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ie a mapgeeeet 3 * = ‘ ae THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1918, pur desire so promptly reallzed that all “ail eben of views on this great whattor should be made in the hearing of all the worid «Count Czernin’s reply which is directed chiefly to my own addross, n the Sth of January, is uttered in a very friendly tone. “He finds in my statement a sufiiciently encouraging approach to the Mews of his own Government to justify him in believing that It furnishes ; [9e basis for a more detailed discussion of yurposes by tho two Governments, “He is represented to have Intim 1 that the views he was expressing phed been communicated to me beforehand and that I was aware of tletn ot Hts time he was uttering them, but In this Iam sure he was mteonderstood. Wihad received no intimation of what he Intended to say. There was, of ison why he «howld communteate privately with me. I am “TSB NEW YORKERS UKRAINIAN FOOD IN TUSCANIA LIST . GOES TO GERMANY: OFTHOSERESCUED. UNDER PEACE PACT | Secretary Baker Fixes Death Provision Is Made for Ex- Total on Torpedoed Trans- | change of Agricultural and port at 113, j Industrial Produc WASHINGTON, Feb, 11.—Soven-| AMSTERDAM, Fob, 11.—A despateh teen New Yorkers have not yet been from Brest-Litovsk via Berlin gives accounted for in the War Depart. |details of the conference at which the ment’s list of Tus some or all of t course, no Fr quite content to be one of the public audience. HERTLING'S REPLY VAGUE AND CONFUSING. “Count von Hertling’s reply is, | must say, very vague and very con fusing. It is full of equivocal phrases and leads it is not clear where. But it is certainly in @ very different tone from that of Count Czernin and apparently of an opposite purpose “It confirms, I am sorry to say, rather than removes, the unfortunate impression made by what we had learned of the conference of Brest- Litovsk. His discussion and acceptance of our general principles lead him to no practical conclusions “He refuses to apply them to the substantive items which mast con stitute the body of any final seti!ement. He ts Jealous of international action and of international counsel “He accepts, he says, the principf@of public diplomacy, but he appear to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities und | that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the Questions upon whose settlement must depend the acceptance of peace by the twenty-three states now engaged in the war, must bo discussed and settled, not in general council, but severally by the nations most immedt nia survivors, but Peace treaty between tho Central m may be on the Powers and the new Ukrainian Re- fitlonal list to be given out tos Pubic was signed and also details of treaty itself. The treaty provides the ratified Gocuments shall bo Of the 2179 American office soldiers on tha ship, the De has now accounted for 1 nd artment a 2 leaving | 47 still on tho missing list of names.| ‘The chief gain for the Central Pow- Secretary Baker hag no later estl- ers is provided for in Article VIIL, mate of the number ac that there shall be which stands at 113 irplus agricul. mall lovs ty attributed by all prodhete of tni~ din Vienna as soon as pos- ere ally missing, which stip mutual exchango of ¢ ately concerned by interest or neighborhood Baker to the fine f t 1 ' “He that the eeas should be free, but looks askance at any men and ot th piediasbrig SALE Da it m t dh by International action tn the Interest t LA WARSI SU LE through the Governments concerned ' imi to eedo . onal actto r of the { cers 1 « Mmitation nat freedom by International action tn the in i = ind mirtly by means of free sale, the, | There remain to be cabled to W letails to be arranged by a spectal ington, if these figures are correct, |commission, Until a final agreement the names of about 244 survivors and! has becn reached, and in any case for (t loast six monthy after the conolu- necount for 158 sion of world