The evening world. Newspaper, March 12, 1917, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i GERMANY FACES STARVATION: FAILURE OF THIS YEAR'S CROP MIGHT MAKE HER SURRENDER Gerard’s Suite Says Hope Is Enter-! y,aiixcrox, marcn tained for Big Crops, With Which) They Do Not Believe Nation Can Be Crushed by Allies. What Ambassador Gerard and his aids wtil have to report of cond tions in Germany on their return has been a matter of acute interest since the break im relations. A fellow passenger with Mr. Gerard on the Infanta Jaadel, from Corunna to Havana, was Ross D, Whytook of The Eveniny World staff, What Mr. Whytock tells is a close reflection of the views of what Mr. Gerard and his aids will tell the high officials of the Government. By Ross D. Whytock Copyright, 1917, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World.) HAVANA, March 12.—The German Empire has just entered the most even to the most optimistic, erious period of its existence and the futur is shrouded by fear. The shadow of famine ha fident as she is in next four months as the crucial epoch during which her fate shall be e tablished. ‘s over the land, and, co: If Germany can survive the next four months with regard to food it is felt that she cannot be defeated. The period during which grim want will stalk through the and will terminate with the beginning of the harvest season or the middle of July. r military and naval prowess, Germany regards the U.S. TODISMANTLE “WIRELESS STATIONS RUNBY AMATEURS Will Take Precautions Against | Sending Reports in 4 Case of War. 12.~-Tevery | amateur wireless station In the) United States will be dismantied by order of the President if war comes, according to authoritative announce- ments to-day, This would be one of the first moves to protect military and naval plans OMctais admitted reports of hidden + | German wireless stations are causing them much more angiety than the serious matter of bomb plots, Fed- 0 eral search for these stations has been redoubled, not only in the United States, bul in Mexico and Cen- tral America After the dismantling of amate' stations would come rigid supervisic and censorship of every public plant in continental United States and the insular possessions, While the bunt for hidden wireless goes on the Government also is re- doubling its efforts to break up the now disclosed German attempt to create suspicion, uneasiness and ac- tual revolution in South and Central American countries. Officials atill refuse to discuss this phase of plot- BV A mR ST NORRIE REA AONE COLNE LRN A PI ‘ re %., Y ENING WORLD, y Patient MONDAY, MARO ——— r wis SIXPERSONS HURT IN STATEN ISLAND STREET CAR CRASH Spreading Rails Blamed for Accident at Stapleton This Afternoon. Six persons were seriously iurt this afternoon when a big steel car of the Richmond Light and Naiway Com pany left the track at Stapleton and turned completely uround, Spreading | rails caused the accident | The was running on a straight track at a moderate rate of speed, it said, when on Bay Street in front the Williams lumber yard, the front trucks left the’ rails. The crashed into the curb and skidded around, 80 that the motorman’s end pointed in the oppostte @irection. All the windows In the car were broken. ‘The car was bound from South | ° Beach to St. George and had thirty or more passengers in the car ‘The motorman, Robert Curry, of No. 454 Tompkins Avenue, New Brigh- ton, was shaken up and bruised. John Littlefield, the conductor, of No. 20| KAISER A REAL Castleton Avenue, West New Bright: | on, was not hurt, Of the passengers Frederick White, forty, of No. 56 Canal Street, was the | most seriously hurt, He suffered con- tusions of the head, face and body HE‘LICKED’ THE KAISER ) | WHEN BOTH WERE BOYS; | NOW AMERICAN CITIZEN ———— "OTO 1. KRAUSE HACKENSACK MAN GAVE. srs cs OVER STOLEN BOUQUET URTHER CAIN NADE BY FRENCH INCHANPAGNE Raiders Capture Men and Ma- chine Guns in the German TO MADISON SQUARE BARDEN Athletic Commission Decides Brown | Must Show Title to Lease— Other Clubs Closed. Punishment was to-day meted out} by the State Athletic Commission, , when the status of several boxing clubs was considered by Commis- | sioners Wenck, Franey and Dwyer. | Grant Hugh Browne's Garden Tower Corporation was deprived of its H- ense to conduct bouts in Madison | atiare Garden until such time as is submitted either a year's or a title to the propert was stated that the license was given with the understanding that title was o be aken o he Garden by Trenches. there * PARIS, March 12.-"The French con ; tinued their offensive operations in the Champagne last night Further gains In the region of Maisons de |Champagne are reported in to-day's | March 1, or hat a year's lease would official announcement Prisoners) then be submitted | were taken in raids and patrol en-| The commission voted that when [counters at different points on the| Benny Leonard and Freddie Welsh meet in the Manhattan Athletic Club | | front, Tho statement follows wine B the referee must be Charlie | White, Bill Brown or Claude Tibbitts, | “Between Soissons and Rheims |and the contestants must notify the & surprise attack directed by the | commission by March of thelr | choice. enemy against one of our trenches The license of the Olympic A. C. in the region of Poissy was ré- | was revoked on a complaint from the pulsed promptly by our fire. The | Comptroller's office that the State tax enemy suffered losses and left {on four January shows had not been prlschers (n GF BADE |paid, The Empire A. C. was also sus | in our hands pended until the State tax is paid in rar Maisons de Champagne | full, as was the Harlem Sporting we made further progress last | (lub. Patrol encounters occurred in the sector of Auberive. The number of ma- chine-guns which we have cap- tured in the region of Maisons de Champagne has been increased to twelve. ‘GURIOUS FIGHTING ON SOMME. |W RETREAT OF THE GERMANS. “In the Woevre we made a suc- | Capture of Irles by the British an} cessful incursion into German | H Vy Pactic trenches north of Selcheprey. In | __ !llustration of New Tactics on Lorraine there were patrol en- Both Sides. LUCKING | nothing about the story. | after 2 Navy Yard Denies Seizing Appate atus, but Gramatan Manager Says He Cut Wires. There was a report about the Feds | eral Building to-day that men from the Brooklyn Navy Yard had gone to’ the Hotel Gramatan, in Bronxville, this morning, and confiscated @ erful wireless apparatus found an the rooms of a German guest. Officials of the Navy Yard professed to know A. O, Gai- ager of the Hotel Gramatan, repeated urging made this statement over the telephone to The Evening World “Some one is trying to make # whole lot out of nothing. Recently T noticed some sort of an instrument room of @ nd chilé had lived on a table in the who with his wife here since last November, I didn't know what it was, but this guest told me he was studying wireless tole raphy. A few duys ago I saw wi running from his room to the roed | and I cut them to keep people from talking. The man and his family are still in the hotel.” Mr. Gallup suid the guest he re- ferred to had told him he was con= nected with a convern that manufac- tures dress form CONVOYS FOR U, S, SHIPS ARE URGED BY STOWELL Columbia Authority Heckled by Anti-War Audience in Labor Temple. Ellery C. Stowell, associate profes- lup, ma na P pe mt i y | sor of international law at Columbia 1 le "sf eosin: ib a| oases beeps da pd fiber ch be ate ads Glen eee Internal hurts. \Otto Krause Tells How He} near at. Marta, aevncast, or WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES University, speaking last night at the Although {t ts generally conceded that Germany's food p) Pan-Americanism is being subjected! He is at St. Vincent's Hospital at} ,,,), ‘9 " -, Badonvillers.” » - Labor Temple, F ¥ a esperate one, it has been calculated with German thoroughness that she|io the most trying test in years,| Livingston. Whaled” the Then Crown | Pete a et ste vot Spent a can just squi through until midsummer with her present supplies.) through German intrigue. The others taken to hospitals are: Prince at Age of Six whteen Allied Alrcratt Brought beau tapes ag hrebed Loupart | Rights What Shall We Do About However, should the calculators have been in error with regard to avall-| The Government is said to have} John Lyons, forty-six, No. 349 Ber- i Down, Saye Berlin. Wood and Achiet le Petit. Them?” said merchantmen should be able foodstuffs, starvation in its most terrible form will encompass them|evidence that German nts not| gen Avenue, Jersey City. and during the next four months there will be great suffering throughout Marie Kennedy, thirty-two, No, 1556] Otto H. Krause proprietor of the| BERLIN, Mareh 12 (via Sayville). | This latest vitcory was cited to-day convoyed through the danger gone by Germany, and hundreds are expected to die of starvation Even though the harvest be a failure, Germany Is determined to go It and the early indications are that it will be,| on, even im the face of terrors that would set the world a-sh the harvest !s a succei Germany will have solved her food problem for at least another year. erin Among the plans in the event of @ harvest failure, which Ambassador Gerard and other American officials who were in Germany have hear: proposed, is one which contemplates letting the populations of territor, pow occupied oy Germany shift for themselves, If the Allies seek to starve out Germany and the situation becomes | One of the first steps which would be taken would be to send all the old men, Sweden and Holland acute, the empire will be compelled to resort to drastic means. women and children into Switzerland, Norway, Then, ‘hey say, if no rellef is had, the food which is now being consume in the territories occupied by Germany would be diverted to her own pop-)| | There are 11,000,000 Poles in Russian territory held by Germany. ‘The menbecs of Mi. Goes Ct naar ulation. who have been in every part of the German Empire feel that Germany will be able to survive the next four months. They eay the suffering will be extreme and that hundrede upon hundreds will die for lack of nourish- week, 34 pound of pot. per day, pound whote turnips or carrots ir week. many to-day, Although Germany| mand of the sailors for a war bonus ment, but that the nation will squeeze | exported some 3,000,000 tons of sugur|of a 75 per cent. increase in wages for through until the harvest, which | pect each yeur before the war her|men on armed American merchant- means her salvation, sugar supply is now largely belng| men, el told Gustay A. Braun, sec- EVERY AVAILABLE INCH OF |converted into explosives, glycerine | retary of the Atlantic District of the LAND CULTIVATED. claiming the greater share of the| International Scamen's Union, that Although Germany has by far al Supply. {he would give the men a 50 per cent FUTURE GENERATIONS WIL PAY THE TOLL. One of the most interesting devel opments of the Gernian food situa Sreater amount of land under culti- vation than heretofore, it must be taken into consideration that the soll ip not as productive as in the past. Germany has exhausted hor supply of | Hon is the small amount of food actu fertilizers, and the substitutes are not | @lly neces: nearly as efficient. Embassy “t+ | human life, All the old rules of physi taches who have travelled through: | Sloky have been knocked sky bi’ out the farming sections of Germany| and the books on hygiene will hay have been told on every hand that to be rewritte twice the amount of land must be; American physicians who have bee tilled to-day to produce the crops of enkamed in huspital work in Gene the pact. jor who have been Insp Wilh regard to lve stock, Germany {camps throughout the te in almoat a® good shape as at the| who returned with Ambu H cling prisos empire an wador Ger on outpreak Of the war; in fact the Gov-|ard are of the opinion that a great) PETROGRAD, Mareh 12 (via Lon. | ernment statistics show that sho has|many Ge:mans have benetiied by the | don).—'The Russian column operating | more live stock than before. But tt! cutting down ¢ must be taken into ¢ nsideration that | phey will shortly inform the modical| from Hamadan has made further ne stock is not of the quality of the| eratornity of the United states of| Prostess, driving the Turks from a ant i 4 | position near Hisitaun, twenty miles ? It in the cities of Germany which some startling facts regarding the) joriieast of Kermanshah, the Turks amount of food ne human life and pi Jowing their usual occupations, sary to sustal are the hardest hit by the shortage of food. In many of the country dis- tricts there has been no real suffering as yet. The country folk are able tO | crease in general disease including Pedi Nase ap Meurial ua saatoee grow, food and many of the farmers, | tuberculosis during the last year, Ac-|@ble to Ko to the soup kitchens al unknown to the food supervisors, cording to a report recently issued by |QtMer Paces for their food; the) have kept animals hidden ®Y | Surgeon General yon Sehjerning the Heys ets ne rewit The Jack which are killed from time to time, | pequctions in Beneral disease amount-|of some one to attend them they In the cities, however, the suffering | eq to fully 60 per cent. Tho Ameri. | berished is becoming more and more acute, can physicians substantiate this} During the next four months, the ‘The poorer classes of the cities are gtatoment toes and turnips, During January and ighment hi February there was a decided reduc- in infant mort ty and @ considerab lolterment of tiv ople's health, In| tion in the amount of potatoes distrl- | growth in children's di accord: |becra there has, been a reduction of | buted and the turnip ration was In- ing to American medical investiga: |20 per cent. tn 't amount of aloo- creased. Beginning with April tho | tore, hol Altogether a reduction of 40 ntato ration will be increased and uchitis, common i per cent. hag been effected tn the eee : ' “ ms mmonly known as! consumption of beer and the price no turnips will be supplied. rickets, a disease that results in the! 360,000 IN BERLIN EAT IN SOUP #°ftening of the bones, ts becomin, quite prevalent throughout the . | persons of goodly m AUSAQS, & KITCHENS. a \ gh ne Cer | Favorite foed in G y, : for TM Hmpire; this ty an affliction | geting for 10 marks (about $2.60) @ The soup kitchens are caring for jrougnt about by malnutrition and| pound; goose ¢ marks @ more and more persons, The | is discovered in children up to the; pound. A big goose sells for as high figures obtainable in Berlin showed ayy of neven yeure oe 100 marks (625), and the general | that over 350,000 persons in that city Khe mik in. ¢ P average for ge is between 60 and r jermany, such as ia| k re i alone were depending upon the SOUP oirainuiie, is not up to standard and ph ae turkoye suring the kitchens for their food; similar cone iy aijuiod. ‘Phis lack of proper nour. |for 7/4 marks a German pound, ditions obtain in nearly all the IarQe@ isninont for the children han resulted [!8 1,10 more than an American ities of the empire. } | pours ite weighing between five see or the lntrer part of January |i2. marked indications of anuemialand eix pounds are fetehing 18 and| uring the a part of January | throughout the land. This is not oon: |20 marke each. geveral reductions wem tm fined to children brought up on the! Germany is hoping for the best foodstuffs issued to the POPULAR ele et ieee the nurse |during the next. few months, Her Butter was reduced from 90 grams ing ‘children, for mothers unable |Nones for an ending of the war are per person per week to 60 grams,|to secure proper nourishment cannot |Pased “lmost aolely upon the subma- the reductions being almost ail con- rear strong offspring; also many of the war are The ea terrible imprint on fined to fats and sugar. On the other | the babies born durin hand several increascs were recorded, |Undersize and physical For several months only one egg Was |the succeeding gener: allowed each person each ten days MANY DEATHS frail, on. LREADY FROM — Germany wants peace and she Now that the egg supply is coming STARVATION manta Maaiv Phe denite tae in, one egg & week is permitted.| The fact remains that a great many Peace Is rapidly becoming @ manta Within the last few weeks the sup- | deaths have Bited from With the greater proportion of the ply of meat has been increased from |atarvation. T ph populatic any in her desire point out the larger numbe. from lack of nour the aged or those already health in Germany 200 to 800 grams per week. Fowl and fish are not included in the meat ration The retion allowed per person fol- follows: 100 grama of meat 800 grame of bread per day, 60 “naire grams of butter per week, one egg York | h week, 200 grams of flour per jie" er week, of the fittest kling hh day, 300 grams of corn meal, barley, Sugar ts almost unknown In Ger- y for the preservation of their food supply, | toward mit of humans fol- There has also been a marked de- But the shortage of food | hundreds of weahlings Will | a eda o| wo to they living largely on black bread, pota- | and consequent lack of proper nour: | led to a decided increase hment were among in poor It is now @ question of the survival only are fomenting ill feeling against the United States, but they are also arraying country against country and even attempting to atir up revo- lutions inside countries in South and Central America | South American diplomats here are endeavoring to reach some common | Kround of neutrality, Meetings, jwhich began Feb. 5, are being held to Yldetermine upon joint action when | | fons of neutrality violations ee FRANKLIN REJECTS WAR BONUS DEMAND OF SAILORS Head of International Mercantile Marine Willing to Give Fifty Per Cent, Increase, but No More. PA Vranklin, President of the International Mercantile Marine, this afternon declined to grant the de-| 1 r 8 L| bonus and no more. In addition, he| I, the ¢ pany would insure the ves of the men and their clothin sland give t -|to New - | the m passage money back York in the event of one of American liners being sunk. | Hefore the meeting Seoretary Braun said the men had declined to go to sea without the bonus they aske Dy ond that Mr. Prankiin would find dif- e}foulty in getting more than 200 sea- me New York to man the fleet port the result of the ” « ren mass mecting to be Y\ held on y night n ort ined | hunsinns Defeat of ‘Tucks the Mesopotamian frontier a} retiring to [Hadjiabad. but a small chance for his life. Many medical agree, hundreds upon| death by starvation. The consumption of liquor has been greatly decreased to the general bet~ has been doubled. Prices of certain | g foodstuffs are prohibitive except to rine campatgn, From the might official in Berlin to th po. ant the submarine is regarded as the weapon by which the German Em- pire will bring to pase the peace which is so ardently d for peace is willing to accept terms to-day which she would not have considered for an instant a year ago. But Germany debires a peace that will not bring her hum » Wh vi ek to degi her or fore: her class power or even # poor first clase down to the place of @ second power she will fight en until an- nihilation alone puts an end to the conflict | apie Franklin Hotel a for many years chief o partment there, belle Richmond Terrace, New Brighton. Robert Luckner, forty-eight, No. 106 Midland Avenue, Montclair Hackensack, and “On account of the very bright weather the activity of long-range ng |SUas and airplanes increased at many |, new phase with the beginning of the as an ideal {ilustration of the curlous fighting on the Somme, which entered of the Fire De- ves he Is David Reese, twenty-one, No. 11). 4 ss places on the western front,” say! German retirement linton Avenue, New Brighton jonly American citizen, except perhaps! to.day'n official statement. “F Wak Guak Gay. Slade 2 tan Anna Frank, thirteen, No. 440 Bay | Poultney Bigelow, who actually cozy village of Itt t : ea jespecially was strong in the Ancré| almost at the top of a slope leading to ls own two fis ic Street, Clifton. with his own two fists “licked tho|seotor, between Buequov. and. Le ; p Ps ae Sap Re grees Kaiser." Born in Germany, but a|Transioy, and waa lively in several the plateau on which is Loupart Wood. GERMANY AG IN TRIES resident of Hackensack for thirty {Sectors along the Aisne and in the] There were quarries east and north years, Mr. Krause takes a lot of | “Rampagne of the village with sunken roads on TO AMEND OLD TREATY Presents Through Swiss Minister Document Gerard Refused to Sign. combat with the fifty-one years ago, wh Kaiser (then the Crow: about six years old “It was a long didn't know what a no pleasure in telling the story of his| morning attacked parts of our post- Emperor time South of Ripont the French this! all sides, which made its defense small units easy. The Germans posted many defenders in groups of elght armed with machine guns by Willian | tion hen he and the! n Princo) were | They were repulsed | “Our enemies lost sixtoen airplanes and two cuptive ‘balloons by air at- tacks of our airplanes and one ma-| After the hurricane of bombardment, |chine by our defensive fire |the British attacked from the west ago, and I| “On the eastern front artillery and|and