'; - ;5sm PICTORIAL SECTION PAGES 22,23,2-1 IMiger -: SPORTS EXTRA uetttnn -4 VOL. IV. NO. 31 PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1917 COMMGIIt) 1911, 1 Till POlIontWH COMMNt "PRICE TWO CENTS f r U CORONER RAPS OFFICE OF KNIGHT HINTS ROTAN COVERS UP GUILTY MEN Clashes With Prosecu tor's Representatives at 5th Ward Inquest THREE WITNESSES ' REFUSE TO TESTIFY Maloney, Sullivan and Clark ' Decline to Take Stand and Y Answer Questions FASCIA HELD FOR KILLING Knight Fails to Hold Common wealth Witnesses as Acces sories in Fifth Ward Crime ft W? ..--.lll.l 1...... n Mm hlltKAa nf Iliutrt,t Attorney Rotan and Coroner Knight flared ;vp this afternoon at the Inquest Into the Oath of Acting Detective George A Hpp ley. slain b.v Imported New York gunmen In the "Bloody Fifth" Ward primary elec tion. I ir.nmr. lintel.! n Vn I ...Km 1 1 h nntltlf!ll Reader, accused the District Attorney's office, which Is prosecuting murder con spiracy charges against Maor Smith, of Imposing silence upon three Coroner's w li tems Samuel O Maloney, head of the Vt O'Earrell Detective Agency bureau rand two emplojes, Michael J Sullivan and James I. Clark He made a mate as If J to hold as accessories before the fact these h three men, who, likewise, nccused of 1 murder conspiracy because the. brought tho tunmen here, are three of the Common wealth's principal witnesses against the Mayor. '-Assistant District Attorney James Oay Oordon, Jr.- pointing his finger at Coroner Knliht. declared that he lesented the ac tuation. In reply to n ijuer from the Soroner he asserted that no evidence in his Sffoneiajon showed that tho men could be ff.lnld as accessories ire outcome wai that "Hutch- .sgucglla (Matcla). the man who killed Kpnlev. was held by the Coroner on a murder chaige for the Grand Jury His pal "I.eft" dl Roma (Costello), was held as an accessor Costellos confession, made public toda, shosedlhat there was co-operation between the thugs and the police In the ward fight The sudden flare-up jolted what was. save for occasional wrangling oxer minor wit nesses. npDarcnth a cut-and-dried nrobe Into the actual killing On several occa sions Coroner Knight gae warning that le would hear nothing but testlmonv perti nent to the,case In hand, and once he cut short an I, tempt to olce "frame-up" charges, COl'XSRL BLOCK QUIZZING Counsel for the thiee witnesses piomptly blocked the moe of Coroner Knight to Question Maloney, Sullivan and Clark, whose testimony at the hearing of the Mavor before Judge Brown was of great elrhk In causing the Major to be held In W sie.wo Hall for Court. When the name of James 7. Clark, the Y, "laa with ejeglasscs, was called, his 4f attorney, Thomas J. Mlnnlck, Jr., stepped (s up ana said S" "I hae advised inv client of his right and have Instructed him not to take the stand, lie has already been held for court y a Magistrate." Michael J Rllllvan. the go-between In the political murder, "was next called an a wit ness. Ills attorney, Harry 1). Wescott. stepped up and said, "I advised my client not to say anv thing or testify In this case" Coroner Knight then started hostilities lth the District Attorney's office "t don't understand," he said. "Haven't X the power to ask these witnesses ques lions relating to the murder of Detective tppleyj" "Sullivan has not as et had a hearing "fore a Magistrate," continued Coroner Knight, Counsel for Hlllllcnn tnfnrrviori Pnrnnr JvniKht that Slltlll nn .A Ussn nnlnJ '" Judge Brown, sitting as a commlt- .ini Magistrate, and that Kulllvnn hull at. Sleady been held for court ..., Aviiifiiii, men ruieu inni juufie Brown had no right to sit as a committing JJaglatrate, and ordered Sullivan to take the. rtand. Sullivan tv as swprn as a witness, Coroner Knight odItaH ym !- ., Ijrau i'c' nd did you have any connection -in ine cringing oer of these gunmen vm new york to Philadelphia?" SUlllVan rnllr1 'T -.. 4n ....,... An ??un( that it may Incriminate me " M0 has lniltrilftftri vnii nnt Ia nnnwip ter question "asked Coroner Knight. ceunsei, was the reply next Ta.Ani ik.l. . -.,. - .. .. '-'.. men ciiitiujci, witn vmieu w the stand Former Congressman Logue ."rnied Coroner Knight that he had ad prjsed Maloney not to testify. jou oring any of these people over !ifltiwh0 flurd n the Fifth Ward shoot . ,.,1(td tne Coroner, "I refuse to an- , was Maloney'a reply wl What Frmitifi Hn mi vfitaa t n. an- r'wifT" the Coroner then asked. k,.,. . repljr v"'- "n the ground that It fY Incriminate me." CORONER. SCORES ROTAN'S OFFICE -Afttr fttlnnaiv ttA 1- V.n .. !.. tnv.A Jr' "d refused to testify. Coroner Knight 4 o Assistant District Attorney Gor fiw na said. lifn , Gordon' J"0" being the representa J'l oj the Commonwealth, I ask you, has Continued en rage Ten, Column Three V 1 The Continuation of the Story "Germany, the Next typublic?" 'by CffJ , W. AekermaH Urtirtcv m Pi DISTRICT ATTORNEY HOOVER ARRAIGNS RETAILERS FOR HIGH COST OF FOOD "POOD ADMINISTRATOR HOOVER puts the high coat of food dncctly up -- to the, retailer. In n, lengthy statement issued at Washington he says: 1 While wholesale prices hate hecn reduced, retail figures either remain stationary or hate heen advanced; that 330,000 retailers hate balked the (lovcrnment's efforts to stabilize the cost of liting. Lacking power to compel the rctniler to do business on the basis of cost nnd a fair profit, Mr. Hoover declnrcd that he intends to do the following things in an effort to wipe out excessive profits: 2 Inaugurate a svstem by which the wholesale prices of principal stplcs shall he published in every consuming center etcry day, so that the public may know nhatthe retailers are paying for their stocks. Gather reports on retail prices from 700 cities, aterage litem and make public at regular intervals. Let the public decide whether the retailer is plajing fair or whether it is necessary to regulate him by law. 3 The food ndministrntion considers thnt, subject to co-opcrntion from the farmers and the ictailcrs, the corner has now been turned in high prices nnd that most of the essential commodities should, one nftcr another, continue to show ledtiction between now and the end of the year. The food administration has no control of either the grower or his organization nor of the great mnjority of retailers. The foundations have been laid for regulation of the intermediate trndes, and where these regulations have come into force and the trades arc co-operating finely considerable results nre evident in the wholesale prices. 4 Flour is from $1.50 to $2 per barrel higher than is warrnnted by the price being made by the millers. The nernge retail price on first patent: in 706 cities on October 13 was $13.77. 5 Beef already shows some tendency toward reduction in wholesale prices, but these hac not been so far reflected in the pnees quoted by tho retailer. The price of beef at the packers' door is 144 cents per pound, as compared with sixteen cents in the month of July, while the nverage retail price of round steak in 79G cities is thirty-one cents per pound, against twenty-seven cents per pound in July, thus showing that retail prices have increased while wholesale prices have decreased. 6 Beet sugar prices are being controlled by tho manufactuiers upon a basis that should reach the retailer from 8 to 8'fc cents pere pound, depending upon the locality. The rise in retail prices of sugnr during the last three days in the eastern States is solely due to the advancement of these prices by retail dealers in the face of n short supply and does not bear any relation to the prices at which these sugars have been purchased. 7 We have a potato harvest of 59 per cent in excess of the crop of last year. The price at the loading points varies from $1.50 to $2.80 per 100 pounds, depending on the section where grown nnd the cost of getting them to market. The price, which is somewhat higher than at this period last year, is due to a tendency on the part of the producer to hold the potatoes for higher pi ices than last year and to the temporary inability of the railroads to furnish equipment sufficient to move from many sections the quantity available at this time. FRENCH REPULSED, BERLIN REPORTS i Germans Assert Vauclerc Mill Attacks Failed, but Paris Claims Success GUNS ROAR IN FLANDERS BERLIN". Oct 19 Samsulnarv rcpulsn of French attack north of Vauclerc mill iChemin des fames) nnd Intoine Ilrltlsh nrtlllerv fire were reported In todaj's ndl clil Plalement In Flanders there was Intense artlllerv fire northenst of Solssons and also formid able use of munitions on the eastern por tion of Chemln des Dames," the statement raid "The French three times attacked north of Vauclerc mill and were sanguin arily remiHed Twe.ve enemj airplanes were downed, dix of thet.e being of n tquadron of bombing: planes -which attached Roulers and in Oel- munster" PARIS. Oct 13 Numerous detailed operations were suc cessfullj carried out bj Kronen troops on the Chemln des Panier, the French olTlclal report declared today The p-loners In cluded men from four different divisions In the Champagne sector tho statement sKld, a French detachment penetrated Ger man trenches nnd drove back a German unit. On the right bank of the Meuse at tacks were repulced Dunkirk was again bombed b German raiders, but without lctlms LONDON. Oct 11 IJnemy nrtlllei nre In the nelghbor hoodVof Menln road and also around Zon nrhnkft was renorted today bv Field Mar shal Halg. Kast of Vermelles, he said, Hrit ish troops repulsed n hostile raiding part without casualties TOP COAT PAYS 524.30 TN 2-YEAR-OLD SPRINT Lyke Pilots Outsider to Victory in Third Race May W. and Babbett Win LAl'RKL Md Oct 10. Rabbett car rying 118 pounds showed the wav to a classy field in the opening six furlongs event here thlr afternoon when Troxler P - loted his mount to 'cl0"vW"LP?. .?.rrt" terflv taking second and Tea Party third The m"hin paid f IB. 5 80 and 3 80 on thInWth"e.raeond event at six furlongs Mav W. well backed b the gathering, ran In snendld form and led Swift Fox and Lo hengrin to the -vlre The machines pa d IberX In the thlrt for SK'hvMki1 furlones wh-n Top Coat, handled hy Lke M. Vol.owedPby Valerius and Kryple O'Nell. Top Coat paid !I 30 for win nneSTURAnCErm.lden lwo...W)ldi. Dili. a furlonaj: .,.,. ., .jisOO 15 SO 13 80 roor Butterfly !--- Ta 116, Parrlng- 01 20 31 SO ft no ion . , t prtv US, i. - . - ' .. TT.l l,lnd Time. l:l i,""ITcoW:Sr Al3;rtlfry and Jane XUr, 1Bi,nrmJt!d. GoMtut ''sTcONo'ltACK. threes r-oM nd up SECOND T". 101 Troll Swift Fax, 100. Lk? . .". 00 3 in J2 so' ; a so s i"i n .u Lohinsrin. ' "-.-.. vrda H . Sllco Qlrl, ""Latonla RnulU ' FIRST nf E pun. S00. maiden three .ear ii f.ivlnnrfl uord.oWI.Jon. IM a.ntryl504;nSM Verdant. 109. "" ' ' V ' ". 00 ?BTOifc rjfira&.'se Top coat., lHhlM; . . .4 00 nn Valerius. Ill,, Jl.0l,ob,r, 13 20 KWP' t;i',14.3 ' Wiominr Drjer. Pitt Mc- Time. 1 11 "'inoVVi. PraionarJ Troohv, CIS. ,bf;,taao'5nPPil.,n o'tb'e Hour ...o ran. Scratch!) BOsrWrSW OTBBM. GROCERS CONSIDER CUT IN HIGH PRICES Meeting of Leading Dealers Discusses Means for Re lief of Consumers HOOVER'S CHARGE DENIED Thnt relief from the prevailing high prices of food products Is In sight for Phila delphia consumers became nppaient this nfternoon when a meeting of the leading letall grocers of the cltv was opened Ht the store of Mitchell. Fletcher & Co. eighteenth and Chestnut streets at which a lepoii was heard from a representative of the Phila delphia association, who has been In Wash ington for several dajs In conference with Herbert C Hoover, national food admin istrator, and with representatives of othei retail grocers from all parts of the countiv As a lesult of this meeting It was stated by a prominent grocer, there is eveiv probabllltv that substantial l eductions In, the prices of mnnv commodities In the local market will be made at once. HOOVER CHARGi: IlllMlIP The stitenient made jesterdav In Wash Ington bv Food Administrator Hoover that the retail grocers of the countrv nie re sponsible for unreasnnablv high prices In manv necessaries of life brought foilh ex pressions of protcKt from leading Philadel phia grocers todav In all Instances these expressions wero tempered with the statement thnt thfie is no desire to crltlclro Mr Hoover, that he Is doing a great work and- deserves the hearty support of the people hut that h has unlntentlrnnll done an Injustice to the noble arms of purvojors of prunes, pickles nnd other edibles, which is much to be de- r plored That prices of table necessaries have continued to mount In spite of the fact that I'ncle Sam has taken charge of the situa tion is not denied bj anv of the local retailers, but the question of placing the blame for this condition is one that brings on more talk The human tendency to pass the buck Is apparent on all sides Some thing is the matter and somebody is to blame, but the retailers, large and small, are very positive that the fault Is not theirs RETAILERS OFFER EXCUSES The chief excuses given by the dealers for the continued and Increasing high cost of food are about as follows Shortage of supply due to the war Inadequacy of transportation facilities making Impossible an economic distribution of the food supply of the country. The commandeering of large quantities of supplies by the Government for the army, reducing the supply for the consumption o the civil population almost to the vanish ing point The manager of one large downtown re tall store blamed the people fiemselves for the condition which now confronts them "If the didn't buy so much stuff for fear prices will go higher," he said, we would have more to sell and the prices v ould not be so high Without exception local retailers ex pressed the opinion that Mr Hoover's as sertion that wholesale prices have gone down while retail prices have steadllv gone up, was misleading. "It isn't a question of wholesale prices at all," declared one prom inent dealer, "but a question of getting the stuff at any price. When there Is a uni versal demand for something thnt ou haven't got, the price of that artlclo Is going to be high OuMproblem Is to get stock at a'l ' What Mr Hoover says about the price of flour at the mill Is quite true," said an other dealer, "but vvh,at good does it do ua that flour Is cheap at the mill when can't get It here in Philadelphia?" The sugar situation continues to be most Continued an raj:, ffli. Column On. i "- " - $. W. Y. Extradition Hearings Itcset NBW YORK. Oct 19 Tho hearing on the extradition proceedings In the cases of Elisabeth Gurley Flynn Carlo Tresca Arturo Olovanltti and Vlovannl XSaldlixl was poatpontd today until next Monday morning The. defendants were! Jndlcted t" the Cook County, III,. Crand Jury follow er tn rct I. W- "W. )ds UtfMfc-hou ,ji coimtry. DRAFT BRAINS OF U.S., THEME OF EDUCATORS Utilization of University Men's Technical Powers Discussed at Meeting DREXEL SILVER JUBILEE rtlllr.it Inn nf the brains and technical training of college nnd imlversltv profes sors giaduates and students In furthering the mllltarv nrtlvltles of n nation at war. along lines never before dreamed of during anv pievlnus wnr, was the theme of a conference of more thin too presidents of cducatlonnl Institutions, scientists and Fed ft nl nlllclalH which began this morning at Dievel Institute Reports presented at this morning's ses sion showed that this mobilisation of spe rlillv 1 1. lined men marks the dawn of a new eia In the training oftertd b higher Institutions of learning and In the relations between them nnd the Federal Govern ment The cnnteience Incidentals signalizes the tvventv -fifth annual convocation of Drexel Institute whoso ptesldent, Dr Hollls God frev Is a member of the Advisors Com mission nf the Council of National Pefeue In opening the conference Doctor God fiev pointed out tint the dut laid upon the ndvivorv commission b the Vdinin Istiatlnn was to watch the lines back nf the line of bittle" nnd asserted that as a lesult of the m commendations offered bv the educational authorities for mobilizing the technical abilities of the mtion every ndmlnistiatlve department of the Govern ment was now far more .Interested In edu cational matters than a ear ago NEW ERA RESl'LT OF WAR "As a result of the war." said ho. ' fni greater emplnsls Is now laid upon the duty I of the American college and umvoisit man ever before This meins a new era. in which Che knowledge of the trained man Is to be put to better account, as well as his alillltv to net as n lender of men ' Doctor Godfrey drew a lesson for the t'niled Stales from the example of the famous universities of England, which, although the had emptied their halls when the call to wai came had let their men go (ci tho trenches Instead of utilizing their knowledge In technical lines The tre. mentions change toda ' he pointed out. "Is that our colleges have been cilled upon to take up work in co-operation with tho General Staff nf tho Armv nnd with the civil staffs of the Government" A survev of the plan of activity rec ommended bv the committee cm engineering and education of the advlsnrv commission, and In part nlrendv put Into effect was presented bv Dr Samuel P Capen, execu tive secietai.v of the t'nlted States llureau of Education Reports fiom elghtv-nlne American educational Institutions show he slid, that their enrollment In IslT is tl 2 per cent les than that of 191B. hs a lesult of the entiante nf their students Into the service of the nation Twentv-three lead ing engineering schools show n decrease In eniollment of 14 1 pel cfnt said he whi'e nntlniiecl cm 1'iiae Ten ( nliinin line FLUCK ATTACKS MERRITT TAYLOR Fourth Transit Hearing Marked by Northwest Busi ness Men's Chief's Charges ASSAILS BLANKENBURG The fourth public hearlt g nf the Smith-: Mitten transit lease befoie Councils' Joint Finance and Stteet Itallwa s Committee this nfteinoon developed Into an attack upon fotmer Transit Pliectnr Merrill Tnvlor delivered bv Charles I. Pluck, piesldent nf the Northwest lluslness Men's Association and the lender of seveial move ments to obstruct transit development Mr, Pluck ali-o directed his veibal bolts against former Maor nlankenburg After icvlewlng the atlnus steps In the carlj history of the eltv's transit develop ment program Mr Fluck summed the sit uation as follows 'On September 11, 1016. with a silver pick ix, Mav or nlankenburg and Director Tavlcn began to dig thn hole in which Philadelphia now finds Itself faced with the tiece-ltv ol either raising carfares In the neai future or raising the taxes CHAUOKS AGAINST TWI.OR Mi Kluck charged the ex-dlrector with having changed his transit progiam fre ciuentlv for political cvpedlencv He charged nlo that back of his "self ac claimed elToits for the dear public there hail been a political ambition, and accord ing to statements appcirlnt. In the news papeis of this morning. Mr Taior believed his opportunity had about arrived ' In a piepared speech, fom-one pages In length Ml Tluck reviewed the hlstoi of the entire transit development program from the vear 1013 to the present date His attacks against Mr Taloi and what he characterlied as "the obnoxious Taylor lease" wero scattered throughout his en tire nddress Discussing the faro feature of the pres ent Smlth-Mltten lease, lie advocated that Continued on I'ase Nineteen, Column eren RASPUTIN "Saint or Devil?" the true story of the "Black Monk" of Russia, by the Princess Catharine Iiadziwill begins in Tomorrow's jstrat QUICK ADDITIONAL RACING RESULTS Foutth Lnufel lace. 1 1-10 miles. Ci Impel, 110, Butwell, 50 50, $1 SO, out, won; Ticket, 117. Shuttinget. $1.40. out, feecond; Hnubcitt, 115, Robinson, out, thlid. Time. 1.45 3-5. Second Latouln lace, 5 1-2 fui longs Lady Luxtuy, 107, Oentiy, 3.00, ?3.10, $2.00. won; Bteczy, 107. Dieyer, $8 40, $5.80. second; Trctty Uaby, 112, Laliunr, $7.40, third. Time, 1.11. POLICE TO CANVASS LIBERTY LOAN SUBSCRIPTIONS Policemen tluoughout the city weie instiucted to make n house-to-house canvass in the Intel est ofthc second Llbeity Lonn thU nfter nooii. The police nie being fumUhcd with pamphlets setting foitli tho advantages of subset ibiug to the loan and also with subscilption WOMEN CRUSHED AT LIBERTY LOAN RALLY NEW YORK, Oct. 10. Several women fainted today when ciushed In n crowd at a Liberty Loan lally In Wall stteet opposite J. P. Morgan's office. This led to a wild leport that there was n llot. AMERICAN AVIATORS REPORTED TRAINING IN ITALY HOME. Oct. 19. Accoiding to the Gioinale d'ltnlia, nnnmoiis young Ameiicnn nviatois nie tialntng in a Miiall town in southern Iltnlv The men nie housed in special conciete uulldingb, it is snid, t cl the Itnllan iimtttictors nie well satisfied with theii piostess DETROIT CAFES FALL BACK ON BROWN SUGAR DETKOIT, Mich., Oct. 10. "War stigni" fills the bowls in De troit cafes. This js not a new variety, hut just plain brown sugni, u"ocl as n last lesoit, when le&tauiuteuis failed to get any white oi lump sugnr. . WORKERS STICK TO POSTS THROUGH FIRE SI ,iii emploves of the Wlllatcl Wright C'ornpati. manufacturer of silk band ages. Si" North Mm vine street, stuck u thcli posts todav when tire was discov ered in the basement of the plant. The damage was estimated at $f0. DOG FANCIER SUES FOR TERRIER'S BOARD Alf lielmont. dog fiiu'lei. show expert and tho owner of kennels at Devon, Ta., has btiiiight suit BCH'tm Wllltym r Kolin IS0G riiostmit stteet, to iccoer an ac count nf JSTfi. alleged tci be due foi boaidlng and caring for Rollns fox terrier, at 2 pel week, fiom l'cbnl(.r'S, lftll The case Is entered In the Mdnlclpal Court. SEVERE STORM TO HIT CITY TONIGHT The iiiiim .eveie sloim of the season l scheduled tn lilt Philadelphia late to night, nccoiil.ng tn le Weather FSuieau It. Is headed frem the Gteat Lakes and traveling eastwaid at evpiess all plane speed Warnings have been ordered displayed on the Atlantic coast. The storm will start with a light lain, due this evening. Tomoiiovv it will be heie in full blast 'with a diop of about twentv degrees in tem pera tin c and high wind It Is not scheduled lo Inst more than twentj-foui hours TRAIN AND TROLLEY INJURE TWO lc 'in ii.ii' iilmi nil -il e .vei'is old. of Baltimore, a hinVeman, Is in n critical rondll at uf'er I eng struck liv an engine in a tunnel near Thlrtj-flfth sticet aand t!in"8 l'ertj load Sam McDowell, twent.v eight, of 14:'" South Twenl -eighth stiect was dragged more than fifty feet when lilt bv a car while riding a motoicjcle on Twenty-second street His condition also is serious. Roth aie in the Polj clinic Hospital. EXPLOSIONS SCARE SUBURBANITES A -eilos of shucks that shook houses In Chestnut Hill and Torresdale shoitl aftei ten o'clock todav. gave ilse to a repent of an explosion similar to that which occurred at i!lhlstnwn. N 1 Monila). costing the lles of foui men It was learned to be without found-itlon. the concussion resulting from blasting near Bristol to facilitate the construction uf u shlpvard In the process of erection there BLOCK OF $1,000,000 FIRST LIBERTY BONDS SOLD NI'W YOKK, Oct 19 The largest transac tiim in I'nlted States war bonds wns made cm the New loik Stock Bvchance todav when a block of J1.000 000 first Mb eitv Hunil VjH was void at sD "IMOO This sale exceptional!) large In itself, Is bj fni the lamest single tin novel of the Initial I'nited States war Issue . SECRETARY LANE'S CONDITION IMPROVING WASHINf'TON, Oct 10 Secietatv of the Interior Franklin K l.ane who is at his Witshlnsto'i home suffcrtng with an attack of giip was testing easier toda He wns tnken III while making n trip In the interest of the UberH Loan AUSTRIAN REGIMENT VOLUNTARILY SURRENDERS W XhlJINliTON. Oct 1 -An Austrian regiment, with ofllcets at Its head and carrlng tlicit own aims, has suriendered to Rumanians alone: the Flusso-Humanian front, according to cables receied today The report stated that the regiment was composed entirely of Mohammedan Serbs from Bosnia. The colonel declared that they weie all Jugoslavs and surtendeted olutnaiily in order to enlist in the Jugo Slav regiment now being formed out of the reorganized Serb i imj. CALLS ON MEXICO TO TAKE STAND WITH ALLIES MEXICO CITV Oct, 19 - A call for Mexico to Join the Allies was sounded In the Chamber of Deputies todav Deput Manuel Garcia in a speech declared that the Allies ate lighting fur elemocracj and against supreme autocracy, and in view of what lias happened in Mexico during the last half a doj-en ve.-irs Mexico should take her stamen the side of the F.ntente Powers ARMY TO LOCATE HOSPITALS AT DESERTED POSTS WASHIM5TON Oct 19.- The War Department will soon announce full details of tlie plan to convert posts now deserted bj regulai troops who have been dis patched abroad. Into hospitals winter quarters for specialized blanches of the ser vice and other mllltaiv uaes The posts In the South are now being utilized for aneclal purposes, but those In the North soon will be available fot use bj reason of their soldier occupants either being ordeied abroad oi sent lo the warmei climate of the South SNOW INTERFERES IN CANADIAN WHEAT FIELDS WINNBl'KO. Canada, Oct. 19 Snow and sleet have held up threshing all over the ptairie provinces, but four-fifths of the crop, however, is In elevators or en route to the Hast. Full plowing Is under way very generallj. PARENTS SAVE CHILD'S LIFE FROM FIRE . Quick action b his parents saved the life of I.ouls Matelll, four sears, old, of 1654 South Chadw'lck street, who was burned early toda while playing with matches at his home. The child's clothing became Ignited and his mother smothered the fiames by wrapping him in a rug-. Louis Masselll, the boy's father, then carried him to St. Agnes's Hospital. - RUSSIAN U. S. WAR EMBARGO LIFTED PFrROClRAD, Oct. 19 The embargo on exports to the United States, which was Imposed oa account of the war, was lifted today by the Minister of Finance. BRITISH PLANES BOMB GERMAN AIRDROME LONDON, Oct. 19. Brltijh naval olne yesterday tombe4 the Vruenatr air- t. 1. i.i. ...(UCnlnvw .,. .11 ai A4Ml!t-u alafuaAat &mttn,.aj.A - k.Si arOHU? mui PMrvyw , .. TMWa machine jtuft saWy., NEWS -w..,.n .ty.t?, ..wvuffM-T i.rMt 0 SLAVS ABANDON NAVYBASE;MAY MOVE CAPITAL Evacuation of Big De pot at Reval" Formally Announced RUSSIANS ALARMED j BY ENEMY'S DEIVE f Plans Made for Transfer of Seat of Government to Moscow FOE HAS GREAT FLEET At Least 70 Warships, Including 10 Dreadnoughts, Massed in Gulf of Riga PHTROUHAD, Oct 1.1 Kvacuallmi of Reval, Ttussla's great naval depot Just at the entrance to the Oulf of Finland, was formerl.v announced today, Petrnsracl msj be abandoned us the cun- Itnl nf Itus.ln. "On account of the strntegic.il situation." caused bj the menace of a German advance fiom tho Gulf of Riga, tt was formerly stated today that earl) transfer of the capital from Petrograd probably to Mos cow was being prepared for by the Gov ernment A speclnl "evacuating commit tee" had been named to make alt plans. The personnel of this committee Included M Tretjakoff president of the economic council nnd a member of the Cabinet M Palachinsk, president of the committee on National Defense, and Minister of Pub lic Welfare Klshkin Germany has n vast naval force around the Riga Gulf Official reports today gave the total strength of the enemy fighting craft there ns ten dreadnoughts, ten cruis ers, flftv destrovers nnd eight or ten sub marines. Two enemy trawlers tt wns announced today, had been sunk In Moon Sound ' On Wednesdaj noon the enemy Innded on Dago Island near fieiro village," the statement cone uded WASHINGTON. Oct 19. In the absence of official dispatches the Riisslan cmhaesv withheld comment this afternoon on the t-port that the Itutslan provisional Government has ordered the re. moval of the capital from Petrograd to Moscow. Tho move wasinc. -unexpected, however. TtmoaI of the capital has been looked for ever since the German drlv against Petrograd got under way. copgiiagi:. Oct. in A big naval battle for the control of the Haltlc Js imminent A large rectlon of the Russian Haltlc fleet, which took refuge in Kassar Hay after the Russian battleship Slava was sunk In Moon Sound, is preparing to make a dash past the German men-of-war guarding the western entrance according to a dispatch from Petrogtad tndaj dited Thursday night In the Rusisn fleet It was teported, nre between eighteen and twent-two rhlps. In cluding battleships cruisers gunboats, tor pedoboats and "ulimarlnes The Gcrmins have a fni supctlor fleet, the big guns on the superdreadnoughtu far outringlng the cannon on the Russian men-of-war There are between fifty and S'xtv unite in the German fleet, no' counting tl.e mine sw eofrs Moon Island is now vlituallv In German hands An ofilclal statement Issued today In Ilerlln, relative to the naval operations in the Gulf of Riga, savs "We gained nearl all the mole on the western coast of Moon Islahd and by mid daj all of It was ours We took r.000 pris oners Part nf the action on Wednesday was fr.ught with the warships filing acmes Moon Uland at eich oilier The Germans now hold four of the elx Islands dominating the entrance to Itlga Gulf No details of the Germnn occupation of Moon Island, due cast from Oesel Inland, have come through Apparently it followed Immediate!) the sea fight The Rerlln War Office, in announcing the capture of 10,000 prisoners and fifty guns on Oesel, stated that onlj a few hundred of the garrison managed to escape to Moon Island Indications are that the Germans' next Mep will ba a campaign against the Aland Islands, which He at the entrance to the Gulf of Uothnla. with the ultimate object of bottling up the great Russian Battle fleet which now lies inactive at Kronstadt, in the Gulf of Finland J00 miles northeast nf Riga Gulf Kornstadt U the sea defense it Petrograd evacuation of P.eval If confirmed, would appear to Indicate even greater menace to Russia by the German Baltic Sea fleet than Its lctorles so far teported have Indicated Reval Is the first of the naval bases which a hostile fleet Intent on penetrating the Gulf of Finland would enc'junter It ts only 2nn miles from Petrograd Before the war Keval was classified as a nav'Rl station of the i-ecnnd class, hut under the Czar"s regime It was strengthened and re 'ortlfitd Transfer of the cipltal from Petro grad to Moccovv has fiequentlj ben con sidered h the new demociatlc Government At the time of the last German drive on land around Riga It was fnrmall stated that such a step was planned Appearance more than n month ago of a formidable German fleet In tho Rattle and reports of an impending navBl offensive against PetrOT grad caused a levtval of the report Demo cratic leaders have since the verj start of the new republic legarded Moscow Tiiore suitable for thp capital than Petrograd. Just why there should be anv Immediate fear of danger tn Petrograd from the Oer- Contlnurcl en pace I'Uht. Column Three THE WEATHER FORECAST For Philadelphia and pJojiiHj. tfaln to ulghl; follotecd by much colder. Saturday partly cloudy and colder moderate tor able trlmfa, becomfnj; fresh northiceit i For eastern Fennsylcaula Kalii. and much colder tonight. Saturdav parti cloudy and colder rxcep' rain In -northeast portion, fresh northtccst tclnds I.KVOTK Of DAY Buhrl... tilt n Sun.cta MOn m. DELAWARE RIBB TIDE CHAC! CHEBTNWT STREET, wen wai.r. , m. ii.. f. Lew wats ?! ' Mri eML'UU ilLJfi i M 4 fir