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ry | PRICE ONE CENT. AVE EDITION Copyright, 1917, by The P Co. (The New York W NEW YORK, MONDA Peblishing Ad) “Circulation Books [Circulation Booka Open to All.” | toA Y, MARCH 5, 1917. UK 14 PAGES TAND FIRM FOR ARMED NEUTRALITY”--WILSON - The “Circulation Books Open to Al. To-Day's Weather—SNOW, LANE EDITION PRICE ONE CENT. ) GERMAN HAD BOMBS FOR WILSON; ADMITS HE BLEW UP BLACK TOM oT co “GAN BENO TURNING BACK,” MOVENSENTE PRESIDENT IS INAUGURATED CRUGERMYSTERY CLARES THE PRESIDENT IN TIS INAUGURAL ADDRESS Nearly Half the Members Sign TO GRANGE RULES nono rues. AS STRONG Mt ARDS Hi Sunshine Dispels the Gloom Pledge to Comply With Wilson’s Demand, “Imperative That We Stand To- = —— _ | ! ! gether,” Says Wilson—“Beware SEEKS TO LEARN POWER. Caused by ed Drizzle of M ——— Several Days. ‘That No Faction or Disloyal In- President, if He Has Right,| |. ain ROUT trigue Break the Harmony or Em- Will Arm Ships Without | TROOPS L A Calling Extra Session. ; f ree ” - 6%h and 12th Regiments of barrass the Spirit of Our People.” bigutmd tre ccatseg.| Maw Yoek Cliy. Prominin! WASHINGTON, March 5.—President Wilson's in to-day was almost \ 1 address |" States in holly devoted to the position of the lent Wilson has asked the legal au | in the Imposing Display. vernment to give WASHINGTON, March 5.—Presi nion within twenty the warlike circu’ which have fast crowded upon this Governs} pour to whether or not he] dent Wilson took the oath ein ment. Three of the big points made were ias power to furnish navy arma-| Public at jock this a Hoe i i ii ‘. : ‘ merican erchantmen | 4 r his inaugural address —We stand firm in armed neutrality, since it seems that in Pe a rene oon ar Fan ty GROW @hiOh Bat specia suthorization by] %efore a great crowe no other way can we demonstrate what it is we insist upon and cannot forego. We may even be drawn on by cir- |the plaza at the east front of the cumstances, not by our own purpose or desire, to a more = ig bee eaid Marshall had been active assertion of our rights as we see them and a more |... ret on| Inaugurated in the Senate Chamber immediate association with the great struggle itself. the armed neu t Asure a few minutes before NOTHING WILL ALTER OUR THOUGHT OR OUR \\ je steps which us feared 1 ¢ President took the nd PURPOSE. They are too clear to be obscured. They are“) Divs (he power ' tale | ing bareheaded, Mrs, Wilson st emocratic Senate caucus | es too deeply rooted in the principles of our national life to be altered. We desire neither conquest nor advantage. We wish nothing that can be had only at the cost of another —There can be no turning back. Our own fortunes as a nation are involved, whether we would have it so or not. —It is imperative that we should stand together. being forced into a new unity amidst the fires that now | blaze throughout the world. In their ardent heat we shall, | in God’s providence, let us hope, be purged of faction and division, purified of the errant humors of party and of | private interest, and shall stand forth in the days to come with a new dignity of national pride and spirit. Let each man see to it that the dedication is in his own heart, the high purpose of the nation in his own mind, ruler of his own will and desire. Here is the address in full “MY FELLOW CITIZENS | “The four years whic ive elapsed since last I stood in thi place] | plave been cr @ most vital interest and consequence, Perhay tor 5 been so fruitful | * of important reform I 1 industrial life or so full of | significant cha 1 the 1 of our political actior j ir house in order; correc “We hay the grosse abuses of our industrial life, liberate and quicken the proces: ha and en¢ and r broader view of people's € ¢ ! a variety and singular distinction at review 1 will be of inere luence as the years go by speaks for itself a It} nt and the ather, to speak immediate future time for retro his is 1 \, ad Durpose LIFE OF THE concerning the pre WHOLE WORLD AFFECTED itered cour “Although we have ce ayes centration and the gre of dow egisla t which we addr 1 fi er upcgie more forced themse our hath faa ous , it w dee pite ¢ life as a nation and over wish to keep free o! Sava arawi il rai their own “It has beon impossible to aveld them, They have affected the Hie of the whole world, They have shaken mon everywhere with a passion and an apprehension they never knew before. He has been hard to preserve calm counsel while the thought of our own peopl swayed this way and that under thelr influence, We are a com of all the na the currents of « Wo Page.) | 1819 We are} 98-YEAR-OLD LAW WHICH MAY our thoughts | s away has been called for 10.30 o'clook | just a few to-morrow morning at which one of the subjects discussed will be | | a fight for a cloture rule. y with the the Vice-Pre hands tmmedia and with Justice He Mftec 1 his hat to the cre people. We always professed unselfish purpose, and we! joubi as to the President's i 5 i i i t | bega at once to deliver s address covet the opportunity to prove that our professions are, t the passage « se " EA aoe i Neut ity Bill wa gi while ie crowd leane¢ rorwa ae he debate on that measure by Sena-|the high wind made It Impossible f than a few feet away te ge, Hitehcock and others, who | , o a law passed tn mor SCORER and many.of them began tc hear leave TIE WILSON’S HANDS. Even the crowds on the nearby| The statute in question provides: | stands could hear nothing, and many | of them, chilled by the “That the commander and crew damp ben of any merchant vessel of the | uncomforta United States owned wholly or in | away part by a citizen thereof may op- At the conclusion of his a President led the inaugur pose and defend against aggres- sion which shall be attempted on ba upon such vessel by the com- t passed in ander or crew of any armed ves- Although t » the White H y before hi sun had f sel whatsoever, NOT BEING A | bright rays through the « PUBLIC ARMED VESSEL OF | kept tho city in gloom for thre SOME NATION IN AMITY | ihe whistling wind caused the Pre WITH THE UNITED STATES.” | dent to change bis mind abo lt w s the debate \ and he 6 At to arm merchant vessels unle the stand by h y ? e President was| aide, D T. Graysor ; Ze would # the vessels the 1 red the F BET und their crews vit fa country not} United States, | ey the De-| . ‘ sident will) ‘The Pres and M w . A cha it miling . W 1 e REPEATED. CHEERS FOR PRES n the sta IDENT WILSON extra session of} at 10 Major Ge k id be u ivrand Mashal of the sugural pr ni nate in the extra sea-| cesgion, and his staff, t n \ nfirm nominations in the court of + nar The possibilities Navy Bu : an ext t e depend fir, 6 staff was nposed m rf the Departmen res apt Ju Presideat's power u ‘ ! " uw, and second on a rules which will grout 1 tion but eat! ey f ne W 69TH AND 12TH LINE THE A : ROUTE A H ' > PE WOKLD TRAVEL BUG A some, Teiepone Beeman (00 Aart t 2 owl UL S. GRAND JURY TSNEAR SOLUTION, SAYS PROSECUTOR Swann’s Assistant Finds Evi-| dence of Plot Against Missing Girl. LITARY FORCE IN THE PARADE ARREST IS EXPECTED r Cocchi Said to Have Been Seen nee See Fuel Men Believed Named in Sealed Charges by Plot Investigators, ing this afternoon Assistant District Attorney Dooling reported to District Attorney Swann that he {wetting fear a solutl felt he was of the mys MAN ARRESTED I TED WN HOBOKEN MAKES FULL CONFESSION: AIDED KINGSLAND DISASTER olice Trap Fritz Kolb in Hotel Room—Alleged Accomplice Also Is Captured—First Prisoner Long Under Surveillance. Cocchi at the Criminat Courts Built-| LINKED WITH LIEUT. FAY, WHO ESCAPED PRISON Fritz Kolb, arrested this afternoon in the Commercial Hotel at No, tery of the disappearance of Rut Three sealed Indic nis, believed| Cruger, the etghteen-year-old Wad-| 212 River Street, Hoboken, across the street from tne North German i jleish High School girl, f her tt ee ee al Be, 18. He intima there| | loyd piers, has confessed, according to Chief of Police Patrick Hayes my sibgheclests i w indications to show Ruth Crug: \ { } n r ¥ oboKen and Cap ty oO he Be Sa vf the 4 ol Fed Van Wie ft es Pht hay ca as ice ca f Hoboken an apt. Tunne f the Bomb Squad of the New York rb Wederal Grand Jury,| placed confide of the} Detective Bureau, that two bombs found in his room were made to be { ' young men frie t with r tt 1 nts’ Knowledge and who mig used in an attempt to blow up President Wilson, and that he was im land fuel; pa pa been guilty of a serious plo’ x ation ne charg st her plicated with others in the explosion which wrecked the Canadian Car urge an excessive price for that] Who was ac * Foundry munitions plant at Kingsland, N. J., and in the disastrous luct | yer, ‘on Mar stank prod fy Aaron Mat Black Tom explosion in Bayonne last summer Special’ Deputy Attorr General | Information — rece Frank M, Swa who has been in| Cruge Kolb, according to Chief Hayes, +———————————_______. harge of the investigation, was was directly associated with another off by the mechanism of an alarm remely indigt n lea | man who escaped arrest this atter-|clock, the other to. be news of the indictments had be vob ul would not ‘ whethe 1 that her husband, Alfred ‘ : i sad causal : fu t Ass bed were fou ten ud been found against food or] Coccht, to whose shop tho last trail] P/@n# Of the detectives fee f copp ubing, which formed yal oprators, but the fact that a num jor Ruth Cruger led, had been seen} One of Kolb's alleged accomplices! the bomb casings, and a ten-pound of big coal men have n before |for tho first time since detectives! was arrested at 4 oviock this after-| coil of fine copper wire. In a space th Grand Jury recently made 4t almost | questioned him Feb, 15 noon, {under the wash stand aa sieges by a been fou 4 j The prisoner, Kolb, who began to! pounds of against men in that busine old him they he bou of pi a B “ we ued lentitivan iain Weak wp] confess ax soon as he was arrested) pound of Trinit Tolu - a 1 find th | im, came to Hoboken, he says, from | jn, : | Mexico, in August, 1914. H 3] pocuments found K a t the Commercial Hotel, a centre of | y, EsSLATORS “DENOUNCE | i i bidbeogguloted git is “PITIFUL MINORITY” | this afters Among his associates there were Sd eit : elead 1 Crager r i 4 \ } jon t ! I! ss % kK r ‘ H 113 iW Not a " f 1 wok f n aft r u * Ww to : 1 Heada ne | i ‘ LUM oO, M W and hurried | v i At, | Hoboken dete t 1 ‘ 1 re ‘ 1 Henry A nmanr nd boy A ¢ r F : * Ainori which 1 me for Cocct =f ’ kK s a I 1 W un wl . it A Secret nveatigations int artes ~ t Madison Ave I ant Di ravi e i 16 Black Tom and Kingsland exp ” r. How te. - i n 1 ¢ Amertenn ‘ wo ole « wocrwen. 90) DAYS IN WORKHOUSE 1 in wh ING GIRL ON GAR b K w w 1 ill ¢ M Kock b i r W e im H je : y k t S the frien. 1 . 1, Edw f old, . 4 t 'p 1 and at ‘ ft Ww f Kiyn . w ty by 1 M b \ Lae ; MI 2 \ j K Keven t tw ¢ i kK = I A Migs Continue to et \ Ja 1iss Koen " Workhous alt “ @ied pound ’ rranged to be set! pauive of w fine.