; -. t mstra ledger Euentng " ft SPORfS EXTRA SPORTS EXTRA $J VOL. III. NO. 147 PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1017 ioi coin VU7 n riiil'iiun I.rmni Conrwt PRICE TWO CENTS- WILSON CALLS i UNITED AMERICA QUICK NEWS COUNCIL; MAYi ' WILSON AT INAUGURATION ARM U. S. SHIPH .J is PHI? I? I? 01 ES ie orfr irtH 6 re tt i to n rt t trt rrU trpt aew LTCttl t it t IM1 arto fair arte b NATION'S CHIEF TAKES OATH IN FACE OF CRISIS War Spirit and Trust in Leadership Mark Occasion SOLID FRONT, PLEA IN RINGING SPEECH "America First" and a New Nationalism Features of Inaugural Address CEREMONY FOR TONIGHT Inauguration Weather Since Lincoln's Time 1861 Sunny and vvaim. Lincoln. 18G5.iRain nnl cold. Lincoln. 1860 Rain. Grant. 1873 Clear and cold. Grant. 1877 Fair and cold. Hayes. 1881 Cloudy and snow. Garfield. 1885 Fair. Cleveland. 1889 Rain. Harrison. 1893 Snow and windy. Cleveland. 1807 Ideal. McKinley. 1901 Rain. McKinley. 1905 Clear. Roosevelt. 1909 Blizzard. Taft. 1913 Clear and fair. Wilson. 1917 Slushy. Wilson. I AVASItlXliTOX, llnull 6 Woodrovv Wilson toriaj tool. alh of olle to serve a necoml term as President uf the I'nlteil suites. Immediately preceding the cere mony Vice President Mai shall was suotn In, also for Ills second tenure The public Inauguration followed the private nrimluls terlnR of the oath to the President at -.oon jesterday Thousands of patriotic c tlzens witnessed the ceremonies, held on the oast fro.it of , -the Capitol p'.aza, and the rinsing cheers that Riected the Chief i:eeutle voiceu n I a united Americanism, for union me i-rcsi- dent has pleaded and which he today de clared was essential If thin nation would tuccesstullv meet the grave International Issues now confronting It The solemnity of the oil.is. on was like that which niatked the second ImiURUi.itlun ef Lincoln The nlr was tense. The w.u tplrlt was evident, n though the picvalling thought was tiust In Woodiou W.Non to avoid a national calamity If It were possi ble. The Piesldent, however. In his luaugu ral addiehs warned that tills nat'on might not he ahle to keep out of the whlilpool of the world war. that it had been drawn much nearei in piln of. nil effoit to pre serve calm Alt.Mi;ti NUl'TltAUTV A slKiiincant ttatement was that armed neutra Itj was now America's only course. "We have been obliged to arm ourselves to make. Rood our claim to a certain mini mum of rlRht and freedom of action," he declared on this subjict. "We stand firm In armed neutiallty since H seems that In no other way we can demonstrate what It Is vvc Ipslst upon and cannot forRo." A hush followed this. Then Rravely he continued. "Wo may be drawn on, by circumstances, not by our own purpose or deslic, to a more active ns aertlon of our rlRhts as we see them and a more Immediate association with the Rrcat truggle itself " PHYSICALLY KIT President Wilson never looked In better Physical condition than he did today. He itemed to have shaken off the air of worry and depression which has marked him dur Ins the last few momentous weeks. From the moment that he enteied the open car riage, drawn by four thoroughbreds, to pro ed to the Capitol, until ho leturned to the White House ho was smlllnR. All 'ons the route of the parade he and Mrs Alison bowed to n crowd that acclaimed them and was plainly in sympathy with the President and the doettlnes for which he tands. i The scene nlonR Pennsylvania avenue s J the President proceeded was an anl lmated one. Thrcej:arrlages, each diawn H .ly (our horses surrounded by soldiers, con ' ed the President and Mrs. Wilson, Vice President nnd Mrs. Marshall, Inauguraf Z Chairman Harper nnd tho Senate and House jA committee leptesentatives. And each had own Individual cscoil.. Preceding the entire column was Major H"eral Hugh I,. Scott, chief mat shah and "'a aids, the mnlorilv of whom r .to.. i 'tutted fron, tho regular army. Then came jthe-aquadron of the.Second Cavalry select- !l D I'1 President as hia own Individual aeon, a high honor paid to the reeular TOiy and designed in .k- h,.i u'..j... MJOti was tho Piesldent ..f th whni. Im and not of any individual Rim. , Vice President Mnnh.n ....... .... .... rww.cadet of the Culver Military Academy, inumna, mounted on coal. black horses i4 PRESIDENT WILSON'S ! INAUGURAL ADDRESS My fellow Citizens: j Tho four years which have elapsed since last I stood in this place have been I crowded with counsel and actioiv of the most vital interest nnd consequence. I'crhaps no equal period in our Itistnrj has been o fruitful of impmtant reforms in our economic and industrial life or so full of siRiiificant chntiKcs in the spirit and purpose of our political action. We have soujjht ery llinughtfull to set our house in order, correct the grosser errors and abuses of our industrial life, liberate and quicken the processes of our national genius and cncrj, and lift our politics to a broader view of (he people's essential interests. It is a record of singular variety and singular distinction. But I shall not Jtttcmpt to review it. It speaks foi itself and will be of incftasmj: influence its the years go by. This is not the time for rcttospect. It is time, rather, to speak our thoughts and purposes concerning tho present and the immediate future. DRAWN' INTO WORLD MAELSTROM Although we have centered counsel and nction with such unusual concen tiation and success upon the great problems of domestic legislation to. which we addressed ourselves four years ngo oilier matters have more and more forced themselves upon our attention, matters l.ving outside our own life as a nation and over which we had no control, but which, despite our wish to keep free of them, have drawn us more and more irresistibly into their own cut rent and influence. It has been impossible to nveitl thcni. They have alTccted the life f the whole world. They have shaken men everywhere with a passion and an appre hension they never knew before. It has been hard to preserve calm council while the thought of our own people swajed this way and that under their influence. We are a composite and cosmopolitan people. We are of the blood of all nations that'are at war. The currents of our thoughts as well as the cur lents of our trade lun quick at all seasons back and forth between us and them. The war inevitably set itr, mark fioni the first alike upon our minds, our in dustries, our commerce, our polities and our social action. To be inditfercnt to it or independent of it was out of the question. U. S. NOT PART OF CONFLICT Ani jet all the while we have been conscious that we wcic not pnit of it. In that consciousness, despite many divisions, we have drawn closer together. We have been deeply wronged upon the seas, but we have not wished to wrong or injure in return; have retained throughout the consciousness of standing in some sort apart, intent upon an interest that transcended the immediate issues of the war itself. As some of tho injuries done us .have become intolerable we have still been clear that we wished nothing for ourselves thai wc were not ready to demand for all mankind fair dealing, justice, the freedom to live and be at ease against organized wrong. It is with this spirit 'and with this thought that wc have grown more nnd more aware, more and more certain that the part c wished to play was the part of those who mean to vindicate and fortify peace. We have been obliged to arm ourselves to make jjood our claim to a certain minimum of right nnd of freedom of action. We stand firm in armed neutrality since it seems that in no other way wc can demonstrate what '.I is we insist upon and cannot forego. We may even be drawn on, by circumstances, not by our own purpose or desii'e, to a more active assertion of our rights as we see them ind a more immediate association with the great struggle