roops guarding Heavy French guns of a the Russian soldiers they capture. gH ounted on armored cars, NEWS REVIEW OF THE PAST WEEK Germans Threaten Quick Attack When the Russian Delegates Reject Peace Terms. Proletariat of Austria-Hungary on Eve of a Revolt—Turks Lose Two Big Cru'sers—Secretary Bak. er’'s Management Hotly Criticized by Senator Chamberlain, Oy EDWARD W. PICKARD, Encouran the ratl ‘ } 3 ans Have nf have Russian provinces consent week would move at once an occupy Reval "hen asked al territory man replied tle that only request of t that man ith the n about tnd south Atovsk, Hoff that he recess might the Ger terms they consult was grudgingly granted that no further post ponements w iid be allowed. The Ru voted unanimously reject ‘ i ter: u ssertion thereupon the f » ory 1 ar I girograa Ger man to subunit to the cong men's decision That delegntes out un f I ¥ do not Russ entary leaders ai vhether it is toy lnte proceeding amicably in with ahout Germany and addy and are peace, Anstrin reparnte re to sign a Japan, which holds itself responsi Ble far th the far East, step to put to the Increasing digorders in according to Pre. miler Tarnuchi who addressed the open. Ing session of the Japanese diet. He reiterated his country's ahsolute lov. nity nnd fidelity to the allies and its determination not to sheathe the sword until an honorable pence (a secured, — there is socinlist riflitin conglderable ie preservation of pence in radien ready to take nn end Siherin In Finland er and the government growing disord red guards have fought hattlex, notably Vihore and Davidstad. The red goards nre alded by Rus n soldiers the peasants are ernment forces HOV. eral nt supporting the pov. The Austro-Hungarian kine been treading on thin lee for two weeks, A great pence-demand swept over the nation and more than n million workers went on strike, the war industries being aboolutely para The the {Ivzed, government us forced to to und and socialise’ us accept food, communal nonmilitarism of thereupon inost of ed their only partly {to work. radicals made fu Iterated their cull lerstanding Having lost to tf} portant positions in Teal on Tentons evacunte considerable territory of the Piave river, moving Monte Spinonels The ¥ given up he “Perr f forcing the 3 nlalin y to the pains long i i the west the Plave and are con the rear the siderable disaster Medulln viel the tue] w fonwes in On the sen Turks suffered nn ron. the Selim in the loss of erifigers formerly Bresian and Goehon. These from ar danelles to attack certain British mon- itors, but and at on gaged by British destroyers and driven into mine fields The Breslau blown up and sunk and the Goeben badly damaged, was run aground at Nagara point, where for several dave and nights It wns sublected to bomb ing by British air eraft and rendered | nueeless, The British lost moni tors, | The number of British vessel® sunk Sultan vo emerged the were seen OTe wns two ns only «ix Inrge and two small ships, In ite efforts to sapply tonnage fo meet the submarine depradations, the United Sintes seared an point hy got ting n large number of veasels from {nae In American conetal traffie, from Germany, coupled with a threat to sink all such vessels that its «ub. i marines could reach, we JY | the pope's pener note, stating that Its terms of peace, as they concern Belgium itself, are absolu Hileal, economic and torial Independence, equitable guaranties iar conven pos) jr 3 resolution ined i INGOrs er Liovd Geor vitars ! from somehedd i who furniehied the evidence knew the they Hed.” In the frets, conree of his ater hy Mr Chamberlain read a hearthrenking lot ter from a father telling of t death of his son in an army camp under most Af- Biker = this ingular that there had been several such due to the lack of nurses, and that ench one had been rigidly thvestignted, The hot dizensslion clency of our war preparations con unabated and Ix reaching the stage where it hecomes personal and vicious The thick-and-thiy upports of the administration the erities of some of ite acts are border ing treachery becnuse they give terward Secretary aid Cnse, of that it was not a over the neff tinues ore declare an | public know the faults that are being committed ean thoss fanlte He correct MY, Their they hold tated by the purest patriotism, Tasker