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had the facts. gation.’ nt two hours to tell what 1! “Then Henry asked me: ‘Do you ,” Lawson flared, “otherwise, ) think Baruch could be mixed up in “Pim done. 1 don't propose to sit here | this way, using his friendships In such ‘and hear the committee wrangle @ way, und involving the Integrity of About the admissibility of my evi- | the Democratic Party dence. “Mr, Chairman,’ ‘I think “You must have respect for the | he would be the last man in the world Committee,” interrupted Henry. to do #ich @ thing, and 1 will stake "Please don't take me to task) my head that ‘Sec Lansing fgain,” Lawson proceeded, “and would got take a postage stamp ot o let me be earnest at earnest! profit out of such transactions, even ements 1 do have respect for this! though tise things were floating all Commitice and the Chatrman—and | around him Teay that honest! jespite the con. | CONSPIRACY EXISTED TO RIG fradiction and denial of your Chair-| WALL STREET MARKET, man. Here is the opportunity of @| “Then Henry asked mo How these Ufetime for a full investigatio things could happen and I told him ., Lawson then proceeded to relate | that there had na big conspiracy further what happened in the Heary in Wall Stret for months and that eoaference. this lenk alone was not responsible. “1 told him to get the stock 1 told him how Mexican war inform Fecord and go through the whole | tion had boon peddied, how altuations Wet,” Lawson continued. “And | | were made to order, and 1 sald that enid to him that before you get | man like Baruch in the market, ¥ one-third of the way down the keoping posted naturally, if he un- Hist the lid will be blown off. Con- earthed any information through @ress and the world will see who rumor or otherwise and was certain made these millions, who were | that people wero making enormous these smug hypocrites who us Operations, would take advantage of their official positions to make | the market.” millions for themselv “I stand by this and I know the “Then Mr. Henry said: ‘To show! guns are on me. 1 stand by what Tt you where we stand, I'll toll you some! have said,” Lawson continued, of the things we've wot. We have it “The other witnesses will—or i ge in such a move If the wit- need mo in order to start an investl- that a Mr. Baruch, who made large #hould—bear out just what I've told | éontributions to the Democratic cam-) you paign fund, had four conversations | “The guns are not on you," Rop- with Secretary Lansing’ resentative Pou interrupted. ‘“"That's going some,” 1 replied. | “PRE HAS ITS GUNS ON ME,” ‘Pour of ‘om? | SAYS LAWSON. “You, he answered, ‘four of them.’| “f don't mean the committee has And then ho added—I forgot to state !# guns On me; I mean the press has this yesterday—'We have the conver- {ts guns on me," said Lawson amid sation of one of the interviews and) laughter. Part of the conversation of another.| Lawson and Hen: We also have it that Count von Bern-| Ing to the witn that Lawson need storff, the.German Ambassador, is ao Not reveal Information ho might have | him." mixed up in it that he made over, received from leak principals, ve've 2, | Repr t ‘in the 1914 Washington Dir 000,000, We've got it up to $2,000, epresentative Harrison moved that 1 Pe Gat dine te appeates haa! (A. Ruth Thomason, priv. sec, Duane ip of (K. Fox, new! J.P Morgan, H. P. Davison of the “Then 1 said to Honry: ‘Mr. Chair-| house of Morgan, F. A. V | Mra, Visconti replied, y agreed, accord. | nit to nay, THE EVENIN conti had given the source of her information, Lawson hesitated, and wanted to know if it was essential. “You know what the value of a good reputation ia,” retorted Patten. “Do you not think It would be un- fair to blast a reputation on the word of a woman you had never seen bo+ fore?” Patten continued, Very unfair,” retorted Lawson, ‘and if she had not had a reputable or with her 1 should have hesl- “T tried to get at the bottom of It. | And her talk Was #0 peculiar, so con- cing, that L gave it. 1 think sho vill tell you the name when she comes on the stand. But if she doesn't I will give the name she told | me a8 her informant,” Patten suggested Lawron had blackened Price's reputation by his to plead with this committee to let me give the names In confidence, and 1 tell you [ didn’t want to bring in his 1 didn't want ‘8 name—I had even thought of burning the letter.” “Did you accept her word that sho was acting from an altruistle inspira- tion?” queried Patten, “| believe she was a woman quiver- Ing with red blood and impetuosity to do something patriotic, Never have 1 sven In all my experience anything so fale,” he sald, The committee then took a recens, Although sibpoena servers hunted all night for Mra. Ruth Thomason Visconti, “the woma. in the case,” they said they had been unable to locate her to summons her as a witness, A few minutes after Mre. Viscont! was nomed by Law yea' one of his Nod her on the telephone to tell her ahe had been named at the leak hearing. “You must e the wrong Vin- cont!,” she answered. Reminded that the only other name of Visconti in the directory 1s “Kduardo Viscont!, cement worker.” "Tt have noth- thing to say. IT refuse to a deny 1 taiked to Mr. mit or Mra. Vinconti's name first appeared ctory, "Mrs, At that time she lived at an, it doesn't seem to me that you the National City Bank, New York; \the exelnatve Ethelhurat apartment in |% S. Bache and Sol We boenaed, The motion w “I think T may get som tion from t ” Harrison explained Lawson said ba and Henry had speculated on what Lansing and | Hopes Women Will Adopt This Habit {)rrescnea "tae satus signin | about prospect of peace, U-boat raids Or ee bix international matters. won held s Glass of hot water each morn-}| “perfectly natural, Ing helps us look and feel agreed that the two were above re- proach of suspicion, though he added: clean, sweet, fresh, “1 don't know whether they might i have been used by ot Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and Lawson testified UORA hy aclouis—a good, clear skin; a nat-| PDA. Whe, turibne: J eJournal, had furnished al ro +4 cor plexion and freedom him the name of Paul Warburg of the rom illness are assured only by) Federal Reserve Hoard in the situa. an, healthy blood. If only every| tion woman and likewise every man could| 74 ORAGGING IN OF PRICE AND realize the wonders of ihe morning TUMULTY. tuside bath, what a gratifying change i A take Glaas. | Lawson was asked whether ho had teud of the thousands of sickly.) {ny wien yesterday. he said that Sits -looking men, women and] Ruth Thomason Visonti, “stated to ooled with pasty or muddy complex-| me in substance that Mr. William W. Fons; instead of the multitudes of| Price of the Washington Star had phy he peel sncowne rain| acted as go-between the leak a age” and pessi we should see a} f betw the President's Seore- virile, optimistic throng of rosy-| tary, Mr. Tumulty, and others and eked people everywhere, that he had received $5,000 cash for Ax inside bath is had by drinking | !¢ and that Mr, Tumulty had received each morning before breakfast a | & Much larger sum glass : real hot water with a tea-| .), ee aan Coe peed blind spoonful of limestone phosphate in it patarday. CAWan xd to wash from the stomach, liver, kid: | arcmitent nie ew rete’ fat neys and ten vards of bowels the pre- 1 i a told him of another banker who vious day's indigestible waste, sour as 80 close to a Cabinet member | fermentations and poisons, thus} could call the latter up at any time. | “cleansing, sweetening and freshening | This Cabinet member was alleged to the entire alimentary canal before | be in on the leak, putting more food into the stomach, | Asked to amplify that to-day, Law- Those subject to sick headach son said: “I told White ‘l hear that fougness, nasty breath, rheumatism, | Y0Ur friend, Pliny Fisk, is doing the colds, and particularly those who have | 8teering.’ In connection with the leak &@ pallid, sallow complexion and who | *ck sambling. “] are constipated very often, are | wi, mi agcanliny, to, the convers urged to obtain a quarter pound of | ims conversation White mive Less limestone phosphate at the drug store,| gon was in mubstance, according to which will cost but a trifle, but ts] Lawson: ied bs sufficient to demonsirate the quick “The story is that Pliny Fisk in and remarkable change in both health | working with Secretary McAdoo, and and appearance awaiting those who|!t'* a terrific thing, And Fisk made practice internal sunitation, We must | Me Ko to the telephone to show me Temember that inside cleanliness is | 1 McAdbo to New York," more important (han outside, be- | K WAS EATING LATE AND cause the skin does not absorb impur- SMOKING LATE,” ter be sub- carried. informa both men on, i to contaminate the blood, while Lawson a to bad indicated pores in the thirty feet of bowels | Fisk was And smoking 0.——Advt. late” when he made hs boasts about | being able to cull McAdoo up. You asked if it Was indicated Plak was in hix cups. “I wouldn't want to pass on that," replicd Lawson, neldentally Lawson declared he had opened up his list of names only j after reading of a plan by the com- | Mittee to pasy “several brands of tor- ture on me if I did not talk." |. Reverting to the statement Henry jissued after their conference, saying to be a “mirage,” How She Was Built Up and .wsun' angus Made Strong by Vinol. | necro help the American people | are inany more such mirages “1 shall feel repaid for writing this| MRS. VISCONTI AGAIN IS MEN jer if 1 can help any tired, worn- TIONED, out mother or housekeeper to find| , Representative Patten then dug th and strength as I have. | into the conversation Lawson had “I have @ family of five, sew, cook Mrs, Viseontl, who, Lawson ind do my housework and I became 2h) had named Price as a go-be- very much run down in health. A| ‘Stn for Tumulty and others. friend usked me to try Vinol. I did STL RRDOAESN ie eld WV onmacel fee 60, and now I am well and strong and ry giant Lae ors pe energy has been restored. Patten wanted to know if Mrs, Vis- Vinol, has no superior as 4 tone tor | Worn-oul, run-down, lired mothers or housekeepers.”—Mrs. J. N. Melton, Jackson, Miss. Pa Vinol contains beef and cod liver tones, iron and manganese pep- aten “and “glycerophosphater, the Absolutely Removes most famous tonics known, At Lig-! ry ; gette-Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores! Indigestion. One package and at all drug stores that display the 7 7. Vinel Agency Sign. Also at the lead-| provesit, 25catall druggists fing drug store in all New York| towns.—Advt. | knows Mrs. Viscontl except ca These persons sald whe told them she had divorced her husband, an Italian, count, with the permission to resume | her maiden name Mr. Morm man Ambassado Was the deciaration Congressman Lindhberg Introduce: Congress, and if not to report fore Dec, 1. eral Sessions sustained this afte: noon the depurrer of Harry A | Gordon of No, 42 Wall Street and | Isidor D. Morrison, attorneys for) jun so-called poultry trust, and dis- t The World’ on Bureau, Pulitzer Building ra Row; World's Uptown Otfleey northwest core wer ." and Broadway Mvorid’s ‘Marie Office, 15% ‘West 125th Bt, a « against wh (Jury for | suah Fifteenth Street Northwest, In 1915 her name appeared thus Ruth Thomason, aten. her realdence wan > first St residence section, her present addre In 1916 her name appeared thus: “Mra, Ruth DK. o (T21 Te t Northwest, In milliona Visconti, clerk.” Duane FB. Fox is a prominent lnw- yer, who said he couldn't remember whether he ever employed Mra, Vis- contl, or Mrs, Thomason. N one could be found to-da ener to Teatify he Inquiry, of J.P. At the offle to Wall Street if he is served with a subpoena, Morgan was not in his office, Noth. ing further would be sald, evince.” WASHINGTON, that it was becar done #0. that ator 14 ferred 1 him A Rpeee sotts Senator this afternoon, (“MONEY SYSTEM USED | from Salonica aa. 4 God! I've humiliated myself | Morgan & Co. | it was sald to-day Morgan will go to Washington to testify before Gone Beyond | NEW GREEK KING “NAMED BY ALLS REPORT IN ROME Duke of Aosta to Take Place cf Constantine, Kaiser's Brother-in-Law, AGREED AT CONFERENCE In Return, Italy Will Throw Immense Army Into Mace- donian Fighting. ROME, Jan, 16—-The Duke of Aorta, cousin of the King of Italy, has been offered the Greek throne, from which King Constantine Is to be deposed by the Entente allies, ac- | cording to reports current here. The decision to remove Constantine, whose wife is a sister of the German Kaiser, and who has been @ thorn in ; the Allies’ side, Is said to have ieee reached at the war conference of the Prime Ministers of the Entente Pow- | jers, held here recently. The selection of the Duke of Aosta; 19 reported to have the full approval | lof the Greek faction, which, led by | nd never will have any- | former Premier Venizelos, has re- | volted from Constantine and set up @ provisional government in Salonica, If reports are true, the throne already has formally been tendered to the Duke, but he has not yet accepted, Constantine Is sald to have spolled the Dardanelles campaign by refus- ing to abide by an agreement entered Into with the Allies by Veniselos for the Greek army to strike Turkey on the flank while the Allies attacked at Gallipoll, It was he who prevented Greece trom living up to her treaty to ald Serbia against Germany, per- mitting hig ally to be utterly crushed, He has constantly hampered the operations of Gen, Sarrail's army in Macedonia, and It has been the fear that the Greek army, taking sides with the Teutons, would strike the | Allies in the flank and rear that bas prevented Sarrall from assuming jan important offensive. The recent actions of the Allies have been to minimize this danger. | he com. | They demanded the release of all the | mittee investigating rumors of a leat | Venizelistas who had been arrested, | the removal of the Greek army and} its practical disarmament. The placing of an Italian on the throne would remove a source of peril over the division of Southern Albania, which both Italy and Greece claim. Jan, 18.—That Ger-| With an Italian on the throne, too, Count von Bernstorff it 1s belleved Italy will be willing to! proposed “has gone beyond hie province’ and make greater efforts to aid the Allies, in successfully prosecuting the war on| &f Pay to po: te floor, {the Macedonian front, It 1s believed | she will now put her army at Avlona in motion and strike at the flank of | the Central Powers’ armies, PARIS, Jan, 16, A Havas despatch the Greek Govern- a Bill to Tear Open the Whole | Wall Street Situation, | WASHINGTON, Jan. 16.--Reopen- | { ing of the “Money Trust” investiga. tion of 1912 was domanded in a resolu- tion introduced to-day by Represen. ! tative Lindhberg, Minnesota | He charged the “money system of | the United States is being used as «| literal gambling hell.” Tho Federal Reserve Board, he) said, “ia entering into further entang- ling alliances with (he bankrup coun- tries of Europe 1 uhberg mentioned the bourd's! appointinent, of the Bank of Eng- | land as its foreign representative as a reason for the investigation, and claimed further that $26,000,000,000 of investments in the United Btat are being loaned to stock speculator He demanded appointment of an investigating committee of five, to re- rt if possible during the present The committee, Lindhberg said, should have power to subpoena books | and papers, He mentioned aa a r son for this request President Taf! refusal to permit the Comptroller of, the Currency to obtain certain bank. | ing Information during the last money probe investi INDIGTED LAWYERS FREED; thor TO SUE JURY FOR $500,000 Demurrer of Attorneys for So-! Called Poultry Trust Sustained | by Judge Nott. Judge Nott in the Court of Gen- missed the indictments for perjury brought against them by the Novem- ber additional Grand Jury The freed lawyers declared in sieamship Martin, of 1,940 tons grof and the Bwedish steamer Norma, of \+ 1,587 tons ( cording to On announcement made to-day at Lloyds Shipping Agency. The agency also says it Is reported | that the British steamship Brook- | (or | 3,093 tons, and the Norwegian | Stonmnet Tholma, 1,896 tons, have been sunk. wood, forinerly the Alfred Dumols, 729 ton has beon destroyed through striking a mine. Eight members of her crew lost their lives. GERMANS USE GAS BOMBS court that would bi suit the jury investigating the poultry | trust, testified that before incorpor+ | ating tho association of poultrymen they had submitted the plans of the | organization to District Attorney | it. J Swann and received his O. K. Mr. | Swann told the Grand Jurors that | 0 not the case and the ina-| dicuunents for perjury foliowed. bers of the Grand | 10 for defamation of | lawyers, as witnesses before | 1S | asin duly) 140 station at Larissa and is in {constant communication in code witn | | Berlin, ARE REPORTED SUNK Two British, Two Swedish and One Norwegian Vessel Destroyed, the Latter by a Mine, LONDON, Jan, 16.~The ‘038, have been sunk, ac- The Norwegian steamer Graafield, IN SOMME FRONT RAID Attacks Fail, Says Paris—Berlin Reports French Raid South of Roye. PARIS, Jan, 16.—A Germain raid early to-day along the Somme, in : the region of Baisiy, which was ac- companied by asphyxtating bombs, Was repulsed, to-day'’e offlcial state- | ported, \u BERLIN (via Sayville wireless), |!) Jan, 16,—Reating back of a French trench raid near Bouvraignes, south jof Roye, was announced in to-day’s oMeint statement. ewhere on the wostern front statement said the ‘fighting ac- Y was within moderate limits on both sides, exce livelier local artillery fire." athens CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN | MARK eT. WHEAT Mona ie - Open. lg Jaw. Olean Tae May Tents TNS Tan” Ti wh, M 901 ws Dru late s s 7 in House killed the [Am Am Am | Xm, sau NM The Entente Ministers are still in! Mi dat wy the harbor at Keratsini, near Athens, FIVE MORE STEAMERS Wille overiand t there was a little | wok: at es dividend of pay able Fe Wt + Bh 0 8 to 24 Dare. Money (PALO OINTMENT | ing or Prourmding | Palos Wik sypication gree relief, Oy adry, G@ WORLD, TUBSDAY, JANUARY ITALIAN ROYAL DUKE SAID TO BE SLATED FOR GREEK THRONE SHIP FROM NEW YORK BELIEVED TO BE LOST j }No Word Received From the! Hallbjorg Since She Sailed on Novy, 23. © Norwegian jorg that left here 1 cargo for Bord © met disaster at sea, advices reaching Funch, Edye & Co., owners of Steamship surance © As now ull peris Records them was one elu cop eral exports, valued at approx $1,000,000, “KILLS AMENDMENT TO BAR LIQUOR “ADS” FROM MAIL WASHINGTO> to-day Randall amendment to the Post Offica Appropriation bill which | would have dented mails for liquor advertising. The vill was Cloning Quot With net changes t vn Am. W, Paper pf | Baldwin Locomori ve ‘& Oh | nat | Reohtehern eel | Maite os Think \ Toba, Prod | ment asserted, eT Elgewhere along the western front) ("4 there were outpost skirmishes re- | 1° % ITEMS FOR k Beare: Roots atock, Jan, ot | Philadelphia Regular sem per ce Underwriters of the $69,000,000 United States Rubber Leen notified th vanes subseri 963-4 to yield | eamship Halub- | 23 with gen- Aux Is belleved to the Line, charterer, from tn- jos to-day. from Capt. T. son, master of the ship, or any of his twenty-three inen ha sentatives of the vess wegian Consulate ¥ they ‘have succeeded d ‘lakes and rivers of the Danube that were signed on at this port. naturalized Ameri n-joseph Lotnole of Charleston, rhe Hallbjorm was of 2, register, 305 feet long, and was built 1904 at totterdam cargo of 3,900 tons, made up mainly er, machinery, cotton and gen- | fensive in the valley section of {with great violenc | both sides clashing in {lowing report: passed without iner: mall rates, pe hy postage or increase V omployees. jin the region o! | fires on some vesse’ FLETS rf. leording to an Amsterdam despatch |man, The submarine ts in charge of | Commander Arnauld. | 8 x % 3 . + Perr nese, SESE, oe ee eee 253. Pe | farm animals on farme and rai eeeeeeeressen Pe BAD SPRAINS OR 'S shoulder, back or @ sprain or strain * | because the moment it i INVESTORS. b, 15 to stock of record nual t, payable Jan, al t record Jun, 22 at, " jor swelling. 16, 1017. RUSSIAN REPULSE IN ROUMANIA IS “CLAMED BY BERLIN Roumanian Army Also Re-+ ported Defeated by Macken-- | sen With Heavy Losses. | \ RERLIN, Jan. 16 (by wireless to Sayville). —Russian forces undertook a violent attack in Roumania yes. | terday on both sides of Fundent, To- day's War Office report says the ad- | vancing Russian waves were out down by the German fire, which tn- Micted great losses. ‘The text of the War Office state- ment reads: front of Archduke Joseph—- Yesterday hostile attacks be- | tweon the Kasino and Suchitaa | Valleys were in absolutely without succes: Rournantan troops who had entered our po- sitlons at one place were com- repulsed by a counter- | Yn this occasion two of- nd 200 men were taken | prisoner. “Army Group of Field Marshal von Mackensen violent artillery prep Rus: masses In strong force advanced to the attack on both sides of Fundent. ‘The storming waves broke down under our curtain of our positions, In the evening the | attacks were repeated. Some hos- tile detachments In weak force reached our trenches, but were immediate'y driven o! The en- emy losses were great.” The statement reports the situation on the Macedonian front unchanged. LONDON, Jan —Teutonic forces ite the marshes, boundary section of Dobrudja, in bringing up heavy artillery, De- spatches from Berlin said that Galats was under fire to-day from stich can- non placed on the bank of the Danube opposite the Reumanian city, Rus. sian and Romanian ces have forced a stoppage of the German in- fantry advance #round that city from the southeast and the official state- ments indicated also that the Tew tonic atiempt to encircle the town from the southwest had geen greatly slowed up. Of interest here also was the Rus- sian statement of a successful of- tou- » the northeast of Focsani. in this sector is proceeding | he forces on equent hand- to-hand encounters, Not only have | the German troops been thrown back here, but thelr losses have been enor- mous. mania, Fighting PETROGRAD, Jan. 16 (via Lon. don, British Admiralty, per Wireless | Press).--Heavy fighting continues on) the northern Roumantan front. The War Office to-day gave out the fol- | “Battles continue with alternating | success in the region southwest ¢ Pralea, ninet 1 KoUth of the confluence of the Rivera Kasino and Trotus. Roumanian and Russian troops which were attacking seven versts south of Pralea have advanced two verats. Two night attacks by the enemy at a point two versts south of Kekosa, on the River Suchitza, were beaten back by the Roumant: | ans ‘In the region of Vadent, ten versts west of Galu(s, fighting still contin. | a ‘Our aviato Barjam! and Su | dropped bombs on} ni, on the Danube Braila, and cattsed | Jie U-BOAT TAKES BACK = GAPTAINS AS PRISONERS Four Are Commanders of Merchant- men, One of Them an Englishman, LONDON, Jan, 16.—A German sub- marine has just returned from a crulse with four captains of met- | chantmen on board as privoners, ac- to Reuters quoting German ews pape’ ’ One of the prisoners ls an English. Commander Arnauld visited Carta- gena last June on the submarine U-35 nd delivered a letter from Emperor William to King Alfonso. On this occasion he was quoted as saying that he had dostroyed fifty ships tn- | cluding the French li rovence. | deities ho nlti $6,626,020,000 In Farm Animals in WASHI. the United States on Jan. 1 age $6,685,020,000, the Department of Agri- culture to-day announced, That is an Increase of $64,350,000 over their value MUSCLE STRAIN swelling right out with “St. Jacobs Oil.” Rub it on a sprained ankle, wrist, anywhere, that's when you realize the magic in old, honest “St. Jacobs Oil, pplied, out | comes the pain, ache, soreness and | swelling, It penetrates right into the) injured muscles, nerves, ligaments, | tendons and bones, and relief comes | instantly. It not merely kills pain, | but soothes and heals the injury so! a quick recovery is effected, Get a small trial bottle of “St. Jacobs Oil” right now at any drug store and stop suffering, Nothing else | sets things straight so quickly—so thoroughly. It is the only application to rub on n bad sprain, strain, bruise Advt, GEN. VON FALKENHAYH . rum TWARCONFERENGE Said to Have Left Roumania and Made Part of Trip in Submarine, LONDON, Jan. 16.—The présence in Greece of Gen. von Falkenhayn, for- mer German chief of staff and of late — in command of part of the forces en- raged In the campaign against noe [High Officials of the Allied deat et entontea, G4 mordia & | Armies Getting Ready to Strike Telling Blow. Reuter despatch, \ ———— Gen, von Falkenhayn ts sald to have embarked on a submarine at) ronpon, Jan, 16—The first aos the Greek port of Kavala, now in the hands of the Germans, and to4*ion was held to-day of « conferenee have landed at @ point on the Greek | Which is in line with the reply of the coast whence he made bis way to|Entente to the note addressed bY Larissa, Tho absence of his name! president Wilson to the beliigerents, fro the offictal Berl! bg ere erin war reports | ivdicating the purpose of the Batente has been noted for some days, post ‘Tno allied army on the alonica|{? Continue the war until ite aline have been attained. front will be reinforced as a pres liminary to an effort to cut the Ber | Details in regard to the Fri in-Constantinople railroad, according | °%4 the Important personalities to a despatch from a British cor- | tending cannot be stated, but Its Get= respondent with Gon. Sarratt’s forces. |¢f#! character differs from the He describes Asiatic Turkey as a| EAtente conference held recently at granary which Germany {s develop. | Rome in that military instead of dip. ing on avientific lines, while it ie |!omatic questions are now taking Also the home of 2,000,000 of mag. | Precedence. nificent fichters who, he says, are! ‘The reply of the Entente to the being trained and drilled under Ger- | Swiss and Scandinavian notes endora- man instructors. ing President Wilson's inquiry of the bolligerents regarding their war (Ams eovered, will be limited to a brief and formal PETROGRATY tans iheeainking of | @cknowledgement. It will refer to two enemy ships near the Bosporus! the reply to President Wilson and ne Sinks ‘Two by a Russian submarine was announced | Will undertake no further discussion fire some hundred metres before .|1n to-day’s official statement. of the question at issue. _ \ Don’t Waste Your Money on Wasted Heat Burn So-CO-ny Kerosene, and cut the coal bill. For heat—for cooking—for tight— Saves time—saves labor—saves money. The SOCONY Sign is your quality insurance. STANDARD OIL, CO, of NEW YORK Principal Offices New York Albany Buffalo Boston Offering for Tuesday, Jan. 16th. ona eftich,_cpminrtaes “Firanee wl wv sl sit.) We Are Now Offering ‘Speciat for To- Morrow, Wedne day, Jan. 17th. Chopved Nats Mi SefeMot’ candy goodnewe LOPT Sweet-crs fn nox 4 BARCLAY STREET oN mi 0 m. B*coRT LANDY STREET ee tin PARK ROWSNAGSAU t \ Closen 7 Bat 1 ¥ Sf Bip aTReeT 1 ar a 4 $b AVE” Ae fer" MARKET er, ‘Newark y. Closest) t0p.m_ Rat VOprmae VY Grookiyn, Closes 11.90 P, M.—Saturday 12 PM, ‘The specified weight inciudee the contain: A SIGNIFICANT GAIN During the week ending January 13, 1917, THE WORLD printed 1,165 columns of paid advertising. This was a gain of 42314 columns over the corresponding week of 1916, In the same period the Herald gained only 22814 columns, the American 312}{ columns the Times 39734 columns. THE WORLD is breaking many records these days, each, however, well carned, They simply evidence the appreciation and sound judgment of advertisers, TITEL ALIA LLM A LLL DIO APO ONIN LONDON TO.