south, converging their lines and table job 1 was| patrol activity was active from time | killing or taking prisoner every Ger- WASHINGTON, March 12. — Gor-|@0ing when I licked him," Mr. Krause! [0 tne. Som. actions of /man in the pocket thus formed, many renewed to-day her efforts to|##ld to-day. “I doubt if the Kaiser) “son the Macedonian front between SEARCH FOR MUNITIONS have the United States sign a proto. | remembers it as well as I do, and of | Lakes Ochrida and Presba there were col amending the Prussian-American| Course &t present he has more im-jminor engagements in front of our treaty of 1798, so an to exempt all |Dortant matters on his mind anyway line.” ON INTERNED STEAMERS > : OTRO! fe t German residents in the United States But 1 never forgot a pee ances Austrian Attack tm the ‘eutine See Sls Gniuat of ibtavtieenes Maria And, though I didn't know when I Reported Repeleed, AGN a rege a S ANY] icked him that he was the Cr ‘ 4 Navy Yard Officials Act in Face period of war and reserving to all icked im BY « as P ‘own ROME, Mareh 1 (via London) ty . Germeas chien in Rtnoreah gana tee |e I was so mad | wouldn't have) The repulse of an Austrian attack of Threats by German cared, anyway Jafter artillery preparation northeast G di ] right to safe conduct to home ports.) "yy, i r theast Zommanders, Lond ies aataa’ prdionel that gobs My grandfather, Willlain Vogel.) of Lengzumo. tn the Trentino, is an 3 ; . . od ne pronee mbas-) way at that time in charge of the| nounced by the War Office in to-day’s| PHILADELPHIA, March 12—In sador Gerard, before his departure! waterworks at Potsdam. Irom the Official statement. There were nu-| the face of threats of boing thrown from Berlin, refused to consider gardens about the waterworks he col- | MeFous artillery and patrol activites | overboard by the commanders of the ‘The Swiss Minister, Dr. Paul Ritter, lected flowers for a big called at the State Department to-day | to take to the palace by direction of the German Foreign! in ihe very best cloth Office, with a copy of the proposed amendment to the treaty. He was unable to see Secretary Lansing, who was busy with other engagements. ‘The matter probably will be given grounds pounced on boy of a was all swelled up with importance. “Just as 1 was entering the palace me, twisted the bouquet out of iny hand and ran away }in other sectors, ARRESTED IN WALL STREET | FORPARTIN HOBOKEN PLOT. bouquet for me 1 was dressed nes I had and interned German boats in the Navy Yard here officials, acting under the direction of the Navy Department at Washington, to-day will search the Prince Eitel Friedrich and Kron- pring Wilhelm, to investigate reports that munitions of war have been smugried aboard. oft bout my size across Jean Caire Humbert Alleged to Be} : rs of this Government have due consideration by State Depart-|a lawn with it. L was mad enough to ep not searched an internad boat be- ment officials, though it is realized} have done murder, 1 chased him Confederate of Kolb and fore, but had taken the word of the that such an amendment, even though|caught him, took the flowers away Sel cn maadate that thata ate ho oa: the Administration favored it, would from him, jaid them aside carefully senwart | plonivos on their vessels, not have much prospect of ratifica-}and then gave him one good and swift , r , | shells are discovered on the boats, tion in the Senate. trouncing until a 1 Very much | 4 third arrest tn the alleged bomb] 1 Melt ee eelsure will, follow, i alana horrified, cama to the rescue, pried | Plot in Hoboken was made to-day at f him and, s id been and SENATOR STONE KEEPS HIS CHAIRMANSHIP Steering Committee Bows to “Sena- torial Courtesy” and Retains Foe of Armed Neutrality. WASHINGTON, March 12 “Nothing was it, even at secretly. my proud of me, Poultney “Bigelow niscences of his boyhoc many when bis father from the United that he occasionally h with both the present hom Senator »ver dons to me about and t grandfather was rather | dress ae No. States Explosives found will not be removed until definite Washington _>-— SARAH BERNHARDT IS ILL. Cancels Booking! Returns to New York With Cold. Sarah Bernhardt has been compelled | by @ severe cold, which threatens her with congestion of the lungs, to cancel her immediate