is:: FORTY-FOUR HEARST PRESS OUTSPOKEN ON GERMAN SIOE Fatond tr Bernrtorff cause of Friendly Atti* tude Toward Huns. HEARST SCRIBE ON 1 EMBASSY PAY ROLL William Bayard Hale, of Hearst News Force Under fcontract aa Confi-! 1 dentist Agent of German Embsssy •. at Washington Sent to Berlin to, Handle "Colorful" News Rsporte— Meped to Pr«v«nt Roumania'a Entry Inte War. Washington, Dee. 1—A senaa onal expose of German propa ganda, involving among others a aeers of sducators of.ths country!* most prominent universities* was liven the senate committee todsy ly the man moat competent to apeak, namely, A. Bruce Bielaski, c'^ief of the bureau of investigation tf the department of justice. He nanvad Dr. William Bayard Hale, a correspondent of the Hearst papers, as being also a paid German agent, altho Hearst did not know it. Sielaski said sslwrities worth 3150,000,000 weer brought to Amer ica fn promote the propaganda but the sala waa slow and oniy ^uuu, 030 materialized from this source. Waahlngtaa, Dec. In telling Ma Osiman propaganda lo Am CA.'-aram BJelaski. cW9t irf VBfi. urd*a iairestigation^of the depart «today iaid before^bs comjnltlA cablegranaa favor 'fdr'Willlam in Ame lSwspa ertcan about to visit Berlin as a1 Hals in German Employ. j,. J918. time was f&vorabltf "to ^et Hearst dial -r ii »i i^aBiiiiigwii ruqv wua ouvruu iu send a first «te Journalist to Berlin, |hlm for t2.000.000. This offer was made Bernstorff toTd the foreign office that the man selected was Hale, who, he said, had been a confidential agent ot the embassy since the beginning of the war and was bound by such by con-j tract to Jane $3, 1918. "Hearst," the message said, "is not aware that Hale 1s our agent, but knows blm only as a Germanophile writer." Hale, according wo Bielaski, waa paid by the German government to with von Rlntelen council." Hearst Furnishes Press Agent. In making this arrangement the m&ln Idea, was thai Hale woud be thd most suitable man to start the reor ganization. of the) news service after peace on the right lines. 'I trust full confidence may be ac corded Haje who'Vill bring a letter of recommendation from me to Dr.. Ham met Hearst l^not jfcware that/ Halo is our agent but knows him enly aa m, Germanophile Journalist •vho has con tributed articles tb- leading iapera.' Another mqpsa^re, dated June B, 1916, said: "Hale tells me, and Hearst confirms, i^Wouaded, that the father 14 rather hurt, that on Privates Fred mam mmm r''i '7, "'J —i. Harvard University Prof. William N. Stone, Co'.uinoUuUnlveralty Dr. Bd Ltnund von Mach, Cambridge, Man.: I Dr. Auth von Brlesen, Prof. John W. I Burgees. Newport, R. 1. Prof. Eugenvj |8mlth. Columbia- l|nlver»lty: Prof. H. C. 3anbo»th, VnnderblU .University 'Prof. J. a. McDonald, University of Indiana Prof. Ferdinand Scheull, Un- Iverslty of Chicago E. C. Richardson, Pilncoton University Prof. Kuno Francke, Varvard University ProC I korge H. M^Olellan, Prlncton Univer sity Prof. A. B.-Faust, Cornell Uni versity: Prof. Morrla Janttow, Jr.. Un iversltv of Wlaconsln Dr. Walter S.: McNeill Rlch-noiid Va.: Dr. David i{ lrlth,a"d P&rV. 111.: Richard Berthold, St LO JIS Prof. Albert Btubnell Hart, Harvard University Dr. H. C. Hexa iner, PhilsulMihla Charles Xagel, St.! I«6uis Osft-.ild Garri.:on Wlllard, Now I York Evenimr Post William Randolph Hearst. No.v York AmericSn Bernard, JUdder, New York Stnats Zeltung Ha ward A. Kiuncly, New York, Even-| Ins Moll Frederick A. Scbradtis New) York Frank Harris, No. 3,. Washing- asked Senator Overman. Suggestlng on June 2,1916, tha* tbt xibertVon Dernburg in which he said sponsible for this outrage on the ^'th^-wis he Ishington Post was offered to ,aid wlth the unaw the p)gt ownera wouW buy the paper back at (t)e end of the ^r for .j IOWA'S HONOR ROLL. Bielaski said Germany never sue- Schnare. Iowa City. ceeded in' seducing an American offi-| Wounded severely—Lieut. Kurt M: cial, "if