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Pt Armistice i Py 4 O ey 5 ' Swonwnn white men -n under | hfl - Berlin, via , March 4—The| e ! . Apy | 2t Columbia, S. €., for lynching a Rumun;:é have lccsp : : \ x : negro. g tice conditio 2 communication ath lcd:l;q Ordsred to Cease Hostilities. s ; E mum:; Mar, 4—Dnsign Lrylen- | ROBERT S. LOVETT, _FORMERLY | RESULTED IN SUSPENSION OF -in- . o One out of every “ of Columbia e m«.fi"&fé&ffifm % Mapilowty| OF UNION PACIFIC ROAD DEBATE IN THE SENATE University ‘awumni was the anthor of cease hostiliies, according to an off- A 7 A% | & book published last year. : v cial announcement today. e 1roops Y 7 5 P 5 ; % s " " ™7 7 |APPOINTED BY MeADOO| TO HOLD CONFERENCES nEoest s neamnees| To Check German Influence and Protect War W|fi| flle Vlfll of m mm “ file ent positions. . . '| mnemr&n.:yu;eergmnmp!e‘x;te;:mmo { : i 1 FEDERAL OFFICIALS SEIZED : - POWERFUL RADIO APPARATUS | He Will Determine What Improxp- | Principal Objection Was to fhe Sec- For insulting the uniform of an Am- at Vladivostok : erleflu‘n soldier, Peter Volityk, of New f \ Was in Possession of Richard Pfund;| ments Are Essential and What| tion Authorizing lssue of $4,000,000,- | YT Was sent to the workhouse. | Former Manager of Plants at Sayville TO CUT OFFRUSSIAN SHH'S‘FMH 'BAtT:I‘C SEA| i v s i o v S P e v o ECRCREE™) DIPLOMATIC NEGOTIATIONS ARE UNDER WAY S The legal time in Portunl and thej- - - | Auores was advanced ome hour on March 1, until Sept 30, dustry, The old ferryboat Secaucus, built in b 3 2 o 7 & v ix']x é‘ 1)"“3‘“’1 the mud at thbvk‘:: .8 at one {ime manager of,tho German| Washington, March 4--Robert §.| Washinigton, March 4—Owposition |Ice floes- this winter opened: her |y, « irst Abnouiieiieth In Eutem Slhu'u the Bolsheviki' Forces . Are Dmm el B m&vffl“u X. | Loveti, formet chairman’of the board |to the aoninistration bill Tor & war | seams. It is Regarded as Probable That the First to AT cl n, N. yes- | of the Union Pacific and priorities di- | inance corporation resulted today in 3 2 . ] i3 terday by federal ofllfll-‘l it became |rectorsof the War Industries Board;|suspensi f debate in the senate un- According to the London Globe, Field Com: t i sm-" Bridges Along the Trans-Siberian Railway, With the enown_toaay: n"rmm;umfw'a; ound | has een appointed by Director Gen- | i o finls B bbb iemadions Mordial Trench,” commander Gt tne e From Japan Will' Be in the Shape of in a room in the. €T Of e ice | eral McAdoo chief of a: new division |tween Governor Harding and Vice jhome forces, and his staff, ived at m Oluectof Placing Obstacles in the Way of a Japanese In- | uilding at 111 Brondway. While It of hetterments and_ additions of the | Coverner. Warwurs. of the foderal re: | Dublin: Offensive Action—It is Believed That the was disconnected .it could have been | railroaq administration, it was an-|serve d, with banking committee set up in half an hour, experts-de- |nounced today. He has resigned from | members and other senators who have | Priority for coal shipments to the asion—Since Sunday, the Germans Have Not Made Any | 2sce bi the Union Pacific and from the War|led the fight on certain sections of the| New York, Ontario and Western rail- Germlny s Intention to Occupy the Whole'of Fink The' raid was made by United |Industries Board and has given up all|bill. T0ad was drdereil yesterday by the fuel 3 States Marshal McCarthy, an army in- | his other corporate interests to take| Tomorrow Secretary MeAdoo, at the | administration. Will Hasten Aggressive Action in Siberia by the JM Attacks on the Americans Near TP"H“ the Verdun telligence officer, an army wireless ex- | charge of railroad improvement$ un- | request of Senator Owen. chairman of ol s Tt Af nnd other - government agents.|der government operation. the banking committee, will meet with | .The .Hon: John Oliver will serve as ! - Section the French Troops CumeuhBrflhnt ttack I xetused | e Will Supervise Extensions. the opposing faction. - 'There were in- | acting Premier of Victoria, B, C. un- > om‘ g aph:o Wmm Judge Lovett will liold one of the|dications tonight that attempts to Ml afte the funeral of the late Pre- ',“,':;,,f:,'“&oé("fl,;‘em S e |road. aaministration. He will super. |48 it 10w stands would be sbandoned. e y astern Sibert ) ey A check German influence and protect | any substantial aid owing to the lack Althoush the militars _operations addition. large auantities of war ma- | N PO i o intertere. He|Vise the big\programme of extensions The Principal -Objections. Bk dv;;';f;d1‘;h§;333;d§903“'3§12 War stores at Vladivostok 1s beligved | of available forces. . the western front in France and | terial. unlocked the door, hewever, when the | contemplated for this year, particular- | Provisions authorizing the corpora- | walkine' along a central street in Wa. | here to be imminent. The United| In a diplomatic way, the situation daily are growing in magni- Obstacles for Japanese. cfficers threatened to break it down. |l¥ relating to terminal constructions |tion's directors to issue $4,000,000,000 terbury yesterday. 5 States has not yet expressed its vlews |bas remained 'unchanged since the tude until it seems apparent that flerce | 1. .. iern Siberia the Bolshevik ele-| Pfund is said to have made an ex- [2nd Will determine what improve- |in bonds to aid the financing of war ., on the proposed step but it was said | middie of .Jast week.s.The state battles cannot much ‘longer be delay- cles | planation concerninz the presence of |MeNts are essential, and what should |industry, as well as those for licens- ; nsible | In - diplomatic auarters -tonight that | partment has not indicated to the . . the Suation n. Tutsa.sootinics | menie evidently ae placing sheacies | BUnCon [ TN, B B ik | be Dostboned unil {he. close of the | In of BRCUINY ses by . CAPIL - | rof Comasters il be beld resporuibl | (8, UERAL LTS O™ mave | pances. goveroment. what ‘may e i 4 fo hold an absorbing place in public| ogion of that territory.” Already they [ the nature of it, Das mot been’ dis- sues commitiee werc the principal ob-11conol to be forwarded to American |UICKly to meet emergency conditions, | View of the new situation created By J interest throughout the world. have festroyed bridges along the|closed. He was not taken into ous- chom Are Being Tabulated. jections urged to in the semate|giidier in France. Icaving to the pending diplomatic ex-'|the signing of peace articles by the Scant. advices from Petrograd ar2 |y ..o Siberian rallway between Lake |tody although it is understood the in- | ' Reports of railroads, now being tab- | banking committee's conferences. Op- : changes ~ development- of an under- | Bolsheviki The statement) e~ coming through, but those that are ' pgiya) and the Chinese frontier. in ad- (quiry has not been completed. His fulated by the Interstate Commerce |Lonents of the measure advanced the! Two Italian societies in New Hrit- | Standing with America and all the | cently by Viscount Motono that Ja- finding thelr wy out of the turmoiM| gibion to having. mined for.eventual | assertion that hr jad been doing work | Commigsion and railroad administra- | argument that mahy of the functions | 5in “2aciied resoliftions favoring - | liles upon the scope and purposes of |Pan had a working agreement With the o m lclcfi“'m:d ‘“‘“““; Jestruction, if necessary, other por- |for the navy was verified but no an- |tion officiais show the improvements | proposed- for the corporation could be that rmans have cease: boycott of German made products at the enterprise. entente allies' and Ameri in": tions of the raiiway lin nouncement was made as to its na-|railroads had planned for this vear if | performed - better by’ the federal re- | 2 @ products at a| " wyje it has no direct bearing on | to this question, it is said, has operations in Great Russia, following y E i 3 % el meeting yesterday., itarilly. Officials 4 i : ture. - He is said‘ to. own ‘the | private operation had continued. These [serve board, and securities licensing i the situation in Asiatic Russio, the |taken too liter als say "!