bookings and 1s now on| alized, told me|the corner of Broad and Wall Streets the Crown! when Detective Sergts. Cornelli and | Fullam of Hoboken took into custody Jean Caire Humbert who gave his ad- 182 West Street | ‘The and Humbert’s protests in his Tem | qgainat it drew a large crowd, but he Was Minister | Was quickly hurried to Police Head- intimates | quarters where he will be held for had encounters | extradition to New Jersey word is received from think that arrest \urday, torpedo boats. “That will rot be an act of war, but ft will be an act of war if any~ body interferes with them,” ne de- ed, “If our merchantmen are to be armed the President snould issue @ proclamation ordering them to firp on submarines at sight and should notify the German Government of this through the Swiss Minister, he does that and an American mer- chantman in the war zone fires on @ submarine it will be acting legally, If not, and if a ship fires on @ sub- marine without being attacked. Ger- many might claim that it was @ vio~ lasion of: international law, and im my opinion she would be technically correct.” Later Prof. Stowell added to re- porters that Gerrnany might be teoh. nically correct In punishing the of- ficers and crew of such a ship. After his address the speaker was heckled by the audience, the majority of which seemed anti-war. QUEEN MARY TO ATTEND, GREAT PUBLIC MEETING Relaxes Rule to Show Interest in| Women's Work in Great War. LONDON, March 12.—Queen Mary will attend a great mass meeing for women only in Albert Hall next Bat. when the woman scheme of nal service will be launched. ‘his is the first time Her Majesty has consented to attend a public meeting. She relaxes her rule owing to the great interest abe is ing iy the scheme. Cleaning Fluid Cleans white and fancy ‘ colored kid shoes MarR A8e AM! Drudfhets OlIED. Kaiser and his | tne f ' 4 William J. Stone, criticised as one of] brother, Prince Henry of Prussia, | ns ipa oaie ie aaal if Humbert/ ner way back to this elty from North-|HURLEY.—Maren 10, MARY WURLNY pia Hh sete | charges him with acting in concert|ern New York. It is expected that she; (nee McCarthy) 4 81 years, be- w r <> | Kee ee a id #9 AUCCOIO I) sy Steamanip sinua From feak| with Fritz Kolb and Hana Schwartz|wil arrive late to-day and go to the| ioved wite of the late Mathew Hurley blocking the sresigente armed news Her Crew Rescued, lin having high explosives in Room| {iio "Hernhardt, who was on a snc-| $04 iother of Patrick B, and Edmund trality” bill during the closing hours STO: March 1 The liriish| No, 22 in the Commercial Hotel of| ond tour, playing a bill of short sketch J. MeCarthy of the last sexsion, succands himself} steamer Pere Marquette sprang a leak | . te, caught cold during one of her rail-| Funeral from her late residence, 926/ Marquette sprang a leak! sopoken: way Journeys and it-was deamed best) 1 s Chair ¢ Jations}and sank sixty m ol . ke ‘ % land av, © 5 . Oe CHALINAN OF 'Ch0 POTOIED Melee lane Sek 4 mill {of Nauset) itumbert told the police that he|that she return and place herself ‘under | ee ee ee i) Committee early Sunday mornin: ‘apt. Char the care of A specialist. Bho will re- arch 13, 10 o'clock; thence to Quper This is shown by the list of new pps i AP ogy Jer, reported upon | was thirty years old, @ salesman, and sume her tour as soon as her health of Angels’ Churoh, wh a high as} \ arrival today. aboard the fishing | that he was born in Germany permits. will be eslebrated. Interment Cajvar committes assignments announced | schooners M Je Costa, which picked | -— * i | Cemetery, Chicago. t--day by the Steering Committes.|ofhis crew. ‘The Here Marauctiar men | Gov. Johnaon to Give Ald tn Senate | A ns ° Pere Marquette, own. | ee ration'a OF! > —— A eaceiiaioaat ts Aten trance |i cea al soeraiea| OAPTURE OF BAGDAD His reapoainsment han been forecast fF ‘the “Aanrae’ Gtasnsinte’ Compens | SACRAMENTO, March 12—Gov.| LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS, on the bell Sena cours | was nd from that port for New| IS LAUDED IN COMMONS Johnaon said to-day: “T shall resign @8 | Lost —dimwn ‘bulldog, vicinity 130th Wt; me | tesy" and “Senatorial precedent” was] York ith # cargo of wood pulp. The] Governor Thursday, March 15 at noon, | ¥ard, Cannon, 6UT'W. 100th wh too strong to be disregarded several hours before they were rescued — Our nation now confronts « great in: a mot other co itte by fisherme | Ira ernational crisis in whie ‘ulifornia eer Arnone OLner < sammraliiee byt No Praise Too High for Dash and} ternagain, oie part The extra sea: | HELP WANTED—MALE, ments agree’ vpon were ——- F Stteh 7 son of Congress « it Imperative eA Thomas, Democrat, to succeed German susvect Arrested tu cui-| Determination of British Troops, | that ‘tvers" Trepresentrtive should lend Oi STOWS UEFICE CALL, KETHBE Senator O'Gorman’ on the Foreign| o...,.° * Keleaned. Savs Bonar Law his presence and his aid in this crise” | Rae a M82 CEDAR BT. BTR FLOOR Relations Committee, and Senators! CHICAGO, March 12.—Trite Wult,| wey " 1 and Knox to fill two Republi. | Pelieved to has an esc eet werner) LONDON, March 12.--After an- 5 oon “| watlor, an no Was ted hi a " 7 | pan yas neles on ne OO ae ee ee acme re "Ct nouncing the fall of Bagdad’ in the] in the new Congress: beginning | fecinges’ Tamebintt and oa tinct, ‘he | House of Commons to-day, Andrew with the extra session, Democratslone of the cruisers interned at Philas| Bonar Law, Chancellor of the Ex-| will preside over fifty-four Senate | deiphia chequer, said there was every reason | committees. and Republicans over to fallave that iwosthivda of tua twenty. This is a gain of one for the| Vou Be wan Hatwar fer e ueeve: inet. bworthird ; ; Turks’ artillery had fallen into the Kepublicans over last year. nm . hands of the British or bad been | > — CHRISTIANIA (via London), March| thrown into the Tigris 12.—The ship red ‘ WHEAT BREAKS 7 GENTS icc cuus,vtgameyntrsacnk im lett) Monae “Law’ auld the fall of!1) Offering for Monday and Tuesday, March 12th and 13th ren D+Aa n Co on| Bagdad came aa a sequel to cane | Hernstort mer German Ambassador | of brilliant operations carried out by woo a ak of J , and determination for which no apyerued br —- Mining praise could be too bigh | Ome an CHICAGO, March 12.—Semi-pan vivers In Por When Gen, Maude, Commander of icky conditions, attributed in the] LONDON, March 12.-—The two miss-| the Mesopotamian At ay, cecaeea ne | | Special for Monday, March 12th main to fear of # rullroad strike, pre boatloads survivora from the| Fier eDve te ; " NUT BLOSSOM STRAWS — Dain rwexian steamer storstad, torpedoed | Month he imperilled the safety of the Vtngers peng shape tubes af dette a vailed during the late trading to-day and sunie by a German submarine, ar-| ‘Turkish army, ‘The ‘Turks immedi. | Weege andy “in Molassess ‘Vault in the wheat market, and prices broke |!!vel patel n port on the Irish coast! ately retired on Bagdad, and were but jerecoiel As much as seven cents a bush early ey a : | pursued with the utmost energy. |t | grunches Wi As compared with Saturday's tin-|@8,500,000 More Gold for Morgan are ae 1 pA ie hed ee ish, 1.86% to 1.86%, May delivery fell) & Co, Le lpcolbA pay tee) a | to 179% and closed wild at 1.80% to| An additional $8,500,000 in gold re- | REke captured 54 BARCLAY STREET 1.80% ceived to-day from Canada r the a Closes 6.30 pin. Bat.10 pm count of J.P. Morgan & broug @ CORTLANOT GrngET LAREDO, Tex., March 12 Passen- | *urces for r to $21 i 0,000 . p.m. Dail gers ariving here to-day from Tor- > 400 BROOME STREET eect inet Mie ; Johnson to Restan as Governor Closes Tp m.. Sat 10 p.m reon report that Villa has not cap-| paps gl ed 98 EAST 23D STREET tured Dur . as roported in border ‘i 4 : 1 Closes 10 0. m. Daily despatches Saturday, “The railroad be SACRAMENTO, Cal, March 12 472 FULTON 8T., BKLYN ween Torreon and Durango is intact,| Hiram Johnson announced to-day that eseg 15.30 be Dell according to theee passengers, and the|he will resign ax Governor next Th 1289 BROADWAY, Brookly Dandits had not deen reported in that | da teow tthe t place in the The eperified © vicinity when they left Torreom, Senate | Enied states Special for Tuesday, March 13th PEPPERMINT FRENCH CREAMS— are bl . ‘ored ored with fineat into POUND BOx | 206 BROADWAY aoe 7 pom. Sat 109. mm, 11 EAST 420 STREET Closea 12pm. Dally 206 WEST 125TH STREET Clones 11 200 m.. Aat.12p.m 23 WEST 34TH STREET jonea T pm. Bat. 10 Bm. TH ST. & 3D AV ‘ones 12» om 187 MARKET 8

Other pages from this issue: