The evening world. Newspaper, January 19, 1920, Page 2

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nen . - A. sceraaremecmmnanea are = = 1 made by & sub-committee inquiring} and not by Secretary Daniois, The THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1920. xecut f Ar 227 without imte the award of naval decorations) witness replied th criticism was “ ” i execution of Article without TRADING IN SUGAR ‘ + allowing themecives to be stopped 8 goon as it completes its present|/ not of the persons w made the { 4 by arguments, because it is not a FUTURES FEB. 16 tamk of investigating the award of| changes, but of the fact that they i] i} i | question of a public accusation medals, This decision was made to-| were changed with juridical character as regards | Be d to ‘mittes, the unanimous urd by the Knight ) | national policy imposed by the ent a Pound in Either A motion by Senator Pittman, Dem-| Board of a tinguished Service Uliveraat eeneciense ty WhIeH Direction, ocrat, Nevada, to have a separate| Medal to Cupt. atterlee, command legal forms have been provided 7 sub-committee named to make an{ing the coust guard cutter Tainpa . “ik } 1 wil) be ore : hentia ' solely to assure to the accused ‘ { York Cofles and tmmediate investication was defeated. | sunk by . Submarine September Gish: RUavaRISES Ab wEPe Hive? 1 by New Kk Chairman Hale said the committee | 1912, with a loss of all hands, He | | before recognized in publio | dug’ Exchang b. 16, it was an. could not complete its investigation of | compared the circumstances to those! — ilgili priee eatan tie ea 1 va rare Ce ee ai neuned th wwiha ae seston naval decorations in less than ten| surrounding the loss of Commander © | : 3 > 7 F , fants a ‘ , r . aie : want + | adopted Hoard Managers, days and that the inquiry of Admi-al| Bagiey’s ship Several Big Vessels Are Stand- Deported Radicals Reach Rus-;New Government Organized Republican Member to Lead Tend htGh ks always shown fnpest | AOE tne Raa: : M > the d the let- i ; at rN . i ‘or the right and love of justice, hav-| Un tn amends > th t Sieas’s charges would not he under-| Senator Pittinan chen read the 1 ing By the Flooded | sian Border and Will Not | As Successor to Clem- New Move to Seat Five ine been one of the first to clann a| ett when tradir resumed, } taken until the committee had made | ter from Secretary Daniels to Chair- | a Ue ‘ | : ; ‘ ‘a is av mauteees 4 atiowe ; shine WhGew Witt oe } itm report on the matter now under |man Puge outlining his reasons for Fransport, Be Harmed. enceau Cabinet. Pending Trial. ASLO WillIh Wo BaVEE Thee Ore ind in her Saale (0, the REEMA uae $2 i ot be ng to cover by her mora BE os Fhe inquiry into naval awards was/ WT oe sentiments, if maintained, | ASSENGERS SUFFERING. atk ai |. PARIS, Jan, 19.—Alexandre Mil-| AUBANY, Jan, 19—Tho aplit IM essential to the solidarity of na-| Se" f ee resumed after the meeting of the full) Ry, dad te of al {radicals deported from the United terand, Governor of Alsace, to-day the Republican party, due over the tions, all of which are equally inter- |!" ‘ t mM > fa ; = j committee adjourned Sissel vale fanivation”” said Admiral Sime. “The (Boiler Fires Out and There Is| Sites eacted Vibore, the last #ta- accepted the offer of dent Poin- Suspension of the five Socialist mem- sted in preventing the return of a 0 8 testimony g bold 3 . anc s ici similar catastrop: f . ; j Dain cafat itenay : mmeeY | committee is not conversant with the ; nae on before they cross the RUSSIAN care to head the new French Cabinet, bers of the Assembly will be em- otitis tothe Iiehest interest of the; Announce slo of A pee i , Senator Pittman, who directed the| facts and could not change my final, No Heat—Vessel Not in border, late yesterday | Millerand himself will take the port- Phasized to-night. Assemblyman Dutch people not to appear to protect | dub Lu ubove t examination of Adrimal Sims, cau-|oPinion one iota, One who did not Peril. fens t te “Fini un White folio of forcign affairs, the remainder | William C, Amos, Republican, of the troplte by Allowing him ahelter om her earns ' | 2 0 5 ruarded by fi Finnish “White ¢ “0 a tioned him not to comment on any | Wet blood with th Moers dur 2 reesei tac gitab bl bed of the Cabinet he named as follows: 11th Manhattan Distriot, will intro- territory, and to facilitate his) HEAVY STORM UPSTATE. the war would be competent to| Juards" and American immigration yg, or of Wi re trial, which is claimed by the voices matter not related to naval decora-|'M& the Ls rate re waaik a inister of War, And Lefevre: | auc. i . . id by th ives ‘ |ea ywho deserved medats.” With hal dozen other ve authorities, at 5.80 P. M. Saturday. sinister of Marine, M. Londre, Min, (vce, % Msolution seating the five of millions of victims, Village Of Boden Co From att / tons. + Pitan called the Admira's| Chairman Hale raid, “The commit. | TUshing to her assistance, the Ameri- | Miss Olga Erickson, who is attached jster of the Interior, M, Steg; Minis. | PCnding thelr “trial” scheduled to Speen nait cation, e ‘ som. 0 ot here to 4 < , but | Can Army transport Powhatan, dis-|to the American Commiss * of | ter of Public Education Andre Hon- befin pafore the Judiciary Committee sODUS This village f ' attention to the fact that some of bis| tee is not here to award medals, but | CAD ‘ a | oa at Praluitigatoray absous panied ti » Hdueation An ; i HOSPITALS MAKE ude ray ecco recommenda‘ions for decorations had! to investigate the facts surrounding abled 700 miles east of New York party norat; Minister of Finance rancois at 11 o'clock to-morrow, Speaker Sweet, | atorin which ie ragine ove part oF [| been changed by the Knight Board awards already mad ___ [itn 271 mititary passengers and a| rie «peda will be escorted to the! MaPeal: | Min ter of Commerce, M. | however, has the majority well in hand ALIENS AMERICANS \'")"y\. i ap i crew of 200 on board, is being towed | Finnish-Russian border at the bridge! gain: Minister of ratigd,. jand the resolution, in all likelihood, Mantal Tis -ae Porelenets Curae have t hea we A ene beet | into Halifax for repairs. She ts in |at Terijoki, Finnish authorities have ryfopiteau; Minister of Agriculture, | Wil be defeated [Mental Nils’ of Forelgne ured | ye 4y_ morn ales of two } no peril and many vessel are stand- peter the Amercans there will be! af, Ricard: Minister of Public Works, |, 20%" B. Stanchifieid and Martin With Their Physical country nearby, unattended since death, ' [ing by her. Her boiler rooms are) & cessation of hostilities between ar etroquer; Minister Ilygiene, M |W. Littleton, retained by Attorney! Diseases. the roads rende the visit of under- | . | flooded and her passengers are re- oe forces and the Soviet ee Breton; Minister of Liberated Re. |General Newton to aid in the Tae Howplial te waves & of |takers from Sc imposible : } ported by wireless to be suffering | While the radicals are crossing the] sions M. ‘Ti cution of the alists, hav the most successful weapotis against sAeaIS TID Raat ae es » (Continued From First Page.) aan a impestigation tt will find many other sinferesting things. For example, it ‘wil De found that the British Gov- ermment offered to make Admiral Stump a «member of the British Ad- mitalty, and without declining the hemor himself, be asked the Navy De- inquired tf the British Admiralty take in the naval representatives of France, Italy or the answer came back i IN THE NAVY ALL THROUGH THE WAR. ‘Throughout the war there was a Gen. March, Chief of Staff in the United States, didn't get along any toe well with Gen. Pershing, Com- “mander in Chief on the other side. ‘This often happens when brief cable- grams and a distance of 8,000 miles separate officials from their home of-| fices. ul Logically Capt. Gleaves should | have gone to Europe just before the | outbreak of the war as America’ naval pari, if we entered the war, would fall, it was recognized, upon destroyers and Gleaves was in com- mand of our destroyer flotilla, But! because Sims had a reputation for | “getting along well with the British,” he was selected. And he did many splendid things which won him the admiration of the Navy Departinent When the war was over Admiral Sims asked for the post of executive at the Naval War College. It was) reliably reported that he really | wanted to be made Commander in Chief of the Atlantic Fleet. Im truth, be did not apply for the job bimseif but devoted his time to opposing the selection of Rear Admi- ral Henry B. Wilson, who had been in command of Naval Operations Office on the coast of France, where the great bulk of American troops were safely landed during the most destructive activities of submarines, DEPARTMENT DIDN'T LISTEN TO KICK ON WILSON. But the Navy Department didn't listen to Admiral Sims's objection to Wilson, whom he charged with being & poor subordinate. Moreover, there was considerable friction between Admiral Sims and Admiral Benson Chief of Navai Operations, who went to France with the American War Mission. There is a good deal of bitter feel ing in naval circles Admiral time's activities and from being simply the usual attack on a civilian Secretary of the Navy by the profes- sional naval men, this controversy vuns deep into naval jealousics and naval personalities For instance, resentment has never disappeared over the sued by Admiral Sims to the general effect that it the British Navy who got our troops to Burope safely Admiral Glcaves felt compelled to is- over far euhics, naval statement is- OVER SIMS AND BRITISH WARNING Jack of heat and light 271 passengers on the 11 women and 8 child- and 179 enlisted men severely from Among the Powhatan are ren, 4 officers is wmolined to didcredit the work of| There is consierable doubt as to Admiral Sims abroad, for while he| what vessel has the former Ham- was Ashore all the time and men like! hurg-American liner Hamburg in Gleaves, Wilson, Mayo, Benson others had tasks of the same import ance, the feeling is that reaey aaa job in British Admir* disposition to look upon the American Navy as amateurish and crude, often ruffled the pride of had an especially delicate fraternizing with t alty, where a supposed an_ inexperienced outfit, American Naval officers. ‘There is one thing fmn's cherece that will bring out an interesting phase of ihe war. While Admiral Sims was asking for more in Admira Heve British and }'rench for service on the other side, the game time other points on map to look after. solng on at Brest, and off the c of France, aged from London at all, but our de- the British Navy at sea, But the lamentable part of the con- troversy is that while it rehearses the aging to focus past history and attention anew diverts again the the Government the Council of N. Pall Mall Gazette Says Relations Between Nations Are “on North Side” of Friendliness, ah Britwin, “all along } ers as being on th in order that he might go home to hi. Bue U BlutCuEeNt Kiving Lhe exact fix ures und while itis true that the British jaunt marine, whieh had always been larger than ours, carried 48 per cent. of our troops tu bu the United tes ships curried 46 per cent But as far as actually getting our trocps safely to Europe the impression left on the public mind by Admiral Sims's stacement was that the British destroyers and naval vessels actually conveyed more American troops than did our own destroye: The of- ficial figure: show that only 297,000 American troops went to Europe under British escort, while 1,720,260 went under tho escort of the United States Navy The percentages are 81 per cent. under American escort, 14 per cent. urder British escort and 8 per cent. under French escort, SIMB IS CREDITED WITH PER- FORMING DELICATE TASK. Nobody in he Navy Department and warships While the office af Chief of Naval Opera- tions in Washington was anxious to do all it could to grant the requests of Admiral Sims in London, it had at the It had to keep in the closest touch with what was t| Cedric for safety as soon as the seas and with actunt naval operations, as these were not man- stroyers and battleships were under the direct command of Admirals of mistakes or “lessons” of the war, it on minds af the legislative branch of from the most im- portant of all duties—namely, the es- tablishment of American influence in fons so that wars NAVY DISCLOSURES DON, Jan, 19.—The “exhibitions” ary Danlels, in reiations be United States and struck onlook- north side, of friend- ly," the Pall Mall Guzette declared to- day. Commenting on Admiral Sims’ statement before the Senate Naval Af fairs Committee, the newspaper de- If Congress Insists upon an in- tion, “we ought to have some interesting disclosures." he Westininster Gazette sald it be- REDS ARE BAILED tow. A wireless message reccived the Chalestown, Mass,, Navy Yara declared the Cedric, of the White Star Line, had passed a line to the dis transport. A similar mes Sage, received at the Army T ne port Service in New York, said the }] British steamer Bardic had the trans n| port in tow, It is believed the pas »| senger-carrying Cedric at first stood “| by, but gave up the tow to the slower abled Veasels, the Navy Department was . answering the pleas of the British| Bardic when the latter came up. and French on this side that the The mewage received here de United States take over Central and| .; 3 Downed ei he tiie South American waters and thus re- hen PaaS concer nthe aren mediante danger, but added: “W re O. K. Water practically stopped, but passengers very uncomfortable with no heat or light.” “A tremendous sea is running,” the wireless message state The pas- sengers will be transferred to the moderate. The Powhatan loft New York last Friday for Antwerp. irst news of the accident was received Sunday afternoon, When 8. O. 8S. calls were sent out. The Powhatan, formerly the Ham- burg-American liner Hamburg, once the temporary yacht of the Kaiser, and the ship that took Col, Roosevelt from this port when he started for his Af ican hunt, reported late yes- may become a thing of the past. As|terday: Phil Giths cabled from London the| “Ship leaking in fire room. Fire other day, «site maey Gre naval! room flooded. Steam not sufficient to n over there, and doubtless ov ure Not yet ready "to get the [Operate Pumps. Assistance requested. Of blood ou! of thelr nostrils." | Northeastern gale blowing.” iain Col, J. B. Mitchell, in charge of the LONDON EXPECTS army transport service, asked tho Halifax authorities to send tugs from there. Also three revenue cutters from the Boston district, two destroy- ers from Newport and the two incom- ing transports, Northern Pacific and Martha Washington, were ordered to go to the assistance of the Powhatan, The transports are bringing home the last of the A. EB, F. men from Brest, t]and probably have reached the Pow- hatan, ‘The East Coast Fisheries Company | steam trawler Curlow called for a sistance last night and reported her position as about 260 miles southeast of Boston, The steamer Sea Bird was standing by he Shipping Board steamer Inde pendence, which lett Newport News .| Thursday for Rotterdam, reported by wireloss that she was stuck in the mud off Cape Henry, A tug sent The Independence is a vessel of 7,000 the semi-offictal explanation | tong gross. given in Washington of the warning} ‘The Shipping Bourd tanker Wilhelm miven Admiral Sims before he left for] Jobson reported that she Ww Great Britain may possivly be true. abled and was drifting on a Sims, the newspaper continued, was | latitude 27.55 north and longitude 78. known as rong pro- British, and, it} west The Coa Guard steamer added, st might have seemed adviswble | Yamacraw was notified of her diffi- to Ainerican na icles culty, ‘The Wilhelm Jebsen, which AD TSTORAMAL BAe ara has a gross tonnage of 7,204, loft New Lene ‘ York Tuesday Blanco, ee ane i" Mexico, TWO MORE ALLEGED 6 Lake Harney, a 2,500-ton freighter, went aground at 3 A.M. to- day off Patchogue, L. I is with- out cargo or passengers and is 1% wl ty be resting easily one and Set linarid eta oaed saree ape half miles off shore,” Capt. M. Toe nesNaL an: sormlebube nted Jin "White, with the life-saving orew yestemlay for two alleged Reds! of the lue Point station, went out Abraham Serebieny of N 1242 New ndexd stil but was told no York Avenue, Brooklyn, and Fred aawisianen was nevdod. it ix hoped No 6 » been confined on | ‘0,float the vessel at high tide. Uniic, who have been confined on] ie eiimer Monteres, Vern Crug Bilis Island pending deportation. |to Now. York, erty feng ts Friends of Serebieny raised his bail] day to ‘Tampa, Fla, that she had Sighted the hulk of the schooner Ca- vonia off Point Governadora, on the s wife and children, whe are reported | Norn goast of Cuba The vessel an 1 coast of Cuba, ‘The 18 to be sick, peared to have burned during the Beginning day « regular| night and the crew was not aboard budget of papers in thirty cases will bags be offered every day unt all of the eget radicals rearesented byt the | SALW AGED SHIP Joffice of Ch Recht have been W |builed out. According to Rose Weiss, HERE WITH BRIDES Jan dawoc jate lawyer, Who haw ohar f the cases, of the 15 on the ishind afire when shells in her maga- .|4i1 are represented by this office, xploded, shortly after the Armis- Forty-three of these have been re-|tico was sign rid auntie {nthe Har. 1 since Thursday pe . c |bor of ‘Trafalgar by guns from the for | Thirty sand dollars wae placed (rt Of Trafalgar by guna from the fort, Thiet Hania Saturdayetoreiee |[%% OpbIe, a converted naval transport DU SeMLGLARG: CHET Te TaGAT ae tae | HAGA MONA Ore Salle dioe cAsecieAn tives of those detained red him | *ailory raised the vessel, rebuilt the nuch « In order to handle the |stern which had been shot off by the matter of bail without confusion Miss |guns from fort and the odd looking Weise indexed the cases. pple a here with nine war brides, Engli#h and Spanish girls, who Bail ne rrfed men of the salvage crew, The boules of fourteen sailora who died Acting on the request of counsel,| Gibraltar were also brought over ‘i avons Daeny |i P Act, from $50,006 ga t@ work, He > he v ° ’ v0U and $10,000 rage I na teen / y.' York yesterday, ‘Pushing ¢ | brid The Russian Soviet Government, it was said, has sured the American Finnish authorities, that its troops will not molest the “R as they enter Russia on their to Petrograd. “T start » into Russia. way for Russia with emotions, mma Goldman before the train departed. “Of course I want to see what ahead, but 1 leave much that is dear behind. I send my regards and love to all in America, both enemies and friends.” arch of the radicals’ bage: © it was put aboard the t rn vealed some instances of pilfering of property from the Buford, which car- mingled said, just t ried the party from New York to | Hango., | ach member of the party was pro- \ vided wih five days* OMcials corted only army ration: aid the party would be s far as the Finnish side of the border. From there they must carry their bag; into Russia. iin sate sto BRITISH WARSHIPS RUSH TO BLACK SEA Admiralty Says Movement Is to Protect Subjects From Bol- shevik Advance. Hearing to Consider vements. Deputy Public Service Commissioners Alfred M, Barrett and M. 'T. Donnolly held a public hearing to-day to consider stiggestions for impre wh a dr ny Island Ta pu lission by barge: sce sof Inst. week with the Deputy Commissions Richard T. Coiner, represent Department, whieh has cc navigable streams, Horough President Connolly of Queens suggested that a new bridge, with a clearance of twenty-four feet at high tide, be constructed and that it provide for the rapid transit line which the city proposes to build into that section, ued GAS KILLS FAMILY OF FIVE. her, Mother and Dead in Philadelphia, PHILADELPHLA, 19.—-An en- tire family of fi wiped out by gas to- in this city dead five 8 old, a his wife, thelr sixteen-ye nthe father of Mrs. Kelly domestic servant used, th ng the W trol of a Among Jan was r ho > rial Set for Beb. 2: Federal District trial of Edward nN former proprietor of th Evening Mail, for Feb, 23. Rum charged with “conspir to d the Government in that he failed report to the enemy allen property eu R Jud) Court, ly Hi to- umely, nd y the t the Andre Tardieu, former Fr | Commission: the United States, | refused to retain his portfolio as Minister of Liberated Regions The new Cabinet holds first meeting at the new I jer's home at 4 o'clock this aft | The choice of M mier has created ‘ston in neh High noon Miller an excellen Parliamentary 1 as Pre- mpres- circles: ae CLEMENCEAU KEEPS PEACE COUNCIL POST Will Not Resign That Body As Vill ssident of Adriatic Question Is Settled. PARIS, J 19 (Un )—_ Georges Clemenceau, retir Premier, will continue a ler the Supreme Council until the Adriatic nd other pressing problems have been led, it was belleved to-day Contrary to expectations, he has not resigned as head of the Council The Jugo-Slav deleg have t yet reevived a reply on the tentative solution f »sition of Fiume advanced by the Couneil. | — MARTENS ON STAND MALTA, Friday, Jan, 1 —Orders} > Did Ne seis Hara were received Thursday n sht for a|O4YS He Did Not Register Here a number of naval vessels to cave Malta, German Because He Had Be- apparently for the Blac. Sea. Vice a ey Admiral De Robeck sa‘ don Friday comes Russian) Ciugen, on board the battleship iron Duke, ac- WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—After laid- companied by the dvtroyers Serapis| wig ¢. A. K. Martens, self-styled fu and Steadfast and th» steamer Hibis-| ion Soviet Ambassador to the Unit © Dy other shi» available is pre- ee bp! to jeave on Sunday had given a brief persona LO ION an. 9 With r of himself and his life Russ the Malta de ateh re ved he nate Committ investigati announcing an apparently importa : he Unit naval movement the Admiralty vad it Ihevik propag ta in the United “may be taken for granted” ‘that the | » adjourned suddenly to-day b ships in question were ing to the | ea its members had age- Black Sea to protect British subjects | 1. and interests in case they were ri- | ™ y threatened by the Bolshevik ad-| Just before adjournment, Marter e to the ¢ replying to quest by ¢ Mo- — eens | ses, said was born in By re NEW FLUSHING BRIDGE. | man parents, and was educated in Rus aad |sian schools as a mechanical engine — He was arrested in 1896 for a) i Long Island muters Attend eee ee nt priaon t was deport nt to s nd and came Senat United St T had pertec b TRADE GROWING WITH GERMANY WASHINGTON, Jan, 19.—A stead- volume trade be- iy and the United States, with A n exports to the enemy country r ng in November of 1919 almost 50 per cent. of what they were ly of tween Germ increasing in the same month of 1913, is shown in foreign commerce reports made public by the Departinent ot Com- meree Food products are going to Germany while chemicals and fertilizers are be- ing sent here Imports from Germany were valued at $291,166 in July, 1919, and by No- vember the volume had grown to a value of $3 919. ‘The imports in nvember, 1413, were valued at $14,- August exports to Germany Vat $11,874,257 in 1919, or the corresponding 74, in 191 todian his interest’ in the Even Mau.” . - Old police hi at No, 300 Deat Testify om Black-| yy rry Street wa. a box this rd, morning and wh " JTouse LOUISVEIL Jun, 1% —Testi | reached the Tr 1 he boiled ing of Rebecca Loveall, twenty-one, | Han on the rac will be written on’ a blackbe d in aourt ‘Tuesday Mhe victim was a] 3" POR eran inte min deat mute, as is the accused going toe the Are tre ae foing andthe ofl Steel MIM Blow Up Wills Ubree, e wat with a fr T CHICAGO, Ind, Jan, 19 SPOOR OF SOB BOO ES ‘Three nmn were killed and elevgn . her 4 to-day by an explosinn{ WON'T FIGHT EDWARDS. | stated and Steel Company here. Gener WHE Not Act for - ~~ on League, Snowplow Kills Veteran I ry vag 18 tata AL Storm, al MeOnan announced to: OSWRUO, Jan While walking eA Aceh ae ramusieter janow storm f nid @ vet) to institute proceedings in the State Sus A snow plow and killed dll ne EO DISA e CAYe ACE Baa | GARY, Ind, J 19—Two men were] plate rom taking 0} on | Lene 44 l i LN cia MODATALT TIO. CAIREMLSEC OTe Interstate Steel Mills at East! amount provided for unde the State io, Indiana. Plomint Practices act, {lished headquarter at the vel. Morris Hillquit and other counsel for the Socialists, tc er with the five suspended members, are ext ected here to-night It is expected the trial will last the better part of ead the jis talk of night sessions fe Assembly to enable it to keop with its work SOCIALISTS OPEN ALBANY QUARTERS Hillquit ind Other Counsel Go to Lead Fight for Ousted A semblymen Morris Hillquit, leader o 8 Uist Party in this State, with th party's lezal committee and counsel and their clerks and stenograpt moved their headquarters to-day from this city to the Ten Eyek Hotel Albany They have several trunks full o papers, prepared to meot any state- ments which may be urged by Attor- hey General Newton and Martin Lit tleton, his in the proseeu t the five Social- nded from the Sweet and | by a st which f combine repre “Whate law | Bolshevism by Dr. Copeland, Com- missioner of Health, in an «ul for | | public support of hospitale, prompted by the financial embarrassment hospital New York Bolshevism “Invariably, Jers in New York whi | shelte ud cared for by a ho tude that ofte € and bitte is dis) earryin ork, 1 fun and been forced to mits work, On he unds of L 4 me, New Y ker | TO USE BIG ARMY BASES FOR TRADE ,| Many Depots on Atlantic Coas | Will Be Leased to Com- | mercial Interest ed A the wa now IS TAKEN UP BY OFFICIALS OF HOLLAND « tinued From First 1 reusons Which imperio promeditated sly exact that ot violations inter tional treaties, as well as disregard the most sacred r chts of nations, tomatic and r 1 receive as regards every placed t provided one, including the special Peace highest pu Con personalities, “ses the by cress “The powers briefly recall, among 80 many crimes, the cynical violation of the neutrality of Belgium and Luxemburg, the barbarous and pitiless system of hostages, deportation en masse, the carrying off of young girls from the city of Lille, who were torn from their families and de- livered defenseless to the worst promiscuity. The systematic de- vastation of entire regions with- out military utility, the submarine war without restriction, including inhuman abandonment of victims on the high seas, and innumerable acts against non-combatants com- * mitted by German authority in violation of the laws of war. “Responsibility, at least moral, for all preme head who ordered them, or made these acts reaches up to the su abusive use of his full powers to tn- frin or to allow infring nt, upon the most sacred regulations of human conscience, EXPECT HOLLAND TO TAKE A SIMILAR VIEW. “The powers cannot conceive that the rmment of the Netherlands can Yr rd with less reprobation than themselves Gov the immense responsi- bility of the former Empe “Holland would not fulfil her national duty if she clate herself with other nations as far her mean. east not hindering, chast ‘or inter- refused to asso- ement of ies committed “In addressing this demand to the Duteh Government, the powers believe it their duty to emphasize its special character 1 “It is their duty to insure fhe BROADWAY WANTS Assogiation’s Referendum Re | Over Im Voi | fal y Avsoctation nounce uth dum am its member t some time ago, had resulted ii overwhelming vote in favor of suggestion that the Broadway be torn up and ice substituted for the troliey serv A tabulation was said to show 17 per cent of the members to w ballots were gent voted for tl line; 15 per cent we favor taining the street cars, and 8 per e¢ tur ballots. without v The b showed, it wa that not only did morehants d business on Broadway object to y ent conditions, but heads of bani insurant mpanies likewise d red for the substitution of bu for street cars For Monday, Jan. 19th ASSES HONEY kock— thrills t SPECIAL POUND HON gery an tooth. OLD PASTIION VAe LA CHOCOLATE CREAMS—Here iso combinath that is bound to i le to every eandy Tover, Bie mounds of | ullow in undertaking, or fer Sweet wolate ND box only cure the physical diseases of the immigrant classes to whom give their free and unstinted service,” Dr Copeland declares, “but they also cure far more vicious discase. It is the | hatred America that expresses it- | self in present-day agitation for a cure-all, which its supporters call ed. Open S TRACKS REMOVED of en- 4 3 BIG UPSTAIRS STORES New York Store, 226 W. 125th Street. Open Evenings. r {) Brooklyn Store, 435 Fulton St. urday Evenings. Newark Store, 149 Market St. Open Saturday Evenings. Bend for Catalogue. PEASE PIANO COMPANY, 128 West 42nd Street 34 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn 87 Halsey St., Newark, N. J. Notice to Advertisers ‘ Advertising copy and release or- ders for either the week day Morn- ing World or The Evening World, ff received after 4 P. M. the day pre- ceding publication, can be inserted only as space may permit and ia order of receipt at The World of- fice. Advertising copy for the plement Sections of The World must be rece M. Thursday preced b and releases must be received by 4 P.M, Friday. Advertising copy for n the M Sheet of The Sunday Worid must be received by 6 P. M, of the preceding Friday and releases must be received by 12 o'clock noon Saturday. Copy or orders received later than as provided above will not Serve to earn discounts of any character, contract or otherwise. THE WORLD. or can be The World. York, oF vr Foy Tuesday, Jan. 20th OOLATR RIS COVERED EN That big varlety hox with bardty ment, any CHOCOLATE, MAMSH- MILK COV PRE MALLOY pleasin would Bie rshimutiows, vfhiah 75c New Woeation see Hate, LOUND ‘Tox bei

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