H. CONrse, is Hee General iss, American army in the supreme i opera. tions on on lnrze scale ays Speeches of Wil-| Amsterdam Germ Hertling told the the Reichstag Premier Lloyd Wilson “contained principles” berlin dispatches ly the the He get forth ian Chancel main committee the Georg« that speeches President acceptable and certain to Germany, according to “Concrete outlires are ' German Chand Bisted demande “ne January 3 the co-operation “On among oo) Hertling sald in ‘After ing toward a ; Open that German boun & ei with ingly might PX Og ntents, and these s doubt, Nevertheless, 1 hold fast hope shortly to arrive with the Rus Litovsk We pereement be mutually from an economic % Continu Hertiing that Alsace-Lorraine German, in 1659, and that it been restored to Germany in 1871 hope to wit &sO0OD h Ukrainia gstisfactory, ow poly pointed was originally had mere re Hk, NO ADVANCE TOWARD PEACE. Washington —No peace is seen here advance toward in the speeches fn Berlin and Vienna by the Chancellor ard Austrian Minister upon the war aims comment Formal will be withheld thorized German agency, but after reading press accounts of the speeches officials expressed the opinjon that they were framed largely for internal consumption, with the incidental pur pozes to plant seeds of discord among tiie Allies by suggestions of separate negotiations and to appeal to the sympathies of the radical Soecialistic gloments in the enemy's countries Regarding the design to affect the fnternal conditions of Germany motes, the German being almost defi antly ageressive and the Austrian compromising and insinuating, wore caleulated precisely to meet the vary: ing conditions in the two ew)ircs, en “Aut tates pra gary and | : Agrees of new | the | Of Lev tions." 2 1 i great princini of Lhe world aller but our +i approach ques de garian foreign reported in The bid for dis aaq 'in matter Readiu alors er WIOLE TT ~inih lines of Tent! Ane development.’ Evacuation of rearate Siberia to autonomous th Balkan independ have an Eleven ates and their ice guaranteed; outlet to the sea Twelfth-—Turkey's possessions not 10. be except as states with nationalities other than Turkish, must be opportunity molested, to afforded Polish independence, “A general association be formed under Thirteenth- Fourteenth of nations must guarantees of po- fitical independence and territorial in- tegrity to great and small states alike.” TO MAKE INDIANS CITIZENS. Reaching Bill, Washington. ~The most drastic In. dian legislation proposed in any re was introduced by Rep Carter, of Oklahoma, of the Public Indian Com- proposing to confer citizen ship on Indians born withir the terri torial limite of the United Stales: ane thorizing issue of land titles to all mixed blood Indians, and the full pro rata share of tribal funds, sarry out the work. 16 TEUTON LINERS LDU. 5. TROOPS Huge Vaterland, Now Leviathan, Used as Transport. MEN AND SUPPLIES SAFE in U. 8. Ten Months Earlier Than Expectel; Seized Vessels Sorvice German Crews Broke Engines. - THE WOMEN MUST STAY HOME, FreeLance Workers Embarrassing In Warring Countries. og \Vashingion Passeg ort ons peri oad Tee E3850 ah su pepartment an women gervices are imperative! juired by some 8 The was that recognized relief agen. explanation, presence of bers of freelance workers was begin. ning an embarrassment to the warring countries. as announced, the large num to prove COV. EDGE SIGNS DRY BILLS. Action Puts 3,000 Saloons Out Of Busi. ness In New Jersey. Trenton, N. J—Governor Edge. in the presence of leaders and members of the legislature, state officers and temperance advocates, signed the Mackay and Wells local option bills It is estimated that through the local option regulations, which many of the cities and towns of the state will now have, about 3,000 saloons will be put out of business in New Jersey. SELLS FIFTEEN TONS OF SUGAR. Food Administartor Seizes Hoarding Of East Side Bookseller. Now York.-Fifteen tons of sugar, which Pincus Friedman. an Bast Side bookseller was accused of hoarding, was sold by the Federal Food Admin. istration to hospitals, charitable in. stitutions and some 500 retail Eromers, at 9 cents a pound, Friedman, who is under $2,500 bail, is alleged to have obtained the sugar from New Orleans
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers