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Show ' - CAPITOL AT VASHIHGTOn AFTER MUST BE ABLE ID SNOWSTORM Look lie! and Feel Clean, Sweet and Fresh Every.Day AMERICA HAS ON BOARD THE CREWS OP FIVE VESSELS AND LOOKING FOR MORE. 1 SAND, man V v o water. Later, under orders from the commander of the raider. Lieutenant Berge headed his prize for an American port and parted company with the Moewe, Nothing has been seen or heard of the raider alnce, and the Appam steamed across the ocean on an uneventful voyage, reaching the Virginia capes at 5:43 Tuesday morning. On board the Appam all told are 455 persons, the, prise crew of 23; twenty German civilian who are on their way to England for Internment. 138 seamen captured with the British hips; il6 passengers on the Appam and the Appama crew of 155. 0 EKsmiocmim This Is how tho capitol building at Washington RUSSIAN MOVABLE looked the other day after a heavy fall of snow. SHIELD TAKE N BY GERMANS self-respec- This movable shield, behind which a squad of men could And shelter while pumping a rain of shells Into the enemy. Is one of many being used by the Germans. It la the invention of the Russians, who made use of it when the Germans were laying siege to the Russian fortress at Grodnow. The apparatus is equipped with six wheels. Two horses are harnessed to It In order to bring It Into position. armor-protecte- d TOWER OF BISCUITS FOR BRITISH NICHOLAS RIABOUCHINSKY r Mann Charges Extravagance. Leader Republican Washington. Tueson In house the Mann, speaking arbill, on deficiency the urgent day raigned the agricultural department traveling expenses. Naval Base In Philippines. Washington. A strong sentiment In favor of retaining a naval station and coaling base In the Philippines, whatever disposition may be made of them, was manifested in the senate Tuesday when It rejected, 58 to 14, a proposal of senator Norris to eliminate from the Philippine bill a provision for retention of a base in the islands. W 1 & Wyo-tuln- I v - ft) I r I -- Grafting In Relief Work. Sant Diego, Cal. Grafting and extortion were reported here to have broken out in connection with the relief work for flood sufferers in the Otay valley. Oil) The biscuit of the British 'corrtsponds to the hard tack" of the United States. Immense quantities of this "stall of life are shipped regularly to 11 the war fronts. The picture shows some Tommies piling up boxes of SalonlkL at biscuits 1- f Italian Loan Successful. The subscriptions to the Italian war loan has reached the sum of two billion lire, although the lists have been open only since January 10. They will continue open until FebruRome. ary 10. . Drop Bombs on Salonlkl. London. A Zeppelin dropped bombs on Saloniki Monday night, acccrd.nf to a Reuter dispatch from that town destroying a Greek warehouse contain g stfgarr coff eeand -- ottr NowirH damage was done. 'sj New York. President Wilson on Thursday night opened his personal appeal to the country for national defense. He gave warning that plans for the readjustment of the army must be formulated and carried out without delay, and solemnly declared he could not predict that the outlook for the United .States would be as bright tomorrow as today, Speaking at banquets of the Railway Business association and the Motion Picture Board of Trade, he sounded the keynote of addresses that he will deliver take Victory for Oil Msn. Cheyenne, Wyo. The federal government is w tthout right to oust from Successful Raid of Airships. Berlin. The German admiraltys reports In the Zeppelin raid of England eay that Incendiary bombs were dropped on and near Liverpool, Birkenhead, Manchester, Nottingham, Sheffield and Great Yarmouth. Violent fires occurred. All the airships eturned in safety. t' in the middle west. Mr. Wilson was In a fighting mood throughout his address. In a speech delivered early in the day he declared he always accepted an Invitation to fight At night he told the railway men' be was an advocate of peace and had struggled to keep the United States at peace, but he considered the liberty and honor of the nation even more important than peace. "Woe to any man who plays map-plo- t or who seeks to make party, political or ambition perconal officials and others for what he declared was an "almost startling" extravagance In use of public funds for oil lands concerns operating prior to a federal order of May 6, 1914, although such companies had not discovered oil at that time, according to a decision by Judge T. A. Riner, in the federal district court for - la President Wilson, night, dealt Tuesday here speaking and of messages with the futility of words of protest to meet breaches law. International "Do you want the situation to be such that all the president can do is to write messages and utter, words of protest?" he asked. In . advocating audipreparedness before the largest ence of his present trip. is to "Why, to ask that question said. answer it," he "Whenever international law Is violated by one or the other belligerents, the president Bald, "America was called upon to register a voice of protest, of insistence. There are actually men In America who are preaching war, the president declared; men who want the United States to have entangling alliances abroad. He said he did ,ont think they spoke the voice of America, which he declared to be for peace. He added that others go further than he, In advocating peace: "They preach the doctrine of peace at rfhy price," he said, while men In the He audience called "Never, never said these men did not know the circumstances of the world. America cannot be an ostrich with its head in the Band, he said. The presidents address was punctuated with thunderous applause. He spoke slowly and gravely, with emphatic gestures to enforce his wprds. United His declaration that the States wanted peace drew a response and his assertion that the of the nation must be preserved, elicited another great demonstration. The president declared he was trying to weigh carefully every word he said. He reiterated that he had been dally charged to keep the country out of war and also to uphold its honor. "The difficulty of keeping America at peace, he said, "during this titanic struggle across the sea, cannot be disclosed now; perhaps It never can be disclosed. How anxious and how difficult this task has been! But my heart has been in it. I have not grudged a single burden that hag been placed upon me with that end in view. For know that not only my own heart but the heart of all America was in the cause of peace. Des Moines, r anow from hla back. DEAD PLAYMATE fort to shake the A Chester short-lin- e trolley car killed his companion while the two With Paws on Body of Tramp Cur, were playing In the atreet He refused Faithful Friend Keapo a Long to leave the body, and when the trot and Cold Vigil. leymen removed It from the tracks he lay down beside It, with hla paws on When dawn came a curly black dog. the mangled body. Efforts to make a tramp, cur, was found crouched on the "tramp" leave, were fruitless. the cold roadway at Forty-seventThe long vigil was rudely disturbed atreet and Woodland avenue, Phila- by a garbage man In the morning. He delphia. with bis front paws on the took the dead animal away tn his cart, stiff body of another curly black dog. and the dog left behind followed for his dead playmate. several squares. He returned to the There the faithful dog had lain all Pennsylvania railroad freight yards, at atreet and Woodland night, through snow and wind, won- Forty-aevent- h have dering why there was no movement avenue, where the two dog months. six to for his their home made answer no and cold of the body harks. He moaned softly when he There he remained moaning because was pulled away, and he made no ef DOG GUARDS h orbisW Drink a glass of real hot water before breakfast to wash out poisons. 05-TRIC- THE WITH HEAD DECLARES PRESIDENT. IN Da-clar- Oesan Crossing Through British Float. Craw, Norfolk, Va. Given tip for lost tfaya ago, tho British passenger liner Appam, plying In tha West African 'trade, sailed like an apparition In plampton Hoads on Tuesday, flying the German naval ensign and with her ships company under guard of a German prize crew. . She brought word of a mysterious German commerce raider, the Moewe, which now roams the seas, and had on board the crews of seven British merchantmen and admiralty transports captured by the Moewe before ehe seized the Appam and started her across the Atlantic for an American port with Liteutenant Hans Berge, of the German naval reserve, and men In charge. twenty-twThe Appam now lies off Old Point Comfort, under the guns of Fortress Monroe, waiting for the state department at Washington to determine her status whether she Is a man of war subject to Internment or a German prize. According to the,story told with great reserve by Lieutenant Berge to Collector Hamilton, when he formally reported his presence in American territorial waters, the Moewe captured the Apam, bound from Dakar, French West Africa, for Liverpool, after a brief show of resistance on January 16, sixty miles horth of the Madeira islands. Oh board the Moewe then were the crews of five vessels previously captured, all of w horn were transferred to the Appam. From all reports, the raider Is a converted German merchantman with a large battery of guns of fairly large a false battery of guns of fairly large caliber. On January 17 she engaged in battle an Australian trader, the Clan McTaviBh, which she sank after , an exciting combat with a loss of fifteen men killed on the Clan McTaviBh. The Appam, which was ten miles awaf at the time In tharge of the prlxe crew, steamed hurriedly back to the scene and rescued four members of the crew of the sinking Clan McTavts struggling in the AN BE Wall Condemns Advocates of War as Theorists Price at Peace Any as In Dea Molnea Address and Country is for Peace. Steamer Given Up for Loot Sail Into Hampton Roads In Charge of Gar i CANNOT precedence over candor, honor and unselfish, unpartlsan said the president. In service, speaking of his defense plan before the railroad men. He declared that the country expects action; this la a year of accounting, and the accounting must be definite on the part of the parties and on the part of every individual who wishes to enjoy the public confidence. "For my part. 1 hope every man In public life will get whats coming to him, said Mr. Wilson, amid laughter and applause, The president admitted that in message to the last congress he had said the need for preparedness was not pressing He declared that he had learned differently In the meantime. He cited his recent support of a tariff commission aa another instance of a change on his part, hut declared there previously was no need for a commission. Mr. WUson spoke of men. of high character, who were clouding the preparedness Issue. He declared they were provincial, and that the United States "could no longer cut itself off from the rest of the world. Life Is not merely to live, but well, eat well, digest well, work well, sleep well,, look welL Whet a glorious condition to attain, and yet how very easy It Is If one will only adopt tho morning Inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, headache, stuffy from a cold foul tongue, nasty breath acid stomach, can. Instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by opening the sluices of the. system each morning and flushing out the whole of the Internal poisonous matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate In it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous days indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tract before putting more food intd the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all tha sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast While you are enjoying your breakfast the water and phosphate is quietly extracting a large volume of water from the blood and getting ready for a thorough flushing of all the inside organa The millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble, rheumatism; others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from any store that handles drugs which will cost very little, but Is sufficient to make anyone a pronounced crank on the subject of Internal sanltation-T-Adv- . Ilv split-tin- g star-ba- LIKED CHRISTMAS IN A JUG Colored Man Could See No Reason Why He Should Be Deprived of Hla Chico. The officer tells me he found you in an alley off Decatur street, asleep and under the influence of strong drink. This Jug was at your side. Have you anything to Bay? Judge Broyles glanced over severely at the short, thick-se- t negro, and paused. "Christmas, Jedge," was the reply. "But you had been drinking, Sam." Christmas, Jedge. Yes yes I know but that is no way to celebrate." The negro grinned. "Dats er mattah ob chlce, jedge, he observed. Some likes ter put on trees, an some likes ter meddle roun in hot mince pies, an' some , sort ob favors lovin' under de ob idear me but Jedge my Christmas comet in de Jug. Yo caint blame me fer havin a chiee, kin yu? Case and Comment fun-ni- mlsslo-toes- Jealous. What a beautiful complexion Mrs. Blank has tonight r Yes; Ive noticed that, too. I what druggist sho is patronizing won-de- now." A diet of oranges will clear muddy complexions and reduce superabund- ant curves. COFFEE WAS IT. People Slowly Learn Jthe Facts. life I have been slave to coffee. I kept gradually losing my it health, but I used to say nonsense, dont hurt me. the "Slowly I was forced to admit my that was truth and the final result shattered. was nervous force uncer My heart became weak and frightened that and tain in its action me. Then my physician told me th I must stop drinking coffee or I couia never expect to be well again. "I 'thought of Postum hut couia Ul hardly bring myself to giT Ail my coffee.' L owe H "Finally I concluded that I trlaL to myself to give Postum a a package and carefully followedno . directions, and what a delicious,Do was! Ishlng, rich drink It know, 1 found it very easy to from coffee to Postum. m I after Almost immediately imd the change I found myself better, on tap 1 went as the days by kept I tag. My nerves grew steady, well and felt strong tad the old nervousness Is gons . 1 am well once more." profits, says M. Riabouchlnsk. th It paye to give np the drink acts on some like a poison, for Cat Highly Intelligent. is the greatest fortune one can So far as Intelligence goss, psychoArizona Leads Stockmen. Name given by Postum Co logical experiments show that it la El Texas. B. Paso, Heard Creek, Mich. practically a dead heat between cats, of Phoenix, Arix.. Dwight was Postum comeg in two forms: dogs and monkeys. The dog has huPostum Cereal the original man morals, therefore people are apt president of the American Livestock association at the session he well boiled. 15 tad 25c P must concluding to assume that he has human logic. of the nineteenth annual convention. But the cat, say certain persons, tn All present officers were 'instant Postum a soluble sheer brains stands next to man. He dissolves quickly ta a cup of has the adaptive intelligence that Pay on Space Plan.' makes him equally at borne in parlor ter, and, with cream and ,ufar Washington. Pay for railway mail a delicious beverage Instantly- or wild woods, and gets him a living transportation on a basis of space 60c tins. anywhere. A cat. it is argued, can measurement, instead of by weight, is Both kinds are equally delicious think faster and take care of himself In provided the 323.000.000 postoffice cost about the eame per cup. under more different conditions than P PI? P.ria 1 ioU Jj.UL.ab pros Abe. U t ie ia 4 eL.,by man. other Theres a Reason for any gth gexeept house postal committee. sold by Grocer M. Nicholas Rlabouchlneky of Moscow, now In America as the representative of Russian capitalists who are making extensive preparations build munition factories in the land of the czar. Owing to the official prohibition of the sale of vodka, the sav tugs banka In Russia now contain the more equivalent of $1,500,000,000 money than ever before, and If American business men would extend credit to Russian business men, the people of Russia would return tremendous If 11 w Fwrr . |