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™ nm Proportion to the City's Population an Sigamer | Condensed Tolegrams Germans Guilty of mwumfinmmfl:m- & ? . B |Took iMPORTANT GERMAN POSI- |FIRST ARMED SHIP TO SAIL FROM | = §1X CONVICTED IN FEDERAL DIis- . v t ” Mrs. Margaret Auth, of Wheel- B : ; 3 TIONS AT VARIOUS PLACES AN AMERICAN PORT ing, . VLS (0und gdluyof booi- | TRICT COURT AT NEW YoM - A y ; i . . — A; S I ATE OF A ; GERMANS LOSE HEAVILY [HAD CREW OF 39 MEN |o:Soiers,® Son e o s i 1 o oI T ; 3 » : B Fire destroyed the ¢ s ¢ The Russians On the Persian Front|Thers Was a Guard of One Lisutenant |aian Refintng Go. ot Bhiladeishin ars | Found Guilty of Conspiracy to Destroy 1 and Twelve Blusjackets Aboard, But | ' °F $200,000. Steamships Carrying Food and Mu- ANl Were Saved—Eleven of Crew |spuics offerto cavey Ammerican sbiiet| "itions From New York for the En- BE SENTENCED FRIDAY P od T = ing only against an irresponsible sov- and the British in 'Mesopotamia Classed Imperial German Government as “An lrre- |Sineet. ons” o 2 Continue to Harass# the Turkish right and is-running amuck. - e supplies to Syria orces. Missing. tente Al il President Wilson’s Address. — sponsible Government Which Has Thrown o et WIS AW s e Thirty-five submarine chasers arriv- Fitiamt Wiinen Speabas Tl 2 g 2R Agri, 2 The Amers ed in the Hoboken yards of the Lack-| n & & P congress P eld m.l'lhll Sir Douglas Haig’s ew ork, Fl’fl ~The Amg jcan l'lfl'll- iroad. ew York, April 2—Six Germans ':0 traordinary session because there are| i ,ops again have made good -|steamship Aztec, mer- were convicted by a jury in the fed- Away All Considerations of "umamty Seiohe vers Bexibos lice e e e e et v SAl ot & ot Gh hiE[" The Germess Tmperial:Clething Toe=| seet diorares eyl Mete il the fod- i i 4 Which it was neither right nor consti” | jjes from thet town.~ night by a German submarine off an rying food and munitions from this and is Run"mg Amuck > Lutlonally Permissible et T should| “Important German ~positions were|island near Brest, France. The cable port for the entente allies by means . 4 z o i 25 ¥ 'aKing. | taken at various places, including the |message from the American consul at tudents all courses in Rutgers’ | of incendlary bombs. Germany Put Aside All Restraints. |trenches on a front of about ten miles | Brest which brought the news of the Collua will hereafter be required to Jury Out Fifty Minut. “On the third of February last, I|between the Bapaume-Cambria road |ship’s sinking to her owners, the Ori- |take military driil = inute officially laig before you the extra-|and Arras. The Germans are said to|ental Navigation company, gave no| . . g = % e L "fl',"“’ guilty are Captain REOUESTS AN ARMY OF AT I.EAST m m "EN ordinary announcement of the imperi- |bave suffered heavy casualties in this|inkling as to the fate of her crew. An ring February 140 vesseéls, carry- chem‘: ;2" se;. of Hoboken, a g e ’ 2l German government that on and ting. * These gains tend materl- | Associated Press despatch from Paris|IN8 557,769 tons of cargo, passed|chemist: Karl Schmidt, chiet engineer after the first day of February it was|ally to straighten out bulges that have | said, however, that while some of the |through the Panama Canal. o e "“,éne";“b Friedrich its purpose to put aside all restraints|prevailed in the British line. men aboard ‘ihe Astec were rescued| o, cew | Karbade, Wilheim Parades and Georgs S SER of law or of humsnity and use its{ The Russians on the Persian front|a number them were missing and Yo‘_:‘;’;g“ s ;',’,";"_';,'g‘g;- o y Al e e B e il T With Authorization of Increments of 500,000 Each as They submitines to shik sviry wesssl: thatlgad fhc Hritisn in Mesopotamis con- D';N':Y 'M‘ 1:""';‘* Marcp 15, | cstate valued at’$iSizgn. same vessel. The jury was out ffty T s P - of Great Britain and Ireland or the|sians have driven the Ottoman forces T Y ouk. Mo 3% i The. 51 Are Needed—While It is Not Intended to Send Troops | western coast of Europe or any of the (westward from Kerind and are now || The Astec sailed from New Yok |, Beventy revel prisoners taken dur: |sevias.”Sone masimum orison ponion he approachinj e aso amian er P a e i 2 " Abroad, the Enlistments Are on the Principle of Uni B e e e ook | near Khanikan - The British troops|manded by Captain Walter O'Brien,|hua City, were publicly hanged as a |Ment for their offerse is two years. '3 ents Are on Principle nivers- | Sermany, 2 ‘to be the object of |have occupied the Turkish town. ofiixicen members of the crew were warning. i Two Others to be Tried. . . . o, the German submarine warfare, earlier | Dely Abbas, on the Mesopotamian |3ative-born Americans. i " Captain Otto Wolpert, pler super- a Service—Recommends Liberal Financial Credits to thejin the war, but since April of last|front. Tre following were the Americans|, lonacio Bonillas, Mexican ““"‘“’.‘;‘; intendent of the Atlas Line and Cap- year the imperial government had| The British chancellor of the ex. oy - A o Ty HIG Parifly Tott Bae ARCORe - for tain Bno Bode, pier superintendent of 1 3 hat trained th om! ders equer has announced in the house of Ve e - ' o the Hamburg-American Line, Governments at War With Germany, Organization of |52merhat, restrained t gy commons that the Turks suffered .- United States shipping commissioner: | Washington. 2 indicted " with those. convicted, - with its promise then given to us that | 000 casualties in the battle of Gaza, Had Crew of 39. AN o AR colm, by | MOt Yet been tried. Dr. All the Material Resources of the Coun and Full boats shotsl not be Palestine, while the British killed . raba incoln, b¥ | Scheele also indicted, for whom the Country, N e Sty The Aztec. under the command of |George Gray Barnard, was presented | gorerqonts testified they manofastuien were less than 400. Captain Walter O’Brien, was manned |to the city of Cincinnati by Mr. and| the hombs, flsd when federal agents a by a crew of 39. Seventeen of this|Mrs. William Taft. year ago unearthed the plot and is Pe- SEVEN CARS ON THE number, including the captain, were T lieved to be in Mexico 3 and Equipment of Navy to Deal With the Submarine War- ! ail other vessels which its subma~ % - resistence was offered or escape at- Fi ick D. erwe l, fare—All Preparations to be Made Without Checking the | tempted and caro taken that their| MONTREAL EXPRESS DERAILED |American citizens. R e A ererd, | Vreiigent Did $4,000,000 Damag rriwa eeibipieen at Hast 8 Sate o] Lo e of the Americans Aboard. Alice, to the marine division of the| The conspiracy of which the de- R I. J. Anderson, mate, 538 Fiftieth | Home Defense League. fendants are convicted is sald by the H H 9 3. | to save their lives in the open boats. Flow of Supplies to the Entente Allies—Friendly Atti- | ave their lives in the open boats and haphazard enough, as was proved tude for German Men and Women, but Contempt for |in distressing instancé atter instance in the progress of the cruel and un- Hohenzollern Dynasty Which Has Fooled the German |maniy Dusiness but a certain degree People, and Has Betrayed lis Objects by Resorting to All| _Every Restriction Swept Aside. he new polyy has swept away . . every restriction aside. Vesseis of ev- Sorts of Intrigue -and Espionage Even Before the | i iy whaterer theis fag, their character. their cargo, their destina- European War Started. tion, their errand have been ruthless- lv sent to the bottom without warn- ing, and without thought of help or asgtp . : . |merex for those on beard. ine vessels \Vashngton, April #.—President Wil- | would be- presented with Siipat [ 95 Tiiepdly, neuGels Slong, with tiese #on tonight urged congress, assembled | thought of the executive;departments i’ ching o in joint session, to deciare a state of [which will be h'l’m Wllh the con- . & M. at Greenfield, Mass. treet, Brooklyn, N. Y.: G. C. Larkin, F vy government authorities to have been = second mate, 85 Garfield avenue, West | A cavalry regiment of women has |responsible for the destruction of or Greenfield. Mas: Lynn, Mass.. E. J. O'Brien, third mate, |been suggested to the military author- | damage to entente vessels and carzoes gine and seven cars of the Montreal |66 Burgess place, Passaic, N. J.; B.