pe economic rela- veon estimated 'tions between Germany and the 185 New Yorkers on | (Krainc be based on the Russo- g 17 yet to be ac- German agreements of 1894 and 1904, urvivors OF Trade must not be hampered by ex- common order. “He would without reserve he glad to kee economic barriers removed | between nation and nation, for that could In no way impede the ambitions ‘of the military party with whom he seems constrained to keep on terms, | Neither does he ralse objection to a limitation of armaments, That matter will be settled of itself, he thinks, by the economle conditions which must | follow the war. "But the German color he demands, muat be returned without counted for, DUNOERWSID ane UNDERW! PRUENCH IN Fen TRY AOVANCING UNDER "BARRAGE FIRE debate among m 5 ave Bre {tho rakin “Hie will discuss with no one but the representatives of Russia what Vile remarkable photo shows French troops coming head-on tn Man's Land on the enemy trenchos, and the photographer who took | SEEK TO IDENTIFY BODIES OF coda avail io panAllted. Radway Ajsposition shall be made of the peoples and the lands of the Baltic prov the advance behind a heavy curtain fire, which makes them indis it evidently risked his life, as he must have been at an advance |. THE DEAD SOLDIERS. Moc shall be resumed as soon as lees: with no one but the Government of France the “conditions” under | _tneuisbable to the enemy. This rald was made directly across No post. The names of survivors have beon ey which Fronch territory shall be evacuated; and only with Austria what) ~ a a = = —__— — = — jer etaeithe: ubles slowly and [This opens the rich grain fields * shall be done with Poland ternational dealing as much as access to raw materials and fair and equal) It will never be used in aggression or for the aggrandizement of any selfish z “i " ; a of Ukrainia to Germany and the “in the determination of all questions affecting the Balkan + he conditions of trade interest of our own, It springs out of freedom and {8 for the service of | Public Inf » SAL lid Certeal Powers] seme ae @efers, as 1 understand him, to Austria and Turkey; and with regard to Count von Herliing wants the essential bases of commercial and in-| freedom.” fort to compile a list of the mi . ae Wareesan. (Grins vib nN the agreements to be entered into concerning the non-Turkish peoples of | ustrial life to be safeguarded by common eement and guarantee, but - ae - act listing survivors as the names | qyyneary, Bulgaria i Turkey on fils statement, to a league of nations which would undertake to hold the He cannot ask tae benefit of common agreement in the one fleld with Bees tee ance | Cea ee Bee pins BMY ni He aiid 45 : board the Pas- vient Woe declared (ieaie 6° new balance of power steady against external disturbance, j Out according it In the other. present war declared itself to ~ “It must be evident to one who understands what this war has I tuke it for granted that he sees that scparate and selfish compacts i al the last moment without! pe independent and expressed a wish wrought in the opinion and temper of the world that no general peace, no with regard to trade and the essential materials of manufacure would at - im 1''the present Ottoman Empire, to the Turkish authorities themselves, he cannot expect that to be conceded him if the other matters to be de lM cone ‘o part and tho Ukrainian Peoples’ a “After a settlement all around, effected in this fashion, by individual lormined by the articles of peace are not handied in the same way as MEATLESS DAYS FOR TROOPS TEE y on names of survivors made! Republic on the other ~oobarter and concession, be would have no objection, if I correctly Interpret | items in the final accounting. . public x roon the sailing! he le ¢ that the Hin the crew to restore peace between itself and at war, I sin desires seeepeace worth the Infinite sacrifices of these years of tragical suffering, ¢ ‘n| ford no foundation for peace. Neither, he may rest assured will separat wheatless d |may have be among the step to’ | f . x r st step toward a last- * possibly be arrived at In any such fashion. The method the German Chan-| and selfish compacts with regard to provinces and peoples orklees days, &¢ my survi ©, honorable to all cellor proposes {s the method of the Congress of Vienna. We cannot and oR. ‘ ¥ oa ei eS aa . sidiers are to hay The Americ d Cross cables it h shall not on): lanaae |CZER S PEACE FUNDAMENTALS. - ena as the jone mapped out is 40 poasibie to: ald |e hurapeglbeatld ait Will not return to that ar . Food i ANG, $0) tHe) RONZON. 