German U-boat Brings Prize to Uo So Waters The Omaha Daily WHEN AWAY FROM HOME The Dee is the Paper Tan ask fori if yea plaa o be abeeat more then a few days, hare The Bee mailed to 70a. EE. TEE WEATHER. Fair VOL. XLV NO. IOC. ..ISDAY MORNING, PEHKUAUV 1!H(V--TEX PACiKR. Oa Trains, at Kotel Us we Blande, ete So. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. - ss B CHILDREN HURLED UNDER WHEELS UF WILSON'S TRAIN President'! Special Backs Into Crowd at Grinnell and Six Youngster Knocked Down, but None Hurt. EXECUTIVE AT EES MOINES i Chief Tells Iowans of the Great ! Need of Defenses of the J Nation. j PLEASED BY HIS WELCOME GRINNELL, la., Feb. 1. Presi dent Wilson's special backed slowly Into a crowd of 3,000 persons here this afternoon. Six children were Knocked down, but fell between the rails or were dragged out before the vhecls reached them. Arrive tn Dra M nines. DKS MOINES, la.. Feb. 1. I'resi- i dent Wilson arrived In I)es Moines at 6:30 p. ni. The president and j Mrs. Wilson were met at the station j Vy a committee representing the 1 Greater Des Moines committee, the Chamber of Commerce and the East Des Molhes Commercial club. Four companies of National Guards with the entire police force of the city held back the large crowd which lacked the sidewalks all the way to t ho hntel, Tha nrnr.., v, - - - - , , - i . v ' i yi i ..lie j i n ident was marked hv cheer, a losea automobile was used by the president, for the temperature was near zero. Both Mr. and Mrs. Wil son were wrapped in furs. At the hotel the president and Ms. tWIIann ("hook hand with members of the committee, and then dined privately In their suite, before leaving for the Coli seum, where the address was to bo de livered, '-'ecretnry Tumulty, Dr. Cary T. :raynon, the White House physician, and other members of the party were entcr-talr-d at dinner by tho committer. fpeake at .wton, Hhortly before reachinK Dea. Molnca the president spoke briefly at Newton, If., urging the peopje to aupQort.hla pre paredness program, and telling them the difficulty' of keeping the United Statea i'ui -mi in.- r.Jiii rn n u wnr. IIP BH.1U . "I can hardly do morcthan express my very; deep gratification that you should have come out In such numbers and with ftlleh eordijtlltv tn ffreet in T want tn bellervo, and I do 6elleve, that It Is be cause of your Interest tn- theerrand upon which I have come; because I have very seriously felt the responsibility of keep I rig this country at peace. I believe that if you knew the difficulties with which I have had to contend, you would know how sincerely and" constantly I have striven for the peace of America. But I have realized, my fellow citizens,, that there were a good many elements in this situation which nobody on this side of the water could control and that, there fore. It was my duty tn see that the coun- crisis that might befall It." Thanks to the president for hla stand on the woman suffrage question waa ex tended to him tonight by Iowa suf fragists, who sent M. and Mrs. Wilson a bouquet of flowers and a note welcom ing them to Iowa. DAVENPORT, la., Feb. l.-Presldent Wilson's special arrived here at 2:30 this afternoon and waa welcomed by 15,000 persons. A battery of state troops fired a presidential salute. The president made no address at Illinois towns as previously planned, merely stopping long enough to greet those gathered at the stattons. lie made his first rear-platform talk here. CONGRESSMAN SLOAN TO TALK TO MANNHEIM CLUB WASHINGTON. Feb. 1. -(Special Tele gramsCongressman Sloan will deliver a speech before the Mannheim club of Qcrmantown, Pa., on February 3, the dis trict In which his grandfather, Charles Ploan, lived. The Weather Teaiperatsiree at Omaha Vrilrrdar. WARMER Hour. Deg. 5 a. in 1 a. m s 7 a. m a 8 a. in 3 9 a. in j lik.ni o 11 a. m a l?m 3 1 1. in i 2 P. m s 3 p. m j P- m 5 P. m j 6 P. in i " P- m n P. m o Comparative Loral Herord. ISIS. 181V 1914 1911. Highest yesterday... lowest yesterday.... Mean temperature... I'recipltation .. 27 44 13 . .0" 2i 'M 4 . .00 .40 Ut .00 temperature and precipitation depar tures from the normal: formal temperature l Deficiency for the day v( ' t aencienrv since March 1 iy prci ipuauon ,a Inch leflrivner i.,- h. .1... . . . ' Hots I rainfall since March l.....a, Inches Jf clencjr ainoe March 1 65 inch I'eflclency fr cor. period. 1914. i.m Inches IvaclMtcy for cor. period, 1S13. S 7 Inches Report from Slalloaa at T P. M. tation ana mate of Weather. Cheyenne, pt. elout liubu.iue. clear I stiver. ihat 7 p. m. eat. fall. ' it , m .00 1 4 .14, li ji .i -' . Pi ik .v r. 4 8 A), --- 1 1" .), 1 im Moinea. fl-liut.r. 'uiixa Citv. ctHf,r tirmth. cear .'i tx ilty. cU'rtr A 4U-nt Int c! a.r AddtCMt "-'OW IftlU. T it. J Mt, i, tta , of j m i . Mixtion. L A WK1..S.I. Lmculi t uiecasier. RULERS OF THE SCANDINA COUNTRIES Embargoes imposed by Denmark and Sweden on exports to Germany are interpred as meaning that the Scandinavian countries have entered upon "a policy of preparation" out of fear that they may be plunged into the European war at any time. 1 T. TV J - ' ,2. . 7 BOYS' DORMITORY AT FREMONT BURNS fifty Students Are Driven Into Six Below Zero Temperature in Night Clothes. ONE BOY IS SLIGHTLY INJURED FKKMONT, Neb., Feb. 1. (Spe cial Telegram.) Fire which broke out in the boys dormitory of Fre mont college Bhortly after midnignt l;st night, destroyed the west wing of the building, causing a damage of fl 5,000. There is partial insurance. Several students who jumped from the second story windows in their right clothes were bruised and cut, and. a number suffered frosted ears and 4oeS The temperature was 0 de grees below zero.. Fifty students vero In the building when the firo broke out. Firemen prevented a spread of tho flames to the girls' dormitory, where seventy-Xlve girls room. They es caped to residences without any serious results. The origin of the fire in a mystery. It is thought to have started from defective electric wires. Ten years ago the college building was destroyed by fire. The fire cut off the stairway exit and nearly half the boys were com pelled to jump from the second story windows. None waa Injured, except Eddie Echtencamp, whose feet were burned In an attempt to descend by the flaming stairway. None of the students lost their clothing and other belongings. They were cared for by near-by residents. A son of Henry Simpson, station master at the Union depot, was one of the Omaha boys attending the college, 'He called his father up shortly after 1 o'leock this morning, telling him that 1 the building was almost totally destroyed, adding that S 11 of the students haa escaped from the building and that none of them was In jured. A number of the boys In the dormitory lost their clothing and their books, sev eral barely having time to escape after having been awakened. Young Simpson at the time of telephoning his father waa unable to give the origin of the fire.1 Kansas City Key Men Driven from Building by Fire KANSAS CITY. Mo.. Feb. l.-Fire that broke out on the second floor of the Western Union Telegraph Company's building here today endanKered the lives of 3fl0 employes at work tn the operating room, fifty of whom were carried down fire escapes to safety. At 2:10 o'clock the blaze was under control and all em ployes had been safely accounted for. Bodies of Thirteen Victims of Otay Flood Identified SAN DIEGO, Cal., Feb. l.