itself. Hut noth'ig will alter our thought or our purpose. They are too clear to be obscured. They are too deeply rooted in the principles of our national life to be altered. DESIRES NEITHER CONQUEST NOR GAIN We desire neither conquest nor advantage. We wish nothing that can be had only at the cost of another people. We have always professed unselfish purpose and wc covet the opportunity to prove that our professions are sincere. There are many things still to do at home, to clarify our own politics and give vitality to the industrial processes of our own life, and we shall do them as time and opportunity serve; but vvc realize that the greatest things that remain to be done must he done with the whole world for a stage and in co-op-cration with the wide and universal forces of mankind, and vvc are mak'.ng our spirits ready for those things. They will follow in the immediate wake of the war itself,' ami will .set civilization up again. Wc arc provincials no longer. The tragical events of the thirty months of vital turmoil through which we have just passed have made us citiens of the world. There can be no turn ing back. Our own fortunes as a nation arc involved, whether wc would have it so or not. And yet wc are not the less Americans on that account. We shall be the more American if we but remain tvue.to the principles in which we have been bred. They are not the principles of a province or a single continent. Wc have known and boasted all along that they were the principles of n liberated mankind. THE THINGS WE STAND FOR These, theieforc, are the things wc stand for, whether in war or in peace: That all nations are equally interested in the peace of. the world and in the political stability of free peoples, and equally responsible for their maintenance. That the essential principle of peace is the actual equality of na tions in all matters of right or privilege; That peace cannot securely or justly rest upon an armed balance of power; That Governments derive all their just powers from the consent of the governed and that no other powers should be supported by the com mon thought, purpose or power of the family of nations. That the seas should be equally free and safe for the use of all peoples, under rules set up by common agreement and consent, and that, so far as practicable, they should be accessible to all upon equal terms; That national armaments should be limited to the necessities of na tional order and domestic safety; That the community of interest and of power upon which peace must henceforth depend imposes upon each nation the duty of seeing to it that all influences proceeding from its own citizens meant to encourage or assist revolution in oilier States should he sternly and effectually sup pressed and prevented. I need not argue these principles to you, my tellow countrymen; they nrc your own, part and parcel of your-own thinking and your own motiv h niralm. They spring up native among us. Upon this as a platform of purpose and of nction wc can stand together. WE MUST STAND TOGETHER And it is imperative that we should stand together. We are being forged into a new unity amid the fires that now blazo throughout the world. In their ardent heat we shall, In liou s proviuencc, hi u ..",..., i-u.cu ui mi-nun ami GERMAN LINES AGAIN PIERCED BY HAIG'S MEN Defenses at Gommccourt and Near Peronne Shat tered in New Attack TEUTONS STILL RETIRING British May Launch Double Drive to Clear Noyons Sector of Koc liXtio.V. March f. The ileiimiis are Mill vlddnu K round hi tin" Am in nnd Kninmn fmtilH. Vcs-tet. d.iv the liiltlfh liiiois advnnr'd ncalu cast if liiimmei'iiiirt seiiiiiiR trrrltnr "o n depth of two-thirds of a mile nlmiR u twu-mllo f i nnt ' Sliuiilt.incnusi) MalRs fniips smashed ilic.nl e.it nf Itmrth ivesnes liiimed'tlti'lj ninth nf Pennine, nnd raptured the runnVx finnt nnil su'ppnl I lines fur n distance nf I'vn-tlilril "f n mile ime hundred nnd n"veiit.v-tlire prisoners nnd thiee machine cuiis fell In In their h.inds 'Hie Imi'iut.ini'e nf thpe two nperatlniix is eniiinious. In the npln'nn nf mlllt.iry jli ei vers lieie. '1 lie movement nm til of the A note slmwH cither that thr Hermans have found themselves unable to hold the'r new lines In the faie nf the powerful iirltlsh preMite m that tne pcrotid HtaRO of their vvltliiliawnl Is under wa. with a possi bility of the abandonment nf tho ilitlre salient houIIi of Airas It Is bi-llevid heie thai the Hrltlsli at t.iLks nn" lontiuulnu to oveiwlielm the ciipiiu. and that the unrxpee'ed letlieincnt fiom the positions thought to have con stituted the new- ileim.'in lino of ilefenso la their onlv alternative eiept capture. Advances lij tho UiltlPh In the last two da.s cast of tiommeiomt havo iiealcd n new nnd daiiReious t-nllcnt In that ."color, and the (Jermans aie believed to have been forced In hui lender fuiJiei tenltory in the face of mi cndlail iik fire. Hough's Irooi-K.fuuiut-UK.iioHUIona evncii ited li the Hermans Foutli anil west of iapnume to be lomplefelj shattered by Hrltlsli chell tire Tienihea weie llnttencd. dugouts ill icd iieriu.in ruiih ci juiiiI to pletes. Ilundieds nf bndte covered the Kiound soniii just killed othei ipp.ucntly liavinR been dead for noiU and month:) PARKWAY BOOZE DENIED BY JUDGE OHIO SSEA'ATE CONDEMNS SENATE 1 1- COLUMBUS, O,, Mnich 5. Without a dissenting vote the Ohm Senate today adopted a lcsolutlon condemning the "pitiful minoi ity" which defeated Tiesldcnt Wilson's ptogiam in the United Stateb Senate ycbtcidny. The State Senate pledged the l'tebldcnt Its henrt ieht co-opeiatiou and declined It stands behind him. SHIP DETAINED BY U-BOAT SAFE IN U. S. PORT NKWrOKT NEWS, Vn March tf. The Ameilcan ship Wp wego, which was. held up off Fastnet by a German s.ubmaiin" nriu limdo to deliver four bands of cylinder oil to the undersea rnW"i, at lived heie today. RUSSIANS FREE EAST PRUSSIAN PRISONERS BUKLIJJ', Match 0. Part "f the inhabitants, of E.tbt Prutbla who v.'c.o cmicd off into Itubsia by Russian tioops have been ieleased, accoiding to Stockholm dispatches to the Beillngske Tidende. About 100 peisoiih, among them eighty childicn under eight ycai3 of age, have auived at Stockholm. Summons Gregory andffv Lansing for Confer- f ence on Plan $ FAILURE OF BILL . 'MM DEMANDS ACTIONS j. 10 uaii HiXtra uon- . Likely gress Session if Senate Changes Rules ?, t MXi V.tJ .?'-W y FILIBUSTERS VICTORIOUS Here Are the Senators Who Actually Defeated Armed Neutrality Pill' Penrose. Norris. Clapp. La Kollcttc. Stone. WASHINGTON, March 5. Democratic majority of th V x.1'1 TV f r$ n . . i . ... I .L states senate win caucus s.rcr x - 'CHANCE' NAMES CHANCE HEAD FOR FOURTH TIME Willi, mi I). Ci.tiiKo was n-oleoteil piesldent of the I'lill.idclplii.i Sloil. KM'h.iliKe , fev tho fouith suctc'slve time lit the niiiui.il elect len tod.i.v .lo'-epli II. Stiau.i j will chncii i linlriiiiin. HiiiieeilliiK the late OejiKP W. I'.ilmcr, wUomi" unexplieU ( term he had filled since .Mr. l'.ilmeiH ile.itli In .Mav of l.it ji.u. Other olllccr.1 ' weie u'-olteteii, tonelhei with four members nf tho KovoruitiK committee, whose I teinu evplied nt thN time. Albert i:. Tuiner. lMwtn N. Ucnxoii, ,Ir, nnd I'lisliman j New hall weie ehu"eii meniheis of lid- fiovernliiK committee, to succeed ICdvvnrd i;r.vl.uiM, A,i..ih.un JJil.ci' .Mellor nnd .Inmu3 l Wlnsiir. ,Ir. Ofllcuri ami Kovern- . ins tomniittce mcmheiH rc-vlected besides Piesldent Clause nnd ('halt man Ktiaub follow: Seetet.ii) and feasuici, lloinec il. l.ee, rovpiiiIiik committee members, Kinnli II. Il.ichm.ui. I". T. Chandler, .lollii V. Sparl.s and Itoluud h Tjylor. ,... . JjjSfew ! 2S3 LANCASTER LICENSES GRANTED; 11 HELD UP j L.N'AHTI2I. I'.i. .March 5 To.l.iy the eoint granted licenses for 'Mi old, stands, no iip,iliiitlims f c new Mauris beinj, pic-enteri. ns It was Renciall.v under Mood the retirt Vkojlri Biant none Illcven lleensei weie rich rrcil until latn toda.v, i prolests li.ivin? Iieen lilc 1 np.ilnst them. Sevenil tile piumiuent lo.irihomes The tlnileri , 'tiy ui:.iu a. m. tomorrow' to ucciue vvueincr ,. an amendment to the Senate rules ..,'' which will prevent filibustering is pos- j-j' ..!!. o . i i u .i.l .. Ar sine, neuaie ii'iiui'rn nuiu mis unci i noon that they thought some action could be taken. At the same time a majorit j leader to succeed Senator John W. Kern, of Indiana, will be chosen. NEW YORK, .March 5. 'I he bteamsh'p Aztec, owned by the Oriental Steam Navigation Company, has been fitted with steel plates and braces ready to receive a three-inch gun .' ,,' aft, according to a statement this aftei?- a t noon by I'luiip uc Konae, presiacm m jy the company. iff The Oriental concern is owner .of the js Orti,.tie Amnripnn clllll. vvll'rh tiasfled.-"'j ,y..v,..., ...... ,-, . T'-i' J safely llirough the war zone. The Aztee j,,' ii now- loaded and ready to sail iojs France. '- WASIIIVUTON. March 8v Vy The armed neutrality bill, nuthorUlnJ the I'tesldcnt to arm American mercnant , shlpsi. protect American life nnd property M'CORMICK MAY ACCEPT CABINET POST WASHINGTON, .Mnuh .". Vance ('. .McCormlcK. Dcuiout.itle National Ch.ili man. Is expected to accept a place In the I'lesldenfs I'.iblnet in the ne.t few months The hecoml Wilson Admlnlstriitlon bei.in tod.ij without nil ehauKC In the Cabinet, but nt leaM thiee men will leslpn wltli'n a ie.isnn.ible time. The are Attorney (icneinl (licsor.v, Seeiet.u of CommeiLe lledlleld and Kotielar of the Ticasuiy .McAdoo . . .- . .. ., on the hlGh neas nnu use any oiner mwrau he may deem ncceraary In the executlorj ot? ya this purpOHC. hns Bone uown to ueieai inj'. the fnlted States Senate. The bill waiji a hilled hv u filibuster 'til by Senator nobertiW!iJ l I . l...llaiic .it VV'tK,ntln nlrled fl.nd?.iM ' i " (1 M.'ji.f'a k in ( nntini'ril en Vtigr I our. i olumn Ono,' rontlnutil on Pocn Tviii, Column One ,' das Olaw-Diit KilU u;L- tin. w ..a in i.iaii 1'IQWOllt Of irmi llll.,l 1.,,,.. i i.-... ty ycar-oW( a pneumonia wU4tnk k wMVHoiy;wan division purified or the errant humors of par'y nnd of private interest, and shall Htand forth in the dajs to copie with a new dignity of nutional pride and spirit. I et each man see to it that the dedication is tn bis own heart, trft) high pur nose of the nation in his own mind, ruler of his own will and de3ire. I stand here and have taken the high and soleipn catlt to which you have been audience because the people of the United States have chos:n me for this nueust delegation of p'ovver and have by their gracious judgment rramed me S leader in affairs. I know now what tho task means. I rea izo to tho full he responsibility which it involves. I pray God I may be given the wisdom and he prudence to do my duty in the true spirit of this great people I am their servant and can succeed only as they sustain and guide me by their confidence and their counsel. The thing I shall count upon, the thing without which neither . .I-- ni nvnll. Is tho unity of America and America united in J3U to purposv nd in Its My SSlr fi License Court Sustains Re monstrances Against Kopp's and Pentony's FINLETTER GIVES OPINION Tho applications for tiannfei of llipioi licenses fiom the line of the proposed 1'aiV. a to cites 'near the lliiirou&hfaio weie iefiied tud.i b.v the l.loenpe tJomt, which hovvcil In the vvlsliss of icinonstinntH icp. tcsentlni; the VoiuiK Men's Clulstlan Assj ilatlon and other bodies. The Hi rne transfers icfif-td weie those of IMnlel .1. Kopp, win piopoped to move Ills pl.ue fiom -to nnd I" N'oith lioail Ftreet to the unitliciiM i omei of Kiflcenth , nnd A i ch streets anil or .lo-cpn reiitony. who petitioned the eourl for pernil.stlon to move fiom 1431 Kllheit Mreet to 1 0 1 Noitb I'lfteenth Mrect. i:i(!IIT Al'I'I.H'ATIONS