The evening world. Newspaper, January 13, 1917, Page 2

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POA. Metab ORBAN GR te . thus pald for. OF ASSOCIATION. Wormer District Attorney Charles Siyehineicee at the Criminal Perk! he waa | t + he Deviaea Bireet Mer- | SAYS BRECKINRIDGE WANTED FR Protective Association, turned ver, on the Magistrate's ruling, some ‘of the association which he at withheld on the ground that. §5,.0. aaa confidential communica One of these was a letterhead of fhe National Federation of Employ-|the room. dra Wicd headquarters in Room 08, At the top of it Bt. Denis Hotel. “Lucion Scott Dork.” ‘These papers were not all that were Mr. Battle wekell the former | tor ¢ Attorney for papers of com- | lawy ied siaint by members of the Division Street Association that they had oa) ved the protection to which they | side es . eabey Mr. Per-| they said they didn't have the money, ¢leet Walter pelieved themselves entitled tins declined to deliver these papers) ,, anlegs @o authorized by the associa-}_ sion. Jacod Klein, a clothing manufactt- ‘er of*No, 87 Division Street, was the! wouldn't give him another cent. ret witness examined by Mr. Battle] CHECK, SAID BRECKINRIDGE— Who related consecutive account of In jponse to Mr. Battle's questions Mr. flealings with Mr. Breckinridge. Rein wala: _ “There was a good deal of trouble @ Division Street during tho strike District Attorney Swann sald later was told by V he had never been able to find iniidge ss the character of the “confidential he cu RKINS TURNS OVER PAPERS oxpenses Breckin= jis this # Attorney” and “A. L. Wilson, |it is » tovw THE EVENING n was be “A week or so later our en by strikers Hosed renlied, and identified the pay | done and a salesman living In Brook- ceuteica QOV-ELECT EDGE STRIKE OF TAX DRIVERS EXPECTED EXPLOSIONS oolation Breck- $3,000 son that w he people who beat man, but that they needed money for Four or five of us were «ppointed a committee to see M Courts TO PROTECT STATE Building. $3,000 TO PRESS CASE. | “Jacobs, one of the committee, went | ———— in to see him and came out to say - . | that Capt. Breckinridge wanted “Will Do Everything to Pro- We telephoned to Mr. Bogert, ¢ | attorney for oUF associat nm, bUL When , he came over Wilson told me that vide for Safety of the Capt, Breckinridge would not ray a People,” He Says. word unless Mr. Bogert got out of ’ So we got him out and Jacobs and Sam Fishman and I went in. 1 said to Mr. Hreckinridge: ‘Mr. | ison asked in your name for $3,000; ” And he replied, ‘I expect WAR OUTPUT GROWING. Jersey Figures for 1915 Show Increase of 608 Per Cent. Over Those of 1914. told him w poor people! ind it h make @ livin said the money was neede: penses and that he'd give us a to defend us—a Mr. Follette, | he said it was—which would save us! $200 or $200 a week “We conferred with our people out Mr. Breckinridge’s office Sores! to The Krening World TRENTON, N. J, Jan, 13.-—-Gov.- Then we stated among ourselves th try to raise $500 by contrib ns, and that If Capt. Breckinridge was willing to take it we could give| him more the next week. But wo sald if we didn’t see any results we In the Gubernatorial chair, and many small ones have rock- CASH, SAID WILSON. “Jacobs and I Mr. Breckinridge and told our plan. ‘You'll seo the what he told us. “T asked him how | should turn over the $500, if it should be in a nt in again to see | damage has been done, war Edge will take up the | * question of protecting the people of | hin State from the danger of great} explosions as soon as he gets settled enteen big War plant disasters jshivered his State tn the last year. | ‘Thirty-five persons have been killed, | many have been hurt and miilions of | In the mean time the output of the Loeb as Mediator. After attending ‘a meeting of the} BERLIN (via Sayville wirelens), striking chauffeurs of the Black and White, Town and Club taxicab con- cerns in Bast Sixty-third Street this afternoon Michael J. Reagaan, of the State Board of Mediation and Con- cillation, said he thought the strike situation had been completely cleared. He sald he thought the men and the company would accept the terms pro posed by Miss Sophie Irene Loeh, of The Evening World, who offered her services as mediator because of her famillarity with taxicab affairs through her experience in urging the reform regulations of the last fow years. Mr. Reagan sald he thought the men would be back at work Mon- day. According to Benjamin Tunney, chairman of the strikers’ grievance committee, a concession by W. Bundy Col anager for the three gom- pante: THATSANKU BOAT, TOENDON MONDAY OFFER CHARGES, ATALLES' REPLY. 