-Thlrteen Identified dead, twenty-four unidentified bodies, and two known dead whose bod ies have not been recovered, constitute an established death roll of thirty-nine today from the Otay valley flood of last Thursday. Reports from Yuiaa, Arts., were that the Imperial valley, threatened by the Colorado river. Is safe. Mongol Insurgents Cross Great Wall LONDON. Krb. 1. The .Mongolian In surgents have crossed the great wall of I China ami an ndvance guuiit of Z.'O) Is '. itf-sirglitg the city ut la Turn r"a. accord i lug; tu a diM,a.i li fi .iu &1 uiUu ior.ii 4 J i ty itii(er i oi respondent til J cltuiaU. . TO "cz rft WIFE WITH SMITH IN MURDER TRIAL Kindly-Faced, Gray-Haired Woman Arrives to Sit with Aged Hus band Before Bar of Court. JURY TO TRY ACCUSED SECURED A Jury was secured during the first day's session of tho trial of Kelly M. Smith, accused of the mur der of Mrs. Frances Campbell: Mrs. Smith, who has been his wife for thirty-nine years, arrived in the aft ernoon from East St. Louis, 111., to Lit at his side before the bar of District Judge Sears' court and a start was made in the introduction of the state's evidence. "I have com to stand by my hus band to the last," said Mrs. Smith. "I have lived with him for thirty nine years and I have never known him to be guilty of any wrongdoing. I know he is not guilty of murder." Mrs. Smith la a kindly-faced little woman, gray-haired and simply dressed. As she spoke slio waa sitting In ber seat In the court room, close to her husband's chair, which h had Just vacated during a reoeas. Smith, the defendant, is 69 years old. In appearance be "a a typical prosperous, well-dressed business man of hla age. Occasionally he takes out a pair of eye glasses Vhlch he adjusts to his nose and studies some paper. At these times some person in the audi ence always Is moved to remark: "He doesn't look like a murderer." Death Peaallr o Asked. Securing of a Jury waa hastened by the fart that state's attorneys made no In quiries concerning willingness to InfUct the death penalty. The twelve men -who compose the Jury are the following: Claude A. ePteraon. R017 North Fortieth, rrank J. Holanrl, 2S24 rtitgifles. Jeremiah Hurlev. 3114 O. Arthur l-erov Hlulr. 8324 Harney. Joseph T. Marshall; 2419 North Twenty-fourth. Max . Kosensteln, 1611- North Twenty fourth. Joaenh Frans. 2612 Seward. Daniel P. Keedy, 1317 South Twenty- miffnnt W Unlihaprf iim Dnnth rr-n V-nlnth. James Williams, 270; Plnkney. William Whesker. 6) South Twenty flrt i . . Walter Sorensen. Florence. Two lorlrs of Mhnotlna. Stories of the shooting of Mrs. Camp bell told in their opening statements by State's Attorneys Magney and Plattl and Attorney Ritchie for the defense, differed principally regarding the part Riley Campbell, husband of the dead woman, played. The state contends that Smith shot the woman the afternin of October 31 in the corridor of a rooming house at 220 North Nineteenth atreet while her husband waa standing gflent. The defense maintains that Campbell waa attempting to choke Smith and that during the strug gle Smith's revolver discharged the fatal shot. Ritchie declared .Mr. Campbell had borrowed more than t:!i from Smith and had deceived him. Mrs. Ella Wldcner, proprietor of the rooming house, testified that Bmlth ahot Mrs. Campbell in the hall or vestibule after he had started to go and had returned to apeak with Mrs. wldener concerning Campbell, whom the defense maintains Mrs. Campbell had told him waa . dead. The shooting occurred during the second of two visits made by Smith to meet Mrs. Campbell on the Sunday she was shot. Mrs. Wldener testified. Galveston Board of Trade Officer Slain OALVESTON, Tex., Feb. l.-Ueorge A. McLarty, secretary of the Maritime com mittee of the Oalveaton cotton exchange and board of trade waa killed and Robert C. Shaw, an inspector in the employ of the committee, was dangerously injured during a revolver fight tu the secretary's office shortly after noon today. Shaw and MclArty had had a serious quarrel so mo days a no, when th latter (lis charid til" inspector. The question as l. whether the uctl i:i t'f tie secretut'y j :;.i'lo . t. lid in ; to have lnen befoie I tho niaiiiiiiie couiuiill-e. i- -- -i i fih ,1 A. - HOLDS OFF POSSE; WOMAN AH0STAGE Californian Kills One and Wounds Two More, Perhaps Fatally, and Battle Law. AT BAY IN VICTIM'S HOME LANCASTER, Cal.. Feb. 1. One man was killed and two others prob ably were fatally wounded today at Elizabeth Lake, near here, by an unidentified man who early tonight was holding a posse at bay while barricaded within the homo, of Henry H. Kent, jr., one of his victims, keep ing" Mrs. Kent a prisoner in the house. ' Geprge Curtis, . 