5 terminals MOUNT JOY STAR AND NEWS, MOUNT JOY, PA. mma | 0 ~~ | Biwwovorvrrrrororsvrvovrororrrovrss¥ ] \ | Morrrrrrsrsroses j William Churchill of the Committee HSSh- ! EUTON | } } i NIA HOLDS : 3 on *ublie formation told louse p i - AY WORLD WAGS aie oo I nN on So a | ; BOLO PASHA : y : LATE CEGIL SPRING re on Asti Popa - 3 1 TRIE jr —r——— T n 18541 % I Rg on : oh ” fod [ R Si i MN : German &py Doomed : pi Ek mm All IES 3 Former British Ambassa- J heft from the ‘New York censorshiv i “ WIN : to Face Firing Squad. ,\ bY g si $ dor Succumbs in Sleep. office ———— ! Ld y sam Ritsrsiiionedsasssnssovsrosesrvaiid J | ka Wife of a : fori ly ‘a ; | OPPO OPO OOOO PPCOO OLS we la . a Big Stories and Minor Events| worker testifying in a federal mquisv | L8QACrS Unanimously Rejec | “Will Survive or Perish With En- : sald the family poverty is such that | nr ve rap He § § tente Cause.’ . roa Message Blue Penciled Into Quickly she has never heer 3 motion: picture | ys Declared Policy cof | e : e ys sag : ; Snow or to Lincoln Park, never rides | “No ar 1 | apa"? rom Jassy. Read Paragraphs. on street cars and has never seen Lake YA Ww but No Peace. | | SY Michigan, although she has beer in Chi | — - [ [ cago six years QQ CArRTQ NTER G N % DOINGS AT NATION'S CAPITAL. Additional names of survivors mci. | RUSSIA DESERTS ENTENTE. NOW FIGHTS BOLSHEVIKI cate that not more than 170 Americans | — | | " . | ) were lost with the Tuscania. | Von Kuchimann Declares Breakup | Troops Said to Occupy Almost the En. { Happenings That Caused a Stir Briefly taking pla ak nee Chronicled—Bulletins | Atlantic const in shipbuilding yt Progress of the Gigantic War | prov at Home and Abroad. | The strikes About the government's prog volved, WAR BULLETINS and breaking down of pered in transportation and face A 3) (Ops arlev i tO . . | r y i} I'he peace parley at Bres.-Litovsk worse situation. {| between Emperor William and mili- ended in a violent quarrel between Dr ary a ities aders airy ES : Indorsement of the federal amend- | GY and political leaders, Petrograd | von Kuehlmann, Count Czernin and : : ment for Trotzky, at which seeds of future dis- by the Executive National Democratic Washington woman suffr was cord were sowed. O itt : mittee Austrians resumed ol $ new Italian line i valleys, but were after a referentlum to tl committeemen representing the Cp. Se states, Immediately on the right of the American position an the St. Mil lent the French Germans’ front, reaching their line trenches lel sa made a drive German-American War Bois hetween the along the Is are ing to be a serious menace to the am of construction Many men have walked out ir the last | . en | few days in the various shipyards in Because of shortage of locomotives hundreds of | up military others the railroads are seriously ham- a | conference a voted Committee of the [LR > 1 All ian Workmen's and Sol- | diers’ Councils that Russia's with- HOG ISLAND GHARGES { drawal was a real one and i1hat all ; | agreements with her former a!lies had of Brest-Litovsk Conference Will Cause Fighting to Reopen, No Designs on Russia, London.—Peace on German having been rerused by the terms Bolsheviki sovernnment, Germany will again ke operations against north- This decided at a t imperial headquarters ern Russia, was probably will be the let of the | sion. | After deliberating government's with- | the court martial in al from the wy heard the case of foreign | of found him guilty and sen communication | tenced him to deat! from Petrograd says Trotzky informed | = Hew in t The only 15 minute Bolshevik has been reiter- Ky. the wireless by Leon Tro treason, minister, A tre and the Mort Mare woods and Newspapers of Germany accuse bringing back with them many prison : a ] ers ident Wilson of wishing : oil V » Judge, wi » object Two thousand Serbian prisoners of he | ape e, with i ojo iL war captured by the Russians from the oe nglo-Saxon rule upon all the n: : ons, Austrians, who had compelled them to | : : ; have been released | American batteries played in t i fight, camps in Siberia. | Mukden on their way to Dalny and Ja- | from jp y : now at | portant part in the artillery supporting the big i French in the Champagne and, it w: They are ment pan, when they will re 