" MeTfFMTR mmmmm |1 ^ it1 j^'j)!1. j f&j " j^l-3 pMpjjM* a that writer m n--»x ^ FCOEFtAL RESERVE BOARD ; WARNS BANKS-rSEES PERI*. # > TO INDUSTRY. The aaap shows In a general way »ow the various revolutionary forces •ontrol vast arfejas of Mexico dwtside f the daritmta influence* General j ' BFFlCttt STATEMENT ISSUED •t;; v - UnHed States Body Notifies Institu tions of Danger in the Purchase |f Short-Term Notes Froffij, Foreign Countries. J - Washington, Nor. 29.--Hie federal f»** Reserve board issued a statement on ^^>,JMonday warning banks and the public » / i" .iagainst the purchase of short-term for- \>«*ign notes. The statement will be a severe blow '•! ?v/'rtb the financiers who were planning to t these loans in the United States. The statement says in part: • "In view of contradictory notes f r •Si %-tiich have appeared in the press re- '^anNng its attitude toward the pur- •'• - ' phasing by banks in this country, of • '. ' treasury bills of foreign governments. ^ j *,H* board deems it a duty to define its .V' • Vvjfcositloa cleanly. • "The board believes that at this I * <tlcie banks should proceed with much * *v. paution in locking up their funds in ^^f^vt!V^ong term obligations'which .are short V. " ,v, "term Ih form or name, but which, I^Y * either by contract or through force of ^^Titircumstances,; may .have to",be re-. K l ®evr^d until normal conditions return. *» <• The board's concern and responsibility f\* , ! 'lies primarily with the banking situ- "X A il ; |;.«v J, "If, however, our banking institu- ' k ' tions have to intervene because for- %* v eign securities are offered faster'than ' "they can be absorbed by investors-- x* > - * "* 'that is, their depositors--an element kl"\ 4* *"0UW be introduced which, if not kept ^ tJmder control, would tend toward in- "O *tabi,ity an(* ultimate injury to the < Vs'" * > -economic development of this coun- to* ^ »s _ "While the loans may be short In if""'*"' a- ^orm and severally may be collected at Pi jpaaturity, the object of the borrower Ih* . »f I > » tnust be to attempt to renew them col I i RAJNG CmrAL CAMPtC VSftA. <>AU 8CAa»rermss CtNTR &Y CARItm±K TtWWTOfcY DOMlNKTfiD BY VILLA, fcANPvr* TERRITORY DOMINATED »Y ZAJPKTAs W«J DlAl* AvM E. R.1 QK cot. 7 Pershing's column still holds its posi tions In northern Chihuahua, and Its general location, with its headquar ters at Ooionia Dublan, (s shown by No. 1. ^ • No. 2 shows where Villa bandits looted Mexican Central train at La cuna station and executed 29 Carranaa guards on October 8. They are now in control of a larger part of Chihuahua. No. S shows where Zapata follow ers are reported to have massacred 100 women, children and Carranza soldiers In the state of Morelos, south of Mex ico Jpltjr. , ., • No. 4 shows where Pellx Dlas's forces captured the city of Tehuante- pec and have Invested Sallna Cruz and Coatzacoalcos, on the Gulf of Mex ico side of the isthmus. Legalistas also have captured important towns in Chiapas and Oaxaca. , The National Guard and regulars istll! are maintaining the guard along the border. AM ER1C AN-M EX I CAN CONFEREES ^^•PITLB ON FAOT v" *' ' LANTiC CITY. •?*'* WAIT 0. K. FROM CABRANZA Own. Pershing to Cross Border Within »f;"Hbrty Days After Signing Pr*. toco I--Both Sides WiU Patroi Line. v lectively, with the result that the ag- ^regate amount placed here will jre- . Win until such time as it may be ad- vantageously converted into a long- /f'\ obligation. It would, therefore, #.#eem that funds of our banks, which r- *bouW available- for short credit $&.*% < [4' ^facilities to our merchants, nianufac- pr<; ; ,>urers and fanners, would be absorbed |£%> - h for other purposes to a disproportion- f i degree, especially in view of the \',f ,,f*fact that many of our banks are al- •y-"'- -ft/,'* *Teady carrying foreign obligations \ which they are under agreement to re- new. ' - ^ ^ * "The board • deems, therefore, its ' y fiut.v to caution the member banks that \ It does not regard it in the interest of i- , Vthe country at this time that they in- Vest in foreign treasury bills of this £* * icharactfer." , r,-; S1' feil" - V/'JIO PASS FOR VIENNA ENVOY < ^ tQreat Britain Refuses Safe Conduct "'yb for Austrian Ambassador to the • ^ - . United States. f ; I«on4aa, Nov. 29.--The foreign tflfice has sent Ambassador Page % ; *'definitely refusing to grant a ^uct t0 Count Adam Tarno5 Tarnow, the new Austhro-TIu , , ' embassador to the United States, y 4^ The reason for th« refusal may be •^paraphrased as follows: ' , "Even « ' intemational law forbade • ^ re*usal such a safe conduct, the "I ' actions of^ustrian and German em- fbassiesr imd' '«£taulates abroad have ^feeen so- wyi||-|Bftcess of regular dip- ViomatSc fMgjp' that the British gov- "erntnent fot§K justified in -withholding . Jti eotisent for such diplomats to travel /-' •: ^to their^osis." CONGRESSIONAL COMMIHEE TAKES UP RAIL WAGES Senator Newlands sprang a surprise at the consider conditions relating to interstate and question win be Investigated by the eomm government control, the, rights of shi (seated at left) is chairman of the of the senate committee. The other me; Hamilton and Sims, Squaj&rs Underwood m*(fcitte* of congress appointed to red that the whole railroad 'wage of government ownership In place of lines of Inquiry. Representative Adamson enator Newlands (seated at the right) iqi chairman eft to right) are: Senator CummtiiB, Representatives Brandegee and Representative Ksch. TEUTONS TAKE ALEXANDRIA :Field Marshal Von Mackensen's Forces Mow Only 47 Miles From - ^»'r - Bucharest. I*' r Berlin, Nov. 29.--Alexandria, a Rou- ^ manian town, 47 miles southwest of ,Bucharest, has been captured by Teu tonic forces, says an official statement ; issued here., , The Roumanian forces which had. re tired from the Danube town of Orsova bas.now been blocked by the approach ^of/ other Teuton forces in the rear. HUGHES RETURNS &' w> Announcement Says That He WiU Re- «suirw Practice With New York Firm on January 1. Lakewood, N. J. ,Nov. 29,--Charles E. Hughes announced here on Monday that on January 1 he would resume t he pract ice of law as a . .member of the New York fiHn of Rounds, Scliurman & Dwight, IK> Broadway. His son, i 1 Charles E. Hughes, Jr., also will enter '-tile firm. Fut Blam^ on Strikers. -Wilkesharre, Pa., Nov. 29.--Anthra cite coal operators, through their bu» reau of information, issued a state ment declaring that much of the al leged shortage of hard coal is due to "ftfetty strikes throughout the regions. M. Giassworkers Given Raise. ? ! Toledo, O., Nov. 29.--Announcement Was made that the EdWard Ford Plate Glass company voluntarily will In crease the wages of its 1,800 employees 8 per cent, effective December 1. The '^tarage dally wage is now $3.00. > WARDS OFF AIRPLANE BOMBS ILY OF AUSTRIA-HUNGARY Here Is the Tatest wrinkle in naval construction, a bomb-proof shelter on fighting masts of the U. S. S. Arizona The steel awnings will protect the men in the fighting top from bombs dropped from airplanes. MRS. VANDERBILT IN MARBLE t~>- - INTf 8HJMK/NW. oi Au^uuu-iluugui.'y, Willi Uio Atlantic City, N. JM Nov. 27.--An agreement was reached between the American and Mexican delegates to the joipt conference here, it pro vides : . 1. For the withdrawal from Mexico of the Pershing expedition within 40 days of the approval by both govern ments of the agreement. The provi sion is made that the time may be ex tended if conditions In northern Mex ico are such as to constitute a menace to United States soil. The details of the withdrawal are left to General Pershing. 2. That United States troops there after shall patrol their side of the border and Mexican troops theirs. In prdei* to guard against raids. Co-op eration between both forces in case of necessity is provided. The following statement was given out by the eonimision: "The commission has come to an agreement as to withdrawal of Amer ican troops in Mexico and border con trol, which is to go by Mr. Pani to Mexico, if It is acceptable the con ference will be resumed within two weeks. The troops are to be with drawn by General Pershing within 40 days of the approval of the agreement but in such manner as will permit the Mexican troops to occupy the evacu ated Territory, which the Mexicans have agreed to do. Should the north ern section of Chihuahua be in a state of turmoil such as to threaten our border, the American troops may alone, or in conjunction with the Mexican troops, disperse the marauders, and the time for. withdrawal shall be ex tended by the time necessary for such work. "The Mexican commander is to have control of the plan by which occupa tion of northern Chihuahua is effect ed, and General Pershing is to have control of the plan of withdrawal and the right to use the railroad to Juarez if he so desires. "The committee found It Impracti cable to arrange a plan of joint bor der control through a common mili tary force, and abandoned the idea of a border zone, which has been so much discussed. It is, however, left to the •commanders of both nations on the border to enter Into such arrange- metns for co-operation against ma rauders whenever it is practicable. "The agreement distinctly states that each side is to care for its own side of the border, but that this shall not preclude co-operation between the two forces to preserve peace upon the border. "The American commissioners told their Mexican colleagues that as a matter of national necessity the policy of this government must be to reserve the right to pursue marauders coming from Mexico Into the United States as long as conditions in northern Mexico are in their present abnormal state. Such pursuit is not, however, to be regarded by Mexico as in any Way hostile to the Carranza government, for the marauders are our common en emies. "The correspondence between the two state departments under which the commission was created requires the latter to deal "bot only with with drawal of troops but also with all oth-- er questions affecting the two cqun- tries, chief of which may be said to be the protection of the lives and prop erty of all foreigners in Mexico." The agreement was reached after 13 weeks of deliberations. The ques* tion of a loan was not brought up. The agreement is contingent upon the approval of Gen. Venugtiano Car ranza. RUSS DREADNAUGHT IS SUNK Petrograd Admits Battleship Was D» stroyed by Explosion--200 of Crew Killed. Petrograd, Nov. 25, via London.-- Russia officially announces the loss of the dreadnaught lmperatristti Maria. The statement issued here on Thurs day reads: "The Russian dreadnaught Impera- trlsta Maria has been sunk by an in ternal explosion. Two hundred of the crew are missing." The Imperatrista Maria was built In 10.13 and is of 22,600 tons of dis placement, 26,500 horse power and 21 fcnots an hour speed. Churles Francis Joseph, the new euiperur Empress Zlta andtthelr son and daughter. , Fire Destroys Church. Quebec. Que., Nov. 25.--Fire that started In the furnace room of the Liinollou parish church destroyed the entire edifice with a loss of $180,000, Honor for Late U. 8. Woman. London, Nov. 29.---The funeral of "Mrs. Almeric Paget was held here. Before her marriage she was Pauline Whitney of New York. Wounded sol diers acted as pallbearers. In recognl- Itfon of her labors In the waijP^f"- . : Fall Kills Joseph Brodk*. , New York, Nov. 29.--Joseph Brooks, ftlXty-five. the theatrical manager, was kilted by a fall from his eighth-floor apartment in West Seventy-ninth street. Sir. Brooks was general mnn« .^.,/M^l^.iaaw-* Erlingtr. Wounds Left Unbandaged. In the new ozone treating of wounds, bandages are dispensed with, and the loose layer of lint which forms the only covering used Is removed fre quently for subjecting the injured flesh to a stream of oxidized oxygen. The painful removing and replacing of bandages Is made unnecessary. Much suffering Is prevented in this way, and the healing effects of the ozone baths are described as quite remarkable. The ozone Is generated by means of in electrical apparatus. Couldn't 8tay Awake. "You didn't keep your new chauffeur long." "No, I had to let him go.** "What was the trouble V "I discovered^ after hiring Mm that he used to be a mechanician for an automobile racer. Whenever I forbade him to drive faster than eight miles an hoar he Invariably fell asleep." Sarcastic Realism. He--What do you take tor seasick- nessf She--An ocean voyage. . War as » Wonder-Worker. War Is a rare wonder-worker. Lesft than ten years ago the proposal to es tablish a municipal milk supply for London was supported only by the more daring progressive candidates. All the rest shrank from It In horror and all over the metropolis moderates denounced It as rank Socialism. Now --with considerable . additions--4t 1» coolly and unanimously put forward by a commission on which all political parties are represented--and no one horrified,--London ChronlcUw Two and Child Perish In Flr«i St. Louis. Mo., Nov. 28.--Mr. and Mrs. C Madison, their three-year-old child and another woman, whose name is unknown, are believed to have per ished in a flre which destroyed the Madison home In St. Louis county . •"!hie style fectly killing." "i should say so, the way he mat- ders the king's engllsh.'V RED, BOUGH, PIMPLY SKIN Quickly Cleared by Cuticura Boap and Ointment. Trial Free. Yen may rely on these fragrant, super-creamy emollients to care for your skin, scalp, hair and hands. Noth ing better to clear the skin of pimples, blotches, redness and roughness, the iscalp of dandruff and Itching and the hands of chapping and soreness. Free sample each by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. 1% Boston. Sold everywhere.--AdT. Cost of Army Rations. ' In 1913 the cost of a day's rations for army men In this country was 23 cents per capita. Now the cost la 30 cents. \ ;;-V' Very Much Bo. Wy f "Is this really cut glass?" #.*>•' "I should say aoi Cut frdm $1,25 to 98 cents." . tea? Late m life the body shows sighs of wear and often the kidneys weaken first. The back i* lame, bent and achy, and the kidney action distressing^ This makes people feel older than they are. Don't wait for dropsy, gravel, harden ing of the arteries or Bright'a disease. Use a mild kidney stimofamt. fry Doan's Kidney Pills. Th°usand^flf^- derly folks recommend them, r* - An IUiisois Cut « Mrs. V. A'Boyd, TIB W. Kirk ham St, Litchfield. 111., aaya: 'T was laid up with kid ney complaint and couldn't do any house work. When I aat d o w n , p a i n s s h o t through my back and shoulders and it was also hard for me to get up. 1 doctored, but didn't get relief until I took Doan's Kidney Pills. They removed the pains ana aches and made my kidneys normal" , G«t Data's at Aray Store, 80c a Box Am* PlLirH FOSTER-M1LBURN CO, BUPFAIjO. tLV. \ £ iNet Contents 15 Fluid Br V' J ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT. AVe^etaWcPrcpafatfcBfeAs similatin^thelood bvR^ula- JtefliTS tho For Infanta ani Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always 5" 16 bC:*# Iff fii' C. S. Pletro has completed a marble bast of Mrs. Alfred Gwynne Vander- bilt, considered one of the most beau tiful women In America. Art critics pronounce the bust as the best mar ble portrait work Pletro haa done. One Thing Needful. Green--I want to give my typewrit er maid an appropriate present for her birthday. What .would you suggest? Brown---Well, if she Is anything like mine, I think a combination pocket speller and dictionary would be the proper thing. 8afety First. She (a fair divorcee)--Do yon be* lieve in second marriages, Mr. Single* ton? He (cautiously)--Well, that--er-- depends on circumstances. By the way, how much--er--alimony did you receive? According to Precedent. "Some people are never satiafled." "Well?" "I see where a chap pulled a pretty girl out bf a lake by her foot and then «shed for her hand.** o . V . Friendly Comment. Omar--Hasel Is a lucky girl. She must have been boru with a silver spoon In her mouth. Aimee--Yes; and Judging from the ftse of her m»uth, it wat * tablespoon. Democrat Wins In 24 Years. Pittsburgh, Pa., Nov. 28.--For the first tittie in 24 years a Democrat from Allegheny county will sit In congress. Guy E. Campbell won the congressional election in the Thirty- second Pennsylvania district. ' Recover 200 Square Mftea. Saloniki, Nov. 27.--Nearly 200 square miles of Serbia has been reconquered from the Teutons In the allies' advance around Monastir, according to the Ser bian official states Issued here Friday afternoon. . I Thereby Promoting ^ Cheerfulness and R^Coflro®, neither Opium,Morphia® n* Mineral Not NARCOTIC PmptinSM* MxSntna * AcMb-bA MUttSnd Constipation and Diarrhoea. and Feverishness and Loss OF SLEEP rr»5jfftiiv^ therefrom-mlata"?-. ffcC-Simile Signatnreof The CEKTAimCo>u«® NEWSSSs Signature of ... S? Exact Copy of Wrapper. 1II U S B For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA wl -i4-;i TMK MNTAUN MHNNVi NCW ' 1* #TT*. ft COLT DISTEMPE. You can prevent this loathsome disease from runnin*- . \ through your stable and cure all the colts suffering witfjr.A it when you begin the treatment. No matter how youngjjT SPOHN'S Is safe to UBe on any colt. It Is wonderful hoi* it prevents all distempers, no matter how colts or horse#- at any age are "exposed." All good druggists and turf <g goods houses and manufacturers sell SPOHN'S at 50 cent® and »1 a bottle; $5 and $10 a dozen. SPOHN MEDICA®. CO., Chemists and Bacteriologists, (^onheu, Intl., V. 8. A* College Men In War. ' "Possibly more than any other war ever waged, the present European struggle has drawn Into its vortex men of education, men of mental attain ments and students. In the very na ture of this war it could not be other wise. With the possible exception of Russia there Is not a nation engaged but has had to draw deeply upon Its human reserve sources. It Is doubt ful if there is a family in France, Ger many or Great Britain that does not have a representative somewhere among the fighters. What a toll this war has taken of the intellect of Eng land Is Indicated by a report of Doc tor Burrows, principal of King's col lege. From this it appears that regu lar men students of English birth have fallen from 800 in the year previous to the war to about 100 now. The col lege has contributed 512 officers to the nrmy and navy. And the work of the follege Itself, especially the scientific part of It, is directed largely along lines Incidental to the war. • ' Not a Breath of Suspicion. Many men. although they may not care to confess It, need to guard ugainsth'lapsus linguae. A case in point Is that of a prisoner who was address ing a court over which I.«ord Russell was presiding. A veijy nice story the prisoner was telling of an offense al- alleged against him of which he was wholly guiltless-^he, a man against whom there had otever before been a breath of suspicion. "Prisoner, pardon me one moment," Interrupted Russell. "You must speak n little louder! I cannot catch what you spy. What was your last sen tence?" ^ And t<"Six months, m* lord," came the amazing reply from that fatally facile tongue. ^4------ A preacher's life would be awfully tame If it wasn't for weddings. We all squander money oh scheme* that won't work. A girl is willing to elope--If there! are no wedding presents in sight. Sudden Cold. Look out--itk£v dangerous., h CASCARAPoPnaNE The old family remedy--in tal days. Money back if it fails. the genuine iy b „ box with Red Top api ^ Hill's picture on it--25 ceata, . Your Livef ̂~ Is Clogged Up That's Why You'ro Tired--Out ef Sorts --Have No Appetite CARTER'S LITTLE UVER PILLS will put you right in a few days. They d their duty. CureCon-i stipation, 1 _ Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headacrti ^ SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE* .: Genuine must bear Signature ; -- ^ , * OAKltlO ITTLE PILLS. Thirty Injured fn Elevated Wwilt. New York. Nov. 27.--Thirty persons were injured when a southbound ele vated train jumped Into a switch at One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street and Second avenue, near the Harlem Bodily Housekeeping (BY V. M. PIERCE, M. D.) The subject of drinking water with meals has been misunderstood. In recent years Investigation by means of X-rays, the observations of scientists s«ch as Cannon, Grutzner, Pavlov, Fowler, Hawk, prove that an • abundance of water taken during dl« gestlon is necessary in good bodily housekeeping. If your kidneys are sick, or yon suf fer with lumbago or rheumatism at times, pain in the back or back of the neck, take a little Anurlc before meals. This can be found at any good drug store. Therefore my advice to young or old Is, always drink plenty of pure water. And for long life, occasionally take tablets of Anurlc three or four times a day. Aauric acts mnch more quickly than llthla. You will find it dissolves -i .,ulc add ji sitiE^doei auaar. A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff For a aumber at * 5 INDIANA NEWS fort Wayne, Ind. years I have suffered with kidney tro#> ble and rheumatism. My bladder gav*| me considerable trouble, especially after retiring at night. I had taken several advertised medicines but with little or no results; then I heard of Anurlc, and knowing by experieno# tow good Dr. Pierce's other remedied were I decided to give thjs new rem edy a trial. The first bottle cleared all sediment from the urine, relieved the bladder so that I could rest ax night and took the rheumatism ana stiffness from my hands and finger®, I hope my testimonial will help som#* one else."--MRS. PEMILA TOMKDf* SON, 815 Cottage Ave. . Dr. Pierce's reputation is back of* this medicine and you know that htf Pleasant Pellets for the liver, his Fa vorite Prescription for the ills^of woe®»< en and his Golden A for the blood Met Ileal Discovery have had a splendi® *ejmtattoa4sur m W^