10 THE NEUTRALS Employers and Men Agree to Lieut. Crompton’s Report of |All Declare It Closes Door of Defend Their Right to Cut Off Terms Proposed by Miss | the Alleged Treachery Given at cen U.S.FLAGONSHIP GERMAN PAPERS. IN FRENZIED RAGE. Peace and Calls for Out in Berlin. Harder Fighting. BERLIN, Jan. 13 (via London).— The German press, although expres | ing indignation at what it considers slurs on the Central Powers tn the | reply of the Entente to President Wil- son, and although angered at the peace conditions, finds consolation In the belief that the note will serve to weld together all classes into an un conquerable and determined whole. Papers like the Tageblatt and the Lokal Anzelger emphasize this ex- | pected effect of the Allies’ reply and | almost Ignore the second Germa: note, which was published simulta. neously. The extravagance of these aims, according to the Lokal Anzeig« binds Central Europe a thousand times tighter together. The Tage- biatt thinks that the note, instead | Jan, 13.—The official report of Lieut: Crompton, commander of the German \-41. parblished to-day, gave in full detail the circumstances of his charge that the U-41 was treacherously at- tacked by a British steamer flying the American flag and told of his subsequent imprisonment in England Crompton said he was unconscious from @ wound and lying in the con- ning tower of the submarine when the undersea craft was sunk, but re- covered his senses when thrown into the water. Neither the steamer nor the submarine was then visible. | Crompton swam about and finally, found @ lifeboat of the Urbino, a steamer which his U-boat had just sunk, after he had appealed for aid to a steamer which passed him only a few feet distant, and had been sneered and spit at by the sailors, Crompton also rescued the helmsman | =~ Sp WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1917. . | sponsible for starting the war, inas- of being a heavy blow for Germany | ine German charge that the as predicted, really makes things of the GAINS BY BRITISH NORTH OF THE BRITISH HIT BA AT GERMAN NOTE SOMME! * LF v7. ¢ Berlin Admits Loss of One Ad- vanced Position Near Line at Serre. BERLIN, Jan. 18 (by wireless to Sayville)—British troops tacked again to-day the German lines at Serre, north of the Ancre on, the Somme front, They gained a footing in one advanced position, Army _ Headquarters announced to-day, but otherwise were sanguinarily repulsed, the Germans continuing to hold the main position, AKIS, Jan. 18—There was artil- Supplies From Enemies in War. |WHO “STARVED” PARIS.|tory~ fighting. in. the. section — of Chaulnes,” says to-day’s official ane. nouncement, “The night passed atement Recalls ‘That Ger-|sutetly om the remainder of the man Chancellor Admitted Wrong to Belgium. LONDON, Jan. 13.-An authoritative tatement issued to-day gives the British view of the German and Aus- trian notes to neutrals. It repeats the assertion that Germany was re- TA ANY CORN No Humbug! Afew drops ' and corn lifts out with much as the proposal for a conference was rejected. This refusal, it is point. ed out, was given on July 1914, while it was not until July 31 that orders were given for a general mobil- ization by the Russian Government. The statement deals at length with proposals Allies regarding the rights of munition factories jumped to $114,260,175 for 1916, showing an in- crease of 607.8 per cent, over the John Hertz, Chicago capitalist, who {s the princi! owner of the Black and White Company, and others, of his boat after finding the empty Urbino lif it. WIFE, DETERMINED TO KILL, ph January, 1916, and there wasn't mough police protection, A day or jwo efter Jan. * check payable to him. Mr. Breok~ inridge ais but on joke up and si No, Captai [easier because it will serve to ar- gmail | nationalities lacked sincerity range ai! differences of opinion. in view of the treatment of the Irish fingers—No pain m et “The enemy's demands,” continued |and the Boers, the subjection of — Henry E. Jacobs,| ‘he'd better give me the cash a year 1914, The report for last year|T¢pudiated the advertisement _pub- tho Tageblatt, “are foolish and sense- Northern Africa, th ‘ Tiny bottles of the new ether com” ¢ ; ‘nother manufacturer in Division mW bring | it to you And Mr. will show that these figures are etill| lished yesterday in which the Black FIRED A SECOND BULL T/ tere and such that no German could | pp6) aH : @ suppression of | pound called freerone can now be ob- Meret, told me he had become ac-] Rreckinndde said (All taht Mr. |climbing, Tho makers of war atuft| and White chauffeurs were described | E {consider them for @ second. TBOli,5 treatment of rence me ns tained for very little cost 5 Quainted with a man named Wilson.| Wilscn’and ‘he'll gi have capital investment of $48,901,- | @ Inferior and undesirable, repudiated | [note is an affront to President Wile | rine ene ntntemeat ce On this at any drug store here. Wilaon, he told mo, had said he was} This was some time in 627 In the State for high explosives| {he statement that the men had struck |«<{1my Afraid That First Shot Didn't) #M In that tt prosents obviously im. |P'nt the statement aa 2 & merchants’ association which| 1916. We got ‘ because Inspector Larney was not dis- charged and withdrew the plan for a only, while the total investment for rious contri the manufacture of war material is ent when M “As for Ireland and South Africa 34 ” possible conditions in the face of his! “ would protect us against any trouble. Finish Him,” She stated bellef that the alms of the two| ‘CIF sons have shown on many bat- ‘ier This drug freezone ts the 8) recent discovery of a Cin- cinnati man. It is needless ; i : 4 to ever again be pestered The duce, Wilson said, would be $100] sion “Street handed it over. to Wil-| 100,000,000, fixed minimum wage of $16.55 @ week Said. groups of opponents are siot irrecon- beat SE GREE Eel with 6 come of a called, OOF | A wees as long as the strike lasted gon. | He didn't give us any focalpt) ‘The concerns employ about 160,000] With 89 per cent. commission on busl-| DENVER, ‘Jan. 13.—Mrs, John|cilable and absolutely barricades i ir cost, that whatever differences | cause they shrivel up and And $100 @ year after that. for the money, A week wont by, Hut{persons and manufacture 70 per cent| Ds lean a charee for gasoline of 15) Lawrence Smith, who two years ago| every way to peace.” there may have Geen between thove lift out, root and all, wit BAYS WILSON TOOK THEM TO cents a gallon According to those at the confer- ence, Mr. Cole insisted that the com. pany could not at present afford to of the high explosives and fifty por cent sums of money were given to Wilson later, and then we any more payments, “After that | met a lawyer countries and Great Britain they are |now united with the rest of the jempire in repelling German ageres-| came to Denver from Eurcka, Cal, following quarrel with her family becauso she married her father's The Deutscho Tageszeltung says that “now, as heretofore, our enemies strive for the realization of demands out a twinge of pain. Apply a few drops of freezone directly upon @ Q@ tender corn or callus. SEE BRECKINRIDGE. “Jacobs told me that Wilson said that a man named Capt. Breckinridge refused to make of the chemicals m United States, Governor said de in the ‘ to-day to The} chauffeur, shot and killed her hus- | Which would result in the destruction |t10n. As cA hipite eee eritel stantly the soreness sub. ¥¢ # was the counsellor for the association ning World correspondent; “I will| PAY it" men 30 cents an hour for ¢| band to-day. of Germany as a great power and |Desinning of tho war had net Ger- sides and shortly you find ind that he was also in the District hot touch upon tho subject of the ex-| {hui if the Black and White end| John Bendel, a cook, heard the|COndemn the German nation to be| Many, too, great colonies in Africa the corn or hardened cale Attorney's Office plosions in my first message to the|Town Taxi Company succeeded in| shot and rushed upstairs, He saw | Stunted and cripple Head inmiaee Wenner Ke die lus so loose that you lift ‘The witness then told of Wilson's seine Lorislature because they had not been | king over the exclusive privilege of| Mra, Smith, whose face was bruised, |, TR Tacsliche Kundschau says that | Billar Melne 8 ip ate A FINE” catealeuaaae after to prove he represented Mr.