1 to Europe | 5 y by way of America. offic Hy reported, gave very ef tiv 2 i . | Support, President Wilson stands head and Pi shoulders above all others as the| Dr. Garfield rescinded his order fo spokesman of the allied peoples, in the opinion of the Maid hester (Eng.) Guardian, mainly because he is able to keep firmly and constantly in view the | reasons came | Speech confirmed the opinion that th United States ] less Mond Local fuel authorities were en red to use their discretion. pow Close scrutiny of President Wilson why the United States into the war, rmany an be would act interest, desires peace, but before it « attained her recognize that Germany hus been vie- President Wilson in an address te torious, Emperor Willian Congress emphatically Ply to an address latest burgomaster of Hamburg on the con- America enemies must said in re- presented by the | Miny's clared will put its whole , unfettered by any self independently i any negotiations looking toward peace, bon:hard- s tice expired on € ays and theaterless Tues 1 ‘e'| ) rejected Ger peace proposal and de clusion of peace with the Ukr: strength into this war of emancipa tion. He made a sharp distinction be tween the German and Austrian re- plies, and lis address was interpret appeal to Austria to breal from Germany's domination. WASHINGTON ed as an a The character of scveral army can { ’ torunents will be changed wher they | cated by their present occu | LV according to a new gene ff which woul 1 alter the : SPORTING System ng replacement troops. Two About fifty-five players of the Amer ial embarkation camps are also ican League are now in governnient A. service, About twenty-six men have resident Wilson took charge of the | left the older circuit for the bigger probe into the affairs at Hog Island, | Same, scene of the largest shipbuilding I'ie Braves have captured Catcher project launched by a ment. He directed Attorney Gregory to assign an official of the de- partment of justice to an investigation, ever John Henry Hereafter baseball clubs will ¢harce cents and 77 cents for TO cent seats, govern- from the Washington club General 25 cent and respectively, and $1.27 for $1.25 seats in order not to handle pennies bec the war tax, New including the war tax, will De amounted | 30 cents, H3 cents and 83 cents and : S110 and $1.40. immediate Washington announces that the ship- ping construction in Great Britain and the United States last year 102,064,097 tions would bri lions. ause of prices, tons and Besides reaching an agreement with A $57,000,000 £as J. ; $2 making plant at 50,000 for Strunk's signature and purchased Outfielder Toronto Club of the Interna- 1 Leag to a contract Edgewood, a high explosive Hook $8.000,000 for port terminals at Sandy and! from the Boston | tion ue, uded in the esti projects for were incl army ordnance depots, stor The National League | has launched a plants blow at | | rowdyism on the ball field. In the future neither 1 I comedian coachers aviation we ronments r players who specialize in “goat get ting” by other means will be tolerated in the circuit, Hereafter exem- behavior will be insisted upon. and hospitals, making a $268.650,000, total outlay of older Surgeon of the | plary raisteac General B Bavy was appointed for another term Edward G. Barrow resigned as pres- ident of the International League to succeed Jack | Boston Red S Resumption of intercollegiate base- ball at Harvard was considered bright when 50 candidates for the varsity and 3aseball minori- | larry as man- declaring the | X unjust tax of | Iy on the peo- riipistration railroad bill in t.° report to the leasure would place an some K200,000,000 annus: senate, ager of the the retention of the lines y geyernment even for one doy | pesnunn squads reported to Coach after peace is declared would place | Hugh Duffy for the first time. Thirty too much power in the hands of the the men were listed as vi irsity can- President. didates, 5 Te. ¥ GENERAL | FOREIGN 3 Le GER Director of Railroads McAdoo has Bolo Pacha was convicted of and condemned to treason taken the first step in a death by for the! in France standardization of all railroad equip-| a court martial, which after a - meat. tional trial deliberated only 15 min- Chairman