THE WEATHER. 10 Pages Today ONE SECTION Local rains Friday or Friday night and probably Saturday. Colder Satur tiay, much colder interior. , II - ' I'll - A lX r-zr rta i -Ltctvx ...... jr. , n . 11 VUL. AO V 11 JW J. JLISt JT PRESIDENT W HIS APPEAL FOR jfe GIVES WARNING AGAINST DEL A Y Considers the Liberty and the Honor of the Country Even More Than Peace. NATION EXPECTS ACTION Ueclares Men Who are Cloud ing the Preparedness Issue Are Provincial. Also Defends Mexican Policy in Speech at Banquet. New York, Jan. 27. President Wilson tonight opened his person al appeal to the country for Na- tional 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 Pict ure Board of Trade, he sounded the keynote of addresses that he will deliver during the next ten days in the Middle "West. In Fighting Mood. ' 3Ir. Wilson was in a" fighting mood throughout his address. ,' In a speech delivered early in the day, he declared he always anticipate ftoHnvtteti0nvr$, fight. Tonight he . told ;' the,jraHroaDrta'in - behalf Of peace was. passed 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 the nation even more than peace. . , . "Woe to any man who plays marplot or who seeks to make party politics or personal ambition take precedence over candor, honor and unselfish, un partisan service," said the President, in speaking of his 'defense plan be fore th railroad men. He declar ed that the country expects ac tion; this is a year of accounting, .and the accounting must be definite on the part of parties and on the part of every individual who wishes to enjoy the public confidence. , ' - "For my part, I hope every man in public life will get what's ' coming to him," said Mr. "Wilson amid laughter and applause. The President at both banquets and all during his day's visit to New York, was greeted with enthusiasm. On his ride between the hotels where the banquets were held tonight, he was es corted by a band and the Ninth com mand of coast artillery of the New York National Guard. Thousands of persons thronged the streets and cheer ed him as he went by. During his speech before nearly 1,500 business men . at the . railway? banquet where he cast aside almost entirely the text of the address he had previously prepared for delivery there, be was frequently interrupted by ap plause. ' Admits Changein Attitude. ; The President admitted, that in a message to the last Congress he had said the need for preparedness was not pressing. He declared that he had learned something in the meantime. He cited his recent support of a tar iff commission as another instance of a change on his part but declared that Previously there was no need for sufift a commission. The business men en thusiastically cheered his ' support ' of the commission. . Mr. Wilson spoke of men olf high character who were clouding the' pre paredness issue. He declared they " ere provincial and that - the United States could no longer cut herself off from the rest of the w6rld. ' The President vigorously defended hit; Mexican policy. He asserted that 'o invade Mexico would mean the los- J of the confidence of the rest of the j rn Hemisphere. 'He cited the feeing of Cuba as an instance of good done by the United States. ' "If we are drawn into the maelstrom nich now surges in Europe," the Pres ent declared, "we shall not be per mitted to do the high things we would Prefer." ... w W ill Not -Turn to Militarism. ihe President defended the continen tal army pian drawn up by Secretary -.arnson and said that he did not care nnUt details f any plan as long as 3)u,ooo trained men were provided as serves under the Federal govern me"t. He advocated strengthening the Rational Guard, but said the consti tution itself put the government under "e state. He added that the .United ates win not turn in the direction 01 militarism. Outlining why the United States nuld prepare, Mr. Wilson said we uust protect our rights as a nation na the rights of our citizens in Amer- - and outsode of it as the consensus 'iviiized peoples has defined them; nuht ensure the unembarrassed real ign!0'1 f our Political development thin our own borders, and must pro of , J he Peace and political autonomy ' u": Americas. : He added that a national defense .eans the protection of the country m invasion, and also the prevention a flank assault upon the things n "i. h we believe to underlie our life." mtiVt tnal PreParedness, with the ntary training of students in indus (Continucd on rare Ten.) " WILSON HAS BUSY DAY IN NEW YORK Speaks ' Twice During ' Day and Twice at Night ADDRESSES MINISTERS They Extend the r President Vote of Thanks for Efforts in Behalf of Peace Many Praise His At titude During War. New York, Jan. 27. President Wil son was busy from the time he arrived here early this morning until he left at midnight for a brief period in Wash ington, before departing on. a tour in the Middle West to speaK for prepared ness. In addition to attending two ban quets tonight, the President spoke twice during the day, shook hands with a group of suffragists and took two automobile rides. Insistence that the American people love peace, but must be treated justly and must harmonize international, rac ial and religious differences, marked his address at noon before a conference of 1,500 New York clergymen of all de nominations. The President did not repeat his now famous phrase "Too proud to fight." But he asserted belligerently that "I al ways . accept, perhaps, by some impulse of my native blood, the invitation to a fight.".. He added that he had always fought in "knightly fashion,'.' that he did not "traduce his antagonists." and that he fought wHh the Intention ot converting them-- - V " " , fiiivote -of jthante unanimously bar the clergymen, end ire reply he declared that in his efforts for peace he had always been conscious of representing the spirit of America. "It is hard to hold the .balance even when so many passions are involved," he said,-"but I have known that in their hearts, and by their purpose, the people of America have been trying to hold the balance even. The neutrality of the United States has not been mere ly a formal matter. It has been a matter of conviction and of the heart." The President said he had been very deeply disturbed by evidence recently of religious antagonism in this coun try. " "Live and let live' is a, very home ly expression," he asserted, "yet it is at the basis of social existence." The rooting out of narrow and parti san feeling was urged by Mr. Wilson, who was very warmly applauded. Min isters of several denominations praised his attitude during the present war. During the morning, the President repeated his opposition to action by the Federal government on the woman suf frage question when speaking to a del egation of 200 members of the Con gressional Union of Woman Suffrage, who called at his hotel and would not leave until; he saw them. He reiterated his position - that he would help the cause in individual states whenever possible, but politely turned aside ef forts to cross examine him. Every time the President appeared on the streets he was warmly applaud ed by large crowds. He was met at the station this morning by a committee of the Railroad Business Association, and before the banquet tonight shook hands with the guests at the banquet. (Ctmtinued on Page Ten.) VOTE OF CONFIDENCE FOR PRESIDENT WHITE Miners Reject Criticisms of Strike Management. E. I. Doyle Creates Sensation by ' At- tacking Leadership in Colorado Coal Miners' Strike H Speaks for Two Hours. , Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 27. After a bitter attack by E.' l. Doyle,- secretary of ; the Colorado miners, in which he as sailed the management of the strike in that state, the United Mine Workers of America in convention gave a sweep ing vote of confidence to John P. White, president, and" Frank J. Hayes, vice president, today, approving all, that the international officers had done to win that labor struggle. - For more than two hours Doyle, with a" mass of letters, documents and pho tographs, attacked some of the things done by' the leaders in conducting the strike - After the convention had ap proved the acts of the international of ficers, a motion to xpunge - from the records all the remarks uj. ed an overwhelming vote. ' Doyle's attack was one of the sensa tions of the convention. The delegates appeared to be so eager to prove on the auestion of approving acts of interna tional v officers that Vice-President Hayes was unable . to gain the floor to (Continued onPage Two.); - : ; WILMINGTON, MINISTER'S NAME NOW IN IRE CASE Mrs. Mohr Told Husband of McDougall's Friendship INCENSED THE DOCTOR That Was in 1013 and Was at Time of First Serious Break With Hus band, She Said Reviews Marriage at Lynn, Mass. Providence, R, I., Jan. 27. The first serious break in the marital relations of the late Dr. C. Franklin Mohr and his wife, Elizabeth F. Mohr, who is charged with having hired two negroes to kill him, occurred at the time she told her husband of her friendship for a man named Samuel A. McDougall, who Is now a minister of Pictou, Nova Scotia. This statement was elicited from Mrs. Mohr during a severe ex amination this afternoon by Attorney General Rice. Step by step the prose cuting attorney brought out the de tails ot-Mrs. Mohrs life. Occasion ally during the examination she seem ed confused as to date and facts given in her direct testimony and several times broke down and sobbed. It was in 1912, she said, that she first told Dr, Mohr afcout McDougall. The doetor, she admitted, was incensed and went to Nova Scotia to try to have the minister unfrocked. The attorney general then reminded her that in her direct testimony she said that hei husband had gone "to the provinces to see a friend." , -. ".The doctor was' under the influence of. drugs," said Mrs,-- Mohr. "He asked m if I preferred ; McDougall to - him, "and I toloT him .that "the Way' he -was' acting I thought McDougall would have been better as he didn't touch liquor." At the time she met McDougall, Mrs. Mohr said, she was known as Elizabeth Blair. She denied that she told the doctor that she had left Providence to go to Boston because of notoriety caus ed by her friendship with McDougall. She could not keep company with Mc Dougall, she said, because the dif ferences in their religious beliefs made it impossible for her to become a min ister's wife. It was at about the time she told the doctor about McDougall, the. at torney general brought out, that Mrs. Mohr and her husband had a falling out, and that he began to correspond with Miss Emily Burger, who later be came his secretary, and who was se riously wounded at the time the doc tor was shot down in their stalled au tomobile. Mrs. Mohr admitted that she was "fooled" about her first marriage with the doctor in Brooklyn but that she relied on the word of the doctor and took no other precautions. She denied that she had lived with the doctor a year and half before their marriage. When the doctor told her, she said, that she would have trouble in proving they were legally married, as she could not produce the certifi cate and that the man who performed the ceremony was dead, she decided not to live with him another day un til there was another ceremony. Her family had objected to her go ing with Dr. Mohr, she said, because he was a divorced man, but she had supposed that his first wife had died 13 years ago. . "After your experience in Brook lyn and later when the doctor told you he was not married to you, it made (Continued ony Page Two.) BRITISH LABOR VOTES T Also Declares Opposition to Military Service Bill. However, a Proposal to Agitate for Re peal of the Measure is Voted Down Arthur Henderson Defends Government. Bristol, ; Eng., Jan. 27. A resolution protesting in the name of the National Labor party against the adoption of conscrijjtionin any form was passed by the LaCor" Co? ress today by a card vote of l.VvJ.oOO against 219,000. The Congress also adopted, by a vote of 1,716,000 against 360,000, a declaration opposing the military service bill which has been -r passed by parliament. A proposal to agitate for its repeal was defeated to 649,000. against 614,000. The apparently contradictory votes at the conference condemning con scription and declining to agitate for the - repeal of the ; measure, were brought about ,by the labor men's de termination to display their unflinch ing opposition to militarism and their desire at the same time riot to .em barrass the government in the prosecu tion of the war. " These views ' were given expression In the various speeches of the leaders, even those supporting the goverri ment'scojnpulsion.seheme, such, as Ar . (Continued on .Page' Ten.) - - - ' AGAINS COMPULSION 3. C, FRIDAY MORNING, TWO U. S. SOLDIERS Found Early Yesterday by Par ty of Carranza Men. DECOYED ACROSS RIVER Say Mexican Soldier Who Got Them to Cross River 'Appeared as Civilian. Three Officer Arrested for Crossing Border. BrownsvillelftTexas, Jan. 27. Charges of disobedience of orders and violation of international law were formally made tonight-'against Lieut. John E. Mort, commander of Battery D, Fourth United States' artillery, and two other officers of the.;,battery who with 14 pri vates made an incursion into Mexico yesterday to rescue two artillerymen who had been captured by Mexican civilians opposite Progreso, Texas. Preparations .; were being made to night for immediate organization of a court martial .to 'try Lieutenant Mort, and other officers, Lieutenant Bernard R. Peyton and Lieutenant Albert W. Waldron. Announcement also was made to night that . Col. J. R. Quintanilla; in command of.: the Mexican garrison at Matamoros, had ordered the arrest of the sergeant In command of the de tachment of ' Mexican troops which took the American soldiers in charge after they had been captured by civ ilians. Brownsville, Texas, Jan. 27. Pri vates William C. Wheeler and Viggo Pederson, of Battery D, Fourth Field Artillery, who were kidnaped late yes terday by Mexicans and taken south from the border, were rescued by Car ranza soldiers and brought to Matarao ras today. They were turned over to American authorities dressed in Mexi can clothes. No word had been heard from the men since their - crossing- the river. They wore no clothes; A searching party-was sent out from Itfatamoras by Col. B. R. Quantanella, commander of the border.in the absence of Gen. Alfredo Ricaut,'". and &t : some early morning hour the" AmfnTietEns werfo-und. p;Wheeler SiiQlrortattr they Ver a decoyed to the Mexican side of the riv er by the promise of a drink of mescal by a Mexican, who appeared op the bank while they were swimming. Wheeler said the Mexican -did not ap pear to be a soldier but - when sur rounded by eight Mexicans later some distance from the bank they found their captors were all soldiers. The men were taken to Rio Brado last night by their captors and held in jail until after midnight when they were put. on a train for Maamoras. There they were taken before Colonel Quantanilla where they were told that Mexican civilians were not authorized to arrest them and that the Mexican soldiers also were at fault. Both men were turned over to United States Con sul Johnson, of Matamoras, who deliv ered them to Fort Brown, where they are held in the guard house. Lieut. John E. Mort, commanding Battery D of the Fourth Field Artil lery, with 2nd Lieut. Bernard R. Pey ton and Albert W- Waldron, were (Continued on Page Ten.) F OF $15,000 IN OHICAGO Bandits Make Good Their Es cape in Automobile. Officers, Employes and Patrons of the Bank Made to Face Wall With Hands in Air While Teller's Cage im Looted. Chicago, Jan. 27. Four youths, all believed to be under twenty years of age, today entered the Washington Park National Bank, forced the twenty officers, - employes and patrons to face the wall with their hands in the air, scouped up $15,000 from the teller's cage, and escaped in an automobile. Although every available policeman and detective was placed on their trail immediately, no clue had been found tonight as to the identity of the ban dits. While the four1 robbers entered the bank with masks over their faces and each carrying two revolvers, a fifth remained outside in the automobile. Three of the bandits forced the offi cers and ten patrons to hold up their hands, while one rifled the cashier's cage. None of the patrons was searched. A. W. McCauley, assistant cashier, jumped into his automobile and at tempted to follow the robbers, but they quickly outdistanced him. J. Garland (Jake) Stahl, former man ager of the Boston American League team, is vice president of the bank. The robbers kept a revolver pointed at his head: He stated that none of the robbers appeared to be more than 20 years old, and that they obtained $15,000. The bank Is in one of the busiest parts of the city outside of the, down town section. Bank officers said tonight that am ple insurance against robbery . was carried and that the loss would not affect the bank. Police Lieutenant John Hogan caught sight of the fleeing-automobile later, and pursued it in his own ma chine. . As he was approaching Kls quarry, an automobile truck collided with his car. wrecking it. and injuring Hogan. - - KIDNAPED RESCUED OUR YOUTHS ROB BANK JANUARY 28, 1916 ENGLAND HAS BEEN Dispatches Treated in Manner Considered "Vexatious- ly Inquisitorial.1 SAYS AMERICAN NOTE Protests "Unwarranted Inter ferences" and Requests a Prompt Reply. Washington, Jan. 27. The text of the American protest: to Great Britain against interference with V neutral mails, made public tonight, reveals uipiumaiic ana consular dispatch es have been treated, in a manner the United States considered "vexAtiously. inquisitorial." The note describes the practice of British officials as "unwar ranted interferences" and in urgently requesting a prompt reply, points out that "a strong feeling is being arous ed" in -this country by the loss of valu able letters, while foreign banks are refusing to cash American drafts be cause they have no assurances' that drafts are secure in the mails. The United States declares that par cel post articles are entitled to the exemptions of neutral trade and de nies the right of Great Britain to take neutral mail ships into British juris diction for purposes of search and then submit them to local censorship regu lations. It also denies that the Brit ish government has any authority over neutral sealed mails on ships which merely touch at British ports. ; With the text of the American note was made public . between Great . Brit ain's ad interim reply saying that ques tions of principle raised by the United States have made it necessary for Great Brt tai:onst$wil!te:. wefore? aoi swering finally, and" indicating that there will be no unnecessary delay in the negotiations. 5 .... The American note is in the -form of a memorandum to Ambassador Page at London instructing him to file a "formal and vigorous protest." It is dated January- 4 and tecturaHy is as follows: . ,t v ... Text of tne Note. " "Department advised that ' British customs authorities removed from Dan ish steamer Oscar II, 734 bags parcel mail en route from United States to Norway, Sweden and Denmark; that British port authorities have removed from Swedish steamer Stockholm 58 bags parcel mail en route Gothenburg, Sweden, to New York; that 5,000' pack ages of merchandise, American proper ty, has been seized by British author ities on the Danish steamer United States on her last trip to the United States; that 'customs authorities at Kirkwall, on December 18, seized 597 bags of parcel mail from steamer Fred erich VIII, manifested for Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Other similar cases might be mentioned, such as that of the steamer Hellgolav. "Department is inclined to regard parcel post articles as subject to the same treatment as articles sent as ex press or freight in respect to belliger ent search, seizure and condemnation. "On the other hand parcel post ar ticles are entitled to the usual exemp tion of neutral trade and the protests of the government of the United States in regard to what constitutes the un lawful bringing in of ships for search in port, the illegality of so-called blockade by Great Britain and the im proper assumption of jurisdiction of vessels and cargoes apply to commerce using parcel post service for the trans mission of commodities. Please bring this matter of parcel post formally to the attention of the British govern ment. - "The Department is further informed that on December 23 the entire mails, including sealed mails in the American diplomatic and consular pouches from the United States to The , Netherlands were1 removed by British aufhorities from the Dutch steamer New Amster dam; that on December 20 the Dutch vessel Noorder Dyke was deprived at the Downs of American mail from the United States to Rotterdam, and that these mails are still held by British authorities. Other similar instances could be mentioned, as the cases of the steamers Rotterdam and Noordam. "The Department cannot admit the right of British authorities -to seize neutral vessels plying directly between American and neutral European ports without touching at British ports, to bring them into port, and, while there, to remove or censor mails carried by (Continued on Page Ten.) THE DAY IN CONGRESS SENATE Met at noon. Petitions bearing a million names and protesting against war munition shipments presented and resulted in vigorous debate. Debate on Philippine Independence bill- resumed. Military committee continued its hearing on army. bills. Adjourned at 4:50 p. m., to noon Fri day.- -: HOUSE Met at noon. Admiral Griffin,, chief of navy en gineering bureau, testifled . before Na val committee. General Wood told Military commit tee army should le. recruited to full strength . before, af'feserve ;t-enrolled. Postal committee favorably reported Postoffice Appropriation .bill providing that railroads be paid for mall trans portation" by space.' ,1 2 -v. . Adjourned at 4:32 p. in.; to noon Fri- day. - - ' - ;T ' IN TE ppj gj jl ENEMY GOULD LAND E v Would Require Less Than 30 Days to Invade America. DECLARES GEN. WOOD Says Army of 220000 Regulars and at Least 2,000,000 Reserves Nec essary to Meet Sitnatlon -Before Committees. Washington, Jan. 27. The position of the United, States in a war-torn world was described to the House Mil itary committee today by Major Gen eral Leonard Wood as like that of "a ship at sea, with typhoon signals com ing from many directions." "We are living in an era of war," he said, "and gradually are accumulating most of the troubles of .the world." General WoofT who appeared at the committee's hearings on the. army in- I crease bills, repeated in the main the testimony he previously had given be fore the Senate Military committee. He said it would take an army of a mil lion and a half to hold a line from Boston south. Should conditions at the close of the war in Europe invite at tack, he declared, any of the more pow erful of the belligerents could land 500,000 men on American soil in less than thirty days. A regular army of 220,000 men fully trained and always under arms, with at least two million reserves behind them should be provided, he urged, to meet this situation. The United States Navy, he classed as fourth in fighting efficiency, and declared it could not maintain control of the sea nor de fend the coasts. While General Wood and Colonel Edwin F. Glenn, chief of staff of the Department of the East, were testify ing before .the House and Senate Mili tary committee, respectively, Rear Ad miral E. S. Griffin, chief engineer of the navy, told the House Naval com mittee, considering navy increases, of the mechanical ills to which the sub marines' are heir and of the problems of finding suitable engines; for battleships and destroyers. : Naval Design Equal to Any. y Adrrl?-4f6MWHei :eJeltevefe;;'.tto foreign power was .- outstripping the United States in naval design, and tha,t type for .type,- American craft ' were as efficient -as 'any afloat. v ' , To sh0wa the " condition of American submarines he read a report stating that they each' had done from 1,000 to 7,000 miles- of surface cruising and several hundred miles submerged last year. Their engines were available for duty approximately 308 days out of the year, he added. Members of the committee asked for detailed information about the Neff system of submarine, propulsion which does away with electric storage bat teries and their dangers, by use of oil engines both on the-surface and sub merged. The Department has asked for $300,000 to test the system. Admiral Griffin said two objections urged against it were that the noise of the motor might reveal a submersible to enemy ships equipped for underwater signalling and that the engine ex haust might create a wake of bubbles (Continued on Page Two.) TRADE CONVENTION AI Measures to Aid American Trade Abroad Considered. All Parts of Country Represented in Gathering at New Orleans Meet ing Will Last Three Days. Many Speeches. New Orleans, Jan. 27. Consideration of the United States tariff system as related to foreign trade and discussion of measures, proposed to aid American commerce to meet the competition of other nations in the world's markets after the European war, occupied the timje of delegates to the third National Foreign Trade Convention, which be gan a three days' meeting here today. Three general sessions and two group meetings were held today and tonight, and were participated in by more than 500 delegates from all parts of the country. , The opening session was devoted to addresses by Alba B. Johnson, who was elected president of the convention; James A. Farrell, and others. "Unfair Discrimination Against American Exports," was the theme of an address late today by J. J. Culbert son, of Paris, Texas, and a paper pre pared by Willard Straight, of New York, on "Relation of the Tariff to World Trade Conditions After the War," was read in Mr. Straight's ab sence by Dr. Richard P. Strong, of the American .International Corporation, New York. The report of the committee on com mercial education for foreign trade of the National Foreign Trade Council, was read at, tonight's meeting by W. D. Simmons, of St. Louis, and the even ing was given over to discussion of the report by Mr. Farrell, J. Rogers Flan nery, chairman of ( the foreign trade commission, Pittsburg;. C. L. Chandler, of Chattanooga'; Ferdinand Schwedt man. New York ; Stanley H. Rose, of the Department of "Commerce, and oth- FORC OF 500,000 NEW ORLEANS BEGINS WflOtE NUMBER 39,457 FIGHTING IN THE WESTERN THEATRE NOW VERY ACTIVE French Claim to Have Driven! Germans From Mine Cra ters They Had Occupied. ATTACKS ON TRENCHES British Report the Evacuation by Turks of Trenches Around Kut El Amara. Considerable fighting has bene tak ing place along the French fronts, Berlin asserts that between 500 and 600 yards of French trenches were stormed by the Germans in the vicin ity of Neuville .and that French coun ter attacks .were without result. In this region, the French assert, the Germans were driven from mine craters they had occupied and were repulsed in trying to re-capture them; while the British report the progressive oc cupation by their men of the mine craters and German listening posts in the Neuville region. Paris - announces also that German trenches in Belgium and to the north of Aisne have been badly hammered by the French guns and that the Germans suffered seious losses In a fight for a mine crater in the Argonne forest. While considerable fighting has been goving On along the Russian front at various places from the region of Riga , down into east Galicia, no important results have been attained by either side. The same is true as to the Aus-tro-Italian front, the Caucasus region, and the Balkans. The British report that the Turks have evacuated their trenches-on tne land side, of the Kut El Amara defenses to about a mile from the entrench ments occupied by the besieged British force.! The- xepot-yjS thee' is n -change in . the situation of the "British force marching up the Tigris river to the relief of ;Kut ' El Amara. "Vexatiously inquisitorial," "unwar ranted interference," and "impress upon Sir Edward Grey the necessity foi prompt action in this matter," are terms employed in the protest of the American government against Greai Britain's interference with neutral mails, the text of which has been made public by Washington . The tentative reply of Great Brit ain promises "before long" to state the result of a consultation between Great Britain and her allies w'th respect to the policy to be pursued. Denunciation of the exportation ol arms and ammunition to the belliger ents in the world war has been voiced in the United States Senate by a dozen Senators Democrats and Republicans, The debate which followed presentation to the Senate of a huge petition, of the organization of . American Women for Strict Neutrality, calling for the enactment of embargo legislation, seemed to presage that a vote may b4 forced upon the embargo issue. . The British labor congress, whil opposing by a large majority the pro visions of the military service bill, ha defeated a 'proposal that the working1 men should agitate for its repeal. Wal ter Runciman, president of- the board of trade in the British cabinet, ha informed parliament that in order tor relieve the pressure on shipping and make room in vessels for additional imports of foodstuffs, fuel, munitions and other essentials, restriction against importations of certain goods will be put Into effect by the gov ernment. In an address read at he proroga tion of parliament until February 15, King George expressed the determina tion of the Entente Allies to continuo the war until victory is achieved. SOUTH CAROLINA BANK ROBBED Cashier Locked In Vault and 500 Ta ken at Smoaki, Smoaks. S. C., Jan. . 27. Two uni late today entered the Bank of Smoaks, a state institution, overpowered C. A. Thomas, the cashier, and escaped with approximately $2,500t after locking Thomas in me vsuiu ins cashier waB found unconscious, and said one of the men had thrown soma liquid in his face which had overcome him. Bloodhounds were put on the trail of the robbers. CHINA DENIES REPORTS. Declares That Japan Has Made No De mand of Any Character. Washington, Jan. 27. American Min ister Relnsch, at Peking, cabled the State Department late today that the Chinese foreign office had notified him that reports of a renewal by Japan of the demands upon China, contained in the famous Group Five, were without foundation. No demands of any charac ter, It was said, had been presented. Washington. Jan. 27. President Wil son has commuted to expire at once a six month's sentence imposed at Fort Smith, Ark., on C. M. Hawklns who pleaded guilty last October to oper ating a distillery without paying the government tax. Washington, Jan. 27. Twelve hundred-Mississippi Choctaw Indians lost a point today In their fight to share in the distribution of $7,500,000 from ths sale of Indian lands when the House Indian Affairs committee disapproved their claims. Rome, via London, Jan. 27. It la reported in Vatican circles that the con dition of Emperor Francis-Joseph, ot Austria, , who. has been ill ,for severaj days, is rapidly growing wors. it ll It it 6 8 1? El 4? if IS- P t. If? !? in I