| we wanted, that Perkins wanted [brought to my attention as an inwue, | Qberaung taxicabs from within the | stoop over her husband's body. | “was by notes 1s this exhausted for|! ac nich, Italian and Britis T nig marvelous drug Breckinridge by inviting the Division oreo timestt and | but it will be my purpose, as Gov-|in ‘pay would be considered, and | ,With the remark, “I'm afraid thatthe present.” “From the Bereth and) in Crusial in Northern Afrion or calluses, but dries them |» t, 7 ¥ jelberg’s service hebded Pipe hed sre s we shot didn’t finish him,” she placed the the Mediterranean,” it continues, “an- 1 is pointed out that the whole af bb ect ppm street merchants to visit the Amsint-| 27M for Ghibera® Servier cin. | ePROr, to do everything that tenda to| Probably faborabl pistol against Smith's mouth and, other w: Russa 1s united against the Centra up.” You: feel ne Fe ae ant District Attorney at the Criminal u af other war is calling with a more im- wal 1 It Nourts Bullding. ridge Lae vib meta len to Mile rebel the people and to provide for | === === | blew the top of his head off, accord- pressive voice.” Powers, while as regards Greece “the { enti @ isla Psiins at “ q son. asked him what the money] their safety. ing to Bendel. fe voice. tes while applyin, ot “4 conten a itor cane Went for, und he sald: ‘It RoR 101” sone of thone things will b soon after the Kingsland disaster,|'"Mre Smith, at the time she mar-| The Kreuzgeltung declares that|*IMes have done no more than Newer fe On Breckinridge, to whom they were in-| Me I'm, the caunaclior of the organ-| yy a Sek sa tee #¢ 1 S| oproad Lerror through @ large section | ried Smith, Was the divorced wife of the Entente programme must suffice |!" their capactty of protecting pow- cause inflammation jzation, Safeguards that are Jersey. N oso William A. Moore, son of the late vine ers the guarantees to which they of the tissues or skin troduced by Wilson. Testl ont ‘oboration of tb of New Jersey. © exploson was to convince the keenest pacifist that 3 “ Bi ine | gesecatimony in corroboratt possible are placed around the niak- | ey, 4 Bishop Moore of the Methodist a | were entitled JZ rounding or underneath, “Wilson said to Capt. Brockin«|ieiy wax given by Samuel Fishman these? oe th ever felt at such a great distance as| crutch, she was the adopted daugh- the war will continue. “The German | ntitled against German in- = x Tet Bete out usta him ex counssticn of | 204, Mever Cohen. proper w* that endanger lif and} one of them last night. Reports of ter of Albert Britton, a wealthy oll |Government,” aaserta the Kreuzzei-|‘\VI8U" ‘o protect the safety of thelr It is now really foolish to Tet & core “A " Magistrate McAdoo said he would * . the association, and wanted him to do all he could to protect us, not with Fangsters or private dotectives, but nly in a way that was according to TESTIFIES WILSON COLLECTED $100 A WEEK. * “Nothing was said about money at his time but later Wilson came down Division Street and collected §100 in cash. We kept on paying him $100 each week. Sometimes one man Would pay and gometimes another, € believe I paid once. “Woe had a lot of meetings and Mr. Wilson came to them but we told him We didn't see any results, that we were giving money for nothing. Wil- Said to us that we should not tdmplaiz, to him but should go to the captain “About a week after he first saw Mr. Breckenridge he came to one of our meetings at No. 60 Division Street, Brenner's store. He was introduced as District Attorney Breckinridge and @ to us for about fifteen minutes. said he wanted us to behave our- eelves and not do harm to any of the strikers. We went to see him four or five times after that and complained we didn't see any results. Ho said that everything couldn't be done in @ day. He told us to let it go for two or threo weeks and they'd seo what they could do, but nothing was DOCH! RUB OUT RHEUMATIC PAIN Rub pain, soreness, stiffness, sciatica right out with “St. Jacobs Oil.” County fifty! Bhestestinn is Pain gone. ‘pain only.” Not one case in fifty requires internal treatment. Stop drug ng! Rub the misery right away! ply soothing, penetratin, acobs upon the comes instantly. “St. Jacobs Oil" is # harmless rheumatism liniment which) never disappoints and cannot burn or discolor the skin. Limber