‘ 3 the signing of the peace compact with | Americans Having Quiet Time. |ofcers the model gf l‘:cl?vunlesa reports aiso are being examined by a|continued by the existing vVOIUNtary| gecond Lieut. George F. Hubbard,|€WS Which came today to the Swed- |the yiscount pyobably meant was that. the Bolsheviki, they now are strikinz| gince Sunday the Germans hive left outfit for communicat etween | committee of railway engineers, acting | committee. son of Judge Hubbard of the Borough |ih legation that Germany has given | ther® existed a sympathetic undec- S8 Against Finland anq that in the south {he Americans Jn comparative peace | points on the battle front for Director General McAdoo with a( Support for the plan proposed in the |'Court at Greenwich, Conn., was injur- | W0tice. of her intention to occupy the |standing on the subject, o the Austro-Hungarians are making in- |on their sector mear Toul. Probably| Owners of the hulflifls said that|view to trimming the estimates in the | bill is understood to have been given|eq in action in France, whole of Finland will tend to Basien| In seeking an undersunding as_to: toads into Podolia in an endeavor 10| finding that their attempted forays |prior to 1913 Pfund was manager of | light of emergency war needs. both by Mr. Warburg and Mr. Hard- | i an agreement upon Japan's plans. The |seope before going on drive out the Bolsheviki and thus se- | vwere tos costly, they have failed to |the German wirelese mmy-ns" ‘and that Joint Board May Be Formed. ing, and Secretary McAdoo is expect-| The Turniture and fittings of (he |GéTman explanation to the Swedish |porting the Japanese lcunn,me Amer- cure an untrammeled hold ,on the |jaynch further attatks and even have |the corporation was the ienanmt of the ed to insist upon it tomorrow. country upon which so much depend- | oyt down materlally their artillery fire |tower. It failea to renew the lease in | o SAtUally a joint government board No Vital Changes Probable. ¢nce hT haeti Blaced for, the. Teeding fiund gas shell bombardments. - Asain | 1913, however, ‘and PIuAd fook over e T Tl oot the il : e & the Teatamic allies Torciey (oM whioh: has ¢ DEstesten |Hom o movermiine t12_ simcr s SN ‘;;‘,‘k”;:;:‘d;’;[‘;ggfi;‘;g{"fi &% | against the proceading, that the order hola_that, while it “has overy ried out n ands, 3 - e s Tands, 1 W A Ter e R T ey e nn e, ) u representative of the treasury, whose | press his amendment limiting the in- | frozn in the Erie Canal. Eolsheviki have been forced to ac- |the giscordant clements in Russia on ve as their purpose e ng % " it their hard peace demands. the German side, were there some for-— = : » e&vllal issues committee is admjnis- | terest rate on the proposed bond is- papeLt “ the Finuish revolutionists_and Bolshe- |Taid. against enemy positions. killing | _When the United. i‘;‘g;df;l;';flggf fering"a voluntary” system of credits |sue to four per cent. and Senator Hol: | Secretary of Labor Wilson announc | O<ials and diplomats here profess|mal assurance that Russian infesritl B L e T s | dsatstink usunts, and prming:beck |Rus that oIt peishts wipsiess wplasits [FrIEIT: lis, of New Hampshire, another demo- | ed the plans for the reunding up for [[FLOFREE, Of WAL Drepuratons ave i was noc o e A ek SGERES s m,.‘qh Y e | Drisoners. Around ‘Tens.the Germans |must bo diamantied, the awners of the S A P crat of the committee, has an amend- | deportation of all I. W. W. members Ly e 7v ot 0 he undertaken. As a [this reason the situation was Yery eviring ‘ot contoel Bt southwestern |have begun a rather intensive bom- | Lullding notified Brund, they declared. | U+ S OFFICERS AND PRIVATES | ment o I e SurbGEiiie’ Tuud | Rud G, OrRlne sabgpage. matter of course secrecy has beén |delicate’ and required very. ¥ Finland (o as far as Helsingfors. This | bardment ' against the' British troops|that- the wires would have to come DECORATED FOR HEROISM to_its” $500, 9 of capital. x B e iceq|Observed, and a striet censorship in |treatment at the hands of the press sirotch of territors slong the northern | Lesieging the great coal center. down, The instructions wers obeved e L g e e fdi the! e erahing, osterday advised | rogard to the Siberian question is in |gvoid . embarrassing misunderstand- ‘l:vm of the Gulf of Tinland, taken Brilliant Attack’ by .French, Jiey; sawesico, Snd Yuoumizea hed ::; D"";‘:’;:ul'"':';'"' fec'"."’:';“:z"’ have .pointed. out that it