mrs. House, BRITISH DENY HINT OF PEACE OVERTURES German Rumor Said England Would Abandon Her Allies in the War. LONDON, Feb. 1.—Official denial was mado here to-day of reports, at- tributed to German sources, that Englard intends to abandon her allies and has made peace overtures to Germany. ‘Tho statement follows: “The German Chancellor has stated that England is compelling her allies to refrain from entering upon any peace movement. This statement, which our allies know to be untrue, was made for the purpose of injuring England in the eyes of neutrals. “To our allies, on the other hand, we hear that insidious and untrue re- ports are being circulated from Ger- man sources that England Intends to abandon them, and has even made peace overtures to Germany, which have been refused, “The two statements together are a good illustration how unscrupulous Germans methods are.” Se FREES AUSTRIA OF BLAME FOR SINKING THE PERSIA All Austrian Submarines Deny Guilt, Pentield Cables Lansing —Inquiry of Turkey Next. WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—Secretary Lansing to-day announced the re- ceipt of @ despatch from Ambassador Penfield at Vienna, saying that he had been informed by the Foreign Office that all Austrian submarines operating in the Mediterrancan had reported that none of them was con- cerned in the sinking of the Penin- sular and Oriental liner Persia, ‘The Secretary alsd announced that he was addressing to Ambassador Morgenthau, for presentation to the Turkish Government, an inquiry as to Austria-Hungary closes the question of whether a submurine of that na- Uonality sunk the Persia, —_— ANOTHER ITALIAN LINER IN WITH MOUNTED GUNS Two 3.6-Inch Pieces on the Caserta Were Manned While Passing the Danger Zone. ‘Two 36-inch naval guns were mounted on the aftor deck of the Ttalian liner Caserta when it arrived here to-day from Genoa and Naples, ‘Thia is the fourth Itallan steamer lcarrying mounted guns to arrive at | Unis port within the past few weeks. The guns were covered when the tying buck to Washington some mild ja closed automobile on his physician's eriticiam of the Administratoin on] advice. the ground that tt makes its diplo-jand a detail of motorcycle police ac- matic moves with too much noise,|companted the President on the drive A pointed out to Col. House during his|\teparture of the President, whether a Turkish’ submarine was velation the| responsible, The State Department|meaning of the warnings of vague! considers that the statement from dangers becomes more clear, For the} The trip to the station was made in An escort of mounted police to the station. Only & small crowd witnessed the Mr, Wil- son stepped to the rear platform as the train pulled out and raised his] {if ‘ hat in response to cheers. Sigmund Wisniewski, who was ar-|{ rested on the stage where President Wilson was speaking Inst night in the Chicago Auditorium, explained to the | police to-day that the army uniform he was wearing was donned to enable him to get into the hall simply to hear the President speak. Thousands were unable to get tick- ets to hear the President, but Wis- niewski passed posing as part of the escort. Wisniewski's antecedents, — gar- ments and letters were examined to- day by the Federal secret service | men and he was released, Just a case of man’s superabundance of patriotism,” said Capt. Thomas L. | Porter tn charge of the Federal Se- eret Service Bureau here. “He had no wrong intent.” MONROE DOCTRINE REAL NATIONAL DANGER. Defense of the Monroe Doctrine is | \ the national danger of which Presl- dent Wilson has been giving warning. It is not a direct attack upon our own shores he fears most, nor any con- flict arising out of any present com- plications, but it Is an attempt of| some foreign nation, after the world} the Monroe | Doctrine by an invasion of South Am- | erica, The President 1s determined to| + war is over, to violate maintain that doctrine even if it necessitates war, and he will go to the defense of any Central or South Am-|{ erican country that is attacked, This revelation came last night in his Chicago speech, though deftly hidden toward the end of his remarks and covered in a mass of oratorical discourse upon the spirit of America, “We are not now thinking of in- vasion of the territory of the United States,” he said quietly. “This is not what !s making us anxious. We are not asking ourselves shall we be pre- Pe pared to defend our own shores and our own homes, Is that all we stand for—to keep the door securely shut against enemies? Certainly not. “What about the great prin- ciples we have stood for, for liberty of government and na- tional independence IN THE WHOLE WESTERN HEMI- SPHERE? What about the pledges of that great principle our foreign affairs ever since the day of President Monroe? “We stand pledged to see that beth the continents of America are teft free to be used by th peoples as those peoples choose to use them, under a principle of national sovereignty as absolute and unchallenged ur own,” SAYS PRESIDENT, Chicago at 10.01 o'clock this morning | the doorkeepers by ‘ “It was |} is _THE|®: “NO SUDDEN CRISIS AT HAND,"| , TEIPER ‘ DETAINED” BY BUFFALO POLICE Finger Prints Taken of Relative of Woman and Man, Victims in Auto Tragedy. BUFFALO, N. Y., Feb. 1.—At the direction of District Attorney Dudley, Sheriff Stengel brought John Edward Teiper, one of the two survivors of the Orchard Park Road tragedy, to Police Headquarters this afternoon Tha District Attorney said that Teiper was “being detained.” Telper's finger prints were taken shortly after he reached Police Head- quarters, /NEW GERMAN TROOPS , RUSHED TO YSER FRON Lines Are Being Strengthened to Meet an Expected Allied Offensive, AMSTERDAM, Jan l.—Large bodies of German cavalry and several landsturm divisions have passed through Liege, en ronte to the Yser front, in the past few days. Travellers arriving here to-day re- ported that the Germans expect an allied offensive within a fortnight and strengthening their ines in Flan. ders. Arrangements are being made to receive large numbers of wound ed ————__ Closing Quotation: With not chaagos fram pemrtous 4 x Alaska Gold Mine (ha imers ee ee PEPER EBSEP EF Interboro come...) Int Hare. “to. 3 iy Mexican Petroleum “Miami Conner: Nat kn, & st, Wer eh. & MM Western “Union ‘Tel 88% 88 ial’ pales, 720,016 shares. ————— ITEMS FOR INVESTORS. Continental Can Company, yea De net earnings’ increased $964,114, equal to .000,000 common dd with 1068-100 per vious year, + pre Associated O11 Company, year surplus $8,902,809; Increase $ Depreciation reserves $1,984,805 idends $1,789,095, Surplus $128,909. Pennsylvania system, Decemby gross earnings increased $7,955,2 Net after tax, increased Twelve months’ gross increased $: 158,159, Not increased $29,227,768 er 4 Southern Pipe Line Company, lar quarterly dividend of $6.0 payable Mareh 1 to record of Feb. 1 Missour! Pacific, #ix months’ gross earnings increased $1,292,089. — Not after tax increased $842,169 Kennecott Copper Company, initial quarterly dividend of $1 a share, plac- ing stock on @ $1 @ year basis, was declared In the light of th President has seemed to have been | backing and filling on his scare uiter- | ances. In some speeches he hus been | alarmingly direct, and in them hi would apparently retreat and y that there was nothing immediate | and that nobody in particular was | contemplating attacking the United States. But these repeated deciar: tions that It ts neces: cre the Middle West, asking whose is t! cles that 1s hanging over their heads. pias oe Rd Berlin Nentes R m Fleet Dam- awed the Goeben. to Sayville, LL. jal denial was the Turkish dreadnought Sultan Selim, formerly steamship reached Quarantine, Pas- and is eligible under the law. Appoint- ment of @ successor, will not be made roofs of churches to the authorities for the manufacture of munitions, ‘ And of Course se @ Reason! Montegriffo explained to the court until President Wilson returns (o Waablogion, not covered and sailors were con- sengers said that during the frat | fealar portion of the voyage the guns were ratiriza fired eh Oe Rees mee damaged atate, ugh the Imp at the Sultan them struck, the Selim none of were observed on Several Russian made to-day of a Russian report that | fully selected Orent erously covered with YOR MC A Special for To-Morrow (Wednesday.) FRUTTI OREAM KISSES— fing flavor blending o 10c Ww Lo la w Extra Special for Tuesday Only CHOCOLATE COVERED SAIR DATES—The chole ates In their fullest pert t Chocolate, ‘The specified weight includes the container in cach case, AMERICAN WOMER A New Hospital Directed Pital has just been established | Italian opened some time Itallan cities, front, which is being suppli the Thoms American Ambassador the Ambassador's residence in is vonducted exclusively by A colved Saturday emergency ald comi phia and immedi the front. supply of surgical instruments adequate and says there is need of greater quantities of @ chloroform and disinfectants, HEARD HEALIS SAY drag a confession out of hiin, to see him of my Ouk Bluffs parish, ing you were his pastor? said I had been learned that Healis was in tro from a Mrs. Nokun, who was an en sary of Mr, Mitzgerald, attorney | Mrs. Mohr. seen Nolan before either Mrs. Mohr or Fitsgerald. jUlarly about Healis's character, Father McNamara ald “George always modest. Providence feporter, who was to relate conversatt their case at 10.40 o'clock. We one of the negroes jointly of Schenectady, N. the Rhode Island i the cold, formal record o {the ai began | Mobr's death his widow bent in her chair for just an tnstam {ter handkerch A Well-Known Actress Tells Ho Darkened Her Gray Hair actress, Who darkened her gray. by mixed at home, in a recent intervie men darken their gray water add 1 oz. of bay rum, a small of Barbo Compound and \ oz. of ine, ‘These ingredients can bt any drug store to the hair twice a weck until it bee the required shade. gray haired person look 20 years yo h and is excellent for dandruff and fi hair." —. INTEREST @ DIVIDEND NOTIC h of ON THE ITALIAN F Thomas Nelson Page N Surgeons’ Supplies. ROME, Feb. 1—An Am front. Four others ago in The hospital Ouvroir established by Nelson Page, wife to I omen Twenty cases of supplies we in Rome fron Mrs. —_———_—— HE MLED ORR, WITNESS SHEA (Continued From First Page.) 7 I is a friend, as a mem! Q. Did you get in to see him by A. No MeNamara Father said he He ald he had nd had never Mr. Rice ked the witness pai model boy, gentle, kind With the calling of Fred Ma ns with Plo he couldn't r defending Mrs. rmsby wi wis, attorney for Victor Bi ith Mrs, Mohr, opened the Dr. Otto an inter tal, who his client. The first witness w y fospi r. 2 As he read bullet n, Mrs. mention of ise in the hospital. eription of th 1 by the physiet to sob, At iy f pressed to he ACTRESS TELLS SECR Promoted Its Growth With Simple Home Made Mixtu Blanche Rose, Miss a well-lg ith a simple preparation which Til, made the following Any lady or gentleman air and e h this simple recipe, athome, Toa half pi very little cost. Af This will m It is also fine to promote the gi 1, relieves itching and scalp bul dvt. dP U. 8 8. JUSTIN--Healed bide wi wived at the. Bureau of Supplies ts, Nery Depa Weahington, D vo o'clock February 17, Aeon re =) hey will be publi med, “for the the ts. 8 uatiny ely tho ‘epranetal re. ans) od ftona tion. to. the at Ne Hoe, Rector wureet HU DANILS. Saretary RTDRLY DIVIDEND of one pee ay been declared upon the cannon, ¥§ Amertcan “Cotton il” Cé the bauking house of "Win y Jedar st. New. York Gig of wl stock at the low sunstes books of the company ome, JUSTUS EB. RALPH, Feb, 1, 1916, 0 EATHA Pic Poe Dp HOD WE ARE NOW OFFERING: y ora ‘ove Oar” bent “covers the arnnd, 2te PATAL ASSORTED CHOCOLATES fine’ ‘To in fal 1 208 BROADWA SH seas a ke Sua ihe pate Tae ooking, flue tasting ass rr niet to the only word that Aue