up! Stop complaining! Get | 5 a sinall trial bottle of “St, Jacobs Oil” at any drug store, and in just a mo- ment you'll be free from pain, sore- render on Thursday his decision as to whether or not a warrant should “recelving bribes and unlawful foes.” Wilson, who is held in the Tombs s dN” directly | tender spot,” and relief | In $10,000 ball as a witness tried in- effectively in the Supreme Court to- day to have his ball reduced, ence acme MAYOR-ELECT HAS BUT $50; POVERTY LAW BARS HIM Defeated Opponent Prepares Ap- peal on Ground That People's Choice Is Ineligible. FULTON, W. Va, Jan. 13--B. J. Stoker, a poor man, was the people's cholee for Mayor of this borough in the recent election, He won by a sub- stantial majority over Herman Roeder, But Roeder was preparing to-day an appeal to the City Council to seat him instead of Stoker, on the ground that Stoker's poverty makes him ineligible. Inventory of Stoker's property showed him to be worth $50, The law says that a man taking the oath as Mayor must be worth twice that much - Eco, NO BIG RR. STRIKE LIKELY. Brotherhoods Will Sanc! CHICAGO, Jan, of a nation-wide railroad strike is re mote, although It may be necessary on 13.—The probability some roads to use the protective fea- ture of the brotherhood organizations in order to accomplish what the President and Congress intended the men to have last August, ‘This ts the gist of @ state- ment issued to-day by brotherhood heads after the adjournment of the con- ference of railway trainmen, The conferees also went on record being unalterably opposed to the lsory arbitration or compulsory Ugation sections of the Adam- bill and against any radical ace y until the eme Court has handed down ision on the Adamson law —_—_—.---— - B71 ‘Than the Law Allown. he issued for Mr. Breckinridge for Rallway Men Work Longer “Those plants are private Property, owned by concerns that have been Branted the right to do business by the duly constituted agents of the State, When the officials of Jersey City sought to stop the handling of explosives in that city they were mot at the outset of their efforts by injunctions granted by the courts. “It 1s, therefore, essential that the jovernor know exactly what he has the power to do before he sets out to do anything.” The main munition work: ficially sted at Trenton, are: Mans & Waldstein, makers of gun- cotton, which is the base of all higa explosives, Newark. ‘ Nixon Nitration Works, guncotton, near Metuchen; Rend Rock Powder Company, blasting powder, Keyport; United States Cartridge Company, small arms ammunition, Maurer; At- jas Powder Company, explosives and blasting supplies, Landing; Hercules Powder Company, explosives, Kenvil; Union Powder Corporation, smokeless powder, Gillespie Station; Du Pont Company, Army and Navy Powder, m ; Du Pont Company, exploders and battertes (two plants), Pompton Lakes; Du Pont Company, dynamite, Gibbstown; Du Pont Company, samoke- less powder, Haskell; Du Pont Com- pany, smokeless powder, Penns Grove: Crucible Steel Company of America, makers of ofdnance, Harrison; J. L. Mott Co. makers of fore caps, Tren- ton; American Can Company, ord- nance, Edgewater; Standard Fuse Corporation, loading fuses, Paulsboro; American Munitions Company, fuses, Bordentown; Canadian Car and Foun- dry Company, explosive shells, Kings- land; Remington Arms-Union Metallic Company, cupping, blanking and drawing-of metals, Hoboken; Wood- ward & Co., makers of shells (machine shop), Elizabeth; Runyon Manufac- turing Company, loading shrapnel shells, Runyon. as of- in the State in addition to this list which make expl DU PONT BLOW.UP There are some chemical companies hearing it and of seeing the pillar of flame produced by the combustion of 400,000 pounds of powder, came from places 150 miles away, The shocks were felt throughout a gone of fully 250 miles, New York City being badly shaken. The damage to the Plant ts $1,500,000. Outside damage ls $500,000. Officers and passengers on the Swedish-American steamship Stock- holm that arrived hore to-day from Gothenburg said the explosion and fire at Haskell were observed 110 miles distant at sea, According to Capt. A. E. Hakansson of the Stockholm, the horizon in the direction of New York was all aglow, the illumination being frequently heightened by the recurring explosions. Buildings four miles away were wrecked, windows wi broken fifteen miles away and automo- biles five miles away were blown from the road. There were three main te which came from three “mixing houses” about five minutes apart, GAS MASKS ARE USED BY THE RESCUE SQUADS. A rescue squad with gas masks and equipment entered the grounds while the fire was at its height and found elght unconscious men, badly burned. All the injured were placed in a tem- oprary hospital. There were nine explosions in all. To minimize the danger of having the plant wiped out in one -vast 0! many small buildings of frail con- struction house the plant, and only a few men work in each of the structures, The firft shock came from a fire which started in the glazing house, where powder 1s coated with graph- ite in a great revolving barrel to leasen the friction between particles. This was at 9.22 o'clock, The detona- tion was heard all over Northern New Jersey and out on Long Island and in the Westchester hills, OMicials of the company said the men in the barrel house were work- ing on & powder made by an entirely new formula prevent flare-ups from the explo- sives usually used in the machine failed to protect the new compound. Provisions made to man, formerly of Beaumont, Tex. PLEAS FOR PITY MADE BY WOMEN OF VIENNA) Those Who Work on Tramways Say Their Children Are Pining Away. LONDON, Jan, 13.—Tho Arboiter Zeitung of Vienna publishes a letter to the Burgomaster from the wives of city tramway employees who have been called to the colors, appealing for full pay. The letter, as quoted in an Am- sterdam despatch to the Times, says: “We are in a deplorable condition, Our distress is frightful and our children are pining away. ‘The letter cites the increase in sal- ary granted to employees who have not been called to the colors and says that these men, in spite of this in- crease, are starving. “How then,” it continues, “with us poor creatures with our half pa: Our wretchedness is great. On our knees we entreat Your Excellency to have compassion and grant us full pay. Do not abandon us. Take pity on our children.” —— CAPT. SELOUS DIED A HERO. Wounded, He Was U When He Was A LONDON, Jan, 13.—Capt Courteney Selo the author Department. hunter, whose death in action in East pA youd Africa was announced on Jan, 6, fell |WNiinenes Teruse while leading an attack on Bhobeho. Although, wounded, he continued to en- courage his men to the last, when he was again hit and instantly killed. The grave of Capt. Selous les in the yeldt under the shadow of a tamarind tree, where @ few of his faithful com- radeés are buried beside him. Bate atl NEW ORLEANS ENTRIES. NEW ORLEANS, Jan, 13,—The en- tries for Monday's races are as fol- lows: FIRST RACE,-Maiden three-yearolda; gel! ing: five and @ half furlongs Sir Oliver, tung, “will be backed by the entire! German people the more heartily and lresolutely it wages war.” The Cologne Gazette says: “The| answer which our opponents have given to our price overtures pre- cludes any further advances on our part. Discu: ton is j.apossible with him who attempts to dictate penalties to us for alleged crimes. The army orders to the forces of the central! allies, calling upon them for new bat- | tles for the honor and safety of the | Fatherland, tell the enemy every- thing we have to say to him.” LONDON, Jan. 13,—The Rhineland | members of the German Central. Party have declared at « meeting, ac- | cording to Reuter's Amsterdam cor- | respondent, that there must now be! no more talk of peace, but that “we must extort the peace which the en- emy would not negotiate.” The despatch quotes the Vorwaerts as saying that the Entente reply ts! far from belng @ peace offer and that | {t is instead “a new declaration of | war, with boundless war aims.” plates lista LEGATION SECRETARY OUT. a the Peace Note. Jan. 13.—George L. Lorillard, Secretary of the American Legation to Roumania and assigned by the State Department Confidential Agent of the United States with the Serbian Government, by request of the Central Powers, to care for their inter- ests there, especially among prisoners. ‘has resigned. Mr. Lorillard is alleged (have eboken in derogatory terms of President Wilson's peace note. This, however, was discredited at the State requested a_ transfer, by the State De- Fire and Explosion in Plant Filling ntract with Russia. CHICAGO, Jan. 13.—Fire followed by an explosion caused a loss of $100,- 000 to the plant of Charles Besley Company, tool manufacturers, to-day. The company had just received large shipments of brass to be filling, war sian Go Greek LONDON, Jan, 18.—It 1s announced semi-offictally that the Greek reply to used for) * own armies,” Dealing with the charge that the Allies were the firat to violate t laws of war at ‘hurt you twice. A few drops of freezone is all that is necessary. The fee is sold only in these email, raya: “From the very heginning the | bottles packed in a little wooden, cases, Germans sowed mines indiserimin. | bearing @ yellow wrapper. Doo ately on trade routes in defiance of| accept anything else.— all international law and with total| > disrespect of the rights and lives of | neutrals. The right of cutting off supplies of an enemy ts a well rec- ognized belligerent right practised by all nations. The avowed purpose of the submarine measures of Germany was to cut off the supplies of these islands, This campaign has been carried out ruthlessly and with total disregard of the rights of neutrals and of their live Even the Ge mans cannot pretend to excuse such crimes as those of the Lusitania, the Arable, the Sussex and many others. “The Germans profess to regard as inhuman the employment of starva- tion as a weapon. Were they of the same opirion in when they starved the city of Paris?” | The statement charges that Ger- many herself arted the war in| Africa by an attempt to ralse an in- surrection in South Africa, and says the Germans are better supplied with One Minute Real Trench Warfare! First and exclusive publication of photographs of actual fighting from Official Films of the amunition and machine guns in ae Africa than are the Denial men also is made of the British Govern t rges of bad treatment of prisoners,“and attention is drawn ‘to the events in Belgium, | the Armenian massacres and the} alleged ill-treatment of prisoners in the Wittenberg camp and elsewhere. | “Have the Germans forgotten,” statement continues, “that the | cellor admitted the violation of Bel- gian neutrality was wrong but claimed it Was justified by military necessity? As for the treatment of Belgium, the world will not readily forget the massacres of Aerschot and Louvain, the forced levies of Belgian funds, and the inhuman, barbarous deportations which are being carried | out this day. It is improbable the allies will make any further comment on the German and Austrian note In the Gravure Seetlon of The Sunday World TO-MORROW New York's Latest Waltz Hit, WORDS AND MUSIC, “Give Me All of You.” In the Magazine Section, ALSO Four Killed by Ex WILMINGTON, Del, Jan. 1%.—Four The Emperor of Ai men were killed and two seriously in- What King George of naland jured to-day when on express train on | Astrology Kaiser Wilhelm, Pennsylvania Railroad plo . Kans Reouge™OM eames or"aeston Mandar | Predicts | Pressey’ Poincare of . e omen had id from the path of w freight di for ‘The Czar of Russia, in front of the express, hern, foreman, far identified. Sugene is the only one thus —_ | Dies im Berth on v The Girl Who Spent a Six- Year Honeymoon in Africa's Jungle. Editor's Wite UTICA, N. Y., Jan, 15.—Mrs, Henry | R, James of Ogdensburg, N. ¥., widow ness, stiffness and swelling. Don't) WASHINGTON, Jan, 13—During the Heagments of the building, burning, | ‘Walter buntan 101! raat the Entente ultimatum 1s not consid- |" M8 yes Padre ae guffer! Relief awaits you. “St,| last fiscal year 73,781 railway employees Fee ee ne oy lotr eoturess sk 10: Patape, 48 b pie neigerteortedgh tree Limits Peat A Sno} PRR ae I Jacobs Oi)" has relieved ‘millions of| Worked longer than sixteen consecutive mixing house, two drying shods| SECOND RACH.” Tiree Searcide and uo: wil. | gratifying 90 far as it goes, There iy ree ine eee icted to meetin New |f* “re 2OU Nea ing—? ’ rheumatism sufferers in the last half) ourt, the limit provided by Federal puffed up. Flames leaped across the} ine, 9x furious -Hveman,, 110; Junge, no intention of raising the blockade | Yori her daughter, Mrs. BE. C, Smith | . jaw, according to @ rep e e rae hrough the plant and | SY Ar 104 hte Por until the Entente demands are con-| ost. Albans, Vt. and tho two were # The Life Story of Capt. century, and is just as good for scle| /4¥, according to @ report made by th crack running t tor or 106: tate Fon tt on t i - von stica, neuralgia, lumbago, backacha | Interstate Comm Commission to. set off several of the sinaller magae iia, ceded in full, to go South for the winter, der Goltz, " " day. This is an increase of 26 per cent zines, ert 96, — = sprains and swellings.—Advt. q NEW JERSEY TOWNS Bi hen the big magazine con- oem a y : over the preceding year, when the num- jut when ne i maw: ‘THIRD RACE. hres. ear-o) and Wenck Hearin Postponed. lic an et Dipl 1 ‘ ' “pears taining 100,000 pound@ of ballastite| ing. ax, turiong—Hoval lmteve’, 10: "Cniitoa jeanne AL smack and after. | [German Secret Diplomatic Agent. ; ——_—____——- ber was 59,894. ‘The principal causes of py talaing 200.000 “poungy ct ballasts Tigstionesiyctnas, (alms tof: | ALBANY, Jan. 18.-Gov. Whitman | UBSTANTI c te | Oorned Over to the United Mines she sxceny OUly ware Geralmens and was felt as far away as Springfield, eargetia, itl; Miots. Tilt Pals Ces: [oes postponed from Monday, Jan. glow of satisfaction follow a|f by Great Britain, i= miscellaneous car defects. _ Mass, and Watervilet, and so strong- jon ‘Hwith, 104; Hupernal, 100: Mico |to Monday, Jan. 23, the hearing on the j Ly = > - | ‘gor 4 “ charges of attempted extortion made glass of good old | ¥ — (Continued From First Page.) ly that residents of those cities H RACE—Three-vearolds and upward: | Against Fred A. Wenck, Chairman of % : Ab 1 t 1 R . German Diplomat tn Washington thought the local government arsenals Hands 0p mile, 4, Murdock, the State Athletic Commission, _ by : Promoted, earmamemead had blown up. * 08; Jie ; ; Fleetabelie, 110; Bryn | Harry M,. Pollok and others of New 4 : bi solu 4 y emoves WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—IHanicl von] the plant declared a public nuis- Shortly before 11 o'clock to-day r! 7; Jem, York an | Public Service.” 1 Indigestion. 0 kage Halmhausen, Counselor of the Germa residents of this place heard and felt| “Pr : > g' NE PACKAGE Halmhausen, Co b nan | ance. fn explosion from the direction of | gel: _ one {wp,) 110; | nerlin Claims Repulse of Allies im By WILLIAM M. CALDER. | provesit. 25cat all druggists, eee y day Givica nat emperor | Many of the workmen who ran to| Haskell, ‘Telephonic communication | ae" nun Col Me Macedenla. : . William had appointed him Minister | the bills after the firat explosion have | to Haakel) is cut oft end definite hs Ne 1 Oh ig ee 107; “Schoo! m5 BERD, le ue iy pA id e United ba) Senator.leck from ) me SSSEFF | Pienipotentiary in the German Dt > formation was not obtainable, T! Noandal, g. sas jay ville as “ - ew Yor! 7] Ait co” He will remain attached | Not Feeurned. Mundreds of the work: | Ci Was felt in Newark. ef ETH MAGTE hver rancid, and .n"e: |ti19 companies advancing toward 8t i Emvasey for the pres. |@rs rownded up by the company TT, Teme a Cognete 3 pina were repulsed.” aay to-daya | | Np or ( ; ems tiart, icial report from the” Macedonian guards to-day flatly refused to go to| 4 ; eR " P ' : —_ “ atrian Sea Planes on « Ra ot Deturber Hela | DON’T MISS work, Tho terrific demonatyation of | Jan, 13 (via wireless to ewan, 110, K fi ~ a Suttenge Sentinels at White House tm ing dangers under which they have | An official statement issued yeor-olds and woman; Forty Turkish Salling V Breed | ,) WASHINGTON, Jan. 15.--Ear muffs, been working completely unnerved | to-day by the Austro-Hungarian Ad- p anaoater uwerewion. |" “TONDON, Jan, 1%—A Russian naval Served in Mug or Glass Fresh) he heavy mittens and furs were used by them and their families. They de- | miraity Ty Leeend, 103; *Hors, 08: | squadron raided the Anatolian coast on . | the Suffrage Sentinels to repel the |manded to be paid off and allowed | dropped Nala gives AiO: Many Gay 108) Paysiaater: | Jan, 6 and sank forty Turkish ailing and Foaming From the Cask | bP i ay rR get a Mun’ Rita he 5 to, + 1005} vessels bound. for Constantinople With | As Bracing as This Glorious Weather, TO-MORRO Silent’ watch, outside dent Wil- |t? BO obtained in the SPireatioe llowanee claimed, | cargo8e, according. to an announcement| “Om ‘Tap at Motels, Cafes. Saloons, wt! j son's to-day, The series of explosions, coming so | attributed to the Petrograd naval staff. eter and ‘Houses.

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