C—O DSI, OO BA 15 LENIENT WITH THE AUSTRIANS President's Proclamation Im- poses Few Restrictions. NOT IN ALIEN ENEMY CLASS Not Barred From Restricted Zones Or District Of Columbia And Will Not Be Compelled To Reginter. Washington. —Austro-Hungavian sub- fects in the United States, the million or more of whom borers and are loyal to the sause, will suffer few restrictions 2 result of war petween the shefr birth and adoption In a proclamation declaring «u of war with Austria-Hungary, ac shrdance with the act of Congress, President Wilson specified that aaturalized Austro-Hungarians, the Germans in this country, be free to live and travel anywhere, sxcnpt that they may not ente: leave the United States without most are lands of in sclivity may be internsd. They 80tL register with police or sflicials, as Germans will be required 0 do shortly, and are not barred from the 100-yard zones about and warehouses closed to and are not required to le iriet of Columbia, piers, docks Germans the ive iis Washington. — Preside: proclamation declaring a with Austria-Hungary and lay fulas for the conduct and treatment of Austrians and [luzgarians, citing the resolulian of Congress thorizing war wii Awcivia Now, therefers, I, Woodrow © son, f*resident of the United States of | Americ do hereby proclaim to whom it may concern that a sta war exists between the United and the Imperial and Royal fIungarian Government; and 1 cially direct ali officers, civil oi ary, of United States that they exercise vigilance and zeal in the | discharge of the duties incident to | such a «iate of war; and 1 do, more wer, earnestly appeal to all Ameri san citizens that they, in loyal Mon tc their country, dedicated from ts foundation to the principles of lib- erty and justice, uphold the laws of | the land, and give undivided and will. ing support to aay be adopted by suthorities in prosecu 8 succesafu! is and obtaining a secure and just peace; “And, acting under and by virts the authority in me by Constifution of the United States, the aforesaid sections of the statutes, [ do hereby further and that the sbserved on the part States toward all denizens "or subjects gary, being males of the teen years and upwards, within the United States sally naturalized, shall be “All subjects males of four who shall be with and Dol acwally Joined ito preserve towards the United and te refrain from erimme against the public safety trom United ing down | au- SAYS ri hi all | of | States | Austro- | do spe | te mili the devo the constitutional ting the war to | 3 Gf 1e of | vested the and revised proclaim conduct the direc of natives, ci Austria-Hun age of four who =hall be and not act- | az follows: denizens or Austria-Hungary, een of * £ BER of ive citizens, years and upwan n the United States naturalized the ds, are peace ae sY La {es ne violating the laws of the States and of the states and territories thereof, and refrain from hostility or ziving information, aid or gomfort: to the enemies of the United States, and to comply strictly with she regulations which are hereby or which may be from time to time pro mulgated by the President: io In accordance with pe undisturbed in the peleerul pursuit of thelr lives and occupations and be accorded the consideration due to all peaceful and law-abiding persons, ex. eopt 80 far as retsrictions may be nec essary for thelr own protection and for the safety of the United Slates; and towards such of said persons as sondwet themselves in accordance with law, «ll clizens of the United States are enjoined to prescrve the peace and to treat them with all such friendliness as may be compatible with loyalty and allegiance to the nited States : “And all natives, citizens, denizens or subjects of Austrin-Hungnry, being males of the age of fourteen years and upwards, who shall be within the United States and not actually nat uralized, who fail to conduct them. selves as so enjoined, in addition to all other penalties prescribed by law, shall be liable to restraint, or to give security, or to remove and depart from the United States in the manner pre scribed by section four thousand and sixty-nine and four thousand and seventy of the Revised Statutes, and as prescribed in regulstions duly promulgated by the President, : “And pursuant to the authority vested in me, | hereby declare and establish the following regulations, which 1 find necessary in the prem- tees and for the public safety: Lh. Ne Star RASA ei male of the age of fourteen years and upwards: and not actualy naturalized, shall depart from the United States mit as the President shall prescribe, or except under order of a court, judge or justice, under sections 4069 and 4070 of the revised statutes: “2. No such person shall land in or enter the United States, except under such restrictions and at such plaes as the President may preacribe, “3. Every such person of whom there may be reasonable cause to be lieve that he is aiding or about to aid i the enemy, or who may be at large to the danger of . the public peace or violate, of whom there iz reason- { able ground to believe that he is about i to violate any regulation duly promul | gated by President, any | inal law the United States, ! the states or territories thercof i be subject to summary arrest by United States Marshal, or such other officers as the President shall designate and to confinement in ! such penitentiary, prison, jail, military camp, or other place of detention | may be directed by the President. { “The proclamation and the reguia { tions herein contained sha!! extend { and apply to all land and water con- tinental or insular, in any way within | the jurisdiction of the United States.” or the 01 crim of or of will the as BISHOP IS ACCUSED. | Disloya'ty Charge Against Rt. Rev. Paul Jones, Of Utah. st. Louis—Bishop Paul Joneg, of the Diocese of Utah, of the Protestant | Episcopal Church, appeared before a committee of three bishops which me: here to consider charges of disloyalty been made against him committee is composed of Bis! 3igshop Kinsolv. Bishop Coadjuto: have The of Texas, and Longley, of lowa. The charge against Bishop Jones is based on statements he is alleged have made with refegence to the war TROLLEY FURL OUGHS ONLY To Xmas Journeys. hington.— of the National will not be given Christmas lougha unless they live within troil distance t! cantonments, the War Department has decided. Secretary Baker in an announce ment assigned the harmful effect a general leave would have on camp discipline and the heavy burden it would throw on the railroads as rea- sons for the department's action. Was A rmy Men fu “= soi of PORTUGAL AGAIN IS QUIET. Revolutionary Committee Continues in Charge Of Affairs. Vigo, Spain.—News from the fron- tier indicate that quiet prevails throug Portugal. ernment has not yet been constituted, according to advices at hand, the revo lutionary committee continuing its functions. The number of wounded the fighting that accompanied the outbreak was 530, according to the fatest information. hout SPANISH SHIP BOMBED. Over Loss Of Eight Of Crew. Madrid. Premier official announcement that the Spanish Steamship (audio had barded by a German submArine, eight ailors killed and others wound. ed, Claudio was bound from an with gniphates for Spanish use, being The of The Germany. I OI EO BATAAN BILLION IN FOOD EXPORTED { Exports For 10 Months Show Great increase. Washington. Exports of foodstufls from the United States for the 10 | months ending in October totaled $1.- | 082,244,046, figures announced by the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce show. For the same period last year the total was $865942,176. Exports of foodstuffs In October of "this year exceaded $98,000,000. PEACE PRIZE TO RED CROSS. : International Committee Of Geneva Gets This Year's Award. Christiania The Nobel peace prize for 1917 has been awarded the Inter national Red Cross Committee of Geneva, The peace prize reserved was added by unanimous action of the custodians to the special fund of the Red Crogs International Committee. MORE CONGRESSMEN RETURN. Members Of Party Whith Has Been Observing War. An Atlantle Port. «Five members of the American Congressional and Citi. gens’ Committees, which has been ob- serving war operations hh visiee and Belgium for several weeks, arrived THIRTEEN HANGED AT FORT HOUSTON — Infantry Executed. 41 And Five Are Acquitted--0o! diere Spring Traps Of Gallows. san Antonio, Texsae — Thirteen of 8 of the Twenty-fourth In- fantry, United Army, found guilty ,of the riot and August 23, were ilitary Announcement carrying out of the sentence made at headquarters the rn Department. army officers and Sherif? John of Bexar county, were present sentence was carried out by soldiers from the post. or civilian spectators al- the time and place of execn having becn kept a secrel. the 68 men tried by the same 41 were sentenced life imprisoninent. One man was sen tenced to dishonorable discharge (ro eiture of all pay and and to be conned at hard Inbor for two and a ha'f years. Taree wore sentenced to be dishonorabiy from the army, forfeit nll Nowances and be confined labor tw years Five aequitied. “Good-by boys of Company C," the last uttered by the s states y ¥ '" ite complicity In on the m tion reserva on Only were or forf army, pay and at hard Were fo ware word and they dropped to the scaffold Men of Company Nineteenth Ine fantry, have been guarding the negro prisoners nee thew brought to stand trial before a complicity in the August thelr death on . f » were San Antonio to court-martial for Houston on The execution miles east of Camp Travis, on a gre scaffold which had ing the A colu infantry soldiers cavalry guadrhouse confined at 23 las! took at been erected dus night assembled at where the negroes 5.30 o'clock A. With Millard Waltz, post commander in com- the column arrived at 620 A M. The guard led in hollow square formation around the scaffold assemb io execution Without a tremor they with soldierly and singing hymn walked to their places. Pra o minister and bs and then the men stand on the traps. Resuming their song they stood erect displayed fortitude while the aw tread Yers two army chaplains gave the order to The triggers had for each trap and gned to each. At they pulled on the triggers and the thirteen dropped £t 717 a major been arranged one Recalis Execution Washington. —The hanging of complicity in riot was unknown to praec- all officials of the War Depart 3 8 Houston. Doubtless the death known to a few high officials, but so the depart. mental commander carried out the executions az a routine affair, as he is warranted to do in time of war and will only make the usual report which was received in news dispatches, Were the country at peace the executions would have required the approval of the President. In time of war, however, all such authority is decentralized and placed with re- sponsible commanders. No such wholesale execution in the army has occurred within the memory of the present generation. The last of its kind was the execution of the so called “St. Patrick's Battalion,” by General Beott during the Mexican War. Members of the battalion de gerted, joined the Mexican forces, later made their homes in Mexico, marrying native women, and many of their descendants now are found there, natives of that country in all respects, but bearing names quite foreign to the language they speak. HUGHES VISITS WILSON. Pays Call While In Capital On A Su preme Court Case. Washington. Charles E. Hughes was a visitor at the White House Monday. He came, he sald after wards, to take hia first opportunity of personally assuring the Persident that he was with him heart amd soul in | le everything he is doing for the vigor : CEPI IIP 0009004460060 3 PRESIDENT URGES ALL ro} JOIN RED CROSS. : Waehinglon.— President Wilson has Issued a proclamation in which he urges every one not already a member to join the Red Cross dur-3 ing the membership campaign start. ing next Sunday and continuing until Christmas Eve With the 3 stogan: ‘make it a Red Cross C hrist- mas,” an effort will be made to add fe n million new members Lo they ¢ million now in the organiza -% ¢ tion. Only one week has been al : lotted to the intensive drive. : The President's 3 lows: $“To the States: “Ten million Americans in « Vited Join the American He ¢ Cross during the week ending with The times require that every branch of our great na tional effort shall be loyally upheld and it is peculiarly fitting that at Christmas season the Red Cros: $ahoet be the branch throuzh which willingness to ex-$ 1 i 1 appeal ig as folk People om United mre io * Lielp is the American $ because it alone cant pledges of Christmas + good will to those who are bearing 4 for us the real burdens of the worl Army and Nay} nations upon whose “You should $s Red Cross Join in the You 3 evidence of fajth In this work | necessary for their heartening an “You should join the Red (Cros 3 Yecause this arm of the nations ¢ service is steadfastly aad efficient + !y maintaining the overseas relle *in every suffering land, administer + ‘2g our millions wisely and well anc gratitude of Our conscience will not le us enjoy Christmas season 4 this pledge of support to our cause & and the world’s weal is left unful * filed. Red Cross member Christmas spirit in terms aot or action over le the iF of *e "WOODROW WILSON, “Preaident of the American Red Cross.” PEP P E000 Rh hh ITALY HONORS AMERICA. Celebrates Deslarat ion Of Against Austria, -All Rome was decorated Italian and American flags to celebrate declaration of war by Austria several miles in ising Senators, associations an townspeople, gh the to the marched through facing the American Embassy, wheres a great demonstration bands playing Italian American airs Ambassador and his staff a embassy Rome ~ the Hungary, A parade compr city held, the Nelson Page ppeared at the windows and were enthusias homas The Mayor of Rome na, invoked the municipality Prince Cplon for a In a speech emphasizing the great proof President Wilson bad given of friendship of America the moment the had Italian territory, clared that America enemy and Italy PEPILPPPLVPPEPOPVOe PIPPI PPPPIPVPPVPPIVPOPPPPPRP POOP P PPP PPIPOPPIPOPOPY { { erty, tyranny. Amid cheers, the Prince pro posed to name a street in Rome for President Wilson, in honor of tris-Hungary. Later men and Councilors demonstration before Embassy. joined the mn to the United States, onstrators, saying that the of Raly snd of Rome, civilization and religion in a war con. ducted for ideals common to both countries and for that freedom which is the essential reason for thelr exist ence.” GERMANS HAVE 2,500 PLANLS. Army Possesses An Air Strength Of 273 Squadrilias. On the French Front in France. What are considered approximately exact figures of Germany's air strength show that the German army possesses 273 squadrillas, comprising about 2. 500 airplanes. The squadrillas are divided as fol lows: One hundred of artillery spotters, 80 of scouts, 23 of bombers, 49 of chasers and 30 battleplane squadrillas for the protection of the bombers. WOMEN LETYTER.CARRIERS. Ten Are Added To The New York New York—Ten women lettercar riers wore added to the list of women who have entered various lines of pub. lie service in New York City. ‘They THE HOLY CITY IN BRITISH HANDS Jerusalem. SAFEGUARDING HOLY PLACES Glorious Consummation Of Endeavor Which For 1,200 Years Has Been The Desire Of The Chris tian World. London. Andrew Bonar Law, Chan the Jery surrounded on all had House of Commons after being by British that salem, sides troops, surren- The Chancellor said British, French Mohammedan rapresentatives were on the way to Jerusalem to safe- General Allenby reported that on po south and west of Jergsalem. iceilor sald. Welsh a¥ffd Homa County troops, advancing from the df drove back the enemy, and, passing Jerusalem on the aast, established themselves on the Jerusalem-Jericho road. At the same timé London infantry and dismounted yoeomanry attacked the strong enemv positions west and northwest of Jeru- alem and placed themselves astride the Jerusalem-Shechem road. Holy City, being thus isolated, renderad to General Allenby The Chancellor sald General Allenby expected to enter Jerusalem officially Tuesday, accompanied by com: manders of the Italian contingents and t of the French fond British po litical officers with the B ish governor, rity had gone ahead on safeguarding the Chancellor stated, The capture of Jerusalem had been to the Chancellor, in of the great that had avoid damage to the and around the city. sitions be Char sur the French and he heads polit mission , together Br that tha 3a ae Da were in the delnved some degree, added consequence care been to taken sacred places in furks Held It 873 Years. The capture of Je British forces marks the ond two brief interludes, of mor 1.200 years’ possession of the seat « the Christian religion Moham medans. For 673 vears the Holy City has been in indisputed ownership the Turks, the last Christian Jerusalem being the German EMperor; Frederick II, whose short-liyad don from 122% to 1244 from jis connection being waged against Tur sritish in Mesopotamia, the fall Je Fasalem marks the definite cal of the long protracted efforts of the Turks to Aptare the anal and invade Egypt. Almost first move made by Turkey trance into the war was a Egypt Sinai Peninsula. nsalem ’ by the of fae sof ruier ol lasted Apart key of Suen the after her en campaign across the great desert BREAKS WITH GERMANY. On The Verge Since Peru In Octover Dismissed German Minister. Ecuador has eriations with official an- the government, Guayaquil,” Ecuador.— severed diplomatic according nouncement made by to an Ecuador has been breaking diplomatic Germany since early in October last, when Peru, Ecuador's neighbor on the south, dismissed the German minister Lima, Dr. Perl. After receiving on the verge of relations with ' ernment Dr. Perl, accredited minister to Ecuador, intd mated that he would take up his resi ital. The Ecuadorean secretary of foreign affairs, however, announced that the minister would not be re ceived officially by the government of Ecuador. Dispatches from Quito said the action of the foreign secretary was taken in order to demonstrate the close affiliation of Ecuador with the Union of American Republics. This step was construed in diplomatic eir. clea as virtually equivalent to a rup ture of relations between Ecuador and Germany. COMMEND MUSKRAT FLESH. Seven Cents A Pound. Winona, Minn Muskrat flesh is to be recommended to the National Food Administration as a substitute for pers point out that the muskrat is a a —— 5 a, Se A AS $56 Why That Lame Back ? 4 Morning lnmeness, sharp twinges § when bending, or aa all-day back- nehe; ench Is cause enough to sus. pect kidoey trouble, Get after the cause, Help the kidpeys. We Americans go It too hard, We overdo, overeat snd peogleet our Weep and exercise and so we are inst becoining ® nation of kidney sufferers, 529% more deaths than in 1800 i the 1910 census story, Use Doan’s Kiduey Pills, Thou sands recomend them, A Pennsylvania Case BR. Pringle, 913 “ery Pi 8t., Indiana, Pa ) D. suffered 5 pain L > of beck ons frequently, al niet my BEC wart RL ET Lily Higher Than Butter. arts of x accord of the Chicago seo rinany, Alas al society, £1 9 wr £1 rine is yeast ant 5 # tu Joie aren § higher } of 1 sd er To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the Zormuls is pricted on every label, showing #t i Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives oot malaris, the Iros builds up system. 60 cents tha Hiusion that 1 ews new Nationa KAYS Mile i i Lio weighs jroung mnie ia LL ary ser ind in the E te wow that of is tively sirengtd for weight, es himsel! ofl in endo i 11 comes that lille and be can full cauipment while thie big Pecalis Economy of 1864. o think whentieoss hardship lis HOA Wormer back to the {Mont.) the sons whe joe fatiess any s them Anaconda prchod dandelion rools used ns oct granulate on the SUgAr and ashioned bla bread even bread and han were considered pretty good caougt but the old people. In thos. riy every family in town kep. Those who didn’t a rule vent withoot n The papers o. that day emphasized the fact that cof foo and tea more nniritious wher axed without milk oT chit nd Mislead, wer ihstitutes hite or and frown fe Ory § were a rarity for compar {abne molnssey, alia honey “as ik. were ec?