a A EO 04 SR A CHIL WAR IN GERMAN CAPITAL Government Rushing Troops to Berlin BLOODY STREET FIGHTING Ebert Government Realizes Now It Must Fight—Radicals Have Set Up An Opposition Government. Copenhagen. — Government troops Rave occupied all the public bulldings In Berlin, and thousands of govern. ment troops are still entering the cap- ital, The Berlin correspondent of the Ber. fingske Tidende, who sends this in- formation, declares that the Spanta- cans have been beaten. There was lively shooting Wednes- day forenoon at many points, includ- ing the Brandenburg Gate, which the government forces had captured dur- ing the night. Several persons were killed or wounded. The troops of the government di- rected an incessant fire from machine guns on the roof of the Chancellor's Palace in the direction of Unier den Linden and Wilhelmstrasse. Latter the firing Increased intensely, and par ticularly in the neighborhood of the Brandenburg Gate, and many more people were killed. A state of siege has been proclaimed in Berlin, according to a late dispatch from the city. probably was made by the Ebert gov- ernment.) London. —German government sages picked up by wireless here say that pants of Berlin are scenes bloody fighting. The government, it is added, is tak. ing all necessary measures to destroy “the reign of terror.” The messages say that some of Berlin already are without li 2 t and water. Provision depots have been stormed by the Spartacans and th wae paris been interrupted. mitted by the Copenhagen correspond. ent of the Exchange Telegraph Com- pany say that negotiations between | ity Socialists) and Independent Soclal- ists failed. More Government Troops. Basle.—Troops loyal to the Ebert | government have arrived in Berlin from Potsdam and driven the Spar tacans as far as the Tiergarten and | reoccupied the printing works, accord. ing to the Frankfort Zeitung. The government, the newspaper adds, decided to take energetic measures and has assembled a large number of troops. Premier Ebert has issued a sanifesto to the “workers, bourgeolse and soldiers,” denouncing the Spar tacans as being responsible for many persons being killed and wounded. MAY MODIFY BLOCKADE, Supplies Will Be Permitted Soon Te Reach Central Powers. ade of the Central Powers, Such miti. gation, it is pointed out, would be granted in order to admit of the pass ing in of food supplies for Czecho- | Blovakia, Poland and sections of Rus- | &la and other territory which it is de- reached except through which the Central Powets are holding. CONGRESS TO HOLD SERVICE. Joint Session In Honor Of Colonel Roosevelt Planned. Washington —8teps toward a me morial service in the Capitol on 8un- day, February 9, in honor of Colonel Roosevelt were taken in Congress. The Senate unanimously adopted a resolu tion by Senator Wadaworth, of New York, providing for a joint session and suthorizing committees to make the arrangements and invite the President, Supreme Court Justices, members of the Cabinet and other officials to par ticipate, FRANCE'S COAL GONE. Mines Cannot Be Brought To Full Pre duction Under Three Years. Washington —Three years will be required to bring the coal mines of Northern France to full produetion and | efface the devastation wrought in ilig conl flelds by the retreating Ger. mans, sald a report to the Fuel Ad | Men WITH DEPENDENTS T0 BE RELEASED FIRST Cruisers Huntington And St. Louis Coming With Artillery Troops— 600 Marines Who Fought At Chateau Thierry On Way. Washington.-—Commanders of com- bat divisions in the United States were authorized to discharge first from their forces those men whose allotment pa- pers show they have dependents, and second, such men as would be affected adversely in obtaining civil employ- ment as a result of being held further in service, It was learned that the instructions regarding demobilization of combat di visions already affect a large propor: tion of these units, in one instance, the commander having been instructed to release 46 per cent. of the men under his command. Huntington And 8t. Louis Coming. The cruisers Huntington and St. Louis sailed from Brest January 2, and are due at New York January 16 with about 3,000 troops. The Fifty-seventh Artillery, Coast Artillery Corps, and the headquarters of the Thirtyninth Coast Artillery Brigade are coming home on the Huntington. Onethird of the 1,700 officers and men of the Fiftyseventh Artillery aboard this ship are from the New York National Guard. Aboard the 8t. Louis is the Three Hundred and Forty-sixth Field Arti} lery, comprising 46 officers and 1.256 men, nearly all of whom will be sent to Camp Lewis, Washington, for de- | mobilization. Other naval vessels announced as returning with troops are the battle ship Rhode Island, due at Newport News January 12 with the Fifth Anti aircraft Machine-Gun Battalion, Four i { Hundred and Forty-seventh Aero Con: struction Squadron, Casual Company | Two Hundred and Sixth, and the bat : | tleship Virginia, due at Newport News | | the same day, with the Seventh Anti | aircraft sector, composed of the Fifty. { first, Fifty-second, ¥Fifty-third Fifty. : fourth and Filty-fifth Antiairerafl Dat | teries, headquarters, supply and med { feal detachments; One Hundred and | | Sixth Trench Mortar Battery, Four Hundred and Elightyfourth Aero Con : struction Squadron and Marine Casual i Company Two Hundred and Fifth EXPLOSION KILLS SCORE. Othery Injured When Film Exchange | In Pittsburgh Is Wrecked, Pittsburgh. — i i | Between 15 and 20 per sons, mostly women and girls, were | kill and more than a score others j injured here when a terrific explosion | wrecked a film exchange bull ding at 804 Penn avenue, in the downtown | | sect lon of the city. Eight bodies have | been recovered from the ruins, and { firemen, working on the interior of the | structure, report that many other i bodies are buried under wreckage, GEORGE GETS RESIGNATION. Retires At His Request Not To Em- barass New Government. i London.—The entire British Cabinet has formally resigned, at the request | of Premier Lloyd George, to avoid com. plications in his selection of a new ministry. The ministers will continue | | to exercise the functions of their office | until successors are appointed, WASHINGTON i Conversion of war risk insurance | | held by soldiers, sailors and marines | | and war workers into, permanent | peacetime policies will be stariod | within 60 days. Steps are being taken by the State Department to bring home from Tur key 3.5600 native and naturalized Amer. icans who have been there during the war. Removal of restrictions upon im- vortation of wool from all non-enemy countries has been ordered by the War Trade Board. Full citizenship was conferred on 162.402 soldiers and sailors up to Jan- uary 1 under the act of Congress passed last May. Road building on an extensive scale is expected by the government offi clals this year, Evidence was given before the Sen ate Committee investigating German propaganda to the effect that $380,000 worth of munitions shipped in 1915 to agents of Francisco Villa, the Mex ican bandit, were paid for by ¥. A Sommerfeld, now interned as an en: omy allen, A commission sent to Burope to Investigate hes recommended to (he Department of Agriculture the formu lating of an international program of agricultural production for the entire world, to forestall a possible shortage , teed and fiber. executives will recommend to Congress a system of railroad man: agement, including private ownership and government control. THE COUNTRY. TRY AT LARGE. GOL. ROOSEVELT la LAID TO REST Ex-President Sleeps in Spot He Had Selected FLAG DRAPES HIS CASKET Service Impressive By Very Simplic- ity—Nation Sends Its Mourners Teo Join Family And Neighbors, Oyster Bay, N. Y.—~Theodore Roose velt lies at rest beneath a cemetery knoll near the rambling rural high way along which he traveled so many times in boyhood and in manhood be tween the Ssgamore Hill house, which was his home, and the quiet village of Oyster Bay. Perhaps to no other former Presi dent of the United States has been paid the tribute of so simple a funeral #8 the one which was given Colonel Roosevelt on the shore of Long Is land Sound. Military and naval hon- ors were not his in death, only be cause it had been his wish, and that of his family, that the last rites be surrounded only with the simple dig nity that might attend the passage of a private citizen. But- the American nation, and resentatives as did also the State and the city in which he was born. These noted men sat sorrowfully in the pews copal Church, while brief services of | prayer and seripture readings were eulogy in which It Sagamo was the noon hour when, ra Hil homestead, all of the sons, Lieut.Col Jr, and Liegt who are soldiers in Europe, assembled for a few moments of pri ¢ side of the casket body. were baitle which the Colonel fough on Cuban soll more Years ago. The Rev. Dr. Talmage rector of Christ Church the comforting words which were the lay the the casket flags, George for the presence of Mrs ghe did not accompany 1 to the church the 46 or to Erave : ill services only Roosevelt : Sagamore H members of the were present fringing smmediaie VICTOR L. BERGER CONVICTED. Under Spy Act. Chicago. —All of found ourt. the Espionage law wers in the Federal CO The defendants found guilty Congressman-elect Victor 1. publisher of the Milwaukee Leader; Adolph Germer, secretary of the Na. tional Socialist party; William E. { Kruse, editor of the Young Socialist; {Irwin St John Tucker, writer and J. Louls Engdabl, editor of are: The defendants were charged with to viola'~ the Esplonage disloyalty and refusal of duty among | the naval and military forces of the United States and with interfering recruiting service and the the Selective Draft A —" A SR . CASUALTIES NOW ALL IN. 1,000 Additional Clerks To Speed Work Of Publicity. Washington —~Complete lists of cas ualties among the American Expedi tionary Forces have been sent tw Washington and 1000 additional clerks have been put to work in the AdjutantGeneral’s office to get them out as speedily as possible. Secretary Baker, in making this an nouncement, said another thousand clerks would be added to the Adju tant General's force and at the rate lists were being handled it would be only a short time before all of the names were published, —- GENERAL BELL DEAD. AM SA. Commandar Of Department Of The East Vietim Of Heart Disease. New York-—-Maj Gen. J. Franklin Bell, commander of the Department of the Bast, died at the Presbyterian Hos pital in this city. His death was due to heart disesse. He was taken to the hospital three days ago for ob servation, but it was not realized that his condition was serious and his death came as a complete surprise. He was 63 years old. ; NOTED PHILATEL ST DEAD, Seb Mation in World, PRESIDENT'S PROCLAMATION ON ROOBEVELT'S DEATH. Bays Former President Had Endeared Himself To The People By His Stren: uoue Devotion To Their Interest. Washington. —The following proc lamation on the death of Theodore Roosevelt was cabled from Paris by President Wilson and issued at the State Department: “By Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States of America. “A proclamation to the people of the United States: “It becomes my sad duty to an- nounce officially the death of Theo- dore Roosevelt, President of the United States from September 14, 1801, to March 4, 1909, which oc. cutred at his home at Sagamore Hill, Oyster Bay, New York. at four fifteen o'clock in the morning of January 6th, 1019. In his death the United States has lost one of its moet distinguished and pa- triotie citizens, who had endeared himself to the people by his stren- uous devotion to their interests and to the public interests of his country, “As president of the Police Board of his native city, as mem- ber of the legislatures and gov. ernor of his State, as civil service commissioner, as assistant secre. tary of the Navy, as Vice-President and ag President of the United States, he displayed administrative powers of a signal order and eon- ducted the affairs of these various offices with a concentration of ef: fort and a watchful care which permitted no divergence from the ine of duty he had definitely set for himself, “In the war with Spain, he dis. played singular initiative and en. ergy and distinguished himself among the commanders of the army in the fleld As President he awoke the nation gers of privale lurked in our financial and in dustrial syrtems. It was by thus arresting t on and = lating the pu f the fo the dan control which he attent rpose o oo fF dhy opened for ay d benefice that he w sequent ne re CEREATY 8 forms and rovernment Unit s I d« that the flags of the the several ngs be d nannies 4 wa od Stale 3 Whi 3 and build for a i that suitable honors un taries of ¥ S01 a ved Lad period war and «¢ rendered on t) the funeral “one this fe dav of Jan unry, in ear of our Lord Nine Thousand Nine Hundred and Nine and of the Independence of America third eo dav ¢ venth ithe ¥ teen the 'nited States of the indred and forty “WOODROW WiILS one ht MANY GIFTS TO PRESIDENT. i 3 tured Austrian Cannon, Milan During his visit to Milan One was a statuette made of captured Austrian cannon representing Ital conquering the Austrian Black Eagle Another was an {lluminated volum presented by Gianni Caproni, the alr plane manufacturer, describing the The volume was dedi cated to a giant airplane which Ca proni Is building of a flight. TO WAR oN BOLSHEVISM. National Security Longue Plans Propa ganda Campaign. Washington Plans for an extensive propaganda campaign against the | spread of Bolshevism as a part of the post-war work of the National Security League were discussed by Col. Charles E. Lydecker, president of the league, before the special House committee in. vestigating activities of the organiza. tion during the last Congressional campaign. ideas were general in Congress, Col onel Lydecker sald he thought not. nba ona HUNS BEEK JOBS IN FRANCE. ed As Soon As Frontiers Open, German waiter who before the ‘war worked In Paris and at Nancy. He voy of returning French prisoners. He presented himself before the smployer whom he had served before running away to enlist In a German artillery regimedit. As soon as frontiers are open another invasion of Huns to seek work ls expected. B— New York Customs Officials FP To Cope Against Such. Important Commercial Centers Destroyed Beyond Repair, Country Should Be Forced to Pay for Ruthless Destruction as Far as Within the Power of Its People. By WRIGHT A. PATTERSON. In August, 1914, the city of Lens in northern France was a prosperous It was known as the Pittsburgh of one great source of supply of fuel for Its steel and fron mille supplied much of the material for shipbuilding and other industries. Its people were in- fortable homes, surrounded by the modest luxuries of an industrial com- munity, All that Is left of Lens today Is a crumbling pile of debris. No single wall of the city Is still standing, and hardly a plece of a wall as much as ten feet square can be seen amid the terrible ruins. Both the bulldings and the machinery of its factories are gone completely, Its coal mines are flooded and the machinery with which they were operated has been destroyed. And all this because Germany start- ed a war for the purpose of conquest; a war in which no principle other than that of selfishness was involved, To- day Germany is a crushed nation. Her plans for world domination miscarried, her armies have been defeated, but before these things happened the city of Lens had been destroyed. 1 stood amid the ruins of what had once been the attractive and prosper ous industrial community of Lens and watched hundreds of her people who had returned after the Germans had been driven back, as they searched for the spots on which their homes had once stood, as they dug into the debris they can be made to pay for them so far as dollars can pay. And with the passing of this city there passed away many thousand, lives of British soldiers who today lig buried around the place they so brave ly defended. One possibly better re. alizes here the terrors of this war than aut any other one spot. Here the Ger- mans held the hills to the east of the city, and the British defenders occu pled the low-lying fields between the hills and the city. For them dugouts or deep trenches were out of the ques tion as the land is but little above sea level, And here, in what is almost a marsh, the British Tommies lay month after month, through winter and pummer, a fair target for the Boche guns on the nearby hills, When I was in Ypres late in Octo= ber, many of the people to whom it had been home, were there digging hopelessly in the rubbish in a vain ef- fort to find some small thing that could be associated with the homes that the Germans had destroyed in their effort to secure world domination by a war of conquest, City of Walls Only. The city of Menin in Belgium, was not shelled by either army, and yet it is a city that Germany should pay for. The walls of Menin are standing, but it is a city of walls only, The floors, the roofs, the joists, the doors and win- dows and the door and window casings are gone, all torn out by the invading Boche, with the result that the people of Menin are as homeless as the ple of Lens and Ypres and hundreds of other cities and towns in the invaded countries, I rode tieres, Bailleul, through devastated Armen~ La Bassee, Douasi, Cambria, Roisel, Peronne, Albert, Ar- res, Bt. Quentin, Guiscard, Noyon, Chauny, Thiaucourt, Vigneulles and hundreds of smaller towns, and the story of devastation was always the same, with but little variation, devas- tation caused by the Boche, and for which the Boche should pay, and for which the price assessed will never be high enough. In many ways the hellishness of the Borhe has been demonstrated. The city of Arras has suffered such complete destruction as has fallen upon many other cities, Here the Ger- man gunners centered their fire upon not in an effort to rescue from it some one thing, some memento of that home they had loved as much, or even more than we Americans love our homes. I saw the tears on the cheeks of many as they tolled. I saw an old woman car- rying away, as the only thing she could finds a piece of a broken chair, devastation, this misery? There Is But One Answer. Are the broken, homeless people of America or Belginm to pay? Or are To be sure, the city of Lens was de- | stroyed by shells fired largely from British guns. Bat they were fired into the city because the invading Ger mans in the city must be driven out that not only France, but the world, might be freed of the menace and to the accuracy and efficiency of Counld the people of America have the cathedral, and day after day, week after week and month after month they continued to pour a rain of metal upon this beautiful old church until today it is nothing but a mass of pow- dered stone. QCGermany cannot give back that cathedral of Arras, but she can pay and should pay for the need- iese, senseless destruction. And the fair cities and towns that have been so ruthlessly destroyed are but incidents in the devastation caused by this war, and for all of which Ger many and her allies, and they slone, are responsible, and for all of which they should pay. DO YOU YAWN AT CONCERTS? if So, There Is a Reason, Which Is Thus Explained by Modern Song Writer. If a person yawns during a sym- phony concert and twists his program . instead of being absorbed in classical music it may not be his fanit. It may be due to an undeveloped pituitary body, which is located in the brais, back of the temples, This is according to Cyril Scott, the song writer, in his “The Philosophy of Modernism fn Connection With Music.” Mr. Scott says that this pitu- as body in highly susceptible to th.