|ities by Miss Marion Weston Cottle, & | in 1915 worfn upwards of $4,000,000. Express bound for New York over the | Bor:fensen, engineer, 248 Forbell ave- | former student at Wellesley. Connecticut River division of the Bos-|n1e, Brooklyn; Harry Larkln, engineer, —_— How Bombs Worked. ton and Maine Railroad were derailed |85 Garfield avenue, West Lynn, M: Twenty-five hundred bundles of dis- Dr. Scheele, known as “the chemical at the Allen Street crossing a mile | Ferbert Collins, engineer, carded clothing and shoes have been | professor,” operated, according to the north of this station tonight. A bag- | Fifth street, Wilmington, Del.; Charles |received by the bundle week commit- | tetimony, an “agricultural laboratory” gage car and one steel coach tipped |Erickson. engineer, 829 Fifty-eighth |tee of the United Hebrew Charities. |in New Jersey where bomb cases, over but, according to railroad avthor- | street, Brookiyn, N. Y.; Chester T. -— manufactured by the Frederich der ities, only three men and a woman|Jee steward, 111 Sacramento street,| Joseph N. Brennan, of Brooklyn, a|Grossc engineers aboard their ship were slightly hurt. San Francisco: Henry T. Long, mess- |money order clerk in Postoffice Sta- | were alleged to have been filled wifh —_— man. New York city: Watson Sianey, [tion G, at No. 744 Manhattan Avenue, |incendiary chemicals. The bombs - i 2 tor, N 3 was arrested on a ch: of d lar- | were designed to explode, through Twenty-five persons were killed in |r2dio operator, New York city; Charles peterly arge of gran: aiott DIl ot e N > . | Kelle: 827 Twerty-ninth s the streets of New York city in March. T T TR S lr:::: oy i £ AL g i moaelh il T T T R T Hunphllu Charies ‘Honolu- useum of Safety | Money for financing the plot, accord- #ight of neutfals to ase 1 A. Koakis, announced that the E. H. Harriman|ing to government agents, was fur- PITHID. The Stemm . At ,; S Nt Davis, Hawast; H. Memorial gold medal for 1916 had been | nisliéd by German embassy attaches. 3o e, e v awarded to the Alabama Great South-| Judge Van Fleet told the jurors that as prescrited. evan he defence. of Sunk in the Night. ern Railway. the international situation should not :“_‘:“_“M“'\‘,"‘:" z‘mfl'::‘;‘“t‘m:’“:};;t":; Whether or not the Aztec fought & - ; influensce them in reaching their ver- Setend arhe AntiRation ced | losing battle with her undersea ad-| The Authors’ defense league, under | dict. that the armed guards which we have |versary had not been disclosed. Her (the auspices of the American Defense placed on our merchant ships will be |O%ners believe however, that she hag iy st S it tons Sallios up: INDEPENDENTS AIDED i no chance to fight, ince she was sunk [on Congress to declare war Iimm - tteated as bevond the nale of law and | 0 o 15 0150k at night, when a heavy |ately sgainst Germany. DEMOCRATS IN HOUSE Tac existing between tive- -Gmited: of e o B we States and Germany sideration for them in lhxt light. with nfe conduct !hrnug‘h the pre- Scene of Great Enthusiasm. scribed areas by the German govern- In a aispassionate, but unmeasured | President Wilson's appearance be-|ment itself, and were distinguished by Qenunciation of the course of the im- |fOre congress was marked by a scene | unmistakable marks of identitv, have perial German government, which he |Of the greatest enthusiasm ever shown | been su=% with the same reckless lack Charmcterized it 211 | since he began the practice of deliver- | 0f compassion or of principle. e et e % wall ling his addresses in person. Crowds| “I was for a litle whi'e unable to Denounced German Government. subject to be deait with as pirates T e 8aInst A1l N2~ | on_ the outside of ‘the capltol cheered | believe that such things would.in i Th : — ons, the president declared that neu- ¢ sea was running. e vessel was — . . trality no longer was fehsible o: dali. |Rim as he entered and as he left. Con- |fact be done by anv government that|“Oqabe oo o larmed with two 5-inch | guns, one| Anti-war Socialists in Berlin Lion’s Share of Applause During Roll eble where the peace of the world was |8ress roared cheer after cheer in an |had hitherto subscribed to the humane| ., ueh at best: in such circumstances | {0rward /and one aft, manned by na- [about to establish a newspaper in Call Went to Miss Jeanette Rankin. gress to be made, and made wwl“ St. Quentin, now being only two|side of the Atlantic, was sunk last urtr.m;nt has ordered a census of all|spiracy to destroying steamships car shoes in Germany. involved; that armed neutrality had be- {outburst ‘of patriotic enthusiasm. practices of civilized nations. Interna- - i it | vl gunners under command of a war- |position to the pro-war Socialist come ineffectual enouch at best, and “Wilful Men” Quiet. tional law had its origin in the at.|ondIn the face of such pretensions It | rant officer. gan the Vorwaertz, according to a Washington, April 2—The demo- was likely ' to promote what it was L tempt to set up somylaw, which would| ;¢ gnee to produce. what was meant| In expressing the fear that the bun- |port in New York labor circles. crats, with the aid of four of the five meant and urged that congress ac- |, From the galleries, the only mem- |%Ye respected ang observed upon the|i, prevent: it Is practically certain to|Ners on the Aztec had no chance to : independents, organized . the house cept the gage of battle with all re- |DSrS Who appeared not to be joining |seas, where no nation had right of| graw ns into the war without either|show their skill, it was recalled that{ A bill to consolidate all State activ- | When the new congress assembled to- souces of the nation. in the demonstration were some sena- | dominion and where lav the free high- | the rights or the effectiveness of bel- | the Cunard liner Laconia, sent to the |ities under a commission of seven|day, re-electing — Speaker Champ tors of the group which the president | wavs of the world. By painful stage | jjperents 4 | bottom off the Irish coast on February members in the service of the Federal | Clark. of Missouri, and sweeping in- To Bring Germany to Terms. branded as “wilful men.” who, by pre- |after stage has ‘hat law been built un Mt 'Pumt Our Sacred Rights. 25, was sunk at night and thaf no|Govrnment in the event of war was in- | to office with him all the other dem- “I advise that the congress declare | Venting a vote on the armed neutrali- | with measre results, indeed. after all submarine was seen although a vig- |troduced in the Minnesota Senate. ocratic nominges: r. Clark received 217 votes against the recent course of the imperial Ger- [ty Dbill had made the “great govern-|was accomplished that con'd be ac-| “There is one choice we cannot|jant watch was kept. man government to be in fact nothing |ment of the United States contempti- | complished, but always with a clear | make, we are incapable of makinz: we 2 > The Pennsylvna Public Service | 205 for Representative Mann. the re- less than war against the government |ble.” Chief Justice White was among | view, at leost, of what the heart and| Will not choos> the path of subm A Slow Moving Freighter. Commission was asked by the rail- | publican choice for speaker, who not those who cheered loudly and there |econsiience of mankind demanded. sion and suffer the most sacred rizhts| The Aztec, a slow moving freighter |roads operating in_ Pennsylvania to|only failed to receive an independent of our nation and our Dpeople to be|of 3727 fross tonage, steamed from |consent to a flat increase of 15 per |vote, but lost the support of his par- R B R the G ignored or violated. The Wrongs|New York for Havre on March 18 with [cent. in freight rates within the [ty colleagues. of rigl e Ger- | against which we fiow array ourselves |y full cargo of foodstuffs and general |state. All_the democrats present voted for Mr. Clark and were joined hy Repre- and people of the United States,” said o cl A the president. “that it formallv ae- |Was no division of spirit between re- Plea of Rotaliation. cept the status of belligerent which ha. |Publicans and democrats. b thus been thrust upon it and that it [ Referring only briefly to the long & diplomatic correspondence with Ger- [man government has swept aside under | are not common wrongs; they cut to|gupplies valued at more than $500.- take steps not only to put the country = ry in a more thorough state of defensebut [Many in his effort to bring her back {the plea of retaliation and necessity | the very roots of human life. 000. She was due at Havre tomorrow| Veterans of the Spanish, Philippine |sentative Sghall, progressive, Minneso- miso to exest all its power and employ | to the bounds of the laws of humani- | and because it had no weanons which What President Asks of Congress. |and probably was less than 100 miles |and Civil wars and men honorably d: t Martin, progressive- nroucuon!-r charged from the United States army | Louisiana: London, socialist, all its resources to bring the govern- |ty and nations, the president launched | it could use at sea except these, which “With a profound sepse of the sol- | from that port when torpedoed. This into his denunciation of the course of |it is impossible to emplov as it is) .~ ’nnd :’wn tr.d‘,“, ch_nc,e,’ of | fact has given hope to her owners|and navy and the National Guard have | York, and Randall, prohibitionist, (‘nl- the German government which he de- | emploving them 1without throwing to|ipo stop T am taking and of the grave | that all her crew may ‘be saved if |formulated plans for action in the |ifornia. ment of the Germau empire to terms and end ;he war.” - clared had forced the United States to | the winds all seruples of humanity or e - ves, but|they had an opportunity to tak event of war. To the surprise of the republicans; Waé Resolutions Introduced. become @ belligerent. Of respect for the understandings that | Fo=Fensibilities which It favelves but |ty Ted - ¢ e L0 Ruptosntiaioe Tabolt viand. 3¢ were supposed to underlie the Inter-| Geem my constitutional duty, I advise| The Oriental Navigation company| A half million postmasters, letter |Clark in nomination. For a time it When the president had finished speaking, resolutions to declare a state TS Conmin e course of the world. also owns the steamship Orleans, one |carriers and field agents for various|was thought that he had done so by that the congress daclare the recent of war ‘existing were introduced in| “The wrongs against which we now Wanton Destruction of Lives. i - Federal d have been se i v o . -, ook . course of the imperial German gov-|of the first vessels to sail unarmed eral departments have been set on | inadvertence, but later it developed he both houses of congress, referred to|&rm ourselves,” he said, “are no com “I am mot now thinking of the loss!ernment to be in fact nothinz less|from an American port after Ger- |the trail of spies -and conspirators |had acted through prearrangement against the United States under Gov- | with democratic leaders. &ppropriate committees and will be de- ey cut to the very roots - s e : i Supopritte Supguiliaes Sui el e de = of property involved, immense and se- | than war against the government and [many’s declaration of unrestricted the | rious as that is, but only of the wan- | people of the United States: that it|svbmarine warfare on February 1. The Massa- ernment orders. Representative Greene, of Fhouts pemta e o ity Mth formall ¢ ‘the status of belli- | O sstully chusetts, presented Mr. Mann's namm ® German people and. anything but @ |ion and wholesalé desiruction of the|formally accept the status of - | Orleans successfully ran the blockade : = S , D Mr. Mz . War Against Autecratic Power. 5 lives of non-combatants, men, women | Serents which has thus been thrust|of undersea boats. The International er Co.. at|in a brief speech and Representative 9 oy g g feeling of friendship and sympathy for | ¥es OF RO~ St = tn pu““"'; upon it and that it tak~ immediate A Bridgeport, announced that positions | Lenroot, of Wisconsin, the progr The objects of the United States in [them, the president declared their 3 - e Inch Guns. > 2 : 1 - ¥ R which have always even in the dark. |Steps not only to put the country in ! - vacated by employes called into the |sive-republican leader, seconded it gntering the war. the president said, |government had mot acted upon thelr | ' N0SS G modera. history, _been | & more thoroush state of defense, but| The Aztec was armed with two five- | national service will be held open and | There were no other nominations and s T et il e el bttt knn’,‘,‘,edn or apuroval. | deemed innocent and legitimate. Prop- |also to exert all its power and em- |inch guns, one forward and one aft |that they will be continued on the (in ust an hour and forty minutes aft- Rutocratic wer" Without Mish P * |erty can be paid for; the lives of the | Ploy all its resources to bring the|The crew of naval gunners on board | payrolls at half pay. er the house convened Mr. Clark, as onde’ fdr c::qu“'l pra dom;’““m See i Work of Dynaties. peaceful ang innoceni people cannot|gOvernment of the German empire to|was in command of a warrant officer. % .| he had predicted to the minute several Ing no indemaitics, or material cem- |* “It was a war,” he said, “determined | be. terms and end the wa The Aztec, formerly owned by the| The General Federation of Women's|days azo, was delcared elected. In a pensations for the sacrfices it comilupon as war used to be determined haitive Agetoss Shenbtud: What War Will Invoive. Pacific Mail ‘Steamship company, was |Clubs of the United States, through |brief address the speaker pleaded for make, the United States must enter |upon in the old unhappy days wien| .mne = present German warfare| -What this will involve is clear. It|2 SBID of 3737 tons eross and 2345 lts officers and executlve commites. |united action in the present crisis the war, the president said, to make |PeODles were mowhere consulted by |asainst commerce is a warfare azainst | 31l involve the utmost practicable co- | ;21000 i7" 7534, She was 330 fect | 7ation to the natfonal organizations of | ouchursts of appiause, but the. Hon's e world safe for democracy, as only pro’ kind. It i v Fn operation in counsel and aetion W 4 . = H - ¥ : one of the champions of the rights of |2nd waged in the interest of dynasties | omK mAmerlc:nash‘:p‘; s g l}::::aa the governments now at war with |/On%. With a beam of 43 feet. b Sl e ha s Uity B S;“nr; ‘gm P Mu;xl""“e“; zfi”;a( mi mankind, and would be satisfied when |OF Of little groups of ambitious men{ Q31 JGIEER TUES REVC Aeen SUBE | Garmany and. as incident to that, the Owners of the 1,700,000 Ford cars |woman to be elected to the house. those rights were as secure as the |Who were accustomed to use ~their | p o€ o0 V08 (B RER 0 WANE WRICH oy tension to those sovernments of the | AMERICAN BLUEJACKETS e ievine theoushout the Tinited ) i faith and freedom of mnations could |fellow men as pawns and teols. Hutrihe ehive wad peaple ol ot | most liberal financial credits, in order 5 Selection of the minor officers of the make th er neu- | i, Tt our resom o CONSTITUTED GUARD |States will be asked by the National|house was delayed by the republicans ake them. Denounced German Plots. tral and_ friendly nations have been s":h"be Mde;’-‘& “t";e!"vr;f nr:'i'np?:: —_— Ford Owners’ Club, of New York, to|who, heping to obtaln one or two Sent in Fuli to Germany. In scathing terms, the president f""“t';elggmzvngfl*;grgnh::e Jraters| ‘olve the organization and mobiliza- | With Lieutenant, All Were Saved— ::lunt:’er l;w e t;{. their fi‘fh‘x:a"’ places, demanded separate rolls on The president's address was sent in |Teferred to German plots against the | (1 th® =ame Way, Tners has been no |' /oo 'ani the material resources of Eleven of Crew Missing. Frodpsiin Y el akadoig €r|each office. Democrats were elected full to Germany by a German official | United States, sayin, mankind. Each nation must decide|the country to supply the materials i oast & to all of the four contested offices, news ageney for nuWication in that One of the things that has served | pIR S B0, | OO, A P it. | The | of war and serve the in tal needs | Washington, April 2.—French admi-| coMMENT OF SENATORS however, and the house then proceed- country. The text also went to Ens- |to convince us that the Prussian auto- | (3ice “we ‘make for ourser must | of the nation in the most abundant, | ralty despatches to the French embas- ed to adopt its rules and organize land, and a sumniuy Of LS contents | CTACY was an ver obu be made with a moderation of coun- |2nd vet the most economical and effi- | Sy here tonight announcing the sink-|{. ON PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS | committees. was sent around the world to other na- | friend is that from the very outset of | /0 '003% “temperateness of judzment | clent way possible. ing without warning of the first armed —_— An effort by Representative Mann to tions. the present war it has filled our unsus- | \ Gsting our character and our mo- At Least 500,000 Needed. American merchantman, the freighter | Brandegee Says it Was Magnificent | brevent adoption of the rules which To carry on an effective warfare | Decting communities and even our of- | U 05, Tiltion. We must put excited| “It will Imvolve ih = Azfec, by a German submarine, said and People Will Endorse It. governed the last congress was futile. pEuinst the German government. which fices of government with spies and st | ¢ (i) < away.” R L e h*"“"u"-"l te full | opnarently Lieut. William T. Gresham 5 In the organization of committees e characterized as “a natural foe to |criminal intrigues everywhere afoo e L respects. | gng twelve American bluejackets con- _Sot the house followed out the selections Vindication of Human Right. but particularly in supplying it with | Sticuting the armed EUara. of the ves- comaehington, AP 2 e ™ Y ih® | made by aemocratic leaders. Hbert; the president recommended: |&gainst our national unity of council, + - - Cnded: | Our Deace within and without, our in- | _“Our motive will not be revenge or|the best means of dealing with the @ been anved, bUL {hat eloven | Go ey ol enators o8 What President Recommends. = otont ‘si. | enemy’s submarines. It will involve | 35" dustries and our commerce. the victorious assertion of the physi nvolve|of ‘the crew were reported missing. Lodge, republican, Massa-| SCENES OF PATRIOTISM “Utmost practical =cooperation in - cal might of the nation, but only the | the immediate addition to the tid i .t Q - Revelation of German Plots. i 3 forces of the United Staf “I will tell you what 1 told counsel and action with the govern vindication of right, of human right, s B ise ‘:t: :'lreuly PRESIDENT ORTED BY s prenident when he conclsded s IN NEW YORK CITY ments already at war with German) It was evident, the president added, | of which we are only a single cham- “Extension of liberal financial {that the spies were here even before | pion. at least 300,000 men, who should, in A TROOP ©F CAVALRY :.‘;“.'?:11;‘};‘, ::e“r};h'ih:; tl.h;h:l“'e‘;‘:t\’:: Newspaper Bulletins Were Surround- credits to those governments so that |the war began. That the Grman £oV- | Armed Neuteality Now Impracticable. 3:,?3‘fl;xxm°h,flfll?"",;”;fi$§; gument.” ed by Throngs of Men and Women. 050 Tar as passible <o theirs: o | b very Thooes of ‘he Uattea States | ,When I advised the congress on |and aiso the authorization of subse:|A Large Crowd at White House, But | *'Senator Brandegee, republican, Con- —— “Organization and mobilization of all { was eloquently proved. he said, by the | the twenty-sixth of February last I|quent additional increments of equal No Disorder. necticut: “It was magnuificent ad- New York, April 2.—While there the material resources of the country. | revelation of the plot to embroil Japan | thought it would suffice to assert our [ force so soon as they may be needed dress. The people will endorse it and | were few scenes of wartime enthusi- Al equipment of the navy, partic- | and Mexice in war with the United | meutral rights with arms, our right|and can be handled in training. ‘Washinston, Aoril 2—The president | I will do everything I can to back it|asm, jn the accepted sense of the term ularly for means of dealing with sub- | States. to use the seas against unlawful inter- Granting of Adequate Credits. left the White House for the capitol | up.” in New York tonight, there was no marine warfare. Accepts Challen ference. our right to keep ‘our people - at 811 p. m. He had been preceded Senator Saulsbury, democrat, Dela- |lack of patriotism. Crowds which had ¢ 2l safe against unlawful violence. But It will involve, of course, the|py a trooo of cavalry which cleared gathered to_ await the momentous Army of Least 500,000 Men. “We are accepting this challenge of | armed neutrality, it now appears, is|S¥anting of adequate credits to the | he capitol plaza of a great crowd as- | “Th news from Washington seemed im- to “An army of at least 500,000 men, stile purpose,” said the president,|impracticable. government, sustafn I hope, so far| cembled there. bued with a grim determination as they can equitably be sustained by |™ 4 great crowd assembled at the help the government ‘“carry it based on the prineiple of universal li- | “because we know that in such a gov- wbility {0 service, @nd the authoriza- |ernment. following such methods, we| Submarines Are Outlaws. =~ |the present generation, by well-con- | white House when the president left : “It was very clearly put, a|through” Newspaper bulletin boards tion of ,dqmo,\,l increments of 500,000 |can never have a friend and that in e s s e . o ect | ceived taxation. I say sustained 50| gor the capitol. A reserve corps of po- | splendid business. There was no doubt | were surrounded by throngs of seri- each they are meeded or can be |the presence o.fits organized power al- | outlaws when used as-ihe German|far as may be cquitadle by taxation | jice was called out but there was no| what the president had in mind. It|ous, earnest men and women. handled in trajning. - ways Iying In walt to accomplish we | Submarines have been used asainst|because it seems fo me that it would [ 4% 307 will meet with the approval of the| When extra editions of the evenmg “Raising necessary money for the |know not what purpose, there cam be | Merchant shippin, it is impossible to | be most unwise to base the eredits P.trlcllc songs, Including My Coun- | American people and have a united | newspapers gave the news that con- Upited States government. so far .“|no assured security for the democratic | fefefd s e s anelr attacks as| which will now be necessary entirely | iy 'Tis of Thee, Thé Star Spangled | people back of it in carrying out the |gress had been called upon to act. possible without barrowing gnd governments of the world. e o e assumed hat | on_money borrewed. It Is our duty | panner, Yankee Doodle and Dixie stir- | programme.” countless orchestras in hotels, restau- the basis of equitable taxation. “The: whole fores of the nation.” i | merchantmen would defend themselves |I most - respectfully urge. to protect| ,..q the crowd to a high pitch of pa Senatgr Chamberlain, democrat, Ores | rants and cabarets along “the great necessary, the t sald, would be | 282Inst privateers or crulsers, visible |our people so far as we may against | igsism which broke into wild cheer- | gon, cAairman of the military com- | white way” broke off in the middle of T Send War Supplies to Entente Al- | 1ECossaay, 08 B o oe %o libs | craft giving chase upon the open sea.|the very serious hardships and eviis| LoUST which broke into wild ch mittee: “It was 2 magnificent message, | their selections and swung into the lies erty and to check its pretensions and Must Be Dealt With on Sight. | whick would be likely to arise out of | "ry, "presidential party was flanked | It was forceful and to the point and | stirring strains of The Star Spangied All preparations. the president urzed. |its_ power.” “It is common prudence in such cir- | the inflation which would be produced | 4" boch sides by motor cvele police|in my opinion expresses the fesling | Banner. ' shou'a be made in such a way as not | Towards Germany's ‘mu. the presi-{ cumstances, grim necessity indeed, to | PY Vast loans. and secret service men. of the great mass of the American —_— ~ to check the flow of war supplies to |dent said, the United States was tak- | endeavor to destroy them before they Materials for Entente Allies. The president remained up until | people.” Jowels valued at between $100,000 already in the field azainst |ing no action at this time, because v- hown their own intention. They| “In carrying out the measures by | nearly midnight tonight talking with None of the twelve semators who :]llflu”“ am. are mhr:';;‘ .I:e):t g% h;:; autho: they were not enrased in ‘be deait with upon sight, if dealt things are accom- House, who came to to accomplish all these |lagainst Americans on the , at all.’ 5 moich e o Washingt congress comment on suspicion that they were smuggled president told congress staces. d sud. (Continued on Page Six) York. J ) into the country.