lUINllIIl . ......I ,,F f.11,1 otittll, .allitiiM fix. nnu ' ., I'M,,, ', ,i,fc ,.,,.v... .... ..i .. Ileenres and for timiffciH was lefuied bj the eouit and ono tinnsfei Kianted up to 3 o'clcik this afternoon "Wo do not want the TaiUway IgoKInK UUo n lino of beer blsns ' t-.vlit Judue Klu letler, In nnnoimcltiK that I'entonj's pin noeil new site was too near the I'dil.vvny. "Itefused." was the l.uonle and low'-tonrd annoiiueeinent of JuiIko Mm tin In inaUiri; Know n tho court'K rieilslon In the Kopii case, nftei heated debate In tho battle between the llqum and the no-riteuse foieej No explanation was Riven evidently the vie nroUH protests ngnlnat n new ualoon In an educational mlghborhood had effect I-- nal decision on another license ti vnifr, that of Mis. MarR.iret ICernan fiom Ier mn'H Hotel, not . beast miner of Klftecnth nnd Kllbert stieets. to 116 South Fifteenth stuct, was defencd SPOtiKS IN SAI.tlO.N Th.eiiu.t luled that the aliened prifcnce of ithustu In ti ualoon illd not affect the Inipinesi of fie luee euouith to vvau.int tho propiletor'H trnnsfciltiR; bis place of bust-net-a this la the (iiso of John l.alziisoh, who wanted tj tratisfer Ills plac of busi ness from ijciinintnun iiveuiio and 1 lininp von Miccts to tho noitheast oilier of Oi lamia and Ililntol streets, Lntzusch clahued that because his place of biislneFH was the scene of a murder sev eral years ago the pluce has unsullied tho proportions of a cutloslty. I'eople, said l.atziich, come anil Htnro from tho outside but seldom peneilate and buy. Hn t,ald that tho publicity he Bot from the tale of the ghosta ptnlklnir about In his cellar did Ills business much harm und that hit re ceipts had 'fallen from J 1 80 to ?U'0 In one week. Judge I'Tnictter, however, wild that he did not think the aliened presence nf splilts a aufilclent cause for I.ntsusch to move, Koi't thnski:u ori'oai:i) The transfer of tho Kopp license was op. posed In ti mil tant manner by the lemon Btrants, rpresenteil by Krnnklln Spencer IMnvmda who declared that Kopp kn.ow when he located at his present site that he would have to, JriBXe "way far the Nark way PHILADELPHIA ROYS RUN AWAY TO INAUCURAL .lolin .McNeill, slNtcen ve.us old. of 13110 South liiiciitbur Mi vet, Jiid .lamei .Molinnacs, sIMeen .ve.irs old, of IT.4J South Twciitj-iilnlb Mteet, no.,i of 'this clt, are beliiR detained b.v the polke of P.altlmoie, .Mil, after bolus found hi n fielKbl c.u In r.altlmole on unite to the lii.iUKiuntlon at Washington. The lads are helm; held until their pal cuts anlve to take tliein bonus FARMER KILLS FOXES. ANGERING HUNT CLUBS Wi:.ST CUKSTl-U .MiikIi ,". Tlic.o is a llvelj rend bctuten the mcmbei.s the Ilnrinot, l!o.e Tree, lllcluiian, West Chester anil othei bunt clubs nf this section and (JeoiKe Tilmble. a Westtown f inner, over Trimble's ho itlni; mun.v of the lest animals for a elne in this i-ectloii. but Just what lepilsals the hunters can or will make is not evident. The fanner s.ijh he cannot fceil all the focs In tho country for the liencllt of tho liuntcix. DELAWARE U-BOAT NETS NEAR READY TO LAY One-half of the steel net which Is to be Mictcliori acioss tho channel of the Delaware Itlvei to In r hostile xuhmniinci fiom passliiK up the rherand cnrianirer iiiB the Indij.Uiial plants of Philadelphia has teiched llelavvaio City, The net will bo laid Jut below Potts tin Pont and Mott, between Iteedy Island and Pml ilu Pont. The total vvelKht of the net will be SOO.oou pounds. Its mesh Is six feet and It Is stout enousli to stop an nlmmt full-sited ship. The only thins now delnvliiK the work of lay Ins the net Is tho falluie of the steel cable which is to bold It to anlve. BALTIC REPORTS BY WIRELESS; DUE TOMORROW Ni:V YOItK. M.uch S. Tho White Star liner Dnltlc, several days oveidue from Liverpool, Ins llnally lepoilcd by wheless to her owned heie nnd will airlvo tomorrow. The Adriatic, of the White Star Line, Is due heio net i''ilday. CHICAGO HOG, PRICES CONTINUE TO SOAR CHICAtiO, .Mnich S. Hobs continued to soar toda.v Tho market was fiom fifteen to tvvcnly-flvo tents hidier than Saturdaj Tup pilccs weie $1 1. no per hundred for hc.iv lis. Piss sold for ?I2.C0 per hundred pounds. AlfflllTCPTATTINft -'1 TO KILL PRESIDENT. Secret Service Arrests Man in Hoboken, N. J., Who Reveals Conspiracy 'SOMETHING WENT WRONG Ni;V YUHK March r. Secret servlpd m. . .. ...,.t n u.in i.l nf onlliiM tVvta nftarnniB 1 IIIIILCin tlllll il CIUIU V l 4"-v; I"D V.IWW ,wyr ., broke into a nom In Hie Commercial I1oU1h MonoKen, . J., nnu nrresieu a man wno.t .;ao his name as Illcliard Kalb, thirty-six ip, . fir nlH .' . . .w A larEo supplv of bombs, dynamite, plcrla .flj.,. ,,1,1 n.,,1 tillrncli eerln unu pnnflspalpd. Ai" .T.v "" " -o--- -( jH loKlliiK to Chief of Police Hayes, of HpaV , uohen, Kalb not only confessed to having ,5! pat Help ited In the Dltick Tom and KlnKi-'Wi, In-1 explosions, but nKreed to give the V! names of fourteen men, who, he said, wera 7f issoelated with him In a conspiracy to aa lasslnate President Wilson In WashlnBloa oday Kalb Is said to have told the secret sen" ,ce men nnd police that 'somethlnir went wioiiK" with the plot against the President Tiul that It had to be abandoned. HO.MUS I'-OIt THi: rrtESIDENT Sixteen completed bombs were found l & Kolh's room, and It was reported he traajft; uorliluK on anoiner wnen me oincers DroKt).! Sm i-'- , -..- wV v lii. KAlb Is said to hae admitted that tlieil ,slteen bombs were to havo been sent tofi'vi n? x PUBLIC HEARING ON ANTHRACITE MINE CODE HAUP.ISlH'P.ti, .Mm ell S. The alithrucllo mine code franiol by Chief of Mines Roderick will be discussed at a public meeting before the House .Mines and Mining Committee at the Capitol Tuesdaj, .Match 13. The bill Is similar in hcopo to the bituminous code. It bus been before the l.eslslatuie In ono foim or another for C"8' A strong effort will bo made to put a code throush this bcssIoii. LARGE INCREASE IN RECEIPT OF TAXES A total of $1,811,607 has been lecelvcd at the olllce of tho Receiver of Taxes In the hiHt """nth That amount was greater by $378,U' than the iccelpts of February, 1916. GERMAN RAILWAYS UNDER MILITARY CONTROL COPHNHAOnN. March 5.- Kaiser Wllhelm has Issued u proclamation to the Herman Kmpho nnnounclns that the iiillvv.iy nystenis mo now under military control, accoiding to advices today from Merlin. NEED OF PORT DEVELOPMENT VIVIDLY SHOWN The necessity of the development of the port of Philadelphia was pointed out today by Dhector Webster, of tho Department of Wharves, Docks nnd Fen lea, who Just leturned from a ten-day Inspection trip of principal liorts In tho South, 'Tho southern ports are wide awake to the big foreign ttade this country will receive after tn yar, lie paiq, 'ana wo ,". Ktwp-nurwisi ir ve ii,ml, , WashlnKton to be used In an attempt on Piesldent Wilson's life. Further searchV of his room developed the fact that besides .'$ other exposlvcs ho had In his possession ' considerable nuantlty of the deadly crystali'! ,..,. a. -r v. T" v -i Chief llas, Captain Thomas Garrett arM( six Hoboken policemen accompanied thi Federal detectives to the hotel, Kalb subiV mltted to arrest calmly, but evidently wufv cicntlv Riirnrlsed. ji'-i " ' . . . liS.Jd'' Tim (tilldA rsrilAll III fVll A mt nMa lu i U' foimatlon tioncernlnsr the search for Kb Cont'nufd on Tafci Thirteen. Columa '. THE WEATHER.: FOHEbAST For I'httaMpMa and ilclntlyG ullu cloudv tonight, with rapidly a irinpcrature to about twenty degree ' momlnu; '1'uetday fair and cold; tt northuesl idnds tonight, flm(Hi Tuctday, " , I.KNfil'ir or DAY v ' II -JS .m. I lloon r !., 5. .10 p.mt I low) Mtst. Suit rl' Hun IIKI.VVV'ARR KIVHK TUMt CHK8TNUT mutet. ,w- wsttr,. H1W t,m, Kf .. i iT!'; J3J H"fTfi:f S f JRllPTkT rmr77' fiifi.V5e r swwa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers