OCR Text |
Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS, SPANISH FORK, UTAH - I HAS ON BOARD THE CREW8 OF FIVE VESSELS AND LOOKING I FOR MORE. ' Look and Feel ANOTHER MYSTERY Clean, Sweet and Fresh Every Daj S. AND DE ADMITTED THAT SITUATION GRAVE, BUT NOT AT ALL DANGEROUS. Drink a glass of real hot water before breakfaet to wash out poieone. s CANNOT BE AN OSWITH HEAD IN THE SAND, DECLARES PRESIDENT. AMERICA IS TRICH f Steamer Given t Up for Lott 8allt Into Hampton Roads In Charge of Ger. man Crew, Crossing Ocean Through British Fleet. Norfolk, Va. Given up for lost days ego, the British passenger liner Appam, plying In the West African trade, sailed like an apparition In Hampton Roads 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 iMoewo, 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 Llteutenant Ilans Berge, of the German naval reserve, and men In charge. itwenty-twThe Appam now lies off Old Folnt Comfort, under the guns of Fortress Nonroe, 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 north of the Madeira Islands. On board the Moewe then were the crews of five vessels previously captured, all of whom 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 ehe engaged In battle an Australian trader, the Clan McTavlsh, which she sank after (an exciting combat with a loss of fifteen men killed on the Clan Tavlsh. The Appam, which was ten miles away at the time In charge of the prize crew, steamed hurriedly back to the scene and rescued four 'members of the crew of the sinking . cian MsTavls giggling la the .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 Jieard of the raider since, and the Appam steamed across the ocean on an uneventful voyage, reaching the Virginia capes at 6:43 Tuesday morning. On board the Appam all told are 452 persons, the prize crew of 23; twenty German civilians who are on their way to England for Internment. 138 seamen captured with the British hips; 116 passengers on the Appam and the Appama crew of 155. " o Secretary Lansing and Condemns Advocates of War as Well as Peace at Any Price Theorist In Dea Moines Address and Country; la for Peace. Ambassador live 'well, eat well, digest well WaI well, sleep well, look well. glorious condition to attain, and how very easy it Is If one will adopt the morning Inside bath. f Des Moines, la. President Wilson, Folks who are accustomed to speaking here Tuesday night,- dealt dull and heavy when they arise, with the futility of messages and ting headache, stuffy from a cold, L words of protest to meet breaches of tongue, nasty breath, acid stomas international law. can. Instead, feel as fresh as a dS "Do you want the situation to he by opening the sluices of such that all the president can do Is each morning and flushingthe.ayat" out ' to write messages and utter words of whole of the Internal poisonous it protest?" he asked, In advocating nant matter. Von Bernstorff Said to Have Agreed Upon Minimum Terms In Set- De-clar- et tlement of Controversy. New York There will be no break ;between the United States and the German government over the Lusitania case. "Secretary Lansing and Ambassador von Bernstorff have agreed upon final terms of settlement of the Lusitania controversy. They are the minimum terms acceptable to the United States. Ambassador von Bernstorff has cabled them to Berlin. I have no doubt the German government will agree to them." This statement was made In this city Monday by an official close to the German embassy. "This talk of a crisis," continued he official, "Is all conjecture on the part of the newspapers. I cannot divulge the exact terms agreed upon by Mr, Lansing and Count von Bernstorff. They must remain confidential for the (Copyright) present." Count von Bernstorff, the German DECLARES COUNTRY MUST BE ambassador, paid a flying visit to this PREPARED TO DEFEND ITSELF AND BE PREPARED AT ONCE. olty Monday and returned the same night. The ambassador expressed his confidence in an amicable adjustment In Forceful Plea at Cleveland, Presof the present controversy between ident Wilton No Man Knows Say his government and the United States. What Single Day May Bring Forth to the Country. Will Speak Against Defense. Washington. Former Secretary of State Bryan will take the stump In Cleveland, O. President Wilson, the middle west against President speaking as he said, "solemnly, Wilsons preparedness program. Rep- warned the nation Saturday night resentative .Warren Worth Bailey of that the time may come when he can Pennsylvania, one of the leaders of not both) keep the United States out fac- of war and maintain its honor, and the Democratic tion In the house announced that declared that the country must be plans had been made to send a group prepared to defend Itself and be preof speakers, headed by Mr. Bry&n, pared at once. "America Is not afraid of anybody," through the country to oppose preparhe said. "I know I reflect your feeledness. 'a ing and the feeling of all our citizens when I say that the only thing I am Another Raid on England. London. The war office officially afraid of is not being ready to perannounces that a Zeppelin raid was form my duty. I am afraid of the made Monday night by six or seven danger of shame. 1 am afraid of the air ships over the eastern and north- danger of inadequacy. I am afraid of eastern midland country. A number the danger of not being able to exof bombs were dropped, but no lives press the correct character of this country with tremendous might-an- d lost effectiveness whenever we are called " Reed Attack upon to act In the field of the worlds Roosevelt affairs." Ml t o Reed Washington. Senator The president spoke in Cleveland sourl, In a speech In the senate Monwltli more gravity and force than he for day, attacked Coloiyl Roosevelt tils attitude toward the Wilson ad- has shown during an f of his previous and praised the presi- addresses on preparedness. ministration Again and again the president dent's conduct of foreign affairs durof the nations honor. He despoke war. the ing European clared the real man believes his honor is dearer than his life, and a Mongolian Rebels Increase. ' London The number of Mongolian nations honor Is dearer than its peace and comfort He said It had insurgents baa been Increased by according to a Mukden dispatch, been difficult to keep the United rays Reuter's Petrograd correspond- States ou of the war and he felt he ent. The dispatch adds that the In- had proved he was a man of peace surgents, who possess twelve guns, when possible. For the first time during his presare marching toward Pekin, ent tour the president spoke of the Mann Charges Extravagance. navy and the coast defenses. The he said, are good In quality, latter, ' Washington. Republican Leader not but in quantity. In Tueshouse on the Mann, speaking day on the urgent deficiency bill, arU. 8. READY FOR WAR. t 20.-00- 0, raigned the agricultural department officials and others for what he declared was an "almost startling' extravagance la use of public funds for 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, 68 to 14, a proposal of Senator Norris to eliminate from the Philippine bill a provision for retention of a base In the islands. Victory, for Oil Men. Cheyenne, Wyo. The federal government is without right to oust from 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 dectslon by Judge T. A. Rlner, In the federal district court for Wyo- ming. Successful Raid of Airships. Berlin. The German admiralty's 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 returned In safety. , 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. i Italian Loan 8ueceieful. Rome. The aubscrtptlona 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 February 10. I Drop Bombs on 8alonlkl. London. A Zeppelin dropped bombs on fialonikl Monday night, scrordinr to a Reuter dispatch from that town destroying a Greek warehouse conti I.: 'fig sugar, coffee and oil. No mill ry damage was done. r Thomas B. Holmoe was the sol of the party of American mining men who were maaeeered by outlaws near Santa Ysabel, Chihuahua, while en route to the mine. He Is a son of Judge L. W, Holmoe of Ksene, N. H., and a raduats of the Massachusetts Inatl-u- t of Technology. aun-vlvo- VII-lle- ta lo Murdered by Highwaymen. N. Y. Two persons were murdered, another probably fatally Injured and a fourth severely beaten on the up In an automobile hold-uOrchard park road near this city ear ly Monduy. Buffalo, Drop Bombs on Paris. The Navy Ready at Any Tima, Says President Wilaon. Chicago. President Wilson Monday night solemnly warned 6.000 men and women In the Auditorium that "no man can competently aay whether the United States will be drawn Into the war." "The navy Is ready at any time to go into war," the president said. "It la efficient, though Inadequate." The vast hall was as quiet as a death chamber when he made the dramatic statement The president later stirred the assemblage to vigorous applause by declaring that "this war waa brought on by rulers, and not by the people." The applause lasted for several seconds, When it subsided the president continued vigorously: "And I thank God there is no man In America who can bring war on without the consent of the people." This stirred the crowd to vigorous applause. It was the presidents fifth speech of the day. He had Journeyed from Cleveland to Milwaukee and back to Chicago since midnight Sunday night, but he did not show the effects of his He was, if anything, arduous day. more vigorous in his deliverer than ever. He seemed inspired by bis big audience. Zeppelin Raid on Paris. Paris A Zeppelin dirigible passed swiftly over a section of Paris Saturday night, dropping about a dozen great bomba which killed 24 persons and Injured 27. Of the latter, ten are In hospitals. Many Firemen Overcome. Detroit, Mich. More than 100 firemen were overcome by smoke and gas fumes Friday while fighting the most stubborn blaze Detroit has had in fifteen years. The loss will reach $200,000. Colorado Murderer Hanged. Canon City, Colo. George Quinn ped by the Zeppelin which flew over was hanged at the state penitentiary the outskirts of Paris Monday night, Friday for the murder of William R. but they produced no auch deadly ef- Ilarbertaon, In Denver, October 24, fect as on (he occasion of the raid of 1914, following a quarrel over Mrs. Herbert so a. Saturday night Pari. Several bomba were drop- J J - WALL OF WATER THIRTY FEETT HIGH RUSHES DOWN VALLEY CARRYING ALL BEFORE IT. Warning of Impending Disaster Had Been Given Residents, But Few Heeding It, Preferring to Stay by Their Homes. San Diego. Reports received Sunvalleys of San day from Diego county showed that a total of thirty-fou- r bodies had been recovered, and raised estimates of the total death toll to sixty-fivThree thousand persons were homeless and there was much suffering despite heroic relief work. Reported breaking of the Cuyamaca dam, releasing three billion gallons of water, eighty miles northeast of here, and fear that other dams in territory already partly flooded might go out under the enormous pressure of their mountain waters, added further gloom to the flood situation. United States marines and sailors flood-ravage- d e. continiifed to search for victims and to check widespread looting. Many ttpdles, It Is believed, were carried out to sea. Many met death and the property loss was appalling when on Friday the lower dam of the San Diego water system in the Otay valley, south of here, broke under the heavy pressure of the flood, waters. A wall of water thirty feet high waa released. Sweeping down the valley, the great flood water carried people, livestock and valuable farm property to deHouses on twenty-fiv- e struction. ranches were Bwept away. The heavy rains had filled the lower Otay dam for the first time In preparedness before the largest audience of his present trip. "Why, to ask that question Is to answer it," he said. "Whenever International law Is violated by one or the other belligerents, the president said, "America was called upon to register a 'voice of protest, of Insistence. There are actually men In America who are preaohlng war, the president declared; men who want the United States to have entangling alliances abroad. He said he dldi 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 any price, he said, while men In the audience called Never, never." He said these men did not know the circumstances of the world. "America cannot he an ostrich with its head In the sand," he said. Tb presidents address was punctuated with thunderous applause. He spoke slowly and gravely, with emphatic gestures to enforce his words. 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 this task has been! But my heart has been in it I have not grudged a single burden that has been placed upon me with that end In view. For I know that not only my own heart but the heart of all America was in the cause of peace. 4 self-respe- dlf-fleu- g 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 tomorrow as today. Speaking bright its history. of the Railway Business at banquets Unable longer to withstand the terassociation and the Motion Picture dam of the the water, rific weight Board of Trade, he sounded the keygave way, releasing a flood of water. note of addresses that he will deliver of the impending danger in the middle west Warnings of the break had been given to the Mr. Wilson was in a fighting mood people In the valley, but few heeded his address. In a speech throughout It was said, choosing to stay them, and endeavor to protect their prop- delivered early in the day he declared he always accepted an invitation to erty. fight At night he told the railway LOUIS D. BRANDEIS men he was an advocate of peace and had struggled to keep the United States at peace, but he considered the liberty and honor of tbe nation even more Important than peace. "Woe to any man who plays marplot or who seeks to make party, poambition or litical perconal over take candor, precedence 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 Is 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 , Everyone, whether ailing, ic t well, should, each morning, befon breakfast, drink a glass of real k water with a teaspoonful of llmeito phosphate in it to wash from tb stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels tk previous days Indigestible waste, tog bile and poisonous toxins; thus clean ing, sweetening and purifying the a tire alimentary tract before putt! more food into the stomach. Tht tlon of hot water and llmeetonepi phate oa an empty stomach is wood fully Invigorating, It cleans out alltli sour fermentations, gases, waste ui acidity and gives one a splendid petite for breakfast While you in enjoying your breakfast the water phosphate is quietly extracting a larp volume of water from the blood ui getting ready for a thorough flush! of all the Inside organs. The millions of people who are both ered with constipation, bilious spelh stomach trouble, rheumatism; othen who have sallow skins, blood dlw ders and sickly complexions are urj to get a quarter pound of. llmeston phosphate from any store that handle drugs which will cost very little, bz Is sufficient to make anyone a pr nounced crank on the subject of b ternal sanitation. Adv. , and ,r LIKED CHRISTMAS IN A JW " Colored Man Could See No Reaici Why He Should Be Deprived of f Hi "Chlce." "The officer tells me he found pi in an alley off Decatur street, askq and under the influence of stro drink. This Jug was at your'ildi Have you anything to sayT" Judge Broyles glanced over severe!! at the short, thick-se- t negro; ut paused. "Christmas, Jedge, was the reply. I "But you had been drinking, Sam "Christmas, Jedge. Yes yeB I know but that Is v way to celebrate." f The negro grinned. Dats er mattah ob chlco, Jedge, he observed. "Some likes ter put ha nles on trees, an some likes ter met die roun' in hot mince pies, an sons sort ob favors lovin' under de mlsale toes, but me Jedge my Idear ot Christmas comes in de Jug. Yo cals', blame me fer havin a chlce, kin yuf Case and Comment. f . Jealous. "What s beautiful complexion Mn I Blank has tonight" "Yes; Ive noticed that, too. I wot der what druggist she Is patronlztol now." t diet of oranges will clear mudi and reduce auperabuni i ant curves. A complexions COFFEE WAS IT. People Slowly Learn the Facts. ! j "All my life I have been a slave coffee. 1 kept gradually losing health, but I used to say nonsense, I dont hurt me. "Slowly I was forced to admit S' truth aud the final result was that f nervous force was shattered. "My heart became weak and unc tain In Its action and that frighted me. Then my physician told me tW public confidence. I must stop drinking coffee or I cotf "For my part, 1 hope every man In never expect to be well again. publlo life will get whats coming to "I thought of Postum but cow him, said Mr. Wilson, amid laughter hardly bring myself to give up l and applause. coffee. I The president admitted that In a "Finally I concluded that I owed I F message to the last congress he had to myself to give Postum a trial. said the need for preparedness was a package and carefully followed t not pressing He declared that he directions, and what a delicious, no had learned differently In the meanIshlng, rich drink It was! Do F time. lie cited his recent support of know, I found it very easy to a tariff commission as another In- from coffee to Postum. stance of a change on hla part, but de"Almost Immediately after I clared there previously was no need the change 1 found myself better, F for a commission. as the days went by I kept on Imp'' Mr. Wilson spoke of men of high ing. My nerves grew steady, I character, who were clouding the pre- well and felt strong and paredness issue. He declared they Now the old nervousness la gone F were provincial, and that the United I am well once more. by President Wilton for the' place on States could no longer cut Itself off It pays to give up the drink u the euprema bench made vacant by from the reRt of the world. acts on some like a poison, for betf the death of Justice Lamar. Is the greatest fortune one can bF Arizona Lead Stockmen. Name given by Postum Co., Splinter Blind Austrians, B. Heard Creek, Mich. El Paso, Texas.-Dw- ight London. There were 70.000' Ausof Phoenix, Arls., was Postum comes In two forms: trians blinded within six months by of the American Livestock Postum Cereal the original for president rock splinters caused by high exploassociation at the concluding session must be well boiled. 16c and 25c Pcl sives In battles on the Italian Isonzo of the nineteenth annual convention. ages, front, according to tbe Balkan corre- All present officers were Instant Postum a soluble powder, spondent of thq Dally Mall. dissolves quickly In a cup of hot F Pay on 8pace Plan. ter, and, with cream and sugar, ms Recover Three Bodlei, for railway mall s delicious bsversge Instantly. SOcF Washington. Pay Texas. Use of Brownsville, dynaon a basis of spare 60a tins. mite Sunday resulted In the recovery transportation of by weight, Is Instead measurement, Both kinds srs equally doltdoui F of the bodlm of three soldiers drowr-e- d In the $323,000,000 postoffice provided cost about the same per cup. In the Rio Grande January 28 at appropriation bill, approved by the There's a Reason" for Postum. thirty-fivmiles Texas, Progresso, house postal committee. sold by Groce west of Brownsville, well-balanc- e |