specificully [ant - Stewart W. Hoover, infantry,|ferce at Tokio. Possibly the, rlext|lugs. conj holdings } —By Premio of x / word to come dut of Japan on the | Information is wanted regarding the. he Germans, on the southern shore to |, The nearest ALprokch 1o a-big bat-|made that Pfund had jeasad the tower) prescribes that the secretary of ths | Blackfooot, !flahu wis killed 1n’ Action bject? will ‘pe_an annoupcement of | ekact terms. of. tho peace lsigned dflm treasury and two members of the re- | Mareh 1. s fhe Tegion ot Boval, wotld Eive the | e fhe Wasiath frgntohan gfi:’::‘: hegage of the g amlels 0 ngb the American Army in France, baara shall constitute a major- |, - “d}',‘f‘t‘,',":‘co’},‘",f:;'fl,',’{’?f‘:, recalied that Sy e & e mm T s iy et the in the Verlin sector, ' Flere the Prench | th Suitamie ohelfen dhe Fo foar _mmfim?"u”;mr,h:c‘:,'sma“d Nl sonmorstione. diestersie; | | Searetiry Daniels. has_commertad /%, beginnimg of, e’ Russo- Japan- | the terms forced upon Lenine . - ¥ e fo the Il and | troops ‘carried. out o brilliant attack | thet a hotographe: ed fid\. 4 and insuring Irar- | Hotace 5. Dayis, chief Bunner's mate|ese war, the Japahese acted without | Trotzky would be accepted by tfl;’ n-n)af':‘:m o emovement of |agatnst ~the*Catoie " trenches 8N4 | sometimeés. went tn. the Past 88y ‘on flie American front|mony in the corporation’s opérations |of the U. S. S. Margaret, for gallan- : ‘mel-'n-mc - Denetrateq the German positions as|building to taKe 'pictures. ‘Pach T8s|tenants, two sergeants and fwo. pri-| o boers. far as their fourth linc. The Hint formality as a d Treaty to Be Ratified Thursday. | of panetration was over a front 6¢.1200 | Cmce i the buildin vates with the Croix de Guerre, with rescuing a sailor. Fs: % | Russian_people. ~Should the of the n,drmmt of Toul, decoruted two 1o~ | BothAvieh the radsur department and | try in jumping overboard at night and | farmamies’ B°""§e;,*;;;§,;?ij":§j°; el dioolly °§:,sf:n"u‘}:$ n fleet had * 3 8 i fa Should ‘ingistent ‘opposition be made beert” smashed and | against Germany, tha ct i T gy o e 1 * jthe palm, fér heroism which they dis-|against legal blish g Charles Phili Pormer . Columbia | ¢, Wat was half won. 3 L The contents of the peace -treaty |métres and to & depth of 500 metres.| TAFT ED CROSS i : asainst legal establishment —of -the Jar-os. L ormer Columbia | "'t has been stated official quar- | 8iberia, as it might easily makeé pos- Natwann 1he’ Ehcsuisa. 808’ the ‘Boi- |4n0 18T prisaners. wers (hkenin the | & OPE‘D:“?E Af’:isw HAVEN m*;clt“rlhe recent German raid in|proposed capital issues committee | student, who objected to the - draft, ety e rH sheviki have not yet haen made k- |cperation. -Attempted attacks by the o ! tets t this is no concern of the en-|sible a friendly agreeme bezwaefi some administration Jeaders in the |was rejected from the army at Camp | o it this S - m but. there is ns r far Aonbt | Germans. north of the Chémin des One. of the lieutenants comes from |'senate tonight said they mi Warns That It is a Grave Mistake to|Brookiyn and the other from Charled- the Teuton rapresentatives ex- | Dames. near the Malincourt Wood and ¢ arles- | to elimination of the clause ana leave | from the camp. noted from the Russians a price in|in Lorraine went for naught owing to| hegard the War as Nearly Over. fton,'S. C. Both men went out into|the present volurtary commitiee, un- i : . 3 fon is Tea v free | carry out h f peace g g R Bt b sl R s et S 2 ot | X0 Man's Land in broad daylight and |disturbed Shocial regulations devised to re.|Clsion is Teached to give Japan a fres|carzy out her guarantee of m %0 be. ratifez’ nevt Thure- | In Peiestine General Allenby's forces | 2¢'7. Haven. Conn, March 4—Not)got a German prisoner. 4 B hand in eastern Stberia, it is now con- | the Far Bast. until Germany finds herself a defeated | : M. Clemencea d b N R R - Vazdin ‘have dvalt: the ‘Turks a skard y efea enceau, accompanied by two| A COMPROMISE ON THE minimum absolutely required for le- oL E Al ve 5 nation will she lay down her arms,|French generals, arrived at American sitimate reasons” were a; nced by . e e e o T o ar hell iront | declared former President William T, | hoadquarters at the front at an ¢asly RATE-MAKING AUTHORITY | {hio o, inistration, . . . |A REFERENDUM VOTE ON ANNUAL REBORT fy e tente allies nor of America how Ja- | Russia and Japan whereby the pan: goes about’ the ask. once = the | government would be au‘hofllul to question of policy is settled. If the de- |take any military action needed t&. ht agree [ Upton as a felon. He was chased i the Food Administration. i s e, AT o) ! Taft tonight in a speech opening a|hour and immediately went to where ——ta HIBITION IN NEW YORK .PENN. RAILROAD SYS R Y aY e ey 1 hie | Red Crogs drive for $200,000 for. war|the troops were drawn up on hree|ls Probable by the Senate and Houss| George: Robinsem of New Eritain. Fmpninig i 4 A hid % is the Vien: Tritish commander against the Otfo. |Service. Peace must come he said, {sides of a square in companies. 5. Conferees on Railroad Bill. aged 3 years, was badly burhed Mon- | Statewide Given Preference Over Fed- | New Freight and Passenger Carrying | AT SRR POPAL s to be de. |DOt' by diblomacy or conference, but| The names of the men to be dec- — day afternoon while playing with s teviorating with cach fresh attack., | 0P DY a victory over this monster [orated ere called and they stepped| Waushington, March 4—A compro- |matches. He is now at the hospital up, the, French premier pinning the|mise on the rate-making authority |and is not expected to live. he charged, was|decorations on them and saying a word eral Amendment in Repufl to Senate. Records Made in 1917. Albany, X. Y., March 4—A refe Philadeiphia, March 4—New frelght™ il g Neoskte pRALRINY WHTnine dn agfve: { siatowide pro-|ana passenger carrying recorls’ were Sihhet e AT i,,.m,,,-"o" SNV driving Rissla into & peace which was| to cach, " One he palted on the shoul- | ment “tomorrow Detween (ne senato| Resr Admiral Edward W.. Eberls B e D et ot M e o s & 2 at's the way o {and house conferees on the adminis- |superintendent of the naval academy, ame i 's the annual report REGARDING 5 wam|, CPENS !N CHICAGO TODAY. is an undercurrent; of feeling |1t” The American blushed and re-q tration railroad control bill, Chairman | probably Wil be relleved of that aaty | i, federal prohibitory —dmencment ] system:in 1917, says the anmyal e % ¢ n the land, he said, that theqtired to"the ranks. ith, of tI pate interstate com- |at,the present term, June 1, i Sress Indicates That the Aliies Are to| Will Decide Whether to Merge With | war is to be a ‘short ‘one. and. that in+ One of the French generals said to aarDele il > g D p b mercs’ committee, _discussed with |en important sea assignment. . o ! ; ¥ Be Helped With Supplics. New Nationalist Party. some way or other by verbal com:|a’lieuténant, newly decorated: President Wilson today this prime S0 ieRtion, and. xetrénchment. 1316, .2 :recard. yeaty. IAcceucs N munication or open diplomacy it will| “We have got the Boches, down and ; i - : .The commitice aiso reported favor:| 193381 ton miles, and the passenpes o ~ point of dispute i the conference and | Henry D. Sayer, of Albany, was ap- |, 17 A | service 555,195, ~Cbviousy of- | Chicafo, March 4—Whether the na. | be,0dsd. That it gravg mistake, he | wo shall put them down deeper if we | cald Tater I had 2 compromise fo pro- | poinied. Federal dircotér of cmploy- AT L R PR in the news-|tional prohibition party shall merge|5aid. He continued: o keep working-as we have.” was recommended to the sennte to-|of the company made public. tonight. night in the report of the committec| The freight service, compared with i v e M‘UL statewide prohibition during the | There were 216,570.72 e 4 3 . pose which he believed would be ac- [ment for the State of New York by !“ 21129.848 over the Argentina | with the new nationalist party prob.| "This Russian business should e a|. At the end of the ceremony a young|ceptable to both. sides. the United States Bemployment Ser- | ™St “considerable. Hickering, the | esions ressedyonr 1248 2 on the eve of a radica change in |ably will' be decided at the prohibition lesson to wus. '“e hear the German 'Dl'lVlte came running -along hurriedly. ‘The bill as it passed the house, in- | vice of the Department of Labor. Tont As regicds the world war. These | convention which starts here tomor- | Sovernment talking about peace and t * 3 ~}”'The report states that the freight ' Ho spoke for a moment with his cap- | vests the president with final rate- S — BN st S oIS = ficles, however, do not make cleat |row, Virgll G. Hinshaw, chairman ot |JUStice to men and nations. And what |tain. fearing apparently 'that he ‘was |making powers, while the senatemeas- | Paul Trosder of Belleville, N. d;, was | dum resolution and the wa: emergency | ton mileage of all Tonnsvlvanty lines ethe: & rupture with Germany is 10 | the mtional committee, announced:to- | 818 they doing? 'Gathering. in all the |going (o' los his medal. The caplain |ure provides that the president may |accused of trying ta smugsle rubber |Pil 10 the faxation and retrenchient eatt tud Went of PEISATEN T I e bronght about or whether Argen- |DIEht . Mrs Hinshaw sald the copvehc|LETTItory they tan occupy, Germany fa | Girected. him: to Droced to M. i | Iitiat tates cobiect 10 1o by e | B T s o SEle TUBDEE | committee B e O . | i combired Enmear tor e tia fforta. will be confined vrinci: | don was called at thia timo 5o tnat It | AKIPE the Baitic ptovinces aad show. | enceau's automobile, which he did Interstate _Commerce ,Commission. | loaded rifies, & loaded shotgun and an | &% atternoon, March 11, =~ Tore the wat of ‘all ther Taieiuiata pally o the purchas ad_shipping of | would be in session &1 the time of the Ing ‘the greedy. spirit she Mias always | premier stepped out and siapped him |Senator Smith would nof disclose. the | extra quantity of amunition was found | ,, The, resolution, D | Grtmt. B liain ¥ Frante. supplies to the allie. The zeneral|nationalist party = convention, which |ShoWn. Germany is a robber, luring fon the back, handing. him his war|exact mature of the propoced come |in mis home. Talt wions sfchigond [oan.ths pwple N b e B SR or ,mlom, Friday. ihose poor, deluded Russian dreamers eross. One o the generals remaried ittee, | As a result of the vears service, the promise. He said it was “unigue and — A0MEE axaah iR, Tho cofnuiiitec, sl et - s : e wever, ded it so as to-con- | Pennsylvania Raflroad . Company: the At Wt A B Dootemnis and majority of the members of the | into submission, driving them Into |laughingly: “Never mind about beins | workable” and indicated it would har-| Representative Doremus of Michigan | EOWeVer, has amen €0 as" : % o & paliticaliun SRR Ty s 1o commitise have | Desce which e 3 robers. “Then thet | lte. o1 wae on tima't the. btheE | OFSS, $ho BORate. Of. tHe, DIRPUTEE |has mee e At B it S igen Pt e oot R R breghthcaioneantiieagh G0 argue that Argentina i declared in favor of merging the | talk of dealing with thal kind of a[morning. .That is enough” and Interstate Commerce Commission |serve as chairman of the democratic|federal amendment. after providing for the ainkigs .mr allies with men, but :hat she can do|natipnalists, Mr. Hinshaw be- | nation for a peace by divlomacy. The soldier, in the excitement and | without curtailing the powers of the | congressional campaign committee, be- | o1 S8|ANS MASS TROOPS other Teserve funds, represented .7 #0 with supplies. The. government is|cause the two parties stand for the TR AR . |glory of the moment, forgot to salute, | commission. cause he could not spare the. time hot treating with American and Pritish |6ame fundamental principles, TO DECIDE ON TAKING but ‘an American general came ta his i One of the important differences in |from other duties. ON FRONTIER OF CHINA |Per cent. on the capital stock. Wlu- diplomats for a treaty covering meat| One plan proposes that thé prohibi- OF ‘SOLDIERS' VOTE |rescue, whispering: “Salute! Saluto!” | tho conference over the provision! for sl nl ;‘;:’,k;’:g'g‘e‘t‘h‘e"’b:‘]‘:n‘;:"’;'m'ft‘""“,":"“ shipments, similar to the recently tionists keep their national committee e None of the men decorated can wear | compensation to_the carriers while | Otto Graff, a Gorman alien resid- |Turks and Germans Are Stirring Up | oivh sor tha Grer qusrteniy distannd of ed_cereal conventjon. mh and that this committee have | At the Coming Special. snmn of the thelr honou until authorized by con- |under federal operation was settled to- |ing in Waterville, was taken into cus- the Mohammedans. this year. The net income was $12,~ The vote in the congressional elec- | charge of the mation-wide prohibition Lcm-htur.. day, the'house conferees accepting the | tody yesterday by the police of this ’ 994,919 less than in 1916, despite the tion yesterday has not yet been count Wm R senate provision. This is considered |city. Graff is charged with violating| peking, Wednesday, Feb. The |increased service. ~This was chieflyi the leaders of President Irigoy. .. nationalist party was formed by| Hartford, Conn., March 4.—At a con- SWEDISH. RELIEF SHIPS less elastic and liberal than the house |his enémy alien permit by making ' S : 3 . vernor of the province of Sin Kiang, | due to higher wages, increased cost of party say that the president wil:| the Persons who left the socialist par- | ference held In' the state. capitel to. . RE section, but it adopts the same basis | trips to Waterbury. b o e » firm majority in congress. |t at its 8t Louis convention because A ¢ TURNFROM. FINLAND: —— western China, from which have come jmaterials, traffic congestion and em- - night between Governor Holcomb and of compensation, the average of net reports that Turks and Germans are |bargoes. - 3 i<+ o of what they termed its disloyal stand. | twelye members of the general assem. |'The Situation in Helsingfors is Grow. | LicOme for the tiireo years ending June | When Prof. Nathaniel Schmidt of |BRe “T0° the” Mohammedans, telo- | return earned on the total in THREE PERSONS INJURED Plans for indiyidual campaigns in{bly -it was agreed that at tho spe- 30, 1917. Under this plan the rail-|Crrell declared in an address before e that the. Ruedi e e <.(, 2 ing Worse. % graphs_that the Russians are massiug|vestment in road and equipment pro- J varipus states for prohibition will be |cial session of the legisiture to be con- / |Foads will be guaranteed about $945,- | the Political Bquality League of Chi- | GH*%id frontier, evidently intending an | viden. for pubfic nse. east apd. west, E IN AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT.|disclissed at the convention, vened Marcii 19 o bills would bs act- | - Stockholm, Sunday, March 3—The | oireer aarer asrement reached tn | 50, Liat only persons who hal no |invasion of Sin Kianz. The telesram Lwas ‘4.5 Be sEainet 6118 19 ph iy —— s 2 oice in Got —strick- Heavy Roadster Skidded and Turned |HOW BELGIANS DEFY THEIR od upon savo one reslating to the tak- Swedish rilief ebgedition . roturieg I adds that the people ate panic-strick-| During the vear approximatelv conference, all short lines, whether | drafted, he was hissed. 3 ing of soldiers’ votes at cantonements GERMAN MILITARY MASTERS |and abroad. It was decided that. the [cromman” o0, 0day. One of _the competitive or not, woild secure the en and asks that rifles and ammuni- | 900 persons were employed throughout eamers of the. expedition was sunk]|henefits of the 1aw and. be.ontitled to | \Nico'as Risch R tion be sent to the governor. the.system {o: Keep Up-the ' dveragat — taken throu - 8 4 igno, aged theee years, J by e k Described in an Official Despatch Re- P:l?’fi'm‘é{‘.‘;‘.‘i.i’:mw.“&%mfi.‘} ki) e D I compensation as parts of the federally | was killed at New Haven, yesterday| o mioimsied a5 Chimcas or dagt |[OTce Of about 250,000. 3 ceived in Washtngton h r ing animosity againss. Sweden smong | CPerated system. These lines are es- |by an automobile driven ' by Tony (ern ‘Turkestan. It is bound on- the | LENROOT ENDORSED BY . S : {roops along the Mexican border |the Finns, who sre wnmiiec o il | timated to be worth more than tWo | Augniera of this city. No arrest was|tul by Mongolin, on the. west by they ‘ashingion, March 4—FHow _the |their vote Was taken by a commisston |the Aland Islands to Sweden. e |Diuons of dollars, —Their inclusion | made. heavy b A The police say the child ran|Ryssia and on the southwest by Af- WISCONSIN REPUBLICANS | Griving iddcd on the stowcovered :em people are ‘detyinz. thelr Ger. |8ppointed for that purpose. slbuation. In . Helsingfors- 18 growing | o Dot o Ty aner Objection [{n front of the ‘machine. hanisian and Sorhern TOAK As Candidate for United States Se s : turtle. | aguinat’ ““"m #9 "“m".':p.f-"—lce"”“a‘,: 3 ;l!gmcegm::‘t: m»{he p]:u thattexc uded, they might| The lower h::-a' of th;u Texas l'ri;- NORWAY HAS:LOST 726 tor at Election on March 19, a Flan hi come bankrup! lature concurr in a inor amend- of New Hr:‘g'u llh‘:. Sona governor’s secretary and clerical - nmcf atrocities. . The guard has been rein-| - Little difficulty over the perlod of |ment by the. senate to the resolution SHIPS AS RESULT OF WAR officia] forced b: Milwaukee, ‘Wis.,” March 4——“ ers of the legislature, . i mngzu"‘;gmf‘c“ o ed to | control—fixeq In the honse blll at two |for the ratification of the federal pie- THREE MORE SHIPS WERE R s gressman Irvine L. Lenroot years and in the senate measuré at | hibition amendment. The resolution |Seamen to the Number of 7.902 Per- ; *| pied Reval. Ciitier: wannine afies pesce 1v- e Ei e e flleventh Wisconsin _district 5 b ished in the Disasters. was endorsed as the republican & clared—is anticipated. Senate econ- — s VICTING OF GERMAN RAIDER. [POWER PLARTIDYNAMITED . . [fcrots ihvo iadliared ostocas. 19| ha Gatantiotion of the. Cutbumss | andon. tde. 1rromn. tho etk e R An American Schooner and. French and | . BY VILLA FOLLOWERS "f}j‘m‘&","‘;“‘x;; g d A B by | Dounced the appolntement of National | break &f the war up to the end of Feb- | republican conference which met rwegi s g Bank Bramier Wolter 5. Wilcox s | ruary the' losses of Norwegian ves- | tnday. o e Norwegian ‘Bark. At the National Mines and Smeiters | the conferces, at'what they expect to | oih Pamcy "ol DI i B O o i e S o ia Tatss Leei E 3 be their final meeting, concerns' state 821 Seamen to tch . to| | COmpany, an American Concern. | bs, fhelr final meet Tegatation of the | Lok, the 13th Federal Reserve S Diserier. um 726, of 1,066,821 tons.. ernor_Philipp L [ves the m Pasn. ex m“h 4—Vila' to1. | carTiers during the periog. of faderat | TIth besdquarters at Sen. Pranciseo:” e pmber of 362 perished in the dis- e m:i‘r m an u«w‘a : e A A "fin fowym o er "'l*‘ o O ety om0 the senate | A man named Ferrarico, carrying 'a| 1In addition fifty-three vessels ‘with | secretary or"f::u - 'v'm:‘m % CHARGED WITH ESPIONAGE. | o . Thie | cently gu o Mines ana Smeitin -{ 0t bd Impaired. m shall | e um of money and who was be. | CT8Ws aggregating more than 700,.are | purpose of avolding a three-corne William admiNion ud xn. American cempany. at Magis. | ™ o R lieved to. have been enrouts to Gers |MiSsing, and of ;these two-thirds are contest that today's meeting was b Dr. J. Robinson Condicted ai The ° vessels trn. mmm, killed Caterino Smith matry from Peru, has been arrested by | bélieved to be war losses. These fig- | James Thompson of LaCrosse, ki * Voice in the Wilderness.” American m 1’%@‘““‘“ and burned | HEAVY. SNOWFALLS CAUSE the authorities at the Panama Canal |Ures were made public. today by ths udn T4 Follette candidate, will & e R R TR T " tons French two ore o wd:rflnsw. m.;{; AVALANCHES IN THE ALPS, |sone, the state department is advised. Norweglan legation in London. _ felection at the primaries. % e o TR e "k Toums cbcaped, | 0% All AmEr- | gtabiee, Houses and Barns Have Been| “Sargeant Michasl Krochmially, ~of (RESCUED 97 SHIPWRECKED, GASOLINE TANK EXPLODED ' ;- —_—— Perth Amboy, N.' Y. died March 2 AROQNED Q'A“E‘E Lt AS AIRPLANE WAS IN umfl?{—" X WOMEN TO VOTE In o e fern Ay N e e Gl ‘SAILORS B MRBLANE WAS ISR Berne, & Greenlaw, of Providence, R. I, died the | A Line: Wb?ch t i meum Paul and Whitney e Ui MONTPELIER, VT., TODAY. |anoutatls ar ahusine sroimenar or) | samo ' from meninaiin, hd ke de- s A Ny it + ntereat Conters erywhere in the Alps. The mountain |Partment was advised yuuflh! by —_— . < i B Effect They! railways are blocked and on .the |Generl Pershing. . - s Pieiie) Poct, March 4= A liner, Hm on tl\- Ltem-o Qum n. Loetschebeg line, a big snownlow with arrived here tnday from. the” Orient two engines was ' buried under an ava- ln remanding two. m':" to_the lower | with W' of . the rescue of ninety- for retrial ked and marconed Sia: ymkea stean i Cipa n?n Yessel which)