except Congressman Bu- Chapma^i, Cedar Rapids Sergeant chanan of Illinos, who got mixed up Alexander Priffilh Reynolds, Giiswotd to entertain in our midst a popula giiihlng of the war, a confidential Fred A. Brown, ,'Elbaron Elmejc L. of the mouths of the men whom they tttr li rather hurt, that on Privates Fred 11, -Reddig, Richland Wiegand's acfcoujkt the Wcrld gets aU Willis T. Chester.. SJMb Mfclnes. -the important Berlin Interviews. lj Wounded slighily-*-Privates Clarence recommend that under suitable clr-. Fi Floyd, ^Cinter Pe^nt -Lyle, Berry, ciimstances Hale should, for obvious Lorimo— reasons, be given preference, as Heart's organs ,have /have always placed 'German ag^nt brought to America '"by' von Bernstorf{,j produced '"•I-was paper "in impertaoi list of names" Br. Bielaski ws "cohtpn* practically all ^rere actively pro-German prior entrance ih! Hansfen themselves outspokenly on our side." 44Iahn, HountvVespon H*rman F. Ros Liat of Hun Sympathisers. jyburg, EMtM^ville, the diary of'Dr. Karl A. Fuehr, SIX THOUSAND he nvar and a few rszumw"""-' ephenrtMuabla^rrThe A. -vrnwii^i KAISER MUST r.r.,ri» tween Dr. Hale and von IJernator/f. Accompanying Dr. Hale was Louis J). repljed,1 "BernstorfTg diary showed it'did not know." kssooer nex^ ^in going to/Germany a-special mission ment of that little stortf, th«n ambassobsr Burtls foreign office.. One of BcrnstorfTs messages asked"Wfttj^g his news dispatches tb include paper. special Pf Dr. Hale Bayart Hale, m*™i«ba:Jir--Oeienian 11 lB a fonned ul'tMs country "by Dr. BefiwrcfV1' «cept CongnasrAan Buchanan.] "I« no one responsible? Dernburg, the ^German propasaadtot. Illinois, who got mixed up with von be called to account? Ts L. Rlntelen In labor'sXpeace council." Premier Lloyd-George Says Mat ion is Agreed Upon Prosecution. STARTING OF WAR TERRIBLE CRIME tbn Square. Now Vork Hob I. Ford, Premier Declares Hohsnxollern and All Freeman's Journal, New pfork Rev. I'ather Thimey, American Catholic Weekly, New Tork Max A. Hein, New'Vork. and George S. Viereck, 1 New York. Dietates Replifa to Bryan Besides this list, Mr. Bielaski also presented a supplemental list of about thirty :ianies of otners to whom 1 he Bald Cirmaft propastahda matter was mailed but who were not believed friendly to the causc. ThU lisb thi committee decitied to vithhold ffrbm the record, Mr. Bieaskl produced letters Dr. Hale wrote to Jr. Albert, X^erman pro pagandist, advising ho.v nHen written by tanla controversy should be a-swered. lhe he Edwards, also sent by Mr. Hearst,-*vlio ',uril?f „l!"i !»...:/•»» csih/iii^ His Aides in Proseouting Ruthless and other Improvements will be made. Warfare, Insluding Submarine Com manders, Must Be Brought to Ac count—Britain to Insist Upon Dras tic- Action oy Peace Conference. their place, he pledged the entire in- Secretary liryan durug 'the Lusi- faience of the British government at! Associated with the Gorman g-anda orgnnizivtion was Dr. Kuehr, a former .consular official ii wd exclusion }f all enemy aliens from' the Orient. Dr Fuchr'.s diary notes British soil/ the premier pointed out? werei, read telling of conferences be- that a consldcra reu*aln- "Is -there any evidence to show that! Mr. Hearst knew Dr. Hale had a con tract with the tterman government?" ipaying Te wnuggls Oifieisl Dispstches. jit was planned and In the deliberate A prlae^r tn^ed Weunnenberg, at wantonness with wUich it was pro It aleo was a crime in that helpless little state and Atlanta pOhlt^ntiary, convicted of esp-) voked. bv Count von U&m-1 to M^ .Dtelaaki, Iniyjiuuation ot a. Jhelpl foruisai tile- departQiciit justice that vltrrthfc• wicked and W&i to arrange in trans- the treaty of neutrality, the sor*p .pfi country. Mr. Hielnskl was interrupted fact that all these\lniqultou.s things! agfn to ask if the German Hgffnt? in this were done in the name of war a^id ipef correspondent, because he countty had ever ruooeeded in swerv- under the imperial edict of an autocrat ... was in the employ of the Hearst or- ing aay "gbveriirtient official, and he.does not change their nature. I 'gans, which "had been outspoken on 1 answered "The war wae a hideous, abomin-j ttie German side." "Nor' remarka!le Htelaskl told-the committee that Hale' fought that by get- [iprs of the best youns men of feurope was week P°ace conference to see that justice DCnfil IM DCTDHODAn Y* done. In declaring for the expulsion tUl i,Io prc Wsr was Crime. warm tribute to the soldiers ijaUor3 of the „». .. ,, .. "The kaiser must be prosecuted. I No* On the contrary," the witness' The empire, said: war was a crime. Who doubts that? It was a frightful, terrible crime. .It was a crime in the' way in which no punishment? Surely that is neither Bertostorff wrote a letter to ^°d justice nor mans. The men'rc- human race must not be left off be- 1 Pa"se ,tanding that I their heods were ,h"v F«,-TW enAgt.., A«,.n, l^.!«SZU. 'in SS?51 Trosps in Ovarsass Service. Visit Roumania aftd if possible, pre- port Issued by the war department to- der on the high seas and the abomin- vent entrance of that nation Into the day and twenty a?e named In the night war. Mr. Hearst, Bielaski said, waa report. The day report includes: ignorant of Hale's employment on the Died of. disease—^Corporal Robert E. tatter's mission. White, AVoodbipe Private Fred H. Followlqg is the message of June 1. Beam, Riverto4 Barnes B. Swisher. to ignore. They spied and plotted and sent by Bernatorff -thru Buenos Alreaj Hlnton John ii Poatel, Winthrop. assisted Germany in forming plans, for I and Stockholm: Wounded sllfhtly-t-Ctotporals Harry the destruction of a country which "•In coiiformltV to your excellency's' E. Hsmin, rAmes Walter B. Brown,! offered them hospitality. They thus wish, I suggest that the present is a. Fairfield Harold-A. -Wise, Oskaloosa have forfeited any daim to remain, favorable time to get Hearst to send a Privates John rE Mijler, Chariton "Further It wpuld lead to inevitable' first rate journalist to Berlin. The Henry G.Waltor.Muscatine Frank J.'Irritation and disturbances if German*, man selected, W. B. Hale, has been an Kruse, Dubuque Howard A. Rose,' who have been fighting us fpr .four your excellency knows, since the be Norway Herman Riggert, Whlttemore years, came here to take the bread out tn ,8 agent at tlie embassy and as such Jmaj Frisk, South Bftglieh. four years ago sought to destroy, aad suitan, on- een bound by contract till -Tune 21, Kighteen IOwanS are. named In the much as I regret that it is impossible ta'ned bx a British corresnondent. wino casualty list released for publication by the wartdep^rtoient Mpt i»ight. They are: Killed in aetion—Corporals Stanford A. Mygera, Des Ifpih^ Lorln L. Fos ter. Lamont Privates J^ellx R. Haven, Ruthven James. P.' Hoeller, Lovlllla Ervin Q. DickBon, RMfto'n. Died of dlseaif—Privates Harold M. HolJoway. Jefferson 1 Fred Howard, Eli­ zabeth Jesse J, WfrM, Drakeville -John G. Ross, Jyffcrgon. Wounded Mve^j^^ivates Thom as J. Sorehieif,,^6orihiadi' Undetermined— uriinorsiv, ~t-r~ Mlsslnlr in ^adtloh—Cdifibral Carl C. downed when perpetrated the deed, 5(M) "The British government rehfrred the question of the criminal culpability ~of the ka'ner and his accomplices to their jaw officers some weeks ago. They invited a body of Jurists in England to war ousM to be tr investigate the matter and they have R,pUbticWn Senators to Oppose |ed by an in- ternatlonaJ court. They also favored last four or five years it is Impossible in labor's peace Corporal Cole BertHof.V Des Moines I tlon of wl#ch a considerable portion I Privates RoyakA- Biurlow, Clear Lake abused our hospitality. This has been John JL Chamberlalh, J^nriHa Sidney demonstrated "by evidence imposalble c,.Lrt_ _/ Tn. L«. tmes B. Swisher, to ignore. Thev enied and clotted and to have free intercourse between, all nations, nope we u« up igalnst 'ifis events of the last few years for-which Germany alone Is responsible and we must abide the consequejjses. "All the European allies have ac cepted the principle that the central powers must pay the most of the war up to the' limit of their capacity. The allies propose to appoint a cofrimlttee of experts to examine, the best-method of exacting the indemnity.