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1917, Daily Average, 82,755; Sunday, 60,056, . WEATHER. , C “From Press to Home : > Lies and jeontinnes sole rontent: las . est temperature about legrees. ‘o- a ~ morrow, fair, with rising temperature. thin the H. ‘emperature for twenty-four hours 2 Ww our” ending 2 p.m.: Highest, 27, at 4 p.m. yesterday; lowest, 10, at 8 a.m. today. Full report on page 11. | : Sworm Net Circulation, Month ef January, PAGES. ~ ONE CENT. FIVE SHIPS ADDED WEAPONS MAY BE TORUTHLESS LIST, PUT AT DISPOSAL No. 29,592. WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1917.—FOURTEE Callaway of Texas seems to be in e|| tual operation, inasmuch as_ several| |members of the House today received | ag high as fifty printed pest cards with | t whether the question of w cept iy case of threatened invasion, should be bs i oo to the direct vote of the peo-/ 3, eran aa a i 5 | 7 - Members of Emergency Peace | "tie mst: rds received are signed in| Praises of Emancipator Sung Their 6,603 Tonnage Brings OF SHIPS oring a ndum, but some of the s have fallen into the hands of th on, for the replies are not un) | Total Since February 1 Federation Present Plans by Congress, Schools and | | | 7 ; at the Capitol. the foferendum and a war and nov aew| Patriotic Gatherings. to 162,197. | Way Will Be Found to Enable cithoutaectiappear to, lwieopierviacs| Vessels to Resist Illegal ing confidence in the judgment of the ONE LIFE REPORTED LOST PETITION GOES IN RECORD. | Attacks. Advocates of a war referendum| py - 2 | The ional Capital tod: joined in f 1 = lea for Economic Protection of | mal Capital today ji | = before the country is plunged into : [the nation-wide celebration of Abra- | TOLL OF THE U-BOATS. | | AMERICAN LINE MAKES hostilities coming from several of the| Workers Against Wealthy Class. | jam Lincoin’s birthday anniversary. | | eastern states, but principally from| A petition from the officials of the| Appropriate exere were held in Petre | APPLICATION FOR GUNS New York city, under the banner of the] International Brotherhood Welfare As-| Congress, the public schools and at Ships Reported Sunk | Emergency Peace Federation, invaded | sociation peace committee for economic! patriotic gathering: | | = Ei | the Capitol and the House and Senate}protection and safeguarding of the| In the House the program included } Since Sunday Morning N D rt t 0: ed, for M eee x : : ae § a ——— | | Navy Department Opposed, for Mili- office buildings early today asking con-/lives of workers before this country |the reading of the Gettysburg address | Shiseh aNRG TES eee el i gressional support of their movement.|goes to war was put in the Record to-|by Representative, Russell and ad- jagh, British. ..... z | tary Reasons, to Convoying Mer- They sought principally to have their!day by Senator Sheppard. The petition} on Lincoln's achievements by etherlee, Britis! congressmen support in every way pos-| recites that the President and Congress | Representatives Chiperfield, Pou and = Se 1,400 chantmen Through Pro- ; je a plan to have referred to the| “appear to fail to recognize in the mili- | Dill. = Olivia, British 242 hibited Zone. } a| A feature of the celebration here to- SH pepe Senate census committee the La Fol-|tary program of the wealthy clas Total | lette resolution making provision for) move hostile to the interest and lives [day will be that arranged for tonlane | | — PeSEUTRAL Previously Meported Sania, | the referendum on the war question. of the working people.” | Sartous cas ie 5 sae == S song Nim f gina! a0 aone | ane 2 | ve patriotic societies at which umber of ships, 73; tonage, | Within a few days the govern- At the headquarters of the pence ad-| It s the committee demands. as|former Speaker Cannon is to sp | ee / 155,594. | mee days the govern: 5 Yorates in the Continental Hotel it was |epresentatives of the workers, “that |“Heminiscences "of Lincoln.” Hes | <= Total Since February 1. | jment will find a way whereby 2 aS | we, ours: and our families be|said to be the only man no - Sumber of ships, 78; to: . Z gaid that they did not think they | .conomically protected and our lives|gress who had intimate acquaint- | 162.197. P nnaSe, } American merchant vessels now would have any chance of getting the jsafeguarded before the administration|ance with Linco! Pak 2 i GS If German submarines reach the | |held in port by fear of German abe mes So anxiou t the rights resolution reported if it was sent to goal set by officiais in Berlin thes yriviieres of some few individuals “Li he Humane.” 2, ‘ 4 Hey ; the foreign relations committee TG RROReae th IO Tee ieee ue a a fe must sink 23,223 tons of shipping | submarines may arm themselves , e Re sentative Chiperfield 0: linois os < #2 poe = 5 . F do not includ ci S, y E Begin Speeches at Breakfast. spoke in the House of “Lincoln the| al ic eenEes Ao; ok neues aman 4 and resume their sailings, it was The pilgrims started in their work Humane,” saying, in part: | £9 De ONT intimated strongly today. today with a breakfast at which sev “Others may speak of Lincoln the] By th S anata 3 = By the Associated Press, ‘ ra S re eral speeches were delivered, and will MANY MEET DEATH leader, the statesman, the President, | LONDON. senses 12.