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Che __|“Ciroulation Books Open to All. ” PRI PRIC I Ci E ONE CENT in Greater New York an Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing B | Hodson County 3. TWO CENTS clnewhere, _ Co. (The ‘New York World). DISRUPTION OF GERMANY AND AUSTRIA NEW “YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, “Circulation Books Open to All.”’ 1 0 PAGES 1918. WEATHER—Fair to-night; to-morrow warmer, > EDITION PRICE (is OnNT be Greater New York Madson Coanty, N. J. TWO ‘ceNts ae 8 eleewhorm NOT AIM OF ALLIES, SAYS LLOYD GEORGE THOUSANDS SHARE COAL WITH THE POOR AS SUPPLY REACHING CITY INCREASES Potice Gather Fuel in Atl Bor-|ROGKEFELLER SHUTS HOME oughis, Under Mayor Hytan’s | BEGAUSE STANDARD OIL | willy GO. CAN'T SUPPLY HEATERS 400,000 TONS ARRIVE Barges Making Better Progress Since Paths Have Been Smashed in Ice. While coal in comforting quanti-| ties—some reports say 100,000 tons—| was slowly moving by barge and car scow to New York from ice-free Jer-| sey ports to-day, the full weight of the police force was thrown task of relieving the want of the coal-| This was to the} less poor. in pursuance of | Mayor Hylan’s plan for soliciting coal} GERMANY THREATENS DRIVE ON RUSSIA IF NEGOTIATIONS FOR PEACE ARE BROKEN OFt )Press Warns Against Confer- ence at Stockholm, Fear ing British Influence. AMSTERDAM, must take the self tions," Jan, 6.- sia | consequences on her- if she breaks off peace neg was the veiled threat of G man military blows contained in a| semi-official despatch received from | Berlin to-day. | German newspapers received bere) to-day all wara against acquiescence by the German Government In the Russian proposals for conference of Socialists at Stockholm, alleging such & conference would be directly a British influence Central Powe to Brest-Latovsk under th Jelegates returning he impression Stations on the New Subway Opened To-Day ‘Tho stations on the new TH Square-Rector Street subway 1 open to are: lay Times Square, Thirty-fourth Street, Twenty-eighth Street, Twenty-third Street, Union Square, Eighth Street, Prince Street, Canal Street, City Hall, Rector Street. The station at Whitehall Streot will not be ready weeks, NEW SUBWAY LINE | for use for some that there would be tmmediate re- eontributions from those who have, sumption of peace negotiations with Plenty and distributing tt to the un- | Russta arrived to find not a single fortunates w! ave not known fire R an d te ther accordi for days. The responses were gen Vienna de lv jay. Inste | efous beyond all expectations. the dei nr ived t er HI | ing for transfer of all future negotia- At 10.30 o'clock 1 nig Lieut y; Monm to mtocknolin Mart, on the desk in the Ralph Ave-| 7 r¥ —_ | nue Police tion, rubbed his eyes in ay War Spirit Again Gasldd surprise when he saw Mayor Hylan| Through Rassia. a : . walk up to the railing before his desk, | | LONDON, Jan. 6.—Latest advices! Trains Now Runt Running on Four-| i h I wish that the policemen of this from Petrog! indicate that a real} j4: witha inay Ye he precinct shall make a house to house (Ola spirit. for ediate resumption ot| Minute Headway From Rec- canvass of the poor people in the pre- CO warfare against Germany is sweep- tor to Times Squi ure. eet said the Maver ae Gi peer x Vrs JOHN D ing bran Rupee te the Red Pree] ee j y many have no ata Nikolal Lentne, the Red - akaie) bine. nino itone ames to ROCKEFELLER Je fer, and Leon Trotaky Minister | The new Rroadway subway,a BR me and tell aia that if they will) John D, Jr. Forced to Move to|tor Foreign Affairs, are p' ee for |T. ln an operations at noon to come to my house they can get enough |, “ \ renewal of hostilities x hundred/day between Times Square and coal to tide them over until the deal-| Tarrytown When Steam Plant and s to the Soldiers aud Work- | Rector ivaine are how Fun ers have «a supply.” His Own Corporation Fail Him. | inonts Congress sa rotaky rapt} ar t a i On four-minute headway Capt. David ein command of | John D. Rockefeller Jr has been |attention when ho delivered his war pi * — meld nae aan essa sion in located, |ObUKed to close his New York home and| speech before them. He swayed them ; he first train to run over the new AS aaa dcop im duty to{move into his father’s home at Tarry-|as Kerensky never did |line left the Pacifle Str ordered his platoon i cag Mi N.Y. Be 4 O| Russian soldiers have come to the|the Fourth Avenue subway | k me mind the Mayor injunction, }town, 3 Y., because the Standar i ear in 2 realization now that they must fight |iyn at a1 o'clock thia morning. It But privately the police are wonder-|Company was unable to provide him Arcrcucaie WAAGhi. AAMT hay yn a o'clock this 1 « ing just how much coal reposes in the | With oll stove heat They did not|for a der i Proceeded through that tube and h eft to give heered wildly when the Baltle dele- Mayor's ce! r ne any left to give him. . | thence over the Manhatt Bri te 7 hg . Mr. Rockefeller's home and those of|gates cried Spe ; A oe OFFERINGS RANGE FROM Aj. Mir locke! Reap ei aPoaeradl | sate: Daltic flag will be the last to | #84 through the Canal BUCKETFUL TO A TON. Ining have a common central heating | ne | Broadway subways to Times spector O'Brie! rted tOliiant. b r 1 me down: |The distance was covered Chief Inspector O'Brien rr Head. |DMt but lack of coul ed It to clo: This enthusiaem te likely to | istar Wi cov Police Commissioner Bugher « down. He sent a requisition to the twenty minutes. T rain The ay cause Germany a great military | quarters to-day, that Mayor Hylan’s ndard Oll Company. tn which he an@ a round trip fre os Square ¢ M | Shbr aie 7 | surprise. Fourteen of the fifteen oréer for a census persons ther are heaviest stockh: urp! » Rector eet and Itt { r | heate | Russian field armies were repre- | throughout the city who a ntirely | heaters, twenty-flve minutes to go to I r destitute of coal and a reciprocal do- | upply exhausted. ¢ them | nted at the meeting, and of latceat nation of lots of coal to such needy {fF YoU or anybody else © an-| these thirteen reported that the [°° ved ' ones by thi sing more than [Sar whereunon Mr with] soldiers were ready to return to |“ f 2 t one i 1 le ahinte aacteas | a |restanra : they need was bringing excellent re- : a | active fighting immediately. | whieh mado by Ct sults, | The correspondent the Pally | man t } out the city called upon familles re- | jthrough 4 neutral ai plotn sat, ‘ 3 et iar mtiat E 1 their names by phone back to the py the Cons ny tt nelr ob- attended by the Broadway A shuti their precincts got volunteer o} i We (BONO Ore Sate) Chaim sald fers of truc d express wagons to| a a ee Lees to profit by tho Bolshevik ree} orn, celubration to-day mark bandie the coal volunteered |Not More Than § Per Ceit. of tuyal to make peace and to tell the | yreaxir titan Early to-day the hou h Buildings Ever Closed at people he Bolehevies Promined') en eration of the canvass by the policemen in sear erat idan | them peace, but them war. swoway , t philanthropic coal owners comi One Time, | ‘Tho version of the correspondent |ivn. jerom wow 1 r ri Offerings ran from All of New York's public schools will s¢ tho Dal is that the Germans | 4, Bibokiin and’ Mant . ton, Supplied at t be ally heated by Monday, it was|nave beon Ing pressure, direct or | going to 1 ind t ' name of the needy fam ann y at the office of Act-|.ndirect, upon the Government tp jgreat trans; yaster i man transferred the coal offering atling sur Straubenmuller. |eonnection With the summoning of & | proach t The ¢ once to the barret Iminediastely patrick Jones, Superintendent of Sup-|Constituent Assembly, 43 the Gere |tion of this great Broadway fires began to be A where there | pies, said that late yesterday h mans have been making it pretty ob- |ity tunnel and bridge connections, n had been dead r many days.| ica 130 tons of coal, which we vious that they aro unwilling to /only relic he tr throt f er the city, accor to In- |" se mS 4 the Bolsheviki as repre-|the past tha hi 1 AN ov panes q [tributed this morning to fifteen Brook- | TeCO8™® ine . y of the ne $i , ne lyn, & spector ri \ Perera Ne | sentatives of a h developmen noklyn, b relief runs smoothly Ha Iw And 250 tons more will be] ian people or even As temporary mit of the people of Hrook GENEROSITY SHOWN EXCEEDS || h fucl to| trustees of the sovereign power, carried th with H] 1 ALL EXPECTATIONS a Regarding the attitude of the comfort to the business ng and At noon to-day Chic Inspector nder ¢ Jor, Super-|Ukraine toward the the theatre districts in Man "Brien began to r rt vorking | Daily ays is _ spection districts det i ay t burst and | wiil ke bargain with the Food Adm rators of ALD States the prog \ f mpanied | | to Hold a ¢ rence, They al) » ner f aD ne many hh | ad continue) WASHINGT Ju Fede yond expe F ERO IRAE TRY 8 ite rile senarit uth, where, |Food Administrators from ail States w In the Fifth Inspect , t. , ’ of next] cording t ndent of the begin two daya' ¢ ; ” in Harlem, for ons \ 2ST nh Now| Timen el fast and aay with Food Administra ‘a teered in the first two bour f = wid M er, “not| furious, In several places there are aaa an te otiea Hh anvass, Thirteen a eieaaa as Gee at been ecenes of Heres eye ge : yibuted in Greenpoint oection t This is a record to be proud | fi Ekaterino- vera etings of ata — ' dering the unprecedented con-| ave eld here, bi (Continued on Becond Page.) ditions. ” me oe i. What President Wilson Said In His Message on Dec. 4, 1917 i 66 W ! intend no wrong against the German Empire, no interfer: ence with her internal affairs, We should deem either the one or the other absolutely unjustifiable—absolutely con trary to the principles we have professed to live by and to hold most sacred throughout our life as a nation “Ihe people of Germany ore being told by the men whom they now permit to deceive them and to act as their masters that they are fighting for very life and extstence of their empire—a war of desperate self: defense against delibergte aggression. “Nothing could be more grossly or wantonly false, and we must seck by the utmost openness and candor as to our reat aims to convince them of its falseness, We are, in fact, fighting for their emancipation from jear, along with our own, from the fear as well as from the fact of wi st uttavk by neighbors or rivals or schemera after world empire. No one ix threatening the existence or the independence or the peaceful enterprise of the German nation." are not fonting 4 war of aggression agaivst the German ‘What Lloyd George Said To-Day in se to Trade Unions ce first day of the war to now, The British people never aimed at breaking up the German peoples or the disintegration of their state. Our wish is not to destroy Germany's great position in the world, but to turn her aside from svhemes of military domination to devote beneficial tasks. her strength to vat Britain ix not fighting to destroy Austria-Hungary or to de- prive Turkey of its capital or the rich lands in Asia Minor and Thrave which are predominantly Turkish, “The British viewpoint ia that the adoption of a democratic constt- tution by Germany would be the most convincing evidence that the old spirit ia dead.” oy RIOTS WO TY, REIT “WN TURKISH TERNS Gale Moves Toward Nova Scotia— Record Cold in Atlantic Sea- board States. WASHINGTON, Jan. 6. ie sold to-day,” Not quite to-day's forecast of Weather Bureau for much of the I sata ciaewen Wastern half of the United States. Temperatures will rise slowly euuctiemtee of Part of Slav|in interior districts and the Atlante | Const States Navy and Army Is | ‘Tho storm off the coast hay moved northward to the vi | with greatly caused gales al nity of Nova Scotia increased intensity and ng tho coast, Demanded. Jan, 6.—Free for passage of | A godsend of warmer weather Russlan ships, wae ge ate | danellos to New York to-day. At ten o'clock n of Turkish terrl-! the mercury, which had been rising emobilization of the|*/Wly #Ince midnight, reached 18% doe grees above zero, and the prediction ta | | Russtan Black Sea fleet are provided | that it will be warmer still to-night, 0 | for in the draft of Turkish peace| With @ minimum of 20 above, The only |fly tm the ointment ts | Snow, which may strike day night The Weather Bureau ¢ |the backboue of the coll | broken and that th Prospect of {ta retu the threat of the city Sun- presented to Russia, according to an Iaxchange Telegraph despatch Turkey, , 18 to retain her Petrograd. trom It te pro- clares that spell has been re is no tf active army in Hate sequence of tt | continuation of n. The change for TURKS TO KEEP CAPITAL NEUTRALZE DARDANELLES, | IN BRITISH TERMS OF PEACE |Premier Calls for Restoration of Alsace-Lorraine, Full Freedom of. Poland, Reestablishment of Bel- gium, and Naturalization of Pales- | tine, Armenia, Syria and Arabia. LONDON, Jan, 5.—Britain’s answer to Count Czernin’s terms of peace for the Central Powers was emphatically announced to the jworld to-day by Premier Lloyd George in a speech at the British Laborite “Man Power” Conference. The British Premier laid down three cardinal principles on which Britain and the Allies would be willing to talk of peace. “Tefore permanent peace can come,” the Prime Minister de- clared impressively, “three conditions must be fulfilled. “Pirat—The “Second sanctity of the treaty must be re-established. ‘Theve must be territorial settlements based om the consent of those governed. “Third and last—There must be created some international organization to limit the burden of armaments and diminish the probability of war.” The fighting: Premier described the things for which the Allies ere Not for the destruction or disruption of Germany. Not Austria-Hungary or Turkey Not merely to alter or destroy the Imperial Consti Germany. Not to take from them, to destroy ution of urkey’s lands that are predominantly Turkish But for these principles: Complete restoration of Belgium. Reparation as far as possible for devastated towns and cities, Neutralization and nationalization of the Dardanelles, “Reconsideration” of the “great wrong” done to France ip 1871 referring to Alsace-Lorraine. Establishment of an independent Poland, “comprising all Polish elements, necessary to the sta- bility of Western Europe.” genuinely because this is Arabia, Armenia, Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine—all entitled arate national conditions war against the Entente. the better i# general through the The main points in the draft pre- | “**ter+ hal of the country sented by the Turkish delegates are | suo uncon ves" | FIRST WOMAN TOVOTEIN, ,. 1. Frontier lines to remain as STATE 1S MRS, CHAUNGEY | She Cast Ballot before the war. 2. Within two years of the con- at Speci clusion of peace the contracting pe in Lisle—Challenges tor All partios shall conclude @ conven- | tion respecting sea trade and con- | | Females on List aulates. nr INGHAMTON, N.Y. Ja M 3. War losses Incurred by Indie | ifred O. Chaunce f Lisie was the tir viduals to be refunded. woman in New tate 4. Guarantees to be given for |» the territorial integrity and de- velopment of Persia on the basis A spe of her entire independence, | t 5. Free rassage to be granted /"*0rlslis thelr rent Russian ships passing through spor AROSE CRON all the Dardanelles and the Bospo- . ru Mobilization within limits to be permitted for national defense. 7. Russia to undertake to re- move her armies to territory with in the previous Russian borders in AILROAD MEN NOT EXEMPT FROM OPERATION OF DRAFT six to eight weeks after signing | Pro hal Crowder the peace agreement, leaving only rl bi Goverminent Ex one division to safeguard her frontie ployees in Cla 8, Ru to demobilize her WASHINGTON, Ja i army of special Armenian units, loyees ure not to t a) and also to demobilize the Black nment employees in compiling Sea Navy. classifications rovoat Marshal General Crowd 9, Turkey to retain her active army in consequence of continua tion of war againat the Entente thiy rulin, Jquestions from D sata sale Dtits STOP COUGHING AT NIGHT : Fornes Schu'S Medlciee ‘triage rebate onags (Racing Entries on Page 2) German colonies to be held at the d disp a conference, having primary regard for the wishes of native bitants. Of Russia, the British statesman left the f ‘¢ to decision of the Russian people themselves “We will stand by the French democracy to death,” Lloyd | George declared. “Tt is difficult to speak of Ru ta without suspen- Ru ed by her own people.” n of judgment a can only be s epee APPEAL FOR WORLD DEMOCRACY IN SPEECH OF LLOYD GEORGE |British Premier Tells Trades Unions Critical‘ Hour Has Come and That His Policy Is Backed by the Nation. Proms V6 ‘} Ica! hour of thia terrible conflict, ama , G ow the trad ne vernment takes the eon aa career te H as to the conditions ' ; 1 h ight either to term uo the struggle it \ 1 ad J that the con- t i n for a f the nation is behind these Ve On Premle » 1) Mr. Lloyd George sald that during Teaser ant i h fow days ho had taken spes \/ the princly pains to ascertain the views ang which: Ww f " representative men o} Y i 4 w la t of thought tn the country, ap of world. He had read the statement of ave arrived at the most erit- labor's war aime, he centinued