** In one passage of his progtam, that dealing with measures for/ an Increase of British output, Mr. Lloyd-George says: "There Is one condition'for the svc4 cess of all Efforts to Increase the out of this country, namely, ess ence. Bolshevikistti id the poison of all production. Russia proves thatV' sr., lBt. jihpgar Privates Ralph «WLV» VICTIMS. VANCOUVER 18 SiHAKCf). Earthquake Reeks Buildings and M^kte III People in Skyscrapers. Vancouver, B. *C.. pec. 6.—Van- Epidemio^ Rssulia in—Msny Fatalities couVer was shaken violently by--»n .in 9«f«i*a. London, Ofc. 4.- -Sl: deaths fraMi ,'8panl«j|i -tii OCCliTteJ elbou earth tremer at 12:45 this moment- thousaand The tremors were felt for two mlnutas luenia have A distinct rubbling was noticeable, pant* of t»H buildings Mrfte especially affected by the'dkiturbfutce, ,J many being setted with,hausea.: '-vf/ lSa shock was salt in all-f^M^'i^ 'i MAR3HALLJ0WN, IOWA. FRIDAY, PECEffBBB 6.1918 WRITER IN BERNSTORFFS the city, many personsbeing awukened by the shaking of furpjture And tumb ling-of dlahea., In n|nc unction* -the shock was reported no oovero that persona rwahed from Ihelr beda to the streets frarlpf -their hemes would be demollshf-d. S Felt in Seattle. Seattle. Wash, DPI-. 6^ Lt ,portlon -i .. that a consldcral.lo, proportion of a considerable number of alien residents waJ later discovered Dr. Hale etill was in t«Pitality and forfeited rights to the pay of the German government. ,j ^ad abused British tnort brutaL treat little state. Remember officials in this "Surely the war was a crime, the record. The able crime, a crime which has sent mil-1 Is no one to there to be What waa believed to In an earth disturbance was felt in Seattle at 1.2:45 n'rlock this morning. there and the recommendation .was .an opted.' The campaign to raise the remaining Juiids needed will be begun at once, A rolIoge commons will be built to be used for various college gathering.) GIVES ORDERS BY WIRELESS. Wilson Directa White Houae Buaineas! Frem Mid-Ocean. Washington, Dec. 6.—Messages dl rccting the disposition of official lu*i ness have begun to reach the White! House from President Wilson at s5a. I London, Dec. 5.—In the detailed re statement of hi.s policy, issued by Premier Lloyd-George today, calling for the trial and punishment of the men the coincidence that President Wilson lesponfsible for the war, however hiprh Mill Land Friday, Dec. 13t I Parle. Dec. (.—Attention is called to W"1 arrive in Paris on Friday. Dec. 13. by larcel Hutin in the Echo de Paris. 111 T11 KuUflAv DYING LY THOUSANDS FOR WANT Of FOOD [By the Associated Press.] Stockholm, Dec. 5.—Fugitives "win niioiis whs hsvs ."SSchcS Hera asy living conditions in Petro grad are terrible. The famine there, they say, defies imagination. Floy sells for 90 rubles and butter sugar at 150 rubles per kilogii (2.2 pounds). Herrmgs are the etoly focd obtainable and aell for five rubles each. All middle class"^ktemcnta,. are excluded from eating houses' and by theiwands. Hundreds ara I^Mnl each day between ,f and o'clock in the morning. Of a normal population of 2, 000,000 only a half million paraona are left in Potrograd. The city looka deserted. Kiilf of the flats are occupied by Red Guards and their families. Hotels, restaurants, cafea and offices are closed. The houses of the ^niddle clasaea are deserted, their Atrniture. has been stolen /and the windows have been smashed. Many widely-known persons are dead. Rumors ofien tente intervention have increased bolshevik hatred and resulted in further peraecutiona of the middle claaa elements. There is great nervousneas in the foreign legationa. Tlje Poliah legation haa been looted, while the Swiss legation haa been entered. PRESENT WAR REVENUE BILL. flnttnce lowans are listed.in^the casualty re- jthe punishment ,of those guilty of mur- needs of the government was presented I General Pershlnc's committee to able ill-treatpnent, of prisoners. Simmons. Debate on the measure, "The British government will uae-its whole influence at the peace con- Wlio nreeeded him Im- to rae et the the senate today by Chairman ]s more than ference to see that justice is executed, ^,^0,000,000 in 1920 from taxation,! is JHome. ./ expected to begin next Monday or "After what has happened in ,t?ie 1 j^.ooo,000,000 in 1919 and Tuesday with republicans strongly opposing attempts to fix the 1920 im j'poets at this time. ri 1 KKy Appears Human a a a I I a a vr fh Tuplt ,_,, H1I „nn ... personality ob on suggests a university professor. In talking with the correspondent The sultan -iskad the Interviewer to publish the following from the ruler: inilUVOiU Vft tliv GERMANS HEAR ALLIES WILL 60 ON TO BERLIN 1 OES MOINES GETS SCHOOL. Baptist College to Be Located at Hight' land Park. Des Moines, Dec. «.—Ai the meeting of the Baptlat convention today It waa decided that I'-aptist College will bo: located at Highland park here. The special committee which has been In veatlgating the status of the De» Moines college made a report recom wending that the college be located Plans to Occupy'Hun Cap ital Due lo Acts of Violence. GERMANS INTERCEPT WIRELESS DISPATCH Studied Indifference Continues to, Characterize Recaption of American Troops in Germany—Pershing Issues train. Proclamation Calling Upon Citizens to Reaume Occupations and Main tain Order, Copenhagen, Dee. 6.—Allied and American forcea Mill temporarily occupy Berlin, exercising police supervision, according lo the Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung of Berlin, which aays that an Amer ican wircleaa diapatc'h to this effeci has been intercepted by the Ger mane. The newapaper f*aya that Mann heim will be similarly occupied. The roason for this action on the part of the allies ia said to be "rsgrettabls ineidert during which the supervisor oi a priaon camp shot three Frenchman. TBy the Associated Press.1 vim :ho American Army of Occupa tion, D^o. j.—Studied indifference again olfaractcrizecl me Cit-rman rrufpi inn American troops on their way to the Rhine today. General Dickmans army resumed its advance at daylight knd by night had reached a line approximately twelV^ miles to. tlie eastward. Scori« of vil lages and small toime were brought under the domination o£ the American army At American Ii^adiuarters St Treves,f General Brown as military governor, and General Smith. of civil affairs, have begun the work of administration. Local authorities In virtually every" community have agreed to retain their! posts and co-operate in maintaining!: o:-der. I tlcneral Pershins has issued a pro I Pjlamotion calling on the people to re- food-stuffs are limited as to variety Washington. Dec. 6.—The war there is apparently enough to meet the venue bill redrafted bv the senate needs of the people. Prices, however. Banized business men of the I'nlted Suites, thru the reconstruct I tin con reassurance has gress of war service coirrfnittees, today gone-far to alleviate anxiety. It is decided to senjfa commission to Rurope understood the Americans wilt rule lo be available to the Aipe'riean peace sternly but General Pershing said in delegates in the event they need as hta proclamation: sletaneo in working out economic prob "No lasv abiding lierson need have lems that might enter Into the peace any feary negotiations. peace are very high. designed to raise sl-lghtly Massacres tO End brought wl$in the fule with firmness. vigor and promptness. The American army will govern In strict accordance with international law and the rules London, Dec. 6.—The London news- 1 an( People Hasssured. I any RCt of cJVJI LIFE, RIU an fomenters might be severely punished,' authorities, wjll b4 punished with the bpt various factors prevented my old ers being prmnptly carried out. The matter now Is being thoroughly invest igated. Justice soon will lie dono anl we never will have a repltltln of these ugly events." ujiihost vigor." likely will te "dominated by republi can Imperialists who oppose President Wilson^* fourteen points." The call aayafsT "Bvch-if we dee Ire a half way peace which would nerve the vital Interests of Germany, we must. at least con* dude a temporary peace before that tl^je." Serious Disorders in Berlin. I011 don, Dec, C.—Melons dlsurders have arisen In Berlin and considerable Bring has occurred In the principal streets, according to reports rea«hl«* the Dutch-German frontier, aaya an Exchange Telegraph dlapatch from Amsterdam. The trouble Is xakd to have been caused by the German bol Mheviki. Baden y/ould Join Switseriand. London. I)es'. Southern Baden Is seeking lnoorioratlon In Switseriand, ciccHirdlng to liaden news [Baden is east of th/ rsnapers. S/^Mne. -•a famous Klar.k Forest ,¥ part of southern Badr who is in .'harKO two or three other famous units would be brought home soon, leaving their places to be tilled by some of tho new coiners. halls•• and Blinds were drawn in many cases and «re closed, while I heaters inu*t limit most of the inhabitants remained In- attendance to 50 per cent of seating doors. 1 capacity. Food Plentiful, Prices High. On* hundred forty-live new ffwrc At Treves 130 airplanes vere found! were reported today up to noon. ready for delivery to the allies. A| small quantity of supplies was left SEND COMMISSION TO EUROPE. 1 there by the Germans. Reports made! Continuing the.proclamation reads:' CAR WEN GET ADVANCE. "The American army is not come to make war on a civilian population. All Increased Pay Allowed In Buffalo, Ot persons who, with honest submission tumwa and Detroit, act peacefully and obey the rules laid Washington, Dec. 6—Wave increases down by the military authorities, will for employes of street railway com be protected In their persons, religion panles at Buffalo, X. Y„ Ottumwa, -and property. At! others will be Iowa, and Detroit. Mich., are prided customs of war sanctioned by the fares to meet the wage advance. part must abstain by word or deed hostility toward the from his two brothers'and ob^dinnt conduct of your private Wajshtngton, Dec, Hun Professors Fssr Republicans. fBy the Associated Press.] Berlin Dec •«,—[Delayedr]—Kight hundred forty-fix members of faculties of German universities haVe signed a statement demanding the earliest con-' .""The great majority of the riatlon is, .yjftcatlan, ot" Uti9 national assenmly. innocent of the aklsdeeds attributed to. Among the reasons siver fiy the res pons- jsifnorsts thatthe new American con •tm* Into office (Maroh IIUBUWUB ntll 11 U, Only llmited number are I et .1^4 The large Kaiser Calla Ger Physieian. London, Dm\ t.—, man phyeieian summoned by the/ sr German em peror ha« arrlv/ Holland on a AUTO BANDIT HANGED Lloyd Bopp Pays Penalty for Murder of Cbioago Policeman. Chicago. Dee. 6.—Lloyd Bopp. auto-| I mobile bandit, convicted of the raur der of Hermnn Mallow, a policeman, was executed by hanging In the coun- 1 ty jail this morning, it was the fourth death sentence carried out la Cook county this year, Hopp walked to the gallows un.sup-' Raasch, a former naval officer. I ported. He was pale but calm, lie! .The Sttaken works, built during the declined to innkc a statement before war, covers hundreds of acrea and I his execution. l,to' 3,000 workers. The machtaee em* Last night ln protested his inno-' ployed in the later raids on itondun I cencc of the crime. He rose at 7:10 and 1'aris were built there, a. m„ after the longest and soundest The machine tor the trana-Attaptki sleep ever enjoyed by a dooinixi man '"Rht has a wing spread of 1M feet in the history of the county jail. land engines of S,OM horse power. RAINBOW TROOPS TO STAY. Secretarv Baker Sav. V*tar.n. will W ashington, Dec. ).—Secretarj- Bak er gave it as his personal opinion thH,t none of the vctenin divisions of th» American army in France will return home before peace formally is de clared. He ftidicatcd that the tried fighting men v^5ulcl comprise the bulk or the force .o be kept in JCurope for the present. REPORT JB75 NEW CASES. Tirteen Deaths Due to Influenza In Dos Moines Thursday. turn to normal pursuits and assuring D. .Vloinen. U»es. 6.— Thirteen deaths I them' that if good order is kept they :i1"' ®', nt'w will not be interfered with. reported in Des Moines jfHierduy. The towns thru which the troc.ps 1 his .s tht largest number of new paf ed todav preseoffed appearance cases here in a single day. Schools, I .'similar to those cntetsfl c.n Sunday, I'°o1 »'nses of intlut'nsn were outdoor athiulr events nlle Congress of War Service Corwn^'tteea lowa attorney and legislator, died at Would Aid Pesca Dalegates. Atlanta City,. N. J. Dec. 6.—The or- In an award announced today by the war labor board. In nil three cases the board found that the companies should be allowed to Increase their RELEASED FROM HUN PRISON. tained by. a British correspondent, wiuo forces. It is yoUr duty, now John/ H. Franklin, of Leon, Among the London, Dec. 6.— Frwn the war's describes this ruler as a very differ-' to devote yourselves to the orderly Americans Reaching France, ginning to the end of October. 1HH ent the ihmn« 'lives and afTalrs,, the' re-establlsment lin. of I^eon, lows, is among war pria- emy at iiu-iy and i»«riSv risk of normal conditions In schools, oners who have returned from Oer- iKri3.iS0 tons ,a«alnst 10,849.527 Iton*^ Mohammed VI, says the correspond- ctiurchea. hospitals and charitable In- many to France. The names of liber- constructed and 2.392,B*5 tons eTfemy1 ent, impressed one as of considerable gtltutions, and resumption of your local ated prisoners began to reach Wash- tonnngo enptured. intellectual force. •. His appearance •You will be unobstructed but on the carried twenty-one names. Including contrary wljl he encouraged and pro- that of Franklin atd also that ot the sultan condemned tne nnwlsdom tccted In these pursuits. So far as IiYank McDougal, of Marysvllle, Mo. Des Moines, Doc. O. J. McHugfl and lack of foresight which brought yburStiltude ahd conduct make It -pos- Turkey into the war. He declared Ibat I ible, local courts, governing bodies Ysnksss In Qermsn Prisons. I a I a Assocl%«:oct%«, had he been sultan tills -never would! 6.—John Ington today. The first list carried lnatltutions wlll be continued In Washington. Dec. 6.—A list of offi- tion. at the final session of the have happened. operation under supervision of Amer- cers and enlisted men In Qeriran prls- vention in connection with the tract The, ruler expressed great irrow at I |Cftn authorities. Except" where they on camps the treatment at the Armenians by I affect the rights and securities of tMe war department, including tho a record has been set In attendance "Certain political commttteeu of Tur-1 American army your present laws and ^following lowans: at the four lays of the show, during key," and added: regulations will remain undisturbed. Camp Rastatt—Fred Shircr, Chart- which over 1.500 farmers, auto, Imple* "Such misdeeds and the slaughter of sons of the fatherland have broken' laws of,war, every act offering hos-j ton, Iowa I the displays and attended the my heart. I ordered an Inquiry Ks soon tljlty or violence, and every uis- Reported in go6d health, camp un-! ings. as I came to the throne so that the I obedienco1 of rutns laid down by 'the known—Herbert 15. Fairchlld, Sioux All officers ana directors Of th^jAs*'^ in force. Every violatl6n of the ton, Iowa Martin J.v Gersema, Apling- ment and tractor dealers have viaitccl Rapids, Iowa Hugh C. Alexander, St. 1 NUMBER1N RERUN SENDS OUT A JULES VERNE STORY Building Airplauea Which Will Make Trips A Atlantic. Huns Alee Claim t» Have Which Will Croee Atlantic and ry 100 Passengers, Msking Trip In Almost Immediately after the arm istice was signed ttie Sttaken works .. .r -. .-nnx-rrtIre the ilzhtlBS Dlaa*? hand into Director Kaasch claimed that -this airship could have gone from 'Berlin to New Vork and back without Stop VinK' opt 1 The Weather. elected directors in place of W, Iowa—Generally fair tonight and Donald of Algona. The other oWlof^l, Saturday warmer toni*flH- aikd-in east-i 4re C. R. Petors. W!nt^rsei,• }vi portion Saturday. Range of temperature at Marshall- '"-:3 jr HAS ENGINES OF 300 HORSE POWER Zspp^n and C$- Forty Hours Berlin Plane te„ Lin# All European Capitals by Air ^Rewtee —One Plane Has Spread ef 1SS FMi 'v-.- vjl lxndoa. Dec. 6.—The Germans are building an airplane with which they I intend trying a trip across the Atlan tic. according to the correspondent at Berlin of the Dally Express. The correspondent aald he learned of this plane when being ahown evgr an aircraft factory at Sttaken, a aub urii of licrlla, by Managing Director commercial machines, in European *,.• tals with Berlin. To Carry 100 Passengers, The correspondent says a Zeppelin factory at Friedrichshafen la building an airahlp for a trans-Atlantic voyage capable of carrying 100 passengers. It haa nine engines and eight propel lors. ita first flight will le ia July next, l^the international atupatlaa cleans up by that time. Ttie,: irfP 'l*.". «xpe«l «tedt$, 1 Heretofore the' nndurstandiag -has been that the Rainbow- division anrf" The corre'spo: remarkable flight of & Zeppelin vember. 1917. The craft stalled Ifiigtf Hulgariu for Kast Africa with twenty* two tone of munitions'and Biedlfttwa, and a crew of twenty-twoi It tliut air rived over Khartoum, in the CUIdltSt lie correspondent's informant deenMft. when it wa» ordered by wireless to. return because it wan leartaed that the I'.ermnn forcos in Kaat Africa had sttr rendered. It returned to its starting point four days after it had left,' GEORGE H. CARR DEAD. .,i Well i^novwri In Iowa aa Attorney anil Legislator. DPS Moines, Dec. 6.—George H. OaiTa former district Judge and well known his home here today. He was taken ,11. Sunday with influenza which devel oped pneumonia but a ruptured blood vessel was the immediate cause'' of death. He .vas born in Whitehall, K. Y., N'ov, 1S52, and came to Iowa-' from Sandwlcli, 111,, about fprty-flve years ago. He first settled in Ktn mettsburg. later moving to -Moines. STRIKERS RETURN TO WORK. Paper Mills Employes to Await Find ing of War Work Board. Gle^n Falls. N. Y., Dec. «.-~Shortly after the strike of 1-5,000 union emrif® ployes of new paper mills in New York and linglaud went Into effect to day, J. T. Carey, president of the In ternational Brotherhood of Fapermak ers, sent a message to the men inWiS structing them to keep the mills runi: ning and notifying thom that the' war work board, soon would render a de cision in their case. ._ w. War's Shipping Toll. IYank- world's total merclvant losses from en- 1 1 IMPLEMENT MEN ELECT of Cresco, was re-eloctad prcsidsnt of president K. P. Armknechti'" son, treasurer T. E. Wherry, town: Thursday, 48 and 19 Wcdnes- ton, secretary directors. J. day,.84 and 21 J»ec. 5, t*lt, 18 and hlne of Burlington, N. P. Olw»i below zero. At^|thi9 m«mlnr the nmnoli. J. F.^ Buckniart ...tif temperature waa 21, comMfffl with 21 Springs, W. N. 'Black of Thursday morning. Matt Conwiiiy of •i euwM»1 lahc^r" 1 soclatlon were re-elected at thts rnloriy- Anthony, Iowa. I ing's meetipg. with the exception tuf 5^., H. L. BruTtt or Lorenz, la„. whd