0 iva MUS alee * ‘Count Czernin seems to sea the fundamental elements of peace with Md Administration for all Ar in estab) identifications of the restoration of friendly ree “What is at stake now is the peace of the world. What we are striving hips in th Atlantic and the Gulf} soldiers whose bodies were found The schedule of foods was issued 1st] on the Irish coas' 8 and does not seek to obscure thom, He sees that an Independent Eormar Turkish Ruler Was e for Is a new international order based upon broad aud universal principles | | °"" ° f Of right and Justice—no mere’ peace of shreds and patches. Poland, made up of all the indisputably Polish peoples who He contiguous p 5 I. wee operator ese anm-| po.day Representative Porter 2B uiitial aia Ht ponalble hat Count von Slertiing beh net asa that; Goes not grasp | 0me andther. Is a niatter ot Muropesn Cea of course be tisoner in Palaces for hin hat time the mens WF" | pittshurgh will otter in this Tse a Mt; fe 4n fact Mving In his thought In a world dead and gone? conceded; that Belgium must be evacuated and restored, no matter what Nine Years. B ¢ mm to ti 1 at may involve; and that national aspirations is cs A t) tho soldiers will have to be burted In “Has he utterly forgotten the Reichstag resolutions of the 19th of July ave beca ‘| must be satisfied, even within his « nd }one g& or does he deliberately ignore them? ‘They spoke of the conditions of a) y. : An wn empire, in the common Interest Of) axsTERDAM, Feb. 11.—The death } Herd on thelr lapnieneeti yen ate "AMONG PASSENGERS ope and ankind on oir Identific 1 tags. e general peace, not of national aggrandizement or of arrangements between Liat aslo dsty yesterday of Abd-i! Hamid, tormer SE niga OLsae : a ate and state: ' If ho ds silent about questions which touch the interest and purpose s y r nines Oy will ask tha com e dete , . of his a more ne than they touch those of Austria only, it t, of of Turkey, from Inflammation mine what ¢ respon. WASHINGTO: >, 11.—Follow« . “The peace of the world depends upon the Just settlement of each Of) iise ho be ; SS anak beet ew ale ads must, O' of the lungs, Is announced in a do- for this alleged n t z ig a list of tke rescued whose the several problems to witch I adyerted in my recent addrees ty the Con: | annpet Vo preg any cede Constrained. T suppose, to defer to Germany ant ita, reccived here today f SHIP CAPTAIN ARRESTED. eee eee Wis: Way ee ‘ u y h reumstane ‘ ere Gay rm Syst | ent passenger i "Se Y conceding p de n OSse! tawater Constantinople b: a me en yx eld ta ° oO o ‘en~ S, HAROLD KS ue N, “I, of course, do not mean that the peace of the world depends upon| jr cue and conceding as he does the essential principles involved and). rien ‘eens SO ecneumne | me a SOLDIER HERO ft iets, Beng, Be the acceptance of any particular et of suggestions as to the way tn wien | Xe Necessity of candidly applying them, he naturatly feels that Austria *t4t0 funeral wi a ane ‘ those problems are to be dealt with |can respond to the purpose of peace ax expressed by the United States — (AN ATLANTIC Pont, Feb fl oe e Nee with less embarrassment than could Germany. He would probably have) Abd-"l Hania thirty-three tah ace oeadrhante oN ALL PROBLEMS AFFECT WHOLE WORLD. | gone dtinok farther: Hadith nok hesn tom the embavraasmenta’ ot Auatrigta| eAbe AOLtAH\ att nets Nan American #tcam 12 “I mean only that those problems cach und all affect thé whole world; | *!iances and of her dependence upon Germany sprawling upon the threo continents 4 nt, was arrested by th ! “i that uuless they are dealt with in m spirit of unselfish and unblased justice, | FOUR PRINCIPLES TO BE APPLIED. rope, Asia and Afriea, and at; eto Pewee un ON AMERICAN LINE with a view to the wishes, the natural connections, the racial aspirations, | “After all, the test of whether it fs possible for elthey Government to BOING PME Was cOmMAaNUeH o£ the | d Twice Acts Hl f \ \ he security and the peace of mind of the peoples Involved, no permanent | go any farther in this comparison of views is simple aud obvious, The ,{!thful army of Moslems. He was: ; Pale es yaaee ald) ana unt ee - eh peace will have been attained, principles to be applied are these paid homage by nearly « hundred Aurtrlan ii) cooutiniat Gentes pees ioe, hes yo _ 7 1 | jo) piects. Sho; old he had been pre ontinued fron “ral Pare. eRA AAW IGEN They cannot be discussed separately or in corners. None of them | “Pirst—That such part of the final settlement must be upon tee aoe Shorn of power, he! previously arrested in Nortolk, Vas. "on | 2 a oh Wat} constitutes a private or separate Interest from which tie opinion of the| the essential Justice of that particlar case and upon such adjustments |Soed HEDGE Ges Huenietony ent We Isneecnearnyiaat te attith DAVID. Uren “world may be shut out. Whatever affects the peace affects mankind, and| a8 are most likely to bring a peace that will be permanent, Mo lived in constant dread of death, F ao hen dia do LORS AT Gs MAL DAN ptt y y c > . ¢ ys pe cons dread of deat plact de : molbing we filed by sila force, {f settled wrong, {4 settled at all, 11 Second—That peoples and provinces are not to be bartered about | He had often escaped it only by goog INVESTIGATE DEATH IN FIRE. | "pica tor ‘ Pi ah pene y have to be reopened, : | from sovereignty to sovereignty as if they were m chattels and |iuck or unusual 7 utlons against me | t ry 4s Count von Hertling not aware that he is speaking in the eourt of pawns in a game, even the great game, now forever discredited, of the | plots. Yet in his later years be had Newark Pot he s to-day EN DMIESSCHE Sterensrilie, mankind, that all the awakened nations of the world now eit In Judgment| balance of powers but that sought death by his own hands, aol qy net May te aes A MA on what every public man, of whate atio uy aky he . mataneholy. hi oxiate: i ho Nowesk poilce bave'bep we ey man, of whatever nation, may say on the instes of | “phird—Every territorial settlement {nvolved {n this war must | 2¢lenchely had his extstonce become. | vestigation into the death of Charte “Vitae Yu a conflict which has epread to every region of the worll? ‘The Retchstag : oY Born Sept. 22, 1848, the second t § : ards, pie a hstis| he made in the Interest and for the beneft of the populations con- ee SOR Vico, prealden eller tl feaolutions of July themselves frankly acceptcd the decisions of that court. | rad) andl Hot . 4 of Abd-ul Modjid, Abd-tl Hamid, be-)t liirymen, whore OF ANSARI ERY O COR “There shall be no annexations, no contributions, no punitive dan ; ae vue V f any mere adjustment or compromise of re Hove 1 when his elder b: | n r : Sear age ‘ nong rival stat A ; ‘ ; i Kk hed port Ai ie Wil the exception Peoples are not to be handed about from one sovereignty to another by an! ag i a i 1 ae er, Murad V., waa dep 1 because ; ; if cd pithine lore fhternauonal conference or an understanding between rivals and antago-| cor , SR ee ee eee ie ieee eee he WE Grito oe ale mai Was 0 AMY YU in tho village, wale) aia aie eeecne “vs ni-ts. Natioual aspirations must be respected; peopl " antago-| corded the utmost satisfaction that can be accorded them without in- {lution of 1209 he waa driven from tho ||. * noke. Out His. AON. | Soule bythe enone, a} wal as 6 veted; peoples may now be doin) troducing new or perpetuating old cleme: 5 . a 4 Palace on the sho: Bruiva on tice BENE cide. OF r inedible fader Gara arp ‘ 8 c D ely in time te é ce of Europe at , . c id con- | pnd ol me weish:4i ho ma aS teal id Selt-determination’ 4s not a mero phrase, It 48 an tmperative} consequently of the world. Imo to break the pesce'of Wurope and: |i in the Palace Latini, a tormer | se END eet ea AeA nee Le meCG | ) I Dei principle of action, which statesinen will henceforth ignore at thetr peril.| A general pe ee Jrealdence of a Greck merchant, in men killed in action, but I never want | Milton ¢ el Delivered Co Army We cannot have general peace for the asking, of by the mere arrangements | pin RUHera Dene cled upon such foundations can he discussed. | gy jonica. CONKLIN ASSAILANTS FINED, | the blame of @ fino American gii matiw Sea Lely a fo a peace conference. It cannot be pleced together out of individual un.| tae p Rone, an Pp seenrenl one Maye Aaiehe) At Salonier, prisoner in @ home) gin f Shoemaker At Parte Hay ne year! You'll hyve! sant haw ordered 1,000,000 footballs toe vidua | So far as we can suc a ettniniiar eee : r . mployees 0 | aint rt 8 Herstandings between powerful states. All tho partios to this | » far as Ww ) Judge, these principles that we rega 4 funda-|which overlooked ¢. bay of the Aegean enereen OF & Peet in § the army, t vorod within seven ¢foin in the settlement of every issue anywhere involved in { war must] mental aro already everywhere accepted as imperative, except among the| Sea but which was virtually a fort.| °Ked Deputy Attorney General, | The Army girls, deeply | pont eme jssue any’ ¢ involved tn it; because | anokesmen of the : a ", sf ress, he wasted away, powerle ‘ ymplaint Deputy Attorney | disappoint. Cd) lo ANOther bit | sammscusemmenenaseuenmensneseee What we gre eceking is a peace that we can all unite to guarantee ATK kK man of th ail ar annexationist party in Germany, If they [fort forgotton +: 4nd! Hees Conklin, of No. 610| tered vill nllea = ante 1 ave where clge bron rejecte ‘eo oblector s pot hoan silt | ails i a vil niles from t = Maintain, ond every itemof it must be submitted to the common judgment | oeenn i it BS, SOPSORI BERRIES BANE BOE DEAD RUAISTOAGIY | A teoas Wea Linen wee rere G HOD MAO No. 446 /¢ront, where they are rapidly wit Nao i ne en rous 0 en ; ntoe: ., Salontea, Ab« unt s Henove: i ront, ya pidly wi $ eae : . whether {t be right aud fair, an act of justice, rather than @ bargain be | nna casteat ¢ ee tueln Vole aHelby Putin Gplnce ab Hnguases arose iG t 128th Stroet, and Louls Hane, of | praises trom the Y, M,C. A. with hot) VAY PS ARTHUR Hay Shantey's, tween sovereign sd 'e tragleal ctroumstance 1s that this one party in Germany {5 ap-|frosporus from Constantisople, where 425 West 118th Street lett : oo Trondwa varently willy @ able to send militong of men to thelr death to ; an . y, Shure maker's shop, were fined $5 cach | nemade rH 1 omunen, 1970 “Phe United Siates has no desire to Interfere In European affairs or tol ener wit vie werkt a Arta aaiot men, tAitbetn AbaLE tommee tone Ne RON ee FA oe GE DIE by Maxintrate | Hoaly Washington | £406. ax Brow Nay 4,30 “ oO | what all the world now sees to be j primer prise ? ie Nee ve Liye ; 20. fact as arbiter in Furopean territorial disputes. She would disdain to take it | . Me Conklin told the Court he took a} para Ma bom | eat. —ant advantage of nuy intermal weakness or disorder to impose her own witt| AMERICA CAN NEVER TURN BACK, Vice mahi Teme Ren sts 1 he rotuaed to" pay "an | pontiona ae apie eI Hb FUN EBAY upon another people. “L would not be a true spokesman of the people of the United Stal | PER URARE CaN nts : é a . \Atar s ' , . CHUNOH, Brondway and 66th a, “phe {6 quite ready 1 - i q f nited State lfasoph 8 TApyd ments _— | 6 Bee » explosives fur | yyapalteeetan, 10. > eile She is quite ready to be shown that the ve 4s suggested | If E-dld not say once more that we entored this war upon no ocea-|of the firm of Ioyd & Co, New ¥ isk Mahaska ds Beonea im Dann? . Meld 200 ‘ rie : Saline bitoiead AL are not the best or the most enduring. They are only her own Visional | Sion, and that we can never turn back from a course chosen upon pring | beMKers Bnd broke died to-day at Island Soand, un American battery nw kketch of principles and of the way in which they should be applied, But} ciple. Our resources are jn part mobilized now, and we shall not pause H wi home tn Orange, He was sb W of h = pee a o oi B Ue 1 ; : 7 slie entered this war because she w: partner, whether shegwould | until they are mobilized In their entirety Jnr {hod lived to-e nbarwo | yy atte liar ¢ { ‘ 2 A4th or not, in the sufferings and indignities by the mlitary masters of “Our armies are rapidly going to the fighting front, and will go more |dausuters. He ae TL along, Mike water \t + nore em Maermany against the peace and security of mankind; and the conditions and more rapidly “| y Fate aaenranaeerad atl ere anon 1 “ of peace will touch her as nearly as they will touch any other nation to “Gur whole strength will be put into this war of emancipation eat ’ tanto, WOro BbIO $0 Nod RS Saas peeretoey} pene WiBd AL which {s intrusted a leading part in the maintenance of civilization, Emancipation from tho threat and attempted mastery of seliish groups of |ciarkson Kina found clear water under the | WHEN Aue ie ae ery ae Fhe cannot see her way to peace until the causes of this war are ree autocratte rulers whatever the difficulties and present partial delays, EE arta iaccap caer tievead bir Jong ain _onen road, moved, its renewal rendered as nearly as may he impossible. “We ure indomitable tn our power of Independent actlon and can Se Te ppooi ete ial ¥ “This war had its roots in the disregard of the rights of small | “ ; : des D Es : shite of smal! na no circumstances consent to ive in a world governed by Intrigue an Most of the coal affoat £ r POTIV and of nationalities which lacked the union and the force to make good | Wo bellovo that our own desire for a new international order and Niheitnentee Jannachit cities, Unioss revere | ip Coffea Drinks SELECTIVE DRAFT ir claim to determine their own allegiances and their own forms of|reagon and justice and the common interests of mankind shall pre 5 My SM ee oF M S NUMBERS aitical life, Covenants must now be entered into which will render such | the desire of enlightened men everywhere, ae eh: BS) Uasieve EEN tS w should try z= pA eat) hdngs Impossible for the future; and thowe eovenanty must be backed by “Without that now order the world will be without peace and human| ‘The firet foal of tho year at James Germans HM Repaired Rouman- ff waalial <oree’of ail thei gations: hal love Juation and ara’wijlte. tot lite will ack doteratle conditions of existance and deve: Having |tutlers East” View Stud arrived tan O11 Welln. INSTANT OSTUM | 19 World ae RIASS it iy any cont aot cur hand to the tasic of achteving tt, we shall not turn back 7 hur Se atiretena’ be tansaered HEN A ats Adee ae RI Eas f i “If (erritoriul settlements and the political relations of great popula “Dh that It te not necessary ¢ ' and is . by Importe Zeitung says the, Germans have tions which have not the organized power to rela! are to be do API 4 Ms HS word of what 31s i fed in repair Made instantly, he ors power to ree fe dntermined have sald tn Intended nan threat. That te not the temper of our people. | roleum anac ; : Ms of the pawecti governments which consider themactves 1 have epoken thus on'y that the whole world may know the truelwemen W Fe oa A Sugar saver. | [ mont directly affected. ns Count Hertting propores, why may vo! eoonemle!| aptrit of Amertor. ‘hat men everywhere may know that or passion for Wonderful flavor (Wer Informa tion) { | questions a/so justicn nid for rovernment ia no mere passion of warde, but a pas * | : “fh Tw enty-Five. Cents | rd i FO a catia pos Chates errs wien vemen tenn ah ee anaie eeen Contains no drugs. By Mail 35 | geolves that justice and the yishts of pevples alfec' the whole 1 Uh in- The power of (ie United States 1g » wenuce to no nation f Hi Y Mail 35e \ } "