—Lioya’s ship- |; aoe antimations wished be soing cae one toner Be but I speak this day of Lincon the} LINCOLN DAY. pinwtagencs anuoun scaCueosiheineeek ee cial quarters that, while the time for a midnight lunch. They tried humane. of Lincoin the man, and the) _ a ial me the following steamers: government will not actually arm all the morning to get an audience | life that has sree Ae t Re lib- = Netherle British, 4. t last I f = a 2 ot ye erty-lo ens of the world | 5 a 2 ae eaced ons ast Te dmerchant (cra . ci Nest Mesccematun. | toes tie SHE) a jay we cannot undersea | AMB SSADOR GERARD RESTING ing the situation until after reaching/ported on her departure from Philadel- 3 E = seltac opie See oes say support to President in his efforts | |the severity of the struggles by which | A Washington and reporting to the Presi-| nia January 21 for Dunkirk, France. {@4Vise arming, a way will b& suppor : jhe rose, or the bleak barrenness of his| dent and the Secretary of State,” Am-|?7* ~ z 4 ie z Seo) eee ses life, which he describes as “the short | |bassador James W. Gerard reiterated to} Olivia, British, 242 tons. found to put weapons at the dis- ° Tae seca jana Simple annais Tot (aie poor. in NOW AT THE SWISS CAPITAL 3% (corespondent, of the Associated) Voltaire, British, 409 tone posal of owners who desire t “ ing » Western Miners i after years he could not bear to speak | ress at Berlin in the final conversation] Sallagh (or Salas: ef | POS yners who desire to pre- evreneneme tne | Westen aa Score of Others Hurt in LIMIPIS) | Soe coee eo coer aonrac ania words had with Mr. Gerard before the corre- ey Nw I a ee ke % ae + Enlon and ‘the mill and smelter work: : OF ore ee ore. seated book spondent's departure from the German|°"Eineer killed and two of crew in-| pare for defense against illegal at- extent of public feeling for peace 1s From Windows When “In all the length and breadth of th : 2 capital. Jured; survivors in boats nine hours| tack atiiseieaieeain Mice ac clanorer land today there is not poverty such as eaches bern From Zuric aving Lrav—|_The correspondent was requested to| before rescued. | SESS Bbalientdciany weativing: that thes mave | . he knew. It is not accurate for men i i cable it immediately upon reaching an} sinking of the Greek sted vasi- | FP: A. S. Franklin, president of the In- not succeeded in staimpeding the peo- Flames Block Exits. to say that his life was the common Q g pune na Credit clenpapnestation-senoe alia kramer foes saan ed 1, {ternational Mercantile Marine, today ple for either war or militarism. He lot of the sturdy pioneer of those days. ele wenty ours From Derlin: 1VeNn | bassador adding: “Anything in the na sa Olga, 1,400 tons, is reported by | oo ne forma ee ‘ warned them, however, that unceasing for this is not correct. jture of a statement or interview pur-|Central News. Her crew of twenty | 20¢ formal application to the Navy activity is absolute! ncaa ary to save ‘Why, I cannot tell, but so ei uae . |poxeing: BS) come om me earlier during} men were landed. Department for guns to arm the pas- (UR CE CG COLD ADDS TO SUFFERING |Mniens ito ne accomplished and a ordia en y the German lupon my arrival in America can, there- Sayudeds hace Ut Avena. Baa bed pe ee supine a ‘A mess: from Jane Addams of Hull | great man required, the early scenes of 5 a y i fore, be regarded as a fabrication.” SS quest states that the company Hanae Ch ace wah toads tt said ! his life are almost invariably laid Foreign fficials |, The ambassador said he feared at-| The British steamer Japanese Prince, |#S been unable to find guns elsewhere. etGewiane Th niche ber with: you fe amid the humblest surroundings, and : jtempts to saddle him with responslbil-| with many Americans aboard, which Washington. I am. most heartily in| PS ‘he Associated Press. in homes where love must supply the jity for utterances that were not his by| " a 5 rd, lc Would Prohibit Vessels Arming. Dania gto. pefarendum on wits It| MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, February 12—|greater part of the needs of childhood irresponsible correspondents seeking a| Was sunk by a German submarine, was{ «ooo, ra Poll, See ene teen hope. I avi ex-|At least thirteen persons are believed to|days. It_was so with Gideon, David, | ny the Associated Press. The customs inspec and other ex-|“good story,” and that he took this| torpedoed without warning, according | Senator La Follette today introduced seems to De our Dest hope. 1am ex-| A 5 3 [oer Hem nclas wabeteriG@eantamdte | sie path 11, via |8minations at the border were relaxed|means of heading off any such efforts./tg a a ch to the Exchange Tele-|* Tesolution to make it unlawful for geedingly glad of the formation of the| nave lost their lives in a fire which! Son" and many others, and so It was |, ow ey ‘baseador {*? # Mere formality. which might most mischievously affect Sra me ; were |2ny merchant ship, in time of peace, Biducanickiy avdvatectiveln destroyed the Kenwood Hotel here short-| although to a much’ greater degre eae ee at een gaan lWh nh ihe fenestra aiteation. Gola) eee SO. aad ae RSP eS ee SS : after midnight, according to police | with Lincoln. : 'd will receive President Sh : an landed, the dispatch adds. <5 : More Solemn Than Funeral. ‘eatinitea? (easy ’, oaks “Reared In a cabin that, was Inferior {and Herr Hoffmann, chief of the Swiss) ole Diplomatic Corps U. S. Notified Officially | .A (orpedo struck the Japanese Prince sapere aarree Loe sagt ae in another 2] sik x ae to the shelter of the animals on the|¢oreign department, tomorrow. The two . amidships with a terrific explosion. The |country. It was not debated, but the “The solemnity of this occasion,” said; Eleven other persons, who were re-] farm, housed in a structure that was| OVEN Teparuue’ & [Guocnin: OO oe Takes Leave of U. S. Envoy f . . crew took to the boats and were picked | Wisconsin senator asked that it lie on Emily Green Baleh of Wellesley Col- [Ported to have been away from their| for a long time without windows, doors | Swiss pee eae a 2 Hie hone © at Berlin Railroad Stati of Mr. Gerard’s Arrival up within an hour. Many were injured/the table subject to call for action by “vi == ae cee rooms at the time of the fire, or a floor and that was no’ -| Pleasant A. Stovall, the America = rlin Rai n 3 +, _, | bythe explosion, but none fatally. the Senate. lege. “would make a funeral seem like at the time of the fire, have not) Ciogea on all four of Its sides, here his| iste, to Switzerland, where Mr. Gerard allroa ato at the Swiss Capital). ‘Te seventy-tve men aboard the ship, | it is indicated that the Navy Depart- @ child’s frolic—when we think of the |¥et reported to the police. One person |early years were pent The ec ae Aes By the Associated Press, including thirty American cattlemen,|ment, while opposed for military rea- horror in Europe into which we may |is known to be dead. Lee ee ieee ee ninmentine 2 - ers p-| BERLIN, Saturday, February 10, 8:30] Official reports on the arrival of for-| “ere saved. : sons to any project of convoying Amer- 3 soon be plunged.” A score of persons were Injured, some | hardly worthy of the Wate. tid upon «| ZURICH, Switzerland, via Paris, Feb- |) ay, ie Tataa | mien tae hanes nae ecesa ananmiatant¢e) 5 ican merchantmen through the pro- “We are here to uphold the hands of| seriously, by leaping from the top|Puie support of poles, Here dwelt and|"uary 12—The American ambassador, |P 1" OY Sv NCSSS 10 the Associated ter nee Gwitzerlapa, reached the German Report of Sinkings. hibited submarine zones, favors furnish the President while he works for!qoors of the structure, when the one| developed the indomitable spirit of the | James W. Gerard, arrived at the Swiss Sayville, February 12—James 5 Eee BERLIN, February 12, via wireless to | jezenue Gups With guns for their own defense. . Inasmuch as the government peace,” declared Winter Russell of New lad, who, while his heart was ofttimes|jounaary at Schachausen at 4 o'clock |W: Gerard, the American ambassador, ;State Department today from American York. “Those who advocate militarism | fre escape became heated. by th i ehes {Minister Stovall at Bern. Thi Sayville, N. ¥.—One German submarine {has recognized that naval stores are Sel war abauld mike geal by enliat-| Ohe women, Mck Lucitis Syuice | Seetened Domes Bok embittered Py Cn* | yesterday afternoon, He waa met by the |°"¢ Ms stat left Bertin at Yi: Seiowe a at Ben ey added! i. the North sea has sunk five British |the only supply of naval guns, it ha ‘ ing.” jumped to her death from the thira|lnipe'ne endured, suffered not his cour-| American minister to Switzerland, Pleas- |OMeht for Switzerland. Besides the aid Ae the information. already| steamers of an aggregate of 14,0u0 Ae eee A resolution adopted by the federa-| A000 ge: tortatl: ant A. Stovall, and. representatives of |¢@PAssy staff 110 other Americans ac- | ublished. sam aacn dnc overseas NESeIRGoaES that source does not alter, the private tion expressed “earnest /support of the “Here it was that he learned the vast President of the United States in his| Many of the seventy-six guests were| sympathy and the broad affection for | the Swiss arm steadfast effort to secure by peaceful |transients and the actual death list|his fellow man that a mansion or a Fae ees aps ‘ : companied him. Members of the for-| The Swiss legation received a dis- = - 5 a including Col. Bruegger = 8 ms The Neue Zuricher Zeitung, the news The Navy Department, it was stated s mili- |¢ign office saw the ambassador off. Mr. | Patch from BO Oe office announc-| ,ency adds, reports from The Hague | fficially, has a considerable number of Gerard will await instructions in Bern | ing Mr. Gerard’s arrival at Bern. »ld-model three-inch to six-inch rifles, methods 2 right settlement of interna-/ 3 z > : talgeem/2tol favor oF : i zs Bsraes = fional conflicts, not alone between the | Probably will never be known. eae oes ne ing, and a big delegation of citizens )petore proceeding. Minister Stovall's dispatch, dated yes-| th#t February 9 was a record day in| available for arming merchant ships, United States and Germany. but among| The fire. which apparently started in g greeted the former Amercican ambassa- Ee : the submarine warfare, as thirty-five |but not enough for the conversion of our European brothers in their frater-| the basement, spread rapidly and Lincoln’s Birth and Life. for to Germany. The trip from Berlin |, The train on which the ambassador |terday, follows: vessels were sunk. all ships it would require in time of nal etrife.” Seema a? Rent area ene a ee ive Dill of Washington in|%as made without noteworthy incident, | }¢ft) Bertin consisted of ten coaches,| “Ambassador Gerard, with staff and| "4 dispatch from Christiania says that |war and also to furnish defensive arma~ ‘It further declared “it to be our de-| the building was inveloped in flames.| Representative Di s although some curiosity was displayed ae Mie BArlig: ome anor ate romain party, have arrived at Zurich and will| February 9 39,000 tons of shipping were |ment for all merchantmen. 4 i he | : 10 the route y' # a sire to serve our country by doing|The stairways were impassable andj brief speech pointed out some of the /hy those who gathered along the rou 5 h Bern 9 o'clock thi: ing. All| destroyed by German submarines. 2 everything in our power to maintain its| People rushed to the windows. While| coincidences which underlay the cir-|through Germany. Mr. Gerard disemn- |leave Tegretfully of their countrymen, | Teach Harn 0 @ Sic = hres ae OE 2 nd sailing vessets| @uestion of Supplying Gunners. leaders in the work of attaining world | figures hung from many windows, oth- tances of Lincoln's birth and life.|barkeg at Zurich with about 120 other |%) er a week of tension, due tojare well. met the ambassador at See Joe oa es Fe 5 peace and doing away forever with the | €FS Shot through the air into nets and|CUumstan Ameritans, intending, at fifst, to remain |Strenuous preparations for ‘leaving, |the frontier and Col. Bruegger, adju-|TePorted sunk by German submarines! The question of supplying trained gun war system and all its consequences,” | 8"0W drifts. One woman, her night|He said: there, but when he was assured of ac- Teecercomeuia tdis tenUehE Aen houtea [tant general of the Swiss army, spe- on PRs brMeryie sey ayene) Guersens News) crews for merchantmen is more difficult Dut “that we hold war in abhorrence clothing aftame, rushed from a group| “I would point out that God caused |commodations at Bern he lett, im- |, “Godse, Judwed’ some qne shouted | ii) Soot ta by the federal coun-| aki thvec were lation with either eer, ffom a departmental point of view. not only because of its menace to the} OF 4! aronged eutlaPtheroindomnarone him to choose for his life profession Lee eee aa foe ee or ath leaning far out of the window of his|cil, welcomed him on behalf of the| nuts or provisions. Two of the sailing | There is objection to withdrawing men merase wor lnertior of tho! individ! the law—the law, that broad but steep jcar, replied: “Auf wiedersehen on | Swiss government. vessels carried victuals for England. | trom the active service of the navy at ual, the suffering which war prices, SNOW drift. She may live. epee ene eae oguene ey tor nisserip, to Baris | Broadway.” Reports from Christiania say that the| 7°" * : and dangerous pathway over which so { y.! Norwegian steamship Sorland was fired | this time, and there is also some ques~ bring Upon families of small means, | Hirement Eat ¥ : : = e in Arriving. any ve si i t Ss nt efter ch a ouais cw ace tial castaaiined anal whee tulrh e eee D Ea Eon a conmchac to aidie |i eee a ee coe Farewell From Diplomatic Corps. at by two British torpedo boats while| {ion as to what effect such a step would ‘ | en the fire started most of the| (evelopment God chose from among | Most of the members of Ambassador! in. ¢ormer ambassador's face wore in Norwegian territorial/waters. |ship owners, furnished guns by their treasure, but mainly because w. ap ome The lccalized Kinneg |downtown apparatus was fighting an-| New Hngland’s brilliant boys the most|Gerard’s large party gave a genuine navy, were required to make oath that that city. He will re- ee days, situation. 15,762, by German submarines, was re-| consideration, but a preference for di- At the station Count Montgelas, head ported in a Lloyd's dispatch received | rect action by the department in plac- ate Department today from |! the guns aboard is indicated by the rat London. All| ‘The enforced idleness of the American nize war, which is the legalized killing | as le as = 2 Reon at of human beings for political ends, to | ther fire, and it was nearly fifteen min-| brilliant’ of them all, Stephen A.| ion of relief when the Swiss border|* Smile as he waited for the train tol State Department Advices. they were to be handled by civilian be one of the supreme crimes against | utes before the first company reached! Douglas. and took him out to tilinols | a tor the strain of the last| (“Part and he expressed himself opti- crews. 7 Toei ide sdsues = erowa lor sectstonr nal foment pacemaker for this pioneer. | was 8 en eae ae ede tne [mistically with regard to further de- Sinking of eight British and neutral | The possibility that the navy might - a ec ©} 1 would show y these ne few days had told mor ess Cs ae 3 5: = os 3 va of |SUPPly guns indirectly, through loan or | velopments in the German-American vessels with an aggregate tonnage of | epee ee neers, has received tore Make Appeal at Capitol. were pushing planks to the lower win-; through life together, yet opposed. dows as a means of rescue, attacked the! During early 2 pot veka ine aoe | firemen because they carried no ladders, | /iming counties ait Peeeoed the same according to Fire Chief Charles Ringer.| girl, and Lincoln won her. The police soon quelled the disturbance,| Served in the same state legislature jority of the travelers. Ambassador! ‘ard met cordially the horde of news- papermen who crowded about him on i his arrival at Zurich, clamoring for in- Of they American section of the foreign| Gen. Carranza of Mexico has sent alat the S play Seca s : ee 2, and Herr von Prittwitz, personal a: bes re ae terviews for papers all over the civ-!0e tentative of Forelen” Ministe, (note to the United States, Argentina, | Consul General: Skin More than a hundred of the Peace Federation delegates crowded into the President's room at the Capitol, where several of them addressed Senator ‘together. Both served in the national |ilized world, but he kept rigidly toj7inmermann, were present to bid M, : the vessel: ly had bi en-| merchant fleet is being viewed with “ peat Se 1 ery eed ws pce °lz: : fr Mr. _|the vessels previously een me iq . Stone, chairman of the foreign rela. |7B@ Se¢ond company arrived with 1ad-| Congress, Lincoln fu the House and | his determination not to speak for pub-| Gonna trewell ‘the diplomatic corms | PTZ and Chile, as well as to all neu-| tigned in press dispatches, but addi- | growing disquiet, and tho general view tions committee, making catieat pleas | ders several minutes later. Douglas in the Senate the same | Heation unti - x was represented by Polo y Bernabe, the {tral nations, asking them to join in|tlonal details on the sinking of some|here is that not only the export trade, to keep the nation out of war. Among | A number of children were dropped | time. Hoth ran for the Senate in Ini. | President Wilson in Washington | Spinish ambassador, who is to take d of them came in the Lloyd's report. but the nation’s standing before the world, Sea RaGhanaabouclea @on malin Sher the interosts of the United steex?|an agreement to prohibit the export |°"tns British steamer Beechtree, which | demands that American vessels continue the speakers were Rev. Normah W.| from windows into the arms of specta- | "2 A ca in Berlin had been _height- ca ed igh wil he "Thomas, . Jessi 1 is pecta-| Jimost certain Lincoln's election to the | Americans in is Ente |Dr. Theotoky, ey : ress cable said was believed to have| to ply the high seas without regard to tl Moley. representing the wenntist ees | tors. None was seriously hurt. presidency in four years more. ‘Then, {ened toward the end by the efforts of| Di. oT Uavers the Duteh minister ted [rome net Countries to the warring |P¢on sunk, was torpedoed and sunk in German proclamation, which the govern- Alexander Conn, Mary Wright Sewali ‘A as to the number of | a crowning close to all their true Gerard to open negotiations. for an|the diplomats of the South American|European nations of foodstuffs and|seven minutes. Her crew was landed eee = Her Doe netics as ra and others. They declared that wom- st D. Stalker, proprietor | gles, almost the last public act amendment to the Prussian-American|Tepublics. The military authorities | m, = | safely. cl = : eeecnt A eer a copret See Ul endment_to the ssian-A i unitions of war. ae much as possible it has been desired not Se ea ee ee | crac peas tlic natn aera a Sie | nie heuteoks fine: cath. ioe comico. as|| reatvotlies CAL tholsame\ tima| the | and (the torelsa: cflceiasciened epectal | comming 4 canto of wheat from iuenog | {2 {ake ne action which mnigne: put the + United States to keep out of the war,| checked up the dea st W e un-} while he at | German newspape! ing a care | United States in the position of precipi- fficers to accompany the train to the a ¢ were flooded with! i us this country was “their only beacon | known.” President. Lastly I would show that | © A poe ose oee wiss frontier, where it is due to arrive | Aires to Cherbourg, was torpedoed off} : of hope.” 3 ae cane when the awful war was done and Lin: ane oes geeiewe Ce jat 8 o'clock this morning. On the way | U-BOAT WARFARE CLOSES rt ose TF ner crew ‘Aled, one SEES FEES President Wilson was re-elected be- Recovery of Bodies Unlikely. coln stood on the highest heights of | OY GUUS iuienities encountered by |to the frontier the train will pick up i cold, and a boat, containing the May Not Answer Last Note. cause he had kept the United State fame, haloed by the homage and ado- | Culties and indienitics encountered by ore or more Americans attached| BAHAMA ISLAND HOTELS, <amtain ana fourteen men, is missing. | y i ration of a world, this Divine Being took him as the nation’s last and most precious sacrifice of ail that war—took | The British steamer Sallagh, about} Nevertheless officials believe that so ten tere was doubt of identity, 18 /tong as the government has repudiated Z Germany's war zone and officially notified 0 consular offices in southern Ger- | many. The disposition of the ambassadorial! NEW YORK, February 12.—The Ger-|Siven as 2 out of war, it was argued, and Con.| Chief Ringer declared recovery of gress should see to {it that the nation| bodies was unlikely, adding that identi- Temains out of the war. Senator Stonej fication would be impossible even if the Gerard was refused permission to com municate in cipher with Washington, and the authorities ignored all denials thanked the delegation and assured him away before envy and jealousy | 474) the § a «| Gorman {train after its arrival in Zurich. rests ‘ i | ft that the President and Congress |Podies were dug from the ruins. could heap abuse and calumny upon | Of the, Sto! ne ficnal themsnce | with. the Swiss government which is|™2" Se@ raiding activities in the south- ISH “BARRED ZONE.” | *™°"can_ship owners of their right to : s ame. : Sy [Awaiting instructions from France. It{¢@F8 Atlantic have terminated abruptly} BRITISH ZONE. |arm for self-protection, the owners should serve peace. serious condition, it was reported at the | ,,."Thus would I show how an all-wise | Tage it clear that the stories were |S considered likely, however, that the, the winter résort season in the Bahama | ‘ be put in a position to exercise that right, “In your desire to keep the nation! /, God had so planned this man’s life, es ‘e > ba lor Gerard's | America arty will stay in Berne f = . . out of war,” said Senator Stone. “and|CitY Hospital that most of them would) shaped his surroundings and so false. Prior to this Ambassador Gerard's | American party ¥ In Berne for|{slands, according to persons who ar-/ Berlin Papers Say Its Establishment Alechonecwites aarere S mail _and|@ few days. : | to preserve the peace of the country, Ijrecover. One woman who became hys-| ranged his associations that by means | (jcgnone wines were cut bis mail and : rived here today on the steamship | Preceded German Action. gard tne latest offer of Germany to dis- ps Suave: Prcround eyrapetby, and 1|terical after being rescued, ran down the | Ge eto meyhadikev tug one nation, Sov-|he could not even instruct the Ameri-| Lokal Anzeiger Criticises Envoy. | Morro Castle. i ae 2 ss = ae cuss means of preventing war, presented hope and irust that nothing may arise! street screaming, and her feet were | Te? & can consuls, and he was, in his OWN} ‘phe Berlin press is confining itselt| Hotels have closed because the Brit-| BERLIN, February 12, via wireless to) tnrougn the Swiss minister Saturday, y Address by Judge W. F. Norris words, a prisoner ish authorities ordered lights out at, S@¥Ville, N. Y.—Among the items given only as an effort to cast on the United ties inevitable. Congress will do {ts best | frozen before she was overtaken. Others, combined result was uncertainty |to the most perfunctory references to to keep the nation out of war.” Foret is 7 e ae a sone co On eh ee yi x : night, passengers said, and h: ;out for publication by the Overseas /|States the appearance of being bellig- warbed in night attire, suffered intens “president Wilson is acting today just | #4 Petty friction, which was only in-|the departure of former Ambassador | 8h b: S Sree Nees ine encyoane gollpwinke erent. |ly in the ten below zero temperature. ed when the foreign office and |Gerara and the Amefican embassy staff,}tOUrists have fied from the islands, The official attitude seemed to be Officiais today were still inclined to ree were doing all in their power to pre-| While several of the injured were in a| his memory and his name. eee through the Spanish | { | | i | College Peace Conference. as Lincoln would act could the great authorities shifted the causing the business places they pat-| “The German newspapers point out $1 While the fire was at its height Harry | f Re goe alan ane h 2 iger, th "s- ae Se nes Dat that the United States and German A conference of colleges in the inter-| sensen and his wife crawled ee & Win, | £tnaneipator come back and take ponsibility for the delay In Ge rate | The Sota pease only news-|ronize to close. | that the English declaration of a barred| governments can have no diplomatle tal at 2 o'clock, Prof. Harry Allen Over- | they paus praeed| Po Ont Of thee Depanenene Ch Jy | . could obtain ot perdon Or the remresentatice of the|Armless, Blind, Reads With | by several days the parallel German an-| Pros a 2 Hees oat rhe i ing | Berson of the) representative of the Tongue | nouncement, apvarently has not become | W2Ffare. and that any other advancei YY. M. C. A. ion. It was ncoln is look- | Officials in vain Btreet of the City Yor eat th presiding. sess mi bi ee meanwhile serve only to- becloud the i i to the | told an cheered. Mrs. |yeste jhis wife and together treet. while spi United States who left yesterday a pop-| KANSAS CITY, Mo, February 12.