30 years old, was shot end tilled as he' attempted to reach the house after the man had taken refuge there. Ills body fell just in front of the door and has not yet been recovered. Kent was shot through tho lung, it was aid, when he ordered the man away from hla ranch earlier in the day. Oratten O. Bennett, Justice of tljp peace, suffered a gunshot woung of tho head when he at tempted to arrest the man. Both were reported to be in a serious condition. After wounding Bennett the man took refuge in Kent's home. He held Mrs. Kent a prisoner with him, apparently to prevent the posse which quickly gathered from rushing the house. local officers and residents, who sur rounded the place, were awaiting the ar rival of officers from Ixs Angeles to take charge of the situation. England Denies It Has Forsaken Allies And Sued for Peace LONDON, Feb.- l.-Officlal denial . was made here today of reports, attributed to German sources, that England intends to abandon-its allies and' has made peace overtures to Germany. ' Tha statement follows: "The German chancellor haa stated that England is compeillni; its allies to re frain from entering upon any peace movements. This statement, which our allies know to be untrue, was made for the purpose of injuring Kugland in the eyea of neutrals. "To our allies, on the other hand, we hear that Insidious and untrue reports are being circulated - from German sourcesthat England Intends to abandon them and has even-made peace over tures to Oermang, which have been re fused. "The two statements together are a good illustration of how unscrupulous German; mthods are." Oil Men Already On Land Not Affected by Withdrawal CHEYENNE. Wyo.. Feb. l.-The fed eral government Is without right to oust from oil lands concerns operating prior to President Taft's withdrawal order of September 27, W. although such com panies at that time had not discovered oil, according to a decision by Judge J, A. Rlner in the frdervl district court for Wyoming today. Preparedness For the merchant means not only carrying the goods the customer wants, but also letting every pos sible customer know that the goods are awaiting him at attractive prices. This means use of news paper advertising space. Advertise in The Bee. ZEPPELINS BEAR TORCH THROUGH BRITAIN; KILL 54 London Official Report Shows Air ; Raiders Penetrate to the Very Heart of Industrial j England. RAVAGES MOST TERRIBLE YET Berlin Says Bombs Caused Great Rires in Liverpool, Manchester and Other Races. VISITORS HAVE A SAFE RETURN III M.KTI V HKKI.IN. Feb. 1. (My Wireless to Snyvllle. The German admlr alty'a reports In the Zeppelin raid on EiiKlaml, say that Incendiary bombs were dropped on and near Liverpool, Birkenhead, Mnnchester. Notting ham, Sheffield a ad Great Yarmouth. Violent fires occurred. All the alr hhlps returned in safety. LONDON, Feb. 1. Fifty-four per sons were killed and sixty-seven In jured In last night's Zeppelin raid. The figures were contained In an official statement issued here this af ternoon. The official statement says bombs were dropped at several towns and In rural districts In Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and Staf fordshire, Some damage to property was caused. An additional official statement waa Is sued this evening, as follows: "Further reports of last night's raid show that the evening's attacks covered a larger area than on any previous oc casion. Homhs were dropped in Norfolk, nurroiK. Lincolnshire, Leicestershire, Staffordshire and Derbyshire, tho num ber being estimated at 220. "Kxcept In a part of Staffordshire tho material damage waa not considerable, and in no case was any military damage caused. "No further casualties have been re ported " With one exception, last night's rsld caused the greatest number of casualties of any alnce the beginning of the war. On the occasion of. tha, last.atUnk; on ixHiaon, made on the night of October 13, nrty-nve arsons were killed and 114 wounded, according to an official state menu i. noinciai. reports said the total was much greater. It being estimated by re turning travelers that between 1D0 and DO persons were killed. lllta Heart of F.nslaad. Tho official British statement shows that the Zeppelins penetrated to the heart of Industrial Kngland. Lincolnshire is oit the east coast. Its southern boundary Is seventy-five miles north of London. Leicestershire adjoins it to the southwest. Derbyshire Is northwest of Leicestershire and Staffordshire is to the west of Der byshire. These counties comprise a strO of terltory In mid-England, extending more than 100 miles from the North 8ea. Stafordahlre and Derbyshire have Im portant inanuacturlng interests. The other counties are given over largoly t aKricultuie. Last night's raid la the nineteenth re ported olclally rom London. The irst oc curred on January It, last year. Tha tqtal of casualties reported previously waa 17 killed and 469 wounded, with which the figures thus far received from last night's attack, brings up the number to 223 killed and flfty-alx wounded. French Lose More Ground in Hand Grenade Fighting UBRLIN. Feb. l.-(Vla Ixindon.) The official statement of today from army headquarters statea that In the region of the .ommo the French have lost more ground In hand-grenate encounters. The statement follows: "Western front: During the night of the Slat small British detachments at tempted a movement against our posi tions west of Messtnes, Flanders. They were completely repulsed after thy had succeeded In penetrating our trenches at one point. "Near Frlcotirt, east of Albert, we pro- vented the enemy by our fire from oc cupylng a crater produced by explosion of one of Its mines. North of this Ger man patrols penetrated into an Kngllah position and returned with some pris oners without having suffered uuy loss. "South of the Homme the I'leiu'.i lost more ground In a hand-grenade flxht. "Kastern theater: There is nothing to report. "Balkan theater: One of our alishil'S attacked ships and depots belonging to the entente In the port of Haloiilkl with gteat success. '' Testimony for Mrs. Mohr is Finished PROVIDENCE, 11. I. Feb. l.-Wllh the completion today of testimony for the defense so fsr as It relates to Mrs. Elizabeth Mohr, on trial for instigating the murder of hep husband, Dr. C. Frank lin Mohr, evidence waa presented in behalf ot two ne tiroes, Cecil Brown and Henry tipellman, who according to the state's contention, were hired to commit the crime. Much of this evidence waa contradictory of that given by the prose cution. He v. William McNary, the laat witness for Mrs. Vohr, declared George W. lUalts, Dr. Mohr'a negro chauffeur, who turned state's evidence told him he had nrver illscusct-d a inuider plot with the woman. APPAM BROUGHT TO FORT MONROE BY PRIZE CREW British Liner Given Up for Lost is Captured by German Subma rine Off the Canary Islands PASSENGERS STILL ABOARD Boat Carries Prominent Colonial Of ficers and Two Hundred Ger man Prisoners. QUESTION FOR STATE DEPT. WASHINGTON. Feb. 1 .--Customs Collector Hamilton at Norfolk ro purted to the Treasury department that the German prize steamer Ap p.uu, which came In Hampton Honda Ihis morning, has prisoners of war nboard. .His report was referred at once to the Slate depart nient, which will determine the status of the ves sel. NKWPOKT Xicws, Va.. Feb. l. The British South African liner Ap- pitm, given up for lont, was brought in to Hampton Roads this morning flying the German man of war flag Vlth a German prlxe crew of twenty two men, commanded by Lieutenant Berg. It was captured at sea on Jenuary 15, four days after it loft Dakar, British West Africa. While Lieutenant Berg came ashore to pay hla respects to Colonel llayne, commandant Of Fortress Mon roe, quarantine officers boarded tho ship. Meanwhile no one was per mitted to come ashore. The Appam brought Its original pas sengers and 13K persons, said tn have been taken from other vessels by the Germans. Four Injured passengers on board are said to have tecn taken from an English ship from Australia. About in persons. Including paaaougera and rretv are aboard the ship. The Appam waa raptured off tho Canary Islands on January 11 by a Ger man submarine, which a few hours be fore had sunk a British steamer. The persons on tha Appe.cn are divided as follows: He own crew, US; paMengara originally an the ship,' lid; survivors of the seven ships destroyed in German sea raids off tha African coast, 13S; German prisoners bound for detention camps, 10; prise ercw, 23, Total. 461. Marprlse to Kaglaad. I.ONDON. Feb. 1. The arrival ot the steamship Appam at Hampton Roads was a complete surprise to shipping men here, as the steamship was given up for lost several days ago. A list of the passeu. gers to the number of 166 was glvon out by the steamship company today. The laat word from tho Appam was a w ireless messago on January 16. Several other merchant ships were 3h the same mute as the Appam and tho capture of that steamer created anxiety concerning the other vessels. The Folder-Dempster line received a dispatch this afternoon from lta New York agent giving tho ar rival of the Appam at Norfolk. The com pany also received word from tho ad miralty which had been informed offl daily of the steamer's arrival. The admiralty had cabled to Dakar and all Intermediate ports for any Information concerning the capture of the Appam. Man Arrested at Wilson Meeting at Chicago Held CHICAGO. III., Feb. l.-Hlgmund WIs nlewskl, who -was arrested on the stage where President Wilson was spoaklng last night In the auditorium here, ex plained to the police today that the army uniform he was wearing was donned to enable him to get Into the hall simply to hear the presldnt speak. Thousands were unable to get tickets to hear the president, but Wlxnlewekl passed the 1 doorkeepers by posing part of the acort. He had some letters In a for eign language In his pocket and the police were still holding him today pend ing their translation. He claimed that he had served several years In the Fnltcd Ktatee army. Trial of Mrs. Meyer Begins at Winterset W INTERNET, la.. Feb. l.-The rase of Mrs. Ida Meyer, 80 years of age, a pioneer In this section and reputed wealthy, who is charged with complicity In the murder of her son's wife, Mrs. Ethel Meyer, ily '. lslj. wuji the first on the dockett of the dUtrlct court, which convened here today. An effort was to be mads to begin the selection of a Jury this afternoon. Fred Mover, sou of the present de fendant, and husband of the dead woman, was convicted of second degree, murder in De( ember and sentenced to fifteen years In the penitentiary. His trial, whi''h occupied nearly two weeke. de veloped a number of sensational fea tures. Meyer appealed to the supreme court and is at liberty on bond of . (01. Attorneys for both the slate and de fense today were agreed that somewhere around 100 witnesses are likely to be called during Mrs. Meyer's trial. Much of the testimony will be the same as that adduced In the case of the son. The wife of Fred Meyer, a bride of only a few months, waa found dying In a room in her home, northwest of here, on the morning of July tt. A bullet wound waa In her head, and revolver bj her aide. Mk-yt r and hla mother claimed the young woniau committed suicide. HEARS SUBMARINE CONVOYS CAPTIVE SHIP TO AMERICA Seven British Vessels Destroyed by Raider Making Prize of Brit ish Liner Appam. ENGLISH CONSUL WARNS British Official Says Advice Re ceived U-Boats Are la Yankee Water.. CANNOT TAKE ANY CHANCES NEW YORK, Feb. 1. The British consul general here today notified British shipping to watch out for German submarines In American waters. Information received at tho consulate from private sources leads them to believe that a submarine had accompanied tho captured steamer Appam on its voyage across the Atlantic. Consular officials would not say n submarine had been sighted. "In times like these we do not dare to take any chances," It was said at the consulate. While the report may ! be without foundation In fact we . have deemed It best to take tho ac tion that we did." Three British ships left port today" and tomorrow three passenger and several freight ships ot allied reg lMtry are due to leave for Transatlan tic or West Indian ports. NKWPOrtT NKWW, Va., Feb. t-Wlth the German naval ensign fluttering boldly from lta stern and in charge ef a Ger man prise crew the British Houth African liner Appam, given up for lost, took ref it He in Hampton Pia ls this morning with the atory of seven vessels destroyed by German sea raiders off the African coast. The Appam was captured off tho Ca nary Islands on January 15 by a German raider four days after it had sailed from Dakar, Prltlah West Africa, for Plym outh, England. Lieutenant Berg of tho German navy, placed on the Appam when It waa cap tured, brought In the prise, eluding the cordon ef British cruteera across the At lantlo and adding to tha historic chapAee of German exploits at sea. a chapter to rank Willi the adventures of the Dresden Karlsruhe, Prlns Eltel Frleflrlch, U-2 and Kronprlns Wllhelm. .Whether the captor was a German U beat ,or a hitherto unreported German auxiliary cruiser is undetermined. From what was learned by some of the offi cials who boarded .he Appam it Is be lieved that some steamer, armed as a German auxiliary, raiding shipping off the African coast took the British liner and put tho prise crew aboard. This view Is supported by the fact that a sub marine could hardly have spared a lieu tenant and such a large crew to a prise. Four Ilaadred Fifty Aboard. There were a total of 4S1 persona aboard the ship, including the surviving members of the crews of seven other ships sunk by the raider which captured the Appam, and twenty German civilians wbo were being transported from Africa to England to be placed in detention camps. The persons on board the veasel were listed aa follows: Original members of crew, IK; original passengers, 116; German prison ers bound for British detention camps, SO; survivors of ships destroyed, 138; prise crew, 12. A large iercentage of the number on board are women and children and. It is said aeveral high colonial officials who where returning to England from Africa. There are also on board tha captured steamer four wounded sailors, who were taken from one of the sunken ships which resisted rapture and waa shelled- The passengers and captured crews lined the rails of the craft as it lay about a uuarter ot a mile off the Old Point dock and appeared to evince great ln- (Contlnued on Page Two, Column Two.) The Day's War News OMC OI' THE MOST STIRRING ma rine haopealna of tha war de veloped today with tha arrival of the missing British steamer Ap pam at Newport News with a Ger man prise rrew on board. It had been raptarrd off the Canary Islaada by m tiermaa aabmartae while on lie war from Dakar! Africa, for Plymoath, Eaglaaa, the capture being effeeted Jan. aary IS, foar days Jitter the Ap pam left Dakar. Tha psuesgen aboard Ihe Apiatm, which for das waa given ap for loot, orlalaally laeladrd high colonial offlulala of the British govern meat. LAST M OUT'S Xepprllaj raid on Kngland apparently Was not di rected at Loadon, the coarse of the raiders tolas more to the north, possibly taklngr la the arret Btasalsetsrlsg center af Maarhrater and apparently being Intended to seek oat and damage or destroy mnaltlone factories. WHAT IS HELIKVUD to have been aa attempt at a third air raid mm Paris wltalu three day was foiled by the loekoats oa the French front, according lo Parle advices. SITUATION AT URZUHISI to r. ported anor arrives far the Tarka than previous advleee have ladluated. There are aatd to bo H4I.OOO asen nndrr Field Marshal n D Uolta looked la the rltr. with etaly twe weeke1 provisions on hand.