The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1917, Page 3

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FRANCE GIVES —e— Chamber of , Deputies »Also| Favors League of Nations ‘ to Prevent Wars. j PARIS, June 5- 4 te 55, the Chamber of Deputies, tion declaring that peace conditio must include the liberation of terri- tories ocoupled by Germany, the re- Lorraine to France and just reparation for damage done turo of Al in the invaded regions. The resolution, which was accepted iso favors the ration of a League of Nations for by the Government, the maintenance of peace. The secret session, which was ad? fourned from Saturday, continued all ' Yesterday afternoon and evening un- {41 midnight, @is morning, tag, been submitted. Dumont, representing the opinion the majority group, The other three Were presented by different sections Tho first resolu- tion, which was accepted by the Gov- @f the Socialists, ernment, read: DEMAND LOST PROVINCES AN REPARATION FOR DAMAGES, “The Chamber of Deputies, the dTrect expression of the sov- ereignty of the French people, salutes the Russian and other al- Med democracies and indorses the unanimous protest which the representatives of Alsace-Lor- Taine, torn from France against their will, have made to the Na- tional Assembly, It declares that it expects from the war Imposed upon Europe by the aggression of Imperialist Germany, the return of Alsace-Lorraine to the mother country, together with liberation ef invaded territories, and just reparation for damage. “Far removed from all thoughts f conquest and enslavement expects that tho efforts of the armies of the Republle and her allies will secure, once Prussian militarism is destroyed, durable guarantees for peace and inde- - pendence for peoples great and small, in a league of nations such ARE YOUR Nostrils Clogged? FACTS ABOUT LOW Lage aad. he charsed yer of ‘ialily, iu atner Df veople at finit thought he. idm ‘and the dane C wea not long before t pesctice on. the’ same principles that the great a eae ia ae pies doctors eondemnrel is phat (Ut hg, amon iienthes di alte as able lo 4! eine hi pum! by Dr. McCoy, at a cont a wat they paid the’ hich price! mp Vearnet tet under tle treatm deatl) fece they were charge). by Malaed results ‘so good. bs vetige aa q, igy eought the service oF te “ARE YOU . lie of my Met on in Throat, Deafness and Head Noises . Robert Allen resid Whoa DR. J. C. McCOY LOST PROVINCES EVACUATION AND REPARATION DEMANDED y a vote of 453 secret session, has adopted a resolu- When the doors were thrown open to the public shortly after midnight President Paul Des- chanel read four resolutions which One was drawc up by Deputies Klotz, Charles and o ihe Beresina, were taco. for in perv ican he } ory the highurice Iewyort faite, | people recuglzed hi lity and gave him credit for pei og My = the greatest lawyer who apoke the | cle When he kept bis foe ‘ia Grecdoe: “ik” © Hie in New GOING DEAF? Clogred Nostrils, Dropping ich Li adad sessveveseceverevevevessoseesssesisooseessossesess PEACE TERMI: as has already been foreshad- owed. 4 “Confident that the Govern- ment will bring this about by the coordinated military and diplo- matio action of all the Allies and rejecting all amendments, the Chamber passes to the order of the day.” Speaking to the resolution Premier Ribot sald: “The Government asks you to vote for the Dumont-Klotz resolution, long debate, now drawing to an en has shown with what spirit of sin- ty and patriotism the Chamber Is animated, This resolution affirms our national sovereignty, It declares that in a democracy like ours there can be no secret diplomacy, None can or wants to fin with the na- tional sovereignty, None has enter- tained such tho: ta. “French policy is the cy of frankness afd clearness, ‘hen the hour for supreme decision strikes, tt will be for representatives of country to determine the conditio of peace, We wish to bring about t triumph of the rights of the peoples and the ideas of justice and lib 5 Do not let us be déceived by formulae, whose makers hide themgelves and who Wish to spreaq the conviction that we seek conquest. We ask only that what is ours be returned to us. We demand that the provinces which never ceased to be French be restored of to us. “The resolution which the Govern- to pass demands a reparation, which nonggean contest, for appalling damages. The universal jence will ratify these ‘Appealin o he President of the great Repu si we wish to fachion Justi right for all nations, guarantees for for our children, ance of b A fall back into our old differences, th might be great, but Frano |, cannot be vanquished. Task y! the name of the Gov- ernment, in the name of France, that your vote be unanimous.” RUSSIANS ADVANCE ALONG PERSIA-TURKEY FRONTIER Repel Kurds’ Attack and Occupy Town — Hold Ground .on Galicia Front. PETROGRAD, June & (via London) Russian troops have made an ad- |vance south of Baneh, near ihe fron- |tler between Persia and Turkey, the War Office reports, The statement | follows "On the Caucasian front Kurds at ted an attack in the region of t Mount Akbaba, south of Erzingan, but were beaten off. South of Baneh the town of Rozansir, northwest of Kermanshah, has been occupied by us. The Kurds retreated toward Djc- vanrud “On the Russo-Galteian front, tn the region of Krevo, the enemy main- tained an intense artillery fire. In- significant attempts of the enemy to attack in the region of Potashnya, on frustrated by qur fire. Rifle fting occurred on the re- jmainder of the front.” peli coat ol FIGHT ABROAD OR HERE, MAYOR MITCHEL'S WARNING Liederkranz Society Sings Patriotic Songs at Mass Meeting He Ad- dresses in City Hall. Park. Mayor Mitchel warned 2,000 people during a patriotic mass meeting {n lCity Hall Park to-day that unless Prussianism is crushed in Europe by the Allies the future of American democracy will have to be defended right on our own soil The meeting was arranged ‘by the Mayor's Committee of National De- fense, Thirty members of the Lieder- kranz, a nan-American singing society, headed by William Forster, its President, sang ‘The Star Spangled Banner,” “My Country” and lother patriotic songs. This meeting is held to-day," sald or Mitel, “to give befiting anity to what is happening all over this broad land, It 1s not pos- sible for us all to serve America on the fleld of battle, but we all can do our shure somehow and we must do jit most practical form of pa- triotism that I know of 1s subscribing jto bonds that wil] help support the |vast armies we are sending into the field, “Unless we furnish the money to maintain our armies we are jeopar dizing those who are giving their lives that we may live in peace and happiness, We should have no il sions concerning this war. If de- nocracy, a8 represented by the allies eld G ne n Europe, ts defeated by autocracy we Will have to fight a life and death battle for democracy right here on our own soil. In other words, if the war is not finished in Burope it must be finished here.” pe me May Have to Register Until M ht in Boston, n BOSTON, M June 6.—It may be necessary to extend the time of registra- tion In Massachusetts to midnight or 214 Flatiron Building Jater, It was learmed, at to-day inrollment “stations” have, “been ‘over. Mecntway and beg Now York crowded since opening at clock and meer Ge. Mainminn ant Fridar, 202 | from indicationa tt will be tan osaible te es Dear UY fosPASYSNg enroll the youth of the State by ® Ga ‘teen. » 1 gelock é APR Pa PM, e land, one heart, one Do You Jown A muLe? qwrt er i” i gat one nation wonwe Ole Wendell Hilmes bch dadhdaadacichetahah Women Census Takers Will Be Heroines 2,000 IN HOBOKEN When throw Asking War Questions MOB MAN ARRESTED!. POSITION LOST! ON TREASON CHARGE THE AISNE FR pM ay il Crowd Battles Bight Pol With Prisoner Who Passed Out Seditious Circulars. from an encircling guard of eigh to-day for in Hoboken, The man, Otto Schroede many, was worming bis way throug’ draft. States and he was locked up « n YES! (mM MARRIED 4 For While Those Questions Seem Impertinent, Perhaps |, They’re Not, and the Women Volunteets Have No Choice but to Ask Them and Woman of Whom They Are Asked Has No Choice but to Answer Them. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. OW OLD are you? Are you married? Is your husband alive? Do you own a mule? Can you speak any language beside your own? (This inquiry does not include baby_talk.) Exactly what work do you fo? These may seem impertinent questions, But you are warned not to treat them disdainfully when they are put to you ‘by any one of 10,000 volunteers who will help in the taking of the State military census, which will include women as well as men. In the Counties of Nassau, Richmond and West- chester these and many other searching inquiries wiil prosecuted by volunteer workers of the Woman Suffrage Party. In New York City the Suffrage organization is only one of many which will help| the State of New York classify its citizens according to their possible use- fulness in war time, Among 10,000 volunteers who have offered their ser- vices to the Military Census Bureau at No, 261 Broadway more than half are women, GREAT AIR RAIDS ON GERMAN BASES: ONE IN PRUSSIA ons of Bombs Dropped by the French and British Aviators. T ey > fu plain, every. nibs akedl women now, but before the cen-| unt I am jus arlably the . Sus 1s over they will be heroines. For] ojdest bec seis I n dunt} PARIS, June 6.—-Alr raids on Ger- it will require courage to climb fiv@} enough to get a year ulder every year} Man cities and war os are de- flights of stairs and ask a persplring| whiiy my classmates all have quali-|scribed In the following report from housewifo in the middle of washday if] fed in the higher mathematics which} ine paris War Office she owns a mule, and sublime patrict-| onapies a woman to say blandly that], i, tam to rouse an elderly business MAD| she in twenty-nine after her daughter] "J" reprisal for bombardments by from his after dinner nap by ringing] pas been out four seasons the onemy of the undefended village the doorbell to ask his Wife if her hus-| 1¢ is fortunate that so many of tho|of Bar-le-Duc May 29 and 49, seven band {s alive. How should she know? | consus volunteers will be women, For}of our airplanes on Sunday night Then, too, it will not be easy to in- | however we may laugh at the preten- flew over tho City of Treves (Rhentsh vade the love-laden precincts of the| sions of other women, we stand solld-| Prussia) and thyow down 1,000 kilo- “parlor” where heavy June courtings ly together when It comes to the ques. | ns of projectile On the same are in progress to ask a young person|tion of age. There seems to be hight our squadrons rained projectiles known to the world at large as Sadic| unwritten law on this point that the enemy aviation grounds at Levine, but to the enamored youth} Women must accept each other's] Morhange, Habshelm, Fre beside her a “booful precious,” whether | statements without question. You) Sissonne. They dropped she speaks any language beside her| May know that your friend the lovely | grams (36,800 pounds) of bombs on own (not, of course, including baby} Mrs. Jones was married in 1885, but/the barracks, which were damaged talk), {f she chooses to state in your pres- | severely. Other squadrons bombarded ence that she cannot remember the the railway station at Luttes, in the [the office of the Military Census] Spanish War, you aro expected and) Ardennes; the Munitions depot at Bureau, on the ninth floor of No.| you do corroborate her. Personally | Warmoriville, north of Rheims, and 261 Broadway, TI was told yesterday] am sure that the woman who care® railway stations and military estab- afternoon that many women have al-|about being young will pick out he lishments In the region of Laon. ready telophoned protests against| favorite age—which is nineteen if she “Ay a part of the operations car- being required to answer the first|is under thirty and en oe ane fed out last night, there should be question of the “Form for females alx- | % Meee a ae itty Othe Stitt | mentioned bombardment of the aer- teen to fifty years of age inclusive’—| i, ,hand : drome at Colmar, the railway station “How old are you?” QUESTION which may puzzle) at Thionville, where a fire was ob- Other women have called up to in- A many apartment housewives in| served, and tbe railway station at quire of the harassed officlals of the | contained in this brief Interrogation, Bun-sur-Meuse, where three explo- bureau if it ts necessary to answer the! Practiy what werk do you dof We Slons occurred State's questions in thelr places Of/ xnow that all these women are ox-| “Yesterday our pilots brought employment, tremely busy, so busy that they sim-| down six German airplanes and com- “My cmployer has been trying to) ply love to read, but somehow never! pelled seven others to land In a dam. find out certain things about me for! get a minute, But when it comes to) aged conditl within the German twenty years,” confided one distressed | meeting the cold eye of a suffrage | lines. It is confirmed that two other business woman to bureau, “And| worker, it may be difficult to classify |German machines have been brought it I have to answer those questions in| thelr gigantic labors. down, one on May 26, the other on my place of employment he'll listen “I order the dinner and I tell the June 3.” I don't mind telling my age and} maid what to do"~so far so good [Treves coniuins some of the whether my husband is alive if you'll] and there is perhaps fifteen minutes) most noted of the German me send one of your ladies around to my | accounted for, but after that? diaeval ruins and ‘buildings. ‘The flat. It's only up at One Hundred and| Some women, to be sure, can add) city ts in Rheinish Prussia, fitty~ Eighty-first Street, but I'l go to Jail|that they get tho children off to| seven miles southwest of Coblena, rather than talk before ny employer.” nea ny attr fae tA great many) Jt contains the most venerable I believe the bureau is mistaken In| Of inapiring their hus} idee CP ig cathedral In Germany, Habsheim ite belief that the question relating to] withstanding all thé pr 4s wom-, i# in Upper Alsace, eleven " age will get its women volunteers into en paves Sat Ba mat ti ert northe ant of Altk ssonne difficulty, There is no reason WhY| Hist pai sc TACaSOL tee Taaat Gate is twelve imi t Laon.) women should not continue to meeti all f inine activitie LONDON, June The aertal at- the age inquiry, when put by the State atl, 1 wond if any woman will be tacks on German, establishme nts in of New York, with the same masterful Ag ‘Geno opposite that little ques) Belgium are being ¢ tinue 1 vi : disregard of facts and probability with} "1 inspire. my husband,” And how, ously by the sh, Further oper- which they treat jhe inquiries of im-|can this groat power of inspiration ations we yorted officially toe pertinent friends. be mobilized for war service, if sh® day, as follow » | does ao Naval n Sunday night © doubt tho result of the census eover ‘ attacked t will reveal the astonishing ab- ICONOCLASTS Ww sence from New York all women They want to change the | wer between the ages of twentysnine and| name of Macdougal Alley to Hot- ‘©! La Reread fifty. I know wom rsonally who} ticelli Court, same time, and shipping in Bruges have been twenty-nine for ten years, pa Ss ag <A also was bombed, All our machines and I am sure sociologists will be im- Pay Ry apm aye Be ETT pressed by the astonishing number of) paward Higging, twenty-four, of! gixey Autos Destroyed in Fi matrone under thirty which will be|New Brunawick, N. J., was burned to AMPABING. vered Jn 3 When I was at school it happened |works Compan: He | was rushed | the ' ttwood Metal Rody Works and jin im dhe class. Now, at chass re uted ty spontameous combustion Pe en LS SS GUARDSMEN HELD ency Demonstrated by the State Militia. The prepare’ness for any gency which has charact lant than in the National Guard, guard ported organization at 8 o'clock this mornin ready for whatever service might be demanded of them, And throughout at his office In the day Gen, O'Ryan UNDER ARMS ALL DAY AT ARMORIES Preparedness for Any Emerg- emer. ized every arm of authority in the city to-day was nowhere more prompt and vigt- armories of the Under the orders of Major Gon, O'Ryan, the men of every in the city re- day, the Robbins Dry Dock Company o! 118 Garden Street, Hoboken, The crowd of and these were quick Sohroeder’s a to realisod what he had there wag a rush for him, 1 the Hall, man there safely, or mobbing the prisoner, Garden Street, finding a quantity o! and ments in were them were papers of dis. line. A ral Socialist headquarters at Adams Street, several thousand pamphiets simila to those wero found It was learned Schroeder lived Street, Hoboken, 0, 128 and in the that at at No. one 208 River svnvessevcesevseoocesvessesessorenes emen ; ‘ An enraged crowd tried to take policemen & man who was arrested distributing seditious pamphlets In front of the City Hall maobinist, thirty-five years old, 0 admitted he was born in Ger- the crowd waiting to register for the Wis pamphlets, headed “Proe- lamation and World War,” contained ® long villification of the United Police iqarters Charged with treason. ‘The police said that from Informa- tion they had obtained other arrests would probably be made during the Bohroeder, who is an employee ot Brooklyn, at first dectined to disclose anything about himself, but after a Uttle urging by the police gave his name and said that he lived at No. 000 of more about the City Hall included many deteo- tives and policemen tn plain clothes, detect tivities, As soon as the police reached him and the crowd been doing dquac- ters is only around the corner from but the police had to fight every foot of the way to get their As #oon ax Schroeder was safe in & c#il, @ Koldler of the Twenty-recond U, S. Infantry was placed on guard at the door of Headquarters to pre- vent any possibility either of rescue Then the police made a search of his room In German for translation. charge from the Hamburg American also was made upon the distributed by Schroeder time three doors from the house occupied by Kolb and two other alleged bomb plotters who are FRENCH RETAKE tike Back Nortl Froidmont Farm—Artilla Battle in Champagne, PARIS, June 6—The War 0 nounces that the position the Germans northwest of Farm, on thé Aisne front, waa taken yesterday by the Frenod, Following is the text of War Office report: “Violent artillery fighting oo curred during the night in the region north of Braye-en-Ladae nois, A spirited attack by troops resulted in the retaking ¢ Parts of trenches in which the enemy gained « footing on the Previous day, northwest ¢6f Froldmont farm, “In the Champagne there waa Intermittent artillery fighting, | which was very severe Dear) Mont Carnillet and the Casqte | Various surprise attacks agaist dur posts between Tahure Auberive were repulsed, | where the night was calm." LONDON, June 5—Only minor 6p erations are veported from the front in France. Following is official announcement; “Hontile raiding parties were 4 off lagt night southeast of Lens gouth of Armentieres, A number the enemy dead were left tn front our lines. Successful raids, in we captured several prisoners, made by us last night south and ot Ypres.” OTTAWA, June 5.—The el Nght station southwest of the possession of which many hum id it sda: it dreds of Germans, Britons dians have sacrificed their lives' recent engagements, appeared to “aafely within the Can lines Canadian Army says a despate hero to-day from Heddquartera in France BERLIN, June 6 (via London). {In mentioning the heavy artillery fire that has been in progress for in the Wytechacte salient on Belgian front, to-day’s army quarter's statement reports the ad~ vance of detachments to learn the effect of the fire, Such advances, it in declared, have tnvariubly beem sement | repulsed. it is also stated that in the nelgh= dorhood of the coast and between La Bassee Canal and the Bay Cambrai High Road the fighting ac« y was lively again yesterday 1 points, Advances made these pointe were also without for the British. r 1, At othor times he lived at a the Municipal Building, was in touch [Row 1m Jal! e No. 36 Newark St No, 5) with the guard units by telephone. |Niwomfiad Mirecte heth in Hooke, | AIRPLANES IN COLLISION. As soon as the members of the]and also at No. 940 Stebbins Avenue, eet Guard reported at thelr armortes mid iste ee aa hod = F ; mene aa fn Ain Be 4 placed in the hands of the Fed- they hustled into field service unl fora authorities SAN DIECO, Cal., June 5.—Two mil- form, got their rifles from the com- Th draft registration was expected itary airplanes, one piloted by Sergt. I. pany ‘racks and were ready, After] to reach a total of about 4,600 in dlo-| Frey, the other by Hying Instructer inapection .aany of the commands] bo 21 Lana ae s0gn goon that this /N. B. Robbing, collided here ta midair were marched into the atreete about | "UmBer woul least doubled. | at a height of about 500 feet. ‘ re chine fell into the ahal- thelr armortes and there drilled be- " Frey's ma fore appreciative crowds NORWAY’S FOOD PROTEST. jiow waters of San Diego Bay, Frey se) nee: ———- * | waited until a boat took him off. Robe Parades to stimulate recrulting | Greae ne fom Against High|bins’s machine was sent into @ side were also ordered, such units, how Comt Planned for To-Mo slip, from which Robbins had mo ever, leaving suffiicent guards in the} CHRISTIANIA, June 5 (via Lond trouble in emerging. | havea armortes to met a mudden emergency] —The Tidena Teg saya that ii food | pinety ‘mbes an hour. about |. ‘The Firat Field Artillery and a|demonateation will be held on Wednes oa ly ttalion of the Tweifth Infantry |49¥ throughout Norway, The day will! yajor st he observed us a holiday, Street cars marched through the upper west side, t n . ‘to, | WIL be stopped, shopa and restaurants! wWasttt jand the Ninth Coast alia 4er} closed, no papers published and only Secretary of War Henry L, Stimeon, Col. John J, Byrne, parade reen-lihe traina will be run as usual. The|now a Major in the Judge. Aavecate wich Village. As it marched around] iden of the demonstration ts to secure| General's Officers’ Reserve Corps, was the recruiting battleship Recruit in] Krant of 150,000,000 kroner for the} formally ordered to report for ve | the Sixty-ninth Lieut. Union Square, fantry appeared under Latham Reed. As there was not sufficient Col lesy with @ marching qalute RETAINS $7,500,000 TAX by the Senate FI and it was House tax of 15 cen considered to-day nance Commit to retain the tee to $2 @ thousand for (hone welg State Gets John D, ALBANY, June 5 Travia to-day received $1,130,000 as th Archbold, first payment of the Inberitance tax on Vthe estate of John D. Archbold. It ta expected the total tax to bo paid by the emtato wil Le more thag $1,600,000, In- space for the two commands to pass along the north aide of the “battleship, "| Col, Byrne drew his men to one sid d had them »resent 4 to the Sixty-ninth, which received the cow= ON RECTIFIED SPIRITS Senate Finance Committee Again Considers Liquor Rates In War Revenue Bill WABHINGTON, June Liquor rates in the war tax bill were further cided 10,000 on Estate of State Comptroller Durposn of lowering food prices organizers also want maximum prio 1. [to be fixed. per gallon on rectified spirits, esti: | comfort—a wonderful clea mated to raise $7,500,000, ance aggregation of coats The Committee decided not to heretofore selling much higher, change the House taxes on wines and : ‘ beer, estimated to yield respectively | Dashing Sport Coats 6,000,000 and $87 000. Present 7 & ieee ne doubled, substantially, by Poplins and Serges the Houne Dill. Gabardines and Velours Chan, in tobacco rates, pre- days ! siguatee annound ed, were formally Spicy Motor Checks idopted by the Committee, excepting ‘ ‘ that it ineroaged taxes on cigurettes All those chic, flaring and i jess than three pounds a and, ind to $4.80 for that } in relent, m weMany Administrative s of weight—yet ampl A te, Seren anid of evenings, the motor t committee, which incre twenty cents to $1.10 a «gallon, the House rate on grape randy used | for fortification purpe ton the present parity between ne distilled spirits and brandy in | manufacturing win At the New he ows Wednesday Sale Fine Coats in Final Clearance full belted models, delightful Alterations Without Charge duty to-day to the Chief of 81 Austgoment to the Army War here. Needful Wraps for Summertime $ 8 75 Indispensable for complete their suggestion of light- le protection for the coolest rip and the inclement day Fashion

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