—|known in the United ular figure disappears from Berlin. The|winiam McPherson of Highland Park, | not. been discuss tates, as it has of American rights. It is not cer- ay afternoon. “L ed by the Ameriéan * University nst| Jensen was badly injured, but her hus: % ere only applic. = i . 3 i any re NI ru nh) AG. mas gure Ge ) -\ing down on us today,” Judge Norris | were only appl assertion that he was a pronounced op- Fi ane tain whether any answer will be made peresenee Ser ee suey Poona bere was not ser ously hurt. se mace, (declared, “a living spirit, and he says|that the admirable self- ie fo aad ponent of Germany is stretching the//ll., who lost his sight and both arms in [Morte German newspapers consider it| tothe suggestion. — wrat tations: cBepreacwtative Cait -{ Slany thrilling rescues took place. |to us, ‘Go and finish the work begun in j politeness people, with case a bit, yet he surely was no friend|a mine explosion in 1906, and who since | possible that news concerning this| Officials noted with interest today oF ou cereacere alloway | Miss Ruth Reams leaped from the third |+¢1, continued in "98, and that faces ys {the resultant + Was be of Germany, and it may be calmly vi eee S “/ that the submarines’ toll of merchant spoke floor into an overcoat stretched by | today, | jeopa dized. i at again at the relations of. thy| te” has learned to read with hts tongue; English measure has been suppressed ships sunk yesterday had sunk to the Tonight's meeting will be held at the| three. me ne was but shlightly in-| ‘°**? ? | Gnitea Stat. malGe 8 ula havg|bY means of raised letters on porcelain | by the English censor for reasons which | SPDs SUNK NeRTOas a campaign. cAll Souls’ Unitarian Church, 14th and] jured | Delay Followed Dela reached a far less deplorable stage if} slabs, ia here today being fitted with arti. |@7® €#sily understood. was inaugurated. yee streets. Those scheduled to speak!” “Wien we were ready to leap, my! FREDERICK W. WHITE DIES. ay; 3 ve |the great transatlantic republic’ had|ficial arms. In a sermon before a congre- | cin, ae companion, Mrs, Squire, returned to the Delay followed delay, and one ex-j been represented in Berlin in the person| gation last night he said he had fed) Q@REEK NOTE TO GERMANY. GREAT BRITAIN IS GRATEFUL, - Pro William 1. Hull, Sw j room for her new dress,” said Miss | leuse was made after another, until!of 4 man who possessed a greater ap-| himself yesterday for the first time in 4 folere Prof, i ny A. On Reains, “It Was several minutes later | Was Known Throughout West for | Friday night, when the foreign office |Preciation of the difficulties and pe-{eleven years | ate es | Extends Formal T s to U.S. for ‘ollege o ork; when she plunged out of the window to E . ote ae esate ties ce | eu jes of our position, and wh t * i nds For: ‘hank: . 8. secretary, Iwania her death. In the rush for windows, «| His Dramatic Criticism. | suddenly announced its willingness toj further, had been inclined to keep hig ;Reported to Have Made ‘Fullest e New ¥ Reservation” Concerning Ships. Latter’s Services in Berlin. few moments later, 1 saw three people NR CLE rard lene sovel nctly i = r H DENVER, Col., February 12.—Frederick | permit Mr, yerard to depart on the | government correctly informed with re. York; Rev ~ 2 topple o and fall through th ae z x spect to ic i vi! G i ian Noe etre cas lieerneceett sh the burn- |. White, dramatic critic, known to the | following day. The names of corre- | pect to relcen Dee non Nes enaer DAY IN CONGRESS, | February 12.—A dispatch to| The gratitude of Great Britain for Maliiel, es ‘s socialist suffra public and theatrical circles as “F. W.|spondents and of other persons pers If, on the whole, Mr. Gerard was no SS | [the Exchange Telegraph Company from] the very eflicient and kindly work un “ ew York state: Mrs. 3 lw.” died in a hospital here today of | added to the list, but even then petty outspoken friend of Germany, he was Senate: Athens says: | dertaken by the United States in car- Sewell, honorary president, DESTROYER PUTS TO SEA. j Sicumonia. He was sixty-seven years | Gelays and uncertainties followed until | dually Adisinel ined toxshsre (the! blind Met at 11 am. “The Athens newspapers assert that| ing for British interests in Germany Representative Ose: | German Vessel D: ae |°Worn in England, the son of a professor | Hortly before the train was boarded. | iinglish with which his. countrymen Finance committee perfectea | | simultaneously with the handing of its| has been conveyed to the State Depart~ be ; aS erman Vessel Damaged in Battle |. Oxtord University: Mr. White was| Mr. Gerard's, fi rewells were said in|seem obsessed. From the beginning of| | revenue bill indorsed by demo- reply to the American government's; ment in a dispatch cegrn Amanaenaee, fe > delegation started look- Quits Dutch Port brought to this country when a child, and }a ndly, thou: formal manner.;the war he expressed his inability to cratic caucus. note suggesting the severing of rela-| Page in London quoting Foreign Min- Ae for senators. they were “photo- conan ene S was educated in New York city. His first |Many Germans were in the throng at! see how the entente could ever be vic- Peace delegation besieged sen- ‘tions with Germany the Greek govern-| ister Balfour. Mr. Balfour said that * a led by ving picture cameras on| LONDON, February 12.—The German! newspaper work was in Albany, N. Y.,|the station which consisted partly of, torious over the central powers, and ators In behalf of a referendum is : Great Britain was no less grateful for the steps of the office build- | torpedo boat destroyer V-69 left Yumj-| where he later was one of the founders | Americans who had not received per-| this opinion he never surrendered.” on war. ment also transmitted a communication | {tvavica's kindliness of spirit in under- with a ban {War or] aon, Holland, at 6:45 o'clock 1 of the Albany Union, since become the | mission to depart on the embassy train| The following American correspond- Resumed debate on Porto Rican to the German government with regard! taking the yrmous work of caring Take a Ree um," draped | ‘ - eats last even- |-rimes-Union. He came to Colorado in thejand must await the police routine}ents have remained in Berlin: James citizenship bill after efforts failed to Germany's declaration of asubmarine| for her interests in a hostile country in front of the first rank jing, assisted by a German tug, says ajearly nineties and since that time has|before being allowed to leave. The| O'Donnell Bennett, Cyril Brown, Wil-| | fo replace. it~ with espionage | | blockade. in It Greece makes the fullest] than she was appreciative of the eM™- We were moved by a spunky, spon-| Reuter dispatch from that port. resided in the state. Mr. White was con-/fact that it was not, generally known | liam Bayard Hale, Oswald F. Schuette; | measures and bill to enlarge the reservation concerning her ships.’ ciency with which that tusk was car- taneons spirit to come here.” declared | phe Dutch cruiser Noord-Brabant a q {nected with Denver papers as editor and | that Mr. Gerard was departing reduced | and Mr. Anderis. | | interstate commerce commission. ried out one of the men of the du.cgation : nd/ dramatic critic from that time until his} the demonstrations at the south Ge: ry { Indian appropriation bill re- One of the results of the severance re ii jsix Dutch torpedo boats escorted the | death. Iman stations to a minimum of curious! Gerard to Give No Interviews. | | tured to conference committee Post for Duke of Connaught. {of Miation= with Germany has been to 7 REFERENDUM IN CPERATION. | German through territorial waters. The crowds. = for further consideration of mat- LONDON, February 12, 4:44 a.m.—The] force abandonment of that relief work. ~—-- V-69 at first steered south. Subscription to Italian Loan. The older SOCR m0 che children] COPENHAGEN, February 12, via Lon- ters in dispute. Se Be Goneuene a Tiios ERENT nA Ss cee 2 ul re were assigned to the sleeping cars on epiaiauet iveneny a Nease? > Ss - Post Cards Already Received by Con-| .The destroyer was badly. battered in a} Oye 2 s a 12 phe |the train. ‘The younger persons rode | 40% 5:17 p.m—"T have a o state. coke poe aeetarts crearaiialorerecat) sore eareae Gov. McCall Gives Pledge. “he < attle with British destroyers in the BEE Ciera cise me ctiMary te in the day coaches and made the trip|ment or interview on the submarine Sai se ing to the Times. The paper intimates| Gov. McCall of Massachusetts called gressmen Show Views on War. North sea late in January, but was|Stefani Agency announces that the] o¢ twenty hours to the border with no|situation or on the present crisis to Representative Russell read = on President Wilson today and said that the duke will investigate the ques- tion of the promoticn of Canadian officers, | that his state would do anything neces- which has been a subject of criticism]|sary in the present international here. emergency. Lincoln's Gettysburg address and Representatives Chiperfield and Dill spoke on Lincoln. alled “war referendum” pro-| "ought into port by her crew. Various | subscriptions to the Italian 5 per cent{serious discomforts. The party was|any newspaper man; I shall not.do so Maciiaaiacsaine ranges repairs have been made since then.| war loan amounted last week to 1,200,-|accompanied by two representatives of tt i the frontier, and I intend. Mets NOM Pere OR CORRE Large and small ships’ boats were| 00,000 lire, 800,000,000 lire of which|the foreign office and guarded care-}|#fter crossing the fr E i! the leadership of Representative | placed on board the destroyede was in cash, fully by men from the secret service. to say nothing for publication regard- | , " ‘