of the Republican! utes before reaching a decision. One National tes has declared | of his accomplices also was condemned against that body taking part in pres to die. Another was sentenced. to dential nomination battles. Seized papers show that Swift & Co. the Chic: kept prominent men on fil Chairman Hurley of the States Shipping Board a ers to return to work, action cuts lif and Boos in France, The N vation: practice of fers for ball dermine the 1 1 [ clubs and dis- three years in prison. Wilson and Premier Lloyd zarded in London as the President are reg two Ar figures of the world and the general public hails Mr. Wil- k-| son as the man of the hour, who will ing their | pe a commanding figure when the time America | for an agreement on go packers, records of George United to sti war line bet ween general peace comes. The Pope favors the Red Cross move- ment to stop use of poison gas in war. Three hundred and sixty-four strikes, involving 54,668 workmen, occurred John Evers, the Red Sox obtained Amos | George Whiteman | been v ted. The councils approved | Trotzky’s S policy. { Criminal Action, Rion Against Shipbuilding Company. of | a This was re- which holds that The negotiations at broke up in a which Trotzky enunciated a policy “no war, but no peace.” stormy session, jected by Germany, Assume Control of All in Trotzky's declaration ended the armis- | the Country : intry. tice on the Russian front. "The armis- | Thursday. i It is indicated in Vienna dispatches | Washington.—Investigation by the that the central powers made peace | department of justice of the Americ with the Ukraine in order to offset International Corporation's their diplomatic defeat at the hands | of Trotzky. It is reported that Ger many will support the Ukraine against the Dolsheviki, An Amsterdam dispatch states by virtue of the treaty tion of the government's hig ng st | Was ur that | a view with Ukraine, by which the status quo ante of the | frontiers between Austria-Hungary | pendlitnte of government money, ablished, Austro-Hungarian | Wednesday entered Brody | possession of to criminal prosecutions if thie facts develop more than were est [ The American International troops on ration is composed of f and took peaceful the | country’s most powerful financiers, Ss a dispatch from Vienna. | Thus the last big town in East Galicia was returned to Austria-Hungary, Doctor von Kuehlmann, town, sa Chairman Hurley of the Board, who had requested the Hog 1s the German | land action, indicated that the COrpo- ation’s contracts for secretary, in a speech ‘at the building the last session at Brest-Litovsk expressed | and the belief that Germany and Austria | still with Russia when the armistice ended the war | government might take over revived, | i te withdrawal from the war $7 \iete fs a real withdrawal, and peans the | > all agreements with | urged by members of yard ships, involving many mil- lions of dollars, might be canceled, ; srt and that af war taken to wean that the the yard, and build This step has been | which was was i construction Russia's : Cag was the (ships itself. the senate com- throwing away of her former allies, said Leon Trotzky, | mittee investigating shipbuilding, Bolshevik foreign minister. He wis | Later it was officially announced at reporting to the All Russian Work-| the offices of the Shipping Board that Soldiers’ Councils on the | the government intends taking over | | reno | men’s and | | oQi1]t : » » ren | i i ] | result of the Brest-Litovsk conference, | the management of six shipyards work- according to a Russian wireless dis. | ling on government contracts, Goy- patch, | : ' croment control will be extended to os { : ; 2 + | other yards just as rapidly as the Austria Keeps Army on Russian Front. | | Fleet Corporation can organize an op- Amsterdam.- Charles of | | erating staff to handle them, iz icte Spe uy . J he 2 Russian declara- [ dicted, until practically all of the 132 > | yards now in operation are placed un- Emperor Austria has issued an army with the 1 termination of the war, Fe reviews the events leading to Russia's | der the immediate military collapse and continues : ernment agents, “And yet the iS Dre- order in IS pie tion of direction of gov- hour has not This government action has become when I am able to recall my warriors | 3 pressing necessity in certain to their homesteads, but their | will come. Then may my draw strength from their of the glorious deeds of their sons, for new prosperity. come yards, return | { | connection | | the Shipping Board, {ross umismat | it was stated at i peoples | because of | igement un- es 1 covered. The Hog last September, ' ; - SF ontract was signed | May God be with us. Islind cont t was signed The above imperial order was ap- At that time the cost | | parently issued before Germany's an- | of the completed yard, with its plant | nounced intention to resume hostili- | for assembling and 50 shipways, was ties against Russia. | estimated at $21,000,000, Already, —_— with the yard and plant less than 60 | | Tobacco Train to France. | per cent. jinished, $2 27,000,000 has been Durham, N. C.—A train of 30 cars | spent, and the cost Gf completion is oa a X 3 : lv estimate { r X15 - loaded with tobacco destined for the | rarity iy a fot Sloe | i : \ 3 QO I) , ), 00! more, The com- American troops in France was given | plet roject is expected t jus | 4 rousing sendoff here as it started on | P'¢1€d Project is expected to co e- n pleuse tlic Gross in expected to le Japan during 1917. in shipbuilding is | The British government refused to d to government control | ze the treaty of peace signed by of thie yards the Ukraine and the central powers, Ameri t ne are being Frederick W. Galley, eighteen years constructed. { old, of Brooklyn, was with Gen- United States treasury expenditures | eral Pershing’s forces, has been report- are $10.000.000 a day. | ed missing. Will II. Hayes of Indiana was chosen The names chairman of the National Committee of | ieney he vessels for who of four Americans, killed in action, two wounded and one one the Republican party in the commit- tee's meeting at St. Louis. vho died from wounds, appeared on the Canadian casualty list, ‘The evacuation of northeastern Galicia its way tween $42,000,000 and $50,000,000, Mayor Newsom made a patriotic a¢ En large crowd that Frei to see the large consignment of local products start for the front. A A A A AAA ANIA [ 1 dress to a | Record Warship Construction. Washington.—A suggestion of the {1 rapidity with which the United States | ji is turning out | was destroyers and other | | contained in a warships state- that the | destroyer Taylor has Just been launch- | PITH OF THE | the Mare 3 | ment by Secretary Daniels Island navy yard four W A R N EWS months after the keel was laid. This | breaks all American records and possi- —e | bly those A dispatch from the headquarters of | the American army in France stated | FOREIGN TRADE. UNDER LICENSE of foreign countries, that the Germans made an unsuc- | : cessful attack on Pershing’s men | President Issues Sweshing Proclama- with gas shells, airplanes in ares | tions on Exports and Imports, AEE aiding. i Washington.—A war measure even A lively artillery mattle was maintain. more revolutionary and farreaching | ed on the sector in Champagne | in effect than the Garfield order which where American batteries are sta. | shut down industry for five days and | added other restrictions on the norm: ivities of the nation was adopted, | when President Wilson issued procla- | tioned. ac by Ukrainian troops has begun. The Spanish press, commenting on | 3 J President Wilson's speech, declared | license the entire foreign commerce of | that “Germa any must now bow to the the United States, which will add United States.” 1,000,000) tonnage to transport service, French and British armies lie silently | opposite the German forces awaiting | PALMER caLLs FoR VIGILANTES. the signal for the great spring fight- | X = ing. Enemy Property Custodian Begins Na- Emperor Charles greeted peace with tion-Wide Campaign. the Ukraine as the fruit of Austria’s | ‘Washington.—A. Mitchell defensive war, alien property custodian, Count von Hertling, the Kaiser's chan. | tion-wide campaign to round up all, cellor, will reply to the speeches of | alien enemy property that is being President Wilson, Lloyd George and | secreted in various places. Instances Dr. Orlando in an address to the | have been reported to him of bankers] reichstag. | canceling hundreds of thousands of 1 After a massacre at Kervo the Red worth of alien owned seecuri- {'] Guard wired to Helsingfors for am. | ties. Palmer calls upon loyal citizens | bulances and surgeons; upon arrival | to give information which will stop the | the latter were slain. | flow 1 money into énemy territory. mations making subject to control by Palmer started a na- ( dollars | t Paris which Bolo Pasha, accused C NIN AS NINSNSNS ASS NAS NSIS INS NS NSIS If Warranted, Government Expected Eventually to construc- fubricat- cel shipyard at Hog Island, Pua., Jered by President Wilson with reckless ex- Corpo- some of the Shipping | to the fuel 0 tion within a y restrictions on farmers, walks a e | estimates, was favorably reported to | the house by Chsirman Sherley. | tire Province of Bessarabia—De- mand by Germany Not an Ultimatum, defied the | worst and London. —Rumania has | | central powers to do their has decided to stake her existence upon a victory by the allies, according to cabled messages from Jassy by way of | Salonica. Rumania, said the mes- sage, “disdainfully ignored” Germany's | ( threat and *will survive or perish with Ottawa, Ont.—Death came peaceful. here to Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, until ently British ambassador to the S " Tar the allied cause, iy The Rumanians apparently continue | r to battle bravely against almost over nited States. The diplomat passed Tvwei 1 "w : ¥ away ‘hile i is glee ‘ Gove whelming odds. Their troops are said Way while in his sleep at overy ment IMouse in the presence of Lady to occupy practically the entire prov- Spring-Rice aged eleven, years, and their children, Betty, Jessarabia, : Bes thia and Anthony, aged nine ince of Bolshevik troops having been ‘beaten in several battles. According to the Tageblatt of Berlin | IDLE MONDAYS ENDED Garfield Cancels Order and Issues Optional Restrictions. Rumania by form of an urgent enter According to | the demand made upon Germany was not in the ultimatum but merely was an that the Balkan into peace negotiations, the same authority the time limit set was Wednesday. Previously it was reported that Field Marshal Macken- ultimatum on Fchruary 6 request state sen sent an demanding that peace parleys begin | Fuei Administrator Reports Inlang , | within four days. | Transportation of Coal Is Prac- A semi-oflicial dispatch from Berlin says the German field gotiating with the command regarding the armistice. nite settlement ; tically Uninterrupted. marshal is ne- Rumanian high continuation of Washington. — Fuel Administrator This message says deti- | Garfield upon this point is de- suspended indefinitely the Monday shutdown orders. , | manded on fecount of te reiarious He lifted likewise the ban on Just entered into by the central pow- ers and the Ukraine, A dispatch from Geneva say of the central the- aters and other amusements hereto- fore required to close down cn Tues- S news gning of peace between the days. powers and the Ukraine, fol- report of the The order was issued with the full lowed by the demobiliza- tion of the Russian army, had a nota- ble effect on the Swiss bourses. En- | tor general of approval of William G. McAdoo, direc- transportation, who tente allied exchange rates were low- | said: ered slightly, while those of the cen- “With a few weeks of favorable fal powery jnereased, Petrograd EX | weather I am sure that the railroads change rotes advanced. The exchange will be able to take care of their re- on neutral countries continues to fall. thors sponsibility. industri: BOLO PASHA MUST DIE. ndustrial “The general activity of the country should be carried forward Adventurer and Accomplice Sentenced | 10 the utmost limit. The railroads are in Paris for Treason, a fundamentally important Pasha, on trial for | the situation, and the public rest found guilty and sen- | assured that they will be operated to tLe limit of their capacity. “I believe that there is every reason factor in Pari. treason, was tenced to death, The speciti¢ Bolo may charge against him was | “intelligence with the enemy.” { Pili Cavillini for encouragement and confidence “ilipo Cavillini, an accomplice of | ut the future. The prompt enacts Jol a as se need t \ ) . I olo, 8is0 Wis Se ne g, ¢ 4 0 death. He ment by the Congress of the necessary 8 ler arres te a 30 ; tal : is under Ire st in ily on nother uilroad legislation and Jie war char Darius Pochere, a third de- finance legislation will be extremely helpful, “There is no We have only to fendant, was sentenced to three imprisonment for the enemy.” Bolo Pasha was a French adventur- years commerce with ground for pessimism. clinch our teeth, : dn . | stand together, and ultimate victory er in finance and society, a friend of is certain.” Abas Hilmi, ex-Khedive of Egypt, who | © ah le gave him the title of pasha. He was | VERNON CASTLE MEETS DEATH. born in Marseilles. When tlte original German war plan | of crushing France in six wesks fell through the Germans started propa- | ganda to “pry” IFrance away from the allies. For this campaign newspapers | Aviator Falls to Earth While Trying to Avoid Collision. Fort Worth, Tex. — Lieut. Vernon Castle of the Royal Flying Corps was | killed while flying 15 miles west ol IFort Worth, SHIPYARDS MUST SPEED UP, Castle in trying to avoid a cadet —- swerved his machine beyond his con- Otherwise ,Government Is Likely to | trol, fell and was unable to right him- Take Over Their Operation, self. The cadet vy an American, but Washington.—Shipyards that are in- was being instructed by the British, eflicient in speeding up the govern- | The accident happened close by the ment merchant marine program are to lenbrook Field. The cadet was unin- were necessary. iw. | be taken over by the federal authori- | jured. ties, it was indicated in official quar- | Castle's plane was only 50 feet from ters. | the ground, and he was in the front The Shipping Board has the power | eat instructing R. and is contemplating exercising it | ip the rear seat, with regard to establishments that are holding back work through ineflicient management, NN AANA NANA NIN NNN NIN NIN Peters instead of where the instructor | usually rides. Had he occupied the | rear seat he would not have been in- | jured. When he saw the danger of | @ collision with the approaching plane Jims undertook what aviators know as an Immelman turn. The plane fuil- | ed to respond and crashed to the earth. Castle was unconscious when picked | up and died in the field hospital 20 | minutes later. WORLD'S NEWS IN CONDENSED FORM SINK EIGHT BRITISH SHIPS. “Drifters” and One Trawler German Prey. London.—Eight British craft which were hunting submarines in the Straits of Dover have been sunk by a raiding flotilla of enemy destroyers, it was an- nounced by the admiralty. The firing WASHINGTON.—Senator Weeks de- clared the number of American sol- diers sent to France to date is only half as large as called for in the sched- ule laid down by Mr. Baker on Octo- ber 1. He urged the passage of the war cabinet bill to speed up America’s | participation in the war. PARIS.—Bolo Pacha filed an appeal Seven from the sentence of death imposed l by by a court martial and expressed the | lasted 45 minutes. hope that the verdict would be te- | After having sunk these vessels, pealed. seven of which were “drifters” and \| NEW YORK.—New York’s fuel trou- | one a trawler, the enemy destroyers bles are over for the winter, according returned rapidly northward before administration, | they could be engaged. I THACA.—Dr. Schurman, president | f Cornell University, declared the na- faced the danger of starvation ar and urged the lifting of HENNIG ACQUITTED OF PLOT. Jury Acts Following Federal Attor ney’s Motion to Free Him. Brooklyn.—The trial of Paul C. Hen. nig, a worker on gyroscopes in the E W. Bliss Company plant, on the charge of treason, came to an abrupt end when Melville J. France, United States district attorney for the Eastern Dis trict of New York, moved that Hennig be acquitted. Judge Chatfield gave the case to the jury, and, after deliberating two min. tes, it returned a verdict of not guilty, WASHINGTON.—*“President Wilson tight rope over a chasm of lood—don’t shake it,” Senator James leclared in answering attack on the onduct of the war. WASHINGTON.—A billion dollar irgent deficiency appropriation bill, argest in the history of Congress, al- hough cut a half billion from original
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers