-.1 iff. - - . . . ; v ii i . f HUVJ1- yEATHER: PA' 4 0 P A G E S I 0 3 SECTIQIIS g, rain Sunday and FULL LEASED VIRE SERVICE 9 Wi, V-- " JBL. - . . ' 1 '. ' VOL 7XXIV. No. 23. WILMINGTON, NORTH CLSUNDAY, FEBRU ARY 3, 1918. CREEL 1 TRUTH ABOUT OURCOWTfif Creel's Machine Busily hn- gaged in Molding Opinion Throughout World HE HAS BUILT UP A GREAT ORGANIZAl 1UW Hammering Home the Facts About America's Entry Into War Some of Means Used ' Washington, Feb. 2.-Molding pub- lie opinion througnout tne unu, lnjimeng home the truth about. Am erica's eatry Into the war, is tae gi antic task assumed by the Commit- f6 on rUDUU iuiw"""'-! " - -Seel, chairman, wrote to President eon in HIS repuri. mauc vx""- - night. "The Committee on Public iniorma- Son has grown to De a woiw uxB" iaaon," Creel's report states. "Not sly does it. touchvery part or the jEchinery that co-oj dinate3 the forces n'AneriCE. for victory, but it carries it meanings and purposes of Amor 2 to all peoples, making the fight kr public opinion in every country." Every agency known for the dis anination of the news is being em ployed by the Creel machine. From Tickerton and Key West the doctrine of democracy is flashed to Eifel tow- . i er, and Rome. Radio stations at &an Diego relay a thousand or more words i day to Honolulu, Yokohama and Shanghai. Cables, telegraph and mails supplement the work of tho ra tio while in every hamlet and city in he land 15,000 "minute men" are do- I their bit. Ip Russia and foreign ciuntrie? the Lotion picture and the printed word any hope or strike fear into tne earts of the ally or the enemy. Over he battlefields of France, Allied air- resident's message 'and the "truth bout America," while in Russia bill iards and the cinema in the short pace of a few months have "worked fundamental change in public sen- inent." With the firm conviction that ihe ffl is still mightier than the sword, erica's mobilized public is this, nters and artists are fighting Teu- on propaganda with its own weapons t studiously avoiding Teuton tac- :cs. "We do not arzue or exhort or cen- lr," Creel declared, "but confine our ictivities to a rlain. straightforward I dentation of our claims, our pur ses and our ideals. We have noth- W to fear from the truth; it can be "ie our pnncinal weaDon." Outlin- k the work already accomplished by fs committee, Creel continued: - it has prepared and printed for Stribution in nil rcTPfa nf fha wnrld 5,00ft (Iftn nr.i. c ,- j.-e i. 8 111 SPVOn lo-n n-no conducts speakine: camoaiens in "17 State of the Union, arranees peetmgs, books sneakers rnniltirts conferences IJ(1 in the four mmands the volunteer services of Public speakers. nas Wireless anH ooV1a nawa "ice tnat. is hoinw ,.r ; ' capitol in Europe, Scandinavia, la aT17;;' South and Central Amev L.5 Mexic. and a feature article ; of similar proportions. 11 sends tn frt; Ian rip """6" tuuuines mu- V- , .exni1ts showing Amer- -i, inaustnal and war prog- bas mnhiiirro iv .J, 'rces n u LU aavemsing car f country press, period 'apaien outioor-for a patriotic 'gn tnat will trivA 30 rvnn nnn f similai. yviuuuw cams for material of .pictorial pub- htiim.r Ubxi ot various govern- is. ments and' patriotic soci- rit K our t,-?:in? Pcitur,e fi.8 i ?h. . uiUKrpss a Tin orhih. Iple dai?vhUndreds of thousands of "It issuer W w':,uu omcial new daliv news- FWnf'n,.?ovennient with a cir- ' copies a day. Ud nf o nnl a i m TO m fiir vuiumeer si ,lua rLlUCll w!th the f paction. ignorance and W dnanize(1- and now directs. toannL80.6161168 d leagues rvwai LO certain class and particular foreign language groups each body, carrying a specific message to its. section of America's adopted peoples. ' - " ' -s "It acts as a bureau of information for all persons who seek its direction in volunteer war work, in approach ing business dealings with the gov ernment. 'It supervises .., the Voluntary- cen sorship of the newspaper and . period ical press "It establishes . rules , and regula tions, for, the cable censorship with respect to press dispatches. "It prepares and distributes, advis es, upon and censors photographs and moving pictures to- the number of more than 700 a day. "It has only 250paid employes, but it directs" and co-ordinates the patri otic work of 5,000 volunteer writers and artists and 20,000 public speak ers. "To carry on its activities in the United States, it hasv spent from its beginning in April, 1917, down to ' De cember. 31, 1917, $119,821.96 for sal ares and $325,713.20 for all its other expenses. "This remarkable showing has been made possible by the generous co-operation of patriotic groups and, indiv iduals, the sacrifice of volunteer work ers and the devotion- of others in ac cepting service at half the. salary re ceived in private employment. "It is not an economy, however, that- can be or should be maintained. I can assure you that the country, as a whole, is behind the war but in ev ery section there Js a'yast .amount of doubt and misunderstanding that , may possibly fester and .inflame Forces of dissension and disloyalty ai&tead:- ily a work and. panicul&xlxiauua true among ithe foreign popiulation. We shall not discharge our full duty to the national defense until jwe have reached , every community In. the Unit ed States by written or spoken words or motion picture; until every indiv idual, native naturalized, or alien, has it seared into his consciousness that the war is a war of self defense and that it has got to be master of his every thought -and action.! "Our great need, ho weverV is in oth er lands. England and France attach prime importance :to educational and informative campaigns,, and Germany, I am crediblyVTnlormed, spends $3; 000,000 a montfevlnjjRussia alone. For known to thefl'jfekt of the world through dribbfesiott information sup plied by foregn iiews agencies, and as the result there as not a country that has any ,exaict; or comprehensive Idea of American :ife, activity, or ideals. This ignorance has lent it self with pechltar effect to the alliea of the enemy jand there's no work more important than this fight for bet ter understanding a mere intelligent public opinio. "Much has ' been done, but it can only be regarded as experimental. Machinery has been created and test ed, and we are now able to commence 100 per cent.- operation in all confi dence. It is for "this that I ask sanc tions. There is no detail in connec , shall be ashamed to reveal. No pa per will be subsidized, no . official bought and no currupt employed. "From a' thousand sources we hear of the wonders of German propaganda but my original determination has never altered. Always do I try to find out what the Germans are doing, and then I don't do it. Even if the very loftiness of our war aims did not com mand honesty at every point. I have the conviction that corrupt methods work their own destruction. "Russia is a case in point. For years, first secretly and at last quite openly, Germany had poisoned the people with lies, yet within the short pace of a few months our own open publicity cmapaign ws aable to work a fundamental change in public sen timent. We do not argue or exhort or censure, but confine all activities to a plain, straightforwrda presenta tion of our aims, - our purposes, and our ideals. We have nothing to fear from the truth; it can be made our principal weapon." Accepting the report, President Wil son wrote the following letter to Creel: ' "The WTiite House, "Washington, D. C, "Jan. 14, 1918. "My Deal Mr. Creel: "I have just finished reading the report of the Committee on Public Information which yuo were ' kind enough tobring me last week, and I wnat to say how much it has gratifi ed me and how entirely the Wrko be ing, done by the committee meets with my apprvoal. I have kept in touch with that wrko, . piece by piece as you know n iuor several interviews, but had not realized its magnitude when assembled in a single - statement. "I , feel confident that ajthe work of the committee progresses it will more .than win the public ; approval and - confidence. . ' - "Cordiftllr 'and sincerely .yuros, "WOODROW WILSONS ;1 PRICE FIVE GENTS .Washington, Feb. 2. With the "war cabinet: ' row furnish ing the high light, Congress next week1 will get down to action on a mass of emergency war legislation. ' j ; Here is what is on the program in the Senate i ' r Senator Hitchcock . will speak Monday in support of the war cabinet and munitions director Mis. ' 1 v Railroad control bill will be reported Monday by the Sen ate Interstate Commerce' Committee. : . "Moratorium" bill, designed to otect soldiers' and Sail ors civil rights, will be reported by the Military Affairs Com mittee.. " - ' ;; ' Bill creating a war finance corporation to be introduced hy Chairman Simmons, of finance committee. .; New food and price fixing bills to be introduced by. Senator Pomerene. Reed sub-committee to begin formulating reports of inves tigations into coal and sugar situations. Here is the program in the House: r Re-drafted railroad bill to be reported by Inter-State Com merce Committee, probably by Thursday. ' . , Urgent deficiency appropriation bills, carrying hundreds of millions for increased war programs to be reported late in week. Representative Glass to speak against critics of the War Department. . ! Daylight savings bill will le reported. . War finance corporation bill carrying $500,000,000 ap propriation: will be reported. Bills for compulsory meatless and wheatless days and price fixing to be consideredby the Agricultural Committee. BOLSU SUPPORT FOR fflO ANARCHISTS pi Berkman and Goldman Pre- pare to Begin Serving Their Sentences New York, Feb .2. Declaring th lorernment of the United States will not dare refuse what h6 declared was .demand of the Russian . Bolshevik government that he be deported xto Russie, Alexander Berkman, notorious- anarchist, today - surrendered to United States authorities,, to begin his sentence of two years for con spiracy to defeat the military draft. Emma Goldman, convicted as a co conspirator, surrendered at the same time." They have been out on bail. "I have been assured," Berkman declaredio a crowd of friends, and sympathizers in the United States District Attorney's office here, "that my friends in dear Russia will leave no stone unturned in their efforts to secure my release or my return. They will fight as bitterly for our cour ageous Miss Goldman." Then Emma took the floor, declar ing with a shaking fist that "this is outrageous." Joseph B. McDonough, Chief Dep uty to United States Marshal McCar- ty, put a stop to the hubbuh Dy en tering the room and warning the AmhRRador David R. Francis Is being threatened, by Russian anar chists who hold him responsible for the life and liberty of Berkman, dis patches to the United Press recently stated. - ) ; STUDENT BALLOONISTS life FINALLY LOCATED Macon, Ga., Feb. 2. After spending 24 cold and weary hours in Ocmulgee swamp, sometimes waste deep in wa ter verily a "no man's land" Cadet Ttowley, of the Macon balloon school at Camp Wheerer, waded out Satur day morning and phoned to officials of the school the first news they had of the balloon and its- four occupants since it ascended at 10: 17 "a. m. the day before. Fifty dollars reward had been of fered for information concerning either 'the whereabouts of the balloon or the men. The men are now back at camp after their gruesome night and the balloon has been "recovered. STATE COLLEGE DEFEATS TRINITY (Special to The Dispatch.) Raleigh, C, Feb. 2. State Col lege defeated Trinity here tonight in one of the hardest and. most spec tacular games of football seen on the local floor in a long while, the final score being State College 28. Trinity 18. Hartsell's . five held Trinity to ffrur field goals, while they themselv es found the ppeket 10 times. ; Allied Conference Adjourned,. Paris Feb. 2. The second - inter allied conference which has been un der way in Versailles this 5 week ter minated tonight. The official - state ment of .its- accomplishments .will.be given vouti simultaneously in all Al lied i cities. . v -L 1. u u &1L WAiN E MAN HAS 14 SONS Ifi THE ARMY "'. '' Negro Farmer, Father of 35, Sends Platpon Hunting for the Hun (Special' to: The DisDatth). Gbldsboro, N. Feb. .--John Bor den, a' well - knpwji colored fanner of tilis. cptmtyhas the disjinguished rec ord of having 14 'sons, serving in the arm of. the United States and is the father of 35 children, and has been married three times, so he says. This interesting news came to light Tnursaay of this week during the pro cess of a divorce case being tried in Superior court Jn this city in which Farmer Borden was a witness for the plaintiff. Borden ' related the following story of his life's history to Judge Whed bee, who in a spirit of humor, asked Borden if he wanted to marry the woman after' she secured a divorce, or in other words was he trying to aid her to get a divorce in order that he might marry her? "I have been married three times. Two of my wives are dead and the third living. I am the father of 35 children, 15 by my first wife, 12 by my second wife and eight by my pres ent wife. My first wife gave birth to four boys each time for three times, and at one time my second" wife pre sented me with three boys and one girl, all arriving within a period of a half hour. Twenty-seven of my children are living, the youngest be ing only 22 months old, and L. now have 14 sons serving in Uncle Sam's army." . Following his relation of this re markable statement, Borden said he was 62 years old. , Mrs. Kizziah Cobb died at her coun try home near Goldsboro this week, aged 80 years. Friends in Goldsboro, -where he at one time made his home, were advis ed this week of the death in Rocky Mount of Mr. Charles L. O'Berry, which occurred Monday last. A fire of unknown origin destroyed property in Pikeville, nine miles north of Goldsboro, this week,, which en tailed a loss of several thousand dol lars, partially covered by insurance. Railroad Blockade Ties up Foodstuffs for Eastern Part of Country MOVEMENT HAMPERED BY SEVERE WEATHER Freight Trains Freeze to the Tracks and Brakes Have to be Thawed Out Terminals Packed BICKETT WRITES.; FORD, (Special to Jie -Dispatch.) Raleigh, N. C., FeV 2: Governor -Bickett, without being ' requested 1 by anyone in Wilmington, today wrote to Henry. Ford, the Detroit multi-millionaire automobile man-; ufacturer, to erect; In Wilmington, the shipbuilding , plant proposed for the Atlantic' seaboard. The Governor told Mr.-ord that no better site can be found anywhere along the Atlantic and that syery- thing necessary for -such a plant is to be found in Wilmington. WANT PROTECTION FOR THE SMALL Kitchin and Webb See fylc Adoo About Exclusion of Little Roads .Washington, Feb. 2. Food short age in certain sections of the United States tonight absorbed the efforts of the railroad administration. with Eastern United; States virtually at the mercy of the national railroad. uirector General McAdoo is making every effort to give both animal and human food right-of-way. Two hundred carloads of feed for live stock are rushing eastward to night at the order of Director McAdoo to relieve the serious situation in the New England district, caused by con gestion due to weather conditions. One thousand refrigerator and box cars will be loaded daily with food stuffs, and speeded through from the Middle West into congested Eastern districts to re-stock . retail dealers, feed bins and poultry yards, Director General McAdoo announced tonight Despite the drastic steps taken by Fuel Administrator Garfield in his closing order and the general embar go on certain Eastern lines by Direc tor McAdoo, the transportation situ ation is not greatly improved. Weath er-has hindered the work of .movin rthe long strfngs; of loaded and empty ujuTB- wuica nave piuggea up every Eastern terminal. Unless Hhe Jam is smashed quickly and necessaries are moved' with dispatch serious results are feared. Lifting of the Monday workless or der is expected Tuesday, but it is generally believed that Fuel Adminis trator Garfield' consented to do this only with the information that the railroad embargo would remain in off or f until tho frsnsnnrtaf fnn c?tn- ation is relieved. While Regional Director Smith, of New York, reported today that the westward movement of cars was 1,000 greater than the eastward movement, there still remaTn thou sands of loaded cars packed ttgnt be tween long strings of freights in Eastern yards. Meanwhile the con stant stream of freight continues to pour in though it is diminished some what by the embargo on certain lines. Weather conditions in New York and New England continue severe, Smith reported to McAdoo tonight. Railroad operation is hampered .at every turn by the extreme cold. Frost is obscuring the signals throughout the Mohawk valley, hampering safe operation of trains. Freight trains stopping for coal and water freeze tight to the . track, requiring four and five engines to budge them. Castings are bursting with the cold. Brakes freeze and have to be thawed out before trains can start. Frozen coal in cars is hindering dumping at docks, though 13 steam ers were bunkered during the day. Over 750 carloads of live stock, dressed beef and other perishables i were forwarded from Chicago yester day and 1,744 cars of coal. From Newsboy to Magnate. St. Paul, . Minn., Feb. 2. Back in the eighties, Bill Kenney was a news boy in Minneapolis. lext week he will become.pr.esident of the Great Northern Railroad. ; Louis W. Hill,' son of the late James J. Hill, will re main chairman of the board of directors. Steamer Caught in Ice. ' Bar Harbor, Me., Feb. 2. A Main kCentral Railway steamer plyingg be tween Moujri Desert and this city is caught' in the heavy r ice somewhere between Frenchman's bay, tonight, and it ia feared her passengers, many of whom are women ahd children, are in danrri ;' ' " ' "' SHIP AND 224 LIVES LOST. London, Feb. 2: Two hundred and twenty-four persons pet ished when ; the armc(d boarding ship Louvain was torpedoed and sunk in the . eastern , Mediterranean on January 21, the Admiralty announce ed tonight, '. , The Louvain was used to inter cept ..merchantmen and send par ties 'of officials aboard , them to inspect their -cargoes and papery.. FREIGHT WRECK IN NASHVIILE SUBURB protect the small; lines as far as pos sible, but Congressman; Webb indi cated a "protection- ' amendment' may be urged when $ie bill comes before the House.. . - Kitchin and Webb insisted that .all traffic agreements- regarding rates, the amount of business the short lines shall receive , from the trunk lines and the proportionate compen sation shall remain the same as now, unless war . emergencies shall make changes necessary. To . this" McAdoo agreed. . ,- ."With $800,,00,000 invested in the securities of the small OUnes, it would be far more serious to; make ttjese investments worthless - than for the government to bear the extra "burden ibt-protectine theTsmalt' lines, said Webb after the conference,. : Many -small lfhesf; particularly In the South, have " vigorously protested McAdoo's . act of excluding them and have asked that all their agreements with the trunk lines be allowed to stand, Kitchin and Webb said. -- ;1 -1 : ' - - . 1. - - - - - - - . t 1 v, -.' ssaa rmmrmM Congms 4 Fflfln mm esMs FIRHTING ilflNP, 141 IUIIIII1U IILUI IU -f , V. Allies Hone to Rrealc tteWt many's Blockade During ;: inis ppnng v:i;:;; TROUBLE BREWING IN BALKANS FOR KAISER m 4; Far Eastern Camnaicn Rvi - -O A,s pected to Loom up Large in Near Future En emy Restless 1 r -i s. rt mm Washington, . Feb. 2. FiKhtineoS SS the Salonika front, where the AllieaM Washington, Feb. 2,-r-Declaring . ex clusion of small roads : from govern ment control will bring their collapse Majority Leader .Kitchin . and Repre sentative Webb today, asked Director General McAdoo whether - the rail road bill could, he amended to pro tect the small lines. McAdoo said the , policy of thelpperating west of Lakj Dolran' and railroad administration would be toTthe Mount' DoboroDolya nositions TipI:. hope to break the Kaiser's back bona I the cbminer snrin vt. ban., hoiin a rrrt,t. 1 ing to Macedonia front war dispatches icvcicu ui w aHuznxion loaav. - . Serbian, British- and French troopsV' t' SOCIALISTS INSPIRED THE GERMAN STRIKES Copenhagen, Feb. 2. The Independ ent Socialists inspired the strikes that are now sweeping over Germany as a protest' against the continuance of the war. This was clearly shown by a pamphlet which reached here to day. It charged that the pan-German3 were endangering te present peace, ne gotiations with Russia--by demanding the cession of territory by the Rus sians. Eight Independent Socialists sign ed the pamphlet. One of the signers was Wilhelm Diettmahn, whose , ar rest was recounted in a message reaching Amsterdam yesterday. While tho Amsterdam disnatch as forward ed here said that Diettinann was ar rested while attempting to address a crowd of pesters in Beriij. the fact that he signed the protest is regard ed as the real occasion for his arrest. The pamphlet called upon the work ing class for a powerful demonstra tion that will finish the war. OVHN Nashville, Tenn., Feb. 2.--One man is missing, four wounded, three of them seriously, and 21 cars and two locomotives are demolished as a re sult of a freight wreck on the Nash ville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Rail road, in a western suburb of Nash ville early tonight. Finding it impossible to get a heavy train over a grade, the crew undertook to carry the train over in sections. The brakes on seven rear cars) which were uncoupled failed to hold on the slippery tracks. The run away cars dashed down the grade and collided with a double-header freight train which was following. BLOTTER FILLING SLOWLY. But Three Prospects For Recorder's . Court This Morning. The police blotter at headquarters early, this morning showed only three prospects for Recorder's court Mon day morning, two of them colored and the other a white man. MacyO. Nix on, colored, was "in" on a charge cf store breaking f William Faison, also colored, had been jailed on a warrant charging larcjeny, wWei the lonesome white man, A Anthony; Stuart,- had "drunk" marked up oppsoite' his name. T CONTROL OF THE OIL INDUSTRY Presidential Proclamation to This Effect Expected in a Day. or So Washington; Feb. . . 1-Government uuntrou or me oil , industry will De a fact within 48 hours-ahother big step in the mobilization of the na tion's tremendous resources for war. President Wilson has prepared and signed a proclamation to be issued shortly, authorizing radical steps by the Fuel Administration. All oil production and distribution will be placed under; license,' it Is un derstood. Prices wilt be fixed for va rious grades of crude and refined pe troleum products. '' - '''''''.' There is no shortage; in oil produc tion. But the extensive aeroplane plans have made it accessary to in sure special grades -of gasoline in suf ficient quantity to ' Vsend American flying machines flying, over the Kai sers armies. Onl by ; controlling distribution can t?iis "be :, cone, vit !s pointed out, ; as i.m jnj," automobile owners are eager tofeVihese higher grades of gasoline even' at igli prices. Oil Director Eeqna wUl be given wide powers to , div.ertifolihe and other oil , products Eerever, "mill A tary needs demantf4 Supplies, of iuel oil for naval ruse wiiihe; ittsiired 'un- Her the new regulatf,on. Mount' Doboropolya nositions held ; by the Bulgars, and have ' made ad- vances in the vicinity of Seres, -reVyrjH, ports state. The Allied forces-at -4 Mpnastir have also started activities against the Austrians and Bulgarai and a determined offensive will : get .. under way from this base earlj-rict ,f spring, military: , critics , here believe A The appointment of General GuI- liame, to succeed General SarraiV V presaged a year of activity in the' Balkans, military officials declare?; Gulliame has a reputation of being restless, aggressive and a good cami -paigner. Had the Entente, intended, rfi to simnly sit tieht: hold Salonika: aW Vi- protect Britain's -route to India Si f rail or some other defensive Generat' j I would have been placed iiireharge of! j that vital base, critics pomted opt if todays - : . ' ' -, With the Allies in the West taxmil Germany's utmost defensite strength 'X:.1 with a-, reconstruction of ;the ItaliaiX' J 8 offensive and with the British in PaJ-iFt ( estin'e, and ' Mesopotamia making "in-" E roads into Turkish territory, the Cen: ;5 tral Empires face great obstacles Ih& i : coming year, high Allied military of- ' ficials ,declare. With the nolicy ot co-ordination, which the Entente haaV. . 1 adopted, the Kaiser, will be unable tafeH I front to the other to. halt the advanc4- M ing offensive, they believe. " - wwv 1 "The Salonika . front is not goinff 1 1 w uc vats ml seconaarv lmnortance.'v v , j a Balkan military expert declared tey day. "On no other front will such immense and far reaching results ac-v crue from a successful offensive. Cut. the Berlin-Bagdad railway and 'Ger-i nany's blockade is broken. , Shut the submarine from the Belgian coast, afldVvf her sea power is gone. . Both ." aro'i necessary and both will be done., be v " fore another year is. gone." . .-&zf'. The morale of the Balkan and AsiaftHJ tic allies of the Central Powers Is' weakening, official information r indi- k cates. The Bulgars, who-long-' since" accomplished their war alms,, hayevS' been deserting by scores and ' are chafing under the German military v' rule. "Germany's draining of Turkey arid J Bulgaria of supplies and in return v giving them war munitions has 'alsdt'. created a spirit of discontent." a BaJ-f kan diplomat declared. "Stop fhis1 interchange and both Bulerarfa and'W Turkey will Vquit. Open thd Darden- 'C nelles and South Russia will be on:2 iher feet again. With British fnrc rT in Turkey and Allied troops in Maceft dpma and the Italian steam roller wlti'iT ' forge onto Vienna." . - Greece's mobilization of troops tor -ii pctive service, announced today, -arid ffv Roumania's decision to- hold v but against overwhelming odds, Is also ln3 dicative that trouble for .the KaiserAi fa 1 j.i : nii . '-- .... la uicwiug iu nits Damans. li3 I: ii CHICAGO POLICE IN FIGHT WITH BANDITS " : : '.- Chicago, Feb. 2. A. desperate: guai battle-near the Fillmore street police . station tonight resulted in" the deatfc- ; of George Raymond, bandit, ' surren der of George Moran, another banPt dit, and injury of four Uther' men. ' ' :; ; Following their hold-pp of tt. worn-f an, the bandits shot Dr. J. M. Han-Tj I ': cock four times when he refused ;tQv!iv; aid the pair by driving them' away ? from the scene in his automobile, fto't . may die. - ? ' - . . Officers engaged the bandits . la a" I ' , running gun battle 'during wWclrS3.'j-j Patrolman David O'Keefe was prob-"':V; ably fatally shot through the Jabdp-' ff. ' ' men and two - detectives were" wound-- ed. . - .- -. .. When Raymond dropped with a bulil let through his heart, Moran surreih; j, dered. The dead bandit, - 26 yearsv' eld; was recently released' from Jol- iet penitentiary. Moran was cunderv 13,000 bond, charged with "stealing" freight. t ;-". : -m : . . - ' : : Food Riots in Vienna. Geneva, -Feb. 2. Food f lote'lii'. , - broken put: n4?yiieiinj.accdjr reports; received; here tonlht 52xfv-tf havet-fpeetf . pillaged ; and clashen Vzsm (' occurred ' between rioters and x ' 1 , .