Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ae The Sunday World Japa the niimber meant both passengers and crew, or includes the) owned dy Willtams & Co. London. fore that the Italian gunboat Paa di Ruttiber of losses from all ships sunk. F SEVEN SUNK, NINE CAPTURED, SAYS Raider for RIO JANEIRO REPORT 2 nese Ship Upon Which Crews Were , Placed Forced to Accompany the Many Miles. (By Associated Press.) RIO JANEIRO, Jan. 1 from a British oficial source, seven vessels have been sunk in the Atlantic | —According to information received here to-day YARROWDALE—4,653 and nine captured by a German raiding vessel The vessels reported sank are: Dramafist, Minieh and Tradegar Hall; French vessels captured include the following: British—Radnorshire, Saint Theodore, jantes and Asnieres. The Britieh--King George, Mount Temple, Georgile, Voltaire and Yarrowdale; Japanese—Hudson Maru. All these vessels were sunk or captured petween Dec, 12 and Jan 10 on the route between the Azores and Pernambuco, in longitude varying between 40 and 32 west, lattitude between 30 north and 7 south, ‘The crews of the steamships sunk were placed on the Hudson Maru, ‘The vessel was compelled to accompany the raider to a point seven degrees south latitude, where she arrived Jan, 12, She then received permission to go to Pernambucs, where ebe arrived on Monday evening with 237 men) from the crews of the vessela which were sunk, No information has been received in regard to the crews of the captured vessels The raider ts said to be a ship of the Moewe type. ‘The vessel referred to In the foregoing as the Tredegar Hall provably is the Netherby Hall, whose sinking by the British Admiralty. There is, fast reported at Cardiff, Wales, on Dec, 2 by the German raider was announced however, a Tredegar Hall, which was She is a vessel of 3,764 tons gross, 342 feet long, bullt in 1906 and owned in Cardiff. It is possible the other ships were afterward sunk SHIPS SUNK BY NEW RAIDER HAD TONNAGE OF 100,000 The Missing Voltaire + and the White Star Liner Georgic Are Among List of Victims. It is possible that the total tonnage of all ships sunk by the new German raider will total nearly 100,000, There are some discrepancies in the list sent from Buenos Ayres and the one given by the British Admiralty. In the two lists twenty-six vessels are named, with four possible duplica- tions. Included among the ships déstroyed was the White Star liner Georgic, one of the biggest freight-carrying vessels in the world. The Georgic sailed from Philadelphia on Dec, 3, carrying a cargo composed largely of cotton. The Voltaire left Liverpool Nov. 28 for New York and was not héard from again. She was believed to have been sunk by a mine or a submarine. She and River Plate Steam Company. The ships mentioned in the British Admiralty as having been sunk are 8 follows: GEORGIC-- 10,077 Line, Liverpool MOUNT TEMPLE-9,792 tons, Can- adian Pacific, Liverpool, NETHERBY HALL—4,461 tons, bl- lerman Lines, London, KING GEORGE — Presumably the 3,852-ton Iiner owned by the Fresh- field Steamship Company of Glas- gow. Lloyds lists three vessels of this name but all are very small vessein except the Freshfield Com- pany's ship.) Navigati tons, White Star VOLTAIRE—8,618 tons, Lamport Holt, Liverpool. DRAMATIST — 5,415 tons, Charshte | Steamship Company, Liverpool. 'RADNORSHIRE — 4,310 tons, Royal Muti Steam Packet Company, Lon- don. NANTES — French schooner, 2,679 | tons, Society Nouvelle d’Atmament, Nantes. SNIERES — Frenob schooner, not listed in Lioydes, The Admiralty announced these vessels captured: ST. THEODORE—4,992 tons, Brit- ish and Foreign Steamship Com- pany, London, tons; Mac. Kill Steamship Company, Glasgow Cables from Buenos Ayres, Rio de | Janeiro and Pernambuco, gave in addition to the above the following ships as having been sunk by the raider: DRINA — 11,483 tons; Royal Mall Steam Packet Co., Belfast SAMARA—6,007 tona; Cle de Sud Amerique, Bordeaux, ORTHGA—6,075 tons; Pacific Steam Navigation Co., Liverpool. HAMMERSHUS—3,931 tons; Damp- skills Selsk Danneborg, Copen- hagen | NEWPORT LAND—Not Lloyd's register. BAN GIORGIO—Three vessels of this © are sted in Lioyd’s, but the only one of transatlantic size ia a ton vessel, the property of Soctota di Navigazione a Vapore Americana, of Messina, listed in listed in Lioyd's ~Not listed = in y ST. SAEL~Not listed in Lioyd'a register, SNOWDON GRANGE-Not listed in Lioyd'a register. GAILIY—Not Nsted in register. The Buenos Ayres cablén men- tioned the Semple, probably a mis- spelling for Mount Temple men- tloned in the British Admiralty statement; the Yanondale, undoubt- edly meaning Yarrowdale, mentioned } in the Admiralty statement; the Bt. Hlodoy St Thi ment, and detailed @ report from the steamer Hetherby about a loss of life, Undoubtedly Helherby is a misspell- ing for Netherby Hall, possibly con- fused In wireless, which the Admir- ality statement mentioned, mene NEW RAIDER RIVALS WORK OF THE MOEWE; OUTCLASSES EMDEN The achlevements of the new Ger- man raider fn sinking or capturing twenty-two ships rival the exploits of the ralder Moewe which, after cruising in the Atlantic for several MINIPH—Not listed in Lioyd's, but | weeks, returned safely to a German there is a MENEVIAN of 2, 29 tons, | port early in March of 1916. Accord- ing to an official announcement at the time she had on board 199 prison- ers and 1,000,000 marks in gold bars, and had sunk fifteen steamships in addition to laying mines which de- stroyed, among other vessels, the British battleship King Edward VIL Successful ralds alr» were made by was owned by the Liverpool, Brazil OT) + YL O© The following vital facts with regard to the adoer- tistng situation in the New York Sunday nevws- baper field are gathered from the printed report o The NEW YORK EVENING POST. the German jcruisers’ Emden and Karlsruhe, the converted merchant- In December, 1916 man Pring Eitel Friedrich and the — submarine U-53, which last October sank #ix merchantmen off Nantucket. The Emden, according to best estl- mates available, sank twenty-three merchant vessels, besides a Russian cruiser and a French destroyer, The Appam, now interned at New- port News, was one of fifteen prizes The Sunday World (1) printed 500,991 lines of paid advertising, which was a gain over December, 1915, of 125,602 lines. (2) This total lineage was 70,165 lines greater captured by the German raider | than that of The gmerican, 28,680 lines greater Metre. 4 " i Other jerman commerce raiders than The Times, and 129,852 lines greater than WhIGh Baa ‘guscesatil cdreiin” wore The Herald. i the Kronpring Wilhelm and the Prinz (3) THE WORLD'S gain was 56,355 lines greater ei dl a than the gain of The Herald; it was 77,472 lines Gates Ge Re oe aes greater than the gain of The American. the mystery of the Tinto, A number (4) IN AMUSEMENT ADVERTISING THE of weeks ago the Tinto was interned WORLD gained 50% over 1915. at Santiago, Chile. Later she w. (5) DRY GOODS ADVERTISING showed a gain permitted to leave, and it was re: od after ber depdyture that she | had carried a big cargo of supplies | of 47,056 lines, or about 32%. and met a German navy vessel on the | (6) FINANCIAL ADVERTISING increased Pateetadsthateemen CREATOR ELLTE nearly 600%. crew aboard her was sent back to Chile. The Chilean navy scoured the coast for the ves but without success, and Jatest reports were that a British | (7) And the foregoing cite only three widely di- versified lines of advertising. They are here men : crulsor, despatched from the Falk- tioned merely to point again to the fact that lands, had taken up the task of look- | r the ship. | is no Vinex (the latest name The Sunday World given far the German. raider) in | Lioyd’s Register, There is a Vindex, | Htatian, tons, 161 feet in length’ which was formerly the U (A) is the great home Sunday newspaper, and that it goes into homes with buying capacity and responsiveness to advertising appeal—hence the increase in Dry Goods Advertising. No and he- | <B) That its circulation is among people of some accumulated means-—hence the increase in Finan- cial Advertising. | (C) That it is read by people who allow them- selves and their families the luxuries and can like lead in the atom: that ortable, tw of tne stomach, fermenta the plan now When food ti " ‘ou have a. it & Brune, Two German ships named Vineta are registored—one of 682 tons and and the other 130 tons, 99 feet long, hailing from Danzig. + GERMAN EMBASSY SAYS PRIZE MAY BE BROUGHT INTO U. S. HARBOR WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.—German Embassy offictals believed It porsible that the steamer St, Theodore, re- ported to have beén captured by a German raider In the South Atlantic and sent away in charge of a prize formation concerning the operations of the ralder, it being sald that nen- trality regulations of the United States would prevent the receipt of a wireless message from the raider or the prige, even if one had been sent. peal | RAIDER REPORTED 1000 MILES SOUTH OF VIRGINIA CAPES NORFOLK, Jan, 17.—A German com- merce raider—presumably the one re- ported to have sunk a score of ves- sela in the South Atlantic—is oper- ating 1,000 mites south of the Virginia Capos, according to a warning flashed broadcast by allied warship#. Masters of all British ships are Warned not to proceed in the direction of the locality named. British consular officers here have received official no! ition to extend the warning to all allied vessels in Aerican ports. WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.-'The Brit- ish Admiralty is working out a plan for the convoying of Hritieh mer- |chantmen through Atlantic waters by fast crulsers and seagoing destroyers, The German raiders, it was said, Lioyd’s | can without much difficulty avoid the British patrol fleet by making the first part of their dash inside terri- torial waters of Denmark, where British warships cannot pursuo them, GALVESTON, Texas, Jan, 17. Rumors were current in shipping ctr- cles here this afternoon that the Swedish steamers Consul Corfitzon and Consul Olsson and the Norwe- glan steamer Asborg, all of which undoubtedly referring to the | sailed from this port in November, ‘hat B. odore of the Admiralty state. | have been sunk by the new German | raider. The Swedish steamers were bound for Havre with 20,000 bales of cot- ton, and the Norwegian vessel car- ried ten thousand bales for Genoa, eee AMERICANS ABOARD GEORGIC WHEN RAIDER SENT HER TO BOTTOM PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 17.—Several Americans were aboard the steam- fhip Georgie, one of the victims of the German raider. The vessel sailed from here Dec. 3 with a consignment of horses for Liverpool and Brent. She carried a crew of 114, most of them horsemen, Of these several who signed on thei are known to have been American: The horses were valued at $250,000, The King George sailed from Philadelphia on Noy, 24 and Wil- mington Nov, 29 for Manchester, Her Marine Insuran: on Report of Ratder's 1 News of the destruction of allied shipping in the South Ani trade by a German raider was fol- lowed by an advance in marine in- surance rates here to-day from two and a half to ten per cent. for West Indian and South American ports, Yacht Alvina, Suspected marine Chaser, Re! WASHINGTON, Jan, 1 steam yacht Alvina, York on Jan. 9 on suspicion of being destined to the Azores to become an allied submarine chaser, was ordered Seloased to-day by the State Depart- ment, The Alyina is listed as belonging to Thomas F. Cole of Duluth, as Sub- Watertown, N. ¥., Doctor Was a Passenger on the Geo WATERTOW, . ¥. Jan, Orville B, McKim of this city was a passenger on the Georgic, believed to mve been sunk by a German ralder Dr, McKim way 4 veterinary surgeon nd had been 4n charge of cargoe horses shipped to the allies dur war, Two Norwegian Steamships Sank. LONDON, Jan. 17.—Lloyds’ shipping agency announces that the Norwegian ateame! orter on Dec. 17 fr The Otta, of 3,238 t on Dec. 18° fi ax gross, m for’ Barry, he SP ORDWAY RESIGNS AS HEA OF CIVIL SERVICE BOARD | DRINK HOT WATER} pitain and advised Whitman to-day Announcing Retire- ment, Denies Report That FP, B. Lord Will Get Place. ALBANY, Jan, 17.—The resignat of Samuel H. Ordway of New York as Chairman of the State Civil Commission announced vice was by ¢ afford to do so—hence the increase in Theatrical ure, bisurated magnesia | Mt. Ordway's letter requesting that and Amusement Advertising. Te eae ae he be relteved of his duties wan sent to the #temach and the Governor Monday, In it the Com. + any Bhye van missioner said that when he accepted No Advertising Appeal nd“ fermentaugn, t€ appointment two years ago it was Rae ’ 8 en wi be as» with the understanding that he might , ah ead Romine: Mwaye tetowe it, retire after one year's service, but that to New York City Heitalion Bt the apemel Reoceda ch He et the feaueat pt the Rixsoutive he neg | gestion, People whd find it tne conknved in office, He said the work } ‘ B aaah fee ath at tines to secure hot water and tr of his department seriously interforec | is complete nor can it be said to be who are frequently obliges to tuke Dusty With hie law neectlee one interfered \ fully effective unless it includes Meee merce deetorany (ujuld always take — @ report that Franklin 33. Lord, the TOMTD caulete of Bisurated Governor's legal adviser, was to be Mr tavion and neutralize the acid in thetr Ordway's successor was denied by the tomach.=-Advt ( | No © ©O©' Twwn~ O@® Charge it for ‘The World may be left at District Messner olfice is the oly any America unt) 9 P, My | Saaeretadpbadniitenimeion: | Governor ey The Qainine That Does Not Affe, he of Iie toule wad laxative tect y the Meud Quinine ca seusiure ow bos, abe. & 180 feet long, hatling from Stettin, | crew, might goon appear in somo American port. |. The Embassy had no official in-| Solvang and Otta have been | % sunk, The of 2,840 tons gross, was | tt Inst reported as arriving at Leghorn t sailed BRIBERY CHARGED TO HEARST SERVICE + BY'A.P.’ ATTORNEY | ———— aay Submits Affidavits Evidence News Is Im- properly Obtained. sociated Press and the International News Service were heard by Judge A. N. Hand dn the United States District Court to-day on the return of the order to show cause why the Inter- national Service should not be en- joined pendente lite from “unlawfully appropriating Associated Presa news items and transmitting them to In- ternational News Service newspapers. Frederick B. Jennings of the law firm of Stetson, Jennings & Russell, appearing in behalf of the Associated Press, declared and submitted am. davits to support his contention that the International News is practising unfair competition in three ways that now jeopardize the existence of his client, Mr. Jennings enumerated the three methods as follows: Kiribery by the International ser- vice of Associated Press employees to furnish “tips” the defendant lof news items flashed by the Asso- 1 Press to its members, Copying of Morkrum machine (As- sociated Press news machines in its menybers’ offices) news items in news- paper offices where both the Asso- clated Press and News Services are enjoyed. Copying from the bulletin boards of Associated Press newspapers news items which the International then transmits to its clients, Concerning the bribery element, Mr. Jennings summarized aMdavits submitted to the Court which assert Cushing, telegraph editor to of the Press member, and his aesistant, C. J. Thomas, received $5 a week each for furnishing “tips” of Associated Press despatches to the Cleveland office of the International News Service, Cush- Jing and Thomas admit the contents of the affidavits, Mr. Jennings also quoted from an affidavit of Melville B, Stone, General CLOSING QUOTATIONS. With not changes from peerious closin; High, Loy | Alaska, Gold Aine, rp ‘Am. hoot Su gait 1 Am iat | Ama: 4% 40: | Am. fon fs” wey Am. iocomotive (Rt fay Tey — | Am! Smett: ; 05; 108 Sieel’ Fry... (Uli) 6Ohy ‘ioe =H us 2 \ 7 | 1 \x H faldwig 1 PERT ST EE ELS ee wrere Fe FE RS PREPTIESES TE CHICAGO WHEAT AND CORN MARKET, WilkaT | ITEMS FOR INVESTORS, | Standard Oil Company of Cal. r quarterly dividend of March 19 to stock record Reg- pea shortage on Jan, 1 to- gars compared With 114): | hit | tatte 89. 908 on Nov, Standard Oil Company of California vuthorl subject to the approval of wuthorities of the State 8. of Califor= 185 shares nin, a stock dividend of | of treasury et th Ko 88 1-3 pe ling ste issued’ on 7 to stockholders of record rate of one-third of @ share share of stock, Fractional 4) proportion. cent. of outsta Crucible Steel Company declared a dividend of 2. per cent. on preferred stock on account of back’ dividends, payable Feb. ‘ the International and News, an Assoctated | Manager of the Aum ted. in. closing a letter written Farts, New York manager of the In- ‘ternational concern, to the Cleveland manager, F, H. Ward, showing that the predecessor of Ward, F. new, In the international office at Cleveland, had arrangements with the Cleveland News men to obtain Asso- clated Press news despatches, These despatches were then, Mr. Jennings told the Court, distributed to the In- ternational’s clients—about 600 news- papers, jin onlin the copying of news from the Morkrum machines Mr. Stetson specified instances all con- of the New York American which is situated in the same bullding and one floor above the New York dffices of the International News Service, Kdi- tors of the International News Ser- vice, which Mr, Jennings referred to news items from the Morkrum ma- chines, the service of which the American enjoys because of its mem- bership in the fatal = Press, These news items, he said, were then transmitted to the International's | clients, In reference to the copying of news from bulletin boards, Judge Hand in- terrupted Mr. Jennings to say that the Court could not see how any body could be prevented from copying news, once itis displayed on a bulletin doa Mr, Jennings admitted that it could be copied if not to be distribu- ted by an organized news agency to its clients without investigating the fo stated. Prior to this Mr. Jennings had ex- plained that in 19156 the Associated Press had expended about $3,500,000 in gathering and distributing news from all parts of the world to its mem- bers, and urged that it was not fair that the International New sServ it pra to furnish this ne 8 to clients. HEART 10 “OLIVER” (Continued From First Page.) had handed to James W. Os- rae, | @. What was said to you? A. Mr. Haskins said “Let's settle this now. wn to Mr. Osborne's office I told him I didn’t want to settle it; I had a ltwyer, Although ‘this was the end of the answer, the wi explanation. “I didn't newspaper notoriety and want to settle"—— “LT object Mr. Rand promptly ex- jclaimed and the witness cut her sen- | tence sho-t, Q. What else was said to you? A. Mr. Haskins said: "You sent let- ters to James W. Osborne?” I re- plied that I had and I wanted to know why he hadn't answered them. Explaining subsequent events, Rac Tanzer said the two visitors walked with her from her work place, “I couldn't get rid of them. They went to the subway with me," she con- tinued. want the I When the witness was asked what had been Mr. Osborne's demeanor toward her during thelr relationship, she answered, “lle was very gentle sometimes and other times very grutt.” Q. You saw James W. Osborne at the first Safford trial, didn't you? A. Yes, it the first time 1 had seen him went away, atte recognized him by his face, voice and walk. Q. Did you ever go out anywhere with this man (indicating the half- smiling Wax)? A. no, never, never. Q. Did you ever hear Mr, Osvorne speak of Ethel Curtis?) A. Yes, I heard the name Curtis several times, sald he had given her money and everything, but once when he came back from Washington he found she spending friend and he more for her. This closed the direct examination of Rae Tanzer and In opening his cross- questioning Mr. Rand took up at once the Curtis matter. Mrs, Curtis was a telegraph operator in the Hotel Im- perial, Q. Did you ever mention the name Curtis till you saw a book with the name in it during the first Safford trial? A, I didn't—1 don't remember whether I did or not. Mr, Rand called the witness's atten- tion to an examination she had under- Di it on an actor hadn't done anything gone in the t Attorney's oftice on Mareh 29, 1915 Q. Did you not say at this time that once when you had met Osborne he had spoken of a girl named Ethel, to whom he'd been very nice and wanted to marry? A. Well, yes, Q. And isn't it a fact that you didn't hear the name Curtis at that time? A. I said just now I had heard the name Curtis, Q. You're under indictment for per jury, aren't you? A, Yes; three times, The witness refused positively to admit that she'd be giving evidence of perjury in holding fast to her identification of Mr, Osborne, iz DECLARES SHE LOST HER HEART, IN TEN MINUTES, Q. There's no probability of doubt} In youp identification? A, Not a bit of It. Every time the witness desired to be positive she raised her voice and bent forward toward the Jury, The meeting of Rac Tanger with the Osborne of her short romance was the next point taken up by Mr. Rand. She told of the meeting near the Bif ty-ninth St and Columbus Clre entrance to Central Park on Oct? 17,| 1914, when she was twenty-three years old, Q. Did he smile A I smiled at him, Q, What did you do? A. We went sat on a bench We only sat there at you? into the park and near the entrance, ten minutes. | Q. Were you In love with this man at first sight? A. There must have been something fascinating about him. Do you mean you fi ell in love “Paris in New York” Cafe des TIS eaux. | 80 W. 40th St. LOUIS HUSTANUM Bole Owens” ry bench with Kim for ten minutes’ . Ag- Idi teally no cost, should be permitted | RAETANZERLOST = IN TEN MINUTES: ss went on with an| didn’t | AGAIN DENIES THAT SHE EVER|t MET WAX. No} with hii eitting on & <4 I was fascinated, not in love, I think. Q. Did you lose your heart to James Y. Osborne in ten minutes? A, Yes, Did he embrace and kiss you when he went to your home in the Bronx? A. Yes, he did, Q. And he so fascinated you that You agreed to marry him? A. Yes. Q. That was after he had spen’ hour in your home? A. Yes. Just then James W, Osborne en- tered the courtroom, You say your Mr. Osborne never wore glasses at any time—even when AS tained in his aMdavits, in’ the cMee Otdering dinner or looking up trains in the Plainfield time table? A. No, never. Mr. Rand asked the witness to name the various dates on which she was| sure she had mot James W. Osborne. She gave Oct. 17, 1914, as the date of Argument counsel for the As- as the Hearst News Service, he said their tooting: Oct. 18 as that of the ni hh visited the editors of the American, ‘iP to Plainfield; Oct. 24 am the day | general denials unless there is @ eat~ owned by W. R. Hearst, and copied Of the bail game and subsequent visit | to the Knickerbocker Hotel in Third Avenue, and March 19, 1915. “I remember that last day!" she screamed, “That's the day you ar- rested me for using the mails to de- fraud—and you've never tried me for that, have you?” Miss Tanzer’s voice broke and she began to sob, “I can't stand this any longer!" The court ordered all this stricken from the record, During the course of the first Saf- ford trial, according to the witness, she had been very careless about her statements of dates on which she} swore she had seen James W. Osborne, Q. Yet that was the trial in which you identified Mr. Osborne as the man who had ruined you? A. Yes, I didn’t think dates made any differ- nee. I wouldn't have given them if I'd known I was going to be Indicted JUST GUESSED AT TIMES SHE MET “OLIVER.” Rand read from the transertpt of the first Safford trial the dates on which Rae Tanger swore she had been with James W. Osborne and she sald she was “just guessing’ when she gave them, as she had been told by a representative of the Dis- trict Attorney that “it would be a right.” A number of the de the witness stated to-day, had ‘been suggested to her* by Roger B. Wood, then Assistant United States Attorney. The next mfnute she withdrew this statement At this juncture Wax was called from his seat in the rear of the room to take the chair directly before Miss Tanzer, which Mr. Rand had hitherto occupied, the left side of his face to the witness, No sooner was he seated than Mr. ade called upon Mr, Osborne to take a chair beside Wax, Mr. Rand tested and the Court upheld, saying, | “I don’t want you up here; go back to your seat, Mr, Osborn And another ineldent was closed. < Q. You have testified James W Osborne was big, broad-shouldered, well set, bald on the top of the head, and that he had blue eyes? A. Y but I was guessing about the ey 1 thought they were blue. James W. Osborne's eyes are hazel brown, Turning to the minutes of a previous inquiry Mr. Rand read Rae Tanzer's recantation of her accusa- and she admit- ted hy was not the man" and n honest mis- take.” iJ Q. Although you made those state- ments at the United States District Attorney's office, do you now say they are untruthful? A. I won't say Q. Didn't you tell Commissioner Houghton that you'd made an hon- est mistake? A. [ didn’t even make a mistake. Q. You say now it's untrue that at this hearing you felt any doubt of the identity of your lover? A. I won't say it's true or untrue, I said what 1 was told to say. “LEAK” COMMITTEE SEEKS THE AID OF (Continued From First Page.) him to go on some fishing excursion like, this." Representative Moore suggested that Untermyer recently accompanted Secretary McAdoo on an official trip to South Amegica, and “has the con- fidence of the Administration.” Representative Focht of Pennsyl- vania branded the whole tion as the most “colossal farce ever imposed on any legistative body in | the world. This so-called leak,” sald Focht, “What leak? I understand the leak was that the President of the United States was in favor of peace, How absurd to any one who knows the roosters of Wall Street. Did not the President early in De- comber, in this very chamber, de clare that the country might be In- volved in war within a week? the market then? No, sed to break, investiga- break ANUT CARAMEL lan! kan ilne CHOCOLATES-~ stylen und flavors wit Find tan] outside of Wall Street made’ money market broaks only when the country suckers are on board 1 len convinced that this matter is a fake land a farce, and that we ought | wash our hands of the whole affair and throw out the evidence as worth- | teas and dahiaged goods, not only be- | cause Lawson is a Wall Street tout and counterfel', but because people on the break, and Wall Street never lets anybody outside make any money, }if it can help it.” Representative Lenrbot of Wiscon- sin, referring to “names of certain men involved,” said: “Presumably }these men will testify that they are labsolutely innocent and presumably ? that is the fact, but the country is [not going to be satisfled with any. _ is factory cross examination to di out guilt if there be guilt and if there is no guilt so far to support that fact by corroborative evidence.” He said there had not been the slightest suggestion from any mem- ber of the committee that Untermyer be chosen, Although declining to object, Rep- resentative Cooper, Republican, of Wisconsin, criticised the inquiry to date. “Thus far," ho said, “the re~ | sults haye only confirmed the belief | throughout the pation that there is no fine sense of honor in public life This inquiry has degenerated into a partisan struggle. Representative Emerson, Ohio, ine troduced a resolution for investigas |tlon of the New York Stock Exchange |by four Representatives, equally di |vided as to politics, and authorizing: |them to report legislation “to prevent. (frauds. A $50,000 appropriation ts \asked | LL ———————————e “LEAVING THE DOOR OPEN” At Home as Well as Abroad. | It is a common fault among men and women of higher education to: give time and thought to small matters. of no real importance while some- thing that affects their future welfare and probably existence itself goes | begging for attention. | SKILFUL LAWYER Special for To-Morrow, Thursday, Jan. 18th. S——Just One only has to attend a theatre of an evening to realize the truth of this statement. In all probability one-half lof the audience will be coughing. | A cough is in many cases the fores runner of the Grippe and should never be neglected, especially this time when the entire Atlantic Coast is feel- ing the effects of the epidemic. he following suggestion has prover: ve when tried on stdbborm coughs or colds that do not respond to usual treatment. Procure from any reliable druggist Johann Hoff's Malt Extract and take - ‘steaming hot sweetened with sugar \three times a day and mgien retii | Quick relief usually folloWs this t ment. % ‘or those convalescing from the Grippe, Johann Hoff's Malt taken cold with meals will assist greatly in re- | storing lost flesh and vitality.—Advt, For a choice selection in a good, reliable make of pianos, visit THB Little Piano Shop Around the Corner 753 Sixth Avenue between 42d and 434 Stree! u will find legitimate and bargains in slightly used of celebrated makes at «i terms that will surprise you. Steinway Baby Grand, Sohe) mer Upright, Knabe Upright, and many others. Pathe, Edison and Columbia PHONOGRAPHS ON BASY PAYMENTS, Special Sule of 88 Note Music Rolls and Vhonegraph Records Tits Week, CHRISTMAN SONS Also 35 W. 14th St, bet. 5 & G Aves, where reliable pianos prices ol1Eeo. 1917, GEORGE rT, years old. aka Rennett: two ehite dren, @ brother and sister survive him, Funeral sevvices Thursday morning at his Inte residence, 590K, L97th MARCHAND.—Sudden | 18, 1917, CHARLES MARCHAND, hin home at Sea Gate, New York Hai Ho waa a chemist widely known | to (he medical fraternity and public } through the country particularly of @ method of through hia discovery q ig hydrogen peroxide and tn ite tlon for medical and commer- | pervices will be held Thure- * ed iinwediately for two etjol "a, no ewitehvoand, twa low ra and hot water a enh ton, g. Yure Open y sauares of ex row bil out h Curae “apy fine ‘aenort= Chopped Became and x dackes for enveloped in a cloak of owe U } | uy WY segues e celled Premium Milk Choc= ; late, A di ith 54 ’ POusS iox 3 Cc peers MO TS BOS c } $4 BARCLAY STREET 1208, BROADWAY. Cho 6 300m) 1A pom Clones 7 p.m i Bi tp. { 20°CORTLANDT STREET iEAST 420 STREET } > Dali Clowes 12 0_m. Daily, i RK RoWdiAseay 87, 266 WEST 125TH stheer i \ AL ; Bat.11. 80: be 7 Sat lon m. ' 463" gRBOK e STREET * ST 34TH STRE {> { Cloves T p.m. Sat_10 eC) n, ; $8 EAST 23D STR e 430 AVE. fel? 10 p. Datiy. we Closes 1). 400,.m) Batt 472 FUUTTON 87. BKLYN 187 MARKET ST. D104 20-p.'m. Daily . Cloves V1Ap.mn.” Rat Spee dae BROADWAY, Brooklyn, Closes 11.30 R, M.—Saturday 12 P.M. ‘The specified weight includes the container. Ca Sy ama